Pharma > Disease Awareness & Understanding

THE HEARING TEST IN DISGUISE

CHE PROXIMITY, Melbourne / COCHLEAR / 2018

Awards:

Bronze Cannes Lions
CampaignCampaign(opens in a new tab)
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Overview

Credits

Overview

Audience

Australia is in the midst of a silent epidemic. 3.5 million people are living with hearing loss however 85% are not being treated. Recommendation of Cochlear implants from practitioners is low. For this reason, Cochlear made the decision to communicate direct-to-consumers for the first time.

BriefExplanation

BriefWithProjectedOutcomes

Cochlear products are registered as medical devices. Cochlear is governed by the Therapeutic Goods Administration. Medical devices can be promoted direct-to-consumers.

CampaignDescription

Of the 3.5 million people living with hearing loss, 85% do nothing about it. Many are in denial, others dismiss it as 'growing old'. Cochlear, the leader in implantable hearing solutions, wanted to encourage those with hearing loss to act.

Based on the insight that people with hearing loss are in denial, we developed a way to test their hearing, without them knowing.

'Does Love Last Forever?' is a short film with two different endings, depending on the viewer's hearing ability. It is a hearing test in disguise.

The film follows a couple's relationship over four decades, and poses the question "Did love last?". For those who can hear well, their relationship remains loving. But the film is scripted and produced in such a way that people with a hearing problem perceive the relationship to deteriorate.

Execution

SHAPING A FILM WITH TWO ENDINGS

Working with leading audiologists we analysed patient audiograms, which informed all aspects of the film. We incorporated sounds, words and environments into the script which people with hearing loss have difficulty with. Performances were choreographed to be interpreted negatively and the ability to lip-read was taken away, making it hard to follow for people with hearing loss.

A SEAMLESS DIGITAL EXPERIENCE TO EVALUATE PEOPLE'S HEARING ABILITY, WITHOUT THEM KNOWING

Teaser content seeded via social, DBM and Outbrain drove people to the campaign microsite to watch the film, without knowing it was a hearing test.

The microsite delivered an immersive film experience enabling users to question the outcome of the couple's relationship, unknowingly undergoing a hearing test.

After the film, users took an interactive hearing assessment which quantified their hearing. A negative result prompted a consultation with Cochlear, placing them on the relevant treatment path.

Outcome

FACILITATED DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

We tested the hearing of 137,000 Australians, who ordinarily wouldn't have been tested.

Leads are critical to Cochlear. The more people who have a conversation with Cochlear, the more people who undertake the assessment process, hopefully becoming eligible for surgery. We received 2,056 high-value, qualified leads, against a target of 1,500. Meaning 2,056 people are on the path to restoring their hearing.

WEBSITE ENGAGEMENT

128,883 unique visitors, with 14 minutes average time on site, demonstrating high engagement.

PATIENT OUTCOMES

While a lead can take 6 years to mature to an implant, 13 candidates have already received this life-changing surgery after seeing the campaign. Many more are in the pipeline to receive surgery.

NATIONAL HEALTH AGENDA

In September 2017, Trent Zimmerman MP presented a report featuring Cochlear to the Australian Parliament. As a result, hearing health is now being considered to become a National Health Priority.

Strategy

DIRECT-TO-CONSUMERS

Cochlear had traditionally focused efforts on communicating directly to hearing professionals. However, with low referral rates, a bold strategic decision was made to communicate directly to consumers. Reasons for low referrals included:

* Lack of screening

* Physicians not knowing candidacy and when to refer

* Little understanding regarding hearing implants within general medicine

DISRUPTING THE DENIAL

Through qualitative, ethnography, and social listening, we revealed the 'denial' stage of the hearing journey. In denial about just how bad their hearing is, or simply dismissing it as a part of 'growing old', sufferers continue to live without what they once took for granted.

This denial was the driving insight behind our campaign. It was clear we had to disrupt the denial.

Considering this behavioural barrier, we couldn't just tell people they had a problem, we had to demonstrate it. We developed a way to test their hearing, without them knowing.

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