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POSB highlights a mother's greatest act of love in tearjerking campaign

POSB highlights a mother's greatest act of love in tearjerking campaign

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POSB Bank has unveiled a new campaign showcasing how a good money habit can go a long way. 

Central to the campaign is a tearjerking film, highlighting that the greatest acts of love aren't always the grandest, but in the small, everyday steps taken to secure the future with loved ones. 

The film begins with a funeral of an old woman named Lee Huay Lian. At Lee's funeral, a woman reads a letter she had written addressing her son Tan Teck Meng. The letter starts with Lee calling Tan a stupid and useless son who is always working, never taking care of his mother and never growing up. She shared about how she's been chasing Tan for money for over 20 years and how because of that, he couldn't go on holidays, spend or eat well. 

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Lee later revealed that she's been keeping the money aside for him and his family, adding that she has finally done enough for her stupid son who is growing older, with a daughter who is also growing up. Lee added that in all of Lee's stupidness, he did one thing right - loving his mother. 

Accompanying Lee's letter are flashbacks of Tan's wedding, Tan at work, Lee going to the bank, and sweet, tender moments the mother and son shared while Lee was still alive. The film ends with Lee crying uncontrollably at the funeral and Lee, while she was still alive, reminding Tan that he only has one life and that he has to treat himself right. 

The film was created in collaboration with The Secret Little Agency. 

MARKETING-INTERACTIVE has reached out for more information. 

This campaign follows the bank's "Does age matter?" campaign, unveiled last November. The campaign addresses the growing incidence of cancer among young Singaporeans and tackles the financial and social impacts linked to inadequate health coverage for cancer treatment. 

The campaign featured a social experiment where a man named Audi is asked questions and has to guess which of the people of varying age and genders lined up in front of him fits the answer. The questions were lightheaded, easy and fun at first. Audi was later stumped when the question provided was "Who has their plans disrupted by cancer?". A 29-year-old woman by the name of Lay Teng steps forward to reveal that she's a breast cancer survivor and how a critical illness plan had helped her with expenses during recovery. 

Related articles:  
POSB reshapes perceptions about cancer and financial planning with social experiment 
POSB uses gen AI to age-morph everyday Singaporeans 
Following last year's Huat perfume, DBS Bank makes a move into home fragrance this CNY 

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