British Airways’ New Ads Will Make You Love Copywriting Again

0

Uncommon delightfully explores the many reasons we fly

It’s been a while since we’ve seen an out-of-home campaign that embraces a repeatable structure as delightfully as the new British Airways ads from Uncommon. It’s also a remarkable campaign for how it captures the wonder of travel—one of life’s most immersive, visceral experiences—with no visuals whatsoever, just simple and evocative copy lines.

The inspiration for the work is as pedestrian as it gets—the forms you fill out upon arrival in a new destination, asking if you’re traveling for business or leisure. That binary choice is refreshingly thrown out the window, as each ad offers a third option, exploring the almost endless variety of reasons why so many of us would want to go places we’ve never been, or get away from the ones holding us back.

Uncommon says it made an impressive 500 unique print, digital and outdoor executions for this campaign. Check out some of them below. 

An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign
An OOH ad from British Airways' new "A British Original" campaign

The work is tagged “A British original.” And while a few of the executions lean into that idea (the billboard above is one of the best), the concept is much more universal than that. “A British original” feels like BA trying to keep a foot in its usual patriotic messaging, whereas the campaign’s strength is really how it goes well beyond that. In fact, the work calls to mind Citibank’s old “Live Richly” campaign from Fallon, which similarly explored more emotional territory in a category obsessed with service messages.

Here are some more headlines from the campaign:

There are also some short films—32 of them in fact, which will run over the course of a month. Check out seven of them below.Play VideoFrench boys. A British OriginalPlay VideoHome. A British OriginalPlay VideoNever liked him. A British OriginalPlay VideoSea temperatures. A British OriginalPlay VideoReset. A British OriginalPlay VideoFun Dad. A British OriginalPlay VideoFor her. A British Original

Uncommon says the OOH creative will adapt “according to location, time of day, weather and what’s happening in the news.” MG OMD handled planning and buying. The campaign will appear on TV, video on demand, cinema, radio, print, display, social and out of home, including Piccadilly Lights and Heathrow.

BA is also working on a new safety video which will “showcase British Airways’ people, alongside some of the most well-known and much loved British talent.”

CREDITS

Client: British Airways
Creative Studio: Uncommon
Media Agency: MG

This article first appeared musebycl.io

Seeking to build and grow your brand using the force of consumer insight, strategic foresight, creative disruption and technology prowess? Talk to us at +971 50 6254340 or engage@groupisd.com or visit www.groupisd.com/story

About Author

Tim Nudd

Tim Nudd is a writer covering creativity in business. Since 2018 he has been editor in chief of the Clio Awards, leading all content initiatives for the venerable awards company. Shortly after joining Clio, he launched Muse by Clio, a website and daily newsletter of original stories and guest essays exploring the best in creativity from the advertising world and beyond. Prior to Clio, he was creative editor at Adweek for eight years. He lives outside Portland, Maine.

Comments are closed.