Emily Tan
Nov 20, 2012

News Corp Australia appoints UM, Mediacom and ZenithOptimedia

AUSTRALIA - Following a competitive pitch, News Corp has appointed Mediabrands' UM to handle News Limited, GroupM's Mediacom for Foxtel and Publicis' ZenithOptimedia for Twentieth Century Fox.

News Corp Australia appoints UM, Mediacom and ZenithOptimedia

News Corp's media accounts have been consolidated with ZenithOptimedia for the past seven years. 

News Corp Australia decided to split its media business as part of a groupwide initiative to "put customers at the centre", said News Limited chief executive Kim Williams. "It is imperative that we go to market with detailed, data-driven insights that respond well to expressed needs and consumption preferences." 

The three agencies each have particular strengths that make them "ideal partners", said Williams. 

“During the pitch process it became clear that MediaBrands has a deep understanding of News Limited and the many opportunities for us to grow our business," Williams continued. "UM’s commitment to innovation and their in-house analytical capabilities will be invaluable as we re-engineer News and our brands for all the platforms our consumers love—print, online, mobile, tablet and broadcast."

Mediacom on the other hand, demonstrated "quality and depth" that will greatly enhance Foxtel’s
capacity to tell its story of delivering a better entertainment experience, said Foxtel chief executive Richard Freudenstein.

Twentieth Century Fox managing director Marc Wooldridge said: "ZenithOptimedia put forward a compelling pitch, demonstrating strategic planning excellence and focus on consumer insights with clear commercial application." 

News Corp is expecting to complete its review of its master media brands account in the next few weeks.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Spikes Asia 2025: Rika Komakine and Tetsuya Honda ...

A Japanese PR agency and their client cooked up a Spikes Asia Award-winning campaign by tackling a common cooking complaint—sticky gyoza. This is how they did it.

5 hours ago

Meta could soon be the largest misinformation ...

The tech company’s recent changes could result in a surge in unmoderated and unfortunate content, underscoring the need for advertisers to again be mindful about where they spend their dollars, writes Sarah Thompson.

5 hours ago

WPP mandates four days per week in office

The change to the global guidelines will apply across WPP's operations.

7 hours ago

Why Meta’s pivot on fact-checking is the right move

This course correction is not merely expedient; it’s the right move for Meta, its shareholders, advertisers, and audiences alike, argues Ramakrishnan Raja in his forthright analysis.