BLIND. FAITH.

TitleBLIND. FAITH.
BrandSINGAPORE ASSOCIATION OF THE VISUALLY HANDICAPPED
Product / ServicePUBLIC SERVICE
CategoryA06. Best Use of Special Events And Stunt/Live Advertising
EntrantEURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE
Entrant Company:EURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE
Advertising Agency:EURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE

Credits

Name Company Position
Victor Ng Euro Rscg Chief Creative Officer
Kelvin Lim Euro Rscg Associate Creative Director
Victor Ng/Adrian Sim Euro Rscg Copywriters
Kelvin Lim/Candice Tang/Farizal Akramhan Euro Rscg Art Directors
Farizal Akramhan/Darius Shah Euro Rscg Editors
Eugene Chong Euro Rscg Technology Director
Chris Loo/Audrey Yap/Grace Chung/Leollyne Teng Shooting Gallery Producers
Abdul Hisham Bin Abdul Muin/Adrian Quek/Mohd Fazrin Bin Mohd Affendi Shooting Gallery Directors Of Photography
Lam Yiren Shooting Gallery Director
Eric Ng Shooting Gallery Photographer
Joel Ng Euro Rscg Production Director

Results and Effectiveness

The success of the campaign is best measured by the reactions of those who contemplated suicide and sought counselling. After face-to-face sessions, many were humbled and inspired by their disabled counsellors’ courage to live on. In just one month, our unique counselling service has helped over a hundred people find their way and will to live. But nothing beats having the visually impaired being seen in a completely different light.

Creative Execution

We trained 12 visually impaired members of SAVH to become counsellors and set up a phone and home counselling service to the general public – who are oblivious that they were being counselled by someone with a devastating disability.

Insights, Strategy and the Idea

The Singapore Association of the Visually Handicapped (SAVH) was facing two interlinked problems: (1) The public subtly discriminates against the visually impaired as they are perceived to be incapable of integrating with the society. (2) Conversely, the visually impaired generally feel a lack of self-confidence to be useful members of the society. These perceptions cannot be further from the truth. Our insight is blindingly simple: if one cannot see, he hears much better – and that makes him a better listener than those who can see. For the visually impaired, this idea turned their handicap into an asset.