student view of Benetton advertising
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Transcript student view of Benetton advertising
UNITED COLORS OF
BENETTON
Presented by:
Jordan Carrasco
Emilie Claveille
Niklas Gustavsson
Alix Provansal
Maria Vasileiou
Ethical Perspectives
of Business Practices
OVERVIEW
History
Advertising Campaigns
Franchising policy
Implications for the international
marketing manager
Conclusion
HISTORY
1965: official date of birth of the company Benetton
1969: internationalization of Benetton with the opening of
the first shop
Late 1980’s: groups of franchisees begun to suffer as a
result of Benetton's relentless expansion which brought
strong competition
From 1982-2000: collaboration with Oliviero Toscani
By 2001: Benetton group operate in 120 countries through
5,000 franchised Benetton stores
UNITED COLORS
OF BENETTON
“If everyone likes a campaign, no
one will talk about it.”
Luciano Benetton
ADVERTISING:
The cons point of view
Exploitation of negative social issues to
increase the company’s notoriety &
profit
Religious feelings infringement &
racism promotion
No consideration of cultural
sensibilities nor historical context of
targeted countries
Need for competitors to imitate the
style of the campaign
ADVERTISING:
The cons point of view
Negative impact on consumer’s decision
buying process
Aversion to advertising from the audience
Legal actions
Benetton as a martyr to censorship
ADVERTISING:
The pros point of view
Memorability / Brand recognition
Innovation in communication
Production of images of global concern for global
customers
Socially responsible business
No provocation but awareness
ADVERTISING:
The pros point of view
Differentiation from misleading campaign
Challenge stereotypes
Cost effectiveness
Awards winning and exposure in galleries around the world
Exploitation of clothing to raise social issues
CONTROVERSIAL ADVERTISING
CAMPAIGN: Death Row
Negative points
No clear impression of Benetton's view on the subject
Widespread protest from customers as well as government
bodies
Strong objections from the families of the victims and
prisoners
Downfall on sales
Black identity could be connected with criminality and death
Trivialisation of death penalty
CONTROVERSIAL ADVERTISING
CAMPAIGN: Death Row
Positive points
Actual controversial issue
Arouse people awareness
CONTROVERSIAL ADVERTISING
CAMPAIGN: Aids
Negative points
Exploitation of the victim
Creation of the a debate about the limits of advertising
Loss of sales and retailers
Obscene advertising campaign
CONTROVERSIAL ADVERTISING
CAMPAIGN: Aids
Positive points
Launch during the AIDS crisis in 1991
Permission of Kirby's family to use the picture in their advertising
Raising attention of the growing AIDS epidemic
Company involvement in AIDS organisations
Benetton's condom ads provided one solution of the problem
Benetton promoted the use of condoms
UNITED COLORS OF BENETTON
FRANCHISING
“Benetton has often been quoted as an
example of a company which has been able to
grow extensively and rapidly with minimal
financial commitment in retail outlets because
the individual franchisees have been
responsible for their own financing”
(Bruce, 1987; Dunkin, 1988; Dapiran,1992)
UNETHICAL POINTS
Exclusive distribution
Demand of a certain threshold of sales volume
Pre-labellisation of products
No take back of unsold / defective items
Minimum amount of orders
Heavy control (layout, music, light…)
Negative impact of the campaigns
ADVANTAGES FOR THE
FRANCHISEE
Ease of brand identification
Neither fee nor royalty paid
A four-year payout
Selection of desired clothes
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL
MARKETING MANAGER
IMPACT ON THE MARKETING MIX
PRODUCT
Advertising known more than the product
Need strong quality to fight negative impact
PRICE
Imposed prices
Curb in prices
PEOPLE
Boycott / complaints
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE
INTERNATIONAL MARKETING MANAGER
PROMOTION
Controversial advertising campaigns
Refusal of printing Benetton’s ads
Banishment of the ads in several countries
Absence of the product
PACKAGING
Benetton bags printed only with faces
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL
MARKETING MANAGER
PARTNERS
Loss of sales for franchisees
Legal action
PLACE
Less availability of products due to the closing of shops/franchises
No shocking images in the stores
IMPACT OF THE KEY
STAKEHOLDERS
Customers : Boycott
Suppliers: resentment to offensive ads
Shareholders: End of collaboration Toscani-Benetton
Retailers: Legal actions
USE AND ROLE OF INTERMEDIARIES
Manipulation of the franchising law
Rapid market development at relatively low price
Cannabilization
Exclusive distribution
REGULATORY AUTHORITIES
ASA – Advertising Standards Authority
Statement of the German Supreme Court
Need for harmonization within EU
CONCLUSION