»

China’s Woes Taint Wal-Mart’s Rep

Brand perceptions of Wal-Mart have suffered as a result of the series of product recalls of toys produced in China, according to a new study. Marketing consultancy Strategic Name Development conducted a study of 503 participants regarding perceptions of Wal-Mart and Target, Brandweek writes.

The study showed that only 40 percent of respondents felt they could trust Wal-Mart to protect them from products made in China; 39 percent of respondents said they were more fearful of buying products from Wal-Mart, with 22 percent saying they were more fearful of buying products from Target.

Fifty-six percent said they felt Wal-Mart was more interested in profits than people; 41 percent felt that way about Target.

Respondents also felt that Wal-Mart “sold out the American consumer just to make a buck,” and that it has been “my policy to avoid all things associated with China, including Wal-Mart… I haven’t been [there] in three months and I used to go weekly.”

Many consumers have decided they would rather buy products made in India, particularly for pet food, prescription drugs and toys (with 78 percent, 74 percent and 73 percent saying they prefer India over China respectively). In only four out of 25 categories - automotive, cell phones, computers and flat screen TVs - did consumers prefer Chinese products.
Jack Trout, president of Trout & Partners, a marketing strategy firm based in Old Greenwich, Conn., calls this a “gigantic problem” for both China and Wal-Mart.

A Wal-Mart rep says the retailer hasn’t seen evidence of such findings at the registers, and points out that Wal-Mart has been the only retailer to publicly announce a new safety-net check and test program for toys.

Related topics: Wireless, Signs of What's to Come, Automotive, Asia, Direct...   

Radio read more like this »

Ad Industry Declines Mirror 2001 Recession: Goldman Sachs

All sectors of the media business will suffer from the weakened economy in 2008 and 2009, with a slump in local advertising particularly hurting newspapers and local TV, according to a new projection from Goldman Sachs.

Broadcast nets will experience…

Print read more like this »

NY Times Shuts ‘International Herald Tribune’ Site Down

The New York Times is shuttering its International Herald Tribune site; NYTimes.com will soon host the international news normally reserved for its sister website.

The move is not about cost savings, but rather about growth, NYTimes.com general manager Vivian Schiller…

Outdoor read more like this »

Vaseline Tracks Actual Buzz about New Lotion in Small Alaska Town

Unilever’s Vaseline set forth on an unusual research project in a small town in Alaska. Setting up a storefront, the company began giving away free bottles of lotion and asking recipients to name the person who had recommended they come…

Television read more like this »

‘Meet the Press,’ Minus Russert, Suffers Slow Slide

Meet the Press, the show hosted by Tim Russert for 17 years before his death last June, is beginning to slip in ratings.

Last month, CBS’s Face the Nation pulled ahead of Meet the Press for the first time in two…

Interactive read more like this »

Blogging Hits Mainstream, Integral to Media Ecosystem

Bloggers collectively create nearly one million blog posts each day, and half of bloggers believe blogs will be a primary source of news and entertainment in the next five years, according to Technorati’s 2008 State of the Blogosphere Report, MarketingCharts writes.…

Direct read more like this »

Discount Retailers Report Mixed September Results

Wal-Mart and Costco reported same-store gains in September, with sales rising 2.4% and 9% respectively. Sales at Target stores open at least a year fell 3%, writes Retailer Daily.

Below, fiscal results from the discount retail giants:

Sales of food and…

MARKETING JOBS
advertisement