The Top 4 Marketing Strategies for China in 2022 | Jing Daily

The Top 4 Marketing Strategies for China in 2022 | Jing Daily

Key Takeaways:

  • China’s luxury consumer group has reached a turning point. The data shows that the consumers born between 1990 and 2000 are now 50 percent of the luxury market.

  • Although the China luxury goods market has maintained 20-percent growth this year, the pandemic also has had a profound impact on luxury consumer perceptions, and brands must change their marketing focus to adapt.

  • Digitalization helps online luxury consumption continue to expand, from 20 percent in 2020 to 22 percent in 2021. As such, online channels are becoming more and more important as a platform for brand marketing and increasing customer stickiness.

Chinese consumer desire for luxury goods is expected to continue to grow in 2022 at an estimated rate of 13 percent, making them the highest spending global consumers. By 2025, Generation Y and Z will account for more than two-thirds of the market. Gen Z, China’s youngest spending generation, are digital natives that have grown up with material abundance. And they are willing to pay a premium for fresh and niche experiences.

As such, luxury brands will continue to leverage digital opportunities over the coming years to provide consumers with unparalleled shopping experiences, using innovative technology like NFTs and AR-powered digitalization. Yet, offline purchasing remains the most important sales channel, making up over 50 percent of all consumption.

Online channels provide consumers with multidimensional avenues for communicating and resonating with luxury brands. Meanwhile, offline channels give consumers physical product and service experiences that online services cannot replace. But integrated online and offline channels create an unmatched level of user stickiness, helping brands build loyalty among future consumers.

So, as you can see, both online and offline channels are crucial today, but each needs different tactics to achieve its objective. Here are two online tactics and two offline tactics that brands have successfully used to achieve their goals:

1. Create innovative products and scarcity scenarios 

Young people have undoubtedly become the focus of attention for luxury brands. The annual consumption of more than 300,000 people born in the post-90s accounted for only 11 percent of the total consumer population yet accounted for 40 percent of sales.

Digitalization can establish better communications by providing consumers with refreshing, unique, and personalized luxury service features. Tmall Luxury Pavilion has created a 24-hour digital shopping channel called Cloud Luxury City (云奢城), containing more than 30 different luxury brands. On the platform, consumers can use AR try-ons, 3D interactions, mini-games, and other exclusive online services provided by luxury brands. Tmall Luxury Pavilion also released six virtual collections (NFTs) in collaboration with six luxury brands, allowing consumers to buy their favorite physical goods from these brands online while also receiving a unique digital item based on blockchain technology. This digital collection was launched on November 1 and sold out in the first hour. Clearly, providing limited-stock products, which are only available for a short time, will continue to be a crucial way for brands to attract consumers.

Digital images of the different brands on Cloud Luxury City. Photo: 淘宝设计 official account

2. Manage private traffic to provide more customized services

Chinese luxury consumers are very diversified today. Young people want interactive and creative content that only brand digitalization can satisfy. Therefore, social media must become a high priority — at the level of brand marketing — as it is an important way to communicate with young people. The WeChat ecosystem should also be part of a brand’s marketing strategy, helping to enhance the overall brand experience and establishing an omnichannel ecosystem.

For loyal customers, social media can better provide them with customized services in a personalized manner. Louis Vuitton establishes connections with different customer groups by creating small, specific WeChat Mini-Programs with unique tone and content. Brands would be wise to upgrade their social media, so they can offer consumers more customized and personalized digital services with luxury features.

At the same time, brand management and operation of private traffic will have a major impact on luxury repurchase rates and customer loyalty cultivation. The Dior China Fashion Show was presented live through the brand’s Tencent Video and WeChat video account. Afterward, show advertisements and the new collection were placed directly on its WeChat Moments. These advertisements were directly connected to the brand’s homepage, boosting sales. WeChat and other social media provide useful ways for luxury brands to interact with users, regardless of the time or place. Brands need to recognize how important that is and create robust CRM ecosystems.

A WeChat Mini Program store matrix from Louis Vuitton. Photo: Screenshots

As mentioned, offline experiences are irreplaceable. Here are two offline tactics that may contribute to the brand success in China:

3. Pay close attention to sustainability but try out collaborations first

After the pandemic, consumers will prioritize the recyclability of products. As such, younger shoppers today have a keen interest in purchasing vintage luxury products, which also help them express their personalities. This demand for vintage luxury is attracting more players, and the secondhand and vintage luxury markets are expected to reach 33 billion euros by the end of 2021.

Chinese vintage luxury service and product providers have been dissatisfied with their online business performances in 2021, and luxury brands should pay attention to their deployment of offline stores. This year, the vintage luxury service and product provider Ponfu (胖虎) recently reopened its offline flagship store in Beijing, displaying nearly 10,000 SKUs. And now, some limited editions of vintage luxury goods are beginning to meet young people’s requirements for uniqueness and sustainability.

In 2022, luxury brands may collaborate with secondhand luxury providers to seize this market as it’s still in the early stages in China. Outside China, the Kering Group has already announced it would invest in a luxury goods resale platform called Vestiaire Collective. But, as of now, it’s hard to say what industry giant will emerge in China’s vintage market.

Product display in the flagship shop of Ponfu. Photo: 胖虎 Weibo account

4. Optimize offline store layouts based on consumer distribution 

Apart from the consumer perspective, factors like regulations have had a significant impact on the development of the industry and marketing and product strategies. China’s promotion of the common prosperity policy will increase middle-class income while limiting luxuries and extravagant consumption to some extent. Brands should pay careful attention to the values of their marketing and conform to the country’s guidelines for related industries.

In addition to the market’s continuously growing size, brands can now also see the contribution of specific groups of people to the luxury market, such as consumers in lower-tier cities. With brands continuing to promote in lower-tier cities, the concept of luxury goods is increasingly expanding from Tier-1 to lower-tier cities. Meanwhile, luxury consumption in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, such as Qingdao and Dalian, has grown to top-five. An offline luxury store in these cities provides a close-up opportunity for consumers to feel and try a product. And the display and the decoration of offline stores allow luxury brands to show their uniqueness and brand culture. That’s why the layout of luxury brand offline stores in cities should consider specific consumer preferences. Consumers in Tier-2 and neighboring lower-tier cities are attracted to these experiences, which aren’t available through online stores.

China will still be the engine for luxury brand growth in 2022. And online consumption will continue its development as offline channels provide the majority of sales. And now, with the anti-monopoly regulations launching, brands can choose from more than one platform to sell. In fact, many luxury brands performed great on different comprehensive platforms this year. The recent Double Eleven had more than 200 luxury brands launch more than 300,000 products on Tmall Luxury Pavilion, and JD.com reached an unprecedented new cooperation model with the LVMH group where consumers could directly access the brand’s official website to purchase from the JD platform.

Photo: Screenshot via Tmall Luxury Pavilion and JD.com

Brands should pay attention to the characteristics of different platforms and channels to take advantage of their unique policies. At the same time, luxury brands should also carry out differentiated selections and listing strategies on both e-commerce platforms and offline stores to provide consumers with customized services and experiences that meet their preferences.

Additional research by Joanna Wang

 

 

Source Credit: This article originally appeared on Jing Daily by Jing Daily. Read the original article - https://jingdaily.com/online-offline-integrated-marketing-china-2022/