A KISS IS A STAMP

Bronze Eurobest

Case Film

Presentation Image

TitleA KISS IS A STAMP
BrandPOSTNL
Product/ServicePOSTAL SERVICE
Category B03. Consumer Services
Entrant Company JOE PUBLIC TAKE-AWAY ADVERTISING Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Advertising Agency JOE PUBLIC TAKE-AWAY ADVERTISING Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Production Company SYNERGIQUE Haarlem, THE NETHERLANDS
Credits
Name Company Position
Antoine Houtsma Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Creative Director
Bart Oostindie Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Creative Director
Maarten van Kempen Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Copywriter
Matthijs Groos Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Art Director
Rikkert Boog Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Art Director
Jeroen van Eck Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Planner
Jolies van Rijn Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Client Services Director
Merel Groenenboom Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Accountproducer
Denise Willigers Joe Public Take-Away Advertising Accountproducer
Pepijn Borgwat Synergique Producer/editor
Susanne Opstal Synergique Director
Kasper de Bont Synergique DOP
Laura Solleveld Synergique Sound
Eren Önsoy Synergique Music Artist
Mark-Jan Pieterse PostNL Manager Marketing/E-Commerce
Alexandra Jongkind PostNL Marketing Manager Consumer Market
Mirjam Paauw PostNL Communication Advisor

The Campaign

Hard times for postal companies: digital is taking over and the millennial generation hardly ever writes a postcard. POSTNL, the Dutch postal company, wanted people to reconnect with real mail. There was virtually no budget for a campaign. So the idea had to rely completely on PR and going viral on social media. So it had to be truly newsworthy and inspire people to act. Strategy was to focus on Valentines Day, the most personal mail event. How to make it even more personal in a way digital mail could never match? WITH A KISS! The day before Valentines Day Dutch people could send their Valentine card with a lipstick kiss instead of a stamp! Special software recognized the lipstick kisses. After the press release that announced this global first things exploded. The kiss was trending topic for several days. All major newspapers, TV news and online news sites reported extensively. It was picked up by BBC world news and German TV as well as through written and online media on all continents. Results were staggering. With a budget under €10,000, about 3 times more Valentines cards were sent. Because of all the attention, even paid Valentines cards with a stamp increased 40% (probably men :-))! The brand values of PostNL in tracking research showed the strongest increase ever. PostNL’s Valentines kiss is a truly newsworthy idea that traveled solely on PR and social media and outperformed any other campaign in the history of PostNL that DID have a multi-million media budget.

The Brief

Research shows especially Millennials increasingly do not see any added value in real mail compared to digital mail. PostNL wanted therefore people to truly reconnect with real mail, which meant: - Inspire people to send a postcard again - By doing so making people experience that real mail is far more personal than digital mail can ever be. As a brand objective, PostNL wanted to boost its brand values as a result of the campaign.

Execution

Big Idea: sending Valentines cards with lipstick kisses instead of stamps! Making it far more personal and intimate than ever before, something that could never be done digitally. PostNL had to rewrite all its recognition software so all possible lipstick kisses would be identified. After extensive testing it was decided to go ahead with this global first: on February 13 all postcards and letters ‘sealed with a kiss’ that were mailed before 5 PM would be delivered the very next day! Since it was crucial people would understand the idea, a romantic online explanatory video was shot. Point of view being a postcard, we see a lovely girl writing on and eventually kissing the screen. This video was included in the press release four days before Valentines Day. After that, it was out of our hands. With no ATL support, being completely dependent on PR and social media.

The press release immediately caused an online tsunami; a trending topic for days. All Dutch newspapers, major TV news shows and online news sites reported extensively. A famous radio DJ spontaneously asked his female listeners to send him as many kissed cards as possible. In Dutch schools children were assigned to create kissed Valentines cards after which entire classes mailed them collectively. BBC World News and German TV made reports from the PostNL distribution centre. It all lead to a huge response: - Almost three times as much Valentines mail was sent. - Even an increase of 40% in paid Valentines mail (with stamp). Probably men! - In tracking, the brand values of PostNL showed the highest increase ever. PostNL’s Valentines kiss is a truly newsworthy idea that traveled solely on PR and social media and outperformed any other ATL campaign in the history of PostNL with media budgets of millions.

The Strategy

Strategically is was decided to focus on Valentines Day since this already is the most personal mail event. How could it become even more personal in a way digital mail could never be? Basically everyone capable of sending a post card was target group, with a special focus on Millenials since this generation hardly ever uses real mail anymore. Given the budget (virtually nothing) and the target focus, it meant the idea had to be both newsworthy (PR) as well as inspirational (viral on social media). Consequently we strongly focused on Twitter (sharing) and on a strong press release.