Michael Hoare
Jun 30, 2010

China: Conscientious growth

China's consumers may appear to want it all, but they are maturing fast and are more environmentally conscious than many marketers imagine.

China: Conscientious growth

Contrasting themes of advancement through consumption and environmental conservation played out in Asia's most dynamic market last year.

A society that wants products faster, cheaper and more stylish has helped fuel consumption, says Heidi Zhang, planning director at Publicis in Beijing. "The main trend is that luxury brands are becoming more 'mass'," she says, citing clothing brands such as Uniqlo, and high-street fashion labels H&M and Zara.

She highlights the transition of Uniqlo from a staid retailer to a fast fashion icon that has opened flagship stores in first and second-tier cities. "The strategy is to make the basic into a lifestyle brand," she explains. Uniqlo has also been quick to adopt digital marketing that has allowed it to build market share in tier-three cities, thanks to a solid online shopping experience.

But the Mainland's biggest success story has arguably been the automotive sector. "Demands for some models are heating up to the point where consumers are willing to pay a premium just to get behind the wheel quicker," says Shenan Chuang, CEO of Ogilvy China.

FMCG goods have also spread their efforts to the smaller cities over the past 12 months, partly as a hedge against the recession but also because of the growth potential. "An interesting trend that we observed was dairy brands positioning milk products as a new choice for gift giving in rural areas," says Chuang.

Electrical and home appliance makers fought for share here too, riding on the back of the Government's policy of subsidising white goods in rural areas. The pitch revolved around value, a theme mirrored in the big cities. "Value-for-money combo promotions became the inevitable trend for local and international fast food chains," says Danny Mok, CEO, Grey Shanghai and Hong Kong.

With attention focused on the Shanghai Expo this year, marketers are using the 'Better city, better life' tag as a theme in their communications. Fareeda Cassumbhoy, Bates 141 China's national planning director, argues the Chinese consumer is far "greener" than people assume, and on a par with the US in considering the environmental impact of a purchase.

She points to new breed of consumer that will support brands with a green pitch. Combining knowledge from online communities and caution after years of food safety scandals, consumers evidently want to be better informed and are far choosier than before.

China Top 20 brands

1 Sony
2 Nestlé
3 Canon
4 Haier
5 Samsung
6 MasterKong
7 Panasonic
8 Baidu
9 Hewlett-Packard
10 Google
11 Apple
12 Yili
13 China Mobile
14 Mengniu
15 Nike
16 Coca-Cola
17 Uni-President
18 Nokia
19 adidas
20 Starbucks

Most popular...

TV CHANNELS
1 CCTV 1
2 Hunan Sate
3 CCTV 6
4 CCTV 8
5 Jiangsu Sate

NEWSPAPERS
1 Guangzhou Daily
2 Shanghai Morning Post
3 Chengdu Economic Daily
4 Shenzhen Special Daily
5 Beijing Evening News

WEBSITES
1 baidu.com
2 qq.com
3 taobao.com
4 google.com.hk
5 sina.com.cn

This article was originally published as part of the 2010 Top 1000 Brands report.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

17 hours ago

Former Dentsu China CEO Deric Wong joins EternityX

EXCLUSIVE: The media agency veteran who left Dentsu China to start a consulting firm will oversee the global expansion at the Hong Kong-headquartered martech company.

17 hours ago

Top 10 travel brands in Southeast Asia

Vietnam Airlines soars above the competition, claiming the title of Southeast Asia’s top travel brand in 2024. Explore Campaign’s exclusive insights from its research with Milieu Insight.

18 hours ago

Apple’s latest campaign celebrates innovation in ...

Known as ‘circles', the student-led teams push boundaries in fields including hybrid rocket engineering, stop-motion animation, game development and sports analytics.

19 hours ago

Ahead of Trump's second-term, Meta to scrap fact ...

Traditional fact-checking will make way for X-inspired "community notes." This drastic overhaul signals a major shift in content moderation as the tech giant appears to appease the incoming Trump administration.