How much do we really watch â or not watch â advertising?
Browsing: TVNZ
You’re serving up ads but do people want to see them and are they paying attention? TVNZ’s latest Forecast Study examines the value exchange and how time and money are being traded to watch – or not watch – advertising. General manager of trade marketing Kathryn Mitchell talks us through the research and how broadcast TV came out on top.
Entries are now open for the 2018 TVNZ-NZ Marketing Awards. Need a little inspiration for your entry? Take a look at how Mercury
recharged its brand batteries to give the business a jolt of new (wonderful) energy and win last year’s Supreme Award.
âThere is a Survivor in all of usâ according to TVNZâs latest campaign for the second season of Survivor NZ, which will start up on Sunday at 7 pm. And after whispers the show may not return after the first season struggled to retain its audience, the new season has been rejigged and is filled with comical controversy.
Spark and TVNZâs bid to secure the rights to bring New Zealanders the Rugby World Cup 2019 has been successful.
Kiwibank, Nigel Latta and TVNZ are back for a second season of Mind Over Money – this time revealing peopleâs money personalities and how this impacts on relationships.
With the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games mere weeks away, the official New Zealand broadcaster TVNZ, with the help of Assignment Group and TVNZ Blacksand, has launched the first phase of its campaign.
IAB New Zealand has announced it has been working with major New Zealand publishers, agencies and tech vendors to implement ads.txt, a global IAB initiative designed to eliminate counterfeit inventory in the programmatic advertising ecosystem.
Cord cutting pundits have predicted the death of ye olde television for years. And while few would argue with Merja Myllylahtiâs 2017 AUT Journalism, Media and Democracy summary when she said commercial television broadcasting showed signs of distress, the six-month interim reports released by New Zealand television heavyweights TVNZ and Sky TV had some surprises. We check in with the media owners and the media agencies to break down the facts and the figures.
Industry happenings at MediaWorks, Culture & Theory, Digiday Media Awards, Pead PR, Razzbri, TVNZ, Bauer, The Warehouse Group, Serko, Sudima Hotels and Resorts and Dow Design.
In light of the chopping and changing of personnel in the media arena, what do the ratings say about the year that has been and the year ahead for TVNZ and Mediaworks?
Run me a bath Alexa, put the lights on dim and tell me the news. We take a look at the virtual assistant space and how Kiwi media organisations will be using Amazon’s Alexa.
Tech-obsessed Kym Niblock is most comfortable when sheâs wading neck-deep in a pool of data. This, she says, is the best place where you can find out where you need to go next. And for TVNZ, this involves diving straight into augmented reality.
Shortland Street is back, and while viewers are dealing with Chris Warnerâs woes, TVNZ and Blacksand are lapping up the success of a colourful summer campaign.
As the champion of TVNZ Dukeâs experimental lineup, programmer Edward Kindred is breaking the barriers of what the role traditionally entails. Heâs one-part Australian gentleman and one-part mad scientist who has found a new laboratory of sorts in The Creators Space.
Despite the ubiquitous nature of digital communications and millennials spreading their time across a range of screens, television remains a hugely valuable platform for delivering emotive content with the scale, impact and the effective frequency required to create meaningful business impact.
TVNZ has appointed Jonathan Symons to the new executive role of marketing director.
The New Zealand Television Awards recognised excellence in local television programmes as well as individual achievement as it announced the 2017 winners last night at Auckland’s SkyCity Theatre.
We talked to much-loved media figure Suzy Cato about her thoughts on childrenâs programming in New Zealand, and what sheâs been up to lately.
Last night New Zealandâs TV talent celebrated the technical nouse of local producers at the New Zealand Television Craft Awards, and it was Lippy Picturesâ Jean that owned the night as it claimed eight of the 10 craft awards. PLUS: the finalists of the New Zealand Television Awards have been announced.
Pinning its hopes on a rebrand, the freshly-christened Helloworld knew from the outset that it could not outspend its competitors. The solution? A marketing approach that focused on innovation and the clever use of âkillerâ o ers to create cut-through rather than competing head-on.
New Worldâs immersive in-store Easter experience broke new ground for the brand, leveraging emerging tech and capturing the hearts and minds of young would-be Easter egg hunters.
Ensuring frontline staff fully engage customers with your product is never an easy task. As New Zealandâs most popular loyalty programme (with over 2.5 million members) but without a physical presence, that disconnect was proving disastrous for Fly Buys. So how do you motivate the wildly diverse frontline staff of Fly Buysâ partners?
On afternoon before TVNZ’s new season launch, the broadcaster’s chief executive sat down with StopPress for a chat about the business.
New Zealandersâ reluctance to talk about their finances is a challenge for banks looking to have meaningful conversations with would-be new customers, so Kiwibank decided to push the boundaries of marketing to get Kiwis to speak up.
Following last week’s announcement of its new season lineup, director of content Cate Slater delves deeper into the programme choices and her personal favourites to win the eyeballs.
Industry happenings at The Sweet Shop, TVNZ and oOh! Media.
Last night, TVNZ and its agency and production partners gathered at Aucklandâs Shed 10 to cut the ribbon on a new season line up. But as much as it was a celebration of whatâs to come, it was a chance for the broadcaster to recognise all it’s achieved in the past year in its push to connect with more Zealanders than ever in more places than ever before.