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IOC marketing director Timo Lumme said the Olympics and Dow might have more in common than you'd think, calling Dow a company that thinks a lot about sustainability and "has very strong beliefs that what it is doing has to be for the betterment of mankind."
"Every industry has it's challenges and any area of life has its challenges," Lumme said. "But ultimately, what's important is that you look at where companies want to get and what positive contributions they want to make."
That was, in some ways, the intent of the USOC and the London Organizing Committee when they signed separate deals with BP. The LOC had good reason to bring on a big-money sponsor with headquarters in its hometown.
And when the USOC was scrambling for sponsors after a rough 2008, it welcomed an alliance with BP, as well. Petroleum companies -- most notably, Chevron -- had a history of sponsorships with sectors of the Olympic movement. Luc Bardin, BP's chief sales and marketing officer, said the USOC deal was a chance to become a "natural member of the Olympics. There is a lower-carbon, greener dimension to this."
Then came the Gulf oil spill.
While BP's investment in Olympic sponsorship is insignificant compared to the expenses it will incur for the spill's clean-up, the accident has left the Olympic movement exposed -- to possible protests, to the possible loss of the funding if BP goes belly-up and to the loss of an active partner.
Since the disaster unfolded, Olympic executives have shown effusive support for BP and refused to speculate publicly on possible problems that might come up.
"British Petroleum are our partners. They supported us during the bid. They have a pre-eminent track record particularly in supporting the creative arts in the U.K. They are our premier partner in the delivery of the Cultural Olympiad," said organizing committee president Sebastian Coe. "We have a world-class business that shares our vision, are a fabulous partner and will be our partner right the way through."
Meanwhile, with the relationship nearly six months old and the Summer Olympics less than two years away, Baird of the USOC said there still were no plans to come up with a marketing campaign or message for the sponsorship.
When and if BP does take action, what kind of message can it put out?
"At this point, it's going to take a very careful activation strategy to make sure people don't become incredibly cynical about BP and the way it does business," Chadwick said. "There's a fine balance. If they overemphasize their environmental credentials at this point, they could confuse customers and create an unworkable contradiction."
Of course, in the world of big-money sponsorships, contradictions abound. The Olympic movement is one of many examples -- though certainly one of the biggest.
"Hey, there's nothing I like better than sneaking in, in dark glasses, and having a Big Mac every once in a while. It's a guilty pleasure," said Pound, of the IOC, about one of the organization's biggest sponsors, McDonald's, which gets key sales locations inside the Olympic villages.
When Dow signed its deal, vice president Heinz Haller bragged that his company was now in business with the owners of the Olympic rings -- "the only medium that we have in the world that is recognized by 95 percent of the global population."
Yes, Dow Chemical and the Olympic rings, together at last.
Whether it makes sense or not.
"As a general rule, people aren't going to put two and two together," Keller said. "There's so much marketing and commercial projects out there. But it's a valid thing to raise. In 'Sponsorship 101,' the cardinal rule is, event organizers want to pick sponsors that fit. At some level, the ones we're talking about don't fit."
[Associated Press;
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