Ambush Marketing Hurt Olympic Brand
Protests against China’s policies at home and abroad, as well as marketing techniques used by companies that are not official Olympic sponsors, have made the Beijing games a risky proposition for some sponsors.
“When any corporation wants to hitch its wagon onto an event, they’re doing it because it is perceived to have a certain popularity and charm,” said Andrew Zimbalist, a professor of economics at Smith College in Massachusetts.
“If the event loses some of that because of pollution or domestic repression or because they’re sponsoring a genocidal regime in Sudan there’s no question some of the shine wears off,” he added.
In China, sponsors are not getting what they pay for, according to Shaun Rein, managing director of China Market Research Group in Shanghai. His firm polled Chinese consumers and found most do not know or care who the Olympic sponsors are.
“Most sponsors are going feel very disappointed with the return on investment for their sponsorships,” Rein said. “There is so much clutter. It’s unbelievable how many Olympic themed messages are popping up all over the place.”
Ambush marketing, in which companies try to identify themselves with the Olympics even if they are not official sponsors, does not make it any easier for the official partners.
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