Browse ads: Automotive- Alcoholic beverages- Clothing- Cosmetics- Entertainment- Food- Travel- Telecommunications- More...
Top 6: May 7th 2025
Web Film

Banco Pichincha: 11 vs 85

Embed Video
Top 6: May 7th 2025
In Ecuador, a professional male footballer earns almost eight times more than a professional female player. This wage disparity is not an isolated case but rather a reflection of inequality in Latin American football. In Brazil, for instance, while the women’s national team that won the 2022 Copa América received a prize of approximately 1.5 million dollars, the men’s team earned 11 million dollars when they won the same tournament in 2019. In Mexico, the Liga MX Femenil has made progress toward professionalisation, but the average salary of a female player is still significantly lower than that of their male counterparts. To close the wage gap and make women’s football a more profitable sport, it is not enough for brands to increase sponsorships. It is essential for fans to engage with the game, attend matches, and consume content across various platforms. Demonstrating its commitment to both sports and women, Pichincha Bank sponsors major names in Ecuadorian sports such as Samia Alava (Skating), Myriam Nuñez (Cycling), Anahí Ortíz (Chess), Anahí Suarez (Race Walking), Ana Vivar (Cycling), Irene Valarezo (Frame Running), and Glenda Morejón (Race Walking) — in addition to sponsoring the women's teams of Barcelona Sporting Club (BSC), Liga Deportiva Universitaria (LDU), and Universidad Católica. The bank decided to put the issue of wage inequality on the public agenda, and there was no better way to represent it than by visually illustrating the wage gap on the field. At the Noche Blanca (an event organised by University Sports League of Quito, Ecuador, to present their squad at the beginning of each season — a traditional and highly anticipated night by LDU fans that generates one of the largest football audiences in Ecuador), during halftime of the BSC vs LDU match, Delta MullenLowe put 85 women on the field to play against 11 men, symbolising the wage gap between them and making the inequality impossible to ignore. Coordinating such an unconventional match required working with the professional league, teams, and players to gather 85 female athletes ready to play.
Credits Other credits

Agency

President José Miguel Sokoloff

Vice President Pablo Salazar Guerrero

Chief Executive Officer Juan Ignacio Gallego

Chief Strategy Officer Eduardo Carvajalino

Production Manager Julieta Kropivka

Executive Producer Gabriel Narvaez

Agency Producer Esteban Montenegro

Agency Producer Margarita Rodas

Editor Juan Diego Enriquez

Graphic Designer Andrés Mendoza

Graphic Designer Esteban Benítez

Media Right Angle Media

Managing Director José Luis Rodriguez

Account Director Susana Oliva

Production MullenLowe Delta

Animation Andrés Reinoso

Animation Karina Tenorio

Music / Sound Fletcher & Munson

Gold sponsors

The Best Ad Jobs

Retrieving latest jobs

Visit Campaign Brief for Australian creative
advertising news