Here is an extract from a July 3rd, article by Paul Verschuur which addresses the value of the Swiss brand in companies’ marketing practices.
"ZURICH: Thomas Minder's family-owned company has marketed mouthwash using the white cross and red background of Switzerland's flag for three generations, relying on the country's reputation for quality, purity and reliability.
" 'Swissness' in marketing consumer goods is absolutely essential," said Minder, chief executive officer of the company, Trybol. "It's worth more than Coca-Cola."
Minder is at the forefront of a campaign to outlaw "Swiss" yogurt made from U.S. milk and "Swiss" cosmetics produced in Germany. Watchmakers, including Swatch Group, proposed last week the tightening of rules for "Swiss-made" timepieces as part of efforts to preserve the national brand and protect Switzerland's 240 billion francs, or $197 billion, worth of exports…
About 6,400 registered trademarks contain the Swiss cross, the country's name or another reference to Swissness, according to the Meyer Lustenberger law firm in Zurich, which researched the issue for the government. But 220 of the trademarks are owned by foreign businesses, and there is also a growing tendency among companies boasting Swiss roots to make their products abroad to cut costs, said Simon Holzer, a lawyer for the firm.
Commercial use of the Swiss cross is illegal, even for products made in the country, but the government recognizes that the law, which permits use of the emblem for decorative purposes, is ambiguous and difficult to enforce, and it has proposed clarifying the rules.
The Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry has urged the government to insist that at least 80 percent of a mechanical watch, or 60 percent of an electronic one, must come from Switzerland for it to qualify as Swiss-made. Under current rules, only the mechanics have to be at least half Swiss. About 40 million fake Swiss watches are made worldwide each year, compared with 25 million authentic timepieces, according to figures provided by Jacques Duchene, president of the exhibitors committee at the Baselworld watch fair.
Minder said the problem extended beyond watches. In May, he took out a full-page advertisement in a local newspaper urging Emmi, the largest dairy company in the country, to stop using the Swiss cross on yogurt made and sold in the United States. Emmi said it has to use American milk because of U.S. health regulations. The yogurt packaging does not say that the milk that made the yogurt is Swiss, but it does use the Emmi logo containing the cross.
"It's hard to understand why Swiss companies shouldn't use the Swiss cross," said Ruth Stadelmann, a spokeswoman for Emmi, who added that "there's got to be a clear, single rule" governing all uses of the national emblem.
The government has acknowledged that enforcing the ban on use of the cross is not feasible and has said that it will propose changing the law to allow both the emblem and "Made in Switzerland" to be used for any product or service that is legitimately Swiss…" (Primary Source: www.iht.com)
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