Wednesday 21 February 2018

Brief 4: D&AD Hellman's Competition Brief - Initial thoughts and ideas



The Brief


Create a Hellmann’s branded device, publication or service that addresses the issue of food wastage.

Your design should be a response to a point in the supply chain where food is often wasted:

- In the home, such as leftover food that’s overlooked or left behind when people go on holiday.
-In restaurants or stores, when over-ordered or expired goods get binned. 

Choose either the home, the store or the restaurant as the focus for your solution. Hellman's Brief Brainstorm Initial Ideas

Working alongside Beth and Bethan as a collaboration, we immediately decided to do a brain dump of ideas onto paper. This means we get off to a quick start by generating as many ideas as possible then discussing and giving feedback on these to develop the ideas further.

1. An app on how to buy and portion food correctly so that it reduces food waste. Input recipes off the internet, the app will then ask a series of short questions: how many people eating? big eaters? and will change the recipe amounts accordingly for each individual recipe. Also tells you what you can do with your leftovers to turn into meals.

2. Create an advertising campaign that photographs food made up from common leftovers in the household. These could be then displayed across all social media platforms. Emphasise the importance of leftover food still being completely edible. Maybe this could be made into a competition to see who creates the most creative meal in the hope to engage more people in the campaign.

3. Show the whole process of farm to store in an easy, digestible manner for consumers. By showing the masses of land space that's used to grow these crops but then blanking out the land's worth of food that actually gets thrown away out of the crops produced. This would make for an impactful visual to inform consumers more about the mass amounts of food that goes to waste.

Group Brainstorm



Coming together with all of our ideas meant we could merge together parts we thought worked well.

Idea 1 - Common Leftover Ingredients

A campaign that emphasises the usefulness of common leftover ingredients towards the end of a food cycle. Sometimes ingredients are completely discarded because of the lack of knowledge on how they can be used to create meals in conjunction with each other. A quick example of this could be using the stalk of a broccoli and the remains of a piece of cheese, e.g. blue stilton, brie etc. to create a soup of sorts.

This product to this campaign could be a recipe book or an app that has combinations of common leftover ingredients in the fridge/ freezer that work well together as a meal.

As a campaign visual this could include images of before and after, whereby the scrappy looking leftovers would be pictured on their own then an after picture would be taken of the finished meal. Showing how less appealing looking food can be utilised rather than being thrown away.

Idea 2 - Dating App Campaign

Working on an idea to go with a playful tone of voice that would be the centre of this campaign. Hellman's would play the role of Cupid in what is to be the matchmaking service between fresh but wonky, not fit for the shelves, produce. The campaign would be about bringing together leftovers and wonky vegetables that normally wouldn't be considered fit to eat and creating recipes from them for consumers to use. Essentially creating relationships between foods in a playful campaign. Using catchy slogans and bold imagery to create a striking set of visuals. E.g. 'go from a 2/10 to a 10/10' showing a before of the produce looking slightly less than appealing and then showing a picture perfect bowl of food that would be considered delightful to consumers.

Idea 3 - Taste the Difference Campaign

This would be a campaign based on creating meals from foods that would typically be discarded by both suppliers and supermarkets that are considered too ugly or wonky to be sold to consumers. Up to roughly 50% of vegetables grown are discarded before they even get to the consumer as they aren't seen as suitable for the supermarket shelves.

To eliminate or at the very least reduce the extent to which this happens, the campaign would centre around creating meals both from 'wonky' vegetables and 'regular' vegetables and asking consumers to taste the difference. Emphasising the idea that there is nothing wrong with produce that may not always look as pretty as others; in the hope to increase the possibility of selling more wonky looking vegetables in the future.

There would be an online campaign to promote this happening, which would utilise clever wording and imagery to catch the consumers eye. Using slogans such as..

'It's whats on the inside that counts' 

'Don't judge a book by it's cover'

etc.

Some inspiration for the campaign was along the lines of the Dove 'real beauty' campaign which puts a focus on every type of woman being accepted as opposed to just slim, pretty women. I feel this is something we could take inspiration from and put into the context of fresh produce, showing that all vegetables are accepted not just the pretty ones.


Idea 4 - Wonky Vegetable Food Truck

Expanding on from previous ideas to base a campaign around wonky vegetables in the hope to increase consumers awareness of them and the difference it can make consuming them, we came up with the idea to create a wonky vegetable food truck.

The truck would go around visiting wherever possible, universities, festivals etc. to sell food that is made from collected wonky vegetables that would typically be discarded from suppliers and supermarkets into the bin. The aim would be to not only make use of the food but also to market the importance of using produce like this that would typically be taken to a landfill in the hope to educate consumers about food waste in general also. The menu would be constantly updated with new and innovative recipes that utilise the abundance of food.


The food truck from my favourite movie Chef as visual inspiration for our idea.

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