EVOC: The Indestructible Billboard

EVOC: The Indestructible Billboard

A backpack is mounted into a bus stop billboard. People step up, throw their hardest punch, and a display instantly shows the force of the hit and how much of it the backpack absorbs.

EVOC wanted to highlight its LITESHIELD protective technology, positioned as shock absorption with everyday wearing comfort. Publicis Munich created a billboard that lets passers-by physically test the backpack’s impact absorption. The unit also ties into Facebook, described as photographing participants and posting the image so they can tag and share their attempt.

The hardest recorded punch is reported as 11.30 kN. Definition-tightening: kN, kilonewton, is a unit of force, so the number is the proof-point for how much impact the demo measured, not a vague “strong” claim.

A product demo disguised as street entertainment

The mechanism is simple. Turn the product into the interface. The billboard does not claim protection, it measures an impact in public and shows both the hit and the absorbed portion in real time.

In performance-driven consumer categories, an outdoor experience that converts a spec into a felt moment can create belief faster than any explanation panel ever will.

Why the Facebook loop matters

The punch is the hook, but the share is the multiplier. By capturing the moment and attaching a score, the activation creates a lightweight competition mechanic, then hands people a reason to post that is about them, not about the brand.

Extractable takeaway: Proof travels when the moment is both measurable and share-ready, so design the interaction and the publishing loop as one system.

Reported results from coverage include around 97 hits per hour and a 220% increase in Facebook fan activity during the campaign window. Those figures are part of the story because they show what happens when the product truth is both playable and publishable.

What EVOC is really buying

This is credibility and recall. If you let someone try to break your protective promise in public and the product holds, the brand earns a kind of trust that polished messaging struggles to achieve.

The real question is whether your proof moment is verifiable at a glance, or whether it reads like a gimmick.

Proof-led stunts are worth doing only when the measurement is instantly legible and the audience feels it cannot be faked.

Proof-led activation moves worth copying

  • Instrument the claim. If you say “absorbs impact,” measure impact and show the absorbed portion.
  • Make the demo social by default. Photo plus score is a repeatable share trigger.
  • Keep the interaction one-step. No instructions wall. One obvious action, one immediate payoff.
  • Design for bystanders. Watching someone else punch is part of the persuasion.

A few fast answers before you act

What is EVOC’s “Indestructible Billboard”?

An interactive bus stop billboard in Berlin that lets people punch an EVOC backpack, then displays the measured force and the absorbed portion as a live product demonstration.

What does LITESHIELD refer to?

EVOC’s protective backpack technology, positioned around impact absorption and back protection while still being wearable for sport use.

Why add Facebook to an outdoor activation?

Because it turns a one-off street moment into shareable content. A photo plus a score gives participants a reason to post and compare attempts.

What does “11.30 kN” mean in plain language?

It is a reported peak force reading from the activation. kN is a unit of force, so the number is meant to quantify the strongest recorded hit.

What is the biggest risk with “proof” stunts like this?

If the measurement is unclear or feels fake, trust collapses. The display must be instantly readable and the interaction must feel authentic.

Swedish Armed Forces: Who Cares?

Swedish Armed Forces: Who Cares?

The Swedish Armed Forces needed to recruit young people to an occupation that, in many ways, requires giving up personal comfort in order to help others. To highlight that trade-off, DDB Stockholm created a digitally integrated event in Stockholm, meaning a live experience amplified online but solved only through offline action, to test how far people were willing to go for one another.

One person agreed to sit in a small boxed room and give up his freedom. The experiment was live-streamed over the internet, and nobody could help him via social media. The only way to help was to physically take his place yourself.

Would you have entered that room?

A recruitment test you cannot “like” your way out of

The mechanism is a single constraint with a hard rule. A person stays locked in a box until someone else arrives and swaps places. “Digitally integrated” here means the story travels through live video and online conversation, but the action can only happen in the physical world.

In public-sector recruiting, sacrifice is rarely persuasive as a slogan, so demonstrations that make the cost tangible tend to cut through faster than promises.

Why it lands

This works because the hard swap rule turns abstract values into a visible choice with a real cost. Watching a live stream makes you a witness, but the rule forces a sharper question. The real question is whether you care enough to surrender comfort, not whether you can signal support from a distance. The gap between those two states is the point of the experiment, and it makes the recruitment message feel earned rather than announced.

Extractable takeaway: If your role requires commitment, build a mechanic where commitment has a visible cost, and make the only path to “help” require real participation.

What the Armed Forces are actually testing

On the surface this is a recruitment film and an event. Underneath, it is a filter for mindset. This is recruitment built on proof, not persuasion. The work asks whether a young audience is willing to trade comfort for responsibility, and it frames that trade-off in the simplest possible form. One person is stuck. Only another person can free him.

What to steal from this participation mechanic

  • Make the value measurable. “Caring” becomes an action with a clear threshold.
  • Use digital for scale, not for the solution. Let the internet amplify, but keep the decisive moment real.
  • Design a rule people can retell. “He gets out only if you go in” travels in one sentence.
  • Let tension do the storytelling. A live situation creates attention without extra explanation.

A few fast answers before you act

What is “Who Cares?” in one line?

A Swedish Armed Forces recruitment experiment where a person remains locked in a box until someone physically arrives to replace him.

Why is the “no social media help” rule important?

It blocks low-effort participation and forces a real-world decision, which aligns with the message about giving up comfort to help others.

What does “digitally integrated event” mean here?

The event is distributed through live streaming and online conversation, but the only effective intervention is an offline, physical action.

What is the main psychological trigger?

It turns spectatorship into a moral fork. Watching is easy. Acting carries a cost, and that contrast creates the impact.

When does this pattern work best?

When you need to recruit or motivate for roles that require real commitment, and you can express that commitment through a simple, uncheatable rule.

Viajes Galeón: Twitpoker

Viajes Galeón: Twitpoker

A poker table. Five of Colombia’s best-known Twitter personalities. Except the chips are not money. They are followers.

Viajes Galeón, a Colombian travel agency, and Y&R Colombia create Twitpoker, a poker game where players bet their Twitter followers instead of cash. The match is streamed live to audiences via web cams, pulling spectators into the tension of every hand because every raise has a visible social cost.

As described, the live format scaled beyond the five invited players. More than 27,000 people played together on a single table experience, and a brand with little or no prior social footprint used the stunt to kick-start its Twitter presence.

Followers as currency

The mechanism is a value swap. Twitter followers become the stake, which instantly reframes poker from private risk to public reputation. Every decision is legible to the audience and personally meaningful to the players, because the loss is social proof, not cash.

In social-led brand building, the most persuasive “launch” is a mechanic that makes your audience feel they are participating in the growth, not merely watching an ad about it.

Why it lands

The idea works because it turns a platform metric into a story engine. Most follower counts sit idle as vanity. Twitpoker makes the number consequential, and consequence creates attention. The live stream adds immediacy, and the five invited players supply recognizable personalities, so the audience is watching real identities collide with real incentives.

Extractable takeaway: If you want social growth fast, design a mechanic where the platform’s native currency is genuinely at stake, then stage it live so spectators feel the outcome unfolding in real time.

What the travel brand is really buying

The real question is how a low-awareness travel brand gives people a reason to follow right now.

Viajes Galeón is not buying “engagement” as a buzzword. It is buying a credible reason for people to follow, talk, and keep watching. The campaign converts a travel agency into a social event host, which is a stronger role for a brand with low awareness than trying to shout offers into a quiet feed.

What to steal from Twitpoker

  • Make the platform metric matter. Treat followers, likes, time, or access as something that can be risked or earned.
  • Use live to create urgency. Live formats compress attention and increase sharing because people do not want to miss the outcome.
  • Cast with credibility. Recognizable participants provide narrative without needing heavy scripting.
  • Let the audience feel included. Scale participation beyond the core cast so it becomes a shared event, not a private stunt.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Twitpoker?

A live-streamed poker game where participants bet their Twitter followers instead of money, built to generate attention and grow a brand’s social presence.

Why does “betting followers” work as a mechanic?

Because it converts a familiar social metric into a real stake, making every play emotionally legible and socially consequential.

What role does the live stream play?

It creates immediacy and shared tension, which increases participation, sharing, and real-time commentary.

What is the key requirement for this to feel credible?

The stakes must be real and visible, and the participants need an audience that cares about their reputations.

When should a brand use a stunt like this?

When the goal is to bootstrap social attention quickly, and when you can translate platform-native value into a simple game with a clear win and loss.