'FRIENDJACK': A CELEBRITY CAMPAIGN WITHOUT EVER SHOWING THE CELEBRITY

Title'FRIENDJACK': A CELEBRITY CAMPAIGN WITHOUT EVER SHOWING THE CELEBRITY
BrandMCDONALD'S
Product / ServiceMCDONALD'S 24/7
CategoryA03. Travel, Leisure, Retail, Restaurants & Fast Food Chains
EntrantDDB Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Idea Creation DDB Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Production DDB Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Post Production DDB Hong Kong, HONG KONG

Credits

Name Company Position
Peter Rodenbeck DDB Group Hong Kong Account Servicing
Andreas Krasser DDB Group Hong Kong Strategy
Frankie Fung DDB Group Hong Kong Creative
Maggie Cheung DDB Group Hong Kong Account Servicing
Garron Chiu DDB Group Hong Kong Strategy
Christine Lai DDB Group Hong Kong Creative
Cola Chan DDB Group Hong Kong Creative
Zephyr Yung DDB Group Hong Kong Creative
Lim Leung DDB Group Hong Kong Creative
Brietta Lau DDB Group Hong Kong Creative

Why is this work relevant for Social & Influencer?

Hong Kong's social media landscape is extremely celebrity and influencer driven, especially with the new rise of young Cantopop stars. Every brand is using one in order to drive awareness to their brand. McDonald's Hong Kong managed to leverage the star power of Keung To, Hong Kong's biggest pop star, without ever showing his face or using his name, to drive awareness to it's latest brand campaign.

Background

McDonald's in 2021 had finally regained it's relevance with GenZ, after seeing declines in brand scores among that cohort for two consecutive years. To cap off the year, it wanted to develop a year-end campaign celebrating what mattered to GenZ the most: friendships In 2021, Hong Kong had also hit peak-influencer. Mirror had become one of the biggest pop-bands in the city's history, and its members appearing on a majority of the major campaigns in Hong Kong. Its lead singer Keung To, a GenZ favourite, was the face of many major brands including earlier McDonald's campaigns, where he worked as a front-line staff in his teenage years. While every brand does year end brand campaigns with influencers, due to budget constraints, McDonald's wanted to generate cut-through with a celebrity-less campaign, while still celebrating the notion of friendship.

Describe the creative idea (30% of vote)

At the end of 2021, canto-pop superstar Keung To released "Dear My friend", a long-awaited hit single celebrating friendships, which was also bound to win awards at the year-end Hong Kong music awards. So we decided to capitalize We were going to develop a series of social posts celebrating true friendships forged over a shared meal of McDonald’s takeaway late into the night, particularly as new COVID restrictions had shut down restaurants and bars. We would then create a "Friendjack". While conversation about Keung To and his song about friendship trended, we would leverage associated hashtags, as well as use our creative to allude to his story. Therefore driving conversations from Keung To's friendship, into conversations about everyone's own true friendships and how McDonald's was the catalyst

Describe the strategy (20% of vote)

Throughout the year, Keung To had already been the biggest trending topic in Hong Kong. Keung To related search terms comprised 7 of the top 10 searched Hong Kong "People" in 2021. Moreover, whenever hot topics became "related" to him, interest in those topics shot up. When a Keung To ad was thought to be a parody of a Japanese comedy show, that show became the most searched TV show in Hong Kong. When Keung To posted about his stressful work life, and a newspaper wrote an article about how you can improve your own mental health, that article became the most shared news article. In the run-up to his single launch, Google search volume for "Dear My Friend" had skyrocketed. We knew that if GenZ thought McDonald's had a related post on Instagram, where most Keung To fan discussion was, it would also drive discussion about McDonald's

Describe the execution (20% of vote)

The day after the single release, McDonald’s launched a series of social posts celebrating true friendships forged over a shared meal of McDonald’s takeaway, and added one more simple hashtag to allude to the single: #DearMyFriend Three organic social posts in one day, all on Instagram, depicting Hong Kong's most popular late-night after-hour hangout spots. These included the Tsim Sha Tsui Harbour Front, Housing Estate Playgrounds, and most importantly, the basketball courts of Southorn Playground, where Keung To grew up honing his famed basketball skills. No mention of Keung To. No image of Keung To's face. Just an image about friendship, with the hashtag #DearMyFriend

List the results (30% of vote)

- 2300+ engagement in the first day, the highest for any organic (non-boosted) post for McDonald's Hong Kong's Instagram page - 410,000+ organic reach, most generated through stories as the post itself received 200+ Instagram Stories Shares However, the most important result was the conversation we managed to drive. People began posting on our comments, as well as on their own Instagram and Twitter accounts, about their friendships and where they were built. They started tagging their BFF's on our post. Some even thanked us for supporting friendship and supporting Keung To. We wanted to become synonymous with friendship, and we did just that. What's even better, two days after our posts, Keung To's single did in fact win "Fan Favourite Single" at the Hong Kong Ultimate Song Chart awards, which got people talking about our posts all over again.

Links

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