e-commerce
Posted by Mark J. Miller on July 12, 2012 10:01 AM

For marketers these days, it's all about digital and taking advantage of all it has to offer. Adidas, though, is pulling its wares off two of the web's major e-commerce hubs — Amazon and eBay — because it's convinced such sites are cheapening its image and damaging its brand value. According to the UK's Marketing Week, the ban goes into effect in January and will extend to its Reebok brand.
Adidas, on a high coming out of Euro 2012 and heading into the Olympics, isn't the only major brand that's pulling back on e-commerce sites — Nike and Asics are also restricting Internet sales, a move that has drawn the attention of German competition authorities. "Adidas isn't the first, and they're definitely not going to be the last to do what they did," said Wes Sheperd, CEO of Channel IQ, an online services provider catering to manufacturers, distributors and retailers, according to AuctionBytes.com. "There's a storm brewing here."Continue reading...
More about: Adidas, Asics, Nike, Reebok, eBay, Amazon, E-Commerce, Online, Trademark, Counterfeit, Euro 2012, London 2012, Olympics
china
Posted by Abe Sauer on June 29, 2012 10:07 AM
The China Daily uses the ongoing frenzy around the Euro 2012 soccer football tournament to revisit a known, but not well known enough, phenomenon in China. Namely, names being registered in China by people who have nothing to do with the trademarked names themselves.
As The China Daily notes, "Philipp Lahm, Cristiano Ronaldo and Andres Iniesta are world-popular soccer stars, but they have also attracted attention that they might not want — from Chinese companies registering their names as trademarks."
Anyone charged with protecting a brand, or who might BE a brand, should drop what they are doing immediately and check to see if your brand has been registered in China without your approval, spelling your doom. Don't even bother reading the rest of this piece on China and trademarks. Go check.Continue reading...
More about: China, Trademark, IP, Legal, Naming, Euro 2012, UEFA, Philipp Lahm, Cristiano Ronaldo, Andres Iniesta, Michael Jordan, Jeremy Lin, Yao Ming, Sports, NBA, New York Knicks, Linsanity, Personal Brands, Licensing, Merchandise, Counterfeits, Apple, iPad, Angry Birds
brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on June 8, 2012 09:03 AM

Apple will use Baidu search engine on phones in China and gets on fast track in court to block Samsung Galaxy phone as iPhone 5 speculation mounts ahead of WWDC, while marketing head Steve Schiller gets a Bloomberg Businessweek profile. Also, Apple will pay $2.5 million to settle false advertising suit in Australia over 4G iPad claims.
Audi plant expansion tests ability to maintain quality.
Boeing hits milestone on 787 Dreamliner.
Burger King plans to expand in Russia.
Cannes Lions to honor Dan Weiden of Weiden+Kennedy.
Carnival Cruise loyalty program members are up in arms.
CBS chief Les Moonves says "partisanship" is part of journalism now.Continue reading...
More about: Brand News, Apple, Audi, Baidu, Boeing, Burger King, Carnival, CBS, Change.org, Chevron, Dish Network, Euro 2012, Facebook, FDA, GE, Galaxy, GM, Google, HSBC, Jiffy Lube, Kraft, Marks & Spencer, M&S, M&S Bank, McDonald's, NASDAQ, Nikon, NYSE, Olympus, Prada, Prius, Samsung, Twitter, Volt, W+K, Walmart, Cannes Lions, Ashton Kutcher