Tag: Melissa Hobley

  • OkCupid’s digital campaign #AllyOfLove in the times of virtual dating

    OkCupid’s digital campaign #AllyOfLove in the times of virtual dating

    NEW DELHI: The Covid2019 pandemic has changed the rules of the dating game and so dating apps have had to strategise ways for couples to meet online, converse and also find romance in it. The dating platform, OkCupid recently celebrated pride month 2020 with a lot of conversation-starting campaigns. It launched #AllyOfLove that celebrates all types of love, especially queer, and holds up the belief that everyone across genders and sexualities deserves to experience love equally. 

    While planning for the campaign, the dating platform came across interesting data and user insights which indicated how progressive and welcoming the OkCupid community is while spotlighting the need to rally around members of the LGBTQi community and show them support.

    “For the month of pride, we wanted to understand our users’ views both within and towards the LGBTQ community. The data has been gathered through questions on the OkCupid app which new and existing users answer to inform the app AI to be introduced to meaningful and compatible matches. With 18 sexual orientations, 22 gender options and over 3000 questions on the platform we make sure you are matched with people on the same wavelength as you to help you to make meaningful connections,” shares OkCupid CMO Melissa Hobley.

    This year, with social distancing, pride parades across the world have been cancelled, taking away an avenue for the community to celebrate their identity and for the larger populace to show their solidarity. To continue the celebration of individuality even if it means from a distance, OkCupid’s pride campaign this year encouraged people both from the LGBTQ+ community and cis-heterosexual members to be an #AllyOfLove.

    “The campaign establishes the fact that at the heart of it, all of us are not very different. Across gender identities, sexual orientation and geography, our desire for love and the need to overcome societal odds are the same because it is so fundamentally human. Some of us, however, find it more challenging than others because of generations of prejudice. We wanted to further amplify queer voices with the motive of gathering solidarity and showing what being a true #AllyOfLove means. Hence, through this campaign, we urge everyone to stand up for love. It’s easy, it’s natural. Be an #AllyOfLove,” she says.

    The campaign which received an overwhelming response with over 1.72 million views and counting. The campaign was amplified on OkCupid India's social and digital pages – YouTube, Instagram and Facebook. To further spread the word, the platform partnered with influencers such as Ankush Bahuguna, Benafsha Soonawalla, Ankita Kumar, Amala Paul and Reba John who answered questions on the theme of ‘Never Have I Ever’ game as was done in the campaign and declared themselves an #AllyOfLove.  

    During the pandemic, it found that millions of users are readjusting their dating lives. “We found out that matches on OkCupid have increased by 10 per cent worldwide since March 2020 – and conversations have increased over 20 per cent. In India, we witnessed a 26 per cent increase in conversations and a solid 12 per cent increase in matches on our platform,” says Hobley.

    There’s also an increase in virtual dating. What would have been a casual coffee date or romantic dinner date night or long drive is now long hours of chatting, video calls and FaceTime, leading to meaningful conversations that spark an emotional connection – all from the safety of our comfortable homes.

    “We at OkCupid believe that this form of virtual dating is ushering in a new era of ‘slow dating’ that’s been welcomed by singles. Around 85 per cent of users on OkCupid believe it’s important to develop an emotional connection before a physical one, so the switch to virtual dates has allowed these emotional connections to thrive,” she says.   

    There is less pressure on people to dress up for a date or hurry through knowing each other, which has brought back the best parts of courtship, says Hobley. By slowing down dating, millennials are discovering love through long, meaningful moments apart. 

  • OkCupid celebrates personal choice with first India brand campaign ’Find My Kind’

    OkCupid celebrates personal choice with first India brand campaign ’Find My Kind’

    MUMBAI: International dating app OkCupid has launched its first 360-degree campaign in India – ‘Find My Kind’ – a conceptual take that reflects Indian millennials’ changing preference to find ‘my’ kind vs ‘others’ kind. Aimed at an informed generation to whom freedom of choice is non-negotiable, the campaign overturns decades of patriarchal values and rigid gender roles with thoughtfulness and quirk. The integrated campaign, conceptualised and executed by BBH India, highlights the importance of personal agency at a time when Indians are increasingly confident in taking control of their decisions.

    The campaign draws insight from user responses to questions on the app, breaking stereotypes about what relationships mean for Indians today. An overwhelming 92 per cent feel their values vastly differ from their parents’, and a majority of them (79 per cent) do not believe they echo their friends’ preferences either, clearly establishing them as a generation that values what they want, not what others want for them. In fact, 67 per cent would rather find a meaningful relationship in the serendipity of a dating app than have friends or family arrange a set up. Surprisingly, 68 per cent don’t even believe marriage is mandatory for people in love. When it comes to the kind of relationship they want, 72% believe traditional gender roles, such as men being default heads and not househusbands, or women taking care of chores and children or changing names, have no place in their lives. In line with the campaign messaging, 87 per cent users don’t conform to society’s judgements, with 88 per cent saying they would follow their passions over high-paying lucrative jobs. ‘Find My Kind’ builds on these insights to present a relatable message echoing this generation’s need for a meaningful relationship with a like-minded partner who shares their values and celebrates their quirks. The campaign resonates with those for whom a relationship is a choice, not a destination, and the ‘right’ companion is someone who is right for themselves, not determined by society, family or friends.

    The campaign lynchpin is OkCupid’s first TVC in India, directed by ‘Bob’ (Shashank Chaturvedi) of Good Morning Films. The film showcases a man and a woman in their 20s making conscious choices in life as other people’s expectations attempt to interrupt them. The film opens with the woman being introduced to a prospective match in a typical arranged marriage situation – she grabs a samosa, speaks her mind, and gracefully leaves. The man, similarly, dodges a forced setup by his friends. By answering the questions on the app, both protagonists make individualistic choices that do not conform to societal norms, to finally arrive at a crossroad, where they glance at their phones and find each other to choose ‘something real’- a 93 per cent match on OkCupid – and a partner who is on their wavelength – their kind.

    OkCupid India brand manager Shuti Gupta says, “Today’s single Indian is battling “suitable” recommendations by parents, friends, extended family or matrimonial services that don’t account for personal preferences. At the other end are exploratory dating services that don’t cater to Indian millennials who want a genuine partnership based on shared personal values. OkCupid celebrates people who are expressing their own preferences in this important decision and empowers them to live life on their own terms.”

    OkCupid global CMO Melissa Hobley adds, “At OkCupid, and in this campaign, we celebrate true, authentic connections based on the things that matter to you. Find My Kind, our first-ever brand campaign in India, taps into the desire of single Indians to exercise their right to choose their own partner. Considering that's one of the most significant decisions you'll ever make, we think finding someone who is YOUR kind is of utmost importance! Find My Kind celebrates people who are looking for something real, and won't compromise or adjust to suit other people's expectations.”

    BBH India executive creative director Vasudha Misra said, "Relationships in the world today – they seem to be either for a fluid let's-not-define-things kind or a let's-get-married scenario. The in-betweeners seem to be left to their own devices (sorry for the pun). Enter OkCupid. A place for people to find that person to share something that's more meaningful. A place for people who know themselves and know what they are looking for in a partner. The idea celebrates these people who aren't letting anyone else decide for them – not parents, not society, not even their own inhibitions."

    The TVC covers major national channels with a focus on English entertainment and movie channels. The outdoor and print campaigns are indexed to metro cities – Delhi-NCR, Bengaluru and Mumbai with a quirky, contextual take on Indian matrimonial listings to bring focus on matching over what matters, and highlighting the difference in approach between millennials and their families. To build resonance with the digital generation, OkCupid worked with a variety of social influencers who speak about the relevance of individual choice in their lives. The campaign is being taken on-ground with an all girl comedy tour -OkCupid, My Kind of Funny- focussing on dating, relationships and experiences of millennials growing up in India. Female comedians Urooj Ashfaq, Aishwarya Mohanraj, Supriya Joshi, Niveditha Prakasam, Shreeja Chaturvedi, will take the stage across Mumbai, Bangalore and Delhi, to bring their experiences to life through fun stand up acts.

  • OkCupid’s Pride Month campaign #LoveAtFirstPride aims for a more inclusive world

    OkCupid’s Pride Month campaign #LoveAtFirstPride aims for a more inclusive world

    MUMBAI: The Pride Month saw brands all across the globe striving for the right to love everyone, gender no bar. One of the most popular dating apps, OkCupid also launched an emotional campaign called #LoveAtFirstPride to bring to light stories for the first time – first dates, first decisions, first moments, first courage, first change, first freedom, first acceptance.

    OkCupid CMO Melissa Hobley told Indiantelevision.com that the campaign is an initiative to celebrate the LGBTQ community on its digital platforms telling stories that are focused on them but hold true for humanity making it relevant for everyone. She sees the campaign as an opportunity to make the world a little bit more inclusive and accepting of the LGBTQ community.

    Speaking about the inspiration behind the campaign, Hobley said that this Pride Month being the very first after the historic Supreme Court verdict to strike down the discriminatory article 377, deserved a celebration and the campaign tries to capture the moment by lauding love beyond the restriction of binary identities.

    She said, “OkCupid users in India truly support gay marriages as indicated by the data collected from their responses and the idea behind the digital campaign was to commemorate the freedom of love which extends to all gender identities. This has been captured in the video through the stories of these influencers and the questions they have answered. Times have changed as today we can ask them these questions and they can answer them proudly. This change in perspective is what the inspiration behind the campaign was.”

    The film that was hosted on Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube received an overwhelming response, as shared by Hobley. Launched in the middle of the Pride Month, the video generated almost a million impressions with an engagement of 50K across platforms within just a week. “We have received an overwhelmingly positive response from the influencers, the LGBTQI community as well as the media. This has further strengthened our belief that India is finally ready for such a campaign and we are so proud to have launched something so meaningful,” said Hobley.

  • This Women’s Day, OkCupid urges to #FlipTheQuestion and break gender stereotypes

    This Women’s Day, OkCupid urges to #FlipTheQuestion and break gender stereotypes

    MUMBAI: As Oscar Wilde once said, “The answers are all out there, we just need to ask the right questions”. This women’s day the international dating app OkCupid encourages us to use our questions well and, maybe, start an epic story.

    Following #SubstanceOverSelfies, OkCupid is now asking single millennials to #FlipTheQuestion. Their latest video, on the occasion of International Women’s Day, uses questions – good and bad – to challenge gender stereotypes. The film opens with three women from different walks of life ignoring ‘assumptions and boring questions’ being thrown at them.

    OkCupid CMO Melissa Hobley says, “India with its evolving social fabric is so exciting. The most insightful responses from Indian users are on feminism, gender roles and the idea of romance in this decade. For women who are charting new paths, both personally and professionally, patronising conversations and lopsided stereotypes remain a constant point of exasperation. With #FlipTheQuestion we’re encouraging men to rethink the questions they ask and begin the journey to an epic story. After all, every good story begins with the right questions.”

    As a dating app that celebrates individuality, OkCupid uses an algorithm informed by over 3000 questions to meaningfully match its users on the basis of shared interests, values, quirks, and deal-breakers. The campaign video went live on 7 March 2019 on OkCupid India’s digital channels.