Title | CURING HOMESICKNESS |
Brand | SYDNEY CHILDREN'S HOSPITALS FOUNDATION |
Product / Service | FUNDRAISING INITIATIVE |
Category | B03. Fundraising & Advocacy |
Entrant | CHE PROXIMITY Melbourne, AUSTRALIA |
Idea Creation | CHE PROXIMITY Melbourne, AUSTRALIA |
PR | CHE PROXIMITY Melbourne, AUSTRALIA |
Production | REVOLVER Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production 2 | THE GLUE SOCIETY Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production 3 | HECKLER Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Nicola Stokes | Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation | CEO |
Tanya Sarina | Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation | Head of Health Promotion |
Susan Wynne | Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation | Director of Development |
David Halter | CHE Proximity | Chief Strategy Officer |
Mariana Rice | CHE Proximity | Client Partner |
Albert Olsen | CHE Proximity | Account Executive |
Sam Dickson | CHE Proximity | Creative Director |
Cameron Bell | CHE Proximity | Creative Director |
Glen Dickson | CHE Proximity | Executive Creative Director |
Ant White | CHE Proximity | Chief Creative Officer |
Holly Alexander | CHE Proximity | Director, Strategic Production |
Darren Cole | CHE Proximity | Head of Design |
Vanessa Saporito | CHE Proximity | Senior Designer |
Georgia Wright | CHE Proximity | Director - PR |
Judy Chung | CHE Proximity | Senior Account Director – PR |
Courtney Kovacevic | CHE Proximity | PR |
Elizabeth Lonsdale | CHE Proximity | Investment Manager |
Anna Horan | CHE Proximity | Head of Editorial & Social |
Sophie Doyle | CHE Proximity | Social Lead |
Annisah Ibrahim | CHE Proximity | Senior Social Creative |
Henry Clarke | CHE Proximity | Social Creative |
Shayne Simpson | CHE Proximity | Head of Print Production |
Michael Ritchie | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | Managing Director/Executive Producer |
Pip Smart | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | Executive Producer |
Jasmin Helliar | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | Executive Producer |
Serena Paull | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | Producer |
Ian Iverson | CHE Proximity | Producer |
Pete Baker | The Glue Society | Director |
Geoffrey Simpson | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | Director of Photography |
Jordan Maddocks | Revolver/Will O’Rourke | 2nd Unit DOP |
Even before COVID, private charitable donations were falling like a stone: 8% year-on-year 2016-8. Furthermore, between 2016-19, there were 3,953 new charities and foundations formed. A shrinking pie was being cut into even more pieces. Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation (SCHF), Australia’s largest paediatric healthcare entity needed help. The variety of illnesses and injuries that are treated by the Network, the types of care that they offer and the research that they fund is vast. The trouble with this diversity is two-fold: comprehension and identification. In the face of donation fatigue, competitive congestion and increasing economic volatility, our brief was to generate additional, sustainable funds with a good return on investment. We also had some clear parameters: 1. Do not cannibalise existing fundraising efforts 2. No paid media budget 3. Costs (time and investment) to manage needed to be largely externalised so we didn’t put additional stress on the existing team
Faced with this context, we concluded that SCHF needed a donation platform that would help them stand out. A single-minded, universal cause to be a magnet for donations: something that everybody could identify with. When we spoke to staff, parents and children a clear commonality emerged, children suffer twice in hospital: firstly, from their afflictions, but secondly from the mental and emotional trauma of being away from family, friends and home comforts. Homesickness affects over 90% of children in hospital with 50% suffering from severe forms of homesickness. So, we created a new initiative: ‘Curing Homesickness’ – a campaign to get kids back to where they belong: home. Homesickness is something we have all felt and we can all identify with. The feeling of hopelessness from being away from home. Research has shown people tend to donate to causes that align with their own experiences, giving our campaign universal appeal.
We had a loose narrative in our heads about a child in hospital pining for their mum’s pasta sauce. But we wanted it to be far more than just an engaging story. We wanted to turn this sauce into a source of revenue in the real world. For it we had a working title: Mum’s Sauce (subsequently changed to Mum’s Sause to mirror a child misspelling). It would need to be an enduring brand, not a temporary SKU or rebadging of an existing product. Radically different to the pay-to-play system; where brands pay a set fee to charities to rebadge an existing product. We approached Australia’s largest supermarket chain, Coles, with the idea. Our own pasta sauce to help children in hospital. Amazingly, Coles offered to handle the R&D and distribution costs. Better still, they agreed to donate 50c from every $3 jar, an almost unheard-of proportion at 16.6%.
1. With zero media spend: 162 million earned media impressions, and $4.6m in donated media: with the backing of Coles, media partners jumped to join. 2. Coles have since expanded the range to 3 different types of pasta sauce. It was the #1 selling sauce for 3 weeks during launch and over a 1.5 million jars sold – and counting. 3. It’s a source of passive income with Coles absorbing NPD/distribution costs so no additional strain on the SCFH team. 4. Coles continues to support the campaign with instore fundraising and promotion, now we have raised over $2 million – and counting. 5. The campaign achieved an ROI of over 300% The ‘Mum’s’ trademark is registered and owned by SCHF, so we can extend range and lines off it. This is just the beginning. Now we have a predictable source of revenue in extremely unpredictable times.
Website URL | Supporting Webpage