Chinese Festivals

Five Essential Tips For Your Chinese New Year Marketing Plan

Year of the Pig is just around the corner! For any brand looking to establish a reputation or achieve sales and marketing goals with Chinese consumers, the Spring Festival is definitely an important time of the year.

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Figuring out customer patterns under a different cultural background is exhausting, not to mention that there are so many cultural elements or implications to be aware of for Chinese New Year. We’re here to help!

1. The Essentials — What’s the most important element of Chinese New Year?

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There are some who compare Chinese New Year to Christmas. Apart from the same shopping fever and decorating pressures, Chinese New Year focuses more on the idea of family and reunion.

This has to do with the fact that family values are an extremely important part of Chinese culture, and have been emphasized throughout history.

Numerous brands take this value into crafting their marketing messages to encourage reliability to the Chinese consumers, usually by showcasing family reunions in their campaigns. But is it enough?

2. Add Seasoning — What else do Chinese people like to spend time on?

There’s no better time than the New Year to indulge in Asians’ obsession with food. In fact, you may have underestimated the significance of their food culture. There’s an old proverb “民以食为天” which can be translated to “People consider food to be the primary need”.

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Instead of “How are you?”, many Chinese people today still prefer the old-fashioned greeting, “Have you eaten yet?” After all, it’s not common to have eight different types of cuisine specific to one country — which makes it perfectly understandable that so much pride is taken in food.

3. Dig Deeper — Show that you’ve done your research

Painting your products red or simply slapping a zodiac animal sign on top of your logo doesn’t work anymore. To truly relate to the audience, show that you’ve actually invested time and done research.

Think about these questions: What do Chinese people like to do in their spare time? What TV shows do they watch? What are the hottest online trends on Weibo? What’s the latest popular sing-along song on Tiktok? What common phrases do they say these days?

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Find that element which not only resonates with the generation you’re targeting, but also represents your brand voice.

4. Ask Locals — Identify and connect with relevant influencers

With a current population of 1.4 billion, China holds significant value to any brand or company. Although the country has prohibited access to western social media sites, such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram (you can only access using VPN tools), this has certainly given rise to a flooding number of Chinese social media sites.

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Major global brands like Chanel, Adidas, Estee Lauder, Shiseido, have all been adept at taking advantage of the massive KOL resources in China — and the results have proven to be very successful. Jing Daily has also suggested working with more niche mid-tier and micro KOLs, to reach your core target audience.

5. No Hard Sell — Don’t make everything about your brand

We get it. You have amazing products, and you believe it will be a huge hit in the Chinese market. But let’s face it — nobody likes hard sells, no matter how great the product or service. When it comes to reaching audience from a different culture, we suggest taking baby steps. Focus on showcasing their culture first, before working your way to engaging them with your product.

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To learn more about Chinese traditions, social media trends, or marketing tips to reach the Chinese community — drop us a message at info@spotlightwest.ca! You can also reach us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn!

What Is Singles' Day and Why It's Bigger than Black Friday

November is here, which means Black Friday is coming up! But while you’re busy going over that mile-long shopping list, did you know that a similar-like day in China has already become the world’s biggest online shopping spree?

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It all started in the 1990s, when the Chinese society started seeing a surplus in the male population as the consequence of the one-child policy. Many believe that the origin was at Nanjing University, where a group of college boys would gather every night to talk about how to get rid of the single status.

Eventually, they decided to start an initiative that celebrates being single, choosing the 11th of November to be the Singles’ Day (or the “Double Eleven Day”) because of the number’s resemblance of single stick figures.

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Then, there came the era of digital marketing, where companies and brands were looking for every way possible to maximize consumption.

The chairman of China’s biggest e-commerce company Alibaba Group, Jack Ma, who was listed by Forbes as one of the top 20 richest people in the world, wanted to launch a shopping promotion revolving around a day that was already nationally celebrated. Drawing inspirations from the American Black Friday tradition, Ma launched the first round of promotion on November 11th, 2009.

The company targeted single people in the country and catered to the mentality of “treating yourself better”, which would supposedly make up for the loneliness of staying single. It didn’t take long for other businesses to catch on.

In 2011, more than half a billion dollars was spent on Singles’ Day. Last year, the Chinese netizens topped their previous record with $24.2 billion spent on just that one day — which is practically equivalent to a smaller European country’s gross domestic product.

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According to Bloomberg, “more than twice as much merchandise is sold over the 24-hour period than during the entire five-day U.S. holiday-buying spree” (from Black Friday through Cyber Monday). Last year, Alibaba even hosted an opening gala event for Singles’ Day, with guest appearances by top-tier celebrities such as Nicole Kidman, Scarlett Johansson, Jessie J and Pharrell Williams.

With more and more international brands offering massive deals and extensive options specifically for Singles’ Day, the celebration is not only for those who are single but has become a global phenomenon.

There has even been a new trend created in December — the “Double Twelve Day”, just so businesses would have another chance to benefit from another round of rapid consumption and e-commerce.

Shoot us a message at info@spotlightwest.ca or follow our social media accounts (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter) to find out more about Chinese social trends, or WeChat marketing tips!