Skip to main content

Canon shows off camera's super-zoom lens in a creative Instagram campaign

Canon Instazoom
Coming up with a creative advertising campaign is far easier than it sounds, especially when it’s revolved around social media. But Canon Asia, alongside advertising agency Dentsu Singapore, managed to do just that with “Canon Instazoom,” the latest campaign to promote the PowerShot SX60 HS super-zoom point-and-shoot (via Branding Asia).

Canon worked alongside Dentsu to create an interactive advertising campaign built entirely within Instagram. We aren’t sure why the company picked an older camera to promote, instead of the newer PowerShot SX620 HS, but the SX60 HS’ impressive 65x optical zoom might have something to do with it.

Canon PowerShot SX60 HS
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The concept behind the advertising campaign is to show off how the SX60 HS offers far more zoom than many other cameras on the market, particularly those within smartphones. (Yes, the battle between traditional cameras and smartphone cameras continues.)

Canon_Instazoom_Ad 2
Image used with permission by copyright holder

To create this puzzle masterpiece, it required over 33 Instagram accounts, 297 photographs, and 330 captions to create a network of photographs and accounts that effectively let you “zoom” into an image using Instagram’s tagging feature. For example, tapping on “sexy_skyline” takes you to one of the Instagram accounts to get up-close to a skyscraper that’s under construction.

Within the main image, there are two dozen individual stories and photographs to find. Users who find all 24 of the scenarios were entered for a chance to win a SX60 HS.

Canon_Instazoom_Ad 3
Image used with permission by copyright holder

While the creative aspect is easily seen, the irony might not be. By using a social network dominated by smartphone-captured photographs, Canon is effectively hitting its target market without the need for sponsored posts by showing off its flagship super-zoom point and shoot within Instagram. Simple and apparently very effective.

Canon reports that its social engagement increased by 947 percent and its viral reach by 475 percent. Over the course of three days, Canon obtained over 1.3 million impressions. Those are numbers difficult to achieve with specialized, sponsored posts, let alone a advertising campaign made up of nothing more than a couple dozen Instagram accounts and photographs.

You can check out the experience for yourself by visiting Canon’s Instazoom Instagram profile.

Tap on the pic, then tap on a tag to test out the world's leading 65x zoom. Have fun!

A photo posted by Canon PowerShot SX60 HS (@canon_instazoom) on

Editors' Recommendations

Watch an acclaimed director use the iPhone 15 Pro to shoot a movie
acclaimed director uses iphone 15 to shoot movie shot on pro midnight

Shot on iPhone 15 Pro | Midnight | Apple

As part of its long-running Shot on iPhone series, Apple recently handed acclaimed Japanese director Takashi Miike (Audition, 13 Assassins, The Happiness of the Katakuris) an iPhone 15 Pro to shoot a short film.

Read more
How to remove location data from your iPhone photos
How to transfer photos from an iPhone to an iPhone

We all love making memories, and a great way to collect those memories is to take a quick snap of a gorgeous landscape, a party in full swing, or a particularly incredible meal. The Apple iPhone now also adds a location to your pictures, meaning it can collate those images together into a location-themed album, or show you all the shots you've taken in a specific location. It's a fun little addition, and it's one that adds a lot of personality to the Photos app.

Read more
‘Photoshopped’ royal photo causes a stir
The Princess of Wales with her children.

[UPDATE: In a message posted on social media on Monday morning, Princess Kate said that she herself edited the image, and apologized for the fuss that the picture had caused. “Like many amateur photographers, I do occasionally experiment with editing," she wrote, adding, "I wanted to express my apologies for any confusion the family photograph we shared yesterday caused."]

Major press agencies have pulled a photo of the U.K.’s Princess of Wales and her children amid concerns that it has been digitally manipulated.

Read more