LEGO France: Creativity Forgives Everything

A child gets caught mid-creation. The scene looks like trouble at first glance, then the line flips the judgement: “We forgive everything to their creativity”. LEGO has recently launched this campaign in France around that exact tension between mess and imagination.

Click here to watch the video on AdsSpot website.

Turning “naughty” into proof of imagination

The core mechanism is a simple reframe. Instead of defending play as “educational”, the work leans into the moments parents normally correct. The child’s act is still a transgression, but it is also a creative act. The signature gives parents permission to smile first, and judge later.

In brand advertising for physical toys competing with screens, the fastest way to win attention is to make imagination look like something happening right now in the room.

Why the line sticks

“Creativity forgives everything” works because it treats creativity as a social contract, not a product feature. Here, “social contract” means an unspoken trade-off: parents tolerate the mess because it signals imagination at work. Parents recognise the micro-drama instantly. You want boundaries, but you also want your child to be bold, curious, and inventive. The campaign positions LEGO as the tool that triggers that boldness, even when it comes with collateral damage.

Extractable takeaway: If your category is crowded with functional claims, choose a human tension your audience already lives with. Then write a line that resolves the tension emotionally, and let the product become the enabler of that resolution.

What LEGO is protecting

This is brand defence disguised as humour. The real question is how LEGO stays culturally distinctive when screens can deliver endless entertainment without leaving any real-world evidence. It keeps LEGO out of a specs battle and away from “learning toy” cliches. By celebrating the messy edge of creativity, the brand claims a territory that is hard for digital entertainment to steal. Real-world play that leaves evidence.

What brands can borrow from LEGO here

  • Use a permission-giving signature. A great brand line does not just describe. It authorises a feeling or behaviour.
  • Stage recognisable “caught in the act” moments. When the scenario is instantly familiar, the audience supplies the backstory for you.
  • Make the brand the ally. The work does not lecture parents. It makes them complicit, which is more persuasive.
  • Let the theme travel across formats. This idea naturally fits film, print, and outdoor because the tension can be captured in a single moment.

A few fast answers before you act

What is LEGO’s “Creativity forgives everything” campaign?

It is a LEGO France brand campaign built around the idea that adults can forgive children’s small “misbehaviours” when they are clearly driven by creativity and imaginative play.

What is the core idea in one sentence?

Reframe mischief as imagination, then position the product as the trigger for that imagination.

Why does this positioning work for LEGO specifically?

Because LEGO is a physical system for building anything. The campaign connects that open-endedness to real, observable behaviour rather than abstract “learning” benefits.

How do you adapt this approach to another category?

Identify a daily tension your audience recognises, write a line that gives emotional permission, then demonstrate the product as the enabling tool inside that tension.

What should you avoid when copying the pattern?

Avoid moralising. The power comes from empathy and recognition, not from telling the audience how they should behave.

Nutricia: Baby Connection

Young parents all over Belgium rely on Nutricia babyfoods every day. To support mums even before their baby is born, Duval Guillaume helped Nutricia create Baby Connection, an iPhone app designed to get dads more involved in the pregnancy.

Baby Connection works best when you use it as a couple. There is a mum version and a dad version, and everything each parent adds is automatically synced with their partner’s phone. The app can even transform two iPhones into one big screen.

A couples app that turns involvement into habit

The mechanism is simple and deliberate. Split the experience into two roles, then keep both roles in lockstep through syncing. Add a playful physical trick, two phones acting like one screen, to make “doing this together” feel tangible, not just promised.

In Belgian consumer brand building, support tools land best when they reduce friction for both parents and make the dad’s role practical, not symbolic.

Why it lands

This works because it shifts the conversation from “be more involved” to “here is exactly how”. Shared inputs, shared visibility, shared moments. The app design quietly nudges the couple into repeated check-ins, which is where involvement stops being intention and becomes routine.

Extractable takeaway: If you want two people to share responsibility, design the product so both can contribute in small ways, see each other’s contributions instantly, and feel like a team without extra coordination effort.

Launching an app with an experience, not a banner

The real question is how to make shared participation feel real before the baby arrives, not how to advertise another pregnancy app.

To launch Baby Connection, Duval Guillaume backed the app with a campaign designed to be as distinctive as the product itself, and to pull the idea into public conversation beyond the app store listing.

The stronger move is to market the shared behaviour the product enables, not just the app itself.

What pregnancy-support brands can borrow

  • Design for the couple, not the individual. Two roles, one shared narrative.
  • Make syncing the default. Shared visibility is the involvement mechanic.
  • Add one physical “together” moment. A simple device interaction can signal partnership better than copy.
  • Launch the product idea, not only the product. If the behaviour change is the point, market the behaviour.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Nutricia Baby Connection?

A paired iPhone app for expectant couples, with separate mum and dad versions that sync pregnancy updates and activities between both phones.

What is the core mechanism?

Two-role design plus automatic syncing, so both parents can add and see information without manual coordination.

Why does the “two iPhones as one screen” idea matter?

It turns a digital feature into a physical couple moment, reinforcing that pregnancy planning is shared, not solo.

What is the business intent behind this kind of app?

To support and deepen trust with parents before birth, by providing a practical tool that keeps the brand present in daily routines.

What is the most reusable lesson here?

If you want involvement from a second person, make contribution easy, feedback immediate, and shared progress visible.