Entertainment Lions For Music > Excellence in Music
MOJO SUPERMARKET, New York / GIRLS WHO CODE / 2022
Awards:
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for Music Entertainment?
When Doja Cat releases a new music video, girls around the world stop what they’re doing to watch. We knew we could hack their viewing habits and teach them a thing or two — by creating the world’s first ever codeable music video.
We turned Doja’s hit track “Woman” into an interactive experience that taught girls how to code. The experience, DojaCode, gave girls the power to play director, using snippets of code to manipulate hundreds of music video elements. This first-of-it's-kind experience changed the landscape within the music industry and education space.
Background
There's a massive gender gap in STEM, and Girls Who Code is on a mission to close it. But the biggest challenge is that girls don’t see themselves in coding.They think it's a boring boy’s club.
Our brief was to get girls interested in coding and show them its important role in culture. But the reality is, there’s a thousand things that girls care about more than coding. And Doja Cat happens to be, like, 999 of them. So to get girls interested, we hacked their viewing habits by creating the world’s first ever codeable music video in partnership with Doja Cat herself.
The short term objective was to show girls the fun and creative opportunities STEM has to offer. The long term objective was to create a shift in the stereotypical image of what the opportunities in tech can be—inspiring more women to pursue computer science as a career.
Describe the creative idea
To get more girls interested in coding, we teamed up with Doja Cat to create the world's first ever codeable music video. The video for Doja’s hit single ‘Woman’ became DojaCode, an interactive experience that puts girls in the director's chair. Using snippets of introductory code, girls could manipulate hundreds of music video elements, from changing nail designs, to controlling the sky, to manifesting Doja herself out of thin air.
This first-of-it's-kind experience was more than simply entertainment, it was educational. It introduced countless girls to 3 coding languages – CSS, Javascript, and Python — and did so in a fun, engaging and meaningful way that empowers the next generation of female software developers.
Describe the strategy
How do you get GenZ girls interested in coding when it's quite literally at the bottom of their interest list? When we talked with our GenZ panel, girls across the country told us they dont think about coding because they don’t know how it’s relevant to their lives. We needed to show teens that coding is culture and to make the user experience fun enough that they walked away wondering, "what else could I code?"
Collaborating with Doja Cat, one of GenZ's most beloved and popular artists, we were able to reach girls where they already were. Embedding a Coding 101 lesson within Doja's music video, we proved to girls everywhere that coding and culture are one in the same — that music, art and creativity are fundamentally linked to coding.
Describe the execution
We set out to change girls’ perceptions of code by combining the world of code with the world of Doja Cat. We worked closely with Doja Cat’s team and Active Theory to use graphic and UX design to transform Doja’s music video into an easy-to-use experience that teaches girls to code. We also took coding - typically desktop-only - and translated it to mobile, where our target audience lives.
Dojacode.com is an interactive experience that lives on its own website on desktop and mobile. We posted about it via social and enabled users to share their coded creations on social too. DojaCode introduced countless girls to coding while significantly increasing Girls Who Code site traffic and newsletter signups. The work launched in December 2021 with Doja Cat’s ‘Woman’ music video, and is still running today.
Describe the outcome
Over 150,000 people coded the video within just the first week. Thousands were capturing and sharing it. They were freaking out on TikTok, losing it on IG. In the first two weeks, DojaCode garnered $10M in earned coverage—all with zero paid media behind it.
DojaCode introduced countless girls to coding while significantly increasing Girls Who Code site traffic and newsletter signups.
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