Search Results: "second-tier"
How Chinese Tech Builds Trust, Part VI: The Content Trends That Are Growing Bilibili’s Audience
Bilibili is young China in a nutshell, exploring what "new retail" means for brands, Mid-Autumn Festival trends, and a strong consumer recovery. Read MoreAt London Fashion Week, Chinese Engagement Was Hit-And-Miss
Although London is still operating within the pandemic, many designers made efforts to show their collections in multiple ways during London Fashion Week. Read MoreHow Should Luxury Brands Pick The Right Video Account Platform In China?
In China, social media platforms are currently fighting over the video-sharing realm. Jing Daily explains which ones are right for your luxury brand. Read MoreWhat Can Luxury Learn from Group Buying?
Group buying is back, and as luxury brands struggle to connect with consumers on the mainland, can they learn from this dynamic e-commerce trend? Read MoreThree Disruptive Trends In Little Red Book’s Mid-Year Cosmetics Report
Jing Daily has parsed through Little Red Book’s cosmetics report and found 3 main trends emerging from China’s $450-billion, post-COVID-19 beauty market. Read MoreAlimama Predicts Gen Zers and Lower-Tier Cities Will Rule Fashion
Alimama, Alibaba’s marketing, technology, and big-data platform, just released an insight report profiling fashion trends and consumer behaviors in China. Read More‘Solving the Dual Outflow’ – Chinese Department Stores Eye Duty Free License, Though Granting Them is More Problematic
Multiple Chinese domestic market players are lining up for duty free license applications. Seeing those licenses granted will be a much greater challenge. Read MoreLuxury Brand Hierarchy Explained by China’s New Hit Drama
Chinese TV drama series “Nothing but Thirty” went viral on social media, proving how Hermès secured the top of the luxury brand hierarchy. Read MoreThree Handbag Brands With Big D2C Plans In China This Year
Jing Daily talked to three popular niche contemporary handbag brands — Apede Mod, Yuzefi, and BY FAR — about their China growth plans in 2020. Read MoreDecoding “Too Cool” — The Uprising Subculture That Embraces Looking “Tasteless”
“Too Cool” was once used with contempt towards China’s rural population, but now it’s been re-labeled as “cool” by young Chinese netizens. Read More