New Zealand Marketing

BAY OF PLENTY

With Mount Maunganui and Tauranga offering some of the country’s most idyllic views, an appealing balance between city and surf, and a creative and buzzing business environmen­t, the region is a hotspot for setting up shop.

-

Reuben Woods, who establishe­d Woods Agency in Mount Maunganui in 2004, says although good positionin­g, work and awards means he’s always attracted talented staff, over the last two years it’s been easier than ever to find high-quality talent.

The team has recently added three new employees from Auckland who’ve come from big agencies, realising they can continue to pursue their careers from the Bay of Plenty.

Woods says there can be this perception coming from the big cities that regional businesses have added challenges because of location, but this is not the case.

“If anything, we can be more nimble, innovative and get to really work closely with a lot of the business owners firsthand,” he says.

“And we a have a much better work/life balance while still being able to compete on a national and internatio­nal scale.”

What’s unique about the Bay of Plenty is the collaborat­ion, he says.

“We have over many years developed a really strong culture of innovation here and I really think this comes down to the way we all collaborat­e as businesses.”

With a nationwide audience, the Woods team use whatever channels best reach the audience – be it TV, print, radio, outdoor,

digital or experienti­al.

“I feel because we are regional, we are much more in tune with real Kiwis, who we are selling to the majority of the time,” says Woods.

“We are at the coal face of the New Zealand consumer and for a lot of the brands we are dealing with, being truly amongst this audience really helps.”

He says without truly understand­ing your customer you are shooting from the hip and potentiall­y wasting a lot of your clients’ money.

“We really get to understand what the New Zealand customer wants and needs without having to spend thousands on research.”

Woods says the team has great relationsh­ips with local, as well as national media, so they can be creative with how they integrate those channels into campaigns.

In the central region of the North Island, residents are 18 percent more likely than the rest of the population to read six or more issues of a newspaper in a week – with 22 percent of residents doing just that, according to Nielsen data.

In the Bay of Plenty, print audiences have remained close to static, a trend not seen in many other regions across the country, and radio and digital audiences are growing.

NZME Bay of Plenty general manager Greg Murphy says they often experience 100 percent sell-out of inventory due to demand and hyper-local geographic targeting is now possible, something that wouldn’t have been available two or three years ago.

For example, if you wanted to target just Katikati, in the past the only way to be truly hyper-local would be to use the Katikati Advertiser. Now it’s possible to deliver 50,000 digital impression­s via

The New Zealand Herald and Bay Of Plenty Times websites within a week, and you are guaranteed to reach the audience.

Murphy says what is noticeably different in the Bay of Plenty it how the audience have a deep personal connection to the media they consume, and they often consume traditiona­l media on a more frequent basis.

“It’s common to hear people refer to their newspaper as ‘our paper’ and many of our audience can be fiercely defensive of what they regard as ‘their publicatio­n’."

He adds the audience is also very focused on their local media producing local and highly engaging content.

“National news and content is easily sourced, but true hyper-local news, sport and entertainm­ent is becoming the key differenti­ator and audience engagement tool for all local media.”

Local staff live and work in the community and connect with the audiences on a daily basis, and many are well-known in their local community and the wider region, Murphy says.

Although the growth of digital, video and social has been dramatic, one of the difference­s Murphy sees in the region compared to Auckland is far less people who have totally converted to digital and social channels for their media consumptio­n.

“We often talk about how our audiences consume media in the Bay of Plenty via multiple mediums across the day and week, and for a marketer, multi-platform media is crucial to reach our audience.”

This is especially true as there has been dramatic audience growth in the 25-44 age group, as well as retaining one of the strongest and financiall­y active over-50 audiences in the country, Murphy says.

It is the fastest growing region outside of Auckland, with one of the strongest growing property markets and dramatic growth in retail, media, marketers and creatives. The Bay of Plenty will have plenty of work to do – and it's well equipped to do it.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand