China The Emerging Global E-Commerce Powerhouse EN
Transcription
China The Emerging Global E-Commerce Powerhouse EN
CHINA THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE From the editors of Internet Retailer magazine Sponsored by Dear Retail, TOGETHER, LET’S BUILD A THRIVING BUSINESS IN CHINA. Love, hybris CLICK H E E-COM RE TO GET OUR MERCE GUIDE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by contents INTRODUCTION China becomes a global online powerhouse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 The right technology eases entry to e-commerce in China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 PART I: E-COMMERCE IN CHINA Growing pains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . China’s e-commerce leader expands into web-based TV shopping . Chinese e-commerce firm turns to Austria for warehouse technology China’s No. 2 web retailer aims to build a bigger e-mall . . . . . . . . A Chinese retail chain steps up its e-commerce game . . . . . . . . . . Bain predicts China will overtake the U.S. in e-commerce this year . A web-only phone maker outsells Apple in China . . . . . . . . . . . . . E-commerce in China grows 35% in the first nine months of 2013 . Behind Alibaba’s $5 billion e-commerce day . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 PART II: WESTERN BRANDS SELL ONLINE IN CHINA UK fashion retailer Asos plans to launch a China e-commerce site . . . . . . . 38 There may be e-commerce gold in China, but it’s hard to mine . . . . . . . . . 40 Wal-Mart’s Chinese e-commerce partner starts selling fresh food . . . . . . . . 43 Xiu.com helps eBay sellers expand into China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Cherries to China from the U.S., via Tmall.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 The National Football League looks for an e-commerce touchdown in China . 49 An umbrella brand prepares for a torrent of traffic in China . . . . . . . . . . . 51 China’s cross-border e-commerce tops $375 billion in 2012 . . . . . . . . . . 54 PART III: CHINESE E-RETAILERS LOOK ABROAD Direct from China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . China’s big online marketplaces will sell to overseas Chinese . . . . . China’s answer to PayPal expands into the U.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alibaba leads $200 million funding round in U.S. shipping service E-retailer LightInTheBox adds three languages to its e-commerce site Alibaba creates a U.S. e-commerce investment group . . . . . . . . . . 3 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 63 65 68 70 71 CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by introduction China becomes a global online powerhouse by Don Davis O nline purchases by Chinese consumers in 2013 will exceed those of U.S. consumers, predicts Bain Capital. That will make China the world’s biggest e-commerce market. But that’s not the most important part of the story for Western brands, retailers and e-commerce technology providers. The big story is this: China’s explosive e-commerce growth is spawning big Chinese companies that are not content to stay in China. They’re targeting the world, even as the world’s brands are seeking to establish an online position in China from which to sell to the rapidly growing and very web-savvy Chinese middle class. In this special report, Internet Retailer looks at three aspects of the industry-altering e-commerce growth in China. Part I examines the growth of the Chinese e-commerce market and its biggest players. Part II looks at how Western brands and retailers are entering China, the obstacles they’re encountering and how they’re responding. And Part III describes the steps Chinese e-commerce companies are taking to expand internationally. In each of these areas there are developments that will impact the business of Western brands and retailers. Consider Alibaba Group, whose two big online marketplaces, Taobao and the more brand-oriented Tmall, account for well over half of all e-commerce in China. In fact, Alibaba executives claim that their marketplaces account for more sales than Amazon and eBay combined. They will soon be providing more details of their business as Alibaba moves toward a long-awaited 4 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III introduction initial public offering, an IPO likely to value the company at around $100 billion. Alibaba says its primary focus remains China, but the huge company is starting to make inroads overseas. Its PayPal-like payment service Alipay is promoting itself to U.S. retailers, primarily as a way to help them sell to Chinese online shoppers, who increasingly look abroad for quality goods. And in the fall of 2013 Alibaba led a funding round in ShopRunner, a U.S. company that helps retail chains deliver online goods from bricks-andmortar stores. It’s also invested in U.S. e-retailer Fanatics and Silicon Valley-based Quixey, which provides a search engine for mobile apps. There is little doubt that Alibaba will use the infusion of cash coming from its IPO for further expansion. And Alibaba is far from the only Chinese company growing rapidly. Its nearest competitor, Jingdong Century Trading Co. more than doubled its online sales in 2013 to more than $16 billion. And it’s attracted some $2 billion in capital, which it’s using to build out its technology platform and nationwide distribution network. Meanwhile, Western brands are moving aggressively to sell online in China. Companies like Amazon.com Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. have invested heavily. Amazon is building its own e-commerce site and marketplace, using as a base Chinese online book seller Joyo, which it acquired in 2004. Wal-Mart in 2012 expanded to 51% its stake in Yihaodian, already a Top 50 Chinese e-retailer and moving up fast. Such big Western brands as Nike, Gap and Coach are entering China, sometimes by selling on marketplaces—mostly Tmall—and sometimes on their own sites, and in some cases pursuing both strategies. As the stories in this report document, they are encountering obstacles they don’t face in the West, such as the fact that Chinese consumers are so used to start their shopping searches on Taobao and 5 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III introduction Tmall that they don’t often search for products on China’s leading search engine, Baidu. That makes search engine marketing costly and often ineffective. At the same time they’re learning how to leverage immensely popular social networks like Weibo to introduce themselves, and their e-commerce sites, to Chinese shoppers. Part III of this special report delves into the least-understood aspect of China’s e-commerce growth: the early moves into international expansion by Chinese e-retail companies. Already in certain categories, such as prom and wedding dresses, Chinese e-retailers are disrupting the U.S. market with drastically reduced prices, as you’ll read in the story “Direct from China.” That story also touches on how eBay is quietly helping Chinese companies sell globally on eBay’s marketplaces around the world. Beijing-based online retailer LightInTheBox is building its business exclusively on selling abroad, primarily in Europe and North America. The retailer went public on the New York Stock Exchange in June 2013, raising $79 million. Xiaomi is another Chinese company few Westerners know about now, but will hear from soon. Founded in 2010, the company makes smartphones that aim to match the features of devices from Apple and Samsung, at half the price. The company sells exclusively online, solicits suggestions from customers and updates its operating system every Friday, and expects to sell 15 million handsets in 2013. In a sign of its global ambitions, Xiaomi in late summer 2013 hired away from Google Inc. its head of Android development, Hugo Barra. Companies like Xiaomi, LightInTheBox and Alibaba clearly have wind in their sales—and every intention of making big waves in global e-commerce. Don Davis is the editor in chief of Internet Retailer magazine and InternetRetailer.com. 6 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE Dear Retail, GUESS WHICH HYBRIS CUSTOMER SAID THAT CHINA IS “ONE OF OUR CORNERSTONES FOR GROWTH IN THE COMING YEARS?” Love, hybris ORY. T S IR E H T D TO REA CLICK HERE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by executive interview The right technology eases entry to e-commerce in China C hinese consumers have become the world’s most active online shoppers. Sixty-two percent of Chinese consumers make an online purchase once a week, by far the most of any country, according to consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. In the United States, which China is about to surpass as the world’s largest e-commerce market, just 22% of consumers make an online purchase each week. Much of the China’s e-commerce growth coming from consumers in smaller cities and rural areas where there are fewer retail stores compared to the country’s major cities. In addition, the explosion of mobile devices is enabling many Chinese consumers to access the Internet for the first time, making it possible for them to purchase goods not available locally, and to do so anytime and anywhere. Tapping the growth opportunities China’s vast population of online shoppers represents requires technology that integrates e-commerce, m-commerce, digital marketing and payment platforms. Like most online shoppers, Chinese consumers expect retailers to deliver a unified brand experience regardless of the device they use to shop, according to Burghardt Groeber, vice president of Asia Pacific for hybris software, an SAP company and e-commerce platform provider. “A successful e-commerce strategy in China includes mobile, access to social networks, gaming and payment services to create a seamless user experience across all channels,” he says. For example, it is not uncommon for a Chinese consumer to view an item in a store and leave, use her smartphone throughout the day to learn what her peers have said about the product on social networks, and purchase the item later that night on a personal computer or tablet using her Alipay account. Alipay is China’s leading third-party online payment platform. 8 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III executive interview Retailers must be prepared to engage that shopper effectively throughout that shopping journey. “Omnichannel is key for success in China, because online and offline shopping behavior is strongly influenced by social networks, the mobile channel and online Chinese marketplaces,” says Groeber. “E-retailers need a web store to provide a starting point for seeding information in the market.” SOCIAL STRATEGIES As Western web retailers are discovering as they enter China, e-commerce is dominated by two players: Alibaba Group, China’s undisputed king of e-commerce and operator of the country’s two dominant web marketplaces, Taobao and Tmall; and JD.com, Alibaba’s fiercest rival. Both companies have invested heavily in social networking platforms, which Groeber cites as an example of the rapid convergence of e-commerce and social media in China. Earlier this year, JD.com aligned itself with Tencent Holdings Ltd, a provider of Internet and mobile messaging and advertising services in Burghardt Groeber, vice president of Asia Pacific for hybris software China that will promote JD.com though its digital messaging platforms. Alibaba is a stakeholder in Weibo, a popular Chinese social media platform combining elements of Facebook and Twitter. Chinese consumers rely heavily on social networks to gather information about products they are interested in purchasing, as they tend to favor recommendations from peers and family members, many of whom share their opinions via social networks, over advertisements and news reports. One way retailers can use social networks to their advantage is by establishing relationships with influential bloggers who comment about their personal experience with a product. These can include celebrities, industry experts and grassroots bloggers with a large audience. Using analytics, retailers can track how much a blogger’s posts drive traffic to a retail web site and the value a brand derives from its ties to each commentator. Groeber also recommends retailers develop promotions for, and offer coupons on, social networks to drive sales and heighten brand awareness. 9 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III executive interview “Social sharing, product comparison, marketing campaigns and the involvement of key opinion influencers are the building blocks of a social media strategy in China,” he says. “Social media has a greater influence on purchasing decisions in China than anywhere else in the world, according to McKinsey & Co.” TECHNOLOGY MADE FOR CHINA The good news for Western retailers looking to stake out a high-profile position on China’s social networks is they can do so without having to invest in one. hybris’ B2C Commerce Accelerator for China provides plug-ins for China’s biggest social networking sites, Weibo and QQ. Once connected, retailers can upload consumers’ comments and product recommendations from their web sites to those social networks. As the integration between social networks and e-commerce tightens in China, retailers will need more sophisticated social media strategies, such as providing consumers the option of making a purchase directly from a social network. “Microblogging platform Sina Weibo already allows direct purchases on Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall platforms,” Groeber says. Many e-retailers entering China opt to open a web store on Tmall, which gives a brand greater control over its image than the more free-wheeling Taobao. While that provides them retailers and brands with an easy way to sell to China’s massive community of online shoppers, they run the risk of commoditizing their brand and pricing because of the heavy discounting on Tmall. Chinese consumers, who are price-sensitive to begin with, flock to Tmall in search of the lowest price. In addition, the limited space retailers have on Tmall for conveying their brand value undermines their ability to charge higher prices than competing retailers on Tmall. A more sensible approach to e-retailing in China is establishing a dedicated e-commerce site, which provides retailers direct control over their brand marketing and customer communications, in addition to opening a Tmall store. 10 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III executive interview “Having a web store and a Tmall store should be the approach of choice, as a dedicated web store guarantees appropriate brand marketing and communication through that site, while a Tmall store establishes a fast, cost-effective presence on China’s largest e-commerce platform,” says Groeber. The hybris B2C Commerce Accelerator for China provides retailers with ready-made components needed to launch an omnichannel strategy in China. Those components include storefront and page templates that can accommodate large product images to deliver the visual user experience Chinese consumers expect, and that support Simplified Chinese characters for creating text-based content. The platform also supports infinite scrolling, a navigation-friendly feature that does away with clumsy page-to-page navigation, making it possible for the shopper to quickly find what he is looking for. Groeber says Chinese consumers have come to expect that kind of design on e-retail sites. The hybris platform’s store locator feature is integrated with Baidu Maps, an online mapping application for China, to visually show shoppers directions to a retailer’s nearest store from the shopper’s current location. Integration with Alipay allows Alipay accountholders to complete payment by entering their user name and password, which authenticates them as accountholders, eliminating the need for entering account information and streamlining checkout. Plans are also in the works to support integration to Tmall so that as retailers add new products to their primary web site those items will be automatically added to their Tmall store. Inventory for both stores will be tracked in real time. “Foreign retailers that build out a localized strategy leveraging a seamless omnichannel user experience can shape their business to appeal to the needs and expectations of Chinese consumers to compete with Chinese e-retailers,” says Groeber. “With the omnicommerce paradigm widely adopted in Europe and North America the hybris B2C Commerce Accelerator is ideal for e-retailers wanting to break into China, and for Chinese retailers that want to expand globally.” 11 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE PART I: E-COMMERCE IN CHINA Growing pains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . China’s e-commerce leader expands into web-based TV shopping . Chinese e-commerce firm turns to Austria for warehouse technology China’s No. 2 web retailer aims to build a bigger e-mall . . . . . . . . A Chinese retail chain steps up its e-commerce game . . . . . . . . . . Bain predicts China will overtake the U.S. in e-commerce . . . . . . . A web-only phone maker outsells Apple in China . . . . . . . . . . . . . E-commerce in China grows 35% in the first nine months of 2013 . Behind Alibaba’s $5 billion e-commerce day . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part II: Western brands sell online in China Part III: Chinese e-retailers look abroad 13 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china Growing pains E-commerce growth in China is explosive, but profits are woeful. And everything’s changing. by Don Davis I n no market will consumers buy more online than in China by 2014, if trends hold, and in no market will so many major online retailers lose money filling those orders. It’s the China paradox: Growth is so explosive that investors are pouring money into Chinese e-commerce, fueling profit-killing price competition. Chinese e-retailer Dangdang, which went public in December 2010, has since seen many rival web merchants, backed by venture capital, trade profits for business-to-consumer e-commerce market share, the retailer’s executive chairwoman told analysts in late 2012. “Before and after Dangdang’s IPO there was a huge inflow of billions of U.S. dollars into the b2c segment in China,” Peggy Yu Yu said. “Selling at or below cost became an easy way for some companies to pump up sales.” Dangdang is No. 10 among Chinese online retailers in the newly published Internet Retailer Asia 500 guide. That ferocious price competition hasn’t stopped global brands and retailers from joining China’s e-commerce fray since China’s entry into the World Trade Organization opened the country to foreign retailers in 2004. Tmall, a major online marketplace operated by Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd., now offers products from 2,000 non-Chinese brands. And such major companies as Toys ‘R’ Us Inc., The Estee Lauder Cos. Inc. and Coach Inc. have launched their own e-commerce sites to sell directly to Chinese consumers. 13 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china CHINA OVERTAKES THE U.S. IN E-COMMERCE SALES $350 $331.7 U.S. $300 CHINA $261.6 $250 $225.5 $168.3 $142.5 $144.6 $100 $50 $258.2 $193.8 $200 $150 $303.4 $194.6 $125.9 $73.9 $42.1 $20.5 $0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: China: Macquarie Group Ltd.; U.S.: U.S. Commerce Department, 2008-11, Internet Retailer 2012-14 projections There are big opportunities to sell online in China, says Andrew Stockwell, vice president of Asia/Pacific for research and consulting firm Forrester Research Inc. But global brands need to take into account the challenges in making delivery and accepting payment, the huge scale of e-commerce and, especially, how fast online retailing is changing in China. “The strategy you develop for the next six months can’t be your strategy for the next 18 months,” he says. They also need to understand the mindset of China’s newly emerging middle class, who will spend their growing disposable income on status symbols, but not on premium-priced everyday products, Stockwell says. “Nobody is going to spend a lot on toothpaste because nobody will see that,” he says. “But a handbag, clothing or a mobile phone, they will save three months for that because it’s a symbol of wealth and affluence, which is more important in China than in the rest of the world.” 14 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china And those buying high-end goods value global brands. In a 2011 Forrester survey of Chinese luxury shoppers, 42% said they prefer foreign brands because they offer better-quality goods. However, Chinese consumers are buying all kinds of goods online, mostly from Chinese e-retailers. The web accounts for 8.1% of total retail sales in China, according to the Internet Retailer Asia 500 guide, compared to 5.2% in the United States. What’s more, with e-commerce in China growing so fast—53.7% in 2011—China’s e-retail sales soon could outpace those of the United States. Alibaba: China’s e-commerce goliath While Amazon.com Inc. accounts for roughly 30% of U.S. online retail sales, Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd. commands about 80% of China’s e-commerce market. Jack Ma, a former English teacher, founded Alibaba with 17 associates in 1999, aiming to use the Internet to assist Chinese entrepreneurs. In 2003, they launched the online marketplace Taobao, which attracted millions of sellers by charging them no listing or commission fees. Today, Alibaba says 6.6 million merchants sell on Taobao and there are 500 million registered shoppers. Aiming to attract bigger brands to a less bazaarlike site, Alibaba in 2008 launched Taobao Mall, later renamed Tmall, which today hosts 50,000 storefronts representing 70,000 brands. Unlike on Taobao, brands pay Tmall an annual fee of $5,000 to $10,000 and a commission of 1% to 5%. Alibaba created several other web-related businesses. Among them is Alipay, a PayPallike service that claims 800 million registered accounts and some $350 billion in 2012 transactions, including payments of utility bills and peer-to-peer transfers. Another is Alibaba.com, a web portal that some 29.4 million users, including many Western web retailers, use to source goods from 2.5 million suppliers, many of them Chinese factories. Alibaba has had its missteps. In early 2011 the company disclosed that 100 of its employees had helped 2,300 Alibaba.com suppliers commit fraud. Alibaba fired the employees and by February 2011 had paid out nearly $2 million to defrauded buyers from its Fair Play Fund, created in December 2009 to compensate buyers in case of fraud. Also in 2011, the U.S. government added Alibaba to a list of “notorious markets” where pirated and counterfeit goods are freely sold. Alibaba, which says it took 63 million dodgy items off its marketplaces in 2011 and employs 200 people to prevent trademark violations, was removed from the list in December 2012. Alibaba also made news in 2012 when it raised $7.6 billion to buy back about half of the 40% interest in Alibaba held by Yahoo Inc., in a deal that valued Alibaba at roughly $40 billion. Alibaba is widely expected to go public in 2014. Meanwhile, Ma, now said to be worth $3.4 billion and China’s 11th-richest billionaire according to Forbes magazine, announced in January plans to resign as CEO. “At 48 I am no longer young for the Internet business,” Ma wrote in an e-mail to the company’s 24,000 employees. He will remain as executive chairman. 15 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china CHINA'S E-COMMERCE LEADERS RANK RETAILER WEB SITE 2012 WEB SALES 2011 WEB SALES GROWTH 1 Alibaba Group TaoBao.com $170,000,000,000 $101,548,761,300 67.40% 2 360Buy.com Jingdong Mall 360Buy.com $8,100,000,000 $4,174,000,000 94.06% 3 Suning Commerce Co. Ltd. Suning.com $4,760,000,000 $945,067,900 403.67% 4 Jia.com Jia.com $3,208,000,000 $1,761,991,000 82.07% 5 51Buy.com 51Buy.com $1,605,691,000 $379,628,970 322.96% 6 HappiGo Ltd. Happigo.com $1,605,000,000 $800,000,000 100.63% 7 Vancl.com Vancl.com $1,400,000,000 $560,633,500 149.72% 8 Amazon.com Inc. Amazon.cn $1,000,000,000 $800,000,000 20.00% 9 360Mart.com 360Mart.com $964,260,000 $642,840,000 50.00% 10 Dangdang Dangdang.com $878,000,000 $575,000,000 52.70% Source: Internet Retailer Asia 500 China’s Ministry of Commerce reported in 2012 that online retail sales in 2011 totaled 782.56 billion yuan ($125.9 billion). By contrast, U.S. online retail sales grew 15.8% in 2012 to $225.5 billion, according to the U.S. Commerce Department. E-retail sales will reach $331.7 billion in China in 2014, predicts Macquarie Group Ltd., part of Australia-based financial services firm Macquarie Group Ltd. If U.S. e-commerce grows at 16% for both 2013 and 2014 it would total $303.4 billion in 2014, putting China first in e-commerce in 2014. BEHIND THE E-COMMERCE EXPLOSION is a two-decade-long economic boom. From 1993 to 2011 China’s economy grew by more than 16 times, an annual growth rate of nearly 17%, according to World Bank statistics. By 2011, China was the world’s second-largest economy, trailing only the United States. Much of the new wealth has gone to an emerging middle and upper class, who mostly live in China’s biggest cities. Boston Consulting Group says the 120 million most affluent Chinese command $590 billion in annual buying power, and that the affluent will grow to 20% of China’s population, or 280 million consumers, by 2020. Along with this robust income growth has come greater use of the Internet, and not just among the urban elite. There are 570 million Internet users, 42% of the population of 1.354 billion, and 220 million online shoppers in China, according to eMarketer Inc., a U.S. market research firm. Online retail is growing rapidly in part because China’s retail industry was so weak. Many Chinese department stores for years leased space to suppliers, gaining none of the expertise in gauging trends and consumer marketing that Western chains acquired. (Notable exceptions are two national chains of 16 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china consumer electronics stores, Suning Commerce Group Co. Ltd. and Gome Electrical Appliances Holding Ltd., both of which compete aggressively online. Suning is No. 4 among Chinese e-retailers in the Asia 500 and Gome No. 16.) As a result, Chinese retail remains highly fragmented, with the top 100 merchants representing only 11% of retail sales, says consulting firm Grant Thornton LLP, roughly the same percentage that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. alone commands of U.S. retail sales. THAT LEFT A VACUUM THAT Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd. filled. The company launched Taobao as an eBay-type marketplace for small sellers in 2003—and drove eBay Inc. out of China by charging sellers no fees, instead earning revenue mostly through advertising. As Taobao became an increasingly large online flea market—where big brands mixed with startup retailers—Alibaba in 2008 created a second online marketplace, Tmall, for larger retailers willing to pay sales commissions. Alibaba’s two marketplaces account for more than 80% of e-commerce sales in China. Alibaba reported in December 2012 that it has surpassed 1 trillion yuan ($160 billion) in sales on its two marketplaces in the first 11 months of 2012. Tmall says its sales for 2012 totaled 200 billion yuan ($32 billion), double its 2011 sales. The Asia 500 Guide estimates Taobao’s 2012 sales at $138 billion. Analysts typically put Taobao’s sales into the category of consumer-to-consumer, or c2c e-commerce, even though most of its sellers are entrepreneurs who buy goods from Chinese manufacturers or wholesalers to sell on Taobao. They characterize as business-to-consumer, or b2c, the sales that take place on more regulated marketplaces like Tmall and through the e-commerce sites of major retailers. And that portion of e-commerce is now taking off. While Macquarie estimated that c2c sales in 2013 would be more than double b2c sales, it projects 55% growth in b2c through 2015, versus 35% in all of e-commerce. Taobao’s early dominance of e-commerce has trained Chinese consumers to turn first to online Jack Ma, Alibaba founder and CEO marketplaces for a vast array of merchandise and low prices. To compete, major competitors have created their own web shopping malls in hopes of offering comparable selection. These include companies that have raised large sums from venture capitalists and public share offerings, such as 360buy.com, No. 2 among Chinese e-commerce companies, which has raised more than $2.2 billion, and No. 10 Dangdang, which pocketed $272 million in its 2010 IPO. For a company like Le Saunda, a Chinese manufacturer of high-end shoes that’s been selling 17 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china online for two years, the prospect of trying to draw enough online shoppers to its own e-commerce site is still too daunting. To promote “selfbuilt web site sales, you need a lot of promotion in order to have enough customers,” says Ken Yang, e-commerce director. Instead of building its own site, Le Saunda operates storefronts on marketplaces like Tmall, 360buy, Amazon.com.cn (No. 8 among Chinese e-commerce sites), Yintai.com (No. 28) and Dangdang. THESE MARKETPLACE OPERATORS compete fiercely for the loyalties of Chinese consumers, and of the retailers that sell on their sites. For example, 360buy launched a round of well-publicized price cuts in 2012 that were quickly matched by competitors Suning and Gome. The prices were so low the government warned retailers not to violate laws against selling goods below cost. To woo sellers, such major players as Alibaba, 360buy and Suning offer loans to online retailers. That’s important because small companies have trouble getting loans from China’s banks that prefer to lend to the country’s giant state-owned companies, says Julia Q. Zhu, who previously worked at Alibaba before founding consulting firm Observer Solutions in Washington, D.C. Alibaba’s AliFinance arm has made more than 200,000 loans since starting its program in 2010, handing out $2.2 billion in the first half of 2012. The average loan is $10,200, Alibaba says, and is often used to buy merchandise. Big marketplace operators are also competing in fulfillment, building extensive delivery networks in a country without a national delivery service like UPS or FedEx. 360buy announced in November 2012 it would let other retailers use its service that provides same-day delivery in 23 cities and nextday delivery in more than 150 cities. The 360buy service includes collecting cash on delivery, a payment method used in as many as 80% of Chinese e-commerce transactions, Macquarie says, in a country where credit cards are not commonplace. Alibaba announced in January 2013 it would work with financial institutions, logistics companies and retailers on a $16 billion project to create a nationwide delivery network. These investments and price wars take their toll on profits. While Alibaba is profitable—the privately held company reported to part-owner Yahoo Inc. net income of $782 million on $2.9 billion in revenue for the nine months ended June 30, 2012—many of its competitors are not. VIPShop, No. 13, proudly reported a $6.3 million profit in the fourth quarter of 2012 and a full-year loss of only $9.5 million compared with a $156.5 million loss in 2011; Dangdang 18 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china increased revenue 44% in 2012 but its operating loss increased 94% to $71.2 million. Jingdong Mall, operator of 360buy.com, projects finally becoming profitable in the fourth quarter of 2013. The losses may be cooling investor excitement. One indication: Chinese group-buying site Lashou, which raised $155 million in three investment rounds, put off an IPO planned for 2012. IN THE FACE OF THIS TOUGH COMPETITION, Western retailers have had mixed results selling online in China. Amazon, the dominant e-retailer in North America and Europe and No. 8 in China, acquired Chinese online bookseller Joyo in 2004, rebranded it Amazon.com.cn and expanded into general merchandise and as a platform for other sellers. Amazon executives emphasized in January 2013 plans to step up investment in China, where it operates 13 distribution centers, according to MWPVL International Inc., a logistics consulting firm. Wal-Mart, which does not operate its own e-commerce site in China, in 2012 raised its stake in Shanghai-based Yihaodian, No. 24, to 51%. However, U.S. home improvement retailer Home Depot Inc. closed its seven bricksand-mortar stores in China last year, and Metro Markt, the consumer electronics retailer subsidiary of Metro AG of Germany, announced in January 2013 it was closing its stores and e-commerce site. Meanwhile, U.S.-based Toys ‘R’ Us and luxury goods retailer Neiman Marcus announced plans late in 2012 to begin selling online in China. Another U.S. brand that launched its own e-commerce site last year is handbag manufacturer Coach Inc., which went live in November 2012 at Coach.com.cn. Coach, which operates 70 stores in China, projects selling $300 million there this year, but did not break out an online projection. Most Coach stores are in China’s largest cities, and the new e-commerce site is attracting new customers—it has shipped to customers in more than 110 cities, many where there are no Coach stores, says David Duplantis, executive vice president of global digital media and customer engagement. At David Duplantis, executive vice president of global digital media, Coach: A new e-commerce site is attracting firsttime shoppers to the brand. least 40% of purchases on Coach.com.cn are by new customers. There are challenges, including the many unauthorized web sellers of Coach products in China. The Coach site emphasizes that it is the only authorized online seller of Coach goods in China. “China is the only market where we have to do that,” Duplantis says. That’s just one of many peculiarities of China that Western retailers will have to understand if they are to be successful in what will soon be the world’s largest e-commerce market. 19 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china China’s e-commerce leader expands into web-based TV shopping Alibaba says set-top boxes by Frank Tong L with its new TV operating system will go on sale soon. ike major Internet companies in the West, China’s leading e-commerce player is positioning itself for a central role in what may be the next big trend in online retail: consumers shopping via web-connected TV sets. Alibaba Group announced in July 2013 that it had developed an operating system for web-connected TVs and a deal with Wasu Media Holding Co. to jointly develop a set-top box, the Wasu Rainbow, that will incorporate the new software and go on sale later in the year. Wasu holds a license to provide Internet-based TV services in China, and says 8 million households use its service to access movies and TV shows on demand and play online games. With the new Alibaba operating system, developed by Alibaba subsidiary AliCloud, consumers will be able to use their mobile phones as a TV remote control, stream video from their phones, and pay utility bills and shop from Juhuasuan, a Groupon-like group-buying site operated by Alibaba, making payments with Alipay, Alibaba’s online payment system that is similar to eBay Inc.’s PayPal. Shopping on Alibaba’s two big e-commerce marketplaces, Taobao and Tmall, will not be part of the initial release. Alibaba is No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500. Chinese TV manufacturers Skyworth, Haier and Changhong plans to release TVs that incorporate the new operating system soon, Alibaba says. What’s 20 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china more, Alibaba has formed an alliance with major technology companies to develop features and standards for Internet-enabled TVs. They include Wasu Media, U.S. computer networking gear manufacturer Cisco Systems Inc., and Chinese electronics companies Hisilicon, Skyworth, Haier, Changhong, Konka, Mstar, Amlogic and Allwinner Technology. “The launch of this operating system allows Alibaba to enter the vast China TV market earlier than other Chinese internet companies,” Zhijiang Dou, deputy research director of TNS China, a consulting company, tells Internet Retailer. “Alibaba already has an OS platform for smart phone, and the OS for Smart TV will be the next battlefield.” Chinese manufacturers shipped 43 million TV sets in 2012, including 26 million “smart TV” units that can connect to the Internet, according to China Market Monitor, a market research firm. Smart TV shipments doubled in 2012 from 2011, the report says. In moving into TV shopping, Alibaba is moving on a parallel path with several major U.S. technology companies. eBay Inc., for instance, has offered consumers using iPads the ability to buy web products related to TV shows, including the Olympics. While eBay and its PayPal payments units have tried to position themselves as leaders in this area, such heavyweights as Amazon.com Inc. and Google Inc. also have shown signs of wanting to do more with TV and e-commerce. For Alibaba, this is not the first time it has butted heads with Western technology companies. The Chinese e-commerce giant developed an operating system for mobile phones in 2011, and reached a deal with Acer, a big electronics manufacturer in Taiwan to produce phones with the Aliyun software. However, Acer subsequently backed off under pressure from Google, provider of the Android software that Acer uses in many of the tablets and smartphones it ships. 21 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART I e-commerce in china Chinese e-commerce firm turns to Austria for warehouse A subsidiary of women’s technology by Frank Tong C apparel maker Aero signs a contract with TGW. hina’s retailers are seeking more advanced warehouse equipment to handle their rapidly growing volume of orders. That’s led a company that both makes women’s apparel and provides logistics services to e-retailers to turn to Austria for automated warehouse technology. CNSS China Co. Ltd. has signed a contract worth 80 million yuan ($13 million) to obtain equipment for a new e-commerce warehouse from TGW Logistics Group of Austria. CNSS was founded in 2011 by apparel manufacturer Aero Technology (China) Co. Ltd. to fulfill orders for Aero and for other Chinese companies that sell online to consumers. CNSS planned to build in 2013 a 51,800-square-meter (557,575-squarefoot) central warehouse in Danyang, a city 125 miles from Shanghai, and in the next several years to construct seven regional warehouses and 15 provincial distribution facilities. In outdated warehouses, one worker picking orders may need to walk up to 40 kilometers each day, CNSS says, a system that becomes increasingly unwieldy as the volume of orders increases.To accelerate the processing time and reduce errors, CNSS decided to adopt a system from TGW that picks products automatically. “CNSS bought automated picking stations, conveyor equipment and two Natrix sorters from TGW,” Julie Sun, managing director of TGW China, 22 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china tells Internet Retailer. Natrix is a TGW brand of equipment that can directs packages of varying sizes to the proper conveyor belt for shipping. Sun says warehouse workers will use mobile terminals to get order information and follow lights to the items they need. Products will travel over seven kilometers of conveyors to 70 packing stations that will be staffed by 140 workers, Sun says. CNSS aims for its center warehouse to process more than 20 million parcels daily and generate 200 million yuan ($32.7 million) in annual revenue for CNSS in 2014. TGW, whose clients include such Western apparel brands as U.S.-based Gap Inc. and Spain’s Zara generated revenue of more than 455 million euros ($609 million) for its fiscal year that ended June 30, 2013, up 25% from the prior year. According to Sun, a year after entering the China market TGW China has signed more than 100 million yuan ($16.3 million) in contracts with five clients and projects top 500 million yuan ($81 million) in annual sales by 2017. “The Chinese logistics market is expected to grow by at least 30% per year in the future,” Sun says. “To better serve the Chinese market, TGW has decided to build a manufacturing plant in the Shanghai area, which is its fourth plant in the world.” Big Chinese e-commerce companies are also investing in developing logistics facilities. E-retailer Jingdong has announced plans to invest 5 billion yuan ($817 million) in five new warehouses this year. Alibaba Group, meanwhile, joined forces in 2013 with several other e-retailers and delivery services to found Cainiao Internet Technology Ltd., which aims to provide logistics services for the e-commerce industry. Jingdong is No.3 in Internet Retailer’s Asia 500 rankings and Alibaba is No.1. 23 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china China’s No. 2 web retailer aims to build a bigger e-mall Jingdong will compete by Frank Tong U more directly with top e-commerce player Alibaba. nlike in the West, the vast majority of retail purchases in China take place on online marketplaces where many merchants compete, particularly the Taobao and Tmall shopping portals operated by Alibaba Group Ltd. Alibaba’s biggest competitor, Jingdong Century Trading Co., has made clear it aims to dramatically increase its share of sales on China’s web marketplaces. While its POP marketplace accounts for 20% of the sales today on JD.com, Jingdong’s e-commerce site, the company aims to increase that to 50% by 2016, Jingdong founder and CEO Qiangdong Liu said in July 2013 at the company’s initial gathering for retailers and technology providers to merchants that sell on JD.com, formerly known as 360Buy.com. Jingdong, No. 3 in the 2013 Internet Retailer Asia 500 rankings and No. 2 among Chinese companies on that list, opened the POP marketplace as a platform where other merchants can sell in 2010. POP stands for “plan of open platform.” Jingdong, which launched in 2004 as a web retailer of consumer electronics products, claims that over 60 million consumers have registered with its site and that nearly 10,000 merchants now sell on JD.com in 12 product categories, including books, furniture, food and cosmetics. Jingdong says it average 500,000 orders and more than 100 million page views per day. The company 24 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china has been particularly aggressive in building out its delivery infrastructure, and says it now directly fulfills orders to consumers in 400 Chinese cities. While Jingdong’s online sales nearly doubled last year to $9.63 billion, according to the Internet Retailer Asia 500 Guide, the company is far behind Alibaba, which accounts for 90% of online marketplace sales in China, according to e-commerce analyst Chengdong Li. Jingdong’s Liu addressed Alibaba’s dominance in his remarks, without mentioning his competitor by name. “It is not a good sign when a platform occupies more than 50% market share,” Liu said. “Jingdong sees the POP business as a key business driver in the future, and Jingdong hopes to provide more options to merchants and customers.” Analyst Li says the various Chinese e-marketplaces are strong in different categories. For example, he says, Tencent, No. 8 in the Asia 500, VIPShop (No. 4) and Dandang (No. 16) are strong in clothing. Yihaodian (No. 42) is strong in food sales. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. bought a controlling interest in Yihaodian last year. Following in the footsteps of Alibaba’s Tmall, Jingdong has created flagship stores that give large companies their own branded storefronts on JD.com. They must pay a $970 fee plus commissions of 5-30% and hold trademarks on the brands they sell. Alibaba created Tmall in 2008 as a platform for large brands that sought a way to sell online away from the free-for-all of Taobao where some 7 million merchants offer their goods and where price competition tends to be intense. Despite the growing competition among online marketplaces in China, Alibaba continues to post robust growth in revenue and profit, as disclosed in July 2013 in the quarterly earnings report of Yahoo Inc., which retains a 24% stake in Alibaba even after selling part of its Alibaba holdings last year. Yahoo reported the following financial results for Alibaba Group for the first three months of 2013 versus the same period in 2012: h Revenue increased 71.5% to $1.382 billion from $806 million; h Gross profit grew 91.7% to $1.018 billion from $531 million; h Net income increased 189.4%to $680 million from $235 million. 25 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART I e-commerce in china A Chinese retail chain steps up its e-commerce game by Frank Tong S Suning’s plans include opening a tech center in Silicon Valley this year. uning Commerce Group Co Ltd., a leading retailer of consumer electronics in China, has unveiled plans to expand its online sales and more closely connect its store and web operations. That includes allowing a limited number of major brands to sell on Suning.com, creating a marketplace that may feature less of the price competition that’s common on competing shopping portals in China. Suning, No.5 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500 guide, launched in September 2013 its “Suning Cloud” marketplace, with more than 300 merchants now selling on Suning.com. That includes such international brands as apparel maker H&M, PC manufacturer Lenovo and consumer electronics company Samsung. Aiming to limit competition among merchants on its marketplace, Suning says it will recruit only a limited number of premium brands to sell in each category. Suning said it would keep the total number of third-party sellers on its site to under 10,000 in 2013 and to no more than 50,000 by 2015. After 2015, the recruiting will focus on overseas brands that don’t already sell in China. “Limiting the merchants in the same category provides a healthy competition opportunity for brands and helps us maintain premium service quality to consumers,” Li Bin, vice president of Suning.com, says. Keeping competition in check could address complaints by many brands that they’re forced to discount heavily because of stiff pricing competition on major Chinese e-commerce marketplaces like Tmall and Jingdong. Tmall is a unit of Alibaba Group, No. 1 in the Asia 500; Jingdong is No. 3. There are 50,000 storefronts on Tmall 26 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china representing 70,000 brands, Alibaba says. Brands selling on Suning.com will pay fees of 2% to 5% of the value of the merchandise sold, although Suning says it will refund the transaction fee to merchants in some categories. The fees are in line with what Tmall charges. However, Suning says it will not charge any up-front fees. A merchant that opens a store on Tmall must put up a security deposit of 50,000 yuan ($8170) to 150,000 yuan ($24,510) and pay an annual fee of 30,000 yuan ($4902) or 60,000 yuan ($9804). Starting as a Best Buy-like electronics retailer in 1990, Suning launched its e-commerce site in 2009 and has taken several steps since to enhance online business. The Nanjing-based company acquired e-retailer Redbaby.com in 2012 to expand into beauty and children’s categories. Suning also reorganized its management to give more emphasis to e-commerce and and integrated its 1,614 stores with Suning.com. Now the two channels have common systems for managing pricing and inventory. “Suning is not only a store chain or an e-retailer, but also an e-retailing service providers. In the future, our major profits will come from financial services, logistics services and data analysis to merchants, not from the price difference between wholesale and consumer,” says Sun Weimin, vice-president of Suning Commerce Group. The retailer also unveiled an investment plan designed to help it reach its e-commerce goals. Much as U.S. office supplies chain Staples Inc. is doing in two pilot stores, Suning planned to redesign 100 of its stores in 2013 to better show off merchandise available on Suning.com. Merchants that sell on Suning’s e-commerce site will be able to display their merchandise in these “Suning Expo” stores, either in physical form or through videos or QR codes that consumers can scan to access online information. The retailer will provide computers and tablets to enable consumers to compare store and online prices, and promises to match prices of major online rivals. Those stores also will serve as pickup points where consumers can collect online orders. Suning, which had 15 regional fulfillment centers and three storage warehouses as of June 2013, says it delivers orders in most cities in less than two days. By 2015, the company says it plans to offer express delivery in 5,000 Chinese cites through a network that will boast 60 fulfillment centers, 12 storage warehouses, 10,000 vehicles and 50,000 delivery workers. The company also plans to expand its I.T. development staff from 4,000 to 10,000 by 2015. Suning has two research centers and planned to open three new centers by the end of 2013, including one in Silicon Valley for researching data mining, cloud computing and web search technology. Suning’s online sales reached $1.73 billion in the first half 2013 and the company has set a goal of reaching 300 billion yuan ($49 billion) in annual sales by 2020. According to iResearch, a Beijingbased research firm, in Q2 2013 Suning had a 5% share of the business-to-consumer e-retail market market in China, behind Tmall (50.8%), Jingdong (17.1%) and Tencent Holdings (5.6%.) That B2C market calculation excludes the largest online marketplace in China, Taobao, which is operated by Alibaba and offers products from some 7 million individuals and small businesses. China e-commerce analysts typically categorize Taobao’s sales as consumer-to-consumer, or C2C. 27 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART I e-commerce in china Bain predicts China will overtake the U.S. in e-commerce by Frank Tong I E-retail in China will grow 32% a year through 2015. t was only a matter of time before Chinese consumers’ enthusiastic embrace of online shopping would make China the No. 1 e-commerce market in the world, surpassing the United States. That time has come, says U.S.-based consulting firm Bain & Company. Chinese consumers spent 1.3 trillion yuan ($210 billion) online in 2012 and that will reach 3.3 trillion yuan ($540 billion) by 2015, Bain says. The report says China’s e-commerce market grew at a compound annual growth rate of 71% from 2009-2012 and projects annual growth of 32% from 2013-2015. By contrast, Bain estimates U.S. e-retail growth at 13% for the entire period 2009-2015. While the Bain report does not project 2013 e-commerce sales in the two countries in dollar terms, 32% growth in China’s e-commerce sales from 2012 would amount to $277 million in online sales in 2013. 13% growth from 2012 U.S. online retail sales of $225 billion, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, would put U.S. e-retail sales in 2013 at about $254 billion. The Bain report explicitly predicted that China would overtake the U.S. in e-commerce. “The year 2013 will be remembered as the one in which China surpassed the U.S. as the world’s largest digital retail market,” write analysts Serge Hoffman and Bruno Lannes in the report, “China’s e-commerce prize.” 28 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china China’s digital market: No. 1 and growing Indexed market size of online shopping (including USD depreciation) 12 9 China U.S. 6 3 0 2009 2012 2015 (Fall) Sources: iResearch, China stastics bureau, US Department of Commerce, Euromonitor, Bain analysis “Digital retailing has furiously transformed shopping and purchasing habits, opening up vast opportunities for retailers and brands that pay attention to the nuances of massively changing consumer behavior.” Drawing on a survey of 1,300 Chinese online shoppers, Bain says Chinese shoppers spend more time online comparing prices than shoppers in other countries. The Bain survey finds more than 70% of respondents say they frequently go online to compare prices among web retailers and with bricks-and-mortar stores. The report also makes these observations about Chinese online shoppers: h They have little brand loyalty. They not only choose from multiple brands, but also purchase from different stores. h Price is the No. 1 reason they shop online. h They embrace technology, especially mobile phones. 60% of shoppers surveyed use smartphones to browse or buy products. By 2012, 66% of Chinese mobile users owned smartphones, compared with 53% in U.S. h They often favor foreign products due to health concerns. Chinese customers purchased 10% of all infant formula and 7% of cosmetics from e-commerce sites outside of mainland China, such as in Hong Kong and Australia. 29 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china A web-only mobile phone maker outsells Apple Web-only Xiaomi updates in China by Frank Tong W its mobile operating system based on suggestions from fans. hile Apple Inc. fans line up around its stores to get the latest iPhone, Chinese phone maker Xiaomi, which sells exclusively online, draws a crowd to its web site every time it releases a new handset. When it introduced its first phone, Mi-I in 2011, consumers placed 300,000 orders in two days and a later release drew 200,000 orders in just 45 seconds, the company says. Xiaomi, founded in 2010, sold 7 million handsets in 2012 and generated revenue of $2 billion. In the first half of 2013 the Beijing-based company sold 7 million handsets and projected 2013 sales would hit 15 million phones and $4.1 billion in revenue. Its Internet-centric marketing philosophy has turned the 3-year-old company into a major competitor in China’s hot smartphone market with much larger global competitors. According to Canalys International, a research company, in the second quarter of 2013, Xiaomi had a 5% share of China’s smartphone market, compared to 17.6% for top brand Samsung and 4.8% for Apple. But founder and CEO Jun Lei does not compare Xiaomi to device makers like Samsung and Apple. “We are an Internet company, not a phone maker,” he says. Indeed, the Internet is at the center of Xiaomi’s business. It sells its Mi phones exclusively on Xiaomi.com, typically selling 200,000 handsets a 30 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china week. The company arranges production based on the orders received, which means it’s never left with unsold inventory. The phones are produced by Foxconn, a major electronics contract manufacturer, which also produce iPhones for Apple. Customers may have to wait up to a month to receive the latest version of a Xiaomi phone, but they get a phone that analysts say has many of the features of a Samsung or Apple device for a much lower price. For example, Apple sells the iPhone 5 on its China web site starting at 5,288 yuan ($864), while Xiaomi’s new Mi-3 handset costs 1,999 yuan ($327). The company name means “small rice” in Mandarin and its logo “MI” is an abbreviation for “mobile Internet.” And Xiaomi uses the web to do more than take orders. The company has built a web site for its “Mi fans” where 4 million registered users can find updated applications and learn about technical innovations from other users. Some 200 fans clubs in major Chinese cities organize online and offline Xiaomi’s mobile phone and its mascot activities. Xiaomi invites fans to submit feedbacks and suggestions. Based on that feedback, Xiaomi updates the MIUI operating systems of the Mi phone every Friday, encouraging more suggestions as consumers see they can contribute directly to designing the next-generation product. Fans’ enthusiasm shows up on China’s online social networks. After Xiaomi released it Mi-3 phone in this month over 1 million fans clicked “Like” on Xiaomi.com and posted 470,000 comments in just several days. On the popular Chinese social network Weibo, 1.6 million fans follow Xiaomi’s official account. In contrast, Apple does not have an official account on Weibo. Xiaomi is moving to build on its early success. The company announced in August 2013 the hiring of Hugo Barra, Google Inc.’s former head of Android product management, to lead global expansion. At the same time, the company unveiled its newest Mi-3 phone at 1999 yuan ($327) and a 47-inch Smart 3D TV, called Mi-TV, for less than $500. 31 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART I e-commerce in china E-commerce in China grows 35% in first nine months Total retail growth of 2013 by Frank Tong O is 8.9%, reports the Ministry of Commerce. nline retail sales in China grew 35% in the first nine months of 2013 over the same period a year earlier, equaling the 1.3 trillion yuan ($212.4 billion) of online sales for all of 2012, according to China’s Ministry of Commerce. China’s total retail sales grew 8.9% in the first three quarters, the ministry reported last week. “While sales from department stores, supermarkets and brand stores increased by 11.1%, 8.4% and 6.9% from January to September, e-retailing sales increased 34.7% to 1.3 trillion yuan and become a bright spot in the first nine months,” Shen Danyang, director the Bureau of International Trade Negotiations at the Ministry of Commerce, told reporters in Beijing. If China’s e-retail sales continue to grow at a 35% in the fourth quarter they would reach $282 billion for all of 2013, and likely eclipse the U.S. as the world’s leading online retail market for the first time. U.S. e-retail sales totaled $225.5 billion in 2012 and grew by nearly 17% in the first two quarters of 2013, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. 17% full-year growth would put U.S. e-retail sales at $264 billion for all of 2013. U.S.-based consulting firm Bain & Company projected in August 2013 that China’s online retail sales would exceed those in the United States in 32 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china 2013, basing that projection on estimates from Chinese research firms. Apparel and consumer electronics are the largest categories of online retail sales, the Ministry of Commerce said in its report. The ministry also disclosed that it had begun in 2013 conducting a survey of 3,000 online retailers in China to produce its estimates of business-to-consumer online sales. It previously had relied on data from Chinese research companies. Some 200,000 Chinese companies now engage in cross-border e-commerce, the ministry said, including business-to-business and business-to-consumer online trade. The total volume of cross-border e-commerce trade amounted to 2 trillion yuan ($US327 billion) in 2012, the ministry says, including both B2B and B2C sales. The Chinese government intends to take additional steps to make cross-border Internet trading easier and to lower costs, the ministry says. 33 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china Behind Alibaba’s $5 billion e-commerce Deals with retail chains and sales day by Frank Tong C of travel and financial products contributed to a record sales day. hina often produces eye-popping economic statistics, and that includes the report in November 2013 from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. that its two big online marketplaces booked $5.75 billion in sales during the annual one-day Singles Day sale. While merchants on Tmall and Taobao sold plenty of conventional merchandise, the sales Alibaba reports also include substantial revenue from selling financial and travel products, and deals with store-based merchants. Alibaba, China’s dominant e-commerce company and No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500, bolstered its Singles Day sales—which were almost double last year’s $3.0 billion—with several new features. A big one was the introduction of financial products such as insurance policies and bond funds. Alibaba obtained government approval shortly before the Nov. 11 Singles Day sale to offer financial services, and the Taobao Licai (Licai means “wealth management”) section of the Taobao marketplace generated $149 million in revenue on Singles Day, Alibaba says. (Singles Day comes from the 11.11 notation for Nov. 11, and Alibaba began promoting it as a big day for online sales in 2009, with many other merchants coming on board in recent years.) Another new features was an “O2O”—offline to online—partnership with such major store-based retailers as Gap Inc., Toys ‘R’ Us Inc. and Japanese 34 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART I e-commerce in china fast-fashion retailer Uniqlo Co. Ltd. to promote Singles Day sales through 30,000 stores in 1,000 Chinese cities. The stores offered deals in advance of Singles Day that consumers could select, completing the purchase online on Nov. 11. For example, shoppers could scan a QR code on posters at Gap stores to get $3 off purchases on Gap’s Tmall storefront on Nov. 11. The promotion was designed to drive consumers into participating stores in advance of Nov. 11 as well as to stimulate buying on Singles Day. Gap did not respond to a request for comment on its Singles Day results. Alibaba also stimulated demand by sending out $50 million worth of digital coupons in advance of the sale. Some of the coupons were specifically designed to drive purchases through mobile devices or on social networks. Travel products also boosted sales on the Alibaba sites. Bargain hunters snapped up 60,000 travel packages in the first 12 hours of the Singles Day event, generating $25.8 million in revenue, Alibaba says. The company has not disclosed full-day travel sales. Alibaba says it shipped 60 million parcels on Monday, the same day orders were placed, out of the 152 million it expected to ship to fulfill all Singles Day orders. Contributing to the fast delivery were the services of a new logistics company called Cainiao Network Technology Co., created in 2013 by Alibaba and six major Chinese delivery firms. During the Singles Day period Cainiao advised merchants on inventory planning and helped delivery companies plan to handle the spike in demand, Alibaba says. While the Singles Day online sale is most associated with Alibaba, which introduced the sale in 2009 to promote its Tmall marketplace aimed at larger brands launched the previous year, many other Chinese merchants also promoted online sales on Nov. 11. In some cases, they extend the sale beyond just the one day in order to better compete with Alibaba’s dominant marketplaces. Here are some Singles Day results from other web merchants: h Alibaba’s nearest competitor, Jingdong Century Trading Co., racked up $1.6 billion in sales in a two-day event that spanned Nov. 11-12. In 2012 Jingdong, No. 3 in the Asia 500, sold $410 million in a three-day event. Customers placed 6.8 million orders in the first day of this year’s sales, the retailer says. Orders from mobile devices increased five times. h From Nov. 8 to 11, Suning.com, the e-commerce site of consumer electronics and appliance retailer Suning Commerce Group Co. Ltd. generated 6 million orders. Sales from mobile devices increased 900% from last year, says Suning, No. 5 in the Asia 500. h Jiuxian.com, a top Chinese online wine retailer and No. 33 in the Asia 500, increased its Singles Day sales 267% to $36.3 million, from $9.9 million a year earlier. Besides its own site, Jiuxian sell wines through its store on Tmall.com. h On Nov. 11, Yixun.com, a retailer of consumer electronics and general merchandise, booked 600,000 orders worth $82 million. 35 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE Dear Retail, IS YOUR COMMERCE PLATFORM READY TO GO GLOBAL? Love, hybris CLIC K LET’S HERE AN D FIND OUT. PART II: WESTERN BRANDS SELL ONLINE IN CHINA UK fashion retailer Asos plans to launch a China e-commerce site . . . . . . . 38 There may be e-commerce gold in China, but it’s hard to mine . . . . . . . . . 40 Wal-Mart’s Chinese e-commerce partner starts selling fresh food . . . . . . . . 43 Xiu.com helps eBay sellers expand into China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Cherries to China from the U.S., via Tmall.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 The National Football League looks for an e-commerce touchdown in China . 49 An umbrella brand prepares for a torrent of traffic in China . . . . . . . . . . . 51 China’s cross-border e-commerce tops $375 billion in 2012 . . . . . . . . . . 54 Part I: E-Commerce in China Part III: Chinese e-retailers look abroad CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART II western brands sell online in china UK fashion retailer Asos plans to launch a China e-commerce site Asos previously by Thad Rueter A opened an office in the United States. sos Plc Holdings, a U.K.-based fashion retailer, will launch an e-commerce site in China using technology from hybris AG. Asos is No. 32 in the recently published Internet Retailer Europe 500. According to that guide, its sales increased nearly 41% year over year in 2012. The move into China represents the latest international push by Asos, which a year ago opened an office in New York, and which says the United States is its No. 2 market after the United Kingdom. The company has said it aims to become the top global fashion destination for twenty-something shoppers. “Within the [Asia-Pacific] region, China is recognized as being the primary driver of growth and, as such, it’s a market in which we want to be a major player,” says Pete Marsden, chief information officer at Asos. The Asos China site, scheduled to launch in October, 2013 will use the hybris Commerce Suite e-commerce software. Asos will also offer Chinese consumers a mobile-optimized site. The retailer has established a team in China that will manage the business there as an autonomous unit, says Paramjot Jassal, head of business transformation-international, for Asos. "We realize that to be competitive in the Chinese market we need to be both close to the customer by operating from within 38 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china China but have the team respond to the wants and needs of the customer from China," he says. China will also be the first country outside the U.K. where Asos will operate a distribution facility. "The Chinese customer is one of the most demanding customers in the world," Jassal says. "In tier 1 cities same-day and next-day deliveries are the norm. To compete we knew we would have to have our product in country close to the customer." The term "tier 1" refers to China's largest cities, such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. ‘The Chinese customer is one of the most demanding customers in the world.’ Asos says it has 6 million active customers, sells some 60,000 products and ships to 214 countries. It also operates e-commerce sites in France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Australia and Russia. In June 2013, Germany-based business software company SAP AG said it would buy hybris, which will operate as an independent unit. Hybris is ranked eighth among vendors of e-commerce platforms in Internet Retailer’s Leading Vendors to the Top 1000 E-Retailers guide. 39 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART II western brands sell online in china There may be e-commerce gold in China, but it’s hard to mine Western brands find by Don Davis W Chinese consumers expect big discounts. hile athletic shoe brand Puma SE sells online in 31 countries, its No. 1 online sales day came in a country where it didn’t even have its own e-commerce site and wasn’t selling its latest styles. The country was China and the date was Nov. 11, 2012, a date that’s called Singles Day (because of the 11/11 notation) that’s become China’s equivalent of U.S. online shopping spree days Cyber Monday (the Monday after Thanksgiving) and Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving). “When I saw those numbers beat Cyber Monday and Black Friday, that opened my eyes,” says Tom Davis, Puma’s global head of e-commerce. There was no comparable eureka moment that put China on the map for Valerie Hoecke, senior vice president of digital for high-end beauty brand Benefit Cosmetics. But she’s seen studies predicting that China will soon pass Japan as the world’s leading market for luxury goods. China, she says, “is one of our cornerstones for growth in the coming years.” What Davis and Hoecke have in common is that both their brands have launched freestanding e-commerce sites in China. That’s a big step in China where many consumers start their online shopping trips at Taobao and Tmall, two marketplaces operated by Alibaba Group, No. 1 in the Internet Retailer 40 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china Asia 500 rankings, and similar shopping portals operated by such Alibaba rivals as Jingdong and the China unit of Amazon.com Inc. Jingdong is No. 3 in the Asia 500 and Amazon No. 4. Price competition is fierce on the Chinese online marketplaces, as both Benefit Cosmetics and Puma have learned from their experiences selling on Tmall, the Alibaba marketplace more oriented to big brands than the larger Taobao, where millions of mostly small Chinese companies sell in a bazaarlike setting. The prevalence of heavy discounting is why Benefit Cosmetics no longer sells on Tmall, Hoecke says. “We found it extremely promotional, and that level of promotional focus is out of keeping with how we present our brand as a prestige brand. We try not to be all about ‘discount, discount, sale, sale,’ and that’s very much what selling on Tmall is all about.” Puma has been selling on Tmall since August 2011 and early in 2013 started selling on Jingdong.com. “We’re trying to curb the discount out of the gate with Jingdong, as we may not have done with Tmall two years ago,” Davis says. “At Tmall we started out accepting it’s going to be a 50% discount. Now we’re trying to pull it back to 30%, and starting on Jingdong with a similar discount as Tmall.” Puma's Tom Davis Both Benefit Cosmetics and Puma have launched their own e-commerce sites in China, and begun the arduous task of persuading Chinese shoppers to navigate to those brand sites, rather than going to a marketplace like Tmall and searching for a product or brand. Benefit Cosmetics has been at it longer, having launched BenefitCosmetics.com.cn in 2011. The company has found that some of the basic tools brands use to market themselves in North America and Europe don’t work very well in China, Hoecke says. Paid search ads deliver poor returns because relatively few Chinese shoppers go to China’s main search engine, Baidu, to begin a shopping trip, instead going to shopping portals like those of Alibaba and Jingdong. Nonetheless, she says, many brands advertise there, trying to get in on the boom in Chinese e-commerce, and that raises pay-perclick costs. “The market hasn’t stabilized yet,” she says. “Everyone is willing to spend money to get in front of consumers.” Nor is e-mail very effective for Benefit Cosmetics. Hoecke says the young women her company targets are reluctant to opt in to receive e-mail, and rarely open the marketing e-mails they do receive. 41 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china Chinese consumers, she says, are more likely to communicate with friends via WeChat, a mobile social network that parent company Tencent says had 236 million active monthly users in the second quarter of 2013. Benefit Cosmetics has just started promoting itself on WeChat and is working on a mobile version of its Chinese e-commerce site. “Mobile is super-important,” Hoecke says. Hoecke would not disclose online sales or traffic from BenefitCosmetics.com.cn, but says, “We’ve seen nice growth, 50% over last year.” The sales alone would not justify operating an e-commerce site, she says, but the revenue does help support the Benefit Cosmetic’s four-person digital team in Shanghai that promotes the brand through social media and other means. Benefit Cosmetics built its Chinese e-commerce site on technology from hybris, which was acquired in 2013 by Germany-based business software company SAP AG. Benefit Cosmetics is part of global luxury brand marketer LVMH, which also owns Sephora, No. 144 in the Internet Retailer 2013 Top 500. Puma, part of France-based retail conglomerate PPR SA, No. 33 in the Internet Retailer Europe 500, prepared for the launch of its e-commerce site in summer 2013 by putting up a “coming soon” screen at Cn.Puma.com for several months before the site’s launch and collecting e-mail addresses. The company also planned to do some paid search advertising, put flyers with information about the web site into shopping bags at the company’s couple of dozen Puma-owned stores in China, and seek to attract traffic through outdoor and other traditional forms of advertising, Davis says. He would not provide details on Puma’s e-commerce sales in China. The site will feature a growing catalog of products and “a full-price representation of the brand,” Davis says, as opposed to the heavy discounts on the marketplaces like Tmall. Puma built its Chinese site on the e-commerce platform of U.S.-based software company Demandware Inc., which is also supplying the technology for 23 online stores Puma has launched around the world in the last two years, Davis says. Davis says it will take time to educate Chinese consumers to shop at a brand site like Cn.Puma.com, but the results from the 11/11 online shopping holiday in 2012 convinced him it’s time to invest in a brand site in China. “This is going to be something,” he says. “If we can figure out how this is going to work from the consumer perspective this is going to be massive.” 42 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china Wal-Mart’s Chinese e-commerce partner starts selling The Chinese e-retailer fresh food by Frank Tong C Yihaodian is selling fresh fruit in Beijing and Shanghai. hinese online retailer Yihaodian is expanding its sale of fresh food with the help of its majority shareholder, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Yihaodian announced in August 2013 that it had started selling fresh fruit to consumers in Beijing, five months after first offering fresh produce from its e-commerce site to shoppers in Shanghai, the e-retailer’s home city. Yihaodian officials say they now receive 1,200 orders per day for fresh fruit, and that they aim to add fresh meat and vegetables at a later date. The e-retailer says it hopes to expand fresh food delivery to other large cities, including Guangzhou and Shenzhen. “Since Yihaodian can get the support of the logistics networks of WalMart China, we could enter the fresh food section faster and easier than others,” says Guo Dongdong, vice president of Yihaodian. Wal-Mart, which raised its stake in Yihaodian to 51% in 2012 operates some 390 stores in 150 cities in China. Wal-Mart’s assistance takes several forms. Wal-Mart warehouses store the fresh fruit that Yihoadian sells, though Yihaodian contracts with delivery services that can handle perishable items to deliver orders to consumers. Another important aid is that Wal-Mart, which sells fresh food in its bricks-and-mortar stores in China, hold import licenses for fresh food. Many Chinese prefer 43 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china imported food items as there have been many press reports about contaminated Chinese food products. Guo notes that fresh food makes up about 20% of sales in physical supermarkets, and that offering items like meat, vegetables and fruit could give Yihaodian a big boost. “It is an attractive category that could enhance repeat purchasing for e-retailers,” he says. China’s farmers are also seeing the opportunity to sell food online directly to residents of major cities. According to a 2012 report on sales of agricultural products from Alibaba Group, the dominant e-commerce platform in China, 260,000 merchants in 2012 sold nearly 20 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) worth of agriculture and food products on Alibaba’s sites, Tmall and Taobao. Alibaba predicted 1 million merchants would sell 50 billion yuan ($8.2 billion) worth of food or agriculture products on its platform in 2013. Alibaba is No.1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500. There is still, however, plenty of room for growth in selling fresh food online in China. Only 1% of food is now purchased on the web in China, according to Alibaba. By comparison, the online penetration rate for beauty and cosmetics was 16.3% by the end of 2011, for electronics 15.6% and apparel 14.3%. Yihaodian, founded in 2008, says the knowledge it has gained about its customers will help it gauge demand for fresh products. The company has grown rapidly in the past five years, founder and CEO Yu Gang said at a press conference in August 2013 announcing the fresh fruit delivery program in Beijing. “Our traffic has increased 1000 times from five years ago, and listed products have grown from only 3,000 to 2 million,” Yu said. Yihaodian says its web site traffic exceeds 10 million visits per day. Wal-Mart does not disclose Yihaodian’s sales, but says they are growing at a double-digit percentage rate and that Yihaodian has doubled the number of active customers from a year ago. Internet Retailer estimates Yihaodian’s 2012 sales at nearly $224, and ranked the e-retailer No. 42 in the Asia 500. “We have six fulfillment centers with 260,000 square meters of storage space,” Yu told reporters. “Since the market develops so fast, the orders of Yihaodian exceeded the maximum capability of warehouses by six times in five years. Now we are building hundreds of thousands of square meters of warehouse space in Shanghai and Dongguan.” He noted that Yihaodian provides same-day delivery in major metropolitan cities and that its own fulfillment network delivers 70% of orders. “Our customers’ satisfaction ratio for delivery is 90%,“ he added. The e-retailer says it is also making progress in attracting mobile shoppers. Yihaodian says it has more than 10 million mobile registered users and that mobile sales increased 10 times over 2012 in the first half of 2013. 44 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART II western brands sell online in china Xiu.com helps eBay sellers expand into China by Frank Tong U Xiu.com provides web site and fulfillment services. .S. merchants selling on eBay Inc.’s marketplace are getting an assist from Chinese e-commerce services provider Xiu.com to start selling products to online shoppers in China. Since November, 2012 Xiu.com has been helping U.S. eBay merchants to set up shops on Chinese e-marketplaces such as 360Buy.com, Jingdong Mall and Tmall.com, a unit of Alibaba Group, and handling their international fulfillment needs. Alibaba Group is No. 1 in Internet Retailer’s 2013 Asia 500. Jingdong Mall is No. 3 Xiu.com created a sub-site, eBay.xiu.com, to sell items from those sellers, which the site refers to as “eBay style.” On that site, the vendor translates U.S. merchants’ product listings into Chinese and localizes the product descriptions for Chinese shoppers, eBay says. For instance, Chinese customers typically request more detailed photos of a product before they place an online order and Chinese clothing sizes differ from U.S. sizes—details Xiu.com handles for American sellers. When a Chinese buyer orders a product from a U.S. merchant, Xiu.com buys product on her behalf and ships it to its fulfillment center in Texas. Since Xiu.com can aggregate multiple orders from many buyers and ship them all together, it helps merchants reduce the costs of cross-border shipping by 45 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china as much as 40%, it says. Xiu.com says it plans to open a second fulfillment center in Los Angeles this year. Xiu.com also employs 10 professional appraisers who inspect the products to make sure buyers receive authentic goods; they also give feedback to U.S sellers after the transaction. Chinese customers need to wait at least 10 days for products bought in the United States to reach them, the vendor says. “The Chinese retailing industry is so fragmented that new brands can hardly find a national department store chain to cooperate with, and so the speed for expanding there would be very slow otherwise,” Wenhong Ji, founder and CEO of Xiu. com, tells Internet Retailer. Besides eBay, Xiu.com works with other overseas online marketplaces or retailers, like South Korean ‘The Chinese retailing industry is so fragmented that new brands can hardly find a national department store chain to cooperate with.’ online market platform Gmarket.com, U.S apparel retailer Karmaloop.com and U.S online jewelry retailer Blue Nile Inc. More than 300 brands use Xiu.com to sell products in China, including Gucci, American Apparel Inc. and The Children’s Place Retail Stores Inc., the company says. The average ticket price for a Xiu.com client is $90 and its sites have 300,000 to 400,000 unique visitors per day. The vendor takes a service fee of about 20% on all clients’ sales, it says. Xiu.com’s sales were $150 million in 2012 and it expected to grow by 20% in 2013 it says. Gmarket is a unit of eBay Inc., No. 7 in the 2013 Asia 500. Karmaloop is No. 118 in the 2013 Top 500 Guide; Blue Nile, No. 74; American Apparel, No. 284 and The Children’s Place, No. 112. 46 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china Cherries to China from the U.S., via Tmall.com by Frank Tong T Chinese consumers can pre-order U.S. cherries on Tmall.com. hrough the magic of e-commerce, consumers in such big Chinese cities as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou are receiving cherries just two days after they are picked by producers in the U.S. states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Utah. The Chinese shoppers place orders on a special section of Tmall.com, along with Taobao.com, one of the two big online marketplaces operated by Alibaba Group, China’s dominant e-commerce company and No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500. That area of the site, Yushou.Tmall.com, is set aside for consumers to place deposits on items for later delivery. A consumer pays a deposit of 10 yuan ($1.60) to reserve a box of cherries. Once the cherries are picked, they are placed in 2-kilogram (4.4-pound) boxes along with four bags of ice to keep them cool, and shipped by air to China. The price of a 2-kilogram box is 179 yuan ($29.21), or $6.64 per pound, 22% less than the $8.50 per pound price of comparable cherries in Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s bricks-and-mortar stores in China, according to China media reports. Wal-Mart is No. 4 in the Internet Retailer Top 500, which ranks North America’s leading online retailers, and No. 244 in the Asia 500. Tmall first offered the option to pre-order U.S. cherries from June 27 to July 8, 2013. That led to over 50,000 orders, says Keith Hu, overseas 47 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china marketing director for the Northwest Cherries Association, which promotes sales of cherries from Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Utah. There were two other cherry promotions on Tmall in July 2013. Hu expected total shipments that month would exceed 200,000 kilograms, or roughly 450,000 pounds. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s office in Shanghai collaborated with the Northwest Cherries Association in working with Tmall on the cherries promotion. “The power and potential of e-commerce in China is unparalleled compared to any other country or region around the world; it has already become a new way of life in China, especially for younger consumers,” says U.S. ambassador to China Gary Locke, who attended several events promoting U.S. cherries. “E-commerce is bringing about new opportunities for U.S. and facilitating enhanced U.S.-China trade, and we are proud to be serving as a bridge for our businesses into the burgeoning Chinese consumer market.” Tmall has offered the cherries only to consumers in 35 of China’s biggest cities because China has limited facilities for preserving products at low temperatures as they move through the supply chain from producer to consumer. “After China ‘After China builds more sophisticated cold-chain networks, we hope Chinese customers will consume more U.S foods in the future.’ builds more sophisticated cold-chain networks, we hope Chinese customers will consume more U.S foods in the future,” Locke says. In fact, Chinese consumers have been demanding more imported food—and looking for it online— recently as a result of widespread warnings about the safety of certain Chinese food products. Sales of imported food on Tmall have increased 500% in the first half of 2013 over the prior year, says Daniel Zhang, president of Tmall.com. U.S. agricultural exports to China in 2012 were $26 billion, up 38% from 2011, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Northwest cherry started selling heavily to Japan and Taiwan several years ago, Hu says, but in recent years the biggest growth has been in sales to China. He says producers in the five northwestern states he represents sold 2 million 9-kilogram boxes of cherries in 2012, up from 200,000 boxes in 2005. Tmall touts the pre-order model as ideal for agricultural products, because it allows the producer to ship exactly what customers have ordered. The Alibaba unit says pre-ordered products typically reach Chinese consumers within two to three days of their being shipped directly to the end customer, versus seven days if they are shipped to a warehouse and then sold through a store. 48 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china The National Football League looks for an e-commerce touchdown It now sells apparel, in China equipment and accessories via Tmall.com. by Amy Dusto T he National Football League announced plans to kick off a new e-commerce site in China in September 2013. The online store will sell apparel, equipment and accessories on Chinese online marketplace Tmall, a unit of Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd., according to the NFL. Alibaba is China’s dominant e-commerce player and the No. 1 e-retail company in the Internet Retailer 2013 Asia 500. More than 5 million Chinese consumers are highly interested in the National Football League, and another 15 million have at least some interest in it, according to NFL China, the league’s fifth international office, which opened in Beijing in 2007. That fan base has been growing 35% year over year in the country, it says. In order to sell in China, the NFL will use technology and services from Export Now, which helps U.S.-based retailers to sell in the country through Chinese-language stores on the Tmall and Taobao e-marketplaces. The company provides market research and selling advice; distribution services; help 49 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china ‘NFL products are becoming increasingly popular around the world.’ with regulatory compliance, such as import tariffs, trademark registrations and taxes; e-commerce store creation; online marketing and advertising services; fulfillment and customer support; and transaction, inventory and information technology management. Export Now says 110 clients worldwide use its services. “Export Now offers the NFL the ability to accelerate our international development and expand our access to the Chinese consumer market,” says Richard Young, managing director of NFL China. “NFL products are becoming increasingly popular around the world. We are excited at the opportunity to increase the availability of our teams’ apparel, equipment and accessories and serve our fans in China.” 50 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART II western brands sell online in china An umbrella brand prepares for a torrent of traffic Totes-Isotoner in China by Don Davis S could benefit from competition between Alibaba’s Tmall and Amazon China. tarting early in 2012, U.S.-based Totes-Isotoner Corp. has been introducing Asian consumers to its umbrellas, shoes, bags, hats and other weather-related accessories. The effort could take a big step forward in coming months as the brand steps up its online marketing in China and takes advantage of developing competition between two e-retail giants: Alibaba Group, China’s dominant e-commerce player, and the China unit of Amazon.com Inc. Totes-Isotoner in spring 2013 launched its storefront on Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace, which is designed for larger brands, at Totes.Tmall.com. That reflected its strategy of promoting the Totes brand in Asia. Traffic is starting to increase as the U.S. company begins to market it more aggressively, and vice president of marketing Nancy Koglmeier says she’s excited about the prospects for selling online in China. “It’s clear to me that the way to put Totes on the map is through the Internet,” she says. Totes-Isotoner began ramping up its search marketing program in June 2013, and traffic to the Totes storefront on Tmall grew from a few hundred visitors a day to nearly 10,000 per day, says Joseph Ranieri, CEO of 101Elements Private Ltd., a Singapore-based company that is working with Totes-Isotoner to introduce its products to Asia. That could increase to hundreds of thousands 51 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china per day once Totes-Isotoner launches a full-scale online marketing campaign, Ranieri says. He says the company is holding off doing that for about a month while it stocks up on inventory in preparation for higher sales. Even as traffic has increased, the conversion rate also has gone up, from 1.8% to 2.5%, and the goal is to reach 3-3.5%, Ranieri says. Sales are still modest, but the aim is to sell $2-2.5 million this year on Tmall, Ranieri says. Tmall offers brands like Totes-Isotoner attractive home pages with room for large fashion shots, which fits with the Totes-Isotoner strategy of positioning itself to Asian consumers as a high-end, fashionable line of weather-related apparel and accessories, Ranieri says. Alibaba launched Tmall in 2008 to give brands a more appealing alternative to the bigger Taobao bazaar where 6.6 million merchants compete for the attention of some 500 million registered shoppers. There are some 70,000 storefronts on Tmall operated by about 50,000 merchants. Between Taobao and Tmall, Alibaba accounts for well over half of Chinese online retail sales by most accounts, and Alibaba is No. 1 in Internet Retailer’s Asia 500, which ranks e-commerce companies by their online sales in the region. Alibaba’s estimated $170 billion in 2012 online sales in China dwarfs all competitors, including Amazon, which booked $1 billion in online sales in China in 2012, by Internet Retailer’s estimates. But Amazon is launching a new initiative that Ranieri says will challenge Tmall and give Totes-Isotoner another opportunity to reach Chinese web shoppers. According to Ranieri, Totes-Isotoner will be one of the first companies in what Amazon is calling its “concept store,” which will offer participating retailers broad freedom to design brand-friendly storefronts—much as Tmall does in the premium brand section of its site. “Amazon and Tmall will be fighting it out for brand attention through these premium brand platforms,” Ranieri says. Amazon did not respond to a request for comment. While Amazon doesn’t sell nearly as much as Alibaba’s marketplaces, it attracts a lot of Chinese visitors: about 105 million monthly unique visitors in 2012 compared to 200 million for Alibaba’s sites, according to traffic data from comScore Inc. reported in Internet Retailer’s Asia 500 guide. Many Chinese consumers distrust Chinese companies and go to Amazon to check prices and to buy, Ranieri says. Amazon already sells Totes products on its site, taking 25-40% of the purchase price. When Totes sets up its own store on Amazon, the marketplace will take about 20-25%, Ranieri says. Tmall’s commission is 5% of the sale price, plus another half a percent for stores in the premium mall section, for a total of 5.5%. 52 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china In exchange, Tmall works hard to market brands like Totes to the 250 million consumers who shop on Tmall, Ranieri says. Tmall puts new brands on its home page to give them visibility and has invited Totes to participate in a monthly promotion in which Tmall features about 20 brands. In addition, Tmall will work with Totes to target its paid search spending, for example showing ads for Totes umbrellas to shoppers in southern China during the wet winter months and to those in northern China when the rainy season hits that region. “It’s hugely effective marketing spend,” says Ranieri, who previously worked with U.S. footwear manufacturer Crocs Inc. to introduce its brand in Asia. But Ranieri notes Western brands like TotesIsotoner and Crocs entering China must understand that the Chinese online shopper asks a lot of questions via telephone, e-mail, text message and live chat. “They really delve into what the product is,” he says. “How big is the opening of the arm, how long from neck to the end of the tail of the coat? Every measurement and material is asked about before or as they make this purchase decision.” There are also logistics and payment challenges that may take U.S. companies by surprise. Sameday delivery is expected in major cities, and many consumers pay in cash on delivery. It’s not uncommon, Ranieri says, for a consumer to order three pairs of shoes in different sizes, try them on while the courier waits, and send back two, paying in cash or with a credit card for the one pair she keeps. To help handle such issues as customer service, web site design and delivery, Ranieri and TotesIsotoner have engaged Export Now, a company that specializes in helping Western brands sell online in China, particularly on Tmall. Export Now created the Totes site on Tmall in 45 days, Ranieri says. “We were leveraging off an existing team that knew what they needed to do, that helped us prepare FAQs and put together a really robust site with lots of information to provide to the consumer,” he says. He says intermediaries like Export Now typically take a cut of 15-30% of online sales they help facilitate. The Totes stores on Tmall and Amazon are just part of Totes-Isotoner’s strategy for entering Asia. It also sells on Japan’s leading e-commerce marketplace, Rakuten Ichiba, No. 2 in the Asia 500, and has placed its products in some 750 bricks-and-mortar stores. Those stores are mostly in Japan, but also include key department stores and specialty shops in major Chinese cities like Beijing and Shanghai. The company has also entered South Korea, mostly via the web, as well as Australia, New Zealand and Singapore. The company planned to bring its products to the Philippines, Malaysia and Hong Kong in 2013, and to Taiwan in 2014, Ranieri said. Also part of the Asia strategy has been the creation of a regional e-commerce site, Totes. Asia, where visitors can find background on the company and its brands and locate stores selling Totes-Isotoner products, but not buy, at least for now. The site is currently in English and Japanese, with plans to add simplified Chinese for mainland China, Korean and traditional Chinese (the written language used in Taiwan and Hong Kong.) “While we don’t expect the kind of volume we will get from local partners like Rakuten and Tmall,” Ranieri says, “we think it will be important to give consumers confidence in the brand and to tell our brand story cleanly and clearly.” 53 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china China’s cross-border e-commerce tops $375 billion Mostly it’s foreign in 2012 by Frank Tong E businesses buying from Chinese firms, iResearch says. -commerce transactions between China and other countries increased 32% to 2.3 trillion yuan ($375.8 billion) in 2012 and accounted for 9.6% of China's total international trade, according to the “2012 China Cross Border e-commerce report” from iResearch, a research firm based in Beijing that specializes in online commerce. Business-to-business transactions—mostly overseas companies ordering online from Chinese firms—accounted for 95% of that cross-border trade, with Chinese consumers buying from foreign web sites most of the rest. “The market continues to develop at high speed and will reach 6.5 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) by 2016, representing 19% of China’s total import and export volume of China,” Xie Chun, the iResearch analyst who wrote the report, tells Internet Retailer. Xie adds, “The 2.3 trillion yuan transactions include B2B and B2C. B2C e-retailing is approximately 5% of total cross border e-commerce volume in 2012, which is 115 billion yuan ($18.8 billion).” More than 90% of cross-border e-commerce transactions in 2012 were exports to other countries from China. The U.S. purchased the most goods from China, 17.2% of the total, including both purchases by businesses and consumers. Europe was next at 16.3%, followed by Hong Kong (15.8%), 54 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART II western brands sell online in china South Asia (10%), Japan (7.4%), Korea (4.3%) and India (2.3%), according to the iResearch report. Popular categories for cross-border e-commerce trade include electronics, apparel and sporting goods, the report says. In terms of business-to-consumer cross-border e-commerce, much of it comes from Chinese customers ordering from overseas sites. According to iResearch, many of these shoppers are young adults living in cities with relatively high income. Their purchasing frequency is low, but their spending per purchase is high, the report says. Chinese consumers often purchase beauty, baby, electronics and luxury products from overseas online retailers. As more Chinese customers become accustomed to purchasing directly from overseas, iResearch predicts cross-border online imports will grow gradually. IResearch declined to make public its estimate of sales by Chinese retailers to online shoppers overseas. But some Chinese companies are starting to sell online to shoppers in other countries, including on sites operated by U.S.-based eBay Inc. In a November 2012 report eBay said more than 7,500 eBay sellers and PayPal merchants in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan were selling more than $100,000 a year to online shoppers in other countries, with 598 selling more than $1 million a year. Another example is Beijing-based LightInTheBox, which specializes in selling online to overseas consumers. The retailer reported selling $200 million online in 2012. The Chinese government has adopted new policies to motivate cross-border e-commerce in recent years. That includes building industrial parks that specialize in cross-boarder e-retailing in five cities on a trial basis. The government has also made it easier for Chinese e-retailers to receive money from consumers in other countries. 55 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE PART III: CHINESE E-RETAILERS LOOK ABROAD Direct from China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . China’s big online marketplaces will sell to overseas Chinese . . . . . China’s answer to PayPal expands into the U.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alibaba leads $200 million funding round in U.S. shipping service E-retailer LightInTheBox adds three languages to its e-commerce site Alibaba creates a U.S. e-commerce investment group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part I: E-Commerce in China Part II: Western brands sell online in China 58 63 65 68 70 71 Dear Retail, WILL YOUR PLATFORM SUPPORT ONGOING BUSINESS GROWTH? INNOVATION IS PART OF OUR DNA. Love, hybris ITH W E R U T UR FU O Y D L I UITE BU S E C R E M OUR COM CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART III chinese retailers look abroad Direct from China Chinese companies are selling online in the United States, undercutting prices in some categories and forcing domestic sellers to respond. by Don Davis O nline sales represent half the business for Peaches Boutique, up from about 2% a half-dozen years ago, says Jeff Surdej, the prom and party dress retailer’s director of operations. But there’s been a recent blip in that web growth. In fact, online sales fell 20% in 2012 for the retailer, which operates a single bricks-and-mortar store in Chicago along with PeachesBoutique.com. The reason for the decline? Stiff price competition that’s emerged in recent years from Chinese companies selling directly to U.S. consumers via such web sites as FabPartyDress.com, JJsHouse.com and FabulousPromDress.com. “It’s not just $10 off our price, it’s half off,” Surdej says. Many of the Chinese sites sell dresses for $100 to $250, while North American retailers like Peaches Boutique sell dresses from major brands typically for $400 to $600. The online competition from China emerged in the last four years, says Dusty Hill, president of Sherri Hill, a well-known prom dress brand. Early on, many of the Chinese sites flagrantly violated registered trademarks, falsely claiming to be selling dresses from brands like Sherri Hill and Jovani, and stealing photographs of their dresses from the web sites of the manufacturers or authorized retailers. Sites like that keep popping up, and Hill and others are having some success fighting them—Hill says he took down 10,000 web 58 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad pages last year by complaining to web-hosting firms, for example. Retailers in other categories can learn valuable lessons about fighting trademark infringement from those initiatives. However, some Chinese web retailers have moved on, Hill says, and now simply sell cheap dresses without violating trademarks. “I see that as fair competition,” Hill says. He cites LightInTheBox Holding Co. Ltd., a Beijingbased company that, Hill says, used to improperly claim to be selling Sherri Hill dresses, but no longer does. LightInTheBox and the other Chinese prom dress retailers did not respond to requests for comment. The bigger question ahead may be how North American retailers and brands compete with e-commerce sites selling low-cost goods directly from China, whose prolific factories produce a United Nations-estimated $2 trillion worth of goods each year. The growing number of international shipping and payment options is making it easier for Chinese companies to directly market and deliver to North American and European consumers, and they’re starting to do just that. A prime example is LightInTheBox, which in June 2013 raised $79 million in a U.S. stock offering. The retailer, which sells wedding and prom dresses 598 Number of eBay merchants from China, Hong Kong and Taiwan selling more than $1 million per year online outside their home markets. Source: eBay Inc. $9.0 billion Chinese retailers’ projected online sales to consumers in other countries by 2015. Source: iResearch Consulting Group as well as home and electronics items, reported 2012 sales of $200 million from the e-commerce sites it operates in 17 languages. Of those sales, just over half were to European consumers and 24%, or $48.0 million, were to North American shoppers. LightInTheBox said in its IPO filing that Chinese companies have strong prospects for selling online to consumers around the world. “They enjoy access to a large, low-cost export-oriented manufacturing base, global payment and logistics solutions and globally scalable online marketing,” the filing says. It also quotes a projection by Chinese market research firm iResearch Consulting Group that online direct-to-consumer sales of Chinese goods to consumers in other countries will grow from $1.7 billion in 2012 to $9.0 billion in 2015, a compound annual growth rate of 75.8%. FURTHER EVIDENCE OF THE EMERGENCE of Chinese e-retail competition comes from eBay Inc., which since 2007 has been helping Chinese companies sell on eBay’s marketplaces around the world and encouraging them to use its PayPal service to accept payments. In a November 2012 report eBay said more than 7,500 of these large eBay sellers and PayPal merchants in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan were selling more than $100,000 a 59 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad year to online shoppers in other countries, with 598 selling more than $1 million a year. Of those sales 77% were on eBay sites, which means 23% were off eBay, including on the Chinese companies’ own e-commerce sites. One example of a large seller that’s launched its own site is Gofavor.com, which sells inexpensive jewelry. While the company would not reveal its sales in dollars, co-founder Wu Hongbo says the company ships 60,000 to 70,000 parcels per year, mostly to Europe and North America, and is growing annually by 30%. Besides giving credit to PayPal for making it easy to accept international payments, Wu notes the expansion of shipping options for Chinese retailers. “International shipping has developed a lot in recent five years. Today we have many choices, and we can choose different logistics solutions for different markets,” he says in an e-mail response that eBay staffers translated into English. Among the services Gofavor.com and other eBay sellers use is ePacket, the product of a 2011 agreement between the U.S. Postal Service and Hongkong Post to facilitate shipments from Hong Kong merchants to U.S. consumers. The service includes order tracking. Fees vary by parcel weight. $5 Typical price to ship a half-pound parcel from Hong Kong to the United States using ePacket, a service of the U.S. Postal Service and Hongkong Post. Source: eBay Inc. A package of just over half a pound costs about $5 to ship to the United States, eBay says. Delivery to the United States takes seven to 10 days. STARTUPS ARE TAKING ADVANTAGE of these shipping and payment services to get into the business of selling online to consumers in the United States and elsewhere. One recent entrant is Bundshop LLC, whose e-commerce site sells furniture and home goods from Chinese designers, with an average selling price of $130, says co-founder Stephany Zoo. Zoo and her business partner, Diana Tsai, are U.S.-born Chinese-Americans fluent in Chinese who recently graduated from U.S. universities and moved to Shanghai, where their families are from, to launch Bundshop.com. It cost $64,000 to launch the business, Zoo says, including $14,000 to build the web site, which formally began selling in March following a few months of testing. Zoo says she uses nine delivery services, depending on destination and weight, and that the retailer’s packages arrive in the United States in seven to 10 days and cost $8 to $10 to ship. “For us to ship to the U.S. is about the same cost as shipping from California to New York,” she says. While it may be easier than ever for Chinese e-retailers to reach online consumers in North 60 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad America, their success is likely to be limited to certain categories, says Ken Calhoon, who worked in international operations in his seven years at eBay and consults on global e-commerce as managing partner of Calhoon Global Management Consulting LLC. For inexpensive, unbranded items consumers aren’t going to wait for delivery or pay much for shipping, and at the high end there aren’t many Chinese brands yet that U.S. consumers covet, he says. But when it comes to higher-priced, custom-made goods, like prom and wedding dresses, the Chinese may be able to compete, he says. “It’s in the segments where they can offer good value for the money, along with customization, that the Chinese can be most disruptive,” Calhoon says. Even here, he says, Chinese companies will only make a dent if they can get U.S. sizing and styling right, and deliver quality goods, he says. U.S. PROM DRESS MAKERS and retailers say many of the Chinese sites violate trademarks, and it’s these sites that they have targeted with an aggressive legal action and consumer education campaign. They say the rogue sites promise brand-name goods, then ship whatever they have on hand. ‘They used to sell to people like me. Now they realize they can sell direct to the consumer.’ SCOTT WEINER, CEO, DBA CASES The Gioconda Law Group PLLC, a law firm that represents Sherri Hill and such luxury brands as Burberry Group plc and Tiffany & Co., regularly makes test purchases to see what the Chinese sites actually ship. “They’re usually out of stock for anything that isn’t very basic, then they will try to talk you into something else or ship you something completely different from what you ordered,” says Joseph Gioconda, a partner in the firm. When Sherri Hill spots an unauthorized retailer advertising Sherri Hill dresses it seeks to take down the site, taking advantage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. The law enables the holder of a registered trademark like Sherri Hill to petition a web-hosting firm to close a site that’s violating its trademark. If the hosting firm does not comply, it becomes liable for legal damages, Hill says. Most web-hosting companies, even outside of the United States, act quickly to take down sites in response to such requests, Hill says. But then the trademark violators often launch another site. “One site down, one site up is what we’re dealing with,” Hill says. Rogue sites will copy images, even if the retailer has put its own name on the photo, 61 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad says Meytal Sutton, president of MissesDressy, a prom dress retailer that sells online and through a store in the New York area. To stop that abuse, the retailer blocks Internet users in China from viewing MissesDressy.com. Another U.S. prom dress retailer, DressGoddess.com posted a video on YouTube in spring 2013 showing the differences between a genuine and counterfeit gown from Tony Bowls, another major prom dress brand. Sherri Hill has taken several other steps to let consumers know which retailers are authorized to sell its dresses. One of the eight navigation tabs on SherriHill.com is Authenticity; clicking on it opens a page where a consumer can enter a domain name to see if it’s an authorized seller. The dress manufacturer added that feature to its site three years ago, Hill says. A year later, it created a seal that retailers can add to their own web sites. Clicking on the seal opens a window that says the retailer is an authorized Sherri Hill seller. Hill, who went to law school in Beijing, traveled to China in spring 2013 seeking a way to enforce China’s strict laws—at least on paper—against violating trademarks. He’s engaged a Hong Kong law firm to draft a copyright violation letter in Chinese that cites Chinese statues that he can send to hosting companies in China, asking that they shut down violators’ sites. “The Chinese are averse to legal threats and I expect good success as far as getting web sites down,” Hill says. “That doesn’t mean they won’t put another one up.” Hill says PayPal has responded quickly to complaints about trademark violators using PayPal to accept payments, and that Google Inc. typically will remove violators from natural search results. He also won a $5 million judgment in a trademark violation lawsuit last year and appeared on TV’s “Today” show in spring 2013 to warn young women shopping for a prom dress against web sites that falsely claim to offer brand-name goods. WHILE MAKING PROGRESS AGAINST TRADEMARK VIOLATORS, prom dress retailers still face the problem of how to compete with web sites offering gowns at low prices that aren’t violating trademarks. The retailers have responded in various ways. Peaches Boutique, for example, will match the online prices of U.S. retailers in its store, but not the prices of Chinese sites. DressGoddess.com, which is based in Pennsylvania, posts at the top of its site that it is a “100% authorized prom dress retailer located in the United States.” Some retailers simply cede the low end of the market to Chinese competitors. Scott Weiner used to source inexpensive mobile phone cases from China to sell on Amazon and eBay until he grew tired of competing with Chinese sellers offering cases for as little as $2. Eventually he began designing more upscale cases and selling them on his own site, dbaCases.com. “The Chinese have gotten smart about it,” says Weiner, CEO of DBA Cases Inc. “They used to sell to people like me or mall kiosks. Now they realize they can sell directly to the consumer.” Indeed they can, with the Internet making it possible for them to market to consumers everywhere, and globalization making international shipping and payment easier every year. There is no reason to think there will be less direct competition from Chinese e-retailers in the years ahead. 62 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART III chinese retailers look abroad China’s big online marketplaces will ship to overseas Alibaba, China’s dominant Chinese by Frank Tong A e-commerce company, will ship to South Asia. libaba Group says more than 500 million Chinese consumers have registered to shop on its two online marketplaces, Taobao and Tmall, which together account for three-quarters or more of online retail sales in China. Recognizing that Chinese living abroad also will want to shop on those marketplaces, Alibaba in July 2013 launched a new service that will help merchants ship to consumers in South Asia. Alibaba, No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500, says eight Chinese logistics companies are participating in the program. It will allow overseas customers to ship multiple orders on Taobao and Tmall to a location in China for consolidation and shipment to their overseas addresses. Alibaba says the service could save up to 50% shipping cost for international customers. Shipping a 1-kilogram (2.2-pound) parcel to Hong Kong will cost around 20 yuan ($3.30) and to Malaysia only 32 yuan ($5.2).The shipping time is from four days to six days. Merchants won’t need to make any changes to their systems, as they will be shipping parcels to addresses in China. Shoppers will be able to track orders through their accounts on Taobao or Tmall. (Taobao is Alibaba’s main marketplace where more than 6 million mostly Chinese merchants sell; Tmall is geared to larger brands.) 63 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad Taobao and Tmall are both Chinese-language sites, so this service mainly targets Chinese-speaking people outside of China. According to Panli, a company that helps overseas customers purchase from Chinese web sites, there are around 50 million Chinese-speaking people living outside China. The new service initially will ship only to consumers in South Asia, including Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia. Alibaba plans to expand the service, especially to other Asian countries, but has no current plans to offer a similar service for shipping to the U.S or Europe, an Alibaba spokeswoman says. “Alibaba will continue to evaluate the demand for this type of service by consumers in other markets and does not rule out rolling this feature out to other markets in the future," the spokeswoman told Internet Retailer. China’s Ministry of Commerce estimated that online retail sales in China grew 67.5% in 2012 to more than 1.3 trillion yuan ($209.7 billion). Alibaba says sales on Taobao and Tmall surpassed 1 trillion yuan, or 77% of the 2012 total for China, in just the first 11 months of 2012. Alibaba has not reported a full-year sales figure for 2012. 64 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II PART III Sponsored by PART III chinese retailers look abroad China’s answer to PayPal expands into More Chinese shoppers the U.S. by Don Davis T buy at iHerb.com now that it accepts Alipay. hree hundred million Chinese consumers shop online, and most of them have accounts with Alipay, the PayPal-like online payment service owned by Alibaba Group Ltd., operator of China’s top online marketplaces. In a move that could make it easier for Chinese shoppers to buy on U.S. e-commerce sites, Alipay is now promoting itself as a payment option for U.S. e-retailers. Among the U.S. online retailers that began accepting Alipay in 2013 is iHerb Inc., No. 204 in the Internet Retailer Top 500. In the first six months of accepting the Chinese payment method, iHerb’s sales on the cn.iHerb.com subdomain of its web site aimed at Chinese consumers increased 244.52% compared with the prior six-month period and 684.15% compared with the same period a year earlier, says John McCarthy, director of marketing at iHerb. “We’ve just been thrilled with the results, to the point that we’re looking at implementing other payment options, not just within China, but also in other countries,” McCarthy says. While not disclosing dollar sales, he says China, which previously was not one of its top 10 markets, now is in the top 10 “and moving up quickly.” Leading Alipay’s international expansion is Jingming Li, whose title is chief architect and acting president of the newly formed Alibaba International 65 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad Financial Service Unit. Based at Alibaba’s U.S. headquarters in Santa Clara, CA, Li sees a big opportunity in enabling Chinese shoppers to pay with a method that they use widely in China, not only to shop online but also to pay utility and other bills offline in China. Li notes that China’s increasingly affluent middle- and upper-class consumers made 83 million trips abroad last year and spent $100 billion while traveling. In addition, he says, they spent 20 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) buying directly from e-commerce sites outside of China. They’re especially interested in buying baby products, apparel and luxury goods. They would buy more, Alibaba reasons, if they could pay with the Alipay accounts they use in China. “That’s where our international focus will be, helping our members continue to use their Alipay accounts outside of China,” he says. In all, there are more than 550 million registered users of Alipay, which Chinese consumers use inside China for such offline transactions as paying utility bills as well as for buying at e-commerce sites, Alibaba says. Alibaba, operator of the Taobao ‘If a merchant is willing to use Alipay as a form of payment it gives a lot more trust and confidence to the consumer.’ and Tmall marketplaces that account for well over half of online retail sales in China, is No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500 guide. Without disclosing the total number of U.S. sites accepting Alipay, Li says there are about 10 web sites in the U.S. that already are generating more than 100 Alipay transactions per day. They include the e-commerce sites of retailers Gap Inc. Direct, No. 19 in the 2013 Top 500, and Forever 21, No. 353; travel site Travelzoo; web domain registrar GoDaddy and peerTransfer, which handles tuition payments for international students. International web sites can boost sales by accepting Alipay because many Chinese consumers don’t have credit cards from Western brands like Visa and MasterCard, Li says. Plus, he says, “They are in the habit of using Alipay. If a merchant is willing to use Alipay as a form of payment it gives a lot more trust and confidence to the consumer who may be purchasing an airline ticket from a foreign carrier for the first time.” Li would not disclose Alipay’s fees, but says they are lower than the fees charged by major credit card brands like MasterCard and Visa. Chinese 66 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad consumers typically fund their Alipay accounts from their bank accounts, which eliminates much of the risk that credit card issuers take on when they extend credit to cardholders. McCarthy of iHerb says the fees he pays are comparable to what he pays for other payment methods, and that he views the fees as “attractive.” For iHerb, adding Alipay is the latest step in a campaign to boost sales to Chinese consumers that began in 2010 when the e-retailer began accepting orders from China. In late 2012, iHerb introduced versions of its e-commerce site tailored to consumers coming from nine countries in addition to the U.S. If a shopper chooses China, for example, she is directed to the cn.iHerb.com subdomain, where the navigation guides and checkout prompts are in Chinese, along with some product information. (With 35,000 SKUs, iHerb has not yet been able to translate all its products into Chinese, McCarthy says.) At checkout, Alipay is one of the payment options. The e-retailer also operates an informational site in China, iHerb.cn, which is completely in Chinese. The site informs visitors what they can find on the iHerb e-commerce site, including screen shots that show how they can place an order. There is also a blog in Chinese, and visitors can text questions that native Chinese speakers respond to. IHerb is also promoting itself in China via social networks. It has posted videos to Youku, China’s equivalent of YouTube, and seen Chinese fans post 27 videos to the site about iHerb. The e-retailer also alerted Chinese consumers to its new Chinese-language e-commerce site early in 2013 by posting to Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter. “That had a terrific impact,” McCarthy says. “Within 24 hours we saw a spike in traffic.” 67 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad Alibaba leads $200 million funding round in U.S. shipping service by Thad Rueter S Alibaba invests in ShopRunner as eBay sells its remaining stake. hopRunner, the two-day delivery service that competes with Amazon.com Inc.’s Prime, raised at least $200 million in October 2013 in a funding round led by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., China’s leading e-commerce company. American Express Co. also took part in the funding round, although ShopRunner CEO Scott Thompson would not detail the specific amounts either company contributed. Meanwhile eBay Inc., an Alibaba competitor as a web marketplace operator in global markets, sold its ShopRunner stake. The company is also expanding its own eBay Now same-day delivery service. ShopRunner is owned by Kynetic LLC, a company launched by Michael Rubin, the founder of e-commerce technology provider GSI Commerce, which developed ShopRunner. For $79 a year—the same price as Prime—ShopRunner members receive two-day shipping on orders from ShopRunner participating merchants, which include Toys ‘R’ Us Inc. (No. 30 in the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide), Blue Nile Inc. (No. 74) and eBags Inc. (No. 149). ShopRunner has more than 80 participating retailers and at least 1 million members, Thompson told Internet Retailer. He said ShopRunner would have about 100 retailers by the end of 2013; The Neiman-Marcus Group 68 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad Inc. (No. 39) is expected to be one of those new retailers. ShopRunner typically takes a fee of 2% to 5% on orders made by its members. The new funding for ShopRunner will go toward such areas as hiring more sales employees and engineers, including those focused on mobile, Thompson says. “Alibaba and American Express recognize ShopRunner as a disruptive model which will have a significant role in U.S. e-commerce market,” Thompson says. “This funding will help accelerate ShopRunner’s growth and enable us to continue to build great online shopping experiences for our members and deliver value for our rapidly growing retailer network. ShopRunner is in a unique position to shape the future of online shopping.” Alibaba made the investment as it moves toward an initial public offering in the United States. Alibaba operates China’s dominant online retail marketplaces, Taobao and Tmall, and is No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500. Alibaba earlier in 2013 led a $50 million investment round in U.S.-based mobile app search engine Quixey. Thompson would not talk about the reasons behind Alibaba’s investment or how much Alibaba put in for this funding round. Alibaba was not immediately available for comment. The ShopRunner investment comes as other e-commerce operators test and expand their sameday delivery efforts. In September 2013, for instance, Google Inc. expanded its Google Shopping Express service and launched a mobile app for the same-day delivery service. Retailers participating in Google Shopping Express include Staples Inc., No. 2 in the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide; Office Depot Scott Thompson Inc., No. 7; Target Corp., No. 18; Toys ‘R’ Us Inc., No. 30; and Walgreen Co., No. 36. The investment for ShopRunner reportedly values the company at about $600 million. “It’s great for ShopRunner that they have such a high valuation,” says Sucharita Mulpuru-Kodali, an e-commerce analyst for Forrester Research Inc. “Their biggest challenge is that it’s a for-profit business model and Amazon Prime, by my estimates, is a money-losing model.” Amazon in the second quarter of 2013 reported that spending on fulfillment increased 35.5% to $1.837 billion from $1.356 billion. According to an estimate earlier this year from private equity firm Robert W. Baird & Co., Amazon.com has made at least 19 million items eligible for Prime, up 10% from the first quarter of 2012. Besides those Primeeligible items—Baird estimates that 10% of products sold on Amazon qualify for Prime—Prime members have access to at least 25,000 streamed TV and film titles. Estimates have put the number of Prime members at up to 10 million. 69 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad E-retailer LightInTheBox adds three languages to its e-commerce site by Kevin Woodward R The move supports the retailer’s expansion in Southeast Asia etailer LightInTheBox Holding Co. Ltd. has added language support for Bahasa Malaysia, Bahasa Indonesia and Thai to its e-commerce site, a move that supports its expansion into Southeast Asia, LightInTheBox announced in September 2013. The China-based retailer says customers in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand now have easier access to its web site. “The population covered by our three new languages is greater than 100 million people, representing a strong base of potential customers,” says Alan Gou, LightInTheBox chairman and CEO. “As this market rapidly grows in both number of internet users and online consumers, it is only natural to offer these potential customers a more attractive and localized e-commerce experience.” LightInTheBox now makes its e-commerce site available in 27 languages, with 10 added in 2013. While based in China, the retailer sells mainly outside of that country, with more than half of its 2012 sales going to consumers in Europe. LightInTheBox is No. 177 in the Internet Retailer Europe 500 guide. 70 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad Alibaba creates a U.S. e-commerce investment China’s leading group by Amy Dusto C e-commerce operator takes stakes in several U.S. e-retail firms. hina’s leading e-commerce company, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., has established a U.S. investment group to back entrepreneurs working on e-commerce and emerging technologies, it announced in October 2013 In previous months, Alibaba had financed three U.S. web businesses, including sports merchandise seller Fanatics, membership-based free two-day shipping provider (and Amazon Prime competitor) ShopRunner and mobile search technology company Quixey. “Alibaba is taking the commerce war to the U.S. front in its global battle against Amazon,” says R. “Ray” Wang, principal analyst and CEO at business advisory firm Constellation Research. “The goal is to tap into the innovation of the U.S. tech scenes in New York and Silicon Valley.” Michael Zeisser took charge of Alibaba’s new San Francisco-based team as chairman of U.S. investments. Zeisser spent the last decade at Liberty Media Corp., where he held executive positions in digital media and e-commerce. He has also, according to his LinkedIn profile, served as a chairman, advisor or board member for more than a dozen Internet companies, including Shutterfly Inc., No. 14 in the 2013 Top 500 Guide; XO Group Inc., No. 477; and Backcountry.com and Provide Commerce, both units of No. 5, Liberty Interactive Corp. along with Liberty’s primary e-commerce properties, QVC and ProFlowers. 71 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE CONTENTS PART I PART II Sponsored by PART III PART III chinese retailers look abroad “Alibaba is run by entrepreneurs, and we believe in supporting entrepreneurs with great vision and a strong sense of mission for their companies,” says Joe Tsai, executive vice chairman of Alibaba and head of Alibaba’s strategic investments. “We are extremely excited to have someone of Michael’s caliber and experience to lead our investment efforts in the U.S.” Next up for Alibaba: an IPO, possibly on a U.S. exchange. Alibaba, which operates China’s dominant online retail marketplaces Taobao and Tmall and is No. 1 in the Internet Retailer Asia 500, has said it intends to go public in the near future. Having failed to get approval from Hong Kong regulators for an ownership structure that would keep management in control of the company, Alibaba may conduct its initial public offering on a stock exchange in the United States. 72 • CHINA: THE EMERGING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE POWERHOUSE