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Warner
Bros President for Consumer Products,
Dan Romanelli recieving the Mipcom Lifetime Achievement Award
from Reed Midem CEO Paul Zilk
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courtesy: Mipcom 2005 |
A veteran
of well over 4 decades in entertainment and licensing, Warner Bros
President for Consumer Products, Dan Romanelli recently received
the Mipcom Lifetime achievement award. He was presented the award
by Reed Midem CEO Paul Zilk.
The presentation ceremony was coupled with this year's Licensing
Keynotes, one of which was delivered by Romanelli himself and the
other by Lucas Licensing President Howard Roffman.
In his 40 years at Warner Bros, Romanelli has heralded the consumer
products of all of the Warner Bros characters and franchises including
Bugs Bunny, Harry Potter, Batman and many more.
In the past two decades alone, Warner Brothers Consumer products
have done over 50 billion dollars worth of business.
Sharing
from his vast experience while giving his keynote, Romanelli said,"Getting
the mythical element in entertainment spurs a great licensing and
merchandising programme. People need a reason to buy and when character
association is right, that creates the reason. "
"Licensing is all about entertainment, If the entertainment's
not working, the licensing too will not work," he added.
The Licensing stalwart reminiscised about the time when Batman
was launched and sold 30 Million T shirts. "There was a time
when Batman TShirts were being sold in almost every city of the
world. I remember that we were giving licenses to everyone who had
black cloth" he said refering to the Black and gold Batman
logo.
Commenting
on the future, Romanelli added"Today competition is very intense
and the life span of a succesfull property is 2-3 years. The measuring
stick for success had become much shorter. As the control increasingly
moves into the hands of consumers just like in content new media
like internet and mobile are increasingly becoming important and
will grow in their clout in the future."
Star
Wars is the biggest entertainment property in the history of
Licensing and Merchandising with an aggregate of over 11 Billion
Dollars that its consumer products have generated. Lucas licensing
President Howard Roffman began by emphasizing on the importance
of having conviction in your product. Star Wars almost did
not happen, he said continuing that, Universal passed
on this project and to begin with even Larry from 20th Century Fox
was not impressed but because Lucas was fresh from the success of
American Grafifti, Larry decided to roll the dice for him.
And what a roll it was
.
Since
it first hit screens 28 years ago, the space opera has enamoured
millions of fans worldwide constantly breaking revenue records for
a majority of categories it launched products in.
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Lucas
Licensing President
Howard Roffman
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Pic
courtesy: Mipcom 2005
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Star
Wars toys were number one (Boys) toys for six years in a row
following the release of the first film said Roffman, however,
by 1985 the kids that had been overwhelmed by Star Wars had grown
up and the numbers were fast dipping
I
had to take this bad news to Lucas Roffman reminiscised. Its
not dead it is simply hibernating. They are going to grow up someday
and then their kids will come back was Lucas reply.
And Indeed in 1991 when Lucas Licensing published the first Star
Wars spinoff with Bantam, the published property rose to Number
1 within months. This was followed by a series of record breaking
figures in publishing, home entertainment, Gaming and Box Office.
Roffman
shared with the audience the complete marketing plan for The
Revenge of the Sith giving a month by month break up of planned
consumer product, games and home video launches all which constantly
led in to the release of the last Lucas Star Wars film. It
is very important to get all partners on board and share all the
plans so that everyone is singing from the same song sheet
remarked Roffman.
The final of the Star Wars movies released on May 19 and
has since garnered 850 million dollars at the box office. Star
Wars toys were on the bestseller list for the first 3 months
since release and contributed 9 % of sales of the total toy category
in the US with retail backing the products well into 2006.
The fans made it possible, not the marketing. It was discovered
and adapted by the audience, and that is something which cant
be manufactured. We are just the trustees of the brand and it has
been humbling to have served the brand, concluded Roffman.
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