
A TV ad for Sneaux Shoes.

A TV ad for Sneaux Shoes.

Very innovative đ
If you have ever reckoned you have an evil twin somewhere else in the world, or that you were separated at birth but no one has got round to telling you, Coke Zeroâs âworldwide social networking experimentâ plays directly into that curiosity.
Coke Zero created a Facebook app called the âFacial Profilerâ with one clear aim: find your online lookalike.

The mechanic is simple and self-explanatory. You upload a photo to the database. Coke analyses the facial characteristics and attempts to find the nearest match from other uploaded images.
In global FMCG marketing, lightweight social utilities can turn personal identity-curiosity into mass participation with minimal friction.
This works because the ârewardâ is social, not transactional. People want to see the result, they want to show friends, and they want friends to try it back, which increases the pool of uploaded images and improves the matching for everyone.
There is also a built-in tension that keeps it sticky: the match is never perfect, which invites replay, comparison, and conversation rather than closure.
The campaign does not argue product attributes head-on. Instead, it borrows the logic of the product proposition and turns it into a human metaphor: âclose enoughâ can still be compelling.
The idea behind the campaign is: âIf Coke Zero has the taste of Coke…is it possible that someone out there has your face?â.
It is a Facebook application that invites people to upload a photo and then returns the closest lookalike match from other uploaded images in the database.
Participation creates the asset. Users contribute photos, the system compares facial characteristics, and the database grows with every upload, which increases the chance of finding a ânear matchâ.
Because the output is personal and social. The result is fun to show, fun to debate, and it prompts friends to try it too, which naturally amplifies reach.
To make the Coke Zero proposition memorable by translating âclose enough to Cokeâ into a human analogy, so the brand message is felt through participation rather than explained through claims.
Build a simple loop where the audience action creates the content, the content creates conversation, and the conversation recruits the next participant.