Terrence Burns, "Olympic Marketing Unpacked"

Terrence Burns is best known as the “Bidding Guy” (in his own words), having supported and worked on more successful Olympic bids than anyone else in the industry. Lots of great stories and learn from his incredible experiences at Delta Airlines (which inspired several books) to working with sponsors and brands across the world. Great insights into the Olympic Games, from bidding processes and how it has changed, to branding the Games, to emotions which describes what the Rings mean to people.  Enjoy the history lesson of the Games while watching the Tokyo Olympics 2020-21.      Key Highlights Starting at the bottom of Delta Airlines fresh out of College –  Maintenance Utility Employee & working his way up the ranks over a period of 15 years  Official Airline of the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta – how it all started  Leading Delta’s sponsorship program of the Games, massive learning curve.  Key setting clear KPI’s, to manage the board expectations Moving from being a Client to the Agency side with Meridien Management, official marketing agency of the IOC Joining Founders Chris Welton and Laurent Scharapan as Sn. VP Marketing – commissioned first proper research on the IOC and Olympic brand   McDonald’s five Cheeseburger Olympic story to illustrate the change in thinking Sponsors have to tell a story to show consumers why they are involved and build the connection.  The fee is just the entry ticket to the party.  Celebrate Humanity Campaign with Robin Williams  Talking numbers of Olympic programs in early 2000 – both for the TOP and LOC program  Salt Lake City crisis and how it turned around through “research lead facts” with sponsors  Losing Moscow Bid, character building and leading to the next gig – Sochi  Partnering with Frank Craighill, one of the foundering partners of ProServe (Donald Dell’s Agency) and Chris Walton to launch Helios (adding Chris Renner, Prescient later) Success with Five Olympic bids & 2 World Cups , bringing Wrestling & Golf back into the Games, Asian Games, etc – helping to steer those bids and creating the stories around it PyeongChang winning bidding story vs Munich’s losing story  New IOC approach to decide on future locations – no longer beauty parades, now Executive Board looks at which cities reflect the Olympic Values and best location for the movement  Emotional Senegal story – Olympics means “hope”  Asian Games gig – a balancing act – Doha 2030 and Saudi Arabia 2034 Current focus for him – working with Sponsor on the great decade of global Sports for North America, from the 2026 World Cup to the 2028 LA Olympics to potentially the Winter Olympics in 2030 Basic advice to sponsors – don’t sign the BTA (Basic Terms of Agreement) before you get advice from an expert Latest numbers, US$ 200 million fees for TOP or LOC programs (4 year cycle) – the ratio of fees to activation investment debate LA Bid about the next 100 years of the Olympic movement  Sochi story – the US$ 50 billion number unpacked  Tokyo 2020-21 thoughts to wrap it up – differences in sponsor mind set in Japan or China vs the US market   About Terrence Burns I have a long history in Olympic marketing, dating from 1993. My background is unique, and includes:  A combination of sponsorship consulting/sales, Olympic and World Cup bidding, Olympic Agreement negotiation, and international sports branding and communications. Serving "on all sides of the table" - as an Olympic sponsor, as a rights holder with the IOC/Meridian, and as a consultant to bidding cities and nations, rights holders and sponsors around the world. Advising clients as varied as Allianz, the Australian Rugby Union, Australian Football Federation, Samsung, Petro-Canada, the City of Moscow, BHP Billiton, TNT China, Bell Canada, Dow Chemical, Nissin Foods, the International Olympic Committee, and the International Paralympic Committee to name but a few. Directing Delta Air Lines' highly successful sponsorship of the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games. Joined the IOC

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The Sports Entrepreneurs Podcast is an “audio biography” series with the leading Entrepreneurs and Movers & Shakers in the business of Sports & Esports of the past 40 years. Marcus drills deep into the career of his guests, what worked and what didn’t, the learning from the good, bad and ugly. Through his wide network, Marcus is able to host top guests from across the industry and from around the world. As a western Sports Entrepreneur operating in Asia for the past 25 years, it has a certain East-West flavour.