
Our weekly wrap of good things, strange things, funny things and other things from inside the intertubes.
Our weekly wrap of good things, strange things, funny things and other things from inside the intertubes.
Deals, expansions, launches and acquisitions across the Industry.
Graham Medcalf takes a look at the week that was, covering TV advertising’s performance, who is responsible for ad placement, converting traffic to conversions and ageism in the industry.
With International Women’s Day acting as the annual reminder of both how much has been achieved for women’s rights and how far there is to go, workplaces are being called on to take a hard look at unconscious gender bias in a new campaign for Champions for Change.
The WARC Creative 100 and WARC Effective 100 results have been released with Colenso BBDO and Special Group New Zealand performing well on a global scale.
After three years of consecutive overall growth, the New Zealand media agency market took a dip of 4.2 percent in advertising expenditure in 2018 – sitting at $1.02 billion. However, outdoor has out-performed the market and was the only channel to grow in 2018, rising 0.5 percent to $138.6 million.
Vincent Heeringa buckles his seatbelt before he heads off to the conference mothership, South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas next week. The annual film, interactive media and music conference has been the industry’s platform for launching careers or guaranteeing the success of movies since 1987.
Industry happenings at Ola, Radio New Zealand and WPP’s Government and Public Sector Practice.
Time moves swiftly in the start-up world, and looking back from 2019, 1999 is practically the Jurassic. But it was that year that Sam Morgan acted on an idea he’d had while trying to buy a secondhand heater for his chilly Wellington flat and created Trade Me.
Special Group head of strategy Rory Gallery on the best being yet to come.
Former 99 managing director Paul Manning shares five ways his advertising background helped him in becoming an entrepreneur.
Looking at September’s social media activity, it’s a familiar sight of Air New Zealand holding the lead, however, across Facebook, Twitter and YouTube there’s been some competition for the top spot.
Our weekly wrap of good things, strange things, funny things and other things from inside the intertubes.
Last night the Great Room at Cordis in Auckland was transformed into a magician’s theatre as the curtain was pulled back on who was the best of the best in direct marketing at the 2018 NZDM Awards. And while the drinks flowed and the tricks amazed, no one could compete with Education New Zealand’s sleight of hand, with the crown entity taking home the bulk of the awards.
Graham Medcalf takes a look at the week that was, covering the return of creativity thanks to technological advances, the gender divide in New Zealand advertising, companies freezing their YouTube advertising and if advertising has becoming obsolete.
NZ Transport Agency and Clemenger BBDO are on a mission to prove the value of seatbelts, with an emotional campaign telling the real stories of Kiwi men whose lives were saved by belting up.
At the halfway point in the fiscal year, TVNZ had gained TV audience and advertising market share, as well as doubling its online streaming numbers, according to its half-year results.
Last night, under a veil of purple lights and blue balloons, Spark PR & Activate was reborn, with a new identity, ‘Drum’. The name change for the agency is not just a rebrand of the office and email signatures, it also sees the agency join the existing Drum network. In the lead up to the big unveiling, Erin McKenzie spoke with the team to see how it was working on the rebrand in-house and what it means for the agency.
Isthmus CEO Ralph Johns says the current New Zealand condition is we are increasingly physical and mentally unwell, our communities are disconnected, access to good housing is inequitable and our environment is suffering. However, these issues that reflect global uncertainty and complexity can also be tackled by casting aside traditional models and structuring your business around ambiguity.
A round of applause for TVNZ, Hallenstein Brothers, The Project and BCITO.
Skirts for women, suits for boys? Those days are gone – and Hallenstein Brothers is just the latest retailer to embrace the notion that, while some clothes are tailored to suit particular types of bodies, if the clothes fit, they fit. But placing model Laura Evans at the centre of its latest ‘The Power of the Suit’ campaign was too much for some, with a number commenters complaining a men’s clothing brand shouldn’t use a women to model its clothing.
Smirnoff Pure and Special Group proved they’re not ones to rest on their laurels last week when they launched a topical new campaign in conjunction with the Lime scooters suspension.
Trustpower has taken over Wellington’s Carter Fountain with a projection of two ballerinas dancing excerpts from Fokine’s ‘The Dying Swan’ and Mário Rádačovsky’s Black Swan White Swan.
FCB’s Peter Vegas and Leisa Wall have been promoted to creative directors.
Ooh!Media’s CY18 financial results are out, showing double-digit revenue growth to reach $482.6 million.
New Zealand is lining up to introduce a new tax on multinational companies that make money out of online goods and services in this country.
On Monday, Whittaker’s launched its latest novelty chocolate-lolly mash up with a chocolatey answer to retro bakesale treat coconut ice. The Coconut Ice Surprise chocolate has a twist though, 20c from each block goes to Plunket – a charity which New Zealanders agree is a worthy cause. However, to relate the chocolate to the charity, Whittaker’s has built the campaign around baby gender reveal parties, causing a backlash from the public who argue gender norms have expanded beyond blue for boys and pink for girls.
With journalism facing the challenge of social media and fake news, TVNZ and NZME are striking back, with campaigns championing their work.