Cigarettes in Canada Display Graphic Labels

21 June 2012 NACS Online Images of cancerous mouths and emaciated lung cancer victims are two of 16 new graphic labels that now appear on tobacco products sold in Canada. TORONTO – “Would you like oral cancer with those cigarettes?” is just one of 16 new graphic messages that began appearing on tobacco products throughout Canada earlier this week, the Toronto Star reports. Approved last September, the law requires that the labels cover 75% of each cigarette pack and cigar box, an effort to curb smoking. “Today we’ve fulfilled our promise to put new, larger health warnings on cigarette and little cigar packages across Canada,” said Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq earlier this week. “This initiative continues our efforts to inform Canadians — especially young people — about the health hazards of smoking.” The graphic labels depict a number of scenarios, including cancerous mouths, tongues covered in white splotches, and a…

Read More

Revealed: Traits of a nightmare director

By Staff Writer news.com.au June 22, 2012 FANCY stepping into the role of non-executive director? Don’t bother if you are an egocentric, talk for the sake of talking or are too timid to speak out. These are some of the least desirable traits in every boardroom, according to a report released by talent management company Korn/Ferry International. What was once seen as a cushy number, the role of the non-executive director has become more formidable as members are expected to grapple with new technologies, a rapidly changing economic environment and increased scrutiny on compliance. Individuals who “really get” the changing landscape of technology and have a global market outlook are in highest demand in corporate Australia boardrooms. However “nodders”, non-stop talkers, egocentrics and hobbyhorse jockeys are the type of people boardrooms do not want. “[Hobbyhorse jockeys] focus on a narrow area which they know and other issues appear irrelevant,” says…

Read More

Wolf Blass blasts duopoly’s ‘risk to wine’

BLAIR SPEEDY The Australian June 22, 2012 WINE industry veteran Wolf Blass has attacked supermarket majors Coles and Woolworths for slashing returns for winemakers and called for an industry-wide levy to promote Australian wine overseas. “The biggest risk in the domestic market is the catastrophic duopoly controlling 60 per cent of our market,” said Mr Blass, whose eponymous brand is now owned by Treasury Wine Estates. “It is a situation where there is no profit to be made, and if there is no profit there is no money for development.” Mr Blass, who now works as a brand ambassador for TWE, promoting the Wolf Blass label at home and abroad, said the company needed to do more to support independent retailers and restaurants to help maintain a profitable market for its own products in the face of cut-throat discounting by the supermarket majors. “We have to protect the independents and…

Read More

Lower-Risk Cigarettes Could Hit Market by 2017

Jun 21, 2012 CSNews NEW YORK — Philip Morris International Inc. (PMI) is developing three new products, one of which is a cigarette that poses lower health risks to users. The cigarette, which heats tobacco rather than burning it, will be ready by 2017. The three products would be sold under the existing brands like Marlboro. PMI’s COO Andre Calantzopoulos revealed the development news in a speech prepared for a meeting today with investors in Lausanne, Switzerland, according to Bloomberg. “We are on the eve of what we all believe could be a paradigm shift for our industry,” CEO Louis Camilleri said in a speech. The new products have “the very real potential to not only be a game-changer, but also be the key to unlock several hitherto virgin territories, most notably the huge Chinese market.” The “most promising” of the lower-risk products would heat tobacco or generate aerosol that…

Read More

AACS Member Profile: ParcelPoint

Working with convenience retailers to ease delivery pain for online shoppers. The demand for services continues and ParcelPoint is delivering such a service for retailers and consumers. As online shopping approaches fever pitch in Australia, ParcelPoint estimates that more than 40 million deliveries will fail this year because no one is home. In response to growing consumer frustration with missed deliveries, ParcelPoint has established an easier way for busy consumers to receive their parcels – at their local convenience store, when it suits them. ParcelPoint is a simple concept – customers deliver to a local store, receive an email or SMS notification when their parcel arrives and then collect when it suits them. ParcelPoint locations include convenience stores, newsagencies and grocery stores. Locations are selected based on accessibility with many open 7 days and after-hours. “We all dread receiving a calling card because it’s generally inconvenient to collect a parcel…

Read More

Additive a casualty of dairy price war

Natasha Bita, Consumer editor The Australian June 25, 2012 THE supermarket price wars have forced one of Australia’s biggest dairy companies back to nature. Milk from Dairy Farmers and Pura Milk will no longer be made with additives known as permeates, in what food and beverage giant Lion described yesterday as “milk’s greatest transformation in 100 years”. Lion’s external relations director, Libby Hay, yesterday said customers did not want unnecessary processing. “We have listened to our customers,” she said. “We looked at our manufacturing process and realised that adding permeate was not essential, so it was an easy decision to remove it from our milk.” Permeate is a watery by-product of milk, often mixed back into milk to ensure consistent levels of fat and protein. The decision to omit permeate will give Dairy Farmers and Pura Milk a marketing edge in the supermarket price wars. Branded milk products have been…

Read More