Our 3 Favourite Christmas Ads of 2016
Here at MintTwist we love a bit of content marketing. December is arguably the king of the calendar when it comes to content marketing. Over the last few years, we’ve all experienced many more brands jumping on the bandwagon and instead of showcasing a product trying to provoke an emotional response. Not all have been successful, remember the Robert Dyers advert from 2015? Although I’m sure that this is an attempt at parody.
Unfortunately, the train is heading into bad weather and won’t be making its destination for Christmas. Brody and his chaperone put a few things in place to ensure the unaccompanied minor has an enjoyable Christmas.
It may have been a costly option for H&M but it’s certainly tactical: the style and class of Anderson will inevitably seep into H&M’s brand image and I couldn’t only think of a few better associations for a clothing re-seller.
Anderson's signature style is now being used to promote brands holiday collection. With the whimsical and cosy train set designs being utilised across the brand's websites and social media I am sure this will a gift that keeps on giving.
The company also offers The Greatest Gift Film Animation Kits for £5 with £2 going to Ormond Hospital. Sainsbury’s also put out a downloadable Studio App and even offer a behind the scenes look at the shoot.
Don’t forget the singing competition which gives hopefuls the chance to appear on the special fans sing-along video and £1,000 for Christmas shopping. Don’t forget Gingerbread Dave, 50p of each one sold also goes to charity. Customers also have the option to donate in store.
There were 180 people working on the production of the film, it took 16 weeks to build the puppets and sets plus another 420 hours to film and then 8 weeks spent in post-production. But it’s what Sainsbury’s did to promote the #Christmasisforsharing theme that caught my eye.
The campaigns integrated arsenal included: a downloadable app and song, instructional videos, gingerbread men, and a singing competition – all of which feed into a good cause.
What makes this ad so successful — on an international scale — is that we all have a family or friend who lives abroad; everyone has experienced the choices of being reunited. As a foreigner living in London this ad resonates even more — it is hard to keep tight relationships when abroad — something that Allegro's core audience are aware of in earnest.
Getting reunited with friends and family during the festive season is at the heart of Christmas, hats off to Allegro for representing that spirit so sweetly. Oh and with a far smaller budget than the runner-ups too, not that should be a deterrent — grandpa showed that with a bit of guts and planning the payoff can be unquantifiable.
The increasingly globalised world may send us away from families but it also critical to the success of Allegro as an international e-commerce provider. After all, grandpas book ‘English for Beginners’ came from Allegro!
Given that just over 800,000 Poles live in the UK Allegro does a great job at tapping into the group’s core audience.