Mumbai: Personal care brand Mamaearth has announced its latest campaign #EverydayIsEarthday to celebrate mother earth every day. As a part of this campaign, the brand unveiled a new digital film encapsulating the essence of World Earth Day.
Conceptualised by Korra Worldwide, the film starts with a little girl named Shreya, the central character of this campaign who is depicted as a goodness specialist at Mamaearth, emphasising how every day is Earth Day at Mamaearth by explaining the facts. It begins with the Plantgoodness initiative of planting trees in abundance, and she fumbles when looking at the number of trees planted, which is around 300,000, and visualises it as an amusement park, explaining that three lakh trees are comparable to 2200 acres of land covered by 22 amusement parks.
She further takes through the next initiative of recycling plastic and explains in a simpler form by connecting the amount of plastic recycled is equivalent to the weight of 854 elephants. She continues explaining the next initiative of Goodbooks made with one side used papers and connects one lakh used sheets used by Mamaearth to a size of a football ground and tells to reduce paper wastage by reusing.
“Being a purpose-driven brand with the objective of serving a greater purpose with our products and initiatives. We at Mamaearth, celebrate every day as Earth Day as we strive to take one step every day with our Plant Goodness and Plastic Positive initiative," commented Mamaearth co-founder and chief innovation officer Ghazal Alagh. "This Earth Day we wanted to share the impact of our initiatives with our consumers and followers. The campaign aligns perfectly with our purpose, and we pledge to commit to staying honest to our principles and values in investing in our planet through our good deeds.”
“Mamaearth isn't just a brand, but a way of life. We believe that big things happen when you do small good every day. And this earth day, we wanted to showcase the small good we do every day," shared Korra Worldwide chief creative officer Deepak Kumar. "From our initiatives to our products to the simple choices we make. But we wanted to simplify this impact of goodness in a language that everyone could understand. So, we took the help of an eight-year-old kid who could demystify things for everyone in a simple video; a video made with a lot of goodness and innocence for all the goodness we all do together, throughout the year.”