Young Lions PR competition springboards fresh talent for a 2nd year; ICCO continues partnership

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The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity has announced, that after a successful launch year, the Young Lions PR Competition is set to return at the 2015 Festival.Offering its support and commitment, the International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO), will continue its partnership with the 2015 competition.

Steve Latham, director of talent & training, Cannes Lions said: “The competition provides a real opportunity for young PR professionals to showcase their talent on a global stage. With a carefully chosen charity providing the brief, it’s also humbling to know that the work they produce can make a real difference – with the charity being given the option to adopt and use the winning campaign. I’m delighted that the ICCO are on-board for a second year, helping us to once again springboard both talent and awareness.”Competitors, who are first decided at regional competitions, are given 24 hours in Cannes to pit their skills against each other and show how PR can be effectively used to engage audiences with an organisation or a specific topic that the ‘client’ is dealing with. They are then asked to present to a dedicated jury who will decide which team is worthy of taking Gold.

David Gallagher, president of ICCO said: “ICCO is committed to promoting the value of PR consultancy worldwide and we see the Young Lions PR competition as an opportunity to show a little swagger under a global spotlight.  Last year’s debut was a smash hit and we’re eager to give our gifted young professionals an opportunity to shine again in 2015.”

ICCO, the representative body of forward thinking PR agencies, will be present at Cannes Lions with its “House of PR” cabana situated at the beachfront alongside the pavilion. This will be the place to meet prominent representatives of the PR industry and learn more about ICCO international activities. PR delegates attending the Festival are welcome to visit and attend networking events from 22 -24 June. More information is available at the ICCO Guide to Cannes website.

Cannes Lions will take place from 21-27 June in Cannes, France. A comprehensive learning programme designed to accelerate essential training across all career levels and disciplines is available during the event, as well as Young Lions Competitions for Print, Media, Cyber, Film, Design and Marketers. Further information on how to be part of it can be found at www.canneslions.com

Five Reasons For Young PR Lions To Roar At Cannes

David Gallagher

“Every agency I know claim its talent is what best differentiates it from the others.  Can they all be right?”
David Gallagher, ICCO President; CEO, Ketchum Europe, Middle East and Africa
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After a smash debut of the Young PR Lions competition at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity last year, ICCO is proud to again serve as the global sponsor as part of our mission to showcase the creative power and competitive advantage of PR consultancy to marketers worldwide.

Not for the faint of heart, the contests pits 30 or so teams of two PR young (under age 28) professionals to devise and present a PR strategy – in 24 hours – against a specific communications challenge. Their solutions are judged by a panel of global agency experts on creativity, strategy and general smartness, and the winners take home a coveted gold, silver or bronze Cannes Lion.

Getting to the Cannes competition itself is a major feat. Competing teams must first beat out the best of their national markets in competitions organised by Cannes Lions festival representatives and the national PR associations that are members of ICCO.

As a judge in the 2014 UK competition and as jury president for the wider PR competition at Cannes in 2013, I can assure you: this ain’t easy.

But it’s well worth the effort. Here’s why:

  1. Do it for your country. The inaugural competition in 2014 saw teams from Japan, the UK and Austria (yay, they were from the agency I work for, Ketchum) take home Lions, proving that wining ideas don’t have to come from giant countries, and that creativity knows no bounds.
  2. Do it for your agency. Every agency I know claim its talent is what best differentiates it from the others. Can they all be right? Those who compete in Cannes certainly stand out, and those that win, shine very brightly.
  3. Do it for PR. Let’s be honest – we are in a fight to attract the best and brightest to the wonderful field of PR. What better way to show off than to showcase our unique and strategic approach to communications problem-solving?
  4. Do it for a good cause. Most of the national competitions and the global finale in Cannes are organised around a client, usually from the non-profit community, looking for creative help to solve a specific challenge. Many activate the winning idea – and what a great feeling to see your brainchild serve a worthy organisation.
  5. Do it for your career. I can’t guarantee a promotion or job offers, but I can say with confidence that few things pop on a CV like a Cannes Lions. And the fact that this competition, unlike the wider PR campaign contest, is about you and your wits, rather than a project, is unlike any other in calling out your rock-star qualities.

Interested? Enter the UK National competition here http://www.prca.org.uk/YoungLionsPRCompetition

Follow @ICCOpr on Twitter #WeLovePR or this blog fo more updates.

Hope to see you in Cannes!

David Gallagher

President, ICCO

CEO, Ketchum Europe, Middle East and Africa

ICCO announces Young Lions PR competition in partnership with Cannes Lions

The International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO), has announced its support for the Young Lions PR competition at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity 2015.

The Young Lions PR competition will see teams of two competing at an international level, who will have been through a pre-selection process in their own country set up the by their local Cannes Lions representatives. The PRCA is handling the UK competition to find a team to represent the UK in Cannes.

The UK competition will see teams respond to a brief created by a PRCA Charity in-house member over the course of one working day. The submitted presentations and written submissions will then be judged by a UK jury and a shortlist of six campaigns will be invited to London to deliver a five minute presentation to the jury, explaining the PR campaign and the written submission.

PRCA consultancy members can now enter the competition here: http://www.prca.org.uk/YoungLionsPRCompetition. The competitors must be aged 28 or younger, working as Assistant Account Executives, Account Executives, Senior Account Executives or Account Managers at PR consultancies.

Once in Cannes, the competing national 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.

Gold, Silver and Bronze medals will be presented to the winners, with the Gold winners being honoured during the Media, PR, Outdoor, Glass and Creative Effectiveness Lions Awards on Tuesday 23rd June 2015.

Last year, the inaugural Young PR Lions contest saw 16 national teams competing for the title of best young creative talent in the world.

David Gallagher, President of ICCO, said: “ICCO is committed to promoting the value of PR consultancy worldwide, and we see the Young PR Lions competition as an opportunity to show a little swagger under a global spotlight. Last year’s debut was a smash hit and we’re eager to give our gifted young professionals an opportunity to shine again in 2015.”

Timeline

3rd March: Registration for UK competition opens

1st April: Registration for UK competition closes at 5pm

2nd April: Creative brief is issued at 8:00am – 7:30pm. Entries due at 7.45pm

4th May: UK winners announced

21st May: UK winners travel to Cannes for the competition

23rd June: Awards presented

The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity will take place 21st-27th June 2015, in Cannes, France. A comprehensive learning programme designed to accelerate essential training across all career levels and disciplines is available during the event as well as Young Lions Competitions for Print, Media, Cyber, Film, Design and Marketers. For further information or to register to attend, please visit www.canneslions.com

 

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About ICCO

The International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) is the voice of public relations consultancies around the world. The ICCO membership comprises national trade associations in 30 countries across the globe in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australasia. Collectively, these associations represent over 2000 PR firms.

Contact Binta Kristin Hammerich, ICCO Global General Manager

 

New report considers structures of international PR functions

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“It is increasingly difficult to co-ordinate communications work across multinational organisations.There is no single best-fit organisational design to resolve that.”
Steven Shepperson-Smith

A new research report has been published with the support of ICCO and the PRCA, which sets out to define the structures of international PR functions.

The research report ‘The globalisation of public relations – How companies are managing communications across continents’, was written by Steven Shepperson-Smith for his Masters of Business Administration Degree at Cass Business School.

Its aim is to develop a systematic way to design a global PR function, and to understand how agencies might best provide it with support.

The report builds upon the work that the PRCA globalisation subcommittee carried out as part of the Future of the PR Industry project.

The findings address the ongoing debate about whether the management of PR should be more centralised (with more resources in a global headquarters), decentralised (with resources focused in operating companies or regional/divisional groups), or indeed made modular (by involving agencies or specialist consultants).

Steven Shepperson-Smith said: “It is increasingly difficult to co-ordinate communications work across multinational organisations.There is no single best-fit organisational design to resolve that. My model is designed to help managers focus on the main factors which they should be considering, and then design a structure that best suits their organisation.”

The research found that there are benefits to a flexible function design that will allow centralisation and decentralisation of ‘communication networks’ for different tasks. However, the decision about how to structure PR teams will be contingent on the operating environment for an organisation in different markets, the experience and expertise of staff in those locations and the sensitivity of different tasks needing to be performed (often defined by what is on the radar of senior management).

The research sets out a series of different models which multinational organisations use for their PR function:

1. Centralised control

2. Centralised, unified

3. Centralised/fragmented

4. Central guidelines, regional control

5. Central guidelines, local control

6. Localised

7. Central guidelines, divisional control, OpCo implementation

8. Divisional control, OpCo implementation

9. OpCo control, central support

10. Central strategy, implementation by language

11. Central strategy, tiered markets

12. Centre of excellence

To explain why organisations might want to have a more centralised or decentralised approach in different situations the report introduces the PR Team Structure Contingency Model (figure 1).

Figure 1: The PR Team Structure Contingency Model including examples of how different structures might be chosen when different types of activities are most regularly required.

 

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PR departments need more cohesion than ever before to deliver better management of messages. The report concludes that everyone working in PR within an organisation should ultimately report to the same person. That person should design the function to provide fit with the organisational strategy. When the organisational strategy changes, so should the design of the PR function.

Having the right organisational design in place will help PR functions to operate more efficiently in a more connected world. There is no one ‘best fit’ organisational design for a global PR function – it is contingent on a number of different factors. However, it is hoped that readers responsible for designing, or working with or within a global PR function, will find it useful to understand and consider what those factors are so as to apply them in their own context.

For more information, click here.

 

 

 

 

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About ICCO

The International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) is the voice of public relations consultancies around the world. The ICCO membership comprises national trade associations in 30 countries across the globe in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australasia. Collectively, these associations represent over 2000 PR firms.

Contact Binta Kristin Hammerich, ICCO Global General Manager

 

About PRCA

Founded in 1969, the PRCA is the largest PR association in Europe, representing 12,000 people in agencies, in-house communications teams, and individuals. The PRCA promotes all aspects of public relations and internal communications work, helping teams and individuals maximise the value they deliver to clients and organisations.

Contact Matt Cartmell, PRCA Communications Director