part of the Engine Group

Archive for June, 2008

Londoners flock to Taste of London for food and freebies

Instant win

Last weekend 49,000 people descended on Regent’s Park for what has become the capital’s favourite destination for food lovers, Taste of London.

Officially opened by Boris Johnson, the London crowd was drawn to an event offering bite sized dining experiences from some of the capitals’ most luxurious restaurants. However despite the expensive and discerning taste buds on show, it soon became clear when it comes down to it, many a cool Londoner has a strong appetite for a freebie.

Across the four days, visitors sampled delicacies from around the world whilst exhibitors ranging from Sainsbury’s to Fortnum & Mason made it their mission to give out anything from sample products to random free gifts. The mob handed approach to distributing meant that cutting through all the noise was going to be interesting.

British Airways, presenting partner of Taste of London, and a few smart heads at Synergy took a step back and asked – what do their guests really want when they visit Taste? A welcome glass of champagne, extra crowns (the event currency) to buy more treats or even dinner for two at one of restaurants..….. perfect!

To give this away British Airways used a simple scratch card mechanic so visitors could win instantly and upgrade their overall experience.

Giving relevant prizes in a simple and effective way enabled British Airways to interact with their core target audience with their key message – “Upgrade to British Airways“. Consumers face a barrage of communications at events like Taste, so the key to standing out is to be relevant to the experience, be relevant to the brand and of course keep it simple.

By Samantha Pillage on June 27th, 2008

Tags: Branded content, Experiential marketing

No comments

Anyone for tennis?

The Lawn Tennis Association wants people in the UK to recognise tennis as more than just Wimbledon. It is looking for a sponsor to ‘own’ the game by backing all domestic events and nurturing much-needed home-grown talent with initiatives for school children. By Louise Jack

Click here to read the full article, courtesy of mad.co.uk.

By Synergy on June 26th, 2008

Tags: Press Clipping

No comments

Success in the hands of brands

“What is unacceptable offline should not be acceptable online – for example, child pornography and other crimes like fraud or theft.”

Was DCMS Secretary of State Andy Burnham really likening Bond’s product-placed Sony gadgets to kiddie porn? Or Kiefer Sutherland’s mobile phone to shoplifting?

In his inflammatory speech Burnham hammered home his affection for the standards that have made Britain great: the standards of the watershed, the standards of impartial BBC news, and the standards of keeping advertisers in their place.

Why did Burnham say this? To set the tone? To ask for guidance? Surely not to shut down a consultation process before it had even started. So I visited the Westminster Media Forum where, sure enough, DCMS policy head Chris Bone said Burnham was “instinctively unwilling” to put his name to the European directive that frees up product placement.

And yet one thing is certain, that if the business models aren’t changed the business will go away. The days of creative talent being packaged by producers to sell to TV channels who pass advertiser money back down the line are numbered. Google (and Yahoo and Vodafone and all the other digital players) are not going to get into commissioning. But they are working hard to take advertising budget away from the traditional value chain.

The truly appalling betrayal of trust in television in the past 24 months – that of misleading the phone voting audience, deliberately or otherwise – seems to have knocked Burnham into Middle England, where new is bad and old is trustworthy. He has a mandate to balance the needs of old and new audiences as well as old and new media. But maybe it’s not about old and new, so much as those who live in a branded world and those who don’t (or don’t want to).

There is a place for people who like a world free of brands, messages, and reminders of the high street: it is called the BBC, where producers studiously erase the grubby link between audiences and the brands they are so familiar with.

But the DCMS risks imposing an artificial Auntie Beeb mindset on the nation as a whole. We live in a branded world and television should reflect that. Not to do so risks patronising the audience and, perhaps worse, damaging editorial credibility: if we’re going for realism, wouldn’t the inhabitants of Albert Square be awash with Nike swoops. Isn’t the absence of Burberry as notable as the obscenity-free language of Grange Hill?

In fact, people who live in a branded world might prefer a well-crafted story (which includes the authenticity of brands) to the interruption of spot advertising.

But we can’t gloss over the issue of standards. Standards are important; they are what makes British creative work stand out. (It’s certainly not the budget!) There is a real fear, reflected and amplified by Burnham, that editorial decisions will be influenced by the availability of product placement money. The missing word in that sentence is ‘badly’: that editorial will be badly influenced. All sort of influences play a part in story development: from the budget to the slot to the tastes of a commissioner. What should be avoided is one dominant influence negatively affecting all the others.

There is a real potential for product placement to damage editorial standards. They are quickly obvious, and usually lampooned as seen in this ‘I, Robot’ and Transformers.  There’s even a channel on YouTube called “Product Placement Top 100″. Devising guidelines around day-parts and genres ignores the obvious fact that the overall content must still be good. Crass bulldozing of products into storylines is damaging to the brands that place them there as much as they are to the reputation of the channels that carry them.

And here I’m going to suggest something – quietly, sincerely – that we don’t hear often. I believe advertising brands can raise the quality. Brands need consistent, high value engagement with their audiences. They need to convince their audiences that the experience is so good you actually want to participate in the product as well! Can I be mischievous and suggest that many TV shows simply need to provide ‘good enough’ quality to prevent someone from changing channels? How many Media Study graduates dream that they might one day write scripts like “It’s day six and the Big Brother Housemates have been licking crisps for 33 minutes”? (I didn’t make that one up I’m sad to say.)

Ironically, a decision by the DCMS to outlaw product placement will harm the British creative industry in two ways. Refusing new business models will hand new advertiser money to online that would otherwise go into 360-degree production. And it will inspire a Mark Burnett-like brain drain where production companies set up shop in more tolerant European countries, develop product placement businesses there, and sell the resulting programmes back into the UK in the vein of programmes like CSI and 24. (The DCMS confirmed that the current framework allows this as long as British broadcasters don’t make any money from it!)

The decision is in the hands of the DCMS and Ofcom but, in the end, success is in the hands of the brands. The government has a role to respond to people complaining of undue prominence or misleading statements, but that only happens when a brand is over-exposed in the editorial.

Brands need to take ownership of that problem. If the brand fashions itself into the script, if it becomes a part of the editorial, if it works with the producers and the distributors, if it chooses carefully among the opportunities, then everything can work better.

And who knows, maybe one day we’ll see Burberry hats in Albert Square.

By Morgan Holt on June 20th, 2008

Tags: Brand marketing, Branded content, Product placement

No comments

Twenty20 cricket: in the NPD era, the marketing game is king

It’s generally overlooked that new product development (NPD) has been a seismic force shifting the tectonic plates of the business of sport over the last twenty years.

As ever, football blazed the trail. The Premier League and the Champions League may both seem like they’ve been around forever, but were created only in the early 1990s. And crucially, their phenomenal consumer and commercial success inspired dozens of imitations in every major sport worldwide.

Twenty20 cricket is the latest seismic event in the series, and could just be the most transformational yet. Created by the ECB in 2003 as a purely domestic marketing tactic to recruit a new generation of fans and counter negative perceptions of cricket, Twenty20 has now mutated into an international marketing phenomenon.

Recent weeks have seen Twenty20 launches literally flying off the NPD conveyor belt. The Indian Premier League, the Stanford Twenty20 for 20 and the Twenty20 Champions League have generated worldwide coverage and serious money, and in so doing confirmed Twenty20 as unquestionably world cricket’s dominant commercial product.

For brands either already involved in cricket, or considering it as a marketing option, it’s still too early to gauge any major effects of the Twenty20 phenomenon. It’s clear that it is impacting on cricket as a brand and on its ability to engage consumers, but to what extent?

Intriguingly, we won’t have to wait too long for significant insights. In the summer of 2009 old and new cricket will come together as never before in the UK, with the visit of Australia for an Ashes Series, and the staging of the ICC World Twenty20. Watch this space.

By Tim Crow on June 18th, 2008

Tags: Ashes, Barclays Premier League, Cricket, ECB, ICC World Twenty20, Indian Premier League, New Product Development, Stanford Twenty20 for 20, UEFA Champions League

No comments

All Playing Together

 

There’s been a lot of press over the last few years about the nation’s decreasing sporting ability being matched only by the increasing waist size of its kids. Yesterday, I found myself at a primary school in south London on a visit with British tennis number 1, Andy Murray, as part of an RBS Dream Playgrounds scheme.The tangible excitement caused by Andy’s appearance at the school showed that kids regardless of age, background and interests all loved the chance to just run around with someone they’ve seen on TV.  

Gasps and a spontaneous round of applause greeted his revelation to the school assembly that he started playing tennis at just four years old, but as Andy himself said, getting started is the easy bit – it’s keeping kids interested in staying active beyond twelve that is problematic.

The substantial investment from RBS to improve the school’s playground area will go some way towards improving the chances of these kids to stay active, but while governing bodies battle to corral Britain’s young into their particular sport, the primary challenge for the government is simply to keep kids active – regardless of sporting denomination.

Governing bodies, Sport England and the Department of Health need to work together to build a combined voice with combined facilities that can build on the interest that a three hour visit from a world class athlete can bring.

Incidentally, toughest examination of the day for Andy didn’t come from the gathered press pack but rather from a six-year-old in assembly who looked slightly crestfallen when silence greeted his question, ‘How many Wimbledon’s have you won?’.

By Dominic Curran on June 17th, 2008

Tags: Andy Murray, Tennis, grass roots sport

No comments

Up-and-coming sports in need of a marketing makeover

Marketers have long been hunting for ‘the next big thing’. While much has been written about innovation in categories such as food and drink, the phenomenon of new and re-branded sporting events is an emerging topic. While few brands have the cash to become the title sponsor of a Premier League football club, up-and-coming sports offer them first-mover advantage.

Click here to read the full article, courtesy of Brand Republic.

By Synergy on June 17th, 2008

Tags: Press Clipping

No comments

Sex, spies and automobiles

While some are calling for F1 chief Max Mosley’s resignation over his recent conduct, others accept he should stay put.  With sponsors reluctant to criticise and fans as keen as ever, Mosley’s antics may be a hot topic now, but the spotlight will soon shine elsewhere, says Louise Jack.

Click here to download the full article, courtesty of Marketing Week.

By Synergy on June 11th, 2008

Tags: Press Clipping

No comments

Euro 2008: Who’s your team?

The hardcore fans are still out there and their allegiance is strong to both club and country.  Much has been said about the sales of Spain and Portugal shirts rising this summer.  In Liverpool and the surrounding area Spain shirts have sold well thanks to Spanish striker Torres establishing himself as a Kop favourite.  Whilst Man Utd fans (wherever they live, Surrey as I understand it…) are snapping up Portugal shirts in homage to Cristiano Ronaldo.

Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Spain’s Fernando Torres in the English Premiership.

The multicultural Barclays Premier League will be well represented in Euro 2008 even if the English team isn’t there itself.  Austria and Switzerland will play host to many faces familiar to the English audience including players from Man Utd, Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal, Newcastle, Wigan, Man City, Aston Villa, Blackburn Rovers, Middlesbrough, Tottenham and Portsmouth.  The Coca-Cola Football League and Clydesdale Bank Scottish Premier League will be represented too plus the transfer gossip will link many players with a move to the Premiership after their performance this summer.

So there is still plenty of home interest but what qualifies as ‘home’ interest?

European communities are well established within Britain and they will be watching their ‘home’ teams with all the passion and support you would expect.  Tesco has not missed this opportunity and would appear to have adopted Poland bringing in extra supplies of polish snacks and beers in 150 stores in areas with large Polish communities as reported in The Times.  There are also strong areas of support for Portugal, France, Spain, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands to name a few.

As a football fan I’m still excited about Euro 2008 and without the inevitability of England getting knocked out it’s almost more enjoyable.   If the fans’ interest is strong then the brands will follow suit.  As Tim said in his previous blog, Euro 2008 is a time that brands can see how their long term football agendas measure up and will give them the chance to make sure things are on track in time for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

So whether you can lay claim to a great-great-grandmother from Portugal, or will be following a player from your club or you just like the shirt… which team will you be adopting?

By Alex Coulson on June 11th, 2008

Tags: Brand marketing, Euro 2008, Football

No comments

Will brands back women’s sport?

Tennis star Maria Sharapova will arrive at Wimbledon later this month with a list of brand endorsements that would make even the Beckhams turn green with envy.

Click here to read the full article, courtesy of Brand Republic.

By Synergy on June 10th, 2008

Tags: Press Clipping

No comments

Euro 2008: no home teams, but still a case study for brand marketing through football

Euro 2008 kicks off this weekend without England or Scotland, but clichéd commentaries about lower fan interest and less brand activity miss the point that for brand marketers who use football, there are still valuable lessons to be learned from the tournament – many of which couldn’t be learned if the home teams had qualified.By the same token, ambush activity will also be thrown into higher relief, whether big, bold and obviously strategic such as the Mars ‘Get Britain Playing’ campaign or Burger King’s ‘Football Your Way’, to the tactical, such as Heineken’s new, and very funny, press work - although we suspect that UEFA and tournament sponsor Carlsberg will be less than amused given Heineken’s status as a UEFA Champions League sponsor.
 


Finally, let’s not forget that Euro 2008 will do quite nicely without the home teams. Every one of the 1.05 million match tickets has been sold - albeit only 33 per cent direct to the fans - and in football terms it will be as good as it gets: the 2006 World Cup Final was between France and Italy.

From fan consumption across a variety of channels for example, we’ll discover how many fans here love football no matter who’s playing, as distinct from those who, as Martin Samuel put it recently in The Times, are in love not with football but with:
‘a St George’s Cross [on] the car aerial, buying the new red England shirt and joining the gang for a month.’
Tournament sponsors, many of them brands with long term football agendas, will also gain a much clearer perspective on how powerfully their campaigns cut through to the hardcore fan audience, undiluted either by the casual St George’s Cross fan or the blizzard of ambush campaigns that would normally accompany a big tournament featuring the home teams.
 
 

 

By Tim Crow on June 6th, 2008

Tags: Ambush campaign, Brand marketing, Euro 2008, Football

No comments


Synergy

How To Find Us


What We Do
Our Work
Engine Group Office
Synergy
60 Great Portland Street
London
W1W 7RT
Tel: +44 (0) 203 128 6800
Fax: +44 (0) 203 128 6837

hello@synergy-sponsorship.com
www.synergy-sponsorship.com

 Find us on Google maps