BEIJING - The advertising campaign is getting red hot, as Beijing enters the final four days of sprint toward the Olympic Games opening.6 d; Z- T, x+ n4 H: r
Refusing to be overshadowed by international big names of Adidas and Coca Cola, Chinese sponsors of the Games are seeking to draw public attention from buses, subway trains, neon lights and right there in the Olympic venues.- z! w* W; z3 G. \, U
The Lenovo Internet lounge in the Main Press Center of the Beijing Olympic Games opens 15 hours a day and its 24 big-screen, state-of-the-art computers are almost always occupied.7 H, g9 E1 m" L: {# X: p7 U- ^
"Several hundred people drop in daily, and most of them are foreign reporters," said He Weifeng, a manager of the Lenovo service center.
' d" {' T O) e3 z& B# ^+ Q4 f Lenovo, the only Chinese company among the International Olympic Committee's 12 top-tier sponsors, is supplying 30,000 servers, personal computers and other equipment for the Beijing Games.
% H" f0 m/ u, V5 M9 f The Beijing-based company has recently made its way into Fortune's top 500. "It's worthwhile after all to be a top-tier sponsor," said the group's board chairman Yang Yuanqing at the inauguration of Lenovo's lounge at the Olympic Park near the athletes' village in northern Beijing.
6 s$ e K) y) L Lenovo was only a local firm with about US$3 billion of turnover when it clinched the sponsorship deal with the IOC four years ago. "Some said we were taking too much risk, but we couldn't afford to lose this once-in-a-century opportunity," said Yang.1 y" `7 Y; `8 `9 a9 B/ h; M. x6 U2 v' F
His company acquired IBM Corp's PC unit in 2005 and is now hoping its link to the Olympics will boost its efforts to become a global brand name.9 \( B. T( X, Q) A: v7 g- [" h
"It's a hard-won opportunity for Chinese businesses to expand their international market through their links to the Games," said Yuan Bin, an official in charge of market development with the Beijing Organizing Committee of the 29th Olympic Games.
: [1 X2 ^- m+ t+ r+ O From Haier's air-conditioners, fridges and washing machines in the Olympic media village to Tsingtao beer and Yili diary products, Chinese companies are taking the chance to bolster their brands and expand further on the world market. All are trying to follow Sony and Samsung to Olympic fame.8 c B8 O9 D1 D5 M3 d* Y5 g" |
Shortcut to fame
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2 i/ s3 H1 w2 J% g When top Chinese sportswear brand Li Ning lost to Adidas in the running for official Olympic sponsor for the Beijing Games, many of its employees cried.3 Y1 ~1 |0 ~; x, D$ L
"For four Games since 1992, Chinese athletes wore Li Ning to the podium. It's painful to see Adidas in the glory at our doorstep," said Zhang Zhiyong, chief executive officer of Li Ning, founded by and named after the gymnast who won three gold medals at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.
/ H$ c1 l9 S; D "We are not as powerful as Adidas financially, and that means we have to budget our marketing expenditures in a wiser and more economical manner," said Zhang.& m7 [0 I/ |" F
Li Ning has since had its logo sewed on shirts, shoes and other sportswear worn by reporters and sportscasters at China Central Television's sports channel from January 1 2007 to December 31, 2008.
& m- n+ X: X, C7 ~( e7 R. T( { The company has clinched deals with China's gymnastics, shooting, table tennis and diving teams to wear its sportswear during the Games, and reached out to international teams including the Swedish Olympic delegation, the Argentine and Spanish basketball teams.
7 G4 b. d$ ]$ `* E* V: w/ T2 V A recent poll by CTR, a leading Beijing-based market research firm, found 37.4 percent of the people it surveyed believed Li Ning was the official Olympic sponsor, while only 22.8 percent knew it was Adidas.
4 B/ d8 Y4 G0 D% q Laughing to the last?
$ Z, P" x' j8 t, ^( F$ W, z" S The controversy over whether it is really worthwhile to sponsor the Games has always haunted Lenovo and at least 20 other Chinese firms. Some have reportedly been forced to give up part of their Olympic marketing plans.! n( w& h @ n, \3 ?8 Y. k+ N8 m
"Most of the sponsors are public companies," said a seasoned financial analyst on condition of anonymity. "I'm waiting for their annual report to tell whether they are winners or losers in the Olympic deal."
' y, I/ G) i- H& k, L/ g Just to be an official sponsor is just the beginning, said Prof. Lu Dongbin with the Beijing-based Renmin University of China. "The company needs to budget at least three to four times the initial spending in subsequent marketing activities." |