Insurance Against Cringe: How Ingosstrakh and Mamba Teamed Up for Valentine's Day
Brands turned cringe date stories into a broad-reach special project.
Original article was published at Sostav
As part of a collaboration, the brands launched a joint project that tackled the topic of bad dates. The teams from Ingosstrakh, Mamba, and Panda Digital shared the project results with Sostav.
On Valentine's Day, brands increasingly compete not for romance, but for attention. This year, Ingosstrakh and the Mamba dating app teamed up to talk about what is usually kept silent: failed dates. The teams from Ingosstrakh, Mamba, and the Panda Digital agency discussed how the idea of "cringe insurance" was born and why the project went viral.
On Valentine's Day, brands increasingly compete not for romance, but for attention. This year, Ingosstrakh and the Mamba dating app teamed up to talk about what is usually kept silent: failed dates. The teams from Ingosstrakh, Mamba, and the Panda Digital agency discussed how the idea of "cringe insurance" was born and why the project went viral.
Creativity on the Edge of a Deadline
As a rule, nontrivial and memorable ideas emerge precisely when time is critically short. The teams had only two weeks to launch the campaign, yet this very constraint became a catalyst for creative thinking. The project plan came together quickly: combine Ingosstrakh's expertise in insurance with Mamba's experience in the world of dating to launch a collaboration about protection from the consequences of awkward dates.
The focus was on real user pain points. According to research, 72% of Russians seeking relationships hope for serious connections but often face disappointment. The reasons: mismatched expectations, bad experiences, cringe. The mechanics were built on this tension: not to sell a product, but to delicately highlight the problem — with careful irony and care.
The focus was on real user pain points. According to research, 72% of Russians seeking relationships hope for serious connections but often face disappointment. The reasons: mismatched expectations, bad experiences, cringe. The mechanics were built on this tension: not to sell a product, but to delicately highlight the problem — with careful irony and care.
How the "Cringe Policy" Worked
Since there was no time to develop a new product, they decided to combine existing offers:
Both products could be obtained for free by participating in the promotion and sharing a story about a bad date.
- Ingosstrakh: the "Mental Health" policy, which includes the possibility of consulting with a psychologist, neurologist, and psychiatrist.
- Mamba: a premium subscription allowing the use of advanced filters and intelligent matchmaking algorithms.
Both products could be obtained for free by participating in the promotion and sharing a story about a bad date.
How It Was Implemented
The campaign's hub was the website save-me-from-cringe.ru, where traffic from all channels converged. Users posted their date stories, and the best ones were published on the brands' social media.
Winners were selected by the Ingosstrakh and Mamba teams, as well as by users — through voting. This increased engagement and eliminated accusations of non-transparency.
Winners were selected by the Ingosstrakh and Mamba teams, as well as by users — through voting. This increased engagement and eliminated accusations of non-transparency.
Results
- Over 500 stories submitted.
- 70 contest winners — winners — received "cringe date insurance" for free.
- The media field was covered: 185 publications in the media, 133 — on social media.
- Viral OTS (Opportunity To See) — 11,602,232.
- Advertising reach — 6,338,168.
Media Mix — What Worked
- Promotion was built on a balance of organic and paid channels.
- Social media and the press provided viral content.
- Engagement was boosted by Telegram seedings.
- The audience was "caught up" with targeted advertising on VKontakte and search engine results.
Despite the peak media overload around Valentine's Day, the project managed to attract attention and spark discussion—thanks to emotional engagement, a relevant topic, and a sincere tone.
Key Learnings
- Timeliness is more important than perfection. With a short deadline, it's worth focusing not on creating from scratch, but on rethinking already available resources.
- Mismatched target audiences are not a death sentence. An insurance brand and a dating service can find common ground if they are united by a human story.
- Tone is important. An ironic yet delicate presentation of the topic helped avoid negativity and build an emotional connection with the audience.
- Voting = trust. The ability to influence the outcome increased engagement and loyalty: the mechanics were simple and transparent.
- PR as a driver, not support. Virality was built into the idea stage, not as a side effect: the content provoked discussion.
- Collaborations reduce costs and increase reach (captain obvious). Splitting the media budget between two brands provided savings — and reinforcement through cross-audience.
- Testing before investing. Without investment in development, the team was able to gauge interest in a future product. This is especially important in large companies with long approval processes.
- This is close to everyone. The problems of bad dates are a socially significant topic that can be presented with humor and empathy, without crossing boundaries.
Alina Porshina, Communications Director, Ingosstrakh:
This campaign was literally born on the fly — without lengthy approvals and strategies. But its energy lies in this spontaneity. When two such different companies unite for a simple but kind goal — in this case, to support a person whose expectations did not match reality — something more than PR and marketing is born. It's about care, honesty, empathy, and a bit of self-irony. Without staging, without calculation — and perhaps that's why we hit the mark so precisely. Right in the heart.
Vasily Azarov, Creative Director, Mamba:
Sometimes you want to say something truly sincere from a brand — and have it go viral. And then it starts: align with product plans, time it right, reconcile budgets. And then it seems everything is aligned, but you also want to make it for a calendar news hook. Then it's luck. This time, we were very lucky. Everything came together into a project where the reach justified the efforts, and the meaning turned out exactly what we wanted to convey: if you ever wanted to escape a date after 15 minutes from the cringe, this product is for you.
Anastasia Verbovataya, Account Group Head, Panda Digital:
To conceive and implement a broad-reach project with two brands in collaboration in just two weeks is a challenge for an agency. But it's under such conditions that great results are achieved. Everything came together here: insight, a strong creative platform, and the involvement of teams on both sides.
Creative Team
Ingosstrakh (Client)
Mamba (Client)
Panda Digital (Creative Agency)
- Communications Director: Alina Porshina
- Head of External Communications Department: Denis Zhadaev
- New Media and Social Media Manager: Anastasia Kondratenko
- New Media and Social Media Manager: Polina Novoselova
- Public Relations Manager: Roman Korotenin
Mamba (Client)
- Marketing Director: Olga Morozova
- Creative Director: Vasily Azarov
- Press Secretary: Natalia Krasilnikova
- Head of Design Department: Yulia Elizarova
- Illustrator: Yulia Samarina
Panda Digital (Creative Agency)
- CEO & Creative Director: Andrey Parshenin
- Chief Editor: Daria Ponomareva
- Account Group Head: Anastasia Verbovataya, Daria Pleshanova
- Senior Designer: Oksana Tkachenko, Maria Voronova
- Head of Community Management Department: Ruslan Poryadny
- Project Manager: Armen Mirzakhanyan, Yulia Kuprikova
- Editor: Anastasia Cheshireskaya
- Copywriter: Akim Lyakhov, Olga Kuzmina
- Designer: Maria Tishchenko, Anastasia Aldokhina
- Community Manager: Maria Malechkina, Yulia Lukyanova, Alena Stankevich, Alexander Ulyanov, Evgeny Bogatov
- Senior Social Listening Specialist: Roman Filatov
- Media Planning: Daniil Epifanov, Liya Kayupova