Annecy ’18 Bid Gets USD2m Support from Public Sector

The bid of French city Annecy to host the 2018 Winter Olympics has received a public sector funding boost from the Caisse des Depots after the financial institution, discount which acts on behalf of central and local governments in France, pledged US$2.09m in support, and also the French National Olympic and Sport Committee.

The Caisse des Depots will support Annecy 2018 financially and operationally through the final phase of the bid’s campaign, with the International Olympic Committee scheduled to decide on July 6 whether Annecy, PyeongChang in South Korea or Munich in Germany should stage the Games.

The deal represents a further funding boost for the bids CEO Charles Beigbeder, who was installed in January as a replacement to Edgar Grospiron who resigned following a dispute over a perceived lack of financial support for the event.

The financial institution’s CEO, Augustin de Romanet stated: “This partnership is an illustration of the Caisse des Depots’ drive to provide effective and sustainable support for ambitious projects. In addition to providing funding and additional staff, our support takes the shape of engineering know-how, especially in the area of protecting the local environment and its heritage through sustainable development, one of our group’s core strategies.”

French Sports Minister Chantal Jouanno added: “Annecy 2018 is a project for the future. The Caisse des Depots, tasked with serving the public interest and supporting sustainable development in our regions, is a natural partner for this bid. Its commitment has made a major contribution to the new dynamic driving the bid since January. Each time a major group joins forces with us, we send a strong signal to the International Olympic Committee.”

Underground Consider 24-Hour London ’12 Operation

Consideration is being taken by London Underground bosses to run the Tube around the clock during the 2012 Olympics, it has been revealed.

Transport for London (TfL) has established a working party to plan staffing for the proposed scheme with the Games expected to place extra strain on the Tube, which already handles three million passengers every day.

The main stumbling block appears to be that unions say they expect a battle on overtime pay for night staff, with the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) general secretary Bob Crow stating: “The hard fact is that there is no agreement with the unions in place for operating hours, volume of service, staffing levels or payments for next year’s Olympics.

“Not only that, but the continued job cuts and attacks on maintenance schedules mean that the Tube is short of capacity and prone to regular breakdowns at the best of times, let alone when we’ve got another million people to shift around the city.

“The mayor can’t keep London moving now, let alone for the Olympics in 2012.”

However, a TfL spokesman added: “We are on track to deliver all transport improvements well ahead of the Games and are confident of supporting a fantastic London 2012 Games and keeping London moving.

“We are now drawing up our detailed transport plans for the Games. However, no decisions have yet been taken about the Tube’s hours of operation during 2012.”

FIFA: Goal-Line Technology not Accurate Enough

FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke claims that only two companies have come close to meeting world soccer governing body’s demands on goal-line technology,.

An agreement was reched by the International Football Association Board (IFAB) on Saturday, March 5, that tests on various systems will continue for another year, with the possibility of using such technology at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

However, FIFA was unconvinced by 10 systems tested last month in Zurich, with the governing body calling for 100 per cent accuracy.

In an interview with Sky Sports News, Valcke stated: “I don’t think the idea is to extend (tests) beyond 2012. IFAB has to make a decision. This deadline gives us, and the companies, another 12 months to work on tests.”

He added: “Even as an empty goal, just throwing the ball through to the goal, only two companies reached 98 per cent and 94 per cent. There’s not one company who has reached 100 per cent. It means that either it’s a technical problem, or it’s not good enough to be used for a 90-minute game. That’s where we have to be very careful.”

At the IFAB meeting in Newport at the weekend it was agreed that UEFA should be allowed to use its system of five match officials at Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine. The two extra officials will be behind the goal-line and on the side of the goal next to the assistant referee.

In other news IFAB did address the official rules with regards to the wearing of ‘snoods’, banning them from the game with concerns over health and safety issues.

Silverstone Partners with Red Bull for MotoGP

Northamptonshire, ailment England, treatment race circuit Silverstone has secured the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup, the Red Bull Matadors and legendary trials rider Dougie Lampkin as part of its entertainment package.

The Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup will be a new support race at this year’s event – Britain’s only round of the FIM MotoGP World Championship.

Silverstone will host rounds five and six of the popular grass roots racing series in which the best young talent from 15 nations will battle it out on the Saturday and Sunday of the MotoGP weekend.

Away from the track, the Red Bull Matadors will be a spectacular new addition for 2011. Throughout the weekend, the UK’s most dynamic aerobatic team will be taking to the skies and wowing the Silverstone crowd. Aerobatic gold medallists Paul Bonhomme and Steve Jones will be performing breathtaking manoeuvres and extreme displays in their high speed stunt planes.

Back on terra firma, Dougie Lampkin MBE will be returning to Silverstone again this year, providing further off-track entertainment. The twelve-times FIM Trial World Champion, renowned for his mesmerising skills on two wheels, was a huge draw in 2010.

Richard Phillips, managing director of Silverstone Circuits Limited, commented: “We’ve lined-up a world-class entertainment package with Red Bull – what’s more, it’s all free, adding further value to the cost of a MotoGP ticket.”

CSI Conclude North One Sport Acquisition

The company formerly tasked with promoting the Wolrd Rally Championship (WRC), North One Sport, has been taken over by sports marketing firm Convers Sports Initiatives (CSI).

The acquisition of North One Sport by CSI was allowed through parent company North One Television, which snapped up the WRC’s commercial rights holding company in 2007 and will continue to produce all WRC programming.

In 2009, North One Sport was appointed to look after the WRC’s commercial and media rights on a long-term deal to run until 2020. Alongside the WRC, North One Sport manages the media distribution and content delivery on behalf of the Isle of Man TT, the Velux 5 Oceans Race and the Clipper Round the World yacht race.

Based in London, CSI is part of the Convers Group headed by Russian entrepreneur and investor Vladimir Antonov, who stated: “Convers Sports’ acquisition of North One Sport starts a new page in the history of the WRC.

“Our team will use all the resources available to us to continue to excite fans with one of the best racing challenges in the world,” he added. “Our company plans to invest substantial resources to improve the promotion of the WRC and bring the quality of competition to even higher levels. This will benefit both participants and spectators in the long run.”

North One Sport’s CEO Simon Long added: “In some ways it’s business as usual for North One Sport. The vision remains the same and we have continuity in that the great team of individuals that work for us will continue to do so.”

MyVideoRights Win Premiership Rugby Distribution Rights

England’s top flight rugby union league, Premiership Rugby, has sealed a licensing agreement with digital rights management agency MyVideoRights.

The agency has been awarded the distribution rights for Premiership Rugby’s content as well as the opportunity to generate advertiser-funded revenues from social media platforms including YouTube, DailyMotion and Metacafe.

The agreement has also seen Premiership Rugby licence to MyVideoRights the “Aviva Behind the Badge” weekly online show as well as weekly highlights and archive footage.

Premiership Rugby commercial director Jon Varney stated: “Many of our fans are logging onto a wide range of social media sites, such as YouTube, to watch rugby, so we’re pleased to enter into this innovative partnership with MyVideoRights to provide consumers with our legitimate, high quality coverage.”

MyVideoRights CEO Ashley MacKenzie added: “Social media platforms are delivering the vast majority of video views today and are increasingly responsible for generating video viewing on owned and operated websites. It makes clear commercial sense for rights holders to put their content where the audience and fans are.”

Merkel Keeps to Hosting IOC Dinner Despite Cabinet Reshuffle

Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor hosted a dinner for the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Evaluation Commission yesterday, March 3, despite being forced into a cabinet reshuffle earlier in the day.

Much of the main news in the nation in recent days has been regarding allegations made against Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg that he had plagiarised sources in his PhD thesis, and he was forced to quit as a result.

Merkel made the decision to replace Guttenberg as Defence Minister with Thomas de Maiziere, previously the Interior Minister, a role which has now been taken up by Hans-Peter Friedrich. The two newly appointed cabinet members joined Merkel, along with Foreign Minister, Guido Westerwelle, in hosting the dinner – a high-powered message that the German Government are behind the bid.

“We have every chance, after the summer fairy tale we have with the 2006 World Cup to now have a winter fairy tale,” said Merkel.

The Chancellor has always been behind Munich’s bid and has also given the necessary Government financial guarantees. 

Merkel added: “I think the world would be overjoyed if we got to host the Games.

“We all – the city, the region and the nation – support the bid for the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games in Munich and Garmisch-Partenkirchen.”

NBA, WNBA & USA Basketball to Travel to Manchester

A deal has been agreed by the Manchester City Council which will see The National Basketball Association (NBA), Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) and USA Basketball matches played in the city in the coming years.

The first game to be played in Manchester will take place on 29th May this year featuring the 2010 WNBA finalists the Atlanta Dream. ‘WNBA Live – Manchester 2011’ will represent the first time that WNBA teams have played in Europe and only the second time an international game has been staged in the league’s 15 year history.

As part of the Global Community Cup tour, USA Basketball’s men’s and women’s national teams will both play a game in Manchester in July 2012 as part of their preparations for the Olympics in London next summer.

All the games will be played at the 18,100-capacity Manchester Evening News (MEN) Arena. The NBA is looking to capitalise on the success of the last four consecutive years in which friendly games at London’s O2 arena have all sold out. On 4-5 March the first -ever regular season games to be held in Europe will take place between the New Jersey Nets and the Toronto Raptors at the O2 Arena.

NBA Europe senior vice president Sophie Goldschmidt stated: “We are delighted to bring NBA, WNBA, and USA Basketball games to the internationally renowned sports city of Manchester. This comprehensive schedule of premier basketball events will help grow the sport for years to come. This partnership shows our ongoing commitment to deepen basketball’s footprint in the country.”

Manchester Councillor Michael Amesbury, executive member for culture and sport, added: “Manchester has a rich sporting heritage, so it is fitting to be welcoming the NBA to the city for this ground-breaking series of events.

“The matches will fit into our varied and innovative sports events calendar and we are sure that they will not only bring thousands of visitors to the city and create huge media interest, but will also inspire Mancunians to participate, officiate, spectate and volunteer in their chosen sports.”

MLB’s Mets Confirm Short-Term USD25m Loan from League

Major League Baseball (MLB) side the New York Mets have released a statement confirming that in November, the league made a US$25m short-term loan to the clubs owners “in order to shore up the team’s liquidity.”

Reports suggest that the loan is “expected to be repaid within months.”

The Mets said in a statement: “We said in October that we expected to have a short-term liquidity issue. To address this, we did receive a loan from Major League Baseball in November”

Sources have also predicted that the Mets owners are now willing to sell up to a 49 per cent stake in the franchise, almost double the 25 per cent share that the owners had previously indicated that they would be willing to relieve.

Pippa Collett – Vice-Chair, European Sponsorship Association

By Martin Laurence

Since gaining and MBA from Cranfield, Pippa Collett has become a leading sponsorship practitioner with an extensive client-side career at Shell, American Express and Rank Organisation. Her global sponsorship experience covers the full spectrum from Ferrari in Formula One and the Olympics to cultural projects including The Olivier Awards and The Unilever Series. She joined Sponsorship Consulting in 2006 to work with blue-chip clients such as Siemens, Standard Chartered Bank and Cisco.

As Vice-Chair of The European Sponsorship Association, Pippa has led on key aspects of the developing sponsorship agenda including authorship of ESA’s Sponsorship Assessment & Evaluation Guidelines and introducing the concept of Continuing Professional Development.

How did your career start?

My original career was in the hospitality industry and that led me, post gaining an MBA from Cranfield to work with American Express. That’s where I had my initial experiences with sponsorship, including working on the Olivier Awards and with Disney and the rest is history really!

How is working with the likes of Shell and American Express, as you have in the past, different to what you do now?

Well I think there are some similarities firstly; particularly in terms of consulting different parts of the business internally which is very similar to the sort of work we do as consultants; only we do it with different businesses now, externally. Financial management and successful team working are also similarly important.

One of the things that I do differently is being able to sense what’s going on in somebody else’s organization and how that impacts what they’re trying to achieve.  I am much better at managing stakeholder expectations and internal politics within clients’ businesses than in my own! I also think that one of the really interesting things about my current work is the variety of the organizations, and indeed industries, which one gets exposed to. This helps to round out your understanding and to spot similar symptoms but in a different organization or industry sector, so you can leverage past experiences and apply it in to new situation.

Leadership is another skill I have acquired.  Running a business is quite different to being a middle manager in a global organization.  This is still work in progress but I think my team appreciates my efforts.

You also have experience of working with brands like Ferrari in Formula One. Do strong brands within sport have a lot in common with strong brands – American Express, for example – outside the industry?

If both the sport and the sponsor have well-managed brands, inevitably when you first try and put them together there is going to be some tension as to how they should be associated. Ferrari, a very well-promoted brand with a clear persona does not, at first sight, sit particularly well beside the Shell brand; Disney and American Express had a similar challenge The solution comes from identifying relevant shared brand territory and aligning around that – fanatical pursuit of excellence in R&D for Shell and Ferrari, or quality family experiences for American Express and Disney.

The point of sponsorship is that both organizations believe that, through partnering together, they will create either greater brand equity in the balance sheet or indeed greater profitability on the bottom line.  So it’s in their interests to work through any challenges they might perceive at the outset in terms of how they align at least some elements of their brands.

Your focus is often on maximizing returns for sponsors. What are the most important factors sponsors should consider in this area?

I think the first issue is that brands should focus on optimizing their returns, not necessarily maximizing them, because the law of diminishing returns definitely has had a big part to play in sponsorship.  Gaining a return is hard enough and therefore activation programmes should centre on achieving a limited number of clearly defined objectives.

For sponsors, objectives largely fall into one of three types.  The first is building their brand – creating brand awareness at one end of the brand ladder, through consideration and preference to promoting brand advocacy at the other. The second type concentrates on commercial objectives – ‘how can this sponsorship help us sell more in some way?’ This can be as direct as a beer brand sponsoring a football club where 70,000 fans will be thirsty at half-time. Alternatively, by being seen to invest in a new market through sponsorship, a brand may gain a much-valued license to operate that conveys competitive advantage over those that are not perceived to have invested similarly. The third set of objectives congregate around engagement, whether that’s business building through hospitality, employee engagement programmes or cementing stakeholder relations.

It’s really important that brands have no more than 5 SMART [specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, timebound] objectives for what they want to achieve from a particular sponsorship. That discipline will then help inform how they allocate their scarce  resources, whether that’s time,  money or people, as opposed to trying to do everything in the hope that something will work – inevitably resulting in a poor outcome for the brand.