Budweiser goes green with 2019 Super Bowl ad
Budweiser has released its much-anticipated 2019 Super Bowl advert, for the match on 3rd February, as it celebrates the brand’s pledge for a brighter future with renewable electricity.
Budweiser has released its much-anticipated 2019 Super Bowl advert, for the match on 3rd February, as it celebrates the brand’s pledge for a brighter future with renewable electricity.
Burger King ran a guerrilla marketing campaign tricking influencers into raising brand awareness for their new dessert fries, but one of them has hit back.
As 2018 draws to a close, we look at some of the biggest marketing blunders of the year. From backfiring tweets to political privacy blunders, there were plenty of mistakes from companies that should know better. Read on, learn from the mistakes and hope your team doesn’t make the list in 2019…
From Amazon’s car boot deliveries to Samsung’s foldable phones, technology took us in some strange directions during 2018. In this special article, we celebrate the 10 weirdest news stories of the year.
One in three British parents say their kids are most likely to ask for a present because they saw an influencer recommend it.
2018 was another big year for digital marketing, with the rise of voice search, AI going mainstream and Walmart buying FlipKart. This was the year that Spotify went public, Huawei overtook iPhone and a video game sparked a dance craze. In this special report, we’ve identified 17 of the biggest trends of the year.
YouTube’s annual recap video, showcasing some of the most popular influencers on the platform, has come under fire this year becoming the second-most disliked video in the website’s history.
John Lewis has come out top in the battle of the UK Christmas ads, generating 135% more engagements for the brand on social media in the five minutes immediately after each ad airing, according to new data.
From fake movies to dog selfies, 2018 marked another big year for video viral marketing case studies. Personalised ads, pranks and long-form storytelling were key themes this year. To round off the year, our team has assembled 20 standout virals from around the world for your viewing pleasure…
The online mattress delivery market has been a booming market recently, but this long-form ad from Purple stood out from the crowd with its unusual experiment, sharp use of humour and striking visuals.
To promote the launch of its cutting-edge new running shoes, Epic React, Nike developed an immersive Reactland initiative that transported users into the heart of a virtual video game (complete with an Avatar of themselves).
Coca-Cola-owned drinks brand Oasis created a tongue-in-cheek, parody of the world of marketing, with an ad that challenged people with opposing views to drink from the same oddly shaped bottle.
This ad from iZettle, who make cheap and accessible card readers, is equal parts Black Mirror and Blade Runner (with some pretty clear homages to the latter). The ad posits a world where one giant corporation has taken over all commerce.
A great example of long-form engaging content, Tinder recruited the talents of Jonathan Van Ness and Antoni Porowski from Netflix’s Queer Eye to help one Tinder user optimise their profile and find their next date.
Range Rover decided to do a public demonstration of what their Evoque 4×4 can achieve, by setting up “the world’s biggest speed bump” in the middle of a London street.
It was casting choice that baffled the world: US comedy favourite Danny McBride playing the son of Mick “Crocodile” Dundee in a reboot of that the iconic 80’s film. But it was all an elaborate hoax to promote Australian Toursim.
This technological feat from Adidas saw the sportswear brand utilise the 30,000 runners of the Boston Marathon to create personalised videos of its participants to promote its latest running apparel.
Iceland’s No Palm Oil advertisement is the most powerful ad of Christmas 2018, according to Kantar Millward Brown’s annual consumer research into the effectiveness of festive advertising campaigns.
Realeyes measured viewers’ emotions and attention levels through facial expressions and body language and found airport ad was most engaging from this year’s festive crop.
Twitter UK has launched a Christmas TV ad featuring a man called John Lewis, who gets an avalanche of tweets each year mistaking his for the department store famous for its festive TV commercials.