Billboard Brasil: On Hold Jam Session

You call a magazine subscription line and get put on hold. Instead of elevator music, you get a prompt that turns your phone keypad into an instrument, so you can jam along while you wait.

Turning hold time into play time

Billboard Magazine features the best of pop music and entertainment in Brazil and, as they frame it, waiting on hold is one of the most boring music moments ever. So their ad agency AlmapBBDO creates the “On Hold Jam Session”, which makes the moment into a fun interactive experience and reflects the magazine’s concept of music and entertainment.

To make the magazine subscribers aware of this new on-hold feature, they send direct mail explaining how one could jam along with their phone buttons when they are put on hold at Billboard Magazine.

Why the mechanic is so effective

The mechanism is simple. Use the tones behind the phone keypad to trigger musical parts, so every button press feels like progress. It replaces passive waiting with viewer control, meaning the caller can shape what they hear in real time. That changes the emotional quality of the same time slice.

Extractable takeaway: If you cannot remove a wait, give people one simple action that produces immediate feedback, so the time feels shorter and more personal.

Definition-tightening: this works because phone buttons generate distinct audio tones that can be mapped to beats, riffs, or samples. The caller does not need instructions beyond “press keys to play”.

In subscription media and entertainment brands, turning unavoidable waiting into a participatory moment is a direct way to make the brand feel lived, not just consumed.

What Billboard is really buying

This is not a content campaign in the usual sense. It is a brand behavior demonstration. If Billboard is about music culture, the brand should show up even in the most unmusical moment, customer service hold time. The real question is whether your brand shows up when the customer is stuck, not only when the customer is browsing.

It also reframes a service weakness into a memorable touchpoint. The caller is more likely to tolerate the wait, and more likely to talk about the experience afterward.

Patterns for turning dead time into play

  • Target dead time. Waiting, queuing, loading, and holding are underused attention windows.
  • Make the first interaction obvious. One prompt, one action, instant feedback.
  • Turn friction into a feature. If the wait cannot be removed, redesign what the wait feels like.
  • Promote it with a physical cue. Direct mail works here because it sets expectation before the call happens.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the “On Hold Jam Session” idea?

It turns phone hold time into a playable music moment by letting callers create beats or melodies using their keypad while they wait.

Why does interactivity matter when someone is on hold?

Because it converts passive waiting into active participation, which reduces boredom and makes the time feel shorter.

How do phone buttons become a music controller?

Each keypad press produces a distinct tone that can be mapped to sounds. The system listens for the tones and triggers matching audio parts.

What is the business benefit beyond “fun”?

A better service experience, higher memorability, and a stronger brand association, plus increased word of mouth because the moment is easy to describe.

What is the main execution risk?

If the audio feedback is delayed or confusing, callers will abandon the interaction and it becomes just another frustrating hold.

Austria Solar: Sun-Powered Annual Report

Austria Solar’s annual report arrives looking almost blank. Then you step into sunlight, and the pages wake up.

Serviceplan’s idea is to put solar energy “to paper” in the most literal way. The report’s typography and graphics only become visible when exposed to sunlight, turning the act of reading into a live demonstration of the product story.

How it works, and why the packaging matters

The mechanism sits in the production craft: a special printing process using light-reactive inks so the content remains invisible until UV-rich daylight hits the page, at which point the design reveals itself.

The report is then wrapped in light-proof foil before distribution, so recipients experience the reveal as a first-time moment rather than an already-exposed artifact.

In B2B and association communications, annual reports are expected to be worthy, and often get skimmed, so engineered “stops”, deliberate interruptions that force a reader to pause, can earn attention without needing louder messaging.

Why the reveal lands

This works because the medium is doing the persuasion. Because the content stays hidden until sunlight, the reader has to take one small step, which makes the reveal feel earned rather than announced. The real question is whether your format can do the convincing before your copy does.

Extractable takeaway: When your value proposition is invisible in everyday life, design a simple interaction that makes it visible in the moment. Let the audience “prove” the benefit to themselves through a familiar artifact.

There is also a quiet confidence in the restraint. The pages look empty at first, which builds curiosity. Then the content appears, which feels like a payoff rather than a pitch. This is a stronger move than adding more words when you need attention without hype.

The business intent behind the craft

The report is doing several jobs at once. It modernizes a traditionally dry format, positions Austria Solar as an innovation-led industry organization, and gives members and stakeholders a story they can easily retell.

Because the reveal is physical and repeatable, it also travels well in meetings. The report becomes a prop for advocacy, not just a document for compliance.

Practical moves to borrow from the sun-reveal report

  • Turn a claim into a demonstration. If your topic is energy, data, security, or sustainability, look for a way the format can embody the message.
  • Design for the first 10 seconds. Engineer a moment that forces curiosity before you ask for attention.
  • Make the interaction effortless. The user action here is trivial. Move into daylight.
  • Package the experience, not just the content. The light-proof wrap protects the “first reveal” so the idea survives distribution.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the core idea of Austria Solar’s sun-powered annual report?

It is an annual report printed so that its content only becomes visible when exposed to sunlight, turning reading into a physical demonstration of solar energy’s presence and power.

Why does making the content invisible at first help?

The initial blankness creates curiosity and a clear contrast. When the content appears, the reveal feels like a payoff, which increases attention and recall compared to a conventional report page.

What makes this more than a gimmick?

The interaction directly reinforces the organization’s story. The report does not just talk about solar power. It requires sunlight to function, which makes the message inseparable from the format.

Why does the light-proof wrap matter?

It preserves the first-time reveal by preventing premature exposure, so recipients experience the idea as a moment rather than a pre-exposed artifact.

Where else can this pattern work?

Any communication where audiences expect low novelty, like policy packs, compliance updates, investor or member reports, or annual reviews, especially when you can embed a simple demonstration into the artifact itself.

Jeep: Compass Remote Postcards

One of the oldest and most effective ways to sell a product is with a good demonstration. Leo Burnett Brussels takes that approach and gives it a fresh spin for the Jeep Compass by turning the demo into a journey people can follow.

Cameras are strapped onto a few Jeep Compasses, and the team sets out to find the most remote post locations they can. Direct mailers are then shipped from these far-flung places, pointing recipients to a site where they can follow the trip and see the Compass in action.

Remote postcards as proof, not promise

The mechanic is simple. Put the product in the environment that proves the claim, document it, then send a physical artifact from the place itself. The postcard becomes evidence that the vehicle actually got there, not just a line in a brochure.

In automotive marketing, demonstrations land best when the proof is embedded in the distribution, so the message and the evidence arrive together.

The real question is how to turn an off-road capability claim into proof people can hold, trust, and retell. This is stronger than a spec-led demo because the proof is built into the medium itself.

Why this lands

This works because it collapses storytelling and verification into one object. A postcard from a remote location is inherently credible. Add footage from the route, and the demonstration feels earned rather than staged, even for people who only skim the campaign.

Extractable takeaway: If your product benefit is “go anywhere” or “handle more,” make the medium carry the proof. Send something that could only exist if the product performed as claimed.

What the campaign is really optimizing for

Beyond awareness, this is built to move the vehicle into active consideration. It gives prospects a concrete reason to re-evaluate the vehicle, and it creates a narrative that sales teams and enthusiasts can retell without needing technical jargon or spec sheets.

How to adapt this demonstration pattern

  • Turn proof into an artifact. Physical mail can signal effort and credibility.
  • Design a followable journey. A route with checkpoints is easier to remember and share than a one-off stunt.
  • Keep the CTA tight. One action. Follow the trip. See the product perform.
  • Make the environment do the persuading. Terrain and remoteness communicate capability faster than copy.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the core idea of the Jeep Compass remote postcards?

Use real remote locations as the demonstration, then mail postcards from those locations and direct recipients to follow the journey and watch the vehicle perform.

Why use direct mail instead of only video?

A postcard from a remote post office feels like proof. It is a physical signal that the journey happened.

What makes this a product demonstration, not just content?

The route and the mailer are consequences of the capability claim. The campaign structure is built around showing the vehicle doing the work.

What kind of products benefit most from this pattern?

Products with a capability claim that is easy to show in the real world. Durability, reach, range, off-road, endurance, or access.

What’s the biggest risk if you copy this approach?

If the “proof” feels manufactured or the journey is hard to follow, the credibility advantage disappears. The checkpoints and documentation need to be clear.