The Campaign Podcast Podcast Por Campaign arte de portada

The Campaign Podcast

The Campaign Podcast

De: Campaign
Escúchala gratis

Campaign's weekly award-winning podcast interrogates and analyses the biggest stories, campaigns and important issues in UK advertising, marketing and media. Presented by Campaign's editorial team. Read more at http://www.campaignlive.co.uk/resources/podcasts

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Campaign
Economía Marketing Marketing y Ventas Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • How responsible are brands for online safety on social platforms?
    Apr 14 2026

    In March, Meta and Google were found liable for designing addictive platforms that harmed a young user's mental health, a verdict both platforms disagree with and plan to appeal. Channel 4 also released its documentary called Molly vs The Machines about a 14 year old girl who took her own life after seeing harmful content online. Plus, the UK Government began a consultation for a potential ban for under 16s to improve digital safety, following Australia's ban in December, with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer saying we “have to act”.


    Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and other platforms rely on advertising to make money. So whether a government ban or strict regulation of the platforms is the solution, this episode questions how much responsibility should the brands funding these platforms have.


    Jake Dubbins, managing director at Media Bounty and co-chair of Conscious Advertising Network, joins the episode alongside Campaign's UK editor Maisie McCabe and editor-in-chief Gideon Spanier. This episode is hosted by tech and multimedia editor Lucy Shelley.


    Further reading:

    Ian Russell challenges Instagram boss to “chat” at Cannes Lions

    Molly vs the Machines showed us that advertising choices aren't neutral

    Can we talk about whether fraudulent ads are the tech platforms' biggest problem?

    Ofcom research finds rise in concern over online risks versus benefits


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • Why are in-house teams taking top talent from agencies?
    Apr 7 2026
    In-house agencies have been growing over the last few years, as brands have been taking more work in-house and building bespoke teams. In the last few weeks, Allwyn launched an in-house studio, ITV shifted its retained creative account from Uncommon to ITV Creative and Uncommon’s executive creative director Richard Biggs jumped to BBC Creative. Campaign Red analysed this trend and last month produced an in-depth global report, The Inside Job, looking into what disciplines brands are in-housing, why they are luring agency talent and how they are collaborating with external agencies. In this episode, Niki Garner, director of ITV Creative, joins The Campaign Podcast to discuss the in-housing evolution, why she hires from agencies and how in-house teams can provide the most value. Garner was also named In-house Agency Leader at Campaign’s In-House agency awards last year.Joining from the Campaign team is data journalist Jamie Rossouw, co-author of The Inside Job, and premium content editor Nicola Merrifield. This episode is hosted by tech and multimedia editor Lucy Shelley.Further reading:How to build a successful in-house agencyAllwyn's media director: in-house shop Studio 59 aiming for “newsroom mentality”BBC Creative appoints Natalie Lau as head of planningITV Creative lead dismisses past 'snobbery' aimed at in-house agenciesITV promotes I’m a Celebrity… South Africa with hand-drawn animation“The darker side of water”: behind the scenes of Channel 4’s “The fountain of filth”Lego ad calls 'play' with array of characters performed by Tom HollandSpecsavers highlights audiology services by 'rebranding'Over four in 10 in-house agencies want to be brand’s lead agency, IHALC research findsITV, Reckitt and Pepsi in-house leaders to speak at Campaign's In-Housing SummitThe Lists 2025: Top five in-house creativesCampaign In-House Agency Awards 2025: winners revealed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
    Más Menos
    31 m
  • Will Whitehorn: “We have to industrialise in space. It is an imperative”
    Apr 2 2026

    In a break from the usual listen, we're bringing you the first three episodes of The Karman Line, a new podcast about the UK space industry from Haymarket Media Group, the owner of Campaign. This burgeoning sector is keen to communicate the extraordinary things it is doing to wider, complementary audiences.


    How do we solve population pressure and climate crisis in space? How has GPS allowed us to provide 12% more food globally? How did the UK become a global leader in small satellite manufacture after the British Government said, “there’s no future for the UK satellite industry”? How did Elon Musk turn reusable rockets from science fiction to science fact in less than 20 years? What else are “Elon and Jeff” going to allow us to do? And why is SpaceX still “the elephant in the room”?

    Join Alice as she talks to Will Whitehorn, chair of giant space tech investor Seraphim and former president of Virgin Galactic, and they discuss the implications of “The Elon Musk show” and its legacy, “the beginnings of a competitive space industry of scale”.

    Contributors:

    Alice Bunn, President of UKspace

    Dr Alice Bunn OBE FIMechE FRAeS CEng | LinkedIn

    UKspace: Overview | LinkedIn

    Will Whitehorn OBE, Seraphim Space Investment Trust

    Will Whitehorn OBE | LinkedIn


    Key topics covered:

    • UK satellite manufacture
    • UK universities
    • SpaceX valuation
    • Reuseable rockets
    • Agricultural management
    • Population pressure
    • Climate crisis
    • Solar power
    • Data centres in space
    • Industrialising in space


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Más Menos
    27 m
Todavía no hay opiniones