Showing posts with label Government/Public Sector. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Government/Public Sector. Show all posts

11.7.09

OVK Let It Ring in Belgium






OVK (Ouders Van Verongelukte Kinderen) is an organisation in Belgium supporting the Parents of Child Road Victims. The organisation partnered with Belgium’s most popular video sharing website GarageTV to raise awareness of the danger associated with using mobile phones while driving. The campaign won three awards at Cannes International Advertising Festival 2009: Promo Gold, Direct Gold and Media Silver.

OVK Let It Ring

The Let It Ring experience begins at www.letitring.be, where anyone can send a message in French, Dutch or English to their friends, providing an e-mail address and cell phone number. Their friend receives an e-mail with a link to Crazy Car Crash, what seems to be a typical internet movie. What the friend doesn’t know, is that he/she is playing the main part in it. As the video starts to play the viewer’s cell phone starts ringing. If the person answers, he/she generates an accident in the viral movie.


Campaign: "Let it ring "

Agency: Happiness Brussels

Client: Red Cross

Year: 2009

7.7.09

David Plouffe's::: lessons from a historic presidential victory


Plouffe

As far as a campaign brief goes, taking a man with barely two years in the U.S. Senate and making him the most powerful person in the world is a pretty tough nut to crack. That's what David Plouffe, Barack Obama's campaign manager, discussed in his Cannes seminar on Thursday, laying out some lessons from the winning presidential run. Plouffe tied the success of the Obama campaign, beyond having a tremendously gifted candidate, to its marriage of grassroots activism and digital technology. "We benefited in many ways that we could look at everything from a fresh set of eyes," he said. Here are some of the key points Plouffe made:
1.
Small is the new big. Obama was not the first politician to realize the collective power of small donors. But the former community organizer imbued his campaign with the notion that individuals on a local level can make a big difference beyond mere donations. Those donations helped power the campaign, of course, as Obama attracted 4 million donors through the Web. But innovations like My Barack Obama, a social network, allowed the campaign to go beyond that and have supporters involved directly in outreach and in combatting attacks on the candidate. "It started with a dictate from him," said Plouffe. "He wanted to run a grassroots campaign."

2. Word of mouth rules. On the local level, the Obama campaign eschewed paid operatives and out-of-town volunteers in favor of those within the communities. Plouffe noted that while people would tune out chattering from a political junkie, they'd listen to a neighbor energized by a candidate for the first time. The campaign tried to encourage word of mouth by stressing authenticity. Volunteers weren't given scripts, for example. "We said, 'Speak from your own heart,' " Plouffe said. "Nothing is more powerful than authenticity. People can have a very sensitive bullshit meter."
3.
Conventional paths are dangerous. The campaign went against the grain in many of its choices. Obama directly confronted the issue of Rev. Jeremiah Wright with a high-profile speech. He held his convention speech in a huge outdoor stadium. He traveled abroad as a candidate. "When we did [conventional things], we paid a price for it," Plouffe said.
4.
Integration and ubiquity. One of the biggest challenges for the Obama campaign, Plouffe said, was making sure its messaging stayed consistent on a daily basis. If the candidate was talking health care on a particular day, the ads in that market needed to reinforce the message, and local volunteers needed to be armed with information on the subject. Not coordinating the messaging "is a mistake a lot of organizations make," Plouffe said. The campaign also wanted to be everywhere—online, on the air and on the ground.
5.
Traditional media is still king. The Obama brand's biggest challenge early on was a familiar one: It had very low awareness and wasn't in the consideration set for many voters. TV was the key to changing that. The Obama campaign has been praised for its online efforts, but TV still played a major role, Plouffe said, particularly in helping to introduce the candidate. The campaign made different use of the medium, however, most notably with the 90-minute infomercial it aired two weeks prior to the election. Even within its online efforts, its most important tools were fairly old school, particularly e-mail. The campaign also made extensive use of Web video. "I know it's fashionable to suggest TV advertising is less and less important," Plouffe said. "In our campaign, it played a critical role."
The presentation, hosted by DDB, got a rapturous reception from the international crowd. It remains to be seen if the Obama campaign is seen as groundbreaking enough to garner a Titanium Lion.

6.7.09

Bleeding shame:::hard-hitting road safety ad

“Rain changes everything. Drive to the conditions”



BRAND:Papakura District Council
CATEGORY:Government/Public Sector
REGION:New Zealand
DATE:Apr 2009 - May 2009
OTHER AGENCIES:Colenso BBDO
MEDIA CHANNEL
Out of HomeAmbientPR





The rains after the summer in New Zealand can be torrential, and have been known to cause many road accidents. Drivers don’t adapt their driving styles to accommodate the wet weather and often don’t realise how compromised their breaking abilities are until it is too late.

After a weekend in which 15 people were killed on the roads, the Papakura District Council decided to act quickly to warn drivers to slow down in rainy conditions in an attempt to reduce the road death toll. It developed a roadside billboard which showed a young boy’s face. When it rained, sensors in the billboard triggered fake blood to flow down the boy’s face – from his nose, ears and eyebrows. The message on the billboard read: “Rain changes everything. Please drive to the conditions.”

There were no deaths on the road in Papakura during the Easter period



Local and national media picked up the story, helping motorists everywhere make the connection between the weather conditions and their driving habits. The end result for Papakura District Council was a zero-fatality Easter season


Credits

The Bleeding Billboard was developed at Colenso BBDO, Auckland, by executive creative director Nick Worthington, art director Emmanuel Bougneres, agency producer Paul Courtney, account director Scott Coldham, account manager Janelle Van Wonderen, photographer Steven Boniface, and produced by Greg Skinner at Rollercoaster Design.

25.4.09

Obama :::Rock the vote in-game

BRAND OWNER:Obama
CATEGORY:Government/Public Sector
REGION:USA
DATE:Oct 2008 - Nov 2008

For Barack Obama to win the 2008 election, he needed to secure a majority of young voters in key battleground states. The Rock the Vote campaign sought to engage and incite young Americans under 30 to register and vote.

In-game advertising has become an effective way for brands to reach coveted young audiences. Among the hard to reach 18-34 male audience, console and PC gaming is strongly preferred as their favorite leisure activity.
While playing videogames, engagement is extremely high and multitasking is almost non-existent compared to watching TV or surfing the internet.
Brand Obama partnered with Microsoft in-game advertising specialist Massive to reach the Xbox Live community.
Rock the Vote was able to successfully call this social community to action through relevant political issues that they care about. Gamers could get voter registration forms sent to their email, vote in an online presidential poll, download themes and gamer pics to show their allegiance for favored candidates.
Obama ran his “Rock the Vote” campaign in 11 Xbox 360 titles across 10 battleground states using geo targeting, time date targeting and content targeting. Gamers who were online in those states saw key messages in realistic settings while playing the video game titles running the campaign. ‘Early Voting has begun’ and ‘Vote Early’ were on billboards, stadiums and outdoor locations.
Additionally, the Xbox LIVE community was polled on their candidate of choice. Nearly 100,000 participants cast their votes, with Obama trending 12 percentage points ahead, providing a unique insight into young voters minds and served as one of the largest unofficial polls in the nation.
The campaign was a first for a political party and succeeded in targeting a hard to reach audience that spends more time gaming than on other media. Some 80,000 voter registration forms were downloaded through Xbox LIVE and Xbox.com and 100,000 Xbox LIVE member were polled voting preference and often acted as the bellwether of national polls.

29.3.09

Conservative Party:::Sorry from Gordon Brown


BRAND:Conservative Party
REGION:UK
DATE:Mar 2009 - Dec 2008

The UK opposition party, The Conservatives, wanted put the pressure on the governing Labour Party. The Tories were particularly keen on putting the pressure on him for his economic policy, which contributed to the fact that the country was in a state of recession and that banks have had to be bailed out by the Government.
The Tories launched a search marketing campaign that aimed to mock the Prime Minister for his economic track record.
The strategy was to buy the paid search key words “Gordon Brown”, so that any time anyone on Google entered the name, the first sponsored link that appeared along side it was a link to www.sorryfromgordon.com.
The site said it wanted an apology and claimed that: “Gordon Brown bottled out of saying sorry in his speech to Congress yesterday so write an apology for him and send it to your friends.” Users on the site could write a fake letter of apology from Gordon Brown from a selection of drop down menus featuring humorous options. Users could finish the sentence “Today, I feel duty bound to say sorry...” with one of the following options: “I genuinely believe that I have let you down”; “Britain is on the brink of bankruptcy and it is my fault”, or “Peter Mandelson told me to”.
The site also gives the option to send the apology to up to five friends, giving it a viral element.

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