Title | GIVE THE RAINBOW |
Brand | MARS |
Product/Service | SKITTLES |
Category |
B02. Live Shows / Concerts / Festivals |
Entrant
|
ADAM&EVEDDB London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Idea Creation
|
ADAM&EVEDDB London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Media Placement
|
MEDIACOM London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Additional Company
|
CAIN & ABEL London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Additional Company 2
|
KING HENRY London, UNITED KINGDOM
|
Credits
Ben Priest |
adam&eveDDB |
Chief Creative Officer |
Ben Tollett |
adam&eveDDB |
Executive Creative Director |
Richard Brim |
adam&eveDDB |
Executive Creative Director |
Matt Fitch |
adam&eveDDB |
Creative |
Mark Lewis |
adam&eveDDB |
Creative |
Maebh Kelly |
adam&eveDDB |
Integrated Producer |
Emilie Verlander |
adam&eveDDB |
Experiential Producer |
Caroline Tripp |
adam&eveDDB |
Project Manager |
Fiona McArthur |
adam&eveDDB |
Managing Partner |
Brittany Lippett |
adam&eveDDB |
Account Director |
Matt Dankis |
adam&eveDDB |
Account Manager |
Jessica Lovell |
adam&eveDDB |
Joint Head of Planning |
David Mortimer |
adam&eveDDB |
Senior Planner |
Lindsey Jordan, Eloise Huntingford |
Mediacom |
Media Planners |
The Campaign
When people think of Skittles, they think of the rainbow. It’s in the "Taste the rainbow" slogan, it’s on the packaging, it’s even seen in the colours of the sweets themselves. It’s our most powerful and distinctive brand asset, but there’s a time of year when another rainbow is more important than ours – Pride’s. Rather than protect our most precious brand asset, we wanted to show Pride’s rainbow was the only one that truly mattered. We got undressed, dropped our colours and gave up our rainbow so Pride’s would take centre stage. Give the rainbow. Taste the rainbow.
Campaign Success
The redesign and rebranding of Skittles was the focal point of our campaign. It was important for everything to remain as is (font, placement etc) and simply just replace the distinctive Skittles rainbow branding with black and white keylines across the logo and pack design. We announced our gesture with an open letter to Pride, which appeared in press and as an animated video online. We stripped the rainbow from our website and social channels and our rainbow disappeared from key DOOH sites along the Pride route. We followed this through the line by rebranding our packaging and removing the colour from the sweets themselves. And, of course, we were there on the day with a black and white float partying along the route with Pride in London.
Describe the success of the promotion with both client and consumer including some quantifiable results
Ambition: build mental availability beyond TV by creating fame for the Skittles brand around Pride in London 2016. We wanted to do this as efficiently as possible, by driving maximum organic reach with as little investment as possible. Target:reach 14.5m impressions with only £35k paid media spend.
• Total impressions across all touch points: 31,192,302
• 56% of total impressions were organic: 17,436,600
• Media cost per impression: £0.001
• These figures do not include additional impressions from organic Facebook shares or articles in major publications such as The Mirror, LAD Bible, GQ, Adweek and Pride itself
• Despite all media being targeted at the UK, the campaign was seen and talked above in over 80 countries and 339 cities
• Skittles won best newcomer award at the Pride in London parade
• General sentiment across the campaign with both the LGBT community and wider millennial audience was extremely positive.
Explain why the method of promotion was most relevant to the product or service
Our ‘Give the Rainbow’ campaign encouraged consumers to actively engage with the Skittles brand via the campaign hashtag ‘#onerainbow.’ This hashtag sat across all our communications and created a platform where we encouraged users to share the campaign story. Furthermore, we specifically used the Pride in London parade to showcase our message of support. The parade was a key channel for us to interact face to face with our core millennial consumer base.
Skittles are traditionally TV-led but given our core target are becoming harder to reach through this channel alone we needed to find new ways to make an impression. Our objective was to find a relevant new occasion for Skittles that would resonate with our millennial audience. We weren’t just targeting an LGBT audience, but finding a contextually and brand relevant way to reach a broader mainstream millennial audience that we struggle to reach with TV.