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    Tmall to Hold China Day During New York Fashion Week

    With the event’s see now, buy now strategy, clothes by Li Ning and Edison Chen may be showing in New York City, but they'll be selling in Shanghai and Beijing.
    T-Mall is to hold the first "China Day" during 2018 New York Fashion Week. Photo courtesy: Alizilia
    Jiani MaAuthor
      Published   in Fashion

    Tmall has announced it will hold a China Day in association with The Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) during this year’s New York Fashion Week.

    Tmall is Alibaba’s business-to-consumer e-commerce platform. Its event will be held on February 7 and focus solely on menswear. Participating designers include more mainstream brands Li Ning and Peacebird, as well as private labels Chenpeng and CLOT by Edison Chen, will give runway shows at Chelsea event space Skylight Modern.

    Capitalizing on the “see now, buy now” trend, most of the pieces shown during China Day will be made available on Tmall immediately afterwards.

    The move echoes a similar strategy that rival e-commerce platform JD.com has pursued since 2015, when the site brought three designers to Milan Fashion Week. In February 2016, JD.com then took five private labels to New York Fashion Week, initiating their own “see now, buy now” strategy. JD.com also brought six couture brands to London Fashion Week in September 2016.

    In its partnership with the CFDA, Tmall is helping present Chinese brands and designers to an international market, while simultaneously leveraging the glamour of New York Fashion Week to sell items in China.

    “It is now hardly new that single Chinese designers show their works during fashion weeks. We hope China Day can introduce Chinese designers in a more systematic way,” said Jessica Liu, president of Tmall Fashion.

    Besides its China Day, Tmall is also rolling out the “Designer DT Innovative Plan”, which aims to cultivate at least five private Chinese labels with revenues exceeding a hundred million RMB this year.

    According to Tmall, The “DT” stands for “designer and Tmall” as well as “data technology”, which articulates Tmall’s ambition to use big data to redefine the business models of private labels.

    China has witnessed a boom in new fashion labels in the past decade, but they face some significant challenges, such as high production costs and unstable supply chains. And the new retail era is making things even tougher.

    “[The designers] are not only competing with other designers. They have to provide a more cost-effective solution to cater to today’s customers,” said Tasha Liu, the founder of multi-brand store Dong Liang, at the news conference. Liu believes Tmall’s user data and ecosystem is a great opportunity for private labels to “meet their audience”. Dong Liang joined Tmall last December.

    According to Chinanews, Tmall has already attracted thousands of private labels, with recent additions including Wconcept, To Be Thrill, Near White, Chizhang, and Comme Moi. In addition to Dong Liang, major shops to sign on include Cachet and Alter.

    For Liu, the 500 million daily active users of Tmall are a treasure.

    “Before joining Tmall, independent designers were disconnected from the Internet. It has been hard for designers to scale if they rely on traditional retail models. They should explore China’s e-tail markets,” Liu said.

    MS MIN is one Tmall success story. The label first opened its store on Taobao in 2010 and joined Tmall in 2016. By 2017 sales had grown 287.5 percent. Taking advantage of user data analytics that Tmall provides, MS MIN tweaked its designs and made its first foray into offline markets. The brand has since joined Lane Crawford and Saks 5th Avenue.

    Mukzin, a private brand focusing on innovating around Chinese traditional clothing, was founded by Han Wen in 2014 and joined Tmall in 2015. According to Han, Tmall has helped her change the way the supply chain works and brought in more opportunities.

    Through Alifish, the licensing and entertainment business unit of Alibaba, Mukzin has launched products with the British Museum and the Vincent Van Gogh Museum, which brought increased sales of 80 percent during 11/11 last year.

    Tmall aims to support Chinese private labels in steps from product development to optimized supply chains, as well as marketing and sales. “Although independent designer brands accounted for less than one percent of the total Tmall apparel business, we saw some demand from consumers who we could not reach before, so we wanted to invest more”, Jessica Liu said in a previous interview.

    Whether Tmall pursues a similar strategy in other fashion capitals remains to be seen, but Tmall clearly aims to nail its China Day onto New York Fashion Week’s agenda. The e-commerce giant announced it will hold another “China Day” during 2019 New York Fashion Week, this time focusing on womenswear.

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