Eichborn: Flyvertising at the Frankfurt Book Fair

Eichborn: Flyvertising at the Frankfurt Book Fair

Jung von Matt just redefined advertising for their client Eichborn at the Frankfurt Book Fair by attaching tiny banners to 200 flies and setting them loose as miniature “sky ads” around the halls. The idea was coined Flyvertising, or “Fliegenbanner”.

A stunt that makes the logo literal

Eichborn’s brand mark is a fly. So instead of printing the fly on a poster and hoping people notice, the campaign turns the fly into the medium and lets it wander through the crowd, uninvited, and impossible to fully ignore.

The weight of the banner itself, attached with a string and some sticky stuff that allowed it to eventually fall off without harming the fly, was so that the fly could fly with it, but not very high and they kept landing on visitors.

How Flyvertising works

The execution uses ultralight banners attached with a string and a sticky material described as designed to let the banner fall off later without harming the fly. The extra weight keeps the insects from flying high, which means they repeatedly land on visitors and surfaces. In a crowded fair, that turns a wandering fly into a moving pointer that creates attention and helps people find the Eichborn stand.

In European trade-show marketing, a stunt wins when it turns wayfinding into a story people cannot ignore in a crowded hall.

Why this lands

The campaign exploits a simple truth about exhibitions. People are overloaded with signage and trained to filter it out, but an interruption that breaks the “expected media” pattern cuts through instantly. Here, the interruption also feels on-brand, because the fly is not a random prop. It is the identity asset brought to life.

Extractable takeaway: If your brand owns a distinctive symbol, find a way to make that symbol behave like media in the real environment where attention is hardest to earn, and let the medium carry the message.

What Eichborn is really buying

The real question is whether a trade-show stunt can turn a hard-to-find stand into the story people repeat across the hall. This is smart exhibition marketing because it fuses wayfinding with a brand asset people will talk about. This is not about explaining a book list. It is about generating foot traffic, conversation, and memorability around a stand number in a hall full of publishers. The flies do the work of a promoter, and the story spreads faster than any brochure.

What to steal for your next event activation

  • Let the identity asset drive the idea. The closer the stunt is to the brand symbol, the less it feels like random noise.
  • Design for physical proximity. A trade show is won at arm’s length. Make the experience land close enough to be felt.
  • Build a “tellable” moment. If a visitor can summarize it in one sentence, it travels through the venue for you.
  • Plan the ethics and the optics. If living things are involved, the “no harm” claim needs to be credible and easy to defend.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Flyvertising?

Flyvertising is an ambient trade-show stunt where Eichborn released flies carrying ultralight mini-banners, turning the insects into moving ads that drew attention and guided visitors toward the publisher’s stand.

Why does this kind of “living media” cut through at exhibitions?

Because visitors are conditioned to ignore static signage. A moving, unpredictable interruption breaks that filter, especially when it happens in personal space.

What makes it feel on-brand rather than a generic stunt?

Eichborn’s identity includes a fly, so the medium directly expresses the brand symbol. That alignment makes the execution easier to remember and retell.

What is the transferable principle behind Flyvertising?

The transferable move is to turn a brand-owned symbol into the delivery system for attention in the exact environment where people normally ignore messages.

What are the risks with this pattern?

Ethics, hygiene perception, and venue rules. If people feel the stunt is harmful or unhygienic, the attention flips from curiosity to backlash.

Road Safety: The Bleeding Billboard

Road Safety: The Bleeding Billboard

A roadside warning that reacts to rain

An impressive device was concocted by Colenso BBDO to demonstrate to drivers that vigilance is needed when it rains. The special billboards were installed on the roadsides in Papakura District, New Zealand.

When it began to rain these billboards started bleeding profusely.

How the device works as a message, not just a stunt

The mechanism is environmental trigger plus instant consequence. Rain does not just “set the scene”. It activates the medium, turning weather into the switch that makes the warning unavoidable.

In public-safety communication, linking a message to the exact moment of risk can outperform awareness-style reminders, because it removes the gap between knowing and doing.

The real question is whether you can make the risk cue appear at the exact moment a driver still has time to react.

Why it lands: it makes the danger feel present

The effect is deliberately uncomfortable. Blood signals harm, urgency, and the possibility of impact. It forces a driver to confront “what could happen” precisely when conditions are deteriorating.

Extractable takeaway: When a warning changes with conditions, the risk feels present, and instinctive self-correction becomes easier. “Rain changes everything. Adjust speed to conditions on the road”.

The business intent: behaviour change at the point of decision

This is less about recall and more about compliance. The goal is to interrupt automatic driving habits and create a micro-moment of self-correction: slow down because the road has changed. Here, “micro-moment” means a split-second decision point where a driver can adjust speed.

This is worth using when the behaviour change needs to happen in seconds, not after a campaign is remembered.

Stealable patterns for safety, infrastructure, and behaviour-change briefs

  • Trigger the message when the risk is real. Tie the communication to a condition the audience can see and feel.
  • Make the medium part of the proof. The environment becomes the “reason” the message is credible.
  • Choose a signal that reads instantly. Drivers have seconds, so the cue must be immediate and universal.
  • Design for instinct, not analysis. Behaviour change often happens through emotion and interruption, not persuasion.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the “bleeding billboard” campaign?

It is a road-safety outdoor installation where special billboards appear to bleed when it rains, warning drivers to adjust speed to conditions.

What is the core mechanism?

An environmental trigger plus instant consequence. Rain activates the medium, turning the weather into the switch that makes the warning unavoidable.

Why is the timing of the message so important here?

Because it collapses the distance between “knowing” and “doing”. The warning appears precisely when risk increases, at the point of decision.

Why use an uncomfortable visual like blood?

It reads instantly and signals harm without explanation. Drivers have seconds, so the cue must be immediate and universal.

What is the most transferable takeaway?

If you can trigger a behaviour-change message when the risk is real, the environment itself becomes the proof, and compliance becomes more likely than with generic reminders.