HelloFresh brings families together in the kitchen in ‘Inspiration Delivered’ campaign via Emotive
Recipe kit delivery service HelloFresh has launched a new campaign to inspire and encourage households to cook and eat together via Emotive.
HelloFresh was the first to launch the meal kit concept in Australia, delivering pre-portioned fresh ingredients and quick, healthy recipes for dinners each week. The company has grown from former Masterchef contestant and HelloFresh CEO Tom Rutledge’s own kitchen in Sydney to serve up millions of meals each year via its meal kit boxes to six states and territories including NSW, SA, VIC, ACT and QLD with deliveries to Darwin commencing last week.
How should we feel when we step into the kitchen? Inspired? Adventurous? Relaxed?
According to research conducted by HelloFresh, the reality is more like stressed, anxious and guilty.
Although the phenomenal popularity of food media is often framed as inspiration for home cooking, four out of five Australians (81 percent) feel the shows have led to unrealistic expectations.
The report found that while 87 percent of the nation want to be more adventurous in the kitchen, growing expectations and busy lives mean that two thirds of Australians (68 percent) have less than ten recipes in their repertoire and one in five of us even have set meals for some or every day of the week.
More than two in three Australians (68 percent) said they felt too busy to find meals that their whole family will enjoy and almost half (44 percent) admitted that deciding what to cook was the most common disagreement in their household.
What’s more, over half (54 percent) of those polled said that throwing a dinner party or cooking for their household was more stressful than going to work.
Rutledge said the study was commissioned as part of the company’s new campaign to explore Australian dinnertime and encourage households to cook and eat together.
Says Rutledge: “Two thirds of Australians (66 percent) said they felt the idea of a formal dinnertime has become a thing of the past, that makes us really sad. Home cooks are obviously feeling the pressure of having multiple commitments and this coupled with high expectations from cooking shows and other food inspiration has meant many of us feel what we’re serving up isn’t good enough.”
Further to feeling stressed about what to cook and catering to fussy eaters, over a third (36 percent) of Australians surveyed felt guilty about not cooking enough healthy meals for their household’s weeknight dinners and another 29 percent felt guilty about cooking the same meals week after week.
Says Rutledge: “The desire to cook meals from scratch is there, almost three in four of us (74 percent) are likely to prepare five or more dinners at home. It’s the planning, shopping and trying to please everyone that is tripping many of us up.”
“There are physical and emotional benefits of sitting around a table, discussing the day; food can bring people together. We understand it’s important that cooking remains recreational and restorative, even in the busiest weeks.”
The company’s new campaign takes a documentary style look at the art of weeknight cooking in three real Australian homes starring non-actors.
Mum Emily Velder who features in the advertisement at home with her husband and three children had been a meal box customer for six months, saying she signed up for HelloFresh after realising the question “what’s for dinner” had become one of the most stressful moments in her day.
Says Velder: “I’d still be working but my phone would go at around 4pm every day without fail from someone in the house asking me what I was making that night. It was becoming diabolical, everyone would come home famished and I’d often be rushing to the shops or chucking something together last minute as soon as I got in the door.”
Like the 87 percent of the Australians surveyed, she said her children Billy Jack, 14, Annie Rose, 13 and Daniel, 10, wanted to try new things and that the three had taken an interest in helping in the kitchen since the recipe kits started to arrive.
Adds Velder: “Their palates have become so much more exotic. There’s a bit of excitement when the box arrives and they learn what we’ll be eating that week and they’ve started getting involved – my youngest often reads me the steps or I just give him one of the steps to do.”
She said her family’s portrayal in the ad was accurate with the recipe cooked just once during filming: “It’s completely unscripted, the kids weren’t bothered with the crew there. It’s just our normal, goofy family and I think it shows the positive effect cooking together and having a plan has had on us.”
Client: Hello Fresh
Creative & Production Agency: Emotive
Director: Stefan Hunt
Executive Creative Director: Mark Harris
Senior Producer: Justine Moyle
Director of Photography: Campbell Brown
Editors: Uthayan Sevaraj
Stills Photographer: Renata Dominik
4 Comments
Not another manifesto ad.
HelloFresh is actually pretty good and has some decent selling points, none of which are addressed in this ad.
Next time write the PR article before the ad — there’s a couple of half-decent insights in there.
Or just hire, you know, an agency with a planner so you don’t produce the culinary equivalent of a slice of wet bread.
Totally agree.
I just can’t decide if it is wet bread or soggy rice.
As a customer myself, the key reasons I use this service and the reasons I would have thought would attract new customers are completely missed.
good lord…
how boring is this… makes me yawn all over that fresh produce
“created by”? who considers that a creation