Photographs: Tourism Queensland/Eddie Safarik/Handout
The 34-year-old beat over 34,000 applicants including an Indian RJ Anjaan to win this job.
According to Ben Southall, "The most important thing to me in life is to have an exciting job that makes me happy, put smiles on people's faces and achieves challenging goals!"
Ben describes himself as a dynamic, gregarious, hardworking, go-getter who loves meeting new people.
Text: PTI & Agencies
Here's the winner of the world's best job!
Image: Ben SouthallPhotographs: Eddie Safarik//Tourism Queensland/Handout/Reuters
Southall was selected by officials from the Queensland state tourism department. The finalists were asked to prove their blogging skills and take swimming tests.
Southall will need to post a weekly blog, keep photo diaries and create video updates to let the world know about the unique experiences available on the Islands of the Great Barrier Reef.
Here's the winner of the world's best job!
Image: Ben Southall (4th R) of Britain is mobbed by other contestantsPhotographs: Eddie Safarik//Tourism Queensland/Handout/Reuters
He will have to do interviews with the media. The contract involves spending six months on Hamilton Island, one of the Islands of the Great Barrier Reef.
The Island Caretaker will also travel to other islands and enjoy activities such as sailing, kayaking, snorkelling, diving, picnics, bushwalking and more.
Though a charity worker Southall is not laid back he enjoys bungee-jumping and Ostrich riding.
Here's the winner of the world's best job!
Image: Ben Southall with the finalistsPhotographs: Tourism Queensland/Eddie Safarik/Handout
The campaign attracted immense publicity globally and generated thousands of news stories in newspapers, on television, radio and the internet.
Typing Best Job in the World into You Tube today threw up 19,000 entries and googling the phrase netted to 182,000,000.
You couldn't get a decent mainstream national campaign for that amount of money, let alone a global one," Nancy Hartley, creative director of Brisbane agency CumminsNitro, which developed the project for Tourism Queensland, was quoted saying in a media report.
Here's the winner of the world's best job!
Image: Ben Southall is ecstatic after being announced the winnerPhotographs: Tourism Queensland/Eddie Safarik/Handout
Tourism Queensland admitted it has kicked in an extra "two or three-hundred thousand" for media management since applications closed in January, but estimates put the value of the return at about $110 million.
That figure is expected to grow by a further $30 million dollars by weeks' end, when the island caretaker position will no longer be vacant.
article