BEIJING, April 28 -- Lenovo Group, China's only
worldwide Olympic partner, is expecting a windfall from its 2008 Beijing
Olympics marketing campaigns, the company said on Friday.
"In 2007 and 2008 all of our marketing campaigns will
be focused on the Olympic Games," said Chen Shaopeng, Lenovo's senior
vice-president and president of China operations.
Lenovo signed a deal with the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) in 2004 to join the sponsorship program, becoming the first
Chinese company in the high-profile club.
Lenovo's brand awareness has since received a boost
after a series of Olympics-related marketing blitzes, including a campaign at
the 2006 Turin Olympics, Chen said.
Lenovo's share in China's PC market rose to 36.7
percent in December 2006, compared with 32.7 percent late 2004.
"Excluding the boost from Lenovo's acquisition of
IBM's PC-making business, I believe the Olympic marketing has played a vital
role" in the company's growth, Chen said.
Lenovo's $1.25-million acquisition of IBM's PC unit
in 2005 helped boost Lenovo's international profile, but the firm is still
struggling with poor brand awareness in overseas markets.
In the third quarter of last year, Taiwan's Acer
Computers surpassed Lenovo as the world's third-largest computer maker in terms
of global sales, according to a report by Gartner, a US research firm. Acer
generates about 50 percent of its total sales in the US, and 20 in Europe.
Lenovo is hoping the Olympics campaign will move the
company closer to rivals Hewlett-Packard and Dell.
Meanwhile, Chen also announced Friday that Lenovo
would contribute 15,000 computing devices including desktops, laptops, computer
servers, and display monitors to 2008 Games, almost twice what the company sent
to Turin.
It will also establish the Games' first ever computer
maintenance centers to fix computer problems on Lenovo and competing computers
at Olympic venues.
Lenovo designed the Beijing Olympic torch, unveiled
Thursday night. The firm has also become the first Olympic torch relay partner
from China.
Lenovo vice-president Li Lan said the company plans
to sign a number of Olympic champions in countries and regions along the torch
relay route.
During last year's World Cup of soccer, Lenovo signed
Brazilian star Ronaldinho as an image ambassador. The company is also the
"Official PC Partner" of the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Recent reports say Lenovo plans to sign Liu Xiang,
China's 110m hurdles world record holder and Olympics champion, but Chen would
not confirm the rumours.
(Source: China Daily)