MANILA, Philippines—When you get there, you get a better view of the advertising landscape and come down with a bagful of enlightenment.
True to its promise, organizers of the Ad Summit delivered rock star speakers at the Subic Exhibition and Convention Center last May 7 to10. The topics indeed, rocked your senses and the reaction of audiences, always thunderous. Each one inspiringly lived up to expectations.
Each session was filled to the rafters. On hallways, coffee shops, convention lounges, lunch and dinner halls, conversations always veered on “who delivered the most interesting topic for the day.”
And the most mentioned names? Philippine basketball coach to World Championship: Chot Reyes and JWT Regional President and China CEO: Tom Doctoroff.
In a gathering of brand experts, hard-to-please creative people and digital geeks, what’s basketball got to do with advertising? Plenty.
The advertising war has many similarities to basketball. If you listened closely to Reyes and got his drift you would know that playing basketball is not just wearing a jersey and shooting a ball. You need a strategy and more.
“You need trust, execution, accountability and motivation (TEAM),” Reyes says in his talk.
Reyes drew a lot of criticisms when he picked Jimmy Alapag, the oldest and the shortest, a no-no if you’re aiming for the best in Asia and want to barge in to the world’s elite in basketball. But he dealt with them head-on and the rest is history.
“I chose Jimmy Alapag to be part of my team because I trust him. I know that when the situation calls for it, he will deliver,” Reyes says.
In his wonderful narrative delivered heartwarmingly, Reyes says: “The first foundation of teamwork is trust. The coach should trust his players and vice versa. In business, people talk about return on investments. “We should talk about return of relationship,” Reyes states matter-of-factly.
Unknown to millions of Filipinos who watched the crucial Philippine-Korea game during the Fiba-Asia Championship, Reyes had a strategy worth retelling. The team had focus and went to the court with unwavering mindset: “Beat Korea.”
Using analogy to score advertising three-pointers, Reyes was uncovering a scientific coach in him, saying, no one is an accidental player and one has a role to play and need to follow a specific game plan.
In his speech, Reyes says the most touching part, the Mark Pingris “no-skills-and-cannot-shoot story.” He repeatedly says, “the guy cannot shoot” but quickly made the turnaround by saying: “… but he can hustle like no other. His calling card is effort.”
Players who have natural ability to work hard are the best players, according to Reyes. “The best players are those who are willing to play their roles. Effort beats God-given talent or educational background.”
“Mark Pingris cannot shoot but he can steal market share,” Reyes says. In the heart-stopping game against Korea, Alapag made the winning shot because Pingris blocked Alapag’s defender.
“You may be the best player in the team, but do you have the humility to allow another player to make a play?” Reyes relates how Jason Castro, one of the country’s best players, allowed another player to take a shot.
In the dying minutes of the Philippines-Korea game, Reyes replaced Alapag with the team’s best defenders. “Alapag didn’t care even if he was the highest shooter at that time. It was because he knew how a team should work,” Reyes says.
“As head coach, my job is not to make a shot but to put my people in the right position to make a shot. Leaders are head coaches.”
Reyes’ was easily Day One’s best speaker.
Doctoroff on the other hand, ended the 4-day summit with a bang. Undoubtedly, his presentation was the best, very well researched and beautifully art directed.
An expert in the greater China market, Doctoroff spiced up his speech with Mandarin, lectured with fire and thunder, a master preaching brand advocacy like the gospel.
If Reyes talked about ROR (return of relationship), Doctoroff spoke about ROI (return of involvement) in branding.
He shares how the Internet is making China the world’s biggest economy because it is now “more powerful than Buddhism.” The author of the book “What Chinese Want: Culture, Communism & The Modern Chinese Consumer” states, “the speed with which China’s citizens have embraced all things digital is one sign that things are in motion in the country.”
In spite of some glitches and short amount of preparation time, the Philippine 4A’s (Association of Accredited Advertising Agencies), through its President, Norman Agatep, put on a great show. Ad Summit made a rousing start, triumphant in regaining its foothold on the country’s biggest ad festival. If only for that, people are already talking about the next.
“The Ad Summit is our own little version of Cannes and that’s good. I just hope they’ll make ghost ads scamper away,” one ad agency copywriter says.
“The next Ad Summit should have more rock star speakers, a plenary hall that can make you see speakers from any vantage point, flawless shuttle bus services, blazing speed wifi, more tables and electricity plugs at the media room, generous sponsors, bigger loot bags, more interesting trade shows that offer new technology,” says a top agency head.
Lito “BoyP” Pangilinan, co-chair of Ways and Mean committee says, “the industry is back together again.” His co-chair Lito Puyat adds, “we were thought to be a crazy bunch to persist with it. It takes “puso” to make it run. I have been very privileged to be in the same company who shares the same aspirations.”
No one could be happier than the person who determinedly pushed it to happen, and that is Matec Villanueva, Ad Summit chair who says it all: “We’re glad we got back what is rightfully ours.”
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