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Tag archives: edcon
Ad of the Week: A+ for a promising CNA campaign
by Oresti Patricios. A stunning campaign from Promise for CNA brings home a simple message that encourages reading from an early age.
Edcon confirms new agency appointments
by MarkLives. Edcon has issued a statement confirming a number of new agency appointments, as well as those which have been retained.
BREAKING: Y&R SA network, Promise win Edcon
by Herman Manson. Y&R SA has won the Edgars account, and Promise has won Edcon’s Speciality division, according to multiple sources.
Edcon account out to pitch as uncertainty looms
by Herman Manson. Edcon is out to pitch as uncertainty looms around the future of the retail giant.
Africa Dispatches: The Red Square
by Mandy de Waal. Edgars is in trouble. Big trouble.
Shelf Life: Edcon squares up for ecommerce
Louise Marsland’s (@Louise_Marsland) pick of new product, packaging and design launches.
International design success for Porky Hefer; artful potato chips from McCain; Jacobs coffee pops into odd spaces to brighten your day; and Edcon begins rolling out its online shopping sites.
E-retail: Local brand activity marks a shift in how clothes are sold online
by Arthur Goldstuck (@art2gee). The arrival of a Mr Price shopping cart on both Web and mobile sites, and new initiatives by Edcon and eBucks, mark a shift in how clothes are sold online.
For much of the past decade, online clothing retail in South Africa has seemed like the toddler party that the big kids avoided. Start-ups, newcomers and unknowns dominated, while the established brands either stayed away or made only a grudging appearance.
Edgars had a web site with a shopping cart, but it was more of an apology than a serious online store. The likes of Stuttafords, Truworths, Jet, Foschini and Mr Price were entirely absent from e-commerce.
Recently, in one week, three major brands have come to the party, and getting dressed will never be the same again.
The biggest splash was made by the chain that is increasingly positioning itself as cool and go-ahead: Mr Price. Even their new web site address reflects that image: MrP.co.za. It claims 18 000 items in its catalogue, and allows customers to choose by size, colour, brand and … trend. Delivery choice is wide, from home to Post Office to nearest store.
Payment option is even wider, including credit card, COD, gift vouchers and account. More important, returns are allowed within 30 days, via store, Post Office or courier.
Probably the single most important option in all of the MrP bouquet, however, is it’s mobile site. It uses a web development standard called HTML 5, which allows the site to look the same on any phone browser, regardless of model. But the real killer app, so to speak, is not the mere fact that it can be used on a phone: it is that it looks great on a phone. It appears inviting, and that is the first step in convincing potential customers to become paying customers.
Jupiter Joburg wants ‘more skin in the game’
by Kim Penstone. It shouldn’t come as a surprise to hear Jupiter Joburg’s Alison Deeb describe the current state of affairs at the agency, post the soul-destroying loss of the Edcon account in March this year, as “very exciting”.
Jupiter Cape Town’s year for living dangerously
At the end of last year, the bad news just kept coming for The Jupiter Drawing Room (Cape Town). At the start of December 2011, the agency was informed that a two-month termination clause had kicked in on its biggest account – that of Woolworths – which it had held for five years.