Campaign India Team
Jan 27, 2012

Entries open for Cannes Lions 2012

There will be 15 categories this year

Entries open for Cannes Lions 2012

The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is now accepting entries across all 15 categories for its 2012 awards - Film, Press, Outdoor, Direct, Media, Cyber, Radio, Promo & Activation, Titanium & Integrated, Design, PR, Film Craft, Creative Effectiveness, Mobile and Branded Content & Entertainment - all of which will be judged and awarded by the dedicated juries in Cannes, France, in June. Entry forms can be completed online at www.canneslions.com from today.

The entry deadlines for the categories are as follows:

17 February 2012: Creative Effectiveness Lions

9 March 2012: Film, Film Craft, Outdoor, Press, Design, Direct, Media, Radio, PR, Promo & Activation, Cyber, Titanium, Integrated, Mobile and Branded Content & Entertainment Lions

New to Cannes Lions 2012 are the categories Mobile Lions and Branded Content & Entertainment Lions.

To assist this year’s entrants, a selection of 'Tips on How to Enter videos' from last year’s Grands Prix winners are available to view on www.canneslions.com.
 

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

17 hours ago

Matchmaker, matchmaker, find me a mattress

Popular matchmaker Sima Taparia features in The Sleep Company's new wedding campaign, this time matchmaking mattresses.

17 hours ago

Reliance-Disney merger creates a $8.5 billion media ...

The new entity is structured around three key divisions—entertainment, digital streaming, and sports.

19 hours ago

Political tension meets platform drama

As big tech's entanglement with politics draws fresh scrutiny post-US election, Western platforms face a deepening trust crisis—from X's advertiser exodus to Meta's legal battles—while Asian tech firms vie to emerge as credible alternatives.

19 hours ago

Dentsu Q3 2024 earnings: Japan's growth contrasts ...

Despite a robust 2.8% Q3 increase in Japan, Dentsu has downgraded its full-year outlook to flat (0%) due to a sharp fall in the APAC region.