‘To be continued’: inside the Guardian’s 200th birthday celebrations – The Drum

Posted: May 18, 2021 at 4:15 am

A lot has happened since 1821. The abolition of slavery, two world wars, the Industrial Revolution not to mention the proliferation of the internet. Through it all, the Guardian has been in print, not just documenting but critiquing the world as it progressed.

We were the original challenger brand, insists Sam Jacobs, creative director at The Guardian's in-house team, a partnership with Oliver. It was born in Manchester, not Fleet Street, from a real need to challenge the status quo, with everything that was going on at the time with the Peterloo Massacre. It was different to the other publications of the time. We still have those similar challenges today, they havent gone away.

200 years for a newspaper is a big deal. The Guardian is older than the New York Times, the Telegraph and the Wall Street Journal. And considering how volatile the media industry has become, survival must be celebrated especially if its trans-centuries.

But the Guardian insists it doesnt want to mark the milestone with a period of reflection. We were adamant that we didnt want it to just be a celebration of the past, says Kate Davies, marketing director at the Guardian. We wanted to talk to our future.

As Jacobs points out, anniversaries can sometimes feel more important to a brand than to the outside world. Theres a fine line between celebration and revelling, he says, which got them to the campaign tagline: A Work in Progress since 1821.

As a news organization, we should be concerned with whats happening now and where were going, Jacobs contends. Learning from the past is important, as it allows us to understand and move forward, but where were going next and the challenges ahead are so important. So we wanted to find a position that talked to that.

Created in-house through a collaboration with Oliver agency, the campaign is devised to highlight the Guardians unique role and voice in the world, with a focus on its independent ownership, reputation for holding the powerful to account and commitment to hopeful ideas and imaginative solutions throughout its 200-year history.

Celebrating the evolution of the Guardians typography and its longstanding challenger voice, the campaign uses clever copywriting that allows the reader to sample its product.

When youre a news organisation that deals with words, words are so important. Every single line we have has so much weight theyre scrutinized so heavily, says Jacobs, pointing to the old AMV BBDO days of the Economist as an example of that. You listen to the stories how they would write 1000s of lines and just the best would be pinned to the wall. You totally understand why this had to happen.

He explains that everyone who works at or reads the Guardian has their own perspective as to what it represents and what makes something very Guardian. And theres positive and negative baggage that comes with that, he says. You have to try hard to get the words right, so we tried to be very critical of what we wrote, self-examining every line. We wrote hundreds if not thousands of lines well, thats what it feels like.

While the Work in Progress campaign will run across multiple touchpoints, including the Guardians digital platforms and apps, with paid activity across its social media channels, its the out-of-home (OOH) work that feels particularly Guardian as it is a firm believer in the epic street takeover.

Last year, the Guardian coated Berlin in 2,000 flyposters as part of an experiential stunt that begged passers-by to break the emergency glass they were housed in and take a complimentary copy of Guardian Weekly. It was a novel approach from the newspaper that it hoped would drive more international readers to the magazine.

The year prior, in a bid to reach two million supporters by 2022, the Guardian flyposted its Hope is Power campaign across the UK to highlight the crucial role that the newspaper plays in giving people information that enables them to challenge the status quo.

So it felt fitting that as part of the big birthday celebrations, 230 outdoor placements would be erected across London and Manchester, including a banner at Manchester Piccadilly, which has been treated with a pollution-absorbing coating Pureti, and a series of special-build work in progress billboards.

There was a lot of different ideas that we played with we wanted each of the pieces of OOH to speak through the messaging but also how it was showing up in the world, says Davies, including the to be continued billboard that highlights how its role in the world will be continued.

But theres also a playful element to it, she says. Its a continuation of that idea that every piece does two things it talks to our readers through messaging, but also through its placement. Thats something we want to always think about with our OOH buys especially when youre buying static. Its important that its interesting that its not just something that sits on the streets for two weeks.

The campaign also features three films created in collaboration with Independent Films. Each explores the idea of progress as it relates to the environment, equality and humanity at large, with voiceovers from the late Ursula K Le Guin, former Observer journalist Alan Ross, and poet and author Salena Godden. It also features the song Immunity written and performed by Jon Hopkins.

We really wanted to get across this sense of history, but also the sense of things being unfinished and us being on a journey, explains Jacobs, on how the films relate to the wider campaign. Along with little bits of snippets of audio speeches that felt timeless, we married that with imagery, which was a really interesting way for us to talk to change over time.

The thing about turning 200 is you have this moment of reflection, because youre evaluating the world as it is and how it was, explains Davies. You have this window into whats going on a moment of pause and reflection. What Oliver achieved through the films was this feeling that youre eavesdropping at this moment in time.

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'To be continued': inside the Guardian's 200th birthday celebrations - The Drum

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