April 30, 2024

Programmatic

In a world where nearly everyone is always online, there is no offline.

DDB Group Aotearoa and FINCH launch ‘Correct The Internet’ campaign

If you search ‘Who has scored the most goals in international football?’ the internet will generally tell you it’s Cristiano Ronaldo, when it’s actually women’s footballer, Christine Sinclair.

DDB Group Aotearoa and FINCH are behind a global movement designed to highlight and correct the inconsistency of searchable facts that disadvantages sportswomen. Correct The Internet’s aim is to highlight and correct the inaccuracies in internet search results and make sportswomen more visible as a result. 

The campaign is the collective work of an international group of like-minded people who saw the need to get behind the cause, championed by Rebecca Sowden, founding partner of Correct The Internet and owner of United Nations’ ‘Football for the Goals’ member Team Heroine – an international sports marketing consultancy.

Read more here:

DDB Group and Macca’s serves up new summer campaign.

Kiwirail highlight rail safety via DDB Group.

Raising the roof with Colorsteel and DDB.

The problem was first discovered when DDB was recently researching facts about the world’s top footballers as part of a pitch. The team discovered that women held many of football’s records. However, when asking simple, ungendered questions to find these facts, the internet was incorrectly putting men ahead of the statistically superior women in its search results. 

Lex Hodge, Director at FINCH, says the campaign had been a hugely collaborative process with the team working collectively towards a single goal – correcting the internet to help make sportswomen more visible.

“When this came to me, I was beyond excited. The quest for fairness, and the mana/strength to stand up and speak truth to power is so creatively liberating. There is no hesitation, no politics – the girl in the film just wants the truth. And that is what is so chilling – the place we gather information from just isn’t giving us the facts. It was important to me that through the film we gave the internet a feeling of real presence, power in numbers.”

FINCH produced a highly emotive video to launch the campaign which was shown at the NZ Football Ferns game against the USA women’s team at Eden Park on Saturday, January 21.   

Rebecca Sowden says she is passionate about helping the world recognise all sporting heroes and empower the next generation of sportswomen.

“Many of the world’s leading athletes are women. Many of the world’s sporting records are held by women. But when people search online for factual sporting information about athletes, the results favour the sportsmen, even when the sportswomen have greater statistics.

“Because the internet has learnt our bias many of its search engine results are inconsistent, often favouring men, and change depending on who is searching. Our goal is to empower the next generation of sportswomen by ensuring that when women are the best in the world, the internet reflects that,” says Sowden.

With its aim to empower women through the power of sport, Correct The Internet has also been endorsed by United Nations initiative, Football for the Goals (FFTG), as well as the support of organisations such as Women in Sport Aotearoa (WISPA), Women Sport Australia, and New Zealand Football, and many well-known athletes including English rugby’s Red Roses’ player, Shaunagh Brown, and NZ Football Fern Meikayla Moore.  

DDB Group Aotearoa Managing Director – Operations, Liz Knox says: “There’s no easy way to correct the inconsistencies in search results. However, if people report these issues using each search engine’s inbuilt feedback function, they can be logged and fixed. The problem is, most people aren’t familiar with the feedback function, and recent design changes on some of the larger search engines make it harder to find.

“So, we built a tool that makes sending feedback simpler. And our campaign is designed to get a global community of people willing to speak up and take tangible action to reverse some of the gender biases that have been ruling our search engines. Success will see a correction of these search results over time,” Knox says.

A number of partners are supporting the campaign across their channels, with extensive social media, OOH, television, radio and PR activity. 

Credits: 

Agency: DDB Group Aotearoa

Production: FINCH

Director: Lex Hodge

Managing Director/Executive Producer: Corey Esse

Executive Producer: Rebekah ‘Bex’ Kelly 

Producer: Sarah Cook

DOP: Gin Loane

Second Camera: Ben Rowsell 

Art Director: Sam Evans 

Casting: Catch/FINCH

Post House for Edit: Atticus 

Editor: Jack Hutchings 

Post House for Grade : Atticus 

Colourist: Pete Richie 

Post House for VFX: Atticus 

Lead VFX artist: Stu Bedford 

Sound Company: Liquid Studios 

Sound Person Craig: Matuschka

Music Company: Liquid Studios 

Composer: Peter Van der Fluit

Partner and Supporters

Correct the Internet – Founding Partner: Rebecca Sowden 

Team Heroine | Supporter of Football For the Goals: Rebecca Sowden 

New Zealand Football

Women in Sport Aotearoa [WISPA]    

Women in Sport Australia        

Fearless Women            

Eden Park         

Mediaworks     

PHD      

Warner Discovery         

Phantom Billstickers   

TVNZ    

UN Department of Global Communications – Outreach Division: Maher Nasser

The post DDB Group Aotearoa and FINCH launch ‘Correct The Internet’ campaign appeared first on stoppress.co.nz.

stoppress.co.nz