Posts tagged ‘china market research’

23/05/2014

The Secret Weapon Behind China’s Booming Online Retailers? Women – China Real Time Report – WSJ

The secret weapon for many of China’s booming e-commerce companies is women, who shop more, spend more and generate bigger profits. Though the income of Chinese women is generally lower than that of men, they are also more likely to spend on themselves.

As the WSJ’s Wei Gu reports:

A new crop of Chinese e-commerce companies has harnessed the power of female consumers. Shares of Vipshop Holdings Ltd., which specializes in branded apparel at big discounts, have soared 30-fold since the company went public in New York two years ago. Women are 75% of the customer base and provide 90% of the revenue.

The company said it chose apparel because it is more profitable than alternatives such as electronics, which appeal more to male buyers. VIPshop’s gross margin is a healthy 25%.

The companies are embracing a research-supported stereotype: Devoted shoppers are disproportionately female. A third of Chinese consumers shopped online more than 40 times in 2013, according to iResearch, a Chinese Internet tracking firm, and 59% of those frequent shoppers were women.

“The ones that are succeeding in China’s e-commerce space are the female-dominated ones,” said Shaun Rein, founder of China Market Research. “The optimism level for female is considerably higher, and they drive retail sales.”

A survey of 1,000 Chinese consumers by China Market Research found that 62% of the women between 25 to 45 plan to spend more in the next six months than in the previous six months, compared with only 52% of the men in that age range. Younger women, aged 24 to 35, are the most optimistic of all.

If they found themselves with extra money, Chinese women say they would spend on clothing and health products, while also setting some aside as savings, according to Nielsen. Women in developed markets would spend on a vacation and pay off debt, as well as saving some. As many as 86% of Chinese women believe their daughters will do well financially, versus less than 40% of women in developed countries.

via The Secret Weapon Behind China’s Booming Online Retailers? Women – China Real Time Report – WSJ.

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06/08/2012

* Chinese Consumer Products Get More Competitive

WSJ: “Gone are the days when big multinationals in China could easily dominate every consumer segment from toothpaste to laundry detergent.

For years, companies such as Procter & Gamble Co. PG mainly had to worry about counterfeits, as their brands, such as Crest, were the hot items for the newly expanding consumer market.

That isn’t always the case anymore.

Take for instance a Chinese herbal toothpaste for whitening and sensitive gums. It sells for the equivalent of about $8.60, roughly double the price of Crest 3D White Vivid, one of P&G’s pricier brands. Yet the herbal toothpaste’s market share in China grew to 8.8% in 2011 from 1.1% five years ago, according to market research firm Euromonitor International. Over that same period, P&G’s market share in the toothpaste category fell to 19.7% from 20.8%. Toothpaste market share in China for Unilever NV, which sells the Zhonghua brand there, fell to 9.9% from 12%, according to Euromonitor. (In other markets, Unilever produces Close Up and Signal brand toothpastes.)

Industry insiders say losses of a point or two are small enough in the short term for foreign companies to manage. But the Chinese brand, made by Yunnan Baiyao Group Co., one of many local competitors gaining market share at the expense of foreign giants, is a sign of a changing consumer environment, some people say.

“P&G and Unilever will have to fight harder for shelf space and fight harder to differentiate from domestic brands that are now offering a wider range of products and features,” said Ben Cavender, a senior analyst at China Market Research Group.

Chinese companies like Yunnan Baiyao are gaining as they sharpen their branding.”

via Chinese Consumer Products Get More Competitive – WSJ.com.

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