CONSUMERS

Are You Reaching The Global Chinese Luxury Consumer?

by

Daniela Aroche

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit: This is the featured image credit

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

The global luxury market surpassed €1 trillion in retail sales value in 2015, with Chinese consumers making up the largest portion of luxury purchases globally (31%), according to the 14th edition of its Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Monitor by Bain & Company.

They are undoubtably the consumer set (by region) to capture for luxury, and here we present the 5 key insights you need to know.

“ Chinese consumers make up the largest portion of luxury purchases globally (31%) ”

Who Is The Global Chinese Luxury Consumer?

They are travellers.

According to China Tourism Research Institute, China had 61.9 million outbound visitors in the first half of 2015, an increase of 12.1% compared with the same period in 2014.

Additionally, Boston Consulting Group estimates that by 2030, tourists from China will make up about 40% of outbound Asian travellers, taking 1.7 billion trips annually, up from 500 million trips taken in 2012, the latest year for which data were available.

They travel internationally for leisure (92%) vs 56% Business (CITM 2015), and in H1 2015 64% of those travellers were women.

“ China had 61.9 million outbound visitors in the first half of 2015 ”

However, as a generational set, it was the millennials – outbound tourists aged between 25 and 34 – which became the largest outbound Chinese tour group in 2015.,

They come from T1 & T2 cities, in urban industrialised provinces

• #1 Guangdong Province (Guagzhou T1) (106,440,000 population)
• #2 Zhejiang (Hangzhou T2) (54,890,000 population)
• #3 Shanghai (T1) (24,256,800, The world’s most populated city).

When travelling, 46% prefer international hotel chains, vs 28% which choose independent hotels with local flavour (though reputation weighs heavily).

Consumer research undertaken exclusively for FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors also revealed that, broken down, on average, the typical Chinese traveler spends around US$1,678 on retail purchases per overseas trip, with the most popular overseas shopping categories to date identified as: clothing, footwear and accessories (bought by 56% of travellers), fragrances and beauty products (52%) and electronics (32%), followed by health supplements or vitamins (23%), then watches (20%).

How & Via Which Retail Channels Are They Buying?

Online confidence is booming for this lucrative set, according to a recent report published by KPMG covering ‘China’s Connected Consumers’.

The 2015 study, released last month, revealed 45% of luxury online shoppers now buy over half of their luxury goods online, with 50% of China’s domestic luxury consumption expected to be generated online by 2020.

“ Mobile is the most commonly used device for daily retail visits by Chinese luxury online shoppers overall ”

Research has attributed the rise in online purchases, in part, to import duties reductions which, combined with brands’ recent moves to realign prices between overseas and China, will boost China domestic full-price e-commerce, and challenge overseas websites.

With the emergence of inexpensive smartphones in China, during a period of simultaneous wealth creation for the middle class, many connected, affluent Chinese consumers were also mobile – and not desktop – first.

Given this, it’s no surprise that the smartphone is the most commonly used device for daily retail visits by Chinese luxury online shoppers overall.

“ So few luxury brands – less than 15% – have sophisticated e-commerce strategies in the Chinese region ”

A research report from the China Internet Network Information Center (CINIC), cited a surge in internet traffic through mobile devices of 36.79 million in the first six months of 2015, taking the total number of Chinese consumers accessing the web through smartphones to 594 million.

That’s 89% of China’s 668 million internet users, up from 85.8% at the end of 2014.

Yet so few luxury brands – less than 15% – have sophisticated e-commerce strategies in the Chinese region, let alone brand owned e-commerce stores. Less than 10% have chosen to work alongside Alibaba’s Tmall to fight counterfeit, daigou and discounting, to reclaim their own brand’s e-commerce sales.

How Are They Connecting & Sharing?

China users’ time spent on digital media has exceeded that on traditional media in 2015.

Total internet penetration rate in China has reached 48.8% according to CNNIC, with
social media users estimated at 659 million – more than the USA and Europe combined – according to the latest report into Digital, Social & Mobile use around the world by WeAreSocial.

China internet users on average spend over 6 hours 8 minutes on media per day (CIW), with 3 hours of that accounted for on social media.

“ 70% of social media users are still under the age of 35, with 30% of those between the ages of 26 and 30 ”

Social media is now used by more age groups, by less educated people and by people in smaller cities, however, 70% of social media users are still under the age of 35, with 30% of those between the ages of 26 and 30.

The majority of Western information platforms (Google, Yahoo, Bing, Wikipedia) and social networks (Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat) are blocked by the Great Firewall of China.

The top four social networks in China are:

“ The most commonly used add-on function on cell phones is WeChat ”

QQ: An instant messaging software service, which offers a variety of services, including online social games, music, shopping, microblogging, movies, platform of games and group and voice chat. The platform measures 843 million (+2% YoY) Monthly Active Users (MAU).

Qzone: A social networking website, allows users to write blogs, keep diaries, send photos, listen to music, and watch videos. The platform measures 659 million MAU’s (+15% YoY).

WeChat: A mobile text and voice messaging communication service, providing text messaging, hold-to-talk voice messaging, broadcast (one-to-many) messaging, video conferencing, video games, sharing of photographs and videos, and location sharing. The platform measures for 600 million MAU’s (+37% YoY).

Sina Weibo: A Chinese microblogging (Weibo) website, akin to a hybrid of Twitter and Facebook. The platform measures 212 million MAU’s (+36% YoY).

The most commonly used add-on function on cell phones is WeChat (19%), Email (-14%), Photos (6%), with WeChat also the most widely accessed source for travel news, at 42%, followed by travel apps.

What Are They Looking For?

Revealing exclusive insights from a yet-to-be released report, Digital Luxury Group (DLG) and Baidu joined forces on stage at Luxury Society’s recent Digital Luxury Keynote event in Paris (Oct 8, 2015), to tackle 2015’s China Luxury Trends by search volume.

Setting the scene, the duo revealed the number of ‘netizens’ in China has grown from 137,0 to 667,7 million from 2006 to 2015, with almost 90% using mobile for search over desktop.

Luxury industry search volumes are growing steadily at double-digits, with watches still reigning as the most popular segment in overall, and fashion searches “no longer limited to accessories (handbags) anymore”.

“ Luxury industry search volumes are growing steadily at double-digits ”

Fashion in particular has experienced a stronger seasonality, with 560k searches daily for ready-to-wear (RTW), with peaks of interest at the beginning of summer and winter, and a growth of 38%, with 57% via mobile.

Non-brand keywords take up more than half of the RTW category (57%), with Baidu Picture (52%) and Encyclopedia (23%), the most popular platforms, besides search engines, indicating the visual and educational needs required by users.

The report also revealed that fashion users are also seeking more inspiration and lifestyle content, with searches for ‘Mix & Match’, ‘StreetShoot’, and ‘Fashion Weeks’, high on the list.

“ The #1 international destination for Chinese tourists remains France ”

Where Are They Travelling & How Much Are They Spending?

Globally, Chinese consumers are flocking to mature markets in droves.

The Bain & Company Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Monitor identified Europe as their destination of choice, where an analysis of European tax-free shopping data, conducted in partnership with Global Blue, shows Chinese tax-free purchases increased by 64%, particularly among the accessible and aspirational luxury segments, thanks to a weak Euro.

Presenting tourism data in August this year, French Foreign Affairs minister Laurent Fabius, confirmed that the #1 international destination for Chinese tourists remains France.

The data revealed that more than two million Chinese visitors came to France in 2015. From January – August 2015, the number of Chinese visitors to Paris also increased by 49%.

Hong Kong and Macau by comparison are losing their shine with affluent Mainland travelers, if Golden Week numbers are anything to go by.

According to tourism figures, as reported by Bloomberg last month, the number of Chinese tourists flocking to Macau and Hong Kong during the Golden Week holidays increased at a slower pace than last year.

“ Japan and South Korea became the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists ”

Arrivals in Macau from Mainland China during the Oct. 1-7 break, officially called the National Day holidays, rose 7.1 percent from last year, when visitations gained 17 percent, according to Macau government data. In Hong Kong, growth in visitations from China decelerated to 2.3 percent from 6.8 percent, according to Hong Kong government data.

By comparison, Japan and South Korea became the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists during the first four days of Golden Week, according to a recent Credit Suisse Group AG report.

A proprietary survey, commissioned FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors, of 1,019 Chinese Internet users also revealed details regarding their net monthly household income, number of international trips taken, destinations and retail purchasing behavior abroad during the twelve months through May 21, 2015.

“ Chinese tourists will spend about $1.8 trillion on travel and tourism by 2030 ”

When asked via the FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors study how much they spent on shopping on their last trip, Chinese travelers confirmed that the most popular spending bands were US$407–US$815 and US$815–US$1,222, while 3% spent more than US$6,516 on retail purchases on their last trip abroad.

Furthermore, Boston Consulting Group predicts Chinese tourists will spend about $1.8 trillion on travel and tourism by 2030 – nearly seven times what they spent two years ago.

Join Luxury Society on Tuesday 8th December in Shanghai for its Digital Luxury Keynote conference, for more exclusive insights into the Chinese market.

The afternoon event will investigate various strategies for reaching global Chinese luxury consumers, and discuss the changing face of media, social media, CRM and e-commerce, and highlight best practices for leveraging each platform to reach them.

Confirmed speakers to date include:

• Claire Chung, General Manager China, The Net-a-Porter Group
• John Hamilton, Director, Marketing Communications, Asia-Pacific, Four Seasons
• Josh Gardner, Founder & CEO, Kung Fu Data
• Michelle Ye, Blogger & Stylist, Chez Mintvanilla
• Pablo Mauron, General Manager China, Digital Luxury Group
• Richard Chen, Investor & China Advisor, Farfetch
• Sophie Doran, Managing Director, Luxury Society

Please register using this link, or contact us to find out more: [email protected]

Daniela Aroche
Daniela Aroche

Journalist & Co-Founder, The Ink Collective

Daniela Aroche is the former Editorial Director of Luxury Society, and co-founder of The Ink Collective – a full-service creative content & communications agency, specialising in the areas of fashion, luxury and lifestyle, with connections to an international network of writers, editors, photographers, translators and designers. Dually based in Paris and Sydney, Australia.

CONSUMERS

Are You Reaching The Global Chinese Luxury Consumer?

by

Daniela Aroche

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit : This is the featured image credit

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

Chinese are the #1 consumers of luxury globally, but how well do you really know them? Here, Luxury Society reveals some key insights into this lucrative consumer set, ahead of its Digital Luxury Keynote in Shanghai.

The global luxury market surpassed €1 trillion in retail sales value in 2015, with Chinese consumers making up the largest portion of luxury purchases globally (31%), according to the 14th edition of its Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Monitor by Bain & Company.

They are undoubtably the consumer set (by region) to capture for luxury, and here we present the 5 key insights you need to know.

“ Chinese consumers make up the largest portion of luxury purchases globally (31%) ”

Who Is The Global Chinese Luxury Consumer?

They are travellers.

According to China Tourism Research Institute, China had 61.9 million outbound visitors in the first half of 2015, an increase of 12.1% compared with the same period in 2014.

Additionally, Boston Consulting Group estimates that by 2030, tourists from China will make up about 40% of outbound Asian travellers, taking 1.7 billion trips annually, up from 500 million trips taken in 2012, the latest year for which data were available.

They travel internationally for leisure (92%) vs 56% Business (CITM 2015), and in H1 2015 64% of those travellers were women.

“ China had 61.9 million outbound visitors in the first half of 2015 ”

However, as a generational set, it was the millennials – outbound tourists aged between 25 and 34 – which became the largest outbound Chinese tour group in 2015.,

They come from T1 & T2 cities, in urban industrialised provinces

• #1 Guangdong Province (Guagzhou T1) (106,440,000 population)
• #2 Zhejiang (Hangzhou T2) (54,890,000 population)
• #3 Shanghai (T1) (24,256,800, The world’s most populated city).

When travelling, 46% prefer international hotel chains, vs 28% which choose independent hotels with local flavour (though reputation weighs heavily).

Consumer research undertaken exclusively for FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors also revealed that, broken down, on average, the typical Chinese traveler spends around US$1,678 on retail purchases per overseas trip, with the most popular overseas shopping categories to date identified as: clothing, footwear and accessories (bought by 56% of travellers), fragrances and beauty products (52%) and electronics (32%), followed by health supplements or vitamins (23%), then watches (20%).

How & Via Which Retail Channels Are They Buying?

Online confidence is booming for this lucrative set, according to a recent report published by KPMG covering ‘China’s Connected Consumers’.

The 2015 study, released last month, revealed 45% of luxury online shoppers now buy over half of their luxury goods online, with 50% of China’s domestic luxury consumption expected to be generated online by 2020.

“ Mobile is the most commonly used device for daily retail visits by Chinese luxury online shoppers overall ”

Research has attributed the rise in online purchases, in part, to import duties reductions which, combined with brands’ recent moves to realign prices between overseas and China, will boost China domestic full-price e-commerce, and challenge overseas websites.

With the emergence of inexpensive smartphones in China, during a period of simultaneous wealth creation for the middle class, many connected, affluent Chinese consumers were also mobile – and not desktop – first.

Given this, it’s no surprise that the smartphone is the most commonly used device for daily retail visits by Chinese luxury online shoppers overall.

“ So few luxury brands – less than 15% – have sophisticated e-commerce strategies in the Chinese region ”

A research report from the China Internet Network Information Center (CINIC), cited a surge in internet traffic through mobile devices of 36.79 million in the first six months of 2015, taking the total number of Chinese consumers accessing the web through smartphones to 594 million.

That’s 89% of China’s 668 million internet users, up from 85.8% at the end of 2014.

Yet so few luxury brands – less than 15% – have sophisticated e-commerce strategies in the Chinese region, let alone brand owned e-commerce stores. Less than 10% have chosen to work alongside Alibaba’s Tmall to fight counterfeit, daigou and discounting, to reclaim their own brand’s e-commerce sales.

How Are They Connecting & Sharing?

China users’ time spent on digital media has exceeded that on traditional media in 2015.

Total internet penetration rate in China has reached 48.8% according to CNNIC, with
social media users estimated at 659 million – more than the USA and Europe combined – according to the latest report into Digital, Social & Mobile use around the world by WeAreSocial.

China internet users on average spend over 6 hours 8 minutes on media per day (CIW), with 3 hours of that accounted for on social media.

“ 70% of social media users are still under the age of 35, with 30% of those between the ages of 26 and 30 ”

Social media is now used by more age groups, by less educated people and by people in smaller cities, however, 70% of social media users are still under the age of 35, with 30% of those between the ages of 26 and 30.

The majority of Western information platforms (Google, Yahoo, Bing, Wikipedia) and social networks (Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat) are blocked by the Great Firewall of China.

The top four social networks in China are:

“ The most commonly used add-on function on cell phones is WeChat ”

QQ: An instant messaging software service, which offers a variety of services, including online social games, music, shopping, microblogging, movies, platform of games and group and voice chat. The platform measures 843 million (+2% YoY) Monthly Active Users (MAU).

Qzone: A social networking website, allows users to write blogs, keep diaries, send photos, listen to music, and watch videos. The platform measures 659 million MAU’s (+15% YoY).

WeChat: A mobile text and voice messaging communication service, providing text messaging, hold-to-talk voice messaging, broadcast (one-to-many) messaging, video conferencing, video games, sharing of photographs and videos, and location sharing. The platform measures for 600 million MAU’s (+37% YoY).

Sina Weibo: A Chinese microblogging (Weibo) website, akin to a hybrid of Twitter and Facebook. The platform measures 212 million MAU’s (+36% YoY).

The most commonly used add-on function on cell phones is WeChat (19%), Email (-14%), Photos (6%), with WeChat also the most widely accessed source for travel news, at 42%, followed by travel apps.

What Are They Looking For?

Revealing exclusive insights from a yet-to-be released report, Digital Luxury Group (DLG) and Baidu joined forces on stage at Luxury Society’s recent Digital Luxury Keynote event in Paris (Oct 8, 2015), to tackle 2015’s China Luxury Trends by search volume.

Setting the scene, the duo revealed the number of ‘netizens’ in China has grown from 137,0 to 667,7 million from 2006 to 2015, with almost 90% using mobile for search over desktop.

Luxury industry search volumes are growing steadily at double-digits, with watches still reigning as the most popular segment in overall, and fashion searches “no longer limited to accessories (handbags) anymore”.

“ Luxury industry search volumes are growing steadily at double-digits ”

Fashion in particular has experienced a stronger seasonality, with 560k searches daily for ready-to-wear (RTW), with peaks of interest at the beginning of summer and winter, and a growth of 38%, with 57% via mobile.

Non-brand keywords take up more than half of the RTW category (57%), with Baidu Picture (52%) and Encyclopedia (23%), the most popular platforms, besides search engines, indicating the visual and educational needs required by users.

The report also revealed that fashion users are also seeking more inspiration and lifestyle content, with searches for ‘Mix & Match’, ‘StreetShoot’, and ‘Fashion Weeks’, high on the list.

“ The #1 international destination for Chinese tourists remains France ”

Where Are They Travelling & How Much Are They Spending?

Globally, Chinese consumers are flocking to mature markets in droves.

The Bain & Company Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Monitor identified Europe as their destination of choice, where an analysis of European tax-free shopping data, conducted in partnership with Global Blue, shows Chinese tax-free purchases increased by 64%, particularly among the accessible and aspirational luxury segments, thanks to a weak Euro.

Presenting tourism data in August this year, French Foreign Affairs minister Laurent Fabius, confirmed that the #1 international destination for Chinese tourists remains France.

The data revealed that more than two million Chinese visitors came to France in 2015. From January – August 2015, the number of Chinese visitors to Paris also increased by 49%.

Hong Kong and Macau by comparison are losing their shine with affluent Mainland travelers, if Golden Week numbers are anything to go by.

According to tourism figures, as reported by Bloomberg last month, the number of Chinese tourists flocking to Macau and Hong Kong during the Golden Week holidays increased at a slower pace than last year.

“ Japan and South Korea became the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists ”

Arrivals in Macau from Mainland China during the Oct. 1-7 break, officially called the National Day holidays, rose 7.1 percent from last year, when visitations gained 17 percent, according to Macau government data. In Hong Kong, growth in visitations from China decelerated to 2.3 percent from 6.8 percent, according to Hong Kong government data.

By comparison, Japan and South Korea became the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists during the first four days of Golden Week, according to a recent Credit Suisse Group AG report.

A proprietary survey, commissioned FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors, of 1,019 Chinese Internet users also revealed details regarding their net monthly household income, number of international trips taken, destinations and retail purchasing behavior abroad during the twelve months through May 21, 2015.

“ Chinese tourists will spend about $1.8 trillion on travel and tourism by 2030 ”

When asked via the FBIC Global Retail & Technology and China Luxury Advisors study how much they spent on shopping on their last trip, Chinese travelers confirmed that the most popular spending bands were US$407–US$815 and US$815–US$1,222, while 3% spent more than US$6,516 on retail purchases on their last trip abroad.

Furthermore, Boston Consulting Group predicts Chinese tourists will spend about $1.8 trillion on travel and tourism by 2030 – nearly seven times what they spent two years ago.

Join Luxury Society on Tuesday 8th December in Shanghai for its Digital Luxury Keynote conference, for more exclusive insights into the Chinese market.

The afternoon event will investigate various strategies for reaching global Chinese luxury consumers, and discuss the changing face of media, social media, CRM and e-commerce, and highlight best practices for leveraging each platform to reach them.

Confirmed speakers to date include:

• Claire Chung, General Manager China, The Net-a-Porter Group
• John Hamilton, Director, Marketing Communications, Asia-Pacific, Four Seasons
• Josh Gardner, Founder & CEO, Kung Fu Data
• Michelle Ye, Blogger & Stylist, Chez Mintvanilla
• Pablo Mauron, General Manager China, Digital Luxury Group
• Richard Chen, Investor & China Advisor, Farfetch
• Sophie Doran, Managing Director, Luxury Society

Please register using this link, or contact us to find out more: [email protected]

Daniela Aroche
Daniela Aroche

Journalist & Co-Founder, The Ink Collective

Daniela Aroche is the former Editorial Director of Luxury Society, and co-founder of The Ink Collective – a full-service creative content & communications agency, specialising in the areas of fashion, luxury and lifestyle, with connections to an international network of writers, editors, photographers, translators and designers. Dually based in Paris and Sydney, Australia.

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