6 Recent Marketing Campaigns That Were Pretty Awesome

I’ve been thinking about some great marketing campaigns of recent months—those I might consider the “best.”

But I find myself wondering: What does best mean, exactly? Or, more simply: Is popular the same as best? If something is popular, can it also be good?

Hemingway would say no. “If you become popular it is always because of the worst aspects of your work,” he famously declared.

But we’re marketers, not novelists. Business effectiveness is what matters, right? Yes and no. Effective by what measure? For marketers, rearview-mirror metrics are only part of the story. The other part is the sensibility, creativity, inspiration and artfulness we bring to the work we do.

So with all that in mind, here’s a highly subjective look at a few of my recent favorites, from a range of organizations and budgets.


1. “Eddie the Terrible,” Humane Society Silicon Valley

Image credit: Humane Society Silicon Valley | Youtube

Most pet-adoption organizations try to make the cats and dogs seem as appealing as possible. Not the Humane Society Silicon Valley, which in December published a creative, funny and unusually honest listing for a tiny tornado of a Chihuahua, Eddie the Terrible. The listing ran as a blog post on the shelter’s website and social media accounts; the shelter also created other assets to support it, including a video on its YouTube channel.

Why it worked: The content was a welcome antidote to the so-called Sarah McLachlan ads: those slideshows of gut-wrenching animal-shelter images with sad, solemn soundtracks. “The most common reason people won’t come to shelters is because they feel it would be depressing—an expectation created by that sort of marketing,” the shelter’s social media manager, Finnegan Dowling, told me. “We knocked it out of the park with a shelter animal story that had nothing to do with trauma, sadness, abuse, negligence, etc.”

Measure of success: The campaign became a mini viral sensation. The story was picked up by the Huffington Post and a bunch of news channels, raising awareness of the shelter. Best of all: Eddie got a home for the holidays.


2. “Wall and Chain,” Airbnb

Image credit: Airbnb | Youtube

In November Airbnb launched a short animated film aligned with two themes: the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and a traveler-inspired story of “belonging anywhere.”

Why it worked: Airbnb has an efficient mechanism in place to collect customer stories at scale (create.airbnb.com). This particular film told a real story from a real Airbnb customer who took her father to Berlin to heal an emotional wound. The best stories, like this one, are specific enough to be believable but universal enough to be relevant. (That’s a gem from my journalism school days.) In this case, the result was a powerful mix of style, art and substance.