Thursday 30 April 2020

To advertise or not to advertise: P&G records 5% sales increase amid Covid-19 demand

To advertise or not to advertise: P&G records 5% sales increase amid Covid-19 demand

To advertise or not to advertise: P&G records 5% sales increase amid Covid-19 demand

Procter & Gamble recently reported an organic sales increase of 5% year-on-year as the coronavirus boosted consumer demand for products in its healthcare, fabricare and homecare categories.
In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, advertisers are all grappling with the same quandary: to spend or not to spend. Procter & Gamble has committed to the former – citing the need to retain “mental availability” of its brands in a time when their physical availability may be lacking.
The CPG giant, which produces the likes of toilet paper brand Charmin and cold relief medicine Vicks, witnessed US sales rise by 10% this quarter. The bump successfully offset the corresponding 8% decline in the Chinese market.
Despite the lift circumstantial demand – as well as “concentration” of the number of products shipping to retailers – chief financial officer Jon Moeller confirmed the company would be putting its foot down on media spend, rather than taking it off in an effort to bank cash.
He noted that while reduced product availability worldwide may lead to greater consumer trial of P&G products, it can also lead consumers away from their brands.
“There are consumers that are trying products that they haven’t tried before – but they aren’t necessarily ours,” he told investors. “We need to work hard to ensure that we maintain mental and physical availability to the greatest extent possible, so that those consumers return to their beloved and trusted brands – which are ours – as they’re more fully available.
“There’s a big upside here in terms of reminding consumers of the benefits that they’ve experienced with our brands and how they’ve [met] their family’s needs, which is why this is not a time to go off air.”
Moeller noted the worldwide increase in media consumption was an added opportunity in “doubling down” on brand visibility.
“This is not a time to retrench,” he said. “And really that’s all in service to our consumers and service to our retail partners, and – we believe – in service to our society.”
The company is also monitoring its portfolio throughout the Covid-19 period with an eye to mix it up once consumer spending patterns restabilize. Moeller said not everything would go back “on the shelf” post-coronavirus.
“I think this is a reset opportunity for us and for our retail partners and I’m encouraged by the conversation so far in terms of approaching that in a constructive, partnered fashion,” he said.
P&G’s Q3 marketing spend was up 1.9% year-on-year, driven by increases in the beauty healthcare, and baby, feminine and family categories.
Source: The Drum

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INSIGHTS April 2020 – Global Poverty, Pandemic Response, & Risk Reduction

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INSIGHTS April 2020 – Global Poverty, Pandemic Response, & Risk Reduction



United Nations University INSIGHTS insights@unu.edu via gmail.mcsv.net 

Mon, Apr 27, 9:20 PM (3 days ago)


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APRIL 2020 EDITION

Will COVID-19 Lead to Half a Billion More People Living in Poverty in Developing Countries?

The economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic could have devastating impacts on developing countries and could cause global poverty to increase for the first time since 1990.
READ MORE »
Welcome to the April edition of the INSIGHTS newsletter. As the COVID-19 pandemic persists, UNU experts continue to respond with timely analysis and produce research advancing progress on every Sustainable Development Goal.

From the potential economic impacts of COVID-19 in developing countries, and the virus's implications for the fight against modern slavery, to ways to bolster co-benefits of integrating climate change action and pandemic response, this month's edition brings you the latest thought pieces, news, publications, and job postings from across UNU's global system.

Miss an edition of
INSIGHTS? Visit the archive.

We Could Be Vastly Overestimating the Death Rate for COVID-19 – Here’s Why

Insufficient COVID-19 testing means only a proportion of global cases are being counted in official statistics, potentially making the virus seem deadlier than it is.
READ MORE »

Welfare Works: Redistribution is the Way to Create Less Violent, Less Unequal Societies

Despite expert consensus that high inequality destabilises societies and undermines democracy, not enough is being done to curtail this growing, global issue.
READ MORE »

The Impact of COVID-19 on Modern Slavery

The COVID-19 pandemic may greatly impact the fight against modern slavery by heightening risks for those who are already exploited, increasing the risks of further exploitation, and disrupting response efforts.
READ MORE »

Priorities for the G20 Virtual Summit on Coronavirus

The G20 can help lead a path out of the COVID-19 crisis by prioritising a global crisis coordination mechanism, response-critical people and goods transportation, a global fiscal stimulus, and commitment by global leaders.
READ MORE »

A Systematic Review of Water and Gender Interlinkages: Assessing the Intersection With Health

Through an analysis of both observational and interventional studies related to water, gender, and sustainability, this paper highlights a range of challenges experienced by women relating to inadequate water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) resources and their implications for SDGs 3, 5, and 8.
READ MORE »

UNU Celebrates Earth Day

UNU researchers and staff shared how they are taking climate action from home despite the challenges posed by COVID-19.
WATCH VIDEO »      READ BLOG POST »

UNU Experts Appointed as Lead Authors for UN Report on Drought

Two UNU scientists will lead the UN Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction Special Report on Droughts, to be published by the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction in mid-2021. 
READ MORE »

UNU Appoints New Director in the Netherlands

UNU is pleased to announce the appointment of Prof. Bartel Van de Walle as the next Director of the UNU Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology.
READ MORE »
FEATURED PUBLICATIONS
Building the Future of Quality Infrastructure
A collection of policy briefs and discussions held at the 2019 Think20 Summit in Tokyo, this publication provides recommendations for building quality infrastructure, a key driver to achieving the SDGs; UNU Senior Vice-Rector Taikan Oki authors the final chapter concerning global targets on drinking water.
GET THE PUBLICATION »
Building Holistic Resilience: Tokyo’s 2050 Strategy
An examination of the Japanese capital's “Zero Emission Tokyo Strategy” against a backdrop of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; the article provides recommendations for bolstering the strategy to enhance co-benefits from integrating climate change mitigation and adaptation, while strengthening pandemic response.
READ THE ARTICLE »
ACADEMIC & LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES

Call for Blog Contributions — Regional Dimension of COVID-19 Response

The Connecting Ideas blog is seeking contributions related to regional governance and COVID-19 from academics, policymakers, professionals, and concerned citizens.  
READ MORE »

Summer Academy on World Risk and Adaptation Futures — Social Protection

The application deadline has been extended to 3 May for this one-week academy in Jakarta, Indonesia, offering young professionals the opportunity to generate knowledge that feeds into both policy and practice.
READ MORE »
UNU JOBS BOARD – WORK WITH US!
Operations Manager (Kuala Lumpur)
Research Associate (Helsinki)
 
SEE ALL AVAILABLE POSITIONS »
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IPC and ACSPN hold Webinar on Combating Covid-19 infodemic


Press Release

IPC and ACSPN hold Webinar on Combating Covid-19 infodemic

For immediate release: Thursday April 23, 2020World Press Freedom Day: Experts harp on fact-checking, fairness ...

The International Press Centre (IPC) Lagos-Nigeria in partnership with The Association of Communication Scholars & Professionals of Nigeria (ACSPN) has announced a Webinar on "Combating Covid-19 Infodemic" for journalists.

The webinar is a partnership initiative under ACSPN's Online Empowerment series and IPC's capacity building programme for journalists, pursuant to the objectives of Component 4b: Support to Media of the European Union Support to Democratic Governance in Nigeria - EU-SDGN.

The training which is scheduled to hold on Friday 24th April, 2020 from 12noon is sequel to the publication of a Covid-19 Reporting Advisory by IPC.

The webinar session will feature speeches and presentations by the guest of honour, Ambassador Ketil Karlsen, Head of the EU delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS; Prof. Adebayo Fayoyin, Understanding the causes and consequences of Covid-19 information crisis and Dr. Clinton Okonye, 'The Science of Coronavirus: Differentiating Facts from Fiction'. Prof. Nosa Owens-Ibie, Vice Chancellor, Caleb University and General Secretary, ACSPN and Mr. Lanre Idowu, Executive Director, Media Review will also give opening and closing remarks.

The Executive Director, Mr. Lanre Arogundade in a statement noted the webinar aims to mitigate the parallel challenge of disinformation and misinformation as an emerging infodemic around the COVID-19 pandemic. He further explained that the global lockdown has led to an international surge in the demand and search for COVID-19 and Coronavirus related information therefore, the webinar is expected to support the important role of Journalists in combatting misreporting and falsification in the era.

At least 100 Journalists are expected to participate in the webinar.

IPC therefore calls on Journalists to register via https://www.eztalks.com/r/969101298

International Press Centre, Lagos
admin@ipcng.org
www.ipcng.org
  


Olutoyin Ayoade

EDITORS BOX!!!CHILDREN IN GREECE DEPENDS ON YOU

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif


Kids In Greece Are Depending On Us


Dear Supporter,
While many of us are safely confined at home, hundreds of migrant children in Greece without a parent or relative are sitting behind bars in police jails and immigration detention, where they face a heightened risk of contracting Covid-19.
The Greek government has the ability to move these kids into safe, child-friendly housing where they can learn, play and thrive.
Childhood happens only once in a lifetime – we need your help to make sure migrant children in Greece get theirs!

Take action today and ask Greece's Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to #FreeTheKids.
Thank you for taking action with us!
Eva Cossé, Greece Researcher, Europe & Central Asia, Human Rights Watch, @Eva_Cosse