Consumer brands have benefited from strong revenue growth on China’s dominant online marketplaces, such as Tmall and JD.com. However, these powerful volume-driven mass platforms, which accounted for 80 percent of China’s online sales in 2014 (exhibit), give consumer brands little opportunity to control traffic, product searches, or access to consumer data. In the shadow of these mass platforms are brand-owned sites, along with China’s equivalent of US retail ones offering brands greater sway. These sites’ share of e-commerce, while constrained, has inched upward. In the United States, by contrast, though platforms such as Amazon Marketplace and eBay continue to increase their share, brand-owned and more brand-friendly online retail (including those sites with limited control) account for about 70 percent of all e-commerce.
China Pulse
The picture is changing, however. A growing population of relatively prosperous, more brand-conscious Chinese—more than half of all urban households by 2020—offers brands an opportunity for greater control of their destiny.1 To take advantage of it, they’ll need to invest more in their own sites and to profit from structural changes at the dominant e-commerce platforms, which are becoming more brand friendly to serve the new Chinese buyers. These platform giants are placing greater emphasis on high-end products and offerings, for which brand authenticity matters; enforcing greater price discipline by avoiding ferocious discounting; and emphasizing best-in-class delivery and customer service. Moreover, they are also showing more openness to sharing selected consumer insights with leading brands. If those brands invest to shape consumer behavior and to increase traffic on their own sites or on others where they have more control, as Apple, Nike, and smartphone maker Xiaomi have done, they should be able to boost their online sales.
This article is the second in our series, China Pulse, which delivers insight into how digitization is reshaping China.