This page is an automated translation
Please see this page for original transcription.

Luxuxmarken in China: Teil IV

19. März 2008 durch China Geschäft Erfolg-Geschichten

Luxuxmarken in China, Teil IVDer Luxus, der in China stellt retailing ist offenbar, enorme Gelegenheiten, aber auch Gefahren und Herausforderungen dar. Zusätzlich zur Erhöhung der Konkurrenz, wie unter das Auftauchen Märkten allgemein, betreffen die bedeutendsten und die relevanten der Herausforderungen für Luxuxmarken Regelungen der Rechte am geistigen Eigentum (IPR), den Zeitrahmen für eine Rückkehr auf Investition, niedriges Luxuxmarkenbewußtsein, dröhnenden chinesischen Tourismus und begrenzte Kleininfrastruktur.

Lesen Sie den Rest von „Luxuxmarken in China: Der Teil IV“ oder geben eine Anmerkung bekannt >>

Luxuxmarken in China: Teil III

12. März 2008 durch China Geschäft Erfolg-Geschichten

Strategien für Luxuxmarken

Durch Nick Debnam u. George Svinos, KPMG

Strategien für LuxuxmarkenFür bestimmte Luxuxmarken hat China bereits Japan und Hong Kong als der größte einzelne Markt in Asien Pazifik überflügelt. (37) Aber das wachsende Vorhandensein von Luxuxmarken in China holt mit ihm grössere Konkurrenz. Die beschäftigtsten Straßen des Landes, wie Nanjing Straße in Shanghai, zeugen heftige Konkurrenz unter den Luxuxmarken der Welt. Während einige gewarnt haben, daß der China Markt gesättigt wird, (38) vorläufig ist das Klima noch ein positives für mögliche Eintretende.

• Marketing

Da die meisten chinesischen Verbraucher niedrige Niveaus des Markenbewußtseins haben, haben sie auch niedrige Niveaus der Markentreue. However this also means that sales staff can be an extremely powerful tool –with the ability to not only inform consumers of the benefits of their brand, but sway them towards making a purchase.

Read the rest of “Luxury Brands in China: Part III” or post a comment

Luxury Brands in China, Part II

March 4th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

Profiling the Chinese consumer

By Nick Debnam & George Svinos, KPMG

Chinese Luxury ShopperWhile hard work and plain living have been revered virtues of the Chinese people for generations, there has been a growth in demand for foreign-branded or imported goods.(19) But running counter to the growing habit of consumption in China is the traditional propensity to save. Though luxury consumption is growing, for most the dominant social idea is still prudent consumption and undertaking no more than you can perform. (20)

Research suggests that while the emerging middle class will continue to save heavily, they will also spend increasing amounts of money. (21) This is consistent with trends that suggest that China’s younger generation of teenagers and twenty-somethings show less of the caution of their parents and grandparents, and far more inclination to spend than to save. Read the rest of “Luxury Brands in China, Part II” or post a comment

Microsoft and Wal-Mart in China

February 25th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

Microsoft and Wal-Mart in ChinaIt took Bill Gates twelve years and billions of missed revenue, profit and market share opportunities to learn how to do business in China … the Chinese Way.

Microsoft came to China in 1992. Eleven years later, with global revenues of $35 billion US, in China the second largest PC market in the world, Microsoft-China revenue was $300 million, and it was operating at a loss.

Read the rest of “Microsoft and Wal-Mart in China” or post a comment >>

Luxury Brands in China

February 21st, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

Part I: Luxury brands and the retail sector in China

Luxury Brands in ChinaLuxury Brands in ChinaBy Nick Debnam & George Svinos, KPMG

Luxury goods and retail in ChinaForeign companies share a growing interest in tapping into China’s luxury market. Statistics show not only that the number of wealthy people is growing fast in China, but that their willingness to spend on big-ticket items is also on the rise, driven by an appetite for status as well as the comforts and trappings of luxury products.

China’s economy grew 10.3 percent in the first quarter of 2006 from the year earlier, overtaking the United Kingdom to become the world’s fourth largest economy. According to a preliminary estimation by the National Bureau of Statistics in China, the GDP of China in the first half of 2006 was RMB 9.144 trillion, a year-on-year increase of 10.9 percent. Total retail sales of consumer goods for the first half of 2006 also experienced significant growth, reaching RMB 3.644 trillion, a year-on-year rise of 13.3 percent. Overall, China’s retail sales have been rising at their fastest pace as increasing incomes spur spending on cars, furniture and electronics.(4) Read the rest of “Luxury Brands in China” or post a comment