A Brand for social justice
In 2020, brands did something they’d never done before: They spoke up about race.
Windows 10 is not a free upgrade, Microsoft said last week. It's a "marketing and promotional activity."
Social Media
As Twitter gears up for an initial public offering, its executives should study Facebook's path to an IPO to learn what not to do.
CMO’s State of the CMO is an annual industry research initiative aimed at understanding how ...
CMO’s State of the CMO is an annual industry research initiative aimed at understanding how ...
In this latest episode of our conversations over a cuppa with CMO, we catch up with the delightful Pip Arthur, Microsoft Australia's chief marketing officer and communications director, to talk about thinking differently, delivering on B2B connection in the crisis, brand purpose and marketing transformation.
In 2020, brands did something they’d never done before: They spoke up about race.
‘Business as unusual’ is a term my organisation has adopted to describe the professional aftermath of COVID-19 and the rest of the tragic events this year. Social distancing, perspex screens at counters and masks in all manner of situations have introduced us to a world we were never familiar with. But, as we keep being reminded, this is the new normal. This is the world we created. Yet we also have the opportunity to create something else.
In times of uncertainty, people gravitate towards the familiar. How can businesses capitalise on this to overcome the recessionary conditions brought on by COVID? Craig Flanders explains.