Mini “Fan the Flame”

Mini along with ad agency TBWA\Agency.com created a social spectacle to increase the number of fans on their recently launched Mini Facebook page in Belgium and Luxemburg.

A Mini Countryman was attached to a thick rope in the parking lot of the “Brussels Motorshow” and a burner placed under the rope. Every Facebook fan was then encouraged to remotely initiate the burner and spit some flames on the rope. A webcam broadcasted the scene 24×7 and the Fan whose flame ultimately broke the rope was the one to win the Mini Countryman. 😎

Google Maps Racing Advergame

Mini France has managed to successfully offer a virtual Mini experience with the help of a Social/Google Maps mash-up advergame called “Mini Maps”.

With DDB Paris and Unit9 they created a Facebook app that lets you customize a virtual Mini and then challenge Facebook friends to time trials around the world through Google Maps. In the challenge you are racing your friends over satellite images of your favorite locations around the world!

Why this works

  • The idea is instantly graspable. Customize your Mini. Pick a place. Race the clock. Challenge friends.
  • Google Maps is not a backdrop. The satellite layer becomes the playable surface, which makes every track feel personal.
  • Social competition is built in. Time trials make it easy to compare performance without complex multiplayer setup.

What this signals for interactive brand experiences

When a brand turns a familiar utility into a game environment, the brand becomes the interaction. “Mini Maps” uses location as the hook, customization as the commitment step, and friendly competition as the retention loop.


A few fast answers before you act

What is “Mini Maps”?

“Mini Maps” is a Facebook advergame for Mini France that combines social sharing with Google Maps to create location-based time trial races.

What does the viewer actually do?

You customize a virtual Mini and then challenge Facebook friends to time trials across Google Maps locations, racing over satellite imagery.

Why is Google Maps central to the experience?

Because it provides the world itself. The satellite view turns real places into tracks, which makes the challenge feel more personal and replayable.

What is the reusable pattern here?

Start with a concrete action (customize), move to a simple challenge mechanic (time trial), then let social competition drive repeated return visits.

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 mechanic: 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 by making participation itself the content.

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. The “product” is self-expression, delivered in seconds, in public.

That public context matters. It creates instant social proof, and it makes the moment feel bigger than a personal post because it physically occupies the street.

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 activation?

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

How does the Facebook app extend the idea?

It recreates the same participation loop online. People take a webcam photo, add the virtual headphones in their chosen colour, pick a model, and join the same campaign experience from anywhere.

Why does this work as acquisition marketing?

It converts brand preference into a public, shareable artifact. The configuration step makes it feel personal, and the big-screen moment adds social proof and reach.