All posts by thburns@gmail.com

Timing Is Everything.

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Lviv, Ukraine, June 2013

Heartbreak, History & Hope – The story of Ukraine and Lviv 2022

Terrence Burns ©2014

My colleague Ansley O’Neal and I were invited to Lviv, Ukraine in June 2013 to discuss the city’s bid for the 2022 Olympic & Paralympic Winter Games.  To be honest, we weren’t quite sure what to expect but what we found was a very pleasant surprise.  A quaint city square (in 1998, UNESCO named it a World Heritage Site), mobs of hip, happy and optimistic young people (the city has dozens of universities and a huge student population) and some of the most entertaining and eclectic restaurants and bars in Europe.  It’s a very cool place full of very cool people.

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One of dozens of (excellent) Lviv coffee bars

We met Lviv mayor Andriy Sadovyi to discuss branding and the bid; he was a progressive man with visions of a westernized Ukraine led by the example of a Western looking and leaning Lviv – even though he was wearing a traditional Ukrainian shirt for the meeting and our photo.

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Ansley O’Neal, Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi, Terrence Burns

In the end, we agreed to help Lviv 2022 create its brand, its key messages, a new logo and a distinct identity for the campaign.  We took a lot of time explaining that the audience for an Olympic bid is an international audience, and that we were not creating a new brand for the city of Lviv, rather, a new brand for the city of Lviv’s bid for the 2022 Winter Games; different message, different target audience.  For the most part I think everyone got it – even the politicians.

So we began.

We quickly found out that no one (foreigners) knew what Lviv was, or where Lviv was or even how to pronounce it (similar to the start of the Sochi bid).  Then we quickly discovered a country that is quite diverse and multicultural.  And, we found out that Ukrainians themselves had a hard time describing their own culture because of their fractured history. It was a pleasant exercise in discovery for all of us…like every bid.  Ukraine has been generalized as either Russian-focused (eastern Ukraine) or Europe-focused (Western Ukraine). As we have seen from recent events, Ukraine is not that simple.

The Lviv 2022 bid committee is quite young compared to other bid committees with whom we’ve worked.  Led by Sergej Gontcharov (he just turned 30 yet is wise beyond his years), the small team really impressed us with their passion for the Olympics and what the 2022 Winter Games could do for Ukraine.  To a person, the team was well educated, intelligent (which is different from being well educated), tireless and above all, that most rare of words in that part of the world – optimistic.

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Lviv 2022 Bid CEO – Sergej Gontcharov, far right, glasses

I’ve worked with a lot of bid committees over the years the Lviv 2022 team was probably the most idealistic (in a good way) and willing to listen and learn.  Those young, expectant faces that took endless notes and asked endless (good) questions will be Ukraine’s leaders of tomorrow.  Which is why the events of this past two weeks have been so devastating.

Ukraine is a country struggling to stand and it is being pulled from every direction by every motivation imaginable.  Ukraine is also a country that has truly been independent only 18 years or so of its entire history.  They are building the car while they drive it, real time, in front of the world.

Watching the Ukrainian athletes march in Sochi’s Opening Ceremony under one government, then try to focus and compete while their country was falling apart back home, then march back into Closing Ceremony under another government sounds like a movie – but it wasn’t.  It was real and it was raw, and it shows once again how the unique prism of the Olympic Games gives the world a window into a country’s people, its culture and history itself.

I saw members of the Lviv 2022 bid team in Sochi on the IOC Observers program.  They were putting up a brave face but you could see the strain in their eyes. I saw people far too young with too much ability and hope to be struggling under the weight of their impossible burden.  It was impressive and moving.

On Thursday morning the 19th of February, we sat with members of Lviv 2022, the Ukrainian NOC and the great Sergei Bubka as events in Kiev were unfolding.  We were trying to help them create Tweets, posts, media statements and releases about the situation, but each time we finished a document, something new transpired.

It was a tense morning but they were not panicking or angry – they were determined that something good would come out of this turmoil for their country, for their home.  One of Bubka’s Tweets was taken up by the media and flew around the world  – “Dialogue is power, violence is weakness”.  He meant every word.

As I write this, I have no idea what will happen in Ukraine tomorrow, or if the Lviv 2022 bid will continue.  What I do know is that the members of the Lviv 2022 bid committee and all the Ukrainian athletes who were in Sochi are champions in my eyes.  Ukraine is a metaphor for the battle of East and West right now, but the reality is they want to be neither, they want to be a bridge to each – and they want to be themselves.

It isn’t often we see history play out before our eyes, but it is happening in Ukraine right now.  Let’s hope they find the self-determination and national identity they crave, as well as the peace that they deserve.

Godspeed my dear friends, Sergei, Sergej, Valeriy, Dima, Oleksandr, Ksenia, Ira, Serhiy, Arsen, Oleg and to those I’ve omitted.

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Bobby, We Hardly Knew Ye…

Bob Last Day MOW
Bob Stiles, Moscow July 2005

Bob Stiles’ Sochi 2014 Olympic Legacy

Terrence Burns ©2014

In January of 2005, our team began prepping the Moscow 2012 bid committee for the upcoming visit of the IOC Evaluation Commission.  In those days we had a very thin advisory team and my forte was not and is not technical planning.  It was too late to “adjust” the Moscow bid books, written locally by non Olympic-experienced advisors – that’s another story.  And, we had to get ready for the IOC EC visit in just two months.

Bob Stiles, an old friend, had just finished his consulting stint with Leipzig 2012. Bob was quite vocal in the media about Leipzig being cut and Moscow passing through.  And if you remember Bob, he could be fairly direct.  A few years before, Bob hired my former partner George Hirthler and me to work on the US bid for San Francisco 2012 (a great bid…too bad) and also for the US Equestrian Federation’s re-branding.  As we do in our business, I felt obliged to return the favor to Bob as soon as I had an opportunity.

Bob had extensive experience in planning, implementing, managing and consulting to major world-class sports events, including six Olympic Games, three FIFA World Cups and numerous other international competitions.

Bob knew his proverbial stuff.

In January 2005, Bob agreed to come to Moscow.  He immediately fell in love with the city and its people, and as we shall see, Russia became the consuming passion for the rest of his too-short life.

Bob was a brilliant man – kind of off the charts brilliant, having earned both his BA and MA at Stanford in education and German.  In truth, you could drop Bob anywhere on the planet and he could speak the language in about two weeks.  He learned Russian as an undergrad (in his spare time) at Stanford and actually visited Moscow on a student trip in 1966 (yes he was busted for selling Levi’s blue jeans out of his backpack on the street). He was fluent in Russian when he was 18, but not when he returned to Russia for the second time of his life in 2005, at the age of 57.

As I said, it didn’t take Bob long to figure it out.  I remember walking all over Moscow with Bob – he loved to walk.  It was a Rip Van Winkle moment.  The Moscow of 2005 was literally a different planet from the Moscow of 1966.  Bob was speechless and observant as always.  As we sat drinking a glass of good red wine (Bob loved red wine), overlooking Red Square and the new GUM, tears filled his eyes and he said “God I am so happy to be back here and see thisthey made it through the nightmare.”  Frankly, I’d never seen this side of Bob.

The very first mention I can recall of the word “Sochi” came at lunch one day, in an nondescript little Russian restaurant around the corner from the bid office – just the kind of place that Bob sought out and loved.  He and I were having soup and some lovely dark Russian bread, and as usual drinking one of the dozens of flavored tea offerings with Dmitry Svatkovksy.

Dima was the Sydney 2000 Olympic Gold Medalist for Russia in the Modern Pentathlon, and he won a Silver medal in the same discipline competing for the “Unified Team” in Barcelona.  Dima served on the leadership team of the Moscow 2012 bid as Sport Director and he was already thinking ahead.  He said, “the leadership (a vague term in Russia that could mean anyone from the Sports Minister – then Viacheslav “Slava” Fetisov – up to Putin himself) is thinking about a winter bid for Sochi for 2014…”.

Bob and I were silent, as neither of us knew where Sochi was, and frankly we working hard to keep the Moscow bid afloat.  In classic Russian style Dima leaned in, inches from our faces, and with an upturn in his chin, he narrowed his piercing blue eyes and said “Sochi…vhat you think…?”  To this day I can’t recall what we actually said, but I don’t remember either of us jumping on it as a “great idea”.  Like I said, we didn’t even know where it was.  I do remember Dima looking a bit disheartened.

So the Moscow 2012 bid marched on to Singapore.  We did our best, but were voted out in the first round with 16 votes behind New York, Madrid, Paris and London.

Four important things happened during that Moscow 2012 bid:

  • I reconnected with Russia (I’d worked there briefly in 1992 with Delta Air Lines as their country manager) and learned to love and appreciate it and its people – it’s tough for most foreigners but worth the effort;
  • I learned a lot about Olympic bidding from the bottom up;
  • I reconnected with Bob Stiles.  Although I initially hired him as a consultant to our firm, we always had a partnership relationship. We had different but complimentary skills – but I am sure that I learned a lot more from him that he did from me.
  • The final important thing that happened as a result of the Moscow 2012 bid experience was that the Russians called, right after the loss in Singapore and asked us to help them on the Sochi 2014 Winter Games bid.  They appreciated our grit, our ability to work hard and frankly, they liked us, trusted us and we liked them.

I called Bob and asked if he was “in” but with a twist.  Going forward, we wanted him on our team as part of our company, not a consultant.  The world of the independent consultant is a tenuous one.  Contrary to common belief, the money is not that great and it is certainly not steady, working from event to event.

To our delight, Bob said yes and joined us full time.  We immediately got to work on closing the Sochi deal.

The then head of the Russian Olympic Committee, Leonid Tyagachev, was the former sports minister. He was rumored to be a close friend of Putin’s and also his ski instructor.  Tyagachev tasked the “three men left standing” after the Moscow bid, Dmitry Svatkovksy, Alexey Sorokin and Alexander Chernov to get the Sochi bid rolling.  They immediately called me and I agreed.  To this day people still ask me why I agreed to Sochi and all I can say is that I knew the Russians would not do two bids in a row and lose.  They were determined – it was a very different feeling from the Moscow bid.  And, I’d never been to Sochi!

Bob and I took a team including David Woodward of North Design, Charlie Battle and David Ficklin representing Jerry Anderson of then-HOK, and Catherine St. Laurent to Sochi in August 2005 for our initial look around.  There was no bid committee, no money, no contract – nothing.  All we had was the word of Russia via our three friends Svatkovksy, Sorokin and Chernov.  But we believed in Russia and we knew, as it always does there, “it will happen”.

Bob and the HOK team, along with other Russian colleagues such as the late Andrei Serpilin of BDO and Dima Mosin, also ex-Moscow 2012 team member went to work on an initial sports and venue plan and budgets, while I went to work on the branding, messaging and the answer to “Why Sochi?”  I am not sure which was more difficult at that point.  I remember the deputy mayor’s office literally covered in maps.  Bob looked at the place where the Olympic Park now resides and said, “what is here…?”  After a few exchanges in Russian with his colleagues, the deputy mayor looked at us and said “nothing…we can use it all – what do you want to put there?”

It was an “ah ha” moment and one that frankly only Bob, among us, truly understood in terms of what it could really mean for this bid and for the long term legacy for the city of Sochi.  Bob said, and I am paraphrasing from memory, “gentlemen I think we can do something historic for the Olympics here – and for Sochi…we have go over there and look around and measure the place but I think we can offer the Olympic Movement the first ever totally enclosed Winter Olympic Park for all the city/ice venues…including the Village, hotels, lounges, sponsor showcasing – all of it in one place!  Do you realize what this means?”

I have to admit I did not know what it truly meant, and I really didn’t understand the true genius behind Bob’s revelation until it began to take shape on paper and in our narrative.  Then it was clear:  a built from scratch, tailor made plan for the Winter Games – state-of-the-art, brand new and in a region desperately in need not only of the sports infrastructure, but the accompanying city infrastructure needed to host a Winter Games and to serve its citizens for generations to come.

We would also re-introduce a new, vibrant and democratic Russia to the world, and host the Winter Olympic Games for the first time in one of the world’s greatest winter sports nations.  Oh, and did we mention it will take place in a summer resort on the Black Sea?  This bid had it all, and then some.  Most of all, it had Bob.

Bob had a vision in his mind that people around the world are now seeing every night on the Olympic broadcast – he could really see those beautiful, incredible new venues in a glorious park in what was then a vast, empty, unused and frankly blighted area.  And he was right – he was right more right than he would ever know.  I know a lot of adjustments have been made since the Application File and Bid Books were written, but the foundation is essentially the same.  And it was Bob who conceived it and drove it.

Bob worked tirelessly on the Sochi bid – it consumed him. We were in Moscow once a month, every month for at least one week, and often two-plus in Bob’s case. We were, by this time working with the new bid committee team brought in December 2005 by new bid CEO Dmitry Chernyshenko, whose talented leadership led the bid to victory in Guatemala City.

We also had help from new colleagues such Jon Tibbs and his team,  IMG, Weber Shandwick, film makers Caroline Rowland and Rupert Wainwright, Andrew Craig and Emma Newbery, speech coach Martin Newman and others I am certain I’ve omitted (forgive me – let me know and I will update this post!).

Bob’s greatest pride was the Olympic Park – that was a never-been-done-before accomplishment and those are hard to come by in Olympic venue planning.  To be sure we had a team of people, foreign and Russian consultants, architects, and analysts working on the bid by now – but it truly was Bob’s inspiration for the Sochi Olympic Park that led to what we see today.

I watched Bob literally become a different, happier more fulfilled person in Russia. “A New Bob.”  Yes he could still call down the hammer of Thor when displeased with someone or something (if you ever worked with Bob closely, you’ve been singed a time or two from the accompanying lightening bolt).

But Bob was also a man at peace with himself.  Russia gave him that gift and it was a beautiful transformation to watch.  The photo at the top of this page was taken when we were leaving Moscow for what we thought was the last time – July 2005 on our way to Singapore for the Moscow 2012 Final Presentation.  Little did we know we’d be back constantly over the next several years, and in Bob’s case finally, to stay and call it “home”.

Bob left our firm in 2008, after the Beijing Games and joined the Sochi Organizing Committee as a Vice President.  I was sad to see Bob go but also understood it was the best move for him.  Bob of course re-learned the Russian language; he also fell in love with a Russian lady,  Olga, and got married.  Frankly, I think he’d always wanted to end his career with an Organizing Committee.

Tragically, almost one year into his new life in Russia, Bob passed away on a trip back to Atlanta.  His loss was devastating to his family, friends and the new Sochi Organizing Committee.

Bob touched everyone with whom he worked in a very special, personal way.  Bob was tireless, visionary, relentless, complex and always kind.  He was a true professional.  And he was my friend.

Rest well my friend, and know that your vision, your dream for the Sochi 2014 Winter Games not only came true, but exceeded everyone’s expectations.

Thank you, Bob.

Chill Out, It’s the Winter Games

Terrence Burns ©2014

Headlines from today:

“Give the Olympics a Permanent Home” – Bloomberg

“Terrorism and Tension for Sochi, Not Sports and Joy” – New York Times

“Sochi’s Already a Mess, for Journalists at Least” – Newsweek

“An Olympic Shame: Vladimir Putin Plays Host To Winter Games” – NPR

I don’t know if I qualify as a true Olympic expert, but I have been around and involved with enough Games, both in front of and behind the magic Olympic curtain, to recognize certain patterns.

For example, virtually every Olympic Games has issues with transport, accommodation, ticketing and yes even security, in the days leading up to and during the first days of the Games. None of this is observed on the broadcast, thankfully, but those in this business have grown accustomed to it and know full well it is normal.  But, by about 7 days into the 17-day event, it all gets figured out and everything works mostly perfectly.  I am looking forward to everyone’s attention turning to the performances of the world’s greatest athletes instead of stories about lost luggage, funny menu translations or vodka.

Which brings me to my point.

Why is everyone “hating on” Sochi?

Do people just not like Russia?  Not like Putin?  Not like Sochi?

Maybe people believe that Sochi and the Russians lied about what they said they were going to do in their bid for the Games.  So, I went back and looked at the Sochi 2014 bid books (which I was honored to help write).  And guess what?  The Sochi bid committee (Russians) did everything they said they were going to do for sport.

Oh, did I forget to mention that the Olympic Games have sport at their heart?

Now, it seems fashionable for every sanctimonious, seasoned sports and Olympic watcher to ask the same question:  How in the world did the IOC give the Games to Putin?  (Note the lack of mention for Sochi, let alone Russia – it is Putin, they decry.)  I understand some of that sentiment. I don’t think the Russians have handled every issue, from LGBT rights, to corruption, to cost overruns to the environment the way others would have handled it.  But…the 2014 Winter Games are not in other countries.  They are in Russia.

So how exactly did the Russians do it?

They put a solid bid together, answering the questions and following guidelines of the IOC’s bid process.  Did they trick everyone?  Deceive the world?  Pull the wool over the Olympic-loving public’s eyes?  Let’s take a look at what they said (Sochi 2014 bid book content in italics below):

The people of Russia invite the world to Sochi to share and celebrate the 2014 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.   Russians have a special passion for winter, for winter sport and for the Olympic Movement.

Well, that seems reasonable and believable.  It is very cold in Russia after all, and Russia and the former USSR won a lot of Olympic medals over the years.

The plans in this Candidature File reflect a unique and historical fusion of the long-term development needs of the Sochi region and the winter sports development needs of the Olympic Movement.  Both sets of objectives fit perfectly within the Sochi 2014 Games plan…Sochi and the Olympic Movement will be beneficiaries of one of the strongest, most wide-ranging legacies ever to result from an Olympic Winter Games.

The Government of the Russian Federation has fully guaranteed and committed – and work has already begun – to deliver all venue, transport, technology, environmental and sport infrastructure necessary to host the 2014 Olympic and Paralympic Games.  The US$ 12 billion “Federal Target Programme for the Development of Sochi” is the key foundation to the plans, which will provide the Olympic Movement with the certainty that all necessary infrastructures for the 2014 Winter Games will be completed on time and on budget. 

 Ah-ha!  They (Russians) said it would cost $12b and it ended up costing $50b!  They (Russians) lied to “us” (whoever “us” is…).

To this I would simply say that I was a member of that team that came up with the $12b budget for the Sochi Games; in fact I hired or recommended most of them.  Where we certain of the number?  Well, not totally, so we padded it a little to make sure (yes, you read that right).  Neither our Russian colleagues nor we had any benchmarks to use or any examples to follow for such an undertaking.  Nothing like Sochi 2014 had ever been attempted before…ever.

Looking back seven years later, should we have used more precise projections, better models to arrive at the $12b figure?  The obvious answer seems to be yes.  But often the obvious answer is not always a feasible one – we used the only information we had at the time.

The point is the $12b figure was vetted and approved by a raft of Olympic facilities, transport, sport, finance and venue and other experts.  So how did $12b become $50b?  Obviously, many people think they know.  Here is my question:  How much does it cost to build an entire city when one has to bring virtually everything in via a broken, barely existing infrastructure system?  I have no idea if it cost $20b, $30b or $50b, but I do know it cost a lot more than anyone, even the experts, thought that it would. And hey, it’s their money.

The Sochi region will be transformed into a modern, world-class, year-round destination for sport, tourism and commerce, and Russia will develop its first world-class, elite alpine sports training and competition infrastructure – a complete winter sports centre that will benefit athletes from the entire Middle East and central Asian region.

That is an admirable goal for a bidding nation.  This was a foundation of  Sochi’s messaging and positioning.  Sochi 2014 met the needs of Russia, of the region of central Asia and offered the Olympic Movement the ability to develop sport in an underserved region. That seems fully aligned with the Olympic Charter and the IOC’s stated objectives for bid cities.  The same could not be said for the bid of our magical, and fully developed winter sports competitor, Salzburg.

The bid committee has listened to and incorporated the guidance of the IOC, International Federations, National Olympic Committees and the Russian winter sports federations in developing the plans in this Candidature File.  The plans focus on the needs of the athletes as the cornerstone for the Sochi 2014 vision and Games concept:

  •  Imagine walking or traveling by shuttle from the Olympic Village to any of the new ice venues in less than 5 minutes – all within the protected security zone of the innovative Sochi Olympic Park.
  •  Imagine needing only 40 minutes of travel time from the ice venue cluster to the mountain venue cluster – all via dedicated-Olympic lanes, dedicated-Olympic roads and rail.
  •  Imagine being less than 18 minutes travel time to any mountain venue from the mountain Sub-Village. 
  •  Imagine an Olympic Village placed along the magnificent Black Sea shore in 4-star resort hotels or a Mountain Village nestled among the peaceful forests in 4-star lodges and chalets, all designed to provide the ultimate opportunities for preparation and focus.
  •  Imagine competing in new, state-of-the-art venues that offer ideal conditions for every athlete.

Well, you don’t have to imagine it any longer – the Russians built these things.  And they built all of them for the comfort and convenience of the athletes – and the Olympic Family.  As they said they would.

To me, the recent news coverage about Sochi seems a lot like piling on.  “Look – two toilets side by side!”  “Elevators not working in brand new hotel!”  “Delays at airport!”  “No sheets on my bed!” “My bus was late!” “First order in the Village McDonald’s was wrong!” “I don’t have a shower curtain!”

Here is the reality:  in seven years, Russia has built about 100 new hotels in Sochi and the surrounding area, four new Alpine Resorts, five new power plants for the city and a new sewer system, upgraded the airport and improved or built close to a million of square feet of new roads and sidewalks.  Oh, and they also built eleven state-of-the-art sports venues for the Winter Games.  Eleven (11).  See them here http://www.olympic.org/news/all-about-the-sochi-2014-venues/219150

The legacy of the XXII Olympic Winter Games will endure for decades, forever changing and enhancing the lives of its citizens, as well as profoundly affecting the youth of Russia.  Key legacy components of the Sochi 2014 plans include:

  • The development of the critically-needed alpine, sliding and ski-jumping facilities, which will:
    • Help to broaden the interest and participation of Russian youth in these popular winter sports
    • Provide world-training facilities for Russian elite-level athletes;
    • Provide for the first time venues for national and international alpine competitions in Russia;
  • Create a year-round tourism industry to expand upon existing summer tourism.  This expansion will improve economic conditions for the local population and sustain employment levels year-round;
  • The development of modern entertainment, exhibition, retail and accommodation facilities along the coast, which will ensure that Sochi becomes a world-class resort destination;

Time will tell if this legacy holds true, but you cannot argue they don’t have the hardware in the ground now to do it.

Finally, to the foreign visitors in Sochi who have seemingly never been out of their home state or village:  yes, Russia is different. Your hundreds of daily, naïve tweets and posts about it do nothing but prove that you may not even have basic cable at home.  Russia is unique.  It is not like America, or Japan, or Australia, or France or frankly anywhere else one has ever been; that is why it is interesting.  Russia is its own continent.  Enjoy the differences instead of denigrating them – you might learn something.

First in 1998, then in 2003, 2005, 2007 and in 2009 we conducted research in Russia about the Olympic brand, or about bids we were working on in Russia.  We learned something fascinating from older Russians. Time in Russia is like the country itself – it is vast, it can seem eternal (which it is) and it is relentless.

Many of the older Russians we interviewed told us that they thought Glasnost and Perestroika began with the 1980 Games in Moscow.  They drew a clear, straight line from 1980 to the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 from the Olympic experience.  They believed that the influx of foreigners into Moscow, even with a boycotted Olympic Games, started an inexorable movement of change and progress that they believe continues to this day.

I remember writing First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation Alexander Zhukov’s speech for Sochi 2014’s presentation in Guatemala.  I asked him what he knew about the Olympic Games.  He said “not much, but I do remember the Moscow Games…it was a different time and a Russia was a different place…I was a student volunteer, mixing and pouring concrete to help build Olympic venues”.  Mr. Zhukov is now an IOC member.  A lot has happened in seven years.

So, I’d like to visit the Russia of 2048, 34 years from now, to see if Sochi 2014 had an impact similar to Moscow 1980.  Maybe the 2014 Games’ influence will be faster – it almost has to, given technology and the Russia of today versus 1980.

Let’s give Sochi and the people of Russia a chance.  They asked for the Games.  They’ve done their absolute best to get ready, and achieved what I believe no other country on earth could achieve in seven years.  And again, they did it with their own money.

Let’s also hope, wish, pray or whatever it is you do when you really want something – that the 2014 Winter Games begin and conclude peacefully.

Chill out – it’s the Winter Games.

The Olympic Brand Challenge

Terrence Burns ©2014

The Olympic brand.  I love working on it.  It makes my heart beat faster.  It feeds my family and has (mostly) for over 20 years.  It still makes the world a better place; but it’s hard work.

One of the best things I love to do is to give lectures around the world to university students; mostly graduate students about the Olympic Brand. There is one particular presentation that I give regularly to one particular university every year – they ask for it each time.  It is a school that only churns out international business and international relations MBAs; so, very global in its focus. I update the presentation each year, but the guts are basically the same.  I was in New York this week doing the yearly spiel for about 40 MBA candidates.

For the first time in 9 consecutive yearly versions of this, the crowd was restless, aggressive and well, a bit edgy.  Yes, they loved the research, they loved the anecdotes and stories, and yes they loved the films.  But…  They (mid-20’s, highly educated, and only 3 or 4 from the USA) also were willing to call BS on the Olympic dream I was painting on the screen.  Why?  Because they felt the picture I was painting did not live up to the reality they believe they understand as the Olympics.  That is not good for any brand.

Bear with me.

They asked good, thoughtful questions like:

“How can you stand there and talk about values when the Olympics bankrupt cities…when 50% of the people in Spain under 30 are unemployed?”

“How can you defend “White Elephants” of recent Games…?” (I told you, they did their homework)

“Who can afford the Games anymore – they are for rich people, not for the common man – no one can afford to go to Russia and most Russians can’t afford to go to their own Games!”

“Why did Rome, Munich (and now Stockholm) say “no” to the Games if what you are saying about the Olympic brand is true…?”

“Why do we have some as sponsors in the Games that sell things soft drinks and fast food, if it is about sport and healthy lifestyles…?”

I could go on and on.

But it was actually a very good, very fruitful session – and I had defensible, rational points of view on most of their questions; some agreed with me, a lot didn’t.  I have been expecting this reaction for the last two years.  What struck me most is how strongly interested, if not demanding, they were in real answers, not BS or spin.

This generation knows “spin”.  They are marketed to from the moment they wake up to the second they fall asleep by phones, laptops, emails, texts and soon to be wearable technology.  They are suspicious and jaded about “spin”.  Can’t blame them.  So, I didn’t spin.  We had a real and substantive debate. Passions ran high but remained respectful.

It was probably the best time I ever had giving this presentation, by the way.

So what has happened?

For one thing, the media reports – deserved or not – surrounding Rio and Sochi have rightly raised awareness of the problems each of these two cities have endured.  Every student in that room knew a lot about the issues and challenges of both Rio and Sochi. So, in a perverse sort of way, these problems have heightened awareness of the Games…but in unintended ways.

In previous years, the students rarely even knew where the next two Games were being held (!), and these are international business and affairs students from all over the globe.  The students were highly sensitized to the “risk” and “cost” of hosting the Games (and the World Cup) in countries/cities that they told me “were not ready yet.”

One Indian student mistook my critique of the current situation, in which I do participate as a consultant to bid cities, as a suggestion that the Games should never go to developing countries.  I emphatically did not say that nor do I agree with it (people hear what they want to hear..).  I said I thought the Games should go to those countries; as a matter of fact, I’ve helped send them there.  But it should be within certain parameters that currently don’t exist in the current bidding process.

He remained agitated and unconvinced.  So I asked him what he thought the 2010 Delhi Commonwealth Games debacle did for future bidding efforts in India.  I told him Delhi set India’s large event hosting aspirations back 25 years, because they were not ready.  The Indian IOC has been suspended from the Sochi Games for heaven’s sake (but not for the Commonwealth Games mess, for other, Olympic reasons)…I didn’t want to hammer him, but he needed to hear the facts.

Other Commonwealth students in the room concurred with me, by the way.  I felt a little bad that he was outnumbered, but he didn’t have his facts straight and he took a run at it.  That’s what happens when one doesn’t have one’s facts straight and takes a run at it.  Reality intervenes, emotion recedes and faces redden.

Two.  Long ago (and I was a small part of this exercise and suggestion) the IOC, in the middle of the Salt Lake City Bid Scandal, realized that its own image and reputation around the world was not very rosy.  So they decided to let the Games be the focal point of the Olympic Brand.  This made good sense at that time; let the IOC, as an organizational brand, take a back seat because everyone loves the Games. But times have changed.

And there are parallels with other sports properties – no one really likes the NFL, or the NBA or NASCAR or even the NCAA – but people love their events, teams and athletes.  Sanctioning bodies are seen as enforcers, etc.  But – there was something deeper, something more systemic with the negative attitudes from the students in that room about the Olympics.

They told me that they did not trust the IOC (so did Germans by the way when they said “no” to Munich’s 2022 Winter Games bid two months ago).  And that, by extension, means they have minimal interest in the Games, the Movement and its future.  This, contrary to wishful and misplaced hope, will not just automatically change with time.  They won’t magically turn into Olympic fanatics when they hit 40.

It is said by some that the Olympics have lost an entire generation.  Core fans of the Games are now 45+.  18-35 year olds (the marketing sweet spot) have waning interest in or affinity for the Games as they exist today.  Is that a “product” problem (i.e., what is on the field of play; are the sports relevant to this age group – to any age group?).  It is a “promotion” problem (who really markets the Games other than a few global sponsors at best)?  Is it a “presentation” problem – this demographic doesn’t sit around the TV with their folks watching Games like we did 30+ years ago.

So…that is my 2-hour focus group report in a highly consistent, highly controlled exercise over many years.  Doing what I do, and knowing what I know about the subject, I noticed it and noted it.  And it is alarming.

Why?  Because these young people will become the future business leaders around the world, making marketing and communications decisions.  I have no doubt that an Olympic sponsor will at some time employ one or more of them.  Think about that.

Here is the good news:  there are many, many things the IOC/Olympic Movement/Olympic Games CAN DO to remain relevant, and I think the new administration of President Thomas Bach very much understands this challenge.

To my friends (and detractors) in the business, I repeat, “I really do think President Bach is aware of this alarming trend and intends to address it – he gets it”.

But what consumers and read in the media is at best 1/3 of the real story going on behind the scenes – both good and bad by the way.  And no, I am not claiming that the Movement is without its dark corners.  It is an ideal that is managed by people; and people make mistakes.

The IOC and the Olympic Movement – of which the United States Olympic Committee is a key, key member – do unseen, incredible positive work around the world every day in 204 countries – they really do, folks.  But that story is rarely told.

So consumers around the world see what others want them to they see (because the IOC and Movement are not managing their own narrative destinies) and, consumers often see want they want to see too, regardless of the facts.  Frankly, left with no alternative perspective, I understand their negative perceptions.  The cost of the Games, environmental damage, respecting human rights, etc.; how do these correlate with the Olympic ideals?

The Olympic Movement is comprised of 204 National Olympic Committees, 28 international summer sports federations and dozens and dozens of national summer federations; and 7 international winter sports federations and dozens of national winter federations.  Twelve Global IOC Sponsors, hundreds of other sponsors, rights holding broadcasters and other commercial partners help fund the Games and athletes around the world – and the Paralympic Movement as well.

It is a very, very fragile world; it is a wonder to me that the Games actually take place at all given the competing agendas and objectives around the Olympic table’s limited resources.  But they do.

However, to remain relevant for the next 100 years (even though the Olympic Games are 3,000 years old, the modern Games have only been around since 1896), the next 10 years of President Bach’s presidency are perhaps the most important in Olympic history.

Time is of the essence because the Olympic Games are worth it.  The IOC is an amazing organization full of men and women (all volunteers by the way) charged with heady, important work. And they take it seriously.  And within them lies the answers to make the next 100 years a true “Golden Age” for the Movement.  Not an easy task nor one to address casually.  3,000 years of history is on the line.

My final point is, they need our support, respect and assistance.  Let’s all pitch in; we all, however big or small, have a role to play in the Olympic Movement.

So, stay tuned.  A new day is coming I believe; it has to.