Thursday 27 May 2010

Sport and Community: From London 2012 to Marathontalk

Today I MC’d a European Sponsorship Association session entitled ‘Beyond 2012’ which looked at the impact that London 2012 would have on the worlds of Olympic Sponsorship, grassroots legacy in the UK and the sponsorship industry a a whole.

The event was hosted at the British Olympic Association offices, and our Reception hosted in and around Olympic torches from Games past.

We were fortunate to have a host of fantastic speakers and panellists from the likes of British Olympic Association, Lloyds TSB, Deloitte, RFU and so on. The most unique session, however, was presented by Dr Martin Yelling and Tom Williams, co-presenters of the excellent running podcast Marathontalk.

The rationale behind Marathontalk (http://www.marathontalk.com/) is not dissimilar to that of parkrun which I mentioned in this blog a few months ago. The podcast creates a sense of community and support for all levels of runner looking to share their passion with others, support that is often lacking in listeners’ daily lives. It has grown dramatically since launch in January, aiming to create the sense that ‘Even if my husband, wife, parents or children don’t understand my running interest, there are thousands out there who will’. In this way, Martin and Tom hope to inspire others to learn and progress in their running. I was left with a sense that theirs is a legacy which will sustain when the Olympic flame has long departed our shores.

This need for ‘connectivity’ relates to a lecture I attended last night given by Baroness Sue Campbell at Bucks New University. Chair of UK Sport and Youth Sports Trust (and thus leading the school and high performance sport agenda in Britain) she talked about the critical need to connect schools with clubs at a local level in driving participation in sport – removing any remaining feeling that sport beyond 16 is only for the elite and encouraging coaches to bring genuine expertise into schools. In this way, they aim to create a bridge from school to club sport in order to create a route towards sport for young adults once the worlds of timetabled PE lessons are long left behind.

London won the right to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games with a promise to inspire young people to ‘choose sport’. 'Legacy', for me, means not just choosing it once, but being supported in choosing it for life. Concepts like Marathontalk and parkrun are the future for supporting grassroots sporting participation in this country. London 2012 will not ensure they continue to do so into adulthood, but together the Youth Sports Trust and Marathontalk just might.

Thursday 20 May 2010

Our New Coalition: Real Leadership and Motivation!

One week on, and the decisions are made. We have a coalition Government in Great Britain.

I am fascinated by the energy and motivation levels of our leaders, Messrs Cameron and Clegg, at the moment. I cannot easily imagine what it feels like to be flat out for six months on the closest election campaign for decades and then have to transition overnight into running the country for five years. There was not even the chance for a quick weekend away to recuperate. It reminds me of the M&A situations we have found ourselves in supporting clients at Lane4 whereby a deal is struck to acquire a business late at night after weeks of negotiation, and the 100 day integration plan kicks off the following morning!

Britain is certainly in need of strong leadership at the moment. Lane4's Co-Founder Professor Graham Jones recently recorded a podcast for the American Management Association where he talks about the distinction between real and safe leaders. He suggests that real business leaders are, among other things, those who are prepared to take the tough decisions for the good of their organisation; who thrive on pressure in doing so and who are highly visible in tough times. They make things happen. They are mentally tough, and their motivation is principally intrinsic rather than extrinsic. The podcast is available here if you would like to listen in.

http://podcast.amanet.org/edgewise/strategic-planning/193/dr-graham-jones-on-mental-toughness/

Real leadership feels a great synopsis of what we need in Great Britain in the months and years that follow. Time will tell!

Back to the lack of a weekend off for our political leaders. Actually we are conducting a study at Lane4 at the moment which looks at the current state of motivation in the workplace against the backdrop of a relentlessly challenging economy. While we might have not all fought an election or bought a business, the last eighteen months have certainly been a roller-coaster ride for all of us. You can take part by hitting the link below. All respondents will receive a free summary report once we have compiled them. Thanks in advance for taking the time!

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/Lane4motivationsurvey


Wednesday 12 May 2010

The Election and London 2012

There are far more qualified people than me to write about the General Election. I did, however, want to mark one change. With a change in Government comes a change in Olympics Minister - and the end of the road for Tessa Jowell. I spoke at a CBI Event on London 2012 after Tessa Jowell a couple of years ago, and was extremely impressed by her genuine passion for what the Games could do for our country. She was clearly speaking from the heart.

Appointed Secretary of State at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport after the 2001 election, Jowell played a significant role in the Government position with regards to the bid for London 2012. If Tony Blair was central to the victory in Singapore, Jowell was certainly central to getting him there in person. She retained her Olympics portfolio after Gordon Brown’s post succession reshuffle, and retained this responsibility until the 2010 Election. I feel for Jowell now - she has moved things so far, and yet now faces the likelihood of seeing Hugh Robertson or similar take the glory.

We already have an interesting model in what the transition to Conservative Olympic Games leadership will look like in the change. We watched as from Ken Livingstone (another victim of the changing political tides) gave way to Boris Johnson's London Mayorship. Initial complaints about mismanaged budgets and inefficient management have already all but seeped away as Boris recognises he will be better set portraying himself as the White Knight of the Games rather than bickering and haggling all the way to 2012.

I feel sorry for both Tessa and Ken, as I do any business leader or even football manager who is asked to leave before his or her work is truly complete. In complex working environments there is often major value in continuity. While Hugh and Boris will grab the glory, the learning curve will be steep.

Wednesday 5 May 2010

Facebook, Blackberry and Social Media - At Play and Work!

Last week I was Moderator of an Insights session for the European Sponsorship Association entitled, 'The New Era of Sponsorship'. We were fortunate to be joined by Vijay Solanki from Blackberry, Trevor Johnson from facebook, Thomas Godfrey from Sport England and Kieron Kilbride from Football League Interactive. It was a fascinating session which focused on the growing adoption of social and new media in sposnorship. What was clear throughout was, in the Vijay’s words,
‘social media is word of mouth on steroids’
It is also the future of marketing and sponsorship as we know it.
It has been relatively easy this far for those of us who are slightly long in the tooth in our roles to ignore the phenomenons of facebook, myspace, bebo and the like in our lives and our business. But did you know Starbucks now has 6.2m facebook fans in the world, and that it can effectively now engage with them on a personal level for free? Could you imagine how frustrating it might be for the Football Association that there are now more football clubs set up on facebook than there are registered with the Association itself? Can any of us really understand how powerful it is that British Gas can market their British Swimming Championships in Manchester to 98,000 fans of swimming in the local area at the touch of a button?

As Thomas Godfrey from Sport England shared, the majority of sport in this country is now played outside of traditional clubs. Just like the majority of music is bought outside record shops, the majority of voting decisions made without watching an official Party Political Broadcast and the majority of our news consumed outside of the 10pm broadcast and the morning paper. We no longer live a boxed-in existence.

The great irony, of course, is that for some reason in a corporate setting we somehow forget all of this. We tend to assume that mass communication without two way dialogue is appropriate, and even effective. We grumble when we see an employee on facebook at work, ignoring the fact they will likely be on e-mail in the evening. We tut when we see our employees with their ipods on while they work – ignoring the fact classical music helps them focus. We consider it a hindrance not a help.

Social media helps create tailored communication with individual audiences. It supports dialogue and debate rather than formal dictat. We could all use a little bit in our lives – at work and play.