THE ALPHABET OF ILLITERACY
Title | THE ALPHABET OF ILLITERACY |
Brand | PEARSON |
Product/Service | LEARNING COMPANY |
Category |
B09. Celebrity Endorsement |
Entrant
|
WEBER SHANDWICK London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Idea Creation
|
FCB INFERNO London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
PR
|
WEBER SHANDWICK London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Production
|
FCB INFERNO London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Credits
Emma Thompson |
Weber Shandwick |
Managing Director, Consumer |
Stuart Lambert |
Weber Shandwick |
Strategy and Creative Director |
Chris Hogwood |
Weber Shandwick |
Director |
Josie Whittle |
Weber Shandwick |
Account Director |
Olivia McCulla |
Weber Shandwick |
Account Manager |
Lucinda Walker |
Weber Shandwick |
Account Executive |
Lincoln Hill |
Weber Shandwick |
Account Executive |
Lauren Hall |
Weber Shandwick |
Account Executive |
Owen Lee |
FCB Inferno |
Chief Creative Officer |
Julia Ferrier |
FCB Inferno |
Senior Art Director |
Martin McAllister |
FCB Inferno |
Senior copywriter |
Chris Baker |
FCB Inferno |
Head of Strategy |
Nic Willison |
FCB Inferno |
Senior Strategist |
Tom Kingham |
FCB Inferno |
Business Director |
Helena Georghiou |
FCB Inferno |
Account Director |
Olivia Pearson |
FCB Inferno |
Senior Account Manager |
Charlie Griffith |
FCB Inferno |
Account Manager |
Charlotte McConnell |
FCB Inferno |
Broadcast Producer |
Kate Grenfell |
FCB Inferno |
Broadcast Producer |
Laura Visick |
FCB Inferno |
Social Media Manager |
Nick Vassou |
FCB Inferno |
Senior Interactive Designer |
Kit Peebles |
FCB Inferno |
Interactive Producer |
Kate James |
Pearson |
Chief Corporate Affairs Officer |
Emilie Colker |
Pearson |
Vice President, Brand & Social Impact Strategy & Campaigns |
Jen Young |
Pearson |
Director, Social Impact Programs |
Emma Buckle |
Pearson |
Community and Digital Marketing Manager |
Chris Treen |
Pearson |
Community and Digital Marketing Manager |
Chris Treen |
Pearson |
Community and Digital Marketing Manager |
Ivana Martinovic |
Pearson |
PR and Marketing Manager |
Rochelle Bond |
Pearson |
Project Manager |
The Campaign
The campaign had one simple insight: while people understand, when prompted, that illiteracy leads to bigger problems, illiteracy itself does not resonate as a “cause”.
We had to shock people, politicians and media out of apathy if we were to go beyond raising awareness to inciting action.
The creative idea was to take something synonymous with reading and writing, something that embodies the building blocks of learning, something childlike and innocent – the alphabet – and give it a provocative, emotional twist.
In The Alphabet of Illiteracy, each letter highlights an issue that could be tackled if literacy was improved.
In our alphabet, A is for AIDs.
B is for bloodshed.
C is for child brides. And so on.
The ad agency used this to develop a 90-second video of an animated A-Z, featuring striking designs by sculptor Wilfrid Wood, sung to the tune of a modified "A You’re Adorable".
Execution
We worked with Lily on a speech that would tell Project Literacy’s complex story in a compelling, accessible way.
We had one simple message: Illiteracy is the root cause of the world’s greatest challenges. And that if we teach everyone to read and write, we can rewrite lives.
On 23/2/16, Lily Cole delivered an impassioned speech to politicians, US ambassadorial staff, influencers and media at the Houses of Parliament in London. Big Issue founder Lord Bird told his uplifting story of growing up illiterate, taught to read in jail aged 16 by a guard.
Lily launched a petition, to be presented to the UN on World Literacy Day, 8 September, urging it to put literacy at the heart of every action to advance the Global Goals.
The event and Alphabet of Illiteracy video were supported by a paid social media campaign.
Next, we’re taking the story to the U.S.
Lily Cole was a smart choice. Her launch catapulted Project Literacy onto the media and policy agenda, laying the foundations for a global movement.
UK International Development Committee chair Stephen Twigg MP pledged to hold an enquiry into the role education plays in international development, with evidence from Project Literacy.
Since the launch, the UN has invited Project Literacy to be part of its Global Literacy Alliance. Borhene Chakroun, Chief of UNESCO Youth, Literacy and Skills Development, said: “This is how to capture the public’s imagination and create a call to action”.
Knowledge/consideration:
Thanks to Lily’s appeal, we achieved 186 pieces of high-quality media coverage, including BBC, Guardian, CNN, Channel 4, Huffington Post and Harper’s Bazaar.
Influencers we hadn’t even invited turned up to the event, including activist David Gandy, who posted pictures to his 533k Instagram followers.
Outputs:
• 12.1million video views
• Reach: 462million
• 14,352 petition signatures.
The Situation
Illiteracy is the root cause of the world’s biggest problems, including AIDS, FGM, poverty and radicalisation.
The Alphabet of Illiteracy distilled decades of academic research into a story that gave a voice to the 1-in-10 people who cannot read or write.
An impassioned speech at Parliament by Lily Cole and powerful creative (12.1 million video views) reached 462million.
The UN has now taken steps to put literacy at the heart of the sustainable development agenda, inviting Project Literacy to be part of its Global Literacy Alliance.
We haven’t eradicated global illiteracy in a month, but it’s not so invisible anymore.
The Strategy
Behind the powerful alphabet creative lay a huge volume of historic academic research into problems from crime to disease to poverty. We knew that trying to explain this story in a compelling way to journalists would be a huge challenge – we just wouldn’t get the time to communicate the complexity.
Our strategy was to find a voice. Someone who could tell the story for us, authentically, and simply.
Actress, activist, entrepreneur and mother Lily Cole, who is outspoken on the importance of education, was the perfect celebrity ambassador.
But Lily needed a platform. Something that the media, and policymakers, couldn't miss.
As the UK was the launch market (it’s also bottom of the developed world literacy tables), Parliament – the birthplace of modern democracy – was perfect. Chair of the International Development Committee, Stephen Twigg MP, agreed to invite Lily to the House of Commons to give a speech.