Archive for the ‘BMW’ category

Synergy Wins Coveted European Social Media Award For ‘Golden BMW’ London 2012 Campaign

LONDON – 1st February 2013: Synergy’s groundbreaking London 2012 social media campaign ‘Golden BMW’ last night won the coveted European Sponsorship Association (ESA) Award for Social Media Activation.

As part of the BMW sponsorship of London 2012, the campaign saw a specially-created fleet of Golden BMWs tour the country visiting the Olympic Torch Relay route a day ahead of the Relay to capitalise on the anticipation of the Flame’s arrival. The integrated campaign, led by social media and PR, encouraged consumers fans to ‘Spot, Snap and Share’ photographs of the highly distinctive Golden BMWs in social media for their chance to win tickets to the Games.

The 70-day campaign reached over a third of the UK population, increased BMW’s Facebook fans by 15% and inspired over 50,000 people to visit BMW dealerships.  

The ESA judges commented:  “The Golden BMW campaign was wholly based on social media with great engagement and business results.  It was hard to achieve standout in the busy Olympic Torch period, but the Golden BMW clearly achieved all the targets they set themselves”.

 Tim Crow, Synergy CEO, said: “We are incredibly proud to have won this highly coveted award in such a competitive category. It is particularly satisfying to have won it in the context of London 2012, the first Games of the mainstream social media era, and confirms our position as leaders in creating and delivering social media campaigns for sponsors. ”

Synergy also received the prize for one of the new categories of the evening – the ESA Professional Development Award. This category recognises the agency with the best approach to professional and career development through training and education. The judges were particularly impressed with the depth of commitment to staff and sophisticated programmes for career expansion that in turn created a real sense of mutual progression.

 Alison Moor, Synergy MD said: “It was great news that team’s collective commitment to professional development has been recognised.  At Synergy, we put our people at the heart of our business.  The Synergy culture is about taking part and being part of the team.  Learning through experience and collaborating is high on everyone’s agenda throughout the company.” 

 - Ends -

 For further information please contact:

Kate McGregor (Press officer at Synergy)

Contact: 020 3128 6834

Email: Kate.Mcgregor@synergy-sponsorship.com

Notes to editors

About Synergy:

Synergy (www.synergy-sponsorship.com) is a multidisciplinary specialist sponsorship consultancy, which guides brands from strategy to delivery. It counts Betfair, BMW, Bupa, Chivas, The Coca-Cola Company, Diageo, RBS and SSE among its clients.

Synergy is the UK’s most recognised agency of its type, having won over forty major awards in its 28-year history, including having been named by Marketing magazine as UK Sponsorship Agency of The Year in 2012, as well as Sports Industry Agency of the Year and Hollis Sponsorship Consultancy of the Year.

 About Engine:

Engine is the UK’s largest and fastest growing independent communications company. Engine employs more than 700 people, containing a family of best in class communications businesses serving the consumer market, the corporate market and the public sector. Engine is an employee-owned business, with one in five staff owning shares in the company. For more information, visit: www.theenginegroup.com

By on February 1st, 2013

Tags: BMW, Default, Digital marketing, Experiential marketing, London 2012, London 2012 sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship consultants, Olympic Torch Relay, PR, Press Clipping, Rio 2016 Sponsorship, Rio 2016 Sponsorship Consultants, Socialympics, Sponsorship, Synergy

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Synergy Trends in Sponsorship 2013

Marketing is moving fast. Everything is changing – virtually in front of our eyes – with new rules written even before the ink has dried on the old ones.

A perfect storm of factors are converging to drive this pace of change. Social media is having a profound effect on what consumers expect from brands and how they want to interact with them.

New devices, unlimited bandwidth and the ability to be constantly connected all combine to give brands a range of new opportunities to engage with their audiences. This is leading to the convergence of the real and the digital worlds and a deep interconnection between all marketing channels and touchpoints.

But even when everything else is changing, the things that people love stay the same. That’s why sponsorship, as a route into people’s passions, is more important than ever.

As 2013 moves into full swing, we are delighted to share our perspective on the big trends that will be driving the sponsorship industry – we hope that you find them interesting and thought-provoking. Most importantly, we hope that you will use them to help create brilliant sponsorship campaigns.

Click here to download the report

By on February 1st, 2013

Tags: Athletics, Blogging, BMW, Brand marketing, Branded content, Brazil 2014, Broadcast sponsorship, Commonwealth Games, Communications, Consultancy, Content, Cricket, Digital marketing, Engine, Football, Football Sponsorship, Glasgow 2014, grass roots sport, London 2012, London 2012 sponsorship, Manchester United, Olympic sponsorship, Olympics, PR, Public relations, RBS 6 Nations, Rugby, Rugby World Cup, Ryder Cup, Sponsorship, Synergy

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BMW and England Rugby – Driving The Ultimate Performance

Having played a vital role in London 2012, BMW unveiled its next major investment in British sport only a few days after the Closing Ceremony, in the shape of a new partnership with England Rugby. The partnership, conceived for BMW by Synergy, will develop the next generation of elite England Rugby talent through the newly-created BMW Performance Academy, as well as seeing BMW create a range of initiatives for England rugby fans at Twickenham and nationwide. 

The launch event to unveil the partnership was led by England Head Coach Stuart Lancaster, backs coach Andy Farrell and Director of Operations Rob Andrew, and hosted at BMW Group UK’s Brand Academy and centre for excellence at Wokefield Park. the national rugby media heard the RFU and BMW present plans for the 30 players that have been selected by the England coaches for the BMW Performance Academy. Through BMW’s support, the players will receive tailored programmes to help them progress from the RFU coaching team, access to BMW mentors, advanced driver training and work experience. This combines BMW expertise with development needs of young players and will help develop the performance pathway.

The fan-focused element of the partnership got off to a flying start with two activations launched at the QBE Autumn Internationals.

BMW’s Sweet Chariot Twitter promotion gave BMW followers the chance to win a ride home after each International in a BMW X5, the perfect end to a day at the rugby.

And the BMW Lounge was unveiled in the West Car Park at Twickenham, giving fans a premium experience in a convivial atmosphere pre- and post- match and the chance to meet England players.

 Keep an eye out during the RBS 6 Nations for more from BMW and the RFU on the road to 2015.

By on December 13th, 2012

Tags: BMW, Default, Experiential marketing, Rugby, Sponsorship, Sponsorship consultancy, Synergy

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Olympic Brands on Track: Top 10

The first thing anyone in sponsorship learns about the Olympic Games is that the Field of Play is sacrosanct. No advertising or commercial branding. No marques or sponsorship identification on any athlete uniforms, save from a Nike swoosh here or a Puma feline there. This strict ‘clean venue’ policy is zealously enforced by the powers that be, and underpins the commercial model from The Olympic Partner (TOP) programme, down.

But it is not quite that simple. London 2012 has seen a number of brands appear on the Field of Play and into the eyes and Twitter feeds of fans worldwide. Some of this exposure has even been sanctioned by the IOC. In typical post-event style, here’s the London 2012 Field of Play Top 10.

1. Omega

An unexplained quirk of the Olympic sponsorship programme, and a source of irritation for fellow TOP sponsors;  despite the clean-venue approach, Omega was plastered across every timing screen or timing-related piece of equipment at every venue. The brand even featured on the ‘final lap’ bell at the Athletics, the Velodrome and the Aquatics Centre.

2. Panasonic

A new entry on to the Field of Play for London 2012. Creeping into the Omega realm of explicit but sanctioned Field of Play branding, Panasonic logos were visible on all event screen venues. Screens variously showed spectators scores, replays, venue instructions and films about the rules of Water Polo, the ‘kiss-cam’ and ’bongo-cam’ and the official Muse song and montage. In terms of eyeballs on logos, one for the attendees rather than the TV audience.

3. MINI

Anyone who watched the Athletics cannot have failed to see the remote controlled ‘mini MINIs’ zipping around the Olympic Stadium, retrieving stray javelins, hammers and discuses, as part of BMW’s sponsorship of the Games. Although the car marque was absent, you didn’t have to be a Top Gear devotee to recognise the signature silhouette (or the  ‘it’s a MINI adventure’ tagline). And it certainly helped that the Olympic Broadcasting Service regularly zeroed in on the cars to ensure the MINI became a quirky focus of coverage rather than an incidental logo.

4. Powerade

Athletes have got to stay well hydrated throughout competition, so inevitably there will be drinks on the Field of Play. At the Olympics, Powerade is the sports drink of choice. While The Coca-Cola Company was required to produce special labels for the Games – reading ‘Sports Drink’ rather than ‘Powerade ION4’ – the signature blue Powerade product would have made it clear to viewers what athletes were consuming.

5. Schweppes Abbey Well

Another Coca-Cola brand that was evident on the Field of Play, again without the brand logo. Instead, the label read ‘Still Water’ in the Abbey Well colours. The fairly recent re-launch of the brand’s identity probably made this a less immediately recognisable brand for many consumers.

6. Heineken

While we’re talking hydration, Field of Play exposure does not come much more high profile than the plastic Heineken bottle launched onto the track at the start of the 100m Final. ‘Bottle yob’ was dealt with, but not before global media coverage of the offending item.

Looking at all the above, you’d be forgiven for thinking that the rules are a tad inconsistent – Panasonic branded things they sell (TVs); Omega branded things they don’t (bells); Powerade and Schweppes Abbey Well de-branded their products; while MINI removed their brand but included their tagline (including the word ‘MINI’). I’m sure there’s IOC method somewhere in the madness…

So what about the non-Olympic family, AKA the ambushers? Leaving aside the permitted sportswear logos on athlete kit, a few brands managed to stand out on the Field of Play.

7. Beats by Dre

Dr Dre and his Beats headphones became the most high profile recipient of LOCOG’s policing, but not before the headphones had encroached on to the Field of Play, and become a talking point in the Twittersphere. Inevitably, the clampdown simply brought the oxygen of publicity to Beats’ use by athletes – entirely in keeping with the brand’s endorsement-led strategy. The sweet sound of success for an orchestrated approach that reportedly included a collection point at Shoreditch House for invited athletes.

8. Nike

When your rival has Bolt, how do you grab attention on the track? Bring out the Volt. Nike’s fluorescent yellow / green shoe didn’t contravene any rules and certainly brought a new colour to the track. Of all the colours in the spectrum, the eye is more sensitive to yellow / green than any other (according to the Nike press release). Nike has form when it comes to iconic footwear at major sporting events – from the golden pair given to Michael Johnson in Atlanta in 1996 to the orange boots worn by Nike footballers at the 2010 World Cup.

It will be interesting to see if rivals will copy their ambusher blueprint when Nike moves from poacher to gamekeeper as an official sponsor of Rio 2016.

9. Kinesio Tape

More fluorescent adornment. London 2012 has seen unprecedented use of Kinesio tape in a variety of colours and patterns. According to inventor Dr Kenzo Kase, the Japanese-made tape can help to mend injuries by allowing more movement of fluids below the skin than conventional tape. Interestingly, the scientific research has not proved as sticky as the tape itself. In spite of this, London 2012 has certainly brought it into further the public consciousness, not least as female Beach Volleyball players had a particular penchant for the tape. Cue a fad akin to Robbie Fowler’s nasal strips?

10. Yohan Blake’s watch

Yohan Blake risked a slap on the wrist from the IOC for wearing a custom-made Richard Mille tourbillon watch during the Olympic sprints. It was designed in the Jamaican colours of black, green and yellow, reportedly in an attempt to comply with the regulations. But, as official sponsor of the time pieces category (including watches), Omega will not have seen it that way.

Media exposure analysis of the Field of Play brands would no doubt score Omega top of the chart. Does that mean they take home the sponsorship gold, as suggested below?

Hats off to Omega for emblazoning their logo across a supposedly brand-free environment. If that was the objective they have well and truly succeeded. But sponsorship has evolved from a discipline obsessed by media exposure as a measure of success to focus on relevant engagement. Omega’s exposure is relatively meaningless ‘wallpaper’ that says little about their luxury products and does nothing to connect meaningfully with consumers.

I’m pretty sure there would have been more column inches, tweets and Facebook posts about Blake’s timepiece than the Games-wide Omega timing system. Winning the ‘Field of Play’ gold is about more than maximising brand exposure, it’s about relevant brand or product integration that is amplified and engages with consumers. Not branding for the sake of it, but talking points that generate fan conversations and a become part of the memories from London 2012.

By that measure, there is only one winner for me, and it is operated by remote control. One of the unintended legacies of these Games will be the rush of Rio 2016 sponsors knocking on the IOC’s door to claim their equivalent of MINI’s little adventure at London 2012.

Full disclosure: Synergy worked with The Coca-Cola Company and BMW UK on their London 2012 sponsorships.

By on August 14th, 2012

Tags: Ambush Marketing, Athletics, Beach Volleyball, BMW, Brand marketing, Brazil, Brazil 2014, Brazil 2014 Sponsorship, Brazil 2014 Sponsorship Consultants, Default, London 2012 sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship consultants, Product placement, Rio 2016, Rio 2016 Sponsorship, Rio 2016 Sponsorship Consultants, Social Media, Twitter

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The Endorsement Olympics: Brands’ London 2012 GB Athlete Strategies Analysed (INFOGRAPHIC)

With Team GB’s first gold medals won, national attention is naturally focused on GB’s Olympians. So this seems like the perfect time to reveal our analysis of brands’ GB athlete endorsement strategies, and to unveil our latest Synergy infographic - Synfographic - to the purpose.

We’ve looked at a group of 45 brands using current and former Olympians and Paralympians. The group comprises:

- Global and domestic sponsors of London 2012

- Major GB sport sponsors which aren’t London 2012 sponsors

- Other non-sponsor brands leveraging athletes in their marcomms

This revealed a total of 404 individual agreements and, if taking into consideration athletes such as Jessica Ennis or Louis Smith who have multiple sponsorship deals, endorsement of 267 unique individuals.

It is worth noting that whilst we have factored in Lloyds TSB’s support of athletes across GB via the organisation’s Local Heroes programme, the figure of 404 agreements does not take these numbers into account. Similarly, neither do the figures quoted incorporate Visa’s sponsorship of the Team 2012 programme. Both these programmes are based on the brands creating or sponsoring group athlete support systems, whereas we wanted to analyse brands’ strategies for individual endorsements - brands that have taken on the challenge (and the risks) onus of selecting, contracting and activating individuals, many several years ago, as part of their London 2012 campaigns.

Risk versus reward: over half of the endorsed athletes have qualified for Team GB and Paralympics GB. 

Whilst you may not be surprised at the dominance of athletics amongst endorsees, the Synfographic does demonstrate that there’s a healthy range of sports sitting beyond the usual suspects, reflecting the diversity of the Olympics and Paralympics.

Men’s deals outnumber women’s by 234 to 170, but the two most popular individuals for sponsors are both women –  Victoria Pendleton and Jessica Ennis. The two most popular men? Louis Smith and Sir Chris Hoy.

Looking at the brands, it’s striking that the seven Tier 1 London 2012 partners are the heaviest endorsers, with 244 agreements in total, an average of 30 per partner, massively outnumbering any other sponsorship tier. Interestingly, non-sponsor brands are the next biggest endorsers, with 91 deals in total, despite the IOC Charter’s Rule 40 restricting leverage of these individuals during Games-time, which has recently been challenged by several US athletes.

It’s also good to see that there are deals with 52 Paralympians – compared with 215 with Olympians – reflecting both brands’ support for the Paralympics and to integrate Paralympians into their London 2012 activity.     

One of the major successes in terms of athlete selection has been BMW’s London 2012 Performance Team*. This is a programme that began with the BMW UK’s central sponsorship of 27 athletes, both past and present, and evolved into a dealer-by-dealer support system for local London 2012 hopefuls. The result: BMW and MINI athletes now form 11% of the entirety of Team GB.

The main questions now are which sponsor has backed the most winners, and who’ll be the post-Games winners in the endorsement stakes. After yesterday’s heroics and today’s headlines, Bradley Wiggins is sure to be at the forefront. Let’s hope that Team GB and Paralympics GB produce many more over the next month or so.

* Full disclosure: Synergy is BMW UK’s London 2012 agency

By on August 2nd, 2012

Tags: BMW, BOA, Default, London 2012, London 2012 sponsorship, London 2012 sponsorship consultants, Olympic sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship consultants, Olympics, Rio 2016, Rio 2016 Sponsorship, Rio 2016 Sponsorship Consultants, Social Media, Sponsorship, Sponsorship consultancy, Sponsorship consultants, Sport, Synergy, Synfographic, Team GB

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What We Do

In her 28 years after founding Synergy, Karen Earl was involved in some ground-breaking work. We asked her to provide an insight into her top three pieces of Synergy output from recent years, which you’ll find below.
 
 

Guinness Rugby

I can hardly believe that I was in a meeting two decades ago when it was felt that rugby wasn’t necessarily right for the Guinness brand. Doesn’t seem possible now, does it?

Synergy’s work on the Guinness Premiership was outstanding. Activation included an Honesty Bar at rugby matches which rewarded fans and reduced queue time at Twickenham, live commentary radios bringing spectators closer to the action on the pitch and even an April Fool PR stunt which created Guinness Eau de Rugby – a fragrance made from mud from Twickenham and Ugo Moyne’s sweat.

By going on to expand its relationship with rugby with partnership deals with the RFU, WRU, Scottish Rugby, the RBS 6 Nations and the Premiership Rugby,  it now means that the two are inextricably linked.

 

Quite rightly, the sponsorship has won numerous industry awards - including the SIA Best Sports Sponsorship, MCCA Best communications campaign featuring sponsorship, and the Hollis Best Sport Sponsorship – not only for the campaign’s creativity but for the outstanding uplift in sales generated.  

 

Betfair

I’ve never been a great football fan (not something I shout about in the office!), but I can honestly say that Betfair’s recent video taking Kettering Town back to the ’70s was one of the best bits of sponsorship activation I have ever seen.  It was genuinely funny.  However, more importantly, it conveyed the brand’s character – fun, irreverent and mischievous.

Added to the tremendous work on the highly celebrated Bum-vertising campaign, Betfair provides the canvas for some of Synergy’s very best work.

 

BMW’s Olympic sponsorship – the Films

I was fortunate to be invited to the unveiling of the four films made by BMW to celebrate its sponsorship of the London 2012 Olympic Games. Not only were they beautifully filmed and produced, but they created that ‘Olympic goosebump’ feeling that I get whenever individual athletes tell their story, show us the rigour of their training, or show us their single-minded determination to succeed.

These four films really sum up the electric atmosphere of the Olympic Games, and make us all pump the air and say ‘Bring it On’.

By on May 3rd, 2012

Tags: Betfair, BMW, Brand marketing, Guinness, Guinness Premiership, Rugby, Sponsorship

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A foolish start to April at Synergy Towers

Staying close to the nationals is standard practice for us here at Synergy, both to keep on top of the zeitgeist and to help our clients become part of it.

Last weekend was no different: as well as scanning the nationals for the usual stories, we were on the lookout for the annual hoaxes that mark every April Fool’s Day, and to see if one of our own had been picked up (it was, more of which later).

Here’s a round-up.

This story in The Sun alleged that the Queen had called up James Bond to open the Olympic Games this summer, which, whilst an exciting idea, left us shaken but not stirred.

Alesha Dixon’s ‘miraculous rise’ to the GB Fencing Team after only weeks of training might not have sounded particularly convincing, but why not? She is young, takes good care of herself and is clearly ambitious. The fact that she had beaten Claire Richards, formerly of Steps, in the final run-off sadly took the claim away from reality and into April Foolery.

Mo Farah’s brand new cotton wool style training suit featured in the Sun on Sunday, revealing plans to keep the medal prospect wrapped up until the start of London 2012.

This fool was in fact one of our own, but the closely guarded secret still left many Synergists momentarily guessing. Almost as amazing, yet believable given modern training gear, was BMW’s new ‘Driverless Running Coach’ that allows your motor to follow you whilst you hit the streets for a run.

When it came to Arsenal Football Club we smelled a rat from the start. The fragrance that offered fans a chance to bottle the scent of the Emirates Stadium, fronted by Jack Wilshere, strangely enough coincided with the launch of an online interactive stadium tour. Funny that!

However, our favourite story featured in the Sunday Mirror depicting bromantics ‘Simon Cowell and David Walliams of Britain’s Got Talent’ on a picnic date, complete with flowers and swan boating on a lake. Everybody loves a happy ending, even on April Fool’s Day!

By on April 2nd, 2012

Tags: Advertising, Athletics, BMW, Celebrity, Communications, Default, Football, London 2012, Olympic sponsorship, PR, Public relations, Social Media, Synergy, Team GB

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BMW Presents: The Ultimate Performance

BMW Presents Launch

February saw us launch a major new campaign for BMW as part of our integrated work with the EngineDare team: an incredible series of short documentaries that celebrate BMW’s partnership with London 2012.

Synergy has been integral to the project since its inception, leading athlete and rights management and playing a central role in marketing integration; Engine’s creative experts WCRS created the films in partnership with leading British documentary directors and four of Great Britain’s finest athletes; and our friends at Dare built a YouTube channel to house the content.

On this project we have had the good fortune to work with exciting UK directorial talent, including BAFTA award-winning Asif Kapadia of ‘Senna’ fame,  Richard D’Argues – creator of TT3D ‘Closer to the Edge’ – and ‘Fire in Babylon’ director Stevan Riley, to explore what it takes to takes to deliver ‘The Ultimate Performance’ on the world stage.

Each of the four films focuses on an athlete from the BMW London 2012 Performance Team, and is a unique insight into the parallels between BMW’s design, engineering and product expertise and the dedication of a world-class athlete.  The films will be seeded over a four-week period on YouTube.

The first film to launch, ‘Man and Machine’, is a documentary by Yannakis Jones on the Paralympian David Weir and his relationship with his wheelchair. It explores how David needs to connect seamlessly with his chair to deliver his ultimate performance. At the same time it shows how the connection between the driver and the car is also central to BMW in delivering the ultimate driving experience.

The second video to be released features Olympic gymnast Louis Smith and the design team for the new BMW i8. This documentary is entitled ‘Form and Function’ and explores the similarities that exist between an elite athlete and a BMW designer who are both in search of perfection. The video offers an insight into how world-class performance in any discipline is driven by dedication and passion.

By on February 24th, 2012

Tags: BMW, BOA, Branded content, Consultancy, Content, Digital marketing, Event management consultants, Event management service, Experiential marketing, Film, London 2012, London 2012 sponsorship, London 2012 sponsorship consultants, Olympic sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship consultants, Olympics, Sponsorship, Sport, Synergy, Synopsis, Team GB, YouTube

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McIlroy’s Millions: And we’re only on the first tee…

As a triumphant Rory McIlroy left this year’s US Open, he did so carrying the inevitable label of the game’s next superstar. His flawless golf, which made him the youngest champion since the great Bobby Jones, sparked premature talk of him overtaking Jack Nicklaus’ 18 Major trophies.

Rory McIlroy Open winner

With previous US Open Champion Graeme McDowell labelling him as ‘the best player he’s ever seen’, it was unsurprising that the sporting community began to draw comparisons between McIlroy and the best player of his generation, Tiger Woods.

Tiger, who current stands at 14 major trophies, was well underway to becoming the greatest golfer of all time. These wins brought with them a whole host of sponsors, all throwing millions of dollars at him, clambering to be a part of his success story.

And it seems McIlroy is set to follow suit.

His current $10million per year contracts with his sponsors (Jumeirah, Oakley and Titleist) pale in comparison to that of Woods who, during his peak, reportedly earned $92million per year from sponsors alone and in doing so, became sport’s first billionaire in 2009.

Tiger Woods Paul Thomas Daily Express

But following his US Open success, companies have supposedly been queuing up to offer Rory huge new endorsement deals, vying for a space on his shirt and cap.

So, is it pure coincidence that Rory’s rise to stardom has coincided with Tiger’s fall from grace? Could it be possible that all the hype been created to satisfy the golfing world’s need for a new megastar?

Let’s examine the facts.

McIlroy didn’t just win the U.S Open with 8 shots to spare; he smashed 12 records along the way.

And when two of the game’s greats, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, claim that he is already ‘well ahead of their pace’ and he could ‘conceivably be the next Grand Slam winner’, it would seem that he is in fact the real deal.

But take away all the talk of records and major victories, McIlroy remains a marketer’s dream.  His youthful exuberance, infectious smile and fearless brand of golf is a shot in the arm for a sport that had been jaded by the scandals of late 2009.

What sets McIlroy apart from other players is the way he interacts and engages with his fans and media alike. How many European players would get a standing ovation after a 4th round meltdown in a major competition or have their name chanted by usually partisan US crowds?

He is as gracious in defeat as he is in victory, handles the media with the maturity of someone well beyond his years and, as I witnessed first hand at this year’s BMW Championship, will happily take the time to sign autographs and pose with fans.

With his first major under his belt, McIlroy’s already huge universal appeal to sponsors and fans alike is only going to increase. Even his usually understated manager Andrew ‘Chubby’ Chandler predicted that his endorsements could reach the levels that so far only Woods has achieved – and we’re only on the first tee…

By on July 15th, 2011

Tags: BMW, Celebrity, Golf, Sponsorship, Sport, Tiger Woods

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Kaymer and Backley in BMW Ultimate Driving Challenge

BMW challenged Synergy to develop a PR stunt that would combine their sponsorship of the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth and the London 2012 Games.

So we challenged former world number one golfer Martin Kaymer and three time Olympic medallist Steve Backley to go head-to-head in a multisport play-off from Wentworth’s first tee. With wedge and javelin in hand, Kaymer and Backley put their accuracy to the test in an attempt to land their shot nearest the pin at the venue for the BMW PGA Championship from May 26 – 29.

Both athletes were given three attempts to hit the pin which, at 60 metres, was comfortably within their reach. Despite Kaymer’s drives averaging over 260m and Backley having a world record breaking throw of 91.46m to his name, precision rather than distance was the aim for the BMW Nearest the Pin challenge. With all shots taken, Kaymer was announced the overall winner, beating Backley with a comprehensive score of 3-0.

Check out the video of the guys in action, below:

By on May 18th, 2011

Tags: BMW, Golf, London 2012, London 2012 sponsorship, Olympic sponsorship, Olympics, PGA Tour, PR, Public relations, Sponsorship, Sponsorship consultancy, Sport, Team GB

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