Staff Reporters
Oct 7, 2022

Women to Watch 2022: Haylie Craig, Colenso BBDO

As a seasoned creative, Craig is a fierce advocate for bold, inclusive work for the betterment of others—particularly those in the queer community.

Women to Watch 2022: Haylie Craig, Colenso BBDO
SEE ALL OF THE 2022 WOMEN TO WATCH
Celebrating outstanding talent in marcomms

Haylie Craig

Senior art director
Colenso BBDO
New Zealand

Haylie Craig possesses qualities that most creatives should: A strong set of values, strength in innovation, and a collaborative, inclusive spirit. And instead of creating work that’s made within an industry bubble, she often invites colleagues, clients, and the community her work is designed to serve to be part of the creative process. This, unsurprisingly, leads to more effective and meaningful campaigns. 

Not only does Craig have these enviable leadership and management traits, she manages to embody brand purpose by using her creative prowess to set examples. One of her proudest creative works—and incidentally, one of Campaign’s favourites—is ‘Beyond Binary Code’ for Colenso BBDO’s biggest client, telco company Spark. 

The project comprises a single piece of code that businesses can copy and paste into their website code to make their forms more gender inclusive. The code is designed to rewrite the internet so it sees more than two genders. Co-created with queer mental-health organisations and transgender and non-binary communities, it’s a single piece of code that can be added to any website to make data forms and fields gender-inclusive to avoid people being misgendered online. The campaign went on to win a silver at Cannes Lions and provided the telco brand with its highest-ever spike in positive social-media sentiment. Using one own’s lived experiences—sometimes painful ones—is courageous for any creative to do, and Craig does it for the sake of bettering the lives of the queer community she so vehemently advocates for. 

On top of that, Craig was instrumental in winning business from health insurer Medibank. Her work on the pitch was said to have directly helped with the agency winning the account, which was the most significant piece of new business for New Zealand in 2021. Craig’s work is proof that an agency mustn’t merely rely on business growth as a measure of its success; her work reminds us that championing bold, inclusive work that can actually make a difference among marginalised lives should and must also account for real creative success.

SEE ALL OF THE 2022 WOMEN TO WATCH
Celebrating outstanding talent in marcomms

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Bridgestone uses tyres and spatial AI to literally ...

INSPIRATION STATION: With pavement as its canvas, the experimental work by Distillery uses data points from a speeding car's wild ride to create some rather staid artwork.

8 hours ago

Is there a place for 'fake OOH' ads in the industry?

There's been a steep rise in 'fake ads' in the past year. With new technologies like Gen AI and CGI lowering the barrier and opening the floodgates, we explore whether fake OOH ads are inherently bad, or if they could even push marketers to create better work?

8 hours ago

Beyoncé's country pivot and lessons in fearless ...

In the disrupt-or-die era, there is no space for marketers to fear failure. If your brand is strong, creative risks pay off. Take a cue or two from Beyoncé's masterclass in risky branding.

9 hours ago

Stagwell’s revenue climbs in Q1 as tech clients return

The holding company is eyeing international expansion and digital transformation for growth.