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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
March 17, 5:15 AM
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China’s most popular wine list on Tmall is showing a split personality. On one end: dirt-cheap, sugary, TikTok-friendly local bottles flying off the virtual shelves. On the other: premium heavyweights like Penfolds refusing to budge from their throne.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 27, 9:07 PM
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What Nicole's shopping habits taught me about China's consumer market
Nicole manages our Food & Beverage business in Guangzhou. She's 30-something, earns well, and represents exactly what people mean when they talk about China's "new middle class."
Last week we were discussing a client's market entry strategy, and somehow the conversation shifted to her weekend shopping. What she told me was frankly more valuable than most of the market research reports I've read lately.
She'd just bought a ¥3,000 domestic skincare set, and spends ¥800 monthly on her cat's organic food. She owns several pairs of premium running shoes but just bought another pair for trail running.
So what? Well, her phone is 4 years old, she takes the subway everywhere, and most of her wardrobe comes from Chinese designers no one has ever heard of.
"I don't really care about brands the way my parents did," she said. "I buy things that genuinely improve my daily life."
Here's the ting. Nicole isn't unusual. China's new middle class, roughly 400 million people in their late twenties to early forties with disposable income, are consuming differently than most international observers would expect.
This generation compares obsessively before buying. They'll pay premium prices, but only when they're convinced the product delivers real value for their specific needs.
Being an international brand used to provide automatic credibility. Now it often means you need to work harder to justify why they shouldn't choose the domestic alternative.
Experience matters more than status
A ¥500 scented candle makes sense if it creates a relaxation ritual after long work weeks. A ¥2,000 camping setup is worthwhile if it enables weekend escapes that provide mental space.
They're not buying products to display wealth. They're buying things that enable the lifestyle they want.
Nicole's generation watched Chinese brands evolve from budget options to serious innovators. They have no hesitation buying domestic, in many categories, they actively prefer it because local brands understand their specific needs better.
International brands that still assume they hold automatic premium positioning might be operating on outdated assumptions.
The opportunity in China remains substantial. This demographic has purchasing power and they're willing to spend.
But they're asking: "Why this product instead of the domestic option I'm already familiar with?"
Nicole's shopping habits aren't random. They're representative of a broader shift in how China's middle class thinks about consumption, value, and what deserves their money.
Worth paying attention to.
🐼 I'm Iain Langridge 毅安 and I launch, manage, and grow premium consumer brands in China. DM or follow me to find out more.
#china #chinamarket #consumertrends #premiumbrands In2Asia Export
Photo: Rainy night. Guangzhou 2025
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 25, 8:27 PM
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Limited-edition Lunar New Year collection activated in more than 10 major airport hubs worldwide
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 25, 4:08 AM
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Hello there! Three developers in Shenzhen built an app for US$200 that asks users one question: "Are you dead?" Within weeks, it was valued at US$14 million and ranked number one in 40+ countries. "死了么" (Si Le Ma), a dark pun on China's food delivery app "饿了么" ("Are You Hungry?"), prompts users to t
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 11:34 PM
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Both the average daily and single-day visitor arrivals during the nine-day period of the Chinese New Year holiday season this year, reached a new high since official record-keeping started for this holiday break. That is according to a Tuesday press release issued by the Macao Government Tourism Office (MGTO). Preliminary figures show that Macau received
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 6:48 PM
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China’s Year of the Horse Spring Festival holiday, featuring a record-long nine days, concluded on Monday and unleashed a surge in tourism and consumer spending, with multiple key indicators reaching historic highs. Beyond the numbers, this year’s holiday has revealed something deeper: a transformation in how Chinese consumers spend and what that spending signals for the broader economy.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 6:45 PM
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Economy&Life | China's consumer market sees a strong start to the Year of the Horse-
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 4:00 AM
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 23, 4:12 AM
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The war that no Media is talking about... 😁 The Chinese new year celebration... If you have lived in China, you know what I mean... It is not IA... it is not Fake... 1.4B people that play firecrakers during 1week... day and night 😆 And in China, no Dragon or special street festivity.. it is Street war in most of Cities. #Chinese #Chinesenewyear
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 19, 12:53 AM
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Chinese milk tea and ice cream chain Mixue has surpassed McDonald's to become the world's largest food and beverage chain by store count.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 18, 10:47 PM
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HONG KONG/BEIJING: More Chinese tourists are expected to travel overseas during next week's extra-long Lunar New Year break, with top destinations ranging from Russia and Australia to Thailand and South Korea, travel agencies say, but Japan has lost some sheen.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 12, 10:04 PM
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Chinese New Year, also called the Spring Festival, is the most important and beloved festival in China. Our team has chosen five of our favorite 2022 Chinese New Year marketing campaigns.
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 12, 7:49 PM
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This unprecedented mass experimentation and mass adoption of AI applications will provide meaningful lessons for the whole world to see.
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
March 16, 10:00 PM
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Singapore welcomed a total of 1.50 million visitor arrivals in February, up 9.0% compared with the same month last year
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 25, 8:32 PM
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During this Chinese New Year, young people have embraced a new, stress-free approach to dumpling making, creating a viral trend that redefined festive traditions.
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 25, 5:16 AM
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The Year of the Fire Horse shifted the tone and emotional tempo of the Chinese market in 2026. Chinese New Year marketing campaigns adapted to a shift in emotional mood: from reflection, healing, and controlled luxury to acceleration, vitality, and disciplined ambition.
🐴 Balancing value and symbolism: Success in the Fire Horse cycle was driven by calibrated value propositions. In a price-sensitive, rational environment, symbolic storytelling worked when backed by clear perceived value and long-term trust.
🧨 Beyond celebration-oriented campaigns: Campaigns that moved beyond generic red imagery and instead linked zodiac symbolism to concrete emotional realities generated stronger engagement. Examples include humor around burnout or disciplined interpretations of vitality rather than exaggerated celebration.
📱 Integrated marketing driving long-term success: Sustainable performance requires coordinated cross-platform architecture. Discovery (e.g., Xiaohongshu), engagement (e.g., Douyin), and transaction validation (e.g., Tmall) increasingly operate as an integrated funnel rather than isolated activations.
📹 Livestreaming as a means of garnering trust: Rising influencer commissions and declining trust are accelerating the shift toward store livestreaming. Brand-operated streams reduce volatility, strengthen retention, and convert offline assets into digital sales infrastructure.
Read more here: https://lnkd.in/eMjrxVTM
#ChinaMarket #ChineseNewYear #CNYMarketing #DaxueConsulting #DaxueStories
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 11:35 PM
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From flour and cotton to health foods and digital deliveries – China's shopping cart tells a powerful story. See how rising incomes and new mindsets are reshaping what (and why) we buy this Spring Festival.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 6:49 PM
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Explore Chinese New Year 2026 trends, advertising spend outlook, consumer behaviour shifts across Asia Pacific, and how brands can win the festival moment with data driven, omnichannel and CTV led strategies
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 6:47 PM
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Chinese New Year consumption injects momentum into global economy-
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 6:43 PM
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In the first four days of the holiday break, average daily sales at major retail and catering businesses rose 8.6 percent from the corresponding period a year earlier, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 24, 12:14 AM
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At Dubai’s Mall of the Emirates, we brought together Susan Fang and PRONOUNCE, a live Huangmei opera performance, and a fully bilingual campaign to celebrate Chinese New Year.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 20, 10:33 PM
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Chinese diplomatic missions serving a number of major Asia-Pacific casino jurisdictions have issued “stay away from gambling” warnings to Chinese citizens amid the advent of the Chinese New Year holiday period that started on Sunday (February 15). Chinese New Year this time falls on February 17 (Tuesday) and the annual celebration is usually a peak
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 18, 11:46 PM
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The memes are really about how deeply global digital life is embedded in Chinese-built systems – and how comfortable young people are with that.
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Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 14, 7:01 PM
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Many foreigners do not know much about Chinese history... This video is a perfect sumup to understand the history about China, I think Han Dynasty, Tang, Song, Yuan , Ming etc
You can visualize many time this video done by AI... but very informative. | 34 comments on LinkedIn
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Scooped by
Trevor Lee @ TravConsult
February 12, 10:03 PM
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The brands that succeeded were those that translated cultural symbolism into disciplined, systemized conversion strategies. Rathe
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