Racheal Lee
Jul 15, 2013

PR delegates add to 'innovative ideas' at MediaWorks

BANGKOK - Campaign Asia-Pacific’s MediaWorks concluded in Bangkok over the weekend. This year's edition featured a real-time brief from client HTC and attracted delegates from creative, media and PR agencies.

image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading

Presentation by the black team in the final round

image.Heading

Presentation by the green team in the final round

image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading

The winning team

image.Heading

The first runner-up

image.Heading

The event was held from 10 to 13 July at the Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel & Towers. It was the ninth running of the specialised training course and conference, and the first time that delegates from PR agencies have attended.

The 121 delegates from 12 countries were joined by chairperson Torie Henderson, president of global account management at Omnicom Media Group, and 10 industry leaders who acted as mentors during the competitive pitch for mobile-phone maker HTC.

The mentors were:

  • Rob Campbell, regional head of strategy, Wieden+Kennedy, China
  • Gautam Dutt, managing director, digital services, Havas Media
  • Malcolm Hanlon, COO Asia-Pacific, ZenithOptimedia
  • Audrey Kuah, CEO, Aegis Media Singapore
  • Swapna Nayak, regional communications planning director, IPG Mediabrands
  • Jeremy Paul, managing partner, Ignition Factory, Omnicom Media Group
  • John Sintras, director, SMG global experience product and chairman, SMG Australia
  • Lee Smith, CEO, platforms, Asia-Pacific, Omnicom Media Group
  • Neil Stewart, CEO, Asia-Pacific, Maxus
  • Jon Wright, head of analytics and insight, APAC, MEC

The event started off with a one-day conference, utilising the skills and knowledge of the mentors and event sponsors, on topics such as insights, strategy, ideas and pitch presentation.

HTC regional media director Lori Becker then asked the 10 teams to come up with a strategy that involved paid, owned and earned channels, with the theme 'Exceptional', for the launch of the new HTC One.

The teams and their mentors then had 36 hours to come up with ideas that they pitched to the judging panel on the third afternoon. Two finalist teams were announced on the same night at a dinner celebration.

“The event showed off some amazing talent, and I left with innovative ideas,” Becker said.

The winning team, crowned on the final day, was the black team, which was mentored by Campbell before a surprise midnight leadership switch on the third night and by Smith afterwards. The team's campaign focused on strengthening the company's brand position with the element of "Instant Awesome" spanning activation, PR and events. The team's consumer insight was that 'expectionals' feel a tension between their projected identity and their hidden true self. HTC closes the gap between the two, helping them maximise their potential.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Creative Minds: Jereek Espiritu pushes his ideas to ...

An intervention by a computer repairman drove Jereek Espiritu away from a career flying helicopters to a world of creative leaps and flights of fancy.

1 day ago

UM launches Full Colour Media with a focus on ...

Full Colour Media is underpinned by a body of custom research conducted with more than 10,000 brands and with 5 million data points, culminating in a ‘Brand Patterns’ proprietary model designed to grow and differentiate brands.

1 day ago

Campaign Global Agency of the Year Awards 2024: ...

With the final entry deadline for Agency of the Year Global fast approaching, we speak to judges who share their views on the biggest opportunities and challenges for 2025, and what they hope to see in winning entries.

1 day ago

The 'laziest influencer' makes cleaning effortless—l...

S.C. Johnson's new mold-cleaning campaign features their least energetic spokesperson ever—a sloth whose main qualification is mastering the art of minimal effort.