PR > Digital & Social
EDIBLE (A DANIEL J. EDELMAN AGENCY), New York / KIND SNACKS / 2017
Overview
Credits
CampaignDescription
The KIND Foundation created Pop Your Bubble, a first-of-its-kind social experiment, featuring a web app to help people triumph over technology. The secret was our “anti-algorithm” — an algorithm that matched users with people who were most different from them (rather than just showing them more of what they already “like”).
We didn’t just talk about our divided nation — we offered a concrete solution to help people actually listen to one another. The web app was the centerpiece of our experiment, giving anyone access to a personalized array of strangers who would “pop their bubble.” To find these strangers, we analyzed a user’s Facebook profile (age, location, likes, shares, etc.) and served up people that were the most different from them. Once a user followed ten of these new people they could pop their bubble, populating their news feed with perspectives from outside their world view.
Execution
Pop Your Bubble was a social experiment conducted in multiple parts.
First we exposed the problem, showing ten participants the surprisingly skewed makeup of their political bubbles. We then challenged our participants to pop their social media bubbles, documenting their reactions in a film.
Next we built a Facebook web app and a custom “anti-algorithm,” giving the whole nation a chance to fix their news feeds. The web app analyzed users’ Facebook profiles (age, location, likes, shares, etc.) to find strangers that were the most different from them, and made it easy to follow any of them on Facebook with a single tap. Once users followed ten of those strangers, they could “pop their bubble” and share the news with their friends. After popping, the user’s Facebook feeds would be populated with thoughts, opinions, and daily life updates dramatically different than the ones they were used to.
Outcome
TIER 1:
In the first two weeks, Pop Your Bubble resulted in more than 140 million earned media impressions, including coverage from The Washington Post, Fast Company, CNN, and more, as well as 25 million Twitter impressions. The tone was overwhelmingly positive, positioning Pop Your Bubble as a solution to the problem everyone was talking about.
TIER 2:
Most importantly, within the same time period, our audience established over 40,000 new relationships, furthering the KIND Foundation’s mission to connect people from all walks of life.
Relevancy
After the 2016 election, everyone was talking about “social media bubbles.” Rather than just tap into an existing conversation, Pop Your Bubble provided Americans with a tangible way to break out of their echo chambers and listen to one another.
Strategy
We conducted our own study of social media users, analyzing how their views compared with the views they typically saw in their news feeds. While the majority of people considered themselves open-minded, only 5% were often confronted with social media posts from outside their worldview. The key finding was a jarring one: No matter how open-minded people thought themselves to be, their actions didn’t quite match up.
The KIND Foundation was founded on the belief that kindness and empathy can change our world for the better, and Pop Your Bubble gave Americans a way to turn open-mindedness into action.
To bring together a diverse group for discourse, we targeted urban, suburban, and rural U.S. areas, making sure to reach people across the political spectrum. We focused on driving diversity among users, and adapted our targeting throughout the program to maintain a balance of participants from all walks of life.
Synopsis
In 2017, America was divided. The era of social media was supposed to be connecting us all, but it was actually making things worse — many people were only seeing content from like-minded individuals in their news feeds, driving an even greater wedge between people with varying perspectives.
The KIND Foundation exists to foster kinder, more empathetic communities, so instead of just talking about the problem, we created a real solution: a social experiment, centered around a web app that could actively create change.
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