More

    Blanche Aigle Communications Wins West Africa’s Best PR Campaign at 2025 SABRE Awards

    Blanche Aigle Communications has emerged as the winner of West Africa’s Best Public Relations Campaign at the 2025 SABRE Awards Africa, held in Mombasa, Kenya.

    The agency earned the recognition for its groundbreaking campaign, “Viva Clean Hearts, Clean Clothes”, which artfully combined corporate social responsibility (CSR) with cultural storytelling and meaningful social impact. The campaign was also named among the top six PR campaigns across the African continent.

    Organized by PRovoke Media during the 50th anniversary of the African Public Relations Association (APRA) and its 36th annual conference, the SABRE Awards honor strategic and creative excellence in public relations, highlighting campaigns that deliver real-world results.

    This award solidifies Blanche Aigle Communications’ place not only as a leader in West African PR but also as a key player in a broader movement of value-driven, culturally intelligent communications with measurable societal impact.

    At the core of the winning campaign was a powerful message: redefining cleanliness beyond hygiene to encompass emotional dignity and shared aspirations. The initiative marked a bold shift from conventional PR tactics, urging brands to connect with communities through relevance and empathy—particularly in African settings where culture drives meaning.

    Check this out: Kipyegon, Chebet Break World Records in Eugene

    Commenting on the win, Nene Bejide, Founder and Principal Consultant at Blanche Aigle PR, said:

    “This award is more than a trophy—it is global validation of the kind of storytelling we stand for: insight-led, human-centered, and culturally attuned.”

    She also noted that this marks the second year in a row that the agency has received this prestigious honor, a testament to its strategic consistency and sustained impact.

    The “Viva Clean Hearts, Clean Clothes” campaign became a standout model for regional brand strategy. Focused on students’ well-being, the campaign positioned Viva Detergent as a voice against bullying in Nigerian schools, linking hygiene to emotional safety, dignity, and community responsibility.

    With over two million Nigerians engaged through various touchpoints—from local markets to digital media—the campaign boosted brand affinity by 42% and helped Viva Detergent become a symbol of care and cleanliness. 

    Every aspect of the communications strategy—from visuals to messaging—was deliberately crafted to hold meaning and drive purpose.

    Source: https://guardian.ng/features/blanche-aigle-communications-bags-2025-sabre-award

    Image Credit: Nairametrics

    Sign up for our free Daily newsletter

    We'll be in your inbox every morning Monday-Saturday with top business news, inspiring stories, best advice and exclusive reporting from Entrepreneur.

    Related Posts

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Latest

    Managing Your Digital Storefront as a Business Owner

    Your online presence in the business world as we now know it is no longer optional—it is your storefront, your billboard, and often your...

    Mobilizing a New Era of Feminist Power Across Youth, Policy, and Global Solidarity – Yasmina Benslimane

    Yasmina Benslimane’s leadership story is one driven across borders, disciplines, and systems of power.  Born in Rabat and raised by a single mother, she encountered...

    Zambian energy trader eyes $100 million power link to Tanzania

    A Zambian electricity trader is proposing a $100 million investment in a high-voltage transmission line that would directly connect Zambia to neighbouring Tanzania, creating...

    Ghana inks two China-backed EV agreements to fast-track local vehicle assembly

    Ghana is stepping up its industrialisation agenda with a stronger push into electric vehicle manufacturing, as the government targets job creation, foreign investment inflows,...

    Kenya’s major oil exporter says Uganda’s $4bn refinery poses no threat

    Kenya’s leading refined petroleum transporter has downplayed concerns over Uganda’s newly signed $4 billion oil refinery project, insisting that the development will not significantly...