With the new year kicking off, we’re reflecting on 2024, a year filled with projects that mattered—work that connected, educated, and inspired communities across Australia.
Last year, we partnered with Bayside Council on campaigns that delivered real community impact, from simplifying waste education to inspiring positive summer behaviours.
With NSW DPI Fisheries, we worked across initiatives celebrating sustainable fishing, promoting industry leadership, and sharing stories that educate and engage communities. We expanded our Customer Experience campaign with the City of Newcastle to include communications about pets, waste and issue reporting.
We were also proud to support the NSW Rural Fire Service and several Australian Government agencies on important campaigns that continue to serve and strengthen the broader community.
These projects reflect what we care about most: connecting people, driving positive change, and delivering results that matter.
In 2025, the world will continue to shift, and how we communicate will evolve. To help our clients stay ahead, we spotlight five trends shaping how brands connect, tell stories, and drive impact.
Oslo’s tourism campaign flips expectations by asking, “Is it even a city?” With its dry Nordic humour and self-deprecation, the campaign highlights Oslo’s quiet charm, crowd-free streets, and connection to nature.
Tourism Tasmania’s “The Off Season” turns winter travel into a selling point, showcasing moody landscapes, pagan rituals, and all the quirks Tassie has to offer during its colder months.
Why This Trend?
People are sceptical of hyper-curated travel ads. Dry humour, self-awareness, and authenticity cut through the noise, making brands feel more human and relatable.
Short-form video ruled 2024, and its grip on digital storytelling is still ongoing in 2025. Platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts dominate by rewarding quick, snackable content that grabs attention and drives engagement.
Why It’s Taking Over:
@duolingo anything to keep the streak alive #duolingo #languagelearning ♬ sonido original - 𝐈𝐯𝐚́𝐧 𝐑𝐌𝐮𝐬𝐢𝐜 🎧
Duolingo has mastered short-form video by turning its green owl mascot, Duo, into a social media superstar.
Impact:
Duolingo’s approach transformed its mascot into a TikTok favourite, amassing 8.2 million followers and millions of video views. The engagement has driven brand visibility, new user growth, and a loyal fanbase.
Why It Works:
What Brands Need to Do:
Short-form video is here to stay, and the brands that win will be the ones that feel real, relevant, and relentlessly entertaining. If you can make people laugh—or stop to think—in 15 seconds, you’ve got them.
For organisations looking to connect at scale, AI avatars are delivering human-like, personalised interactions that feel both innovative and approachable.
Don’t Think the Tech Is Ready? Think Again.
Take LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, who created an AI twin of himself—trained on over two decades of his speeches and writing. The result? Reid AI mirrors his voice, tone, and ideas so well that Hoffman interviewed himself to showcase its capabilities.
Where This Trend Is Heading:
AI avatars can scale human-like interactions for everything from virtual guides to public education. They combine:
For brands, this means smarter, more personal connections—at scale.
To redesign the U.S. government’s Performance.gov, Pentagram used ChatGPT to simplify lengthy reports into clear, human-friendly summaries. Simultaneously, Pentagram used MidJourney, a text-to-image generative AI platform, to produce hundreds of custom icons in a cohesive, hand-made illustration style—bringing scalability, clarity and context to government data.
Why it works: Combining generative AI with human expertise streamlines design at scale while maintaining quality and craft.
The Debate: Some critics argue AI undermines creative integrity, but Pentagram shows it can enhance what skilled designers already do and provide efficiencies and scalability for clients.
Accenture Life Trends Insight:
Why It Works:
These trends aren’t passing fads—they reflect more profound cultural shifts in how people connect, consume, and engage. For brands ready to meet these changes, 2025 offers real opportunities to build trust, deliver meaning, and drive lasting impact.
Awabakal Country
PO Box 1695
Newcastle 2300
New South Wales
Australia
Wadawurrung Country
Surf Coast Shire
Victoria
Australia
We acknowledge that we work on the lands of the Awabakal and Wadawurrung nations. We wish to pay respect to their Elders – past, present and future – and acknowledge the important role all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people continue to play within our region and all of Australia.
Awabakal Country
PO Box 1695
Newcastle 2300
New South Wales
Australia
Wadawurrung Country
Surf Coast Shire
Victoria
Australia
We acknowledge that we work on the lands of the Awabakal and Wadawurrung nations. We wish to pay respect to their Elders – past, present and future – and acknowledge the important role all Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander people continue to play within our region and all of Australia.
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