Title | 14 IS NOT OK |
Brand | ESTONIAN SEXUAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION |
Product/Service | NOT APPLICABLE |
Category |
B02. Non-profit / Foundation-led Education & Awareness |
Entrant
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
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Idea Creation
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
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Media Placement
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
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PR
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
|
Production
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
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Post Production
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OPTIMIST CREATIVE Tallinn, ESTONIA
|
Credits
anoorupa bose |
Optimist Estonia |
Creative strategy, Creative direction, Copywriting, Media strategy |
Siim Nikopensius |
Optimist Estonia |
Creative strategy, Creative direction, Copywriting |
Bruno Palmik |
Optimist Estonia |
Art direction |
Heigo Heinleht |
Optimist Estonia |
Art direction |
Maris Teder |
Optimist Estonia |
Project management |
Susanna Eenma |
Optimist Estonia |
Project management |
Marko Kivirand |
Optimist Estonia |
social media management |
Cäthly Oja |
Optimist Estonia |
PR management |
Sandra Audova |
Optimist Estonia |
PR management |
Triin Adamson |
Optimist Estonia |
PR management |
Kristjan Taal |
na |
Photography |
Helina Risti |
na |
styling |
Elsa Levo |
na |
make-up |
Why is this work relevant for Direct?
In Estonia, the legal age of sexual consent is only 14. Every year, 14-year-old children get sexually abused because of it and yet, all previous attempts to change this law have failed.
When it comes to this topic, there is complete lack of consensus within political parties and complete lack of awareness within society. Problem is, people think 14 is OK.
So we launched a direct response campaign that would provoke Estonians to raise their voice against this dangerous law and say ''14 is not OK''. Only then politicians would be forced to take immediate steps to change the law.
Background
The situation:
In Estonia, the legal age of sexual consent is only 14. At 14, a child is too young to understand the dangers that come with sexual consent. Every year, 14-year-old children get sexually abused because of this law, and yet, every attempt to change the law has failed. There is no consensus among political parties and key decision makers on this topic. Neither is there any public pressure on them to take action, because people think 14 is OK.
The brief:
We had to protect 14-year-old children from sexual abuse by raising the legal age of sexual content.
Key objectives:
We had to get people to realise how dangerous this law is, so they would publicly raise their voice in support of changing the law. This in turn would raise the pressure on politicians and lawmakers to take immediate steps to increase the legal age of sexual consent.
Describe the creative idea (30% of vote)
We released a horrifying story about the ‘consensual relationship’ between 14-year-old Piia Heivdal and 54-year-old Kristo Terrandi. The story was fictional, but we crafted it like a typical tabloid style news report and released it on one of Estonia’s leading online news portals that is known for sensational news. As planned, people completely missed the tiny 'content marketing' sign and continued reading in horror thinking it was a real story about a real child!
By the time readers realised this was actually a campaign, they would have also realised in the most impactful way, why the law needs to be changed immediately.
So at the end of the story, we gave people the hashtag #14isnotOK, to trigger a nationwide movement, where the public and influencers could raise their voice together in a way that was connected and synchronised. Only then we would be loud enough to pressurise politicians to respond.
Describe the strategy (20% of vote)
We analysed hundreds of news reports around this topic from the last 7 years and conducted surveys among the general population to understand why this dangerous law had remained unchanged. We found that the main problem was that people think ''14 is OK''.
So our campaign was targeted to the general public to drive awareness and instant response, which in turn would influence politicians and decision makers to take immediate action.
To make people realise how dangerous this law is, our strategy was to show them a 14-year-old child in the most dangerous situation because of this law. But the situation would have to be so frightening, that it would provoke people to publicly oppose the existing law.
We would also have to craft a hashtag or a slogan that would enable the public and the influencers to raise their voice together and send one unified message to politicians.
Describe the execution (20% of vote)
Initially, two of Estonia's biggest news publishers refused to release our story. On 17th March, we finally managed to release the story of 14-year-old Piia and 54-year-old Kristo via a content marketing space on one of Estonia’s leading online news portals which is known for publishing sensational news.
Because our media budget was only €2000, organic virality and earned media was critical for us to succeed.
We made the story so moving that people would want to share it. When people shared it, we made the shared article's thumbnail image and text so impactful, that others would click on it. We also featured an image gallery in the story to enable people to initiate a photo-based hashtag response on platforms like Instagram.
At the end of the story, we added the hashtag #14isnotOK to drive people to use it and put pressure on lawmakers, thus turning people into campaign ambassadors.
List the results (30% of vote)
Within 24 hours, the story and photos of 14-year-old Piia and 54-year-old Kristo went viral. The campaign sparked a nationwide movement where the public and influencers raised their voice to say ''14 is not OK''. Victims who had been sexually abused at 14 began sharing their stories using #14isnotOK. Estonia's top TV and radio channels started conversations around why 14 is not OK.
Despite a campaign budget of just €5000, the campaign crossed 1 million+ impressions in a country of 1.4 million people. The story also became the 10th most-read story in the history of the news portal.
Comments and reactions: 25,000+
Audience engagements: 160,000+
Organic traffic to the story: 200,000+
Images clicked: 300,000+ times
The most important result of all was that politicians and lawmakers immediately responded by introducing a bill to raise the legal age of sexual consent to 16.
14 will no longer be OK in Estonia.