Title | CHILD FOR SALE |
Brand | CHINA’S SOCIAL ASSISTANCE FOUNDATION (CSAF) |
Product / Service | CHARITY |
Category | F02. Art Direction/Design for Direct |
Entrant | BBH CHINA Shanghai, CHINA |
Entrant Company | BBH CHINA Shanghai, CHINA |
Advertising Agency | BBH CHINA Shanghai, CHINA |
Production Company | BBH LIVE Shanghai, CHINA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Johnny Tan | BBH China | Chief Creative Officer |
Yu Kung | BBH China | Executive Creative Director |
Jenny Jin | BBH China | Associate Creative Director |
Ken Lu | BBH China | Creative Director |
Yu Kung | BBH China | Director |
Leo Liu | BBH LIVE | Director |
Jonathan Koh | BBH China | Engagement planner |
Maggie Zhou | BBH China | Account Director |
Janel Kok | BBH LIVE | Head of Operation |
Yilin Lin | BBH China | Print Producer |
Ella Cao | BBH LIVE | Film Producer |
Ken Wang | BBH China | Producer |
Jimmy Liu | BBH China | Print Production |
Deborah Abraham | BBH China | PR Director |
Kevin Xu | O-PLUS | Executive Director |
Direct marketing is often associated with consumer products therefore it provided the ideal platform to get across our message: Child traffickers don’t see children as humans, they see them as products. This was brought to life on International Children’s Day using the tools of direct marketing to illustrate and spread awareness of the problem and get people to take action. Key elements involved an infomercial shown online and in cinemas targeted at parents with children, metro posters, shop window takeovers in shopping malls and direct street selling. This gained the awareness desired and drove people to charity’s social platform.
The creative executions adopts the point of view of a callous child trafficker selling kids by offering special deals and discounts in the same way a seller of a product would do. The dramatization of this singular thought was extremely relevant as marketing a product is similar to marketing a child in the eyes of a child trafficker. The whole campaign centred around International Children’s Day on June 1, 2015. It started with an infomercial shown online, on special screens and in cinemas a week before Children’s day. This was supported with print and metro posters and on Children’s day itself, there were shop window takeovers in shopping malls and high street stores. This also involved street sellers selling direct to the public. All this driving the public to the charity’s website.
The client is a government-backed charity raising awareness aid prevention and solving this ongoing issue. So our target audience is everyone in China with the main emphasis on families who have children. The campaign was relevant to show the government charity is active in dealing with this issue and offering help, advice and action to end child trafficking.
In only 3 weeks since posting the video it received over 50,000 views, was with over 5,000 mentions in discussion forums and generated unprecedented online search volume, searches for 'Child Trafficking increased by over 20X on the same period from the previous year. If the first step is getting people to want to find out more about our cause, then we have succeeded.