BEIJING, Jan. 11 -- Olympic-themed marketing initiatives, even for non-sponsors, are getting a comparatively better strike rate, according to a recent report from global market researcher Ipsos.
The report tracks the performance of Beijing 2008
Olympic Games sponsors in China.
The Ipsos survey, the third since October 2007, used
computer-assisted phone interviews. It covered 3,215 Chinese aged between 15 and
60 across 10 cities including Beijing, Qingdao, Qinhuangdao and Tianjin.
Of the 29 Beijing Games sponsors and partners
included in the study, China Mobile ranked No 1, with its composite index of
sponsorship performance at 51.8, followed by Coca-Cola, Air China, Lenovo and
Yili. Ipsos' Olympic 2008 Sponsorship Performance Indexes (SPIs) include sponsor
identity recognition, sponsor voice, wrong recognition, sponsorship fitness,
brand image and enhanced willingness to purchase.
Netizens and ordinary consumers differ in brand
recognition of Olympic sponsors, according to the survey.
The study found that netizens were more willing to
purchase from Olympic sponsors than ordinary consumers.
Netizens and other consumers respond differently to
Olympic sponsors because of cultural factors and their use of information
resources, said Jia Yanli, deputy director of Ipsos' public affairs research
department.
Netizens are generally more educated and have better
access to business information. They get the latest news on Olympic sponsors
fast and it tends to have a stronger impact on them, according to the study.
"We suggest that businesses take note of these
differences in initiating Olympic marketing campaigns and conducting online and
offline marketing activities," said Jia.
The Ipsos report found that the majority of Olympic
sponsors have improved their brand recognition in China. Of the sponsors
included in the latest study, China Mobile, Coca-Cola, Haier, Yili and Lenovo
were the top five for brand recognition with 18.3 percent, 13.4 percent, 11.2
percent, 9.4 percent and 9.3 percent recognized on the first reference without
prompting - much higher rates than the two previous surveys.
Of the non-Olympic sponsors, Mengniu, Pepsi, Li Ning,
China Unicom and Nokia ranked the top five with 8 percent, 4.2 percent, 3.5
percent, 3.1 percent and 2.4 percent respectively in terms of incorrect
recognition.
But in the sports clothing industry, Olympic sponsor
Adidas has lagged behind non-sponsor Li Ning in terms of brand recognition in
all three surveys.
Li Ning is often mistakenly thought of as an Olympic
sponsor. In the latest survey, 70.9 percent of respondents still believed Li
Ning was an Olympic sponsor, while only 65.7 percent thought Adidas was.
In the food and beverage industry, there has been
nearly 70 years of rivalry between Pepsi and Coca-Cola. Here, it's Mengniu
versus Yili. In terms of brand recognition, sponsorship fitness, social
responsibility and brand trustworthiness, Mengniu has beaten Yili in the past
two surveys, but the latest data shows the margins have narrowed.
In the financial and insurance industry, PICC has
also met Ping An Insurance's ambush marketing using Olympic sponsorship as its
platform. In all the survey indexes, Olympic sponsor Ping An Insurance has
performed as well as PICC.
"All the Olympic sponsors should pay more attention
to the high percentage of incorrect recognition of non-Olympic sponsors and the
situation that non-Olympic sponsors are performing equally well or even better,"
said Jia, adding that this not only damaged sponsors' interests, but could also
hurt their brand image.
(Source: China Daily)