Sainsbury’s Christmas ad tops the 2014 UK YouTube ads leaderboard, with Nike getting two spots in the top 10 ranking, according to new data from Google which also looks at the leading agencies.
In total, the top 10 ads earned a combined 330 million views globally and contrary to expectation, Sainsbury’s Christmas ad topped the charts, racking up more UK views than the John Lewis Christmas advert or two of Nike’s very successful world cup adverts.
The full list ranked by UK views is as follows:
1. Sainsbury’s OFFICIAL Christmas 2014 Ad
2. John Lewis Christmas Advert 2014 – #MontyThePenguin
3. Nike Football: Winner Stays. ft. Ronaldo, Neymar Jr., Rooney, Ibrahimović, Iniesta & more
4. Nike Football: The Last Game ft. Ronaldo, Neymar Jr., Rooney, Zlatan, Iniesta & more
5. Always #LikeAGirl
6. Three – #SingItKitty – cat advert
7. Marks & Spencer Christmas Advert 2014 #FollowTheFairies
8. Most Shocking Second a Day Video
9. Sapeurs – New GUINNESS Advert (2014)
10. Human Loop the Loop with Damien Walters – Pepsi Max. Unbelievable #LiveForNow
This year, the top 10 ads earned a combined 330 million views. So what made these ads virtually unskippable?
Here are Google’s top 3 insights:
• Make the most of the moment: half of the top ads this year are designed around a magic moment (in this case Christmas and the World Cup). But successful brands have learned to split this big moments into hundreds of digital interactions. For example, Nike use before and after the game interactive content like highlight videos to engage with its audience.
• Short doesn’t always mean sweet: ads this year were on approximately 57% longer, averaging 2.8 minutes in length. This means that consumers online are happy to spend more time with branded content, provided it is entertaining and relevant. Gone are the days when 30 or 60 sec were the norm for captivating ads, and online ads were merely repurposed TV ads.
• Emotions & connections: many of the winning ads have succeeded in forming deep emotional connections with their audience. Whether by reminding us of our inner child like Evian or empowering women everywhere like Always, brands are targeting our hearts, not our wallets.
To recognise the creativity behind the ads that captured our imagination this year, YouTube is today also launching a ranking of the top 3 creative and media agencies.
Graham Bednash, Director of Consumer Marketing at Google, said: “The most popular ideas are those where brands are thinking like publishers, not advertisers. They are mashing together the skills of documentary, music video and advertising to create amazing, shareable content.”
The ranking is determined by an algorithm that factors in paid views, organic views and audience retention (how much of a video people watched).
Craig Mawdsley, Chief Strategy Officer at AMV BBDO, creative agency behind Sainsbury’s ad, #1 of the 2014 UK YouTube Ads Leaderboard, added: “YouTube has been crucial in enabling us to generate audiences for the film much more efficiently than in the past. In fact, without YouTube, film-making of this ambition would be very hard to justify, as the cost of reaching enough people for a film that takes over 3 minutes to tell its story would be too great. But the “TV-premiere” strategy, that creates a tailwind of PR and social mentions, ensuring the film is sought out by viewers has served us very well. When we showed the film in research groups, a few days after its TV debut one of our respondents summed it up well “Oh, I haven’t seen this on TV yet, but I’ve heard about it, so I was going to watch it on YouTube”.
Charlotte Wells, Media Director at PHD, the media agency behind Sainsbury’s ad – “Through clever use of TV, social media and YouTube advertising, real buzz was generated around the Christmas film. On launch night alone, over 1m people viewed the ad on YouTube, it was the most viewed piece of content the day after launch as well as the top trending search term on Google. Since launch, it has now generated over 16 million views and 10 thousand comments. YouTube was the video platform that people went to watch it and find out about the real story of the Christmas Truce and Making of the film. It has been a very special campaign to be a part of and we are delighted we have been able to raise an additional £500k for the Royal British Legion.”
Neil Christie, Managing Director at Wieden + Kennedy, commented: “The role of YouTube in these campaigns was as a content broadcast hub. Over the last few years Nike has been cementing its YouTube channel presence (6th most subscribed) through a three-strand content strategy: 1. Hero (major initiatives); 2. Hub (regular content series); 3. Hygiene (always-on videos). Both these films fell into the ‘Hero’ content strand.”
“The fact that the content got progressively longer was no mistake – Nike was building on the narrative to become a storyteller for a new generation of football fans. Long format films allow Nike to connect with people on a deeper level – by providing an evolving narrative to engage fans in a new and surprising way,” Christie concluded.