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It can cost $1.1 million to send an ad agency to the Cannes Lions before anyone even gets on the plane

Cannes
Cannes

Jim Edwards

The ad industry descended on Cannes on the Cote d'Azure in France last week to drink the town dry of rose, take meetings, and complain about the business they're in. (Oh yes, and to give some awards to the most interesting, creative, and innovative advertising work of the last year.)

Anyone who is anyone in the marketing and media world comes to Cannes in June, and it is not unusual to meet VIP execs who have been to Cannes more than 10 or 20 times. Politicians have Davos. Tech people have CES. Media and marketing people go to Cannes. 

But the cost of getting to Cannes is staggering. Conference badge fees start at €1,500 ($1,667) and entry fees for competition work start at €499 ($555). Those are the basic fees. VIP passes and major entry fees can go as high as €5,000 for a badge and €1,500 for an entry.

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A large global agency might send 100 or 200 people to Cannes, and enter 1,500 pieces of work, according to two executives at different agencies.

So here's some math on the total cost for a large global agency network:

  • 200 staff who need passes at 1500 each = €300,000

  • 1,500 work entries at €500 per entry = €750,000

  • Total = 1.15 million ($1.28 million)

That's before anyone gets on the plane. Almost all of those 200 staffers will then need plane tickets, and hotel or Airbnb rooms, plus meal expenses.

A source told Business Insider there is even a €10,000 special VIP ticket that gets you access to all the top hotel rooms (the best hotels and their rooms are essential controlled by the Cannes Lions conference).

The Daily Mail spent at least £1 million on two yachts and a stage — and that doesn't include any attendee badge costs. Luma Partners, the private bank that advises on media and advertising tech company mergers, made this map of luxury party yachts from agencies and vendors who want attention:

Luma cannes yacht image1.JPG
Luma cannes yacht image1.JPG

Jim Edwards

"It's not cheap," one global creative director told us.

Bear in mind that the primary activity of most people during the week is partying. Events shut down around 3 p.m. or 4 p.m., and "sundowners" begin thereafter. They are followed by all-nighters. Getting to bed at about 4 a.m. in Cannes is considered normal.

So why do agencies put up with this cost?

"It is the gold standard for clients. It's really the only award they know and care about," the creative director said. And while winning a Lion won't automatically win you clients, it does create the kind of buzz that eventually leads to clients. WPP and Omnicom executives spent the week wining and dining AT&T executives at the Hotel du Cap’s Eden Roc Grill. AT&T is considering consolidating its entire $3 billion ad account at just one network.  

"It's worth it for things that are difficult to measure, intangible things," the president of one global agency told Business Insider. "We have back-to-back meetings all week but not one of them can I not have elsewhere, New York or London or Shanghai."

Essentially, the agencies are paying for efficiency: "The convenience is that everyone is in town at one time."

yacht
yacht

Jim Edwards

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