Skinny cleverly outsources its radio ads to New Zealanders in new campaign via Colenso BBDO
To avoid expensive celebrity voice talent and pricey recording studios, Kiwi telco Skinny has launched ‘Phone It In’, a low-cost campaign developed by Colenso BBDO, that lets Kiwis record Skinny radio ads on their mobile phone, for free.
Hundreds of Skinny radio scripts have been published around the country. From standard placements like billboards and regional newspapers, to takeaway coffee cups, bar coasters, movie screens, 3 a.m. TV ad slots, social, and a street poster blitz.
Each script comes with an 0800 number that takes callers to the automated ‘Skinny Radio Ad Recording Service’ (which is essentially an answering machine). From there, the recordings are given the trademark Skinny mnemonic and dispatched as radio ads.
Each script is written to be contextually relevant to its location, leading to bespoke placements around the country.
The end result is an out-of-home campaign, that doubles as a radio campaign, that triples as a cost-effective way to tell the nation about Skinny’s incredible mobile network and low prices.
Says Si Vicars, CCO, Colenso BBDO: “When a brand pays a couple of million bucks for Morgan Freeman, that cost is ultimately passed on to the consumer. That’s not how Skinny rolls. So instead of expensive celebrity voice talent, we’re open sourcing our radio ads so that anyone in New Zealand can record them on their mobile phones for free. This is a truly interactive campaign, and we’re excited to see what gets created.”
Says Ally Young, brand lead at Skinny: “Skinny have always found ingenious ways to keep prices low, and customers happy. Recruiting Skinny fans across the nation to become the voices of our brand is just another way we save our customers money, and showcase how much New Zealanders love Skinny. We can’t compete on advertising spend, so we’re always looking for super smart ways to be efficient, and showcase Skinny’s standout sense of humour.”
Says Amanda Palenski, creative integration lead, PHD: “‘Phone It In’ is a brilliant example of creative and media collaboration. Each placement was thoughtfully chosen and given its own contextually relevant script, to be then brought to life by the voices of the public.”
The campaign will also be supported by an integrated radio partnership with Jono & Ben. Skinny has a track record of saving customers money through smart and thrifty advertising hacks, and was awarded the coveted WARC Sustained Growth Grand Prix at Cannes this year.
Client: Skinny
Client: Ally Young: Domain Chapter Lead – Brand
Agency: Colenso BBDO
Media Agency: PHD
Any other partners: DRUM
26 Comments
That’s the goods. Someone had some fun writing that.
The forgotten medium of Colenso (pioneered by Mike O). This is a winner for sure.
I actually heard it on the radio too. I like it.
Huge x
God I love this. T(h)om, if you had anything to do with this, comment back on here which someone else will DM to me as a LinkedIn post which will be danced via a tiktok.
Genuinely my favourite ads from Colenso in the last couple of years.
Funny idea, large scale (seen them round lots myself), well written. Well done to all those involved.
“In non-traditional radio that is a GOLD AXIS!”
You can smell the fun in this campaign. Great work.
Good blog burn, Colenso. Made me laugh.
An idea where the product and the service are integral to the execution. A low cost mobile provider letting Kiwis turn their phones into a way to record radio ads. Then you add some craft to the writing and you’ve made something very good. The art direction is shit but maybe that’s the point. Like the self referential poster says, ‘Bravo’
Simple. Funny. Me likey.
https://droga5.com/work/johnsonville/
Kinda the same thang.
I called the number. Pick mine. I also want to hear the type of recordings they get outside the strip club.
That’s not me on the one outside the strip club.
“Gold for most transparent comment made by Creative who worked on it.”
No, I don’t work at Colenso, that’s why I said “maybe they’re coming back” as in I think Colenso have been pretty crap in the last few years.
I was just giving honest comments, to nice work. Work on your understanding of transparency. People seem to get confused by the word “opacity,” maybe you’re one of them?
Also, just to really put me in my place, tell me what you think would top this in Axis for best non-traditional radio?
https://droga5.com/work/johnsonville/
A low cost telco crowd-sourcing radio talent with contextual ads to save money & then publishing them raw is not the same as Johnsonville asking staff for ‘unscripted’ film scenarios.
It’s different though? The other one had people pitch ads that got made into movies. These people read scripts out loud to be the VO. If we bash every vaguely similar idea then this blog… well, not much would change in the comments, but it’s still a dumb thing to do. Made me waste my time watching that video.
These two ideas are worlds apart? The only similarity being that the radio VO is done by joe blogs rather than paid VO talent. That’s where the similarity ends.
But didn’t the money they spent on all the other media placements cost more than what a voice over talent would have? Fun idea, dodgy logic.
They’d be running ads anyway. This way the ads do double-duty. Still speaks to low-cost.
Shameshame
There’s a car yard in Auckland that gets customers to do their ads. They are so dreadful I can’t remember the name of the actual car yard. And no, they aren’t paying me to say this.
Your comment is the same as “You guys know about this one right?”. Please endeavour to be original.
I really don’t like Colenso, but I love this idea.
Kiwi Lager campaign. It’s well done but it is close.