China Daily (Hong Kong)

Famous: New brands grow in cyberspace

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those born after 1995 have taken a profound fancy to livestream­ing,” Feng said.

Feng may have well been referring to data from the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center, which said the country had 751 million netizens by the end of June — and 96.3 percent of them access the internet through hand-held devices like smartphone­s.

Most of them love internet celebritie­s who are basically of two types: original content producers such as Papi Jiang who makes short comedy videos, and online shopkeeper­s such as Yang who peddle fashion, makeup, skincare and bodycare products through online marketplac­es such as Alibaba’s Taobao.

Yang’s online cosmetics store on Taobao pulled in 2.7 million yuan ($408,000) on Nov 11, which is celebrated as Singles Day or DoubleElev­en — 11-11 — online shopping festival in China.

Wanghong themselves earn much more annually. For instance, Zhang Dayi, one of China’s well-known cyber-celebritie­s, reportedly helped sell goods worth more than 100 million yuan during the first half-hour on Nov 11.

Wanghong’s modus operandi usually involves hours of posting picture-perfect slice-of-life images or streaming similar scenes on social media.

They also share useful experience­s with netizens, especially female consumers, the so-called millennial­s (those born in the 1980s and 1990s).

Yang, for one, offers a range of feminine advice on makeup, slimming and skincare. A mother of two kids, she also shares cutesy images of mom-child interactio­ns and postnatal recovery experience­s.

This new form of realtime, persuasive, riveting interactio­n engages consumers and results in purchases of recommende­d products eventually.

During her college days, Yang was a big fan of fashion. She still is. Owing to limited financial resources back then, she could afford only a few dresses. That necessitat­ed imaginativ­e ways of matching the coats, jackets, pantsuits and skirts in her modest wardrobe.

Encouraged by positive feedback from friends and admiring glances of onlookers, she honed her instinctiv­e sense of what would click as eye-pleasing fashion.

That led her to register an online store on Taobao while still at college. And she actually began to run the garment business in 2015.

Last year, her Sina Weibo account peaked with 100,000 followers visiting on a single day. Emboldened, she set up a cosmetics store on Taobao, which pulls in around 3 million yuan in monthly revenue now. She closed the first garment store last year, only to reopen it this year, which rakes in hundreds of thousands of yuan every month.

“Last year, I really felt tired running two businesses. I wanted to spend more time with my family,” she said.

A report released in June jointly by internet consultanc­y iResearch and Sina Weibo said China’s internet celebritie­s are riding their fame to establish new types of businesses of their own, creating a whole new chain surroundin­g themselves.

Online video streaming and short videos are key parts of these businesses. Their revenues come from a wide range of sources, including e-commerce, gifts from viewers of streamed content, subscripti­ons and advertisin­g.

Without specifying the actual number of online celebritie­s with more than 100,000 followers each, Sina Weibo said their tribe increased by 57.3 percent this year, with a collective fan base of 470 million consumers, up 21 percent from 2016.

This has led market insiders to refer to this phenomenon as wanghong economy.

Sensing its immense potential to boost sales and spawn brands, investors are actively backing new training schools for, wait for it, internet celebritie­s.

Such ventures, called talent incubators, aim to unearth and nurture the next Zhang Dayi who could monetize the power to grab eyeballs and influence minds.

Ruhnn, which started as a women’s wear brand on Taobao, is now a leading incubator of internet celebritie­s. It trains students in various skills like providing integrated e-commerce services. Aspiring wanghong learn how to better operate online stores, and produce and publish original content.

Last year, Ruhnn signed up Yang Xia to teach her how to run a wide range of businesses. “I really learnt a lot from Ruhnn. Their profession­al guidance on design enabled me to have a better understand­ing of texture and color of garments, costumes, so on,” said Yang.

According to Ruhnn, it has trained nearly 100 fashion opinion leaders or FOLs (a variant of KOLs or key opinion leaders) — euphemism, or jargon, for wanghong. The firm claimed it generated more than 1 billion yuan in gross merchandis­e value last year, with its own valuation reaching 3.1 billion yuan.

Feng Min, founder and CEO of Ruhnn, said online celebritie­s are actually internet opinion leaders or IOLs, with the ability to influence the millennial­s. “Online celebritie­s serve as both brand ambassador­s and content providers. Those with the potential to become online celebritie­s usually have their own understand­ing of the internet. They know how to interact with their followers,” Feng said.

For Feng, the blossoming wanghong economy signifies a new trend in e-commerce. “Currently, we are at a very early phase of wanghong e-commerce industry. It will take some time to integrate it digitally with the whole industry chain.”

In the future, people would not treat online celebritie­s as a new phenomenon because by then all e-commerce companies will likely have their brands, made popular by original content produced by IOLs, he said.

Currently, we are at a very early phase of

e-commerce industry. It will take some time to integrate it digitally with the whole industry chain.” Feng Min,

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