brands under fire
Posted by Sheila Shayon on May 13, 2013 06:39 PM

The rescue efforts in Savar, Bangladesh have officially been turned over to recovery as the death toll surpasses 1,100 in what has become the worst accident in the history of the garment industry. But 20 days later, it seems that progress and change is beginning to emerge from the rubble of a decrepit industry.
The Bangladeshi government has agreed to let garment workers form trade unions without the permission of factory owners—a breakthrough in workers' rights in a de-regulated country, where garment factories were shut down this week following worker unrest over wages and conditions.
The proposed safety plan, backed by a coalition of labor groups, calls for independent inspections of factories and a legally binding fire and building safety plan requiring retailers to help pay for improvements to factory safety and is an amendment to the 2006 Labor Act lifting restrictions on forming trade unions in most industries.
The pact also calls for changes regarding severance payments, welfare fund payments, management practices and payment and banking standards. In what could be a game-changing announcement, Swedish retailer H&M announced Monday that it will sign the binding agreement.Continue reading...
More about: Retail, Corporate Citizenship, Ethics, Supply Chain, Labor, Bangladesh, PR, Garment Industry, Fashion, Apparel, Benetton, C&A, Cato Fashions, Calvin Klein, Gap, H&M, Inditex, Joe Fresh, Loblaw, Loblaws, M&S, Primark, PVH, Tesco, The Children's Place, Tchibo, Tommy Hilfiger, Walmart, Zara
rebranding
Posted by Mark J. Miller on May 13, 2013 02:55 PM

Calvin Klein is doing a little spring cleaning and the company has put one big thing out on the curb: ck Calvin Klein.
In the hopes of unifying its brand under one name, the company is rebranding its “ck Calvin Klein” bridge apparel and accessories tier to simply “Calvin Klein” on a platinum label, starting this fall, according to a company release.
The line, which consists of sportswear as well as watches and jewelry is mostly distributed in Europe and Asia. It was only last June when ck Calvin Klein opened its first store in the UK’s Manchester, but now in accordance with the rebrand, all existing and new retail locations will branded as Calvin Klein.Continue reading...
brands under fire
Posted by Sheila Shayon on April 26, 2013 05:33 PM

The death toll in the latest Bangladesh garment industry disaster has risen to more than 300 as rescue crews continue to pull survivors from the rubble of Rana Plaza and search for an estimated 500 workers still missing, with more than 2,500 already rescued.
In the aftermath of the garment factory collapse in Dhaka, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has called for those responsible to turn themselves in. It is believed that the building owner and factory owners are in hiding after ignoring warnings from police and industry officials to forbid workers to enter the building after cracks were discovered on Tuesday. The building collapsed on Wednesday.
"Whoever might be the culprits, and if even they belong to our party, they won't go scot-free," the impoverished nation's Prime Minister warned. (Update: The factory owners were arrested on Friday night, when the death toll had risen to 336.)
The disaster shines a light, yet again, on global apparel companies that outsource manufacturing to Bangladesh, a practice that has ballooned into an $18 billion industry as clothing companies continue to adandon manufacturing in China, where inflation and rising wages are pushing up costs. The upshot: Bangladesh and its questionable garment industry is now the world's second-biggest garment manufacturing center.Continue reading...
More about: Retail, Apparel, Fashion, Corporate Citizenship, Ethics, Supply Chain, Labor, Human Rights, Manufacturing, Bangladesh, Walmart, JCPenney, Joe Fresh, Loblaw's, Mango, Benetton, Primark, C&A, KIK, Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, Tchibo, Labor Laws, Legal, PR, Protests, Activism
super bowl
Posted by Dale Buss on February 4, 2013 02:04 PM
"Brotherhood," Budweiser's 2013 Super Bowl ad, was among those which stood out among rather routine fare.
Super Bowl ads (the complete list) this year provided few gems, according to an emerging consensus of industry professionals.
Many were deemed lame or even confusing, and generally considered ineffective and off-brand. Several brands seemed to suffer rather than benefit from the frenzy of sneak peeks and full-commercial reveals in this year's rush for pre-Game exposure and social buzz.
Still, some brands were able to leverage social media presence and responsiveness into overall good showings up to and through the event, with campaigns that will move forward from here.
Continue reading...
More about: Super Bowl, NFL, Advertising, Campaigns, Sports, AB InBev, Audi, Axe, Beck's Sapphire, Best Buy, BlackBerry, Budweiser, Budweiser Black Crown, CBS, Calvin Klein, Cars.com, Century 21, Chrysler, Coca-Cola, Doritos, E-Trade, Gildan, GoDaddy.com, Got Milk?, Hyundai, Kia, Lincoln, M&Ms, Mercedes-Benz, Mio, NFL Network, Oreo, Pepsi, Prudential, Redd's Apple Ale, Samsung, Skechers, SodaStream, Speed Stick, Subway, Taco Bell, Tide, Toyota, Wonderful Pistachios
brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on January 31, 2013 08:58 AM

Calvin Klein and Speed Stick reveal teasers for Super Bowl debut, while Beyonce's halftime show also offers a sneak peek in our latest Super Bowl brand round-up.
BlackBerry undercuts debut of new BlackBerry 10 with news of more delays.
Deutsche Bank swings to loss as it cleans up its business.
AutoNation to put its own name on most dealerships.
Bazooka Candy is rebranding for a new generation of gum chewers.
Boeing plays down effects of Dreamliner grounding.
Chipotle starts selling organic hoodies.Continue reading...
More about: Brand News, AutoNation, Bazooka Candy, Beyonce, BlackBerry, Boeing, Calvin Klein, Chipotle, Dreamliner, Deutsche Bank, Durex, Facebook, H&M, Hostess Cake, Netflix, Nintendo, Tesco, Wii U
super bowl
Posted by Dale Buss on January 30, 2013 06:31 PM
Just four days before the game, only a few Super Bowl advertisers have kept the creative content of their commercials entirely under wraps — and even fewer are yet to come forward reveal their participation.
One of the last hand-raisers came clean today: Speed Stick, which will air its first-ever Super Bowl commercial. The spot will represent the latest execution of "Handle It," a campaign that "celebrates moments when guys are sweating on the inside but step up and Handle It on the outside," according to a release.
In the spot, "Laundry," which was crowdsourced by the Tongal video community, a man demonstrates that he knows how to "handle it" in a laundromat when a woman finds him accidentally handling a pair of her panties. With the ad, Speed Stick and parent Colgate joinma men's personal-care battle-within-a-battle during the Super Bowl, competing against Unilever's Axe (which is sending contest winners to space).
Calvin Klein is also making its Super Bowl debut, and it's also about men and underwear:Continue reading...
More about: Super Bowl, Advertising, Sports, NFL, Audi, Axe, Beyonce, BlackBerry, Calvin Klein, Colgate, Iron Man, Marvel, Mercedes-Benz, Pepsi, Speed Stick, Toyota, Unilever, Volkswagen, VW, Visa, Skechers, Social Marketing, Video Marketing, YouTube
sustainability
Posted by Shirley Brady on January 9, 2013 12:09 PM

Greenpeace has added Uniqlo to its list of global fashion brands and retailers signing its Detox pledge, making "a public commitment to eliminate all releases of hazardous chemicals throughout its entire global supply chain and products by 2020."
The commitment covers all Fast Retailing-owned brands — Uniqlo, Comptoir des Cotonniers, Princesse TamTam, GU and Theory — which together operate more than 2,000 stores. "Uniqlo recognises clean water as a critical global issue, and is proud to join Greenpeace in its campaign to eliminate hazardous chemical use," stated Yukihiro Nitta, Fast Retailing's executive in charge of social responsibility. The company also vowed to disclose discharge data from at least 80% of its global suppliers (including all their facilities) by the end of this year.
As the environmental group blogged, the Uniqlo deal "comes just a month after Zara, Mango, Esprit and Levi's announced similar individual commitments, responding to waves of pressure from activists and consumers around the world. Competitors in the fashion world including GAP, G-Star Raw and Calvin Klein are looking increasingly out of touch now that 12 of the world's top high street fashion brands have committed to Detox." Other Detox signatories include Adidas, C&A, H&M, Nike, Puma and M&S.
More about: Sustainability, Retail, CSR, Corporate Citizenship, Greenpeace, Campaigns, PR, Activism, Levi Strauss, Levi's, Uniqlo, Fast Retailing Group, Comptoir des Cotonniers, Princesse TamTam, GU, Theory, Gap, Gap Inc., G-Star Raw, Calvin Klein, Adidas, C&A, H&M, Nike, Puma, M&S, Safety, Public Health
corporate responsibility
Posted by Sheila Shayon on December 7, 2012 03:21 PM

As countries like Bangladesh move up the food chain from aid to trade, the global eco-system fueling the fire, literally and figuratively, is largely the retail fashion industry, feeding the western world’s insatiable appetite for fashion.
The November 24th factory blaze that killed 112 garment workers in an illegal factory in Bangladesh showed the world, as Reuters puts it, that “pressure from big Western brands to produce huge volumes of apparel fast and at rock-bottom prices, [is making] Bangladeshi suppliers routinely sub-contract their orders.”
As the victims — many of them young women and mothers, all of them poor — are mourned and the Clean Clothes Campaign organizes vigils at C&A and beyond as part of a bigger shame campaign for brands whose labels were found in the ashes, what’s really on trial, as the New York Times points out in a scathing article today, is ethical sourcing and a severely out-of-balance equation claiming the lives of impoverished workers with no options.Continue reading...
More about: Corporate Citizenship, CSR, Retail, Fashion, Supply Chain, Ethics, Ethical Sourcing, Labor, Human Rights, Bangladesh, Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, Asia, Foxconn, Apple, Disney, Gap, H&M, Samsung, Sears, Ikea, C&A, Carrefour, Tommy Hilfiger, China, Cambodia, Calvin Klein, Van Heusen, IZOD, ARROW, G.H. Bass, Eagle, Tchibo