Archive for June, 2010

Three Lions, Two Fingers, One Winner

As the “Golden Generation” of England footballers bid for the umpteenth (and probably last) time to realise their potential at a major international tournament, fans across the country will be reaching for their Three Lions replica shirts, keeping their fingers crossed, and praying that “Wazza” really can Write The Future.

Back to the present. Before a fly-away Jabulani ball has been struck in earnest, the contest between “official sponsors” and those pesky ambushers has truly kicked off. The FA and Mars, an official partner of the England Team, are reportedly considering legal action against Nestlé, for “passing off” an association with the England team through Kit Kat’s “Fingers Crossed” campaign. Yes, this is the same Mars who undertook the infamous “Believe” ambush marketing campaign around the 2006 World Cup. For 2010, and the first football World Cup on African soil, a classic case of poacher turned gamekeeper.

Three questions, one for each lion on John Barnes’s Mars Bar :

1. Is Nestlé actually passing off an association with the England team?

This should probably be left to the lawyers, but from a layman’s / sport industry professional’s perspective, using Sol Campbell and Mansfield Town manager David Holdsworth as your “talent” is not the best way to infer an association with the England team. And despite the well observed allusions to England’s World Cup heritage – “cross your fingers for no penalties…no broken metatarsals…no tears” -and liberal use of the ambusher’s best friend (the St George’s flag), nothing suggests that Kit Kat sponsors Capello’s boys.

2. Should Mars be trying to protect their hard bought status as the England Team’s confectionary brand of choice?

A lesson for all official sponsors. Complain about the ambushers and you are giving their campaigns the oxygen of publicity. Mars clearly had good reason to turn gamekeeper and pay for the privilege of England partner status. They should be confident that their association, leveraged properly, will pay off. Otherwise, why not remain a poacher?

3. Whose current World Cup campaign is better?

No contest. Kit Kat have tapped into the very essence of the English sporting psyche, and the pervading sense of hope over expectation that grips every England football fan during international football tournaments. Their TV ad brings that insight to life in a down to earth, domestic football environment. Compare that with John Barnes re-hashing a song from 1990 in a sparsely populated park, with production values that suggest too much money in the FA’s coffers and not enough in the activation pot.

Reports suggest that Mars may have won the battle of the lawyers, and that Nestlé have agreed to curtail the campaign. Is that the final whistle on this contest? Probably not if Kit Kat’s PR team are on the ball. What price England players crossing their fingers during a crucial penalty shoot, or being caught on camera tucking into one of the 200 Kit Kat’s that have been delivered to the England training camp by the FA’s official supermarket …?

Whatever happens, fingers crossed that 2010 marks the end of John Barnes’s singing career.

By Tom Gladstone on June 11th, 2010

Tags: Advertising, Ambush campaign, Brand marketing, Communications, Content, Football, Football Sponsorship, Media, Public relations, Social Media, Sponsorship, Sport

1 comment

The Theatre of Dreams hosts the inaugural Betfair World Cup

Sixteen countries, a sun-filled Old Trafford, a victorious Czech Republic team, a German cardboard cut-out mascot, a stadium awash with national team kits and the legendary Sir Bobby Charlton – that was the first ever Betfair World Cup!

As part of Betfair’s sponsorship of Manchester United, 96 lucky amateur football players and United fans from 16 different nations entered the world of the mighty Reds to enjoy a once in a lifetime opportunity to play at the Theatre of Dreams. The Betfair World Cup included a three-hour training day at United’s exclusive Carrington Training Facility before the 5-a-side teams went head-to-head on the pitch at Old Trafford. Clad in their nation’s colours and with the Betfair LED boards rotating in the background we witnessed sporting class, team hugs, and football fans fulfilling their dream of playing at Old Trafford! Check out our video to see the event in action…

Despite their national team not making it through to the FIFA World Cup Finals the players from the Czech Republic triumphed over Ukraine in the Betfair World Cup Final, whilst the Bulgarians lost out to the ever-so vocal Portuguese team in the Plate Final.

Manchester United and England star Gary Pallister was on site to watch all the action and said, ‘These players are following in the footsteps of legends, from Sir Bobby Charlton to Eric Cantona to Wayne Rooney. The final was a pretty close run thing but the Czech’s seemed to have the upper hand in the final half and came away with the all important win.’

Whilst the Synergy Experiential team managed to help 96 footie fans fulfil their dreams (along with the help of the incredibly well organised Manchester United Soccer Schools) I realised a personal dream of my own, interviewing the legendary Sir Bobby Charlton for the post event video (see You Tube player above).

It has to be said Sir Bobby is nothing short of a true hero for every United fan and he was certainly one of the highlights of the event, as every team had their photo taken with the United and England legend (gotta love those white suits, Bulgaria!).

With one World Cup over we now eagerly anticipate the FIFA World Cup in South Africa starting on Friday. Keep your eyes peeled on www.thevoiceofthefans.com and the Betfair poster at Waterloo station as England try to go all the way!

This blog was written by Vicky Clark and Caroline Ayling.

By Caroline Ayling on June 9th, 2010

Tags: Betfair, Event management service, Experiential marketing, Football, Football Sponsorship, Manchester United, Sponsorship, Synergy

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The beautiful numbers game: the World Cup off the field

Numbers: the 2010 FIFA World Cup will be a feast of them, with anything and everything that happens on the field analysed down to the minutest statistical detail. But that’s not my agenda here. Instead, I’ve listed below some of my favourite stats about the business of this World Cup off the field. Enjoy, and feel free to comment and add your own!
0
Number of times the World Cup has previously been staged in Africa.
0.5
Percentage the World Cup is forecast to add to South African GDP this year.
1
Number of teams sponsored by Umbro, which only sponsors England.
2
Percentage the World Cup is expected to add to total global advertising revenues this year.
3D
Focus of World Cup sponsor Sony’s tournament activation campaign, which will feature 25 matches filmed in 3D for the first time.
6:1
Predicted ratio of UK viewers for World Cup matches on BBC compared to ITV, based on recent World Cups and UEFA Euro Championships. Bad news for Adrian Chiles.
9
Percentage of people who will download an app to help them follow the World Cup, according to a recent Nielsen survey.
10
Percentage of South Africans (approximately 5 million) with internet access.
12
Teams sponsored by Adidas competing in the World Cup. Nike sponsors 9, in case you were wondering.
16
Official FIFA fan parks (known as Fan Fests) around the world for the tournament: nine in South Africa and seven others, in Berlin, London, Mexico City, Paris, Rio, Rome and Sydney
19
Official sponsors of the World Cup, comprising six FIFA ‘Partners’ (Adidas, Coca-Cola, Emirates, Hyundai-Kia, Sony and Visa), eight ‘World Cup Sponsors’ (Budweiser, Castrol, Continental Tyres, McDonalds, MTN, Satyam, Seara and Yingli) and five ‘National Supporters’ (BP, First National Bank, Neo, Prasa and Telkom).
32
Fans, one from each competing country, who will feature in ‘Bud House’, World Cup sponsor Budweiser’s ‘Big Brother meets the World Cup’ reality show which run on YouTube throughout the tournament.
33
Days between the end of the World Cup on July 11 and the start of the 2010/2011 Premier League season
46
Female percentage of UK TV audiences for England matches, according to a recent forecast by Initiative.
86
Countries visited by the Coca-Cola World Cup Trophy Tour over 9 months in 2009 and 2010.
110
Hours of World Cup coverage to be broadcast by BBC.
200
Countries who took part in the World Cup qualification campaign, a new record on the previous best of 194. A total of 19.3 million fans attended the matches.
1954
Year when a World Cup match was televised for the first time.
1978
First World Cup tournament to feature official FIFA World Cup sponsorships.
3,300
World Cup trademark violations, according to FIFA, in 84 countries, from the 2006 World Cup. In 1994, when FIFA began taking action against violations, there were 258 reported in 39 countries.
5,556
Altitude above sea level, in feet, of Johannesburg, where the 2010 Final will be staged.
11,300
Reported number of tickets bought by non-South African Africans.
150,000
Media representatives working in South Africa during the tournament.
3,300,000
Tickets to be sold in total for the 64 World Cup matches.
13,765,154
YouTube views to date of Nike’s ‘Write the Future’ World Cup-themed ad featuring Wayne Rooney, Christiano Ronaldo, Homer Simpson and others.
23,000,000
Dollar difference in FIFA prize money between winning the World Cup and being knocked out at the group stage.
186,000,000
Returns, at the time of writing, when you type ‘World Cup 2010′ into Google.
2.5 billion
Amount in sterling that Betfair is forecasting fans will bet on Betfair during the World Cup.

By Tim Crow on June 9th, 2010

Tags: Default, Football, World Cup, YouTube

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Do brands risk alienating fans by promoting events they don’t support?

With KitKat’s high profile World Cup campaign raising the hackles of the FA and Mars, Tim Crow writes in Marketing magazine on the pros and cons of ambush marketing. Click here to read the article.

By Synergy on June 8th, 2010

Tags: Press Clipping

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Not just another World Cup Schedule Website…

I spotted this brilliant FIFA World Cup online schedule this morning and think it’s a really great way of presenting fixtures on a website, especially when you compare it to the static rightsholder fixture pages we so often see.  Well done to our Spanish friends at marca.com!

By Erica Hodges on June 4th, 2010

Tags: Digital marketing, Football, World Cup

2 comments


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