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The boundary-breaking campaign which won Manifest and The Gate Films Advert of the Year at the 2021 Champions Awards

Manifest & The Gate Films winning Ad of the Year at the Champions Awards

At the 2021 Prolific North Champions Awards, video production specialist The Gate Films and brand communications agency Manifest took home the prize for Advert of the Year.

In a difficult year for advertisers, they were up against TV spots including On The Beach’s ‘Ready when you are’ campaign.

The winning campaign, however, was ‘The Boob Life’, which the creative specialists created for baby product brand Tommee Tippee, promoting its diverse range of infant feeding products. When the sector came together in September 2021, the team came through as winners.

“It was amazing to get together under one roof again, and celebrate success stories from all over the North,” said Bec Chelin, Manifest’s MD. “We had a lot of fun, and way too many shots.”

Entries for the 2022 Prolific North Champions Awards are open now, closing on March 17th – click here to learn more about the flagship awards ceremony and get started on your submission.

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The story of The Boob Life

The multi-channel campaign was designed to demystify the realities of feeding for new and prospective mums. It hit headlines when it was banned from Facebook for allegedly violating its policies, a decision Tommee Tippee described as “outrageous and hugely offensive”.

Manifest had been tasked by the brand with launching two new products, Tommee Tippee’s breast pads and double breast pumps, as well as raising brand awareness and building brand love.

“We were able to create a response that centred around the problem, not just the solution,” said Chelin. They started with consumer data analysis then conducted more than 400 interviews with parents in the UK, USA and Australia.

“It unearthed a well-known, but unspoken real-world truth – every day, parents are judged for making their preferred choice when it comes to infant feeding.” For the first time ever in the sector, she said, the ideation process was firmly on the mother.

From this, Manifest started work on the campaign messaging and architecture, creative ideation, playbook and execution, enlisting The Gate for TVC and social assets. The final integrated campaign ran in all three countries, showcasing parents’ real stories and creating “a narrative that resonated and gained cut-through with parents, consumers, culture and media everywhere.”

Manifest’s research found that 90% of mothers felt breastfeeding needed to be spoken about more widely, while half cited the stigma of breastfeeding as damaging their mental health.

“We saw real opportunity to change that,” said Chelin, who said the agency wanted to provide a feeling of greater support to mums through the challenges of parenthood.

She said: “The Boob Life started a public conversation to break down stigmas with open and honest views of infant feeding, and encouraged women to make their own choices. The huge response on social, cut-through in the media, and the advert’s shareability among influencers created a positive movement.

“More so, it forced advertising bodies in the three lead markets to review their controversial policies as they cited this important film as ‘indecent due to adult content and excess nudity’. In reality, it just showed breastfeeding mums.”


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Results of the groundbreaking campaign

The sector within which The Boob Life ran is one that is usually sanitised, “full of white linens and calming scenes,” said Bec. This is what made the campaign stand out so much, and set it apart from the competition.

She added: “Tommee Tippee challenged the status quo of other brands depicting a ‘perfect’ and unattainable view of parenting. Encouraging more positive cultural and societal views around parenting, The Boob Life was a real turning point for the industry”.

Ultimately, the campaign achieved attention from titles including Marie Claire, Mamamia, Grazia and Adweek, reaching readers numbering more than 16 million. Its results were also striking – driving an increase of 400% in social media engagement for Tommee Tippee.

Chelin said: “Moreover, it started a global conversation. Even now, major advertising bodies are reviewing their policies due to the controversy around the original film being banned online – and it’s all down to The Boob Life.”

When it came down to it, The Boob Life was a worthy winner at the Champions Awards, and Bec said they were “buzzing” to win the award. “The achievement isn’t just a huge testament to the creative team behind this campaign, but the mums who told their raw, uncut stories and helped us drive positive change for parents across the world.”

What advice would Manifest and The Gate Films give other companies hoping to win industry awards for bold and compelling creative? They say it’s about taking judges on a journey, going beyond vanity metrics, and displaying empathy. “If it makes a difference to consumers’ lives – you’ve probably nailed it.”

The Prolific North Champions Awards will be presented at Old Trafford on May 26th. Entries are open until March 17th – see the list of categories and click here to make a submission.

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