Can’t Miss Campaign: Your Year with Nike+
According to Nike, “Data means nothing if you don’t do something with it.”
Inspired by the amount of running and training stats logged by Nike+ users, the company decided that data should be doing more for the people who matter the most: their community.
Enter the, “Your Year With Nike” campaign. In the campaign, Nike and its agency AKQA created over 100,000 personalized one-minute animated films designed by French illustrator-director McBess.1 In the videos, the content each user sees is created from their personal Nike+ activity from 2014, plus their location and the typical weather there.
The strategy behind the videos is two-fold. The videos were sent to the 100,000 of the most activate Nike+ users to celebrate a strong 2014, while inspiring those people to work toward an even better 2015.
While this is an intelligent approach, the delivery and use of data really differentiates this campaign. Nike opted for a highly personalized, artistic and inspirational video, versus say, an email highlighting a user’s stats. The aesthetic and style of the video is also different from other Nike community initiatives, but the risk seems justified.
The company knows this is a highly engaged, loyal customer audience and the level of personalization is a strategic way to capture attention for the length of the video.
The use of data also speaks volumes about the future potential for initiatives like this. Understanding when someone is training for a big race, or about to achieve a major goal or milestone offers additional opportunities for engagement and to add value to the consumer experience. Nike even hits at this in a blog post, where they note, “the first of a series of initiatives that will see Nike use data to help it’s members do more – whether they are attempting to run their first mile or complete their tenth marathon.”
Nike may be no stranger to celebrating milestones, but “Your Year With Nike” speaks volumes to the value of strategically using data to reward and inspire your community.
This post originally appeared on Convince&Convert.com.