Sunday, 1 September 2013

The case study of successful social media campaign: World's Best Job

Dubbed as one of the best social media campaigns, Tourism Queensland successfully promoted the Great Barrier Reef as a global tourism destination. But not through the very conventional way.

Marketed as “The Best Job in the World”, Tourism Queensland launched a campaign in 2009 that recruited people from all over the world for a ‘job’ on the tropical Hamilton Island. The job paid AUD 150,000 and includes free airfares from the successful candidate's home country to tropical Hamilton Island on the famed Great Barrier Reef. The application process required for a 60-second video to be submitted via the official website, and available publicly for consideration for the position. 



And what’s the catch ? That’s probably your next question.

In return, the winner will be expected to have as much fun as he or she can -- soaking up the sun, swimming, snorkelling, sailing -- and report to a global audience via weekly blogs, photo diaries and video updates. The island caretaker role wasn’t a campaign gimmick, it was a completely
genuine employment opportunity with Tourism Queensland, living on the islands of the Great Barrier Reef and reporting back to the world via online social media.

The successful candidate - who will stay rent-free in a multi-million-dollar three-bedroom beach home -- must be over 18, a "fantastic and charismatic" communicator, and able to speak and write English.

Part of the job responsibilities include feeding the fishes


The main objective behind this campaign is to drive and promote the northeastern Australian state's 18 billion dollar a year tourism industry during the tough global economic climate, officials say. And they are at pains to stress that it is "a real job".

"The fact that they will be paid to explore the islands of the Great Barrier Reef, swim, snorkel and generally live the Queensland lifestyle makes this undoubtedly the best job in the world", said acting state Premier Paul Lucas. Given the enormous response, the economic downturn has also played a part in translating the advertisement into a dream for hundreds of thousands of people who were adversely affected by the global financial crisis.


Within a short span of one month, the impact of the campaign was as follows:
-          - $200 million in global publicity value for Tourism Queensland although the money spent was only a meager $1 million.
-         -  35,000 applications received from over 200 countries
-        -   The submission web site crashed 2 days following the launch of the campaign (due to the huge influx of visits and video submissions!)

The tangible results of this campaign are:
STA Travel says it experienced 17% growth year-on-year in bookings to Queensland in the period February to April 2009 (when the campaign was at its most intense).
Austravel claims similar positive growth in Queensland-led holidays. Both companies attribute the increase to the Best Job campaign.

This campaign also received coverage from CNN stories to BBC documentaries, a segment in Oprah Winfrey’s talk show, Time magazine as well as everything in between. In Google search for “the best job in the world island”, it achieved approximately 148 million listings and generates 231,355 blog entries. A “best in the world” search on Flickr for pictures generate around 4,486 pictures to choose from.

Extensive media coverage of the "Best Job in The World" campaign



While the social media impact could be measured fully, this is undoubtedly one of the best social media campaigns that was brilliantly executed, and its phenomenal success demonstrates how effective cross-channel  social media and traditional mass media can intertwine to bring outstanding results. 


The official video can be found below:

No comments:

Post a Comment