Dec 7, 2009

7-Eleven | Hello Kitty 35th Anniversary Charms Collection | Hong Kong

Hello Kitty is celebrating its 35th anniversary with 7-Eleven in Hong Kong and a redemption campaign for charms bracelets.

Timed to coincide with the festive season, the campaign asks consumers (especially female ones) to think back to their first Hello Kitty. Also targeting men, the promotion proposes another gift idea for the women they admire. Redeeming the charms one by one also shows perseverance. Which is a necessary virtue if one is the pursuer in a relationship.

The thirty-six charms date back to the classic Hello Kitty design from 1974. In the commercial, Leo Burnett rewinds a girl’s life to the moment when she acquired her very first Hello Kitty bag. Her story is tracked from going to school as a young child to meeting a classmate and falling in love. The commercial is an innocent love story of the two main characters sharing a drink (symbolising indirect kissing) at school and subsequently marking their commitments to each other.

7-Eleven is launching advertisements across all above-the-line media with additional promotion through MSN, Facebook, She.com and more. The campaign will run till March 2010.



Credits:
Project Hello Kitty 35th Anniversary Charms Collection
Client 7-Eleven
Creative agency Leo Burnett, Hong Kong
Executive creative director Connie Lo
Creative director Miranda Shing
Art director Katie Ng, Mike Wong
Copywriters Paul Yu, Kiu Chan
Agency producer Joyce Mok
Media agency Zenith
Production compancy Tuckshop
Director Anthony Yip
Exposure Television, print, outdoor


Related Articles

Just Published

14 hours ago

Budgets 2025: Retail media and CTV will dominate ...

The industry is poised for significant growth in 2025, fuelled by robust digital revenues and shifting consumer behaviours that could see budgets moving to social platforms and retail networks over traditional channels. Media experts weigh in.

14 hours ago

McDonald's Valentine's campaign may make you ...

Ad Nut refuses to be manipulated by commercials, but this V-Day spot from McDonald's Philippines, with its saccharine portrayal of enduring love, is surprisingly effective. Curse you, Golden Arches!

15 hours ago

The boys’ club still runs Australian advertising—and...

Déjà vu and disappointment: W+K Sydney's all-male team exposes the hollow promises of diversity in adland, writes Jet Swain, who calls for an end to "lip service."

15 hours ago

Samsung says there’s an AI companion for every ...

With the global launch of its Galaxy S25, Samsung and BBH Singapore want consumers to think about AI not as an intimidating piece of technology but as an omniscient wingman.