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
brands with a cause
Posted by Alicia Ciccone on February 21, 2013 05:26 PM
Swedish fashion house H&M is continuing its green streak with the official launch of its Garment Recycling Program.

The second-largest clothing retailer in the world will accommodate the program in all of its 269 U.S. locations as well as all 48 of its global markets. Beginning today, customers can bring any garment from any brand in any condition into an H&M store. For every bag of clothes donated, customers will receive a 15 percent off voucher for their next item purchased.
"We believe this program will really make an impact in reducing the amount of clothing that ends up in landfills all over the world," said H&M spokesperson Marybeth Schmitt in a press release.
Additionally, H&M is teaming up with Global Green USA, who will be the sole beneficiary of the recycling program. The donated clothing will be handled by H&M's partner, I:Collect, which repeatedly reprocesses the garments for new use.Continue reading...
More about: Retail, Sustainability, Fashion, H&M, Global Green USA, I:Collect, & Other Stories, WWF, Karl-Johan Persson, Europe, India, US, M&S, Recycling, Corporate Citizenship, Vanessa Paradis, Campaigns
sustainability
Posted by Sheila Shayon on February 7, 2013 06:46 PM

As many high-end brands show off their latest designs at New York Fashion Week, Greenpeace has a big message for the fashion world at large: It's time to clean up your act.
The latest from Greenpeace’s global Detox campaign is its “Fashion Duel,” with Italian actress Valeria Golino leading the charge for the industry to make environmental stewardship a priority in their operations.
The "duel" sets out to rate 15 Italian and French high-end luxury brands on three areas of the global supply chain — leather, pulp and paper and toxic water pollution — and highlights their differences in policy on toxic water pollution and deforestation.Continue reading...
More about: Greenpeace, Sustainability, Activism, Fashion, Luxury, Campaigns, Corporate Citizenship, Fashion Week, New York Fashion Week, Alberta Ferretti, Chanel, Dolce & Gabbana, Hermès, Prada, Trussardi, Nike, Adidas, Puma, H&M, M&S, C&A, Li-Ning, Zara, Mango, Esprit, Levi's, Valeria Golino, Celebrities, Social Marketing
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
sustainability
Posted by Sheila Shayon on December 6, 2012 06:15 PM

Fashion retailers are embracing sustainability with ever-widening arms, becoming increasingly accountable for the byproducts their industry creates. With their latest moves, H&M and Marks & Spencer (M&S as it's better known) are leading the rack-pack.
Following in the footsteps of the UK-wide recycling push launched by M&S earlier this year, H&M is planning to launch the world’s first global clothing collective initiative, to be introduced in all of its 48 markets in February.
According to the fast-fashion retailer's press release, “Any pieces of clothing, from any brand and in any condition are accepted. In return, the customer will receive a voucher for each bag brought. The collected clothes are then handled by H&M’s partner, I:Collect, which provides the infrastructure in which consumer goods are repeatedly reprocessed and made available for new use."
“Our sustainability efforts are rooted in a dedication to social and environmental responsibility. We want to do good for the environment, which is why we are now offering our customers a convenient solution: to be able to leave their worn out or defective garments with H&M,” stated H&M CEO Karl-Johan Persson.
No value was stated for the voucher H&M is offering in return for donations to in-store collection boxes to be processed by I:CO, as its Swiss recycling partner is branded; its tagline is "Rethink. Recycle. Reward."Continue reading...
More about: H&M, M&S, I:CO, Sustainability, Recyling, Corporate Citizenship, CSR, Green, Retail, Fashion, Oxfam, Facebook, Joanna Lumley, UK, Europe, Switzerland, Better Cotton
corporate responsibility
Posted by Shirley Brady on November 26, 2012 10:51 AM
Now you don't have to worry about mannequins watching you — they may also be following you onto the sidewalk. As part of Greenpeace's global "Detox" campaign, more than 700 people, in over 80 cities, in 20 countries around the world protested, staged street theater and conducted "mannequin" walk-outs to demand Zara to eliminate the use of all hazardous chemicals throughout its supply chain.
From Bangkok to Buenos Aires, the activists also called on Zara store managers (who don't permit photos of their mannequins) to forward Greenpeace's Detox demands to their headquarters, after new research found traces of hazardous chemicals in ZARA clothing items, some of which can break down in the environment to become hormone-disrupting or even cancer-causing substances. As Greenpeace put it, "how will the world's largest fashion retailer — which responds so swiftly to changes in fashion trends — react to this global call for toxic-free fashion?"Continue reading...
More about: Greenpeace, Retail, Fashion, Environment, Sustainability, Safety, Health, China, Zara, Levi's, Armani, Victoria's Secret, H&M, Marks & Spencer, M&S, Miranda Kerr, Kora Organics, Activism, Protests
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
brand news
Posted by Shirley Brady on May 23, 2012 08:50 AM

Facebook I.P.O. raises regulatory concerns, as regulators review Morgan Stanley's pre-Facebook IPO actions and the social network's share price drops 18% below IPO price and shareholders worry. NASDAQ is also being sued by an irate investor, while Facebook, its bankers and CEO Mark Zuckerberg are also being sued. One hot commodity: Zuckerberg's post-IPO secret wedding to Priscilla Chan sees Claire Pettibone-designed wedding dress "go viral."
Apple's iPad played a key role in the largest debt restructuring in history, with 100 iPads saving Greece $140 billion. European banks were less prepared for the Greek economic crisis.
SAP to acquire Ariba for $4.3 billion in push into cloud.
Alcatel-Lucent technology made the Internet five times faster.
Amazon's massive cloud business raises questions.
FOX's American Idol lost nearly a quarter of its still-huge audience this season.Continue reading...
More about: Brand News, Alcatel-Lucent, Amazon, American Idol, Apple, Ariba, Axe, Baidu, Band-Aid, BT, Burberry, Claire Pettibone, CNN, Danone, Dunkin' Donuts, Egypt, Evian, Facebook, FOX, Google, Greece, Heineken, Hulu, IAC, iPad, JPMorgan, Lenovo, M&S, Mastercard, Morgan Stanley, Muppets, Novo Nordisk, Pinterest, RailAmerica, Samsung, SAP, Tesla, TOMS, UEFA, UGG, Uniqlo, Victoria's Secret, Volvic, YouTube, Barry Diller, Lenny Kravitz, Mark Zuckerberg