How do you take an advanced material technology like transparent solar cells and get customers to care about it? Ask Hyundai. Its latest innovation, a transparent “Nano Cooling Film,” can cut temperatures inside a hot car by 20 degrees. That’s great news for cities’ raising temperatures due to global warming, but Hyundai’s problem was how to educate people. They first went the standard publicity route with informational materials and explanations, but Hyundai wanted people to have a deeper understanding.
They found an ideal case study city in Lahore, Pakistan, where it’s very hot, people don’t open their windows because of air pollution and running air conditioners is expensive. Oh, and the country also forbids window tinting.
But Hyundai only had a 3% market share in Pakistan so putting the film on only Hyundai cars wouldn’t have made a big splash. Instead, they offered to put it on any car brand. The creativity? Hyundai realized Pakistani drivers like to put stickers on their cars, so they created a “Made Cooler by Hyundai” sticker that went on every car that got the window film.
And suddenly, the term “Nano Cooling Film” was all over the news and social media with thousands more requests. Hyundai turned the effort into a short film (debuting on Sunday on YouTube) about the heat and pollution in Lahore and Hyundai’s car solution.
“As a researcher, this (campaign) was an amazing opportunity in context for our product,” said Min Jae Lee, a senior research engineer at Hyundai Motor Group.
Takeaway: Fly your science flag! Figure out creative ways to explain, show and make connections between the scientific medicine innovations that can sound complicated (just like Hyundais’ Nano Cooling Film) but that make people and patients’ lives bet