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Will this be the ultimate fate of shopping malls ?

GoFlyKiteNow

Alfrescian
Loyal
Empty - The Biggest Mall in the World
BY FC Andrew Collins Today


Roaming though one of the many Shanghai shopping malls one could not help but wonder where everyone was? The place was empty, populated with the low paid workers tirelessly keeping it clean.

Meanwhile, a few fiber-optic wires away, a booming mall was busy catering to the 250m+ customers enjoying a hassle free shopping experience. That mall was Taobao. Online.

Whether it be a casual or luxury shopper--intellectuals (refined, less brand focused), followers (doing just that), lovers (big brand, big logo), or the laggards (last to keep up) the one stop shop that is the behemoth Taobao is catering to them all with a great velocity.

Taobao is simply an online force of nature. There are a number of contributing factors behind it's incredible growth. The vast array of products, cheap distribution costs (average delivery is $2), easy debit payment methods, transparency of sellers, the list goes on. Just incredible to see how it captured a whole nation.

The latest push by TaoBao is to make the official 'retail TaoBao Mall' aligned with Chinese offline retail standards. Licenses, professional fit outs, online service and standards are now a pre-requisite in setting up a store.

But it's all worth it. As many foreign brands are learning the key to retail success in China is vast becoming an online play. With brands such as Zara, Louis Vuitton, Adidas all with online flag ship stores.

Traditional thinking expects a shoppers would always consider the 'touch and feel' retail experience a necessity.

But as we learn more about the Chinese 'modern' consumer they are more than comfortable to explore through trusted online Chinese channels.
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BusNo64

Alfrescian
Loyal
They should have malls which offer instant jobs in future .

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QXD

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
That is already happening. When malls die the get filled with Maid Agencies, Employment Services, Massage Parlours and Construction Offices.

They should have malls which offer instant jobs in future .
 

longbow

Alfrescian
Loyal
Well they did sell 999 Ferraris. Consumers are there but developers can screw up a particular development of a mall. Could be transportation, store mix. I doubt if it is lack of customers given that it is in Shanghai!

China is primed for online shopping. It has world largest number of internet users, country's infrastructure development is such that you can deliver packages quite efficient to major cities with UPS/FED and local courier companies fighting for business.


Ferrari is celebrating its best year of sales in China with a special celebration in Shanghai. The Italian firm sold almost 300 cars in China in 2010, and marked the occasion by bringing together more than 15 Ferraris in front of the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai.


The firm also marked the delivery of a 458 Italia to its 999th Chinese Ferrari customer, Johnson Zhang. In China the number nine - ‘jiu’ – is a symbol for longevity and excellence, hence why the firm elected to mark its 999th Chinese client.


Ferrari CEO Amedeo Felisa was in attendance, adding, “For Ferrari, China represents the present and the future. It is a great country where we continue to invest. I’m convinced that in a couple of years, we’ll reach sales of 500 cars per year, a number equal to established European markets.”


Tellingly, many young Ferrari owners under the age of 40 attended the event. Most are new entrepreneurs who represent the major growth demographic for the Italian firm’s future cars.


Ferrari has been working to ensure it retains a high profile in China. Just over a year ago the artist Lu Hao created a unique 599 GTB art car, while the Ferrari HY-KERS made its global debut at the Shanghai World Expo.


Read more: http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/news/a...rks_sales_success_in_china.html#ixzz1BSZ24jjp
 
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GoFlyKiteNow

Alfrescian
Loyal
Well they did sell 999 Ferraris. Consumers are there but developers can screw up a particular development of a mall. Could be transportation, store mix. I doubt if it is lack of customers given that it is in Shanghai!

China is primed for online shopping. It has world largest number of internet users, country's infrastructure development is such that you can deliver packages quite efficient to major cities with UPS/FED and local courier companies fighting for business.


Ferrari is celebrating its best year of sales in China with a special celebration in Shanghai. The Italian firm sold almost 300 cars in China in 2010, and marked the occasion by bringing together more than 15 Ferraris in front of the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai.


The firm also marked the delivery of a 458 Italia to its 999th Chinese Ferrari customer, Johnson Zhang. In China the number nine - ‘jiu’ – is a symbol for longevity and excellence, hence why the firm elected to mark its 999th Chinese client.


Ferrari CEO Amedeo Felisa was in attendance, adding, “For Ferrari, China represents the present and the future. It is a great country where we continue to invest. I’m convinced that in a couple of years, we’ll reach sales of 500 cars per year, a number equal to established European markets.”


Tellingly, many young Ferrari owners under the age of 40 attended the event. Most are new entrepreneurs who represent the major growth demographic for the Italian firm’s future cars.


Ferrari has been working to ensure it retains a high profile in China. Just over a year ago the artist Lu Hao created a unique 599 GTB art car, while the Ferrari HY-KERS made its global debut at the Shanghai World Expo.


Read more: http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/news/a...rks_sales_success_in_china.html#ixzz1BSZ24jjp

Ferrari selling cars online ?
 

longbow

Alfrescian
Loyal
No lah. Just point out that:

1)the consumer market in China is huge and vibrant as seen in number of Ferraris and RR sold

2) Online commerce potential is large given largest number of internet users, good road, efficient system of delivery and the size of the country

3) Brick and mortar shopping malls may fail not because of lack of customers but because of competition, location, tenant mix.

4) I doubt if online shopping will kill shopping malls. Just that stores must change their merchandise mix.




Ferrari selling cars online ?
 
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