
Cardrona Drops In On Bondi As Thinkerbell Launches First Work For RealNZ
The activation landed after the highly anticipated opening of Cardrona's 2025 winter season and the launch of Soho Basin: a 150-hectare terrain expansion, and the resort's biggest milestone in over a decade. With fresh ground to explore, it was the perfect moment to tempt Aussies off the sand and onto the slopes.
From first light, a crew of surfers - joined by Aussie pro, Olympian and two-time world champ Tyler Wright - were offered snowboards and lift passes in exchange for surfboards and the chance to win three-day passes to Cardrona or Treble Cone. Each swapped board was donated to the Bondi Surf Club.
The work marks the start of Thinkerbell's remit as RealNZ's earned agency of record across New Zealand and Australia.
RealNZ is New Zealand's leading tourism and conservation operator, offering some of the South Island's most iconic experiences - including Walter Peak High Country Farm, Pātea Doubtful Sound, Piopiotahi Milford Sound, Cardrona Alpine Resort, and Treble Cone - all part of a broader mission to help people fall in love with conservation.
Jessica Allison, General Manager at Thinkerbell Aotearoa says, 'Board Swap is a brilliant expression of what this collaboration is all about: using creative earned ideas to bring RealNZ's story to unexpected places. Landing snowboards at Bondi is attention-grabbing, but it also captures something deeper: the thrill of discovery, and the invitation to experience Aotearoa's wild side. We're proud to kick things off with work that's as imaginative as it is purposeful.'
Alesha Stefanissin, General Manager of Marketing at RealNZ says, 'This work is a bold start to our partnership with Thinkerbell. We've got world-class experiences and a big story to tell. Thinkerbell brings the energy, creativity and reach to help us do that across both sides of the Tasman.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
4 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Govt says controversial campaign 'a winner'
Image: supplied The government is calling the controversial 'Everyone Must Go' campaign a winner for attracting Australian tourists to New Zealand shores. The campaign was ridiculed when it was launched. Media in the United States and United Kingdom called it tone-deaf, while opposition MPs said it made New Zealand sound like a clearance-sale item. But Tourism New Zealand stats show it delivered 7981 additional visitors between March and May. Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston said that was more than 1000 additional visitors than expected. She described the campaign as a winner, aimed at grabbing people's attention - and it did. "We knew Aussies would recognise it as a great opportunity. Just like they grabbed Phar Lap and pavlova, it's proved the same story with 'Everyone Must Go'." The campaign targeted a $17 million spend boost, and the minister said it generated an estimated $22 million in incremental visitor spend. The industry had backed the campaign, with 450 operators offering more than 800 deals to entice travellers, she said. "A key part of this campaign's success were the deals the tourism industry came to the party with. This team approach showed we can deliver great results for the sector when government and industry are joined up and working towards the same goals." The campaign received an initial $500,000 budget from the International Visitor Levy, but received an additional $300,000 boost. Of the additional visitors, 6804 of them could be directly attributed to bookings made via the campaign, with the remaining 1177 linked to the indirect conversion activity. The total number of Aussie arrivals in autumn increased by more than 24,000 - hitting 331,571 this year. "Every one of those Australian visitors who ate at cafes and restaurants, visited tourist attractions and shopped in our towns and cities has helped the New Zealand tourism sector grow, and boosted the Kiwi economy in the process," Upston said.


Scoop
4 days ago
- Scoop
Take That! Tourism Campaign A Hit With Aussies
Minister for Tourism and Hospitality The 'Everyone Must Go' campaign encouraging Australians to pick New Zealand for their next holiday has hit its results out of the park, bringing in thousands of visitors in a boost for regional economies and tourism operators. Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston says 'Everyone Must Go' was initially targeted at 6,750 additional arrivals over the autumn but ended up significantly exceeding expectations. ''Everyone Must Go' has been a winner,'' Louise Upston says. 'Tourism NZ stats released to me show it delivering an additional 7,981 visitors to smash its initial forecasts. It also attracted significant attention on both sides of the Tasman, and got Kiwis and Aussies talking about New Zealand as a destination. 'Tourism is a key part of our plan to grow the economy, create jobs, lift wages and help Kiwis get ahead. 'Everyone Must Go' is a great example of the sector and Government working together to achieve these goals. 'We knew Aussies would recognise it as a great opportunity. Just like they grabbed Phar Lap and pavlova, it's proved the same story with 'Everyone Must Go.' 'A key part of this campaign's success were the deals the tourism industry came to the party with. This team approach showed we can deliver great results for the sector when Government and industry are joined up and working towards the same goals.' More than 800 deals from 450 operators across accommodation, transport and experiences were available during the campaign. The initial $500,000 campaign spend delivered a solid return on investment, leading to an additional $300,000 to give the campaign a further boost. 'This campaign was the first Tourism Boost initiative, and these positive results show that with the right investment in the right markets we will drive economic growth. 'Every one of those Australian visitors who ate at cafes and restaurants, visited tourist attractions and shopped in our towns and cities has helped the New Zealand tourism sector grow, and boosted the Kiwi economy in the process,' Louise Upston says. Notes: The Autumn campaign targeted an additional 6,750 visitors (above baseline growth) from Australia between March and May and delivered an additional 7,981 arrivals over the period. 6,804 arrivals were directly attributable to bookings made via the campaign and an additional 1,177 arrivals were from the indirect halo effect of conversion activity in market over and above the campaign. The additional 7,981 visitors generated an estimated $22M in incremental visitor spend (29 per cent ahead of the campaign target of $17M). Across Autumn 2025, the total number of visitor arrivals from Australia increased by more than 24,000 – up from 307,338 last year to 331,571 this year. These additional 24,233 visitors generated an estimated $67M in visitor spend. The campaign had support from the industry including: strong collaboration with airlines, hotels, travel agencies and online travel platforms; 450 tourism operators providing 800 deals on TNZ's


NZ Herald
19-07-2025
- NZ Herald
‘What downturn?' Mike Greer Homes bucks house-building slump
Mike Greer, who founded Mike Greer Homes and is based in Christchurch. Photo / LinkedIn The data was only based on residential construction, not sale of the land that went with the homes. 'The houses are one thing but we also create 300 new sections annually from subdivisions and $200m of commercial work via rest homes, retirement villages, offices, etc.' Greer also owns Miles Construction, building in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. He owns 82% of Mike Greer Homes, having sold 18% to fellow Canterburian Ben Gough last decade. A Mike Greer home at Beachlands. Asked about more newly founded house-builders in his region, he says: 'Years ago, I said I don't think anyone will get to the level I am. All these young guys popped up with revolutionary ways of raising money and built scale rapidly, which surprised me. They weren't relying on the big four Aussie banks to get stuff done.' He is less reliant on those banks, he says, having built substantial capital in the business. 'I've been doing this for 31 years. I'm building quite a lot in Australia and have been for the last eight years – townhouses in southeast Queensland on the Gold Coast under the Breakwater Homes brand.' Mike Greer Homes is headed here by chief executive Iain Munro. Its model is different from others in the top 10 list of New Zealand's busiest builders. 'We are not like other group home-builders in New Zealand that run a franchise-based model. We run the joint-venture branch model, where Mike Greer Homes owns 51% of each regional branch and 100% of the two largest branches in Christchurch and Auckland,' the company says. Mike Greer has a holiday home at Lake Hayes, pictured in the foreground with Lake Wakatipu in the background. Photo / Getty Images The recession doesn't worry him. 'We just build them and worry about selling them later. We always do well in a tougher market. All the mum and dad speculators disappear. They get a fright.' House-building slumped 3.8% in the latest year, Stats NZ says. There were 33,530 new homes consented in the year to May 2025, down from 34,851 in the year ended May 2024. May's annual consent total is the second-lowest for any month since the end of 2018. The Woolshed dining and restaurant venue in a historic building at Ayrburn. Photo / Jason Oxenham 'The record for the annual number of new homes consented was 51,015 in the year ended May 2022. While consent numbers fell sharply after that peak, they have levelled out over the past year,' Stats NZ economic indicators spokeswoman Michelle Feyen said on July 1. But for Greer, the slump presents new opportunities. He has a holiday home at Lake Hayes and is impressed with Winton Land's Ayrburn, counting himself fortunate to regard this as potentially his local. Anne Gibson has been the Herald's property editor for 25 years, written books and covered property extensively here and overseas.