Media > Channels

SUPER BOWL DRONES HALF TIME SHOW

INTEL, Santa Clara / INTEL / 2017

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Overview

Credits

OVERVIEW

CampaignDescription

The advertising space in the Super Bowl is crowded with the world’s largest brands, fighting for attention. To break through the clutter of the event, Intel took a different route and became part of the show itself.

During Lady Gaga’s Super Bowl Halftime Show, we launched over 300 drones over Houston’s NRG Stadium to create a custom light show that seamlessly integrated our technology with her performance.

We conveyed an entirely new application for our drones in front of an audience of 150 million people, during the most-viewed segment of the Super Bowl, and created the first drone integration on television.

Execution

On February 5, 2017, the drone light show aired on live television with 150 million viewers watching. Moments after the show, we launched a broadcast spot to provide brand attribution. We also launched real-time content on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, which kept fans engaged after the event.

In the week following the event, the drone performance gained significant media coverage in a variety of news, sports, technology, and music publications. With the drones capturing the world’s attention, we launched an additional film on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, which gave viewers a peek behind the scenes and showed how the show came to life.

Outcome

An estimated 150 million people watched the Super Bowl Halftime Show live, and the performance has gained almost 30 million views on YouTube. Within the Super Bowl broadcast, the drone light show generated the highest aided-awareness ad recall at 53%. The show garnered 4.9 billion potential impressions through article and broadcast clip mentions, including over 950 feature articles and over 1,200 media hits.

Relevancy

During the Super Bowl, the world’s largest brands fight for attention in the event’s crowded advertising space. Intel took an entirely different approach and became part of the show itself. During Lady Gaga’s live Super Bowl Halftime Show, we launched 300 drones over NRG Stadium, creating a custom light show that kicked off her performance. The light show seamlessly integrated Intel technology with the event and showed 150 million people a completely new application of drone technology. It was the first drone integration on television.

Strategy

Intel’s strategy was to create awareness and garner brand credit for the first drone integration in a Super Bowl Halftime Show, delivering on the brand promise that Intel makes amazing experiences possible. Our target audience was Super Bowl viewers and the broader U.S. market.

Synopsis

In 2017, Intel went to the biggest televised event in America, the Super Bowl, with one goal: use Intel technology to create an experience unlike anything the world has seen before and change people’s perceptions of what that technology can do.

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