Showing posts with label HEMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HEMA. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Visiting Alibaba's Hema supermarket - Ashley Dudarenok

Ashley Dudarenok
Marketing expert Ashley Dudarenok visits one of Alibaba's Hema supermarkets, based on AI and data-collection, paving the way for new retail. She even finds a fish with QR-code so you can track where it is coming from.

Ashley Dudarenok is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

Are you looking for more experts on innovation at the China Speakers Bureau? Do check out this list.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Retail: the mirror of China's AI revolution - Ashley Dudarenok

Ashley Dudarenok
China's retailers, with Alibaba's Hema at the helm, are leading the AI revolution in online and offline space. Consumer expert Ashley Dudarenok explains how AI, online and offline retail combine at a dazzling pace, at CFOinnovation.

CFOinnovation:
Shoppers at (Alibaba's) Hema experience a seamless integration of its online and offline stores. Customers ordering groceries online for home delivery will have a staff member going through the supermarket’s aisles, bagging groceries, and passing the orders onto a conveyor belt to the deliverers. To date, it has opened more than 100 stores in China. Retail experience is taking on a new form in China. 
“So essentially in China these giants are actively merging offline spaces into the online environment. It’s not like offline to online or online to offline. It’s more like [both] becoming one experience. So it’s much deeper than omnichannel and all these other concepts that we’ve been aware of and trying to implement for the past 15 years in the West,” said Ashley Dudarenok, founder of Alarice, a digital marketing agency in Hong Kong. 
Alibaba’s grocery stores are an example of digitizing and integrating inventory, supply chains, logistics, payments, delivery, and order fulfilment of retail. 
In the bigger scheme of things, what’s happening in the retail landscape is another manifestation of technological changes, especially due to development in AI. “This ‘new retail’ is the integration of the technological advancements that has been happening for the past 20 years. Retail is just one aspect very close to businesses — we all understand we buy services and products,” Dudarenok said.
More at CFOinnovation.

Ashley Dudarenok is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

Are you looking for more innovation experts at the China Speakers Bureau? Do check out this list.  

Thursday, February 15, 2018

What's the deal with Alibaba's new retail? - Tom Doctoroff

Tom Doctoroff
Supermarkets in China (and where not) have been unfriendly for innovation - to put it mildly. But Alibaba's HEMA's supermarkets, starting the so-called "new retail", are causing a revolution, writes marketing guru Tom Doctoroff in AdAge. 25 Stores are functional and dozens more will be open soon.

Tom Doctoroff:
Until recently, China's grocery retail scene was primeval. Customer service was an oxymoron. A walk down the aisles of locally managed chains such as LianHua, HaiHang and Bubugao is a depressing experience, with ultra-bright lighting, wilted produce and scowling employees. Due to operational rigidity and cultural tone deafness, no international hypermarket—Carrefour, Walmart or Tesco—has achieved broad scale. 
Hema, on the other hand, oozes customer-centricity. In-store restaurants build a sense of in-store community. Layouts are easy to navigate and address Chinese sensibilities—for example, live produce is put near the entrance. In the U.S., the closest equivalent might be Whole Foods, though it's worth noting that Alibaba debuted its Hema brand before Amazon bought Whole Foods. 
Traditional retailers haven't tried to create an emotionally appealing brand, while Hema has. The brand name Hema Xiansheng means "boxed/packaged freshness and liveliness," while it also sounds like the phrase "Mr. Hippo." Hema uses a personified hippopotamus as its mascot. Its advertising is also more adventurous than other supermarket brands. Hema had a pop-up "Seafood Art Exhibition" in Shanghai, in an aquarium-style glass house, where consumers could check out expensive seafood products such as Boston lobster and Alaskan king crab. 
What will make Hema resonate? For one, it provides multi-level reassurance. China is the ultimate low-trust society. Economic, social and political interests remain unprotected by impartial institutions. Food, specifically, is dangerous stuff. The fear of contamination has been acute since 2008, when six babies died and several hundred fell ill from tainted milk powder. Parents pay 300 percent premiums for imported infant formula. In this context, Hema's transparency is manna from heaven. QR code displays reveal the origin of every product—where it was made, where it's from—as a guarantee of quality. 
The Hema purchase process also introduces new levels of "seamless product trial." Rather than piling goods into a cart and handing over cash over to a surly worker at the cash register, shoppers can "graze and pay" as they go. Imagine a woman enticed by a tropical fruit she may serve at a dinner party. With Alipay, she can buy just one, take a bite, and buy ten more later if the product passes muster. Or she can order online for delivery just before the event. 
Finally, the supermarket opens new worlds of discovery. Hema's multidimensional online-and-offline experience turns shoppers to connoisseurs of the exotic. Buyers are instantly provided information about, say, a novel dessert's provenance or recipe ideas for unusual seafood dishes. In China, a nation obsessed with sending pictures of food through cell phones, culinary adventurism is tantamount to lifestyle elevation. Given the ubiquity of social media platforms WeChat and Weibo, cuisine is translated into "face"—that is, currency of social advancement. "Showing you know" is a weapon in China's competitive battlefield of life.
More in AdAge.

Tom Doctoroff is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

Are you looking for more marketing experts at the China Speakers Bureau? Do check out this list.

Friday, January 11, 2013

The need for China hands - the HEMA case

Hema store front
Hema store front (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
China veteran Janet Carmosky pleaded earlier this week for rethinking the relationship between China hands and corporations. Corporations do not use the China expertise as well as they could, Janet Carmosky argued. Seldom you get a good illustration on what can go wrong, presented on your TV-screen in the same week, as happened to some of the China adventures of retailer HEMA.
Earlier today we already made fun of the company, who focuses on a retail concept where affordable commodities of a decent quality are sold to low-earning customers. That works pretty alright in the Netherlands and Belgium, where they have their largest operation. But they are owned by investment bank Lion Capital, and that means they have to grow, grow, grow, even if that kills the company.
My information is based on the documentary "The Secret of HEMA". Recordings took place during a whole years and that means the viewers do not have a complete picture. In fact, some of the rather stupid decisions could make sense, if you would know the whole picture.
According to my assessment their retail concept would not work in China, but pressure from the investment bankers might force the HEMA management to make decisions that are less than smart, as I discussed in the earlier post.
A shocking event in the documentary is a visit to one of their major suppliers. HEMA sources much of their textile and other commodities in China, so a visit to the larger supplier would make sense. The HEMA CEO Ronald van Zetten meets his Chinese counterpart, and he brings a box of cheap cookies from their store as a present. The lady, the translator/assistant, gets a similar box.
That is two mistakes in one: if you are going to meet the CEO of a large supplier, you can come up with something better than cheap Dutch cookies, he probably does not like anyway. And second, you do not give somebody lower in the hierarchy the same present. Those are small things, but easy to avoid.
Being an ignorant Dutch CEO gives you some leeway in China, but it looked pretty stupid. And that was only the start.
Van Zetten skips all the traditional pleasantries you need in China to break the ice. He starts the conversation by asking whether his supplier, since they have already a long-term trusted relationship, wants to become a partner in his planned retail operation.
There is not really an indication that the supplier has also experience in setting up a retail operation. Manufacturing is a different ball game than retail. What seems to happen - and that is all to common - is that business is offered to the first Chinese you trust.
The Chinese CEO does not look too surprised, but praises the plan as an excellent idea and offers his services. Expecting that he would have said differently - even when the idea is obviously heading for a failure - is a wrong idea. Chinese do not mind to tell you the truth, but not at your first visit to China.
Hey, I'm Dutch, and if somebody would propose such a plan, involving millions of investments, I would likely be on the conservative side telling the truth.
Even if the HEMA had assigned a decent due diligent research into the retail capabilities of their supplier, the idea seems less than smart. When you set up a retail operation with your supplier, you jeopardize both operations if one of them goes bad. Putting your eggs in different baskets is very important.
But the HEMA people leave the premises smiling, and think they have concluded a smart deal.
Later in the documentary, management has decided to leave their suppliers in China, and move their sourcing operation to Turkey. Middle management is unhappy, since they lose a trusted partner in China, they were very familiar with and offered good products and kept all the deals. The documentary maker here fails to ask what is happening to the retail operation, although that seems pretty important.
Again later in the documentary, supplies from Turkey do not meet the quality standards, and they cannot deliver the volume needed for a larger retailer like HEMA. The relationship with the Chinese suppliers already has been screwed up, before Turkey fails to deliver, so they now have to go back to China, at least for the near future.

Getting things right in corporate life is a challenge, and sometimes for obvious reasons stupid decisions have to be made. But I would have guessed HEMA would have been better off by listening to some China hands, and sometimes listening to them too.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Why Media Markt failed in China, and HEMA will

Media Markt Shanghai
Are they crazy? That was the first question I asked myself when I visited the giant Media Markt store in Shanghai in December 2010. A giant store in electronics, like I knew them from Europe, with a mostly similar range of products, apart from their rice cookers and dehumidifiers.
No competition for their domestic competitors both in price and selection, I concluded after a bit of research. Since my visit they expanded to seven stores in Shanghai, so the low number of visitors did not really deter the management.  Although, they initially had planned to open up to 100 stores up to now, but that also proved to be a challenge. This week, as German media announced Media Markt was closing their operation in China, although the holding company Metro still has to make the formal announcement.
Only three months ago, Media Markt did start in China a new marketing campaign, with a strong focus on pricing, but it was obvious too little, too late.

Why did they even try such a hopeless concept, now even their German management might ask. A nice clue I got earlier this week, when I watched a nice documentary "The Secret of the HEMA". The retailer HEMA is a kind of household name in the Netherlands and now also Belgium. An iron century-old business model of selling cheap commodities of decent quality to low-earners (and cheap high earners).
They have a long-standing tradition of sourcing their products in China, but during the documentary we watched not only their expansion into France. Also China was on the agenda.
"Don't do it," I jelled at the TV screen, a habit I do not often display, since it is pretty useless. But why was this sympathetic CEO Ronald van Zetten transferring a modestly profitable retail model in a small part of Europe into China, following the failed tracks of Media Markt?
The explanation came later, as Van Zetten had to visit the company who bought the HEMA in 2007, the investment firm Lion Capital. He did not say much after the visit, but booked a flight to Shanghai to explore the market.
He asked the right questions, in the Shanghai stores he visited. He did some math and discovered that the stores needed 50 percent of their turnover to cover for the rent. A short moment of desperation, since that is pretty high if your business model is based on low margins. Foreign companies will have a hard time when they try to beat local competitors on price. But then he soldiered on, following the instructions of his investment bank owners, for the HEMA there is no other way than expanding, even into markets where there is no future.

Enhanced by Zemanta