Marketing In China

Description
In this document I have tried to put the basic problems faced by Marketing Managers both in B2B & B2C channels, in China. As we know China is culturally very different from the Western and Indian culture. Hence it becomes more important to understand their culture and form the marketing strategy as per that. This is a descriptive report. At the end I have tried to suggest some solutions which will help the marketing managers to be successful in China. It is really very easy to fail in China as many of Fortune 500 companies have tried and failed. Even Google is one of them, but there is always companies like Coca Cola who have a success story.

C h a l l e n g e s
  f o r
  M a r k e t i n g
  I n
  C h i n a
 
Prepared
 for:
 Prof.
 Heming,
 
 Dept
 Of
 Economics,
 OUC
  Date:
 29-­?11-­?2012
  Proposal
 #:
  Project
 Report
 for
 Chinese
 Business
 Environment
 
  (This
 report
 is
 written
 only
 for
 academic
 purpose)
 
  Prepared
 by:
 Ashish
 Jude
 Michael,
 Student
 PGPEx
 (IIM
 Shillong+OUC
 )
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 


 

2
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 


  Table
 of
 Content
 

 

 

1. What
 is
 marketing?
  2. Growth
 Of
 Chinese
 Market
  3. Importance
 of
 marketing
 in
 China
  4. How
 is
 marketing
 In
 China
 is
 different?
  A)
 B2B
 Channel
  B)
 B2C
 Channel
  5. Why
 marketing
 In
 China
 is
 different?
  A) B2B
 Channel
  B) B2C
 Channel
  6. Challenges
 faced
 during
 marketing
 In
 China
  A) B2B
 Channel
  B) B2C
 Channel
 
 
 
 
 
 
 7.
 How
 to
 overcome
 the
 challenges
 faced
 during
 marketing
 In
 
 
 
 
  China
  A) B2B
 Channel
  B) B2C
 Channel
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 8.
 Conclusion
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Bibliography
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  3
 
 

What
 is
 marketing?
 
If
 we
 answer
 this
 question
 in
 words
 of
 Dr.
 Philip
 Kotler
 Marketing
 can
 be
 defined
  as
 “Marketing
 is
 the
 science
 and
 art
 of
 exploring,
 creating,
 and
 delivering
 value
 to
  satisfy
 the
 needs
 of
 a
 target
 market
 at
 a
 profit.”
 
  We
 can
 say
 the
 following
 activities
 can
 broadly
 constitute
 marketing:
 


Designing
 the
 product
 so
 it
 will
 be
 desirable
 to
 customers
 by
 using
 tools
  such
 as
 marketing
 research
 and
 pricing.
  Promoting
 the
 product
 so
 people
 will
 know
 about
 it
 by
 using
 tools
 such
 as
  public
 relations,
 advertising,
 and
 marketing
 communications.
  Setting
 a
 price
 and
 letting
 potential
 customers
 know
 about
 your
 product
  and
 making
 it
 available
 to
 them.
 However
 the
 key
 processes
 of
 marketing
  are:
 





(1)
 Opportunity
 identification
  (2)
 New
 product
 development
  (3)
 Customer
 attraction
  (4)
 Customer
 retention
 and
 loyalty
 building
  (5)
 Order
 fulfillment.
 
 
 

Figure 1


 

4
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 

The above figure gives summaries the key elements of marketing and their relationships. We can say marketing can be divided into three major streams: 1.Marketing
 Audit
 consists
 of
 Market
 Analysis,
 Market
 Segmentation
 and
 Market
  Strategy.
  2.Market
 Research
 consists
 of
 Qualitative
 and
 Quantitative
 Analysis
 and
  Consumer
 Tests.
  3.Marketing
 Mix
 consists
 of
 Product,
 Price,
 Place
 and
 Promotion
 generally
 known
  as
 4P’s
 of
 marketing.
  Generally
 we
 divide
 marketing
 into
 two
 channels:
  B2B
 Marketing:
 It
 means
 business
 to
 business
 marketing,
 describes
 commerce
  transactions
 between
 businesses,
 such
 as
 between
 a
 manufacturer
 and
 a
  wholesaler,
 or
 between
 a
 wholesaler
 and
 a
 retailer.
 It
 imply
 that
 the
 buyer
 is
 not
  necessary
 the
 end
 consumer.
 For
 example
 machinery
 purchase
 by
 a
 company.
  B2C
 Marketing:
 It
 means
 business
 to
 consumer
 marketing,
 describes
  transaction
 between
 business
 and
 consumers.
 The
 buyers
 are
 generally
 end
  consumers.
 For
 example
 Head
 &
 Shoulders
 shampoo
 to
 a
 consumer.
 


 

Growth
 Of
 Chinese
 Market
 

Why
 is
 China
 taking
 off
 now?
 If
 we
 consider
 B2B
 channel
 China
 has
 the
  reputation
 of
 being
 World
 Factory
 and
 where
 dose
 the
 technology
 &
 machinery
  for
 this
 factory
 comes?
 From
 developed
 countries
 like
 US,
 Japan,
 Germany
 &
  Europe.
 Today
 when
 we
 observe
 the
 balance
 of
 payment
 account
 with
 other
  countries
 we
 can
 see
 that
 it
 has
 trade
 surplus
 with
 all
 countries
 except
 Japan
  from
 where
 it
 imports
 major
 portion
 of
 technology.
 Still
 the
 western
 countries
  are
 eyeing
 this
 market
 and
 are
 yet
 not
 successful
 to
 grab
 important
 place.
 The
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  5
 
  estimated
 value
 of
 B2B
 market
 in
 China
 expected
 to
 be
 more
 that
 US$320bn
 out
  of
 which
 US$
 50bn
 is
 being
 spent
 over
 the
 Internet
 in
 B2B
 market
 segment
 in
  China
 and
 China's
 online
 B2B
 market
 is
 larger
 than
 B2C
 market.
  In
 case
 of
 economic
 slowdown
 as
 faced
 in
 2009
 the
 Chinese
 economy
 was
  severely
 affected
 as
 they
 have
 very
 low
 private
 domestic
 consumption
 if
 we
 see
 


 
 Figure
 2
 
  in
 figure
 2,
 the
 domestic
 consumption
 as
 a
 %
 of
 GDP
 is
 very
 low
 at
 37%
 which
  make
 its
 economy
 very
 valuable
 to
 performance
 of
 its
 exports.
 China’s
  consumption-­?to-­?GDP
 ratio
 has
 dropped
 by
 nearly
 15
 percentage
 points
 since
  1990
 and
 continues
 to
 fall
 in
 the
 aftermath
 of
 the
 financial
 crisis.
 While
 falling
  consumption
 rates
 are
 common
 in
 developing
 economies,
 the
 speed
 and
  magnitude
 of
 this
 decline
 have
 no
 precedent
 in
 modern
 history.
 In
 the
 United
  States,
 private
 consumption
 always
 remained
 above
 50
 percent
 of
 GDP
 even
  during
 the
 full-­?scale
 industrialization
 drive
 of
 World
 War
 II.
 In
 Japan
 and
 South
  Korea,
 consumption
 remained
 was
 always
 above
 50
 percent
 during
 periods
 of
  rapid
 industrial
 development.
 The
 sources
 of
 China’s
 low
 consumption
 rate
 are
  both
 behavioral
 and
 structural
 set-­?up.
 The
 country’s
 households
 have
 an
  extraordinarily
 high
 ability
 to
 save:
 the
 average
 Chinese
 family
 save
 around
 an
  astonishing
 25
 percent
 of
 its
 discretionary
 income,
 about
 six
 times
 the
 savings
  rate
 for
 US
 households
 and
 three
 times
 the
 rate
 for
 Japan’s
 this
 makes,
 China’s
  savings
 rate
 is
 15
 percentage
 points
 above
 the
 GDP-­?weighted
 average
 for
 Asia
 as
  a
 region.
  In
 order
 to
 boost
 the
 private
 domestic
 consumption
 the
 government
 has
 given
 

6
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  the
 people
 the
 right
 to
 go
 shopping.
 In
 2011,
 China
 begins
 its
 12th
 five-­?year
 plan,
  shifting
 its
 economic
 focus
 from
 export-­?led
 sectors
 to
 increasing
 domestic
  consumer
 demand.
 The
 plan,
 passed
 by
 the
 government
 in
 mid-­?March,
 2011,
 is
  designed
 to
 develop
 the
 country
 into
 a
 major
 consumer
 marketplace.
 It
 plans
 to
  increase
 consumer
 product
 imports,
 promote
 urbanization,
 and
 optimize
 the
  consumer
 market
 for
 consumption.
 That
 the
 Chinese
 consumer
 is
 driving
 global
  growth
 is
 well
 known.
 The
 statistics
 are
 arresting:
 ten
 million
 new
 Chinese
  consumers
 enter
 the
 market
 each
 year.
 In
 2010,
 China’s
 consumer
 market
 was
  estimated
 to
 be
 worth
 $1.7
 trillion.
 Credit
 Suisse
 projects
 that
 the
 burgeoning
  domestic
 consumer
 market
 could
 grow
 to
 nearly
 $16
 trillion
 within
 a
 decade.
 But
  while
 the
 consumers
 are
 there
 in
 droves,
 brands
 don’t
 necessarily
 know
 how
 to
  reach
 them.
  Still
 there
 are
 some
 interesting
 facts
 on
 China’s
 B2C
 market:
  •
 There
 are
 more
 than
 420
 million
 Internet
 users
 in
 China,
 a
 number
 growing
 by
  the
 minute.
 The
 advertising
 and
 marketing
 landscape
 in
 China
 is
 rapidly
  changing
 to
 adapt
 to
 dynamic
 media
 and
 communication
 technology
 trends.
  •
 There
 are
 five
 times
 as
 many
 people
 in
 China
 learning
 English
 than
 there
 are
  people
 living
 in
 England.
 There
 is
 an
 implication
 here
 for
 marketers—the
  younger
 generation
 has
 a
 lot
 of
 exposure
 to,
 not
 to
 mention
 interest
 in,
 the
 West.
  •
 Chinese
 consumers
 spent
 $9
 billion
 on
 luxury
 goods
 in
 2010,
 second
 only
 in
  magnitude
 to
 the
 United
 States.
  •
 The
 consumer
 in
 China
 has
 become
 significantly
 more
 sophisticated
 than
 ever
  before.
 Simon
 Pestridge,
 global
 brand
 director
 for
 Nike,
 said,
 “There
 is
 no
  difference
 between
 the
 consumer
 in
 China
 and
 the
 consumer
 in
 the
 U.S.
 They
 are
  incredibly
 proud
 and
 savvy,
 which
 is
 different
 from
 10
 or
 15
 years
 ago.”
 
  Importance
 of
 marketing
 in
 China
  Marketing
 is
 just
 like
 first
 step
 which
 you
 make
 while
 you
 enter
 any
 market.
 And
  when
 that
 market
 is
 as
 big
 and
 important
 as
 China
 that
 first
 step
 is
 really
  important.
 In
 China
 things
 work
 basically
 by
 relationships
 or
 “Guanxi”
 and
  marketing
 plays
 an
 important
 role
 for
 initiating
 this
 relationship.
 
 There
 has
 been
  several
 example
 when
 the
 marketing
 strategy
 of
 MNCs
 even
 such
 as
 Coca-­?Cola
  after
 initial
 hiccups
 learnt
 the
 lessons
 and
 localized
 their
 marketing
 strategy.
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  7
 
  Coke
 changed
 its
 name
 to
 KeKouKeLe
 in
 which
 Ke
 Kou
 means
 tasty
 ,
 good
 to
 eat
  and
 Ke
 Le
 means
 be
 happy.
 And
 this
 made
 Coca
 Cola
 a
 great
 advantage
 on
 Pepsi
  its
 arch
 rival
 in
 Chinese
 market.
 
  Another
 point,
 which
 MNCs
 get
 wrong
 about,
 is
 thinking
 China
 as
 a
 single
  market.
 Actually
 there
 no
 single
 market
 but
 actually
 two
 markets
 one
 Urban
 &
  other
 Rural
 and
 both
 totally
 different
 from
 each
 other.
 And
 one
 should
 market
  products
 differently
 in
 each
 of
 them.
 MNCs
 like
 Google
 failed
 at
 the
 hands
 of
  Baidu
 in
 China
 just
 as
 they
 were
 not
 able
 to
 formulate
 a
 good
 marketing
 strategy
  for
 Chinese
 Market
 where
 the
 major
 Internet
 users
 were
 youth
 and
 students
 and
  Google
 just
 targeted
 working
 professionals.
 Finally
 Google
 shut
 down
 its
 China
  Operations.
 This
 shows
 that
 marketing
 is
 very
 important
 for
 surviving
 in
 Chinese
  Market.
 
 
 
  How
 is
 marketing
 In
 China
 is
 different?
  The
 question
 of
 how
 to
 market
 and
 sell
 in
 China
 is
 one
 that
 is
 debated
 endlessly
  by
 foreign
 companies
 seeking
 to
 profit
 from
 the
 huge
 potential
 of
 the
 country.
  Views
 expressed
 by
 business
 people
 claiming
 to
 know
 the
 secret
 of
 success
 in
  China
 vary
 wildly,
 from
 those
 (generally
 newcomers)
 who
 say
 that
 marketing
  and
 selling
 in
 China
 is
 ‘just
 like
 home’
 through
 to
 those
 (usually
 those
 with
 at
  least
 a
 couple
 of
 years’
 experience
 in
 China)
 who
 exaggerate
 the
 unique
 nature
 of
  Chinese
 business
 and
 Chinese
 people
 to
 such
 an
 extent
 that
 selling
 in
 China
  sounds
 like
 an
 impossibility.
 The
 reality
 is
 that
 these
 two
 positions
 are
 both
  equally
 correct
 and
 incorrect
 –
 there
 is
 no
 reason
 why
 a
 Western
 company
 with
 a
  flexible,
 patient
 and
 ‘listening’
 approach
 to
 marketing
 and
 sales
 should
 not
  succeed
 in
 the
 Chinese
 market.
 
 

B2B
 Channel
 
As
 Chinese
 companies
 have
 developed
 over
 the
 past
 decade,
 they
 have
 rapidly
  become
 more
 sophisticated
 in
 their
 business
 systems
 and
 practices,
 creating
  both
 opportunities
 and
 challenges
 for
 Western
 businesses.
 Although
 ongoing
  East-­?West
 cultural
 differences
 continue
 to
 pose
 challenges
 to
 foreign
 enterprises
  carrying
 out
 marketing
 in
 China,
 companies
 that
 make
 an
 effort
 to
 understand
  such
 variations
 and
 integrate
 them
 into
 their
 marketing
 strategies
 stand
 a
  greater
 chance
 of
 succeeding
 in
 the
 China
 market.
 

8
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  When
 discussing
 Chinese
 attitudes
 towards
 marketing
 and
 sales,
 it
 is
 important
  to
 make
 the
 distinction
 between
 the
 different
 types
 of
 companies
 operating
 in
  China.
 Marketing
 staff
 employed
 by
 western
 multinationals
 typically
 have
 more
  heightened
 awareness
 of
 marketing
 concepts
 than
 local
 Chinese
 companies,
  often
 employing
 expatriates
 or
 returnee
 overseas
 students
 with
 MBAs
 in
 senior
  marketing
 positions.
 With
 such
 large
 variations
 in
 marketing
 practices
 among
  different
 types
 of
 companies
 in
 China,
 foreign
 companies
 are
 best
 advised
 to
 take
  a
 flexible
 approach
 to
 sales
 and
 marketing.
 
  In
 general,
 the
 principle
 of
 ‘marketing’
 in
 business-­?to-­?business
 markets
 is
 less
  widely
 recognized
 in
 China
 than
 in
 more
 mature
 markets.
 Commonly,
 marketing
  is
 viewed
 as
 a
 task
 for
 the
 sales
 department,
 its
 role
 sometimes
 viewed
 as
 little
  more
 than
 taking
 care
 of
 the
 company
 logo
 and
 brochures.
 In
 short,
 marketing
 is
  defined
 by
 many
 in
 Chinese
 businesses
 as
 consisting
 of
 only
 the
 ‘promotion’
  element
 of
 the
 4
 Ps.
 ‘Product’
 is
 the
 job
 of
 engineers,
 ‘price’
 the
 job
 of
 salesforces
  and
 ‘place’
 the
 job
 of
 senior
 management.
 At
 worst,
 marketing
 departments
 are
  derided
 as
 ‘spending
 departments’,
 their
 apparently
 superficial
 output
 seen
 as
 a
  poor
 substitute
 for
 the
 relationships
 that
 are
 so
 important
 in
 a
 Chinese
 business
  environment.
 
 

Figure
 3
  In
 contrast
 to
 some
 Western
 markets,
 the
 salesperson
 and
 more
 broadly
 the
  principle
 of
 selling
 are
 more
 widely
 respected
 in
 China.
 Two
 issues
 perhaps
 lie
 at
  the
 core
 of
 this
 fact:
 firstly,
 the
 entrepreneurial
 spirit
 of
 the
 Chinese
 people,
 and
  secondly
 the
 great
 importance
 placed
 on
 relationships
 in
 business
 decision-­? making.
 A
 good
 salesman
 must
 be
 adept
 at
 forging
 not
 only
 relationships,
 but
  also
 friendships
 with
 potential
 customers.
 The
 importance
 of
 relationship
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  9
 
  building
 tends
 to
 imply
 a
 long
 sales
 process,
 requiring
 of
 salespeople
 patience,
  continual
 learning
 and
 an
 on-­?the-­?ground
 presence.
  How
 do
 Chinese
 Companies
 want
 to
 be
 targeted?
  As
 per
 a
 study
 made
 by
 B2B
 international
 the
 following
 was
 the
 result
 


  Figure
 4
  We
 can
 clearly
 see
 that
 Chinese
 Companies
 like
 Exhibitions
 &
 Conferences.
 For
  initial
 phase
 they
 are
 comfortable
 with
 emails
 &
 websites
 too.
 But
 for
 finalization
  they
 prefer
 networking
 and
 workplace
 interactions.
 


  B2C
 Channel
 
Perception
 and
 awareness
  According
 to
 executives
 responding
 to
 the
 survey,
 consumer
 awareness
 in
 China
  is
 king;
 raising
 consumer
 awareness
 is
 one
 of
 the
 three
 most-­?frequently
 cited
  goals
 for
 the
 near-­?
 and
 mid-­?term.
 About
 a
 third
 of
 Chinese
 (35%)
 and
 non-­? Chinese
 (32%)
 companies
 are
 focused
 on
 brand
 awareness,
 making
 it
 the
 most
  commonly
 cited
 marketing
 goal
 for
 the
 coming
 year.
 But
 brand
 perception
 is
  critical
 too,
 and
 the
 top
 focus
 of
 non-­?Chinese
 companies—27%
 of
 Chinese
  companies
 and
 36%
 of
 non-­?Chinese
 companies
 named
 positive
 brand
 perception
  as
 a
 top
 marketing
 goal
 for
 the
 next
 year.
 Brand
 awareness,
 however,
 may
 be
  particularly
 challenging
 for
 non-­?Chinese
 companies
 looking
 to
 break
 into
  industries
 in
 which
 there
 are
 already
 hefty
 domestic
 competitors.
 For
 example
  Nike
 has
 built
 its
 marketing
 and
 branding
 strategy
 around
 basketball.
 As
 in
 China
  basketball
 is
 very
 popular.
 
  Change
 your
 brand
 for
 China
 

10
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  Best
 Buy’s
 shift
 away
 from
 its
 core
 brand
 in
 China
 may
 be
 indicative
 of
 how
 some
  non-­?Chinese
 brands
 need
 to
 approach
 the
 market.
 While
 operating
 a
 China-­?only
  brand
 appears
 not
 to
 be
 the
 norm,
 the
 vast
 majority
 of
 non-­?Chinese
 marketers
  (63%)
 indicated
 they
 believe
 they
 need
 to
 change
 their
 brand
 attributes
 for
  Chinese
 consumers.
 (Fig.
 3)
 In
 many
 cases,
 this
 may
 mean
 altering
 some
 brand
  attributes
 to
 demonstrate
 alignment
 with
 local
 Chinese
 culture
 and
 local
 Chinese
  tastes.
 For
 instance,
 western
 spirits
 brands
 have
 had
 to
 alter
 their
 scotch
  marketing
 to
 account
 for
 Chinese
 cocktails
 that
 mix
 scotch
 with
 ice
 and
 green
 tea.
  That
 is
 not
 to
 say
 that
 strong
 global
 brands
 need
 a
 complete
 brand
 makeover
 to
  compete.
 The
 success
 of
 many
 global
 brands
 in
 China
 would
 seem
 to
 support
  this:
 take
 Starbucks,
 McDonald’s,
 and
 KFC,
 for
 instance.
 Still,
 even
 if
 brands
 don’t
  need
 a
 complete
 makeover,
 they
 might
 benefit
 from
 a
 few
 nips
 and
 tucks.
 
  Online
 and
 mobile
 are
 the
 future
  Moving
 forward,
 digital
 and
 mobile
 marketing
 will
 be
 a
 critical
 part
 of
 the
 mix
 for
  all
 brands
 in
 China,
 as
 marketers
 seek
 to
 integrate
 their
 message
 across
 both
  traditional
 and
 digital
 platforms.
 China
 has
 more
 than
 420
 million
 Internet
 users,
  according
 to
 the
 China
 Internet
 Network
 Information
 Center,
 and
 its
 number
 of
  mobile
 subscribers
 tops
 850
 million.
 Online
 marketing
 is
 extremely
 or
 very
  important
 for
 reaching
 the
 Chinese
 consumer.
 


 

Why
 marketing
 In
 China
 is
 different?
 
B2B
 Channel
 
How
 Well
 Do
 Western
 Companies
 Choose
 Their
 Marketing
 &
 Sales
 Approaches
 In
  China?
 


 Figure
 5
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  1
 
  From
 the
 above
 figure
 we
 can
 see
 where
 exactly
 the
 western
 companies
 go
  wrong.
  First
 is
 the
 major
 at
 conference
 and
 exhibition
 where
 the
 general
 tendency
 of
  western
 marketing
 professionals
 think
 its
 wastage
 of
 time,
 and
 commit
 the
 first
  major
 mistake.
 Second
 is
 workplace
 interactions
 which
 western
 companies
  indulge
 on
 only
 if
 deals
 are
 at
 very
 advance
 stage.
 
 Now
 lets
 see
 the
 logic
 behind
 first
 phenomenon
 where
 Chinese
 buyer
 think
 that
  exhibition
 it
 will
 be
 easier
 for
 him
 to
 see
 the
 available
 product
 to
 solve
 his
  problem
 and
 he
 can
 physically
 see
 then
 also
 he
 can
 meet
 related
 sales
 persons.
  As
 Chinese
 people
 are
 much
 more
 comfortable
 after
 the
 physically
 see
 the
  product.
 But
 western
 companies
 don’t
 understand
 this.
  Now
 lets
 see
 the
 second
 phenomenon
 if
 we
 consider
 decision
 in
 western
  countries
 it
 looks
 like
 figure
 6.
 

1
 


  Figure
 6
 


 

Here
 we
 can
 see
 that
 after
 completion
 of
 one
 activity
 only
 the
 other
 start.
 Now
 let
  us
 see
 the
 decision
 making
 in
 Chinese
 companies
 in
 figure
 7.
 


 Figure
 7
 

12
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 
  Here
 we
 can
 see
 that
 there
 are
 many
 parallel
 activities
 such
 as
 supplier
 input
  scoping,
 Supplier
 input
 evolves
 into
 a
 series
 of
 increasingly
 specific
 proposals
  along
 with
 Customer
 refining
 of
 needs
 are
 all
 going
 in
 parallel.
 It
 may
 also
  happen
 that
 the
 buyer
 is
 simultaneously
 be
 speaking
 to
 other
 suppliers.
 
 
 

B2C
 Channel
 
Chinese
 middle
 classes
 believe
 that
 with
 the
 right
 competitive
 tools,
 they
 will
  find
 an
 opportunity
 to
 transform
 their
 lives,
 in
 contrast
 to
 a
 blue-­?collar
 laborer,
  who
 sees
 his
 social
 and
 economic
 status
 as
 more
 or
 less
 fixed.
 It’s
 the
 difference
  between
 basic
 needs
 of
 survival
 and
 physical
 safety
 and
 a
 need
 to
 satisfy
 social
  status
 requirements.
 The
 middle
 class
 engages
 with
 society
 to
 get
 recognition
 for
  financial
 success.
  It’s
 important
 to
 note,
 though,
 that
 this
 is
 not
 about
 arrival,
 it’s
 about
 being
 on
  the
 right
 journey-­?-­?they
 see
 theirs
 as
 a
 continuous
 struggle
 upward,
 and
 there
 is
  an
 acute
 awareness
 that
 all
 could
 be
 lost
 in
 the
 blink
 of
 an
 eye.
 Civic
 institutions
  are
 unreliable;
 there
 is
 no
 political
 representation;
 wealth
 is
 not
 protected
  institutionally;
 the
 safety
 net,
 particularly
 health
 insurance,
 is
 incomplete.
 People
  say
 that
 all
 they
 want
 is
 to
 be
 happy
 and
 to
 be
 in
 control
 of
 their
 destiny,
 but
 at
  the
 same
 time
 they
 understand
 that
 this
 ideal
 is
 not
 truly
 practical.
  The
 middle
 class
 seeks
 to
 create
 something
 sustainable,
 reducing
 the
 chances
 of
  falling
 off
 the
 middle-­?class
 pedestal.
 While
 China’s
 middle
 class
 is
 becoming
 more
  modern
 and
 international,
 it
 is
 not
 becoming
 more
 Western.
 
  A
 brand’s
 success
 is
 rooted
 in
 an
 appreciation
 of
 people’s
 fundamental
  motivations—and
 in
 China
 this
 means
 that
 a
 premium-­?priced
 product
 must
 be
 a
  tool
 for
 social
 advancement.
 And
 the
 range
 of
 product
 categories
 perceived
  to
 achieve
 this
 objective
 has
 expanded
 significantly.
 For
 example
 in
 the
 fifteen
  years
 since
 DeBeers
 entered
 the
 market,
 the
 penetration
 of
 diamond
 engagement
  rings
 has
 risen
 from
 8
 percent
 to
 80
 percent.
 The
 company
 achieved
 this
 by
  understanding
 that
 marriage
 is
 perceived
 differently
 among
 Chinese
 than
  Westerners.
 While
 the
 latter
 like
 to
 believe
 that
 passion
 and
 romance
 last
  forever,
 the
 former
 see
 commitment
 as
 persistent,
 not
 love
 as
 such.
 De
 Beers
  gave
 the
 Chinese
 man
 a
 tool
 to
 demonstrate
 his
 reliability.
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  1
 
  THE
 JOURNEY
 OF
 SUCCESS
  This
 journey
 is
 the
 materialistic
 &
 societal
 success
 of
 a
 person
 at
 his
 different
  stages
 of
 life.
 Today,
 the
 middle-­?
 and
 upper-­?middle,
 as
 well
 as
 wealthy
 classes
  have
 all
 achieved
 critical
 mass.
 The
 strategies
 of
 brands
 targeted
 to
 each
 must
  shift
 accordingly.
 
  Acceptance:
 Young
 college
 graduates
 are
 unproven,
 in
 search
 of
 acceptance.
  They
 need
 acknowledgment
 of
 their
 potential,
 not
 admiration
 for
 their
  achievement.
 For
 example
 Wrigley’s
 Double
 Mint
 chewing
 gum
 asks,
 “Are
 you
  really
 ready?”
 and
 presents
 fresh
 breath
 as
 a
 shield
 against
 coworker
 alienation.
  For
 individuals
 just
 out
 of
 the
 starting
 gate,
 brands
 can
 sharpen
 their
 basic
  survival
 skills—to
 pounce
 on
 opportunity
 or
 demonstrate
 their
 potential.
  Rejoice
 shampoo
 links
 dandruff-­?free
 hair
 to
 having
 the
 confidence
 to
 approach
  the
 boss
 when
 a
 chance
 to
 translate
 English
 arises.
 Ariel
 detergent
 links
 clean,
  white
 shirts
 with
 an
 ability
 to
 “rise
 and
 shine
 at
 the
 office.”
 
  Recognition:
 Once
 strivers
 are
 in
 mid-­?career,
 they
 must
 be
 recognized
 for
 both
  their
 past
 achievements
 and
 their
 capacity
 for
 further
 advancement.
 Products
  play
 an
 active
 role
 in
 their
 winning
 the
 game
 by
 demonstrating
 their
 advanced
  survival
 skills.
 For
 example
 in
 one
 ad,
 Sony
 Handycam
 associates
 digital
 

3
 

transmission
 capabilities
 with
 resourcefulness
 by,
 somewhat
 ironically,
 enabling
  a
 vacationing
 professional
 to
 delay
 returning
 to
 work.
 Technology
 brands
 from
  Motorola
 to
 NEC
 to
 Hewlett
 Packard
 are
 productivity
 weapons,
 competitive
  advantages
 deployed
 on
 the
 business
 battlefield.
 As
 people
 scale
 their
 work
  hierarchies,
 it
 also
 becomes
 increasingly
 important
 to
 them
 to
 sharpen
 their
  internal
 tools—for
 example,
 “determination
 to
 face
 the
 future”
 (China
 Mobile’s
  Go
 Tone
 network).
 
  During
 the
 middle
 stages
 of
 advancement,
 a
 happy
 family
 is
 an
 important
 factor,
  a
 necessary-­?but-­?not-­?sufficient
 prerequisite
 to
 being
 taken
 seriously
 as
 an
 adult
  constructively
 engaged
 with
 society.
 That’s
 why
 many
 automobile
 ads
 targeted
  to
 business
 people
 feature
 parents
 with
 their
 (only)
 child
 and
 Epson
 commercial
  printers
 dramatize
 color
 accuracy
 by
 depicting
 a
 father
 educating
 his
 daughter.
 

14
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 
  Admiration
 and
 Iconization:
 Toward
 the
 top
 of
 the
 hierarchy,
 the
 laoban,
 or
  boss,
 requires
 unanimous
 respect
 and
 deference.
 Given
 the
 ubiquity
 of
 rival
  factions
 and
 impatient
 upstarts,
 power
 is
 conditional.
 Authority,
 therefore,
 must
  be
 self-­?evident—hence
 premium
 Ballantine
 scotch’s
 tagline,
 “When
 success
  speaks
 for
 itself,
 there
 is
 no
 need
 to
 show
 off,”
 or
 BMW’s
 call
 to
 “Reflect
 your
  inner
 leadership
 spirit.”
  In
 China,
 iconic
 stature
 is
 the
 best
 defense
 against
 corporate
 maneuvering.
 Icons
  are
 paragons
 of
 wisdom,
 masters
 of
 the
 system.
 They
 are
 revered
 because
 they
  both
 lead
 and
 teach.
 This
 is
 why
 the
 most
 premium
 products
 often
 base
 their
  appeal
 in
 “shared
 mastery”
 and
 “artistic
 connoisseurship”
 potent
 demonstrations
  of
 internalized
 confidence.
 
  The
 middle
 class
 is
 on
 a
 perilous
 journey
 of
 advancement,
 both
 material
 and
  societal.
 In
 this
 context,
 brands
 should
 enable
 strivers
 to
 achieve
 surer
 footing
  every
 step
 of
 the
 way.
 


 

Major
 challenges
 faced
 during
 marketing
 In
 China
 
B2B
 Channel
 
Poor
 ability
 to
 listen
 
  An
 inability
 to
 listen
 is
 a
 common
 criticism
 of
 Western
 companies
 amongst
  Chinese
 buyers.
 The
 importance
 of
 this
 cannot
 be
 overstated,
 and
 this
 relates
  partly
 to
 the
 need
 to
 show
 respect
 to
 any
 potential
 customer.
 Most
 importantly,
  only
 by
 studying
 customers’
 requirements
 and
 how
 they
 evolve
 in
 China,
 can
 any
 

company
 hope
 to
 engage
 with
 and
 meet
 the
 needs
 of
 Chinese
 companies.
 
 

5
 
  Therefore,
 Western
 companies
 are
 prone
 not
 to
 communicating
 their
 message
 in
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  1

the
 wrong
 way;
 rather
 they
 tend
 to
 make
 a
 far
 more
 basic
 mistake:
 they
 refuse
 to
  listen,
 and
 therefore
 communicate
 completely
 the
 wrong
 message.
  Unwillingness
 to
 negotiate
 
  Just
 similar
 to
 unwillingness
 or
 inability
 to
 listen
 is
 a
 similar
 ill
 disposition
  towards
 negotiation
 when
 it
 comes
 to
 western
 companies.
 This
 may
 well
 relate
  to
 the
 fact
 (already
 discussed)
 that
 definition
 of
 the
 customer’s
 needs
 and
  definition
 of
 how
 to
 meet
 those
 needs
 tend
 to
 happen
 concurrently
 rather
 than
  sequentially
 in
 China.
 This
 can
 make
 Western
 companies
 feel
 unsure
 of
 exactly
  what
 they
 are
 negotiating
 about,
 something
 they
 tend
 to
 try
 to
 resolve
 by
  insisting
 on
 more
 structured
 negotiations.
 
  Western
 companies
 are
 also
 prone
 to
 showing
 a
 sheer
 unwillingness
 (rather
  than
 inability)
 to
 negotiate,
 even
 walking
 away
 when
 ‘the
 going
 gets
 tough’,
  wrongly
 assuming
 that
 all
 differences
 are
 irreconcilable.
 This
 is
 absolutely
 the
  wrong
 approach
 in
 China,
 where
 negotiations
 are
 extensive
 and
 the
 opening
  price
 is
 almost
 never
 the
 price
 the
 customer
 ends
 up
 paying.
  The
 Chinese
 approach
 to
 completing
 deals
 usually
 involves
 many
 rounds
 of
  negotiation,
 and
 often
 a
 large
 number
 of
 people
 from
 different
 levels
 within
 an
  organization
 will
 be
 involved
 in
 the
 negotiating
 process.
 Even
 when
 tacit
  agreements
 are
 in
 place,
 contracts
 can
 often
 be
 redrawn
 several
 times
 before
 a
  final
 agreement
 is
 in
 place,
 which
 can
 be
 frustrating
 to
 foreign
 businesspeople
  unfamiliar
 with
 Chinese
 negotiating
 practices.
  Ignoring
 the
 importance
 of
 Marketing
 in
 Product
 Life
 cycle
 
  Some
 of
 the
 ‘mistakes’
 made
 by
 Western
 companies
 in
 terms
 of
 their
 marketing
  and
 sales
 approaches
 and
 messages
 can
 be
 explained
 by
 the
 fact
 that
 their
  Chinese
 activities
 are
 relatively
 new.
 Companies
 are
 providing
 solutions
 to
 needs
  which
 have
 only
 just
 emerged,
 and
 mutual
 understanding
 between
 buyers
 and
  suppliers
 is
 still
 developing.
 There
 has
 been
 a
 strong
 tendency
 for
 Western
  companies
 to
 undervalue
 the
 importance
 of
 marketing
 in
 China,
 seeing
 it
 as
  something
 that
 takes
 place
 not
 at
 the
 beginning
 of
 the
 product
 life
 cycle,
 but
 once
  channel
 access
 and
 market
 penetration
 have
 been
 achieved.
 This
 is
 extremely
  surprising,
 given
 the
 sophistication
 of
 marketing
 techniques
 in
 the
 West,
 and
  may
 result
 from
 a
 lack
 of
 knowledge
 of
 the
 target
 market,
 as
 well
 as
 a
 lack
 of
 

16
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  confidence
 that
 marketing
 techniques
 will
 be
 successful.
  Focus
 on
 product,
 channels
 and
 price,
 rather
 than
 promotion
 
  If
 Chinese
 companies
 tend
 to
 regard
 promotion
 as
 the
 only
 aspect
 of
 marketing,
  there
 is
 an
 opposing
 tendency
 for
 Western
 companies
 in
 China
 not
 to
 pay
  promotion
 enough
 attention.
 Many
 Western
 companies
 entering
 the
 market
 first
  carry
 out
 some
 kind
 of
 channel
 (place)
 research,
 as
 well
 as
 an
 examination
 of
 the
  likely
 prices
 the
 market
 will
 bear.
 They
 have
 usually
 given
 a
 good
 level
 of
  consideration
 as
 to
 which
 products
 will
 appeal,
 albeit
 with
 insufficient
 thought
 to
  how
 these
 will
 need
 refining.
 Company
 resources
 have
 been
 thrown
 into
  understanding
 the
 size
 and
 nature
 of
 the
 market
 opportunity,
 with
 much
 less
  emphasis
 placed
 on
 how
 that
 opportunity
 should
 be
 communicated
 directly
 with
  the
 target
 market.Figure
 8
 shows
 the
 priority
 of
 expectations
 which
 Chinese
  Buyers
 have
 from
 Western
 or
 companies
 outside
 China.
 


  Figure
 8
  “We
 know
 best”
 
  A
 valid
 criticism
 made
 by
 Chinese
 businesses
 of
 their
 Western
 counterparts
 is
  that
 they
 sometimes
 appear
 hard-­?wired
 into
 thinking
 that
 everything
 they
 do
 is
  automatically
 superior
 to
 the
 local
 competition.
 Essentially,
 Western
 companies
  forget
 that
 marketing
 is
 about
 the
 profitable
 satisfaction
 of
 needs,
 and
 that
 if
 a
  need
 is
 different
 in
 China
 to
 the
 West,
 then
 the
 value
 proposition
 must
 also
 be
  different.
 There
 is
 often
 a
 tendency
 to
 try
 to
 ‘re-­?educate’
 Chinese
 buyers,
 rather
  than
 simply
 providing
 a
 value
 proposition
 that
 meets
 the
 market’s
 existing
  needs.
 
  “Marketing
 is
 a
 ‘Western’
 discipline
 –
 it’s
 less
 important
 in
 China”
 
  Some
 Western
 companies,
 many
 of
 them
 guided
 by
 Western
 market
 entry
  consultants,
 tend
 to
 overstate
 the
 importance
 of
 relationship-­?building
 or
  “Guanxi”
 in
 China,
 in
 that
 they
 see
 it
 as
 a
 substitute
 to
 marketing
 effort,
 rather
 

7
 
  than
 complementary.
 Good
 salespeople
 are
 sometimes
 left
 stranded
 alone
 in
 a
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  1

small
 representative
 office,
 with
 no
 marketing
 capability
 to
 complement
 them.
 
  Communication
 problems
 
  It
 cannot
 be
 denied
 that
 there
 remains
 a
 significant
 language
 barrier
 between
  Chinese
 and
 Western
 companies,
 albeit
 one
 that
 is
 closing
 as
 huge
 numbers
 of
  Chinese
 businesspeople
 learn
 English
 and
 increasing
 numbers
 of
 Westerners
  learn
 Chinese.
 Once
 companies
 need
 to
 interact
 at
 an
 operational
 rather
 than
  strategic
 level,
 linguistic
 difference
 can
 often
 cause
 miscommunication
 and
 result
  in
 problems.
 

B2C
 Channel
 
China
 is
 still
 an
 emerging
 economy,
 and
 marketers
 often
 feel
 they
 don’t
 have
 the
  research
 they
 need
 to
 target
 these
 new
 consumers.
 Furthermore,
 regional
  differences
 across
 China
 are
 pronounced
 but
 poorly
 understood,
 particularly
 by
  foreign
 firms.
 And
 as
 incomes
 of
 Chinese
 in
 second-­?,
 third-­?,
 and
 fourth-­?tier
 cities
  rise,
 their
 consumption
 patterns
 will
 drive
 market
 dynamics
 in
 unprecedented
  and
 unpredictable
 ways.
 Still
 we
 can
 divide
 the
 major
 challenges
 faced
 by
  Foreign
 companies
 in
 B2C
 segment
 into
 three
 main
 
 challenges:
 
  Driving
 down
 prices
  As
 we
 know
 the
 Chinese
 Market
 is
 not
 similar
 to
 western
 or
 developed
 countries,
  here
 the
 per
 capita
 income
 (PPP)
 is
 nearly
 one-­?fourth
 of
 US
 which
 comes
 to
  about
 US$8466
 as
 compared
 to
 US
 at
 US$48,442.
 And
 the
 saving
 rate
 is
 very
 high.
  The
 disposable
 income
 is
 very
 less.
 
  Hence
 China
 is
 a
 market
 with
 low
 margins
 and
 high
 volumes.
 There
 is
 also
 a
  saying
 that
 one
 is
 often
 negatively
 surprised
 on
 margins,
 but
 positively
 surprised
  on
 volumes.
 China’s
 intensely
 competitive
 markets
 are
 price
 sensitive
 and
 the
  high
 cost
 of
 distribution
 has
 made
 it
 very
 difficult
 for
 MNCs
 to
 achieve
 the
  margins
 which
 they
 are
 accustomed.
 But
 there
 exists
 an
 opportunity
 in
 terms
 of
  enormous
 volume
 which
 MNCs
 can
 target
 only
 thing
 is
 that
 they
 have
 to
 tap
 the
  fastest
 growing
 pool
 of
 consumers
 and
 build
 relationship
 with
 them.
 
 
  Deepening
 geographical
 penetration
  China
 is
 a
 vast
 country,
 precisely
 the
 4th
 largest
 country
 in
 terms
 of
 land
 area
 and
 

18
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  largest
 in
 terms
 of
 population.
 South
 eastern
 and
 costal
 part
 of
 China
 is
 densely
  populated
 where
 else
 the
 north
 and
 central
 part
 is
 having
 a
 low
 population
  density.
  Most
 of
 the
 MNCs
 are
 well
 established
 in
 Teir
 1
 and
 Teir
 2
 cities,
 but
 are
  struggling
 to
 go
 into
 Tier
 3
 cities.
 Income
 is
 rapidly
 growing
 in
 smaller
 cities
  though
 they
 are
 sizeable
 as
 per
 world
 standards.
 Building
 capabilities
 in
 these
  areas
 require
 investment
 and
 local
 partnership.
 There
 are
 136
 Tier
 3
 cities
  spread
 across
 China,
 this
 presents
 difficult
 decisions
 in
 terms
 of
 which
 cities
 and
  regions
 are
 to
 be
 prioritize.
 Even
 after
 problem
 of
 Tier
 3
 cities
 is
 solved
 the
  challenges
 will
 be
 posed
 for
 serving
 Tier
 4
 cities,
 as
 these
 cities
 are
 important
 for
  companies
 to
 capture
 middle
 class.
 
 
 
  Learning
 about
 the
 new
 middle
 class
  China
 is
 a
 market
 of
 Middle
 Class.
 There
 is
 a
 niche
 market
 for
 luxury,
 which
 a
 few
  affluent
 people
 can
 purchase.
 But
 a
 large
 number
 of
 MNCs
 are
 targeting
 the
  middle
 class.
 As
 we
 have
 discussed
 earlier
 how
 the
 person’s
 phase
 of
 life
 decides
  his
 purchasing
 behavioral.
 Similarly
 for
 targeting
 middle
 class
 MNCs
 have
 to
  learn
 about
 the
 middle
 class.
 A
 recent
 survey
 by
 McKinsey’s
 China
 Consumer
  Center
 of
 6000
 consumers,
 including
 many
 from
 smaller
 cities,
 shows
 striking
  variations
 in
 taste,
 attitudes
 and
 brand
 loyalty
 both
 among
 members
 of
 different
  income
 class,
 as
 well
 as
 across
 cities
 and
 region.
 Successful
 MNCs
 have
 to
  develop
 a
 deep
 understanding
 of
 the
 consumers,
 who
 may
 not
 be
 able
 to
 afford
  company’s
 products
 today
 but
 be
 able
 to
 do
 so
 in
 future.
 And
 also
 they
 have
 to
 be
  willing
 to
 innovate
 and
 adapt
 to
 meet
 the
 needs
 of
 these
 rising
 consumers.
 
  The
 above
 challenges
 became
 more
 complicated
 and
 uphill
 tasks
 for
 MNCs
  because
 of
 the
 following
 limitations:
 
  Lack
 of
 reliable
 market
 research
  The
 overwhelming
 consensus
 is
 that
 there
 is
 a
 dearth
 of
 good
 market
 research
  on
 the
 Chinese
 consumer
 and
 market.
 There
 is
 a
 lack
 of
 reliable
 market
 research
  on
 Chinese
 consumerism
 general.
 Given
 China’s
 breadth,
 its
 unpredictability,
 and
  the
 diversity
 of
 regional
 tastes,
 a
 lack
 of
 understanding
 of
 consumer
 preferences
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  1
  could
 seriously
 hinder
 marketers.
  Missteps
 can
 be
 costly,
 both
 in
 terms
 of
 the
 bottom
 line
 and
 brand
 equity.
 Yet
 

9
 

even
 large
 brands
 have
 made
 serious
 mistakes
 by
 not
 getting
 the
 right
 consumer
  data.
 For
 example,
 when
 it
 opened
 its
 Shanghai
 outlet,
 retailer
 Marks
 &
 Spencer
  assumed
 sizing
 would
 be
 similar
 to
 its
 established
 Hong
 Kong
 store.
 But
 it
 soon
  found
 that
 smaller
 sizes
 were
 selling
 out
 and
 larger
 sizes
 were
 sitting
 on
 the
  shelves.
 It
 had
 failed
 to
 foresee
 the
 regional
 difference.
 In
 addition,
 marketers
 do
  not
 appear
 overly
 satisfied
 with
 market
 research
 providers
 in
 China.
 
 
  Lack
 of
 transparency
  A
 lack
 of
 transparency
 in
 the
 Chinese
 marketing
 communications
 industry
 has
  the
 potential
 to
 hold
 them
 back.
 The
 issue
 of
 transparency
 is
 less
 about
  responsible
 business
 than
 it
 is
 about
 consistent
 standards
 among
 agencies.
 In
  particular,
 this
 transparency
 needs
 to
 relate
 to
 some
 of
 the
 less
 “obvious”
 facets
  of
 agency
 operations,
 such
 as
 media
 research,
 media
 planning,
 and
 media
 buying.
  While
 Western
 agencies
 typically
 have
 created
 processes
 to
 make
 these
 areas
  less
 opaque,
 Chinese
 agencies
 often
 are
 not
 yet
 at
 that
 level.
 
  Finding
 the
 right
 skills
  Talent
 is
 an
 important
 issue
 for
 both
 Chinese
 and
 non-­?Chinese
 marketers,
  particularly
 as
 they
 begin
 ramping
 up
 their
 Chinese
 operations.
 But
 with
 this
  growth,
 companies
 are
 rightly
 concerned
 that
 they
 may
 not
 be
 able
 to
 take
  advantage
 of
 the
 business
 opportunity
 in
 China
 because
 of
 a
 shortage
 of
 qualified
  executives
 and
 managers
 to
 drive
 the
 process.
 The
 consumer
 opportunity
 in
  China
 may
 be
 great,
 but
 it
 is
 vital
 to
 remember
 that
 China
 is
 still
 a
 developing
  market,
 without
 a
 long
 history
 of
 management
 training.
 It’s
 not
 a
 matter
 of
  finding
 a
 person
 to
 take
 a
 key
 role,
 but
 finding
 the
 right
 person.
  When
 it
 comes
 to
 talent,
 both
 Chinese
 and
 non-­?Chinese
 companies
 are
 looking
 to
  create
 the
 right
 balance
 of
 East
 and
 West.
 For
 their
 marketing
 leadership,
  companies
 appear
 more
 concerned
 that
 the
 executive
 come
 from
 within
 the
  company
 than
 that
 the
 executive
 is
 from
 China
 or
 not.
 Chinese
 companies,
 as
  might
 be
 expected,
 are
 most
 likely
 to
 recruit
 Chinese
 nationals
 from
 within
 the
  company
 as
 their
 marketing
 leaders,
 but
 still,
 a
 significant
 are
 recruiting
 non-­?
 

20
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


  Chinese
 leaders
 from
 within
 their
 ranks.
  In
 three
 years,
 interestingly,
 the
 situation
 flips.
 Chinese
 companies
 are
 more
  likely
 to
 recruit
 non-­?Chinese
 from
 outside
 their
 company
 as
 their
 marketing
  leaders,
 while
 non-­?Chinese
 companies
 are
 more
 likely
 to
 be
 looking
 at
 Chinese
  from
 outside
 their
 company.
 For
 marketing
 staff,
 both
 Chinese
 and
 non-­?Chinese
  companies
 are
 looking
 to
 recruit
 Chinese
 nationals.
 Today,
 they
 are
 looking
  primarily
 within
 the
  company,
 and
 in
 three
 years
 they
 expect
 mostly
 to
 be
 recruiting
 from
 elsewhere.
 

How
 to
 overcome
 the
 challenges
 faced
 during
  marketing
 In
 China
 
B2B
 Channel
 
There
 are
 a
 few
 points
 to
 keep
 in
 mind
 and
 I
 feel
 then
 things
 can
 me
 made
 much
  more
 easier
 for
 dealing
 with
 Chinese
 Buyers
 in
 B2B
 channel.
  1.
 Remember
 the
 marketing
 basics
 –
 Product,
 price,
 place
 and
 promotion
 are
  all
 important.
 All
 should
 be
 researched
 before
 and
 after
 market
 entry,
 in
 order
 to
  ensure
 that
 the
 value
 proposition
 meets
 and
 continues
 to
 meet
 the
 target
  market’s
 needs.
 
  2.
 Patience
 –
 Patience
 is
 required
 when
 applying
 the
 marketing
 basics
 to
 the
  local
 market.
 In
 particular,
 the
 sales
 process
 is
 longer
 and
 more
 complex
 than
 in
  Western
 markets,
 and
 local
 buyers
 will
 take
 time
 to
 be
 convinced
 that
 a
 Western
  company
 has
 the
 ‘local’
 credentials
 to
 meet
 their
 needs.
 
  3.
 Listen
 –
 Only
 by
 listening
 will
 you
 be
 able
 to
 understand
 and
 therefore
 meet
  the
 local
 market
 needs.
 Chinese
 companies
 do
 not
 want
 to
 buy
 a
 product
 or
  service
 that
 has
 come
 straight
 off
 a
 shelf
 in
 the
 West.
 
  4.
 Relationships
 –
 Focus,
 but
 do
 not
 over-­?focus,
 on
 relationships.
 Any
  salesperson
 must
 be
 prepared
 to
 be
 ‘friends’
 with
 a
 potential
 supplier.
 However,
  this
 is
 as
 well
 as,
 not
 instead
 of,
 the
 4
 Ps
 of
 the
 marketing
 mix.
 
  5.
 Be
 confident
 in
 your
 quality
 –
 Western
 companies
 start
 from
 a
 strong
  position,
 in
 that
 they
 are
 usually
 assumed
 to
 have
 excellent
 quality.
 Focus
 on
 the
  value
 you
 add,
 and
 be
 prepared
 to
 explain
 why
 you
 can
 add
 value
 in
 China
  specifically.
 
 

1
 
  6.
 Be
 methodical
 –
 One
 of
 the
 qualities
 that
 defines
 Western
 businesses
 is
 their
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  2

methodical
 approach
 to
 doing
 business.
 It
 is
 clear
 that
 when
 this
 turns
 into
 a
  dogma
 about
 how
 business
 should
 be
 done,
 Chinese
 companies
 quickly
 lose
  interest
 in
 your
 offering.
 However,
 do
 not
 be
 afraid
 to
 highlight
 the
 methodical
  nature
 of
 your
 offering,
 as
 this
 is
 something
 that
 is
 valued
 by
 Chinese
  businesspeople
 and
 seen
 to
 be
 lacking
 in
 some
 Chinese
 businesses.
 
  7.
 Be
 flexible
 –
 Flexibility
 on
 issues
 such
 as
 product,
 service,
 payment
 terms
 and
  price
 is
 vital
 for
 success
 in
 the
 China
 market.
 Foreign
 companies
 should
 do
 their
  best
 to
 identify
 and
 meet
 Chinese
 customers’
 real
 needs
 rather
 than
 assuming
  these
 needs
 mirror
 those
 of
 customers
 in
 the
 West.
 
  8.
 Be
 prepared
 for
 plenty
 of
 negotiation
 –
 Any
 potential
 supplier
 should
 be
  prepared
 for
 plenty
 of
 negotiation
 when
 selling
 to
 Chinese
 businesses.
 It
 is
  almost
 inconceivable
 that
 first
 proposals
 will
 be
 accepted.
 Keep
 in
 mind
 the
 fact
  that
 buyers
 may
 be
 deliberately
 benchmarking
 suppliers,
 and
 always
 try
 to
  reserve
 sufficient
 margin
 for
 further
 price
 reductions
 at
 a
 later
 stage.
 
  9.
 Avoid
 exaggerations
 –
 Focus
 on
 the
 credentials
 you
 have,
 rather
 than
  exaggerating
 to
 make
 up
 for
 perceived
 deficiencies.
 Above
 all,
 Chinese
 companies
  want
 to
 trust
 their
 suppliers.
 
  And
 finally
 the
 table
 below
 shows
 when
 to
 approach
 future
 Chinese
  customers/buyer
 by
 which
 media
 for
 Western
 or
 companies
 outside
 China:
 

 

22
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 


 
  B2C
 Channel
  Though
 regarding
 Lack
 of
 reliable
 market
 research,
 Lack
 of
 transparency
  Finding
 the
 right
 skills
 MNCs
 have
 to
 either
 put
 their
 own
 efforts
 or
 get
  professional
 help
 from
 the
 experts.
  Now
 discussing
 about
 the
 basic
 three
 challenges
 of:
 
  Bringing
 down
 the
 prices
  MNCs
 can
 do
 this
 by
 formulating
 a
 strategy
 where
 they
 can
 use
 the
 Economies
 of
  Scale
 and
 Localization
 concepts.
 I
 believe
 if
 both
 of
 these
 are
 used
 in
 a
 right
 way
  MNCs
 can
 succeed
 in
 bringing
 down
 the
 prices.
 
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  2
  Geographical
 penetration
  use
 them
 as
 
 New
 Frontier
 for
 growth.Greatest
 growth
 opportunity
 in
 China
 is
 

3
 

With
 the
 rise
 of
 income
 levels
 in
 
 Second-­?Tier
 Cities
 &
 Third
 Tier
 cities
 MNCs
 can
  beyond
 the
 First
 Tiercities
 of
 Beijing,
 Shanghai,
 and
 Tianjin.
 That’s
 not
 surprising
  given
 that
 China
 has
 more
 than
 100
 cities
  that
 have
 populations
 in
 excess
 of
 1
 million.
 Figure
 9
 shows
 the
 long
 tail
 of
  Chinese
 Cities
 which
 have
 a
 potential
 of
 future
 markets.
 Or
 thought
 of
 in
 another
  way,
 many
 of
 the
 so-­?called
 second-­?
 or
 third-­?tier
 cities
 in
 China
 have
 a
 similar
  urban
 population
 to
 global
 cities
 such
 as
 Amsterdam
 or
 Chicago.
  For
 marketers,
 this
 means
 that
 the
 growth
 of
 China’s
 consumer
 class
 appears
 to
  be
 taking
 place
 outside
 the
  first-­?tier
 cities.
 Beijing
 and
 Shanghai
 may
 be
 approaching
 saturation,
 and
 a
  regional
 presence
 will
 be
 very
 valuable
 moving
 forward.
 These
 second-­?
 and
  third-­?tier
 cities,
 after
 all,
 are
 where
 the
 majority
 of
 the
 population
 lives
 and
 as
  the
 middle
 class
 gains
 more
 economic
 mobility,
 they’ll
 have
 more
 disposable
  income.
 According
 to
 McKinsey,
 half
 of
 China’s
 100
 largest
 cities
 will
 experience
  at
 least
 50%
 growth
 in
 consumption
 between
 2008
 and
 2015,
 and
 25
 will
 double
  their
 consumption.
 
 


  Figure
 9
 

24
 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
 


 
  Learning
 about
 China’s
 New
 Middle
 class
  The
 changing
 landscape
 of
 marketing
 and
 advertising
 in
 China
 just
 as
 globally,
  advertising
 and
 marketing
 channels
 are
 in
 a
 dramatic
 state
 of
 flux,
 and
 that
  situation
 is
 mirrored
 in
 China.
 While
 traditional
 advertising
 channels—such
 as
  television
 and
 print—remain
 strong
 today,
 their
 predominance
 is
 likely
 to
 be
  challenged
 in
 the
 coming
 years.
 Among
 marketers
 participating
 in
 the
 survey,
  television
 is
 clearly
 the
 primary
 channel
 today
 for
 reaching
 the
 Chinese
  consumer.
 Which
 new
 channels
 will
 emerge?
 Marketing
 executives
 at
 both
  Chinese
 and
 non-­?Chinese
 firms
 foresee
 a
 rise
 in
 word
 of
 mouth,
 public
 relations,
  online
 and
 social
 media,
  and
 mobile
 apps
 as
 the
 most
 potent
 ways
 to
 reach
 Chinese
 consumers
 in
 the
  future.
 Clearly,
 as
 marketers
 look
 to
 build
 brand
 awareness
 and
 perception
  among
 Chinese
 consumers,
 television
 advertising
 will
 play
 its
 part.
 But
 as
  marketing
 priorities
 shift
 away
 from
 brand
 development
 toward
 sales
 and
  geographic
 expansion,
 other
 media
 are
 likely
 to
 play
 a
 critical
 role.
 In
 particular,
  marketers
 will
 likely
 be
 formulating
 integrated
  marketing
 communications
 strategies
 across
 a
 variety
 of
 Chinese
 consumer
  touch
 points.
 But
 first,
 a
 caveat:
 While
 television’s
 appeal
 to
 marketers
 is
  expected
 to
 drop
 off
 in
 the
 next
 three
 years,
 the
 exodus
 from
 TV
 is
 not
 universal,
  and
 is
 likely
 to
 remain
 quite
 potent
 for
 certain
 consumer
 brands.
 
 
 

Conclusion
 
Marketing
 is
 not
 a
 rocket
 science
 with
 some
 hard
 and
 fast
 formulas,
 which
 you
  apply
 to
 a
 specific
 problem
 and
 you
 get
 results.
 It
 is
 what
 we
 learn
 from
 previous
  experiences
 and
 present
 conditions.
 On
 similar
 lines
 we
 have
 seen
 that
  Marketing
 in
 China
 specially
 for
 MNCs
 and
 Western
 companies
 is
 not
 so
  complicated
 just
 we
 have
 to
 keep
 in
 mind
 a
 few
 points
 and
 remember
 each
  country
 has
 its
 own
 culture
 and
 tradition
 and
 a
 good
 marketing
 manager
 molds
  his
 marketing
 strategy
 as
 per
 requirement
 for
 a
 particular
 country
 or
 region.
  I
 hope
 I
 was
 able
 to
 make
 out
 my
 point
 in
 this
 report.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 

Challenges
 for
 Marketing
 in
 China
  2
 

5
 

Bibliography
 

  1. Wikipedia
  2. McKinsey
 Quarterly
 –
 August
 2009
 “A
 consumer
 paradigm
 for
 China”
 by
  Janamitra
 Devan,
 Micah
 Rowland,
 and
 Jonathan
 Woetzel.
  3. McKinsey
 Quarterly
 –
 March
 2012
 “Meet
 the
 Chinese
 consumer
 of
 
 2020”
  by
 Yuval
 Atsmon
 and
 Max
 Magni.
  4. Fobes
 Insights
 “Marketing
 to
 new
 Chinese
 Customer”
 -­?2011.
  5. “The
 Unique
 Cultural
 Challenges
 Of
 Marketing
 To
 China's
 New
 Middle
  Class”
 by
 Tom
 Doctoroff.
  6.
 “From
 Made
 in
 China
 to
 Sold
 in
 China:
 The
 Rise
 of
 the
 Chinese
 Urban
  Consumer.”
 Published
 by
 McKinsey
 Global
 Institute.
 
 
 
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