Toyota scraps all Olympic-related TV ads in Japan amid COVID-19 outbreak - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:59 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Toyota scraps all Olympic-related TV ads in Japan amid COVID-19 outbreak

Toyota won't be airing any Olympic-themed advertisements on Japanese television during the Tokyo Games despite being one of the IOC's top corporate sponsors.

Automaker spent $1B for the right to be a major Olympic sponsor

Among its many Olympic-themed initiatives, Toyota launched a fleet of taxi cabs that would ferry visitors around Tokyo. (Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg)

Toyota won't be airing any Olympic-themed advertisements on Japanese television during the Tokyo Games, despite being one of the International Olympic Committee'stop corporate sponsors.

The extraordinary decision by the country's top automaker underlines how polarizing the Games have become in Japan as COVID-19 infections rise ahead of Friday's opening ceremony.

"There are many issues with these Games that are proving difficult to be understood," Toyota's chief communications officer, Jun Nagata, told reporters Monday.

CEOAkio Toyoda, the company founder's grandson, will be skipping the opening ceremony. That's despite about 200 athletes taking part in the Olympics and Paralympics who are affiliated with Toyota, including swimmer Takeshi Kawamoto and softball player Miu Goto.

Nagata said the company will continue to support its athletes.

Pandemic of bad marketing

Being a corporate sponsor for the Olympics is usually all about using the Games as a platform to enhance the brand. But being linked with a pandemic-era Games may be viewed by some as a potential marketing problem.

Toyota Motor Corp. signed on as a worldwide Olympic sponsor in 2015, in an eight-year deal reportedly worth nearly $1 billion US, becoming the first car company to join the IOC's top-tier marketing program.

The sponsorship, which started globally in 2017, runs through the 2024 Olympics, covering three consecutive Olympics in Asia, including the Tokyo Games.

The Tokyo Olympics, already delayed by a year, are going ahead despite the Japanese capital being under a state of emergency.

IOC president Thomas Bach, right, and Toyota president Akio Toyoda are shown in 2015, when Toyota was more than happy to align its brand with the 2020 Olympic Games. (Reuters)

It's already virtually a made-for-TV Olympics with most events, including the opening ceremony, going ahead without fans in the venues. Some dignitaries, such as IOCpresident Thomas Bach and Emperor Naruhito, are likely to attend.

We should never have gotten the Games- Japanese factory worker Motoyuki Niitsuma

Toyota is one of the most trusted brands in Japan. The maker of the Prius hybrid and Lexus luxury models prides itself on its quality controls, with its "just in time" super-efficient production methods praised and emulated around the world.

Public opinion surveys reflect widespread concern among Japanese people about having tens of thousands of Olympic participants enter the country during a pandemic.

Motoyuki Niitsuma, a manufacturing plant worker who was banging on a bucket in a recent Tokyo protest against the Olympics, said he didn't like the idea of cheering for the national team, and the pandemic has made that message clear.

"The time to compete is over. Now is the time to co-operate," he said. "We should never have gotten the Games."