New CRA campaign showcases the power of audio

Commercial Radio & Audio (CRA) and leading independent agency Thinkerbell have joined forces in a new Power of Audio advertising campaign, demonstrating just how potent audio can be.

Launching today, the campaign expands on System1 research, developed in partnership with CRA, which identifies the key ingredients for effective audio creative: strong branding, memorability, emotional resonance, and entertaining execution.

It drives home the message that a specially designed audio score, set at the right ‘fire frequency’, has the power to literally put out a fire, and that audio can move minds, emotions and brands.

Adam Ferrier, the Founder & Chief Thinker at Thinkerbell, says audio is often tretaed like the ‘side dish’ in campaigns.

“But when you isolate it and make it the hero, it becomes undeniable.”

“This is proof that a good frequency can spark culture, shift mood, and even kill a flame. That’s power.” 

“People feel most alive with a soundtrack behind their lives. It is the most emotionally powerful medium. We have to ask ourselves – are we holding the power of audio back? It is NOT a second cousin to other industries.”

“Audio is versatile, as vibrant inside as outside, and cost effective too.  CRA have got their shit together as an industry body protecting and promoting the main brand that is audio.”

The Power of Audio campaign was created in partnership with sonic specialists MassiveMusic and art collective Glue Society with the concept a living metaphor for the medium’s impact, literally and figuratively. It can both light a fire in you and actually put one out.

CRA CEO Lizzie Young says “Audio is uniquely positioned to influence behaviour – it connects emotionally, can adapt in real time, and reaches audiences in the moments that matter. The ‘Power of Audio’ sets a benchmark for what’s possible when you combine insight, creativity, and context with audio’s unmatched ability to engage at scale. It’s exactly what we encourage brands to do: harness the full potential of audio to work harder, cut through, and deliver growth.”

The actual audio frequency captured will be used across film, radio and social media. It’s also the first use of CRA’s new sonic brand identity, created by audio specialist David Konsky, and features dynamic creative capabilities across podcast and streaming platforms as well, produced by Original Audio.

This initiative builds on CRA’s broader positioning, Where Brands Are Heard, with the aim of growing investment in commercial radio and audio across metro and regional markets. And with CRA ‘having their shit together’, we too can assist in keeping this flame alive.

Watch the behind the scenes creation of the Power of Audio below.

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Greg Smith
18 Aug 2025 - 9:27 am

‘CRA have got their shit together as an industry body protecting and promoting the main brand that is audio’

I feel like commercial radio australia will do anything with their money BUT actually support the industry for longevity. Yes Audio is at the core of what we do, but for a business with RADIO in its name, it’s doing laughably little for RADIO.

Oooh lets spend a whole heap of money on the same message we’ve been talking about for the last 10 years but this time we’ll spend money on another bullshit pr company that has nothing to do with radio.

Everytime they speak their vernacular moves further and further away from supporting radio and more and more into *audio* in general.

The best part? Podcasting doesnt need any of this. The succesful brands are going to be succesful because of the content they’re making. The social media platforms reward good content which then brings in the audience.

This just feels like CRA trying to jump on podcastings coattails and being like I SWEAR WE’RE RELEVANT SIR.

How about you actually do something other than letting the biggest networks network away any uniqueness they might have?

@greg smith
21 Aug 2025 - 5:04 pm

to be fair – the spend is negligible. A lot of contra, a lot of preaching to the converted on member stations.

I do love a good CRA call out, but this creative actually hits the mark for me.

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