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Lessons from GermanySouth Africa needs to focus on building its brand as a nation, incorporating the continent of Africa, in a brand campaign that will outlast the 2010 Soccer World Cup and have a positive spin-off for the entire continent. This was the message from Mike de Vries, MD FC Deutschland GmbH, who spoke about Germany's lessons in positioning itself as a brand prior to the FIFA World Cup 2006, at a 2010 marketing seminar in Johannesburg on Tuesday, 15 August 2006. ![]() De Vries, who was MD of Germany's branding campaign, said although Germany only started with its country brand positioning globally about 18 months before the Soccer World Cup this year, the message of 'Germany - Land of Ideas' unified the country as never before, turning the stoic nation into flag-waving patriots and generating unprecedented positive coverage for Germany across the globe. "It was difficult at the start... there was a bad mood in Germany. People were depressed, the economy was poor. So we created this message of Germany as the land of ideas and we tried to communicate our message as effectively as possible." De Vries admitted that no one involved in the country brand campaign could have anticipated the success that followed. What was key, he said, was that the brand message had longevity past the 2006 FIFA World Cup, and was not really about soccer, but about the nation and what it represented on the global stage. It got people thinking about Germany in a different way. AuthenticTo give South Africans some idea of what we can expect to descend on us come 2010, he started with the stats:
The 'Germany - Land of Ideas' brand message worked, De Vries believes, because:
There wasn't a big budget to communicate this message across the globe, De Vries explained, so a global ad campaign was not realistic. What they did was to create messages that could be picked up on by the international media, relying on the multiplication of those messages to create a groundswell of requests for more information and a slew of stories on Germany that had nothing at all to do with soccer - and as a result, built a brand that has longevity past the actual 2006 Soccer World Cup. Aligning stakeholders'The PPP Concept' was how Germany brought all stakeholders together to organise the actual soccer tournament. It involved transparent and professional organisation which brought together the government through the interior ministry, the federation of German business and 23 companies, civil society and the media. "There were many stakeholders whose interests had to be aligned towards an overall strategy line. We integrated a lot of different partners and kept FIFA informed all the time of our activities - it is possible to run other activities outside of FIFA's own branding, marketing and sponsorship activities." What Germany did was simple: it built the country brand - Germany, not the German Soccer World Cup - which allowed them to partner with some of their own top German brands and companies outside of the soccer sponsors already tied up years in advance by FIFA - as is the case with South Africa's 2010 tournament. "We divided this up into commercial license use and non-commercial use, and integrated the media. We collected all 23 corporate partners in a license program offering various integrating projects. Some were also FIFA partners. In every contract, FIFA rights were respected and ambush marketing was prohibited." How it worked was that a company such as Bayer, the German pharmaceutical brand, became an official partner to 'Germany - Land of Ideas' and got involved in the sponsorship of various projects to promote this brand message - long before the actual tournament - thereby building the country brand internationally, uniting Germans in huge displays of patriotism come the actual World Cup in 2006, and generating a brand message with legs that is being taken further into the future. De Vries outlined some of the key projects in which the brand message was communicated:
The outcome was 3.5 billion contacts worldwide prior to the Soccer World Cup tournament and over 30 TV stations globally reporting regularly about nation building in Germany. "It was an enormous success," De Vries said, proudly. Key learnings for South AfricaDe Vries put together 10 key learnings for South Africa, based on his experience in contributing to building the brand message, 'Germany - Land of Ideas':
About Louise MarslandLouise Burgers (previously Marsland) is Founder/Content Director: SOURCE Content Marketing Agency. Louise is a Writer, Publisher, Editor, Content Strategist, Content/Media Trainer. She has written about consumer trends, brands, branding, media, marketing and the advertising communications industry in SA and across Africa, for over 20 years, notably, as previous Africa Editor: Bizcommunity.com; Editor: Bizcommunity Media/Marketing SA; Editor-in-Chief: AdVantage magazine; Editor: Marketing Mix magazine; Editor: Progressive Retailing magazine; Editor: BusinessBrief magazine; Editor: FMCG Files newsletter. Web: www.sourceagency.co.za. View my profile and articles... |