Dove marks International Day of the Girl with a call to “change the compliment” in new global campaign via Zulu Alpha Kilo, NY and Canada
This International Day of the Girl, Dove is launching a global campaign created by Zulu Alpha Kilo’s New York and Toronto offices, spanning 25 countries to #ChangeTheCompliment, encouraging praise that focuses on personality and achievements, not just appearance, to build real confidence in girls.
For generations, girls have been praised for how they look. When we call out a girl’s beauty but forget to tell her that she’s also “kind and clever” or “strong and creative,” we can accidentally send the message that how she looks is the only thing that defines her worth. Dove is launching a new campaign on International Day of The Girl (October 11th), a global call to #ChangeTheCompliment and rethink how we talk to, and about, young girls.
Research shows that well-meaning appearance-based praise can increase body dissatisfaction, and that adults place greater emphasis on girls’ appearance than boys. #ChangeTheCompliment, a global movement calling for a change in how we praise girls, aims to change that.The campaign runs through October and is coming to life in 25 countries across five continents, including Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Brazil, Greece, Sweden, South Africa, and India.
Says Marcela Melero, Chief Growth Officer, Dove Personal Care North America & Dove Masterbrand: “One of the most powerful truths our research has revealed is that low confidence in appearance doesn’t begin in adulthood – it takes root in childhood. We’ve identified a simple shift to help young girls understand that they are so much more than how they look: starting this International Day of the Girl, we’re asking people to #ChangeTheCompliment and praise girls for what their bodies can do, as well as how they look.”
The integrated campaign is designed to spark conversation among parents and role models, spanning film, social and UGC activations, OOH and influencer partnerships.

The hero film, composed of found footage and filmed moments of real girls, is directed by Haya Waseem with Object & Animal and edited by Marlo Caine at Cosmo Street Editorial, and will run on television and cinema. Large scale out-of-home shows girls with the call “Don’t just call me beautiful.” Social-first assets include a custom CapCut template for TikTok and an “Add Yours” Instagram sticker inviting people to share their own #ChangeTheCompliment stories, alongside influencer-led extensions. In Germany, Dove’s Body Confidence Sport program is featuring #ChangeTheCompliment in its programming with local teams, where girls can customize t-shirts with their own chosen compliment that represents them best.
Says Emily Garvey, Head of Strategy, Zulu Alpha Kilo New York: “The provocation here is that what feels like a harmless, positive behavior is actually the root of our confidence issues as girls and women. The work had to spark a cultural conversation to change how people see what they’ve always accepted.”
The campaign is part of The Dove Self-Esteem Project, the world’s largest provider of body confidence education, having reached 137 million young people across 153 countries with free, evidence-based resources co-created with body image experts. This International Day of the Girl, Dove will expand workshops in schools and communities worldwide, uniting partners, parents, educators, and employees to help build school children’s confidence.
#ChangeTheCompliment runs throughout October. To learn more, visit the Dove Self-Esteem Project landing page.
Client: Dove / Unilever Global
Chief Growth Officer, Dove Personal Care North America and Dove Masterbrand: Marcela Melero
Brand and Product Marketing Manager, Dove: Sol Molina
Global Dove Partnership Brand Manager, Dove: Xander Smit
Global Assistant Brand Manager, Dove: Meg Morrison
Agency: Zulu Alpha Kilo NY & Toronto
CCO & Partner: Tim Gordon
CCO: Brian Murray
Creative Director/Art Director: Nikki Garrett
Creative Director/Art Director: Jacob Gawrysiak
Creative Director/Art Director: Ana Segurajauregui
Creative Director/Copywriter: Jeff Tyser
Creative Director/Copywriter: Addie Gillespie
Copywriter: Dylan Thompson
Art Director: Carlos Veras
Head of Strategy: Emily Garvey
Sr. Strategist: Jordan Alperin
Managing Director: Meghan Mullen
Managing Director, Operations: Robyn Morrissey
Group Account Director: Alexa Macdonald
Account Director: Hayley Blackmore
Director of Integrated Production: Ola Stodulska
Exec. Producer: Tammy Lecker
Senior Producer: Teresa Bayley
Lead Interactive Artist: Andrew Martin
Studio Artist: Stephanie Kelly
Production Company: Object & Animal
Director: Haya Waseem
Executive Producer/Partner: Emi Stewart
Head of Production: Lauren Skillen
Director of Photography: Chris Lew, CSC
Production Company: Animals
Executive Producer: Miriana DiQuinzio
Executive Producer: Chris Hutsul
Production Manager: Liam Benstead
Line Producer: Dan Montgomery
Editorial Company: Cosmo Street
EP: Luiza Naritomi
Senior Producer: Amanda Slamin
Editor: Marlo Caine
Assistant & Social Editor: Moss Levenson
Post Production: The End
EP: Diana Dayrit
Artists: Jon Nagel & John Erdman
Color: Company 3
Color: Kath Raisch & Yoomin Lee
Producer: Jake Rioux
Music: MassiveMusic
Composer: Adina Nelu
Music Supervision: Alex Menck
Executive Creative Director: Justin ”Commie” McCullen
Sr. Producer: Dale Mason
Sound Design and Mix: Sonic Union
Sound Designer & Mixer: Steve Rosen & Kelly Oostman
Executive Producer: Justine Cortale
Casting: MiLO Casting
Casting Director: Stephen Milo
Lead Researcher: Taijah Hinds Rowe
Found Footage: Lost Loved
Founder/Partner: Jamie Sewell
Researcher Team: Laura Weatherburn & Dave Lupto
Research Admin & Support: Jessica Verner
Stills Photography: Saty + Pratha
Photographers: Saty Navmar + Pratha Samyrajah
Wardrobe Stylist: Shea Hurley
Hair & Makeup Artist: Sheri Stroh
Business Affairs: Hailstorm
Nikki Balekjian and Savannah Horner