30.8.14

Gillette Venus| Tag The Weather Gillette Venus

Insight

GILLETTE’S PROBLEM: WHEN WOMEN ARE SHIVERING, THEY’RE NOT SHAVING!

Sweden gets very cold in winter. For five months of the year, sub-zero temperatures engulf the region, and darkness and snow force people to stay indoors. As a result, Swedes don’t shave much. After all, why should they bother when they have to swaddle themselves in coats, thermal underwear and tights just to leave the house?

This is bad news for Gillette, whose Venus ladies shaving range suffers from a double-digit sales slump every winter.

Gillette realised that during the colder months, the brand’s biggest challenge is not rival razor products - it’s the weather.

While Gillette’s female target like to regularly shave and show off their legs in the summer, that routine becomes less and less frequent in the winter. The brand's key insight was that it needed to re-programme this behaviour to boost frequency of shaving and increase sales of Gillette Venus.

Gillette’s major problem, of course, was that it couldn’t change the weather, but could it help its target dream about sunnier climates, imagine long hot days, remember what summer feels like?

And, if Gillette could get them thinking warm - if it could really bring that dream warm weather to life - perhaps Gillette could fire up their summer shaving routine.

Strategy

GILLETTE’S STRATEGY: SHARING SOMEONE ELSE’S SUMMER WOULD STOP WOMEN SHIVERING AND START THEM SHAVING AGAIN!

Gillette couldn’t change the weather, but it could change the mind-set of its audience. If Gillette could remind them of summer – by helping them share and swap stories and pictures with women in warmer climates – Gillette could emotionally engage them with their summer shaving routine.

Gillette needed to start that process early to remain relevant during the cold season. It knew its target was increasingly mobile and smartphone dependent, spending hours plugged in to social networks and online photo-sharing platforms. In Sweden, women use Instagram twice as much as men and 39% use it on a daily basis.

Gillette would give women the chance to win a trip somewhere warmer, by entering Gillette’s photo contest on Instagram. For the chance to win, women would have to submit photos of the coldest places in Sweden, labelling them with Gillette’s #venuscompetition hashtag. This would be great content to share – while painfully cold, there’s nothing prettier than a sparkling blanket of snow. Gillette’s snap-happy women wouldn’t be able to resist.

A specially selected jury of female bloggers from sunny Florida, Brazil and Australia, would comment on the pictures and select daily favourites – giving Gillette’s photographers social fame and moving them closer to the holiday.

Keeping shaving on women’s mind, Gillette would offer a discount on Venus products to anyone posting a picture. Uniquely, this discount would be based on the weather conditions at their GPS-stamped location. The colder the weather, the bigger the discount. A partnership with an online retail brand would make purchase just a tap away.

Top fashion bloggers would also spread the word about Sweden’s weather – by showing sun-worshipping local Miami residents just how cold it was in Stockholm. Gillette would use their reactions – and photos – to create more sharable content on Facebook and the Venus website. 

Execution

SHARING PHOTOS AND STORIES LED TO SAVINGS ON SHAVING! 

In January 2013, in the middle of the Swedish winter, Gillette launched the Gillette Venus ‘Tag the Weather’ competition website and made the tough climate conditions work in its favor
To win a holiday to Miami, consumers took photos of their winter weather and published them on Instagram; the campaign site automatically found them thanks to the hashtag used. Each photo was instantly given a bad weather score. Based on geo-location, the colder the conditions recorded (based on historical weather data) the higher the score.  
Consumers could convert this into a dynamic discount for the Venus Proskin Sensitive. The lower the temperature, the bigger the discount. Gillette’s unique partnership with Halens, the region’s biggest online fashion and personal care retailer, meant that purchase was always just a click away. 


Gillette’s message combined display, video and blog partnerships on mobile and web. Tag the Weather appeared on blog portal Devote.se and fashion blogs such as Tyras.se. It created videos showing Swedes talking to Americans in Miami about their weather and asking if they wanted to swap locations. They were hosted on YouTube, Facebook, female blogs and the campaign site.

Above-the-line ads invited women to show off their everyday weather to a unique jury of sun-spoiled bloggers (Steffi from Miami, Alana from Rio, Chrystal from Sydney), who also wrote about the competition and extreme weather in Sweden.

Wherever possible Gillette’s shivering target was exposed to the warmer weather being enjoyed by women elsewhere. 

Results

SHARING PICTURES LED TO SALES HEATING UP BY 570%

In just two weeks Gillette attracted more than 5,800 Instagram photos – the highest number ever in Sweden. Overall, Gillette reached 444,500 Instagram users earning nearly 130,000 likes. The campaign site attracted more than 160,000 unique visitors – 80% via a mobile device.

In total, Gillette reached three million unique mobile devices across the region, while Facebook and Instagram activity reached 91% of all Swedish women 18-35. 
Gillette’s response-led tactic generated incredible sales. The impact on sales of was incredible. During the campaign online sales of Venus Proskin Sensitive increased 570% and blades were up 100%. While in-store sales were boosted by 36%.


BRAND:
Gillette Venus
BRAND OWNER:
Procter & Gamble
CATEGORY:
Toiletries/Cosmetics
REGION:
Sweden
DATE:
2013
AGENCIES:
MediaCom
Saatchi & Saatchi
MEDIA CHANNEL:
Digital,Mobile,Online

Quaker Oats | Havrecrunch | Yellowstone Diet

Insight

Turning the negative into a positive. Every day seems to bring us new information about what is good for us, what we should eat, how we should look, new extreme diets and new forms of exercise. They can range from the practical to the absurd. We know that people want to look and feel good, but the barrage of mixed messages combined with an increased focus on looks and lifestyle in society meant that our audience were being negatively affected rather than feeling positive about who they are. The beginning of any new year was particularly full of these messages as people focused more on their lifestyle and eating at this time of year.
With the launch of the Havrecrunch, Quaker Oats set out to challenge this negative trend, there is more to life than the next diet fad and it wanted to remind consumers of this. OMD needed to come up with an idea targeted specifically at this audience to get their attention, entertain them while also enlightening them about what leading a healthier lifestyle actually means.
The marketing challenge was to create awareness for the new Havrecrunch product by creating a meaningful connection with the target audience based on insights on their conscious living and eating habits.

Strategy

There is no miracle cure, but everyone claims their new product to be one, which is where the grizzly berries come into the picture.
The Yellowstone berry was considered a super-food for bears and it had recently become famous and a discussion point in social media forums. The Yellowstone berry helps bears get through the winter hibernation period and had recently become almost extinct before an initiative by Yellowstone Park bought the berry back to life.
With the berry background story in place, OMD would create fake commercials for a diet called “The Yellowstone Diet”. This diet was to come from these wild berries that scientists had supposedly been researching the last eight years. By harnessing the credibility of the story and armed with the knowledge that previous campaigns which had used humorous content were a success, the Yellowstone berry diet campaign was born.
Video content was created in an exaggerated and funny way to get people’s attention and have those wondering if this was real or not. The agency would release the ‘fake commercials’ on several social platforms that the audience uses to research, discuss and share new trends and diets. OMD’s strategy was to get the target group’s attention and use them to spread the Yellowstone diet themselves through social media. It would then move to mainstream channels such as print and out-of-home to reveal that the diet was about conscious living and encouraging people to eat healthily, rather than just chasing the next big fad.
Quaker believes that “There is no miracle cures – eat healthy and use your common sense”. With its brand story at the heart of the campaign it would set out to challenge the negative trend in body consciousness in an entertaining and irreverent tone of voice.

Execution

Knowing that being online and having credible buzz around a product was the key to attracting its audience, OMD recruited key ambassadors to promote the Diet and seeded 10 fake diet videos on blogs and forums. The videos consisted of two energetic people in gym gear discussing the diet and explaining the berry in an infomercial style. This included an introduction and demonstrations of the related products such as a Hibernation patch that works while you sleep, by inserting the berries into your nose, and personal favourite the Belly-berries patch for everyday use.
The content was seeded onto sites that contained news about health, fitness and lifestyle; OMD bought premium placements in trustworthy environments. Four Bloggers wrote 10 editorials about their experiences and expectations of the Grizzly Berries. #Yellowstone on Twitter would be track the chatter about the diet. All this was over five weeks alongside the bought placements.
The agency also rolled out budget display placements and cryptic search ads, to mirror the massive amount of ridiculous advertising for getting abs and losing weight in minutes in “untrustworthy environments” to also achieve a cheap TV-shop-feel in several contexts.
As the campaign got more and more ridiculous, OMD finally rolled out on all digital platforms, the BeOn network; Twitter, blogs, display, RTB, GDN, Search, YouTube and Facebook with a reveal, that it was all a part of a campaign highlighting bad diets and that the focus should be on healthy living and breakfasts, with Havrecrunch.

Results

“It’s the fake diet you don’t want to miss!” Havrecrunch delivered on its brand story and message that there is no miracle cure, just simply to eat healthy and use your common sense.
Awareness during the campaign increased the sales index to 334. While the buzz and chatter around the fake diet went crazy throughout the campaign on blogs, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, with comments such as: “This is great, where can I get it” to “This is the funniest parody of diet advertising ever seen.
After two weeks of advertising, Quaker Oats had + 27,000 visitors on the website, and + 50,000 views on YouTube, generating approximately +200,000 views spread over 10 videos. Phase 1 achieved an aggregated viewing time of 4,215 hours, equivalent to over 201 days of video consumption. Facebook reached a total of +70,000,000 impressions, while Twitter reached 216,000 impressions and 17,176 engagements, which meant a stunning 7.92% engagement rate.
A highlight of the campaign was an official invitation to have a stand at the 2014 Health and Beauty Conference, where Havrecrunch was invited to demonstrate the Grizzly Berries.
BRAND:
Havrecrunch
BRAND OWNER:
Quaker Oats
CATEGORY:
Food
REGION:
Denmark
Sweden
DATE:
February - May 2014
AGENCY:
OMD
MEDIA CHANNEL:
Online,Out-of-Home,PR,Print

Cxense | Cxense boosts hyperlocal targeting capabilities

Insight

Widespread use of centralised web traffic hubs in the Nordic region has traditionally limited the value of advertising geotargeting technologies in the area. Leading ad serving technology provider, Cxense, is now breaking the mould, using an IP geotargeting solution from Digital Element to improve granularity by over 110% and eliminate holes in coverage – resulting in significantly higher revenues for its customers’ ad campaigns.
Online geotargeting in the Nordic region is notoriously difficult due to the common practice of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) routing large numbers of IP addresses through centralised hubs, a practice known as ‘backhauling’. Unsophisticated geolocation methodologies can be misled by this practice, resulting in a disproportionate number of IP address locations being incorrectly geolocated to a centralised hub, rather than the location where the device actually connects to the publicly-routable internet.
For Cxense, ad serving technology provider, the issue of tracing an IP address back from the centralised hub to the ISP end-point was not completely resolved with their previous IP geolocation provider. Cxense, which handles more than 45 billion ad impressions per month, recognised that, with improved data granularity and city-level accuracy, it could serve more relevant ads and generate higher Click-Through Rates (CTRs) and revenue for its advertising clients.

Strategy

After an extensive evaluation process of several IP geolocation solutions, Cxense chose Digital Element’s NetAcuity Edge technology for its hyperlocal targeting capabilities.

Execution

By integrating the NetAcuity Edge technology into its ad serving platform, Cxense is able to address the challenges associated with online ad geotargeting in the Nordics. While less sophisticated IP targeting techniques rely on routing infrastructure analysis and are degraded by backhauled traffic, NetAcuity Edge combines traditional infrastructure analysis with anonymous insight gleaned from a network of global commercial partners to provide a more granular and accurate response at a hyperlocal level (city and postcode), while still maintaining user anonymity and complying with the highest standards of end-user privacy. Now publishers, using EmediateAd from the Cxense Advertising suite, can assure its advertisers that it is utilising the most accurate and granular hyperlocal dataset available and that their ads are reaching users in the right geographic locations throughout the entire Nordic region and beyond.

Results

By deploying Digital Element’s IP geolocation technology, Cxense’s local advertising capabilities have become significantly more precise, and the company now delivers the Nordic region’s most granular and accurate geotargeted ads. With a rate of 100% country-level accuracy, 98% region-level accuracy and 97% city-level accuracy, Cxense’s geotargeting solution delivers fewer blank spots, more impressions, higher CTRs and, ultimately, increased revenues for its customers’ ad campaigns.
To measure the success of the deployment, Cxense compared before and after geotargeting data* across four different countries – Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland – with staggering results: 
Denmark:
- Average increase in cities identified: 114%
- Average decrease in ad impressions served to visitors in unknown locations: 99.6%
- Average decrease in inventory delivered to unknown locations: 99.3%
Sweden:
- Average increase in cities identified: 146%
- Average decrease in ad impressions served to visitors in unknown locations: 99.1%
- Average decrease in inventory delivered to unknown locations: 99.9%
Norway:
- Average increase in cities identified: 131%
- Average decrease in ad impressions served to visitors in unknown locations: 98.1%
- Average decrease in inventory delivered to unknown locations: 97%
Finland:
- Average increase in cities identified: 157%
- Average decrease in ad impressions served to visitors in unknown locations: 97.8%
- Average decrease in inventory delivered to unknown locations: 97.6%
Percentage change in geotargeting data accuracy by country

By deploying Digital Element’s NetAcuity Edge geotargeting technology within its leading-edge advertising platform, Cxense is charting new ground for the future of successful advertising campaigns across the Nordics.   
BRAND:
Cxense
CATEGORY:
Internet
REGION:
Norway
DATE:
1
MEDIA CHANNEL:
Online

Ahlgrens bilar | Fruit Hatchback - The All-New (Edible) Swedish Car

Insight

Established candy and confectionary brands have a stranglehold on the Swedish market and new brands, even from traditional candy makers, have a tough time entering the market. Ahlgrens bilar (“Ahlgren’s cars”) is one of Sweden’s oldest candy brands and built alongside the strong connection that Swedes have with automobiles. Its newest candy is called The Fruit Hatchback but was faced with intense competition and increased price pressure from the recent market recession, making the goal of standing out from the crowd even tougher.
Starcom MediaVest's task was to create a pre-launch campaign that garnered enough interest to gain the new flavour a foothold in the stores and make it competitive in the fiercely contested and traditionally conservative Swedish candy market. Swedes like to stick with what they know, and while they know cars, they don’t know what a Fruit Hatchback is. The challenge was how to create buzz and involvement around a low interest product with a very limited budget – SEK 1,000,000 ($156,000) including production costs.

Strategy

Generations of Swedes have taken great pride in the fact that a small country like Sweden has produced two world-class car manufacturers: Saab and Volvo. But with the former bankrupt and the latter sold to China, the national automotive ego had taken a bit of a battering in the 2000s. Not only that but gearheads’ favorite program, “Trafikmagasinet” (“Traffic Magazine”; equivalent of Top Gear), went off the air as its creator, Carl-Ingemar Perstad and its network faced a series of infamous legal and budget woes.
With Swede’s automobile pride at its lowest point, Starcom wondered if it could give them a little bit of good news and excitement. Starcom knew it couldn’t market Fruit Hatchback as just another new flavor of a well-known sweet. Which got them thinking… What if it could inject some good news (and humour) into the Swede’s dismal automotive sector, by introducing a new Swedish car! It wanted to sell the Fruit Hatchback, not as a candy, but as a new, “real” car.

Execution 

When “Trafikmagasinet” went off the air, its finale was so abrupt that fans received no closure and created a cult following that only grew as time went by. The idea was to bring the format, the host and the passion back to Swedish consumers by launching the updated “Bilmagasinet” (the Car Magazine) and have Mr. Perstad “leak” the news of a new Swedish car – The Fruit Hatchback.
As the first of four shows aired on YouTube, the speculation from Twitter and blogs like automotorsport.se and vk.se immediately started as to what this new vehicle could be. Simultaneously they recruited “test drivers” for the new car via Facebook and even arranged for an official unveiling of the “Fruit Hatchback” at the Stockholm Lifestyle Motor Show! And finally news spread about the new Swedish car – Fruit Hatchback – on digital screens in all central stations in Sweden.
Results 
The car magazine topped the ‘Unruly Viral Chart Sweden’ in February 2013 and got 524,000 views on YouTube – remarkable for a country as small as Sweden. The limited test driver spots (10,000) were quickly booked with each driver rewarded with a sample bag.
As the fourth part of “Bilmagasinet” aired, and the cat was out of the bag, Ahlgrens bilar’s Facebook page became one of Sweden’s fastest growing, with a fan base growth of 65%. As the campaign culminated, Ahlgrens bilar became the most talked about fast moving consumable brand on Swedish Facebook and achieved a “talking about this” percentage of an astonishing 31% - a great measure of how deeply involved people became in the campaign.
The true success of this campaign however was shown when the subsequent store introduction surpassed any previous Ahlgrens introduction. Fruit Hatchback has become the third most popular candy in Swedish service stores and has taken the number six spot in grocery stores.
BRAND:
Ahlgrens bilar
CATEGORY:
Confectionery/Snacks
REGION:
Sweden
DATE:
January - February 2013
AGENCY:
Starcom Mediavest
MEDIA CHANNEL:
Digital,Events,Online

Coca Cola| the “Land of Smiles”



Insight

The soft drinks market is fiercely competitive in Thailand.  Coke was a stagnant number two at 24%, well behind Pepsi which was at 40%.  In addition, a newcomer “Big Cola” has managed to grab 10% in just 5 years, growing faster than Coke. Coke was not even on top of mind amongst core target drinkers and consumer relevancy was on the wane.
To add insult to injury, Coke sales were heavily affected at the end of 2011 from some of the worst floods in Thailand’s history, isolating two thirds of the population and submerging buildings and factories under water. Bangkok was paralyzed and Coke ran out of stock as manufacturing was brought to a halt.  70 million Thais were plunged into crisis.
Right after the crisis, Coke’s biggest selling opportunity is to provide refreshment during the hot, dry summers in Thailand. The global communication platform of Coke is “Happiness” which is localized as “Summer Fun” during peak sales season.  However, given that the country is just recovering from one of the worst floods in recent history, “Summer Fun” was terribly inappropriate. We had to find a new way to connect Coke with its consumers to revitalize its brand image and sales.

Strategy

Thailand is known, for good reason, as the “Land of Smiles” but these floods in Thailand just added to the many crises the country has had to endure in recent years and pushed the nation to the edge. Thais became overly cautious about the future.  For the national psyche, the floods really were a watershed.
Although only two-thirds of Thais were directly affected by the floods, everyone was emotionally affected such that Thailand’s Gross Domestic Happiness plunged almost 10% to its lowest point yet after the floods in January 2012.
For more than 65 years, Coke has been the ambassador of “Happiness” in Thailand so we wanted to bring Smiles back to the Land and give Thai people a boost to their confidence, taking the lead in moving the country forward again.
As the crisis unfolded, millions of people were relying heavily on TV and the internet to get minute-by-minute updates both from official news outlets and social media. News spread far and wide across the country, increasing the ratings by 16% for news programs on TV.  Digital media became the real time crisis center. We noticed that during the first day when the floods hit, the number of twitter messages soared to 3.3 million tweets, the highest tweets ever in a day for Thailand. 
Media was oversaturated by news of the disaster, adding to gloomy mood of the country.  Thus, to reverse the tide of bad news, we needed to inject as many positive stories & messages to uplift the country’s mood.  Coke initiated the “Million Reasons to Believe in Thailand” campaign, aimed at recharging the people’s confidence in these difficult times.  We encouraged all Thais to become our happiness ambassadors by sharing encouraging messages and good news to their countrymen directly affected by this disaster.

Execution

Initiative set up the first and largest 4D interactive illumination display, integrating light, sound, animation and effects on one of the tallest buildings in the heart of Bangkok to serve as a beacon of hope that could be seen across the entire city.  Consumers were invited to send their stories how they overcame their personal tragedy and send encouraging messages that appeared on the building in real time.
National pride picked up.  Everyone felt a sense of belonging as they shared their stories and messages on social network sites, becoming an online phenomenon.  A total of 137 million engagements transpired over the Coke Facebook page, which became the central storage of happiness stories.
The trend to replace bad news with stories of hope attracted mass attention that was further reinforced into a partnership with evening news programs on the 2 biggest TV stations, top national cable TV and radio channels by making daily good news into a permanent feature on their news programs.
At the end of the campaign period, the Hall of Happiness was built, an exhibit in the Digital Gateway Mall whose roof was wrapped to resemble the iconic Coke bottle, essentially creating the biggest Coke bottle on the planet.  The exhibit featured every message shared by every Thai on the Facebook page and previously flashed on the giant display to show the world that Thailand has never been stronger and ready to move forward via a giant Coke bottle filled with “millions of happiness stories.”

Results

- More than 1 million Thais shared their happiness through the campaign
- 137 million engagements with the campaign through Coke and social network sites
- Awareness of the “Million Reasons to Believe in Thailand” reached 92% of Thais
- Even as Thailand GDP stands at a minus 4.2%, Coke sales hit an all-time high of 29 million unit cases sold for the month of March 2012
- Coke market share increased from 24% to 30% through this social relevance campaign, narrowing the gap against Pepsi whose market share dropped from 40% to 32%
At the end, there are so many reasons to believe that Thailand is a country of opportunity, creativity and prosperity. There are no prizes to be won for participating in this campaign just simply the well-wishing messages coming from the heart of every Thai. 
As the happiness ambassador, Coke's utmost achievement is to proudly say it made “Thailand, The Land of Smile” once again. (Thailand’s Gross Domestic Happiness went up from 66% to 75% at the end of the campaign – ABAC POLL)


BRAND:
Coca Cola
CATEGORIES:
Drinks (non-alcoholic)
FMCG
REGION:
Thailand
DATE:
March - May 2012
AGENCY:
Initiative Thailand
MEDIA CHANNEL:
Experiential,Out-of-Home


Insight

Zest, a P&G body soap product, wanted to connect with consumers in an innovative and never-done-before way, to let them know that Zest was a body soap that was truly magical beyond its core benefits of only providing cleanliness and freshness. Thanks to previous campaigns, consumers understood the benefits of the product but lacked an emotional reason to use Zest.
Starcom decided to appeal to people’s inner unfulfilled dreams with a content platform that allowed themselves to reveal their deepest desires.  And what better place to transform and really show what’s under their skin than: The Shower.
With “Descubre lo que hay bajo tu piel con Zest” (Discover what is under your skin with Zest,) the agency re-created those private moments where people unveiled their inner desires.

Strategy

For the most part, advertising messages about soap product are always about “beauty, cleanliness, or being refreshed.” These messages are repetitive and only address the functional benefits of the brand, not the emotional rewards for the consumer. Although consumers want to feel clean, showering had become a much-needed ritual where a lot of unique and strange things happened – more than just singing a favourite song.
From Starcom’s research, they discovered that the shower was a place where secrets came alive, like a confession booth. It had become a sanctuary where people relive their desires, dreams, fears and unfulfilled business. So by capturing those moments, Zest reminded consumers that in the shower, it was always there to listen to their stories – no matter how zany.
Shower Stories lie at the intersection where the product meets the consumer at its most vulnerable moment, encouraging emotional transformation. These stories lay a foundation for developing a content strategy that is tangible, relatable, immersive, memorable and emotional for the consumer.

Execution

Shower Stories was an original production of six episodes aired on national TV. The agency also created the Zest YouTube-branded channel to reach more people for social impact and measurement. The stories were innovative because they were based on the idea that people let go of their inhibitions and reflect on their inner desires in the shower.  While Zest “uncovers what’s under your skin,” it also lets you discover your heart.
After the first segment aired on YouTube, Zest received an unprecedented amount of stories from people telling them what they did when they were in the shower. Some of the real-life stories were racy, others were just plain funny, but the all of them included the soap as their only companion, their key audience during the shower.
The agency also took the concept to retail. At stores where people bought Zest, mock shower booths were installed, with a microphone, shower cap, towels, hair wigs and other shower-related props. Everyone, including kids, adults, young adults, all where suddenly interested in reliving their own shower stories. They took a bath in the in-store mock-shower, in front of everyone, just to get their picture taken and later share with friends and families.
Suddenly the branded-channel called attention with more than a million views. Zest decided to open the conversation directly with their audience to maximize the viewing experience. The brand invited people to take a shower with Zest to uncover what is under their skin and share it with the world – people shared their amazing stories on YouTube - and because they were water-conscious, they asked that showers were limited to one minute.

Results

The agency created a content platform to remind them that it was okay to dream big or overcome their fears, even if just for one minute.  The stories were not only engaging but viral in nature as people ran with the desire to create their own stories via video uploads, revealing their dreams to their friends or to the world.  The relevancy of this content opened doors for Paid, Owned and Earned Media to garner unprecedented results.
“Shower Stories” validated the effectiveness of communicating a simple yet meaningful brand message, one that’s driven by content and community engagement. Sharing can reinvigorate a brand even in the face of fierce competition and familiar product features.
If the campaign provided at least 1 million people with a refreshing smile or moment of reflection, then the project was a success. Zest’s YouTube channel has earned 2.4 million unique views to date and built a community who shares real-life confessions and heartfelt messages. Fans surprised and delighted the brand with tales of running away from office life or showering in their clothes.
Of course, it doesn’t hurt to move the bottom line. Since the start of the campaign, Zest’s sales have increased by 23%.
This campaign was awarded 'Best Use of Content' at The Festival of Media LatAm Awards 2013.

    BRAND:
    Zest
    BRAND OWNER:
    Procter & Gamble
    CATEGORY:
    Toiletries/Cosmetics
    REGION:
    Mexico
    DATE:
    October - December 2012
    AGENCIES:
    Starcom Mediavest
    Publicis
    MEDIA CHANNEL:
    Experiential,Digital,Events,Online,Out-of-Home

    KFC Add Hope | The Journey of Hope

    Idea

    Today, there are millions of children around the world that don’t having their basic needs met, thousands of them in South Africa. Through no fault of their own, children are hungry - for love, security, education, food.
    In 2009 KFC recognised this, and put into action the initiative now known as Add Hope. KFC Add Hope is an in-store mechanic that gives customers an opportunity to donate ZAR2 towards feeding hungry children. It’s a way to show the world that big brands can be about more than the bottom line. It’s a way to show that multi-national organisations are capable of capturing and mobilising the spirit of giving, the spirit of sharing, the spirit of truly affecting change in the societies where they function.
    In 2011 the brand put in a mammoth effort and raised ZRR9.6 million. Every cent of which went directly into filling empty tummies.
    In 2012 KFC commissioned adventurer Riaan Manser, to do the Journey of Hope: a 4100km expedition around the country. In just two months, Riaan cycled the word “hope” across the South African map on half the calories he needed. He would stop in at charities along the way, inspiring children and showing the public the difference a single meal could make, if only they just Added Hope.
    And they did. Last year KFC raised R12.6 million. This means that 40 000 children have food every month because of the brand’s commitment to change the world in which it operates.

    Production

    The nature of the Journey of Hope was fast paced. MediaEdge had to film as Riaan Manser was cycling because the schedule did not allow them to re-shoot anything. From the date he started the Journey of Hope (14-09-2012), he had to cycle 130km’s, every day to arrive at the final destination and event on time (02-11-2012). From the 14-09-2012, when the Journey of Hope started, MediaEdge had 12 television deadlines. Meaning they needed to film, edit, grade, mix and telestream to the broadcaster: 1 episode and 1 promo per week for the following 6 weeks.
    The on the road Production team consisted of a Production Manager and Production Coordinator. The DOP had a camera assistant. The Producer and Director would join at each charity. The entire Journey of Hope was filmed using 3 Canon DSLR cameras and various lenses to capture Riaan Manser’s struggle and the beautiful South African landscape. MediaEdge opted for the DSLR cameras due to their fantastic image quality, the interchangeable lenses and their compact size.
    The Director and DOP were selected for their incredible vision, experience and delivery of quality under extreme pressure. The episodes were edited on FCP and colouring was done by a professional telecine company. The audio of each episode was given the attention of a TVC. Each episode underwent 4 phases of approvals, spread across agency, client and broadcaster. All in 7 days.

    Brand fit

    KFC is a QSR and the idea sparked for them. KFC believed that their central business - feeding people - could also be the point of contact where they could make an impact to make the world a better place.
    The Journey of Hope TV series brought the work that they do to alleviate the hunger of South Africa’s underprivileged and forgotten children to life. MediaEdge highlighted the scale, scope and reach of their effort by creating an epic solo cycling expedition that literally spelt the word ‘hope’ across the country. The agency showed the devastating impact of malnutrition by only providing Riaan Manser, the celebrity explorer, with half the calories his body needed to sustain his effort. Lastly, they brought the impact of a ZAR2 donation, the amount of money KFC requires to provide a meal to a starving child, to life by showing the stores of hope that have sprouted from the work that Add Hope has done over the past couple of years.

    Results

    Engagement:
    TV Viewership: 1.2mil
    Online views: 5787
    581 people participated in a total of 1831 conversations about the campaign.
    There were 4.45mil opportunities to see the conversation.
    The campaign generated ZAR7 mil worth of earned media at an ROI of 1:34.
    ZAR12 mil worth’s donations were collected in 2012 – which translates to 6mil meals in 2013. An increase of 33% from 2011
    BRAND:
    KFC Add Hope
    BRAND OWNER:
    KFC
    CATEGORY:
    Food
    REGION:
    South Africa
    DATE:
    October - November 2012
    AGENCY:
    YUM
    MEDIA CHANNEL:
    Digital,TV

    NSW Health | Creating A Media Channel To Fight Hepatitis C


    Insight

    Hepatitis C is often misunderstood as only a concern for “junkies”, and those who associate with dirty needles. A key audience that had a misconception around hepatitis C was 18-24 year olds. In fact only 5% saw themselves at any risk.  (Source: TNS for NSW Government)
    This demonstrated a problem, how can you hope to make a message stick with a famously hard-to-reach group when the message is about something they feel is someone else’s problem? A big budget awareness campaign targeting all of the 18-24 year olds in NSW wasn’t an option; the budget was just $200k. Mediacom had to be clever with the money by closely relating the message to occasions where Hep C is contracted. This was the key task.
    The agency needed to understand the times and places that young people were most at risk of contracting Hepatitis C. Research showed that an important setting for risk was parties, where people who were not regular drug users got caught up in the heat of the moment and ended up sharing a needle when recreational drug use escalated, as the party evolved.
    It was clear that as a party developed they started making decisions based on different parameters.  This lead us to a clear insight: Decisions that increase the risk of hepatitis C are made in the heat-of-the-moment, not when in a cold, considered state.

    Strategy

    Enter The Party. Delivering the Hepatitis C message in the most impactful way meant doing it when they were in a heat-of-the-moment mindset.  You can’t buy media at parties so the question was, how would the agency get people into a drug-sampling-party-immersed mindset in a government media campaign? It needed to put them in harm’s way without being in harm’s way.
    Mediacom achieved the heat-of-the-moment mindset in a virtual way by basing the whole campaign online. Its audience being internet hungry 18-24 year olds added further logic to this decision.
    The campaign had two parts:
    1. An immersive virtual party.
    2. Online media and messaging inviting and tempting the audience to the party.
    With a spend of just $200k the agency single-mindedly approached just one media partner, Mi9, to deliver the most added value. This media inventory and advertorials all pushed to the main part of the campaign; an interactive party experience that we created at entertheparty.com.au.

    Execution

    1. An Immersive Virtual Party: The agency created a realistic (Facebook integration so you were there with your friends), interactive (user-defined journey through the party) and appealing (styling, music and locations closely matched to real life parties), to ensure it was a party the audience wanted to go to. The results will show you that it was.
    The party-goer had to make decisions that started tame- e.g. “do you want to hang with your friends in the kitchen or backyard”- and then escalated to the more risky and Hep C relevant- e.g. “do you want to get a home tattoo”, cumulating with a scene in a bedroom with the question “would you share a needle?”.  
    In this heat-of-the-moment, late-stage party mindset it delivered the key message about the situations in which the viewer would personally be at risk of contracting Hepatitis C. From here the party-goer had the option to re-enter the party, explore different routes, or share the party on Facebook.
    2. How to get people to the party: Earned media was key but the Mi9 partnership was used to access relevant environments such as Zoo, Celebrity Fix, Music Fix, Cleo, Cosmo, and behavioural targeting to seek out young party-goers. This consisted of banner ads that were first person, real video shots of the party, as if you were looking right through the window of the house.  They invited you to “enter the party”.

    Results

    Brad Kemp, Senior Marketing Officer, NSW Health, said: “We loved the agencies unique thinking in answering this brief. We are currently investigating ways to roll out this idea to a larger audience. We look forward to the agency continuing to challenge our thinking, as work such as this really does change the way we think about communications.”
    The campaign was relevant to the target audience; 27% of NSW 18-24 year olds agreed with the statement “Hepatitis C is relevant to me” after the activity compared to 5% who viewed themselves as being at risk before the activity. (Source: TNS for NSW Government Campaign Evaluation; January 2013)
    It reached a wide audience despite a tiny spend; 20% of NSW 18-24 year olds participating in the evaluation research recalled seeing the communication. (Source: TNS Campaign Evaluation; January 2013)
    It made specific messages stick; 69% of young people exposed to the party reported being more informed of the specific factors to contracting Hep C. (Source: Millward Brown; October 2012)
    It created a relevant and memorable environment; 65% said they would refer to this campaign if a friend ever suggested the idea of injecting drugs. (Source: TNS Campaign Evaluation; January 2013)
    BRAND:
    NSW Health
    CATEGORY:
    Pharmaceuticals/Healthcare
    REGION:
    Australia
    DATE:
    July - August 2013
    AGENCY:
    MediaCom
    MEDIA CHANNEL:
    Online

    Björn Borg | Björn Borg Party Training

    Insight

    Björn Borg is Swedish for “David”.
    The sportswear category is dominated with brands like Nike and Adidas, world-renowned titans of both the category and marketing. Björn Borg also makes sportswear, but it has established itself primarily for its line of underwear. Unfortunately for Björn Borg, a trend of personal training has swept through its core markets and the hype and pretentiousness behind these global giants of sportswear came along with it.
    Björn Borg was set up for a David vs. Goliath clash against these sportswear makers in its own backyard, but these global giants sell performance and winning for a living and aren’t used to losing. They play a game where the odds are in their favour. But as they invaded Björn Borg’s territory, Starcom Mediavest Group wanted to show them that Björn Borg sportswear plays something different altogether.

    Strategy

    Choice: “Winning” or “Winning and Looking Good”.
    The goal most people have when they train or work out is to look good – a trim physique and big muscles are more attractive than the alternative. They’re trying to impress others outside of the gym and while they’re at the gym as well. Having the right swag and fit of apparel is as essential as knowing the latest exercises and dietary supplements. But Björn Borg, with its heritage from sport, knows that although the clothes are essential it’s the psychology of how you feel that’s even more important.
    These people have a separate goal than just trying to win, so SMG wanted to make Björn Borg sportswear stand for something else besides coming out on top and created the idea of “party training.”
    Working out requires people to have free time which can also be spent enjoying oneself as well. Essentially, “Should I train or should I party?” It created true value and empowered them to do both.

    Execution

    What You’re Really Training For: To Party
    The agency teamed up with online party and training enthusiast Ron Allen to create the world's first Party Trainer. It wanted people to realise that their real motivation for training is to look good when you go out to have fun with others.
    To show its new sportswear collection in a cool way across all markets, SMG made the Björn Borg Tumblr page the hub for Party Training. It created a series of instructional videos of Ron Allen instructing people in how to Party Train — dressed in Björn Borg sportswear, of course. Tumblr even helped to re-skin the page and loved the design so much that the brand was able to editorially promote its videos on its home page.

    With Björn Borg’s devoted fans ready and willing to spread the message, SMG created a way to let them create gifs of their Party Training by using LoopCam. This smart phone application captures and makes moveable images allowed fans to share their personal Party Training routine with one click to the Party Training hub. The reward? A chance to win a Party Training for a full year and a collection of the new Björn Borg sportswear.

    Results

    Under assault from the Goliaths of the sportswear industry, Björn Borg proved that Party Training was the way to go, with sales skyrocketing over 25% internationally.
    Virally, it generated over 2.5 million views of the instructional videos and over 60,000 unique visitors to the Party Training tumblr page.
    The Party Training moves have been shared more than 40,000 times on Tumblr. And, it received enormous press coverage, equal to €350,000 ($479,000) in its target communities (fitness, fashion, gay, students).
    Most importantly, people are having more fun combining partying and training.
    BRAND:
    Björn Borg
    CATEGORIES:
    Accessories/Clothing/Footwear
    Sport/Leisure
    REGION:
    Europe
    DATE:
    October - December 2012
    AGENCY:
    Starcom Mediavest
    MEDIA CHANNEL:
    Digital,Online

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