Cannes Lions

The Homeless Bank Account

WUNDERMAN THOMPSON, London / HSBC / 2021

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Overview

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Overview

Background

Without a fixed address of their own, homeless people find themselves in a lose-lose situation where not having a home makes it virtually impossible to open a bank account. Without a bank account they can’t claim benefits or store their money. Without an address and a bank account its harder to secure a legitimate job. All of which makes it harder to find a home. It’s a vicious circle that prevents these people from re-joining society’s system.

HSBC UK’s values are OPEN, CONNECTED and DEPENDABLE, and the bank believes that as a nation, and as individuals, we thrive more when we are connected to something bigger than ourselves. Our brief was to help HSBC UK reconnect the homeless back into society.

Idea

Traditionally, banks require photo identification and proof of address to open an account. But these are documents that many homeless people may no longer have. So, the way in which society’s financial system has been designed means that once you’ve fallen out of it, it’s incredibly hard to find your way back in.

At HSBC UK branches, people without a fixed address can now open a bank account using a participating charity’s address as their proof of identity (as long as they are accompanied by a charity caseworker that is). This partnership allows the homeless to reconnect with society and helps break the cycle of financial exclusion.

To raise awareness of the service we took to the streets using data to pinpoint locations with the highest levels of homelessness that were also in close proximity to an HSBC UK branch that offered the service.

Strategy

Brand perception studies showed that people strongly associated HSBC with being global and with wealth management. In short, we were the bank for “wealthy foreigners”. At the same time, our research told us that our target audience strongly value creating greater social inclusion.

The disconnect between these two things formed the basis of our approach. We needed to find a way to reframe HSBC UK’s perceived internationalism from being about geography to the values of a worldly, open and connected Britain.

To do this, we started with one of the most vulnerable and overlooked groups in the country at the moment – the homeless. Demonstrating through the No Fixed Address service that HSBC UK is committed to helping everyone in the country to thrive regardless of their gender, sexuality, place of birth, social class, employment status, physical capability, or living situation.

Execution

To raise awareness amongst those who may need the service and those who might be in a position to help, we used out of home footfall data in 5 cities to target sites based on the rate of homelessness in the area, as well as their proximity to an HSBC UK branch that offered the No Fixed Address service.

A mix of specially designed bus shelter vinyl wraps and disruptive fly poster formats in these areas highlighted the two types of homeless, rough sleepers and the invisible sofa surfers (people moving from sofa to sofa). Revealing the struggles they face without access to financial services while introducing the service.

We also generated larger reach by appearing in national publications that had previously aligned themselves with homeless causes (including The Guardian and free titles such as the Evening Standard).

The campaign ran from 16 November 2020 to 30 Dec 2020.

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