Durex writes a firm letter to the Unicode Consortium, pushing for a condom emoji

Durex is hardly joking when it comes to the condom emoji.

The Unicode Consortium, the group behind the emoji approval process, is convening this week and Durex has drafted an open letter asking them to approve its design.

The brand’s effort launched last November, ahead of World AIDs Day, with the #CondomEmoji hashtag, asking for it be approved in an effort to promote safe sex.

It’s still pushing firmly for it: Durex tweeted a quickie letter, combining emojis and old-fashioned words, to lobby the Unicode Consortium to approve the emoji. The cartoony icons are increasingly becoming an integral part of young people’s communication.

“A safe sex emoji will empower them to talk openly about protection,” part of it reads. “Let’s make 2016 the year emojis take safe sex seriously.”

Durex’s initiative is being supported by four organizations dedicated to AIDS and HIV awareness, including MTV’s Staying Alive foundation.

The campaign has its skeptics. “It’s possible this letter could be seen by Unicode, but it wouldn’t influence any decision on the matter,” said Emojipedia founder Jeremy Burge.

He added that brands are “baffled” by Unicode Consortium’s process, saying companies can’t launch hashtag campaigns or throw money at the organization; everyone has to follow the same application process. Durex, for its part, has gone through the proper channels and should, according to Burge, “at least be considered” by Unicode.

“Whether major vendors want to include a condom on the emoji keyboards of millions of users around the globe is another matter,” he said. If approved, the earliest the condom emoji could appear on keyboards is mid-2017.

More in Marketing

CeraVe taps Carmelo Anthony as ‘head coach’ of its new dandruff campaign

CeraVe found that the NBA and Carmelo Anthony could give it access to a very diverse, engaged and Gen Z fandom.

Digiday Programmatic Marketing Summit May Recap: How marketers are navigating agentic ad buying

Execs are already using AI agents to buy ads. At DPMS, they shared what’s worked (and what hasn’t) and the guardrails that the industry needs to put in place to future proof.

Future of Marketing Briefing: The brands winning at AI started with process not tech

The AI agent conversation is a distraction. Here’s what matters more.