The Real China Revealed

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The Real China Revealed

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Ad for a Stampmaker fake it! The Real China Revealed ... 10 provincial capitals: Changchun (Jilin), Chengdu (Sichuan), Guangzhou (Guangdong) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Real China Revealed


1
(No Transcript)
2
  • Which is the largest market
  • in China for Humvees?

3
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4
  • Which city did The Guardian
  • refer to as Invisible City?

5
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6
  • What is the most common (and free!) advertising
    medium in small towns?

7
Ad for a Stampmaker fake it!
Ad for Locksmith
8
The Real China Revealed
  • Insights into the mainlands 2nd and 3rd Tier
    cities

9
Where is the money currently?
44.5 population 32 of GDP
4.5 population 4 of GDP
51 population 64 of GDP
Source Asian Demographics
10
Only 33.5 of all retail sales in China now come
from the 24 largest cities.
National Bureau of Statistics / Access Asia
11
Relative affluence of inhabitants in the main 8
cities will decline
  • Compounded annual growth rate of affluent
    households is 17.9
  • Number of affluent households in the 8 cities
    will more than double but contribution will be
    down to 33 by 2012
  • Note currently middle class are those with Rmb
    28-48K - here forecast of those earning Rmb 80K
    even with some inflation, they should enjoy good
    standards of living by 2012

Secondary cities in the provinces of Jiangsu,
Zhejiang, Shandong and Fujian.
Chongqing, Chengdu, Kumming, Qingdao, Tianjin,
Shijiazhuang and Xiamen
Beijing, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Ningbo,
Shanghai and Shenzhen
Source Asian Demographics
12
Defining the Tiers
  • First-Tier Cities
  • Four municipalities Beijing, Chongqing,
    Shanghai, Tianjin
  • Cities with total retail sales of more than
    RMB30bn, annual per capita income of
  • RMB11,000 and high per capita retail sales as
    proportion of income
  • 10 provincial capitals Changchun (Jilin),
    Chengdu (Sichuan), Guangzhou (Guangdong),
  • Hangzhou (Zhejiang), Harbin (Heilongjiang), Jinan
    (Shandong) Nanjing, (Jiangsu),
  • Shenyang (Liaoning), Wuhan (Hubei), Xian
    (Shaanxi)
  • Four leading cities Dalian, Qingdao, Shenzhen,
    Xiamen
  • Second-Tier Cities
  • 17 provincial capitals Changsha (Hunan), Fuzhou
    (Fujian), Guiyang (Guizhou), Haikou
  • (Hainan), Hefei (Anhui), Hohhot (Inner Mongolia),
    Kunming (Yunnan), Lanzhou (Gansu),
  • Lhasa (Tibet), Nanchang (Jiangxi), Nanning
    (Guangxi), Shijiazhuang (Hebei), Taiyuan
  • (Shanxi), Urumqi (Xinjiang), Xining (Qinghai),
    Yinchuan (Ningxia), Zhengzhou (Henan)
  • 50 prefecture-level cities, including, Ningbo,
    Suzhou, Wuxi, Wenzhou, Nantong,
  • Dongguan, Zhanjiang
  • 15 more cities with populations of between
    500,000 and 2mn
  • Third-Tier Cities

13
Seeking insights into the other half
14
Research Objectives
  • Understand the consumer in low tier markets and
    how they are different from (or similar to) top
    tier cities in terms of attitudes towards life,
    brand consumption media habits.
  • The retail communication study - brand and
    communication presence at different types of
    retail stores.
  • Shopper profile and shopping basket -
    observations of shopping behavior, including
    shopper profile and the products brands in
    their shopping basket planned vs impulse buying

15
Study sample
  • Home interviews photographs 3419 families
  • Retail environment 295 hypermarts,
    supermarkets, convenience stores, mom-n-pop
    stores
  • Shopper exit interviews 530
  • Qualitative in-depth family expert interviews
    20

16
Market Coverage
22 cities in 10 provinces, across tier 1 to tier 3
North
17
44.5 population 32 of GDP
4.5 population 4 of GDP
51 population 64 of GDP
Source Asian Demographics
18
Topline findings and implications
19
Consumer Lifestyle - attitudes to family
  • Tier 1 residents feel almost guilty of giving
    their careers preference over family, hence
    justifying priorities to themselves.
  • Many Tier 2-3 families eat together anyway.

20
Consumer Lifestyle - attitudes to life
  • Consumers living in tier 1 cities are more
    satisfied than those in the Tier 2-3.
  • Over half of those living in Tier 2-3 are not
    satisfied.
  • A big city has many more opportunities for
    earning and spending Nanning respondent

21
Consumer attitudes - risk
  • The majority plays safe, yet there is a
    substantial number of those willing to take risks
    in equal measure across the tiers
  • Nude portfolios in Nanjing
  • My daughter has left high school and is learning
    how to dance Mr Wang, Lanzhou

22
Consumer attitudes - risk
  • The majority remains debt-averse China continues
    to be a high savings nation.
  • Change marginally greater in Tier 1 cities
  • I am confident that I will get a raise this year
    and will pay off my credit card bills Jr.
    Executive in Shanghai.

23
Consumer attitudes - ambition
  • Tier 1 residents are only slightly more ambitious
    than the lower tiers the majority still does not
    consider itself very ambitious.
  • I want to be like Yo Yo Ma

24
Consumer attitudes - fashion
  • Again, small differences between the tiers. Lower
    tier consumers have huge access to fashion
    beauty, even if it is not always branded. Its
    also cheap.
  • Why should I spend 200 kuai on a pair of branded
    jeans when I can pick up 5 stylish pairs here?
    Young woman, Cenxi

25
Consumer attitudes - novelty
  • Novelty is a big draw. Consumers are looking for
    new ideas in every sphere of consumption. Again,
    across the tiers, and to a slightly greater
    extent in Tier 1.

26
Implications - 1
  • The brand stories, particularly those around the
    themes of risk, fashion, family, ambition can be
    the same across the tiers.
  • However they need to be calibrated.
  • Risk-aversion can be countered with confidence.
  • Brands and communication will need to offer the
    new even in the lower tiers tired clichés and
    similar products will not work.
  • Brands and communication for low tier consumers
    can actually make them feel good about their
    condition, rather than inadequate.

27
Attitudes towards brands advertising
  • Clear role for advertising it is the source of
    knowledge about brands
  • Fair numbers find value in brands greater
    numbers in Tier 1 cities

28
Attitudes towards the foreign
  • Openness to foreign brands significantly less in
    lower tier towns.
  • Greater price sensitivity belief that foreign
    brands are more expensive.

29
Brand Preference - Top 10 Favorite Brands
30
Influences on purchase decision
  • Still a price-driven, price-sensitive market
  • Price influences both store and brand choice

31
Influences on purchase decision
Average
32
Influences on purchase decision
  • Price and brand are most important, across the
    tiers
  • In Tier 1, people value their own experience in
    Tier 2, others opinions matter in Tier 3,
    packaging and salespersons / shopowners
    recommendation matters more.
  • Reflects how and where they mostly shop

33
Shop vs Brand - relative importance
Do you first decide which shop to buy or which
brand to buy?
34
Shop vs Brand - relative importance
General speaking, the more expensive the
product, the more important the brand!
35
Influence of the Little Emperors
  • Kids have significant influence on the family
    during shopping as sources of new information,
    but the proportion is lower as one moves down the
    tiers.
  • They are among the first to latch on to new
    trends.

36
Influence of the Little Emperors
  • We spend 40 of our income on our son, to make
    sure he has a good education and is comfortable
    couple in Linxia, MHI Rmb 1100
  • Bu jidao their son, upon being asked who the
    cartoon character on his T-Shirt was (it was
    Mickey Mouse)

37
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38
Implications - 2
  • Role of advertising / brand communication
    experienced by consumers is mostly informative.
  • Opportunity to use emotion, creating value
    systems and move to imagery and storytelling.
  • MNC brands need not emphasize country of origin.
    For the low tier, cultural assimilation would be
    a good strategy.

39
Implications - 2
  • Tier 2 3 show a lower degree of shopping
    confidence and individuality than Tier 1 shoppers
  • Role of word of mouth much greater need to
    motivate shopowners / shop assistants as well as
    current users
  • Need for constant reassurance
  • Opportunity to involve kids to spur brand choice
    and aid shopping, even in the low tier

40
Some other differences between the tiers
41
Food habits
  • Tier 1 has significantly more consumers eating at
    fast food restaurants (such as KFC, Yoshinoya,
    McDonalds ) than Tier 3 Tier 3 families remain
    conservative with their eating habits.

42
Planned purchase consumer durables
Which ones do you plan to buy a new one next 12
month?
43
Planned purchase consumer durables
  • More consumers in tier 1 intend to buy new TV in
    next 12 months.
  • Replacement market - upgrades
  • More consumers in tier 2 plan to buy new DVD
    player, air conditioner and washing machine.
  • More consumers in tier 3 are willing to buy new
    mobile phone, computer, digital camera and
    refrigerator.
  • Both first-time purchases consumers entering
    category for the first time.

44
Shopping Frequency Distance
Shopping Frequency
Shopping Distance
Sample 250 245 135
Sample 250 245 135
45
Shopping Frequency Distance
  • Shoppers in tier 12 markets go shopping a little
    more frequently than those in tier 3 markets.
  • And there are more shops near residence zone in
    tier 12 markets than in tier 3 markets

46
Impulse Shopping
  • Interestingly, shoppers in Tier 23 markets do a
    bit more impulse shopping than those in Tier 1.

47
Impulse Shopping Influences
48
Impulse Shopping Influences
  • Discounts are the most effective promotion that
    trigger impulse shopping.
  • Free gifts and sampling are more attractive in
    tier 1 markets.
  • Radio ads and standalone display are attractive
    in tier 3 markets.

49
Shopping environment
50
TV Program Type Preference
Average
51
TV Program Type Preference
  • Tier 1 likes sports, music, food, business,
    nature and environment programs
  • Time to chill (but cant abandon the quest for
    money)
  • Tier 2 prefers local news most
  • Tier 3 are more skewed to national /
    international news, education career
  • Looking for ways to advance, want to know
    whats happening in the world


52
Internet usage
  • Internet users spend half as much time surfing
    the Net during weekends compared with weekdays,
    in Tier 1 and 2 cities the difference is
    relatively lower in Tier 3 cities.
  • A reflection of many more opportunities for
    entertainment and socializing in the upper tiers.

53
Implications - 3
  • Significant differences in food habits
  • Low tier remains conservative need to stimulate
    demand, offer traditional cuisine in new and
    convenient formats
  • Consumer durable co.s must have a multi-tier
    strategy
  • Sense of direction for channel planning across
    the tiers
  • Use TV to build image, focus on softer brand
    values use local / in-store media to enable
    comparison and trigger impulse opportunity to
    localize

54
Thank you!
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