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MODERN MARKETING<br />

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AND SCARE YOURSELF FINANCIALLY<br />

OCT.26.12<br />

SOUTH<br />

WEST<br />

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THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

VOLUME #33 ISSUE #22<br />

Cover: courtesy of Rankin<br />

www.rankin.co.uk<br />

Rankin shot the poster for When the Lights Went Out, the<br />

supernatural horror film set in Pontefract, West Yorkshire, directed<br />

by Pat Holden and co-produced by Bil Bungay.<br />

20<br />

Bil Bungay, who provides an insight this issue into what happens when ad men make movies<br />

31<br />

26 Oct 2012<br />

Is South West best? This regional focus concentrates on the creative marketing sectors in the<br />

South West, catching up with agencies operating in the region<br />

05 Leader<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s editor Gordon Young discusses the<br />

innovation to be found in out of home advertising.<br />

06 Agenda<br />

Some of the latest insights and analysis<br />

into the media and marketing industries.<br />

13 People news<br />

A round-up of some of the latest appointment<br />

news, including the hiring of Mike Shackle as<br />

executive creative director of gyro London.<br />

INSIDE03<br />

15 Out of home innovation<br />

Out of home advertising is undergoing a revolution.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> takes a look at outdoor innovations to emerge<br />

from the Creative Out of Home Awards judging process.<br />

18 Women in digital<br />

As part of our series profi ling infl uential digital women,<br />

Propel CEO Melina Jacovou speaks to Jocelyn Bull,<br />

marketing director, Somo, about the growth of mobile.<br />

COVER S<strong>TO</strong>RY<br />

20 Admen take on the movies<br />

With Halloween approaching, Bil Bungay of Beattie<br />

McGuinness Bungay takes us through the experience<br />

of conceiving and creating horror fi lm When <strong>The</strong> Lights<br />

Went Out.<br />

25 <strong>The</strong> Works<br />

A round-up of some of the most interesting recent<br />

creative work, including a series of prints created<br />

by the Association of Illustrators for Ted Baker.<br />

31 South West focus<br />

<strong>The</strong> latest in <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s series of regular regional<br />

features focuses on the creative talent to emerge from<br />

the South West, catching up with agencies operating<br />

in marketing industries in the region.<br />

44 MiNetwork update<br />

We take a look at the nominees for the MD/CEO of the<br />

year award, a public vote category at the MiAwards.<br />

46 Last Word<br />

Opinion editor Cameron Clarke rounds up some of<br />

thedrum.com’s best read blogs from the past few weeks.<br />

45 Jobs 47 Directory<br />

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THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

conTRibUToRs THis issUE<br />

joHn McLELLAn, foRMER<br />

EDiToR of THE scoTsMAn<br />

analyses the recent Panorama<br />

investigation into the dropping<br />

of the BBC investigation into<br />

Savile’s conduct<br />

biL bUngAy, foUnDing<br />

pARTnER, bEATTiE<br />

McgUinnEss bUngAy<br />

writes on his experience of<br />

what happens when ad men<br />

turn their hand to movies<br />

MELinA jAcovoU, cEo,<br />

pRopEL LonDon catches up<br />

with Somo marketing director<br />

Jocelyn Bull in the latest of <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Drum</strong>’s profiles on influential<br />

women in the digital space<br />

jAnE AsscHER, MAnAging<br />

pARTnER, 23RED looks at<br />

the trend of brands<br />

increasing their investment<br />

in brand activation and<br />

below-the-line activity<br />

MARk LowE, foUnDing<br />

pARTnER, THiRD ciTy takes<br />

the last word this issue, looking<br />

at the recent controversial<br />

Wonga sponsorship of<br />

Newcastle United<br />

sTEpHEn LEpiTAk,<br />

nEws EDiToR<br />

stephen.lepitak@thedrum.com<br />

THoMAs o’nEiLL,<br />

AssisTAnT EDiToR<br />

thomas@thedrum.com<br />

cAMERon cLARkE,<br />

opinion EDiToR<br />

cameron.clarke@thedrum.com<br />

kATiE McqUATER,<br />

sTAff wRiTER<br />

katie.mcquater@thedrum.com<br />

giLLiAn wEsT, REpoRTER<br />

gillian.west@thedrum.com<br />

OuTdOOr nOw mOre<br />

pixel Than pasTe<br />

LEADER05<br />

As ancient grainy pictures from the early days of photography<br />

demonstrate, outdoor advertising has always been a feature<br />

of our cityscapes.<br />

Above the blurred pictures, of petticoat clad girls, or flat-cap wearing<br />

men, are images of long forgotten health tonics, confectionary brands<br />

and ladies hat suppliers.<br />

Sometimes they are painted direct on to rough, soot blackened gableends,<br />

or pasted in a chaotic mish-mash that proves that the scourge<br />

of the fly-poster was as much a fact of city life then as it is now.<br />

This is an industry that is not only as old as the oldest profession,<br />

but as civilisation itself – it possibly emerged around the time of the<br />

first cave paintings in the form of ‘Buy my Bison’ drives.<br />

So that’s what makes it all the more surprising that the sector is not<br />

only surviving the current digital revolution – but is actually excelling.<br />

New digital screens grace the landscape. Interactive displays are<br />

becoming more common. Posters that recognise the gender of its audience,<br />

or dispense cakes or the seductive smell of baked potatoes have featured.<br />

Near field communication, broadband technology and augmented reality<br />

have taken it to the very cutting edge of modern communications.<br />

Its strength seems to be that, in this social media enabled world, people<br />

need something to talk about and things to share. And outdoor is perfectly<br />

placed to pump-prime these sorts of conversations. Over the last couple<br />

of years we have seen some great examples like the Lynx Angels in Victoria<br />

Station, were passengers could watch themselves on a giant screen interact<br />

with virtual angels who appeared to be standing next to them.<br />

But more recently we have seen other examples that have taken<br />

this concept beyond the realms of traditional outdoor. <strong>The</strong>se include<br />

the recent Red Bull stunt for example, which saw 8 million people watch<br />

a live YouTube stream of a man breaking the sound barrier after freefalling<br />

from the stratosphere.<br />

Initiatives like this have made the whole out of home space one of<br />

the most exciting and dynamic parts of the business. Which is why<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> has launched the Creative Out of Home Awards in association<br />

with Clear Channel to recognise the innovation in this sector. You can<br />

see some of our nominations for our inaugural event on page 15.<br />

This work provides evidence that this business is now more about<br />

pixels than paste.<br />

gordon young, Editor<br />

gordon.young@thedrum.com<br />

Publisher/Editor: Gordon Young Associate Editor: richard draycott Assistant Editor: Thomas O’neill News Editor: stephen lepitak Opinion Editor: Cameron Clarke Staff Writer: Katie mcQuater Reporters: ishbel macleod, Gillian<br />

west, Jen Faull Business Development Director: liz hamilton Business Development Manager: James mcGowan Directory Sales: Victoria swan Recruitment Sales: Tehmeena latif Marketing & Subscriptions: ayush<br />

Kejriwal Design & Production Director: nick Creed Design/Production: amanda dewar, dane Brown Events Director: lynn lester Events Manager: Katy Thomson<br />

Managing Director: diane Young Head of London Operations: andy Oakes Head Office: 4th Floor, mercat Building, 26 Gallowgate, Glasgow G1 5aB Tel: 0141 552 5858 Fax: 0141 559 6050<br />

Original Design: stand Printed by: stephens & George magazines<br />

THE DRUM is published by Carnyx Group Limited. <strong>The</strong> publishers, authors and printers cannot accept liability for any errors or omissions. Any transparencies or artwork will be accepted at owner’s risk. All rights reserved. On no account<br />

may any part of this publication be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the copyright holder and publisher, application for which should be made to the publisher. © CarNyx groUP limiTeD 2012 iSSN 2046-0635


06AGENDA<br />

marketing deals<br />

Groupon UK & Ireland managing<br />

director defends its offering<br />

Four years ago discount website<br />

Groupon brought daily deals commerce<br />

into the mainstream, offering<br />

users bargains and discounts<br />

on spa treatments, fine dining and<br />

hotels. Since its 2008 launch in Chicago<br />

Groupon has grown at a rapid<br />

place quickly expanding into some<br />

48 countries.<br />

However, in December 2010 the<br />

Advertising Standards Authority (ASA)<br />

referred the site to the Office of Fair<br />

Trading (OFT) over ‘serious concerns’<br />

after it broke UK advertising regulations<br />

more than 50 times in less than a year.<br />

In March of this year the OFT ruled that<br />

Groupon needed to change its trading<br />

practices, leading UK and Ireland<br />

managing director Roy Blanga to admit<br />

Groupon customers had “experienced<br />

the negative side effects of our growth”<br />

and that “we’ve messed up.”<br />

Since then many have criticised<br />

Groupon in the UK of lagging behind its<br />

contemporaries such as Wowcher, LivingSocial,<br />

regional sites such as itison,<br />

and its US counterpart. Speaking to <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Drum</strong>, Blanga defended Groupon UK,<br />

commenting: “Groupon is only two and<br />

a half years old in the UK so it’s fair to<br />

say the technology we have has not had<br />

the time or the opportunity to ‘lag’.<br />

“Many companies have tried to replicate<br />

what we do – but none of them<br />

have been able to develop as quickly<br />

and engage with the level of businesses<br />

as we have. What people tend to underestimate<br />

is the dual nature of the Groupon<br />

model. We are both a technology<br />

company and an operational company.<br />

You cannot deliver the service we deliver<br />

without both sides of the coin.”<br />

Blanga also defended criticisms that<br />

the UK offering falls behind its US sister,<br />

adding: “<strong>The</strong> US is Groupon’s largest<br />

market and this is why most of our technology<br />

is developed and tested there<br />

before being rolled out to our other markets.”<br />

David Katz, vice president and general<br />

manager for consumer mobile at<br />

Groupon agreed with Blanga, adding<br />

the company was “actually pretty aggressive<br />

about rolling out new offerings<br />

into the UK market” and “it’s not entirely<br />

accurate to say everything comes out of<br />

the US.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> latest Groupon offering to roll-out<br />

onto the UK market in the near future is<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> catches up with Groupon UK and Ireland<br />

managing director, Roy Blanga, to discuss criticisms<br />

the discount site is lagging behind its UK peers.<br />

Roy Blanga, Groupon MD UK and Ireland, and David Katz, global vice president and<br />

general manager of mobile<br />

‘Smart Deals’, which has been jokingly<br />

referred to by chief executive, Andrew<br />

Mason, as a feature to stop it “sending<br />

pole-dancing offers to men.” Launched<br />

in the US in February, the feature “enables<br />

subscribers to enjoy a more<br />

personalised offering with customers<br />

receiving more targeted emails based<br />

on their location, gender and previous<br />

purchases,” according to Blanga.<br />

Katz explained to <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> how this<br />

would also be incorporated into Groupon’s<br />

mobile platform: “What we’ll be<br />

doing is trying to organise deals so that<br />

when you open the application for the<br />

first time the deal that you’re going to<br />

see is the most relevant one that is most<br />

appealing to you. It’s not about having a<br />

mobile specific deal, its more about how<br />

we sort to make it easiest for you to get<br />

the best deal that you want quickly.”<br />

Blanga told <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> that Groupon<br />

“sees itself as the ‘go to’ destination for<br />

people who want to try new and exciting<br />

experiences,” continuing, “we see ourselves<br />

as an experience-provider rather<br />

than a voucher or discount website. We<br />

are continuing to focus on technology in<br />

order to grow.”<br />

Part of that technology is mobile, and<br />

in August Groupon launched a “substantial<br />

re-working” of its mobile application,<br />

which Katz explains was done<br />

to “make the experience on mobile as<br />

good as, if not better than, the experi-<br />

ence on a desktop.”<br />

Speaking about the mobile side of<br />

Groupon, Katz explained: “Groupon<br />

is in a fortunate situation as we are a<br />

commerce company; I think some companies<br />

who rely on mobile advertising<br />

for their revenue struggle a little on the<br />

mobile.<br />

“For a commerce company like Groupon,<br />

our business model transitions<br />

onto mobile very easily. Users can do<br />

the same things on their mobile device<br />

as they can on desktop. From a business<br />

point of view we make revenue in<br />

exactly the same way, and so it’s really<br />

very seamless for us.”<br />

Despite complaints, stories of merchants<br />

being unable to cope with<br />

demand, claims of unfair pricing and<br />

misleading terms of advertising, Groupon<br />

still boasts over 38 million users<br />

worldwide. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> asked Blanga how<br />

he thinks Groupon is viewed by British<br />

businesses, to which he replied: “With<br />

many high street businesses struggling<br />

in the current economic climate, we are<br />

keen to be seen as a core part of a business’s<br />

marketing mix, helping them to<br />

bring new customers through the door.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Groupon offer is just the trigger<br />

to get a new customer through the door.<br />

Once they are there, [it is the merchant’s<br />

chance to] develop a relationship with<br />

them for the long-term, encouraging<br />

them to return.”<br />

www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 THE DRUM<br />

Acquisitions<br />

and growth<br />

WPP owned Grey Group will<br />

acquire the majority stake in ArtM<br />

Communications Group in China.<br />

<strong>The</strong> deal, which is subject to regulatory<br />

approval, will see the company, which has<br />

offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzen and<br />

Guangzhou, will join the Grey Group.<br />

New York-based digital advertising<br />

agency Clash Group has announced<br />

its expansion into the UK.<br />

<strong>The</strong> announcement of the transatlantic<br />

expansion has followed the company’s<br />

acquisition of Vendari, a UK voucher comparison<br />

site.<br />

M&C Saatchi Mobile has announced<br />

that it is to expand into Australia with<br />

a new office in Sydney.<br />

<strong>The</strong> office will be led by Sarah Di Mento<br />

in the role of business development manager,<br />

with Di Mento saying: “<strong>The</strong> Australian<br />

market is ready. Our entry strategy is<br />

very similar to what we’ve deployed and<br />

been hugely successful with in the UK<br />

and US markets, as well as our recently<br />

opened South Africa office.”<br />

Chime Communications is to wholly<br />

acquire pH Associates in a deal that<br />

Could be worth up to £14m.<br />

<strong>The</strong> deal to buy the pharmaceutical<br />

data agency will see an initial considering<br />

of £6.07m paid in cash, and £0.85m<br />

in working capital of PHA at the time of<br />

acquisition.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Mission Marketing Group has<br />

acquired balloon dog for a deal<br />

worth £3.2m.<br />

<strong>The</strong> multichannel marketing agency,<br />

which has offices in London and Norwich,<br />

offers a range of marketing services,<br />

working with Aviva, Barclaycard, Pret a<br />

Manger, and Rightmove. <strong>The</strong> agency recorded<br />

a pre-tax profit of £0.7m last year,<br />

with a turnover of £6.3m.


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com AGENDA07<br />

marketing<br />

IPA Bellwether survey reveals<br />

marketing spend decline forecast<br />

<strong>The</strong> latest IPA Bellwether survey has<br />

found 23 per cent of companies likely<br />

to reduce marketing spend, with only<br />

18 per cent planning to increase their<br />

spend. This is the second downward<br />

revision of the year.<br />

Reasons given for the downturn in confidence<br />

relate to the slowing of the global<br />

economy and a lack of resolution to the<br />

Eurozone sovereign debt crisis.<br />

Online budgets were revised higher,<br />

with the net balance growing from 5.1 per<br />

cent to 7.1 percent, with online advertising,<br />

search and SEO spend growing by 5.2 per<br />

cent, while all other communications categories<br />

set to fall. Below-the-line will decline<br />

by the highest degree, it has been claimed,<br />

while direct marketing and sales promotion<br />

will also decline.<br />

IPA president Nicola Mendelsohn commented:<br />

“<strong>The</strong> message provided by the<br />

Bellwether survey is consistent and indicative<br />

of the economic situation as a whole<br />

which is one of underlying stagnation. We<br />

had hoped when the year started that<br />

things were picking up but as time has<br />

gone on the economy has stuttered and<br />

confidence isn’t particularly strong. We had<br />

hoped for growth but are instead looking at<br />

a flat market. Although this is disappointing<br />

it is by no means terrible. <strong>The</strong> outlook<br />

for UK economic growth in 2013 is looking<br />

better than this year so consequently<br />

Reaction fRom the industRy<br />

Keith Hunt, managing partner, Results International:<br />

“<strong>The</strong> latest Bellwether report certainly makes for<br />

depressing reading. Yet it’s important to remember that<br />

not every business in the industry is suffering. What we<br />

are seeing are winners and losers, with some digital<br />

disciplines doing better than more traditional areas. In<br />

our work we see agencies in high growth areas such<br />

as data and digital doing well as marketing executives<br />

recognise that they deliver the best returns for their<br />

brands. Agencies with a more traditional skill set should<br />

be thinking hard how to get a better ROI or getting into<br />

these growth areas themselves, fast.”<br />

Tim Hipperson, chief executive, G2 Joshua:<br />

“<strong>The</strong> latest IPA Bellwether report paints a gloomy outlook<br />

on marketing spend for the rest of the year, however, if<br />

the priorities of customers are put at the forefront and<br />

acted upon with immediacy through the use of intelligent<br />

and connected marketing, then 2013 will offer a far<br />

more prosperous picture. Cash-strapped consumers are<br />

looking for brands that offer them relevancy, engaging<br />

Marketing budgets have been revised down for the<br />

second successive quarter, taking figures to their<br />

most extreme in three years.<br />

we are expecting a relative improvement<br />

in marketing spend. We shall see what Q4<br />

and the year ahead brings but the advertising<br />

and marketing industry is certainly not a<br />

market in decline.”<br />

Chris Williamson, chief economist at<br />

Markit and author of the Bellwether, added:<br />

“Disappointing sales and revenues prompted<br />

companies to cut their marketing budgets<br />

again in the third quarter, reflecting the<br />

weaker than expected economic environment<br />

than many had hoped to be operating<br />

in. <strong>The</strong> modest increase in budgets that<br />

had been set at the start of the year looks<br />

instead to turn into a reduction in spend<br />

compared with 2011, as companies seek<br />

to reduce costs. It therefore seems likely<br />

that marketing spend will have fallen for a<br />

fifth successive year.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Bellwether is consistent with other<br />

surveys which suggest that the official data<br />

overstated the weakness of the economy<br />

in the first half of the year, but also suggests<br />

that economic growth slowed, and<br />

perhaps even stalled, in the third quarter.<br />

With business confidence falling further in<br />

the third quarter, prospects also look rather<br />

subdued for the rest of the year.”<br />

content and value for money delivered as soon as they<br />

request it and the marketing industry needs to tap into<br />

these demands to reap the rewards.”<br />

Nick Jefferson, MD, gyro London:<br />

“Work comes home. Home comes to work. Our lives<br />

are portable. And the devices we are using – iPhone<br />

5, Kindles – are only getting faster and better. It makes<br />

perfect sense that more spend would gravitate to digital.<br />

It also makes sense that there is a greater emphasis on<br />

SEO and being found. <strong>The</strong> crowd is arriving in throngs<br />

to digital properties and as with any channel, it’s up to<br />

marketers to stand out.”<br />

Renee Joyce, marketing manager, Tangent Snowball:<br />

“Research from periods of economic downturn has<br />

consistently shown that brands who invest in marketing<br />

are the ones who grow market share and revenue. It’s up<br />

to agencies to continue to work more closely with clients<br />

to understand the real pain points and devise strategies<br />

around this with tangible measureable outcomes.”<br />

advertising<br />

TV takes 61% of<br />

global advertising<br />

spend<br />

TV advertising still accounts for 61<br />

per cent of global ad spend, Nielsen’s<br />

Global AdView Pulse found, although<br />

TV investments have declined 2.2 per<br />

cent in Europe in the first half of 2012<br />

compared to the first half of 2011.<br />

<strong>The</strong> research found a 7.2 per cent<br />

global gain in internet advertising, with<br />

an 11.2 per cent increase in this sector<br />

seen in Europe; while magazine spending<br />

fell significantly in both Europe and<br />

North America.<br />

Outdoor and radio ad revenues were up<br />

in all areas measured, while cinema saw a<br />

slight gain in Europe of 0.4 per cent.<br />

<strong>The</strong> report concluded: “Gains in areas<br />

such as Internet (+7.2 per cent), radio<br />

(+6.6 per cent) and TV (+3.1 per cent)<br />

offset the 1.3 per cent decline in magazine<br />

spending in the first half of 2012,<br />

leading overall advertising investment to<br />

be up 2.7 per cent.”<br />

marketing<br />

Staff levels up<br />

but budgets down<br />

Warc’s Global Marketing Index has<br />

seen a slight decline for all regions’<br />

measures in marketing budgets, trading<br />

conditions and staffing levels from<br />

September to October, with marketers<br />

in the Americas most positive.<br />

<strong>The</strong> research also found that conditions<br />

in Asia Pacific are also generally positive,<br />

while the figure is negative in Europe.<br />

<strong>The</strong> report explained: “<strong>The</strong>re were<br />

mixed signals from the three individual<br />

components that contribute towards the<br />

headline GMI metric.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> index for global trading conditions<br />

remains unchanged in October on 54.7.<br />

Within this, the Americas index value<br />

signalled rapidly improving conditions<br />

(60.0), with Asia Pacific and Europe also<br />

positive, on 54.3 and 52.5 respectively.<br />

“Globally, the index for marketing budgets<br />

registered a value of 48.8 in October.<br />

This represents a marginal month<br />

on month improvement, but indicates<br />

that marketing budgets are generally decreasing.”<br />

It adds that staffing levels has ‘continuously<br />

been in positive territory over<br />

recent months’, with the levels rising<br />

in all regions.


08AGENDA<br />

sponsorship<br />

Do Armstrong sponsors<br />

have a case for fraud?<br />

As Nike claims it was ‘misled’ by Lance Armstrong,<br />

Ben Griffin of the Fraud & Risk Services team at<br />

national law firm Cobbetts LLP considers whether<br />

sporting cheats could not only expose themselves<br />

to public disgrace, but also to claims of fraud.<br />

During his reign as Tour de France<br />

champion, Lance Armstrong was a<br />

sporting superstar, with some of the<br />

top brands in sport clamouring to be<br />

associated with him. However, with<br />

the recent publication of a report labelling<br />

him a ‘serial cheat’ and alleging<br />

that he systematically used performance<br />

enhancing drugs, the question<br />

of whether he deceived sponsors and<br />

employers for financial gain has come<br />

to the fore.<br />

Indeed, this question is certainly one<br />

Nike’s bosses may now be asking, after<br />

the global sports brand dropped Armstrong<br />

on the basis of “seemingly insurmountable<br />

evidence that he participated<br />

in doping and misled Nike for more than a<br />

decade”. Bike maker Trek and Budweiser<br />

brewer Anheuser-Busch have also now<br />

dropped Armstrong.<br />

In English law, Armstrong’s sponsors<br />

may have grounds to argue that they<br />

have been victims of fraudulent misrepresentation.<br />

This is on the basis that he<br />

would have represented to sponsors that<br />

there was a benefit to being associated<br />

with him at the same time he was, according<br />

to the US Anti Doping Agency<br />

(USADA), taking performance enhancing<br />

substances. <strong>The</strong> sponsors, Nike included,<br />

would have paid substantial sums for<br />

the supposed benefit of being associated<br />

with him at this time.<br />

However, Armstrong has denied doping<br />

(though he chose not to contest USADA’s<br />

claims). Furthermore, the brands associated<br />

with him during his prolonged period<br />

of dominance in cycling’s biggest race will<br />

no doubt have benefited from the profile<br />

he gave them at the time and as a result,<br />

may not have suffered a loss – which is<br />

vital if they were to pursue a claim.<br />

It is also doubtful whether their brands<br />

have truly been tarnished by association,<br />

as it could be argued that only true cycling<br />

fans can remember the bike he rode<br />

or who sponsored the kit he wore on Alpe<br />

d’Huez in the 2004 edition of the Tour, or<br />

indeed, in any other race.<br />

In addition, the teams for which Armstrong<br />

rode, could, theoretically, have<br />

claims against him. A parallel can be<br />

drawn with the situation where job applicants<br />

falsify of qualifications in order<br />

to secure employment. In some cases<br />

of such falsification, the applicants have<br />

been subject to criminal sanctions and<br />

employers have pursued civil proceedings<br />

for recovery of salary paid to them.<br />

In an employer-employee relationship,<br />

the employee is subject to a duty<br />

of good faith and therefore must not act<br />

in a dishonest manner or in a way that<br />

would be detrimental to the employer.<br />

It is arguable that such a duty could be<br />

established between Armstrong and the<br />

teams he rode for.<br />

<strong>The</strong> only fraud that we can say Armstrong<br />

(and a large number of riders in the<br />

professional peloton) is perhaps guilty of<br />

is one against the fans.<br />

pr<br />

Fans of <strong>The</strong> Thick of It will join me in<br />

spotting the parallels between the last<br />

episode and BBC director general<br />

George Entwistle’s appearance at the<br />

parliamentary Savile inquiry.<br />

I am typing as Entwistle takes to the<br />

gallows, sorry, parliamentary enquiry;<br />

the media ready and poised to judge his<br />

statements and either release the trapdoor<br />

or let him struggle on his job.<br />

Let’s not beat around the bush though,<br />

I think many in the PR and media sector<br />

think that this will need a Herculean public<br />

relations fix for Entwistle to survive.<br />

In fact, if any one man needs a Malcolm<br />

Tucker figure, it is George. But what are<br />

the tried and tested media options to help<br />

Entwistle survive? Let’s take a look.<br />

Apologise and apologise hard – TICK.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first apology from George and Team<br />

BBC came on 12 October. He started<br />

today’s appearance with several humble<br />

words about the gravity of the situation.<br />

Announce an urgent internal investigation<br />

– TICK. Again, announced on 12 October.<br />

This is where you assure people no<br />

stone will go unturned in your organisation’s<br />

attempts to find the root of the problem.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BBC has gone a step further and<br />

announced two investigations. Boom…<br />

Sack people at a senior level – Operation<br />

Scapegoat: NOT YET. George needs<br />

to make sure he is not that scapegoat.<br />

<strong>The</strong> buck may well stop at the most<br />

senior person within an organisation, but<br />

savvy senior folk make sure that there is<br />

www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 THE DRUM<br />

Tips to save Entwistle<br />

from the BBC trapdoor<br />

As the BBC gets ever more embroiled in the Savile<br />

row, director general George Entwistle was hauled<br />

up to a parliamentary inquiry. Here, Andy Barr of PR<br />

agency 10 Yetis offers a Entwistle a handy crisis PR<br />

guide that could save him from the sack.<br />

a buck shaped funnel that points elsewhere.<br />

Expect former director generals of<br />

the BBC to be dragged into the debate<br />

and blame to be directed their way.<br />

Leak a bigger story to divert attention –<br />

NOT YET. Unless pictures emerge of Gary<br />

Lineker having a sex-orgy with a bevvy of<br />

otters (not likely, Gary is a lovely guy) there<br />

is little the BBC can do to shake this. Even<br />

the Sunday Times’ story on MPs’ second<br />

home BuyToLet swindle this weekend<br />

could not budge Savile off the news.<br />

Start a war – NOT YET. Political PR 101<br />

to recover failed ratings. America and the<br />

UK have done this to great effect in the<br />

last 30 years. Who can the BBC start a<br />

war with? Well, that is the difficult one<br />

given it is an organisation riddled with<br />

cardigan-wearing lefties. Maybe this is<br />

the time where Entwistle starts a war with<br />

the BBC DG that was in charge during<br />

Savile’s time. If they are still alive.<br />

Female spokespeople – NOT YET. <strong>The</strong><br />

PR overlords at the CIPR (stands and<br />

salutes) recommends as part of its crisis<br />

comms planning that brands in a bit of<br />

doo-doo put forward females to front off<br />

the media. Apparently women appear<br />

more sincere. What a shame the BBC did<br />

not heed corporate governance advice<br />

and get more women at the top of the<br />

tree. Maybe time for George to become<br />

Georgina?<br />

Smear the people investigating you –<br />

ERM – this is the BBC, they don’t do this.<br />

Do they?


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com AGENDA09<br />

MEDIA<br />

How Savile reminded public there is a lot<br />

going on they should know is going on<br />

As Rab C Nesbitt might have put it,<br />

Jimmy Savile wasn’t just a creep,<br />

he was a creep’s creep. No, he was<br />

worse than that. Much worse.<br />

Revelation after revelation continues<br />

to pour out about his perverted behaviour.<br />

200 alleged victims and counting. It<br />

seems everyone who has ever had anything<br />

to do with him is falling over themselves<br />

to say that they had suspected as<br />

such, heard the rumours, couldn’t prove<br />

anything, had to keep quiet, etc.<br />

Except now we know there weren’t just<br />

rumours; there were real allegations made<br />

to the police by real victims. A report was<br />

sent to the Crown Prosecution service,<br />

but without witnesses prepared to testify<br />

in court, there could be no guarantee of<br />

successful prosecution and the case was<br />

dropped. (Phone-hacking, Hillsborough,<br />

Jimmy Savile? Is there is a pattern emerging<br />

of strangely curtailed police activity?)<br />

We know there was enough evidence<br />

for Savile to be quizzed both by police<br />

and the BBC. As far back as 1980, even<br />

I heard the rumours while a student, from<br />

a fl atmate whose father worked in TV in<br />

Leeds. Savile was a well-known pervert<br />

but the police didn’t have enough to<br />

charge him, he told me. 32 years on and<br />

they can only nail him now he’s dead and<br />

can’t lie his way out of another inquiry.<br />

Now we know we weren’t wrong to<br />

fi nd his groping of young people on Jim’ll<br />

Fix It disturbing. So why didn’t the producers?<br />

How could someone who made<br />

so many people feel, at the very least,<br />

uncomfortable, manage to maintain a<br />

position as national treasure for so long?<br />

Looking back at the footage, it’s clear<br />

the blatant sexism wouldn’t pass today<br />

but it now seems it was more than just<br />

eccentricity or a lack of political correctness<br />

which was tolerated at the BBC.<br />

At least on this occasion we can’t say<br />

that illusions have been shattered, as<br />

with John Simpson’s claim about Derek<br />

McCulloch, the legendary children’s<br />

radio presenter. Unless we are talking<br />

about the illusion the BBC deliberately<br />

created, of course.<br />

Admittedly, proof of such behaviour is<br />

not easy to come by. Newsrooms are full<br />

of rumours about well-known people and<br />

their shenanigans, none of it printable.<br />

That’s the stuff you haven’t heard<br />

about at the Leveson Inquiry. All the stories<br />

journalists haven’t printed because<br />

they don’t know for sure they are true.<br />

I have long found it ironic that while<br />

John McLellan, former editor of <strong>The</strong> Scotsman,<br />

now communications director for <strong>The</strong> Scottish<br />

Conservative Party, comments on the Panorama<br />

investigation into the BBC’s decision to can its<br />

own investigation into Jimmy Savile’s conduct.<br />

the most common accusation levelled at<br />

journalists is that they make everything<br />

up, the biggest inquiry into press standards<br />

has been over material obtained to<br />

ensure stories were totally reliable.<br />

So for all the bleatings about an unrestrained<br />

press from the likes of Charlotte<br />

Church and Hugh Grant, perhaps we<br />

should thank Jimmy Savile for reminding<br />

the public there is an awful lot going on<br />

they should know is going on, but the law<br />

makes it virtually impossible to reveal.<br />

We have gone from “How did they fi nd<br />

that out?” to “Why didn’t they tell us?”<br />

Journalists can’t win.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BBC is now engulfed by a different<br />

problem. Newsnight knew about Savile; it<br />

had the witnesses but it didn’t broadcast.<br />

Panorama aimed to reveal why, in what<br />

must go down as one of the most bizarre<br />

episodes in modern British journalism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> comparison in newspaper terms<br />

would be an investigation published in<br />

the feature pages about why the news<br />

department hadn’t revealed the paper’s<br />

recently deceased star writer was a paedophile.<br />

And that the order not to publish<br />

came from the managing director.<br />

It was certainly a gripping show, if for<br />

no other reason than watching one part<br />

of such a familiar organisation ripping the<br />

rest of it apart. I had to keep reminding<br />

myself I was still watching the BBC, so<br />

devastating were its criticisms.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is now little we don’t know about<br />

Savile’s depravity; vomit-inducing, as<br />

Paul Gambaccini described it. But to see<br />

reliable faces like Nationwide’s Bob Langley<br />

reveal he witnessed him leaving his<br />

caravan with underage girls showed just<br />

how far we have come from the age of<br />

TV innocence which allowed people like<br />

Savile to get away with what they did.<br />

Listening to victim Karin Ward’s moving<br />

testimony with the knowledge Newsnight<br />

had corroboration from other witnesses<br />

makes it all the more diffi cult to understand<br />

why the investigation was halted.<br />

And it was astonishing to hear reporter<br />

Liz MacKean accuse the Corporation of<br />

misleading the public about the reason.<br />

That being said, the Panorama team<br />

failed to stand up the central allegation:<br />

that the probe was stopped because of<br />

pressure from senior programmers so a<br />

Christmas tribute could go ahead. It is<br />

clearly more than just an embarrassment<br />

that the beatifi cation fronted by Shane<br />

Ritchie was broadcast by one bit of the<br />

BBC when another possessed solid evidence<br />

of Savile’s sordid past.<br />

It may yet emerge that such pressure,<br />

so far denied, was in fact applied but the<br />

show could not fi rmly establish the link<br />

beyond the allegations of the journalists<br />

whose work was spiked. For now, the<br />

strongest accusation which can be laid<br />

is despite having an on-camera witness,<br />

corroboration, a police investigation and<br />

a subject who could not sue, the programme<br />

editor Peter Rippon simply did<br />

not have the bottle to broadcast.<br />

And for a journalist, maybe facing a<br />

charge like that is as bad as it gets.<br />

EVENTS<br />

<strong>The</strong> new <strong>Drum</strong> Design Awards<br />

purely recognises great design<br />

work being produced by agencies<br />

across the whole of the UK. Focusing<br />

only on design, categories<br />

will cover graphic, digital and<br />

environmental design, with the<br />

awards being judged by a panel<br />

of designers who have extensive<br />

industry experience.<br />

Register and entert at thedrumdesignawards.com.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re’s only a few weeks left for<br />

you to get your tickets to this<br />

year’s MiAwards. Join us on 15<br />

November at the Mercure Piccadilly<br />

in Manchester where the<br />

winners will be revealed. For more<br />

information and to book tickets<br />

visit miawards.me.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> Marketing Awards<br />

2013 will be launching very soon.<br />

To get your hands on one of<br />

the industry’s most sought after<br />

accolades – you have to enter!<br />

Register your details online at<br />

thedrummarketingawards.com/<br />

register to be kept up-to-date<br />

with entry deadlines and other<br />

news.<br />

Tickets for the Cream Midlands<br />

Awards, sponsored by Pitch,<br />

are available to buy online<br />

at midlands.creamawards.<br />

co.uk/book. <strong>The</strong> winners will<br />

be revealed at the Jam House,<br />

Birmingham on Wednesday 7<br />

November.


oooh!<br />

intermarketing.co.uk/oooh


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com AGENDA11<br />

digital<br />

<strong>The</strong> day 60 digital agencies visited 60 high schools<br />

D-Day took place on 10 October and<br />

saw 60 digital agencies paired with<br />

schools across the UK to complete<br />

challenges and address the digital<br />

skills gap. As a media partner of the<br />

BIMA initiative, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> ran a live<br />

blog of the day to highlight the educational<br />

value of the initiative.<br />

At present, 1.5 million people are employed<br />

in creative industries or in creative<br />

roles in other industries, accounting for 5.1<br />

per cent of UK employment. Employment<br />

in digital has also grown at twice the rate<br />

of the whole economy, yet digital skills are<br />

often overlooked in the classroom.<br />

As part of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s coverage of<br />

the initiative, reporter Gillian West joined<br />

Govan High School and its partner<br />

agency, Spider Online, to experience<br />

BIMA D-Day first hand. In a presentation<br />

to the class, John Campbell, MD<br />

of Spider Online, discussed the value<br />

of digital as a career “you can fly” in<br />

very early on, adding: “Digital is making<br />

money right now, and this is the worst<br />

recession since the 20s.”<br />

After Campbell had spoken, the crux<br />

of the day got underway as the pupils<br />

began work on their BIMA D-Day challenge.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were six challenges in total<br />

– design a mobile app, an innovative digital<br />

solution, a social media campaign,<br />

web coding, or multimedia content.<br />

Pupils from Govan High chose the social<br />

media challenge which saw them devise<br />

<strong>The</strong> British Interactive Media Association (BIMA) recently brought together 60<br />

digital agencies from across the UK with over 1,800 school pupils. <strong>The</strong> D-Day<br />

challenge looked to address the digital skills gap in the UK, with the initiative<br />

pairing schools with local agencies to educate students about digital careers<br />

through hands on advice.<br />

a social media campaign for a new café.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s live blog coverage of the day<br />

asked pupils and agencies to join us by<br />

tweeting using the hashtag #BIMADDay,<br />

and roles were reversed as the pupils at<br />

Govan High taught computing teacher Mr<br />

Mullen how to tweet.<br />

It seemed Mr Mullen wasn’t the only<br />

one learning new digital skills, as one<br />

of the recurring themes of the day was<br />

the level of knowledge and insight of the<br />

school pupils involved. Abi Ellis from LBi<br />

told us one of the pupils at its partner<br />

school, Woodside High, had “explained<br />

the virtues of passbook iOS6 to me in<br />

great detail. [He’s the] best coder in the<br />

school, so they tell me. Seems like I’m<br />

learning a thing or two today.”<br />

Phil Heywood of Redweb, partnered<br />

with Avonbourne College, commented:<br />

“My big revelation for #BIMADDay was<br />

going to be user centred design. Turns<br />

out the students at #AvonbourneCollege<br />

already knew! #smartkids”<br />

Kristal Ireland, Enjoy Digital’s strategy<br />

director, was also impressed by the pupils<br />

of her partner school, David Young Com-<br />

munity Academy. In her D-Day reaction<br />

piece for <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> she wrote: “What<br />

was most impressive was the level of<br />

digital skillz (I’ve been told z is the cool<br />

thing now) that some of the pupils had.<br />

One 16-year-old in our group had a great<br />

understanding of HTML, CSS and could<br />

use Photoshop. He came up with a very<br />

innovative iPhone app, but what was the<br />

most impressive was how excited he<br />

was about how to market the app and<br />

importantly monetise it. A great commercial<br />

head for someone of his age!”<br />

Pupils across the country were also<br />

very familiar with the use of social media<br />

and had expectations about how companies<br />

should handle customer service<br />

queries through these channels. Ireland<br />

commented on this familiarity in her analysis<br />

of the day, explaining that one of the<br />

revelations of the day was the discovery<br />

of pupils’ digital knowledge: “A standout<br />

quote of the day came from one of<br />

the Multimedia teachers, who said, ‘the<br />

students don’t understand the concept<br />

of “digital”; it’s just how their lives have<br />

always been’.”<br />

When <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> spoke to teachers<br />

at Govan High, they echoed this, saying<br />

there is a real passion for digital amongst<br />

their pupils, but their knowledge of social<br />

media doesn’t come from the school.<br />

“It’s in their lives, they use it every day.<br />

We can’t get access to the likes of Twitter<br />

in class but they all have it on their<br />

phones, that’s how they know what to<br />

do,” explained business management<br />

teacher, Sonja Kerr.<br />

Codegent co-founder David Hart<br />

made a similar comment on <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong><br />

live blog: “Scary and heartening that digital<br />

comes so naturally to teenagers who<br />

have grown up with it.””<br />

With digital growing on an almost daily<br />

basis, it’s clear to see more initiatives like<br />

this are needed to get kids into a thriving<br />

industry, something mentioned by John<br />

Campbell in his presentation to Govan<br />

High: “Forget colleges and uni, it’s school<br />

level you need to start at.”<br />

Echoing this was LBi’s Ellis, who said:<br />

“<strong>The</strong>se are coders, planners, designers,<br />

imagineers, makers, movers and shakers<br />

of the future.”


20 200<br />

20% 15% 25% 18%<br />

2 %<br />

0%


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

Pelliet to head up<br />

Sony European<br />

marketing<br />

Following news that<br />

Sony is to cut 1000 jobs<br />

in its Europe division,<br />

the brand has appointed<br />

a new group of marketers<br />

led by Gildas Pelliet as European<br />

head of marketing.<br />

Pelliet, formerly the Sony UK and Ireland<br />

MD, will be based in the Weybridge<br />

office and will be supported by nine<br />

platform and product marketing heads.<br />

It has also been revealed Shaun Dorrington<br />

will be the head of marketing in<br />

the UK while Matt Coombe has remained<br />

as head of brand and consumer activity.<br />

G2 appoints<br />

Wolfram as C<strong>TO</strong><br />

G2 has announced the<br />

Frank Wolfram as chief<br />

technology officer for its<br />

EMEA region, beginning<br />

in January 2013.<br />

For the past 12 years Frank has<br />

been C<strong>TO</strong> at SYZYGY Group, a fullservice<br />

digital agency, and previously<br />

worked as an independent software<br />

consultant.<br />

Yahoo! hires<br />

Google exec<br />

Yahoo! CEO Marissa<br />

Mayer, on her first day<br />

back from maternity<br />

leave, announced the<br />

hiring of senior Google<br />

advertising exec Henrique de Castro<br />

as Yahoo!’s COO.<br />

De Castro will initially work from the<br />

Yahoo! London office because he does<br />

not have a US work visa. <strong>The</strong> company<br />

said he will transfer to California as soon<br />

as he can obtain one.<br />

Gyro London appoints<br />

Shackle as executive CD<br />

Mike Shackle has been appointed<br />

as executive creative director<br />

of gyro London, replacing Ian<br />

Kerrigan who leaves next month.<br />

Shackle, the former creative director<br />

of TBWA\Singapore and Y&R/Enfatico<br />

Beijing, will aim to bolster the agency’s<br />

creative offering, working across all of<br />

the London office’s accounts, including<br />

Virgin Atlantic, FedEx, HP, L’Oreal,<br />

Google+, Audi, American Express and<br />

Shell.<br />

Nick Jefferson, managing director of<br />

gyro London, commented that Shackle<br />

is “a true creative leader”.<br />

He went on to say: “As a Brit who<br />

has lived and worked in Asia, North<br />

America and Europe, he brings a truly<br />

international perspective to our global<br />

network. With Mike, gyro London will<br />

reach its next level in its unstoppable<br />

pursuit of creative innovation and<br />

thought leadership for our clients.”<br />

Shackle meanwhile said of his appointment:<br />

“In this day and age, it’s<br />

even more important than ever to create<br />

work that ignites real human emotions.<br />

After working in Asia and the<br />

States, it’s exciting to come home to<br />

join an agency that has that belief ingrained<br />

into its DNA.”<br />

Grey lands Saatchi &<br />

Saatchi design director<br />

Grey London has announced the<br />

appointment of Steve Davies to head<br />

up its design department.<br />

Davies, previously design director at<br />

Saatchi & Saatchi, will oversee design<br />

output across all platforms in his new<br />

role.<br />

He said: “I’m very proud of what I’ve<br />

achieved at Saatchi & Saatchi in regard<br />

to building a great design department,<br />

but Grey is clearly an agency on the<br />

up and this was an easy decision to<br />

make. <strong>The</strong>y’ve got a fantastic roster of<br />

clients – clients you wouldn’t have expected<br />

them to have five years ago –<br />

and are already producing some really<br />

high-quality stuff. I’m looking forward to<br />

building up the department and taking<br />

that even further.”<br />

starts with the right pitch.<br />

Creative / Account Handling / PR recruitment<br />

pitchconsultants.co.uk / info@pitchconsultants.co.uk / 0121 270 4080<br />

PEOPLE NEws13<br />

Every great relationship<br />

As well as being responsible for the<br />

development and direction of Grey London’s<br />

design department, Davies will<br />

report to executive creative director Nils<br />

Leonard.<br />

Leonard said: “Grey London is about<br />

world class talent, and Steve is up there.<br />

He shares our vision to create not just<br />

ads, but popular culture and he’ll take<br />

our aesthetic thinking to the next level.”<br />

People on<br />

the move...<br />

Leo Burnett USA<br />

has appointed Mick<br />

McCabe as chief<br />

strategy officer,<br />

where he will oversee<br />

research, analytics, shopper<br />

marketing and brand strategy.<br />

ASOS has appointed former<br />

Amazon UK boss Brian McBride<br />

as chairman, while M&S executive<br />

director of general merchandise<br />

Kate Bostock joins as executive<br />

director.<br />

Woolley Pau Gyro has brought<br />

in Andy Jones, previously creative<br />

director at Ogilvy Healthworld,<br />

as creative director.<br />

Carat has<br />

announced Anne<br />

McCreary as digital<br />

strategy director,<br />

joining from her role<br />

as lead digital strategist at Skive.<br />

Guardian News & Media has<br />

announced the appointment of<br />

Wolfgang Blau as digital strategy<br />

director, beginning next April.<br />

Haygarth has<br />

appointed Benoit<br />

Cacheux as head<br />

of digital having left<br />

Omnicom agency<br />

Organic where he headed up<br />

its London office.<br />

<strong>The</strong> RSPCA has announced<br />

the appointment of John<br />

Grounds as its new director<br />

of marketing and campaigns.<br />

Adobe has<br />

appointed Jeremy<br />

Waite, formerly<br />

head of social<br />

strategy at TBG<br />

Digital, to handle its social<br />

strategy for EMEA.


NIELS SHOE MEULMAN<br />

JOINS CREATIVE SOCIAL<br />

GLOBAL INSPIRATION DAY<br />

NOV 9TH<br />

OLD ST.<br />

LONDON<br />

elle@creativesocial.com<br />

creativesocialgid.eventbrite.com<br />

Photography by Adele Renault


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

Armed with new digital technologies,<br />

out of home advertising has become a<br />

linchpin for successful media executions,<br />

connecting key components of an<br />

integrated strategy.<br />

Red Bull took its trend for content producing to the<br />

extreme in an out of home advertising stunt that was<br />

out of this world with Felix Baumgartner’s leap from<br />

the skies.<br />

Baumgartner’s record-breaking skydive didn’t just<br />

push at the boundaries of human possibility but was<br />

also an example of marketing without limits. Red Bull<br />

had funded and conceived a stunt that captured the<br />

world’s imagination, with the live stream of the jump<br />

viewed by millions globally.<br />

As well as sharing of such high-profi le out of home<br />

stunts, social media and mobile enable advertising to<br />

transcend the immediate space – from billboards to<br />

subway posters – with out of home communications<br />

now being consumed inside the home as well as on<br />

the go. <strong>The</strong> sharing of innovative ads or memorable<br />

stunts means even just one billboard can be<br />

consumed by millions.<br />

One such example, nominated in the experiential/<br />

ambient and special build categories at the inaugural<br />

Creative Out of Home Awards, is the live bacteria<br />

billboard designed to promote Warner Bros fi lm<br />

Contagion. Created by CURB Media, and developed<br />

by microbiologists to ensure the stunt would work,<br />

the name of the movie gradually appeared as it grew<br />

from live bacteria, fungi and mould.<br />

Despite only appearing on two boards in a disused<br />

shop front in Toronto, the ad went fi guratively (as well<br />

as literally) viral thanks to YouTube and social media,<br />

and was consumed by millions worldwide.<br />

Paddy Power was certainly counting on the power<br />

of word of mouth with its tongue-in-cheek out of<br />

home antics over the course of the summer. If its<br />

defi ant billboard ad poking fun of strict Olympics<br />

advertising guidelines didn’t get consumers talking,<br />

then the stunt involving footballer Nicklas Bendtner<br />

fl ashing boxers emblazoned with the Paddy Power<br />

logo certainly did. <strong>The</strong> brand also came under fi re for<br />

its controversial customising of the Uffi ngton White<br />

Horse.<br />

Traditionalists may argue that Paddy Power’s<br />

antics don’t fall into the category of out of home, but<br />

its approach of seeding social conversation around<br />

its cheeky stunts is just one of the new faces of out<br />

of home in 2012 – and this approach challenges<br />

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Paddy Power<br />

outdoor stunts<br />

this year include a<br />

challenge to Olympic<br />

advertising rules,<br />

Nicklas Bendtner’s<br />

lucky pants and the<br />

customisation of the<br />

Uffi ngton White Horse


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the DRum OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

the boundaries of the sector, opening it up to new<br />

possibilities.<br />

Another example which emerged from the Creative<br />

Out of Home Awards judging process was the<br />

Forza Motorsport out of home campaign for Xbox<br />

by UM London. Integrating outdoor posters with<br />

an experiential build in Westfield shopping centre,<br />

the campaign typifies the innovation to be found<br />

in out of home, combining high impact creative<br />

with a memorable experiential campaign to seed<br />

conversation. <strong>The</strong> build provided an interactive<br />

element, asking consumers to choose the various<br />

elements that would make up the real life build of the<br />

car, as they would within the game.<br />

So no longer is out of home about static posters<br />

visible only to passers-by. <strong>The</strong> medium is becoming<br />

far more interactive, fuelled by advances in digital<br />

technology and the meteoric rise of social media.<br />

Advertisers who seek to integrate these elements into<br />

campaigns will reap the rewards.<br />

<strong>The</strong> inaugural Creative Out of Home<br />

Awards has been organised by <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> in<br />

association with Clear Channel to recognise<br />

and reward the growth in innovation in the<br />

out of home sector, with categories ranging<br />

from experiential/ambient to use of live<br />

updates.<br />

Judging took place on 10 October at<br />

Clear Channel's offices, and the panel was<br />

chaired by John Jessup, creative director,<br />

Leo Burnett.<br />

<strong>The</strong> awards ceremony will take place<br />

on 22 November at the Emirates Stadium,<br />

London.<br />

<strong>The</strong> full list of nominations can be viewed<br />

at creativeoutofhomeawards.com.<br />

out of home17<br />

Viral marketing takes on a whole new meaning with this billboard created by CuRB media for Warner Bros film<br />

Contagion, and nominated at the Creative out of home Awards.<br />

um London’s out of home and experiential forza motorsport<br />

campaign for Xbox, which has been nominated in<br />

categories including innovation at the Creative out of<br />

home Awards.


18girl guides www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 THe druM<br />

upwardly<br />

mobile<br />

in our latest installation in a series focusing on influential<br />

women in digital, melina Jacovou speaks to Somo’s Jocelyn bull.<br />

Earlier this year Somo was named ‘One to<br />

Watch’ in both <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s UK Digital 100<br />

and New Media Age’s poll of the top 100<br />

interactive agencies, as well as being lauded<br />

as the fastest growing mobile company in<br />

Europe in the Media Momentum Awards.<br />

Established in 2009, the mobile specialist has already<br />

expanded its operations from London to the US and Asia,<br />

and works with massive clients – Audi, Paddy Power,<br />

Disney and <strong>The</strong> Times, to name just a few. Based on<br />

headcount, it is unequivocally the largest independent<br />

full-service mobile marketing agency around.<br />

<strong>The</strong> person responsible for the safekeeping of such<br />

a valuable brand is Somo’s marketing director Jocelyn<br />

Bull. Such a brief might intimidate many, but when we<br />

meet she is relaxed and full of enthusiasm for her task.<br />

Perhaps part of the reason for her bright outlook is<br />

that she’s amongst friends at Somo – some of whom<br />

she’s known for more than eight years of her career. For<br />

Jocelyn, it’s the second time she’s worked alongside<br />

Nick Hynes, Somo’s co-founder and CEO.<br />

“Nick is from <strong>The</strong> Search Works [where Jocelyn<br />

worked between 2005 and 2008] and there’s a big ex-<br />

Search Works contingent here.<br />

“Working at <strong>The</strong> Search Works taught me a lot about<br />

the kind of business and the kind of people I want to<br />

work for. I knew that any business Nick was part of<br />

would have the same qualities and that I would leap at<br />

the chance to work with him again.”<br />

Where <strong>The</strong> Search Works’ mission was to build<br />

Europe’s largest paid search marketing agency, Somo<br />

is much broader in scope. As a full service agency, its<br />

team covers mobile strategy, innovation, advertising<br />

campaigns and creative design and production from<br />

conception to delivery.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> challenge of mobile, and the beauty of it, is that<br />

it changes phenomenally quickly. From 2005 to 2007,<br />

search was changing a lot. But that’s nothing compared<br />

to mobile right now.<br />

“When I joined, I was quite guilty of thinking ‘mobile<br />

is going to be just like digital, isn’t it? Same stuff on a<br />

smaller screen.’ I quickly realised how wrong I was.”<br />

Mobile is growing incredibly quickly and represents<br />

the current zeitgeist of digital, and marketing in general.<br />

Somo appears, from the outside at least, perfectly<br />

placed to ride that wave into a position of market<br />

dominance. Does Jocelyn agree?<br />

“We adopt a ‘mobile-first’ philosophy. When your<br />

starting point is a bit of kit which sits in someone’s hand<br />

24 hours a day and that can play a part in almost every<br />

interaction with a company or a brand all through the<br />

life-cycle, that’s extremely powerful.<br />

“I think we’ll see more of a shift of clients who will start<br />

to think in that way – mobile first. And yes, that’s going<br />

to be great for Somo.”<br />

Not that it will be an uncontested fight: “<strong>The</strong>re are lots<br />

of people doing mobile, so it’s very competitive in that<br />

sense. You can barely find a digital agency these days<br />

that doesn’t also say that it’s doing mobile as well.”<br />

When Jocelyn talks about mobile, it’s apparent how<br />

much belief she has in the future of the channel. This<br />

confidence is widespread in the industry, and with good<br />

reason – mobile advertising and technology is poised<br />

to dominate the landscape as mobile internet adoption<br />

reaches saturation point.<br />

<strong>The</strong> potential of mobile lies in the fact that it remains<br />

largely untapped as a brand opportunity. Jocelyn<br />

sees the inherent linking ability of mobile as crucial for<br />

reaching audiences in new ways.<br />

“When you look at the stats around media spend by<br />

advertisers versus consumption, 10 per cent of users’<br />

time is spent on mobile but only around one per cent of<br />

ad budget is spent on the channel.”<br />

“From a consumer perspective, no one sits there and<br />

really dissects the media they’re consuming – they don’t<br />

see the dividing lines. What we try to do is create better<br />

experiences joining channels together. So, social media<br />

and mobile go perfectly together, for example. And<br />

the things we can do to enhance print media through<br />

mobile really make sense.”<br />

How much are clients willing to adopt that ‘mobile<br />

first’ perspective that Somo advocates?<br />

“Of course it varies a lot,” says Jocelyn. “Many clients<br />

will start talking about mobile in a niche sense – getting<br />

more app downloads, or improving their mobile site.<br />

But when they start to consider the broader changes in<br />

behaviour that mobile is creating, they start to get very<br />

excited about the broader opportunities.”<br />

In a discipline regarded as ‘of the future’, how much<br />

does Somo have to be focused on the long-term<br />

evolution of mobile?<br />

“We’re always looking ahead, but frankly,” – she says<br />

with a laugh – “you can’t see very far into the future<br />

“FroM a consuMer perspecTive, no one siTs THere<br />

and really dissecTs THe Media THey’re consuMing –<br />

THey don’T see THe dividing lines.”<br />

of mobile. When clients ask for three or five year plans<br />

it’s just not possible. If you can even look a year ahead<br />

you’re doing well.<br />

“We’ve got a dedicated innovation team whose<br />

job it is to know what’s coming up and how it can be<br />

harnessed for clients. Right now they’re looking at<br />

things like audio triggers in TV advertising and how they<br />

can be linked up with the mobile experience, or the next<br />

generation of augmented reality.”<br />

At 33, Jocelyn has already achieved a lot in her<br />

career; sitting pretty in a senior marketing position at<br />

an agency that’s positioned to take advantage of the<br />

mobile revolution. Not that she’s taking it for granted:<br />

“Particularly with the state of the economy in the<br />

last few years, it’s been a pleasure and a privilege to<br />

be a part of an industry that is not only doing well, but<br />

is booming.”


THe druM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

girl guides19


20when the lights went out www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 the DRuM<br />

Horror Story<br />

from AdlAnd<br />

Adman Bil Bungay has co-produced a horror movie, written<br />

and directed by his former creative partner Pat Holden, and<br />

based on the ‘true’ story of the haunting of Holden’s aunt<br />

Jean’s Pontefract council house in the 70s. So, as Halloween<br />

approaches, we catch up with Bungay to find out what<br />

happens when ad men turn their hands to the movies.<br />

How did you find time to make ‘When <strong>The</strong> Lights<br />

Went Out’ when you have a busy day job?<br />

I have had to do a little juggling at times, and my days are<br />

busier as a result of wearing two hats, but the producer’s<br />

role is very much on and off. Loads of phone calls, especially<br />

to the US after hours (my co-producer Deepak Nayar, of<br />

Bend It Like Beckham fame, lives in Hollywood) and a few<br />

trips to a film set/edit suite/sound mix. Lots of little things<br />

to take care of, so finding the balance hasn’t been quite<br />

as tough as you’d think. A bit of stamina has helped at<br />

times though. Also, a producer’s role doesn’t end with the<br />

production. It very much carries on to theatrical release,<br />

DVD release and I suspect well beyond that. Ironically,<br />

promoting the movie has been the toughest bit!<br />

So this is a Hollywood production?<br />

I suppose it is in part. <strong>The</strong> financing is local and we filmed<br />

in Huddersfield with a local crew, so it is a British movie in<br />

reality, but the Hollywood connection is cool I suppose. One<br />

thing’s for sure, there’s no way I could have made it without<br />

Deepak. He is a class act. A proper producer! <strong>The</strong>re’s<br />

nothing that man doesn’t know about film-making and I<br />

had the privilege of being his annoying student intern.<br />

Describe movie making.<br />

Creativity’s extreme sport. Unless you include Stromberg’s<br />

‘bullet art’. I honestly don’t think it gets much tougher than<br />

making a movie. And I started an agency, remember! It<br />

is fraught with extremes. Massive ups and catastrophic<br />

downs. Like a passing train of consecutive carriages of hot<br />

girls and cold vomit. You get the finance approved – UP. You<br />

discover it isn’t nearly enough to do what you need to do<br />

– DOWN. You miraculously shoot 100 pages in six weeks<br />

– UP DOWN UP DOWN UP DOWN UP DOWN DOWN<br />

DOWN, REALLY DOWN, SOMEONE KILL ME… UP. <strong>The</strong>n<br />

you see the first edit and it sucks – CRASH BURN. BUT!<br />

You somehow reshoot the ending and by some miracle<br />

finish the movie and, my god, it works! – BIG UP!! But then<br />

you can’t cut a decent distribution deal – DOWN, DEAD.<br />

BUT suddenly you nail a theatrical release – UP!!! And you<br />

get a release date and a premiere! – UPDIDDLYUP. <strong>The</strong>n<br />

you see the poster they want to run…<br />

But didn’t you design the poster? We had it in a<br />

previous issue of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>?<br />

Yes, Dan Forde and I designed it. Rankin shot it. It’s dark<br />

and awesome. But here’s the funny thing, in this process<br />

I was suddenly the client! It’s the distribution company<br />

that has the responsibility of promoting the movie, not<br />

me. So they decide the release date, the marketing<br />

plan, the poster… it was tough letting go, I can tell you.<br />

But really interesting being put in the client’s shoes for a<br />

change; being a client is a lot tougher than you’d think.<br />

So what have you learnt about being a client?<br />

Loads. But the biggest lesson is the client’s seat is a<br />

very scary seat indeed. Fundamentally, they employ the<br />

services of a marketing company that are specialists<br />

in their particular field of creative selling and more<br />

often than not, the client knows nothing of creativity’s<br />

mysterious ways; which actually explains why so many<br />

clients are bothersome to their agencies – because often<br />

the only tools they have to defend themselves against<br />

our dark art is data. That’s why clients are obsessed with<br />

research. It appears to numerically assess the efficacy of<br />

an idea, which in turn seems to justify the concept.<br />

Of course the reality is that it is impossible to numerically<br />

assess a creative concept (this one equals 63?) so it’s<br />

best to leave that crutch at home. That said, there I am<br />

in the client’s seat for a change, and there I was quietly<br />

wishing I had the time to play the research card in order to<br />

convince the ‘agency’ to change tact dammit…<br />

How does movie making compare to making ads?<br />

<strong>The</strong> production processes are much the same for sure. In fact,<br />

I have a deep admiration for TV producers that have to set up<br />

new productions constantly, because at least for filmmakers<br />

they only have to set up a production once, maybe twice<br />

a year. Director, casting, locations, costume, studio hire, set<br />

builds, storyboards, editor, post deals, etc, over and over<br />

again. It is more or less exactly the same process that filmmakers<br />

follow, just for a few days instead of weeks.<br />

But though budgets are diminishing, the price per second<br />

for commercials is still much higher than movies for sure.<br />

And there are a few good reasons for that, such as – the<br />

performers tend to charge an appearance fee as opposed to<br />

an hourly rate, that looks reasonable over a 6-8 week shoot<br />

whereas on a commercial it’s ‘ouch’. You can cut a much<br />

better rate over 6-8 weeks with the crew too, but the main<br />

reason for the difference is (as much as I love them) clients<br />

again! On my film shoot Pat Holden the director took the<br />

proverbial bull by the horns (and we are talking the biggest,<br />

baddest muvver of a bovine that God had the temerity<br />

to create) and got on with it. No play back, no comment,<br />

nothing – I was a spectator and a good thing too.<br />

Whereas on commercial shoots – clients, and agency<br />

of course, are allowed a monitor and a say; that more or<br />

less means approvals of every shot (a bit like approving the<br />

carpet first, then the wallpaper, then the sofa with no eye on<br />

the finished effect) by people that are unlikely to know about<br />

the intricacies of storytelling in 30 seconds – and that takes<br />

time. Loads of time. Three takes max on a film shoot, on a<br />

commercials shoot the director’s patience is the limit…<br />

What advice would you give ad folk who have the ideas,<br />

but are struggling to produce decent commercials?<br />

Make sure that the client fully understands the idea, choose<br />

a brilliant storyteller (director), cast actors and NOT models<br />

(performance first, appearance second always), rehearse


the DRuM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

Clockwise from top: Pat holden and Bil Bungay (picture<br />

by Chris Bretz), the Rankin shot film poster, Bungay takes<br />

delivery of the house keys, and number 30 east Drive<br />

when the lights went out21


22when the lights went out www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 the DRuM<br />

then go shoot without the client or with a very brave and<br />

trusting one! And if you are shooting dialogue, block it out<br />

if possible; meaning shoot a well-rehearsed story from<br />

several angles and not shot after shot. You will get a much<br />

more fluid story told convincingly this way. <strong>The</strong> other way,<br />

including 300 approvals will give you a commercial, which<br />

the consumer certainly doesn’t want to see.<br />

What else have you learned from the experience?<br />

You have to be madder than a pervert with a meat<br />

grinder fixation to want to make a movie. It’s difficult,<br />

it’s expensive, it’s stressful, it’s a huge gamble. But like<br />

advertising at it’s best, it can be great fun. I am proud<br />

to have made a movie and feel like the experience<br />

has made me grow as a creative. <strong>The</strong> last time I was<br />

exposed to a learning curve this vertical was when I<br />

started Beattie McGuinness Bungay back in 2005.<br />

What advice do you have for anyone wanting to<br />

follow suit?<br />

Don’t do it! Save your money, your sanity, your marriage<br />

etc! But where’s the fun in that? I am a total believer in<br />

taking risks in life. Ironically, I am never more comfortable<br />

than when I feel like I am sticking my neck out, when I<br />

cannot be sure of the outcome – BUT can have some<br />

influence over it.<br />

I’ve never thought of this before, but perhaps I am not so<br />

different to the adrenaline junkies who throw themselves off<br />

buildings. I love the rush you get from taking a leap into the<br />

unknown. Cicero, an incredible Roman philosopher, lawyer<br />

and statesman that rose to the top of the Roman senate,<br />

had a simple philosophy: ‘You don’t know the solution to<br />

a problem until you create the problem’, this is definitely a<br />

philosophy that I identify with. Have the courage to declare<br />

your intention, then you have no choice but to work it out,<br />

and more often than not – you will.<br />

<strong>The</strong> movie is based on true events that happened<br />

in a house in Pontefract, West Yorkshire right?<br />

Yup. I’d say 70 per cent (for the clients reading) is based on<br />

fact and the rest embellishment. More or less all the events<br />

that we portray happened in some form, but we added<br />

a fairly spectacular ending because poltergeists just stop<br />

doing stuff, which is a little underwhelming.<br />

Rumour has it you bought the house?<br />

Erm, yes. It was for sale, so I bought it.<br />

For heavens sake, why?!<br />

I refer you to Cicero! <strong>The</strong>re is a load of stuff I had no idea<br />

would happen now happening in and around the house,<br />

all with a view to promoting the movie, so as it stands, it<br />

was an excellent purchase. But I have also put it back<br />

on the market – for 2.5 million quid! Because if the price<br />

doesn’t scare you, maybe the poltergeist won’t either! It is<br />

also the most expensive ex council house in the UK.<br />

Have you stayed there?<br />

God no! <strong>The</strong>re’s a kicking, screaming nut job of a<br />

poltergeist in there, and yes, he (it) is still there – and by<br />

all accounts is not best pleased with me for spoiling its<br />

tranquility. On the bright side, this landlord isn’t charging<br />

his polty tenant any rent, so it should be grateful.<br />

It’s still there?<br />

Yes. It is. <strong>The</strong> girl that plays Sally in the movie visited the<br />

house with a friend recently and swears the lamp swung<br />

on its own, the neighbour (a medium) was in there a<br />

month back and she was possessed by the thing for a few<br />

minutes. <strong>The</strong>re’s bumps, scrapes, shadows… eeek.<br />

Do you believe in ghosts?<br />

If the question is ‘do I believe in an unexplained phenomena<br />

that results in the physical manifestations of formerly<br />

living things’ the answer is a firm yes! Not least as I have<br />

physically experienced, let’s call them ‘ghosts’ twice, and<br />

what I saw/heard is not in debate, with a third encounter in<br />

the balance. But what’s really incredible is that you would<br />

not believe how many people have come up to me whilst<br />

I’ve been working on the movie and volunteered their<br />

ghostly encounters. Easily as many as eight out of 10 folk<br />

have had some kind of paranormal experience, some quite<br />

extraordinary events experienced by very sane, grounded<br />

folk. People you work with right now.<br />

But what ‘ghosts’ are, is a different debate altogether.<br />

What I find interesting is that you quickly get labelled a kook<br />

for an admission like mine, but if you talk about parallel<br />

universes, string theory, or there being eleven different<br />

dimensions – you get labeled a kook too! And they are well<br />

founded, incredibly advanced scientific theories!<br />

My suspicion is that there is a perfectly sound, as yet<br />

undiscovered scientific reason for ‘ghosts’, and when<br />

solved is likely to be the most profound scientific discovery<br />

of our time. <strong>The</strong> kooks need to unite to figure it out in my<br />

opinion! Happy to host the discussion at my house!<br />

So the poltergeist in your house?<br />

I’d love to know what it is. Or indeed where it is from.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house is supposedly built on a ley line (I’ll get me<br />

coat…) and has underground water. It is on the land of<br />

a former monastery, there is plenty of supposition that<br />

religion buildings, including most of the ancient churches<br />

we use today, were built on ground that has a particular<br />

energy, so it could be that the house has a peculiar set of<br />

circumstances that lend themselves to the extraordinary<br />

phenomena that has without a doubt, occurred there.<br />

But for the time being, let me trade off the fact that it’s the<br />

things we don’t understand that scare us the most!<br />

Nice segue back to the When <strong>The</strong> Lights Went Out.<br />

When can we see it?<br />

It’s out at Halloween, midnight viewings nationally for a<br />

couple of weeks with the prospect of us rolling it out to<br />

more cinemas before Christmas, and it’s on Blue Ray/<br />

DVD early next year. Go and see it! Oh, and note that it’s<br />

the Rankin poster that is leading the way! Thanks to a<br />

little research. ;-) UP!<br />

So what next?<br />

Well, we’ll see. I am getting loads of screenplays sent<br />

to me which is cool, but a big responsibility as people<br />

put an awful lot of effort into a screenplay, so it troubles<br />

me knowing that in reality one in ten is a genuine good<br />

read and fewer will ever get made – but you never know,<br />

something may come of them.<br />

<strong>The</strong> other thing that I am often banging on about<br />

is the advertising industry being firmly part of the<br />

entertainment industry now, based on the very simple<br />

truth that the more entertaining your ads are, the more<br />

engaging they are, the more effective they are likely to<br />

be. On that basis, the ultimate advert would be a movie,<br />

so there are some quite advanced plans afoot to marry<br />

my advertising world to my movie world. A very exciting<br />

prospect indeed, but boy am I going to need the bravest,<br />

most trusting, most forward thinking, most loaded of<br />

clients for this one! Know you of such a man?!


the DRuM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

when the lights went out 23<br />

the dated decor of number 30 east Drive and, above,<br />

pictures from the when the lights went out premiere<br />

at the house


PENCIL<br />

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16/19—23 NOVEMBER<br />

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FOLLOW US<br />

@MONOTYPEUK<br />

SUPPORTERS<br />

SET IN NEUE HAAS GROTESK


tHe DrUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

creative news25<br />

the works<br />

To submit work to our creative round-up contact thomas@thedrum.com<br />

ted Baker has unveiled ‘a Baker’s Dozen’,<br />

a series of 13 a2 prints created by the<br />

association of illustrators which will be<br />

gifted to customers who spend over<br />

£150 on the a/w collection in store. the<br />

artwork has a British theme, including<br />

fish and chips, drinking tea, village fetes<br />

and gardening. Only 1000 copies of each<br />

print will be available worldwide.


26the works www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 the DrUM<br />

expanding on its branding work for luxury jewellery<br />

store Union, red Design has designed and specced some<br />

elegant bespoke packaging including bags, tags and ring<br />

and bracelet boxes. these are now in production and<br />

should hit the shops in the next few months.


tHe DrUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

creative news27<br />

Fedrigoni, the italian papers manufacturer, has created<br />

an anthology of interpretations of papers for book<br />

blocks, with 16 different paper stocks tackled by 16 book<br />

designers. the first eight designers involved are: studio<br />

Joost Grootens, rainer Groothuis, Frédéric teschner,<br />

Kameel Hawa, wijtntje van rooijen & Pierre Péronnet,<br />

elyron, sánchez/Lacasta and thomas Manss & company.


28the works www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 the DrUM<br />

Barcelona-based hey studio has created the poster and a colourful and tactile<br />

ribbon application for a suite of print pieces to promote the city’s art and design<br />

festival ArtFad 2012.


tHe DrUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

creative news29


<strong>The</strong> best integrated agency in the South West |<br />

Integrated Agency of the Year South West<br />

THE DRUM<br />

<strong>The</strong> South West's Best Marketing Company<br />

MARKETING INDUSTRY AWARDS


mOdern markeTing<br />

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sOUTH By sOUTH WesT<br />

®<br />

OCT.26.12


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

WEST IS BEST<br />

Continuing our series shining the spotlight on the creative<br />

marketing sector in different UK regions, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> reaches<br />

the South West of England, where an air of positivity pervades<br />

and the creative industries lead the way to financial recovery.<br />

From St Ives to Bristol, we spoke to a cross<br />

section of the region’s top creative marketing<br />

agencies, and the message was clear… the<br />

industry in the South West is buoyant.<br />

And, as a marker of health, what better<br />

industry by which to gauge a region’s fettle than marketing<br />

services, as Andrew Buffrey, West & Wales regional<br />

manager at the Direct Marketing Association, explains.<br />

“Marketing activity – or, not to put too fi ne a point on<br />

it, marketing spend – is a true barometer of the economy<br />

at large. Rightly or wrongly, marketing is the fi rst sector<br />

to feel the pinch when times are hard. Conversely, when<br />

business leaders believe that the future might be a little<br />

rosier, it is the fi rst to feel the lifeblood returning.”<br />

But why does the South West seem to be leading the<br />

charge back into recovery when so much of the country<br />

is still struggling?<br />

Wolf Rock director Dave Meneer describes the<br />

region as “a creative place for creative thinkers”, while<br />

e3 MD Neil Collard says these are exciting times for<br />

the creative industries in the South West, with the<br />

area boasting “the most competitive and productive<br />

economy of any large English city outside of London,<br />

with world recognised companies such as Aardman<br />

Animations, the BBC and HP.”<br />

Creative marketing in the South West has been<br />

“reliably consistent and strong”, according to Mike<br />

Spurr of Bristol design shop Duttons. And while, just like<br />

the wider economy, it is “facing up to some pressing<br />

challenges”, there has been cause for optimism recently<br />

as “recruitment and relocation pick up again, with a<br />

more confi dent outlook for many agencies”.<br />

Recent research by the DMA backs this up, with<br />

fi ndings indicating a seven per cent growth in the direct<br />

marketing industry in the fi nal months of 2012, taking<br />

the annual equivalent spend to £15.2 billion.<br />

Andrew Buffrey explains: “<strong>The</strong> South West is set to<br />

reap the benefi ts since the creative sector is growing<br />

SOUTH<br />

WEST<br />

FOCUS<br />

more rapidly here than anywhere else in the UK.<br />

According to government fi gures, 8.2 per cent of the<br />

UK’s advertising enterprises are based in the region, so<br />

this could equate to £1.2 billion. It is no exaggeration to<br />

say that the creative industries will be at the forefront of<br />

the South West’s economic recovery.”<br />

Bournemouth agency RLA’s Paul Smith takes up the<br />

argument, saying: “<strong>The</strong> South West creative industry is<br />

fl ourishing as a lot of clients look outside of London for<br />

what I think is comparable skill but at signifi cantly greater<br />

value for money.”<br />

While this explanation is shared by many in the region,<br />

it is the skill sets evident in the South West that most cite<br />

as reason for optimism.<br />

David Flavell at TV production company Pangaea<br />

observes that while in London there once prevailed a<br />

perception of the South West as a parochial, production<br />

backwater, 2012 has seen creative marketing and TV<br />

production thriving, “with many businesses punching


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THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

well above their weight, successfully competing against<br />

national companies and winning major contracts”.<br />

He continues: “<strong>The</strong> South West now benefits from<br />

a wide range of companies that have proved they are<br />

perfectly capable of delivering truly top class work at a<br />

national level. On the back of these achievements, many<br />

out of date preconceptions have been swept away and<br />

now, more than ever, companies from the South West<br />

really are competing on their own merit.<br />

Paul Honey at Strange likewise agrees, saying that<br />

from a digital point of view, “the South West competes<br />

with London in terms of quality of work and it far outstrips<br />

it in terms of value for money.”<br />

While the South West has long been a hotbed for<br />

creative talent, its recovery will by no means be limited to<br />

the design studios for which the region is renowned. <strong>The</strong><br />

area is poised for a surge in digital business, with agencies<br />

having acted carefully and strategically throughout the<br />

recession, and in some cases completely realigning their<br />

business in readiness for the brighter days ahead. And<br />

the region is no longer dominated by Bristol, with several<br />

hubs of digital expertise, particularly on the south coast.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re is a plethora of talent across the South West<br />

and in particular across digital and creative disciplines,”<br />

says Stuart Devlin of Devon-based SEO and digital<br />

marketing agency e-Strategy.<br />

Saman Mansourpour, managing partner at <strong>The</strong> Agency,<br />

describes the South West as a “centre for digital excellence<br />

which makes up a high percentage of client spend”, with<br />

the region’s “early adoption of digital technologies, and<br />

investment in digital education and people as a whole,<br />

largely helped by the universities of Bath and Bristol”,<br />

meaning much of the creative talent it produces choose to<br />

stick around, or return after some time in London.<br />

And why wouldn’t they stick around? <strong>The</strong> South West<br />

offers one of the best work/life balance for creatives in<br />

the UK, according to Lynne Elvins, vice chair of the West<br />

of England Design Forum, who says “it’s not surprising<br />

that creatives are attracted to the region for the lifestyle,<br />

with its easy access to the coast and countryside and<br />

train links to London and further afield”.<br />

It’s a “beautiful place to live and work” according<br />

to Sanders Shiers owner Alan Sanders, who explains<br />

“our nearest beach is literally a 10 minute walk, while<br />

commuting tends to be much less stressful. Most of the<br />

artists in the studio here all walk to work”.<br />

Getting back to business, the South West has proved<br />

that creativity, while still evident in abundance, is just one<br />

part of its offering, as agencies have had the foresight<br />

and bravery to not just weather the economic storm but<br />

to turn threat into opportunity. <strong>The</strong>y have demonstrated<br />

that by marrying creative talent with strategic nous, they<br />

can deliver innovative, targeted marketing activity with<br />

exceptional results.<br />

Thinking Juice MD Gellan Watt sums up the region’s<br />

appeal, and the reason clients are keen to get on board:<br />

“If you want to find an agency that can make a budget<br />

go further, it won’t happen in W1. Agencies outside of<br />

town work harder, faster and often smarter. <strong>The</strong> only<br />

difference is we don’t often get the same briefs as in<br />

town, from the truly big brands. What’s brilliant about<br />

the South West is that it’s got a truly rich talent pool<br />

that came from, or commuted to London – meaning you<br />

get everything you want in the South West, but from an<br />

agency that is glad you’re their client.”<br />

In the next issue of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>, we continue our<br />

regional review with a feature focusing on the<br />

marketing industries in Scotland.<br />

SOuTh<br />

WEST<br />

FOCUS


36regional review www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 THe DrUM<br />

Q&A<br />

What is the current state of the creative<br />

marketing industry in the South West?<br />

Neil Collard, MD, e3:<br />

<strong>The</strong>se are exciting times for the creative<br />

industries here in the South West. <strong>The</strong> area<br />

boasts the most competitive and productive<br />

economy of any large English city outside of London,<br />

with world recognised companies such as Aardman<br />

Animations, the BBC and HP.<br />

Gellan Watt, MD, Thinking Juice:<br />

It’s tough. Like everywhere. We’re doing<br />

great things, winning business and delivering<br />

big results – but we’re working harder than<br />

ever, and faster than ever. Luckily we’re built to be able to<br />

do it. Nimble, efficient and packed with talent. But those<br />

agencies that aren’t, are very clearly finding it hard. Some<br />

big agency brands of years gone by are suffering. It’s sad,<br />

but the world has changed and keeps changing. It’s not<br />

enough to be good. Today the bar is great.<br />

Mike Spurr, director, Duttons:<br />

This sector in the South West has been<br />

reliably consistent and strong, although<br />

right now, just like the wider economy, it’s<br />

facing up to some pressing challenges. <strong>The</strong> percentage<br />

of micro-businesses is higher than average and many<br />

of them have relatively precarious finances, with a third<br />

seeing no net profits or profits of less than £25,000 in<br />

2011. But there is a mood of cautious optimism now<br />

emerging, with recruitment and relocation starting to<br />

pick up again and more confident outlook for many<br />

agencies.<br />

Andrew What is Girdwood,<br />

the current state of the creative<br />

media marketing innovations industry director, in the South LBi bigmouthmedia<br />

West?<br />

Saman Mansourpour,<br />

managing partner, <strong>The</strong>Agency:<br />

<strong>The</strong> creative marketing industry in the South West is ever buoyant. A<br />

centre for digital excellence, which now makes up a high percentage<br />

of client spend, the region’s early adoption of digital technologies, and<br />

investment in digital education and people as a whole, largely helped by<br />

the universities of Bath and Bristol, means many choose to stick around,<br />

or at least return post London. In addition there has been a lot of agency<br />

consolidation since the 2008 economic crisis. <strong>The</strong> region saw a number<br />

of mergers and acquisitions, as well as distressed purchases. This has<br />

left fewer mid-size agencies today, propped up the revenues of larger<br />

agencies and led to an influx in the number of start-ups.<br />

David Flavell,<br />

MD, Pangaea TV Production:<br />

If you were asked to think about which<br />

type of industries might be flourishing<br />

in the South West today, creative marketing and TV<br />

production might not immediately spring to mind. Within<br />

the swirling media hub that is London, there used to<br />

be a perception that the South West was a parochial,<br />

production backwater. However, in 2012 this couldn’t<br />

be further from the truth. Creative marketing and TV<br />

production is thriving, with many businesses punching<br />

well above their weight, successfully competing against<br />

national companies and winning major contracts.<br />

What major changes have there been in the last year?<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong> speaks to some of the<br />

most influential individuals in the<br />

South West creative marketing<br />

scene to gauge the health of<br />

the industry in the region and<br />

find out where it is headed.<br />

Ella Romanos, CEO, Remode:<br />

<strong>The</strong> South West has been seeing growth<br />

in creative industries, particularly in games.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a great vibe and energy which<br />

seems to be encouraging collaboration, communication,<br />

innovation and creativity and ultimately growth of existing<br />

companies and the setting up of new ones.<br />

Lisa Killbourn,<br />

group strategic director, Bray Leino:<br />

<strong>The</strong> loss of the COI SW roster is significant.<br />

<strong>The</strong> replacement of this with the new<br />

£520m Government Procurement Service which is<br />

ploughing through 500 bids for only 30 roster places<br />

seems likely to favour a few big London players rather<br />

than the many in the regions. <strong>The</strong> ARM framework gives<br />

regional agencies some hope of government business,<br />

but only for projects under £100k.<br />

Paul Smith,<br />

business development director, RLA:<br />

Certainly the failure of some key middleweight<br />

agencies has been a real eyeopener,<br />

so I think there has been a little consolidation<br />

which is worrying smaller companies a little.<br />

Which sectors are in growth or decline?<br />

David Flavell,<br />

MD, Pangaea TV Production:<br />

I don’t see any one section suffering from an<br />

inevitable, terminal decline, but decline is a<br />

possibility within every sector of the industry if we are not<br />

quick to recognise the diversity of requirements in today’s<br />

climate and adapt our services and products accordingly.<br />

It’s no longer viable to sit back and go along with the status<br />

quo. Whatever the sector, those companies prepared to<br />

think outside the box, provide innovative services and<br />

deliver excellent value for money will flourish.<br />

Gellan Watt, MD, Thinking Juice:<br />

PR agencies seem to be finding it tough.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are moving more and more into<br />

social media to find new budget. Mobile, of<br />

course, is growing at a rate of knots.<br />

Mark Mason, CEO, Mubaloo:<br />

Purely creative businesses are in decline.<br />

Every agency needs to be digital these<br />

days – that’s what businesses expect. As for<br />

growth, mobile is definitely growing as I’ve mentioned but<br />

also social networking, UX consultancies and marketing<br />

automation agencies are seeing strong growth.<br />

What does the South West offer over London<br />

or other UK regions?<br />

Paul Honey, MD, Strange:<br />

For digital, I think the South West competes<br />

with London in terms of quality of work<br />

and it far outstrips it in terms of value for<br />

money. In the current economic climate, doing more<br />

with less is important for many companies and Strange<br />

is able to attract clients because we have a far better<br />

cost structure than our London peers.<br />

Paul Handford, exec director, redtag:<br />

<strong>The</strong> South West not only has some of the<br />

best and most experienced marketing and<br />

creative brains in the country, it is also a<br />

hotbed for innovation. Clients not only benefit from this,


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

01 02<br />

What major changes<br />

have there been in<br />

the last year?<br />

Gellan Watt, MD,<br />

Thinking Juice:<br />

Strangely, I’ve seen a<br />

lot of client movement.<br />

You’d imagine in times<br />

like this there would be<br />

more value placed on<br />

long-term relationships<br />

and commitment. But people are unsettled. I’ve<br />

seen a lot of clients move work into London (for<br />

what reason I have no ideas – security?) only to<br />

move it back out when they get worse results.<br />

Other changes include the stampede towards<br />

social media, which very few clients have<br />

mastered, or understood, its true potential.<br />

but can make their budgets go further through competitive<br />

pricing structures that reflect the lower overheads.<br />

Stuart Devlin,<br />

digital director, e-Strategy:<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a plethora of talent across the<br />

South West and in particular across digital<br />

and creative disciplines. <strong>The</strong> quality and delivery of work<br />

is on a par with that of other regions but at typically lower<br />

costs. Staff retention also tends to be good in the South<br />

West and this is an area that clients value as it enables<br />

long term relationships and deeper understanding<br />

of clients’ businesses.<br />

Saman Mansourpour,<br />

managing partner, <strong>The</strong>Agency:<br />

Necessity is the mother of invention. Only a<br />

few agencies in the South West have had<br />

the support of agency networks or groups and their<br />

cash to keep them afloat. Every individual in an agency<br />

organisation, or indeed every freelancer, has to prove<br />

themselves each and every day, which means we have a<br />

very versatile and practical talent pool, both in their work<br />

and their approach. It has never been truer that agencies<br />

in the South West deliver more bang for client buck.<br />

Lisa Killbourn,<br />

group strategic director, Bray Leino:<br />

A bit like the Galapagos, if you’re somewhat<br />

isolated from others in your ‘species’, you<br />

evolve differently and bring something fresh or even<br />

unique to the party. You don’t grow your business as<br />

London agencies do, with a constant watching eye<br />

on what others are doing – you are led more by your<br />

clients’ changing needs than your competitors’.<br />

David Flavell,<br />

MD, Pangaea TV Production:<br />

<strong>The</strong> South West has everything to offer.<br />

While the challenge in London is to<br />

stand out from the crowd, the challenge in the South<br />

West is to stand out from the crowd and persuade<br />

companies to do business outside of the capital city.<br />

To win big contracts and get noticed, companies from<br />

03<br />

SOuTh<br />

WEST<br />

FOCUS<br />

01 Bristol agency Taxi Studio redesigned and refreshed<br />

Westonbirt Ice-cream as Jolly Nice 02 Bournemouth‘s<br />

Thinking Juice carried out photography and product<br />

design for new tent brand FieldCandy 03 Duttons<br />

Design’s work for Ecotricity’s car charging points<br />

for a new national network<br />

the South West don’t just talk about ‘going the extra<br />

mile’, they actually get on and do it. In addition, our<br />

cultural heritage and stunning filming locations make<br />

the South West a unique place to do business.<br />

Is there a sense of community among creative sectors<br />

in the area?<br />

Tony Stiles, CD, Smith & Milton Bristol:<br />

Yes, there’s a strong sense of community,<br />

especially in Bristol. <strong>The</strong>re’s something<br />

about the area that brings people together<br />

and there’s a groundswell of support out there for local<br />

businesses – just look at the Bristol Pound. <strong>The</strong>re are<br />

many organisations that help facilitate this as well –<br />

Bristol Media, PMStudio (Watershed), West of England<br />

Design Forum – they all help bring creatives together.<br />

Bob Mytton, MD, Mytton Williams:<br />

Yes. <strong>The</strong> creative community has been<br />

growing and getting stronger over the past<br />

10 years.<br />

Dave Meneer, director, Wolf Rock:<br />

Yes very well networked and supportive of<br />

other local businesses – although the South<br />

West does sometime stop at Plymouth!<br />

Mike Spurr, director, Duttons:<br />

<strong>The</strong>re’s a very strong sense of community<br />

across the creative sector in the SW. <strong>The</strong>re’s<br />

a concentration of creative businesses<br />

in Bristol and Bath, two of the UK’s ten creative


Truth 1: REAL people who won’t let you down.<br />

THE S<strong>TO</strong>RY OF THE CLIENT<br />

AND THE THREE HEADED BEAST.<br />

It had been a good year in the<br />

valley. <strong>The</strong> corn had grown high,<br />

and the sheep had grown fat.<br />

From high up in the mountains,<br />

however, a jealous and vengeful giant<br />

looked down. He had no grain and<br />

no sheep.<br />

He was used to taking what he needed<br />

from unfortunate travellers winding<br />

their way through the treacherous<br />

mountain passes.<br />

But this year, there had been few<br />

travellers. He had grown hungry. And<br />

so he sent a fierce, terrifying dog into<br />

the valley to steal from the villagers<br />

and bring meat back to him.<br />

Ten hands at the shoulder it stood<br />

with teeth like ivory scythes, eyes like<br />

flaming coals and breath like… well,<br />

like a dog’s.<br />

In the fields, the villagers watched the<br />

dog descending the rocky track into<br />

the valley with horror.<br />

But one young man saw in its eyes the<br />

hunger of a whole summer without<br />

food. And he knew the animal’s urge<br />

to eat was stronger than its urge to steal.<br />

He fetched meat from the butcher and<br />

fed the dog. It ate until its belly was<br />

full, and then sloped away back to its<br />

master in the mountain with nothing<br />

in its jaws to give him.<br />

<strong>The</strong> giant was furious, and sent his<br />

biggest most terrifying dog into the<br />

valley. One with three heads, each lined<br />

with triple rows of razor sharp fangs.<br />

Three times as fearsome, three times<br />

as dog breathy…<br />

Again, the young man knew the beast<br />

would rather eat than steal.<br />

But this time it was trickier.<br />

This time, the heads that were not<br />

being fed would get jealous and<br />

impatient, snapping at the young<br />

man’s wrists and hands.<br />

All the rest of the villagers had fled<br />

when they first set eyes on this<br />

apparition. All but one – his oldest<br />

and best friend.<br />

As the young man fed meat into the<br />

ravenous maw of one head, his friend<br />

would distract the others, always keeping<br />

a step ahead of their snarling teeth.<br />

Eventually even this ferocious<br />

hellhound had had its fill, and turned<br />

tail to go back to its mountain lair.<br />

with a cry that echoed like thunder,<br />

brought his stick down hard across the<br />

dog’s shoulders.<br />

Big mistake: baying in bloodcurdling<br />

triplicate, the creature fell on its master<br />

and ripped him limb from limb.<br />

While down in the valley, the young<br />

man – and the friend who had stood<br />

shoulder to shoulder with him –<br />

were carried through the village by its<br />

grateful inhabitants and feted as heroes<br />

forevermore.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Moral: When confronting your<br />

greatest challenges, you need people<br />

you can rely on to never let you down.<br />

To learn more about the agency who’re<br />

trusted to solve the most complex of<br />

comms. problems for some of the world’s<br />

biggest brands, call Paul smith on<br />

07500 012 731 or link in at<br />

linkedin.com/in/paulsmith76<br />

rla.co.uk<br />

When he saw his plans had again been<br />

thwarted, the giant lost his temper and IndIspensable In what we do


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

01<br />

02<br />

hotspots, so the personal networks are strong and<br />

very interconnected. Larger regional agencies tend to<br />

be competing with London agencies rather than other<br />

local agencies so the attitude is more collaborative and<br />

much less protectionist.<br />

Mark Mason, CEO, Mubaloo:<br />

Bristol Media is a fantastic focus for South<br />

West creative businesses in many ways.<br />

Not only are there regular social events and<br />

business get-togethers, but it also enables members to<br />

negotiate better rates on services such as recruitment.<br />

Is there a case of big agency dominance in the South<br />

West or are smaller agencies leading the way?<br />

Saman Mansourpour,<br />

managing partner, <strong>The</strong>Agency:<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are a number of network agencies,<br />

where many talented people start their<br />

careers, or transfer into from London. However, the<br />

South West has an entrepreneurial spirit that may well<br />

stem from its early digital roots. <strong>The</strong>re is a real hotbed<br />

of small agencies doing really bespoke and interesting<br />

stuff. Many are the brainchild of individuals who have<br />

served in organisations such as the BBC, so start-up<br />

projects often get a hearty leg-up.<br />

03<br />

01 Pangaea TV’s work for Devon County Council 02 Strange’s branding and website for Fujifilm Create 03 <strong>The</strong> Agency<br />

created the ad campaign for the re-launch of netmag.co.uk<br />

Paul Honey, MD, Strange:<br />

It’s nicely balanced between big, medium<br />

and small agencies. <strong>The</strong>re’s some great<br />

talent in the region and many agencies are<br />

producing high profile work for some of the biggest<br />

and best brands in the country. It’s good to see clients<br />

recognising the talent available in the South West.<br />

Stuart Devlin,<br />

digital director, e-Strategy:<br />

<strong>The</strong> South West isn’t particularly dominated<br />

by one agency but there does appear to be<br />

a shortage of agencies specialising in a particular digital/<br />

creative discipline, with many full service/traditional<br />

advertising agencies competing in the digital space.<br />

What is the current talent pool like in the region?<br />

Alan Sanders, owner, Sanders Shiers:<br />

Naturally there isn’t the same creative<br />

resource you would find in London, which<br />

can make recruitment more challenging.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is however a great pool of fresh eager new talent<br />

from the outlying colleges and universities. Falmouth<br />

College of Art & Design for example is world renowned<br />

and always expanding its course disciplines. We already<br />

have our eye on that one. <strong>The</strong>re is also a pool of talented<br />

Your brand is your bottom line.<br />

We’ll make it work harder.<br />

creatives that have done their time in the city and move to<br />

outer reaches in search of fresh air and space.<br />

Richard Spruce, CD, Stuff Advertising:<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are plenty of talented people around<br />

but we seem to be better at attracting<br />

people back to the region than keeping<br />

them here in the first place.<br />

Bob Mytton, MD, Mytton Williams:<br />

Generally OK, although it has been a struggle<br />

to find good middleweights. <strong>The</strong>re is a need<br />

for good digital designers and strategists. In<br />

general, being such a vibrant creative area, it is attractive<br />

to many people in the creative industries who have done<br />

a few years in London and are keen to relocate.<br />

Paul Smith,<br />

business development director, RLA:<br />

<strong>The</strong> talent pool is our greatest problem.<br />

Finding high quality senior management<br />

for account directors, planners and creative directors<br />

is proving a real problem. <strong>The</strong>re’s a lot of people who<br />

say they have these skills but not to the standards<br />

we need to deliver for our national and international<br />

accounts. You’d never imagine there was high<br />

unemployment, the trouble we’ve had!<br />

duttonsdesign.com<br />

SOuTh<br />

WEST<br />

FOCUS<br />

Brand communicators


South West Digital Agency of the Year - <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong><br />

It’s all about planning and insight<br />

With clever people on board To get great results<br />

For brands big and small Now how can we help you?<br />

planning<br />

creative<br />

UX<br />

We aim high<br />

web development<br />

ecommerce<br />

digital marketing<br />

www.strangecorp.com 01202 203160 results@strangecorp.com


THE DRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

01<br />

02<br />

03<br />

01 & 02 Mytton Williams helped Waitrose extend its<br />

identity into a new area of business with the Waitrose<br />

Cookery School 03 Some of Bray Leino’s work for the<br />

2011 Census campaign<br />

Wolf who?<br />

Are universities and colleges in the South West<br />

adequately preparing students for the work place?<br />

Richard Spruce, CD, Stuff Advertising:<br />

I’m not sure they ever really can, no matter<br />

how hard they try. More collaboration<br />

between universities and agencies would<br />

help. <strong>The</strong>re’s no substitute for learning on the job so work<br />

experience plays a vital role in preparing students.<br />

Tony Stiles, CD, Smith & Milton Bristol:<br />

Creatively, yes. Practically, no. A lot of<br />

students come out of college with a great<br />

portfolio of creative work but no idea how to<br />

implement it, either digitally or in print. Surprisingly, few<br />

creative students seem to be getting the training they<br />

need in digital/online design skills. We think these are<br />

national, rather than South West, problems.<br />

Andy Reid, MD, McCann Bristol:<br />

This is certainly an area where we have<br />

seen improvements. Universities are far<br />

more willing to speak to industry leaders<br />

and work in collaboration to give students the chance<br />

to experience real life working scenarios or live briefs.<br />

Mike Spurr, director, Duttons:<br />

<strong>The</strong> colleges in the region are very proactive<br />

in making sure they understand the<br />

needs of the industry and are preparing<br />

students to meet them. <strong>The</strong>re are more students than<br />

opportunities but many agencies link up with colleges<br />

to offer structured work experience places and regional<br />

bodies such as Bristol Media are developing talent<br />

sharing schemes.<br />

Paul Handford, exec director, redtag:<br />

We are seeing some good talent from local<br />

universities, but one of the main issues is that<br />

candidates have little workplace experience.<br />

redtag has given interns workplace opportunities during<br />

the last five summers to provide students with practical<br />

experience of what working for a marketing agency is<br />

all about. We would like to see local universities and<br />

colleges forge stronger links with agencies such as ours<br />

to help prepare students for life after study.<br />

What areas are set to see most growth?<br />

Paul Smith,<br />

business development director, RLA:<br />

Digital, digital, digital. Everything else is in<br />

mild decline according to other neighbouring<br />

agencies but I think that depends on your focus. At RLA,<br />

we’re focusing on both and as a result our traditional<br />

skills, promotional marketing and international clients are<br />

growing just as fast as pure digital.<br />

OK. So you haven’t heard the name (yet) — that’s because we are the South<br />

West’s newest agency. We bring together over 100 years of national and<br />

international experience. <strong>The</strong>re are just three things you need to know<br />

about Wolf Rock. 1) Between us we’ve helped build the world’s first (and biggest) functional drinks brand,<br />

re-branded the UK’s leading superyacht yard, launched a world-famous visitor attraction, led a restaurant<br />

to record results for Britain’s best-loved celebrity chef, and accelerated North Wales’ fastest-growing<br />

holiday cottage company. 2) We are in Cornwall (we like it here). 3) Our phone number is 01872 262698.<br />

Neil Collard, MD, e3:<br />

From an engagement level, mobile,<br />

tablet, m-commerce, mobile payments<br />

and social media marketing are areas we<br />

expect to see ongoing growth in investment. However,<br />

the big shift we are seeing is the growing integration<br />

of customer data to provide real-time joined up<br />

experiences for the customer across all touchpoints.<br />

Alan Sanders, owner,<br />

Sanders Shiers:<br />

Digital sectors will see the most growth.<br />

This has been hugely affected by products<br />

such as iPad, iPhone and so on. People of all ages<br />

are much more computer savvy and building their<br />

lives around the internet and connectivity.<br />

Paul Handford, exec director, redtag:<br />

Like most agencies we are seeing growth<br />

in the digital space, however we are finding<br />

that media integration is key to successful<br />

effective campaigns and therefore agencies that are<br />

able to offer fully integrated solutions are more likely<br />

to see growth.<br />

Are there any significant barriers to growth<br />

in the region?<br />

Dave Meneer, director, Wolf Rock:<br />

<strong>The</strong> perception of distance can be a<br />

barrier, and the logistics of working<br />

with an agency that isn’t on the client’s<br />

doorstep – smart clients will for go for talent over<br />

location... dumb ones will go for the easy choice of<br />

the biddable next-door shop.<br />

Andy Reid, MD, McCann Bristol:<br />

Bristol is well placed and doesn’t have any<br />

issues with infrastructure, whilst talking to<br />

agencies further into the South West, this<br />

can pose challenges.<br />

Paul Honey, MD, Strange:<br />

Not really – but if I had to pick one thing<br />

that’s a continual annoyance for many<br />

agency folk in the region, it would be the<br />

rubbish and intermittent 3G service on the train when<br />

we travel to meet our clients in London!<br />

Alan Sanders,<br />

owner, Sanders Shiers:<br />

<strong>The</strong> only real drawback is distance and<br />

connectivity when travelling for meetings<br />

and events in London and outer regions; we find you<br />

just need to make more of an effort and plan ahead<br />

a little more. Other than that, day to day business is<br />

generally conducted via email/internet.<br />

AMBITIOUS MARKETING<br />

www.wolfrockmarketing.co.uk<br />

SOuTh<br />

WEST<br />

FOCUS


THe dRUM OCT.26.12 www.thedrum.com<br />

e-STRaTegy<br />

Tel: 01803 203311<br />

Email: info@e-strategy.net<br />

Web: www.e-strategy.net<br />

Twitter: @estrategyltd<br />

knowledge bank<br />

Eddie Bent<br />

Managing Director<br />

e-Strategy<br />

developing a content<br />

strategy to succeed<br />

In recent times, the benefits of content marketing for<br />

SEO has been widely broadcast with a plethora of<br />

articles, opinions and top tips reinforcing the need for<br />

organisations to produce unique content regularly in order<br />

to acquire those sought after first page rankings.<br />

However, limiting the role of content marketing to SEO<br />

without first understanding how content impacts on the<br />

delivery of your commercial objectives is unlikely to yield<br />

the desired results. Developing low quality, regurgitated<br />

content from online news sources is unlikely to add<br />

significant value to your audience or significantly enhance<br />

your visibility in these post Google Panda and Penguin<br />

update times.<br />

Content marketing needs to be an integral component<br />

of your digital marketing and communications strategy<br />

and should be utilised to build awareness of your brand,<br />

stimulate user engagement, reach new audiences, increase<br />

visitor levels, improve conversion rates and drive revenues.<br />

For most organisations, the commercial objectives will be<br />

similar, but a clear strategy that clearly outlines the process<br />

for achieving these objectives, is critical.<br />

Prior to embracing content marketing, organisations<br />

should consider the following:<br />

About You<br />

In an increasingly competitive digital landscape, it is<br />

imperative for organisations to differentiate themselves<br />

from their competitors in order to gain market share.<br />

During the early stages of developing a content strategy,<br />

key areas such as brand values, unique selling points,<br />

tone of voice and value proposition need to be identified,<br />

documented and issued as guidelines internally and to<br />

external agencies.<br />

This forms the basis of your content strategy and should<br />

be utilised across all forms of digital communication,<br />

including website content, blog posts, pr and social<br />

media.<br />

Audience<br />

Developing content that is of value to your audience<br />

and stimulates a response; whether that be a comment,<br />

share or like, is the holy grail of content marketing, with an<br />

emphasis on quality over quantity.<br />

Discuss potential subject matters internally and seek<br />

feedback from your existing audience to determine what<br />

types of content would be well received. If you are currently<br />

writing content, review what has worked and what hasn’t<br />

worked, which platforms have been the most effective in<br />

terms of engagement, monitor your areas of expertise and<br />

brand mentions online.<br />

Look at forthcoming events in your sector, product<br />

launches and seasonal trends as potential subject matters<br />

and use all of this information to plan an initial 3-6 month<br />

plan which illustrates timings and schedules for the<br />

development and publishing of this content.<br />

Platforms<br />

Which platforms do you intend to use for the delivery of<br />

your content strategy? A blog should be at the forefront<br />

of your content delivery plan but identify where your target<br />

audience is likely to reside online and which platforms offer<br />

the most effective route of communicating with prospective<br />

customers.<br />

Keywords<br />

Review Google Analytics to identify keywords and phrases<br />

that typically drive visitors to your website and analyse the<br />

search queries report in Google Webmaster Tools to find<br />

keyword opportunities.<br />

Social Media<br />

Ensure that social media, and in particular social sharing,<br />

is integrated into your content marketing strategy. Identify<br />

which social media platforms will be utilised and tailor the<br />

content specifically for each platform. If applicable to the<br />

audience, share your blog posts across the main social<br />

media platforms and integrate social sharing functionality<br />

into key areas of your website.<br />

Utilise Google+ as a mechanism to share content and<br />

build authority. Create a company profile and personal<br />

profiles for each person who will be writing the content and<br />

integrate Google+ authorship features to build authority.<br />

Content Types<br />

It is important to note that content, in it’s broadest sense,<br />

can be delivered in a number of ways such as opinion<br />

pieces, buying guides, reviews, white papers, video,<br />

SOuTh<br />

WEST<br />

FoCUS<br />

podcasts, infographics, imagery and more. <strong>The</strong> type of<br />

content that you publish will be largely dependent on what<br />

your audience engages with and what level of resource you<br />

have to produce this content.<br />

Resource<br />

Resource is a key consideration when developing a<br />

content marketing strategy. Do you have the resource and<br />

expertise in-house to deliver the required content and type<br />

of content effectively? Will you need to outsource elements<br />

of the content development?<br />

In most instances, structuring your content schedule so<br />

that can be delivered effectively in the short term is typically<br />

a good starting point. Its important to emphasise the<br />

‘quality over quantity’ factor and it is often more beneficial<br />

to plan the scheduled delivery of content rather than an<br />

initial burst of activity which will inevitably tail off through lack<br />

of resource.<br />

Measurement<br />

It is important that all content marketing activity can be<br />

measured effectively and key metrics should be agreed and<br />

included within the content marketing strategy. Key metrics<br />

could include an increase in visitor levels, user engagement<br />

and revenue and should be monitored regularly to determine<br />

the overall success of your endeavours.<br />

Summary<br />

<strong>The</strong> analogy ‘content is king’ is still very much at the forefront<br />

of digital marketing but ‘strategy is queen’ will ensure that<br />

your content attracts, engages and converts.


Vote for your MiAwards MD<br />

Nominations for MiAwards 2012<br />

are now live with more than 60<br />

agencies set to go head to head to<br />

collect awards in November when<br />

the judges decisions are revealed.<br />

However, one area of the awards<br />

that still need to be decided<br />

are the Public Vote categories.<br />

Nominations were sought from<br />

MiNetwork’s membership for the<br />

public vote categories - which<br />

covered MD/CEO of the Year,<br />

Creative Director of the Year,<br />

Marketing Director of the Year,<br />

Emerging Marketer of the Year and<br />

Marketing Personality of the Year.<br />

Here we look at the nominees who<br />

are vying for the MD/CEO of the<br />

Year award. To vote for your winner<br />

please visit www.MiAwards.me.<br />

Christopher Bishop, MD, 7thingsmedia<br />

In the last three years Chris Bishop has taken<br />

£15k and turned it into an international multimillion<br />

pound digital agency. Founding the<br />

agency in 2009 it is his infectious drive and passion that<br />

has led the company’s phenomenal growth. Brands<br />

such as Agent Provocateur, boohoo.com, Liberty<br />

London, Ted Baker and UNICEF have bought into his<br />

approach as much as his 17 employees in London<br />

and New York have. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s 2012 “Marketer of<br />

the Year” is showing no signs of stopping with further<br />

growth planned for 2013.<br />

Gary Boon, MD, Shout<br />

Shout is still a relatively young business,<br />

only three years old, but Boon and his team<br />

have shaken up the North East’s digital<br />

scene and become an established player working with<br />

an impressive client list. After just two years Boon’s<br />

agency was named North East Marketing Company of<br />

the Year at last year’s MiAwards and this year saw Boon<br />

set a growth target of £5m by 2015 after it developed<br />

work for GFI, Sage and NAC Group.<br />

Ian Ord, MD, Fifth Ring<br />

Ord has spearheaded a £3M charity<br />

campaign for cancer care and he has won<br />

so much business that their income in<br />

Aberdeen has risen by £500k this year. He has taken<br />

Fifth Ring to the top of Scotland’s Recommended<br />

Agency Register and has also invested £450k to<br />

make sure they have the best working conditions and<br />

technology available. He has also continued Fifth Ring’s<br />

international expansion, bedding in the agency’s new<br />

office in Kuala Lumpur, while continuing to grow their<br />

interests in Texas, Dubai and Abu Dhabi.<br />

Gellan Watt, MD, Thinking Juice<br />

In 2011 Watt integrated his agency<br />

Thinking Juice into the growing Emerge<br />

Group and overnight saw his creative<br />

and operational role expand to include cities such as<br />

Manchester and Edinburgh. Over the past 12 months<br />

Watt has led both the business and the creative team<br />

through massive growth and the merger of Thinking<br />

Juice with the Emerge, along with balancing the<br />

creative output for the entire group. In that time he’s<br />

worked tirelessly to ensure the business continued<br />

to achieve significant success and has overcome the<br />

challenges in the market place that every agency faces<br />

when going through such fundamental change.<br />

Rob Shaw, CEO, Epiphany<br />

Shaw’s leadership as Epiphany Group<br />

chief executive has led to a remarkable<br />

phase of growth for the agency. <strong>The</strong> last<br />

twelve months have seen agency revenues grow by<br />

54%, the creation of subsidiary agencies in the form<br />

of Epiphany Australia and Shackleton PR and also<br />

a recruitment drive that will see Epiphany’s 100th<br />

employee join the company before November. Shaw<br />

also oversaw Epiphany’s staff share option scheme,<br />

whereby Epiphany employees benefit from the<br />

company’s continued success, as part of an integrated<br />

staff benefits scheme that was highly commended at<br />

this year’s Business Benefits Awards<br />

www.MiNetwork.me<br />

Winners celebrate<br />

collecting trophies at<br />

last year’s MiAwards,<br />

held at the Mercure<br />

Hotel in Manchester.<br />

Justin Cooke, CEO UK, Possible<br />

High profile digital man Justin Cooke has<br />

had quite a year, the high point obviously<br />

being the sale of his agency Fortune Cookie<br />

to Sir Martin Sorrell’s WPP, the agency becoming part<br />

of the international POSSIBLE network. And while<br />

Cooke’s agency role has expanded dramatically he has<br />

still continued to spearhead the growth of the British<br />

Interactive Media Association (BIMA) and was key in<br />

the launch of the UK Digital Hall of Fame among many<br />

other initiatives to support the growing digital sector.<br />

Ben Hatton, MD, Rippleffect<br />

Hatton’s Rippleffect continues to be a<br />

highly respected digital agency and has<br />

continued to add impressive clients to its<br />

clients list over the year. Hatton’s role within the Trinity<br />

Mirror organisation has also been expanded and he<br />

is now a scout for the group identifying opportunities<br />

for acquisition to continue the growth of Trinity Mirror’s<br />

digital operations across then UK.<br />

Gary McCall, MD, Banana Kick<br />

McCall’s Leeds-based Banana Kick<br />

agency is now three years old and what<br />

was launched very much as a niche sports<br />

and leisure marketing business has grown significantly<br />

and now McCall and his team handle new store<br />

launches for ASDA across the UK and also for the<br />

rapidly expanding gaming and leisure group Genting.<br />

<strong>The</strong> agency has grown significantly in numbers and<br />

now employs more than 35 staff members, with little<br />

sign of slowing up.<br />

To find out if you have been nominated for a MiAward visit www.MiAwards.me. To find out more about<br />

MiNetwork visit www.minetwork.me or contact Chris Morton on 0141 559 6068 or chris.morton@thedrum.com


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46last word www.thedrum.com OCT.26.12 tHE drUM<br />

last word<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Drum</strong>’s opinion editor Cameron Clarke takes a look at some of thedrum.com’s best read blogs from<br />

the last couple of weeks, including Mark Lowe’s take on Wonga’s controversial sponsorship of Newcastle.<br />

To see your views in print or on our website, email your opinion pieces to cameron.clarke@thedrum.com.<br />

loads oF wonga For nEwcastlE bUt<br />

nEw sponsor FacEs a HUgE pr battlE<br />

Mark lowe, founding partner, third city<br />

It has been hailed by some as a stroke<br />

of PR genius, but the most telling<br />

comment about Wonga’s sponsorship<br />

of Newcastle United football club<br />

came from @thejamesdixon on<br />

Twitter, who wrote:<br />

“Wonga are to pay £24million to<br />

sponsor Newcastle over 4 years. If they<br />

lent that @ their typical APR over 4 years<br />

they’d have to repay £4bn.”<br />

But who cares? We’re told that a<br />

majority of Newcastle fans approve of<br />

the deal, which sees the club’s stadium<br />

revert to its original name of St James’<br />

Park. And boss Alan Pardew toed the<br />

line hard for the new sponsor: “As<br />

manager of this football club I can only<br />

say that to have the best sponsorship<br />

deal we’ve ever had is a good thing.”<br />

Wonga’s chairman Errol Dammelin<br />

knows his limits and the debate about<br />

turning St James’ into the ‘Wonga<br />

Stadium’ will have lasted less than a<br />

nanosecond. But even if it occurred<br />

by default, this was a clever PR stunt<br />

that established the brand as a people’s<br />

champion for the credit crunch.<br />

As a result, ninety thousand Newcastle<br />

fans now love Wonga, but it still has a<br />

huge battle on its hands to bring itself in<br />

from the margins of acceptability.<br />

This drama has a colourful cast, with<br />

the Machiavellian Dammelin on one side<br />

and on the other the ambitious young<br />

Walthamstow MP Stella Creasy, who<br />

has built her political reputation on a<br />

fight to bring payday lenders to heal.<br />

Wonga’s success will depend almost<br />

entirely on its ability to convince the<br />

public of one central argument – that<br />

the market confers its legitimacy. People<br />

want us and need us, they say, so what<br />

we are doing is good.<br />

This ‘ends justifies the means’<br />

argument is similar to that of Pardew and<br />

Newcastle chairman Derek Llambias,<br />

who say that their Faustian pact with<br />

Wonga is the only way to match Qatari<br />

cash and push Newcastle into the top<br />

tier of clubs.<br />

<strong>The</strong> counter-argument is equally<br />

simple. It frames Wonga and other<br />

companies with ‘innovative’ business<br />

models like Amigo Loans as quasi-<br />

Medieval money-lenders exploiting the<br />

poor and marginalised.<br />

I’m told by those in the know that<br />

Wonga’s customer base is surprisingly<br />

upscale; that they happily service<br />

thousands of young professionals<br />

unjustifiably frozen out of mainstream<br />

credit. Certain well-respected journalists,<br />

for instance the Independent’s Simon<br />

Read, have accepted this with<br />

qualifications, saying that there is a<br />

place for payday loan companies.<br />

But there is no doubt that a good<br />

chunk of Wonga’s customer base is<br />

either poor, or has fallen on hard times.<br />

This impression is reinforced by stories<br />

of customers using their loans to pay off<br />

gambling or drugs debts.<br />

It is through these human stories that<br />

the Wonga name will live or die. Social<br />

media will make it almost impossible for<br />

the brand to cover up sharp practice<br />

and Creasy has built a powerful lobby<br />

that will not waste any opportunity to<br />

move against the lender.<br />

For MorE blogs go to tHEdrUM.coM/opinion<br />

mOre frOm<br />

<strong>The</strong> blOgs...<br />

MISSION IS ONE <strong>TO</strong> WATCH<br />

Deals expert Tony Walford<br />

says the Mission Marketing<br />

Group’s recent buying spree<br />

marks it out as ‘one to watch’.<br />

“If Mission can resist the<br />

temptation to pull everything<br />

toward the centre, while at the<br />

same time keeping costs under<br />

control and nurturing talent and<br />

clients, there could be a bright<br />

future – and now that the group<br />

has real scale, it won’t be long<br />

before it’ll be able to add really<br />

big global clients to its portfolio.”<br />

CAMERON’S TWEET TEST<br />

Daljit Bhurji offers some<br />

advice for David Cameron<br />

as the PM joins Twitter.<br />

“In both tone and content<br />

Cameron has the opportunity<br />

to counter his occasionally bad<br />

tempered, Flashman persona<br />

and the much more dangerous<br />

charge of chillaxing levelled<br />

against him... However he<br />

decides to use Twitter, a clear<br />

strategy will need to go hand<br />

in hand with bravery.”<br />

STARBUCKS’ PR MACHINE<br />

PR columnist Andrew Barr<br />

expects Starbucks to come<br />

out fighting over allegations<br />

in the press that it is not<br />

paying enough tax.<br />

“It will be an interesting one<br />

to watch, as Starbucks’ PR<br />

team is slicker than Don’s hair<br />

in Mad Men, so when they<br />

come out firing, the collective<br />

media better get ready.”


THE DRUM DIREC<strong>TO</strong>RY<br />

Here you will fi nd a selection of our online directory advertisers.<br />

To view their company profi le, work and case studies go to www.thedrum.com/directory<br />

To fi nd out more contact Victoria Swan on 0141 559 6070 or victoria.swan@thedrum.com<br />

AGENCY MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE<br />

Synergist<br />

Tel: 0870 444 9656<br />

Contact: Nick Lane<br />

nlane@synergist.co.uk<br />

synergist.co.uk<br />

AGENCY MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE<br />

Sohnar Ltd<br />

Tel: 0800 880 3008<br />

Contact: Callum Broderick<br />

enquiries@sohnar.com<br />

sohnar.com<br />

COPYWRITERS<br />

Blackad<br />

Tel: 0845 838 0612<br />

Contact: Alan Black<br />

copywriters@blackad.co.uk<br />

blackad.co.uk<br />

DESIGN<br />

Shoot the Moon<br />

Tel: 0161 205 3311<br />

Contact: Phil Marshall<br />

phil@shoot-the-moon.co.uk<br />

www.shoot-the-moon.co.uk<br />

DESIGN AND DIGITAL<br />

STAR Digital<br />

Tel: 01604 696385<br />

Contact: Ben Harper<br />

ben@star-digital.co.uk<br />

www.star-digital.co.uk<br />

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agencies plan, schedule and<br />

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A collective of outstanding<br />

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photographers with a large<br />

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technical experience.<br />

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delivering outstanding<br />

solutions across<br />

all sectors.<br />

DIGITAL<br />

BSS Digital<br />

Tel: 0330 303 50 50<br />

Contact: Sangeeta Raval<br />

digital@bss.org<br />

www.bssdigital.org<br />

MEDIA BUYERS<br />

Boutique Media<br />

Communications<br />

Tel: 0113 3948993<br />

Contact: Simon Bollon<br />

simon@boutiquemc.co.uk<br />

boutiquemc.co.uk<br />

SEARCH MARKETING SERVICES<br />

SEO<br />

Tel: 0800 088 6000<br />

Contact: Danielle Haley<br />

sales@seopositive.co.uk<br />

www.seopositive.co.uk<br />

TRANSLATION & MULTILINGUAL PRODUCTION<br />

Brightlines Translation<br />

Tel: 01225 811200<br />

Contact: Neil Gauld<br />

ncg@brightlines.co.uk<br />

www.brightlines.co.uk<br />

ACCOUNTANCY SERVICES<br />

FW Accounting<br />

Tel: 01224 585599<br />

Contact: Alasdair McGill<br />

enquiries@fwaccounting.com<br />

fwaccounting.com<br />

AGENCY SUPPORT SERVICES<br />

Kaizen IT<br />

Tel: 0845 141 1400<br />

Contact: Steve Timmiss<br />

sales@kaizenit.co.uk<br />

www.kaizenit.co.uk<br />

thedrum.com/directory<br />

Expertise in web development,<br />

mobile and apps, e-commerce<br />

and systems integration<br />

capabilities. Achieve a<br />

joined-up and effortless<br />

communications experience.<br />

Media agency, buying and<br />

planning specialist, Integrated,<br />

online, offl ine, privately owned<br />

and entrepreneurial. We’re<br />

everything you would expect<br />

from a media agency and more.<br />

SEO Positive is one of the<br />

UK’s most innovative online<br />

promotion agencies, specialising<br />

in SEO strategy development,<br />

PPC marketing campaigns and<br />

social media management.<br />

Translation and multilingual<br />

production. Working with<br />

marketing and media agents<br />

is a speciality. We’ll take care<br />

of your brands.<br />

Streamtime Software<br />

Tel: 084 333 07 662<br />

Contact: Aaron Green<br />

aaron@streamtime.net<br />

streamtime.net/uk/streamtime/<br />

BRANDING & COMMUNICATIONS<br />

Duttons Design Ltd<br />

Tel: 01275 850905<br />

Contact: Mike Spurr<br />

mikes@duttonsdesign.com<br />

duttonsdesign.com<br />

ELLA LA VITA!<br />

COPY WRITING<br />

Liz Holt Freelance Copywriter<br />

Tel: 07919 365 335<br />

Contact: Liz Holt<br />

hello@lizholt.co.uk<br />

lizholt.co.uk<br />

Matra Copywriting<br />

Tel: 07891 287602<br />

Contact: Audrey Mason<br />

audrey@mantracopywriting.com<br />

Simon Platt<br />

Tel: 07771 911256<br />

Contact: Simon Platt<br />

me@simonplatt.co.uk<br />

simonplatt.co.uk<br />

DESIGN<br />

Breeze Creative Design<br />

Consultants<br />

Tel: 01360 449347<br />

Contact: Craig Mackinlay<br />

info@breeze-creative.com<br />

breeze-creative.com<br />

Diagram Design & Marketing Ltd<br />

Tel: 01925 600533<br />

Contact: Andy Hutchinson<br />

andy@diagramdesign.co.uk<br />

diagramdesign.co.uk<br />

Engine Creative<br />

Tel: 0845 454 1000<br />

Contact: Andrew Wise<br />

andy@enginecreative.co.uk<br />

enginecreative.co.uk<br />

Gary Swift Studios<br />

Tel: 01977 646431<br />

Contact: Gary Swift<br />

gary@garyswift.com<br />

www.garyswift.com<br />

Manifest<br />

Tel: 0113 2429174<br />

Contact: Nev Ridley<br />

nev@manifestcomms.co.uk<br />

www.manifestcom.comSI CONT.<br />

Milestone<br />

Tel: 01494 676436<br />

Contact: Jay Roff<br />

jay@milestonedesign.co.uk<br />

www.milestonedesign.co.uk<br />

Mortonward Limited<br />

Tel: 0131 555 3553<br />

Contact: Ewan Morton<br />

ewan@mortonward.co.uk<br />

mortonward.co.uk<br />

Resolve Creative<br />

Tel: 0131 555 7585<br />

Contact: Katie Firth<br />

katie@resolve-creative.co.uk<br />

www.resolve-creative.co.uk<br />

Stocks Taylor Benson<br />

Tel: 0116 240 5600<br />

Contact: John Benson<br />

john@stbdesign.co.uk<br />

www.stbdesign.co.uk<br />

Brightlines Translation<br />

Fluency for Business<br />

Fiveways House,<br />

Westwells Road,<br />

Corsham, SN13 9RG<br />

United Kingdom<br />

Triangle Design<br />

Tel: 01454 311220<br />

Contact: Jules Ashford<br />

info@triangledesign.biz<br />

www.triangledesign.co.uk<br />

DESIGN AND BRANDING AND<br />

COMMUNICATION<br />

Happy giraffe<br />

Tel: 01562 886 752<br />

Contact: Kerry Baynon pearce<br />

kerry@happy-giraffe.com<br />

www.happy-giraffe.com<br />

DESIGN AND DIGITAL<br />

Bloom Agency<br />

Tel: 0113 243 4757<br />

Contact: Alex Morris<br />

amorris@bloomagency.co.uk<br />

bloomagency.co.uk<br />

CSI MEDIA<br />

Tel: 0844 873 0073<br />

Contact: Richard Nash<br />

richard@csimedia.net<br />

www.csimedia.net<br />

Davison Williams<br />

Tel: 020 7490 3737<br />

cuppa@davisonwilliams.com<br />

www.davisonwilliams.com<br />

Purple Agency<br />

Tel: 01256 631 660<br />

Contact: Steve Shaw<br />

enquiries@purple-agency.com<br />

www.purple-agency.com<br />

Whitespace<br />

Tel: 0131 625 5500<br />

Contact: Iain Valentine<br />

iain@whitespacers.com<br />

whitespacers.com<br />

DIGITAL<br />

Big Communications<br />

Tel: 0116 299 1144<br />

Contact: Olivia Brown<br />

olivia.brown@<br />

bigcommunications.co.uk<br />

www.bigcommunications.co.uk.<br />

Dog Digital<br />

Tel: 0141 572 0730<br />

Contact: Suzanne Morrow<br />

suzanne@dogdigital.co.uk<br />

dogdigital.co.uk<br />

Enjoy Digital<br />

Contact: Kristal Ireland<br />

kristal@enjoy-digital.co.uk<br />

www.enjoy-digital.co.uk<br />

Magma Digital<br />

Tel: 0845 241 6460<br />

Contact: Jeremy Coates<br />

info@magmadigital.co.uk<br />

www.magmadigital.co.uk<br />

Mind orchard<br />

Tel: 01273 819340<br />

Contact: Arran D'Aubigny<br />

arran@mindorchard.com<br />

T: +44 (0) 1225 580770<br />

F: +44 (0) 1225 580370<br />

E: info@brightlines.co.uk<br />

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Advert AWK (B-Words).indd 1 15/10/2012 11:35


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