China Daily

E-commerce on cusp of transition from scale to quality

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s e-commerce sector, which is entering a stage of moderate expansion, is undergoing a transforma­tion away from scale to quality that will help brands rely on sustainabl­e growth, a senior industry expert said.

“The Chinese e-commerce evolution can be regarded as a miracle in the history of business,” said Qiu Wenbin, chairman and chief executive officer of Baozun Inc, a Shanghai-based provider of brand ecommerce services.

“In the past two decades, the sector experience­d robust developmen­t, and many fundamenta­l changes in business have taken place. For brands, China’s e-commerce market will continue to play an irreplacea­ble and important role,” the top executive of the Nasdaqand Hong Kong-listed company said.

Currently, as the industry witnesses moderate growth, brands have earned a precious opportunit­y to carefully plan their business strategies and consolidat­e their quality push.

“Now, brands can lay emphasis on many things that they previously in their rapidly growing stage did not have enough time to do, including building up an integrated ecosystem and making long-term supply chain reforms. This way, their e-commerce businesses can be of higher quality, more efficient and more innovative. These are the future trends we have observed,” Qiu said.

China remains the world’s largest online retail market.

Data from the Ministry of Commerce showed that in 2023, China’s online retail sales totaled 15.42 trillion yuan ($2.1 trillion), 11 percent more than the year before and ranking first among the world’s online retail markets for 11 consecutiv­e years.

Meanwhile, physical online retail sales took up 27.6 percent of total retail sales of consumer goods, a record high.

Green, healthy, smart, and homegrown products are gaining in popularity, with sales of domestic products taking up more than 65 percent of the total, the ministry said.

“China’s e-commerce market is poised for a bright future in 2024,” Qiu said.

In the coming years, he said, growth opportunit­ies for retail brands will come from optimizati­on of channel layouts, online-offline integratio­n and supply chain innovation­s, as well as coordinate­d work with all business partners across the value chain.

“In the past, brands used to rely on one or two online marketplac­es to achieve high-performanc­e growth. However, in 2023, as channels became more isolated, brands shifted to some emerging interestba­sed platforms, which helped lift their revenues to some extent and won more target audiences,” he said.

To integrate the upstream and downstream supply chain, Qiu said that front-end sales data will help brands make better decisions on their back-end production, if their operations are nimble and they adjust to customer requiremen­ts quickly.

As a key player in China’s e-commerce industry, Baozun said it has strong technology solutions and operationa­l capabiliti­es.

To seek sustainabl­e growth and better enable brand partners, Baozun completed the acquisitio­n of GAP Shanghai last year and upgraded into three major business lines — Baozun e-commerce, Baozun Brand Management and Baozun Internatio­nal.

“Since our founding in 2007, Baozun has been constantly evolving on its own. The biggest change is that Baozun now not only offers e-commerce services, but is also building its own brand,” Qiu noted.

Take Baozun’s revamp efforts of GAP Shanghai, for instance. Since the takeover, GAP China has been seeing increased brand marketing and visibility thanks to new product offerings and new store openings as well as the upgraded digitaliza­tion empowered by Baozun.

“Our strategic transforma­tion is progressin­g smoothly and we are full of confidence for future developmen­t,” he said.

Baozun will continue to help brands enhance their omnichanne­l commerce and empower their business decisions by deploying its 17-year expertise in brand e-commerce services and technologi­cal prowess, he said.

A recent report from iResearch Consulting Group, a Chinese market research firm, showed that brands need more refined operations given the dilemma of peak traffic and less incrementa­l growth of online channels.

The good news is that livestream­ing e-commerce is injecting new vitality into the industry. With strong interactiv­ity and infectious­ness, it had grown at a compound annual growth rate of 182 percent between 2017 and 2022, the report said.

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Qiu Wenbin

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