Lynne Suzanne shows you how to win competition prizes
Judge for yourself!My
visit to a UK handling house was a real eye-opener.
Here, all the competition entries, after being delivered through
the mail, are stored in a safe place until the closing date has
passed. The number of entries received to each competition are
recorded and this information given to the promoters.
Normally, two lists are drawn up. One containing the entrants
names and addresses, the other,
their tiebreaker slogans. A number is allocated to each
entrant so that when the winner is chosen, their slogan can be
matched up with their name and address. The latter list
containing only numbered tiebreaker slogans being the one the
judges will see.
The
judging panel may consist of a representative from the
manufacturer, the competition promoter or advertising agency,
handling house personnel and independent professional people,
perhaps totalling, three, five or seven.
The
judges are given the criteria for the tiebreaker, including
brief details of the product, the task and the word limit. They
then study their list of tiebreakers and mark off any which they
think are worthy of further consideration. Once this has been
completed and a list of
At
the close of the judging session, usually only a few tiebreakers
will stand out as exceptional and the judges will place these in order of preference. The tiebreakers are
then married up with the corresponding names and the prize
winners informed.
Now
can you, and I certainly couldn't, imagine what 40,000 slogans
on a computer printout
look like?
Can you visualise 10,000 entry forms?
It's a real eye-opener!
One
competition promoter I spoke to, who handle their own
competitions in-house, told me they open the entries as soon
they arrive. They check for the inclusion of qualifiers and
correct answers to the first part of the task, just as the
handling house does, but instead of storing the entries in a
safe until after the closing date, they undertake the
preliminary judging on a daily basis.
As soon as they come across slogans they feel are
eye-catching and worthy of further consideration, these are
stored in a safe place. Then after the closing date, instead of
the mammoth task of checking thousands of entry forms in one
session, the preliminary judging has already taken place. This
company do not use computer printouts. They simply bundle entry
forms into piles of one hundred each and every judge works
through several bundles of entry forms, placing each separate
form into one of two piles, i.e. for further consideration or
rejection.
I
feel this is an excellent method of judging, which is very fair
to competitors, for each judge has two piles of entry forms. He
or she then passes their pile of rejects to the next judge
sitting on their right. The procedure is repeated, until every
judge has seen each entry form. Only then, when the numbers of
entries for the final judging stage are fewer,
do they read them out loud, confer and decide upon a
winner. Sometimes, my contact told me, an exceptional slogan is
an outright winner. Other times the judges may have to take a
vote on two or three contenders for first prize. I have nothing
but admiration for judging sessions like these.
My
observations are that, when your slogan is being read, at
whatever stage of the judging, whether on a computer print out
or on the entry form, it stands on its own merit. Either the
judge likes it or he/she doesn't. It's as simple as that.
A
perfect illustration of this was when myself and another
well-known comper were on Granada TV's This Morning to
talk about the launch of our new books and were asked to judge a
phone-in contest.
As we were under pressure to come up with a winner in a short
time scale, obviously we didn't have time to spend as long as
we'd have liked to read the entries.
Ushered out to the phone-in room where several young ladies were
busily writing the entrants name, telephone number and slogan
onto separate pieces of paper, we were initially handed a bundle
of around 500 entries.
Picture the scene. We held them between to read them. Sometimes
we both said `No' at the same time. Sometimes we said 'yes we
like this', and that entry was put on our 'further consideration
short list' pile. The fact is, and this is an important point
for you to take on board and remember is,
we devoted a maximum TWO SECONDS for each entry.
We
could tell, in that first 'scanning of the slogan', whether it
grabbed our attention or not. Although we put these entries on
the shortlist pile with other hopefuls, one was so brilliant and
imaginative it was unanimously declared our outright winner. We
went back to the studio, to announce our winner live on TV. © Copyright Lynne Suzanne www.win-with-lynne.co.uk
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