
Lessons In Marketing
February 8, 2007(Beware: LONG POST… but hilarious, so KEEP READING!)
Everytime you go shopping, you have to remember the slogans or commercial music of the products you see in the market, and it’s known that cracking an international market is a goal of most growing corporations.
It shouldn’t be that hard, yet even the big multi-nationals run into trouble because of language and cultural differences.
Here are the best examples…
The name Coca-Cola in China was first rendered as Ke-kou-ke-la…
Unfortunately, the Coke company did not discover until after thousands of signs had been printed that the phrase means “bite the wax tadpole” or “female horse stuffed with wax” depending on the dialect.
Coke then researched 40,000 Chinese characters and found a close phonetic equivalent, “ko-kou-ko-le“, which can be loosely translated as “happiness in the mouth“.
In Taiwan, the translation of the Pepsi slogan “Come alive with the Pepsi Generation“…

… came out as “Pepsi will bring your ancestors back from the dead“.
Also in Chinese, the Kentucky Fried Chicken slogan “finger-lickin’ good” came out as “eat your fingers off.”

The American slogan for Salem cigarettes, “Salem – Feeling Free“, got translated in the Japanese market into “When smoking Salem, you feel so refreshed that your mind seems to be free and empty“.

When General Motors introduced the Chevy Nova in South America, it was apparently unaware that “no va” means “it won’t go“.
After the company figured out why it wasn’t selling any cars, it renamed the car in its Spanish markets to the Caribe.
Ford had a similar problem in Brazil when the Pinto flopped. The company found out that Pinto was Brazilian slang for “tiny male genitals“.

Ford pried all the nameplates off and substituted the word Pinto for Corcel, which means horse.
When Parker Pen marketed a ballpoint pen in Mexico, its ads were supposed to say “It won’t leak in your pocket and embarrass you“.

However, the company mistakenly thought the spanish word “embarazar” meant embarrass. Instead the ads said that “It wont leak in your pocket and make you pregnant“.
An American t-shirt maker in Miami printed shirts for the spanish market which promoted the Pope’s visit. Instead of the desired “I Saw the Pope” in Spanish, the shirts proclaimed “I Saw the Potato“.
Chicken-man Frank Perdue’s slogan, “It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken“, got terribly mangled in another Spanish translation…

A photo of Perdue with one of his birds appeared on billboards all over Mexico with a caption that explained “It takes a hard man to make a chicken aroused“.
Hunt-Wesson introduced its Big John products in French Canada as Gros Jos before finding out that the phrase, in slang, means “big breasts“. In this case, however, the name problem did not have a noticeable effect on sales.
Colgate introduced a toothpaste in France called Cue, the name of a notorious porno mag.

In Italy, a campaign for Schweppes Tonic Water translated the name into Schweppes Toilet Water.
Japan’s second-largest tourist agency was mystified when it entered English-speaking markets and began receiving requests for unusual sex tours. Upon finding out why, the owners of Kinki Nippon Tourist Company changed its name.
and finally…
In an effort to boost orange juice sales in predominantly continental breakfast eating England, a campaign was devised to extoll the drink’s eye-opening, pick-me-up qualities. Hence, the slogan, “Orange juice. It gets your pecker up.”
I hope you’ve all enjoyed the mis-translations… by the way, these are all true!

I-can’t-stop-laugh-ing!!
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHA
It’s a good thing Parker pens double for a contraceptive! LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
hmm .. deja vu
it’s teh bless of those who make you feel like
a genious!. be thankful for all of badliyat
And by the way, you’re completely fathya :s
I mean I never wondered and never will because well Frankly My Dear, I don’t give a damn ;P
all i can say is :
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
4 ever :p
“In Italy, a campaign for Schweppes Tonic Water translated the name into Schweppes Toilet Water.”
LOL
and the Pope one hehehe
Nice Examples … i would like to know the expresion on the owners face when they knew the meanings of their products