A strange thing has happened to me
over the last two weeks. My eyes on repeated occasions have had grit magically
appear in them and cause tears. This complaint started during the Olympic
opening ceremony and was at its worse on Super Saturday but re-occurred often
while watching all manner of sports. I of course am not alone and the whole
country has been taken along on a journey that I don’t think anyone outside of
Boris and Lord Coe imagined.
Now the flame is close to being
extinguished, big questions will be asked of who has made the most of the games
and how brand Great
Britain can capitalise on the success of the
games and a positive worldwide reaction.
The biggest winners are of course
the athletes, in particular the medallists. Even those who didn’t win a medal
will have increased visibility which will help in the search for sponsorship.
For the big names though, big numbers are possible.
Jessica Ennis’ current earnings have
been estimated at £1m from sponsorship from brands such as Aviva, P&G and
Addidas. Her gold medal and increased media presence could see this rise to £2m
over the next 2 years according to sponsorship experts.
If you just look at cycling,
Victoria Pendleton already has various beauty deals and also a range of leisure
bikes with Halfords. The other big name cyclists from Sir Chris Hoy, Bradley
Wiggins and the upcoming Laura Trott, will be targeted as potential sponsorship
opportunities. From Mo Farah, to the Brownlee brothers all could, and probably
need to, seriously capitalise on their success to help support future
efforts.
The big Olympic sponsors themselves
will also be evaluating whether the millions spent delivered. Although defining
ROI on this activity is difficult, ultimately shareholders expect some form of
bottom line return from this level of activity. From McDonalds to Cadbury and
BP, all will be reviewing how they performed and what value it
delivered.
But what about Brand GB, will we be
able to emulate the commercial success of the Sydney games? There have been plenty of stories
about the supposed ghost town of central London . This changed and even Sir Andrew Lloyd
Webber has had to go on record and apologise for doom mongering and happily
admit that bookings were up in his theatres. All of this is short term gain; the
real money will come from long-term investment from overseas and export of
product and expertise.
So while the Olympics have been
running, a number of investment drives have also occurred. A British Business
Embassy has been set up during the Olympics at Lancaster house to showcase
British business with an aim to boost the economy by £1bn. Activities include
investment conferences with speakers of the likes of Eric Schmidt, chairman of Google, Sir Martin Sorrell
of WPP, and Sir Jonathan Ive, Apple’s design head. Engineering tours of the
Olympic Park have also been popular especially with Chinese
representatives.
To our athletes
the Olympics is a chance to fulfil a lifetimes dream and years of dedicated hard
work. To some, medal success will bring personal wealth from sponsors keen to
piggyback their new found adulation. To Great Britain this really has been
the chance to put Brand GB in the spotlight and all that we can achieve. The
world has been watching. I hope they liked what they
saw.
Tim Youngman is
head of digital marketing for Archant follow him on Twitter
@timyoungman
No comments:
Post a Comment