Cold weather, snow and wind did not deter Chinese companies from
coming into Turin and making remarkable investments in marketing
promotions and sponsorships.
At the opening ceremony, a crowd of some 35,000 filled the
Olympic Stadium. More than 4,700 performers, including fast-moving
skaters with fiery rocket packs, dancers and even dancing cows
opened the festivities.
Some 2,600 athletes from the more than 80 countries and regions
marched into the stadium accompanied by American pop music from the
1970s and 1980s.
Amid the teams and names coming into the stadiums, New Yalu
group from Jiangsu Province was the only Chinese company and also
the first one to provide a foreign delegation - Democratic People's
Republic of Korea- with sportswear.
Apart from sportswear companies, computer giant Lenovo and beer
company Tsingtao also took advantage of the golden chance to expand
their global market.
After being selected as the official domestic beer sponsors of
the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, Tsingtao Beer has stepped up its
efforts worldwide, including a successful bid for official domestic
beer sponsor for the Winter Olympics' Chinese Delegation.
Led by vice-president of Tsingtao Beer, Zhang Xueju, a group of
staff came to Turin and launched a series of promotional activities
including exchanging ideas with dealers, consumers and
reporters.
Zhang said they were gaining experience for the 2008 Beijing
Olympics marketing programme.
For Lenovo, with its name splashed on walls, all of its 34 work
stations have athletes and trainers from Australia to Sweden typing
out e-mails to friends and family.
Lenovo Group Ltd acquired IBM's personal computer business. A
household name in China, it is banking on expensive Olympic
sponsorship to help it become a worldwide brand. "We're using the
Torino Games to establish ourselves as a global player," said
Deepak Advani, Lenovo's chief marketing officer.
As a top level sponsor, Lenovo offers 5,000 computers, over 600
notebook PCs, 400 servers and 1600 printers for the Turin
Games.
Sohu and Sina, China's top two websites, are also determined to
use the Games to increase influence home and abroad.
As an official Internet Content Service (ICS) partner for the
Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, the first such in Olympic history, Sohu
sees the Winter Olympics as a chance and also a challenge to test
its ability to meet internet users' demands for different news.
(China Daily February 22, 2006)