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Advertising NewsChildren tell world leaders to consider them

Published: 16 October 2009

The 'Consider Us' campaign has been conceived and developed by ZOOM Advertising, part of the Ogilvy group. Creative Director, Deon Robbertze urges everyone to tell everyone about the campaign. “It’s high time the children had a say in their future. I defy the world leaders not to listen to them!”


Children tell world leaders to consider them
The 'Consider Us' campaign has been conceived and developed by ZOOM Advertising, part of the Ogilvy group. Creative Director, Deon Robbertze urges everyone to tell everyone about the campaign. “It’s high time the children had a say in their future. I defy the world leaders not to listen to them!”

A TV; radio; and print campaign will advertise 'Consider Us': a ‘guerilla’ campaign masterminded by Heart (the social enterprise hub that incubates new social enterprises) includes a chalking project, whereby messages are chalked up in the communities and a greening/planting project. Two dedicated websites are now live for the posting of messages. A social media campaign using free Mxit and website banner advertising makes up a full digital media campaign to support 'Consider Us'.

Children don’t mince their words and hundreds of thousands of South African children will tell world leaders what they want them to do about the planet. The kids’ main message is: 'Consider Us' … so that the world they live in will be habitable in years to come.

Children between six and 18 are being asked to explain, in 20 words, why world leaders should consider them when signing their climate change treaties. What is precious about our world? Why is it worth saving? These messages then appear, in real time, on a dedicated website, serving as a voice of the generation with the most to lose. A voice that grows louder every day as the virus spreads and the messages roll in.

When 13 year-old Kiyan van Rensburg says: “We will make our ancestors proud. We will follow your example,” the pressure is on to set a suitable example. And young Alexander Dickie makes a valid point when he asks: “If the earth doesn’t survive, who will?”

Adding his voice to the 'Consider Us' groundswell is South Africa rock star, Arno Carstens. The singer-songwriter and former front man of 'Springbok Nude Girls' has offered a single off his soon-to-be-released album as the soundtrack to the campaign. Titled 'Emergency', he will perform this haunting song together with the award-winning Tygerberg Children’s Choir at a CTICC gala dinner on Thursday, 22 October. The performance officially launches the 'Consider Us' global campaign and commemorates the historic United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) Global Roundtable when hundreds of the world’s top money men and investors come to Cape Town to plan a new and green economy.

When Arno and the children sing: 'How long … too long … right now … this is an emergency,' delegates in the auditorium may find it hard to ignore the plea.

During Cape Town Green Week (19 to 23 October), some of the messages will be strung-up on washing lines inside the Cape Town International Convention Centre so that delegates from all over the world who are attending a series of events can read them. There will be giant screens inside the CTICC showing messages as they are posted live on the 'Consider Us' website, www.considerus.org or www.considerus.mobi.

A selection of the most hard-hitting, heart-rending messages will be collated in a book and delivered to heads of state at the Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen in December. These world leaders will be asked to sign the book, which will constitute, effectively, a signed oath to heed the demands of children all over the world.

Once signed, the book will travel back to Cape Town, South Africa, where it will be buried in a time capsule at a UN heritage site, to be opened twenty years from now.

The children’s 'Consider Us' campaign begins in Africa and spearheads a global movement. A groundswell of emotion, passion and genuine pleas is set to touch even the hardest hearts and, in its honesty and innocence, will challenge world leaders to listen to what the world’s children are telling them. Most of the business leaders, environmentalists and heads of state – those who decide the world’s future when they thrash out a framework for the war on climate change – are middle aged. This is one of the biggest challenges facing the issue because, while it’s commendable having the vision and urgency to act now, most of the people involved in this global rescue plan won’t be around to see whether it works or not. Their children will be around though, so if anyone should have a say in what the world will look like in a few years’ time, it should be them.

There seems to be a genuine belief that Copenhagen can succeed where its predecessor, Kyoto, fell short.

Parents; teachers; and children are being encouraged to participate in the campaign so that these messages can be delivered to the world’s top money men in Cape Town next week so that they may take those messages on to Copenhagen. If the finance world invests more responsibly, we can live in a better world.

Next story in Advertising News:Digital agency merger is SA's largest  →
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Standard Bank is popping-up an effective campaign

When designing an advertising campaign, how effective is it to use more than one platform in which to run your campaign? Standard Banks’s new MyCard campaign is one such example that uses the mediums of television; print; ad online. Totally Mad’s Lindsey Kin investigates.


Standard Bank is popping-up an effective campaign
By Lindsey Kin

Before deciding on a medium, it important to understand your consumer. One needs to know what they read; watch; and listen to, as well as where there interest lie, before choosing a particular advertising platform in which to place a campaign to reach that specific target audience. With Standard Bank’s MyCard, the group launched a first-of-its kind credit card for women in South Africa, reinforcing the status of South African women who make the majority of buying decisions and have better financial records than men.

On top of TV, Standard Bank made use of Destiny magazine to market this new banking concept. The brand personality of this publication is about the professional woman who sees herself as being quite different from her mother and more traditional female peers, in that she is more rebellious; independent (emotionally and financially); more educated; and more outspoken. This is the reason why Destiny was selected for Standard Bank’s MyCard, in that the magazine’s target market and the MyCard target market is a match – thus connecting with its specific target market.

“Determined to assist our clients in making the right connections, Standard Bank will ensure that they move forward, by changing opportunities into realities. Standard Bank will encourage you to move forward by ‘connecting the right ideas; at the right time; at the right place; in the right way, in order to unlock something better and create opportunities that will move you forward,” says Nikki Twomey, Standard Bank Group Brand Director.

The MyCard campaign has also used the online realm to connect with its female consumer. For example, the ‘Let’s celebrate you for being you’ competition allows female MyCard holders an opportunity to share their MyCard experiences with an online community.

Standard Bank’s new campaign is impressive – and if you too have seen their pop-up print add in Destiny magazine, you will know exactly what I am talking about. I also feel that the campaign has been a success thus far, because it truly connects with the modern female consumer who is financially independent, through many media avenues, with its underlying message communicated on a personal level.

What are your thoughts on this campaign? Post your comments on our blog.

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Help for debt-stressed consumers with new campaign

In an effort to curb the growing consumer debt in South Africa; the Banking Association of South Africa (BASA); the National Credit Regulator (NCR) and the Debt Counseling Association of South Africa (DCASA) today launched the National Consumer Awareness campaign at the Grace Hotel in Rosebank.


By Reikhutsitse Malala

The joint campaign is aimed at effectively dealing with debt-related challenges and conveying critical information to consumers who have dented their credit record.

African Bank Investment Limited Executive and Campaign Spokesman, Johan de Ridder, said the campaign is aimed at reaching consumers who are debt-stressed but not yet under review, as well as consumers who are already under debt review.
“We want to reach out to consumers who are plunged in debt and give them an empathic ear and encourage them to apply for debt counseling,” de Ridder told the gathering.

The campaign, funded by ABSA; African Bank; Capitec; First Rand Bank; Nedbank; and Standard Bank, will be pushed through media advertising.
Media Relations officer of NCR, Lebogan Selibi, says they will start conveying their message through various radio stations in seven different languages and in newspapers in two languages.Selebi says through this campaign they aim to reach about 75 to 85% of the entire population.

As a starting point for debt-affected consumers, de Ridder invited consumers to contact banks when it comes to dealing with over-indebtedness before applying for the debt counseling and preferably before actually defaulting. He added that consumers under debt counseling are encouraged to visit their debt counselor to ensure that they have a debt plan in place that will enable them to settle their debts within a reasonable period of time as required by the National Credit Act, so that they can restore their credit worthiness.

De Ridder also warned non–paying consumers under debt counseling that they run the risk of having their debt review process terminated, and they may lose their assets and all protection afforded in terms of the Act.

According to Spokesperson for DCASA, Paul Slot, who was also part of the panel at the conference, debt counseling at present is not achieving its aims as outlined in the NCA. Slot adds that limited cases are being resolved and high levels of defaulting consumers are under counseling. “This campaign, in combination with the implementation of the NCR Debt Review Task Team recommendations accepted by the banking industry, aims to start reversing these adverse trends,” said Slot.

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