Archive for September, 2009

Whither the 2008 World Championship?

Let’s say that the WMSC on Monday rules that yes, Renault did cheat at last year’s Singtel Singapore Grand Prix. Here’s what might happen.

The team will go instantly bankrupt as the FIA levies a massive fine (it has to be more than the $100m levied on McLaren, doesn’t it?) and every sponsor withdraws immediately, citing the reputational damage clauses that they have in their contracts. The 2009 season finishes with 18-car grids while Russian oligarchs mingle with Middle Eastern sheikhs in the queue to buy the team with the small change they have in their pockets. So far, so normal for the wild roller-coaster that is modern-day F1.

The FIA goes further though, and disqualifies Renault from the Singapore race. Rather than declare Nico Rosberg, who finished immediately behind Alonso, the winner, the FIA cruelly denies Williams its first race win in years by awarding the race to Felipe Massa, who was leading at the time of the safety car deployment in the wake of Nelson Piquet Jr‘s crash, that allowed Fernando Alonso to go on to “win”. So Massa is retrospectively awarded 10 points, which means he’s earned enough to win the 2008 World Championship. Lewis Hamilton hands over the trophy and the title without so much as a whimper.

What a mess. What’s the solution? Who’d be a judge on the WMSC? Not me.

By Scott Garrett on September 17th, 2009

Tags: Default

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When there’s nothing new to say, don’t say anything at all

Reading through my daily Google News Alert I came across a press release from Endsleigh Car Insurance issued Sunday last where, according to the headline, Endsleigh ‘looks ahead to the rest of Formula 1 Grand Prix 2009 season’.

What followed was a short summary of Michael Schumacher’s failed return to Grand Prix racing, Luca Badoer taking the place of the injured Felipe Massa, and questioning how many more teams will leave the sport following BMW’s decision to call it a day.

Not exactly ‘what Formula 1 Grand Prix fans can expect from the rest of the season’ as promised in the release, but more a lazy regurgitation of old news.

Luca Badoer has been and gone, having raced in both the European and Belgian Grands Prix, before being replaced last week by fellow Italian Giancarlo Fisichella; BMW are well into the process of trying to find a buyer; and ‘Crashgate’ has been dominating the F1 media agenda.

Despite the stories mentioned in the release being more than two weeks out of date, a quick Google search revealed pick-up on more than twenty websites.

It’s tough for brands not directly associated with Formula One or one of the current teams to benefit from the sport’s perceived glamour and large fan base. Endsleigh Car Insurance have shown themselves to be a little off the pace, which for a sport that lives and dies by fractions of a second will not endear the brand to motorsport’s hardcore.

By Synergy on September 17th, 2009

Tags: Default, Formula 1, Sport

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Betfair agree sponsorship with FC Barcelona

Synergy recently advised Betfair on the negotiation of a new marketing partnership with FC Barcelona. Marketing covers the announcement of the partnership here

By Synergy on September 11th, 2009

Tags: Press Clipping

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Biggest is not always best

Without making sweeping generalisations, there is a culture in many parts of the US where bigger is better.  This was highlighted recently by the Dallas Cowboys when they launched their all singing all dancing stadium replay screen.

Gone are the days when you need to take your glasses to watch live sport…the screen at the Cowboys’ stadium weighs in at 60 yards long by 71 foot high, thus in effect making it the world’s largest high definition television screen.  However, the bragging rights from having this colossal TV are somewhat diminished by the lack of planning put into the screen’s placement.

In the Cowboys pre-season friendly against the Titans, the Titans punter Craig Hentrich hit the giant screen hanging 90ft above field level on more than one occasion and commented “I don’t know what the people were thinking. I guess they should have tested things out before they put that thing in place. It’ll have to be raised.”

Having already spent £1.5 billion on the Stadium, the Cowboys owner Jerry Jones disagreed with the issue, stating “How high is high if somebody just wants to sit there and kick straight up? You gotta be trying to do it. The rule is very clear. You just kick it again.”

If I were a betting man I would put a punt on the screen being raised before the start of the season!

cowboys

By Simon Roche on September 10th, 2009

Tags: Default

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Jack Wills Freshers’ Tour, sponsored by… Jack Wills

Just yesterday at Synergy towers, there was some collective musing going on around how the face of sponsorship could change in the next few decades. And that got me thinking about that ever-elusive demographic – the 16-24 year olds – to see how they might be running businesses and consuming media in 25 years’ time.

One area of interest is how immune (or not) youth of today have become to brand presence in their everyday lives. Do they reject it (oft-quoted myth)? Do they embrace it (when it suits them)? Do they challenge it to give them added value before giving it their valuable attention (‘what’s in it for me’)? Or do they ignore it altogether?

Or, have they come to expect it as par for the course of being entertained? I wondered if the ‘such and such, brought to you by…’ had become such a ubiquitous tag to music concerts / sporting fixtures / televised events, that people in 10 or 20 years might actually notice an absence of brand more than its presence. After all, I was hearing this mandatory credit line before I could even read, from the loveable muppets of Sesame Street (‘Sesame Street was brought to you by the number 8 and letters D and M…’ etc.)

But one interesting application of the sponsorship concept was brought to me today by Britain’s favourite ‘University Outfitter’, Jack Wills.

jwunsigned-sponsored-by3

Having just returned from a summer of fun in New England, the brand’s bright young marketing things are about to embark on another grand tour of the UK’s trendiest universities. JW will be partying at various Freshers’ Weeks in the next few weeks, combining their ‘fabulously British’ fashion with cutting edge, fresh new music – via the brand’s evolving unofficial music label, JWUnsigned.

But what caught my eye in the creative flyer for the Tour was the sponsorship line. Bearing in mind that this is a Jack-Wills event, delivered as a music tour produced by a Jack Wills sub-brand, it is ‘sponsored by’ – wait for it – a Jack Wills clothing line. This year’s JWUnsigned Freshers Tour is brought to you by No.350-4-842 – the brand’s denim range.

This I feel points to some interesting signs about the presence that sponsorship has in the lives of youth culture today. Sponsorship in its very basic sense (brand-pays-rights-holder) cannot apply here given that both the sponsor and property are from the same stable. So one assumes that JW is using the Tour platform to leverage awareness of its 350-4-842 denim as almost a stand-alone brand, instantly recognizable in and of itself but crucially as part of the Jack Wills family.

But I sense that there must be an implicit acceptance here by the Tour’s marketeers that their target consumers are so expectant of a live event being sponsored, it has become a necessary element of the Tour name. ‘Sponsored by…’ acts in this case as a ready-made stamp of officialdom: all big music events are sponsored so the JWUnsigned Tour needs to be too, in order to gain stature and acceptance within the youth marketplace.

St. Andrew’s, Leeds, Edinburgh, London, Bristol, Nottingham, Guildford and Brighton all appear to be on the list of host cities for the Tour events, and I’m intrigued to see what these will look like. How will JW use the opportunity to engage with their fans? Will they be actively spreading the word of their ‘Worn in but not Worn Out’ denim range to a captive audience of indie music fans? Will the bands be wearing the jeans during all their sets? Or is that ‘sponsored by…’ tag ultimately just that – a tagline?

And most interesting of all – will the legions of JW-loving Freshers either notice or, perhaps more importantly, care?

By Lucie Bartlett on September 9th, 2009

Tags: Brand marketing, Experiential marketing, Fashion, Music, Sponsorship, Synergy

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