Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity

The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity (formerly the International Advertising Festival)[1][2] is The World Championship of Creativity and a global event for those working in the creative communications, advertising and related fields. The seven-day festival, incorporating the awarding of the Lions awards, is held yearly at the Palais des Festivals et des Congrès in Cannes, France. In 2013, it ran from 16–22 June and it is due to take place from 15 to 21 June in 2014.[3]

Often called the world's biggest ad festival,[4] the annual event commonly attracts thousands of delegates from around the world attend the festival to view shortlisted work, attend seminars, workshops and master classes, and - according to WPP's Sir Martin Sorrell - "to get away a little bit from the hurly burly" and have "fun".[5] The week's activities include four award ceremonies as well as an opening and closing gala.[6]

History

The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is considered the largest gathering of worldwide advertising professionals, designers, digital innovators and marketers.[7] Every year in June, around 11,000 registered delegates from 90 countries visit the Festival,[8] to celebrate the best of creativity in brand communication, discuss industry issues and network with one another.

Thousands of ads from all over the world are showcased and judged. In 2013, a record 35,765 entries were received. The countries with the biggest number of entries were United States (6,078 entries), Brazil (3,476), and the UK (2,671). Australia leads the Asia-Pacific market with 1,404, followed by India (1,110) and Japan (1,093).[9]

Inspired by the Cannes Film Festival, staged in Cannes since the late 1940s, a group of cinema screen advertising contractors belonging to the Screen Advertising World Association (Sawa) felt the makers of advertising films should be similarly recognised. They established the International Advertising Film Festival, the first of which took place in Venice, Italy, in September 1954, with 187 film entries from 14 countries. The lion of the Piazza San Marco in Venice was the inspiration for the Lion trophy.[10]

The second festival was held in Monte Carlo, and the third in Cannes. After that, the event alternated between Venice and Cannes before settling in the latter in 1984.[11] New categories have been awards in recent years: the Press & Outdoor Lions competition in 1992; the Cyber Lions in 1998; Media Lions in 1999; Direct Lions in 2002; Radio, and Titanium Lions in 2005; Promo & Activation Lions in 2006; Design Lions in 2008; PR Lions in 2009; Film Craft in 2010; Creative Effectiveness in 2011,[11] Branded Content & Entertainment and Mobile Lions in 2012, and Innovation in 2013. However, in recent years there have been calls from within the industry for the Festival to simplify the entry categories to better reflect the current state of the modern communications world.[12]

In the 1990s, the Festival also added a programme of learning in the form of seminars and workshops.[11] Over the years, this side of the Festival has grown considerably and, in 2013 featured around 130 sessions over 7 days.[13] These included talks from Christopher Bailey, Jack Black, Jenson Button, Nick Cannon, Shepard Fairey, Arianna Huffington, David Karp and Annie Leibovitz.

In 2004, British publisher and conference organiser EMAP plc (now called Ascential Group) purchased the festival from French businessman Roger Hatchuel - who had started managing it in 1987 - for a reported £52 million.[14] In June 2014 the Wall Street Journal[15] as well as Campaign Magazine[16] reported on Nimrod Kamer's protestations at Cannes Lions.

Philip Thomas is the chief executive officer. Terry Savage is the current chairman of the festival.[17]

The Awards

Cannes Lions juries are drawn from experts in each field from around the world. Each jury is headed by a jury president. They judge submissions in Film, Film Craft, Media, Press, Outdoor, Cyber, Promo & Activation, Direct, Design, Radio, Mobile, Branded Content & Entertainment, PR, Creative Effectiveness, and Titanium and Integrated.[18] In 2013, the Festival launched a new category called the Innovation Lions, which are supposed to "honour the technology and innovation which facilitates creativity".[19]

Other awards include Holding Company of the Year, Network of the Year, Media Agency of the Year, Agency of the Year, Independent Agency of the Year, Media Person of the Year, Advertiser of the Year and the Palme d'Or to the best production company.[20]

Advertisements are generally entered by the agencies that created them, although technically anyone can enter any advertising creation, providing it ran within a specified time frame. The jurors are instructed to reward advertising that is deemed most creative both in idea and execution.

In an article in the Guardian in 2009 WPP boss Sir Martin Sorrell said the Cannes Lions awards were too costly to enter.[21] However, a year later, he also admitted that he had made sure that WPP was "very, very focused on Cannes" and wanted to be "the leader in terms of awards at Cannes".[22] In 2011, WPP won the first Holding Company of the Year prize at the Festival.[23] Commenting on this industry recognition, WPP Worldwide Creative Director, John O'Keeffe, said:

"Cannes is the only global, cross discipline show, covering advertising, design, digital, media, promo, effectiveness, and everything else besides. It doesn't aggregate the scores of other shows, so you can't inflate your ranking on the back of just one or two pieces of work. If you are number one at Cannes, you've done it the hard way, the proper way, the only way."[24]

In 2013, the "Dumb Ways To Die" a campaign by McCann Australia for Australian company Metro Trains made history by winning a total of five Grands Prix awards, the most ever awarded to a single piece of work.[25]

Young Lions Competitions

The Young Lions Competitions (previously known as the Young Creatives competition, which started in 1995) is open to advertising professionals up to 28 years old working in teams of two. The competition takes place during the festival week in Cannes in seven divisions: print, cyber, film, design, young marketers, media and PR.

In the print competition, an art director and a copywriter are given 24 hours to create a print ad to promote a charity or organisation chosen by the Young Lions Competition. Print teams consider this "brief" overnight and have between 08:00 and 20:00 the following day to create their ad. The cyber competition is structured in the same way, with teams comprising a copywriter and a web designer.In the film competition, teams of two are given two days to create a 30-second commercial. The media competition, added in 2008, challenges teams to develop an innovative media strategy within a budget of $1,000,000. The Young Lions Cyber Competition is open to a copywriter and a web designer aged 28 or under, who have 24 hours in Cannes to create an online campaign. The brief, provided by a charity of our choice, is disclosed to all competitors at the start of the Festival. The Cyber teams then consider the brief overnight and work the following day to create their work. The Young Lions Marketers Competition started in 2010. It is designed for young marketing talent working for a client organisation aged 30 or under to showcase their talent. Each team is expected to produce a two-page brief that would be presented to a communications agency. For this competition, the communications agency is represented by a select jury of creatives and strategists. A design competition was launched in 2012.[26] The newest competition is a PR competition which was launched for the 2014 festival. The competition is open to PR professionals aged 28 years old or younger working as assistant account executives, account executives, senior account executives or account managers working for PR agencies/consultancies. During the competition, teams of two show how PR is effectively used to engage audiences with an organisation or a specific topic that the ‘client’ is dealing with. The competition allows some elements of creative to be produced by the contestants so that their strategy takes shape in front of the jury.[27]

Lions Health

In June 2012, Cannes Lions announced that it plans to launch a new two-day event for creative communications in healthcare, wellness and sustainability. Taking place in the Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France, just before Cannes Lions kicks off on 15 June 2014, the event will offer two days of content that will explore and debate the essential and unique issues relating to the world of healthcare communications. The move was welcomed by some sections of the industry, with Jeremy Perrott, global creative director of McCann Health, commenting: "Lions Health gives the industry the highest stage to showcase its brilliance."[28]

References

  1. "2011 Cannes Lions: From Advertising to Creativity".
  2. "2011 Cannes Lions 2011 Review".
  3. News | About Us | Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity Archived October 11, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "World's biggest ad festival to kick off in Cannes". The Times Of India. 9 June 2010.
  5. Sweney, Mark (22 June 2010). "Sir Martin Sorrell: Cannes Lions is 'a chance to get away'". The Guardian (London).
  6. http://www.canneslions.com/festival/whats_on.cfm Archived October 11, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. "World's biggest ad festival to kick off in Cannes". The Times Of India. 9 June 2010.
  8. Sweney, Mark (20 June 2011). "Cannes advertising festival rebrands to reflect digital age". The Guardian (London).
  9. "Cannes Lions attracts record number of entries - Business News | The Star Online". Thestar.com.my. 2013-06-08. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  10. "The History of Advertising 20 - A Cannes Lion".
  11. 1 2 3 Archived August 22, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  12. "Categories, Schmategories - Cannes 2011". Creativity Online. 2011-06-27. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  13. The Festival | Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity
  14. Sommerich, Phil; Martinson, Jane (10 August 2004). "Emap buys Cannes advertising festival". The Guardian (London).
  15. Jack Marshall, "Ad Agency Spoofs Cannes for Promo Videos featuring Nimrod Kamer", Wall Street Journal, June 18, 2014
  16. Ben Hall, "Watch: Satirist takes on Sir Martin Sorrell and joins Kanye West's entourage", Campaign Magazine, June 19, 2014
  17. "Cannes Lions appoints new CEO".
  18. Enter the Awards | Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity Archived August 22, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  19. Pathak, Shareen (2013-01-16). "Cannes Advertising Fest Intros 'Innovation Lion' Award | Agency News - Advertising Age". Adage.com. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  20. Enter the Awards | Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity
  21. Sweney, Mark (7 July 2009). "Sir Martin Sorrell criticises Cannes Lions on cost and new category". The Guardian (London).
  22. "Cannes Eye TV › Cannes Eye". Blogs.hillandknowlton.com. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  23. "Cannes Lions 2011: Nike Writes Itself into History, Awards, Festivals & Events, News". Shots.net. 2011-06-26. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  24. WPP most creatively-awarded global group in Cannes - WPP
  25. "Quirky 'Dumb Ways to Die' campaign sweeps advertising awards". Reuters. 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  26. Archived October 1, 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  27. https://www.canneslions.com/enter/young_lions_competitions/how_to_enter/
  28. Wentz, Laurel (2013-06-12). "Cannes Will Add Lions Health in 2014 In Separate Festival | Global News - Advertising Age". Adage.com. Retrieved 2014-02-05.

External links


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