Salvos Stores shows how much the right gift means in new campaign via The General Store
As the festive season draws near and buying presents is on everyone’s to-do list, charity retailer Salvos Stores has taken a purpose-led, yet humorous, approach in its new Christmas campaign developed by The General Store.
Says Matt McMahon, customer experience manager at Salvos Stores: “This work beautifully demonstrates that gifts from Salvos Stores have special meaning because of the consideration that goes into searching for a unique item, whether it’s an obscure vegan cookbook, a retro game console, or even a vintage sweater vest.
“In addition, preloved presents from Salvos Stores have a far-reaching impact that extends to the environment and the vulnerable communities that we support every day. And that’s what truly creates gifts with more meaning.”
At Salvos Stores, 100 per cent of profits support programs that transform the lives of Australians in need, such as those experiencing hunger and homelessness. And through its support of the circular economy and numerous sustainability initiatives, Salvos has also diverted over 40 million items from landfill in the past year.
The Christmas campaign also signifies a playful step change in Salvos Stores’ brand personality. Within the three hero films, the awkward hugging and tongue-in-cheek dialogue bring to life the impact that a preloved gift has on the environment and community.
Says Marcus Tesoriero, chief creative officer at The General Store: “Doing good for the world doesn’t always have to be earnest. We wanted to take a more entertaining approach to Salvos Stores’ serious message of sustainability and community support – highlighting how much a gift from Salvos Stores would really mean to someone.
“Salvos Stores have been the leaders in the circular economy for generations, long before it became cool. This work reaffirms Salvos Stores position as the dominant player in the preloved goods market, especially as we head towards a potentially turbulent economic climate next year.”
The General Store began working with Salvos Stores four years ago. During that time, the two businesses have worked together across store design architecture, business strategy, advertising, design and animation.
Adds McMahon: “Being a purpose-led business comes with its own unique challenges, but The General Store has an in-depth understanding of our business, the current competitive landscape and the consumer mindset. They know what creative work makes people tick,” said McMahon. “We’re so thrilled to be on this next step of our journey with them.”
Launching this week, the new Christmas campaign for Salvos Stores will be rolled out across TV, social and in-store.
Client: Salvos Stores
Customer Experience Manager: Matt McMahon
Customer Campaign Partner: Sarah Keogh
Creative Agency: The General Store
Chief Creative Officer: Marcus Tesoriero
Creative Director: Andrew Jones
Art Director: Daniel Li
Copywriter: Mitch Taylor
Group Account Director: Sommer Smith
Senior Account Director: Kiki Jones
Production Company: Painted Black
Director: Armand de Saint-Salvy
DOP: Aaron McLisky
Production Designer: Jan Edwards
Producer: Henry Richardson
Photographer: Charles Grant
Sound design: Squeak E Clean Studios
37 Comments
new homogenized san serif logotype just dropped.
Who hurt you? These are great spots. Great message, really great talent and acting. Shot well.
Grow up if the only thing you have to contribute to this planet is “lots of people use that font.” Honestly. Get in the sea.
Locker room made me lol
Is there ANYTHING this man can’t do?
Really like it. Now i want a ps1 for christmas
Marcus gives good ad.
Love these! Simple idea and well executed 🙂
Love seeing these guys do so well under Marcus. Well done guys. And well done Marcus.
Love the films, in particular the ps1 spot! Great work lads and to all involved #loveamarndtoo
Decent work fella.
MARCUS! MARCUS! MARCUS!
These are nice and single minded.
Well done all
Me Marcus Good.
…time for you to log off the comments section
Love how the humour is light yet effective and still passes the message across! Love the G store works bravo!
More like MARCUS touch!
Jonesyyyyyyyyyy
Marcus
(in the comments)
Finally an ad that’s actually funny, will relate with consumers (particularly in this economic environment) & answers the client brief exactly! nice work!
Thank you so much for these try-hard, multi-barreled, cluttered, poorly written, wasted opportunity online ads.
You probably need to talk to someone. Hope you’re ok.
Get in the bin, you thumb.
But aint no-one wanting a PS1 for xmas
Yep, these are really nice.
Simple, clean execution. Nicely written, acted and directed. Great cause.
You’d have to be a real sourpuss to shit-can these spots.
*Also, I’m not Marcus.
Nor am I Mitch, his copywriter, who clearly deserves a bit more kudos.
Perhaps he can pop on incognito too? Hello? Mitch? Nice work, bruz.
I like the spots, nice work team G Store. What’s with the Marcus overkill in the comments??
Great work lads.
Great work, some of the best in Australia right now. Na just kidding, just wanted to jump in on the astroturfing the G Store work always seems to roll out. When the ego dies, the soul will awaken.
Y’alls need to push through those first thought ideas ffs. dam shame that a brand that has something genuinely unique going on ends up with ads that feel like every other tired aussie retail ‘comedy’ dialogue spot from the last 10 years. Some half-decent casting ain’t enough to bring it back into good.
These General Store comments threads are a crack up, arguably more rewarding than the work itself. Hey, all PR is good PR, amirite?!
These guys don’t miss 🎯
This is a Marcus idea
These are good, I feel they would of worked better though if it focused on nostalgia – classic finds for loved ones – rather than financial burden. The story would have more positive spin of why you would buy at the Salvos rather than you are poor.
Marcus down for more Marcus.
Aurelius
Why is the entire agency praising their CCO in the comments? Or is it the guy himself.
Or is it yum?
I don’t even know anymore.