Showing posts with label clothesindustry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clothesindustry. Show all posts

3/03/2009

Isinbayeva agrees China sponsorship deal

BEIJING: Russian pole vault queen Yelena Isinbayeva agreed a sponsorship deal with Chinese sportswear firm Li Ning yesterday that state media said sets a new world mark for a track and field athlete.


Neither company officials nor Isinbayeva’s camp would disclose the terms of the deal, but the Chinese press put its value at a combined US$7.5mil over five years.

Isinbayeva, the world record-holder since July 2004 who has set a total of 26 best marks, said she hoped Li Ning’s support and a planned line of tailored gear would help her vault to greater heights.

“I am really looking forward to it. I’m sure it ... will help me set a lot of records,” she told a press conference at Li Ning headquarters outside Beijing.

The endorsement highlights the growing clout of Chinese companies in the world of athlete endorsements, with several top sporting stars recently signing lucrative deals in China.

Isinbayeva’s dazzling performance and appeal made her one of the shining stars at last year’s Beijing Olympics.

The Russian confirmed her status as history’s greatest female pole vaulter in Beijing by setting a new record as she defended her gold medal.

Her agent, Daniel Wessfeldt, indicated Li Ning’s offer trumped all others and it was hoped the deal would lead to further endorsements in China.

“This will open other doors in China,” he said.

While some struggling US corporations have dropped leading athletes from endorsement deals, China’s market has proven a bright spot for sponsorships, with companies shelling out big bucks here to top foreign names.

In perhaps the biggest deal, US swimming star Michael Phelps recently signed a sponsorship deal with Mazda to endorse the car company in China.

Although no figures have been announced, it was reported to be worth more than US$1mil, making it the biggest sponsorship deal for a foreigner in China at the time.

Last month, tennis star Jelena Jankovic signed a lucrative deal with Chinese firm ANTA Sports Products Limited.

Under the deal, the terms of which have been kept secret, the 23-year-old Serb’s on-court gear is being marketed as the “JJ” brand, which she exhibited for the first time in Melbourne last month at the Australian Open.

(AFP)

9/13/2008

Geox in distribution deal with China's Belle

MILAN, Sept 12 - Italian shoe maker Geox , known for its "no-sweat" shoes, has entered a distribution partnership with China's Belle International , it said in a statement on Friday.

The partnership with the shoe retailer will allow Geox to open 200 sales points by 2010 in China, Geox said.

Geox aims to expand the number of stores it has worldwide to more than 1,500 by 2010 from 724 at the end of last year.

Geox makes shoes with breathable soles and is taking on big players like Nike and Adidas with its "no-sweat" sports shoes.

(Reuters)

8/19/2008

Nike and Adidas claim China's heroes

The real battle in Beijing is not the struggle to top the medal table, but the multibillion-dollar fight between two giant brands intent on conquering the fastest-growing sportswear market in the world. Adidas and Nike have invested unprecedented sums in wooing Chinese consumers during the Olympics. The German firm is estimated to have spent $190m (£100m) on sponsorship and associated marketing; its US rival has stumped up close to $150m.

Adidas is sponsoring the games itself and the Chinese Olympic committee. Torchbearers, officials and volunteers are all clad in the brand; so too are Chinese champions. "Every single Chinese athlete winning a medal will be in Adidas on the podium," says Paul Pi, vice-president of marketing for Adidas China.

But Nike has fought back by sponsoring the Chinese teams in 22 of 28 Olympic sports.

At the root of this rivalry is a market a fraction the size of the US - but growing at 30% annually for the past five years. Pi concluded, "If you want to lead globally, you have to lead in China."

Nike says it passed the $1bn sales mark this spring, a year ahead of schedule. Adidas says it has leapfrogged its rival in becoming market leader by the start of the games, with sales up 60% in the first half of 2008 - though its claim is based on factors such as brand image. It is "on course" to reach $1.5bn by 2010.

(Guardian)

8/12/2008

Li Ning, Olympic Hero and Global Sports Brand

BEIJING, Aug 11, 2008 -- On Friday night, Li Ning, China's revered gymnast, lit the Olympic torch in one of the most spectacular Opening Ceremonies in the history of the Games. In doing so, he also helped put his own company and entrepreneurial spirit on the world stage.

It has been 24 years since Chinese gymnast Li Ning competed in the 1984 summer Olympics in Los Angeles. It was there that he stunned audiences by winning a total of six Olympic medals for gymnastics; three gold, two silver, and one bronze in the category. After leaving the gymnastics stage in 1989, his passion for athletics was channeled into the founding of his eponymous company, Li Ning, which has become China's leading sporting goods company. Its market shares in China rivals those of adidas and Nike.

Li Ning founded his company under the banner "The Hope of the New Chinese Generation." Since that time, the company has grown globally, all while staying true to its home roots. The Olympic Games represent a pinnacle moment in the storied history of China. The Games, he says, "give new life and opportunities to the Chinese themselves."

When building his company, Li Ning's goals were two-fold: to empower others to realize their own personal potential, and to become China's first national sporting goods brand. With the mantra, "Anything is possible," the company has risen to become China's premier sporting goods provider, and this summer's Olympic Games will feature the most foreign teams to ever wear the Li-Ning(R) brand. Li-Ning is sponsoring four Chinese national teams -- table tennis, diving, gymnastics and shooting -- and Li-Ning apparel will be worn by the Spanish, Swedish and Argentine national basketball teams, the Tanzanian track and field team, Sudanese marathon runners and the U.S.A. Table Tennis team.

Li-Ning (R) has championed product development since its founding less than twenty years ago. Now, the company's international brand development is underway. Consumers should look for more from Li-Ning(R), through the closing ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games, and beyond.

(Market)

5/03/2008

Li Ning Toe-to-Toe Against Nike and Adidas

China's top athletic wear maker, Li Ning, has quite a lineup of sponsorships for the Beijing Olympics. There's the U.S. ping-pong squad (the men are ranked 44th globally and the women are 12th), Sudan's track and field athletes (none of whom has ever won an Olympic medal), and Sweden's Olympic delegation (but the athletes won't wear Li Ning during competition, only for ceremonies).

Why would a shoe and clothing manufacturer that does 99% of its business in China bother with athletes from far-flung locales where its products aren't sold? It has to do with Li Ning's unusual position in the Chinese market. The 28-year-old company once ruled China's sneaker business, but today it lags behind giants Nike (NKE) and Adidas (ADDDY) even at home. And a big part of the appeal of those powerful rivals is their profile on the global stage. "We don't have as strong a brand" as Nike and Adidas, says Abel Wu, who oversees Li Ning's footwear division. "Our thinking is that as a local brand, we need to have an international image."

Call it paper-tiger marketing. Li Ning tries to create the illusion of being a global player despite its near-total reliance on its home market. In addition to the international sponsorships, the company is running an ad campaign called "One Team, One Belief" featuring European, African, South American—and Chinese—athletes standing in a stadium with their hands across their hearts. And Li Ning has teamed up with the National Basketball Assn. as a sponsor of the "NBA Jam Van Tour." The event, which rolls through dozens of Chinese cities, includes a basketball court that can be assembled at every stop. Local kids are invited to participate in competitions such as the "Li Ning Slam Dunk Contest."

To be fair, Nike and Adidas also back athletes who have little chance of winning medals. And Li Ning's marketing isn't based entirely on third-stringers from abroad. Its chairman and eponymous founder brought home three gold medals in gymnastics from the Los Angeles games in 1984. Basketball star Shaquille O'Neal is an endorser (but only in China; in the U.S. he wears shoes made for him by Li Ning, though they don't bear the company logo). And Li Ning is sponsoring China's ping-pong players, divers, gymnasts, and sharpshooters at the Beijing Games—all strong medal contenders, but not events where high-tech footwear plays much of a role.

Li Ning makes no bones about admiring its bigger rivals. Its gleaming corporate campus near Beijing, complete with indoor swimming pool, basketball courts, and a climbing wall, seems like a page out of Nike's playbook. Ads feature the slogan "Anything is Possible" (which the company launched before Adidas came out with "Impossible is Nothing," but long after Nike's "Just Do It"). And its logo is strikingly similar to the Nike Swoosh. "They just dusted off a Nike marketing plan, took bits and pieces, and said, "VoilĂ !'" says Terry Rhoads, a former Nike China executive who runs Shanghai sports consultancy Zou Marketing.

Some branding experts say the paper-tiger strategy is paying off. The deal with the U.S. table tennis team cost a fraction of the $80 million that Adidas is paying as an official Olympic sponsor in China. Similarly, getting Shaq to endorse the brand in China clearly cost far less than persuading the Phoenix Suns star to wear Li Ning shoes in the U.S.—though the company declined to say how much it's spending on any of its sponsorship deals. "They are the most efficient marketer for the Olympics in terms of spend vs. return," says Greg Paull, a partner at market researcher R3 in Beijing. Last year, Li Ning's profits jumped 61%, to $66 million, as sales climbed 37%, to $603 million, giving it 9.3% of the Chinese market, according to JPMorgan (JPM).

STILL PROVINCIAL

With sportswear sales in China growing at 30% per year, there's plenty of room yet for Li Ning to expand. It now rolls out about 600 different shoe styles a year. And in 2004 it hired Ned Frederick, a former research director at Nike, and Portsmouth (N.H.)-based Daniel Richard Design, which has worked with Converse (NKE) and Saucony, to come up with a technology that could compete with the Nike Air lineup. Their answer was the Basketball Bow, which tops Li Ning's product range at $140—about $20 less than the Nike Air Jordan. But most of Li Ning's business is in models selling for $30 to $70 a pair. And Li Ning's strength is in smaller cities where the big rivals haven't yet focused much effort. So it still has to prove it can face off against Nike and Adidas in Beijing and Shanghai—let alone the U.S., where Li Ning in January opened a small design office in Nike's backyard, Portland, Ore.

To compete with the big names either at home or abroad, Li Ning may need to decide what it wants to be. Today, it's difficult to say whether it's a trendy brand for urban teenagers or a bona fide performance shoemaker, and simply creating an image of global reach won't clear that up, says Tom Doctoroff, chief executive officer for China at ad agency JWT (WPPGY). While Nike may now be both, it established its name as a maker of serious athletic footwear before it was ever cool. "The challenge is to link to a brand idea that is the basis for enduring loyalty," Doctoroff says. Li Ning's "helter-skelter messaging is probably not an effective way of establishing that."

(Business Week)