Title | NOT A BOOMERANG |
Brand | BITE BACK |
Product/Service | ANIMAL RIGHTS ORGANISATION |
Category |
B03. Social for Mobile |
Entrant
|
FAMOUSGREY BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
|
Idea Creation
|
FAMOUSGREY BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
|
Production
|
FAMOUSGREY BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
|
Credits
Peter Ampe |
FamousGrey |
Executive Creative Director |
Diederik Jeangout |
FamousGrey |
Creative |
Marc Richard Vander Heyden |
FamousGrey |
Creative |
Cato Samyn |
FamousGrey |
Project Leader |
Floris Adriaenssens |
FamousGrey |
Connection Planner |
Jonas Sprengers |
FamousGrey |
Social Marketeer |
Sven Vanhee |
FamousGrey |
Editor |
Background
While most animal zoos claim to play an important role in the survival of endangered species, in reality they are an entertainment business. This results in cost-efficient animal housing, with enclosures far too small to provide in an animal’s needs to live a happy life. Therefore a great number of animals in captivity develop ‘zoochosis’, which is in fact a mental illness caused by depression. This results in repetitive body behaviour such as head bobbing, body swaying or running the same path over and over again. Bite Back wanted zoo visitors to look past this apparently funny behaviour, and look at the core of the issue.
Describe the creative idea
We used raw footage of animals with zoochosis displaying repetitive behaviour, and uploaded them as Instagram Stories. At first, these videos looked as yet another cool ‘Boomerang’. But with very simple copy we educated people that these weren’t funny videos, but in fact real footage of depressed animals in captivity.
Describe the strategy
We took the popular trend of posting Boomerangs (short videos looped over and over again) on Instagram, and reached people with an unexpected and very serious message within a visual and entertaining online world. We used a popular social media trend to
Furthermore, despite the very restricted budget of the client, we could geotarget Belgians specifically in and near zoos, so they experienced our message while standing face to face with animals in captivity.
Describe the execution
The footage of the animals suffering from zoochosis was posted without editing or looping it. So at first glance it looked like looping Boomerangs, but when you realised they weren’t, you’d see the subtle variations of the animal movement or camera shake of the one-take video.
However, we’ve split the footage into three frames so the viewer would first see just the animal, and only discovered the story by tapping right and making their way through the full reveal.
List the results
As this was a campaign for a non profit organisation, it was more about the clever use of media than about mass media.
Therefore the results below are the only results we can give. We sincerely hope this suffices:
10.000 people were targeted during their visit at the Antwerp Zoo or Planckendael Zoo.
1,43% CTR to the site, that’s 3 times higher than the Instagram Stories benchmark of 0,5%.
6,90% CTR to the site for the Instagram story with the elephant.
Since this was a low budget campaign for a nonprofit organization, no further results were measured.
But the creative use of geo-location clearly compensated for a bigger media spend