SAY IT TO MY FACE - AN INITIATIVE FROM TAGESSCHAU
Title | SAY IT TO MY FACE - AN INITIATIVE FROM TAGESSCHAU |
Brand | ARD-AKTUELL/TAGESSCHAU.DE |
Product/Service | TAGESSCHAU.DE |
Category |
E02. Social Purpose |
Entrant
|
LA RED Hamburg, GERMANY
|
Idea Creation
|
LA RED Hamburg, GERMANY
|
Production
|
ARD Hamburg, GERMANY
|
Additional Company
|
4=1 Hamburg, GERMANY
|
Credits
Matthias Maurer |
LA RED GmbH |
Managing Director |
Jan Köpke |
LA RED GmbH |
Creative Director |
Daniel Klose |
LA RED GmbH |
Creative Director |
Hannah Johnson |
LA RED GmbH |
Senior Concept |
Lucas Florian |
LA RED GmbH |
Digital Strategist |
Kevin Breynck |
LA RED GmbH |
Technical Director |
Malte Klaedtke |
LA RED GmbH |
Junior Concept |
Ilka Klingenberg |
LA RED GmbH |
Account Director |
Marjan Haider |
LA RED GmbH |
Junior Art Director |
The Campaign
Why do people write so much more aggressively on Social Media than they speak in real life?
Our theory: online haters are hiding behind their computer screens. So would they have the courage to come out of their anonymity to say their hate to the face of those affected? That’s what we wanted to find out with the project „Say it to my face!" - a Facebook live experiment in online hate speech.
For the first time, we invited haters to confront their victims to repeat what they wrote, whilst looking directly into their eyes.
Creative Execution
We asked three journalists regularly on the receiving end of anonymous insults – including the ARD’s Editor-in-Chief Kai Gniffke – to share a video commentary about a controversial subject on the Tagesschau Facebook page. Subjects that we knew would provoke a wave of hate. And they did: hundreds of hate comments flooded in.
Through hypertargeting on Facebook two days later, we were able to present precisely these hate commentators a video challenging them to join the journalist they’d written to in a live video chat. To say what they had just written, right to their faces.
At the same time, we published a vertical video ad developed and targeted especially to drive awareness amongst millennials.
On the following day, the Facebook live event took place. For one hour,live on Facebook, for three days after another.
Finally, a short video documentation was developed and targeted to millennials on Facebook and YouTube.
What happened? The haters did indeed come. But hardly any had the courage to actually say what they’d written. Even when put on the spot. Apparently, it wasn’t easy to speak in the raw tone of their comments when looking their counterpart in the eye.
The campaign reached 11 million on Facebook alone, including every news and current-affairs interested millennial in Germany. Over 3.1 million people watched the campaign videos, with 460,000 tuning in for the live sessions. Within these sessions alone, we received 18,000 comments. In fact, the interaction rate on the Tagesschau Facebook profile more than doubled to 1.1 million throughout the entire campaign.
But perhaps most crucially, we finally found out why online haters write so cruelly. Not because they hate the person they are commenting on, but because they want to be heard.
Our first communicative target group: “millennials” – young people aged 21-35 interested in politics and current-affairs. This target group is increasingly frustrated that comments on one of their main platforms, Facebook, are being dominated by a small, hateful minority. We used this insight to get in touch with them right there, and establish our relevance. By demonstrating to them that we are fighting for something they too want: a better discussion culture on the internet.
In order to do this, we knew we had to challenge exactly those haters that had recently commented on the Tagesschau Facebook page to enter an eye to eye dialogue. This was our second communicative target group: the haters. We reached them with a specially developed Facebook targeting strategy (see digital supporting content).
By the Tagesschau taking a stance on such a polarising topic, we speculated that a broad PR echo was likely.