LONDON — In a year plagued by COVID-19, China as the world’s largest luxury market has shown great resilience and delivered promising results for those brands that got their China strategy right.
From continuous price hikes, record-breaking tallies, global collection debuts to dazzling physical events, digital viewings and livesteaming selling, luxury brands have made headlines on a daily basis throughout 2020 in the country. This not only offered hope for the suffering industry but also provided a reality check for those who fail to tackle the market.
While travel bans didn’t do much to stop the global spread of the virus, the health crisis in China was contained by early April, and the country began to show signs that it would become the sole source of growth for many while the rest of the world entered various levels of lockdowns.
Retailers big and small embraced China’s widely available technology tools to stay connected with their customers.
The Alibaba-owned Intime Retail, one of the nation’s largest high-end retailers with tenants ranging from Cartier to Lane Crawford, saw online business quadruple and revenue bounce back to normal in May thanks to livestreaming, free shipping, as well as a series of campaigns and sales initiatives.
Some 5,000 sales associates from Intime’s store registered as livestreamers to host around 200 sessions daily on Taobao Live during the height of the outbreak to engage with and acquire new users.
Intime introduced free shipping for all in-app purchases and partnered with Cainiao, Alibaba’s logistics network, to help cover deliveries within a 10-kilometer radius of any store location, to further encourage online spending.
The brand also tapped the country’s most talked-about livestreamer, Austin Li, and actress Song Jia for this year’s May 20 Chinese Valentine’s Day promotion. With 40 million fans on Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, and 25 million and 15 million followers on Taobao and Weibo, respectively, Li’s endorsement is a highly strategic move, even for top brands like Vuitton.
For the spring 2021 season in September, Prada, Fendi, Valentino, Hugo Boss, Dior and Miu Miu took the livesteaming game to a new level by inviting hundreds of guests to watch the show live in China. They were rewarded with huge social media exposure.
Prada, for example, hosted 180 guests — including brand ambassadors, influencers, high-profile editors and artists — for its viewing reception at Rong Zhai, followed by dinner and cocktails. The livestreaming of Raf Simons’ and Miuccia Prada’s first codesigned collection for the brand on its official Weibo and Douyin accounts saw a record-breaking 48 million participating users exploring the show as well as the viewing event. The Weibo hashtag #PradaSS21 hit 170 million views in one day and now stands at 420 million views.
Louis Vuitton also saw a record-breaking monthly sales figure from its flagship in Shanghai’s Plaza 66, the largest in China. It made $22 million in August. It’s believed to be the highest monthly sales figure in China’s history. The record-high sales tally was boosted in part by the brand’s men’s spring 2021 show held in Shanghai at the beginning of the month.
Coach was one of the first brands to join this channel, and the discount goes as deep as 70 percent off. This move paved the way for the brand to become one of the three brands that hit the 100 million renminbi, or $15.2 million, sales mark during the Singles’ Day shopping festival on Tmall this year, alongside Cartier and Michael Kors. It also became the best selling brand in the bag and accessories category.
It’s indeed fascinating to hear stories about how well some brands are doing in China amid the pandemic. But the reality is far from rosy for new entrants looking to expand in the market.
Those that are now benefiting from China’s swift recovery have been in the market since the early Nineties, and have built a sizable local operation with innovative China-centric strategies.
“An integrated approach is absolutely key in China,” Lau added. “Chinese consumers are some of the most digitally connected in the world. They are informed and well researched when it comes to brands and products, and even though they are constantly connected, offline retail is critically important to brands providing a tactile, sensory experience to their Chinese customers. The bar is constantly pushed higher when it comes to off-line experiences in China. Tech and digital must play a key role in offline retail activation, too.”
Looking beyond the first-tier cities, as COVID-19 disruptions reshuffle economic output in China, a handful of cities are performing better than the rest and attracting mega high-end retail projects amid the strong rebound in 2020. Heuritech, a fashion technology start-up, predicts that brands need to be agile enough to widen their purchase locations to China. Men and Gen Z, especially from lower-tier cities, are fast-emerging consumers, with a greater appetite for products tapping originality and national pride.