A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd.

Touché!PHD's Charles-Étienne Morier: The digital crème de la crème

Charles-Étienne Morier, digital media planner, Touché!PHD

Claim to fame

He studied architecture at Cégep du Vieux Montréal, but Charles-Étienne Morier has spent the last four years building brands' presence in the digital landscape. At Touché!PHD, where he's worked since 2007, Morier, 29, has transformed three milk products from Fédération des producteurs de lait du Québec into digital advertising leaders.

Recently, Morier's challenge was to turn cream into a must-have ingredient for women aged 25 to 54, who are increasingly turning to the internet for quick and convenient recipes. "However, they rarely think of cream when preparing their daily meals; they rather associate it with a luxury," says Morier.

For the six-month campaign that began last June, Touché!PHD integrated the brand within the largest recipe website in Quebec - Transcontinental's Recettes.qc.ca.

Cream was already featured in about 50 recipes on the website, so for the buy they amalgamated them into one special section. A recipe generator also allowed visitors to type in two random ingredients found in their fridge to receive instructions on how to use them and create a cream-tacular dish. This addressed consumers' presumption that cream is only used in complicated meals, Morier explains.

For cooks who wanted even more cream in their diet, the site linked them to a microsite, Metsdelacreme.com, which listed additional recipes, as well as a Facebook application where they could upload and swap recipes with friends.

It was a long integration process, reflects Morier, because many of the features (like the Facebook widget and the new sections) were being introduced for the first time. But the results were worth it. Promoted by online ads on Transcon's web network as well as through print ads in magazines, the campaign generated more than 125,000 visits to the cream section in four months. The recipe-sharing Facebook tool also became the most popular French application in the food category.

Morier's work

In 2007, Morier put two other brands from Fédération des producteurs de lait du Québec in the spotlight. He developed a campaign for chocolate milk that incorporated the brand's animated characters Leo and Choc into edgier media environments in order to target the 12- to 34-year-old demo, including cinema and videogames.

For instance, small banner ads were placed in live Xbox 360 games that, if clicked by gamers, would take them to a microsite where they could create and upload their own videos and vote for other favourites. The ads, which Morier says are less intrusive than 15-second pre-roll ads in games, generated more than 244,000 visits in four months and chocolate milk consumption increased by 5%.

That fall, the dairy brand asked consumers to share their nostalgic moments of past friendships in a campaign for regular milk. "Basically we wanted to create our own community around attributes of sharing and getting closer," says Morier.

Page 1 2 

Comments

Yes, even polar bears get sick of icebergs





Magazine

July 2010

In our Fall TV issue, we take our annual look at the nets' new shows with feedback from media buyers, announce the shortlists for Agency and Media Agency of the Year and meet Robb Hadley, P&G's brand manager of male grooming.