PADDOCK OF PRIDE

TitlePADDOCK OF PRIDE
BrandM.J BALE
Product / ServiceMEN'S FASHION
CategoryA06. Use of Social in a Direct Campaign
EntrantWHYBIN\TBWA GROUP SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
Entrant Company WHYBIN\TBWA GROUP SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
Advertising Agency WHYBIN\TBWA GROUP SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Credits

Name Company Position
Matty Burton WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Executive Creative Director
Dave Bowman WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Executive Creative Director
David Roberts WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Senior Copywriter
Tim Chenery WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Senior Art Director
Nick Lilley WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Producer
Jonathan Pitcher WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Production Director
Paul Bradbury WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Ceo
Brendon Killen WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Editor
Candice Juniper WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Social Planning Director
Fiona Milliken Eleven PR Claire Verlander
Claire Verlander Eleven PR Senior Account Executive
Rob Lowe Eleven PR Pr Director
Kat Webb WHYBIN/TBWA GROUP SYDNEY Campaign Manager

The Brief

M.J. Bale, an independent menswear brand, had taken out a low level sponsorship of the Australian soccer team at the World Cup. But, in their deal they had no naming rights, no superstar endorsements, no branding, no access to the Socceroos’ huge social media following. The brand was invisible to new customers. We had to develop a direct marketing idea that would maximize our minor sponsorship, expand our social audience and engage passionate Socceroos fans to generate more suit sales. Note: The word ‘paddock’ is used in Aussie slang to describe both a grazing pasture and a football field.

Creative Execution

We made our product and its provenance the heart of the direct idea. The entire process, from choosing the farm, planting the grass seed and releasing the sheep into the paddock of tweets became personalized content tailored to and driven by each celebrity. The idea quickly caught their attention and they became (unpaid) ambassadors by sharing it with millions of their followers. This in turn propelled the story into mainstream media, creating unprecedented consumer demand for our suits. We were the only sponsor who changed the very way they made their product to show their support for the national team.

Describe the creative solution to the brief/objective.

We harnessed the support of Australia’s biggest and most-followed celebrity soccer fans, by turning them into our social influencers without paying them a cent. When Australia qualified for the World Cup, we took tweets of support from these celebrities and grew them in hectares of grass at our farm. Then, we fed the grass to our merino sheep. After we sheared the sheep we turned this passion-infused wool into cloth for the official team suits, then put them on sale to the public. With a Twitter following of less than 1000 people, we had to reach 1 million Australians

Results

A 2452% expansion in M.J. Bale’s social audience. 74% uplift in suit sales in the following month (highest monthly increase ever). We got the smallest team sponsor the largest share of voice, reaching 32,000,000 people in earned media (it was the largest share of voice of ANY Socceroos sponsor) 15 re-tweets from the official Socceroos Twitter account despite having zero access to this channel in the sponsorship agreement.