Tag Archive: GMR News


Each month, GMR Charlotte goes Casual for a Cause (CFAC) for one week. They choose a benefitting organization and each employee donates $5 per day that they come to the office in casual attire.

January’s initiative supports Ward Gibson, Account Executive at GMR Charlotte, in his mission to raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation as he puts himself up for auction.

Ward is one of 30 bachelors & bachelorettes each with a unique date package (that they created themselves) for the Guys & Dolls Bachelor/Bachelorette Auction in Charlotte, NC February 25, 2012. Each contestant is assigned to a team connected to a child suffering from Cystic Fibrosis. Ward’s team supports 3-year old Oliver Bleune (aka ‘Superman’!).

To help Ward achieve his goal of raising at least $2500 in donations for the charity, GMR Charlotte staff is volunteering at the night of the auction as well as securing donated items to incorporate in his date package and the event’s silent auction. GMR staff is also donating money to purchase tickets to the event.

Ward’s date package is based on the Parks & Rec bit that two of the characters do: “Treat Yo Self,” which includes a trip to Myrtle Beach and a day of pampering with a manicure and pedicure, salon services and a shopping spree.

Even if you can’t be there, you can still donate to this great cause. Visit Ward’s donation page to make a contribution.

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Published on Billboard.biz on January 06, 2012 by Andrew Hampp

As pop, dance and hip-hop dominates the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 and modern rock radio stations switch formats, what does a rock band need to do to get heard these days? It starts with a good commercial synch.

Foster the People, 2011′s breakout rock act, knows the importance of having songs placed in ads firsthand-lead singer Mark Foster got his start writing jingles for Los Angeles’ Mophonics before lending his gift for melody to mega-hit “Pumped Up Kicks.” That song’s slow burn at pop and modern rock radio eventually paved the way for other high-profile synchs, like the band’s “Color on the Walls (Don’t Stop)” appearing in Nissan’s Versa campaign. The result? Strong sales for Foster the People’s debut album, Torches, which ranked at No. 55 on the Top Billboard 200 Albums year-end list.

But after Foster the People and other rock bands’ synch-happy strategy, the commercial-licensing opportunities have been spotty at best for most rock acts. That’s why many rock acts raised their hands when the NFL teamed up with sports-music firm Banshee Music and GMR Marketing to pair original rock tracks with individual leagues for localized anthems and touchdown songs.

Universal Republic hard-rock act Hinder, for example, jumped at the opportunity to record the song “The Fight’s About to Begin” for free in exchange for exposure during NFL events and telecasts throughout the 2011-12 season. After two top 10 albums and a top five single (“Lips of an Angel”) on the Billboard charts, the band has struggled in recent years to get its music out to the same mass audiences.

“We’re getting less label support than we’ve ever gotten, so we’re pretty much out there on our own right now,” Hinder drummer Cody Hanson says, noting the band’s existing relationship with Banshee Music. “It’s tough to do, so we have to use the relationships we’ve made over the years and have to take advantage of the Internet as much as we can. We hope we can reach people any way we can but it’s getting tough.”

Other acts like Chickenfoot and “American Idol” alum James Durbin also came onboard last summer, despite the NFL’s season remaining in limbo until late July. Banshee VP of sports marketing John Canaday says the agency might have been able to lure even more rock acts to record or compose original songs for the current season had the timing been more concrete.

“On the one hand, it was frustrating we couldn’t start,” Canaday says. “On the other, it’s pretty impressive we had songs, deals and music created in about a two-month period that would require league approvals, artist approvals, label approvals and a number of steps that would typically take much longer.”

For the NFL, the Banshee deal gives each league an ownable song that fans can instantly identify when they show up at games or watch their telecasts. But NFL VP of entertainment marketing and promotion Tracy Perlman insists the artists are the biggest benefactors.

“Sometimes they get to reach a fan base they don’t necessarily have,” Perlman says. “Whether you’re dealing with country artists in a specific marketplace or rock bands in a specific marketplace, you’ve got a captive audience of over 60,000 people every week in a stadium. There’s also the ancillary benefit of being picked up on TV, being licensed, and the opportunity to get that reach also shows them as football fans.”

 

GMR Marketing was honored to partner with IEWC Global Solutions and Elite Fitness for a Thanksgiving Food Drive November 15 to help those in need this holiday season.

Nick Collins, Ryan Grant, Desmond Bishop, Tramon Williams, Frank Zombo and other Green Bay players signed autographs for hundreds of fans who each gave a full bag of non-perishable food or a $50 cash donation.

In all, 19,000 pounds of food and more than $7,100 was collected. All proceeds and food donations benefitted the New Berlin Food Pantry.

Connect with GMR Marketing:

Facebook.com/gmrmarketing

www.Twitter.com/gmrmarketing

Each month, GMR Charlotte goes Casual for a Cause (CFAC) for one week. They choose a benefitting organization and each employee donates $5 per day that they come to the office in casual attire.

This November, GMR Charlotte gave back to our troops. The packages were sent to some of GMR’s friends & family who are serving overseas in Afghanistan and Germany.

Many GMR Clients generously donated items to include in the care packages. Monies from CFAC directly funded the shipping of each package and additional goods for the boxes like magazines, gloves and vitamins.

They raised $480 which allowed them to send 26 packed boxes overseas to our soldiers. Thank you to our employees for donating to such a great cause! Happy Holidays from GMR Charlotte.

Published in Sports Business Journal by Theresa Manahan on September 22, 2011

Celso Schvartzer will lead GMR Marketing's expansion into Latin America

With the emerging sports opportunities in Brazil, GMR Marketing has opened a new office in Sao Paulo, and has named longtime marketer CELSO SCHVARTZER to lead its expansion into Latin America. The Sao Paulo office is wholly owned and operated by GMR Marketing and joins other recently opened offices in Singapore, Australia and New Zealand. GMR now operates 22 offices worldwide on five continents. GMR Marketing Exec VP GREG BUSCH said the opening of the office in Sao Paulo was a strategic move by the company on two fronts. “It’s one, the combination of it just becoming an incredibly emerging market with a lot of upside and a lot of our clients have business operations in Brazil. But that married up with the fact that … two of the major global stages will be there in the next few years.” Busch said the appointment of Schvartzer follows the company’s strategy to be more directly active in the ’14 World Cup and ’16 Rio de Janeiro Games. “We felt it was important in opening that office that it was not a joint venture or an acquisition. We built it organically and to do that it was important that we had the right person on the ground. That person has got the mix of one, global big-brand experience with local on-the-ground credibility.” Schvartzer previously led brand activation efforts on behalf of Coca-Cola Brazil for the Olympics and FIFA World Cup from ‘97-’03, and helped craft the Brazilian Olympic Committee’s sponsorship plan for the ‘07 Pan American Games. Most recently, he was CEO of LiveWright, a non-profit that aims to turn Brazil into an Olympic powerhouse by helping to fund sports programs. The GMR office will have five employees including Schvartzer, along with sister company Omnicom. Busch said GMR plans to open a Rio office in the next 12-18 months that initially will serve as a base for operations during the World Cup and the Olympics.