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  • Archive for the ‘Japan’ Category

    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.

    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

    Chinese Financial Services Sector Update

    November 16th, 2009

    l   Banking

    China Great Wall Asset Management, one of four ‘bad banks’ set up to deal with the non-performing loans of China’s banking system 10 years ago, has established a life assurance joint venture with Nippon Life Insurance of Japan as part of a strategy of diversification.

    l   Exchanges

    China’s Growth Enterprises Market (GEM) was launched at the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on October 23.  Companies listing there will be smaller technology companies that show good growth potential.  Shang Fulin, chairman of the industry watchdog CSRC, warned that the GEM companies would be more likely to be exposed to market manipulation than larger companies.

    To find out more about our Financial Services market research capabilities, please visit: http://b2binternational.com/China/b2bsectors/financial.php 

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

    Market research in China versus market research in Japan

    July 24th, 2009

    As international market research specialists, we have experienced first-hand the many differences – cultural, linguistic, economic, etc – of different countries and markets around the world.  Sometimes the extent of these unique ‘quirks’ can be greater that many people realise, influencing the way we conduct our market research in any given country, and sometimes impacting on the findings and conclusions we uncover.  While we have written widely on some of the differences we have encountered around the world, we are always very interested to hear about other people’s research and experiences.  In the following article –

    Dragons of different hues – which featured in the July/August 2009 Association for Qualitative Research magazine, Irwin Hanks contrasts qualitative research in two very different countries: China and Japan.

    Let’s start with a little history

    Japan has a strong market research culture going back to the early 60s, led by the rise of post-war manufacturing and exporting. Formal research agencies grew from what was, initially, an internal activity among large Japanese companies. Many are now over 40 years’ old and national household names.

    China, by contrast, despite its astonishing recent economic and MR growth, had few formal agencies in this field until around 17 years ago, before which few capitalist businesses were around to buy research.

    Initial industry growth was fed by the ‘conversion’ of State economic and statistics gathering units into quasi MR units. More significant, however, was the advent of investment by foreign agencies, driven by awakening interest in China’s market potential from their own clients.

    So what affects the two countries’ MR industries?

    The Economy

    The contrast between both markets is currently huge. China, even if it has taken a well publicised hit in the export-driven low-cost manufacturing sector, remains in growth mode. Major clients remain reasonably robust domestically, and there is little decline in foreign interest.

    In Japan, unfortunately, it’s a different story. Companies are, for the first time, laying off workers, consumers cutting spending, and the Government has lurched from one crisis to another recently without any effective remedial action. Worse, because the Japanese MR industry depends far more on domestic clients than international, business is seriously down. Qual is doing better, but only because it is seen to be cheaper.

    Professional skills

    In China, the strongest skills set agency-side is found mainly among the first wave of a small group of (now senior) managers from the late 80s/early 90s. More recently, they’ve been joined by a wave of imported expats. The latter, though professionally skilled, usually rely very much on local staff for cultural input and language. Qual is growing in China and takes a far larger slice of the ‘pie’ than in Japan. This is fuelled by sophisticated clients who want to gain deeper insights, and those less sophisticated who like qual because it is fast, cheap and they can ‘see it with their own eyes’.

    Japan now has a broad base of trained and skilled market researchers (although biased towards quant), and a research culture which has long since spread to service sectors and government related organisations. Generally, professional standards are high, and ethics are strong within the context of Japanese business society.  The typical Japanese client, however, places far more faith in numbers, including those from the ubiquitous group interviews than from true qualitative.

    Awareness

    This affects how one sells, how one recruits and in some ways, even how one interviews. In Japan there is generally a well absorbed understanding of the benefits and uses of MR among business people, despite a strong preference for numbers rather than ‘feelings’. Even the general public is familiar with the concept of taking part in MR studies and are also well informed about issues like privacy and rights.

    In China, however, the picture is rather different. Aside from perhaps the top 12 Chinese companies and the many joint-venture and foreign-invested ones there is little understanding among business owners of the benefits of MR, let alone of qual. Among the general public the picture is very varied. The urban elite in major cities may now be familiar with surveys, but elsewhere we often spend as much time explaining what we are doing as actually doing it.

    Lower professional standards in China, along with a tendency for many city dwellers to seek easy money by any means, have however had one unfortunate consequence. Professional respondents have become a nightmare, far worse than in the West. They even use different names and multiple ID cards, an activity with which less reputable agencies connive.

    In Japan, while professional respondents exist, western clients can expect few issues if screening protocols are explicitly agreed. The stereotypical view of Japanese honesty is, generally, fairly valid. Many Japanese MR companies do, however, use people called ‘monitors’ who are recruited for surveys regularly. That’s why clients need to specify if they want ‘fresh’ respondents, or at least place restrictions on how recently they participated.

    Lifestyle and Culture

    Along with differences, there are also similarities. Focus groups can be difficult to conduct successfully in both countries. Other forms of qual, in particular individual depth interviews, are often much more effective.

    The Japanese find it extremely hard to express feelings or opinions, particularly to strangers. ‘Warm ups’ take much longer here and very good (cross-cultural) moderators are needed as so much of the ‘truth’ from groups here is the unspoken.

    Furthermore, the Japanese are taught from a young age that for every situation or occurrence there is essentially a right or a wrong response, with nothing in between. So when asked ‘why’, many are left groping for a response. Different techniques to those used in the West or even other Asian markets are often needed.

    In China, qual receives a much higher proportion of spend, but some of the same problems surface. While the Chinese don’t have quite the same communications problems in public as the Japanese, their character is still reserved and introverted. In addition, 50 years of post-revolutionary rule means that for older respondents, formulating independent opinions is problematic. Under this circumstance, the ability of moderators is crucial. Unfortunately, the industry’s meteoric growth means that many moderators don’t have such capabilities. The good ones are world class, but there are too few.

    So, very different markets and challenges. Which is why, in China and Japan, choosing an agency with true cross-cultural abilities is so very critical.

    Irwin Hanks
    Copyright © Association for Qualitative Research, 2009

    B2B International, through its Asian headquarters in Beijing, conducts b2b market research projects across many industry sectors, markets and geographical locations throughout the Asia-Pacific region.  Its qualitative and quantitative research specialists are fluent in many Asian languages, including Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Malay and Korean, as well as English.  In conjunction with its European and North American offices, the group is able to conduct multi-country studies across the world.  For more information on any of our offerings, please call +86 (0)10 6515 6642 or email beijing@b2binternational.com 

    To read some of our international market research white papers, please click here: http://www.b2binternational.com/library/whitepapers/

    The biggest company in the world hails from China

    July 3rd, 2009

    PetroChina, the Shanghai-listed arm of state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), and mainland China’s biggest producer of oil, recently became the largest company in the world.

    Following a stock-price rise of 3%, taking its total market value to some $336 billion, PetroChina is now the most valuable company in the world.  It is worth approximately $100 million more than fellow Oil & Gas giant, United States-based Exxon Mobil.  Industrial Bank of China (Banking), China Mobile (Telecommunications) and China Petroleum (Oil & Gas) are three further Chinese companies which rank among the biggest in the world.

    China’s overall economy became the third largest in the world earlier this year, now resting behind just the U.S. and Japan.  Many economists expect China to overtake Japan within the next few years to gain second spot.

    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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