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A small plate of JUST Egg inspired food
A nice place setting at a dining table
the outside of the pioneers club restaurant with vines growing on the walls

Pioneers Club • A Hyper-Personalized Dining Experience

  • Client

    Eat Just, Inc.

  • Solutions

    ExperienceExperiential Strategy & ProductionSocialInfluencer Marketing

A table with JUST Egg products on it covered in green leaves

Hatching up a launch rich in experience.

JUST Egg is a plant-based alternative to commercially produced eggs developed by San Francisco-based company Eat Just. With an aim to enter Asia’s alternative protein market, the brand partnered with us to create a launch campaign that creates buzz among chefs, plant-based advocates, foodies and influencers, starting with Seoul. Not one to chicken out on Covid challenges presented to us at the time—safety restrictions, supply chain deficiency and time and resources constraints— we leveraged them as an opportunity to set up an intimate, immersive and Covid-safe pop-up restaurant, The Pioneers Club.

Monk Thoughts When developing the concept...the Covid restrictions in South Korea kept changing to become more strict. We decided to turn these new challenges into creative opportunities.
Jesper Larsson headshot

Whipping up a hyper-personalized dining experience in an herbs-filled environment

  • A desk in a restaurant overgrown by plants Two chefs work on the presentation of JUST Egg dishes
  • Two people stand in front of a grassy wall with their names shined on it Two people's feet touching a grass ground of the restaurant

Planting the right ambience.

Designed with personal safety as a main priority, The Pioneer’s Club was a plant-based pop-up restaurant that offered a unique and exclusive fine dining experience in a verdant herbs-filled environment. The name was carefully chosen as a tribute to the pioneers who helped the plant-based movement gain traction in South Korea. The design theme of the space was “wild nature reclaiming modern life,” which referenced both the growing plant-based movement in South Korea and JUST Egg’s new Korean tagline, “The egg born from the ground (땅이 낳은 에그),” also developed by Monks.

A noodle dish made with JUST Egg products
A chef stands in front of the restaurant neon sign covered in plants

Customized elements to suit every taste.

At The Pioneers Club, only two guests at a time can be seated, with the guests’ dietary restrictions and allergies influencing the menu. By working together with renowned chefs and letting them create localized recipes, we showcased the potential of the product and developed content to feed the feeds for months after the event. And by inviting the right crowd while showing the potential of the product, it quickly opened doors to get JUST Egg on the menu of other trendy plant-based cafes and restaurants, such as Millennial Dining and Monk’s Deli.

A couple sitting at a table at night with yellow light keeping them lit
Press To drum up buzz around converting diners to this food form, American plant venture Just Egg teamed up with Monks to develop the pop up restaurant Pioneers Club, inviting local plant-based advocates to a foliage-filled fine dining experience.
Read on Campaignasia.com

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An U.S. Airforce jet
The earth with a U.S. Airforce logo above it

US Air Force Website • A Platform Taking Personalization to New Heights

  • Client

    US Air Force

  • Solutions

    PlatformWebsites & Platforms

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Case Study

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Proving the sky’s the limit for effective, personalized platforms.

As the most technologically advanced branch of the US Armed Forces, the United States Air Force has long attracted STEM-oriented, academic achievers. Together with GSD&M, we built an innovative platform that takes potential recruits on a digital journey through carefully curated content pathways tailored to their interests.

An iPad showing the U.S. Airforce website

Taking user experience to new heights.

Once users land on the US Air Force website, they’re ready to take their first steps to get to know the military service inside and out. And as they explore, the platform gets to know them better, too. Through intelligent UX design, the experience serves content based on individual viewers’ preferences and personas, helping them get a feel for what to expect from a career in the US Air Force. This way, the content bypasses time-consuming queries to identify the best career path for each qualified recruit.

Our Craft

From personalized paths to career paths.

  • A person in the Airforce with headphones on
  • The earth in space
  • A picture of the U.S. from space
  • Career screen from the U.S. Airforce website
  • Salary screen from the U.S. Airforce careers website

A data-fueled journey.

We believe that users should see a fair value exchange in return for their data. The US Air Force platform was built around this philosophy, generating each user’s path based on intrinsic and extrinsic motivators. Short breaks in the pages encourage readers to share details about who they are, what experience they have, and what they’re looking to gain from a career in the US Air Force. And these paths are always evolving; a variety of independent modules makes it easy to author and adjust bespoke pages as we learn more about the needs of the audience.

Airforce in action
A person in the Airforce standing in front of a plane

Results

  • Increased conversion rate of 47%.
  • 37% increase in qualified applicants.
  • 1x Awwward

  • 2x FWAs

  • 6x Addys

  • 1x Cannes Lion

  • 3x LIAs

  • 1x Webby

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Get in touch.

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How to Make a Personalized Campaign That Sticks

How to Make a Personalized Campaign That Sticks

4 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

How to Make a Personalized Campaign That Sticks

These days, there’s a lot that inhibits brands from standing out: there’s an onslaught of competing content, user attention spans are shortening and budgets (not to mention time) are tight, making it difficult to rapidly produce and experiment with content that truly sticks.

That latter point is perhaps the most significant, because the biggest indicator of whether or not a user will engage with your content is whether it’s relevant to them. This desire of relevance elevates personalization beyond just a simple business need—in today’s market, it’s expected by users and required from brands.

Monk Thoughts 83% of global business leaders are increasing personalization budgets in 2019.

This results in an imperative for efficient, cost-effective production that cuts through the noise and lands directly in front of the right consumer at the right time. A report recently released by SoDA showed that brands understand the need for personalization, with 83% of global business leaders increasing their investments in it for 2019, and nearly a third increasing their personalization budgets significantly.

People who touch an item feel an increased sense of ownership toward it—and personalized experiences are poised to persuade and push them over the edge of purchasing. Coca-Cola’s 2014 “Share a Coke” campaign was massively popular simply by creating a situation for customers to engage with the brand in a personal and social way. Marmite has taken a similar approach with its personalized jars, which provide a point of identification for the user.

But making strategic use of personalization remains a key challenge, particularly with production of content that benefits from personalization. In the same report, 55% of business leaders cited a clear focus on producing content quicker, and 47% sought greater cost-efficiency in content production.

But producing personalization at scale doesn’t have to be burdensome for brands. Through an integrated production process and technologies that enable dynamic delivery of content, organizations can produce a staggering volume of hyper-targeted content with ease—though it may require them to rethink their creative approach.

Levels of Personalization

Personalization in marketing certainly isn’t new, though most organizations operate on a relatively low level of personalization maturity. Rather than relying on basic data metrics like greeting a user by their name or using rules-based segmentation, brands can achieve best-in-class, highly relevant creative by optimizing content for omnichannel journeys (remembering the user along the way), integrating behavioral recommendations and applying AI to predictive personalization.

Stimorol.BOF.NL20sec.00_00_14_15.Still002

While every video features the same ranger, viewers will see different scenarios based on their preferences.

Now, don’t get too scared—all of the above likely sounds complicated, especially if you don’t yet have a distinct personalization or data strategy in place. But the good news is that personalization is less about the amount of data that you have, and more about what you do with the data. Minimal personalization can make a big impact.

To illustrate this, let’s look at a great example of an omnichannel campaign that reacts to user behaviors in a way that’s surprising to users, grabbing their attention by speaking directly to them. When Danish gum brand Stimorol decided to branch out into a new form of candy, they needed an awareness campaign that would challenge consumers to likewise extend outside their comfort zones. But how can you challenge someone to try something new without knowing what they habitually do? That’s where the creative opportunity behind personalization emerges.

We solved this problem by producing an integrated campaign that responds to user behaviors. Key to the campaign are YouTube bumper ads that respond to the types of videos that individual consumers are watching. While watching sports videos, for example, users may be treated to an ad that prompts them to try playing sports instead of just watching them.

These bumpers make use of one key data point—the type of content that users are watching—but does so in a clever way that immediately grabs viewer attention and prompts them to identify with the message in a personal way. While they might not be willing to change their own habits, trying a new Stimorol candy sounds like a sweet deal in comparison.

Personalization that Enhances, not Inhibits, Production Quality

Isn’t it unsustainable to produce several variations of content like the kind mentioned above? Not if you have already outlined the variables that differentiate individual pieces of content, or have clearly mapped out the touch points to be supported by an omnichannel campaign. We optimized production for the Stimoroll campaign by limiting it to a single-day shoot at a single location, resulting in over 150 format-ready deliverables capable of greeting the right consumers at the right place and time.

Giraffe#1_Intro.00_00_08_23.Still005(1)

Are you a dog or giraffe person? Your preferences will determine what you see in this dynamic video, highlighting different destinations.

According to Salesforce, 57% of customers are happy to provide personal data in exchange for personalized marketing—which means data can inform awesome content and vice-versa. The key is that the data exchange should provide consumers with obvious value.

With the technology available today, brands can achieve an even greater level of relevance with their content, dynamically stitching together personalized content reactive to several data points. With Google Vogon, for example, brands can automatically translate a single base video into dozens of personalized variations on the fly, resulting in a high volume of unique videos that don’t push film crews to their limits or sacrifice quality.

Our dynamic video content for Booking.com was designed from two base videos: one featuring a giraffe browsing for travel destinations while another focused on a dog doing the same. But the type of animal featured is just one of several variables that enable 54 permutations tailored to hyper-specific segments and interests. These include the target market, different destinations found within those markets and a key passion (like shopping, dining or sightseeing) that provides added inspiration.

Both campaigns discussed above demonstrate how brands can efficiently target key segments of their audiences through personalization. Whether employing just one data point or many, personalization at scale can grab user attention and leave an indelible mark on them, and the right creative and production strategy enables brands to take advantage of these benefits without wearing themselves thin.

Smart use of personalization makes the difference between marketing that blends in vs. interrupts. How to Make a Personalized Campaign That Sticks Make work that blends in, not interrupts.
personalization assets at scale content personalization dynamic content personalized content personalized marketing

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The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

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