The Star Malaysia

Prada playing catch-up online in China

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AT Prada’s Spring/Summer 2018 show in Milan last week in a warehouse papered with giant pop-art comic strips, one name in the coveted front row stood out: Tao Liang, otherwise known as Chinese blogger “Mr Bags”.

His presence alongside Vogue’s Anna Wintour and Italian influencer Chiara Ferragni is a sign of Prada’s efforts to turn around its business with a focus on the digital sphere – where it has lost ground to rivals including Gucci.

And nowhere is a revival more critical than in China, which accounts for close to a third of all global luxury sales.

Crucially, Chinese luxury buyers tend to be younger than elsewhere, and online influencer­s like Mr Bags carry real clout.

Prada, whose profits and sales have been sliding, is playing catchup with rivals like Louis Vuitton, Fendi and even the more affordable luxury brands like Coach. All have raced ahead, forging tie-ups with bloggers and online stars who draw in Asia’s smartphone-obsessed youth.

While online influencer­s are a force globally, in China, bloggers like Mr Bags, “Gogoboi” or “FreshBoy” can have tens of millions of followers, and an outsized say on shopping trends.

“The key opinion leaders (KOLs) in China are very powerful. They can promote a product to an extent that no counterpar­ts in Europe can match,” said Chinese fashion blogger Yang Dong, who has called Prada the “depressed teenager” of luxury brands.

Yang said Prada’s issue in the market was not its design.

“When other brands roll out new products, they first come to China weeks in advance and get Internet celebritie­s and KOLs to lead the trend,” he said.

“If Prada doesn’t put its marketing focus on China, it will lose more ground.”

Prada, which appointed a new global digital director, Chiara Tosato, in March, is starting to catch on.

Tosato said earlier the fashion house would look to drive online sales globally – a change from 2014, when CEO Patrizio Bertelli said it would focus on physical stores.

Prada will this year complete the roll-out of its e-commerce platform in key markets including China, South Korea, Japan, Australia and Russia. It’s already active in Europe and the United States.

Prada declined to comment for this article.

To be sure, an online presence won’t solve other issues like too many shops, and customers can feel some tie-ups make the brand less aspiration­al. Online buyers can also be more fickle.

Yet Prada’s modest online sales target, including sales through e-tailer partners, is for 5% of its total by end-2018.

For smaller, luxury outerwear maker Moncler, it’s 6% this year – meaning it’s already reaping the data dividends that come with online sales.

The power of China’s online stars means they are impossible to ignore in a country where hundreds of millions of people use microblogs such as Weibo.

Top fashion blogger Gogoboi has more than seven million followers there. Mr Bags has a more modest three million, but is seen as a leading influencer when it comes to accessorie­s.

“When a new bag comes out, probably it doesn’t get much attention. But when a fashion blogger or celebrity carries it, it’s suddenly out of stock,” said Yang Lei, a Chinese online shopping agent selling luxury goods back to China.

And Prada needs that support. Even as its China sales recovered slightly in the first half of this year, to US$359mil (RM1.5bil), Prada’s global profits fell 18%, after a 2016 bottom line that was its lowest since its 2011 initial public offering.

Gucci, meanwhile, has seen its sales jump.

Of course, slow-to-digital was not Prada’s only issue. It also opened more stores than its mega-brand rivals and failed to spot the power of high-margin casualwear.

A Reuters analysis of Weibo shows Prada far behind Coach, Gucci and Louis Vuitton in terms of celebrity tie-ups and endorsemen­ts online. The brand has 309,000 followers on the popular platform – around a tenth of what Coach can boast.

Unlike some rivals, Prada has steered clear of creating limited edition capsule collection­s in collaborat­ion with influencer­s.

In contrast, a young, fringe Chinese rap group said they were in talks with Coach over a tie-up – a sign that even potential future stars are being tapped.

“The power of digital is a critical part of our global transforma­tion plan ... we are always seeking innovative ways to leverage social platforms,” a Coach spokesman said, adding that partnering with Chinese actress Tiffany Tang and singer Timmy Xu “is one way we are working with KOLs to build emotional bonds with our consumers”.

Prada is finally following, albeit cautiously.

“Prada works with influencer­s in different regions including Asia, but will push into this more and increase collaborat­ions,” a person familiar with its plans said, noting Prada is “not obsessed” with collaborat­ion and doesn’t want to dilute its brand.

Alongside Mr Bags in Milan last week, Prada also hosted Filipino fashion blogger “BryanBoy”, Hong Kong actress Tina Leung, South Korean model Irene Kim and Singaporea­n designer Yoyo Cao.

Prada has also done pop-up stores focused on Asia, aiming at millennial shoppers.

That push could help reach consumers like Xu Dan, a 28-year-old business developmen­t worker in Beijing, who says she reads all of Mr Bags’ posts: “I trust these bloggers’ sensitivit­y to fashion.”

Not everyone will be easy to move.

Akane Kishi, a 29-year-old human resources worker shopping in Tokyo, said Prada had just not kept up.

“I often see Fendi on Instagram and think I want to buy that one, in that colour,” she said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Prada is making an effort to turn around its business with a focus on the digital sphere. — Bloomberg Moving with the times:
Prada is making an effort to turn around its business with a focus on the digital sphere. — Bloomberg Moving with the times:

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