What Young Lions Can Teach Us Old Cats

Guest blog post by David Gallagher, ICCO President & CEO EMEA, Ketchum

Earlier this year, ICCO helped launch a new feature of the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, the Young PR Lions – a global competition of 28-and-under talent drawn from the world’s leading agencies to solve a pressing communications problem, in real time.

This was a calculated risk, but with huge upside. Showcasing the power of PR with our best and brightest stars on a global stage is a statement of confidence about how far PR has come, and how promising the future is for those who do it right – with the passion and expertise fostered by ICCO and its members associations around the world.

Still, someone had to light the way, so hats off to the ICCO Board for supporting the idea and to our agency supporters, H+K Strategies, GolinHarris, Ogilvy PRand my own team at Ketchum for seeing the opportunity and walking the talk of commitment with financial support.

I have now how had the opportunity to interact with many of these young lions in three countries (as a juror in the UK completion, as a coach for the German team, and as a colleague of the Austrian team, drawn from our agency in Vienna), and I can safely say that PR is a great investment with pros like this rising through the ranks.

At the final round of competition at Cannes, a panel of industry veterans will decide who takes home a trophy, but in the meantime I have been struck by several lessons the young lions can teach old PR cats like you and me:

  • To rise, you have to shine – and vice versa.  The first thing that has struck me about these professionals? Their willingness to rise up to a challenge, risk disappointment, and show what they can do.  To stand out, you have step up.  These guys are fearless.
  • We are defined by what we bring.  Today. Experience is priceless, but often we use it as an excuse (‘tried it – won’t work’) to avoid new ideas or big thinking, rather than as a guide to keep innovation on track. In these competitions, with just a few hours to propose solutions, the teams are unfettered by decades of experience; they just let the biggest ideas break through. In the real world of course, experience can be a great filter, but it should never drown out creativity.
  • Social is the new traditional media.  Strange how often I hear experienced PR advisors still talking about social versus traditional media. Not one young lion draws such an artificial distinction; they are much more likely to discuss content or channels in term of earned, owned, shared or paid.
  • Problems are solved with changes in attitude or behaviour. Not with ‘coverage.’ One of my happiest discoveries: how many of their programs / campaigns focused on what would change minds in order to deliver objectives, rather than what would generate ‘media interest.’

Don’t get me wrong.  We old cats still have a few tricks to teach. For example, ‘creating buzz’ is not really a meaningful goal.  What’s cool or trending is not always an insight in itself. And budgets are quite important in the real world.

But if these young lions are at all representative of the wider agencies we’re leading, we have a lot to look forward to.

 

As a Senior Partner and CEO of Ketchum’s European operations and chairman of the UK agency, David Gallagher brings more than 20 years of public relations experience, both as a client and as a senior agency adviser, to some of the world’s leading brands and companies.

David Gallagher oversees Ketchum’s nine European agencies and their specialist services, which include consumer public relations, healthcare communications, corporate affairs and social responsibility, public affairs, change management, and clinical trial recruitment.

He is president of the International Communications Consultancy Organization (ICCO), the global umbrella network of 30 national PR agency trade associations, and a fellow and past chairman of the UK Public Relations Consultants Association.  He chairs the World Economic Forum’s global agenda council on the future of media, and was the 2014 PR jury president for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

Cannes Lions Predictions for PR 2014

Guest blog post by David Gallagher, ICCO President & CEO EMEA, Ketchum

As I write this from cold, grey and wet London, it’s hard to believe that in just a few weeks the world’s marketing and communications geniuses will descend on the sunny South of France in droves for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

The PR community has been making itself felt at Cannes with increasing numbers and influence for the past few years, and there is every reason to think 2014 may be the break-through year we’ve been waiting for.  So while the creative are choosing which ironic t-shirts to pack and local restaurants are stockpiling crates of rose, let’s make a few predictions:

  1. 2014 becomes the year many PR people say they ‘got’ Cannes.  While our interest has been mostly around the awards competition and the mainstage speakers, 2014 marks the first year of a Young PR Lions competition.  Two-member teams from agencies around the world, thanks to sponsorship of ICCO and the underwriting support of global agency leaders Ogilvy,GolinHarris, H+K Strategies and my own employer, Ketchum, will answer a brief and demonstrate the problem-solving power of PR before a jury of global experts.  This is not a prediction, but a fact, but I believe it will mark the beginning of a tipping point, when sufficient numbers of PR people – especially our young influential – are engaged in the Cannes phenomena to make it part of their annual ‘inspiration diet’ for years to come.
  2. A PR agency wins a Gold Lion in a non-PR category. I’m not sure – this may have already happened – but with the quality of PR agency submissions year on year, and with greater familiarity with the overall workings of the festival, I think this will be the year where one of us wins big in another category.  And why not?  Most great campaigns are designed to be shareable and newsworthy from the get-go.
  3. AVE continues to decline as a measure of campaign effectiveness.  Last year’s jury made a point of frowning on advertising value equivalency – AVE, the dubious practice of assigning editorial news coverage an advertising value as an evaluation metric.  We urged future competitors to use real business, policy, behavioural  or social outcomes as the yardsticks for effectiveness.  I doubt AVE will die completely this year, but I hope it’s in in its last throes.
  4. A PR agency will win the PR Grand Prix!  Last year I predicted this would happen within two competitions, but that was a hedge.  After visiting many top agencies and national ICCO member associations, I am convinced that this is the year one of us takes home the biggest prize of all from the festival’s Monday ceremony. Network agencies are finding their best work to enter, and smaller independents are stepping into the ring with remarkable entries; surely one of theme will prevail this year.

 

In any case, this year’s festival promises to be a memorable and inspiring demonstration of global creativity, and for the first time ICCO will be on hand to welcome members of the PR community with hospitality and networking.  Please look for the ICCO booth in the Palais for information on ICCO activities and events.

As a Senior Partner and CEO of Ketchum’s European operations and chairman of the UK agency, David Gallagher brings more than 20 years of public relations experience, both as a client and as a senior agency adviser, to some of the world’s leading brands and companies.

David Gallagher oversees Ketchum’s nine European agencies and their specialist services, which include consumer public relations, healthcare communications, corporate affairs and social responsibility, public affairs, change management, and clinical trial recruitment.

He is president of the International Communications Consultancy Organization (ICCO), the global umbrella network of 30 national PR agency trade associations, and a fellow and past chairman of the UK Public Relations Consultants Association.  He chairs the World Economic Forum’s global agenda council on the future of media, and was the 2014 PR jury president for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

 

 

Cannes Lions Predictions for PR 2014

Guest blog post by David Gallagher, ICCO President & CEO EMEA, Ketchum

As I write this from cold, grey and wet London, it’s hard to believe that in just a few weeks the world’s marketing and communications geniuses will descend on the sunny South of France in droves for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

The PR community has been making itself felt at Cannes with increasing numbers and influence for the past few years, and there is every reason to think 2014 may be the break-through year we’ve been waiting for.  So while the creative are choosing which ironic t-shirts to pack and local restaurants are stockpiling crates of rose, let’s make a few predictions:

  1. 2014 becomes the year many PR people say they ‘got’ Cannes.  While our interest has been mostly around the awards competition and the mainstage speakers, 2014 marks the first year of a Young PR Lions competition.  Two-member teams from agencies around the world, thanks to sponsorship of ICCO and the underwriting support of global agency leaders Ogilvy,GolinHarris, H+K Strategies and my own employer, Ketchum, will answer a brief and demonstrate the problem-solving power of PR before a jury of global experts.  This is not a prediction, but a fact, but I believe it will mark the beginning of a tipping point, when sufficient numbers of PR people – especially our young influential – are engaged in the Cannes phenomena to make it part of their annual ‘inspiration diet’ for years to come.
  2. A PR agency wins a Gold Lion in a non-PR category. I’m not sure – this may have already happened – but with the quality of PR agency submissions year on year, and with greater familiarity with the overall workings of the festival, I think this will be the year where one of us wins big in another category.  And why not?  Most great campaigns are designed to be shareable and newsworthy from the get-go.
  3. AVE continues to decline as a measure of campaign effectiveness.  Last year’s jury made a point of frowning on advertising value equivalency – AVE, the dubious practice of assigning editorial news coverage an advertising value as an evaluation metric.  We urged future competitors to use real business, policy, behavioural  or social outcomes as the yardsticks for effectiveness.  I doubt AVE will die completely this year, but I hope it’s in in its last throe
  4. A PR agency will win the PR Grand Prix!  Last year I predicted this would happen within two competitions, but that was a hedge.  After visiting many top agencies and national ICCO member associations, I am convinced that this is the year one of us takes home the biggest prize of all from the festival’s Monday ceremony. Network agencies are finding their best work to enter, and smaller independents are stepping into the ring with remarkable entries; surely one of theme will prevail this year.

In any case, this year’s festival promises to be a memorable and inspiring demonstration of global creativity, and for the first time ICCO will be on hand to welcome members of the PR community with hospitality and networking.  Please look for the ICCO booth in the Palais for information on ICCO activities and events.

 

500_gallagher4america

As a Senior Partner and CEO of Ketchum’s European operations and chairman of the UK agency, David Gallagher brings more than 20 years of public relations experience, both as a client and as a senior agency adviser, to some of the world’s leading brands and companies.

David Gallagher oversees Ketchum’s nine European agencies and their specialist services, which include consumer public relations, healthcare communications, corporate affairs and social responsibility, public affairs, change management, and clinical trial recruitment.

He is president of the International Communications Consultancy Organization (ICCO), the global umbrella network of 30 national PR agency trade associations, and a fellow and past chairman of the UK Public Relations Consultants Association.  He chairs the World Economic Forum’s global agenda council on the future of media, and was the 2014 PR jury president for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies Support Young PR Lions Competition in Cannes

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“We are the first and the only professional public relations body to have an official presence at the Cannes Lions Festival, which is becoming an increasingly important event in our members’ calendar.

We could not have done it without the support of our sponsors, and we are very grateful to GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies, who have once again proven their industry leadership.”

Francis Ingham, ICCO Chief Executive

twitter 

 

Today the International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) announced GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies as official supporters of the Young PR Lions competition at this year’s Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

The Young PR Lions programme was launched earlier this year to celebrate the brightest talent in the global industry. The competition itself will see national teams of two PR professionals aged 28 or under who will prepare and deliver a 5-minute presentation for a non-profit organisation client in 24 hours that will be judged by a select jury. Unlike its larger PR Lions equivalent, only professionals working in PR consultancies will be eligible to enter. Both Young PR Lions and PR Lions Award ceremonies will take place on Monday, 16th June.

The national Young PR Lions competitions are currently under way in over 20 countries around the world. The ICCO member association PRCA has been selected to run the competition in the UK.

In February 2014, ICCO was announced as the official sponsor of the Young PR Lions competition, making it the first public relations professional body to establish close links with the Festival. As part of its Cannes sponsorship, ICCO will produce an online Guide to Cannes, highlighting best events for PR delegates; exhibit at the Palais de Festival during the Festival week; hold a social event before the PR Awards on Monday, 16th June; and host post-Festival events and webinars showcasing Cannes best practice and winning campaigns.

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“GolinHarris is passionate about young talent and finding new ways to challenge and develop tomorrow’s communications leaders. We’re delighted to be part of this inaugural Young PR Lions competition and look forward to seeing what the UK’s best can deliver.”

Matt Neale, President, international, GolinHarris

twitter

 

As official Young PR Lions co-sponsors, GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies join Ogilvy PR and Ketchum who have pledged their support earlier.

150_6027

“Cannes Lions is the largest celebration of marketing and communications and it is important to recognise the role that many young people play in our industry. H+K is proud to sponsor the Young PR Lions Competition to showcase the creativity of PR’s brightest emerging stars.”

Richard Millar, Global Chair, Creative Strategy and CEO London
twitter

As official Young PR Lions co-sponsors, GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies join Ogilvy PR and Ketchum who have pledged their support earlier.

Boilerplate

About ICCO

ICCO 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. ICCO is a proud sponsor of the Young PR Lions competition at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

www.iccopr.com

Boilerplate

About ICCO

ICCO 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. ICCO is a proud sponsor of the Young PR Lions competition at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

www.iccopr.com

 

 

GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies Support Young PR Lions Competition in Cannes

150_4569

“We are the first and the only professional public relations body to have an official presence at the Cannes Lions Festival, which is becoming an increasingly important event in our members’ calendar.We could not have done it without the support of our sponsors, and we are very grateful to GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies, who have once again proven their industry leadership.”

Francis Ingham, ICCO Chief Executive
twitter

 

Today the International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) announced GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies as official supporters of the Young PR Lions competition at this year’s Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

The Young PR Lions programme was launched earlier this year to celebrate the brightest talent in the global industry. The competition itself will see national teams of two PR professionals aged 28 or under who will prepare and deliver a 5-minute presentation for a non-profit organisation client in 24 hours that will be judged by a select jury. Unlike its larger PR Lions equivalent, only professionals working in PR consultancies will be eligible to enter. Both Young PR Lions and PR Lions Award ceremonies will take place on Monday, 16th June.

The national Young PR Lions competitions are currently under way in over 20 countries around the world. The ICCO member association PRCA has been selected to run the competition in the UK.

In February 2014, ICCO was announced as the official sponsor of the Young PR Lions competition, making it the first public relations professional body to establish close links with the Festival. As part of its Cannes sponsorship, ICCO will produce an online Guide to Cannes, highlighting best events for PR delegates; exhibit at the Palais de Festival during the Festival week; hold a social event before the PR Awards on Monday, 16th June; and host post-Festival events and webinars showcasing Cannes best practice and winning campaigns.

 

150_6026

“GolinHarris is passionate about young talent and finding new ways to challenge and develop tomorrow’s communications leaders. We’re delighted to be part of this inaugural Young PR Lions competition and look forward to seeing what the UK’s best can deliver.”
Matt Neale, President, international, GolinHarris
twitter

 

 

150_6027

“Cannes Lions is the largest celebration of marketing and communications and it is important to recognise the role that many young people play in our industry. H+K is proud to sponsor the Young PR Lions Competition to showcase the creativity of PR’s brightest emerging stars.”
Richard Millar, Global Chair, Creative Strategy and CEO London
twitter

 

As official Young PR Lions co-sponsors, GolinHarris and Hill+Knowlton Strategies join Ogilvy PR and Ketchum who have pledged their support earlier.

 

Boilerplate

About ICCO

ICCO 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. ICCO is a proud sponsor of the Young PR Lions competition at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

www.iccopr.com