British Airways: #lookup points to planes

Last month, British Airways set up an interactive digital billboard in London’s Piccadilly Circus. It uses custom-built “surveillance technology” to track British Airways flights passing overhead. Here, that means identifying aircraft and matching them to British Airways flights in real time, not tracking individuals on the street.

On detecting a BA flight, the boy in the ad gets up and points to the plane. An accompanying message displays the flight number and the place it is arriving from.

In high-traffic city centres, digital out-of-home works best when it reacts to the environment rather than shouting at it.

Interactive advertisements are getting more popular with brands. In May, a Spanish organization called ANAR used lenticular printing to show different messages to kids and adults in their campaign for anti-child abuse.

How #lookup works (and what “surveillance” means here)

The magic is simple. The screen stays “normal” until the exact moment a British Airways aircraft is in view. Then the creative switches to a scene that makes you do what the boy does. You look up, spot the plane, and connect the brand to the real object above you.

“Surveillance technology” sounds heavier than what’s happening in practice. In this execution, it is reported as hardware and software used to identify aircraft and match them to British Airways flights in real time. The storytelling trigger is the aircraft, not the crowd.

Definition you can reuse: Context-aware DOOH is outdoor creative that changes based on live signals from the environment (location, time, weather, movement, or public data feeds). It works when the signal is instantly understandable and the change earns attention rather than interrupts it.

In European city-centre media buys, context-aware DOOH is one of the few formats that can earn attention without relying on volume.

Why it lands: a micro-surprise that answers a real question

Most outdoor advertising asks for attention first, and only then offers meaning. #lookup flips that order. It gives you meaning first. A child pointing at something real. Then it rewards your curiosity with an answer you cannot get from a static poster. What flight is that, and where has it come from? Because the trigger is a plane you can actually see, the data reveal feels like an answer to curiosity, not an interruption.

Extractable takeaway: If the environment makes people ask a question, your creative should answer it instantly with one human-readable data point that completes the scene.

The real question is how you turn ambient curiosity into a brand-credit moment people choose to share.

This is the rare “brand moment” where the interface and the emotion line up. A real plane prompts real curiosity. The billboard supplies the missing information. The brand gets credited for the experience.

What British Airways is really buying with this idea

At one level, it’s a smart stunt. At a deeper level, it’s a reframing of air travel. Instead of selling price, routes, or amenities, it sells the feeling of possibility and the breadth of the network.

It also turns a passive medium into an earned-media engine. When a billboard reacts to reality, people record it, talk about it, and share it because it feels like “proof,” not persuasion.

How to borrow the #lookup pattern

  • Pick a signal people already notice. Planes, trains, weather shifts, match scores, queue length, local landmarks. The trigger should be obvious without explanation.
  • Make the reaction immediate and legible. If the audience needs to read a paragraph to understand the mechanic, the moment is lost.
  • Answer a question the environment creates. “Where is that going?” is stronger than “buy now.” Build the creative around curiosity.
  • Use data as a storytelling ingredient, not a dashboard. Flight numbers and origins feel human when they complete the scene, not when they look like telemetry.
  • Keep privacy optics clean. If you must use loaded terms like “surveillance,” clarify what is being detected and what is not.

A few fast answers before you act

What makes the British Airways #lookup billboard “interactive”?

It changes its creative in real time based on a live external trigger. A British Airways aircraft passing overhead. That trigger causes the billboard to play a scene and display flight details tied to the specific plane.

Is this the same as QR codes or touchscreens in outdoor ads?

No. QR codes and touchscreens require deliberate user input. #lookup is environment-triggered interaction. The “input” is a real-world event, not a tap.

Why does real-time data improve out-of-home advertising?

Because it turns a static message into a situated experience. When the content matches what is happening around you right now, attention feels earned and the brand feels more relevant.

What’s the simplest way to replicate this pattern without complex engineering?

Use a clean, reliable signal you can access easily (time of day, weather, local transit status) and design one dramatic creative switch that is instantly visible from a distance.

What’s the biggest risk with “reactive” outdoor ads?

Overcomplication. If the trigger is rare, hard to understand, or the creative change is subtle, the concept will not land. Optimise for clarity and frequency of payoff.

KLM: Disney’s Planes Pre-Screening on a Plane

On October 2, KLM gave 300 kids an experience of a lifetime. The lucky kids were invited to a spectacular pre-screening of the new Disney film Planes.

To make the event unforgettable, KLM held the pre-screening on an actual airplane, then used timed special effects to recreate the world of Planes in a live setting around the aircraft. KLM described it as the world’s first movie experience in and around a plane.

A movie theatre that already has wings

The clever bit is not “screening a film on a plane”. That is normal. The clever bit is synchronizing the environment with the story so the audience feels like the film has leaked into real life.

In airline and travel brands, immersive launches work best when the setting is native to the promise you sell.

The real question is whether your launch idea could only happen in the world your brand already owns.

This is worth copying because it makes the brand story feel inevitable rather than advertised.

The most memorable launches turn passive viewing into a physical moment that people can retell in one sentence.

Why it sticks

It sticks because the story, the setting, and the timed effects all reinforce the same feeling, and the audience experiences it rather than just watching it.

Extractable takeaway: Immersive brand experiences land when the environment is part of the content. If you can make the setting behave like the story, you create a memory people repeat for you.

It collapses brand and story into one setting. An airline is already a stage for travel narratives. Parking a film about aircraft inside a real aircraft makes the connection immediate.

It treats immersion as service, not spectacle. The effects are not there to show off production budget. They are there to make the kids feel looked after and included in something that cannot be repeated at home.

It earns conversation because the headline is simple. “They screened Planes on a plane” is a line anyone can pass on. The live effects turn that line into a story worth sharing.

Steal the sync-moment playbook

  • Pick a venue that makes your message inevitable. The location should do half the explaining before a single word is said.
  • Design “sync moments”. By “sync moments” I mean timed physical cues that match a few key beats so people feel the story, not just watch it.
  • Optimize for retellability. If the concept cannot be summarized in one sentence, it will not travel as earned media.
  • Make the audience the hero. For kids especially, the emotional memory is the product. The brand benefit follows.

A few fast answers before you act

What did KLM actually do here?

They hosted a pre-screening of Disney’s Planes for 300 kids inside a real aircraft and staged timed effects around the plane to mirror moments from the film.

Why is the airplane venue more than a gimmick?

Because it is native to both the brand and the story. It makes the experience feel “only possible with KLM”, which is the point of experiential work.

What makes this different from a normal premiere?

The environment is synchronized to the content, creating immersion. It is closer to live theatre than to a standard screening.

What is the business intent behind an event like this?

To build brand affinity and memorability, especially with families, by creating a high-emotion story people associate with the airline.

What is the most transferable lesson?

Choose a setting that embodies the message, then add a few well-timed sensory cues that turn viewing into a felt experience.