The Sports Technology Awards Sets a New Industry Standard with AR

Global Event Uses Augmented Reality to Reveal its Shortlist

The Sports Technology Awards has become the first awards globally to present its shortlist through augmented reality (AR), as the 2017 finalists were given a preview ahead of the public announcement.

 

Reflecting the innovation it celebrates, brands entering the Sports Technology Awards were advised to download its AR app and scan their office for a digital icon. By doing this, they could see the shortlist hours before the announcement was made public.

 

Now in its fourth cycle, the Sports Technology Awards has continuously pushed innovation from both entrants and within its own ceremony. The 2016 lunch saw drones deliver the MC’s script and robots direct people to their tables.  Awards Director, Mark Hunter, explained:

 

“The Sports Technology Awards is a unique celebration of innovation in sports globally, as such, our audience is highly sophisticated so each year we face a challenge of how to impress and engage them in ways they’ve yet to see. We had seen some creative yet practical uses of AR so decided that this should be one of the technologies we embrace this year and the response has been phenomenal.”

 

The Sports Technology Awards’ AR solution was by Skignz, a UK company that aims to “make AR useful”. Skignz is also delivering part of awards ceremony so there are plenty more surprises in store.

 

Si Brown, Skignz founder, said: “It’s exciting  to work prestigious brands like The Sports Technology Awards, especially when we are given the opportunity to demonstrate how practical, yet playful, augmented reality can be AR can be dismissed as signs in the sky but they can be fascinating portals to more information and provide a highly effective and engaging way to inform audiences.”

Shortlist Announced for 2017 Sports Technology Awards

Over 70 sports were represented and submissions were received from 30 countries. The standards were as high as ever but even more international and varied.

 

The innovations these entries represent were nothing short of very impressive, proving that this area of sports is one of the most exciting and we are delighted to be part of it.

 

The awards ceremony will be held at The Roundhouse, Camden on May 4th 2017.

 

For more information contact info@sportstechgroup.org or 02031502080

 

Meanwhile, follow us on Twitter: @SportTechGroup

 

Click to learn more about the Yahoo Sports Technology Awards and Sports Technology Awards Startups.

2017 Judging Panel Revealed

The list of judges for the 2017 Sports Technology Awards has now been completed.

 

With experts from a variety of sectors within sports and technology, the team is as strong as ever.

 

The judging process of the STAs is something that it prides itself on. Making sure that it is as fair as possible is of great importance, therefore the judges are carefully selected each year.

 

29 different experts have been carefully selected. Their backgrounds are both extensive and impressive, ranging from England manager, Gareth Southgate, to performance engineer, David Markey, at Land Rover BAR.

 

The awards ceremony, which will be held at the Roundhouse in London on the 4th of May, will be unmissable this year as the calibre of both nominees and judges is exceptional.

 

If you have any questions about this year’s awards, email

info@sportstechgroup.org

 

Meanwhile, follow us on Twitter: @SportTechGroup

 

Click to learn more about the Yahoo Sports Technology Awards and Sports Technology Awards Startups.

Nǐ Hǎo Sun Jihai

We are thrilled to announce that former Manchester City defender and HaiQiu co-founder, Sun Jihai, has joined the Sports Technology Awards’ team of judges.

 

The footballer-turned-businessman joins a prestigious list of individuals already on the roster.

 

After officially retiring in December 2016, Jihai has been involved with sports technology company HaiQiu, which launched last year.

 

Jihai was inducted into English Football’s Hall of Fame in 2015 and his target for the future is to become a bridge between UK- based and Chinese sports and technology companies.

 

With experience in and passion for sport and technology, he makes the perfect judge for this year’s Sports Technology Awards.

The Sports Technology Awards Launches New Website

The new Sports Technology Awards website is now up and running.

 

Just as sport is evolving with ever-changing technological advances and innovative use of technology.

 

Making sure that the branding of the STAs is up to date is vital. Having positioned the brand as an industry pioneer, we want all things associated with the awards to match those high standards.

 

The new website makes the user experience more enjoyable, offering visitors a more responsive and effective way of navigating through everything related to the Sports Technology Awards.

 

Follow us on Twitter: @SportTechGroup

Emma Boggis Joins the STAs as a Judge

The Sports Technology Awards is delighted to announce that Emma Boggis will be joining the prestigious list of judges.

 

Boggis is the CEO Sport and Recreation Alliance as well as a non-executive Director of the British Paralympic Association.

 

Prior to that, she worked as a Private Secretary to the Prime Minister, Deputy Head of Mission in the British Embassy in Madrid, Deputy Director in the Cabinet Office with responsibility for social policy and legislation and as an officer in the British Army.

 

Her diverse range of experience will add a fresh perspective to this year’s panel.

How to Get an Awards Submission Right

One of the Sports Technology Awards judges, Richard Ayers, lists seven tips to ensure you bag a winning entry…

 

Entries for the BT Sports Industry Awards just closed. The Sports Technology Awards’ closing date is the end of the month and I’m currently working my way through as many films as I can because I’m a lucky Bafta film judge. It seems that many people want a gong for Christmas, so I have some tips for those entering.

 

Firstly, how do I know what’s involved in award winning? To be clear, Seven League doesn’t win awards for our work, our clients do. Take the wonderful work our team did creating, recruiting, managing and maximising the value of the Rose Army during the Rugby World Cup… all our own graft for O2, but it will form part of award entries with our chums at M&C Saatchi, VCCP and O2 themselves. And quite right too.

 

Personally, I have a batch from former lives (being on bafta-winning teams and a range from my pure internet days) and then from my sport life it’s the BTSIA Best Website for Manchester City FC (for which, read digital generally. it was 2012) and the ridiculous but flattering Digital Individual of the Year DADI award, also in 2012 (did you know it was Sir Martin Sorrell the year after? Because it’s a natural jump from me to him. Right.).

 

However, on the judging side of things, the 7L team have done a lot more recently: The European Sponsorship Awards, the Sports Tech Awards, the Football Business Awards, the Business of Cricket Awards…

 

It’s always fascinating, and I appreciate the time and effort it takes to put together an awards entry – but because I know what an effort it can be, I thought I’d put together some simple tips.

A friend used to say that when he was filtering CVs, he’d take half of them and put them in the bin right at the beginning of the process. The logic was that it helped him cut down the workload and anyway, you wouldn’t want to hire someone who was unlucky.

 

For tips that are slightly more practical than ‘be lucky’, read on…

 

  1. It’s not a marketing blurb. Don’t use marketing speak. If possible, don’t get a marketing person to write it unless they can write in non-marketing speak. I’m a judge – that means you’d think I’ve got some experience in your sector. You won’t pull the wool over my eyes by saying something ‘exploded’ or ‘went viral’. You’re just going to irritate me. As a recovering journalist I know I have a sensitive spot when it comes to writing style – but hyperbolic idiocy will get your entry thrown in the bin. You think I’m joking? Three gems from recent judging: “This was a truly synergistic partnership” – shut up. and no, it wasn’t Josh or Carsten at Synergy being clever; “We nailed the target” – really? do I look like I’m in the pub… what is that supposed to mean? might as well have said ‘smashed it. dropped the mic’; “The project exploded in social media” – it did WHAT?! WHAT IS THAT SUPPOSED TO MEAN?!?

 

1.a. Going back to the judge thing… the organisers usually ask people who are good at what they do. Now, sometimes we get asked to judge categories that are not our home turf so a little bit of explanation is good, but beware of patronising or over-simplifying, because it might look like you’re trying to pull the wool.

 

  1. I don’t have all the time in the world to read your carefully crafted essay. If you’ve got something good to say, make it concise and punchy and clear in the first paragraph. First sentence if possible. Bullet points are good. Here’s a crazy idea, why don’t you put some real facts in there too. Real ones.

 

It’s easy: Check the limit, count the words

 

Look at it from a judge’s perspective. It’s a fascinating process and sometimes you see work you didn’t know about, which is interesting. But it’s not paid work. The last time I did one, I had 104 entries to review. There were some that were duplicates but there were still about 80 individual entries and even if I spent just 90 seconds reading each one of them, that’s still 2 hours of my time. The reality is you spend a minimum of 5 mins on each one.

 

  1. Categories. They’re there for a reason. You might think that your project was ‘massively social’ (see point 1.) but unless it meets the criteria, it will go in the bin (see point 2.). If the criteria aren’t clear or your project does cross some boundaries, then get in touch with the organisers and check. Or say something about that in your well-honed, tightly-written entry.

 

  1. Be classy. Don’t comment on others. It’s just not done. Picking out competitors or other projects and criticising them is ungentlemanly at least. If you really have a point to make, then an oblique reference to the issues is passable, but be careful.

 

  1. Word Limit. It’s a word limit. You know, like a speed limit – you can go over it if you want, but it will be illegal and if a policeman decides to nick you, then you’re bang to rights. See point 2… one of the ways of filtering is simply to look at the long ones and make a super quick decision about whether it’s going to be worth the read.

 

  1. FACTS. Yes, I know, this one will blow your mind. How about you actually put some facts in the entry. We’re intelligent enough (see 1.a) to know that something can be highly effective and award-worthy even if it didn’t get all the publicity and public awareness. Small and beautiful is good. Yes, the big boys will put in huge totals of social media reach and website traffic… and omit to say that they spent a truck load on digital marketing to buy traffic. Yes, they will forget to point out that their website campaign was supported by the insanely expensive tv spot, or that it was part of a national event with high profile celebrities, so of course it got loads of awareness. We know this. We can factor that in. We can question numbers. Whether it be KPIs or budgets, just be clear as you can. But you have to give us the numbers – numbers that matter – in the first place. No numbers = bin. Wrong number = bin. Numbers purporting to be relevant but trying to pull the wool? Bin. Numbers that have relevance and tell as much of the whole story as you can… not bin.

 

6.a. Digital and Social numbers. This is worth a paragraph, partly because it is an area of real expertise for Seven League. Yes, there are lies, damned lies and digital numbers. You can make them tell almost any story you want and, at the same time, there are all sorts of moving goalposts and changing definitions (and mixed metaphors) from the various platforms who have a black-box approach to analytics. We judges know that sometimes it’s difficult to give the right engagement figure, or to combine different platforms’ approaches. That’s ok – just be clear about it, or point us to a page on your website that tries to explain it – but give detail wherever you can.

 

6.b. There’s one area where us judges do give some leeway on numbers – and that’s project budgets. It’s very very useful to give as much detail as you can, but we do understand that sometimes it’s just too sensitive. There, you see, I can have empathy.

 

and finally, because there had to be Seven tips…

 

  1. Being on a short list is good. Don’t crave the win. I have seen some odd things go on in a judging room. Like Hancock and Syd James’ Twelve Angry Men episode of Hancock’s Half Hour… the group can swing one way and another. This doesn’t happen in the STAs case where it’s all done on scoring and we judges won’t meet, but most awards *do* have a judging day. One strong voice can bias the proceedings, or one procedural point can make a bigger-than-expected impact. 99% of judges have always been very diligent in my experience, but we all get stuck for time and if people have to leave and a quick decision is needed… it might be your entry that comes off worse. To be on the short list is a real credit to you. Still… if you are lucky enough to win, enjoy every minute of it.

 

Richard Ayers, CEO Seven League

Click to learn more about the Yahoo Sports Technology Awards and Sports Technology Awards Startups.

Entries Open – Sports Technology Awards 2017

Entries are now open for the 2017 Sports Technology Awards.

 

In May, the finest in both sport and technology will gather at The Roundhouse in London, for a spectacular awards ceremony.

 

Last year, hundreds of entries were submitted across 20 categories in the hope of gaining one of Sports Technology’s ultimate seals of approval.

 

The closing date for all entries is 24th January 2017.

 

A full list of categories can be found on our website. Any queries can be forwarded to info@sportstechgroup.org

Mark Hunter Joins the Sports Technology Awards

Former Olympic gold medallist Mark Hunter has joined the Sports Technology Awards team as a Director.

 

His new role makes him responsible for overseeing the awards and further developing the brand.

 

Speaking following his appointment, Mark said: ‘Having been a guest at the previous events, I always enjoyed the ceremony and I was impressed with the work the Sports Technology Awards team has done in creating something so powerful so quickly. That said, there is a lot more that we can be doing; I am especially excited by the potential of the Power List and the opportunities that exist for us in a variety of markets.’

 

He added: ‘I thoroughly enjoyed my time at London Youth Rowing and remain committed to helping the charity inspire more young people in the capital to try rowing. It’s been fascinating to see and experience how technology has evolved. It has now become an ever-increasing part of people’s involvement with sport and I look forward to engaging with my network to unearth the technology, the innovations and the people the awards should be celebrating’.

The Roundhouse London Announced as STA’s 2017 Venue

The Sports Technology Awards is proud to announce that this year’s ceremony will be hosted at The Roundhouse London.

 

Typically a hub of inspiration for the creative arts, the Roundhouse is also one of the most architecturally astounding and unique event spaces in London.

 

Converted from an historic engine turntable into a performing arts centre in 1966, the legacy of the location has grown from strength to strength and provides the perfect space for the best in sports technology to gather in May.

 

This year is the fourth cycle of the Sports Technology Awards. With the globally unique ceremony having become an international kite-mark of excellence, it was vital that the premises for this year’s awards reflected the quality of everything and everyone involved.

 

The Roundhouse is located on Chalk Farm Road in London (NW1 8EH), and the event will take place on the 4th May.

 

Follow us on Twitter: @SportTechGroup

 

Click to learn more about the Yahoo Sports Technology Awards and Sports Technology Awards Startups.