The One Show

The One Show is the world's most prestigious award show in advertising and design. For over 50 years, the Gold Pencil has been regarded as one of the top prizes in the creative industry. The One Show has a rich legacy of honoring some of the most groundbreaking ideas, created by some of the most remarkable minds in creativity.

2025 One Show - Direct Marketing

Returning Creativity

Agency Dentsu Creative / New York

Client Crayola

Category

Integrated / Omnichannel Campaign

Annual ID

OS25_DM079M

Background

Creativity is crucial for development, enhancing our confidence, career success, and mental well-being. But through a study with the Ad Council Research Institute (ACRI), Crayola found that in the face of our fast-paced, overbooked lifestyles, we’re not able to prioritize creativity in our lives as much as we should – and this is especially critical for parents and their kids.

As one of the world’s biggest manufacturers of art supplies, Crayola saw the need to spark a fresh conversation about creativity that could remind parents of its importance and empower them to nurture it with their kids everyday. Research shows that creativity helps develop core life skills, predicts career success, boosts educational attainment, and enhances well-being. 

Informed by the Ad Council study, we developed an initiative to encourage parents – and people everywhere – to take a fresh look at creativity and the impact it has on us.

Our goal was to spark conversations about creativity's long-term implications, employing a multi-vertical phased approach to engage target consumers—parents.

Creative Idea

To launch the campaign, we aimed to connect emotionally with parents, reminding them of their own creative childhood experiences. And we did it by using one of the most valuable assets Crayola had on hand: an extensive collection of childhood artwork stored in its archives.

We started by tracking down three artists and creating an emotional film of their art returns that could deliver our message and serve as a call-to-arms. We set out to reconnect 50 adults with their childhood artwork, but tracking down these artists was no small feat. So, we launched a nationwide search, tapping into America's love for solving mysteries, we called on people to help us track down these artists by sharing on social, tagging potential matches in the comments, and/or submitting a form with a potential match. Our goal was to maximize the artwork’s reach by using a variety of channels to encourage people far and wide to respond to the call. We leveraged social media and earned media buzz to drive our efforts.

With a goal of maximizing the artwork’s reach while igniting new conversations about the long-term implications of creativity, we developed a 360 communications approach to connect with audiences across platforms, earned, owned, paid, experience, and OOH, to ensure we reached target consumers (parents) in ways that drew attention and initiated action. 

Insights & Strategy

Crayola partnered with the Ad Council Research Institute on a nationwide study to understand parents’ views on creativity and barriers to engaging their children.

Findings revealed that most parents believe creativity is essential for growth but struggle to nurture it amid daily demands.

The study showed that 60% of parents feel their children lack creative activities and that parents have additional challenges managing time constraints and coming up with new activities. But most surprising, nearly half don't see themselves as creative, and most believe they need to be creative themselves to foster creativity.

Parents’ lack of creative confidence makes them feel unequipped to nurture it in their kids. But by reconnecting parents with their creativity and its importance in childhood, we could empower them to create more creative moments with their kids.

Our film established the narrative that creativity is critical not only for childhood development but also for building skills that are useful throughout life. To amplify and extend this message, we employed a "tentpole and drumbeat" strategy, combining major events with ongoing storytelling to maintain visibility and reinforce key messages.
We designed experiential efforts to slingshot the campaign to a national conversation and generate opportunities for executive interviews and discussion.

Across social media and digital channels, we launched our search to reunite 50 more adults with their childhood artwork, an effort backed by support from celebrities. We also encouraged families to share their creative moments as inspiration for others.

Overall, we didn’t just focus on use of Crayola products, but framing creativity as a lifelong mindset and means to achieve success. The journey from childhood art to the people parents have become today provides the connective tissue that perfectly demonstrates the power of creativity and why we believe it’s a critical skill for life.

Execution

The campaign featured in-person and cross-channel activations designed to inspire and highlight the lifelong benefits of creativity while creating a national movement around our art return. Here’s how it started:
Returning Creativity Film: To grant additional visibility and traction to the debut of the film, we timed the launch of the creative to UN World Creativity and Innovation Day.
Announcement: We launched the Film on UN World Creativity and Innovation Day for maximum visibility.
Return of Artwork + Targeted Local and Social Efforts: A key tactic involved returning decades-old artwork from Crayola’s archives. We cataloged and shared these pieces on social media, engaging local and national media. Our collaborative strategy used tailored CTAs and formats across channels to expand, reach, and encourage our audiences to take action, leading to art returns nationwide.
Return of Artwork + OOH: Billboards were placed in areas local to the artists to encourage people to help us find the artists, one even taking place in Times Square with an artist and her former teacher, where her artwork was displayed on two billboards.
Children's Art Exhibit: We showcased childhood artwork from Crayola’s archives at New York City’s first-ever art exhibit, inviting media, influencers, and the public to celebrate creativity and advance children’s futures. The exhibit also offered engaging activities to spark creative moments.
Campaign Hashtag: The Art Return mission inspired users to share their childhood creativity stories with the hashtag.
Voices of Creativity: Celebrities like John Krasinski, Quinta, Andy Grammer, and NFL's Mack Hollins supported the campaign through social media and live events.

Results

Crayola sparked a nationwide, continuous discussion on the importance of creativity and how creative moments shape the rest of our lives.

Within weeks of launch, the campaign’s digital and social elements attracted nearly 3 million views (137,263 hours of watch time) across YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. By the end of the campaign, TikTok alone amassed 5.2 million views and over 60,000 engagements.

The campaign, particularly the art return, generated 2,973 earned media placements with a total reach of over 6.1 billion. Coverage appeared in outlets like Parents magazine, TODAY.com, NBC News, Univision's Despierta América, News Nation, and Upworthy.

Ultimately, people responded to the call to help us track down these artists - with over 750,000 using the hashtag and more than 5.2 million engagements as people spread the word.

2025 Awards

Total Points: 3

Merit

Credits

Agency

Dentsu Creative / New York

Media Agency

dentsu X

PR / Marketing Agency

Dentsu Creative

Client / Brand

Crayola

Production Company

Hummingbird Content Studio

Music / Sound Production Company

750mph
Premier Music Group
Spark Music Group

Editorial Company

Tag

Chief Marketing Officer

Victoria Lozano

Copywriter

Alye Chaisson

Creative Director

Giovanni Muratori

Director

Aqsa -
John X

Director of Photography

Guido Raimondo

Executive Creative Director

Brian Eden
Craig Cimmino

Global Group Creative Director

Andres Arlia

Senior Art Director

Reed Wilson

Senior Copywriter

Ronen Goldfarb

Senior Producer

Emily Brown
Matt Moran

Senior Strategist

Alyssa Fea

Social Strategist

Ava Notkin

Account Supervisor

Anna Diffley

Associate Editor

Joshua Bloome

Associate, Integrated Media

Maria Freitag

Casting Company

Tiffany Company Casting

Casting Director

Fernanda Chaves
Macee Binns
Mercedes Manning

Chief Creative Officer, US and HIspanic Latam

Rafael Rizuto

Color Company

Company 3
Gammakurv

Colorist

Sal Malfitano

Creative Director (Art Gallery)

Alexander Augustinos
Declan Byrnes-Enoch

DIRECTOR, DIGITAL MARKETING

Marisa Scurato

Director, Education

Cheri Sterman

EVP Account Management

Andre Galan

EVP, Public Relations

Holly Gilbert

Experiential Production Company

Mktg

Group Account Director

James McCawley

Head of Global Partnerships & Promotions

Anna Roca

Head of Production

Olivia Ray

Manager, PR & Marketing Activation

Connie Walker

Musician

Giosuè Greco

Owner / Founder

Tiffany Persons

Senior Account Executive, Public Relations

Beth Bartlett

Senior Associate Client Solutions & Planning

Julia Hartwig

Senior Colorist

Sean Coleman

Senior Director Brand Activation & Content

Mimi Dixon

Senior Manager, Marketing

Kailee Baylor

Senior Sound Engineer

Mike Bovill

SVP Integrated Planning

Ashley Bruce

VP, Client Solutions & Planning

Megan Bah

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