Emily Tan
Jan 9, 2012

Lowe, Initiative and Asia PR Werkz to handle creative for Singapore's MCYS Office of the Public Guardian

SINGAPORE - Lowe Singapore, Initiative and Asia PR Werkz have been appointed by the Office of the Public Guardian, a division under Singapore's Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports, to handle creative and media duties for a social campaign aimed at communicating the importance of creating a Lasting Power of Attorney document.

MCYS and agency partners Lowe, Initiative and Asia PR Werkz
MCYS and agency partners Lowe, Initiative and Asia PR Werkz

The consortium led by Lowe Singapore was awarded the business following a pitch process that involved multiple advertising, media and PR agencies.

Lowe will handle the strategic planning and creative duties, Initiative will be responsible for strategic media planning and buying and Asia PR Werkz will drive PR and community outreach.

The agencies are tasked with educating Singaporeans about the benefits of pre-planning by making a Lasting Power of Attorney document which is aimed at protecting human dignity, autonomy and choices. The legal document is part of the new Mental Capacity Act (launched March 2010) and allows an adult Singaporean to appoint one or several persons to act as proxy decision maker(s) should that individual lose his or her mental capacity.

Lowe's regional growth officer, Vikas Mehta described the campaign as an integrated multimedia plan that will include an element of social media. The campaign's launch dates are still under discussion but it will likely roll out in early March 2012, he added in an email response.

"It was an interesting challenge, to find ways to persuade Singaporeans to plan ahead for the unfortunate and often unexpected situation of not being able to make their own decisions due to diminished mental capacity," said Srija Chatterjee, business director, Lowe Singapore.

Commenting on the win, Pat Lim, managing director of Initiative Singapore said that the campaign raises difficult but compelling questions for Singaporeans. "The creative and media teams have been working very hard to find the right way to create awareness for this topic which is relevant to all Singaporeans.”

 

 

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

2 days ago

Apple leads as US dominates Kantar's Top 100 Global ...

As US brands dominate the top 10 in Kantar's BrandZ 2025 ranking, Chinese companies and APAC players like Airtel are rapidly gaining ground, signalling a shifting balance in global brand power.

2 days ago

Microsoft to retire Xandr DSP in favour of an ...

After acquiring the DSP from AT&T in 2021, Microsoft’s priorities began to shift more to the sell side, with AI at the forefront.

2 days ago

Arthur Sadoun calls for ‘different approach’ at ...

Publicis CEO says Lions festival should not just be about 'AI theory' or 'celebrating creativity for its own sake', given the toughest conditions since the pandemic.

2 days ago

From Hiroshima to Hangzhou: How Jagabee and Frugra ...

The Tokyo-headquartered maker of the hugely popular potato fries, Calbee, is tapping into anime fandom and IP collaborations to boost sales and brand affinity in China. Read our interview with CMO Hiroyuki Miyakura.