

Mumbrellacast
Mumbrella
Every week the team at Mumbrella cover the latest news in the Australian media, marketing and advertising industries along with interviews with key people in the industry. Featuring a rotating panel of hosts from the Mumbrella team, this podcast is essential listening for anyone working under Australia's media and marketing umbrella.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 25, 2021 • 46min
An alcohol-soaked adland
This week, Mumbrella's Brittney Rigby started a conversation about advertising's alcohol culture with an in-depth feature. In this episode, she discusses the key issues and gives an insight into how agency leaders have reacted to the piece.Over in TV, WIN's CEO Andrew Lancaster has gained a seat on the Nine's board in the wake of the companies' recent affiliate deal. Plus, Ten is taking a comedic look back at 2020... in April 2021. Is the idea past its prime?And, to mark the 10th anniversary of The Conversation, founder Andrew Jaspan reflects on founding the publication and the speed with which it grew. And, with publishers reaching agreements with Google and Facebook, Jaspan gives his view on the state of journalism in Australia as well as what the future holds.

Mar 18, 2021 • 45min
Influencer marketing is a murky business
Influencer marketing is in the spotlight again, with SBS' The Feed airing a four-part investigation into the industry. The team unpacks some of the shadier aspects of influencer marketing and discusses why it is so difficult to regulate.Plus, the team analyses the WPP AUNZ scheme implementation booklet as the takeover bid from WPP plc moves forward. Also at WPP this week, Group M CEO Mark Lollback departed. What's next for the group's media agencies while the search for his replacement is underway?News Corp and Nine struck news payment deals with Facebook, after weeks of the social media platform reportedly dragging its feet. The two major players join Seven, Schwartz Media, Private Media, and Solstice Media on the deals list, but the ABC still doesn't have an agreement with Facebook or Google.And, ahead of the 2021 season's launch, AFL Media's Julian Dunne gives a deeper insight into the return of the game to stadiums and what that means for the code as well as the brands and marketers that partner with it.

Mar 11, 2021 • 45min
'An exciting year to be covering radio ratings'
International Women's Day took place this week, and to mark the occasion Leo Burnett CEO Melinda Geertz joined the Mumbrellacast to talk about the importance of supporting women in advertising.By reflecting on her own experiences and who inspired has inspired her career, Geertz dives into the importance of fostering a culture understands the needs of women in the workplace and reflecting the diversity of the talent pool in the make up of an agency.The first radio ratings of 2021 also landed this week, which saw Melburnians change their radios back to FM while Sydneysiders stuck to AM and talk back. The survey also gave a glance at the performance of an abundance of new shows and re-branded stations across Australia. So, who do the Mumbrellacast team have their eye on?And, ACM head Antony Catalano made another play to boost his regional media empire by making a deal to purchase nearly 19 million shares in Prime Media Group at a cost of $4.245 million, from fellow media mogul Bruce Gordon. The move for Prime comes just over a year after its shareholders voted down a merger with Seven West Media. The question now lies about whether the Australian Communications and Media Authority will allow Catalano to actually take control of Prime.

Mar 4, 2021 • 45min
The biggest job in Australian media
It was a week of CEO appointments. Leading the pack was Mike Sneesby, Hugh Marks' successor for the chief executive job at Nine. Few in the industry were shocked about the news, but what does this mean for the internal execs who unsuccessfully applied? Can Sneesby succeed if the board is as fractured as Nine's own newspapers suggest? And, where does this leave Stan?Over in adland, UM, Ogilvy, Leo Burnett and Havas PR all also named new CEOs. The team chats through how each appointment indicates something different about the state of each business.And ahead of the first radio ratings survey of the year, Triple M's Mike Fitzpatrick give a preview of the network's status in 2021. From the launch of Triple M Perth - bringing Basil Zempilas on board - to the 'dynamic' sound of The Marty Sheargold Show, and the importance of regional radio, Fitzpatrick feels confident about 2021.

Feb 25, 2021 • 51min
Facebook's backflip, Hugh Marks' final results for Nine, plus Antoinette Lattouf on media diversity
This week, Facebook backtracked on its decision to pull news sharing from Australian users and, with some amendments, the News Media Bargaining Code passed the senate. Everyone seems to have come out a winner... except the small publishers. It's hardly the end of this saga, so what's next?The media and marketing industry is in the throes of financial reporting season; first up on the podcast is Nine, which reported $1.2 billion in revenue and net profit up 79% to $182 million. It's the last results for outgoing CEO Hugh Marks, so the Mumbrellacast team dives into which parts of Nine were the most successful in the first half of the year, and speculate on who will take the chief executive crown.It was also a full-year report from WPP AUNZ, and despite a decline in sales and EBIT, the group was heartened by its results being on-par with market projections. COVID-19 cost cutting and the implementation of CEO Jens Monees' transformation plan saw the group also manage to significantly lower costs. With a potential takeover from WPP plc in the works, the team looks ahead to what's next for WPP AUNZ.And also in the news was the senate hearing into media diversity, triggered by a petition by former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, which received 500,000 signatures. Joining the Mumbrellacast to chat through the issue was Media Diversity Australia's Antoinette Lattouf.

Feb 18, 2021 • 36min
Publishers sign up to Google Showcase, Seven's financials improve and Facebook pulls news
This week Pearman Media's Steve Allen joined the Mumbrellacast team to breakdown Google Showcase and what it means for publishers as negotiations in the News Media Bargaining Code roll on.As well as being the first major media brand to sign up to Google Showcase, Seven West Media revealed its significant debt pile had been slashed by 42% to $329 million and reported a net profit of $116.4 million in the first half of the financial year, meaning the company's $170 million cost savings program is on track. In a better position than expected, the results raise questions about the importance of the performance of its upcoming content slate and whether the company should consider paying back the Job Keeper benefits which reportedly saved 120-150 jobs.Plus, this morning Facebook announced it was pulling all news sharing from its platform, effective immediately. It wasn't just publishers that work up to find their pages blocked and content missing, but satirical sites, sports teams and the Bureau of Meteorology also got caught in the crosshairs. Now it's up to the Australian Government to move on the situation.

Feb 11, 2021 • 46min
TV ratings kick off, eyes turn to the Super Bowl ads, and all things in-housing with Lution
TV ratings returned this week, this time with the unusual inclusion of the Australian Open in the official ratings period. After doubt and quarantine crisis surrounded the tennis until its launch, how has the new schedule impacted programming on Seven and Ten? 2021 will be a big year in TV, but with the Olympic question remaining in everyone's minds, what will the landscape look like this year?And with the Super Bowl comes headline-grabbing ads. But how did the big game ads differ this year after brands continue to feel the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic? And with the tennis in play and football on the horizon, how can Australian marketers make their mark in sports this year? Plus, Chris Maxwell and Andy Gibson talk all things in-housing off the back of launching new consultancy Lution. The pair dive into the benefits of in-house advertising teams for marketers, how it improves creative work and answer if it really does attract high-level talent to the client-side.

Feb 4, 2021 • 45min
Sports streaming heats up, Microsoft comes to the rescue, plus Time Out on taking time in
This week, how did Time Out pivot to Time In? Managing director Michael Rodrigues joins the Mumbrellacast to give insight into how a publication that celebrates experiences out and about navigates an era of sudden and sometimes prolonged lockdowns. With the News Media Bargaining Code on the top of all publishers' minds, Rodrigues also discusses where Time Out sits on the issue.The week also saw the battle for sports rights heat up as new entrants in the streaming market began to emerge. Telstra withdrew from streaming the AFL and NRL, with its customers now offered discounted access to Kayo's broadcast. Stan Sport announced the team that will lead its Super Rugby coverage, soon after announcing its streaming service will come in cheaper than Kayo. And Amazon Prime is making moves, picking up the swimming and presenting itself as a dangerous player in the periphery. In this quickly growing market, who will rise and who will fall?Plus, with Google threatening to pull out from Australia, Microsoft stepped in this week offering to fill the void. The Mumbrellacast team takes a look at how big a hole Google would leave in Australia and whether Microsoft really is up to the task.

Jan 28, 2021 • 51min
People moves, digital ad services under the microscope, plus Starcom's Nick Keenan
It was a week of Google news, and fresh off the back of the Senate's hearing into the News Media Bargaining Code the ACCC released its interim report for the Digital Advertising Services Inquiry. Here, the team gives the rundown of its initial findings and chats about what the industry has to say now that agencies seem to be out of the woods.Three agency leaders also left in seven days. David Fox is off to Ogilvy Middle East and North Africa, while Justin Drape announced he was leaving The Monkeys and Colenso BBDO's Scott Coldham is simultaneously becoming the CMO of two different brands. Were any of these moves a surprise? And what is happening inside these agencies?Plus, Nick Keenan gives the team an insight into his experience taking over the leadership of Starcom while getting to know his staff working remotely. With transformation on the cards, Keenan chats about his learnings from the client side and the pivotal role talent development is playing in the future of the agency.

Dec 18, 2020 • 32min
Mumbrella's top stories of 2020
On the final Mumbrellacast for the year, the whole team pitches in to count down the top stories of 2020. Popular campaigns came from Menulog and Hungry Jacks, thanks to famous faces and famous burgers. But, by far the biggest story was the impact COVID-19 had on the media and marketing industry.The team looks back on the warning shot to the media industry that was News Corp's regional closures, the major talent redundancies at Ten, how brands handled challenging conditions, and reflect on what became of the industry as 2020 rolled on.To round out the year, the Mumbrellacast team reveals their picks for the biggest news story that came across the desk, from Hugh Marks' upcoming departure from Nine to Ben Lilley's purchase of McCann.


