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Volvo Ocean Race - The unique communications bubble

by Mark Turner on 6 May 2015
The communications tower on the stern of Dongfeng Race Team Richard Gladwell www.photosport.co.nz
Mark Turner has a sports and events marketing career spanning 18 years, and is Executive Chairman of OC Sports who are managing the 2014-15 program for Dongfeng Race Team.

He writes a very informative blog commenting on Volvo Ocean race and sports and event management issues.

Here he looks at the communications aspect of the race - both into and from the race boats and crew:

Before Dongfeng Race Team, since competing in i in 1989, I’ve only watched the Volvo Ocean Race just like any other fan from afar. One aspect of this race that I had some difficulty getting my head around at the beginning, has become a defining element for me, and for the communications strategy of Dongfeng Race Team. And that is the total comms lockdown onboard the boats.

I”m not sure if everyone understands this, and the impact it has. Basically, while the boats receive lots of weather data from VOR HQ, they have no access to the Internet per say – only this data – plus personal email that goes through a VOR server and a bunch of checks by both team and event to ensure there is no illegal assistance passing to the sailors.

Unlike any other professional race in the sport today, the teams have absolutely no idea what is going on in the outside world unless VOR race management decide to share something with them. And that is pretty rare, only really happening if there is a significant safety issue. Other than when the boats are inside AIS range, when they are getting real time performance feeds from the other boats around them, they know a whole lot less than we do on land.

Firstly on positions where on land we get 3 hourly feed with all the data points filled in, and onboard they just get one position every 6 and without the data fill so they don’t have the detail tracks in between (apart from when in AIS range) – and secondly on general information about what has happened to the other boats. Overall, this has one big positive – there is NO reason to keep what happens to yourself onboard – because whatever you share, will still NOT go to the other boats during the leg. So when you break something, traditionally most campaigns would keep it to themselves – for two reasons – a) in case it gives some kind of advantage to the other teams to know why you are slower or sailing lower etc, and b) so that they don’t learn about your mechanical failure and check their own equivalent technical solution. The combination of strict One Design rules, and an open and transparent Boatyard Shared Services setup, means that (b) is now irrelevant, and (a) is dealt with because the other teams will only find out once the leg is over.


It means also that many wrong conclusions are in fact made by the teams on the water – they might mistake less wind for a different wind angle on a competitor between two positions. They might assume they are sailing better than another boat that in fact has broken a sail. They might wrongly interpret the wind data for another routing. And they will never know during the leg how a team got in front of them sometimes. Replaying the tracks back afterwards can be quite a surprise for the navigators sometimes!

Not every Skipper or team has embraced this liberating fact that you can say what you like and the other teams won’t hear about it – but on Dongfeng, with Charles full support, we’ve been able to do something that probably no other VOR team ever did before. And that is share everything, and in almost every case, immediately. Of course things like a dismasting need a few more steps before going public, like sharing the news with and reassuring family and sponsors. But apart from that, we’ve been able to just share it live and direct – and with social media, that means sometimes within minutes. I pushed before the start for the boat twitter feed to be able to go direct from the boat too, rather than via a VOR HQ ‘approval’ process – and got agreement on this, which has been excellent as we get a feed of news from the boat in between official report times, or outside of the processing timeline of the VOR Comms Machine.

We are also lucky to not have a sponsor that is all over us on this detail either – instead our Chinese partners have been confident that we will manage the communications side well and respecting the sponsor’s image etc.. This is not always the case, sponsors often want to micro-manage or control every message. Its understandable from a corporate viewpoint, however rarely successful as a strategy in the long term. At the end of the day we are in a mechanical sport, in a tough environment, and things will go wrong. Better to take the audience down with us when things are not perfect, and allow them to share the emotion of the team when things go better again. Not just pretend that everything is fine all the time – since its never the case!

Back to sharing the news directly from the boat – we had a few moments when there were breakages, and I had the OBR on the phone asking if we should publish or not. In one instance, Charles had actually said to the OBR please don’t film this. Then, after a quick chat and reflection, he reversed that after remembering that actually no other team would know that we’d broken that particularly sail or fitting anyway, so why keep it a secret.


One downside (easily outweighed by the upsides) is that we have perhaps given the impression that we are breaking more stuff than the other teams, and in some people’s eyes therefore been a bit more reckless than the others. I think the truth couldn’t be more different, we have just shared every time we have broken stuff. Remember Cape Town restart? Which boat chose to do a long tack around rather than a crash gybe? Do you know which team is the only one to have not snapped the outrigger tube at all in the race yet? Which team had boat number one, complete with some elements that hadn’t been finished off properly like the padeye that broke on leg 1 – and then again on leg 2 because it wasn’t given the backing plate we suggested it should. At the end of the day, we’ve just been the ones telling the whole story. Yes, Dongfeng broke the mast/rigging – but there isn’t a shred of evidence that it was because of pushing the boat harder. What certainly was the case is that we had problems with the mast track since the beginning. In the One Design format you have to just step up and take these issues on the chin – but its not fair at all to leap to a convenient conclusion that somehow the boat had been pushed harder. You only have to look at the pictures of Brunel and the rest of the teams pushing hard around Cape Horn to be assured that everyone pushes hard, and Dongfeng no more than others.

One other interesting fact shared by VOR HQ before the comparison became impossible, is that in the first half of this race, Dongfeng sailed 300 miles less than the next boat…so maybe sailing more efficiently in the right direction helps not have to push a boat so hard!

For the full column click here

For more columns from Mark Turner Click here and for more about OC Sport click here

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