6 Lessons From the Best Marketing Campaign Ever
[ http://www.facebook.com/widgets/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rohitbhargava.com%2F2009%2F07%2F6-lessons-from-the-best-marketing-campaign-ever.html ]Last month an unlikely underdog stunned the marketing world at the International Cannes Advertising Festival. At the show, a single marketing campaign took home a Grand Prix award in three categories simultaneously--direct, cyber and PR-- something that had never happened before in the 50+ year history of the show. Contrary to what you might expect, the unanimous winner of this unprecedented victory was not a Fortune50 brand with an advertising budget of millions, but a small Tourism board promoting a little known island off the Great Barrier Reef.

The winning campaign was called the "Best Job in the World" and was essentially a big online job search conducted through social media for a new "caretaker" for Hamilton Island in Queensland, Australia. Done on a comparatively paltry marketing budget of just $1.7 million dollars and reliant on fortuitous PR and word of mouth, the campaign achieved stunning results, including over 34,000 video entries from applicants in 200 countries, and more than 7 million visitors to the site who generated nearly 500,000 votes.
Just two weeks ago on July 1, the winner of the competition--a 34-year-old British man named Ben Southall started blogging and touring around Queensland, finally bringing the competition to a close. For the next six months, he will be touring around Queensland, sharing his adventures through a video blog, writing, Twitter account and Flickr photos-- generating even more interest in Hamilton Island and all of Queensland in the process. The tangible results for the island are rolling in as well: Amway Australia chose it as the site of their upcoming annual conference, and domestic Aussie airline Virgin Blue just started flying a direct flight between Sydney and Hamilton Island, due to the rise in demand from travelers wanting to get to the island.
I realize that tourism and the travel industry may seem far removed from your business. Unfortunately, we don't all have the natural beauty of Hamilton Island to fall back on when starting our marketing campaigns. Still, a big part of the reason for the amazing success of this campaign was not what they were marketing, but how they used social media to do it. In that, there are some lessons anyone trying to promote a product or service could use:
NOTE: This entry is republished from my guest blog post on FastCompany.com today.
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When I saw this campaign, I thought it was brillant! The amount of content that resulted because of this is going to having very long term affects. They offered something of value or the chance to get something of value and in return, people around the world gain them more value then they would have ever been able to do themselves.
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Posted by: Beyond Domaining | Saturday, July 18, 2009 at 08:22 AM
Interesting. It really does look like online video is the next wave in marketing. It doesn't look like such a bad idea to get your potential market to compete for making a good video for you. That's already instant exposure as long as you can get people excited about it. I'd also make sure these videos are posted on sites like YouTube, AdWido, and Veoh so that people will be a bit more likely to find them.
Posted by: Jones | Friday, July 24, 2009 at 12:26 PM