Title | PERFORMANCE ENHANCING MUSIC |
Brand | SAMSUNG |
Product / Service | SAMSUNG |
Category | A04. Media / Entertainment |
Entrant | CHE PROXIMITY Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Idea Creation | CHE PROXIMITY Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production | REVOLVER Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production 2 | RESONANCE - SONIC BRANDING Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production 3 | BIG SYNC MUSIC Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Post Production | THE GLUE SOCIETY STUDIOS Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Additional Company | THE GLUE SOCIETY Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Additional Company 2 | CITIZEN JANE CASTING Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Gavin McLeod | CHEP Network | Chief Creative Officer |
Justin Ruben | CHEP Network | Executive Creative Director |
Richard Shaw | CHEP Network | Creative Director |
Jeremy Hogg | CHEP Network | Creative Director |
Daniel Smith | CHEP Network | Senior Art Director |
Ernie Ciaschett | CHEP Network | Senior Copywriter |
Tash Johnson | CHEP Network | Head of Strategic Production |
Sophia Tubby | CHEP Network | Executive Producer |
Jonny Berger | CHEP Network | Managing Partner |
Grace Vizor | CHEP Network | Group Account Director |
Peter Thomas | CHEP Network | Account Director |
Raisa Mushrafi | CHEP Network | Senior Account Manager |
Mike Deane | CHEP Network | Chief Media Officer |
Tim Russell | CHEP Network | Head of Communications Planning Media |
Alex Connell | CHEP Network | Communications Planning Director |
Elizabeth Lonsdale | CHEP Network | Investment Director |
Sue Lau | CHEP Network | Senior Addressable Manager |
Amanda Bodagh | CHEP Network | Investment Trader |
Andrea Quach | CHEP Network | Ad Ops Manager |
Tim McPherson | CHEP Network | Head of Art |
Charlotte Bruton | CHEP Network | Head of Mixed Reality |
Mary Anne Truong | CHEP Network | Operations Director |
Natasha Brack | Edelman | Director & Group Head of Technology |
Thom Landers | Edelman | Associate Director |
Jonathan Kneebone | The Glue Society | Director |
Michael Ritchie | Revolver | Managing Director/Co-Owner |
Pip Smart | Revolver | Executive Producer/Partner |
Jasmin Helliar | Revolver | Executive Producer |
Cathy Rechichi | Revolver | Producer |
Jordan Maddocks | Revolver | Director Of Photography |
Luke Crethar | The Glue Society | Editor |
Scott Stirling | The Glue Society | Post Producer |
Andy Clarkson | The Glue Society | Grade |
Viv Baker | The Glue Society | Online |
To create awareness of Samsung’s sponsorship of the Australian Olympic team, we leveraged a topical moment - the absence of crowds at the Tokyo Olympics. Crowd noise is proven to motivate and enhance athlete’s performance; so to replace it we created music that not only entertained, it was also scientifically proven to increase the performance of Olympic athletes. The songs were then released as performance enhancing music on Spotify for athletes everywhere to use and we also produced a mini-documentary designed to generate PR that explained how the music had been made.
Samsung was signed on to be an official sponsor of the Australian Olympic team. We saw this as an opportunity to shift perceptions of Samsung, from being cold and techy to being true supporters of Australians. However, research told us that as a first time sponsor, we needed to leverage and activate this sponsorship beyond simply naming rights and ad placements in order to maximise the effectiveness. The objective was clear; How can we create a PRable story that demonstrated how Samsung was able to add value to Australian athletes during the Olympics beyond our official sponsorship activity?
Working with Olympians we gave them an edge over competitors by leveraging something already used by athletes across the globe. Music. We created personalized tracks, each scientifically proven to enhance performance. Every beat, lyric, instrument and artists were chosen to match their desired mind-state, event, and musical preference. To further enhancement performance, we tested and fine-tuned 13 audio-triggers including isochronic tones, personal mantras, cadence and more. Then brought the tracks to life with their favourite Australian artist. Athletes used their tracks to prepare and compete in Tokyo. Meanwhile the world listened along on Spotify and tested the tracks on themselves for over 183 thousand minutes. As well as watching our documentary film over 22 million times via YouTube, social and a bespoke website.
Samsung has an extensive, always-on program of research and insights. But more importantly, we had a clear understanding of the brand's purpose. When presented with an opportunity to sponsor the most watched events of the year, the question was not what can we say, rather how can we activate our mission in a way that would generate PR for the brand? Tokyo Olympics presented a clear barrier... no crowds. While a lack of atmosphere research into the impact of crowds unlocked an opportunity, athletes everywhere say that the energy from the crowds can lift their performance. While we couldn’t put crowds in the stadium, we did, as part of our sponsorship deal, put phones in Athlete’s hands. Therefore, how could we use our phones, our ecosystem, and our innovative spirit to provide an unfair motivation advantage that gave our Aussie athletes the best shot when they entered the Olympic Arena.
The PR campaign was launched during the Olympics through our key assets; the Performance Enhancing Music tracks and the documentary film. The music was launched on Spotify through a branded playlist supported by Video & Audio takeovers on the platform. Word spread through the Olympic village and our story was picked up by journalists covering the Tokyo Olympics. The documentary film was launched on YouTube and supported by a comprehensive PR outreach program to sports journalists and tech writers. In line with how music albums are dropped by artists, we launched OOH street posters during the Olympics period to infiltrate culture and create hype. We also connected with younger audiences through our SNAP AR lens, customer built AR tech that allowed our customers to create their own performance enhancing music. The campaign ran until the conclusion of the Paralympic games.
This campaign was about adding authenticity to our sponsorship of the Australian Olympic team. By thinking outside the box we were able to create a PR story that was featured in over 15 national publishers such as The Australian, Daily Telegraph and Vogue with a combined readership of 1.74m and delivered wide reach with 83 million impressions. But more than that, we created content people wanted to engage with including over 183 thousand minutes of our custom Spotify tracks listened to, and our branded mini-documentary being viewed 22 million times. We proved that action is better than words when it comes to supporting sports events. This activity turned the tide on Samsung’s usual results in ad recall. The campaign delivered a big uplift in Ad Recall across channels: +135.71% improvement in Ad Recall vs. Control on Twitter +12.23% improvement in Ad Recall vs. Control on YouTube +45.45% improvement in Ad Recall vs. Control on SNAP While the campaign surpassed all campaign metrics set out, the true impact was felt at a business level. The traditionally unpersuadable iPhone audience were flocking to our website in droves to consume our content off the back of our PR story. We delivered 182,879 site visits during the two week campaign window, 73.3% of which were accessed from our competitors' devices. Brand campaigns are about the long-game, but everything in the short-term suggests we are well on our way to shifting perceptions about the brand.