What brands can learn from its viral Father’s Day campaign.
When Southwest Airlines Captain Jim Curtis flew his final trip before retirement, the moment was already sentimental. Then his daughter, First Officer Julia Curtis, joined him in the cockpit, turning the sendoff into a memorable Father’s Day story.
The retirement flight, or “fini flight” in pilot-speak, happened May 28. Southwest documented the trip, then saved the story for Father’s Day weekend.
“It had all the makings for something that could get the media attention,” said Ashley Persons, managing director of external communications and social media strategy at Southwest Airlines. “You can tell their connection. You feel it.”
Audiences felt it, too. Social posts tied to the story across Southwest’s channels have generated more than 36 million impressions, up 4 million since Father’s Day. The story ranks as Southwest’s eighth most-viewed story of all time on Facebook, its second most-viewed Instagram story since the second half of 2024 and its fifth most-viewed TikTok story ever.
The campaign also sparked more than 200 media stories, including a feature from People and a mention on The Today Show. Since June 26, Southwest has seen about 50 more news mentions, including a feature on Fox News.
How did Southwest find the story?
The best stories come from knowing your people before big moments arrive, Persons said. This was not some random feel-good event that just happened. Southwest had been following Julia Curtis’ story for months.
She joined the airline in February as Southwest’s 200,000th employee. The company had already featured her on its social channels. Southwest also knew her father was nearing the age of 65, the mandatory retirement age for commercial pilots.
“We knew his retirement was coming up,” Persons said. “We knew that we wanted to make sure that they could fly together and share that moment.”
Julia Curtis also came through Destination 225, Southwest’s pilot hiring program, which partners with flight training companies and schools to build a pilot pipeline. Internally, teams across multiple departments worked to make the timing line up between Julia Curtis’ training and her father’s retirement flight, Persons said.
“We wanted that moment to happen for them,” she said. “Those times always feel like magic to us, when you can get all the pieces to align.”
@southwestairOne special sendoff for one special dad! Wishing all the fathers, and father figures, a wonderful Father’s Day. ♬ original sound – Southwest Airlines
Southwest didn’t want the story to feel like a manufactured Father’s Day campaign, however. It wanted to recognize a highly emotional milestone shared between a father and daughter, she said.
How was the moment shared?
Southwest chose to publish the story on social first, then let the audience reaction take over organically.
Persons said the airline views its social channels as a place for brand storytelling and affinity.
“We want people to see what it is to be a part of Southwest,” she said. “You watch that video and those Southwest employees are a living embodiment of what our company stands for.”
That story traveled naturally without Southwest having to pitch anyone.
“When you’re doing your media relations, it’s this fine line of bragging about how amazing we are, but also just showing that,” Persons said. “It was really cool to see that post and see everybody come to us.”
The team also had B-roll and photos ready before the story took off. When media requests started coming in, the airline could respond quickly.
The human detail made it relatable
The retirement flight was touching and the father-daughter connection gave it heart, especially Julia’s comments to passengers over the intercom about all the reasons her dad means so much to her, including still paying for her cellphone.
“That’s one of those things that just makes everyone laugh because we’ve all had those conversations,” Persons said.
Emotional stories work better when they include those ordinary details, Persons said. Audiences may not know what it feels like to fly a retirement flight with their father, but they probably do know what it feels like to dodge a family conversation about the phone bill, she said.
The campaign also landed at a time when audiences are seeing a flood of tech-heavy or AI-generated creatives. This story did the opposite, Persons said. It let a genuine human connection do the work.
“Southwest loves connecting people to the moments that matter,” Persons said. “This was just a home run of a post that embodied that and showed it so clearly.”
What other brands can take from it
- Look for employee or customer stories that could naturally become campaigns. Julia Curtis’ hiring, training and family connection gave Southwest a story arc that carried over to the Father’s Day campaign.
- Decide which channels make the most sense. Where can the story be widely shared? Is there space for engagement? Not every story needs a press release. Some stories are stronger when audiences discover them on their own.
- Have assets ready to go. Organic reach is great, but PR teams still need photos, video and clear background material ready when reporters call.
- Organize PR and social so they can work together. Southwest combined those teams under Persons in January, a change she said has helped the airline decide whether PR or social should lead a story.
“To be able to have both of these teams together and able to think through from either lens, which one we want to lead with and where this story could really take off, it’s been a really fun approach for us,” Persons said.
The post How Southwest Airlines turned a retirement into 36 million social impressions appeared first on PR Daily.

















