|
How are the sponsors
doing : Just as popcorn plays a major role in enhancing consumer experience
in cinema, snacks and drinks seem to add to the consumer thrill of watching the
games on the telly - 50 per cent of them have soft drinks and 32 per cent alcoholic
drinks when watching matches. It might be good news for World Cup sponsors like
Coca Cola and McDonalds, who invested huge sums of money to display their names
on the bill boards around the football fields. The
survey reveals that 72 per cent of Chinese know Adidas is the official sponsor
of the World Cup, 65 per cent of them can recognize Coca Cola, followed closely
by Visa and Sony with awareness of 61 per cent and 58 per cent. McDonalds, ranking
the fifth among all the sponsors, has been identified by 47 per cent of Chinese
consumers. The solar energy company Yingli Group, first Chinese brand to sponsor
this worldwide game, has become familiar to 20 per cent of the match audience.
Not an insignificant achievement considering it was practically unknown to most
before the games kicked off. It
is interesting, however, to get consumers recognition without paying any
sponsorship fee. 45 per cent of Chinese feel Nike is also one of the sponsors
of the World Cup 2010 with Pepsi also getting an echo of 38 per cent from the
media noise. KFC, competing with McDonalds for the share of consumers stomach,
also seems to have secured a share of their mind and is wrongly perceived by over
20 per cent of consumers as a sponsor. The
Chinese also predict a Brazil versus Argentina final. |