TBWA to pay for public to air grumbles
TBWA is launching a scheme enabling members of the public to air their grievances through a full-page ad in a national paper – free of charge.
Chief executive Alasdair Ritchie says the ads will appear once a month. Creative work will be provided by TBWA and media space by the papers.
Ritchie says: “People need to have a medium where they feel they are being heard. For example, if someone’s father died because there were not enough hospital beds that person could have a full-page ad saying what happened. But it is not meant to be political. It is more a cri de coeur.”
Ritchie has had discussions with a number of papers and says the response has been positive.
“The only concern they have at the moment is that the ad might look like a piece of editorial,” he says.
If the scheme gets off the ground, TBWA creative director Trevor Beattie – who recently created a controversial anti-rape campaign – will have sole responsibility for producing the ads.
Ritchie says that each month the deserving cause will be chosen by a jury made up of representatives from TBWA and the newspaper concerned.
The scheme is expected to be launched in September.