Cannes Lions
TRY AS, Oslo / IKEA / 2023
Overview
Entries
Credits
Background
As the world’s largest furniture retailer, IKEA has taken big measures to become a more sustainable company. With their newly opened second-hand stores, IKEA aim to build a more circular business model where used furniture can be re-sold in their stores.
But we still needed people to sell and buy more second-hand. In Norway alone, over 3 million pieces of furniture are thrown away each year. A lot of it is from IKEA. We conducted an experiment at Oslo’s biggest landfill and the results was shocking: 70% of all discarded IKEA-furniture could have been re-sold in IKEA’s second-hand stores.
So how could we inspire more people to sell their used stuff back to IKEA, rather than throwing it at the dump?
Execution
The film is about how IKEA understands that you don't need your furniture forever. In real homes across Norway we see unwanted furniture, alongside the reason of why they're no longer needed.
The brutally honest film doesn't shy away from addressing the honest and sometimes darker sides of life. Everything from office furniture where a pandemic company went bankrupt, a bed from a broken marriage, a wine rack where the owner stopped drinking, to kitchen furniture from the seventies where the owner has passed away. Together, the furniture makes up a real collection from IKEA: The Life Collection 2022.
At the end we see the furniture back at IKEA to be re-sold in their second-hand stores. It ends with the line "Whatever the reason - give used furniture new life at IKEA" followed by a dynamic title saying The DIVORCE, TEMPORARY, BANKRUPT, BORED, DEATH, PREGNANT, BOYFRIEND, LIFE Collection 2022
Outcome
We collected real unwanted IKEA furniture, along with the brutally honest reasons why it was no longer needed. The Life Collection 2022 was promoted in a disruptive print campaign where IKEA dared to address every possible reason for getting rid of furniture – including death, divorce, bankruptcy and even alcoholism. The campaign ran in the biggest newspapers and glossiest lifestyle magazines, serving as a stark contrast to other high-end furniture ads.
After the launch, there was a clear shift in numbers. Furniture sold back to IKEA increased by 120%, and the amount of used furniture bought in their second-hand stores went up 143%. And best of all, by daring to show the honest and sometimes negatives sides of life, the positive impression of IKEA rose - to an all-time high.
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