Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
GUANGZHOU, April 21 (Xinhua) -- Visitors at the
ongoing Canton fair, China's largest import and export exhibition, are surprised
to see a booth whose only adornment is a narrow door on a huge wall and a logo
of the 2008 Olympics.
A line under the logo says: "Official leather
footwear supplier of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games." Curious foreign buyers are
swarming through the narrow door to see the actual products.
"The Olympics logo says it all. From quality to
style, from history to reputation, we believe we are the best," said a man at
the booth, Lu Jia, a sales manager with the Aokang Group, one of China's biggest
shoe manufacturers.
Aokong has spent heavily to tie its goods to the
Games. A company must pay at least 16 million yuan (about 2.3 million U.S.
dollars) to be an official supplier, according to the Beijing Olympic Committee.
The company is not the only one at the fair, which
dates back half a century and usually does about 37 billion U.S. dollars in
business, to use the Olympic marketing strategy to lure foreign buyers.
Although many Chinese companies are much smaller than
the traditional multinational Olympic sponsors, like Volkswagen, Adidas and
Coca-Cola, this year's Games offers them hope of exporting more.
Another Olympic sponsor, Guangzhou Dayang Motorcycle
Co. Ltd, put the event's logo on a billboard. A manager of the company said more
orders came in from Brazil, Venezuela and Colombia, so he believed that using
the logo was a profitable decision.
Those without an official sponsorship deal have also
found ways to link their products to the upcoming event.
TV giant Changhong Group put up a huge billboard with
images of China's national table tennis team, the most popular sport team in the
country. Changhong began to sponsor the team last March.
A digital product manufacturer, Beijing Huaqi
Information Digital Technology Co., Ltd., is promoting a designated product of
the Olympic museum, a digital pen that "reads" books aloud.
"We've got chance to show our products to Juan
Antonio Samaranch, the Honorary President for Life of the International Olympic
Committee," said Li Shenghua, the company's overseas department chief, saying
that they would not miss any chance to connect their products with the Olympics.
Olympic sponsors are divided into two categories. Top
multinationals and giant Chinese companies are called "Worldwide Olympic
Partners" and "Beijing 2008 Partners." Another 41 companies, most of which are
Chinese domestic companies, won the sponsorship and sole supplier title for the
Beijing Olympics.
"Everyone knows that the Beijing Olympics will be a
superb opportunity for foreign businessmen to enter the Chinese market. But
Chinese companies have also found it a good chance to embrace the global
market," said Zhang Yansheng, director of the International Economic Research
Institute under the National Development and Reform Commission.
"Aokang already has steady overseas clients. We just
want a larger market share" from being an Olympic supplier," Lu said.