chinese beauty market
What Luxury Brands Can Learn From Bonnie & Clyde’s Beauty Disruption in China
As the demands of Chinese beauty consumers change, local independent beauty brands with personalities that offer exclusive technology are growing in appeal. 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 MoreWhy Beauty Brick-And-Mortar Is Thriving In China
Offline beauty sales are peaking now that China’s online buyers are back at brick-and-mortar chain stores. But can local beauty retailers seize the moment? Read MoreFive C-Beauty Brands You Should Know Beyond Perfect Diary
The C-Beauty space is flooded with a host of newcomers. Here, Jing Daily handpicks five new C-Beauty brands that are loved by Chinese consumers. Read MoreMasahiko Uotani on How Shiseido Reaches Chinese Consumers
The Chinese market has become a critical growth engine for Shiseido, the leading Japanese beauty and cosmetics powerhouse. Read MoreCan China’s Beauty Brands Wrestle the Market Back from Western Ones?
Chinese-born beauty brands (C-beauty) are climbing the value chain, moving from producing low-cost items to high-end goods. Read MoreLuxury Skincare Brand Strikes Gold with Spas for Beauty-Obsessed Chinese
Foreign prestige beauty brands that offer exclusive spa visits for Chinese clients can earn their loyalty and create a stronger connection. Read MoreCan Gucci Find a Market for their Bizarre Brand of Beauty?
While Gucci’s Hollywood-cum-Punk aesthetic is likely to appeal to the general public, will it help the brand develop a global luxury beauty business? Read More$1 Bln in Beauty: Estée Lauder’s China Campaign Pays Off with Sales Surge
Sales of the Estée Lauder Companies Inc beauty products crossed $1 billion in the Asia-Pacific region in the last quarter. Read MoreChinese Whispers: LVMH-owned Chaumet Embraces WeChat E-commerce Sales, and More
Chaumet, the premium jewelry brand owned by LVMH, has started to sell jewelry pieces on WeChat to wealthy Chinese consumers this week. Read More