Jane Leung
Nov 24, 2010

AliExpress grants Christmas wishes on Facebook in Australia

Alibaba’s AliExpress is starting a Christmas campaign with giveaways on Facebook.

AliExpress Christmas Channel campaign on Facebook
AliExpress Christmas Channel campaign on Facebook

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has started an AliExpress Christmas social media campaign in Australia through Facebook, promoting its Christmas channel. AliExpress is the wholesale transaction-based sub-brand under the Alibaba enterprise.

The campaign is hosted at Facebook.com/Alibaba.au, and will run until 5 December, also supported by online ads on Yahoo 7.

The promotion revolves around the Facebook's ‘Like’ button. Participants are asked to choose a product on the Christmas channel and link it Alibaba Australia's Facebook wall. The top five posts which receive most ‘Likes’ will emerge as the winners and each receive the corresponding product from AliExpress.

Credits:
Project Christmas Wish List Campaign
Client Alibaba
Creative agency In-house
Idea innovators Alice Chim, Daphne Lee
Designer Wil Lo Copywriter Alice Chim
Exposure Online
Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Creative Minds: FCB's Claire Herselman transforms ...

Get to know the senior copywriter who moved to London at 18 and worked as a barista.

1 day ago

WPP boss Mark Read hits back at employee vitriol ...

CEO told Campaign's sister title, PRWeek, that some of the comments being made about his decision to require all employees to work in the office at least four days a week do not reflect the views of many staff.

1 day ago

How young Malay-Muslim women are spending and consuming

Malay-Muslim women are leading a consumer revolution, with 93% preferring local groceries and 89% choosing homegrown F&B, according to a new analysis. Brand boycotts are reshaping loyalty, while halal certification, affordability, and shared cultural identity are the decisive factors in their purchasing power.

1 day ago

Singtel's attempt to reimagine LNY traditions ...

The telco's annual festive film blends humour and lightheartedness, but its reliance on traditional gender roles dampens an otherwise innovative take on festive preparations.