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Saturday, October 5, 2024

Swiggy’s Valentine’s Day initiative highlights user-friendly tutorial for the older generation

In an age dominated by swipes to the right, traditional love often garners romanticized ideals. Amidst today’s contemporary scene, enduring love has become increasingly rare, prompting the current generation to admire and look up to elderly couples who epitomize the timeless essence of love.

This year, Swiggy has chosen to spotlight this kind of love for its Valentine’s Day campaign. Through a UI-based film titled “Table for 2,” the food aggregator platform tells the story of an elderly couple rediscovering love as they confront an empty nest. In the film, a son installs the Swiggy app on his father’s phone before relocating abroad. Despite the father’s initial hesitation, he embraces it, and gradually, it helps the parents reignite the spark in their decades-old relationship.

Crafted by Talented, the film narrates the journey of Shailja and Pradeep as they navigate love, life, food, and the badminton court. Actors Gajraj Rao and Sheeba Chaddha provide the voice-overs for the parents.

The agency prefers to call the film the ‘second season,’ drawing a parallel with its previous UI-based campaign titled Wrong Address during Valentine’s Day in 2023. The film narrated how the app brought together Aashna and Raghav, a modern-day couple. 

“Last year, it was on a modern-day couple, this year we aimed to dig a little deeper and showcase a story of a tier-2 couple. That’s why we picked an elderly couple, who don’t know how to use the app,” explains Malvika Thirani, creative, Talented. 

While last year’s story was about a couple evolving from strangers to lovers, this year’s storyline depicts a couple who are in love, learning to express it in a new way. 

“Last year, it was on a modern-day couple, this year we aimed to dig a little deeper and showcase a story of a tier-2 couple.”

Malvika Thirani, creative, Talented

While the film tugs at the heartstrings, it also fulfils another function by elucidating the practical use cases of all of the platform’s core offerings: Swiggy Dineout, Swiggy Instamart, Swiggy Genie and Swiggy Food Delivery.

P.G. Aditiya, CCO, Talented, says one of the objectives of the ad spot was to demonstrate the app’s seamless experience and ease of use. To this end, it has also launched a Whatsapp version that can be easily shared on family groups.

This film showcases the brand’s love, and customer experience at the same time

P.G. Aditiya, CCO, Talented

“A good creative can fulfil many objectives at the same time. This film showcases the brand’s love, and customer experience at the same time. We have a long-term relationship with Swiggy, and the aim is to address different audience cohorts with different films,” he highlights.  

Aparna Giridhar, VP–marketing, Swiggy, shares that millennials and Gen-Z teach their parents and grandparents how to use Swiggy. “We’ve also seen the older generation embrace Swiggy. It’s been our endeavour to continue to bring unparalleled convenience to them,” she says.

Giridhar explains that the brand’s directive to the agency was to narrate another Swiggy story suitable for Valentine’s Day, emphasising how Swiggy contributes to the happiness in various love stories. “We wanted to highlight the brand as an integral part of their lives across all the business units of Instamart, food delivery and Dineout,” she says. 

We’ve also seen the older generation embrace Swiggy. It’s been our endeavour to continue to bring unparalleled convenience to them

Aparna Giridhar, VP–marketing, Swiggy

Meanwhile, the agency’s sincere effort was to surpass the success of last year’s Valentine’s Day campaign. 

“As it is UI-based with only voiceovers, it allows the audience scope for imagination. All viewers will have a different image of Shailja and Pradeep. Being UI-based makes it more relatable and imagination-friendly,” Thirani states. 

The film has several heart-tugging moments, such as when Pradeep expresses his intention to chop onions and searches for a vegetable chopper on the app. During this scene, he charmingly tells Shailja,, “I hate tears” (a popular Rajesh Khanna dialogue from the film Amar Prem). They are chopping onions to prepare ‘Lasagne’, but while searching for the recipe online they type ‘lasanya’. 

Thirani says these little things could be portrayed only because of the UI format of the film. 

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