In 2004, Dove and
Ogilvy organized a photography exhibit titled "Beyond Compare: Women Photographers on Real Beauty". The show featured work from 67 female photographers which led to the Real Beauty campaign. The Dove Real Beauty campaign was conceived in 2004 during a three-year creative strategic research effort, conducted in partnership with three universities, led by Joah Santos. The creative was conceived by Ogilvy Düsseldorf and London. The original advertising research indicated that only 4% of women consider themselves beautiful. The ads invited passersby to vote on whether a particular model was, for example, "Fat or Fab" or "Wrinkled or Wonderful", with the results of the votes dynamically updated and displayed on the billboard itself. Accompanying the billboard advertisements was the publication of the "Dove Report", a corporate study. The creatives in charge of the shoot and original concept were Jacqueline Leak and Debra Fried from Ogilvy, New York. According to
Ad Age, the campaign successfully increased sales of Dove soap from $2 billion to $4 billion in three years. generating exposure that Unilever estimated to be worth more than 30 times the paid-for media space. Following this, the campaign expanded with a series of television spots, culminating in the 2006
Little Girls global campaign, which featured regional versions of the same advertisement in both print and screen, Unilever purchased a 30-second spot during
Super Bowl XL at an estimated cost of $2.5 million for the
Little Girls campaign. In 2006,
Daughters was released, which consisted of filmed interviews about how mothers and daughters related to modern perceptions of beauty and the beauty industry. Dove's Self-Esteem Fund released statistics to support the idea that young women and girls are likelier to have distorted views of beauty.
Art director Tim Piper proposed to create
Evolution with the budget left over from
Daughters). It was designed to get viewers to find the campaign website to watch
Daughters and to participate in mother-daughter workshops. In April 2013, a video titled
Dove Real Beauty Sketches was released as part of the campaign, created by Hugo Veiga. It went
viral, attracting strong reactions from the public and media. The differences create strong reactions when shown to the women. In 2017, Dove and Ogilvy London created limited-edition versions of body wash bottles meant to look like different body shapes and sizes. Dove produced 6,800 bottles of the six different designs and sent them to 15 different countries. In 2023, Dove partnered with
Common Sense Media,
Lizzo, and ParentsTogether Action to advance revisions of the
Kids Online Safety Act, a federal bill that supports design standards and safeguards to protect kids online. ==Reception==