Netflix Film, Case study Spanish Lessons, 1 by Alma Miami

The Film titled Spanish Lessons, 1 was done by Alma Miami advertising agency for Netflix in United States. It was released in Aug 2016.

Netflix: Spanish Lessons, 1

Brand
Released
August 2016
Posted
August 2016
Chief Creative Officer
Creative Director
Chief Creative Officer

Awards:

One Show 2017
Social MediaBranded Social Post: Branded Social CampaignSilver
Direct MarketingDigital: Social Media & Viral MarketingMerit
FilmUnder 100k BudgetSilver
FilmOnline Films & Video: Short Form - CampaignSilver
Social MediaSocial Engagement: Community BuildingSilver
Branded EntertainmentOnline: Short Form - CampaignBronze
New York Festivals 2017
Branded EntertainmentCraft: HumorSecond Prize Award
Digital (Cyber) CommunicationsCraft: HumorSecond Prize Award
Digital (Cyber) CommunicationsBanners And Rich Media: Products & Services: Household Products & ServicesThird Prize Award
Cannes Lions 2017
DirectCampaign: Low Budget / High Impact CampaignBronze Lion
DirectDigital & Social: Use of Social PlatformsGold Lion
Promo And ActivationStrategy: Launch / Re-launchSilver Lion
PRPractices & Specialisms: Content-led Engagement & MarketingGold Lion
CyberWeb Campaign: Media & PublicationsBronze Lion
MediaBranded Content & Entertainment: Use of Branded Content created for Digital or Social MediaSilver Lion
Promo And ActivationSectors: Media & PublicationsSilver Lion

Credits & Description:

Title: Spanish Lessons
Agency: Alma Ddb
Brand: Netflix
Country: USA
Entrant Company: Alma Ddb, Miami
Advertising Agency: Alma Ddb, Miami
Creative Chairman, Ceo: Luis Miguel Messianu (Alma Ddb.)
Chief Creative Officer, Co-President: Alvar Suñol (Alma Ddb.)
Vp Of Digital: Michael Sotelo (Alma Ddb.)
Creative Director: Iu La Lueta (Alma Ddb.)
Associate Creative Director, Copywriting: Beatriz Torres Marin (Alma Ddb.)
Associate Creative Director, Copywriting: Gabriel Ferrer (Alma Ddb.)
Associate Creative Director, Art Director: Luis Aguilera (Alma Ddb.)
Account Supervisor: Cristina Lage (Alma Ddb.)
Director, Digital Strategy: Carly Sutherland (Alma Ddb.)
Digital Content Creator: Gabriela Benitez (Alma Ddb.)
Digital Content Creator: Samantha Lemoine (Alma Ddb.)
Executive Producer: Jorge Espinosa (Alma Ddb.)
Editor: Rick Morales (Alma Ddb.)
Strategy:
While conducting research and social listening from global activity around Narcos Season 1, we found one tiny nugget – one recurring comment from all regions – that inspired the concept for Season 2. “Watching Narcos has taught me more Spanish than I learned in high school.”- @lauren_schattle Fans were loving and discussing how they were learning Spanish from the show, and not just the basic “hola” and “muchas gracias” phrases, but the more realistic and authentically crude language. “RT if you’ve started thinking random curse words in Spanish after watching Narcos.” - @Vikram_Poddar. We shared the Narcos Spanish Lessons with fans and like-interested social media users specifically on Twitter where a lot of this conversation was already happening. We also shared it on Facebook because we already had a large following, knowing that it would organically reach millions more users through follower engagement – particularly shares and commenting.
Execution:
The first lessons were shared organically on Narcos’ social channels within conversations about the show, or during contextually relevant times. For example, on a Friday afternoon we posted “what to say when your friend bails on your weekend plans”: ‘Malparido’ (‘bastard’).After releasing a few videos, we asked fans to request some of their favorite lines... and Narcos obliged. A total of nine Spanish lessons were shared over a period of two months.
Outcome:
The content blew up. Completely organic, it generated 30% of engagement across all content posted for Narcos Season
even outpacing the paid promotional content. Reflecting on our original goals:+ Generate excitement and discussion: Over 1.2 million total engagements.+ Raise awareness of Season 2: Completely organic, the campaign reached 52 million people and generated over 13.3 million views.+ Grow followers of Narcos social platforms: Narcos saw a follower increase of over 50%, which can be largely attributed to this content series. For example, the day of and day after posting just one lesson, the Facebook page saw an increase of 15,000 likes.+ Sales: In Q3 of 2016, Netflix added approximately 3.57 million subscribers worldwide, 55% over their target. Narcos Season 2 was named by the CEO as one of the biggest factors of the company’s success in his shareholder address.
Campaign Description:
No matter where you are from or what language you speak, fans want to learn/speak the language of Narcos.Combining the universal language of humor with the raunchy dialect of the show we created “Narcos’ Spanish Lessons”. The characters from the show became the tutors in branded content videos. Each character gave a lesson teaching words in Spanish you don’t exactly learn in grammar school. Pardon our “French” while we demonstrate:Coma mierda (ko-ma-mee-err-dah): eat shit.Hijo de puta (ee-ho-day-poo-tah): son of a bitch.Malditos malparidos (mal-dee-tohs mal-pah-ree-dohs): damn bastards.
Synopsis:
The plan was to promote Season 2 of Narcos with a global multicultural campaign. We had to find out what gave Narcos its cross-cultural magnetism across borders. What was that common thread? Our objective was to take the Narcos story beyond the Netflix platform. Without paid media, create innovative social content that would propel the existing fans to share their Narcos obsession and attract new Narcos fans worldwide.Specifically: + Generate excitement and discussion, KPI: social engagement+ Raise awareness of Season
KPI: reach+ Grow followers of Narcos social platforms, KPI: follower increase
Relevancy:
Netflix is web-based. It’s streaming. And fans of streaming shows are more likely to have their social media open and active.The Narcos social platforms have over 3.5 million followers who already love the show. That's a lot of free advocacy if we give them something to talk about. The Spanish Lessons campaign built on the reputation of the show, and interacted with Narcos fans to give them more of the crude, rude show that they love, banking on those fan sharing with potentially new Narcos fans to promote the new season.