Brief:
India is a patriarchal society. Over generations, deep-rooted cultural norms have made housework the sole responsibility of women. In 2015, Ariel – a leading detergent brand – made gender equality at home its mission. Over 7 years, #ShareTheLoad created a gradual shift as it sparked conversations that nudged men towards taking up housework.
But…
In 2021, a World Economic Forum report revealed a shocking truth – at the current pace of change, gender parity is 135 years away. Which means no woman alive will experience gender parity.
This startling reality shaped Ariel’s next brief:
Our objectives were clear – we needed to trigger a conversation of a scale that would beat our past successes.
Creative Idea:
To accelerate the pace of change and drive an immediate mindset shift, ‘See Equal #ShareTheLoad’ – a provocative social movement by Ariel for the first time took on a defiant tone.
It challenged men and their mindset through a radical question – “why do men share the load with other men, but not with their wives? Is it because they never saw them as equal?” And in doing so inspired women to break their silence and speak up.
Only when you See Equal, you Share The Load.
Not just that, it called out to brands and content creators publicly in an appeal to join Ariel in creating an equal tomorrow. And then it went a step further and turned its packs into a silent protest.
Strategy:
Our target audience were urban households across India.
Via secondary research, ethnographic studies, social listening, lived experiences and third party surveys, we uncovered the following unsettling truths:
In the face of these truths, to accelerate the pace of change and drive an immediate mindset, we had a multi-pronged approach aimed at igniting conversations and correcting imagery:
Execution:
We kickstarted the movement on 11th February 2022 by taking a defiant stand with our film. For the first time in Indian advertising, the woman confronts her husband and calls out his double standards. The wife asks why men can share the load with other men but not with their wives. Is it because they never saw them as equals? This was a new tone for the country.
Next, through the front page of leading Indian dallies, Ariel made a public appeal to content creators & marketeers to join the brand in showing and creating a more equal tomorrow.
And then Ariel turned its packs into a silent voice of dissent by replacing the brand name with the most common Indian male names.
All this triggered a national conversation, as influencers and media stepped forward to take our message into homes across the country.
Results:
Business impact – sales, donations, site traffic
Response rate
Impressions
Change in behaviour
Consumer awareness
‘See Equal #ShareTheLoad’ broke all expectations and records.
It grabbed the attention of and engaged consumers, influencers and the media:
The movement drove preference for Ariel
But most importantly, the movement drove an immediate mindset shift in men:
In 2015, 79% men believed that laundry is a woman’s job. This dropped to 41% by 2020.
Today, it stands at 26%.