LGBTQ
abuse has more than doubled since the COVID-19 lockdown began, and queer charities
are struggling to meet demand with the lost income from canceled fundraising
events such as Pride.
Inspired
by real stories, we show a teen girl’s relationship with her abusive mother
during the lockdown. Only at the end do we realise that the girl is trans and is
unable to be herself safely at home.
We
set-out to raise awareness of the issue, encouraging donations to help LGBT
Foundation’s helpline continue supporting people at their point of crisis. With
next to no budget for media we planned a very light paid social and digital
campaign which was heavily supported by PR coverage and organic shares on
social media from influencers. We knew that for this to work the creative would
need to work incredibly hard to capture the audience’s attention and hearts to
build affinity with the cause.
So
far, the campaign has raised enough funds to enable LGBT Foundation’s helpline
to answer 400 more hour-long calls to LGBTQ people at crisis point, provide 800
online group sessions for isolated LGBTQ people, or fund 200 assessments of
domestic abuse cases.
The
work gained over 100k views at launch and 2.1m impressions.
Digital
placements of the film were specifically targeted LGBTQ sites with an audience
who would be sympathetic to the cause but were not engaged currently. The
combination of relevant and emotive creative with strong targeting performed
unexpectedly well with the CTR of 2% vs the benchmark of 0.5% and the VTR of 18%
vs benchmark of 10% for video over 15”. This is particularly strong given the video
is 90”. This was also reflected in LGBT Foundation’s posts on Facebook and Twitter
achieving engagement rates 83% higher than their average (Twitter 4.89% vs average
of 1.9% and Facebook 17.4% vs average of 11%).
“A masterclass in
how to create a campaign on a very sensitive topic”
PR Week,
Creative Hit of the Week
“A courageous piece
of work which deserves to be shared as widely as possible”
David Reviews,
Pick of the Day
“A powerful example
of sharing the lived-experiences of LGBT people to drive empathy and
awareness.”
Creative Brief, Hot Pick