营销日历 营销导航 热门搜索 使用技巧
广告营销案例

    您的体验已到期

    免费领取会员>
    The Monthly活动广告营销案例

    本案例默认翻译为中文,点击可切换回原语言

    已切换成原语言,点击可翻译成中文

    案例简介:

    案例简介:Background Thousands of homeless and impoverished women experience an epidemic known as period poverty: a lack of access to sanitary products. Many women take desperate measures to fashion makeshift tampons out of whatever they can find, like old socks or paper towels. This can lead to serious health problems like toxic shock syndrome (TSS). Shoppers Drug Mart, the largest retail pharmacy chain in Canada, is committed to supporting all women’s health — even the most disenfranchised. So we set out to create an effective way to supply free tampons to homeless and impoverished women who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford them. Describe the cultural/social/political/environmental climate in your region and the significance of your campaign within this context Many homeless women feel unsafe going to shelters for tampons due to abuse, harassment, exposure to drugs, and other issues. Furthermore, tampons are in limited supply in canadian shelters and only available one or two at time, forcing woman who want to stay clean to return again and again over the course of bone period. We needed a solution that provided homeless women with a way to safely and convenient acquire tampons while preserving their dignity. Describe the creative idea (30% of vote) We created The Monthly: tampons dispensed through upcycled newspaper boxes. We realized these disappearing yet recognizable, former newspaper delivery devices would be a discreet, private way to deliver tampons to women when and where they need them. So we reworked the boxes to dispense tampons, rather than newspapers. We outfitted the boxes with keypads and distributed the code to outreach programs. We also created a web app with the code and locations of our boxes that women via the many free wifi points in the city. Describe the strategy (20% of vote) We deliberately took a targeted approach to our awareness campaign by making sure that the only people who knew about The Monthly were those who needed to — homeless women. We reached out directly to local advocacy groups, shelters, and outreach programs to spread the word and distribute the boxes’ codes and locations. We also target area of the city where homeless and impoverished woman live and handed out information about The Monthly directly to women on the street. Describe the execution (20% of vote) We worked with local government to install The Monthly ‘newspaper boxes’ on Toronto streets, in the neighborhoods that needed them the most. We began with a pilot neighbourhood and presented the finding to city council, once Toronto politicians found out about the idea, they immediately approved the development of more boxes to turn it into a citywide program. Because of the impact The Monthly has had on period poverty in Toronto, the program is expanding across Canada. Describe the results/impact (30% of vote) There were no likes. No hearts. No shares. No retweets. Shoppers Drug Mart has quietly promoted this effort to the women who need it. Rather than accolades for the company, SDM has measured the success of this project by the the enthusiastic support The Monthly has received by Toronto City Council -- who allowed the expansion of the program across the city. And most importantly, the need to regularly restock the boxes. Clearly the woman who need them, are getting them. Showing that The Monthly is helping to eradicate period poverty in Toronto.

    The Monthly

    案例简介:

    The Monthly

    案例简介:Background Thousands of homeless and impoverished women experience an epidemic known as period poverty: a lack of access to sanitary products. Many women take desperate measures to fashion makeshift tampons out of whatever they can find, like old socks or paper towels. This can lead to serious health problems like toxic shock syndrome (TSS). Shoppers Drug Mart, the largest retail pharmacy chain in Canada, is committed to supporting all women’s health — even the most disenfranchised. So we set out to create an effective way to supply free tampons to homeless and impoverished women who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford them. Describe the cultural/social/political/environmental climate in your region and the significance of your campaign within this context Many homeless women feel unsafe going to shelters for tampons due to abuse, harassment, exposure to drugs, and other issues. Furthermore, tampons are in limited supply in canadian shelters and only available one or two at time, forcing woman who want to stay clean to return again and again over the course of bone period. We needed a solution that provided homeless women with a way to safely and convenient acquire tampons while preserving their dignity. Describe the creative idea (30% of vote) We created The Monthly: tampons dispensed through upcycled newspaper boxes. We realized these disappearing yet recognizable, former newspaper delivery devices would be a discreet, private way to deliver tampons to women when and where they need them. So we reworked the boxes to dispense tampons, rather than newspapers. We outfitted the boxes with keypads and distributed the code to outreach programs. We also created a web app with the code and locations of our boxes that women via the many free wifi points in the city. Describe the strategy (20% of vote) We deliberately took a targeted approach to our awareness campaign by making sure that the only people who knew about The Monthly were those who needed to — homeless women. We reached out directly to local advocacy groups, shelters, and outreach programs to spread the word and distribute the boxes’ codes and locations. We also target area of the city where homeless and impoverished woman live and handed out information about The Monthly directly to women on the street. Describe the execution (20% of vote) We worked with local government to install The Monthly ‘newspaper boxes’ on Toronto streets, in the neighborhoods that needed them the most. We began with a pilot neighbourhood and presented the finding to city council, once Toronto politicians found out about the idea, they immediately approved the development of more boxes to turn it into a citywide program. Because of the impact The Monthly has had on period poverty in Toronto, the program is expanding across Canada. Describe the results/impact (30% of vote) There were no likes. No hearts. No shares. No retweets. Shoppers Drug Mart has quietly promoted this effort to the women who need it. Rather than accolades for the company, SDM has measured the success of this project by the the enthusiastic support The Monthly has received by Toronto City Council -- who allowed the expansion of the program across the city. And most importantly, the need to regularly restock the boxes. Clearly the woman who need them, are getting them. Showing that The Monthly is helping to eradicate period poverty in Toronto.

    暂无简介

    The Monthly

    暂无简介

    基本信息

    综合评分
    {{getNumber(caseInfo.whole)}}

    暂无评分

    已有{{caseInfo.tatolPeople}}人评分

    创意
    {{getNumber(caseInfo.originality)}}
    文案
    {{getNumber(caseInfo.copywriting)}}
    视觉
    {{getNumber(caseInfo.visualEffect)}}

    案例详情

    涵盖全球100万精选案例,涉及2800个行业,包含63000个品牌

    热门节日97个,23个维度智能搜索

    • 项目比稿

      品类案例按时间展现,借鉴同品牌策略,比稿提案轻松中标

    • 创意策划

      任意搜索品牌关键词,脑洞创意策划1秒呈现

    • 竞品调研

      一键搜索竞品往年广告,一眼掌握对手市场定位

    • 行业研究

      热词查看洞悉爆点,抢占行业趋势红利

    登录后查看全部案例信息

    如果您是本案的创作者或参与者 可对信息进行完善

    案例评分

    综合
    {{wholeEm}} 请评分
    创意
    {{originalityEm}} 请评分
    文案
    {{copywritingEm}} 请评分
    动视
    {{visualEffectEm}} 请评分

    链接粘贴成功,ctrl+v 进行复制

    完善信息

    最多可填写1000个字符

    请填写正确的邮箱

    完善信息成功

    完善信息失败

    评分成功

    您已经完成过对该案例的评分了

    联系我们 返回广告案例顶部 分享广告案例 意见反馈 广告案例意见反馈 回到顶部 返回广告案例顶部

    链接粘贴成功,ctrl+v 进行复制

    扫码关注公众号完成登录

    登录即视为同意《用户协议》

    二维码失效

    刷新

    注册成功,赠送你10天会员体验权

    注册失败,请检查信息后重新输入