Analysis Of The Dove Campaign For Real Beauty

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“The Dove Campaign for Real Beauty”is a worldwide digital marketing campaign that was launched by Unilever in the year 2004. It includes advertisements, video, workshops, sleepover events and the publication of a book and the production of a play. The aim of the campaign is to celebrate the natural physical variation embodied by all women and inspire them to have the confidence to be comfortable with themselves.Under the campaign, Unilever launched a video with the tag “Real beauty sketches”. "Real Beauty Sketches" aims to underline the stark contrast between how women view themselves and what others see. Research Objectives Real beauty sketches connected with women at a more generic level. Unilever had set out to reach out to million of women …show more content…

"Real Beauty Sketches" struck a chord with consumers, generating close to 3.8 million shares in its first month online and adding 15,000 new subscribers to Dove's YouTube channel over the following two months. Its impact spread across traditional media as well, resulting in an onslaught of print features, broadcast news segments and online discussions, not to mention more than a dozen parody videos. In June 2013 Dove and agency partner Ogilvy & Mather Brasil took home the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity's highest honor, the Titanium Grand Prix, solidifying "Real Beauty Sketches" as the viral campaign against which others are judged.This video has been viewed more than 65 million times on YouTube. This was thanks in part to the Unilever brand's efforts to spread its message worldwide: Dove uploaded the video in 25 languages to 33 of its official YouTube channels, reaching consumers in more than 110 countries. If we were to measure the campaign based on few yardsticks, it would …show more content…

The advertisements used to market Axe often symbolises women in a completely different picture. Critics argue that how Unilever can have such polar views on women. On one hand, Dove encourages women to focus on their internal beauty and sends a message across them that ‘everyone is beautiful’. On the other hand, Axe sends a message to men stating that its products often draws beautiful, ‘model type’ women towards them. Such bipolar views of Unilever are still argued and reduces the momentum of both their campaigns and gives a hypocritical status to Unilever. Adding to above, below are few points that critics argue about the real beauty sketches

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