HOW CHARACTER WON THE RUGBY WORLD CUP FOR GUINNESS

Short List
TitleHOW CHARACTER WON THE RUGBY WORLD CUP FOR GUINNESS
BrandDIAGEO
Product/ServiceGUINNESS UK & IRELAND
Category A01. Creative Effectiveness
Entrant AMVBBDO London, UNITED KINGDOM
Idea Creation AMVBBDO London, UNITED KINGDOM
Credits
Name Company Position
Bridget Angear AMVBBDO Chief Strategy Officer
Craig Mawdsley AMVBBDO Chief Strategy Officer
David Edwards AMVBBDO Head of Stragegy
Tom Claridge AMVBBDO Strategy Director
Paul Brazier AMVBBDO Chief Creative Officer
Adrian Rossi AMVBBDO Executive Creative Director
Alex Grieve AMVBBDO Executive Creative Director
Dave Buchanan AMVBBDO Creative Director
Mike Hanett AMVBBDO Creative Director
Rob Messeter AMVBBDO Creative Director
Mike Crowe AMVBBDO Creative Director
Nick Godden AMVBBDO Agency Producer
Ben & Dan Tubby Tubby Brothers & Stink London Director
Ben & Dan Tubby Tubby Brothers & Stink London Director
Ben & Dan Tubby Tubby Brothers & Stink London Director
James Cobbold and Ben Gulvin 750MPH Sound Engineer

Brief Explanation

The Guinness brand idea is ‘Made of More’. A celebration of people with substance, character and integrity because Guinness is a beer with more substance, character and integrity than other mainstream beers. One of the main activation pillars within Made of More is rugby. It’s a sport characterised by those same values, and Guinness has a long and proud association with the game. The problem we needed to solve in 2015 was that England were hosting the Rugby World Cup. That might not sound like too much of a problem, but it meant that numerous brands would be jumping on the rugby bandwagon at the time of the tournament. And to make matters worse, Guinness weren’t an official sponsor, Heineken were. At a time when all eyes would be on the game, Guinness risked weakening its strong association with Rugby. This couldn’t be allowed to happen, so Guinness came up with the very clear objective to win the battle of the Rugby World Cup advertisers – and hijack the rugby world cup. The insight we used to shape our thinking was that the physical nature of rugby is the most remarkable feature of the sport, and is therefore what most other advertisers would use as the focus of their communications. Guinness therefore needed to uncover rugby stories that were removed from, and indeed could eclipse any story of mere rugby physicality. Rugby stories Made of More. And we found our best example in Gareth Thomas. A Welsh rugby legend who was the first openly gay, professional rugby player. What’s more, he chose to come out whilst still playing for and captaining his country, as opposed to waiting until he’d retired. In digging deeper into his story, we learnt that Thomas had suffered huge emotional turmoil during the years he’d kept his sexuality secret. He desperately wanted to be honest about himself, but was terrified he would be ostracised from the sport he loved. Beyond hero broadcast content, we also took out approach of telling Rugby stories Made of More into social media, cherry picking the greatest examples of rugby character from the tournament and creating content around them in real time. Overall the campaign delivered for the brand and business, defending market share and establishing Guinness as the beer of the World Cup – despite not being an official sponsor.