Fiftyfifty Lebanon Case study Close The Gap - Case Film by Impact BBDO Dubai

The Case study titled Close The Gap - Case Film was done by Impact BBDO Dubai advertising agency for Fiftyfifty Lebanon in United Arab Emirates. It was released in Feb 2020.

Fiftyfifty Lebanon: Close The Gap - Case Film

Released
February 2020
Posted
October 2020
Creative Director
Creative Director
Designer
Copywriter
Chief Creative Officer
Executive Creative Director
Producer

Awards:

Cresta Awards 2020
Print DesignTypography (any category)Gold
CraftOutstanding Art Direction (print)Gold
Print DesignArt Direction (any category)Silver
Print, OohPoster/Billboard campaign (2-6 executions)Bronze
Brand PurposeBrand ActivismBronze

Credits & Description:

Title of Entry: Close The Gap
Brand: Fiftyfifty Lebanon
Product/Service: Equal Pay for Women
Client: Fiftyfifty Lebanon
Entrant Company: Impact BBDO
Creative Agency: Impact BBDO Dubai
Creative Director: Sarah Berro
Creative Director: Marie Claire Maalouf
Art Director: Bijoy Purayil
Designer: Ahmed Nawara
Copywriter: Sarah Berro
Chief Creative Officer: Paul Shearer
Account Executive: Emma Jane Randall, Rima Hussein, Lilas Sinno
Typography: Nabil al Mawla
Executive Creative Director: Ali Rez
Strategic Director: Noor Hassanein
Producer: Ann Geleen Amparado
Producer: Rawad Keyrouz
Producer: Charly Hatem
Motion and Image: James Keith Elgie, Nidal Bou Ghanem
Creative Services Director: Tennyson Torcato
Head of Multimedia: Ramy Tannous
Date of Release: 2020-02-01
Notes: The gender pay gap has been steadily narrowing globally. But in Lebanon, not as fast as it should. To date, a 21% average gender pay gap remains to be closed; contributing to Lebanon’s poor ranking at 145 out of 152 countries (Global gender Gap Report 2020). As part of its initiatives to build a gender balanced Lebanon, Fiftyfifty wanted to raise awareness about the 21% gender pay gap; and inspire a behavioral change in women, and towards women in the workplace.
The idea was to show people what it means to close the gap, literally. In Arabic, a gap between two words or two letters impacts the way they are read and understood. And in some cases, by closing the gap between the letters, we reveal a new word with an entirely different meaning. So we chose words that with the gap, reflected women’s reality at the workplace today: Unequally paid, stagnating in lower positions, with unequal opportunity to grow. We asked people to close the gap, to reveal new words with empowering, positive and hopeful meanings. By inviting people to close the gap between letters, we showed them what it means to close the pay gap between genders.
We created a typeface and graphical elements inspired by the Lebanese currency; and designed each ad after one of the Lebanese notes. We highlighted the gap with a vertical strip that slashed the edges of the letters to dramatize its impact. Inside it, we wrote our CTA: Close The Gap. With each word, we reminded people of Article 26 of the Lebanese labor law that prohibits all forms of discrimination against women in the workplace. The campaign was launched on February 10th for two weeks. Our ads were seen in major newspaper in the country. Posters and billboards were placed in popular business areas to inspire change. DM’s were sent to influential women to start the conversation. Flyers were handed out to women in banks. On digital and social platforms, people interacted with the posters directly. And using Anghami’s wide pool of reach, we targeted different people with different messages.
The campaign had a noticeable impact on the culture. With more than 2 Million impressions, and a trending campaign, our simple words made thousands of Lebanese women aware of the law that is behind them when it comes to demanding equal pay. All they had to do was close the gap. Website visits for the organization rose by a whopping +40%, while awareness of the Labor Law increased by an incredible +80%.
The translation of the words in English before and after closing the gap "Not Yours" became "Your Money" "Inequality" became "For Equality" "If I May" became "I Achieve" "Waiting" became "Claiming"