There’s a time for everything and the time of eyes-welling-up-with-tears commercials is now. It actually started a few years ago, and they’re still going strong, touching soft spots in us all.
Whenever a new one of those beautiful emotional viral ads emerges from the depths of the internet, it’s quickly shared across the Earth in a matter of minutes thanks to social networks and highly connected online communities. So, what’s the deal with these highly emotional ads? As you probably already guessed, that’s what I’ll share with you today and by the time you’ve finished reading this article, you’ll never see them the same again.
If you’re one of the 2 people online who that hasn’t seen these ads, here’s a little journey through a few of them to get you up to speed:
In 2013, Dove released a video that was going to become the viral campaign of the year and generate billions of dollars in earned media. The idea of the video came from an ad agency, Ogilvy & Mather (Brazil), and was filmed in San Francisco. The result was edited into a 6-minute short film and a 3-minute online commercial.
In 2014, Always launched the #LikeAGirl campaign. The campaign video also became viral and even got a spot in the Super Bowl commercial break.
In 2015, Ad Council, an American non-profit organisation helping both government agencies and non-profits create and promote public service announcements launched the “Love Has No Labels” campaign with a video that quickly became viral.
In 2016, Momondo, the travel fare metasearch engine, launched a video under the #LetsOpenOurWorld call to action and hashtag. The campaign later turned into a competition for people who would like to win DNA testing kits and free trips to their places of origin.
More recently, Heineken also launched a video called “Worlds Apart” which also became a viral hit. Many people saw the new video as a response to Pepsi’s awful, tone–deaf Kendall Jenner ad from a month ago.
I’ll let you dry your tears first… Go ahead, take a moment. So… damn fine ads, right? What truly gets something in our eye is the fact that they’re all based on very powerful insights. They also feature real people, not supermodels or celebrities. Also, they’re all using an experiment as a way to show us a reality that’s quite different than what the people in the ads expected.
So, how do ad agencies come up with these ideas? Well, it’s actually quite simple…
The Emotional Viral Ads Recipes for Winning Ideas
What happens in ad agencies is very different to our world. The creative teams working in an agency usually work on more accounts (different brands). We usually work on our own business, our personal brand, and some side gigs, but we usually address the same core target and we usually know what we want to say when talking to those buying our products and services. In the ad world, things are not as simple. The creatives work with various brands, managed by different brand teams, who focus on different core targets.
Generating hundreds of ideas on command is part of the agency life. Getting ideas is not impossible, but getting them in a matter of hours is nearly impossible without a trick up your sleeve.
In the ’90, Systematic Inventive Thinking was… well… invented. The idea behind it was simple – ideas have common patterns. By focusing on the patterns, you can generate dozens, hundreds of ideas in just a couple of hours. This is the part that ad agencies don’t really want you to know, because it takes the magic out of advertising.
Since then, there were developed various systems to help creative teams come up with ideas, many of them based on identified patterns. Usually, the ad agency hires a company that teaches the creative teams what new patterns can be used for coming up with ideas. That company teaches the same patterns for a couple of years, going from one agency to another. Soon, all of the world’s big agencies are following the same patterns in generating ideas.
Now for the fun part, one of those patterns is an ideation tool called Self-Validation. It was identified by The Mindscapes, a creative training company. This ideation tool instructs creatives to design an experiment using real-life situations in order to prove a brand’s point.
That’s the ideation tool probably used for coming up with the ideas for these emotional ads we can’t stop sharing on Facebook, but that’s not the only tool available, and we can also use them to come up with ideas for our own campaigns.
A popular tool is called the Extreme Challenge. It means you try to create a challenge that’s related to your product and get people to either participate in it or follow it developing because it’s so crazy. Think of the “Best Job in the World” campaign or Felix Baumgartner’s jump from space for Red Bull.
If you watch enough ads, you’ll start seeing the patterns I’m talking about, and when that happens you’ll know what to use in your own brainstormings. Or… you can just use a shortcut. Shortcuts are fun, right? Just watch this video of a workshop on patterns used in advertising for generating ideas. You can thank me later.
The Connection Between Millennials and Emotional Viral Ads
What the ads we’re discussing have in common is that they were created with the Millennials in mind. They’re America’s largest living generation, and even if they’re not everywhere on Earth the largest generation alive, they are representing a powerful cohort of consumers that brands are trying to attract and keep on their side.
Millennials are an interesting group of people – very different from their parents, actively looking for content to consume, and, most importantly, knowing just how they like their brands.
Appealing to Millennials is good for business, and given their interests and lifestyle, it’s not bad for society either. Exactly because there’s such a big interest in getting your communication just right for Millennials, there are many studies that point to a set of rules in creating a campaign or a brand that they’ll love.
One team studying what Millennials look in the brands they buy and what drives them is the one made up of Joeri van den Bergh and Mattias Behrer. Back in 2011, before these ads started to pop up on the internet, they wrote a book called “How Cool Brands Stay Hot: Branding to Generation Y”. In the book, they talk about the CRUSH branding model – the 5 success factors of a youth brand. To be appealing to Millennials, brands have to score high on the CRUSH scale, and you’ll see how the emotional ads we’re discussing do that beautifully.
The CRUSH Branding Model
“CRUSH” comes from the 5 success factors Millennials use to rate brands:
- Cool
- Real
- Unique
- Self-brand identification
- Happiness
Don’t get scared by the complexity of this, most of these things apply to big brands like DIESEL, Mini Cooper, Apple or Converse. By taking a look at the things they work with, we can also get some ideas for our own ventures. Let’s dig in!
Is It Cool?
Being cool as a brand is not an easy feat. You need to pay attention to what your competitors are doing and make sure you’re not becoming too edgy. The easiest way to make sure your brand’s as cool as possible is to innovate, involve Millennials in your creative process, run exclusive offers and promotions on new hip channels (like Snapchat).
Is It Real?
You gotta keep it real! Millennials are all about authenticity. They don’t like brands who copy others or use fake stories to sell their products. They want to be listened and talked to with respect. They also want to see brands hold their ground when it’s important, but also be transparent and open.
Is It Unique?
Young consumers care about a brand’s mission, but they won’t care about it if it only exists on a website and it never manifests in real life. They’ll look at what a brand stands for (through its actions) and try to find something they have in common. You need to really be able to express what makes you stand out from your competition, why is your brand different. You need to own that everywhere and in everything – from the logo to packaging, website, social media posts, tags and stickers.
Is There Self-brand identification?
Millennials will select the brands that show day in day out how they’re connected to their passions. They’ll self-identify with the brands that help them stand out individually but also fit in with a group they aspire to be a part of (a tribe).
Does It Bring Happiness?
When they experience an emotion, Millennials are likely to share the experience with other people. Research showed that only 10% of emotional experiences are kept secret, the rest are going to be shared. The impact of the emotion is also influencing how soon and how often it’s going to be shared. When your brand is removing negative emotions (like Dove), you sure have a winner on your hands.
Millennials are happy to share things that make them feel like they’re improving something, strengthen ties between people, help them lose self-consciousness.
This is why those emotional ads strike a cord. The brand positioning has been carefully studied and set up to please Millennials, the message of the ads clearly established. You can’t watch the Dove ad and don’t get what Dove stands for, what the brand’s mission is. You can’t watch the Ad Council PSA and not experience a strong emotion. Heineken proves just how cool it is by jumping into a conversation that not even individuals are brave enough to have over dinner.
Now, let’s get back to you… I know you don’t have those big budgets these global companies have, but that doesn’t mean you can’t apply a few things to your online marketing or product development or personal brand.
Here’s what I want you to do the next time you’re creating a product or a campaign:
1) Use the ideation techniques I mentioned (and those in the workshop video) to come up with at least 10 ideas. Write down any idea you have, no matter how crazy.
2) Select the top 3 ideas that you like.
3) Analyse the top 3 ideas by answering the following questions and giving a point to those for which you answered yes:
- Does your idea have the potential to generate a strong emotion?
- Does your idea fit with your core target’s passions or interests?
- Can you present your idea with transparency, with no misleading claims?
- Is your idea different from what your competitors have done in the past?
- Is your idea innovative?
4) Select the one idea that scored most points.
5) Write down a description of your idea.
6) Think of who could describe the idea in front of a camera and how.
7) Think how could you produce a short video to present your idea.
Big brands got nothing on you. With a lot of work and dedication, you can be a champion at emotional viral ads in your own niche. Take what you can use, discard the rest. Use the inspiration as fuel for your own efforts and work to make your products household names.
Something you might want to look out for, is a new software called Memester which is coming out in a couple of days.
You can click here to find out more about it!.
Have you seen any great examples of emotional advertising for viral traffic? Share it in the comments below, I’d love to see some more!
Now a days documentation too lead the industry.
Kind Regards
Wow, you are really going against God´s principles…. homosexuals, if don´t repent, are not going to inherit the kingdom of God; and that does not has anything to do with love…. Jesus is Love… He doesn´t condemn, but he is the WORD, that give us light and direction. Please, read your Bible.
A family consists of a man, woman and children…. that´s the way God design it.
Hey Ana, thanks for sharing 🙂 I firstly want to say – good on you for sharing your thoughts – it takes a lot of courage to stand up for what you believe, so – high fives to you! xx
I’m not going to get into a debate about homosexuality and would ask that any comments in this thread be respectful to each other – if you feel you’d like to voice an opinion you can, but please understand – it’s YOUR opinion, and should be treated that way.
MOST IMPORTANTLY I’d love you Ana (and others reading) to note your reaction to the video and perhaps Ana’s comment from a marketing perspective.
The fact that you feel very passionately about the topic – whether it’s for or against – is what makes something like this go viral.
Also interesting to note too, is that even though the tone was strongly pro-LGBT – they also added in other things that people can no-doubt relate to, disability, race, age etc.
So that no matter your background, your life experience, your circle of friends – or the way you’re living your own life … at some point of that video, you will have thought either ‘YES!!! I agree with that and know someone who would love this video’ or ‘NO!!! They can’t say that… this can’t become the norm for society – I need to tell people about that’
That’s the beauty of viral videos. 🙂 It’s like a piece of art – designed to PULL a reaction – make you FEEL and then, with the availability of the Internet, social media etc – you can put a voice to those feelings too.
Final note on this too… check it out – that video is from 2015. And it’s still getting a reaction from you. LONG TERM viral marketing at it’s best!
Hi Cindy, and thanks for your reply… I like your products very much, and I have bought some of them, specially the COVERT xyz. I admire you as an internet entrepreneur, and like the way you teach and your software… so I will continue to follow you , and now I really appreciate you left my comment in this site and did not delete it.
The only thing is that the LGBT discussion is not my opinion, it´s God´s Word in the Bible. God created us with freedom of choice, even if we want or not to believe in Him, so I am not anybody to insist “that much”, but if somebody wants to know where in the Bible God talks about it: 1 Corinthians 6:9-11 .
I am from Mexico… and one of the very few things I admire in Donald Trump (US President) is that he wants to preserve God´s principles in that matter.
Thanks Cindy, I really appreciate your response on my first comment… and wish you a Merry Christmas and the best for 2018! I will be looking forward on your software products. Best regards, -Ana
Thanks! It’s lovely to hear from you – and to hear your appreciation – I pour a lot of myself into bringing out marketing products, training etc – so it’s great to hear you’re digging it 🙂
Re: the LGBT stuff, I totally appreciate that you have a firm belief – which is awesome, I can respect that – without holding those beliefs myself.
I’m not putting a ‘right or wrong’ label on anything – that’s your own thing to decide. We’ve all got our decisions in the matter – and that’s what makes us unique and passionate enough for videos like this to trigger the ‘share share share!!!’ part of our brains – thus… going highly viral
In a word..polarizing. We live in a very divided world. I am a Christian conservative and get sick to death of someone trying to stereotype me as a male neo nazi racist or bigot. Trust me, you want to have a true God fearing Jesus loving person around. On the other side of the fence are pro choice liberals. Of course, there are hybrids of all beliefs and political systems. We are a mish mash of humans that all have our strong beliefs and what makes us tick. I did watch the Heineken commercial and that was nicely done with alot of sensitivity and class. I personally stay away from any controversial topics because someone is going to be offended.
It’s a tricky time we’re living in for sure… and in some ways – pretty damn confusing. We’re told on one hand, to find your passion and be strong in that belief – then, we’re told… don’t hurt people’s feelings – it will fork up your business.
And don’t say fork. That’s gonna offend people… lol (sorry re: fork – I have just started watching the Netflix series ‘The Good Place’…)
I think you’re right re: the Heineken commercial. Finding the right blend of controversy/hot topic + respect is tricky. You CAN be controversial, but like you said – it can be polarising. Which can be good sometimes – you get a bunch of very passionate (targeted) followers at the expense of losing the wider audience.
The problem with being polarising is that if you annoy 50% in your first ‘out there’ proclamation… that’s one thing. When you then say a second thing that is equally polarising – you can quickly cut that following down by another 50% … as marketers, that little world gets pretty lonely pretty quickly!
Presenting alternative points of view is how we gain understanding about those points of view and can discuss each others viewpoint. Per se you are not a male neo nazi bigot and only become one when you behave in ways that those types of people behave, in other words you are entiltled to your belief but not entitled to beat up those with differing beliefs, you hate being categorised, and so do those so called pro choice liberals As you so succinctly put it. “We are a mish mash of humans that all have our strong beliefs and what makes us tick. ” Respecting another persons position is not agreeing with it
I think there are two streams to this thread. One is about up lifting and normalising the lives of minorities. In our hopes and aspirations we are more the same than different and to leave any group out of our advertising is to fail to provide the service that we are meant to be about and that is helping others, it also leaves money on the table that others not so principled would take without providing any value.
The other part is our responsibility as human beings not to ostracise others, Jesus’ revulsion was left for those whose religion excluded others, who made money because of their position not because of their contribution. He walked among and communed with prostitutes, theives, liars, traitors. If you are correct about your beliefs with sincerity and taking all the known ,to you, facts into consideration then God will acknowledge that, if you are wrong with sincerity and taking all the known, to you, facts into account then God will acknowledge that. He will do it in communion with you not to belittle or denigrate you. Each of us will be dealt with in the same way. That is the stance I take as a marketer and a human being.
Fact: viral does not mean profitable.
Well, that’s true – just ask your doctor… haha. If you have a decent amount of traffic from something and aren’t having it make money for you though, you need to examine why and fix it. There are some niches that are more profitable than others – and much easier to make money in than others… but i’ve never seen a niche that will earn ZERO dollars with a lot of traffic.