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Lamborghini brand sharing and cigarette advertising
  1. Timothy Dewhirst1,
  2. Wonkyong Beth Lee2
  1. 1 Department of Marketing and Consumer Studies, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada
  2. 2 Dan Program in Management and Organizational Studies, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
  1. Correspondence to Professor Timothy Dewhirst; dewhirst{at}uoguelph.ca

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Lamborghini brand sharing and cigarette advertising

Licensing and brand sharing arrangements, where a fee or royalty is paid for use of a name, is a common strategic consideration to provide a newly introduced product or service with an immediate and proven brand identity (table 1).1 Serving as such an example, Korean Tomorrow and Global (KT&G), which is South Korea’s leading tobacco firm, launched a new cigarette brand, Tonino Lamborghini, on 18 April 2012, where the branding resembles the legendary Italian luxury sports car maker (figure 1A,B).2 3 According to The Moodie Report, it took 1 year of negotiation to reach a brand licensing agreement and 3 years to develop the cigarette product.4 The cigarette brand was initially offered in two variants, L8 (predominantly black package) and L6 (predominantly yellow package), with reported tar deliveries of 8.0 mg and 6.0 mg, respectively. Compared with KT&G’s other product offerings, Tonino Lamborghini cigarettes have considerably higher reported tar deliveries and such product characteristics contribute to the brand’s masculine, powerful and assertive image.4–8 Tonino Lamborghini now offers additional brand variants, including ‘Ice Volt’ (figure 2), which is mentholated and has promotional claims that the product possesses ‘the thrilling taste of powerful cooling freshness,’ and ‘Ice Tornado,’ which is described as having a strong, fresh and cool flavour and possesses a ‘tornado’ filter that rapidly rotates cigarette smoke (figure 3).9

Table 1

Key terms and definitions

Figure 1

(A, B) A two-page Tonino Lamborghini cigarette ad, from the Korean edition of Esquire (July 2012 issue), that appeared on successive right-side pages on glossy, heavier and higher quality paper relative to most pages seen within the magazine. The ad circulated a few months after the cigarette brand’s launch.

Figure 2

A double-page ad, from 2012, that identifies the Tonino Lamborghini brand variant ‘Ice Volt’ as ‘new.’

Figure 3

From 2013, a Tonino Lamborghini ad for the ‘Ice Tornado’ brand variant that circulated in the lifestyle magazine M25. The ad copy, in Korean, states the Ice Tornado brand name and refers to the variant’s ‘tornado’ filter and a coolness sensation that wakes you up and provides alertness (ie, provides a jolt).

The brand name, Tonino Lamborghini refers to the son of Ferruccio Lamborghini, who is the founder of the legendary car manufacturer. Tonino Lamborghini’s signature is depicted on the packaging, which is highly expressive of an identity and meant to give the product authenticity.10 Tonino Lamborghini is also known as an Italian merchandising brand that offers fashion items as well as tobacco paraphernalia such as high-end lighters, cases, cigar cutters and ashtrays.11 Like its automobile counterpart, a raging bull logo is used to represent Tonino Lamborghini cigarettes (figure 4). A bull represents a powerful, impressive, striking and daunting beast that also symbolises strength, masculinity, virility and regality.12 13

Figure 4

A photograph of point-of-sale signage situated among the ‘power wall’ of a convenience store. The ad copy, in Korean, states the Tonino Lamborghini brand name and refers to smoothness as well as confidence and assertiveness. The price of Tonino Lamborghini cigarettes is listed at ₩4500 (nearly US$4.00), which reflects a premium price point and the same price listing as direct competitor, Marlboro, although it is acknowledged that the price range of cigarettes tends to be minimal in South Korea. The photo, dated 14 March 2016, was taken by Timothy Dewhirst.

Choi Jihyun, KT&G Overseas Brand Department Manager, explains that the tobacco company is attempting to leverage the masculine global appeal of the Lamborghini brand name, which is most likely to attract or draw Korea’s younger generation male smokers who are particularly interested in western culture and imported luxury brands and cars. Tonino Lamborghini is marketed to ‘have a premium and masculine brand image, targeting the ‘assertive, competent and refined’ man in possession of the ‘Lamborghini charisma.’’4 Moreover, cars such as Lamborghini are regarded as expressions of excitement, as well as being flashy and spirited.14 Accordingly, the packaging of Tonino Lamborghini cigarettes uses bold colours and graphics. Lamborghini cars are globally recognised for sensational speed and unique style (eg, the doors open upward rather than outward), as well as luxury, sophistication and innovation.

Domestically, the launch of Lamborghini cigarettes—given the brand’s higher reported tar deliveries; masculine, powerful and premium image; and youthful appeal—appears to be competitively positioned against Marlboro, which is the most popular cigarette brand globally. Nevertheless, KT&G’s growth is increasingly dependent on exports to overseas markets.15 Despite being the leading tobacco company in South Korea, which is the world’s eighth largest cigarette market, KT&G’s export sales now exceed its domestic sales.16 17 KT&G has acquired the ‘exclusive global sales rights for the (Tonino Lamborghini) cigarette brand and plans to market it as one of its global strategic items.’3 Since 2012, Tonino Lamborghini has been exported to 17 countries including China (duty-free shops), Russia and  the Middle East.18–20

The Lamborghini brand sharing example provides evidence that important obligations of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which is legally binding and has been ratified by 180 Parties to date, including the Republic of Korea, are not being fulfilled. Brand sharing is identified as a form of tobacco advertising and promotion covered by stipulations of the WHO FCTC and defined within guidelines for implementation of Article 13.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Dr Joanna Cohen and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback and supportive comments. When writing this manuscript, TD and WBL were visiting scholars (adjunct professors) at Hanyang University’s Department of Advertising and Public Relations in South Korea.

References

Footnotes

  • Contributors TD and WBL significantly contributed to the writing and analysis of the study.

  • Funding This work was supported by an award from the Institute for Global Tobacco Control at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health with funding from the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use.

  • Competing interests TD is an associate editor of Tobacco Control with respect to Product Marketing and Promotion. He has served as an expert witness in tobacco litigation and served as an invited expert and consultant for establishing Article 13 guidelines of the WHO FCTC.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.