MINI: Photo Box Billboard

A billboard that turns fans into the creative

MINI has launched an innovative electronic billboard on Berlin’s Kurfürstendamm shopping boulevard. The billboard is connected to a Photo Box booth that captures the faces of MINI fans and puts them onto a massive screen along with each participant’s favourite MINI model, for a chance to win their preferred car.

Contestants have four colours and four models to choose from, including the MINI Hatch, Convertible, Clubman and Countryman.

The mechanism: Photo Box in Berlin. Facebook everywhere else

On the street, you step into the Photo Box, clamp on a pair of headphones, pick your colour and model, and the system outputs a ready-to-share moment on a giant public screen.

Fans from around the world can also join through the MINI Facebook app, where you can snap a picture with your webcam wearing a pair of virtual headphones in your favourite MINI colour.

In high-footfall city retail corridors, interactive out-of-home turns passersby into opt-in media, where participants choose to become the message through participation.

The real question is whether you can turn a simple preference into a public moment people want to share.

Why it feels modern: ecommerce choice, but on a building

The experience borrows the best part of online shopping. Configuration, without forcing the rest of it: specs, comparisons, and checkout. Because the billboard outputs a finished result in seconds, the act of choosing feels like content, not a form.

Extractable takeaway: When the environment publishes a participant’s choice at street scale, social proof becomes the distribution, and the moment feels bigger than a personal post.

The business intent: acquisition through identity

This is acquisition marketing that avoids hard selling. MINI lets people declare a preference. model plus colour. and then wraps that declaration in a contest mechanic. The brand gets reach, participation data, and a stream of shareable assets without asking people to create anything from scratch.

What to steal for your next interactive OOH build

  • Make the choice set small and satisfying. Four colours and four models is enough to feel personal, without feeling complex.
  • Design one iconic prop. Here, the headphones act as a visual signature that unifies street and Facebook participation.
  • Let the environment do the distribution. A giant screen creates built-in attention and bystander reach.
  • Mirror the experience online. The Facebook version keeps the same core mechanic so the idea travels beyond the location.

A few fast answers before you act

What is MINI’s Photo Box Billboard?

It is an interactive out-of-home billboard in Berlin where fans take a photo, choose a MINI model and colour, and see themselves displayed on a massive public screen, tied to a chance to win their preferred car.

How does the street mechanic work, step by step?

Step into the Photo Box. Pick your colour and model. The system captures your photo and outputs a finished, public “moment” on the billboard that is easy to share and talk about.

How does the Facebook app extend the same idea?

It mirrors the participation loop online. Fans take a webcam photo, add the campaign’s signature headphones motif in their chosen colour, pick a model, and participate without being in Berlin.

What role do the headphones play in the concept?

They are the visual signature that links the physical Photo Box experience to the Facebook version. One iconic prop makes the campaign instantly recognizable across channels.

Why does this work as acquisition marketing, not just a stunt?

It turns preference into a visible artifact. People declare model and colour, then the street-scale screen adds social proof and bystander reach while the brand collects intent signals.

What should you measure if you build something like this?

Participation rate, completion rate, average time to choose, shares, and downstream lead or test-drive intent. Also track whether the billboard creates bystander attention, not only participant engagement.