SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS BENELUX Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Credits
Name
Company
Position
Norman Groenewegen
Cheil Amsterdam
Creative
Pepijn Spanjerberg
Cheil Amsterdam
Creative
Thijs de Boer
Cheil Amsterdam
Executive Creative Director
Mariska Kloezen
Cheil Amsterdam
Managing Director
Janita Veenstra
Cheil Amsterdam
Account Director
Matthijs van Schie
Cheil Amsterdam
Project Manager
Mario Piepenbrink
Mario Piepenbrink B.V.
Technical Director
Pirke Bergsma
Pirke Productions
Agency Producer
Roen Roomberg
Roen Roomberg
Strategy
Bob van de Gronde
Eyeforce
Director
Egon Feiner
Eyeforce
Producer
Aemilia van Lent
Eyeforce
Producer
Noel Schoolderman
Eyeforce
Lighting cameraman/D.O.P.
Arthur Neumeier
Eyeforce
Second cameraman
Johannes de Jong
Eyeforce
Editor
Charlie Feld
Eyeforce
Grading
Milan Scholma
Eyeforce
Online editor
Terry Devine King
Terry Devine King
Music
Woodwork
Woodwork
Animation
Jos Wabeke
Brandspanking
Post Production
Tomas Kamphuis
Freewheel Stories
Editor
Gerben van Walt Meijer
Samsung Electronics Benelux
Head of Marketing IMD
Roos Bulder
Samsung Electronics Benelux
Manager Marketing Communication & Channel Marketing IMD
Femke Koenen
Samsung Electronics Benelux
Marketing Communication Specialist
Steffany Sprong - van der Hout
Samsung Electronics Benelux
Social Media Manager
Starcom
Starcom Nederland
Media Agency
Glasnost
Glasnost
PR Agency
Background
Samsung is worldwide Olympic partner of the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang and Samsung Netherlands is sponsoring Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting, two Dutch short track skaters. Although the Netherlands has excellent speed skating results at the Olympics (35 Olympic gold medals), short track is nowhere near as successful (1 bronze/0 silver/0 gold).
The brief was to develop an idea to claim sponsorship of two Dutch Olympic short track skaters, and to keep in mind that Samsung stands for: ‘Meaningful progress comes from daring to defy barriers.’ With the tagline: Do what you can’t.
Describe the creative idea
For an innovative tech brand saying ‘do what you can’t’, we didn’t choose to just put a logo on a suit. We invented a whole new suit. A suit that enables the skaters and coach to do what they can’t: measure in real time the height at which the skater is positioned above the ice. This height is one of the most important things in skating, because the closer you are to the ice, the faster you’ll go. Until now, this has always been judged on gut feeling.
We developed the Samsung SmartSuit, equipped with sensors to measure with millimetre accuracy. The suit is designed to send data to the coach’s device, allowing him to communicate adjustments immediately to the skaters.
Describe the strategy
Innovation in sports is always a hot topic just before every Olympics. Who’s got a new invention? What’s the latest development in sports? When Samsung asked us to develop an idea to claim sponsorship of two Dutch Olympians, we developed an innovative tech contribution for the skaters. The Samsung SmartSuit.
The athletes and coach trained with the suit in secret for months. Just before the Olympics, when the buzz about innovations in sports and PyeongChang was at its peak, we brought it to the press.
We didn’t invite them to come and see Samsung’s latest invention. No, we invited them to come and discover the latest sporting innovation just before the Olympics.
After the press release, in no time more than 450 million people knew about the secret weapon. And – in the slipstream – about Samsung being a real contributing tech sponsor of the Olympic short track skaters.
Describe the execution
First we needed to know how to create value for the short track skaters, as this was the key to our success. We met the national team coach and human movement scientist for the first time in March 2017. As it turned out, one of the most important things in skating is the position of the ice skater. To measure this, we developed a suit equipped with 5 sensors that feed live body kinetic telemetry and location data to the Galaxy S8 (data) and Tab S3 (data/video/charts), even when the athletes hit 50 kilometres per hour on the ice.
The tech suit also needed to fit like a regular suit, and the data needed to be comprehensible at a glance for the coach so he could send a vibration immediately to tell the skater to adjust his position.
Once the first prototype was developed in August, the technicians and short track skaters tested and trained with the suit in secret for months. Just before the Olympics we brought the story to the press.
List the results
After the press release, in no time half a billion people knew about the secret weapon. And about Samsung being a real contributing tech sponsor. The tremendous appreciation of this unique sponsorship benefited the brand significantly; see below.
Awareness: €830,000 in free publicity in the Netherlands and €1,410,000 worldwide.
KPI: 10% growth of KPI Proud-to-Own brand value within 2 months, from 24% to 34%! (DVJ Insights).
48,100 article reads with branded content 4,765,194 impressions. 321% above benchmark.
Total key engagement rate among millennials of 1.3% (benchmark: 0.44%). Average View Through Rate online videos of 20%, which is extremely good considering the length (60 and 30 sec.). (Starcom)
No. 1 best scoring campaign in the Netherlands in terms of attractiveness, innovation and sympathy. (Motivaction)
We literally proved ‘Do What You Can’t’. During the Olympics, Knegt and Schulting won the first ever Dutch Olympic silver and gold medals for short track.