Showing posts with label KFC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KFC. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

The KFC, McDonald's shoot-out - Ben Cavender

Ben Cavender
Ben Cavender
Both KFC and McDonald's have been struggling to keep market share in China by expanding fast. Localizing has become a key word,  but sometimes at the expense of quality, says business analyst Ben Cavender in AdAge.

AdAge:
The U.S. giants have also faced headwinds from questions over their chicken supply, avian flu fears and a slowdown in economic growth. McDonald's China comparable store sales were down 3.6 % in 2013 from 2012. KFC is also revamping its China offering, with an updated menu and much-needed store renovations.
"One of the problems KFC had is they've expanded so quickly they haven't done a good job of cleaning up and modernizing stores, whereas McDonald's has been very aggressive about doing that," said Ben Cavender, principal at China Market Research Group. "We're starting to see a shift where consumers are saying they actually like the McDonald's dining experience, more than at KFC."
McDonald's is also getting more aggressive about store openings: Last year it debuted 275 China locations and this year it plans 300.
More in AdAge.

Ben Cavender 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 a media representative and do you want to talk to one of our speakers? Do drop us a line.
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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Why Big Macs and KFC are losing out in China - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
+Shaun Rein 
Ten years ago McDonald's was a winner in China, but with KFC the big macs are losing out. Retail analyst Shaun Rein explains to Reuters that Chinese consumers turn to domestic chains, who supply more to the aspirations of their customers.


Shaun Rein 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.

China Weekly Hangout

How successful can president Xi Jinping be in rooting out corruption, the +China Weekly Hangout is going to ask on Thursday 31 October. How committed is the Xi/Li team to real change? You can read our announcement here, or register for the event here. 

Is China going to collapse under the burden of its debts? Yes, if they do not play their cards rights, tells Sara Hsu, leading expert on shadow banking in China at the +China Weekly Hangout  on August 30. Questions are asked by +Fons Tuinstra of the China Speakers Bureau.
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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Searching for China's fast food chains - Paul French

Paul French
Paul French
Foreign fast food chains like McDonalds and KFC are wildly popular in China, but domestic chains failed to have a similar success. Retail analyst Paul French explores in Foreign Policy why his favorite Real Kung Fu restaurant has only a few hundred outlets, while foreign competition has many thousands.

Paul French:
My Shanghai Real Kung Fu is still around -- even flourishing. The once-dirty floors are now mopped every hour; the dog-eared paper menus have given way to illuminated menu boards that hover over high-tech registers manned by smiling, uniformed employees who move almost robotically from counter to kitchen and back. Real Kung Fu promises your entire meal within 60 seconds of ordering or your money back, and I have yet to claim a refund for my favorite dish, the really rather good chicken-and-mushroom rice. They've learned a few tricks. 
The same can be said of other vastly improved and emerging local fast-food places, such as Mandefu and Baijila, small-scale Chinese chains doing slightly Westernized variants of local favorites, complete with knockoff Western logos -- Mandefu's red and yellow sign front owes more than a bit to McDonald's palette, while Baijila taunts KFC with a slightly feminine Colonel Sanders
But China's up-and-comers, its aspiring middle class, prefer the status of the real thing. McDonald's and KFC are still largely the preserve of the bai ling and young families on the make, who go for a little taste of things foreign, and a sign perhaps that they really are moving up. As Warren Liu, a former KFC senior executive, has written, when the chain's first restaurant opened just outside Tiananmen Square back in 1987, "Customers were attracted to KFC's Chinese brand name; its American roots; its likeable, grayish, beard-bearing brand spokesperson -- Colonel Sanders; the unique restaurant décor; the new way of ordering food; the bright red and blue colors of the brand logo; the American music broadcast inside the restaurant; and, as an added bonus, a very clean toilet!" That's mostly all still true... 
The truth is: The Chinese people are both aspirational and eminently sensible when it comes to partaking of the benefits of global capitalism. Great cars come from Germany, luxury fashion from France and Italy, and fast food from America. And the hundreds of millions who make up China's new middle class want the best of everything: Audi cruisers, Gucci purses -- and, it would seem, KFC's Dragon Twister.
More in Foreign Policy.

Paul French 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.

China Weekly Hangout

Not all foreign firm are doing well in China. The +China Weekly Hangout discussed on January 30 why foreign companies fail in China, with as panelist +Richard Brubaker of Collective Responsibility and +Andrew Hupert, expert on conflict management in China. Moderation: +Fons Tuinstra of the China Speakers Bureau. Including references to Apple, Mediamarkt, Foxconn and many others.

The upcoming cyber war is the subject of the +China Weekly Hangout on Thursday 27 June. The revelations by Edward Snowden showed that the US is preparing a military shake-out, as both China, Russia and other countries are building up their cyber war capacities too. Joining us are former security consultant +Mathew Hoover and media en communication lecturer +Paul Fox of the Hong Kong University. Moderation by +Fons Tuinstra, president of the China Speakers Bureau.
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Tuesday, June 04, 2013

KFC: losing grip on its China market - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
Shaun Rein
The bird flu and food scandals did not help KFC to continue their success story in China, their largest market. But also in terms of their offerings KFC is losing grip on the market, tells business analyst Shaun Rein in Business Week.

Business Week:
Now KFC is in danger of losing what made it distinctive by loading up its menu with Chinese dishes. Two of three main items on KFC’s dinner menu are rice-based, including spicy prawn rice and beef rice. The third is a mushroom-chicken burger. Patrons craving something sweet can order sugared egg tarts. “You want to localize but also maintain your core brand DNA,” says Shaun Rein, Shanghai-based managing director of China Market Research Group. “The name of the game 10 years ago was localizing, but at this stage consumers are already sophisticated.”
More in Business Week. 

Shaun Rein 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.


+China Weekly Hangout 

Bird flu was just one of those nightmare scenario's hurting KFC. The China Weekly Hangout discussed last April the latest flu outbreak in China with  flu expert Harm Kiezebrink from Beijing, HKU-lecturer +Paul Fox from Hong Kong and CEIBS adjunct professor +Richard Brubaker from Shanghai. We try to figure out what is happening with N7H9, and what possible scenario's can develop. And we discuss what the Chinese government has learn from SARS, now ten years ago. Coming Thursday June 6, the China Weekly Hangout will discuss the art of negotiating trade negotiations, with our in-house negotiation expert +Andrew Hupert of +China Solved as one of the guests. You can read our announcement here, or register at our event page for action.
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Thursday, March 14, 2013

KFC at last deals with the internet buzz - Sam Flemming

Sam Flemming
Sam Flemming
When the KFC in China got hit by a food scandal, it took a while before they took on the inevitable buzz at the internet, says internet watcher Sam Flemming in Adage. But now they have started to face the issue directly.

Adage:
In recent weeks, KFC has begun unfolding a campaign to reinforce its food safety bona fides. Dubbed "Operation Thunder," it includes a mini-site detailing steps the company will take to ensure the safety of its chicken, including working with only the best suppliers and stepping up coordination with regulators. It also pledged to better inform consumers about product safety issues. 
Meanwhile, KFC kicked off a poetry contest on social media. The company asked fans to pen poems that include the phrase, "The chicken are innocent," laying the blame on illicit drug use at the farms. Best poem wins an iPad mini. 
"After a slow start in reacting to the crisis late last year, KFC has taken on a more active approach to social media to face the issue directly. They have increased activity on their own Weibo and RenRen accounts, including responding to many of the comments about the crisis and by engaging media key opinion leaders. They will share news articles about the crisis on their Weibo account which in turn creates more buzz," said Sam Flemming, founder and chairman of Shanghai-based social-media research and consulting firm CIC.
More in Adage.

Sam Flemming 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.

Next week, on Thursday 21 March, the China Weekly Hangout will focus on food security in China. CEIBS sustainability professor Richard Brubaker and others will join us to discuss over 6,000 dead pigs in Shanghai and other issues in the domestic food chain. Read here our announcement, and register for participation at our event page. 

After developing the internet in China, the country's internet companies are increasingly looking for a global market. The China Weekly Hangout discussed the global aspirations of China's internet companies in November 2012 with Steven Millward of TechinAsia.
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Friday, January 25, 2013

Failing foreign firms - China Weekly Hangout

KFC Localized Logo Beijing China
KFC Localized Logo Beijing China (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
No month passes without yet another foreign firm trying to enter the China market throws in the towel: they do not make it. The China Weekly Hangout dives on Thursday 31 January Wednesday 30 January into the backgrounds of those failures. Are Chinese governments giving foreign firm a harder time than their domestic competitors. Or is it stupidity on the foreign side who do not get what the Chinese consumers want? Or a combination of both.
Will they survive competition, food scandals and increasingly critical customers?
On Thursday CEIBS-adjunct professor Richard Brubaker will join us and we will discuss both KFC and Apple at length. Yes, both are still successful, but will they hang on?
Last week, in our China Weekly Hangout on pollution, Richard Brubaker mentioned names of foreign firms who do well in China: Alstrom, Siemens, GE and others who offer the quality Chinese companies do not have. But the number of failures seems larger: Media Markt, BestBuy, Google, Yahoo, Caterpillar, B&Q, just to mention a few.

Update: who is next heading for trouble? We bet on General Motors, who is busy jeopardizing their relationship with their China partner SAIC. They should first talk to Volkswagen, who did a similar move in the 1990s.

Do you want to have you say too? Leave your questions at our event page (available here), or register for participation.

The China Weekly Hangout takes mostly place on Thursdays 10pm Beijing time, 3pm CET (Europe) and 9am EST (US/Canada). This week it will be on Wednesday. You can follow the discussion also on YouTube at our event page on here in this space.

Is this going to be your first Google+ Hangout and do you want to try it out in a dry run before participating. Send me an email, or add me to your Gtalk (if you use that).
Yesterday the China Weekly Hangout discussed how pollution affects the lives of those living and working in China. Participating, Richard Brubaker and Fons Tuinstra, president of the China Speakers Bureau.


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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The different consumer demographics - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
Shaun Rein
Consumer demographics, and especially the position of the middle class, boils out in China very different, cause problems for brands focusing on that middle class, tells business analyst Shaun Rein in OpenMarkts, in an interview ticking off different parts of his book "The End of Cheap China."

OpenMarkets:
You explain in your book how the rise of cheap China is creating an optimistic consumer class. Yet China still appears a minefield for foreign brands. Some are huge success stories, while others flounder. 
To be successful you have to adapt your brand and product for Chinese tastes. Brands like Gap have not really done very well. One reason for this is the middle class does not really exist [as a consumer demographic] in China.  A brand has to be either really cheap or one with high status. Pricing and advertising has to connect with the Chinese standpoint. 
Foreign food brands have done particularly well in China, where an important selling point is being trusted. Our research found food and product safety are by far Chinese consumers’ biggest concerns.  The huge success of Kentucky Fried Chicken in China is because it has the right product and brand, and is also very trusted.  However, this has also meant recent troubles that KFC has had with suspect chicken supplies have been very serious. People had such high trust in Yums (KFC’s owner) it had much further to fall, such was the level of outrage.   Still, if a brand gets it right, China will likely become their largest market.
More in OpenMarkets. Shaun Rein 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.

 On Thursday 24 January the China Weekly Hangout will focus on how the pollution affects the lives of people in China. Do you want to participate of follow the event? Do sign up at our event page or check in for the details.

Earlier in 2012 Shaun Rein's colleague Ben Cavender gave an overview of mistakes foreign companies made in localizing for the China market. Including Gap, IKEA, B&Q and Dunkin Donuts.
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Tuesday, January 08, 2013

Trust crisis hits KFC's sales - Shaun Rein

ShaunRein2
Shaun Rein
Chinese consumers expect foreign brands to be safer and better than domestic ones. But when that confidence is hurt, like happened after a government investigating into the poultry supply of KFC, damage can be huge, explains business analyst Shaun Rein in Bloomberg. 

Bloomberg:
The Shanghai Food and Drug Administration on Dec. 20 said tests conducted by a third-party agency from 2010 to 2011 found found eight batches of chicken supplied to Yum by Liuhe Group Co. had levels of antibiotics that didn’t meet prescribed standards. Yum, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut chains in China, got 44 percent of its revenue from the Asian nation in 2011. The company said that it stopped all supplies from Liuhe in August. 
“The trust in KFC was so high that now the anger is high,” said Shaun Rein, managing director of China Market Research in Shanghai. “People tend to trust western brands, they think these brands have better quality control over the supply chain and they are not going to cut corners.” 
Food safety is a big worry for many Chinese consumers and it may take at least three to six months for them to start returning to KFC stores, Rein said.
More in Bloomberg.

Shaun Rein 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.

Not all foreign companies get it right, when they have to adopt their offers to Chinese tastes. Ben Cavender recalls how four companies, B&Q, IKEA, GAP and Dunkin Donuts got it wrong when they tried to localize.

 
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Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Why fast foreign food wins in China - Shaun Rein

Various donuts from the Dunkin' Donuts store i...Image via WikipediaChinese consumers know that oil and sugar provide not a healthy diet, but they know that Western fast food brands in China at least keep a close eye on their production processes, unlike the Chinese competition. That is why they win, explains Shaun Rein in CNBC.

Shaun Rein:
My firm interviewed thousands more Chinese consumers in eight cities about their dining habits, we found that Emily's response was not unusual. Many Chinese consumers consider western fast food brands like Yum Brands, McDonald's and even Dunkin Donuts healthy.
They all know a healthy food diet should not have too much oil and sugar, but they also trust foreign brands won't cut corners in the production process. They fear tainted ingredients more than fat.

Far too many Chinese view western fast food companies as healthy alternatives to local restaurants, rather than a once in a while greedy indulgence. China's food supply-chain is clearly a mess, and it is a serious problem that needs to be fixed immediately.

In a survey of 5000 consumers in fifteen cities, my firm found that food and product safety was the biggest concern for Chinese consumers, ahead of paying for medical bills or children's education.
Those concerns continue to be top of mind because of regular allegations that food companies and restaurants are using poor quality ingredients. Last week, for example, shares of Chinese noodle chain Ajisen [0538.HK 12.54 -0.92 (-6.83%) ] plummeted nearly ten percent when word got out they allegedly use instant broth flavoring rather than stock made from boiling bones as they claimed in advertisements. Before the news broke, consumers told my firm they trusted Ajisen to provide healthy food.

Misrepresentation of product safety can be costly because the Chinese have become unforgiving when it comes to health. A mere allegation is enough for businesses to lose customers, see their bottom lines hit and their share prices decimated.

Shaun Rein
More in CNBC

Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Key success factors in China - Warren Liu

Ema with Colonel Sanders of KFC printed on itImage via Wikipedia
Warren Liu, author of the bestseller KFC in China: Secret Recipe for Success, has been building on his earlier success with a new book China Key Success Factors. Most business books on China focus on one industry or one company. Warren Liu has been trying to surpass that often superficial approach by analyzing what factors lead to success in a wide range of industries.
While the book is certainly not handbook into success in the China market, it helps to set a lot of argument on success and failure in China into perspective.

The book has been produced by the China Speakers Bureau.
Warren Liu is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you need him at your conference or meeting, do get in touch.


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Monday, October 11, 2010

Buy Ctrip and Yun! - Shaun Rein

ShaunRein2Shaun Rein by Fantake via Flickr
Domestic consumption is growing and Shaun Rein tells at CNBC what companies investors should be looking at in the short term. While both McDonalds and Yum! are doing well, Shaun Rein prefers Yum! since they cater for different consumer markets with different price points, while McDonalds sticks to one price for all.
Travel is going to be important, as cars allow Chinese consumers to travel more domestically, young Chinese with cheaper cars, looking for budget hotels. Ctrip, China's successful travel portal would be an obvious investment.

Commercial
Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.


Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Hu Jintao, China's most prominent diabetes patient - Paul French

paulfrenchPaul French by Fantake via Flickr
President Hu Jintao is China's most prominent diabetes patient, but with 120 million obese - and counting - he is certainly not alone, tells Paul French, co-author of Fat China, to Jeremy Goldkorn of Danwei TV. Chinese are getting more of everything and lost control of their diet, just like people in the West, only later. "We would have loved to blame McDonald's or KFC for it," says Paul French, "but we cannot."

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Paul French is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.


Fat China! Paul French talks about obesity in China from Danwei on Vimeo.