Title | BUILT FOR BELGIAN ROADS |
Brand | MITSUBISHI |
Product/Service | SUV'S |
Entrant
|
LDV UNITED Antwerp, BELGIUM
|
Idea Creation
|
LDV UNITED Antwerp, BELGIUM
|
Media Placement
|
INITIATIVE MEDIA Hoeilaart, BELGIUM
|
Media Placement 2
|
MEDIA*A Auderghem, BELGIUM
|
PR
|
OONA BENELUX Antwerp, BELGIUM
|
Credits
Dennis Vandewalle |
LDV United |
Creative Director |
Dries De bruyn |
LDV United |
Creative Director |
Jannis Min Jou |
LDV United |
Art Director |
Thomas De Boeck |
LDV United |
Copywriter |
Dimitri Mundorff |
LDV United |
Client Services Director |
Julie Oostvogels |
LDV United |
Account Director |
Ineke Beeckmans |
LDV United |
Account Manager |
Innie Tran |
LDV United |
Account Manager |
Pieter Van Schil |
LDV United |
Account Executive |
Julie Vanderbeck |
LD United |
Art Director |
Matthew Lootens |
LDV United |
Copywriter |
Jef Raeman |
LDV United |
Strategy Director |
Jeffrey Uten |
LDV United |
Design Director |
Why is this work relevant for Integrated?
Our Built for Belgian Roads-campaign was rolled out across multiple media platforms. The different media complemented and built on each other to make it as effective as possible. We rolled out in print, location specific outdoor, radio, social film, live streaming, we hijacked Waze and we even made ‘The book of #Belgianroads’.
The business results showed that it was a successful integration that helped achieve the brand purpose.
Background
The competition in the Belgian SUV sector is fierce. Mitsubishi is unknown and therefore unloved In Belgium. The new positioning of Mitsubishi 'unbreakable' provided a distinctive story for the brand. But how could we make the story relevant to potential SUV buyers in order to raise brand awareness and boost sales? We needed to do this in a hyper competitive market with competitors that have massive budgets.
Describe the creative idea
In car campaigns, you see cars in beautiful landscapes on perfect roads. But that’s not the reality. You don’t get to drive those roads. You mostly drive the Belgian roads, filled with potholes and cracks often in rainy weather. So you need a strong car to conquer them.
That brought us to the idea of ‘built for Belgian roads’. We used the poor quality of our roads to promote Mitsubishi’s solid SUV’s. So, in our campaign we always showed our cars in a realistic environment: on the bad Belgian roads.
Describe the strategy
The strategy of the campaign was built around the insight that our Belgian roads are even worse than in Rwanda. According to figures from the Federal government and a survey of the Flemish Motorist Association (VAB) Belgium has around 62,700 km of roads in bad condition. A recognizable insight for many Belgians.
That’s why we used the poor quality of our roads to promote Mitsubishi’s solid SUV’s. The campaign idea, ‘built for Belgian roads’, was a relevant claim.
We focused on the most relevant media: when you’re behind the wheel experiencing the bad Belgian roads.
Describe the execution
We made locationspecific OOH. On social media we geo-targeted the bad roads and adapted the tagline to the name of the street in question. We launched a social video to promote our ‘Motor Show conditions based on the road conditions’.
We hijacked ‘Waze’ to mark dangerous potholes and cracks around the Brussels Motor show to warn others. We added the note ‘Do you drive a Mitsubishi? Then you can ignore this notification’.
We broadcasted a national radiocampaign, making use of the typical noises you hear while driving on bad roads.
Afterwards, we promoted our immediately available stockcars. We let our stockdeals continue as long as one exemplary, random hole remained open.The hole could be viewed 24/7 via a livestream. Because the holes in the road may not be fixed overnight, a Mitsubishi to tame those holes can be yours overnight. We even made a book dedicated to the Belgian roads.
List the results
During our first peak (The Brussels motor show), we had 19% more requested quotes in comparison to the same period last year. At the end of our campaign (May), we had 30% more requested quotes compared to last year.
It resulted in a 17% growth of Mitsubishi’s market share during the Brussels Motor Show, while the market declined by 6%.