HONG KONG - Forget chocolates or roses this Valentine's Day -- a gift of
musical condoms is bound to be more entertaining.
Hong Kong's Ondo Creation, which makes designer condoms, hopes its Idom
sheathes will put a more romantic spin on safe sex -- and reduce the risk of a
slap on the face that a pack of six might elicit among some conservative Asians.
 A package of Idom, a musical condom, and its contents, a
music CD and a condom, are seen at a store in Hong Kong January 19, 2007.
[Reuters]
 |
The Idom itself doesn't sing --
but the mint, strawberry, chocolate and banana flavored condoms come in an
attractive package with a music CD to get you in the mood for love.
"We create an environment for lovers who would like to try a different
experience," said Victor Tsang who runs Ondo Creation.
"We try to create products that are not embarrassing, but very trendy and
hip. It's a lifestyle product," he added.
Cynics may scoff at the marketing gloss, but the 18 month start-up's products
sell across the world. The firm also won a bronze medal in the Industrial Design
Excellence Awards run in conjunction with BusinessWeek magazine, which said Ondo
had managed to "revitalize the image of condoms."
Tsang, a former IT executive, says his product was inspired by a desire to
promote safe sex and to provide a fun, relaxed alternative for what he calls
"more conservative" customers.
The brand eschews regular prophylactic distributors, instead peddling its
wares in bookstores, record shops and trendy nightspots in a long list of cities
that includes Hong Kong, London, Paris, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Tokyo and
Singapore.
"We're targeting more lifestyle stores, rather than 7-11's and pharmacies,"
said Tsang.
"There's a market gap in the condom industry that we may be able to make fun
-- and also penetrate," said Tsang who expected a 30 percent surge in sales
ahead of Valentine's Day.
The Idom's Exotica, Chocotasy and Loveberry brands come with CD compilations
of chillout, acid jazz and dance music.
"The music starts slow, then medium, then becomes fast before getting slow
again," said Jack Wong, who helped with the music.
He shrugs off the fact that the CDs run for exactly 18 minutes: "Whether this
is long enough or not, really depends on the individual."