Heineken UK appoints outsourced marketing support specialist EC Group to play key role in World Cup period promotion

Heineken UK – the country’s biggest beer and cider producer – has appointed leading outsourced marketing services specialist EC Group to handle its ground-breaking Who Wants To Be A Football Millionaire? promotion this summer.

Created by marketing agency Steam UK – and developed in partnership with Sony Pictures Television – the Football Millionaire campaign will be Heineken UK’s biggest and widest-reaching promotion of 2010. It will run across five of Heineken’s top-selling beer and cider brands – Foster’s, John Smith’s, Kronenbourg 1664, Strongbow and Bulmers – in the run-up to, and during, the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Fronted by Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? presenter Chris Tarrant, the campaign will feature on-pack and on-can in supermarkets and off licences and will appear in more than 13,000 bars across the UK from May onwards.

Keith Parsons, Heineken UK said: “EC Group have been excellent in their professional approach to planning this large scale activity. We need assurance that all logistics are 100% and EC Group have been able to ‘fine tune’ every detail to give us this and as always provide an enthusiastic service that makes them a pleasure to work with.“

EC Group (www.ecgroup.co.uk) will build and fulfil all promotional kits from its flagship three million cubic foot site in Hayes, Middlesex.

David Knight, Account Director at EC Group, says: “We have worked very closely with Heineken UK and their agency Steam UK to ensure perfect presentation of each promotional kit at the point of delivery. Packaging design has been key in ensuring that the various phases of the promotion are clearly and logically presented to licensees.

“This is all about driving sales and the more we can do to help maximise correct implementation, the better for our client’s bottom line.”

He adds: “EC Group’s recent investment in online systems and sophisticated processing technology will play a vital role in this huge promotion and will allow us to respond very rapidly to demand. Orders for the POS kits can come through to us at any time of the day or night – seven days a week – and it’s our job to make sure that we always have sufficient finished stock in place, to the right specification, to stay ahead of the game.”

EC Group – which celebrates its 200th anniversary this year – is recognised as the UK’s longest-established handling, fulfilment and logistics company. The firm began providing packing, warehousing and distribution services in 1810 under the name E. Christian & Company.

Today, EC Group combines its 200 years of experience with the latest 21st century technology and processes to provide bespoke outsourced services designed to meet each client’s specific requirements.

Its cost-saving marketing support services range from handling simple one-off distributions, mailing campaigns and point-of-sale merchandising … through to total project management of design, print, storage, fulfilment, digital asset management, and distribution contracts.

CAFOD appoints outsourced business support specialist EC Group to handle processing and fulfilment of donor requests

CAFOD – the official overseas development and relief agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales – has appointed EC Group to manage the storage, processing, fulfilment and distribution of its fundraising literature and promotional materials.

EC Group (www.ecgroup.co.uk) is one of the UK’s largest and most experienced providers of specialist outsourced support services for charitable organisations. Its longstanding clients include Christian Aid.

One of the first projects being handled by EC Group is the mailing of special lapel pins to individuals who make donations to CAFOD’s Haiti Appeal.

EC Group has over three million cubic feet of secure storage space at its warehouse complexes in Hayes, Middlesex and Grays, Essex. It also has state-of-the-art multi-channel donor contact centres in Hayes and Grays.

Other support services include secure information and database management, mailings, online solutions, and print-on-demand digital printing of brochures and fundraising literature.

Steve Tassie, CAFOD’s Head of Supporter Services, says: “EC Group’s wide experience in servicing organisations with similar requirements was a major driver in arriving at the decision to appoint them. Their offer was a compelling one, comprising a cost-efficient pricing model which was crucially important to us.”

He adds: “EC Group also demonstrated a clear commitment to help us meet the challenges we face in the delivery of a highly flexible, responsive and fully scalable resource distribution service to our supporters throughout England and Wales.”

Kim Singleton, senior account manager at EC Group, says: “CAFOD has some exacting process requirements because of the rapidly evolving and highly unpredictable global landscape for overseas relief.

“Our role is to help their London-based supporter relations team to meet these challenges and manage their workload and future operational requirements more easily.”

EC Group – which celebrates its 200th anniversary this year – is recognised as the UK’s longest-established handling, fulfilment and distribution company. The firm began providing packing, warehousing and distribution services in 1810 under the name E. Christian & Company.

Today, EC Group combines its 200 years of experience with the latest 21st century technology and processes to provide bespoke outsourced services designed to meet each charitable organisation’s specific requirements.

Tailor-made services typically include multi-channel donor contact centres, response handling, fulfilment, database management, mailings, storage, distribution, logistics, marketing communications, and design.

EC Group puts a heavy emphasis on robust systems and procedures and is fully accredited to key international standards such as ISO 9001 (Quality Management) and ISO 14001 (Environmental Management).

Secure fulfilment

Secure fulfilment – an information security perspective

Murphy’s Law states that whatever can go wrong will go wrong. Nowhere is this truer than in the world of fulfilment and logistics, where the volume and complexity of everyday life gives abundant opportunity for errors and inaccuracies – all with a high level of exposure. The key is to choose partners well-acquainted with Murphy’s Law, with the ability to put secure plans into place to avoid them – or stop them before they are even anticipated.

Suppose, for example, that the fulfilment house receives an urgent request to deliver certain goods, but cannot find them in the warehouse. Perhaps this is because of a malfunction in the location system or the result of simple data input error. The system says the goods are in pallet location XYZ, but location XYZ is empty. Maybe it is because the goods have just been mislocated, or maybe, due to unprecedented demand, stock has just run out but the system has not yet been updated…

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Collateral management

Creating one, seamless collateral delivery system

In the everyday reality of corporate business, the habit of producing marketing collateral is frequently undertaken as a response to a need without necessarily addressing the business case for producing it:

  • Most organisations produce marketing collateral out of habit
  • Most organisations produce twice as much as they need
  • Most organisations don’t know what they actually need

Companies produce marketing collateral because the internal system says so – producing large arbitrary quantities of material without understanding why that collateral is being produced, to what end and without the means to measure its effectiveness or considering the long-term cost implications…

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Collateral management U.S.

Answering the challenge of collateral management and marketing outside the United States

Successful marketing campaigns outside the US demand something very challenging of marketing management: a way with words in languages you do not speak.

If you are selling in a country, you must market to the customer in their language, in the way that will help your sales force win as much business as possible. And it must be done in such a way that the minutiae of language, format and messaging is managed meticulously, whilst the bigger picture your management requires of you – most notably return on marketing spend – is monitored to ensure you are sending the right deliverable to the right customer. Having numerous owners and agencies will not give a cohesive view, and in fact, makes the marketing organization responsible as the one discernible point of control – something most managers find very difficult to manage…

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Risk-taking in branding and design

World-class advertising, branding and design all demand talented clients who understand the value of risk-taking

Much of today’s advertising, branding and design seems reminiscent of Macbeth’s comments about life: “… a tale/Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.”

That sense of ‘signifying nothing’ seems particularly apt. Take the current branding exercise at ITV, for example, where the broadcaster is currently undergoing its fourth re-branding exercise in only ten years.

That effort, detailed by Raymond Snoddy in Marketing (11 January 2006), is called ‘Brand 2010′. Naturally, it is backed by extensive research and in-depth analysis, which has included communicating with 6,000 viewers and conducting innumerable workshops with ITV staff. It has also been supported by the considerable talents and resources of M&C Saatchi and Sir Martin Sorrell’s MindShare…

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Event: In just 60 minutes US AND THE U.S.

In conjunction with Reeves + Neylan, TAL and TheFrameworks, EC Group is pleased to announce the second 60 minutes event: US AND THE U.S.

Following the success of the first 60 minutes event with guest speaker Jonathan Porritt, you can now join us to hear Justin Webb draw parallels between the US and UK elections. The event will be chaired by Richard Lyddon.

Date of event

Tuesday 27 April 2010, 4.00 pm to 6.00 pm

Where

One Moorgate Place (also known as Chartered Accountants’ Hall, headquarters to the ICAEW) One Moorgate Place, London EC2R 6EA

Contact

Please email if you are interested in attending.


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