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This case study examines closeup's innovative metaverse campaign, 'city hall of love,' which aimed to promote inclusivity and freedom to love. The campaign utilized decentraland to create a virtual space where couples could obtain nft marriage certificates, symbolizing permanence and challenging societal barriers. The study highlights the campaign's success in earning media coverage, driving engagement, and strengthening brand meaningfulness. It provides valuable insights into leveraging web 3.0 technologies for social impact and brand building.
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Oral hygiene brand Closeup created the City Hall of Love, a metaverse destination, as part of its global campaign to earn media, expand its reach and drive conversions around its brand value of freedom to love. Closeup wanted to reiterate its brand values of supporting all forms of love and closeness in the face of political setbacks to equality. Due to budget, it focused on content creation and reaching digital trailblazers; a metaverse was selected in which to build a City Hall of Love where couples could get NFT marriage certificates, which represented permanence. In partnership with VICE, a couple was recruited to participate and publicise the novel opportunity. The promotion earned coverage in 95 publications versus a target of 50, reaching 140 million people; the City Hall of Love had over 20,000 unique visitors and the campaign improved brand scores for meaningfulness and difference.
Brand: Closeup (toothpaste) Brand owner: Unilever Entrant company: MullenLowe Singapore Idea creation: MullenLowe Singapore Market: Global Sector: Oral health Budget: Up to 500k
Activists, NGOs and brands have historically fought against the structural oppression of love, taking to the streets and resisting discriminatory laws and norms. Their efforts have raised awareness, changed perceptions, garnered support and, in some cases, changed laws and regulations. But recently, decades of social and political progress have been rolled back by the decision of a few individuals (e.g., the United States Supreme Court abortion ruling), even in
democratic and progressive societies. Will a stroke of the pen bulldoze the march towards freedom to love? Closeup is a brand born during the 1960s sexual revolution. It believes people don't choose who they are attracted to, and closeness is beautiful; hence, mutual attraction should face no barriers. Taking a creator rather than an activist mindset, it pivoted from existing efforts to unlock a new territory and empower a hitherto inactive segment of the society to build a more inclusive world: City Hall of Love. The outcome? A breakthrough use of the metaverse to create real- world utility. Market background & objectives Closeup is a toothpaste brand born amid the 1960s sexual revolution, a period when social inhibitions to free love were challenged. It believes people don't choose who they are attracted to, and closeness is beautiful; hence, mutual attraction should face no barriers. But in the past six decades sexism, racism, nationalism, bigotry, xenophobia, mistrust, paranoia and castes have continued to create distance between people. A white paper [1] the brand published with Dr Holly Parker, a lecturer at Harvard University, revealed that: While 8 in 10 youths want to be free to love someone regardless of his/her/their background, fewer than 3 in 5 feel they have that freedom. 5 in 10 are afraid of discrimination, judgement or public shame. 4 in 10 fear being expelled from or disowned by their family or society. 4 in 5 had pursued unconventional relationships in the past. 1 in 2 kept their unconventional relationships a secret due to the lack of support from family and friends. The challenge: To legitimise the freedom to love in a way that would stand the test of time. This challenge wasn't about fighting another structure or barrier. It was about fighting for a world where people are free to love and legitimise their love.
The core business was selling toothpaste, so the marketing budget had to be preserved. The brand had to leverage the power of earned media to optimise its budget for this creative solution, which needed to be built and enhanced over several years. Based on these considerations, the following objectives and KPIs were set: Objective 1 for 2022: Be noticed and seen at scale through earned media. Longer-term objective 2: Turn curiosity and interest into action (e.g., visits, engagement). Longer-term objective 3: Drive conversion (actions that break existing barriers to love). Longer-term objective 4: Strengthen brand meaningfulness and difference. Insight & strategic thinking In shifting from 'fighting against' to 'fighting for', the brand transitioned from an activist mindset to a creator mindset, unlocking a new territory for its purpose. The history of disruptive innovations has something important to teach. Henry Ford once said, 'If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses'. More recently, Steve Jobs said: 'It's really hard to design products by focus groups. A lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them'.
suddenly change the platform's rules. Decentraland was the perfect sandbox to engage the trailblazers. The next order of business was to issue a new symbol of love from the City Hall of Love: the NFT Certificate of Marriage. When love, in all shapes and forms, is immortalised on the blockchain, it stands the test of space and time. Its legitimacy cannot be invalidated overnight by any court ruling. First, users sign in to Decentraland with their MetaMask Wallet before entering the City Hall of Love. Next, they interact with the Cyber Cupid to trigger a window to select their partner's name and propose. The partner who receives the proposal needs to say 'I do' before they can start to mint the NFT Certificate of Marriage. Once minted, the NFT will appear at City Hall of Love and is available outside of Decentraland in their MetaMask wallets. The NFT Certificate of Marriage Every NFT Certificate of Marriage is recognised and validated by over 222,000 nodes [4] on the blockchain, which is more legal witnesses than any authority on earth. This is a remarkable victory in itself. Just because the NFT Certificate of Marriage is virtual doesn't make it less real. It adds an important layer of meaning to how a couple sees their relationship and how people in their online and offline social circles see them. [5] When releasing the beta version of City Hall of Love, the brand had another challenge: How to make the metaverse and NFT human? It worked with VICE to locate a couple in an unconventional relationship that wanted to legitimise their relationship through marriage. From there, the event took place organically. This was vital because any attempt to engineer or script the event would result in a fatal backlash. The result? Proof that getting married in the metaverse is real and human, and brings the online and physical worlds together. Further implementation is planned beyond 2022 as this is a long-term investment by Closeup to create a brand property. Performance Closeup's City Hall of Love was a sandbox to prototype an alternative way of legitimising the freedom to love. Hence, it was important to differentiate between results for 2022 and results that will be measured a few years later.
KPI: Earn coverage from 50 major and niche titles. Results: In four months, City Hall of Love was covered by 95 titles, which exceeded the KPI. [6] KPI: Reach 10 million people. Results: The 95 titles had a combined reach of more than 140m, which greatly surpassed the KPI. [7] Furthermore, the City Hall of Love gained worldwide media coverage, so there was no need for any media spend.
Out of a universe of 300,000 Decentraland users, more than 20,000 unique visitors came to City Hall of Love in four months. Furthermore, 24 couples have minted their NFT Certificate of Marriage, a promising start. [8]
The impact of City Hall of Love on the brand can only be measured over time, however, the initial result for 'Closeup is a
brand that celebrates all kinds of closeness/love' earned an impressive 9 out of 10. This became the No. 1 contributor to meaningfulness and No. 2 contributor on Kantar's index. [9]
Only a handful of people will geek out over the number of nodes on the blockchain. To get more trailblazers to join in trialling and creating this new symbol of love, the brand needs the NFT Certificate of Marriage to have real-world implications. Moving beyond the inception stage in 2022, the goal is to strengthen the legitimacy of City Hall of Love and the NFT Certificate of Marriage. This means building a tangible ecosystem of social benefits linked to the NFT Certificate of Marriage. After all, legitimate unions in today's world come with social recognition and tangible benefits, such as property purchase, apartment rental, mortgage, healthcare and pension. An uphill task? Yes. Impossible? No. And Closeup won't stop until everyone is free to love. ROI figure Earned media ROI: 57: ROI Explanation Earned media ROI was calculated using widely adopted PR values for online media publishers and social media content creators ranging from Tier 1 to 3. Lessons learned Closeup fights for a world without barriers to mutual attraction, where diversity is accepted and celebrated so that everyone is free to turn their mutual attraction into action. Before the City Hall of Love, the brand strategy was brought to life in three ways:
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