ecch identifies winning cases through an objective process - cases are judged anonymously.
All cases registered with ecch during the last five years are put forward for consideration. The winning case in each category is the one that has achieved the highest growth in popularity among peers worldwide, based on the number of individual organisations ordering and teaching the case during the last calendar year. A case that has won a category award in a previous year cannot win again, but is eligible, once, for the overall award (eg the 2010 overall award winning case won the marketing category in 2009).
All submissions must have been tested in the classroom, completed in the specified time frame and be in English. They may be compiled from field research, published sources or generalised experience. Authors may submit a single case or a case series. The case, or case series, must be a maximum of 5,000 words, excluding exhibits and annexes. Each submission must be accompanied by a teaching note for which there is no word limit.
An unprecedented 13 schools from 7 countries in 4 regions have produced winners in the #ecchcaseawards2012 bit.ly/x5VM9I
— ecch (@your_ecch) February 20, 2012

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Kate Cook
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