What we can do for you
Industry and business award entry writers at Boost Marketing have helped companies like Prudential, Virgin Atlantic, First Choice, KnowledgePool, The
National College for School Leadership and Blue Sky Consulting win
awards. This year we have helped with further entries for EDF Energy,
the Home Office, Blue Sky Consulting, KnowledgePool and
First Choice. Our involvement in an award entry can be any of a combination of:
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Acting as editor.
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Writing your industry award entry from scratch
using available documentation and by interviewing relevant
stakeholders.
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Coaching or mentoring you through the
writing of your submission.
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Troubleshooting or reworking previous business award
entries to suit other awards.
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A full 'managed service' where we
take ownership for your awards submissions.
Awards we can help you
with
We have experience with the following
categories of awards, but much of our methodology can apply to any of a
number business awards:
-
Training awards - such
as National Training Awards, World of Learning Awards (WOLCE
Awards), TJ Awards, People Management Awards (click here
for full list)
-
Customer service awards
- such as National Customer Service Awards, Telegraph Business
Awards (click here
for full list)
-
Sales awards - such as
National Sales Awards (click here
for
full list)
-
Call centre awards -
such as European Call Centre Awards, CCA Awards (click here
for full list)
-
Industry specific awards
- such as TTG awards (travel), Achievement in Utilities Awards
(click here for full list)
Our approach
To win an award you have to convince the
judge that you make the grade. I have seen companies do fantastic
work, certainly deserving of awards, and even entering awards, but
winning nothing Entering awards is like being in an examination,
or writing a proposal: There is probably a marking scheme, and you need to
align the content of your submission to this.
Our approach combines the art and science
of award entry:
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Understand the judging process, and
ensuring that you give judges what they need to see.
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Look objectively and strategically at
what happened and understand what really made it great.
-
Find, or even help calculate
essential evidence and supporting 'assets' such as graphs and return
on investment calculations.
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Find the optimum balance of context,
detail and evidence within the word count allowed.
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Write clear and readable copy, and
ensure that the submission is professionally presented