Uygurs learn what's in a name
Updated: 2014-04-22 08:42
By Cui Jia and Gao Bo (China Daily)
|
||||||||
A baker works naan bread at a branch of Abula's Naan in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygure autonomous region. [Chen Yan / For China Daily] |
Businesspeople in Xinjiang turn to branding to find their recipe for success, report Cui Jia and Gao Bo in Urumqi.
People chatted and stamped their feet as they waited, inhaling the smell of the hot, fresh-baked naan - a traditional Uygur round flatbread sprinkled with sesame seeds - that has made the bakery one of the most popular in the region.
Abula's bread is rapidly gaining a following in other parts of China, too, and businesspeople from the Uygur ethnic group such as Abulajan Mettohot, who owns the Abula's Naan brand, are beginning to understand the importance of effective branding in the battle to win customers.
Like many Uygur entrepreneurs, Abulajan used a variation of his own name to brand his product. He felt "Abula's Naan" was simple and easy to remember, an assumption that has proved true, judging by the success of the 43-year-old who now owns a chain of outlets across Xinjiang.
Abulajan arrived in Urumqi from Yecheng county in southern Kashgar prefecture in 1997. Despite few formal educational qualifications, he was ambitious - so he borrowed 2,000 yuan ($320) from relatives and opened a small bakery.
Business boomed, but Abulajan wasn't happy: "I once heard some people on a bus praising my naan. They had some of my naan with them, but were carrying them in plain plastic bags. That's when it occurred to me that the bags I gave the customers didn't have a design or my name on them, so no one could tell if the naan came from me or another baker," he said. "I have a special recipe for the dough, which makes my naan crispier than normal, and I realized that if I wanted to capitalize on that, I would have to find a way to make people remember my name".
In 2001, he registered his first trademark and designed the company's logo, which depicts a smiling Uygur man, complete with traditional hat and mustache, holding a naan and giving a thumbs-up. In addition to having the logo printed on carrier bags, Abulajan also designed gift boxes, which upgraded the bread from a daily essential to a presentable gift. Five years later, the company was designated a "famous Xinjiang brand" by the Xinjiang
Administration of Industry and Commerce.
- Obama roasts himself, rivals at dinner
- Forum trends: No house, no marriage?
- Huge mist cannons attract people in Lanzhou
- Indian train derailment kills at least 12
- One handed climber scales UK's toughest routes
- World leaders when they were younger
- H&M promotes summer collections with DJ show
- Getting a taste for the World Cup
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Education: Variety is the spice of academic life |
Xinjiang hopes to prove that the west is best |
Documents prove the truth can't be buried |
Race to remember story of resistance |
Strait talking: From enemy to friend |
Welcome to the world’s largest garbage dump |
Today's Top News
Travel passes to DPRK made easier
Yunnan's only panda perking up thanks to TV
Intl cooperation to aid drug fight
Deal signed to upgrade roads, grid in Ethiopia
China busts foreign spy ring
Tokyo lawmakers begin China visit
Houston tries shuttlecock diplomacy
Senior Chongqing official investigated
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |