Dove has led India’s transformative #StopTheBeautyTest campaign for three years, challenging beauty biases in arranged marriages. The latest edition showcases four mothers rewriting matrimonials to eliminate beauty biases, introducing ‘mothermonials’.
The campaign challenges traditional matrimonials by redefining them as ‘mothermonials’ under #TheBeautyTestStopsWithMe. Daughters are often only described by their physical appearance in family biodatas.
These ‘mothermonials’ provide holistic insights into daughters, shifting focus from appearance to character. By sharing their daughters’ personalities and ambitions, mothers empower them for more positive partner search experiences.
Dove started a conversation in 2021 about the beauty standards women face when seeking a partner. The 2022 campaign focused on the beauty expectations young girls encounter early on, affecting their self-esteem. This year’s #TheBeautyTestStopsWithMe calls on mothers and daughters to challenge traditional matrimonial practices.
Dove released four films featuring real conversations with four mothers, emphasizing beauty biases in arranged marriages. Partnered with a media house and Mindshare, Dove uses AI for personalized mothermonials. The platform shifts focus from physical traits to compatibility factors like education and hobbies. The Dove Self-Esteem Project, in collaboration with UNICEF, will impact 23 million Indian school children by 2026, providing educational materials to boost body confidence and self-esteem.
Sharing more insight, Harman Dhillon, Executive Director, Hindustan Unilever, and Beauty and Well- Being General Manager, Unilever South Asia, said, “Dove is on a mission to ensure the next generation grows up with body confidence, self-esteem, and a positive relationship with the way they look. Through these campaigns Dove has urged and provoked the country to stop the beauty test for two years now. In 2024, we continue to build on our efforts by encouraging mothers to lead the change and for daughters to challenge the very format of a biodata that is the perpetrator of beauty-based biases. We aim to revolutionize traditional matrimonials into empowering ‘mothermonials’ that inspire society to see daughters beyond stereotypes. Through this campaign and the Dove Self Esteem Project, Dove is committed to taking tangible actions that help address biases and inspire body confidence amongst young girls and women.”
Zenobia Pithawalla – Senior Executive Creative Director & Mihir Chanchani – Executive Creative Director, Ogilvy added “In our country even today parents put out matrimonial ads or biodatas for their eligible daughters. Tall, slim and fair rear their ugly heads in the first two lines. At Dove, we approached mothers who wanted her daughter’s matrimonial ad to be different from hers. These mothers of India joined hands with us to write matrimonial ads without beauty biases. We brought mothers on the frontline, to protect every daughter of India from the ugly Beauty Test. With this began the change from Matrimonials to Mothermonials.”
Watch the films here:
Film 1:
Film 2:
Film 3:
Film 4:
Film 5: