PR > Social Engagement & Influencer Marketing
WUNDERMAN THOMPSON, Sydney / UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME / 2022
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for PR?
Before, during and following the COP26 climate summit, the topic of climate change and the need for more action was a regular feature of news bulletins around the world.
Most of this coverage spoke about what world leaders were doing, but through the international PR coverage and shares this book received, we were able to spotlight what our planet’s youngest citizens were doing to safeguard their future – and in doing so, stimulate a much larger conversation.
Background
In the lead-up to COP26 – the most anticipated international climate summit ever – the UNDP wanted to remind the world that it’s not just world leaders who have the power. Their challenge was to inspire even the most powerless groups across the globe to speak up about the need for climate action.
Describe the creative idea
‘The Birds and The Bees’, also known as ‘the facts of life’, is the conversation parents have with kids to explain how babies are made.
To empower kids to speak up about climate action, the UNDP published a book that flips this tradition by getting children to sit parents down for 'the talk' about the planet they will inherit.
Since birds and bees are among the most susceptible animals to the effects of climate change and fossil fuels; the story uses them as the barometer for its devastating consequences. From this bleak realisation, the story evolves to leave kids and parents with a simple solution that they can action together.
Describe the PR strategy
Scientific projections and news stories about what the future of our planet will look like without climate action were cause for people to switch off. Particularly following a pandemic, people of all ages needed stories of hope for a better future.
By empowering today’s youth to talk to adults about protecting the planet, we gave news outlets a climate story with a positive spin.
To achieve this, both digital and physical copies of books were sent to news outlets, as well as celebrities with a passion for climate action.
Describe the PR execution
Once the book went live on November 4th, media gravitated to the story. Melanie Zanetti, (star of children’s show Bluey and voice of the audiobook) began to be asked about the book in interviews with major national broadcast outlets, the story became the top article in two of Australia’s biggest news outlets, and people began to share their photos with the book on social media. This was amplified by the UNDP sharing the book with millions of followers.
List the results
The book was covered in all forms of media, from TV news, to national newspapers, radio, online publications and was shared by readers across Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Achieving 17 million earned media impressions, and contributing to the book having been read 915,362 times and counting.
It is also now available in multiple languages as a physical copy and e-book. As well as two audiobooks, one voiced by Game of Thrones star Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, and Melanie Zanetti from Emmy-Winning kids’ show Bluey. More importantly, it has become an ongoing tool to discuss the most important issue of our time.
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