TAG | 2010 vancouver olympics
It’s all the buzz – at 142 years old, Canada is the “cool new” global brand. The Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games certainly put Canada centre stage, but beyond graciously talented athletes and fantastic Olympic logo-wear, it’s national pride that’s raised the bar on this country’s brand experience.
The momentum started with a 106-day Olympic torch relay driving a uniquely Canadian energy as it united people across the country. And then, from Shane Koyczan’s “We Are More” poem at the Opening Ceremonies – where he spoke for Canadians and declared, “Some say that something that defines us is something as simple as please and thank-you” – to Sidney Crosby’s golden goal, the brand called Canada hosted a 17-day party for the world.
And the world bore witness to patriotism of epic proportion.
Turns out we’re not the Canada the world thought they knew. From tragedy to record breaking achievement, the brand called Canada found its voice and declared it loudly, complete with uncharacteristic flag-waving and spontaneous outbursts of “Oh Canada”.
What makes the Canadian brand so engaging?
We’re perfectly imperfect.
- When our athletes drink beer in public celebration of winning Olympic Gold medals, we roar and raise a glass.
- When International media criticized us early in the Games, we pushed “ignore” and now we get to watch them back-peddle.
- We also don’t take ourselves too seriously. When the fourth leg on the Olympic cauldron malfunctioned, we had fun showing the world how we fixed it… and when TV host Stephen Colbert called Canadians “syrup-sucking iceholes”, we laughed.
MY SOAPBOX: Endearing “Canadiana” aside, the already “strong and free” Canada has been galvanized and rebranded through the Olympics. We’ve reinvigorated the Canadian brand experience through human experience – individual athlete stories and “slices of life” that connect with the world and ultimately, mean more than medal counts. And it’s that brand equity that will shape Vancouver and Canada for years to come.
Tourism Vancouver President & CEO Rick Antonson summed it up today when he stated, “Right now, Canada is the world’s coolest brand. We must treasure that, protect it, and use it for the immense good of our communities.”
STAGE-LEFT: I know in my last post I said I’d report back on my Molson Canadian Hockey House experience especially after the logistical nightmare and public back-lash they caused during the ticket-purchase process approaching the Olympics… but you know what? Who cares. Ultimately, it was Molson’s promoter Vision Companies behind the ticket glitch… and after we got “inside-the-tent”, the 65,000 square foot sea of red, rocking energy made it all go away. Yes, the food sucked as did some of the big screen placements, but the service was good and the music and personalities were hugely entertaining. As for Molson’s rousing, grass-roots “I AM CANADIAN” Olympic ad campaign? Brilliant.
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Performance Enhanced Olympic TV
1 Comment | Posted by Susan Doré in Communication Providers, Standing O
Living in the downtown hub of the 2010 Vancouver Olympic machine, I can officially report… it’s beyond overwhelming. There are no words for the excitement, fun and international melting-pot of the mind-numbingly emotional highs and lows that come with celebrating these elite athletes. But what’s taking it to epic levels is the digital experience. And it’s being led by the Canadian television network, CTV.
It’s Web 2.0 on steroids… squared. Seriously.
Live TV is always great, but consider CTVOlympics.ca a value-added appendage to your journey in becoming the ultimate Olympic voyeur… fuelled by Microsoft Silverlight technology.
Where-ever you are in the world, simply go to CTVOlympics.ca and enjoy:
- Live streaming audio of all events, which you can customize, jump around and view with ease… even if you’re a technical neophyte
- A live CTVchat-blog, MSN and Facebook feed to “friends” that are online
- Cool polls, athlete profiles and must-see event footage
- The latest scores, medal standings, photo-galleries, and an e-store for coveted Olympic garb
Other CTV touch-points:
- @CTVOlympics on Twitter for sound-bites of up-to-the-minute happenings
- CTV’s Olympic Facebook Fan Page for expanded news and chit-chat
- CTV branded videos/music on iTunes
- FreeiTunes app with mini-web platform (which I downloaded on my iTouch and prefer over their Blackberry web-link)
- CTV personalities host the Olympic Medal Ceremonies
- CTV has aligned with Bell on walk-in Olympic kiosks in all the right places to educate and convert cell-phone users to Bell where you can enjoy live streaming Olympic footage in the palm of your hand (I’m not on the Bell network but you gotta love the exclusive sponsorship advantage/lock-down!)
I’m sure there’s more I haven’t uncovered yet… as a marketer it’s as exhilarating as it is exhausting. In fact, my real-time experience yesterday included catching Canadian Maelle Ricker win Gold in Snowboard Cross … I watched it on TV and had her qualifying video, winning video, Olympic history and more on my CTV laptop feed inside 60 seconds.
We’re dialled in people… and the Olympic ride is just beginning, so strap in. I’ll bet my red mittens we haven’t seen anything yet.
MY SOAPBOX: The Vancouver 2010 Olympics have been hyped as the first true digital Games. The CTV brand and network is the driving force behind that. From a marketing “check-list” perspective, they’re off-the-charts on content with amped-up traditional online marketing channels combined with connectivity we’ve never seen before. You bet I’m a proud Canadian, but fact is CTV has eclipsed every world-wide TV network to the extent that I’ve talked to visiting Americans who prefer CTV’s up-to-the-minute, impartial coverage (yes, they said impartial).
STAGE-LEFT: Next up, adventures at Olympic venues including the Molson Canadian Hockey House. Have to say, the ticket-purchase process through Molson proved to be a highly publicized rough start. It almost caused a media-frenzied Labatts Blue revolt (which is serious beer warfare in Canada in case you missed that). Molson’s corporate band-aid was mediocre and mishandled… let’s see how a visit to their Hockey House for the Bronze Medal men’s hockey game plays out for me and my friends. Could get ugly.






