| Brand | Ad Title | Air Date | Ad Length | Benefit/Tool | Ace Score |
| Hello Toothpaste | What’s in Your Toothpaste? An Inconvenient Truth | 4/11/17 | 1:45 | A | 584 |
| Mountain Dew | puppymonkeybaby (partial CGI) | 2/7/16 | 0:30 | A | 455 |
| Charmin Ultra Strong | Passing Inspection | 4/11/11 | 0:15 | A, T | 457 |
| Ancestry.com | Ancestry & Disney Pixar | The Hint | 11/13/17 | 0:30 | S | 586 |
| Airwick | Spread the Joy (partial animation) | 10/22/17 | 0:30 | S | 603 |
| 23andMe | Gru’s 23andMe Genetic Journey | 8/2/17 | 1:00 | S | 579 |
| MailChimp | KaleLimp (partial CGI) | 2/2/17 | 1:00 | S | 391 |
| Taco Bell | National Taco Day: Glen and The Magic Taco | 9/25/17 | 1:30 | S, A | 624 |
| Coca Cola | The Catch (CGI) | 2/5/12 | 1:00 | S, A | 654 |
| Charmin Ultra Strong | Two Day Underwear (partial CGI) | 7/27/15 | 0:30 | S, A, T | 611 |
| CharcoCaps | Downward Don’ts | 10/15/17 | 0:15 | T | 508 |
| Squatty Potty | Slay Your Poo-Stink With The Golden Fart of Mystic Unicorn (partial animation) | 11/11/16 | 3:30 | T, A | 568 |
| Squatty Potty | Unicorn changed The Way I Poop (partial animation) | 12/11/15 | 3:00 | T, A | 491 |
| Lactaid | The Milk That Doesn’t Mess With You “Balloon” (partial CGI) | 10/3/16 | 0:30 | T, A | 556 |
For some ads, the animation (visuals and/or characters) took center stage, but for many it served as a means to an end (to more effectively present a product or message):
Nearly all of the animated ads that intended to inform were viewed as highly informative by consumers, suggesting the approach can indeed provide a means of delivering a great deal of information on otherwise boring or uncomfortable topics in a more attention-getting manner. The chart below ranks the ads on perceived levels of information:
However, half of the animated ads we studied were not well-liked by viewers upon first viewing, with many expressing little to no interest in seeing the ads again in the future. Much of this dislike can be attributed to the length of the videos, "weirdness," and/or the subject matter. Whether long or short, when the story you have to tell is more mundane (or technical or awkward), viewer engagement is much more susceptible to trailing off without some enhancement to the story. In the chart below, ads are listed in order from longest to shortest:
Even with animation, attempts to present the benefits of products serving our perhaps least refined of human habits (passing gas and bowel movements, for example), are first met with shock and sometimes awe. Some find the directness of these ads hysterically funny, while others see them as incredibly offensive. Yet, they are informative and depending on the animation, attention-grabbing:

Interestingly, viewers do not appear as willing to admit relevance for products such as CharcoCaps and Squatty Potty:
Squatty Potty's first ad to consumers was met with an overall strong level of dislike, but Squatty Potty did a fine job of getting massive attention (both from viewers in our testing and in the press), and educating on the benefits of the product. Adweek credited "This Unicorn" spot for a 600% increase in sales online as well as a 400% improvement at Bed, Bath, & Beyond, the brand's largest retail partner. However, there is no doubt the exposure the ad received (thanks to Lauri Greiner of Shark Tank) played a part in this success.
There is also the concept of accustomization. The first Squatty Potty ad to actually advertise such a product way back in 2015 was met with much viewer disagreement - one of the most polarizing ads we've ever tested (99th percentile). Yet just one year later, a little bit less disagreement was seen for “Slay Your Poo-Stink” (and favorable responses outnumbered the negative), and by 2017, CharcoCaps saw no higher than average polarity (and again, less negativity). Importantly, all three utilized humor to soften the blow, as depicted in the emo word clouds (which represent viewer verbatim comments):
"This Unicorn" "Slay Your Poo-Stink" "Downward Dont's"
While not all of these ads were created to drive purchase intent some of the strongest Top 2 Box purchase intent scores were observed among long-form, educational ads, suggesting animation can be a very good option when brands have some explaining to do:
As we've seen countless times, storytelling works, particularly when brands have a large amount of information to deliver because it harnesses attention in such a way as to hold interest on topics (or ad lengths) that might otherwise bore or turn off viewers. Our review here suggests that animation does indeed enliven this effort, with the majority of these ads beating industry performance norms. Moreover, animation can cement Brand ID and foster positive purchase intent as well or better than non-animated ads. While consumer attitudes may be harsh on the first ad to attempt to sell products that are seen as undesirable, attitudes in America shift quickly, and humor definitely can help smooth the road to acceptance. Being super creative to the point of being off the wall will always be a risk, but chances for success can be multiplied with excellent cultural relevance as in the case of Squatty Potty, Mountain Dew, and MailChimp- all of which attached themselves to a popular radio/tv programs, among other approaches.