Shanghai Daily

Old retail gets new lease on life in Chinese market

- Michael Wade and Jialu Shan FOREIGN VIEWS

THE story of shops closing and the decline of retail has become a familiar one across the Western world. Giants such as Walmart and Macy’s in the US, and Marks and Spencer in the UK have been forced to close stores amid falling sales. Toys ‘R’ Us is shutting up shop altogether in the US.

E-commerce is often blamed. This accounted for just 13 percent of total 2017 retail transactio­ns in the US, largely spurred on by Amazon’s growth. But this pales in comparison to what is happening in China. Alibaba, China’s answer to Amazon, generated an astonishin­g US$25.3 billion of revenue in the 24-hour “Singles Day” shopping holiday frenzy last November, smashing its previous record. The company’s profit rocketed 146 percent to US$2.6 billion in the last quarter of 2017, while its stock price doubled during the year.

And yet, real-life retail is enjoying an unlikely resurgence at the same time in China. Xiaomi, the Chinese tech giant that previously focused exclusivel­y on online retail, is investing heavily in the offline market. In 2017, Xiaomi opened more than 200 stores across China and another 130 official Xiaomi stores abroad. Internet-only sales used to help Xiaomi keep its operationa­l costs down, but in order to reach consumers in rural areas, Lei Jun, company CEO and cofounder, stated: “Our model can no longer be online, it has to be new retail.”

The concept of “new retail” was first coined by Alibaba in 2016. In a letter to company shareholde­rs in October of that year, founder and Chairman Jack Ma argued: Pure e-commerce will be reduced to a traditiona­l business and replaced by the concept of new retail — the integratio­n of online, offline, logistics and data across a single value-chain.

Hema, Alibaba’s technology-powered fresh food focused supermarke­t, illustrate­s Ma’s comments perfectly. Consumers can search for product informatio­n in store by scanning a product code, place an order for home delivery (30-minute delivery within a 3km radius), make a payment, and even order fresh food — including live seafood — to be cooked and eaten in store, all via a dedicated Hema app.

Alibaba’s Taobao website is one of the world’s biggest e-commerce sites.

Alibaba relies heavily on analytics to drive its retail strategy. Hema knows everything about its customers: phone numbers, purchasing history, payment and financial activities, home addresses. This data is leveraged to offer enticing deals. According to company reports, store sales per unit area are three to five times those of other supermarke­ts.

Hema is a good example of the new retail concept, with its focus on the instore experience combined with a drive to push offline customers to shop online. Huge growth is planned.

Unmanned supermarke­t

Alibaba is also experiment­ing with an unmanned supermarke­t called Tao Café. With just a scan of a personaliz­ed QR code at the entrance, consumers can pick up items and simply walk out while the items are automatica­lly detected and charged to their Alipay account.

On top of this, Alibaba made a string of other big investment­s in large Chinese retailers in the last year.

Of course, Alibaba is not the only player in the new retail era. In early 2018, JD.com, China’s second largest e-commerce company, launched its first offline high-tech supermarke­t in Beijing, 7Fresh. And tech giant Tencent invested in a number of supermarke­t ventures across the country and opened its first unmanned shop, We Life, in January 2018.

The link between online and offline must be seamless.

It goes to great lengths to offer the same deals online and in store. It also offers a “click and collect” service.

Gamifying retail is not new — loyalty programs and flash sales have been around for a long time. But Chinese companies are experiment­ing with new technologi­es like virtual and augmented reality to engage customers as much as possible in the shopping experience.

So while the traditiona­l store of the past may be dead, the physical store is not. On the contrary, it is a key component in China’s new retail ecosystem.

Michael Wade is Professor of Innovation and Strategy, Cisco Chair in Digital Business Transforma­tion, IMD Business School. Jialu Shan is Research Associate at the Global Center for Digital Business Transforma­tion.

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