Creative Circle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Creative Circle (also known as The Advertising Creative Circle or The Advertising Creative Circle of Great Britain) is an educational awards body dedicated to creativity in British advertising, and the oldest advertising and marketing awards body in Europe.[1] Their mission is to help promote creative excellence in advertising, while sharing knowledge and experience through educational programs and supporting young creative people.[2] The annual Creative Circle awards are judged by the British advertising creative community. Their main offices are in Covent Garden, London.

Origins

The Advertising Creative Circle of Great Britain was founded on 8 October 1945,[1] at a luncheon at The Trocadero Hotel, London.[1] The concept can be traced back to, H.F. Crowther (Director of Advertising Agency Rumble, Crowther & Nicholas) and G.R. Pope (Advertising Manager of The Times).[1]

At the time, Crowther and Pope felt there was no other advertising organisation concerned exclusively with the craft of visualising, writing and designing advertising,[3] and so decided to create an Advertising Creative Circle that could "not only provide a forum for such creative men, but [also] contribute to raising the status of advertising as a profession".[3]

The First Council

More information Title, Name ...
TitleNamePosition; Company
PresidentMr. G. O. Nickalls[1]Director; Alfred Pemberton, Ltd
Vice-presidentMr H. F. Crowther[1]Director; Rumble, Crowther & Nicholas Ltd
Hon. secretaryMr Ernest Briggs[1]Director; London Press Exchange Ltd
Hon. treasurerMr S. J. G. Chipperfield[1]Masius and Fergusson Ltd
Council memberMr G. Butler[1]Art Director; J. Walter Thompson Co. Ltd
Council memberMr G. H. Saxon Mills[1]Director; W. S. Crawford Ltd
Council memberMr G. J. Redgrove[1]Director; C. Vernon and Sons Ltd
Council memberMr G. Worledge[1]S. H. Benson Ltd
Close

This first council was responsible for determining subscriptions, membership control, copy vigilance, press relations and a programme of art exhibitions, publications and functions.[1] In addition, they were tasked with selecting 10 more honorary members and a further 50 ordinary members, to be made up of noteworthy people wholly engaged in creative work – copywriters, copy chiefs, artists, art directors, layout men, visualisers and more.[1]

Within its press relations functions, the Creative Circle hoped not only to keep the press informed about advertising matters generally, but also "take up the cudgels" whenever it was publicly attacked.[1]

Honours (awards)

The Creative Circle has been awarded the best of British advertising creativity since 1986.[4] There are several levels of awards presented on the Honours Evening. From commendations, through to Bronze, Silver, and Gold, and ultimately, the Gold of Gold award for the single best piece of work that year. The President also presents a personal award to the person or organisation that has had the greatest impact on advertising that year.

List of President's Award winners

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinner
1986John Gillard (Principal of The School of Communication Arts)[5]
1987Watford College (College)[6]
1988Central Office of Information (Client)[7]
1989Tony Cox (Creative)[8]
1990Tony Kaye (Director)[9]
1991Tim Delaney (Creative)[10]
1992Roger Woodburn (Director)[11]
1993Barbara Nokes (creative)[12]
1994Chris Palmer and Mark Denton (Creatives)[13]
1995---
1996Tom Carty and Walter Campbell (Creatives)[14]
1997Paul Weinburger (Creative)[15]
1998Richard Flintham and Andy Mcleod (Creatives)[16]
1999The men and women of the Creative Services Departments[17]
2000Paddy Easton and The Computer Film Company (Production Company)[18]
2001Dave Waters (Creative)[19]
2002Roger Kennedy (Typographer)[20]
2003Paul Silburn (Creative)[21]
2004Steve Henry (Creative)
2005Daniel Kleinman (Director)[22]
2006---
2007Ed Morris (Creative)[23]
2008Juan Cabral (Creative)[24]
2009No Award Given[25]
2010Malcolm Gaskin (Creative)[26]
2011Graham Fink (Creative)
2012Nick Gill (Creative)[27]
2013Matt Gooden & Ben Walker (Creatives)[28]
Close

List of Gold of Gold Award winners

Established in 1989 as 'The Big One',[8] and known from 1996 to 2011 as 'the Platinum Award', the currently named Gold of Golds is given to the single best advertising creative idea of the year (the only exception being 2008, when it was felt advertising agency Fallon deserved the award, having produced both the Cadbury Gorilla commercial and the Skoda Fabia Cake commercial in the same year ).

More information Year, Winning Work ...
YearWinning WorkClientAgency
1989 (The Big One)Relax[8]British RailSaatchi & Saatchi
1990 (The Big One)Into the Valley/Israelites[9]MaxellHutchins Film Company / Howell Henry Chaldecott Lury
1991 (The Big One)Club/Bar[10]Red Rock CiderGGT
1992 (The Big One)Shoes In Action[11]ReebokLowe Howard Spink
1993 (The Big One)Reg on...[12]Regal, Imperial TobaccoLowe Howard Spink
1994 (The Big One)Unexpected[13]DunlopAMV BBDO / Tony Kaye Films
1995---------
1996 (Platinum Award)Twister[14]VolvoAMV BBDO
1997 (Platinum Award)St GeorgeBlackcurrant TangoHHCL & Partners
1998 (Platinum Award)Hiccups/Dentist/Chair/Guard/Tennis/Lamppost[15]Volkswagen UKBMP DDB
1999---------
2000---------
2001 (Platinum Award)Bear[18]John West SalmonLeo Burnett
2002 (Platinum Award)Sofa[19]ReebokLowe
2003 (Platinum Award)Ball Skills/Mum/Diving/Babies/Monsters John SmithsTBWA\London
2004 (Platinum Award)CogHondaPartizan / Wieden + Kennedy
2005 (Platinum Award)GrrrHondaWieden + Kennedy
2006 (Platinum Award)BallsSonyFallon
2007 (Platinum Award)No Award Given N/AN/A
2008 (Platinum Award)Fallon[23]FallonFallon
2009 (Platinum Award)Wallace & Gromit[24]Harvey NicholsDDB
2010 (Platinum Award)Knife Crime[25]Metropolitan PoliceAMV BBDO
2011 (Platinum Award)Straight/Catch MagnersRed Brick Road
2012 (Gold of Golds)The Long Wait [27]John Lewis PartnershipAdam & Eve
2013 (Gold of Golds)Don't Cover It Up [28]RefugeBBH London
Close

Role Reversal Seminar

The Creative Circle Role Reversal Seminar was created in 1968[29] by Sam Rothenstein – a copywriter who believed that creative standards don't just depend on advertising agencies but on clients too.[29]

The concept of the course is simple: one of the best ways to understand someone is to put yourself in their shoes.[30] So, a group of middleweight marketers take on the role of an advertising agency creative department. While agency Creative Directors take on the role of the clients.[31]

The marketers are grouped into "Agency" teams and made to pitch against each other for a piece of business (as happens in the real world).[29] The "Agencies" are given a creative brief from a fictional client simultaneously. They then have 72 hours to conceive and produce a pitch-winning idea. This includes deciding upon a strategy and slogan, then creating and designing ad executions, across all media – they're then expected to film, edit, and present a television commercial in that time.[32]

Each "Agency" is assisted by a professional Creative Director, to keep them on track, and an Art Director (known as a "Tutor" or a "Wrist") to help them turn their ideas into visuals and storyboards. A film crew and production team are also on hand to help with the filming and editing of the commercial.[29]

After the 72 hours are up, the "Agency" teams pitch their ideas to the fictional clients – a consortium of real Creative Directors – who then select a winner.[32]

The course is designed to give marketers the opportunity to see things from the point of view of their agency – learning through doing – which often gives them a completely new perspective on that relationship.[29] It's also renowned throughout the industry for late nights and much drunken bonding, giving clients and agencies an insight into each other's worlds.[33] It's even been known to influence real-world client/agency relationships, with one story speculating that many years ago, Guinness switched its multimillion-pound advertising account to J. Walter Thompson as a result of one such seminar.[31]

The Role Reversal Seminar ran unbroken for precisely 40 years, always taking place in one of the UK's top universities – including Cambridge and St Andrew's[34] – before settling for the last 20 years at Trinity College, Oxford. Over those 40 years, the course attracted thousands of marketers, but was closed in 2008 due to financial constraints.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI