Archive for the ‘sponsorship’ Category

P&G, Olympics: A Meaningful Sports Partnership

Thursday, February 25th, 2010


Early this week I got a random email from a publication that was looking for me to weigh in on sports sponsorships and whether they are declining or changing due to economic pressure. Luckily, I just happened to have walked out of an all-company meeting in which our P&G team here at Bridge Worldwide shared their contribution to the Procter & Gamble Olympic Winter Games partnershipa tribute to Moms that brilliantly ties together multiple brands in a meaningful way.

In the past I have been fairly unkind to sports tie-ins in this blog. For example, a while back I criticized the practice using the example of State Farm’s naming sponsorship of the Major League Baseball Home Run Derby during All Star weekend. At best, most sponsorships are just the 3,001st meaningless ad impression that a consumer might see on a given day. At worst, and as Seth Godin suggests, they are a way for marketers to get a free trip to a game.

However I genuinely love the work that P&G has done on a corporate basis around this year’s Olympic Winter Games. If you’ve been watching the games, you have certainly seen a number of TV commercials for P&G products such as Bounty, Tide, and Olay. While it’s true that I’m not a fan of this kind of advertising, I have to admit that pooling together multiple brands for a single media buy is a smart approach to making the medium work harder.

But what is really special is how the company decided to make its partnership and mass media buy meaningful by embracing Moms. As part of its Olympics effort, the company is specifically directing funds toward the mothers of Team USA athletes in a program titled “Thank You Mom.” This “cause” within an Olympics partnership recognizes that the economy has made it tougher for families to afford to travel to see their kids’ special moments. It is also a perfect tie to the company and its brandsmost of which target mothers and are used by mothers for years in raising their children.

To bring deliver on the promise and address mothers’ needs. P&G is providing funds earmarked toward helping athletes’ families travel to the games in the form of debit cards that have gone to more than 200 individuals. The company also set up a special home in Vancouver near the games that provides a place for families to gather before and after events. (It’s a little-known issue that families can’t come into the Olympic Village where athletes stay.) And to honor these special mothersand build a connection to mothers everywhereP&G is using some of its media time for a series of truly tear-jerking videos. More than 130,000 people have chosen to view the video above so far on YouTube.  Kudos to Wieden+Kennedy for the nice work.

Online, our team helped activate the partnership with additional meaningful elements. There is the opportunity to download a $100 coupon book, which will help directly link the program to sales results. And we added content that cannot be found elsewhereincluding video interviews with Olympic Winter Games athletes’ moms, and blog recaps and live Twitter reports from the games. If you are touched by the content and tribute, you can even send a thank-you note to your own mother with this tool.

There are plenty of big companies such as Visa and McDonalds that are back at the Olympics again, and they have also purchased a lot of commercial time with game-themed ads. But I haven’t seen anyone who has worked to do something special, memorable, or meaningful with their large commitment. The bonus for P&G, should it choose to continue sponsoring in years to come, is that it can “own” this idea around embracing the unsung mothers and make future events bigger and better. And we hope to help continue this new tradition!

A Meaningful Experience Through Bourbon Country

Monday, October 12th, 2009

bourbon chase

We’ve all seen our share of bad event sponsorships. Most of the time sponsorships just look like another paid logo on the side of a banner or are randomly mentioned by an announcer during a sporting event. Last year I wrote about one of thousands of examples—that of State Farm insurance and its sponsorship of the Major League Baseball Home Run Derby. But over the weekend I got to enjoy a very meaningful event that brought me closer to several companies and an entire state region.

Over the weekend I joined the inaugural Bourbon Chase run across the center of Kentucky. It was a 200-mile relay race with 170 12-person teams that started on Friday morning and went through the night until the finish Saturday evening. One of my friends asked to join a team with 10 strangers—all 30- and 40-something guys like me who were looking to put our running skills to the test in a fantastic challenge. The teams all begin with staggered starts that are aimed to spread out the runners and get them across the finish line in a similar window of time. Each runner took three turns of running without about 6 hours between each turn, with distance ranging from 4 to 8 miles per run. It was a fun and challenging event and I would highly recommend that anyone who can form or join a team for one of these long-distance relays to go for it.

As you can probably guess from the title, this run went through the heart of the world of bourbon and Kentucky whiskey brands. The region is home of distilleries for brands including Maker’s Mark, Jim Beam, Woodford Reserve, and Wild Turkey. And the “Bourbon Trail” is rapidly rising as a tourist destination experience. Like many wine regions around the world, the Bourbon Trail offers incredible scenery, history, education, and diverse sips of high-quality spirits.

From a marketer’s perspective, I really loved how these bourbon and whiskey brands threw themselves into the race with open arms and giving hearts. This race was the first of its kind in the area and most companies would probably be too cautious to embrace 2,000 sweaty runners coming through their distillery compounds at all hours of the day and night. But the people who work at these distilleries bought in and helped us have a wonderful time. I’ll always remember the good folks at Four Roses setting up a snack stand for us at 5 a.m., and I heard stories of the people at Woodford Reserve opening up their warehouse to shelter people who were stuck sleeping out on the grass outside. They all probably thought we were crazy, but they did their best to keep us fueled up and having fun.

Meanwhile, we had a chance to learn and sip along the way, too. I got to taste the difference between oak-aged and unaged bourbon during a Maker’s Mark tour. I learned that Four Roses bourbon combines five proprietary yeast strains with two separate mash bills to produce 10 distinct Bourbon recipes. And I got to see the Woodford Reserve “barrel run,” a kind of iron railroad track that is used to roll barrels from the distillery to the warehouse for aging. At the celebration event in Lexington Saturday night, all of the participating brands lined up to provide a free tasting for all runners.

By experiencing something about the makeup of both the bottles and people of these brands, we all enjoyed a special experience that we will remember for our lives. The running challenge, team camaraderie, beautiful countryside, and good people and brands of the Bourbon Trail will make this dark liquor an enjoyable staple for years to come. That, my friends, is how you meaningfully sponsor a sporting event.

I leave you with one picture of a teammate running through this gorgeous country near the Maker’s Mark distillery:

bourbon 1