Monday , 2 October 2023

The Bare Facts On How Durex Sells Condoms in China (+2K Views)

Selling condoms in China is difficult. After purchasing Durex in 2010 Reckitt China-11Benckiser set out to expand its 30% market share there but quickly realized its usual strategy was not going to work in China so it went for an all-social and all-digital strategy overhaul and the results were dramatic. Here’s why.

The above introductory comments are paraphrased excerpts from an article* by Misiek Piskorski (imd.ord) entitled Condom Company Masters Social Internet and Wins In China – How Durex broke into the Chinese market using social media.

Reckitt Benckiser (RB) went for a radical strategy makeover, which relied on leveraging Weibo (Chinese Twitter) to get cheap advertising, engaging key opinion leaders online and partnering with e-commerce platforms to reduce distribution costs. Within 3 years, sales revenue jumped 300% as prices went up, the overall market for condoms grew, and the company’s market share soared by 50% to 45%.

Other companies can learn from RB’s experience, as the competitive Chinese business environment makes it difficult for any foreign firm to succeed.  What Reckitt did with Durex in China offers a clear-cut template for companies entering China. Steer away from offline advertising and distribution, and go for the all-digital trifecta of social media, digital opinion leaders, and e-commerce distribution.

Advertising

TV advertising is very expensive, as there are more than 3,000 different terrestrial, cable and satellite TV channels in China, so it takes a lot of money to reach the target audience scattered across so many outlets. To put it starkly, a message broadcast to only 5% of Shanghai’s population costs the same as the same message broadcast to 5% of the population of India.  

China’s more than 600 million internet users spend more time surfing than watching TV. A lot of that time is devoted to Weibo, where users gather news, post links and videos, and buy products directly. So if RB was going to build a market by advertising condoms cheaply, social media was the way to go.  

Selling something as intimate as a condom is difficult so RB embraced a light-hearted approach by creating a fictional character called Little Dudu, a cute and animated condom-like character, who dished out entertaining messages, pictures and videos, provided sexual-health information and posts about love and emotional support. Dudu also pushed the advertising envelope in a way that would have made “Mad Men” proud.  

When Beijing was struck with torrential downpours in June 2011, for example, Dudu posted a message suggesting how lucky he was to have two Durex condoms in his pocket. He posted photos of people putting condoms over their sneakers to keep them dry. The campaign went viral, and Durex’s popularity soared. The humor and cleverness of the posts made them huge hits in China, and by the end of 2013, Durex posts had received 500 million unique hits, all of that at a fraction of the cost of advertising on TV in China.  

Using Weibo, Durex also targeted key opinion leaders in China’s blogosphere, and brought them into the fold. Some were nationally recognized personalities, while others were Weibo users with large followings. By connecting with these trend-makers, Durex hoped that those connections would be shared among their followers. This crowd-driven effort paid off, as Durex became the brand of choice for affluent Chinese. The company was able to charge $5 for a dozen low-end condoms, and up to $30 for its most popular varieties.

Distribution

Distribution is also expensive, as China’s retail largely relies on mom-and-pop stores. The top five retailers represent only a small fraction of overall sales, and even they run distribution largely on a store-by-store basis, so Durex reconsidered its distribution strategy and partnered with the Alibaba Group, which oversees the Chinese equivalents of Amazon, eBay and Groupon, to provide consumers the ability to buy condoms online. Eventually, customers could buy Durex directly through Weibo and WeChat and have the products delivered to them.

Marketing Leadership

There is major lesson here, and it’s about the incentive to change. Durex adopted this radical strategy because it had to. Without it, it would have failed to conquer the second-largest economy in the world and, out of that desperation, it found a strategy that worked, and now the company is rolling it out across the globe.  

Many companies experiment around the edges, expand into e-commerce, and add a little bit of social media but since the rest of their strategy remains unchanged, the results are not that impressive, and digital and social strategies get pushed to the side.

Durex shows that a real act of leadership is to start your strategy from scratch as if all you had at your disposal was Twitter, Facebook, Amazon and eBay and a set of customers on their mobile phones. Durex clearly did that, and beat everything they had done before. 

Editor’s Note: The author’s views and conclusions in the above article are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original post. Furthermore, the views, conclusions and any recommendations offered in this article are not to be construed as an endorsement of such by the editor.

*http://www.imd.org/research/challenges/TC063-14-condom-internet-china-misiek-piskorski.cfm (Mikołaj Jan Piskorski, a Professor of Strategy and Innovation at IMD is an expert on why and how people use various online social platforms across the world, and how firms can successfully leverage social platforms to build social strategies. He is the author of “A Social Strategy: How We Profit from Social Media” published by Princeton University Press.)

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