Cannes Lions

Heartbreak Stickers

OGILVY SINGAPORE, Singapore / CANCER SOCIETY / 2018

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Overview

Description

A sticker was created to stop a parent who smokes from opening their cigarette pack. The sticker made use of adhesive that made it very difficult for the sticker to be removed easily, without it having to be torn or damaged. The sticker was in the shape of a simple heart, and a simple question was printed on it. BREAK THE HABIT, OR BREAK MY HEART.

The heart, metaphorically, belonged to the children of the smokers, who were the ones tasked with sticking the hearts onto the packs of their parents. On each sticker was a space where they could fill out their name and address it to whichever parent smoked. Emotional blackmail at its heart ripping best.

Execution

An adhesive heart shaped sticker, designed to have to be torn from a pack to allow a smoker access to his all-consuming habit. The sticker itself was made so that to break into the pack, anyone would have to break the heart in two. Any child who then placed a sticker on a pack could write their name on it and make it their own. Making a simple metaphor for breaking the child's heart if the parent continued to try and smoke from the pack. Every parent was asked to pledge their commitment to quit. The handing out of the stickers and the pledges has so far been undertaken by the all the schools of Lorna Whiston, who have over 2,000 pupils belonging to nearly 4,000 parents. The number of schools who are taking up the challenge will hopefully encompass every school in Singapore eventually.

Outcome

The number of smokers in Singapore is one of the lowest in the world at 13.4% of the adult population. The government’s aim is to reduce it to under 10%. Worryingly, the number has remained at a constant 25% amongst the male population. These tend to be the real hardcore smokers who remain. The ones finding it hard to quit. The first Lorna Whiston school we collaborated with has over 2000 students, of which over 15% of parents are smokers. 100% of the parents who were confronted, pledged to quit. In the first 8 weeks of the campaign, 80% of them have stuck to the pledge. The programme is currently being rolled out to the rest of the schools in Singapore. As the first semester ends in May, more schools will take up the challenge in the new semester beginning at the end of June.

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2023, CANCER SOCIETY

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