I was there in the Nest!.
Fri 8th August, 2008

By Joo Teoh



“I was at the Opening ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.” How cool is it to be able to say that??? OK, so admittedly, about 89,999 other people can also claim that they were in the audience for one of the most amazing theatrical experiences of the year, if not the decade. But boy was it cool. Click click here to find out more.


The Games are not yet a day old and ambushers have been busy...
Fri 8th August, 2008

By Charles Jefferson



Google have used the Olympic rings on their home page as part of their brand lock up of the day, making it the ultimate composite logo and they didn’t pay a dime. However there’s an argument to say that Google are just celebrating the day of the Opening Ceremony as they do on other days http://www.google.com/holidaylogos.html and not seeking to directly profit from this association…

Siemens on the other hand have been aggressively promoting their business success. When GE issued their games press release with a $1.7 billion sales return on their Olympic sponsorship, (which includes NBC advertising sales, direct sales to the Games and their global sales and marketing program - $190MM), Siemens responded the next day issuing a press release online stating that they had achieve €1.1 billion sales from Olympic projects. Their CEO even went as far to say that they had made a greater “contribution” than any of the official sponsors, which has obviously angered the collective sponsor group. GE responded immediately and IOC demanded removal of the release. Siemens retracted, but this has not been the first time that they have encroached on sponsor space during this Games cycle.



Corona also managed to take some focus away from official beer sponsors like Budweiser and Tsing Tao by sending a street team to the bustling Wangfujing shopping district a day before Opening Ceremonies. The "Corona Party Beijing' team of 9 played music and stopped to pose for pictures with passers-by while waving Mexican and Beijing Olympic flags. It was particularly interesting to note that this street team drew the largest crowd in a shopping area teeming with official sponsors' flagship stores and billboards located in the heart of Beijing.

Siemens will have achieved their business goal, the press release will have replicated across the net and the media will have their sound byte making it more than just a celebration.


China stamp cultural mark on the opening ceremony...its all in the details!
Fri 8th August, 2008

By Matt Moore

Okay so I wasn't actually in the Birds Nest, but I was in the Olympic Green at 8 minutes past 8 on the 08-08-08! The number 8 represents prosperity and confidence in Chinese culture so an auspiscious date & time!...the waiting is over and the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games are officially open.There's so much to say about the Ceremony but again I love the way the "Chinese brand" has been portrayed and how they are rewriting Olympic history...it's all been so beautifully thought through...Who will forget the legion of drummers, the outfits, that scroll, the lighting effects....or when the moment the torch was lit...Something that is always a tightly guarded secret and a highlight of any Opening show. They always said that the Barcelona lighting would be tough to match. However Li Ning, famed for winning 6 medals in gymnastics at the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games, effortly running the length & breadth of the Nest will remain ingrained in my mind. So suprising that Li Ning - also owner of the "chinese Nike - Li Ning brand" and ultimate competitor to adidas was allowed to take center stage... was this ultimate ambush?It's all in the detail as I said previously...in a change to traditon the countries enter not in alphabetical order but by stroke count of the Simplified Chinese characters for each nation. For example, this will place Australia (澳大利亚) in 203rd position, just ahead of Zambia (赞比亚) because the character 澳 is written in 15 strokes and 赞 is in 16 strokes. The Olympic traditions of Greece entering first and the the host nation (China) entering last were still observed though... How will London and Vancouver make their mark?





The Olympic torch is lit by Li Ning, famed for winning 6 medals in gymnastics at the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games. Li Ning is also the founder of the Li-Ning company which sells footwear and sporting apparel in China - a chance for some profile against the other "big two" footwear and sporting apparel giants (adidas and Nike)competeting for recognition at the Games - more to come on this battle later.


There’s Opening Nights and Opening Nights….!
Fri 8th August, 2008

By Kristina Schaefer



This week has seen a number of high profile media launch events by a number of the sponsor family. It’s a bit of a “bun fight” if I am honest as there doesn’t seem to be a global schedule in place by either BOCOG or the IOC. So its been a lottery and it has meant that there have been a few timing clashes.

In Beijing there are believed to be some 30,000 accredited media. More than any past Games. So the key challenges are going to be – getting the right media; maintaining a high presence throughout the 16 days, keeping things fresh and differentiating from the rest. At the start everyone is hungry but I would imagine its going to get more challenging to keep the global media positive, engaged and motivated. And get their focus off successes on track to brand stories around it.

So when it comes to your unveiling do you go early or hold back? Is it a morning, lunch or evening gala? On Monday 4th August, GE & Omega went first and were rewarded by visits from Jacques Rogge who personally unveiled each of their pavilions in the Olympic Green. It was pretty hot and humid so media were keen to get inside the tranquil air-conditioned venues.

Then followed by the first evening event hosted by Samsung on Tuesday 5th August. This was not any ordinary launch but a “SHOW” which appealed to an eclectic audience that had gathered around a massive Samsung stage. The evening was presented by two well known Chinese TV presenters.



Samsung dignitaries entered to a fanfare from the Samsung band. This was followed by speeches from Samsung, IOC \ BOCOG and a Chinese athlete. After the mandatory brand video we were introduced to a Chinese fable, a kids stage show and the evening was wrapped up with a worldwide variety show for good measure.



Kind of lost the plot to be honest but bags on energy and enthusiasm got us through it.

Last night we were invited to the VW launch and as you can imagine this was something pretty special. Probably the best event so far…It was a highly stylised and choreographed studio production using the very latest presentation technology. It was slick, professional and just oozed German style, design and precision.



The site itself would not be any sponsor’s first choice as it is a long and narrow rectangle. But VW designer’s designed something pretty special. On one side they have their air-conditioned function rooms facing a bank of big TV screens on the other side. The screens sit on top of glass boxes which hold some of VW \ Audi \ Skoda classics.



In the middle is a bank of tiered seating that will allow people to relax in the shade produced by huge sails. A great place to watch some of the action unfold during the Games. And at ground level next sprinkled around the cars are Olympic memorabilia from past games – include 8 torches from past Games.

The only disappointment for us and I would imagine the international media was that the introduction speeches by VW CEO was in German and translated only into Chinese.

The brand video was a bit drawn out but the finale was amazing. A troop of aerial acrobats were attached by wire to a set of moving screens. They ran, jumped and swung as they simulated a number of the Olympic disciplines.



One big learning though… make sure your audience can understand what is being said. There were at least two events where you could see people feeling a little bit dismayed that they could not understand what was being said. Big hand goes to GE though who took time to provide simultaneous translation head sets to make sure that both the Chinese and International media capture the key messages.