Jenny Chan 陳詠欣
Apr 16, 2015

Hazardous? No. Honest? Hopefully

CHINA - Actress Jessica Alba is set to launch her Honest brand, a range of baby feeding products, shampoos, personal-care lines, vitamins, diapers and blankets, in China by the end of 2015.

Jessica Alba's baby products brand is due to launch in China by the end of the year
Jessica Alba's baby products brand is due to launch in China by the end of the year

In the US, Honest is sold on the shelves of retailers including Nordstrom, Target, Costco and Whole Foods as well as directly to consumers in monthly subscription packs. In China, the brand would most likely start sales via an ecommerce model, Alba has told US media.

Brian Lee, CEO and co-founder at The Honest Company, believes the brand will “really resonate with the Chinese family looking for non-toxic lifestyle choices”. Scare cases involving gutter oil, chemical-laden milk, and antibiotics-filled food occur so frequently in China that a joke has been making the rounds on the country’s social media: “If you laid someone out flat on the ground, you’d have a human periodic table.”

Chinese consumers have lost faith in local suppliers of products, in particular those for babies and children, that don’t meet safety standards. So Honest touts itself as not just a CPG (consumer packaged goods) company but “a lifestyle, a way of life, and also an education platform … to create a non-toxic world”.

Another obvious reason for the impending launch is the sheer size of the new market: the number of children born each year in China is 22 million, plus the middle class in the country will soon equal the entire US population. Honesty may be the best policy.

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

7 hours ago

Creative Minds: Roberto Buhain, unscripted

Cylndr Seoul’s copywriter and a former theatre actor, Roberto Buhain reveals his unpredictable path from the stage to the world of advertising—complete with half-finished tattoos and a whirlwind of hobbies.

8 hours ago

The impact of social media on brand boycotts in Asia

A new study by Carma unpicks the role social media played in propelling boycotts targeted towards Starbucks, Disney and Skechers in Malaysia and Indonesia, and how brands can bounce back from them.

9 hours ago

YouTube partners with Shopee to launch shopping feature

The first-ever retail feature in Southeast Asia will pilot in Indonesia and eventually be rolled out to Thailand and Vietnam.

9 hours ago

McDonald’s China’s CGO on 'kidult' marketing and ...

McDonald’s China's chief growth officer, Yabin He, tells Campaign that he deprioritises ROI in place of emotional connections and targeting the 'inner child' of consumers.