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As Chinese Preferences Shift, A Wakeup Call Awaits Luxury Brands

AhMeng

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As Chinese Preferences Shift, A Wakeup Call Awaits Luxury Brands
shutterstock_1207538323-1240x698.jpg

The move toward more Chinese brand consumption started around three years ago, and now it’s even impacting the storied luxury segment, as competitive Chinese brands are emerging in nearly all categories. Photo: Shutterstock

The Wall Street Journal recently published an article by Julie Wernau on how dramatically Chinese preferences are shifting from Western brands to Chinese brands. Look at smartphone sales, where foreign brand shares have dropped by 78 percent in ten years. In China, Apple only has a market share of 8.6 percent, ranking fifth behind Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaoimi — brands most Westerners have never heard of. Other categories aren’t dropping as radically, but the share of foreign cars has dropped by 13 percent during that span, and the share of watches by 6 percent. It’s a trend that should concern all Western companies.

The move toward more Chinese brand consumption started around three years ago, and now it’s even impacting the storied luxury segment, as competitive Chinese brands are emerging in nearly all categories. Since China is the youngest of the large luxury markets (millennials and Gen Zers account for roughly 80 percent of luxury consumption, with a sweet spot age bracket of 25-35 years old), their consumers are more open to trying new brands, and for those consumers, country of origin is now less important than brand storytelling and the ability to create value for buyers.

“As the Chinese economy shifts inward, McKinsey predicts between $22 trillion and $37 trillion of economic value—or between 15% and 26% of global gross domestic product—could disappear as supply chains shrink and other changes ripple through the global economy,” says Wernau in her Wall Street Journal article. That should be a loud warning bell for Western luxury brands that still use traditional marketing, are weak at targeting millennials, and lack the advanced technology necessary to operate in a massive, fast-moving market like China’s. The luxury market has benefitted strongly from Chinese customers, whether they buy inside of China or out, but when preferences shift, this model can collapse fast.

What should Western brands do? First, they shouldn’t underestimate China. Too many brands still simply take their Western business model and implement it in China — and the results are almost always disastrous. While brands need to have a global positioning, it has become increasingly important to adjust expressions of a brand’s storytelling to the specifics of a country and a target group. A fifty-year-old male customer in Zurich will have different expectations, ways of communicating, and influences than a 23-year-old female customer in Beijing. Many brands struggle when targeting younger customers, and then their consumer base, revenue, and profits quickly erode. In these fast-moving times, one bad year can be enough to cement the fate of a brand. Agility and decisiveness are imperative today, and a brand must have dynamic content creation, particularly for Chinese customers.

Second, brand storytelling can only be relevant, authentic, and effective if the brand first knows what the target group is talking about. Real-time customer insights with advanced data querying technologies and a state-of-the-art digital infrastructure that goes beyond simple social media listening are indispensable. Brands that do not know right now what their customers in China are talking about risk becoming obsolete — fast.

Third, the brand itself is now of utmost importance. Young Chinese customers have much higher expectations in terms of brand positioning, brand values, and brand purpose, especially when it comes to luxury. Many Western brands fail in this regard. They execute brand strategy more like a trademark, attaching the brand name as a design expression. What they fail to give customers is a real reason to buy their products, based on extreme value creation through a meticulously-crafted brand positioning. In times of disruption, digitization, and change, brand value creation has never been so important.

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Looking in-depth at a variety of top luxury and premium brands we work with, there were almost none that had full clarity on their brand positioning. Descriptions were rather vague and differed depending on the leadership team. This is typical, but the danger in a lack of overall brand clarity is that further down the brand chain — to sales and store staff — branding becomes even blurrier. For Western brands trying to sell to a brand-obsessed Chinese consumer group that is motivated to move away from foreign brands and toward domestic brands, this is a significant threat.

Now is the time for brands to act before it’s too late. Brands that can’t connect with younger Chinese consumers won’t survive. Most Western brands in China lose money. Those that do not undergo a digital transformation, strengthen their brand positioning, and adjust their brand storytelling to what Chinese customers now expect will simply be gone. The ones that do will continue to find success, even as tastes and loyalties change.

Daniel Langer is CEO of the luxury, lifestyle and consumer brand strategy firm Équité. He consults some of the leading luxury brands in the world, is the author of several luxury management books, a regular keynote speaker, and holds management seminars in Europe, the USA, and Asia.
 
The luxury brands of the world should simply write China off and refuse to export to them in the first place.

Once you start depending on China for your bottom line the company will leave itself open to being subjected to the political will of the Chinese government.

The NBA learned this the hard way.
 
Once you start depending on China for your bottom line the company will leave itself open to being subjected to the political will of the Chinese government.
Indeed! But the greed for market share, growth and profits is overwhelming in this luxury game.
 
https://money.cnn.com/2018/05/09/news/economy/foreign-companies-china-taiwan-compromise/index.html

The compromises that companies make to do business in China

by Julia Horowitz @juliakhorowitzMay 9, 2018: 8:41 AM ET








Play Video

'One China,' explained

Foreign companies just got an important reminder: Doing business in China comes with a long list of demands.
More than 30 global airlines — including some US carriers like American Airlines (AAL) — were recently told by the Chinese government to remove any information that could suggest Taiwan, Hong Kong or Macau are not part of China.

Over the weekend, the White House denounced the warnings as "Orwellian nonsense." But toeing the line on Taiwan is just one of many concessions required of foreign companies that want to keep on China's good side.
"It's a constraining environment," said Nicholas Lardy, a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and expert on the Chinese economy.
Here are some of the compromises businesses need to make.


Watch what you say about Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau

China considers self-governed Taiwan to be an integral part of its territory, and rejects any suggestions to the contrary. Hong Kong and Macau are special administrative regions of China.
The country has acted forcefully when it believes that materials from foreign companies imply these areas are independent. In January, China blocked the Marriott website and app for a week after the hotel group listed Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau and Tibet as separate countries in its emails and app. Delta Air Lines (DAL) and retailer Zara were called out by China over similar problems shortly thereafter.
The Chinese government seems to be increasingly vigilant about monitoring content that isn't written in Chinese, according to Scott Kennedy, director of the Project on Chinese Business and Political Economy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
"What's new now is they are trying to enforce the way these companies talk to any audience," he said.
china business concessions tech transfer



Store some data locally

In June 2017, China enacted a law that tightened restrictions on cross-border data transfers, and mandated that critical data be stored locally. The Chinese government has framed the legislation as an effort to shore up cybersecurity, but critics see it as further means for China to monitor and control online information.
A number of foreign companies have had to make big changes in order to comply.
Apple (AAPL) said it would store the iCloud data of mainland customers with a state-owned company in Guizhou. Last November, Amazon (AMZN) Web Services sold the hardware it uses for cloud storage to its local Chinese partner to satisfy the new rules.

Strike up joint ventures with local businesses

In some sectors, Beijing only lets foreign companies operate in the country through joint ventures in which Chinese partners hold the majority stake.
Automakers like GM (GM), Volkswagen (VLKAF) and Toyota (TM) have paired up with local players so they can avoid paying stiff import tariffs on cars. Chipmakers like Qualcomm (QCOM) and Intel (INTC) have also set up joint ventures to develop semiconductors in the country.
Requirements regarding joint ventures have been a particular point of contention in the current US-China trade fight. The US government claims that foreign companies are expected to transfer proprietary technology to their Chinese partners before many joint ventures can be finalized — and that can mean giving up intellectual property.
There has been some movement to loosen constraints on foreign investment in recent months. China has committed to easing restrictions on the finance industry, for example.
By the end of June, the People's Bank of China intends to fully remove foreign investment limits on banks and asset management firms, according to analysts. The central bank will also let foreign companies own a majority stake (up to 51%) in securities, fund management, futures and life insurance firms.
china business concessions dalai lama



Be careful when it comes to the Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama is a popular global figure. But to the Chinese government, the Buddhist spiritual leader of Tibet is a "splitist" who should be denounced — or at least not celebrated by companies in their marketing materials.
Mercedes-Benz had to apologize in February after quoting the Dalai Lama in a post on its Instagram account.
In 1950, Communist China sent troops into Tibet to enforce its claim on the region. China has controlled Tibet since 1951 — though the central government in Beijing has faced repeated unrest from ethnic Tibetans.

Censor content

In order to operate in China, internet companies have to follow the government's strict rules about censored content.
This even applies to powerful multinational companies like Apple and LinkedIn.
In 2017, Apple pulled the New York Times news app from the App Store in China, saying it was told that it violated "local regulations." Apple also removed software from its App Store in China that allowed users to circumvent the country's so-called Great Firewall.
LinkedIn agreed to China's censorship requirements when it launched a Chinese version of its site in 2014. Later that year, it told some users that posts related to the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre wouldn't show up in mainland China. The networking site was bought by Microsoft in 2016.
-- CNNMoney's Daniel Shane contributed to this report.
 
10 years ago China aready said Chinese products must go up market....

Here they are and arrived, fuck off fake CAM....
 
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Third, the brand itself is now of utmost importance. Young Chinese customers have much higher expectations in terms of brand positioning, brand values, and brand purpose, especially when it comes to luxury. Many Western brands fail in this regard. They execute brand strategy more like a trademark, attaching the brand name as a design expression. What they fail to give customers is a real reason to buy their products, based on extreme value creation through a meticulously-crafted brand positioning. In times of disruption, digitization, and change, brand value creation has never been so important.

As someone who doesn't speak slimeball Marketingese, the above paragraph is absolutely devoid of semantic content.

Can one of our helpful bros translate it to English and maybe give an illustrative example of whatever the writer's point was meant to be, please?
 
As someone who doesn't speak slimeball Marketingese, the above paragraph is absolutely devoid of semantic content.

Can one of our helpful bros translate it to English and maybe give an illustrative example of whatever the writer's point was meant to be, please?

The foreign luxury brand label adds no functionality or quality to the product and at the same time consumers are a lot more knowledgeable about alternatives thanks to the internet.
 
Too late, either u know or go kick yr own balls...

As someone who doesn't speak slimeball Marketingese, the above paragraph is absolutely devoid of semantic content.

Can one of our helpful bros translate it to English and maybe give an illustrative example of whatever the writer's point was meant to be, please?
 
Half a billion shoppers expected to participate in Singles Day 2019 — here's what you need to know - Business
A graphic on Singles Day, showing some facts about its sales, and the countries of origin for popular imported goods.
PHOTO China's Singles Day, or Double 11, is the biggest sales event in the world. ABC NEWS: JARROD FANKHAUSER
It's the world's largest single-day sale.
Held annually on November 11, China's so-called 11.11 Global Shopping Festival is now larger than US equivalents Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. This is its 11th year.
While the obscure tradition of Bachelors Day began in 1993 at Nanjing University, e-commerce behemoth Alibaba turned it into a shopping festival in 2009 on its Taobao website.
Double 11 is now marked across all of China's major e-commerce platforms including Alibaba's Tmall and Taobao, and their competitor JD.com.
2019 expected to be the biggest year yet
A couple sits on a bed. Subtitle reads we will both be up and ready.
PHOTO Consumers will stack their carts before the sale begins at midnight. SUPPLIED: ALIBABA
Festival shoppers typically stack their carts during the evening on November 10, and begin checking out as the clock strikes midnight.
However, presales are also an option — and if they're any indication, this year could see the biggest sales day yet.
Chinese state media reported this week that 64 brands had already sold more than $20 million worth of goods in presales each.
Last year's event smashed previous records, seeing $2 billion worth of purchases in the first two minutes, and total sales of $42.5 billion over the 24-hour period.
Alibaba expects 500 million consumers will participate this year, a whopping 100 million more than last year. Experts say it's a potent sign of the growing affluence across China.
Clothing, beauty products and lifestyle electronics like mobile phones are generally the most popular items.
Fresh food is also on offer. JD claims that 300,000 eggs were sold in the first half-hour of last year's event.
Property developers will also be seeking to flog real estate on Singles Day, with thousands of heavily discounted homes on sale in 2019.
Some people have been known to get carried away with the excitement.
Follow this story to get email or text alerts from ABC News when there is a future article following this storyline.
One punter on social media last year said he had woken up in a drunken haze to discover he'd purchased a discounted pig, giant salamander and peacock.
Deliverymen wearing red work among parcels beside a road in Beijing, China.
PHOTO Alibaba predicts 500 million shoppers will participate in 2019. REUTERS: JASON LEEAustralian businesses will cash in
Australia has consistently appeared among the top five source countries for goods bought by 11.11 shoppers, alongside Japan, the United States and South Korea.
"China is a major market for all industries in Australia," said Hans Hendrischke, a professor of Chinese business at the University of Sydney, arguing that other industries are often overshadowed by the resources sector.
"[But] 40 per cent of Australia's agricultural exports go to China," he said.
Purchases of Australian lamb rose by an astounding 775 per cent in the first hour of last year's sales compared with 2017.
Australian supplements, cosmetics and baby products are among the most in-demand products for import to China during Singles Day.
Major Australian brands including A2, Bellamy's, bubs, Swisse, and Blackmores.
PHOTO Australian supplements and dairy products are popular with Chinese consumers. ABC NEWS
The vitamin company Swisse, founded in Australia but now Chinese-owned, was China’s most imported brand in 2018. Its competitor Bio Island came in fifth overall.
"Chinese consumers want to buy what Australia excels in producing," Professor James Laurenceson, head of the Australia-China Relations Institute, told the ABC.
Such is the demand for Australian products, Singles Day was blamed for creating a shortage of baby formula in Australian supermarkets in 2015.
"Because of the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement, Australian wine now enters China tariff free," Mr Laurenceson told the ABC.
"In contrast, Californian wine gets hit with a tariff of more than 50 per cent, up from 14 per cent before the trade war began."
A survey by consulting firm AlixPartners recently found that eight in 10 respondents said they thought the US-China trade war could impact their spending patterns on Singles Day.
More than half cited "national loyalty" as the main reason for not buying American brands.
"US brands can expect some disruption because of the consequences of the US-China trade war on consumer sentiment," the report concluded.
Mr Hendrischke said, however, that "boycotts don't necessarily translate into practice".
"If [Chinese consumers] have a choice between Nike sneakers and some other thing, they'll probably still go for Nike."
Many shoppers in Hong Kong, meanwhile, may boycott the sale altogether, amid anti-Beijing protests that have now lasted more than five months.

'Renovate, Decorate, Boycott': Pro-Beijing businesses under attack in Hong Kong
Last year, Hong Kong was the largest destination outside mainland China for Singles Day purchases alongside Russia and the US.
But Hong Kong protesters have now taken to vandalising local businesses owned by Communist Party-affiliated entities, or those perceived to be pro-Beijing.
State media tabloid the Global Times reported some protesters in Hong Kong were considering a boycott of Alibaba, citing social media posts.
The newspaper dismissed a potential boycott as "ridiculous and unrealistic".
'A digital Belt and Road'
Nicole Kidman and Alibaba chairman Jack Ma on stage.
PHOTO Celebrities like Nicole Kidman and Pharrell Williams have previously appeared at televised 11.11 events. REUTERS: ALY SONG
Celebrations will go off on the mainland, however.
"For the past 10 years, I have been stationed at our command centre … at the most intense moment, just before clock strikes midnight, I would take the stage to count down to the start of the event," Alibaba chairman Daniel Zhang, who recently replaced Mr Ma, said in a statement.
"This year my most important responsibility is to shop and be a consumer."
Taylor Swift may have cancelled her appearance at the Melbourne Cup, but won't miss the opportunity to headline Alibaba's televised countdown event for 11.11 in Shanghai.
Previous years' events have featured stars like Nicole Kidman, Scarlett Johansson, Mariah Carey and Pharrell Williams.
The real show is pulled off behind the scenes, however. The scale of the sales makes its execution an immense technological and logistical feat.
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Video 1:29
China attempts global dominance with One Belt One Road project
ABC News
"China is bringing these technologies to scale that we don't really see anywhere else," Mr Hendrischke said, referring to the use of big data to ensure demand can be met, and that products are delivered quickly.
"Once we see these technologies perfected they would be transferable to other markets," he added.
Mr Zhang told an event in Shanghai this week that massive merchandise volume was no longer Alibaba's primary aim.
"Rather we are looking at strengthening data capabilities, cloud computing power, and logistics networks to weave a digital 'Belt and Road' for the welfare of more people," he said.
Posted Sun at 3:05am
 
If the Chinese people can be more national brands conscious as the Japanese, then the western brands will be screwed. Japanese are famous for buying made in japan. Japanese tourists buy only japan brands overseas.
 
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