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4 Lessons From The Year’s Best Marketing Campaign

Every year, Advertising Age magazine publishes a report that looks at the collective results from nine of the most globally respected industry award shows in the advertising industry—from the Cannes International Festival of Creativity to the Clios. The number-one award recipient this year wasn’t a tear-jerking celebrity sports ad or a preview of a hot new holiday gadget. Instead, the top honor went to Metro Trains from Melbourne Australia—a public utility with a simple public service message advocating greater train safety.

The addictive animated jingle for its popular campaign video rode global YouTube popularity to drive its unexpected message home for audiences (see video embedded below). How can you mimic the success of this campaign in promoting your business?

1. Elevate Your Message

The easy thing to do with a public service announcement is to come up with a straightforward tagline that focuses on the problem. Metro Trains elevates its message beyond just train safety. Instead, the video and corresponding campaign created a conversation about something bigger than just safety on trains, and benefited from the attention. The lesson is clear: If you can find ways to talk about something bigger than just your business, you can reach people in a way that a more direct (and smaller) message just can’t.

2. Embrace Humor

The entire campaign takes a humorous approach to a rather morbid topic. The lesson? Not to take yourself or your business too seriously. Even with a serious public service announcement, humor can lighten its tone just enough to make the message one that people will interact with and share frequently. No one wants to share a virtual version of an overprotective mom wagging her finger and telling you not to do something. In this case, humor isn’t about trying to make you laugh out loud. Instead, it gives just enough levity to make what could be a difficult and depressing message more relevant and shareable.

3. Make Your Team Into Heroes

As you might imagine, there were several teams behind this campaign, including advertising agency partners and other vendors. One of the great things about industry awards, beyond the fact that they can add a layer of legitimacy and attention, is that they offer credit to the team that worked on them. In this case, that credit means a lot, because the entire team working on the project likely devoted more time and attention than their day jobs dictated they had to. Part of inspiring a team to achieve great things on your behalf is offering them a share of the credit and attention when the kudos eventually come. It gives everyone a shared sense of accomplishment, and makes it even more likely they will go above and beyond to deliver great results for you in the future as well.

4. Extend Across Multiple Channels

The biggest concern with a viral hit video in a marketing campaign is often the curse of the “one hit wonder.” What if all people really care about is a single great video? To counter this, the Metro Trains team has an active publishing strategy around the concept of the ad that includes everything from printed materials to gaming apps. By extending the reach of the campaign beyond just a great video, they can engage even more people in the message and give the campaign more of a shelf life to continue reaching and influencing people long after the first video becomes overplayed or less interesting.

Though it may seem like an unexpected example to find marketing lessons, the campaign is worth paying attention to. In addition to its accolades, popularity and awards, the campaign managed to reach its ultimate objective: a reduction in train accidents of over 20 percent.

As executive creative director Jon Mescall shared in an interview, “What we have is a franchise, rather than just an advertising platform.” What if you brought that same mentality to the marketing you’re doing for your business? Building a franchise instead of a campaign may be harder, but there’s no denying it has the power to set you apart when you do it—even if your goal isn’t as selfless as saving humanity from the dangers of trains.

Sometimes the best examples of marketing brilliance isn’t found in a flashy sports ad, but in the unexpected world of public service announcements. DECEMBER 09, 2013 Every year, Advertising Age magazine publishes a report that looks at the collective results from nine of the most globally respected industry award shows in the advertising industry—from the Cannes International Festival of Creativity to the Clios. The number-one award recipient this year wasn’t a tear-jerking celebrity sports ad or a preview of a hot new holiday gadget. Instead, the top honor went to Metro Trains from Melbourne Australia—a public utility with a simple public service message advocating greater train safety. Metro Trains from Melbourne Australia The addictive animated jingle for its popular campaign video rode global YouTube popularity to drive its unexpected message home for audiences. How can you mimic the success of this campaign in promoting your business? 1. Elevate Your Message The easy thing to do with a public service announcement is to come up with a straightforward tagline that focuses on the problem. Metro Trains elevates its message beyond just train safety. Instead, the video and corresponding campaign created a conversation about something bigger than just safety on trains, and benefited from the attention. The lesson is clear: If you can find ways to talk about something bigger than just your business, you can reach people in a way that a more direct (and smaller) message just can’t. 2. Embrace Humor The entire campaign takes a humorous approach to a rather morbid topic. The lesson? Not to take yourself or your business too seriously. Even with a serious public service announcement, humor can lighten its tone just enough to make the message one that people will interact with and share frequently. No one wants to share a virtual version of an overprotective mom wagging her finger and telling you not to do something. In this case, humor isn’t about trying to make you laugh out loud. Instead, it gives just enough levity to make what could be a difficult and depressing message more relevant and shareable. 3. Make Your Team Into Heroes As you might imagine, there were several teams behind this campaign, including advertising agency partners and other vendors. One of the great things about industry awards, beyond the fact that they can add a layer of legitimacy and attention, is that they offer credit to the team that worked on them. In this case, that credit means a lot, because the entire team working on the project likely devoted more time and attention than their day jobs dictated they had to. Part of inspiring a team to achieve great things on your behalf is offering them a share of the credit and attention when the kudos eventually come. It gives everyone a shared sense of accomplishment, and makes it even more likely they will go above and beyond to deliver great results for you in the future as well. 4. Extend Across Multiple Channels The biggest concern with a viral hit video in a marketing campaign is often the curse of the “one hit wonder.” What if all people really care about is a single great video? To counter this, the Metro Trains team has an active publishing strategy around the concept of the ad that includes everything from printed materials to gaming apps. By extending the reach of the campaign beyond just a great video, they can engage even more people in the message and give the campaign more of a shelf life to continue reaching and influencing people long after the first video becomes overplayed or less interesting. Though it may seem like an unexpected example to find marketing lessons, the campaign is worth paying attention to. In addition to its accolades, popularity and awards, the campaign managed to reach its ultimate objective: a reduction in train accidents of over 20 percent. As executive creative director Jon Mescall shared in an interview, “What we have is a franchise, rather than just an advertising platform.” What if you brought that same mentality to the marketing you’re doing for your business? Building a franchise instead of a campaign may be harder, but there’s no denying it has the power to set you apart when you do it—even if your goal isn’t as selfless as saving humanity from the dangers of trains. Rohit Bhargava is a four time bestselling author and brand consultant who spent five years leading award-winning digital campaigns in Australia. He is currently based in Washington, DC, leading the Influential Marketing Group, and delivers “non-boring keynotes” on the future of business and marketing at events around the world. Read more articles on marketing.” target=”_blank”>contributed article on the American Express Open Forum website and is republished here with slight edits.  

2 thoughts on “4 Lessons From The Year’s Best Marketing Campaign”

  1. Yes, yes, yes, yes and …no. Dumb Ways to Die might have made advertising types gush, but it did not work. The number of young people dying or being injured from accidents on Victoria’s railways has actually increased since the campaign began. Nice creative is useless when it fails to affect its target audience, and this campaign has failed comprehensively. The metrics are bad, and sadly, in the cemeteries. Shame on all who conveniently ignore this and continue to gush about it.

    Reply
  2. I had no idea that this video was part of an ad campaign. My kids have been singing this song and playing this video for months. They are 11 and 12 years old and its a viral hit in their schools. Not sure if its messaging is on target, however.

    Reply

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