The Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry (INDA) has launched a rebranding initiative to strengthen recognition of the nonwovens industry as a stand-alone, vibrant, attractive sector for up-and-coming professionals. The initiative includes a new tagline for nonwovens - “Advancing Engineered Material Solutions” - which better explains the industry.
The move is meant to help companies recruit new talent, and also to lay the foundation for fairer treatment in tariff and trade areas. To better reflect the dynamic, technology-based nature of the industry, INDA has launched a new tagline of “Advancing Engineered Material Solutions,” which appears under its logo.The Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry (INDA) has launched a rebranding initiative to strengthen recognition of the nonwovens industry as a stand-alone, vibrant, attractive sector for up-and-coming professionals. The initiative includes a new tagline for nonwovens - “Advancing Engineered Material Solutions” - which better explains the industry.#
In addition to the tagline, the initiative includes a video that positions “nonwovens” as “engineered materials” and highlights the breadth of nonwoven applications; a new Academic Outreach Initiative to attract young talent to the industry; and is working with EDANA, the European nonwovens association, to secure approval for a new definition of nonwovens through the International Standards Organisation (ISO).
“These three initiatives are critical to ensure our industry is properly recognised, attractive to newcomers and defined as being independent from textiles to enable fair tariff treatment,” said INDA president Dave Rousse.
This growing global industry produces high-performing versatile products that cost-effectively deliver features such as acoustic insulation, thermal protection, absorbency, filtering, liquid repellency, or flame retardancy that solve many problems. Examples include diapers, absorbent hygiene products, surgical drapes, cleaning wipes, automotive parts, and liquid and air filters, among many others that are essential to daily living.
“Our industry has traditionally defined itself by what it is not – which is a woven, knitted or converted product,” Rousse said. “Some of our members are adopting more modern phrases to describe themselves, including engineered materials, performance materials and fibre-based specialty materials. We support this language refinement as we try to distinguish ourselves from textiles and instantly connect with those not familiar with our business.”
Recognising that young new talent is critical to sustain its growth, the association is positioning the industry in a new, dynamic way so people instantly understand what it does.
“The term ‘engineered materials’ is a far more comprehensible concept to provide the clarity needed to connect with today’s up-and-coming professionals,” he said.
The tagline was developed as part of the Academic Outreach Initiative led by INDA’s new assistant director of Career Services. The initiative supports members recruiting on college campuses by providing information on what the industry does, the products it produces or contributes to, the prospects for continued growth, jobs in it, and potential hiring companies.
Along with the new tagline, INDA produced a one-minute video (www.inda.org) that conveys the contemporary, forward-looking nature of the industry in a manner that appeals to young professionals.
A third component of the rebranding of nonwovens is the soon-to-be-changed official ISO definition of nonwovens in the IS that forms the basis of the Harmonised System of tariffs and underpins trade agreements. The current ISO definition states that nonwovens are “structures of textile materials.” The proposed new definition calls nonwovens “primarily fibrous assemblies,” a more general approach that enables tariff treatment separate from that of textiles. (SV)
Fibre2Fashion News Desk – India