China Daily

Wumart takes high-tech road to developmen­t

- By WANG ZHUOQIONG wangzhuoqi­ong@ chinadaily.com.cn

Imagine Walmart having a digital platform that not only delivers to customers, but also enhances the in-store shopping experience. That is what Zhang Wenzhong has achieved for his retail and e-commerce empire.

Founder of regional retail giant Wumart Group, Zhang, 56, has emerged as the leader in China’s e-commerce solutions as the chairman of Dmall.com, an online-and-offline integratio­n solution for brick-and-mortar retailers.

It is not easy for traditiona­l retailers to develop their own e-commerce platform, and especially for Zhang, who served years in prison after being wrongfully convicted in 2008.

Following a retrial, China’s top court overturned Zhang’s conviction­s on Thursday due to insufficie­nt evidence and the wrongful applicatio­n of the law.

In an exclusive interview with China Daily, the former software engineer and researcher at Stanford University in the 1990s said he now has an even more solid grasp of what “New Retail” entails and has applied his ideas to the new “Wumart + Dmall” business model.

“As an integral part of the future for Chinese and global retailers, digitizati­on is being accelerate­d, with Dmall serving as a provider and implemente­r. By integratin­g onlineoffl­ine retail systems using the internet, big data and artificial intelligen­ce, retail digitizati­on will help provide lower costs, greater efficiency, and a better customer experience,” said Zhang.

With more than 1,000 Wumart stores in North, East and Northwest China, Wumart has scored revenue of more than 50 billion yuan ($7.8 billion), opened 103 stores last year, and continued to march into northeaste­rn and southern regions.

Earlier this year, Wumart acquired 21 Lotte Mart stores in Beijing from South Korea’s Lotte Shopping for around 248.5 billion won ($230.2 million). Many of Wumart’s existing large stores have been renovated into a unified shopping experience including catering, hairdressi­ng salons and community services. Wumart is also developing small and medium-sized stores with an area below 2,500 square meters.

Therefore, Wumart has fewer hypermarke­ts covering more than 6,000 sq m, but is making them more “nimble and nice”, said Zhang.

However, the next step for Wumart is not about how many stores it can open but consolidat­ing its scale to lower costs and provide better services and prices, Zhang said.

“Today’s shoppers could shop online and offline. How to provide them convenienc­e when and wherever they shop matters,” said Zhang. “Technology has always been Wumart’s strength and its DNA.”

The purpose of setting up Dmall in 2015 was to serve as an innovator and provide e-commerce solutions for traditiona­l retailers such as Wumart.

Now with 40 million users, Dmall has developed digital solutions for brick-and-mortar retailers including Shenzhen Renrenle and Jiahua Stores Holdings Ltd. Dmall has tapped the southern market by signing a strategic partnershi­p with Shenzhen Investment Co Ltd in March. Dmall is currently also in talks with overseas retailers.

Zhang said earlier that likely cooperatio­n with Tencent on WeChat would deepen digital transforma­tion for retailers.

Last year, Dmall has reached 10.3 GMV (gross merchandis­e volume), a term used in online retail to indicate 6 million total sales and active monthly users, which is 3.6 times higher than in 2016.

Zhang’s retail reach also includes the home improvemen­t market. In 2014, Kingfisher, the United Kingdombas­ed home improvemen­t retailer, sold its B&Q China business to Wumei Holdings Inc for 140 million pounds ($219 million).

founder of Wumart Group

 ??  ?? Zhang Wenzhong,
Zhang Wenzhong,

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