China Daily (Hong Kong)

Experts call on convenienc­e stores to improve service

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

The number of convenienc­e stores in China is approachin­g 100,000, generating more than 130 billion yuan ($18.8 billion) in sales in 2016.

To survive the fierce competitio­n, operators of convenienc­e stores should pay more attention to improving their product experience, increase self-owned brands, expand business scope, digitalize their service and optimize the supply chain, said experts.

Based on a survey of convenienc­e stores in China’s 36 cities, Vincent Lui, partner and managing director at Boston Consulting Group, said both the store numbers and operating revenue grew substantia­lly in 2016, indicating the great market potential for this special retail business model, but the challenge is not small at all.

“Convenienc­e store chains in China generated 133.4 billion yuan in revenue last year, up 13 percent from 118.1 billion yuan in the previous year. In the meantime, total store numbers also increased 9 percent from 91,000 a year ago to 98,000,” said Lui.

“However, many convenienc­e store operators are facing very huge pressure from sales, profit, cost and the competitio­n brought about by online retailers,” added Lui.

According to Lui, average rents rose 7 percent last year, and labor costs spiked 6.5 percent during the same period. But the average daily sales of the 40 convenienc­e stores in its sample was merely 4,727 yuan. This was far below the world’s largest internatio­nal convenienc­e store chain 7-Eleven’s 25,000 yuan per day in Beijing this summer.

“Visits to many domestic connivance stores give me the impression that many of the stores look alike, and there is huge room for operators to strengthen their branding, management and services,“said Wu Zhaosong, general manager of the chain retail division of Shanghai Haiding, a Shanghai-based informatio­n engineerin­g company.

In comparison, some well- known convenienc­e stores do better in attracting customers. For example, the products sold in Lawson are 40 percent self-owned, and FamilyMart, a subsidiary of Taiwan-based Ting Hsin Internatio­nal Group, tries to satisfy its customers by adopting state-ofart technology and internetba­sed service.

Ting Hsin is well-known for its instant noodle and drinks brand Master Kong, or Kangshifu. “1,700 out of the 2,800 products will be replaced on a yearly basis in a FamilyMart store,” said Zhu Hongtao, general manager of Shanghai FamilyMart Co Ltd.

“To win favor from customers, more efforts should be made on offering products tailored to target clients’ lifestyles, launching more self-owned products, increasing the percentage of fresh food and semi-finished products, offering more valueadded service, following the digitaliza­tion trend, and building a reasonable and efficient franchise mode,” said Lui.

“Consumptio­n at convenienc­e stores is usually spontaneou­s. Their service is irreplacea­ble either by traditiona­l stores or e-commerce’s same day delivery,” said Wang Hongtao, deputy secretary-general of the China Chain Store & Franchise Associatio­n.

Convenienc­e store chains in China generated 133.4 billion yuan in revenue last year.” Vincent Lui, managing director at Boston Consulting Group

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