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Why Tourism Australia’s New Ad Falls Flat in China Five Icons Tell the Story

Australia’s latest tourism spot, “Come and say G’day,” dropped on YouTube this week. Kangaroo Ruby hops across the screen, but the film has barely made a ripple on Chinese social media. We’ve boiled the disconnect down to five easy-to-grasp icons.


1️⃣ 🗣️ Speech-Bubble Icon

Problem: Aussie Slang + Rapid Banter

  • “Barbie,” “prawns,” “G’day” are unfamiliar to most Chinese ears.
  • Fast-paced jokes (emu steals phone, sea lion “bigger than Dave”) lose their punch in translation and clash with Chinese humor styles.

2️⃣ 🧩 Puzzle-Piece Icon

Problem: Fragmented Storytelling

  • Chinese viewers expect a single emotional arc: lovers watching the Southern Cross, best friends ticking off the Sydney Opera House.
  • The ad feels like a shaky vlog montage—hard to imagine “I’m there.”

3️⃣ 📸 Check-List Icon

Problem: Icons Are Off-List

  • On Chinese itineraries, Sydney Opera House, Great Ocean Road, Heart Reef dominate the must-shoot list.
  • The film spotlights South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula and Tasmania’s Bay of Fires—not marquee names, so wanderlust never ignites.

4️⃣ 📲 Nine-Square Grid Icon

Problem: Low Social Currency

  • Chinese travelers want instant-post glamour: hot-air-balloon breakfasts, infinity-pool sunsets.
  • Hand-held shots of dusty roads and bare-hands barbecues aren’t “WeChat-worthy”, so the film stays unshared.

5️⃣ 🛡️ Safety-Shield Icon

Problem: Security & Convenience Cues Missing

  • Top concerns in China: Chinese signage, Alipay, hot water dispensers.
  • Scenes of camping in the bush and empty highways amplify fears of “too rugged, too remote.”

Closing Thought

To crack the Chinese market, Tourism Australia doesn’t need a funnier kangaroo; it needs:

  • One coherent narrative arc (“My dream came true in Australia”).
  • Hero shots of headline icons.
  • A 3-second reassurance: Chinese services ready to help.

Until “G’day” is translated into a language Chinese travelers can understand, photograph, and trust, Ruby’s invitation will keep echoing in an empty inbox.