MINI Ambient, Digital, Case study DRIVING DOGS by DraftFCB Auckland

DRIVING DOGS
The Ambient Advert titled DRIVING DOGS was done by DraftFCB Auckland advertising agency for MINI in New Zealand. It was released in Jun 2013.

MINI: DRIVING DOGS

Brand
Released
June 2013
Posted
June 2013
Executive Creative Director
Creative
Executive Creative Director

Awards:

Cannes Lions 2013
Direct LionsBest Use of Digital Direct Marketing; Social Media & Viral MarketingSilver
Direct LionsProduct & Service; CharitiesGold
PR LionsSectors & Services; Charity and Not for ProfitSilver
PR LionsBest Campaign; Best Integrated Campaign Led by PRBronze
Spikes Asia 2013
PRBest Use of Live Events and/or Celebrity EndorsementGrand Prix
PRBest Use of Media RelationsGold

Credits & Description:

Type of entry: Product & Service
Category: Charities
Advertiser: SPCA NEW ZEALAND
Product/Service: PUBLIC AWARENESS / PET ADOPTION
Agency: DRAFTFCB NEW ZEALAND Auckland, NEW ZEALAND
Asia Pacific Executive Creative Director: James Mok (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Executive Creative Director: Tony Clewett (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Executive Creative Director: Regan Grafton (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Creative: Matt Williams (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Creative: Peter Vegas (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Senior Motion Graphics Designer: Marco Siraky (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Head Of Post Production: Blair Walker (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Senior Designer: Nick McFarlane (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Interactive Designer: Catherine Chi (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Group Account Director: Toby Sellers (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Account Director: Sally Willis (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Account Manager: Stephanie Hueber (Draftfcb New Zealand)
General Manager PR: Angela Spain (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Account Manager PR: Eloise Hay (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Media Manager: Rachel Leyland (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Communications Planning Director: Rufus Chuter (Draftfcb New Zealand)
General Manager Media: Simon Teagle (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Head Of Digital And Content: Harri Owen (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Senior Digital Media Planner/Buyer: Steph Pearson (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Digital And Social Media Campaign Manager: Sam Boniface (Draftfcb New Zealand)
Describe the brief from the client
As a long standing, but little known, supporter of New Zealand animal adoption charity SPCA, MINI wanted to help drive interest in SPCA dog adoptions.
Our target: the hundreds of thousands of potential dog owners in NZ.
Our strategy was to address the key barrier to adoptions: the perception that shelter dogs are inferior to store bought animals. People think that if a dog's in a shelter, it must be damaged goods.
To do that, we wanted to show how smart these dogs really are.

Creative Execution

People need to trust a dog with their family, so it was crucial we proved shelter dogs are able to be trained (and trained well) in the most compelling, convincing way possible. Only such an audacious idea could reassure people that adoption wasn’t a risk.
The campaign was a genuine world first. We had to devise an 8 week “dog driving” training course; modify a car so a dog could drive it; and then film them behind the wheel actually driving.
By making heroes of the dogs we also subverted conventional adoption advertising which often paints the dogs as victims.


Creative Solution to the Brief/Objective.

We taught three SPCA dogs to do something a dog had never done before. Drive a car.
We used this idea to engage potential dog owners directly through social media; allowing people to learn about the training, engage with the dogs and connect with shelter dog advocates. From here, they were directed to the SPCA adoption website where they could adopt their own smart dog.
Video content of the dogs driving was seeded with bloggers and news networks and quickly went viral. Each video finished with an adoption call to action, ensuring the perception change was immediately converted to action.


Results

People need to trust a dog with their family, so it was crucial we proved shelter dogs are able to be trained (and trained well) in the most compelling, convincing way possible. Only such an audacious idea could reassure people that adoption wasn’t a risk.
The campaign was a genuine world first. We had to devise an 8 week “dog driving” training course; modify a car so a dog could drive it; and then film them behind the wheel actually driving.
By making heroes of the dogs we also subverted conventional adoption advertising which often paints the dogs as victims.