top of page

Cologuard "Stuck-stalgia"

The Problem

Exact Sciences came to us for a creative strategy to promote their at-home, non-invasive colon cancer screening test- Cologuard.

 

For the brand, the challenge went far beyond awareness for adults aged 45+. Screening wasn’t clearly understood or emotionally easy to engage with.


Barriers included feeling overwhelmed by the product, avoidance driven by fear of results, and a deep cultural discomfort around talking about colon cancer.

The Strategy

​Across surveys, interviews, and social conversations, one key tension stood out: Gen X and Millennial–Gen X cuspers do not see themselves as "older adults" yet, rejecting anything that feels heavy or age-coded. Many are still culturally anchored to the ’80s and ’90s.

 

Nostalgia is different for this generation, who is “stuck-stalgic”- longing for a time period they never really left.

 

Instead of leading with fear or medical urgency, we led with this. Humor became the entry point and familiar references served as gentle wake-up calls.

 

We built “stuck-stalgia” as a platform—using iconic cultural moments and memes as playful wake-up calls for an audience that still feels young at heart but is, in fact, screening age.

 

​We wanted to reframe colon cancer testing, using cultural alarm clocks to show that the best way to stay young is taking care of yourself.​

 

The rule was simple: if you get the reference, it’s probably time to get screened.

 

Matthew Lillard, a defining ’90s horror icon, became the perfect expression of our insight. The horror-themed “Screen” spot met people where they already were, culturally and emotionally, reframing screening as something that doesn’t have to be scary.

This idea then extended to other nostalgic icons, from Lance Bass to John Stamos, gently reminding our audience of their age in order to drive awareness and action.​

The Creative
Campaign Recap & Results

Drop Me a Line!

Thanks for reaching out!

© 2026 by Avery Serven.

bottom of page