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  • Archive for the ‘Brands’ Category

    Chinese Retail News

    December 30th, 2009

    • Retail sales in Beijing rose to Yn339bn (£30bn) in the first eight months of 2009, up 14.3 per cent year-on-year, reports Savills. Outlet stores benefited greatly from the economic downturn.

    • French luxury brand Louis Vuitton plans to open a 2,000-sq m flagship store, one of the largest in the world and the largest in China, in Shanghai before the Expo starts in May 2010.

    • Retail sales during the eight-day National Day holiday in October hit a new high, with the home appliances, jewellery and catering sectors all experiencing a surge.

    • Lotte Shopping, South Korea’s biggest department store owner, is to buy the Chinese supermarket operator Times Ltd in a deal reported to be worth US$625m. Lotte, which is reported to have beaten China’s Wumart Stores to clinch the deal, will gain 65 stores on the Chinese mainland.

    Sources: CBBC, Xinhua, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, FCO Country Updates and other news sources.

    Top country brands

    December 23rd, 2009

    Strong and consistent branding is not just vital for products and services.  It is also important for countries, helping them to attract visitors, businesspeople and new businesses alike to raise their profile and boost their economy.

    In FutureBrand’s latest Country Brand Index (CBI), Singapore is the country in Asia whose branding efforts have really paid off this past year.  Moving up an impressive 11 spots, from 24th last year to 13th in this year’s overall rankings, Singapore earned top spot in several of the individual categories, including best country brand for “shopping” and “easiest to do business in”.  It was second only to the United States in the “Ideal for Business” category, and was judged as the third best country brand for conferences.

    Other ‘rising stars’ in Asia-Pacific, according to this year’s CBI, include the United Arab Emirates (UAE), China and Vietnam, which were named as the top three likely major tourist destinations in the next five years. India was also a notable mention.

    However, we should not neglect to point out that Australia and New Zealand, in third and fourth places respectively overall, were the Asia-Pacific region’s top country brands.  The complete Top 10 is shown below:

    1. United States

    2. Canada

    3. Australia

    4. New Zealand

    5. France

    6. Italy

    7. Japan

    8. United Kingdom

    9. Germany

    10. Spain

     

    To learn more about branding market research, please click here.

    Brand Management in China

    November 23rd, 2009

    An article that appeared recently in AdAgeChina - 3 Golden Rules of Brand Management in China – caught our eye.  In it, Tom Doctoroff of JWT offers some advice for global brands looking to make it big in China.

    Since we conduct a lot of branding research within China (as indeed we do across the rest of the world), we thought we would reproduced Tom’s article today on our blog. Of course, if you wish to find out more about how to establish yourself in China, why not read our white paper Marketing and Selling to Chinese Businesses, or email beijing@b2binternational.com for more information:   

    To maximize relevance and trigger loyalty that results in a sustainable price premium, global brands need to be aligned with China’s cultural imperatives and operational realities.

    At the risk of oversimplifying, here are three “golden rules” marketers must be sensitive to before landing in the mainland.

    1. Maximize public consumption to justify price premiums.

    In China, a Confucian society torn between stifling regimentation and ambition, consumers regard brands as tools for success. “Face,” the primary currency of upward mobility, is rooted in status projection. This is why brands that are consumed in public are able to command huge price premiums relative to goods used in private or within the house.

    All leading mobile phone brands, for example, are international. Even in tier-five cities and the rural fringe, Nokia commands a 40% market share, despite significantly higher prices than local competitors.

    Sony’s Handycam, a product brandished outside the home, is a brand leader. However, Sony television sets, although aspirational, struggle to be more than a niche product.The leading household appliance brands are, without exception, cheaply-priced domestic brands such as Haier,TCL and Changhong.

    The “public display” imperative leads to fundamental positioning differences. As a general rule, benefits should be “externalized,” not “internalized.” Bath gels should not promote “sensorial indulgence” in the shower. They should “stimulate” the user to begin the day with a kick, ready to conquer the world. Beauty products must help a woman “move forward” and enhance her ability to “open doors” professionally or “control” her man. Mass market beauty brands should still help lower-income women be “admired” as a great mom or adored wife. Even beer must deliver something. In Western countries, “letting good times roll” is enough. In China, pilsner must bring people together, reinforce trust and optimize opportunity for mutual (financial) gain.

    Automobiles, now a middle-class “must buy,” should make a statement about a man on the way up. BMW, a winner, elegantly fuses its global “ultimate driving machine” with a Chinese declaration of ambition.

    DeBeers achieved 80% penetration of engagement rings by morphing universal passion inherent in “A Diamond is Forever” into Confucian “proof” that “commitment will last a lifetime.”

    The importance of public display is also critical in shaping business models. To conform to Chinese tastes, Starbucks, for example, broadened the sandwich menu, identified prime site-to-be-seen real estate, and made stores bigger. Starbucks has established itself as a public place where professional tribes gather to proclaim affiliation with the New Generation Elite. Likewise, both Pizza Hut and Haagen-Dazs have built mega-franchises rooted in out-of-home consumption.

    2. Simplify communications and benefits to enhance comprehension.

    Chinese are overwhelmed (yet excited) by the explosion of brands. Twenty years ago, the public phone was the only way to make a telephone call; today, there are over 300 different mobile devices,from $30 basic models to state-of-the-art smart phones. Making matters worse, China’s media landscape is cluttered. Television screens, most owned by Focus Media, are ubiquitous – in taxis,elevators, restaurants, building tops, locker rooms and bathroom stalls.

    Complicated messages, therefore, are not easily digested, even amongst the most brand-literate. Consistent messages must be conveyed directly. Advertising must be ruthlessly single minded. Visualize the key benefit, leverage demos as creative ideas, slice of life formats revolving around  torture tests and so on. Select celebrities, usually Chinese, whose star attributes reinforce a core brand proposition.

    For simplicity mandate, heavy mass media is essential. China’s untamed landscape requires forming brands from scratch; television fits this bill. Digital is increasingly critical to deepening engagement and loyalty but mass media will remain center-of-the-plate for years.

    3. Extend brands downwards to generate scale, affordability and margin.

    Multinational brands must need to profitable and have mass-market scale. Most multinational can charge a price premium because Chinese consumers prefer the reliability and “cool” of foreign   brands. The tough nut, however, is scale. Scale is critical in a reassurance-driven market such as China.

    The only way to target a broad swathe of price-sensitive consumers is to extend premium-priced brands downwards across lower price tiers by reducing costs and simplifying benefits. At the same time, great care must be taken not to degrade quality perceptions, usually by advertising the most premium variants.

    Colgate’s Total Oral Care, a premium toothpaste made largely of imported ingredients, costs   approximately 200% more than local brands and maintained a 3% share. Colgate Herbal and Colgate Strong, however, use cheaper local ingredients and are priced slightly higher than or at parity with local brands. The combined Colgate franchise controls a phenomenal 20% of the toothpaste market, one with hundreds of regional and national competitors. In recent years, Nestle and Procter & Gamble (with varying degrees of success) have adopted a similar strategy. So, too,   have higher involvement categories such as mobile phones.

    The Chinese business battlefield is treacherous, rife with kamikaze commoditization. We have not covered issues such as avoiding censorship, in-store activation, product localization, the supremacy of the “single child” and safety issues. However, these three “golden rules” are essential to consider before finalizing a China strategy.

    Online marketing of technology brands

    November 18th, 2009

    As reported in this week’s Media, marketers, in their rush to embrace social networking, are neglecting more basic online media formats.  A new Asian survey, conducted by Edelman and Brandtology, indicates that forums and bulletin boards, rather than social networking sites, are key for reaching and interacting with target audiences.

    The Digital Brand Index study aimed to identify the most widely talked-about technology brands across Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan.  The study, which will be expanded to Japan and Korea in the coming months, covered a total of 800,000 mentions of 233 major technology brands on 4,348 online channels including forums, blogs, social networking sites and news websites.

    Recent phenomenon Twitter was found to be the most commonly used channel in India and Australia, but in other markets, particularly Southeast Asia, technology-related forums emerged as the main platform for discussion - for example, in Singapore, 90% of conversation took place on forums.

    Of the technology sector brands discussed online, Google and Microsoft ranked in the top 10 in all markets.  Google was the most widely discussed brand in both India and Malaysia, while Nokia had the highest number of mentions in China.  The brand Intel was popular in a number of geographical markets including Hong Kong, India, Indonesia and Malaysia and Taiwan.

    To find out more about the research we conduct in the Technology sector, please visit: http://b2binternational.com/China/b2bsectors/informationtechnology.php 

    Alternatively, to learn more about branding studies, please visit: http://b2binternational.com/China/research/cn/branding.php

    Product Launch in China

    November 6th, 2009

    Recent reports state the GlaxoSmithKline is to target China’s £16bn-a-year soft drinks market with its Lucozade energy drink.  The Chinese version of Lucozade, which will be reformulated with a stronger flavour, will have a new brand name that will translate literally as ‘excellent suitable glucose’.

    The decision to launch the brand in China is part of a wider GlaxoSmithKline strategy to target emerging markets with its consumer and pharmaceutical brands.  The company is also said to be planning to launch products (as yet unnamed) in Mexico, Brazil and the US.

    Lucozade, which until now has largely focused on the UK and Commonwealth markets (85% of its sales are generated in the UK and Ireland), is often heralded as successful example of rebranding and relaunching a product.

    Originally launched in the 1920s as a glucose supplement for the infirm, by the late 1970s the drink was only available in chemist shops.  In 1983, Lucozade was repackaged and relaunched as a soft drink – or, to be more specific, an energy drink.  The logic behind this move was that it was easier to sell ‘energy and empowerment’ as a proposition than ‘recovery’.

    To find out more about our branding services, please click here.

    Alternatively, to learn more about our market research in the food & drink sector, please click here.

    Top Australian Brands

    November 4th, 2009

    Google, Nokia, and perhaps a little predictably, Vegemite, emerged as the winners in a recent survey of Australia’s top brands.

    The consumer perception study, conducted every three years by George Patterson Y&R, looked at 1,200 brands across 139 different categories.  The online survey sought the views of more than 4,000 Australian consumers.

    Google, in taking this year’s top-spot, moves up from its No. 4 placing in the 2006 study.

    The Top 10 Brands were found to be:

          1. Google

          2. Nokia

          3. Vegemite

          4. Microsoft

          5. Sony

          6. Bunnings Warehouse

          7. Ikea

          8. Coca-Cola

          9. Tim Tam

          10. Wii

    The Bottom 10 Brands were revealed as:

          1. Investra Property

          2. House of Windsor Foods

          3. Australand

          4. Grazia

          5. Fidelity

          6. Hudson

          7. GE Capital

          8. Theos Bottle Shops

          9. Aurora Coffee

          10. GQ

    Four of the biggest losers were clothing brands: Mambo, Stussy, Sportsgirl and Quicksilver, with a number of premium luxury brands, among them watches, jewellery and hotels, suffering too – perhaps as a result of recent recessionary belt-tightening.  The brands of BMW, Citroën and Land Rover in the automotive industry also slipped in the rankings.

    The study also tracked consumer trust in brands which, perhaps somewhat surprisingly, has actually increased of late – especially in the service and finance sectors.  Interestingly, among the most-trusted brands are a number of medical/pharmaceutical brands that consumers rely on when they’re not feeling great, with Panadol, Band Aid, Neurofen and Herron ranking in the top 15.

    Consumer Goods sector update in China

    November 2nd, 2009

    The global consumer goods manufacturer Procter & Gamble is to build a US$248m manufacturing base in Tianjin.  P&G plans to develop its sanitary products plant in Xiqing district into its largest manufacturing base in Asia Pacific, and possibly the world.

    Meanwhile, a recent survey by Ruder Finn shows that 50.3% of consumers in Greater China claim they will not let the global recession affect their purchase of luxury consumer goods. These same respondents also appear to be extremely loyal, with 89.3% saying they will stick to their preferred luxury brand despite the economic downturn.

    Sources: CBBC, Xinhua, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, FCO Country Updates, Ruder Finn, Harvard Business Review and other news sources.

    Global expansion for Chinese companies

    September 17th, 2009

    According to recent reports in Ad Age China, the global recession has turned cash-hungry Western companies into takeover targets for Chinese marketers.  Foreign countries have also become increasingly tempting new markets for a number of Chinese brands.

    Chinese companies haven’t been hit by the economic crisis to the same extent as those in many other countries and, thanks to a huge domestic stimulus package, China’s GDP rose 7.9% in the second quarter of 2009 (compared to a year earlier).  Economists are optimistic that the growth will continue, with Credit Suisse, for example, forecasting economic growth of 8% this year and 9% in 2010.

    A number of Chinese organizations have been taking advantage of the recession to take over other firms at a bargain price.  What’s more, instead of merely looking overseas for resources and cheaper manufacturing sites, Chinese companies are now looking further afield from more of a marketing (rather that production) perspective – i.e. to build their brands and retail operations.

    Computer company Lenovo Group was one of the first privately owned Chinese firms to expand overseas, although its original plans were affected somewhat by the recession.  However, the world’s fourth-largest PC manufacturer is now refocusing its efforts on consumers rather than corporations and, over the summer, opened a ‘concept store’ in Malaysia which allows consumers to test and experience its full product range.

    Similarly, Li Ning Co., a well established and respected sportswear and sporting goods company within China, is making efforts to build its brand overseas, recently opening a flagship store in Singapore.  The store, which is dedicated to badminton – very popular in Southeast Asian markets – lets shoppers try out first-hand technology-inspired badminton sportswear and rackets.

    Meanwhile Haier Group, China’s largest appliance maker, has bought a stake in a New Zealand competitor in order to get a foothold for its own brand products in the New Zealand and Australian markets.

    Chinese companies are a growing presence on the world stage, with 37 appearing in Fortune’s annual ranking of 500 top global companies this year – up from 28 last year and just eight a decade ago.

    Top 1000 brands in Asia

    June 26th, 2009

    Media magazine (www.media.asia) recently published the results of its ‘Asia’s Top 1,000 Brands’ survey.

    Covering Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand, the survey looked to rank the best and most trusted Asian brands across 11 major product and service categories, including: automotive, financial services, food & beverage, and media & telecommunications.

    Many of those featuring highly in the list will be familiar names to both Eastern and Western markets and consumers alike.  Some strong brands which are less well recognised outside of Asia include: Lotte at no.21 (Sweets & candy); Meiji at no.29 (Food & drink); and Shiseido at no.41 (Cosmetics).

    The Full Top 10 list is:

    1.     Sony (Consumer Electronics)

    2.     Samsung (Electronics/White goods)

    3.     Canon (Camera/Office equipment)

    4.     LG (Electronics/White goods)

    5.     Panasonic(Consumer Electronics)

    6.     Hewlett-Packard (Computers)

    7.     Nokia (Mobile phone)

    8.     Apple (Consumer Electronics)

    9.     Google (Search engine)

    10.   Coca-Cola (Soft drinks) 

    Strong Chinese and Asian Brands

    June 12th, 2009

    Headlines following the latest BrandZ Top 100 report concentrate on Google taking the top, but for observers of Asian brads there are some interesting developments

    The Top 10, shown below, contains many of the usual suspects, and unsurprisingly is dominated by Western brands, but China mobile at no 7, features as Asia’s highest ranked brand, down from number 5 last year, but with a higher brand value up from $57.2 billion.:

    1.     Google (Technology) - US$100 billion

    2.     Microsoft (Technology) - $76.2 billion

    3.     Coca-Cola (Food & Beverage) - $67.6 billion

    4.     IBM (Technology) - $66.6 billion

    5.     McDonald’s (Food & Beverage) - $66.5 billion

    6.     Apple (Technology) - $63.1 billion

    7.     China Mobile (Telecommunications) - $61.2 billion

    8.     GE (Conglomerate) - $59.8 billion

    9.     Vodafone (Telecommunications) - $53.7 billion

    10.  Marlboro (Tobacco) - $49.5 billion 

    In total, six Chinese brands make it into this year’s Top 100 list, and apart form China mobile this is dominated by China’s growing financial giants. Three Chinese financial brands ranked highly in the survey: ICBC (no. 12), China Construction Bank (no. 24) and Bank of China (no. 27) respectively. China Merchant’s Bank, while only making number 80 in the list, was easily this year’s biggest climber, with an estimated increase in brand value of 168%.


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