THE SOIL RESTAURANT

TitleTHE SOIL RESTAURANT
BrandPROTOLEAF
Product / Service100% ORGANIC SOIL
CategoryB05. Public Service, Charity & Fund Raising
EntrantTBWA\HAKUHODO Tokyo, JAPAN
Entrant Company TBWA\HAKUHODO Tokyo, JAPAN
Advertising Agency TBWA\HAKUHODO Tokyo, JAPAN

Credits

Name Company Position
Miho Majima Initial Pr Planner
Takeshi Kasuga Pyramid Film Producer
Kaoru Ootani Tbwa\hakuhodo Agency Producer
Chino Yamaguchi Tbwa\hakuhodo Copywriter
Nozomi Imaoka Tbwa\hakuhodo Art Director
Keisuke Shimizu Tbwa\hakuhodo Art Director
Takahiro Miura Tbwa\hakuhodo Pr Planner
Tomoki Harada Tbwa\hakuhodo Creative Director/Copywriter
Kazoo Sato Tbwa\hakuhodo Executive Creative Director
Miki Matsui Tbwa\hakuhodo Chief Creative Officer

The Brief

Protoleaf is a Japanese gardening soil brand. Home gardening is very popular in Japan; however, concerns about nuclear radiation from Fukushima had caused consumers to question soil safety – even in store-bought products. We wanted to communicate the surprising quality and safety of Protoleaf to all soil users, including existing customers and competitor users.

Creative Execution

Most Protoleaf customers grow vegetables in their own gardens. Therefore, the issue of soil safety was highly personal – it affects what they eat, their health and their lifestyle. So, we believe there is no better way to prove the safety of soil that grows vegetables to eat than actually eating the soil itself. Further, without the constraints of media budget or schedules, this campaign and last indefinitely, as long as the restaurant keeps soil on the menu.

Describe the creative solution to the brief/objective.

What if the soil was so safe, you could actually eat it? To convincingly showcase our soil quality and safety, we opened “The Soil Restaurant” with a Michelin 3-star chef who created a full course meal using Protoleaf Soil as the main ingredient. The restaurant was open to the public and charged $100 per person for the special course.

Results

Customers and Media ate it up: Media flocked to the The Soil Restaurant, resulting in massive coverage not only in Japan but in nearly 20 countries throughout the world as well, including features on CNN, CBS, BBC and even the Discovery Channel. This simple idea racked up approximately US$8,900,000 in media exposure with zero media investment. Using only the soil itself, we definitively proved the safety of our product, and of Japanese soil, to the world. As a result, consumers felt safe to buy soil again as sales surged to 130% versus the previous year. People could return to gardening and producing their own food.