Bengaluru: In an age where screen time often competes with quality time, Sunfeast Marie Light’s latest ‘Marie Light Mode’ campaign taps into a cultural tension that many modern couples instantly recognise. The brand’s newest activation moves beyond conventional advertising to explore a growing reality: smartphones are increasingly becoming the third participant in many relationships.
At the heart of the campaign is a simple but powerful insight. While technology has made people more connected than ever, it has also created moments of emotional distance in everyday relationships. From endless scrolling before bedtime to checking notifications during conversations, digital habits are quietly reshaping how couples spend time together.
Building on this observation, Sunfeast Marie Light took the conversation offline through an on-ground social experiment across Bengaluru and Chennai. Rather than relying solely on brand messaging, the campaign invited real couples to participate in candid discussions around their screen habits. Questions about daily screen time, bedtime routines and whether their phones receive more attention than their partners led to honest and often revealing responses.
From a strategic perspective, the campaign demonstrates how brands are increasingly using social experiments to transform consumer insights into lived experiences. Instead of presenting a solution, Sunfeast Marie Light positions itself as a facilitator of reflection, encouraging audiences to examine behaviours they may otherwise overlook.
The initiative also aligns closely with the broader ‘Marie Light Mode’ platform, which advocates slowing down, taking lighter moments and creating meaningful pauses in everyday life. By linking the product proposition with a contemporary lifestyle challenge, the brand makes its messaging more relevant and emotionally resonant.
What makes the campaign particularly effective is its reliance on participation rather than persuasion. The conversations feel authentic because they are rooted in real experiences, while the humour inherent in the ‘phone divorce’ concept keeps the messaging engaging rather than preachy.
The choice of Bengaluru and Chennai further reinforces the campaign’s relevance among urban consumers, where digital dependency is often most visible. By bringing the discussion into public spaces, the brand transforms a private behavioural habit into a broader cultural conversation.
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