PIGEON AIR PATROL

Bronze Eurobest
TitlePIGEON AIR PATROL
BrandPLUME LABS
Product/ServicePLUME LABS
Category A05. Use of Real-time Data
Entrant DIGITASLBi London, UNITED KINGDOM
Idea Creation DIGITASLBi London, UNITED KINGDOM
Credits
Name Company Position
Matt Steward DigitasLBi Managing Director
Chris Clarke DigitasLBi Chief Creative Officer, International
Pierre Duquesnoy DigitasLBi Group Creative Director
Nikki Stammers DigitasLBi Strategy Director
Helen Fuchs DigitasLBi Experience Director
Jasmin Kocur DigitasLBi Media Strategy Director
Cirine Drira DigitasLBi Content Strategist
Stuart Aitken DigitasLBi Head of Content
Katie Carruthers DigitasLBi Copywriter
Ben Sandhu DigitasLBi Design Director
Alan Chu DigitasLBi Designer
Darryl Morton DigitasLBi Lead Technologist
Kevin Mar-Molinero DigitasLBi Creative Technologist
Thomas Hill DigitasLBi Developer
David Lamb DigitasLBi Lead Producer
Julia Conroy DigitasLBi International PR & Marketing Director

The Campaign

The Pigeon Air Patrol… The world’s first flock of avian environmental crusaders, The Pigeon Air Patrol flew around London equipped with Plume’s tiny air-pollution sensors. The Patrol monitored air-quality in real time – sharing results live on Twitter as they flew. And anyone tweeting @PigeonAir received an instant update on pollution in their local area, from the nearest Patrol pigeon flying above them. The two biggest things pigeons allowed us to do were: i) Easily uncover important data during times when pollution levels are said to be the most toxic – the morning and evening rush hours, when London is otherwise gridlocked. ii) Quickly deliver localised air-pollution data in a disruptive, engaging and newsworthy way. The Pigeon Air Patrol not only made the subject of air-pollution more accessible, it made it something people wanted to talk about. It also allowed us to inject some wit and change the tone of the conversation.

– Over 6000 new pollution data points uncovered across the city in 3 days – Generating nearly 40,000 conversations online – Inspiring over 2,000 news stories globally (*highlights below) – Creating over 667 million impressions – 93% of those who engaged said they cared more about air pollution as a result, which is a key predictor of behaviour change. – Facebook Trending Topic – Crowdfunding goal exceeded inside 3 days. – Backed by the £10,000 raised, Plume Labs can now make 100 wearables for new Air Patrol members to beta test… Soon there will be a human-powered monitoring network across London – all thanks to pigeons. * Highlights list of global outlets running this story across TV, radio, print and online: Time magazine, Al Jazeera, The Guardian, Wired, the Evening Standard, TechCrunch, ITV, Discovery Channel, NPR, NBC News, Mashable, New Scientist, Washington Post, CNN, New York Post, Engadget, ABC Australia, Newsweek, Les Echos, Metro, TechRadar, Wall Street Journal, Time Out, The Independent, The Mirror, Forbes, Mail Online, BBC News, New Scientist, Fast Company, CNET, Marie Claire, Sky News and CBS.

This work has been entered into Creative Data because we collected and applied potentially life-improving air-pollution data in an imaginative, engaging way that’s never been done before. Typical city air-quality monitoring involves static equipment and mathematical techniques to estimate, or model, likely air-pollution levels between sites. Our idea both overcame this obstacle to accuracy and removed one of air pollution’s most powerful weapons – invisibility – in one fell swoop. In so doing, it reignited public debate around air pollution in London and delivered data in a more relevant and personal way.

GATHERING Previously, the means for collecting London’s air-pollution data was limited to a series of readings taken from static locations combined to form an average. Perhaps the most significant problem with this, is that an average doesn’t mean anything to an individual in a specific location, who could benefit from that specific reading. We turned this limited approach on its head by collecting hyper-local data on the move, in mid-air, to form a dynamic picture of London’s air-pollution. To do so we attached tiny, wearable pollution sensors to trained racing pigeons that followed strategic flight-paths across London. INTERPRETATION & TARGETING With our pigeons now collecting personalised air-pollution data, we then shared it in real time, using a simple pollution index, accompanied by infographics and clear, actionable advice. We did so in a colourful and light-hearted tone – thanks to a distinctive brand identity. The pigeons were released at key times for high pollution – namely, the morning and evening rush hours. The live data was used to engage people on Twitter who were already showing interest in their local areas and activities. By using a memorable hashtag and real-time platform we brought to life Plume Labs’ mission of democratising data.