Tag: Cannes Lions

  • Tista Sen, Malvika Mehra, Tapas Sen & Abhijit Chaudhuri join Prasoon Joshi in first list of Cannes Lions jury

    By A Correspondent

     

    Tista Sen, Malvika Mehra, Tapas Sen and Abhijit Chaudhuri join Prasoon Joshi in the first list of Cannes Lions jury announced yesterday. While Mr Joshi is Jury President of the coveted Titanium and Integrated category (as announced earlier), Ms Mehra will be adjudicate in the Press category, Ms Sen in Outdoor, Mr (Tapas) Sen in Radio and Mr Chaudhuri in Film Craft.

     

    Commenting on this year’s jury line-up, Philip Thomas, CEO of Lions Festivals says, “We are delighted to welcome this group of high calibre professionals to judge entries and award creative excellence in their respective categories. Every year the outcome of the judging process at Cannes Lions sets new benchmarks in creative communications for the global industry. By pulling together this collection of leading names we can expect the outcome of the jury’s deliberations to continue to achieve this.”

     

    The entire list of the juries for the five categories is as follows:

     

    Titanium & Integrated

     

    Prasoon Joshi, Chairman, CEO and Chief Creative Officer, India & South Asia, McCann Worldgroup – Jury President

    Alexandre Hervé, Vice President – Executive Creative Director, DDB Paris, France
    Anselmo Ramos, Founder, David, Brazil
    Gaston Legorburu, Worldwide Chief Creative Officer, SapientNitro, Global
    Jacki Kelley, CEO North America & President, Global Clients, IPG Mediabrands, Global
    Katrien Bottez, Executive Creative Director, Duval Guillaume, Belgium
    Kentaro Kimura, Co-CEO, Executive Creative Director, Hakuhodo Kettle, Japan
    Kevin Brady, Executive Creative Director, Droga5, USA
    Steve Vranakis, Executive Creative Director, Google Creative Lab, UK
    Tor Mhyren, President/Worldwide Chief Creative Officer, Grey, Global

     

    Press

     

    Rémi Babinet, Founder and Creative Director, BETC, France – Jury President

    Alvin Lim, Group Creative Director, Draftfcb, China
    Damisa Ongsiriwattana, Creative Director, JWT Bangkok, Thailand
    Damon Stapleton, Executive Creative Director, Saatchi & Saatchi, Australia
    Danilo Boer, VP Senior Creative Director, BBDO New York, USA
    Darren Bailes, Executive Creative Director, VCCP, UK
    Fernando Tchechenistky, Executive Creative Director, DDB, Argentina
    Gabriel Roman, President/General Creative Director, Lowe Ginkgo, Uruguay
    Götz Ulmer, Executive Creative Officer, Jung von Matt/Alster, Germany
    Juan Silva, Executive Creative Director, Shackleton, Spain
    Kalpesh Patankar, Creative Director, Y&R Dubai, UAE
    Leslie Sims, Executive Creative Director, McCann NY, USA
    Malvika Mehra, National Creative Director & Executive Vice President, Grey Worldwide, India
    Marcelo Reis, Creative VP and Partner, Leo Burnett Tailor Made, Brazil
    Mariana O’Kelly, Joint Executive Creative Director, Ogilvy & Mather, South Africa
    Maurice Wee, Creative Director, Bartle Bogle Hegarty, Singapore
    Nuno Jerónimo, Partner & Creative Director, O Escritório, Portugal
    Volkan Karakasoglu, Creative Director, TBWA\Istanbul, Turkey

     

    Outdoor

     

    Jose Miguel Sokoloff, President, Lowe Global Creative Council & Co Chairman and CCO Lowe SSP3 Colombia – Jury President

    Alemsah Ozturk, Chief Happiness Officer, 41? 29!, Turkey
    Brett Morris, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Creative Officer, Draftfcb, South Africa
    Cristina Tin Sanchez, Executive Creative Director, BBDO Guerrero, The Philippines
    Darren Spiller, Executive Creative Director, DDB Group Melbourne, Australia
    Eugene Cheong, Chief Creative Officer, Asia Pacific, Ogilvy & Mather Asia Pacific, Singapore
    Gigi Lee, Executive Creative Director, Y&R Malaysia, Malaysia
    Gonzalo Ricca, Executive Creative Director, DON, Argentina
    Jeff Kling, Chief Creative Officer, Fallon Worldwide, USA
    José Valdir Bianchi, Art Director, Agência Mood, Brazil
    Juan Sanchez, Chief Creative Officer, TBWA\España, Spain
    Keiichi Higuchi, Creative Director, Dentsu, Japan
    Kevin Lee, Executive Creative Director/Partner, Leagas Delaney, China
    Luis Elizalde, Executive VP Chief Creative Officer, Saatchi & Saatchi, Mexico
    Matthieu Elkaim, Executive Creative Director, CLM BBDO, France
    Stefan Kolle, Founder and Chief Creative Officer, Kolle Rebbe, Germany
    Tista Sen, National Creative Director & Senior Vice President, JWT India, India
    Vicki Maguire, Deputy Executive Creative Director, Grey London, UK

     

    Radio

     

    Tony Hertz, Owner & Creative Director, Tony Hertz: Radio & Brand Sound, The Philippines – Jury President

    Danny Searle, Chief Creative Office/Vice Chairman BBDO Asia, BBDO, Singapore
    Emma Eriksson, Creative/Partner, Le Bureau, Sweden
    Felipe Luchi, Creative Vice-President, Lew’Lara\TBWA, Brazil
    Jan Leube, Chief Creative Officer, Y&R, Germany
    Josh Rabinowitz, EVP/Director of Music, Grey Group, USA
    Max König, Creative Director, Simple, Chile
    Raf Debraekeleer, Producer – Director, Cobra Radio Brewery, Belgium
    Rafael Arnau, Producer, Composer, Sound designer, Rafael Arnau Freelance, Spain
    Shane Bradnick, Executive Creative Director, DDB, New Zealand
    Simon Blaxland, Owner, Blazland Productions, UK
    Tapas Sen, Chief Programming CrOfficer, Radio Mirchi, Entertainment Network, India
    Tom Eymundson, Partner, Director, Pirate Group, Canada
    Vanessa Pearson, Executive Creative Director, House of Brave, South Africa
    Victoria Marie Evensen, Copywriter, Dinamo, Norway
    Vince Lagana, Creative Director, Leo Burnett Sydney, Australia

     

    Film Craft

     

    Brian Carmody, Co-Founder, Smuggler, USA – Jury President

    Abhijit Chaudhuri, Director, Q.E.D. Films, India
    Augusto Gimenez Zapiola, Director, Argentinacine, Argentina
    Corey Esse, Managing Director/Executive Producer, Exit Films, Australia
    Felipe Vellasco, Director, Sentimental Filme, Brazil
    Jenny Gadd, Head of Integrated Production, Johannes Leonardo, USA
    Kerstin Heffels, Producer, Heimat, Germany
    Martin Loraine, Deputy ECD, AMV BBDO, UK
    Pia Dueholm, Executive Agency Producer, INGO Stockholm, Sweden
    Roel Welling, Director, Wefilm, The Netherlands
    Thierry Buriez, Creative Director, Being, France

     

    With the introduction of the new Product Design category, a total of 17 juries will be judging in Cannes this year. Members of the remaining 12 juries will be announced shortly. Cannes Lions, the world’s leading celebration of creativity in brand communications, will take place 15-21 June at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France. For information on how to enter work, or register to attend, please visit www.canneslions.com.

     

  • Cannes Lions adds a few more award categories for 2014

    By a correspondent

     

    The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is introducing a number of changes to some of its Special Awards which are based on points accumulated from shortlisted and award winning work presented at the Festival.

     

    The Palme d’Or award, presented to the best performing Production Company, will see changes introduced to bring it in-line with the other special awards. The calculation will continue to be based on a points system awarded as follows: 10 points for a Grand Prix; 7 points for a Gold Lion; 5 points for a Silver Lion; 3 points for a Bronze Lion; 1 point for a shortlist entry.

     

    The changes being introduced are:

    • Production companies no longer have to have at least 10 entries in the qualifying categories -  Film, Film Craft and Branded Content & Entertainment – to be eligible for the Palme d’Or.

     

    • The Palme d’Or will consider all shortlisted and winning entries from a Production Company.  In previous years, only the best 10 entries from each production company were considered.

     

    • Shortlisted points will now be capped at 10 points, which is in line with the existing Agency of the Year rules.

     

    “We welcome these positive changes to the Palme d’Or award as they will allow exposure to more producers throughout the world,” said François Chilot, President of CFPE/YDA.

     

    The Media Agency of the Year Award will be replaced by the Media Network of the Year award. It will be awarded to the media agency network that obtains the highest score for entries in the Media Lions section. Only media agencies are eligible to compete in this award, which will be based on a points system as above. Advertising agencies credited on shortlisted and winning campaigns in Media Lions will see their points included in the Agency of the Year and Independent Agency of the Year calculation.

     

    “As is our usual process when introducing changes at Cannes Lions, we consult extensively with industry leaders to ensure that we continue to be relevant and reflect the changes that are happening in the business around the world,” said Terry Savage, Chairman of Lions Festivals. “These adjustments to the calculations of the Special Awards are no exception, and as such we are delighted to have the support and endorsement of the key players.”

     

  • Cannes Lions to launch Young Lions PR competition with ICCO

    By A Correspondent

    This year’s edition of the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity will launch a new Young Lions PR competition, providing young professionals in PR agencies with the chance to test their skills and showcase their talent.

     

    Supported by The International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO), the Young Lions PR competition will see teams of two people – PR professionals aged 28 years or younger working as Assistant Account Executives, Account Executives, Senior Account Executives or Account Managers for PR agencies and consultancies – who have been through a pre-selection process in their own country, set up the by local Cannes Lions representatives, put their skills to the test and compete at an international level.

     

    Once in Cannes, the competing teams will be set a brief by a charity or non-profit organisation that will act as the ‘client’. The aim of the 24-hour competition is to show how PR is effectively used to engage audiences with an organisation or a specific topic that the ‘client’ is dealing with. The competition will allow some elements of creative to be produced by the contestants that can be used when they present their strategy to a selected jury.

     

    Gold, Silver and Bronze medals will be presented to the winners with the Gold winners being honoured during the Creative Effectiveness, Promo & Activation, PR and Direct Lions Awards on Monday, June 16.

     

    Said Steve Latham, Cannes Lions’ Director of Talent and Training: “As we continue to strengthen and amplify Cannes Lions’ efforts to provide rising stars with unique learning opportunities, the Young Lions PR competition will complement our existing contest offerings and give budding PR professionals a unique experience and a global platform that will help their career prospects. We are delighted to count on the support of the ICCO for this competition.”

     

    And this is what David Gallagher, President of ICCO said: “ICCO is focused on the future of the global PR industry and we see the Cannes Lions festival as a one-of-a-kind world stage to showcase the enormous potential and creativity of our young talent. We are delighted to help debut the Young PR Lions competition and eager to show our stuff among the best and brightest in Cannes this summer.”

     

    ICCO, for those not in the know, is the voice of public relations consultancies around the world. The ICCO membership comprises national trade associations in 29 countries across the globe in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australasia. Collectively, these associations represent over 1,700 PR firms. www.iccopr.com. And since not everyone from the PR business tracks Cannes: the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity will take place June 15-21, 2014, in, where else, Cannes in the south of France.

     

  • Prasoon Joshi is jury prez at Cannes Lions

    By A Correspondent

     

    Prasoon Joshi

    Prasoon Joshi, Chairman, CEO and Chief Creative Officer, India & South Asia, McCann Worldgroup, has been appointed Jury President of the Titanium & Integrated Lions category at the 2014 edition of the Cannes Lions Advertising Festival to be held in Cannes, France from June 15 to 21. “Titanium brings the world’s most respected and eclectic set of people to the jury, and there is immense learning. The bar is raised and new benchmarks set for the world in advertising and communications. It will be an honour to work with the jury,” Joshi, who also is an awardwinning film lyricist and scriptwriter, said.

     

    Meanwhile at the Clio Awards which is scheduled to be held in October 1, 2014, Taproot India founder and Chief Creative Officer Agnello Dias and Malvika Mehra, National Creative Director, Grey India have been invited to the jury. Said Mehra, who will be on the jury of the ‘Content & Contact, Integrated Campaign & Innovative Media’ category, is looking forward to being on the jury. “It’s a great honour and a responsibility as one has a big part of play in setting a benchmark.” Dias will be on the Film jury.

     

  • India not shining in innovations @ Cannes Lions

    By A Correspondent

     

    The land of ‘jugaad’ scored a blank at the inaugural innovative lions category at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

    The organisers announced the Innovation Lions shortlist ahead of the 2013 Festival which kicks off in just under two weeks’ time. The Innovation Lions, introduced as a new entry category this year, will honour the technology and innovation which lead to the creative idea being possible. A total of 270 entries from 40 countries have been received in the category’s launch year. The jury, led by jury president David Droga, Founder, Creative Chairman, Droga5, have viewed all of the entries and voted to arrive at a shortlist of 25 entries which have come from a wide breadth of countries.

     

    TITLE PRODUCT/DESCRIPTION ENTRANT COMPANY  COUNTRY
    Necomimi Bio sensor technology / communication tool Dentsu Japan
    Two Screens Are Better Than One New type of phone Yota Devices Russia
    Ingress Massive multiplayer location based game Niantic Labs At Google USA
    Vision Shift System New video experience system Dentsu Japan
    Motley – Telling Stories At The Speed Of Culture Social media publishing tool Digital Arts Network Denmark
    Cinder Software technology The Barbarian Group USA
    PZU Drive Connected car ecosystem K2 Poland
    Engen Fireblanket Fireblanket calendar Draftfcb Cape Town South Africa
    Adidas Window Shopping We put shopping into window shopping TBWA\Helsinki Finland
    tshirtOS Wearable, sharable, programmable, 100% cotton status update MediaMonks The Netherlands
    Google Street View Hyperlapse Labs experiment Teehan + Lax Canada
    Virtual Makeup Mirror Kinect technology mirror ID\ Brazil
    The Feed Visual news feed R/GA London United Kingdom
    Sky Rec Hashtag that works like a record button AgênciaClick Isobar Brazil
    Guide Dots Mobile app for the blind Y&R Singapore Singapore
    Natalia Project Global assault alarm system for human rights defenders at risk powered by social media RBK Communication Sweden
    Small World Machines Vending machine with live streaming Leo Burnett Sydney Australia
    Terra VIP Terra VIP glasses invention DDB Brasil Brazil
    Thunderclap Thunderclap – social media technology DE-DE USA
    Chrome Web Lab Interactive website connected to a museum experience Google Creative Lab United Kingdom
    Radio Ambulance Ambulance location notification system Maruri Grey Ecuador
    A Boy And His Atom: The World’s Smallest Movie Stop-motion animation made with atoms Ogilvy New York USA
    Nike+ Kinect Training Fitness title for Xbox 360 AKQA United Kingdom
    Karta Mastercard Display Nowe technologie Getin Noble Bank Poland
    Tech Ball Sports technology SapientNitro United Kingdom

     

    Entrants who have been shortlisted will now present to the jury in Cannes who will then discuss which entries are worthy of taking home the first Innovation Grand Prix and Innovation Lions. For the first time in the Festival’s history, delegates will be invited into the jury room to watch the live presentations which will take place across June 15 and 16 in the Palais des Festivals, Cannes. The winners will be announced and honoured on stage at the second of the Festival’s awards ceremonies on June 18 which will be followed by the official Opening Gala.

     

    Commenting on the judging so far, David Droga said, “New category, new expectations, same excitement. I can’t wait to see it literally come to life at Cannes.”

     

    Cannes Lions is the most prestigious international advertising and communications event in the world, accepting entries into sixteen categories and awarding sought after Lions to the greatest creative work, ideas and technologies. Taking place from June 16 to 22, the festival will also feature over 100 pieces of inspiring content given by exceptional speakers as well as offering unbeatable learning and networking opportunities. More information can be found online at www.canneslions.com.

     

  • Piyush Pandey, others celebrate Cannes Lions’ 60 yrs of game-changing ads

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is set to commemorate its 60th anniversary with the launch of Game Changers, an exhibition and accompanying book that celebrate six decades of campaigns that have changed the landscape of the advertising industry forever.

     

    On display in a designated area of the Palais des Festivals, the exhibition will run alongside the Cannes Lions Festival welcoming both delegates and the general public from June 15-22. From Volkswagen’s ‘Think Small’ to the Nike Fuelband via Levi’s ‘Launderette’, it looks at the ‘firsts’ from the creative companies that have been transforming brands for 60 years. After the Festival this exhibition is set to travel to different venues around the world.

     

    The book, Game Changers: The Evolution of Advertising, published by Taschen for Cannes Lions, features more than 150 of the most outstanding campaigns to have been produced since the 1950s, and discusses the context in which they were launched. It also features eyewitness accounts from key industry players David Bailey, Lord Tim Bell, Lee Clow, Brian DiLorenzo, David Droga, Jeff Goodby, Paula Green, Bob Greenberg, Sir John Hegarty, Valdean Klump, Aaron Koblin, Piyush Pandey, Fernanda Romano, with an introduction by Arianna Huffington (of ‘Huffington Post’ fame).

     

    “There is no better way to celebrate Cannes Lions’ birthday,” says Philip Thomas, CEO of Lions Festivals, “Pulling together decades’ worth of ground-breaking campaigns reminds us why this industry is so special. Its relentless creativity, passion and its ability to innovate and reinvent shines through in Game Changers. It is both a fascinating and educational walk-through of defining industry moments and the world’s greatest creative work.”

     

    The Game Changers: The Evolution of Advertising book will be exclusively available for sale at the exhibition in Cannes before going on general release later this summer through major bookstores and online. More information is available at www.gamechangersatcannes.com.

     

    Other 60th anniversary celebrations taking place at the Festival include an exhibition of Cannes Lions memorabilia and a drinks reception hosted by the City of Cannes at the Cannes Connect Bar on Friday June 21. The 2013 edition of the International Festival of Creativity takes place in Cannes, France, from June 16-22.

     

  • Cannes Lions names YouTube’s Salar Kamangar as media person of the year 2013

    By A Correspondent

     

    Salar Kamangar

    The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is the world’s largest and most prestigious annual awards and celebration of creative excellence in advertising and communications. Every year, the Festival organizers present The Media Person of the Year Award to a prominent personality who is an influential figure in the development of today’s media landscape, ultimately playing an integral part in shaping the future of the industry.

     

    This year, Cannes Lions is honouring YouTube CEO Salar Kamangar.

     

    Founded in 2005, YouTube was acquired by Google the following year. Since taking on the role in 2009, Mr Kamangar has overseen the expansion of YouTube into a global broadcast platform. Under his leadership, YouTube’s site design and its investments have been reshaped to focus on channels and the emerging content creators behind them. YouTube’s usage has been increasing at tremendous rates, to six billion hours of video watched each month, a 50% increase over the past year. YouTube has also launched TrueView, the advertising format whereby advertisers only pay for ads watched, and has doubled the number of advertisers using it in the last year.

     

    Philip Thomas, CEO of Cannes Lions, said, “YouTube has become a global phenomenon under Salar’s leadership. The statistics say it all: more than one billion unique users a month watch more than six billion hours of video. In 2011, YouTube had more than one trillion views – a simply staggering statistic. But YouTube is more than a formidable communications tool of everyday life. YouTube has become a key way for people throughout the world to share their cultures and stories, helping us understand and connect with one another. And for businesses, YouTube is enabling the next generation of great channels, similar to how cable systems enabled the emergence of modern TV programming and advertising. In the coming years, YouTube will surely become ever-more important to content-creators and advertisers the world over, and so Cannes Lions is delighted to recognize Salar’s achievements and present him with the Media Person of the Year award.”

     

    Mr Kamangar said, “Content creators and advertisers alike are building successful YouTube channels that tap into a global community of fans, with more than one million of these channels now earning revenue. I’m delighted to accept this award not just on behalf of YouTube, but on behalf of the artists and producers across the world whose creativity has established YouTube as the global destination for video.”

     

    As Google’s ninth employee, Mr Kamangar’s early roles at Google included drafting its first business plan, starting its early legal and finance functions, and helping to found Google’s product team. While leading product management for Google’s advertising and monetisation products, Salar and his engineering partner designed and launched AdWords, helping the program grow into a business generating billions of dollars a year. Salar also led product management teams for Google’s web applications, including Gmail and Docs. Salar earned his bachelor’s degree in biological sciences with honours from Stanford University.

     

    Salar Kamangar will be presented with the Media Person of the Year honour on Wednesday, June 19, in the Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.

     

    Previous recipients of the Media Person of the Year Award include, Jack Dorsey, Creator, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman of Twitter; Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman of Google; Mark Zuckerberg, Founder and CEO of Facebook; Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft Corporation; Tsuneo Watanabe, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of The Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings; Sumner Redstone, Chairman and CEO of Viacom; and Gerald Levin, CEO of AOL Time Warner.

     

  • Cannes Lions announce remaining jury line-up

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, which this year celebrates 60 years of creative excellence in advertising and communications, has completed the jury line-up by naming the members of the Design, Film Craft, Media, Promo & Activation, and Radio Lions categories.

     

    The remaining five juries will be led by Jack Klues, Chairman, Vivaki (Media Lions); Joe Pytka, Director, Joseph Pytka Productions, USA (Film Craft Lions); Mary Lewis, Creative Director, Lewis Moberley, United Kingdom (Design Lions); Ralph van Dijk, Founding Creative Director, Eardrum, Australia (Radio Lions); and Rob Schwartz, Global Creative President, TBWA Worldwide, USA (Promo & Activation Lions).

     

    Philip Thomas, CEO of Lions Festivals, said, “It is a privilege to have an assembly of such esteemed industry professionals in Cannes to judge and award the best work. And we are particularly delighted to count on 11 past Cannes Lions jury presidents amongst the total 308 jury members taking part in this year’s 16 different juries. The time, commitment and integrity applied to their task ahead will have a profound effect on moving the industry forward at a global scale.”

     

     

    The extended deadline for submitting entries is 19 April. Information and tips on how to enter are at http://www.canneslions.com/awards/. Judging and announcements of the shortlisted and winning work will take place in Cannes, France, during the festival week, June 16-22.

     

  • Cannes Lions Young Media Academy to launch at 2013 festival

    By A Correspondent

     

    The International Festival of Creativity, Cannes Lions, has announced the launch of a young media academy which will complete a line-up of six academies at this year’s festival.

     

    Aimed at young media professionals working within media agencies and media companies, the Cannes Lions Young Media Academy is a week-long structured programme focusing on creativity in media. The objective is to inspire, focusing on demonstrating the value and execution of creativity in media channels, while providing a greater understanding of the global media and advertising community. During the programme delegates will develop a deeper understanding of the impact of creativity, how to manage relationships between the idea, the media channel and consumer behaviour and gain insight into the major issues and challenges that lie ahead.

     

    The class will follow a bespoke week of exclusive academy presentations and will include:

    – Understanding and providing effectiveness – case studies and presentations from previous Creative Effectiveness Lions winners

    – How do clients judge creativity? The breakdown of a Lion winning campaign presented by the client and agency

    – Understanding the ways clients think and act – insights from global brands

    – Deconstructing analytics and metrics in a creative advertising world

    – Understanding the challenges of social media and measuring ROI

    – The technological evolution of media, channels and consumers’ behaviour – presentations from technologists and developers

     

    Leading the Academy will be Maria Luisa Francoli, founder of global digital agency Media Contacts and former Global CEO for the global media network MPG. She said, “I am thrilled with this initiative and feel very honoured to have been invited to lead the academy. The fact that Cannes is allocating so much attention and resources to promote creativity among young media professionals is great news for the industry and a wonderful privilege for the first 35 members of the academy. I will do my best to ensure that we all take maximum advantage of the opportunity.”

     

    Commenting on the addition of the new academy, Steve Latham, Head of Talent & Training, Cannes Lions said, “Understanding how creativity can be used within media strategy is essential if the industry wants to innovate. This academy will provide inspiration and tailored training in a focused and distilled environment. We’re delighted that Maria Luisa, with her wealth of experience and knowledge, will be leading the academy.”

     

    The academy will run throughout the festival week from June 16 to 22, and is open to young media professionals aged 28 and under. The cost of the academy is €1,945 and details of how to take part can be found online at www.canneslions.com or by emailing academies@canneslions.com.

     

     

  • Why CMOs needn’t feel guilty about going for Cannes Lions

    By Delshad Irani

     

    What does a chief marketing officer of a very large global company do when he wants to be proficient in Twitter? He asks the CEO of Twitter, Dick Costolo to provide the best resource they possess for an intensive reverse mentoring session. According to Antonio Lucio, global chief marketing, strategy and development officer, Visa, it is critically important for him as the head of a global marketing organisation to be an expert on social media and be able to build the Visa brand on platforms like Twitter and Facebook.

     

    Interestingly, he has been a marketer for over 30 years and it is his first time at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity and the first time Visa has attended the festival as a company. The question then is why now? For starters, digital media has changed the rules of engagement. However, the cases of truly successful integration and application of digital media are few and generally set on loop. “The fact is that when people talk about social they keep using the same concepts and best cases, for instance, the Old Spice campaign. This means that there really isn’t a clearly articulated model,” said Mr Lucio.

     

    So clients like him attend festivals like the Cannes Lions to spot inspiring ideas, particularly in the digital, social and mobile and media worlds. Reasonable grounds for marketers to attend with teams of 5 to 15 senior management level employees.

     

    But, it wasn’t too long ago when if you were a client and you said you want to go to Cannes for the ad festival you might not have got permission from management to do so. However, it is due to the efforts of a few that has led to the institutionalisation of the client’s side of Cannes. Marketers like Mr Lucio can come with midsize teams and it’s no longer considered an indulgence. P&G, Unilever, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Heineken, Kraft, GM, McDonald’s and Mars, among others are just a few of the big global marketers who were present at the 2012 Cannes Lions.

     

    Some have been attending longer than others. Like Joseph Tripodi, executive vice president and chief marketing and commercial officer, The Coca-Cola Company, who is particularly impressed with the attention the festival is receiving from media owners like Time Warner, in addition to growing participation numbers from clients as well as delegates from agencies. Keith Weed of Unilever, who has come to Cannes three years in a row and has been CMO for as many years said: “We have 15 people here this year and we do a combination of workshops, meeting our agency partners and recognising and acknowledging that creativity is great. In a cluttered media world, we need creativity to cut through.”

     

    So apart from networking and opportunities to meet all their concerned parties, old and some new, in the same place, at the same time, these marketers are on the look out for inspiring work from across the world. And set creative benchmarks wherever possible. According to Cyril Charzat, senior global brand director, Heineken: “It’s very much about stimulating our marketing people to be stronger when they evaluate work from creative agencies; to define what is progressive and inventive. Our key message is to stimulate inventiveness and that’s what we try to do.” And Cannes is a part of that story.

     

    On the Indian front, however, it is not yet a vital chapter. And Cannes remains the exclusive domain of adwallahs, with a light sprinkling of some regular clients like Mr Kakar of Aditya Birla Group, who has been attending the festival for over half a decade. Then there are first-timers like Mahindra & Mahindra. The company wanted to test French waters and therefore Vivek Nayer the company’s VP-marketing for the auto division attended the festival. But he left a tad disappointed and overwhelmed by the creative clutter. Other Indian marketers in attendance were Parle Agro (with Nadia Chauhan also a jury member), Dabur and Flipkart. Clearly, Indian marketers are grappling with the big question – to attend or not to attend? Meanwhile, clients from markets on our left and right, up and down, are strategising on ways to find the best creative result during the seven days spent in the Cote d’Azur.

     

    However, the challenge for most is to put all that inspiring work to actual use. And here’s how some intend to do it. “We are not going to come in like the advertising people who get inspiration and go back home to figure it out. We will have a very structured approach with sessions of inspiration followed by sessions of perspiration, daily.

     

    It’s my responsibility during the week to ensure that Cannes becomes a truly business building program for us,” said Mr Lucio of Visa. In other words, for marketers to take Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity seriously there must be “enough perspiration to pay for the inspiration.”

     

    Fair enough.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

  • Heading high towards Cannes 2012

     

     

    By Shubhangi Mehta

     

    In its 59th year, the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, which will take place from June 17 till 23, is considered the largest worldwide gathering of advertising professionals, designers, digital innovators and marketers.

     

    Every year in June, around 9,000 registered delegates from 90 countries visit the fest to celebrate the best of creativity in brand communication, discuss industry issues and network with one another. Thousands of ads from all over the world are showcased and judged.

     

    Inspired by the International Film Festival, staged in Cannes since the late 1940s; a group of cinema screen advertising contractors from the Screen Advertising World Association (Sawa) felt that the makers of advertising films should be recognised similarly. They established the International Advertising Film Festival, the first of which took place in Venice in September 1954, with 187 entries from 14 countries. The lion of the Piazza San Marco in Venice was the inspiration for the Lion trophy.

     

    Cannes Lions juries are drawn from experts in each field from around the world. Each jury is headed by a jury president. They judge submissions in Film, Film Craft, Media, Press, Outdoor, Cyber, Promo & Activation, Direct, Design, Radio, PR, Creative Effectiveness and Titanium and Integrated.

     

    Inspiring creativity is at the heart of Cannes Lions. The Festival is where creative professionals come to debate, learn and be inspired; where the greatest industry honours are bestowed; where those pushing creative communications forward are celebrated. Amongst the featured agencies this year are names such as BBDO India, Leo Burnett India, DDB Mudra, TBWA India, JWT India, BBH India, Taproot India, Publicis India, Contract Advertising, Grey India , Happy Creative Service and Ogilvy India.

     

    Since the past couple of years, India has been doing fairly well at Cannes due to which the expectations are increasing with each passing year. Hence MxM India tried to find out what the experts think are India’s chances in the run for metals at Cannes Lions this year.

     

    Russel Barret
    Ashish Khazaanchi
    Kartik Iyer
    KV Sridhar
    Rajiv Rao
    Senthil Kumar
    Jishnu Sen
    Josy Paul

    Russel Barret, Managing Partner, BBH India, said: “India matches up to any other country when it comes to creativity. What we lack is the space between ideas and execution. The factors that affect it are probably budget and time. I am really hopeful that we will win just like any other agency which sends their work. Though out of all the Indian work that I have seen, the Tide (print) by Leo Burnett India and OOH Iconic poster by Mudra are my favourite works.

     

    Ashish Khazaanchi, NCD, Publicis Ambience was optimistic: “Our country has had some good and some not so good years at Cannes, but there has never been an extremely dreadful year for our country. India is amongst the countries having ‘great creative talent’ and the proof is the Grand Prix in the past. Our agency has done wonderfully at Cannes, but this year our focus was mostly on agency growth. My preferred work for this year would be Fox Crime ad and Gandhi booklet by Leo Burnett.

     

    Karthik Iyer, Owner, Happy Creative Service felt awesome: “Any agency would, to get recognition from the world’s best creative leaders on a global scale. India never lacked ideas, for sure. But I think more attention can be paid to craft. That’s an area we always get beaten, either because of the lack of time, budget or both. When it comes to my favourite work, there are so many it would be unfair to point a few. But a few that come to mind – Coke Studio Entry of the music from Coke bottles DM, I absolutely love that piece, Fox Crime should pick up something, Bajaj Exhaust fans and Sour Marbels to name a few.

     

    KV Sridhar aka Pops, NCD, Leo Burnett, India maintained: “The only place where our country lacks is exploring the new medium ideas such as digital. We focus more on the conventional mediums rather than the non-conventional ones, unlike countries in Latin America. The chances of India collecting metals at Cannes Lions are more in the categories like design, photography and sound design. For me the magic creators are Killer Jeans, Tide and Bajaj. I feel this will be a good year and we might get close to 20 odd metals, but we cannot regard it as a record breaking year. I’m hoping for the best for Leo – especially for properties like Tide, Coke Studio, a couple of Radio spots and Thums Up for branded content.

     

    Rajiv Rao, NCD, Ogilvy India said: “I think Indian work is absolutely fantastic, hence it does so well in the Indian market. The scenario in our country is such that we need to do a specific kind of work to appeal to our consumers, hence we do not appeal to the global jury at times. But that is not because of the quality of our work. All we need is to bridge our work in such a way that we appeal to the local masses as well as the international juries.”

     

    Senthil Kumar, National Creative Director JWT India was of the belief that they can only do their best and hope for God and the jury to do the rest: “Sure we have the potential but until the jury agrees, we won’t be striking heavy metal there. I have always believed that Indians are the most creative people on earth. We have to be more unabashedly Indian in our ideas and even in our ‘God is in the details’ execution. If only we’d stop aping the West and strive to unleash something very Indian every time, we’d have better chance at hunting down Gold Lions. This year, our creative hopes would ride on the following ideas: The Times of India Kerala Launch, RIN Eraser, Lifestyle’s Baddie bags, Nokia Recycle Films, and some other ideas that may just surprise the audience.

     

    From a potential point of view, these ads are the ones that could hunt down a few Lions for India this year: Google Chrome Tanjore, Mumbai Mirror, The Times of India Kerala Film & IPL 5 Carnival in Film Craft, The FOX Crime Series in Digital, the Nokia Recycle Viral Films, the Coffee House print work, the 3D Audi Website…

     

    Jishnu Sen, chief operating officer, Grey India, put forth his view: “The reason that the metal tally for India isn’t as high as some Latin American country is because of the international jury. Our work is always great and creative. Grey has done some great work this year with Killer Jeans and Cupid Condom. We are hoping to pick up some metals.”

     

    Josy Paul, Chairman and NCD, BBDO India felt: “India is a late entrant at Cannes, and taking that in consideration, we are doing fairly well and growing year by year. I am expecting the Gold and Silver winners from Abbys to do well at Cannes as well. As for my agency, Cannes is like a lottery, last year we did not expect to do so well, but we did. This year too, we are hoping our Gillette campaign would do well.”

     

     

    Main image: www.CannesLions.com

     

  • Being on Cannes jury is no mean task

     

    By Tuhina Anand

     

    Being on the jury of Cannes Lions means serious business – being shut in a room for endless hours and going through thousands of entries to make a case for the piece you like. Undeniably, despite the work involved, the experience of being a jury at Cannes is a learning experience in many ways.

     

    Ryan Menezes

    As Ryan Menezes who was invited to be on the Cyber Lions jury in 2011 puts: “I thought, cool, after winning India’s first ever gold lion in 1996, I now get to judge the most cutting edge category of all. I was looking forward to a week of sun, sand and schmoozing. Yeah, right! It was cyber boot camp from start to finish.”

     

    Giving a peek into the work, Mr Menezes explained that first there’s a preliminary voting to determine the shortlist, which takes place online. This is even before you set foot in Cannes. He added: “Once you’re there, barely recovered from the seven course welcome dinner, you plunge into this seemingly bottomless pit of entries where you see some of the world’s best work, and some of the world’s best case studies for mediocre work. You quickly learn to check out the work first and skim through the somewhat exaggerated case studies, but with around 500 entries to be judged over 6 days, you’re looking at around 9 hours a day of sitting in front of a computer, with headphones. By the end of the day, you’re too drained to do anything more than crawl back to your fantastic Hollywood themed suite at the Palais Stephanie and pass out.”

     

    But wait, there are good parts too: “You get to hobnob with some of the best minds in the world, you get a peek into what’s going to happen in the future in the digital category in India, as we are light years behind. You learn stuff that can help you win pitches when you return (I have used this to great effect in two successful pitches this year) and you learn that craft is not dead, it has been resurrected and is alive and kicking serious butt in cyberspace. You get VIP entrances to the gala functions, reserved seats at the award ceremony, invites to the hottest parties, but you’re too dead so you take off to Paris or Amsterdam or Monte Carlo for some peace and quiet. And to sum up, what made the experience really worthwhile was the flawless orchestration of everything by the organizers from start to finish. And, of course, the jury members were fair – there was no lobbying, no camps and no crab mentality. Just a desire to give great work it’s due. And that’s what makes Cannes, well, Cannes.”

     

    Amer Jaleel

    Amer Jaleel, NCD, LoweLintas who was invited to judge the Press Lions in 2011 agreed with Mr Menezes. It was his first experience of judging at any festival and after his experience he feels that coming out with great creative work is difficult but judging so many good works is even more difficult: “While people come and congratulate you on being on the jury and then take off to enjoy the French Riviera, you have to get back to some serious work looking at endless entries. However, besides seeing the best works, what I enjoyed was interacting with the mindset behind those works.”

     

    “The debating that goes behind each piece of work and when you knock your head against somebody else’s work is the enjoyable part of being on the jury. The questioning, the conviction behind the works helps in validating your beliefs, assurance and creative thinking. It also gives you a peek into human behaviour as you see few pushing for some works with vested interest,” Mr Jaleel added.

     

    Shashi Sinha

    Shashi Sinha, CEO, Lodestar UM, who judged media Lions in 2008 feels that the experience at Cannes was of superior quality: “The screening process is intense and it’s time consuming. What I remember is that one got to see an amalgamation of digital and activation at Cannes which one is now beginning to see in India. This was four years back!”

     

    Being actively involved in the organizing of advertising industry awards in India, Mr Sinha pointed that a large jury at Cannes for each category works in favour of minimizing the biases. He also points that the entire process being digitized adds to making it a tighter procedure of judging.

     

    Priti Nair

    For the experience of being on the jury, Priti Nair of Curry-Nation who had judged the print category said: “It was a fascinating experience. First and foremost you feel enormously good and they make you feel enormously important as a judge! I was judging print and there were some 7000 entries. You get to meet and interact and have lunch with people whose names you have only read and whose work you have truly admired. What strikes is the smoothness with which the whole thing moves. It is thought through to the last detail in terms of how do you divide, how you score and how you make sure it does not feel unfair. Apart from this, you actually get to see work that you would never ever see anywhere. It is work sent from all over the world.”

     

    These could be lessons that Indian awards committee could also emulate here.

     

    While everyone praises the well-oiled jury process, the chance to see works from across the world and even interact with great minds in advertising, some are also of the view that being on such a platform makes you realize the drawbacks in Indian advertising and people practicing advertising itself.

     

    KV Sridhar

    KV Sridhar aka Pops, who was on 2010 Press Lions jury, pointed that the Cannes jury is different from any other international fest as there is representation from different countries. If there are 22 jury members they will be from 22 different countries. He said:, “There would be silent Japanese who will make an apt observation and there will be vocal Indians or South American jury. However, the Indian jury becomes a lone member as representation from South Asia is not so strong. So they fail to gang up and explain the nuances of advertising coming from their part of the world as compared to those from Latin American countries who do make a case of work coming from their part of the world.”

     

    He added: “I have seen is that jury members from other countries are well versed with works not just coming from their agency but also from their country. So they really put a strong case for their works. It’s like putting their country first and then the network. One is not saying that be blindly patriotic but one must stand and fight for a good piece of work from their country and explain the various cultural nuances which will help the jury in better understanding of the work. Also, the jury should share their inputs with the industry so that for the next time one is prepared well when sending entries for festivals like Cannes. There should be a platform created to share their learnings.”

     

    Pops categorically said that one should be familiar with the works coming from their own country: “Fight for the creative you like, it doesn’t matter which country it belongs to. Double tick if you like a work, as in Cannes if you blink you will miss the entries!  Ensure that the works you like makes to the next level and that will only happen if you fight for that work and lastly be honest to yourself.”

     

    Ravi Kiran

    Ravi Kiran, who judged the media Lions in 2010, makes a valid point when he says that while Cannes is for celebrating work, there should be focus on learning too. While few make it to Cannes, there should be means to make the entries available to people who work behind these entries, but are not at Cannes. He also noted that when it came to countries, jury came with a certain mindset, like in the case of India one would always look at scale, given its vast population. So anything on a small scale in certain categories where it applies would not impress juries for Indian works: “While we have heard that how you package the work matters at Cannes, I did feel that many entries coming from our country lacked substance. Packaging is important, but you can’t bluff the jury with poor substance in the garb of good packaging. Also there were many videos that went with the entries and I particularly felt that one should ensure that these videos are not too long, as no jury has the patience when going through 70-80 entries. In fact, the videos should be similar to 30 second ads that we make.”