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Havas bids farewell to Welsh, promotes O'Connor and Sethebe to joint ECDsHavas Johannesburg has announced chief creative officer Eoin Welsh's resignation, and the promotion of Fiona O'Connor and Tumi Sethebe as joint executive creative directors, effective 2 January 2018. Welsh will be leaving the agency group at the end of 2017 to pursue passion projects, the agency said. I’m leaving because I want to get back to what I do best, which is help make the best possible work. I want to have less of a management role and dedicate my energy far more to the work itself. So it’s a personal decision to take on a role that would be more fulfilling for me – nothing to do with Havas as an agency at all, which I leave with considerable sadness, but also content in the knowledge that Fiona and Tumi are more than capable of taking up the lead role and guiding the agency to new heights. “Our people are at the core of our business and as such, we looked inside the organisation for talent that would take our agency to the next level. Tumi and Fiona have proven themselves with their incredible work ethic and are well deserving of this promotion. I’m particularly excited to see them leading the creative team and I’m positive that their different perspectives will lend our work the right amount of tension needed to maintain and continue asserting our excellence.” ![]() Fiona O’Connor and Tumi Sethebe O’Connor says she’s grateful for the recognition that both Sethebe and she have been given. “It’s an exciting time to lead brands through this maze that is the consumer landscape and it demands a new kind of clever from us as custodians. Two heads are certainly better than one and I believe that Tumi and I have both the smarts and the grit needed to lead our creative team to success. Sethebe agrees: “It’s an honour to be appointed along with Fiona, whom I have incredible respect for. This is a huge moment for us, the business and our clients, as it represents a new chapter that will redefine how we navigate and stay on course doing great work for our clients in this ever-changing world that we live in, characterised by a consumer that is moving at an incredible pace and purpose. I am a serial collaborator and so I am very excited about what Fiona and I will achieve given our very diverse backgrounds, experiences and points of view.” Here, they share more about why they’re looking forward to working together and how they plan to make 2018 the best year ever…
Sethebe: I am so excited to be working with Fiona because she is a talented creative, with a wealth of experience. I always call her my partner in crime. Based on our very diverse backgrounds, I think we will bring an interesting edge to the agency group in Southern Africa.
Sethebe: Creating great work that is relevant, compelling and memorable. For me, advertising is about the gift of discovery and the dizzying scale of change in our consumer and business landscapes makes that discovery all the more exciting.
Sethebe: I love the idea that you can start with a blank piece of paper and end at making a change in someone’s life. I love that our output, when done right, is not just about pushing sales for our clients but it is about influencing behaviour change and adding meaning to people’s lives. Sethebe: I am with Fiona on this – I have loved working with all our clients because the variety of brands we have delivers a much-needed dynamism to our day-to-day lives. Literally. So they have all been great. One that stands out is Samson – a truly South African brand that I grew up around and working on it was an absolute privilege. I also loved the She Loves Beer and the opportunity it presented to push the envelope and change people’s perceptions around women and beer.
Sethebe: I consume all content because I am a content creator, and inspiration can be anywhere. That being said, I have just finished listening to the book Peak Performance by Brad Stulberg and Steve Magness, and I am currently reading Radical Candor by Kim Scott. I have been truly inspired by the post-album-launch content that’s from Jay Z’s 4:44. It’s kept me glued to Tidal on my little screen.
Sethebe: As a serial collaborator, I believe you cannot do it alone.
Sethebe: I think we will see more digitally-led creative solutions that will engage consumers effectively. The first screen will dominate even more than we have known it to. I always say, when people walk into meetings, they have their mobile devices, not TV screens, and we will see more content centred for that device. Augmented reality provides a fantastic means to push boundaries in the way we curate content, and in the way consumers engage with it. We will definitely see more of that. And to add on to Fiona’s point, we will see an increased urgency in mining real-time consumer insights, and those who answer that will truly be game-changers. I am not talking about big data because that is an exhausted conversation; I am talking about nuanced insights that zero in on people’s lived experiences and build more empathy. This will be the easiest way to escape advertising on single stories, aka, stereotypes.
Sethebe: After all is said and done, it’s all about doing great work that supports our clients’ business, and equally important, that challenges and changes society. I am looking forward to being a catalyst in the entire process. ![]() Eoin Welsh Now for some last words from Welsh…
More about Fiona O’ConnorO’Connor started her career in 1997 as an art director at Ogilvy & Mather and in an upward growth trajectory, has worked with various agencies that include Lowe Bull and Leo Burnett, on various local and international brands. Her portfolio of experience includes brands within the FMCG category like Crosse + Blackwell, Kit Kat, Sprite, Axe, Sunlight, Veet, Durex and Harpic; and quick service restaurant brands like KFC and Chicken Licken. She has also worked with leading automotive brands including Peugeot, Volvo, Fiat and Mercedes Benz and leading financial services houses like Nedbank, Sasfin and RMB, to mention a few. More about Tumi SethebeSethebe began his career in 2001 as an art director and over the years has worked on household brands such as SABC, DStv, Wimpy, Standard Bank, MTN, Tiger Brands, Castle Lite, South African Airways, and international brands such as Land Rover, BMW and Miller Genuine Draft. He started off his career at Young & Rubicam and over the years has worked with TBWA\Hunt\Lascaris, Metropolitan, and before he came to Havas, was creative director at Ogilvy Cape Town. About Jessica TennantJess is Senior Editor: Marketing & Media at Bizcommunity.com. She is also a contributing writer. marketingnews@bizcommunity.com View my profile and articles... |