Norwich Union: Out West
From the collection of
From the collection of
It's all hip and happening working in insurance, as this 1971 recruitment advertisement for Norwich Union, made for cinema screening, shows.
Norwich Union aim to persuade school-leavers that a career in insurance is interesting, exciting and rewarding, in this recruitment advertisement from 1971, which would have been screened at local picturehouses.
Norwich Union aim to persuade school-leavers that a career in insurance is interesting, exciting and rewarding, in this recruitment advertisement from 1971, which would have been screened at local picturehouses.
Purpose-built cinemas began appearing around Britain shortly before WWI, booming in popularity during the War and developing into the ‘picture palaces’ of the 1920s - when adverts jostled for space alongside newsreels before the main feature. Local businesses were quick to see the potential of a big screen and a captive audience to promote their wares.
While they didn’t have access to the budgets of the national brands, regionally-specific businesses had the benefit of that personal touch. Products and services evolved over time, but that scratchy ad for your local Indian restaurant, so integral to the cinema-going experience into the 1990s, had its roots in the booming entrepreneurship of the industry many decades before.