Title | CRAH TEST |
Brand | THE FRENCH ROAD SAFETY DELEGATION |
Product/Service | ROAD SECURITY |
Category |
D03. Use of Social & Digital Platforms |
Entrant
|
DDB PARIS, FRANCE
|
Idea Creation
|
DDB PARIS, FRANCE
|
Production
|
STINK DIGITAL Paris, FRANCE
|
Production 2
|
STUDIO 5 Paris, FRANCE
|
Credits
Alexander Kalchev |
DDB Paris |
Executive Creative Director |
Alexis BENBEHE |
DDB Paris |
Creative Director |
Pierre MATHONAT |
DDB Paris |
Creative Director |
Jeanne Taillard |
DDB Paris |
Copywriter |
Timothy Alexandre |
DDB Paris |
Art Director |
Corinne Persch |
DDB Paris |
Agency Producer |
Vincent Léorat |
DDB Paris |
Vice-Président |
Nicolas Kabassakalis |
DDB Paris |
Account Manager |
Andéole Vu-Dinh-Ba |
DDB Paris |
Account Executive |
Gregory Panteix |
Stink Digital |
Executive Producer |
Bettina Diss |
Stink Digital |
Production Director |
Stanislas Liban |
Stink Digital |
Photographer |
Why is this work relevant for Brand Experience & Activation ?
The Crash Test is usually a cold and scientific experiment. We transformed it into a different kind of experience that triggered a lot of emotional response by people who witnessed it, generating awareness and discussion around the subject of wearing a seatbelt.
Background
The French Road Safety Delegation assignment is to lower the number of deaths on the road by addressing all their causes. In 2016, failure to use seatbelts is still a key factor: it causes nearly 10% of lethal accidents in France (354 out of 3,655 people). Today, 2 of 3 children are not correctly attached in the car or not attached at all. This is why The French Road Safety Delegation organised the first crash-test opened to national press and television of the decade, featuring both attached and non-attached crash-test dummies.
Describe the creative idea
We wanted to take advantage of this national event and increase the reach of the message.
The first step was to make it public, by broadcasting it live on Facebook. Crash-tests are accurate accident simulations, but are seen as cold and scientific, and do not engage people emotionally. So we asked ourselves, how do we make people and journalists care about these plastic dummies, as if they were real people ? So we added a new sequence in the live, just before the impact :
A flashback of the crash-test dummies happy family life. It transformed a cold demonstration into a human drama, in a few seconds. Then, we used the data of the crash-test to write the story of the family after the accident on social media.
Describe the strategy
When it comes to road safety, especially regarding the seatbelt use, everyone is concerned and has a part of responsibility. Initially, people were invited to see the crash test on Facebook live. Aside from the fact that it is quite uncommon to broadcast live this kind of events, they were not expecting more than a regular crash test. No one expected to see the flashback of the dummies living happily as a real family, and to identify themselves emotionally just before the terrible impact.
Describe the execution
The campaign was executed together with the Utac-Ceram, the test facility in charge of the crash-test organization and commissioned by the Road Safety Organisation.
With their help, we were able to reproduce the real conditions of an accident with non-attached people in a car, and to use the data captured by the dummies sensors. We analyzed them with the help of a traumatologist to tell the real consequences, physical and psychological, of the accident. The car of our Dummy Family was captured by 4 internal and 4 external cameras. We received their video streams and were able to automate the edit in real-time by knowing timings and angles in advance. This way, we were able to inject in the edit the sequence of the family flashbacks where we wanted and broadcast it.
List the results
The crash-test on Facebook live was seen more than 396,000 times.?
Over 6,890,000 people were exposed to the message and there are more than 5,000 shares on the entire story. The various publications generated hundreds of poignant comments reflecting the power of the message. Most people talked of the dummies as if they were real humans. The engagement rate on the Road Safety Organisation’ Facebook account reached 7% (vs an average of 2%). TV Channels and press journalists were present during the crash-test and widely relayed the operation.