Campaign India Team
Apr 26, 2017

Bravery award for P&G's 'Dads #ShareTheLoad' at The ANDY Awards

India bagged three metals out of the 125 that were handed out in the 2017 edition of the awards

Bravery award for P&G's 'Dads #ShareTheLoad' at The ANDY Awards
P&G India wins the bravery award for Ariel detergent's “Dads #ShareTheLoad” at the 53rd edition of the International ANDY Awards. Apart from this top honour, India also bagged two silvers at the awards. 
 
The campaign raised an important question ‘Is laundry only a mother’s job?’ In this social movement, every father was made the center of change to end gender inequality at home by shining a mirror at their actions that propagate gender inequality. "The movement was led by a poignant film about a dad's self-realization and conversion about roles and responsibilities within the home, and about setting the right example by helping with laundry. Garnering over 50 million views in under 15 days, it became India’s most viewed viral ad," according to the media statement.
 
The work was created for brand Ariel by BBDO Mumbai. The campaign also won a silver in the integrated media category. The other silver for India went to McCann Worldgroup for 'The dancing letters' campaign for the Maharashtra Dyslexia Association.
 
 
Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

13 hours ago

Stagwell revenue rises 6% in Q1

Besides the US and the UK, all other geographies which includes APAC grew by 43.6%

13 hours ago

Marketers using experiments doubled from 18% to 36% ...

While new AI-driven tools have made the adoption of ad measurement solutions easier, a new report shows that advertisers still lack a complete view of ROI.

15 hours ago

When the care stops showing up

Apollo Hospitals’ Nurses Day film imagines a hospital without nurses, blending emotional triggers with a nod to gender inclusivity—for once.

16 hours ago

When packaging talks, who's listening?

As digital-first brands prioritise values over visuals, Edelman India’s senior strategist says that the packaging playbook is being rewritten—challenging legacy rules of shelf seduction.