Net#work BBDO Announces Key Appointments
At Net#work BBDO, we’ve entered a bold new chapter: one rooted in possibility, led by ambition, and shaped by a renewed commitment to creativity.
We’re proud to announce our repositioning under the banner of #WhatIfWeDoBigThings, aligned with BBDO Worldwide’s first global repositioning in 30 years. This shift marks a powerful evolution from the iconic “The Work. The Work. The Work.” to a new mantra: “Do Big Things.” It’s a call to arms that celebrates breakthrough thinking, real-world impact, and a collective agency mindset ready to push beyond the expected.
As part of this transformation, we’ve welcomed Deidre Lodwig as our Managing Director and Jacque Matthee as our Chief Creative Officer. Together, we’re driving a new era for Net#work BBDO, one where impact, not just scale, defines success.
Our #WhatIf culture is central to this evolution. It’s more than a tagline — it’s a strategic methodology designed to deepen our client partnerships, ignite collaborative thinking, and move beyond traditional metrics. We’re creating work that resonates culturally, engages meaningfully, and delivers measurable value.
We’ve also updated our visual identity, putting new emphasis on the hashtag. A symbol that’s been part of our DNA since the beginning, long before it became a social media mainstay, it now stands proudly as a visual cue for the conversations and movements we intend to spark.
This repositioning is not just a rebrand, it’s a renewed promise to our clients, teams, and industry: we’re here to imagine, to lead, and to do big things.
We’re incredibly excited about what lies ahead. With the strength of the Omnicom Advertising Group behind us and a leadership team that blends experience, creativity, and tenacity, we’re poised to drive a big, brave new future for Net#work BBDO.
Let’s build it together.
#WhatIfWeDoBigThings
Do Big Things: BBDO Launches New Global Positioning
You Need to be True to Yourself
“I came in,” says Chris, “with the outsider-insider perspective that BBDO, as a whole network, has always been about great work – work that real people see, that real consumers are impacted by and love.
“Nancy came in and said, ‘We’ve gone from playing it great to playing it safe.’ And suddenly, it became very simple. It was about a big, bold return to the big swings that have always been the hallmark of the agency – creating an environment where it’s completely safe to do that again, where it’s expected to do that again.”
“Coming in with a fresh perspective helped us see things quickly,” adds Nancy. “Chris joining supercharged that, not to mention gathering our global creative leaders to push on the tension and work through this together. We had to start with the problem and then apply the magic to it – collaboratively, and on a global scale.”
To do that, in November 2024, a group of leaders from across the BBDO global community convened in New York City to pressure test the ambition and make sure that it was workable across all markets.
‘Do Big Things’ is also a commentary on an industry that Nancy and Chris feel has developed a bit of an insecurity problem. They could sit across from me in this interview and list all the incredible reasons they feel ‘big’ is a good and healthy thing in the advertising industry of 2025. But they also recognise that there may be negative connotations with that word: big is old, big is bad, big is slow, big is expensive.
“We wanted to go right at it and assert that it’s small-minded to think big is bad,” says Nancy. “We could only really start to challenge that idea and fully live our purpose if we embraced the fact that we are big and about being big.
“And who doesn’t want big? Big ideas, big ambition, big growth, big talent. We want to flip the notion of big around. Challenging the insecurity in the marketplace around that word feels super exciting to us.”

What if We Do Big Things?
In its first new global repositioning in almost 30 years, BBDO is exchanging ‘The Work. The Work. The Work.’ for ‘Do Big Things’, LBB can exclusively reveal.
An evolution rather than a replacement of a mantra that was originally coined in 1996 by North America chairman Phil Dusenberry, ‘Do Big Things’ was a group effort to get a new BBDO positioning from leaders within its community from all over the world. It was spearheaded by Nancy Reyes, global CEO, and Chris Beresford-Hill, global CCO, who assumed their roles with the agency at different points during 2024. They took over from Andrew Robertson and David Lubars, who had led BBDO globally with panache for many years.
Nancy and Chris say that ‘Do Big Things’ is about capturing the value of what all of the agency’s teams bring to the table and recognising successes along the way – big breakthroughs, big client marketing shifts, big evolutions in how they interact with consumers, and so on. In short, it’s about the value of everything that exists in the space between a customer and a brand. Of course, they say, it all should lead to big, famous work, but there are many more wins along the way that they are keen to highlight.
Nancy jokes that advertising’s ‘incessant paranoia’ is part of what makes the industry great. “We are the most insecure and dramatic people on the planet, and it’s almost a habit to declare our death at least once a year,” she says. There was big data, web3, the metaverse, now there’s AI, all of which we feared might be the end of our industry. “And yet, we’re still here,” says Nancy. “We operate well in a crisis. It’s what revs us up and keeps things interesting.
“Some of it is brought on by the business itself. We know how we got here – whether it’s the push away from media, the commoditisation of creativity, or the elimination of brands in some places. You can see why the industry does this to itself. It’s easy to feed that insecurity.
“But we just feel like, fuck it. We’re in advertising, and we’re proud of it. I don’t understand why we keep wanting [the industry] to die or calling ourselves something other than what we are. When we’re advertising, and we’re big, and we do it well – that’s something to be proud of, not something to kill.”
Chris agrees, asserting that he feels marketers’ biggest need right now is confidence from advertising partners. He can think of BBDO creative leaders all around the world that he would trust his life with to get him out of trouble, and feels similarly about BBDO and what he and Nancy call a ‘community’ of incredible agencies and talent. “We just need to own our expertise right now and bring it to our clients. That’s the only way forward.
“At the end of the day, we’re here for marketers with big dreams and big ambitions. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a start-up with a small media investment; we’re going to think big for that. And if you’re a giant company trying to claw back market share, we’re going to bring the bigness to that too.”
Nancy and Chris first met in the early days of their careers at Goodby Silverstein & Partners. Chris was, in his own words, “a hardworking, anonymous copywriter,” while he remembers Nancy was already known as “the best account person in the building,” destined for success. In 2017, they reunited professionally at TBWA\Chiat\Day New York.
During Cannes Lions one year, while Chris was at Ogilvy and Nancy still at TBWA, they took a walk. Nancy told Chris about an opportunity at BBDO that she was really excited about. “I was there as a friend, supporting her,” says Chris. “And I said, ‘Oh my God, BBDO is it. This is the stuff we love. This is about doing big, famous work. Everything else is irrelevant. It’s about creating billion-dollar ideas all around the world. This is the one.’”
What Chris didn’t realise was that Nancy was suggesting that he come along for the ride. “I think I spent so much time telling her how excited I was that I missed the point when she said, ‘We should talk about it.’ I was like, ‘We are talking about it! I’m really excited for you.’ I was jealous, honestly.
“So, to me, when someone I admire is excited about something like that, it’s a no-brainer. What an amazing opportunity. What a great way to channel your energy. What a great thing to be part of. And that’s been the energy ever since. There have been some tough days, but that’s the general vibe.”
“For such a smart guy, he can be pretty thick-headed,” Nancy jokes. “I thought I was being pretty overt! But the point is, because of the opportunity and what BBDO represented, I wouldn’t want to do it without him. It was like, ‘If we could just do this thing together, wouldn’t it be great?’ That’s the energy we try to bring to it every day.
“And yes, of course, there are challenges. But if we can bring that energy to people and have them believe in it, then I think we’ve done our job really well.”
Main Office
3 Sandown Valley Crescent,
Sandown, Sandton 2031
Johannesburg
info@networkbbdo.co.za
+27 11 912 000
© 2025 – Net#work BBDO – All Rights Reserved.
China is Here
And they’re not tiptoeing into the South African automotive market – they’re kicking the damn door in.
They’re hiring from established automakers to strengthen capabilities; aggressively expanding their dealer footprint, producing cars packed with advanced technology, slick interiors, and pricing that makes a mockery of the old value ladder. They’re no longer locked inside the entry-level segment; now they’re coming for luxury.
This is the situation I step into as I join a leading luxury auto brand as lead strategist. It’s not business as usual – it’s a moment that demands clarity.
Because if we don’t re-examine what luxury means in this new reality, we’ll lose relevance and get left behind.
Let’s be real: the old definition of auto luxury – better engineering, MEGA TECH, countless finishes – is looking shaky. When the other guy can offer comparable tech for less and as standard, differentiation dies and pricing power evaporates.
Now consumers are questioning why premium cars are so pricy, and brands haven’t answered.
The result:
Mercedes-Benz sales down 80% in a decade.
Volvo? Closing 60% of their dealerships.
BMW? Also considering “restructuring” its dealer network to shave costs.
Audi? Tried offering prime minus 8 in desperation – sales continue to spiral.
Whats happening here is global. Great tech isn’t rare anymore. It’s everywhere. Look at what tools like Midjourney, Runway, or ElevenLabs are doing in the creative space. The average person can barely tell AI-generated work apart from human-made. OpenAI’s GPT-4.5 was mistaken for a human 73% of the time by the Turing test. A huge shift.
So if tech is no longer a differentiator, luxury can’t be about access to it- everyone will have it.
The real battleground will be TASTE.
What can’t be copied is human discernment: the curation, the sense, the cultural awareness that tech can’t manufacture. These will be the new markers of luxury. It’s like the PDO stamps that certify Parmigiano Reggiano from Parma or Karoo Lamb from the Karoo – it’s about origin, intent, and subtlety that can’t be faked.
That’s where luxury is headed.
Fashion already shows this shift. Virgil Abloh’s “3% rule” showed how small, thoughtful changes could turn mass products into art. MSCHF’s Big Red Boots? Proof that even ‘bad’ taste, when wielded intentionally, can grab the cultural mic. And locally, Lukhanyo Mdingi proves how being so palpably humanly tasteful – from handwoven fabrics to the stories embedded in each garment, can create demand.
For luxury carmakers, this is the fork in the road. If your play is more features, you’ve already lost – Chinese brands will win that race every time.
The only viable path forward is to own what tech can’t: emotional resonance, human meaning, taste. Design and experiences that move them. Brands that mean something beyond metal and specs.
In a world where anything can be copied, luxury will be defined by what can’t: the human ability to sense what matters next.
Main Office
3 Sandown Valley Crescent,
Sandown, Sandton 2031
Johannesburg
info@networkbbdo.co.za
+27 11 912 000
© 2025 – Net#work BBDO – All Rights Reserved.
Corona Studios - This is Living
Just the other day I happened to wake up early. That is unusual for an engineering student. After a long time I could witness the sunrise. I could feel the sun rays falling on my body. Usual morning is followed by hustle to make it to college on time. This morning was just another morning yet seemed different.
Witnessing calm and quiet atmosphere, clear and fresh air seemed like a miracle to me. I wanted this time to last longer since I was not sure if I would be able to witness it again, knowing my habit of succumbing to schedule. There was this unusual serenity that comforted my mind. It dawned on me, how distant I had been from nature. Standing near the compound’s gate, feeling the moistness that the air carried, I thought about my life so far.
Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people's thinking.
Steve Jobs
I was good at academics, so decisions of my life had been pretty simple and straight. Being pretty confident I would make it to the best junior college of my town in the first round itself, never made me consider any other option. I loved psychology since childhood, but engineering was the safest option. Being born in a middle class family, thinking of risking your career to make it to medical field was not sane. I grew up hearing ‘Only doctor’s children can afford that field’ and finally ended up believing it. No one around me believed in taking risks. Everyone worshiped security. I grew up doing the same.
‘Being in the top will only grant you a good life’ has been the mantra of my life. But at times, I wish I was an average student. I wish decisions would have not been so straightforward. Maybe I would have played cricket- the only thing I feel passionate about. Or maybe I would have studied literature (literature drives me crazy). Isn’t that disappointing- me wishing to be bad at academics. It’s like at times I hate myself for the stuff I am good at.
When you step out of these four walls on a peaceful morning, you realize how much nature has to offer to you. Its boundless. Your thoughts, worries, deadlines won’t resonate here. Everything will flow away along with the wind. And you will realize every answer you had been looking for, was always known to you. It would mean a lot to me if you recommend this article and help me improve.
Thriving for Simplicity and Ease of Use Sharing Knowledge
Just the other day I happened to wake up early. That is unusual for an engineering student. After a long time I could witness the sunrise. I could feel the sun rays falling on my body. Usual morning is followed by hustle to make it to college on time. This morning was just another morning yet seemed different.
Witnessing calm and quiet atmosphere, clear and fresh air seemed like a miracle to me. I wanted this time to last longer since I was not sure if I would be able to witness it again, knowing my habit of succumbing to schedule. There was this unusual serenity that comforted my mind. It dawned on me, how distant I had been from nature. Standing near the compound’s gate, feeling the moistness that the air carried, I thought about my life so far.
import styles from './MyComponent.css'; import React, { Component } from 'react'; export default class MyComponent extends Component { render() { return ( <div> <div className={styles.foo}>Foo</div> <div className={styles.bar}>Bar</div> </div> ); }
I was good at academics, so decisions of my life had been pretty simple and straight. Being pretty confident I would make it to the best junior college of my town in the first round itself, never made me consider any other option. I loved psychology since childhood, but engineering was the safest option. Being born in a middle class family, thinking of risking your career to make it to medical field was not sane. I grew up hearing ‘Only doctor’s children can afford that field’ and finally ended up believing it. No one around me believed in taking risks. Everyone worshiped security. I grew up doing the same.
process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development' ? '[name]__[local]___[hash:base64:5]' : '[hash:base64:5]' )
When you step out of these four walls on a peaceful morning, you realize how much nature has to offer to you. Its boundless. Your thoughts, worries, deadlines won’t resonate here. Everything will flow away along with the wind. And you will realize every answer you had been looking for, was always known to you. It would mean a lot to me if you recommend this article and help me improve.
Take the Time to Listen and Find the Right Inspirations
Just the other day I happened to wake up early. That is unusual for an engineering student. After a long time I could witness the sunrise. I could feel the sun rays falling on my body. Usual morning is followed by hustle to make it to college on time. This morning was just another morning yet seemed different.
Witnessing calm and quiet atmosphere, clear and fresh air seemed like a miracle to me. I wanted this time to last longer since I was not sure if I would be able to witness it again, knowing my habit of succumbing to schedule. There was this unusual serenity that comforted my mind. It dawned on me, how distant I had been from nature. Standing near the compound’s gate, feeling the moistness that the air carried, I thought about my life so far.
Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people's thinking.
Steve Jobs
I was good at academics, so decisions of my life had been pretty simple and straight. Being pretty confident I would make it to the best junior college of my town in the first round itself, never made me consider any other option. I loved psychology since childhood, but engineering was the safest option. Being born in a middle class family, thinking of risking your career to make it to medical field was not sane. I grew up hearing ‘Only doctor’s children can afford that field’ and finally ended up believing it. No one around me believed in taking risks. Everyone worshiped security. I grew up doing the same.
‘Being in the top will only grant you a good life’ has been the mantra of my life. But at times, I wish I was an average student. I wish decisions would have not been so straightforward. Maybe I would have played cricket- the only thing I feel passionate about. Or maybe I would have studied literature (literature drives me crazy). Isn’t that disappointing- me wishing to be bad at academics. It’s like at times I hate myself for the stuff I am good at.
When you step out of these four walls on a peaceful morning, you realize how much nature has to offer to you. Its boundless. Your thoughts, worries, deadlines won’t resonate here. Everything will flow away along with the wind. And you will realize every answer you had been looking for, was always known to you. It would mean a lot to me if you recommend this article and help me improve.
Top Working Tips to Help You Succeed as a Freelance
01. Wake up at the same time.
Naturally, my first impression of these headphones is based off of the look of them. They have a classic over-the-ear style that is highlighted by a blue LED light that indicates the power for the noise canceling. The padding on the ear pieces seems adequate for extended usage periods.
They are wired headphones, but the 3.5mm stereo mini-plug cable is detachable. Something else I noticed right of the bat was the very nice carrying case that comes with them. It has a hard plastic exterior with a soft cloth interior that helps to protect the surface of the headphones from scratches. I never truly appreciated cases for headphones until I started carrying them from place-to-place. Now I can’t imagine not having a case.

I’d start my day by checking email, Twitter, Facebook. Reading the “news”. I’d look at my to-do list and start working on something.
02. Plan your workout time.
Now that I had the headphones on my head, I was finally ready to plug and play some music. I plugged the provided cable into the jack on the headphones and then the one on my iPhone Then I called up Pandora. I tend to have a very eclectic music purview and have many stations set up for different moods. The sound quality of these headphones was remarkable. There is an amazing depth of sound and incredible highs and lows that make listening to music a truly breathtaking experience.
In order to test how voices sounded, and the overall art of sound mixing, I pulled up Netflix on my iPad Air and watched a few minutes of a movie to hear all the nuances of the film. None of them were lost. In fact, I ended up hearing sounds that I hadn’t heard before. Echoes…birds chirping…wind blowing through trees…breathing of the characters…it was very impressive what the headphones ended.
Distractions aside, there was no real rhyme or reason to my workflow. The not-so-fun (but necessary) stuff kept getting neglected.

03. Create connections.
Now that I had the headphones on my head, I was finally ready to plug and play some music. I plugged the provided cable into the jack on the headphones and then the one on my iPhone 6. Then I called up Pandora. I tend to have a very eclectic music purview and have many stations set up for different moods. The sound quality of these headphones was remarkable. There is an amazing depth of sound and incredible highs and lows that make listening to music a truly breathtaking experience.
In order to test how voices sounded, and the overall art of sound mixing, I pulled up Netflix on my iPad Air 2 and watched a few minutes of a movie to hear all the nuances of the film. None of them were lost. In fact, I ended up hearing sounds that I hadn’t heard before. Echoes…birds chirping…wind blowing through trees…breathing of the characters…it was very impressive what the headphones ended up bringing out for me.
