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APG awards judging: day two

Neil christie

W2O brings you, hot from the evil heart of Shoreditch House, the inside scoop from within the sealed judging chamber on day two of the APG Awards. Today we saw presentations from JWT Mumbai (Forevermark Diamonds), RSPCA NSW Australia (Campaign Palace), BBH (Axe – Japan, Barnardo's and Air Action Vigorsol), Saatchi & Saatchi Australia (Sony Net-Share Cam), Grey London (BHF- Yoobot), Mother (Stella Artois 4% and Eurostar), M&C Saatchi (Kent County Council), McCann (Halo 3) and your own brave lads from Wieden + Kennedy (Nike 5).

Judges' table

Voting

Above: an actual vote being cast.

Guy

Chairman of the Judges: Guy Murphy of JWT.

Judges

Paul graeme 

Paul and Graeme of W+K limbering up for their Nike 5 presentation. Colman practising rapid masturbatory hand-gestures. Graeme attempting to bite off his own tongue, possibly as a result of nerves.

Both had rehearsed an 'amoebic dysentery' excuse with which they opened their presentation in a vain attempt to win the judges' sympathy. Deciding to use a giant fridge as a bit of 'planning theatre' was a questionable move.

Questioning g and p 

Above: our boys field some tricky questions from Rob Forshaw. Graeme and Paul try to look thoughtful. Fridge isn't helping. Axel Chaldecott resorts to quaffing large drink.

A diverse and interesting selection of cases presented today. I guess in a way over the two days we saw an overview of what should be the world's best strategic thinking currently. We certainly saw 'planning' fulfilling a variety of functions: digging deep to find customer insights (as you might expect); identifying channel opportunities that connect with people in new ways; acting as a commercial partner to clients and helping to redefine the business problem; inspiring great creative work (again, as might be hoped); developing new models for how communications can work; proposing new ways of briefing, from diaries to brand worlds; turning conventional wisdom on its head to provide a brilliantly counter-intuitive idea; getting under the skin of culture and working out how to fit in rather than stand out; curating user-generated content; designing an online decision-making experience; using search optimisation requirements as a creative springboard; creating new IP models; reconciling clashes between global consistency and local relevance; working in new, more spontaneous, less logical ways; persuading their agencies and clients that extraordinary results don't come from ordinary strategies. Interesting stuff, and fascinating to see what's going on out there – who's pushing the boundaries and what's being achieved.

And the results were….

I can't tell you that. Results of the judging will be announced at the APG Awards Ceremony on October 8th.

APG awards judging

Axel, matt, rob, lucty

Spent today in swanky Shoreditch House with a top team of industry legends and luminaries judging the APG Awards. Obviously confidentiality prevents me from revealing any of the discussion amongst the judges but I can say, to tantalise you, that it was a very interesting process. The awards recognise excellence in strategic planning and each agency presents its case in a 20 minute slot, so as chairman of the judges Guy Murphy of JWT said, it's kind of like 'the X-Factor of planning'.

We saw thirteen presentations today and there are another twelve tomorrow. These have been whittled down from 150-odd submissions so I don't think I'm giving anything away by saying that the standard overall is very high indeed. There's been some genuinely interesting thinking presented and it's fascinating to observe the cultural body language each agency displays in the way it presents itself. Some went for low-tech flip-charts (one involuntarily, following a tech meltdown), some went to the other extreme, going to advanced levels of technical accomplishment in style of presentation. Some had shiny shoes, some had knitted their own trousers. Presenting agencies today were: BBH (for Lynx and Johnnie Walker), M&C Saatchi (PC World), AMV (Royal Mail, Dept for Transport and The Economist), Tribal DDB (VW), Grey (BHF – heart attack), W+K (Nokia), Mother (PG Tips and Orange), McCann (Skcin) and VCCP (Comparethemarket.com). You can read the shortlisted papers here.

It's also interesting to see just how much stuff you can fit into a 20 minute presentation. When it comes to presentations, shorter is ALWAYS better.

Rory 

Simon standing

The panel of judges, who you can see above, arguing the toss, tucking into cake and ensuring that their caffeine intake is kept hot-wiringly high, is comprised of Guy Murphy (JWT), Derek Morris (Zenith), Claire Beale (Campaign), John Owen (Dare), Rory Sutherland (Ogilvy), Lucy Jameson (DDB), Matt Willifer (APG/nDreams), Simon Clift (Unilever), Axel Chaldecott (JWT), Bill Griffin (Rapier), Rob Forshaw (Grand Union) and me, Neil Christie (Wieden + Kennedy). 

Below, W+K's own Andrew Stirk girds his strategy loins for what could be his Susan Boyle moment, presenting the Nokia Supernova case history. And just to make things more nerve-wracking for him, he had me taking photos of him.

Stirky 

Another twelve presentations tomorrow. Partly daunting. Partly quite exciting.

Personally, I found it inspiring to see the good work being done out there. As Tarantino says (referencing his own relationship with PT Anderson), it was the fact that Brando had to compete with Montgomery Clift that made Brando a better actor. And nothing makes QT happier than to see his friend and rival produce a masterpiece. So, W+K is kind of like the Brando in this analogy. Inspired to do better by our competition. And possibly about to get fat and lazy and go bonkers and rarely work again.

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