Cymru Wales: ‘Wales To The World’ Takes Home the Coveted Grand Prix

 London, Friday 8th September 2023 – The World Media Group, an alliance of leading global media organisations united in championing trusted journalism, is delighted to announce Cymru Wales (the Welsh Government) as the Grand Prix winner of the 2023 World Media Awards.

The awards, presented by the World Media Group, are the only global awards to recognise brands, agencies and media partners who, together, create the most effective cross platform, cross border, content-driven advertising campaigns.

Brands including Adidas, Birkenstock, Bumble, Deutsche Telecom AG, DP World, Maersk, PGIM, Visa and Volkswagen were amongst those receiving accolades for their impressive category entries this year during the awards celebration at the Ham Yard Hotel in London.

Cymru Wales’ Grand Prix-winning campaign, ‘Wales To The World’, which also won the Travel & Tourism category, capitalised on the opportunity to showcase their nation to an international audience when Wales qualified for the FIFA World Cup finals for the first time in 64 years.

‘This is Wales, C’mon in’ invited the world to get to know more about Wales in an authentic, people-led campaign that communicated Wales’s brand proposition and embodied the nation’s values. The people of Wales became messengers — telling their nation’s stories, and championing its values, culture and traditions in an engaging, unscripted and authentically Welsh way.

“While the standard of all our finalists was impressive, the jury agreed that ‘Wales To The World’ sums up what is at the core of the World Media Awards’ ethos. It truly demonstrates how a powerful content-driven campaign in the right media environment can bring a story to life without compromising on authenticity,” said Belinda Barker, Chief Executive of the World Media Group.

“The Welsh Government did an amazing job bringing together different cultures and values in an integrated campaign that showcases Wales as a progressive nation with so much to offer. We can’t wait to come and visit!”

“The World Media Awards showcases the best in international content-driven marketing so it’s an honour to be listed amongst such a high calibre of finalists,” said Heledd Owen, Director of Marketing, Cymru Wales. “We’re delighted to be awarded this year’s Grand Prix for ‘Wales To The World‘. It means a lot to know that this campaign, which is just the beginning of our long-term strategy to raise the profile of Wales internationally, has been recognised by the industry. We look forward to sharing more stories from the heart of our nation in the next chapter.”

 A panel of 39 heavyweight jurors from leading international advertisers, agencies and publishers, co-chaired Jerry Daykin, Head of Global Media, Beam Suntory and Natasha Byrne, Managing Partner, UM, were tasked with selecting winners from the many global submissions. The full list of judges can be seen here. The World Media Awards Ceremony was supported by Smartology.

The full case studies for this year’s winning entries, along with the winners of previous years, are available to read in the World Media Group’s Creative Vault here.

The winners of the World Media Awards 2023 are as follows:

AUTOMOTIVE

Buzz – Feeling The Force Of A Perfect Partnership
Brand: Volkswagen ID Buzz
Entered by: PHD and Scholz&Friends

Judges’ Comments: Volkswagen chose a great brand ambassador in Ewan McGregor based on the insight that there was a strong link between their audience and the Star Wars audience, and the relaunch timing for both iconic brands. But more than that – the campaign had strong results, with a reach of over 5.7 billion and 20,000 preorders – a capacity order book.

CORPORATE INFLUENCER

Discover New Paths
Brand: Maersk
Entered by: Havas Business
Credits: &Co, Copenhagen

 Judges’ Comments: This campaign used every touchpoint to create a truly global impact.  The jury loved the involvement of the employees – creating internal ambassadors. Maersk tackled negativity about logistics head-on and succeeded in injecting emotion into B2B marketing. Plus, it achieved great results – two thirds of people who saw it went on to connect with Maersk.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Protecting Gamers Protects Visa
Brand:
Visa
Entered by: Starcom Worldwide
Credits: Roblox, Venatus Media

Judges’ Comments: Visa had a clear objective to reach a Gen-Z audience, and the insightful analysis of Gen-Z audience behaviour in the gaming world meant a true value-led campaign could be created.

The judges also felt that Visa succeeded in brilliantly transforming the brand value of ‘security’ into a suit of armour for gaming avatars. And all of this executed in just eight weeks – very impressive!

Highly Commended:

OutFront
Brand: PGIM
Entered by: Reuters
Credits: Ptarmigan Media

 Judges’ Comments: In a sea of long format articles, blog posts and graphs that define this category, the judges highly appreciated the creative direction and craft of the creative execution of this strategy.

LUXURY & LIFESTYLE

Ozworld
Brand: adidas
Entered by: EssenceMediacom
Credits: Jam 3

 Judges’ Comments: The adidas team identified the ideal platform to connect with this unique audience, and came up with a strategy that reinforced the perceptions of the adidas brand as innovators.

This campaign turned a product range with historically declining sales into top-selling products -results which testify to the success of the campaign.

MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT

Brand Anthem
Brand: Bumble
Entered by: Havas Media Group London

 Judges’ Comments: This campaign is a great example of a well-executed, international marketing strategy that also requires localisation of messaging – the Bumble team showed that they could deliver on complex coordination and delivered impressive results.

TECHNOLOGY & TELECOMS

 #WhatWeValue: Embracing Volunteerism With Gen Z
Brand: Deutsche Telekom AG
Entered by: Mindshare GmbH
Credits: emetriq GmbH, Publicis Sapient, Saatchi & Saatchi London, Proud Robinson & Partners

 Judges’ Comments: A meaningful and purposeful campaign built on the strong insight that Gen-Z want to give back and do something for each other – and that they have a particular focus on the future of the planet. The campaign engaged with the audience across multiple Gen-Z focused platforms with excellent results and also made a real difference – supporting 108 projects to help to make the world a better place.

TRAVEL & TOURISM & GRAND PRIX WINNER

Wales To The World
Brand: Cymru Wales (Welsh Government)
Entered by: Orchard Media and Events
Credits: iCrossing UK

Judges’ Comments: The passion came through in this entry and the jury felt that the Welsh Government team did more than just make the most of this World Cup moment. They addressed the difficulties arising from a clash of values, they embedded local storytelling into different cultures, and the modular creative approach enabled many stories to be told on the creative journey. Plus, there was a sense that this was the beginning of a strategy for Wales – the start of things to come.

Specialist Categories:

BRAND & MEDIA OWNER CATEGORY

Birkenstock: Ugly for a Reason
Brand: Birkenstock
Entered by: The New York Times Advertising

Judges’ Comments: This was an example of two brands coming together to achieve a mammoth task, to explain why Birkenstocks are the way they are. Birkenstocks, yes, are ugly but for a really good reason! And the New York Times with their reach and journalistic integrity were the perfect partner to explain that. The judges also loved the extensions of activity into social and events that kept the conversation going and benefitted both brands.

Highly Commended:

Trade In Transition
Brand: DP World
Entered by: Economist Impact

Judges’ Comments: The judges were impressed by the cut through that this research-based campaign achieved – and the strength of the results was reinforced by the fact that it was quoted by global influencers such as Christine Lagarde. 

RISING STAR

Obinna Iwuji
Wavemaker

Judges’ Comments: Obinna demonstrated an authentic approach and attitude to his work (no marketing speak), as well as an enthusiasm for the industry, and a passion to go the distance. He’s clearly excelling in his own right whilst also creating a legacy and carrying out amazing work outside of his day job.

Highly Commended: 

Teodora Tepavicharova
Condé Nast

Judges’ Comments: Teddy impressed the judges by, even at this early stage in her career, giving on to the next generation through mentoring.

SOCIAL GOOD

 #WhatWeValue: Embracing Volunteerism With GenZ
Brand: Deutsche Telekom AG
Entered by: Mindshare GmbH
Credits: emetriq GmbH, Publicis Sapient, Saatchi & Saatchi London, Proud Robinson & Partners

Judges’ Comments: This was more than a marketing campaign – real actions came out of it.  The brand demonstrated its support for young people’s commitment to change and promoted volunteerism – even flipping an NFT into a tool for enablement.  Deutsche Telekom knew their audience well and put money into the projects post-campaign

#ENDS#

Media contact:
Charlotte Panther T: 07834 431206 or E: Charlotte@world-media-group.com

About The World Media Group – Championing International Trusted Journalism
The World Media Group is a strategic alliance of leading international media organisations that connects brands with highly engaged, influential audiences in the context of trusted and renowned journalism. Its members include The Atlantic, BBC News, The Economist, Forbes, Fortune, Insider, National Geographic, Politico Europe, Reuters, The New York Times Company, The Smithsonian, TIME, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post, and partners Brand Metrics, Dianomi and Smartology. To find out more about the World Media Group, please visit www.world-media-group.com.

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]This month the World Media Group’s Chief Executive Belinda Barker chats to the winner of the World Media Award for Content Leadership and Innovation, Navin Rammohan, in a special edition of The Media Navigators podcast. Navin is Vice President, Segment Head Marketing at Infosys. Below is an extract of their conversation. You can watch the video below or listen to the full podcast here. [/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]

Congratulations Navin. Please can you start by telling our audience a little bit about who Infosys is and what you do as a business?

Infosys is a large global IT services and consulting organisation. We started off around 42 years back with a seed capital of around $250 with seven founders and today we are about $18 billion in revenue. We have 330,000 employees globally, and we are in 56 countries, managing our clients’ businesses around digital transformation. We look after the entire technology spectrum of large enterprise – the Global 2000, the Fortune 500 of the world, managing critical technology and different kinds of work related to their technology transformation. Just to give you an example, imagine an iconic automaker, which is looking at their cloud transformation, we look at how cloud can impact their car business for connected cars. Similarly, a government organisation that is looking to implement strategies for their SME businesses that want to use blockchain, we help them look at blockchain as a strategy for the small and medium industries within their constituencies. We look at AI to really help tennis players improve and manage their games and that’s some of the work that we do with sports organisations. In a sense we navigate the entire technology spectrum of medium to large enterprises around any kind of challenges they face, which technology can really solve. We define ourselves as an organisation which is there to help amplify human potential; to navigate the ‘next’ for people, businesses, and communities. The value systems that the founders put behind the organisation 42 years back still stand in terms of how we go about doing our business. We are proud of our ESG strategies. We became carbon neutral in 2019-2020, 30 years ahead of the Paris Agreement. In the social sustainability space, we’re implementing a strategy of re-skilling about 10 million people with digital skills. We are already at the halfway mark with 5 million people already on a platform that is provided free to enable people to learn digital skills. We are really proud of what we are doing ‘beyond business’ but I don’t think we can call it beyond business because now ESG is a core part of every organisation’s strategy. From a people perspective, learnability is one of the core strategies of Infosys. We have probably the world’s largest corporate university in Mysore, where we train close to 15,000 people simultaneously. Learning and constantly evolving ourselves to learn new technologies and bringing that to our clients’ business is core to Infosys. It’s about amplifying human potential to create the next opportunity for people, businesses, and communities. We are a people company that uses technology to really help better our clients.

What made you think that a content-led campaign was the right approach for Infosys and how did you get involved with the tennis partnership?

At Infosys we follow our content marketing approach with a theme called ‘UnMarketing’. It’s a very value-driven approach where we are not really marketing the technology, but we are creating marketing with the help of technology. Rather than creating TV commercials and campaigns, we want to create products and services and platforms using our technology, and that becomes our marketing. Tennis is a great example of what we are doing using the content marketing approach. We are building a digital platform for ATP, which helps players and coaches to understand statistics much better. It helps fans to engage with the game in a much more immersive way than if they had just watched it on TV. If you go to our platform that we have created on the website, the spectators can understand the game in a much more granular way, and that improves the fan engagement level. Infosys technology is the backbone of all these immersive experiences, and that becomes a marketable technology for us to showcase to our other clients. We go beyond the tennis audience and core stakeholders to our other business audiences to show them that what we can do with tennis data can easily be done with retail data or manufacturing data. That has been our philosophy in terms of an approach to marketing – the technology is used for creating products and services and platforms and digital experiences for any kind of business, and we use that to market ourselves. That has been the differentiating factor because it brings in authenticity and value. We’re talking from a place of complete knowledge; clients appreciate that, and it leads to meaningful engagement and conversations with them. We’ve taken this model to our other partnerships like The Economist Group. We have built their entire sustainability platform – it’s called The Sustainability Project. One of the problem statements that had come to us with was that their sustainability content was spread across the whole website and they wanted to bring it all together in a way that was personalised. They knew a lot about their audience and what they’re consuming, so how could they then target them better? We created a platform for them that is live on the Economist Impact website called The Sustainability Project, so every piece of content related to sustainability is in a single place. The Economist team is now able to target this audience in a much sharper way. They know what their audience is reading, how much they are liking it, how much time they are spending on the content, so it gives them insights into the new things they need to do in this space. It’s almost a Netflix kind of an experience that you’re bringing to sustainability content. Similarly, we are currently working on something called the Value Chain Navigator with them, which is a digital tool to look at how organisations around the world are looking at their Scope 3 emissions. While these are projects which are delivering business value to The Economist, it is also helping Infosys from a thought leadership perspective in the sustainability space. It helps us to build our credibility and, at the same time, we are building new technology solutions which are solving a real-world problem for our clients. Leading with content like this helps us to create a very differentiated kind of proposition, which is helping us in the market, both from a brand perspective as well as from a business impact perspective.

Content marketing has been a big trend over the last few years. Do you think that will continue and how will it morph in the future?

I think the definition of content has really changed. It’s no longer about text. It’s no longer about audio. It’s no longer about video. What we are seeing in the market is a lot about content being experiential and immersive. Every year, the number of digital channels and mediums are increasing. Whether it is Web3, GenAI now, whether it was the Metaverse, each of these trends have had a hype cycle. I’m not saying that as marketers, we should not ride some of these hype cycles. I think we should. But I think we should ride it in a way that is furthering the brand’s narrative. That’s the most important thing. How is it really adding to your brand story? How is it making it relevant to the audience that you’re trying to target? How is it relevant for the business you are in? For example, about two years back, the Financial Times, came to us with a business problem. They felt that the world of journalism was going to be very different in the next few years with people wanting to contribute to the content in some way, rather than just being passive listeners or audiences. They call this whole phenomenon ‘participative content’. We brainstormed with the visual journalism team at the Financial Times and came up with a gamification of the content. We created something called the FT Climate Game – a very immersive and scientifically based game with four personas that let you decide how you want to take decisions which will end up having a certain impact on the climate. The goal was to ensure that the temperature doesn’t rise above 1. 5 degrees. It was a fascinating way to reimagine content completely and give an understanding of the subject itself. Another example is something we created for the International Tennis Hall of Fame, based in Newport in Rhode Island. It’s where tennis started in the US and is the only grass court tournament there. All the legends of the game and every old artifact related to tennis are on display at the museum, but unless you go to Newport, you can’t see this fabulous museum. They came to us to ask how to take it global – they wanted every tennis fan globally to be able to experience the Hall of Fame in a way that is immersive and experiential, so we built a Metaverse. You can take your own avatar and move around this entire space, exploring the Hall of Fame and every artifact immersively, like you’re actually there. It was launched in July, and we’re seeing tremendous results. I think the content strategy is really evolving around creating content that is genuine, adds value, and builds in authenticity into every interaction that you do, which creates some kind of meaningful engagement with your target audience. I think that’s the direction where content is headed.

What is the one challenge or trend that you’ll be watching over the next 12 months?

With Gen AI now, there’s a huge amount of opportunity. We are experimenting with AI models to not just solve clients’ business problems, but also in marketing. We’re trying to see how we can push the narrative so that clients understand it in a much more immersive way. I think the Gen AI space is going to be very exciting in the next 12 to 24 months. We are keen to explore and create, but the principles for us will not change. We want to look at any of these new technologies with the same principles of making sure that it furthers the brand’s narrative, it adds value, and it really engages in a way that it is meaningful. I think the storytelling aspect of content is going to become much more important because it’s going to lead to a human-centric kind of content building. We are seeing that it has a much better resonance from our clients when we connect with them at a human level with our content. Thank you, Navin.   We look forward to presenting Navin with his award for Content Leader and Innovation at the World Media Awards ceremony of September 7th.  If you would like to join us in celebrating the very best in international content-driven marketing, tickets to the World Media Awards ceremony are available here. [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

London – 05 September, 2023 – The World Media Group today announced the winner of the 2023 World Media Award (WMA) for Content Leadership & Innovation. This honour is awarded to the individual recognised by peers for talent in creating exemplary international content-driven campaigns that demonstrate brand bravery, creativity, and innovation. This year, the award is going to be presented to Navin Rammohan, Vice President, Segment Head Marketing at Infosys. Navin will receive his special award at this year’s WMA celebration in September.

Co-head Judges, Jerry Daykin, Head of Global Media, Beam Suntory and Natasha Byrne, Managing Partner, UM, along with Belinda Barker, Chief Executive of the World Media Group, agreed that Navin is an inspirational leader who pushes the boundaries of what is considered traditional content marketing, developing new models of collaboration, and using Infosys technologies to create unique experiences.

Navin was nominated for several innovative initiatives; most notably, the Infosys campaign around unifying power of sport to create more meaningful connections between tennis fans and players., Infosys collaborated with tournaments including ATP, Roland-Garros, the Australian Open & ITHF to create unforgettable sporting experiences for fans, players, and the media.

This included an industry-first, cloud-based SaaS system called the ‘Infosys tennis platform’, which aggregated multiple data sources. Infosys also launched a 3D art museum for Roland-Garros fans that encapsulated the heritage of the tournament, and they created a virtual platform during the Covid 19 pandemic to host 12,000 VIPs of the Australian Open.

The second campaign was The Sustainability Project for The Economist Group. As digital Innovation partner, Infosys Technologies is leveraging its cutting-edge capabilities to enable users to seamlessly navigate and engage with Economist Impact content and tools. Through a dynamic framework that customises, organises, and prioritises the content that matters most to readers, the combination of meaningful UX and intelligent integration of topics, formats and events ensures readers understand the most critical trends.

“World Media Group members once again nominated a host of exceptionally talented candidates for this year’s Content Leadership & Innovation Award,” said Belinda Barker, Chief Executive, the World Media Group. “Navinfought off the competition by demonstrating his ability to identify innovative marketing opportunities that simultaneously showcased Infosys’s technological expertise while delivering value to global audiences. In doing so, the Infosys campaigns under his leadership perfectly reflect the qualities we are looking for when we select our World Media Award winners.” 

The award will be given during an exclusive live ceremony at the Ham Yard Hotel in London, on Thursday 7th September 2023, where the final category winners will also be announced. The winner of this year’s prestigious Grand Prix Award will also be announced on the night, joining previous Grand Prix winners Johnnie Walker, London & Partners, Malaria No More UK, Shell, Sonos and Tata Motors as the ‘best of the best’.

Tickets for the World Media Awards  ceremony can be purchased here.

ENDS