Ideas don鈥檛 come from agencies. They come from people.
That鈥檚 a firmly-held belief at The Kitchen, Kraft Heinz鈥檚 in-house agency. And, in recent months, they鈥檝e been practising what they preach with five new hires at the creative director level. Gira Moin, Ananta Prayitno, Corey Winnicki, Phil Coulter, and Brendan Sack have all joined the agency, adding lashings of experience and a generous helping of energy to The Kitchen鈥檚 creative recipe. That鈥檚 set to be applied across all of Kraft Heinz鈥檚 repertoire of brands, continuing to carve out places within culture and turning audiences鈥 heads.
The Kitchen鈥檚 creative firepower just got a major boost. With five new Creative Directors joining the team, their combined experience spans every corner of the industry. Together, they鈥檝e shaped iconic campaigns, earned global recognition, and pushed the boundaries of creativity. They鈥檝e crafted beloved Super Bowl spots, led national brand platforms, and driven award-winning work across film, digital, social, and experiential. Their expertise extends beyond traditional advertising鈥攄esigning immersive retail spaces, producing live events, and even reimagining physical brand headquarters.
With a shared passion for ideas that move culture, this collective brings a diverse set of skills that strengthen The Kitchen鈥檚 ability to create breakthrough work. More than just individual achievements, their combined experience reflects a commitment to craft, innovation, and making brands matter in unexpected ways.
But like any good recipe, the ultimate aim with The Kitchen is to produce something that鈥檚 greater than the sum of its parts. Executive Creative Director Simon Au explains that 鈥渨hat鈥檚 most important for us about adding Gira, Ananta, Corey, Phil and Brendan is what they add to the exceptional talent we already have across The Kitchen鈥檚 creative leadership. Now more than ever before, we鈥檙e able to unlock creativity and ideas for brands to help them break through at the speed of culture鈥.
To find out more about the five new CDs鈥 plans for their roles - and how working in-house is helping them to deliver on ideas that cut through in 2025 - 天美棋牌鈥檚 Adam Bennett caught up with Gira, Ananta, Corey, Phil, and Brendan.
It鈥檚 been an industry trend for some time now, but the shift of talent towards in-house agencies is beginning to reach a critical mass. In fact, it鈥檚 now less of a 鈥榯rend鈥 than something that鈥檚 simply an established part of the marketing landscape. For creative directors like Brendan, that was part of the driving force that led him to The Kitchen.
鈥淜raft Heinz and The Kitchen are at the forefront of advertising鈥檚 future鈥, he tells 天美棋牌. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one thing to be a traditional agency that claims it works at the speed of culture. It鈥檚 another thing to be specifically designed from the ground up to actually do so. Our mandate is clear and to be able to work on great brands in this new paradigm is an exciting opportunity.鈥
That level of direct access to top tier brands under the Kraft Heinz umbrella isn鈥檛 just appealing to creative talent in terms of prestige - it鈥檚 also something that can help unlock even better work. 鈥淭here鈥檚 something really exciting in the fact that some of the greatest agencies in the world only have one, two, or a handful of our brands鈥 while The Kitchen has all of them鈥, explains Ananta. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much opportunity for brand-building and fostering actual consumer brand love.鈥
And it all adds up to something of a self-fulfilling prophecy. 鈥淔or me, it was all about momentum鈥, reflects Phil when asked why now was the right time to join. 鈥淭he Kitchen is evolving - not just creatively, but we鈥檙e embedding ourselves further into the business. That鈥檚 something I wanted to be a part of.鈥
That鈥檚 a sentiment which has been borne out of the in-house agency鈥檚 strong growth. 鈥淚n just three years, we鈥檝e expanded from 4 to 19 brands, grown our team from 35 to over 135 across two offices, and we're still growing鈥攚ith 40+ open roles to fill in 2025. This expansion is a direct result of the trust Kraft Heinz places in us鈥, notes Tom Evans, Head of The Kitchen North America. 鈥淲e now deliver creative for 70% of the media plan across 90% of brands we work on, producing full 360 campaigns, platform-native social and influencer content, and cultural activations that make our brands stand out. As the creative agency of record for select brands, we鈥檝e become a strategic growth driver for Kraft Heinz鈥攑roactively shaping opportunities, creating briefs instead of waiting for them, and delivering measurable business impact.鈥
Across the board, there鈥檚 a feeling that The Kitchen鈥檚 scale and success is enabling the team to spark trends rather than chase them - or to be the signal, not the noise. And for a team of high-quality creatives, there鈥檚 little more exciting than that.
This attitude means that Kraft Heinz brands have developed a helpful knack for carving out their own space within culture.
鈥淭he Kitchen does a great job with work that doesn鈥檛 force its connections - things like the #FindTheKetchupBoatGuy, Ore-Ida鈥檚 Tot Protecting Pants, Mustard x Mustard collab鈥 they aren鈥檛 just fun, distinctive ideas, they鈥檙e from truly ownable cultural truths鈥, as Ananta explains. 鈥淓very so often a piece of content from our brands pops up on my own For You Pages, and it feels engagingly native to the space (and that鈥檚 high praise for brand social!).鈥
And there鈥檚 a direct link between those success stories and achieving the relevance required to drive growth - a legacy the team is keen to continue building on.
Ideas that move the cultural needle aren鈥檛 exclusive to in-house agencies - but the team all agree that working in-house does make it easier to find those aspects of a brand that might help reinvent it.
鈥淔rom fiery upstart brands like Liquid Death to more established ones like Meta, Spotify, or Kraft Heinz, people are getting jealous of the kind of work you can build in-house鈥, says Ananta. 鈥淎 lot more people are seeing it for the shortcut to trust that it is. Being in-house means you鈥檙e legit in saying you鈥檙e looking out for the best for a brand - you have a vested interest.鈥
And within the industry, it鈥檚 becoming an increasingly popular choice for talented creatives. 鈥淚t gives you the ability to break down the walls between creative and brand鈥, adds Phil. 鈥淧lus, collaborating early and often in more informal ways helps to humanise the process.鈥
It鈥檚 a sentiment summed up by Gira. 鈥淐reating reactive, culturally relevant work takes speed, agility, and a deep connection to the brand,鈥 she says. 鈥淏eing in-house gives us the ability to move fast and make shit happen.
In the wider marketing context, this is all happening at a time where media is more oversaturated than ever before. Getting a fair hearing from modern audiences is a challenge - one that the ability to hack into culture can help brands overcome.
鈥淭here鈥檚 way more fish in the digital deep sea and they鈥檙e all trying to hook the next big trend. The secret is tapping into what really makes the consumer and audience tick, from nostalgia to pure originality鈥, says Corey. 鈥淵ou gotta let go of the ego and really open yourself up to the world. Letting loose, keeping the mind open and most importantly having fun while doing it. Because if you are, chances are they will.鈥
鈥淭he secret to ensuring a brand gets heard is reminding themselves what Shakespeare once wrote: 鈥楢nd this above all, to thine own self be true.鈥欌, summarises Brendan. 鈥淎s a brand you must really know who you are and stick to it. Find what makes you unique and special, and if you can鈥檛 find it, create it. This takes enormous courage because it could mean trying
something new that makes you a little uncomfortable.鈥
For these creatives - and increasing numbers across the industry - those new ideas are being cooked up in-house.