The Guardian's first brand campaign in seven years

Paige Murphy
By Paige Murphy | 24 September 2019
 

The Guardian has released a campaign, Hope is Power, to restate the the newspaper's purpose and inspire readers around the world to support its journalism.

It is the Guardian's first brand campaign in seven years.

The campaign’s central message, ‘Hope is Power’, is inspired by the Guardian’s editor-in-chief Katharine Viner’s essay A mission for journalism in a time of crisis.

The campaign seeks to build on the trust and affinity readers have with the Guardian and its role in giving people the facts to challenge the status quo, publish fresh ideas and opinions, and hold power to account.

“The Guardian has an almost 200-year history of producing journalism which inspires hope. This new campaign aims to turn that feeling into action," says Anna Bateson, chief customer officer, Guardian News & Media.

“Against the backdrop of a volatile political landscape around the world and with a frugal budget, we have chosen to take a bold creative approach which we hope will inspire readers to support Guardian journalism in a number of ways.”

The new campaign aims to deepen affinity among existing Guardian supporters, while also encouraging new readers to spend more time with Guardian journalism.

The campaign is one part of the Guardian’s target of reaching two million paying supporters by 2022.

The creative will run for five weeks across television, video-on-demand, cinema, outdoor, social, audio and the Guardian’s own channels in the UK, US, Australia and globally.

It relies on carefully targeted use of the Guardian’s platforms, contra agreements and a media plan which includes the use of flyposting and targeted podcast ads.

The campaign film is directed by Academy Award-winning director James Marsh, known for his Stephen Hawking biopic, The Theory of Everything.

It is set to music from the Tony award-winning musical Hadestown, the track Nothing Changes is written by Anaïs Mitchell.

The Hope Is Power campaign is a collaboration between the Guardian’s brand, marketing and editorial teams.

Uncommon London led on creative development, PHD led on media planning and buying, and Pentagram developed the initial brand positioning.

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