Christopher Campbell
Nov 2, 2022

Corporate crisis: The new PR norm in China

The sphere and influence of PR has grown to become essential in China, where brands are just one crisis away from losing Gen Z, their stakeholders, credibility and reputation, says Hylink's strategy director.

Li-Ning was recently rocked by accusations that items from its latest collection strongly resemble Japanese military outfits during WW2.(L)Li-Ning’s new design from the brand’s official Weibo account, (R)the brand’s national fashion image Chinese Li-Ning, Japanese military uniform during WWII

Please sign in or register

Access limited free articles a month after free, fast registration.

Existing users sign in here

Forgotten Password?

Having trouble signing in?

Contact Customer Support at
[email protected]
or call+852 3175 1913

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

WPP’s Mark Read on the new-biz pipeline, rebuilding ...

CEO asserts that more time in-office will make WPP a 'stronger company in five years' time'.

3 hours ago

Former AKQA boss Ajaz Ahmed launches shop to ‘rival ...

Studio.One makes its debut with several ex-AKQA staffers.

10 hours ago

Women to Watch 2024: Shilpa Sinha, McCann Worldgroup

Sinha’s strategic leadership at McCann Worldgroup unites cultural insight with creative impact. She also advocates for inclusive representation across regional and global work.

10 hours ago

Former McDonald's marketer Eugene Lee joins Chagee ...

Earlier this month, the Chinese milk tea brand's Nasdaq debut boosted its valuation to US$5.95 billion.