Kia Lie Detector

Most people in Belgium know that Kia gives a 7-year warranty on all its models. That is a good thing. But a lot of them also think 7 years sounds too good to be true, and that there must be a catch. That is a problem. If people do not believe your advertising message, regular advertising is insufficient.

So LDV United built a campaign designed to prove one simple point. Although it sounds unbelievable, the 7-year warranty is described as 100% true, with no catch.

Proof beats repetition

To prove the warranty was genuine, the campaign used a lie detector. Legal Connections, described as an official lie detector company, hooked up the CEO of Kia Motors to a polygraph. Consumers then asked him questions about the 7-year warranty during a live online session.

In European automotive markets, long warranties are a major purchase heuristic, and credibility becomes the real bottleneck when the claim feels “too good”.

Here is the key marketing idea in one line. When your promise is extraordinary, you need a proof ritual that feels public, simple, and hard to fake.

How the stunt travels

The lie detector was not the whole campaign. It was the anchor. The stunt was communicated through newspaper ads, banners and a press release announcing that an actual CEO would undergo a live lie detector test. That structure is what turns a proof moment into earned media and word of mouth, meaning peer-to-peer sharing both online and offline.

Because a polygraph is a culturally understood symbol of truth-testing, it reframed the warranty from “marketing claim” into “something we are willing to be challenged on, live”.

Recognition and reported impact

The work later picked up Cannes Lions recognition, listed as a Direct Bronze Lion for “Lie Detector”.

The campaign’s impact was reported via independent media company Scripta as:

  • Brand recognition: 42% (instead of 32% sector average)
  • Attribution: 73% (instead of 62% sector average)
  • Resulting in an Effectiveness Rating of 31% (instead of 20% sector average)
  • And last but not least: An impressive credibility of 80%

What to steal for your next “credibility gap” claim

  • Identify the credibility gap early. If the promise sounds implausible, spend on proof, not frequency.
  • Choose a proof mechanic people already understand. Polygraph. Lab test. Public demo. Anything that signals “hard to fake”.
  • Make the proof interactive. Live questions beat scripted endorsements when trust is the objective.
  • Package the moment for pickup. Announce it like an event, so press and blogs have a clean story to carry.

A few fast answers before you act

What problem does the Kia lie detector idea solve?

It solves a credibility problem. When a benefit sounds too good to be true, people assume a hidden condition. The campaign is designed to remove that doubt by staging proof in public.

Why use a lie detector in advertising?

A polygraph is a widely understood truth ritual. Even if people do not treat it as perfect science, it signals confidence and willingness to be challenged in front of an audience.

What makes this more than a stunt?

The stunt is structured as a live, interactive Q&A, and it is distributed through paid announcements and PR. That combination turns a single moment into a story that can travel.

When should brands avoid “proof theatre” like this?

If the claim cannot withstand scrutiny, or if the proof method is likely to be seen as misleading or unsafe, the stunt will backfire. Proof mechanics only work when the underlying promise is clean.

What are better success metrics than views for credibility campaigns?

Measure belief and consideration shifts. Brand trust, message credibility, attribution to the correct benefit, and downstream intent signals are usually more meaningful than raw reach.

Drive your Track

Tell Jeep your favorite song and their app will tell you where to drive! Jeep Spain with Leo Burnett Iberia have come up with a new online campaign called ‘Drive Your Track’.

At www.driveyourtrack.com users are asked to upload their favorite song in order discover where their music could take them. A special technology is then used to read the sound waves generated by the uploaded track and then find the landscapes that match the shapes of these waves! With an extra click, users can also discover the route to reach the destination.

Google Maps Racing Advergame

Mini France has managed to successfully offer a virtual Mini experience with the help of a Social/Google Maps mash-up advergame called “Mini Maps”.

With DDB Paris and Unit9 they created a Facebook app that lets you customize a virtual Mini and then challenge Facebook friends to time trials around the world through Google Maps. In the challenge you are racing your friends over satellite images of your favorite locations around the world!

Why this works

  • The idea is instantly graspable. Customize your Mini. Pick a place. Race the clock. Challenge friends.
  • Google Maps is not a backdrop. The satellite layer becomes the playable surface, which makes every track feel personal.
  • Social competition is built in. Time trials make it easy to compare performance without complex multiplayer setup.

What this signals for interactive brand experiences

When a brand turns a familiar utility into a game environment, the brand becomes the interaction. “Mini Maps” uses location as the hook, customization as the commitment step, and friendly competition as the retention loop.


A few fast answers before you act

What is “Mini Maps”?

“Mini Maps” is a Facebook advergame for Mini France that combines social sharing with Google Maps to create location-based time trial races.

What does the viewer actually do?

You customize a virtual Mini and then challenge Facebook friends to time trials across Google Maps locations, racing over satellite imagery.

Why is Google Maps central to the experience?

Because it provides the world itself. The satellite view turns real places into tracks, which makes the challenge feel more personal and replayable.

What is the reusable pattern here?

Start with a concrete action (customize), move to a simple challenge mechanic (time trial), then let social competition drive repeated return visits.