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Charity Campaign Inspiration – From The Dad Shift
A charity campaign that inspired me
If you’re looking for charity campaign inspiration, look no further…
The fear I felt when my husband went back to work. I remember it like it was yesterday.
I’ve been lucky enough to have had 3 babies. And as magical and wonderful as that newborn bubble is, it’s also incredibly hard. A body that’s trying to recover. Hormones all over the show. All the emotions. Tiredness like you’ve never experienced before. Trying to get out the door before the next feed or the next nappy change. So when after just two weeks of living in that new world, my husband had to go back to work, the fear of doing it alone hit me hard.
So maybe I’m biased, but I was utterly delighted to see The Dad Shift’s latest campaign absolutely fly. The Dad Shift is campaigning for better paternity leave in the UK. And what a campaign they’ve delivered. Did you see it?
“Things that last longer than UK paternity leave”
The campaign compares paternity leave to things that last longer:
Eggs.
Milk.
A free trial.
A bunch of flowers.
All outlasting the time a dad gets at home with a newborn.
Why It Works
There’s no complicated storytelling here. No big-budget film. Just a brutally clear idea, executed really well.
It makes the invisible visible
Policy is abstract. By turning “two weeks” into everyday comparisons, they’ve made something intangible feel real.
It’s participatory
Parents around the country have been central to the campaign, placing campaign stickers on supermarket items that last less than two weeks, and putting larger format posters on household bins waiting for collection.
It trusts the audience to get it
It’s simple (as the best ideas usually are). You don’t have to explain it.
The campaign is built on a simple contrast (X lasts longer than paternity leave), that lets people join the dots themselves. When people complete the thought for themselves, they’re far more likely to remember it.
What can we learn?
Make it playful
I love that this campaign has scaled so easily. It has a format that asks the audience to get involved, spreading the campaign messaging, but in a really easy and fun way. If your campaign only works as a finished piece of content, it has a ceiling. If it works as a format, it can spread.
Ask yourself:
“Could someone else easily recreate this idea in their own way?”
If the answer’s yes, I reckon you’re onto something.
Design for participation not just attention
The best campaigns give people a role:
Add your version
Share your example
Join the movement
Your audience helps you build momentum, by adapting your message to their own story. When people co-own your message, they feel part of something.
Use contrast as your creative shortcut
“X lasts longer than Y” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in this campaign.
It’s:
Instantly understandable
Easy to replicate
Hard to ignore
What’s your version of that?
View from the Den
The cleverest part of this campaign isn’t the idea itself. It’s that it lets go of control.
It invites people in. Hands them the format. And let’s them get involved.
And in doing that, it becomes bigger than the original execution ever could be.
Well played The Dad Shift. Very well played.
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