Cannes Lions
BBDO , New York / COLOR OF CHANGE / 2021
Overview
Entries
Credits
Background
In 2020, racial inequalities reached a tipping point in America. Color of Change, the country’s largest online racial justice organization wanted to create a campaign that helped combat oppressive symbols of racism that have been glorified in towns and cities across the country.
Idea
Confederate statues that are long standing symbols of America’s racist past were brought down all across the country. Leaving behind empty pedestals in their wake. We created an Augmented Reality experience that gave people the power to place symbols of equality where symbols of racism once stood- using their phone. All by repurposing an element of America’s racist past for a hopeful future.
Strategy
Drive awareness, change the historical narrative, transform culture, honor justice and equitable progress through meaningful conversation with consumers, media and industry leaders.
•Insight: In 2020, the racial inequalities reached a tipping point in America causing the demolition of confederate symbols across the nation, leaving a sea of empty pedestals in its wake.
•Key message: The Pedestal Project by Color Of Change is a new augmented reality experience that brings an innovative way to mobilize and power racial justice.
•Target audience: Organizations, media, key industry leaders and consumers age 18+ based in the U.S.
•Creation and distribution of assets
oAR Filter: worked with a Black sculpture artist, CGI designers and developers to create realistic depictions of statues
oPress Materials, press release, email pitch, key messages, talking points and social media copy; AR filter renderings and how-to-videos
oDistribution method: earned media outreach, influencer engagement and social media amplification
Execution
Featured in the experience are prominent Black Civil Rights activists like Congressman John Lewis, Black Lives Matter Co-founder Alicia Garza and Activist Chelsea Miller. We wanted our AR statues to not just be likenesses of our Activists but be visual homages to their life’s work. Each statue captures a moment that cements their passion for racial justice. Like seeing a young John Lewis, hand raised, brow furrowed, tie flying and mid-stride depicted during The March on Washington in 1963.
To create these, we worked with Black fine artist Spencer Evans who created detailed 2D sketches that were then rendered into 3D sculptures. When launched, users could also listen to an immersive audio experience and hear the activists talk about why change is worth fighting for. Launched at the start of Black History Month, the campaign helped replace centuries of hate with hope, all using a phone.
Outcome
With zero media dollars spent and over 600 million impressions earned in the month we promoted the campaign, the impact was strong across 48 countries who saw, read, experienced, and shared the initiative. Color Of Change saw a 200% spike in their website traffic, and the brand was searched for 1.5x times more on the day of launch. It got us to 50K signatures of the online petition. The response saw 96% positive sentiment in February, compared to 80% with Black History Month content on the internet.
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