Eswatini Financial Times

Puma hones focus on speed in Olympic battle with Adidas, Nike

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PARIS - German sportswear brand Puma is using this year’s Olympic Games and its partnershi­p with sprint champions Jamaica to focus on speed as it jostles with Adidas and Nike to carve out space in an increasing­ly competitiv­e running and lifestyle market.

Puma CEO Arne Freundt aims to boost sales of “performanc­e” products like running shoes and soccer cleats, and has revamped Puma’s “Forever Faster” message in its first brand campaign in a decade on Wednesday in Paris, host of this year’s games .

The campaign features top athletes, including pole-vault record holder Armand Duplantis and 400-metre hurdles champion Karsten Warholm.

Puma is trying to win over more everyday and serious runners, and its sponsorshi­p of Jamaica’s Olympic team and some of the world’s best sprinters like Shericka Jackson and Elaine Thompson-Herah helps to associate the brand with speed, said Geoff Lowery, analyst at Redburn in London.

“You’re never going to sell very many running spikes, but in terms of properly iconic teams that credential­ise you as a performanc­e brand and associate you with some of the most exciting athletes, Puma have a super-strong relationsh­ip there,” Lowery said.Freundt visited Jamaica at the end of March, attending the country’s top high school track and field meet for the first time to launch the Jamaican Olympic kit at the event seen as a testing ground for young athletic talent.

“You’re never going to sell very many running spikes, but in terms of properly iconic teams that credential­ise you as a performanc­e brand and associate you with some of the most exciting athletes, Puma have a super-strong relationsh­ip there,” Lowery said.

Freundt visited

Jamaica at the end of

March, attending the country’s top high school track and field meet for the first time to launch the Jamaican Olympic kit at the event seen as a testing ground for young athletic talent.

Puma’s latest running spikes for its Olympic sprinters and hurdlers are in a bright orange hue tinged with pink, which was picked for the distinct contrast it creates against the blue of the athletics track, according to Puma’s senior head of innovation Romain Girard.

Brands like Puma, Adidas, and Nike will also be allowed to celebrate their Olympic athletes’ medal wins on social media during the Games for the first time, as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) plans to relax rules governing online marketing in a “pilot project” with the World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry.

“With the new IOC regulation­s we will be able to use that moment in a better way, to congratula­te them [athletes] also via social media, I think that’s a win-win for both the Olympics as well as us,” Freundt said.

 ?? ?? ▲ Puma launches a new brand campaign with Olympic athletes
▲ Puma launches a new brand campaign with Olympic athletes

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