How the outdoor media industry reinvented itself via digital, data and content

How the outdoor media industry reinvented itself via digital, data and content

The rapid growth of online media in the past decade has seen “traditional” media – television, print, radio and outdoor – lose some of its once lustrous reputation in the marketing industry. Yet one of those traditional media, outdoor, has been able to buck the trend and reinvent itself in the digital era. And in doing so it has increased its audiences – and revenues.

University of Sydney appoints Andrew Baxter as Adjunct Professor

University of Sydney appoints Andrew Baxter as Adjunct Professor

The teaching of marketing related subjects at a tertiary level could become irrelevant unless Australian Universities engage with the sector as it goes through a period of rapid technology driven change, according to a leading marketing industry expert.

Andrew Baxter, who headed the communications agencies Ogilvy and Publicis here in Australia, made the observation after being appointed as an adjunct Professor of Marketing by the University of Sydney Business School.

“Marketing has changed enormously over the past 10 years and now more than ever, universities need to understand industry best practice in order to remain relevant,” Professor Baxter said. “Students need to learn the latest techniques from the sector itself.”

In his new role, Professor Baxter, will work to establish a dialogue between the Business School and the multi-billion dollar marketing industry.

“Technology has transformed the industry in recent years with a shift in focus away from traditional media and towards highly targeted digital platforms,” said the head of the Business School’s marketing discipline, Professor Vince Mitchell.

“It is essential that we engage the best talent available if our students are to be job ready when they graduate and join the workforce,” Professor Mitchell said as he announced Professor Baxter’s appointment.

$11bn of FMCG marketing wasted by selling brands on promotion

$11bn of FMCG marketing wasted by selling brands on promotion

According to Nielsen, 40 per cent of FMCG brands sold in supermarkets in the last 12 months were done so on promotion, up from 30 per cent in 2009. The research says that 48 per cent of these sales would have happened anyway, regardless of whether the product was on promotion. That’s $11 billion in sales discounting that didn’t need to happen.

That’s money that’s being diverted from advertising spend and product innovation, both of which are needed to drive the longer-term health of individual FMCG brands and the category as a whole.

Measuring marketing - how do you know your marketing campaign worked?

Measuring marketing - how do you know your marketing campaign worked?

The small business owner who has just spent $100,000 on a radio campaign and the multinational who has invested $50 million in marketing in the past 12 months have the same question: How do we know our investment has worked?

Andrew Baxter to Chair oOh! Media's $2 million Unmissable Awards

Andrew Baxter to Chair oOh! Media's $2 million Unmissable Awards

Tourism Tasmania’s ‘Feed your curious’ campaign is the first entry in the running for a share of the $2 million worth of out-of-home media in the 2018 national oOh! Unmissable Awards.

The awards have been launched this week and will recognise the best integrated campaigns across the oOh! network of out-of-home assets.

Three $500,000 media packages are up for grabs to national campaigns that use two or more oOh! environments with native content. There are also three $175,000 single market campaigns to be awarded which combine an oOh! environment with native content.

oOh!’s group revenue director, Phil Eastwood, said in addition to the $2 million worth of media, the judging panel, which will be chaired by the former chairman of Publicis Communications ANZ, Andrew Baxter, will award the creative lead of the best campaign of all the winners with an all-expenses paid educational trip for two to the SXSW Conference and festivals in Austin, Texas.