Staff Reporters
Sep 7, 2012

Cannes Lions and Gates Foundation expand 'Aid is working' challenge

GLOBAL - Based on the strong response to their first contest, The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have launched a new phase of their communications challenge under the rubric 'Aid is working: Tell the world'.

Cannes Lions and Gates Foundation expand 'Aid is working' challenge

The initial contest, launched earlier this year, invited communications ideas aimed at breaking through hesitancy about aid to the developing world by showing that it works.

The organisations received more than 900 applications from 85 countries and are now selecting the 10 finalists, who will be announced in November. Each will receive US$100,000 in seed funding to develop their idea, as well as an invitation to join the all-star members of the Cannes Chimera at the Gates Foundation in Seattle for a mentorship experience. After that, one winner will receive up to US$1 million to put their idea into action. 

"The response to this first communications challenge has been overwhelming in terms of the creativity and the vision of the entries it's prompted," said Philip Thomas, Cannes Lions CEO. 

Based on the strong response, the organisations decided to launch a new challenge with more focused guidelines. Specifically, entrants are asked to submit:

  • Ideas that can be implemented via mobile telecommunications
  • Ideas involving new ways to communicate data on aid
  • Ideas that engage young audiences
  • Ideas that demonstrate the progress of aid 

As before, entrants are limited to two sides of A4 paper. The deadline is 7 November. The organisations have gathered a new Chimera of international ad-agency leaders, who will advise on the programme, review submissions, and mentor the winners. The new panel includes Graham Fink, chief creative officer of Ogilvy Shanghai.

In the first phase, the highest number of entries came from the US, China, UK, India, Canada, South Africa, Romania, Australia, Brazil, Kenya and Nigeria. The creative communications community contributed more than 30 per cent of the entries, with other entries coming from international development organisations and academic institutions.

"The participation from the creative communications industry has exceeded our expectations — testament to the spirit of our community to put to good use the power of creativity to solve a global problem," Thomas said.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

'Looking for the first domino': Titanium jury ...

In a wide-ranging interview, John explains how APAC work, like New Zealand’s stigma-smashing Grand Prix for Good and Ogilvy Singapore’s work for Vaseline, are setting the stage for global creative change.

1 day ago

John Wren on his vision for a bigger, better Omnicom

The chief executive tells Campaign why the IPG acquisition makes sense, what the impact will be and what will determine success.

2 days ago

Big ideas, not big algorithms, will win Cannes

At Cannes 2025, Adobe’s Shantanu Narayen and Publicis’ Arthur Sadoun unpacked why AI may power creativity—but humans still pilot it.

2 days ago

Campaign Cannes Global Podcast Episode 2

Our editors from the UK, US, Canada and APAC report from Campaign House at Cannes Lions 2025.