Since the dawn of the digital advertising era, marketers have used video advertising for upper-funnel brand awareness and search advertising for lower-funnel direct response. But it does make you wonder: If a brand wanted to use the power of video’s sight, sound, and motion to drive consumers to take an action, would it work?
A recent marketing push from Hawaiian Airlines provides a resounding “yes.” At the start of 2018, the airline and its agency, Cole & Weber, ran a campaign in partnership with Mediacom that turned the typical use cases of video and search advertising upside down. Google Search ads helped get the airline’s name in front of people and follow-up YouTube video ads drove them to make incremental purchases.
Source: Hawaiian Airlines YouTube Analytics Data, June 2018.Share
The results speak volumes. Thanks to the month-long campaign, Hawaiian Airlines increased flight bookings by 185%, while reducing cost per acquisition by 69% compared to other campaigns run concurrently.1
In preparation for the busy summer travel period, the airline wanted to follow up with people in Los Angeles and the Northern California Bay Area who were considering visits to Hawaii. While in the past it has always relied on search ads to push customers to book flights, this time the airline took a cross-channel approach. It used search ads as the first point in a conversation with the aspiring traveler, aiming to build awareness, and then followed up with a video push.
To do that, the marketing team set up a typical search campaign, focusing on branded keywords like “Hawaiian Airlines” and nonbranded keywords like “Flight to Hawaii.” Then it created a set of 15-second and 30-second video ads using the company’s market-specific brand creative and YouTube’s direct-response format, TrueView for action. The call to action in the direct-response format invited people to click-through to “See Fares,” where they were directed to a landing page of flight and pricing options relevant to their area.Play video
To identify the right audience for the video campaign, Hawaiian Airlines turned to the data from its search campaign. Using a new tool from YouTube, the team looked at the keywords that had worked best on search and then brought those over to YouTube. That meant the video ads were only served to people who had already shown an interest in the brand or traveling to Hawaii.
The campaign has made Hawaiian Airlines reconsider the role video ads play in its direct-response marketing pushes. “Combining a qualified audience from search with the targeted reach of YouTube lets us make our video buy more efficient,” said Sandra Wang, global advertising at Hawaiian Airlines.
For many brands, direct response is not top of mind when creating digital video campaigns. Here are a few lessons to consider when thinking about your own direct-response video campaign.