Unmade: media and marketing analysis

Tim Burrowes
Unmade: media and marketing analysis

Media and marketing news with all the in-depth analysis, insight and context you need. Unmade offers industry news from an Australian perspective, from the founder of Mumbrella and the author of the best-selling book Media Unmade, Tim Burrowes www.unmade.media

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    'We are approaching retail media 3.0': Lessons from REmade's leaders

    Welcome to an audio-led edition of Unmade. Today’s edition features one of the highlights of last week’s REmade - Retail Media Unmade conference, our leadership panel. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including Unlock (October 31), Compass (across November); HumAIn (2025), and REmade (September 2025). * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  Growing pains, data gains, and techy brains: retail media’s leaders reflect In today’s audio edition, we hear from the retail media leaders in a session which concluded our retail media conference REmade last week. Dan Ferguson, chief marketing officer for Adore Beauty Group, Sarah Minassian, head of retail media at Metcash and Marc Lomas, MD of commerce for GroupM AUNZ shared their views on the surge in retail media and its growing industry impact. The panel presented a unified case that retail media is on a fast track, and with year-on-year expansion, demanding attention, investment - and increased integration across the industry. In the conversation, moderated by REmade’s Curator Cat McGinn, Lomas argued “We are rapidly approaching Retail Media 3.0 where it’s no longer a separate entity - it's just media, seamlessly integrated across channels and treated the same as other forms of media." Another key takeaway was the need for better collaboration and data sharing between brands, retailers, and tech partners. The message was clear: transparency builds trust, and trust fuels the kind of partnerships that can really scale retail media. Minassian said “It’s about having authentic conversations, building trust, and aligning everyone’s expertise to move forward at a million miles an hour." The panel doubled down on putting customers first. Whether it’s using podcasts or digital channels, keeping customer experience front and centre drives genuine engagement. As Ferguson said, “We listen to our customers. They give us sharp and direct feedback, and it’s what drives our decisions. At the start of the pandemic, our audience told us, ‘less of the hard sell,’ and we changed our tone of voice accordingly. That kind of customer feedback is what shapes everything we do." On the tech side, integration is key. Metcash is focusing heavily on building the infrastructure needed to enhance its retail media offerings, while Adore Beauty’s commitment to leveraging customer data shows just how important tech and data are in taking retail media to the next level. Lomas added: "When you look at the way consumers are starting to shop, younger demos are rekindling the love of the store. The store is a new canvas for innovation, and syncing experiences between online and offline through technology is where retailers can really step in and deliver." And Metcash’s Minassian called out the need for more diverse voices at the table to shape the future of the industry, reminding women to apply for roles, even if they don’t feel they have the "perfect" experience. * REmade will return in September 2025. Subscribers who become paying members of Unmade now will get a whole year of access to paywalled content and all our events, plus a ticket to the next REmade, Upgrade today Unmade Index hovers as Nine moves up and Seven moves down Declines from Ooh Media (down 1.2%) and Seven West Media (down 2.8%) were offset by increases in the valuation of Domain (up 1.5%) and Nine (up 0.4%) to slightly lift the Unmade Index yesterday. The index closed up by 0.2% at 451.6 points. Today’s podcast was edited by Abe’s Audio. We’ll be back with an end-of-week update tomorrow. Have a great day. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade tim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    41 min
  2. 3 OCT

    The Unmakers: How Mercha is reshaping Australia's promo merchandise sector

    Welcome to an audio-led edition of Unmade. Today we talk to two of the co-founders of Mercha - Ben Read and Sam Hardy. Plus, the top of town pushes down the Unmade Index. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (September 2025), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  The Unmakers: Meet Mercha - ‘A digital platform in an analogue industry’ Mercha can claim to be the first branded merchandise player in Australia to have fully digitised its processes in what remains marketing’s arguably most analogue sector. Last month the company wrapped up a $300,000 crowd-funded seed round, valuing it at around $10m. In today’s edition of The Unmakers, Unmade’s Tim Burrowes talks to CEO Ben Read and chief revenue officer Sam Hardy about why the promotional marketing sector has taken so long to scale up in Australia. As Hardy puts it: “Mercha is a digital platform in an analogue, old school industry.” Over just three years, Mercha has ramped up to a turnover of $2.9m in the last financial year. Promotional merchandise is also a sector facing headwinds as sustainability moves further up the agenda. Mercha claims to be part of the solution by focusing on products that people will want to keep. Says Read: “It is shocking to me that 66% of promotional products end up in landfill. That is just disgusting to me. It should never happen. “We're trying to be better than an industry that is not trying hard enough.” By way of example, Hardy adds: “We had a radio station out of Sydney ask us very early on in the piece to do 250,000 whistles for a New Year's Eve event. Plastic whistles next to the harbour. And it would have been great, the revenue. But we turned it down. “I draw the line on offering people crap that's going into the bin or offering people product that's not made fairly.” Unmade Index red up top, green below The Unmade Index slipped on Wednesday after Nine, the biggest locally listed media and marketing stock lost 1.6% to fall back to a market capitalisation of $1.9bn. The move added to the daylight between Nine and its 60.1% owned subsidiary Domain. Domain slipped by 1.2% yesterday. Ooh Media was also on a losing trend yesterday, slipping by 1.1% In the mid market, ARN Media and Southern Cross Austereo both saw slight improvements. Vinyl Group, which this week announced the acquisition of blockchain music collectibles business Serenade, rose by 9.5%. In the company’s annual report released on Tuesday, it said it had written down the value of its Vampr “LinkedIn for musicians” platform, founded by CEO Josh Simons, by $1.8m, but remained “bullish”. The Unmade Index slipped by 0.7% to 461 points. Today’s podcast was edited by Abe’s Audio. As disclosed in the podcast, at the time of recording this interview, I was considering taking part in the Mercha crowd funding round on Birchal, via my super fund. I did choose to invest We’ll be back with an end-of-week update tomorrow. Have a great day. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade tim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    31 min
  3. 30 SEPT

    StW: How will ACCC intervention hit retail media?; Succession for Bruce Gordon; More AI magic (and menace)

    Welcome to Start the Week, our Monday scene-setter for the week ahead. In today’s audio-led edition: We chew over what the ACCC’s concerns over Cartology and Coles 360 may mean for Australia’s retail media sector; Bruce Gordon retires; and yet another significant week in AI developments If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (1 October), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  Can retail media networks succeed if they are non-retailer owned?; AI’s latest threat; Bruce Gordon hands over Last week, the ACCC lit the fuse on a new battleground for retailers - does their ownership of retail media networks give them too much power? In today’s podcast, recorded the day before our REmade - Retail Media Unmade conference, we discuss the implications. Also today: Google’s AI Overviews are finally coming to Australia, which will alarm many publishers; and Google also unveils a powerful new research tool, Notebook LM. And Meta goes hard on AI-generated content. And Bruce Gordon, proprietor of WIN and kingmaker at Nine, moves into retirement. Further reading: * Unmade: Cartel-ogy: The ACCC comes for retail media * Unmade: Brands beware: ACCC’s supermarkets attack is PR used as an offensive weapon * ACCC: Supermarkets inquiry August 2024 interim report * The Australian: Consumer trust in Coles and Woolworths plummets following ACCC action * Australian Financial Review: Google to test its artificial intelligence-powered search in Australia * Australian Financial Review: Billionaire Bruce Gordon retires from WIN as succession questions loom Today’s episode features Tim Burrowes and Cat McGinn. (pic) Editing was courtesy of Abe’s Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, sound design and podcast production. Time to leave you to start your week. We’ll be back with more tomorrow. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade tim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    31 min
  4. 25 SEPT

    The accidental publisher: How Josh Simons ended up running Australia's fourth biggest ASX-listed publishing company

    Welcome to an audio-led edition of Unmade. Today: As Vinyl Group this morning announces yet another acquisition, we talk to CEO Josh Simons about the bust-up that saw the ousting of Brag Media co-founder Luke Girgis, and the background to his opportunistic acquisition of Mediaweek. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (next week), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  ‘I stand behind the acquisition every day of the week’: Vinyl boss Josh Simons on the bumpy Brag Media buyout Among the bosses of Australia’s ASX-listed media companies, nobody has had a more random path to the hot seat than Josh Simons. From the lead singer of rock band Buchanan, Simons went on to found Vampr, a social networking site for the music industry, before seeing that acquired by the company he went on to head, Vinyl Group. Simons was the architect of Vinyl’s $8m+ purchase of the Brag Media group, publisher of The Brag and local editions of Rolling Stone and Variety among others, at the start of the year. The initial plan was for Vinyl Group to be a portfolio company with its Brag Media arm run separately to its music platform interests. But that quickly fell over, with the less-than-amicable departure of Brag Media co-founder Luke Girgis five months after the takeover. That left Simons taking what he describes in today’s interview with Unmade’s Tim Burrowes as “a masterclass in media” as he relocated from Melbourne and took charge of the Brag Media publishing operation. That’s included a lesson in the publishing etiquette around journalistic independence. Simons concedes that he was “naive” when he took control adding: “I'm not dogmatic in terms of my views on things. And I think it's important to be able to know when you've said something stupid.” Vinyl Group, with a market capitalisation of a little under $92m, is behind only Nine, Domain, Ooh Media, Seven West Media, ARN Media and Southern Cross Austereo when it comes to local ASX-listed media companies. When it comes to the narrower business of publishing, Vinyl is fourth if you also include the dual-listed News Corp. As Simons observes dryly: “It’s not lost on my parents.” During the interview, Simons offers few clues about what led to the ousting of Girgis, although he hints: “We had to invest in areas that were previously just not being invested in. We needed to bring journalists in.” Hires have included Lars Brandle as head of content, and promoting former Daily Mail and Cartology executive Jess Hunter to head of Brag Media. Since recording the interview, editor-in-chief Poppy Reid who was part of the Girgis era, announced her exit. Earlier this month, Vinyl Group completed the fire sale acquisition of Mediaweek for just $1m after owner Trent Thomas was forced to sell the title following allegations of harassment towards staff. The timing and price of the deal was, Simons says, “almost too good to be true”. The integration is being overseen by Vinyl Group’s chief operating officer Joel King. Simons hints there are more media acquisitions in the entertainment space to come, including overseas. Asked about the fact that Vinyl Group’s tech platforms are global while the media companies are local, he notes: “Rome wasn’t built in a day. We’ve got broad, ambitious plans for global. Rest assured that we're looking around the world to find teams that might add value in any of those areas inside the media part of Vinyl.” As we were publishing this morning, Vinyl Group announced to the ASX that it has agreed to buy event and brand activation agency Funkified from founder Gus Stephenson for $2.5m. Funkified has been Brag Media’s in-house events supplier since 2021. It had a turnover of $4m and

    33 min
  5. 22 SEPT

    StW: Warburton's media move; LinkedIn scrapes; Telstra's ad blitz; sporting codes lobby against betting ad ban

    Welcome to Start the Week, our Monday scene-setter for the week ahead. In today’s audio-led edition: James Warburton invests in Boost Media; troubled Disrupt Radio says it’s in a “holding pattern”; the AFL and NRL lobby on betting ads; and LinkedIn admits to training its AI on user content. We’ve upgraded Unmade’s membership. Annual members now get a free ticket to all of our events. That includes REmade - Retail Media Unmade on October 1; Unlock on October 31; our Compass series in November; and HumAIn next year. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership also includes members-only content, access to our paywalled archives and your own copy of Media Unmade. Upgrade today. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (1 October), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  Telstra kicks off new campaign around grand final; Warburton invests in Boost; Disrupt Radio staff still unpaid Telstra is among the first brands to reveal its plans for a big campaign launch timed around AFL grand final, according to The Australian today. The Oz also features good and bad news from streaming radio, with Disrupt Radio still in a funding crunch and Broad Radio about to go from pre-recorded live. Over in the AFR, Seven West Media is the topic of the day, with former boss James Warburton revealing an investment in ad inventory reseller Boost Media alongside private equity company CVC; and questions about Seven Group’s appetite to remain invested in its media arm SWM. And today’s AI chat covers the revelation that LinkedIn is training its large language model on posts from its users; the role of generative AI in creating media content; and a new version of OpenAI. Further reading: * The Australian: Disrupt Radio is two months behind in staff payments, future of station unclear * The Australian: Broad Radio launches new live programs on the women-only radio station * The Australian: Telstra gets animated to shake off corporate image * Australian Financial Review: Ex-Seven chief James Warburton, CVC Emerging Companies ink media deal * Australian Financial Review: Seven West Media stokes tension behind the scenes at Seven Group * Unmade: Publishers await their Independents Day * Sydney Morning Herald: ‘Nanny state’: NRL, AFL storm the field over gambling ads * Mumbrella: AI generated content doesn’t work – But if it did? The media’s screwed Today’s episode features Tim Burrowes, Abe Udy and Cat McGinn. Editing was courtesy of Abe’s Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, sound design and podcast production. Time to leave you to start your week. We’ll be back with more tomorrow. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade tim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    21 min
  6. 16 SEPT

    'We don't see ourselves as a free to air business any more' - Rod Prosser on Paramount's evolution

    Welcome to a Tuesday update from Unmade. In the interests of topicality we’re reworking our publishing rhythm this week. We’ve brought forward to today our usual Thursday audio-led interview to focus on the Paramount Upfronts which kicked off in Sydney yesterday. And our member-only post which usually happens on a Tuesday, will be later in the week. Further down, we’ve also got better news on the Unmade Index which finally broke its eight day losing streak. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (1 October), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  How Paramount is making one plus one add up to more Paramount yesterday become the first of Australia’s TV companies to show its hand during 2025 Upfronts season. One of the challenges of covering Upfronts presentations is that they tend to be a grab bag of announcements, without there necessarily being a unifying theme. That was certainly the case with Paramount, with announcements covering free to air commissions for Network 10, local commissions for streaming service Paramount+, the company’s global content pipeline, converged trading technology upgrades with Paramount Connect, and a rebrand that will see 10 Play disappear so it will be Ten across both linear and streaming. And that in itself was the unifying theme. Albeit by accident rather than plan, the global ownership structure of the company leaves Paramount as the best placed media company to argue that the sum of its parts adds up to more than the whole. While Paramount Plus isn’t the biggest subscription streaming platform with an advertising tier, it gets to be the only one that is part of a local Upfront. While a distant third behind Seven and Nine in broadcast TV, Ten gets a pipeline of global formats and content from its parent company. While 10 Play isn’t as big as Seven’s FAST (free ad supported TV) channels, advertisers and agencies can buy across both Paramount+ and 10 Play. To lean in to the acronyms, Paramount is the only company locally that can offer advertisers audiences across SVOD, BVOD, FAST and FTA. The sum of the parts has the potential to equal more than the whole Under Hugh Marks, Nine’s portfolio felt like a company where its assets across TV, streaming, publishing and radio added up to more than the whole. More recently one plus one has equalled two at best. Seven West Media’s TV and publishing assets feel similarly disconnected, even more so since being split into seperate divisions ready for some sort of M&A activity. ARN Media’s (so far failed) takeover plan for SCA was about being stronger in the single medium of audio. Southern Cross Austereo’s valuation will go up as soon as it finally offloads its fading regional TV licences (presumably mostly to Paramount) and becomes a pure play audio company. So what to make of Paramount’s announcements? There’s a further investment in live reality TV alongside I’m A Celebrity. Big Brother returns to its original home where it ran for its first eight seasons, before three seasons on Nine where it relaunched well out of the 2012 Olympics before fading, and five seasons on Seven which took much of the life out of the format by moving to a cheaper pre-recorded format. Big Brother will be live on Ten and streamed 24 hours a day live which is almost exactly the sort of content FAST was invented for. There were no other major format surprises. Have You Been Paying Attention, MasterChef, Taskmaster, Survivor, and Thank God You’re Here all return. The Project stays on air. Talking ‘Bout Your Generation (or Talkin’ ‘Bout Your Gen as it will be this time) has been revived minus Shaun Micallef as host. Sam Pang will get his own show. During the podcast conversation with sales

    34 min
  7. 15 SEPT

    StW: Nine moves on from the Sneesby era; Upfronts season: Independents Day and Paramount on stage

    Welcome to Start the Week, our Monday scene-setter for the week ahead. In today’s audio-led edition, we explore what happens next at Nine, the NRL tries to bring Paramount into its next TV rights auction, and Upfronts season rolls on. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes: * A complimentary ticket to all of Unmade’s events, including HumAIn (2025), REmade (1 October), Unlock (31 October), and Compass (November); * Member-only content and our paywalled archives; * Your own copy of Media Unmade.  Mike drop, now what for Nine? Mike Sneesby may be on the way out for Nine, but the company still has months of dramas ahead. As we discuss in today’s podcast, acting CEO Matt Stanton’s first challenge will be navigating the release of the report into the company’s culture. The Australian reports today that “a slew of bullying claims have also been levelled against two senior women at Nine”. Also in the podcast, we list some of the contenders for what is one of the biggest jobs in Australian media. Plus, we get ready for another big week in Upfronts season, with Paramount sharing its plans for 2025 today, and Digital Publishers Alliance running Independents Day on Thursday. And the NRL is trying to talk up a bid from Paramount for its next round of rights negotiations. Further reading: * Unmade: Nine's $3bn decline * Unmade: Scorecard: Mike Sneesby failed at Nine, but first he gave the company a future by launching Stan * Unmade: After Sneesby * The Australian: Outside pick firms as next Nine boss * Capital Brief: Nine execs jostle for power as race to replace Sneesby as CEO begins * Sunday Telegraph: What’s the Buzz: Peter V’landys seeks meeting with Channel 10 over NRL rights Today’s episode features Tim Burrowes and Abe Udy. Editing was courtesy of Abe’s Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, sound design and podcast production. Time to leave you to start your week. We’ll be back with more tomorrow. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    19 min
  8. 9 SEPT

    StW: Privacy postponed; Big fines for scam ads; New AI rules; Unpaid Disrupt Radio staff unready for startup 'rough and tumble'

    Welcome to Start the Week, our Monday scene-setter for the week ahead. In today’s audio-led edition: The government clear the decks on its policy logjam, with privacy reforms dumped until after the election; new AI rules, and heavy fines on scam ads. Plus, the boss of Disrupt Radio - where staff have gone unpaid for nearly two months - claims: “Start-ups are not for the salaried and superannuated”. We’ve upgraded Unmade’s membership. Annual members now get a free ticket to all of our events. That includes REmade - Retail Media Unmade on October 1; Unlock on October 31; our Compass series in November; and HumAIn next year. If you’ve been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership also includes members-only content, access to our paywalled archives and your own copy of Media Unmade. Upgrade today. Privacy reforms move to the ‘too-hard’ basket; Don’t expect salaries and super, Disrupt Radio founder tells staff It’s a frenetic day for government policy announcements with major consequences for the marketing industry. Most notably, The Guardian has broken the news that the most consequential reforms to the Privacy Act have been moved to “the too-hard basket”, and are likely to be dumped to the other side of the election. Also today, the government is announcing a crackdown on scam ads with fines for the digital platforms that carry them. What’s unclear is whether this will extend to media brands (most local news outlets) who carry Google Display Network content. And the government has also kicked off a fortnight long consultation period around a new set of voluntary rules on AI usage. Sticking with AI, Unmade’s Tim Burrowes, Cat McGinn and Abe Udy also examine the launch of Seven’s The AI Factory - is it substance or spin? And the team discusses the latest on the ailing Disrupt Radio. Founder Ben Roberts told The Australian today that the real problem for unpaid staff isn’t their empty bank accounts, but that they’re not used to what he sees as the realities of life in a startup. “Start-ups are not for the salaried and superannuated, and I made it very clear to people I personally hired that it might be a bit of a rollercoaster. "It’s been particularly difficult for those who haven’t been through the rough and tumble of a start-up before,” he told The Oz. Further reading: * The Guardian: Get a VPN and delete your cookies, Australia’s privacy laws are still lagging behind “Are we the baddies?” * Brisbane Times: Up to $50m fine for banks, telcos, social media firms in war on scams * Australian Government: Voluntary AI Safety Standard * Seven West Media: Seven opens the AI Factory * Unmade: Disrupt Radio goes off air * The Australian: Disrupt Radio hits turbulence: unable to pay staff and the station is taken off DAB+ Today’s episode features Tim Burrowes, Abe Udy and Cat McGinn Editing was courtesy of Abe’s Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, sound design and podcast production. Time to leave you to start your week. We’ll be back with more tomorrow. Toodlepip… Tim Burrowes Publisher - Unmade tim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

    28 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.3
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

Media and marketing news with all the in-depth analysis, insight and context you need. Unmade offers industry news from an Australian perspective, from the founder of Mumbrella and the author of the best-selling book Media Unmade, Tim Burrowes www.unmade.media

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