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Brands grabbing market share from the West

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2019-01-22 08:56:08China Daily Editor : Mo Hong'e ECNS App Download

Chinese products are excelling in niche markets

Cui Xiaohong used to be an engineer working for a lighting company in Foshan, Guangdong province. But in 2006, when she turned 33, she decided to swap her gray uniform for a more colorful world, and two years later founded the cosmetics brand Marie Dalgar.

Although global peers have penetrated deep into the Chinese market, in recent years this young cosmetics brand has seen annual revenue growth of 57 percent on average.

Every 15 seconds, it sells one stick of mascara, and its products were taken by French cosmetics retailer Sephora in 2017, through which Marie Dalgar reached global markets.

Explaining this quick growth, Cui said, "Advertisements are not effective in reaching consumers, but innovative products are, as they have helped our brand make direct and deep contact with our customers."

Jason Yu, managing director of global market research company Kantar Worldpanel, said Chinese goods have become the "new cool". The country's fast-moving consumer brands have been gaining market share from foreign competitors across most product categories in the domestic market for the past six years, he said.

Fast-moving consumer goods refer to relatively low-cost products that sell quickly. They include cosmetics, packed food, beverages, toiletries and grocery items.

Yu said, "Chinese brands, especially many dynamic young ones that we call 'insurgent brands', have seen great performances in niche markets due to high-quality products, healthy concepts and the individualized services they deliver."

A recent report by Kantar Worldpanel and global consultancy Bain & Co said that in 2017 Chinese fast-moving consumer goods brands realized 7.7 percent year-on-year growth in sales, but represented 98 percent of market share growth.

The report also studied 46 insurgent brands that performed best in 33 subcategories and whose annual revenue growth exceeded more than 10 percent from 2015 to 2017. Some 67 percent of these brands grew at least twice as fast as their category average, although half of them only had annual revenues of between 100 million yuan and 500 million yuan ($14.6 million and $74 million).

For example, oral care brand Saky took only about four years to rise from 14th to second place in the domestic toothbrush market.

On Nov 11, for the Singles Day shopping festival, the sales of Chinese snack brand Three Squirrels reached 682 million yuan, 41 percent more than the previous year. The brand, founded in 2012, has ranked first seven times in its subcategory for the festival.

Chinese consumers also no longer believe that foreign goods are superior, and consider that domestic brands are now often best at meeting their needs. Global financial service provider Credit Suisse's report, Emerging Consumer Survey 2018, said 91 percent of Chinese consumers ages 18 to 29 prefer local appliances to foreign ones.

Andy Zhao, president of Nielsen China, the global measurement and data analytics company, said the consumption patterns of Chinese consumers have gradually changed.

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