The good and the bad of China brands

We kick off a new short-video series, Marketing Masters, with Prophet's Tom Doctoroff discussing what Chinese brands need to do better to succeed outside their home market.

In a new video for Campaign Asia-Pacific, marketing industry heavyweight Tom Doctoroff lays down some home truths about what Chinese brands currently get fantastically right and what they're getting horribly wrong.

Specifically, Doctoroff draws attention to the possibility that the country's cultural mindset is having a knock-on effect on structures. "When you have overall a relatively protective culture, where people revere the concrete and they tend to think that the abstract is not bankable, the conceptual is not bankable, then that tends to translate into fairly rigid corporate hierarchies," he says.

This video kicks off Campaign's new short-video series, Marketing Masters, in which respected industry minds will share their expert wisdom on specialist subjects. We will have more episodes featuring Doctoroff's insights, and considering the imminent release of Campaign's highly anticipated Asia's Top 1000 Brands, we've made sure that our questions have a particular focus on brand development.

Doctoroff, APAC CEO of J. Walter Thompson until June last year, recently joined Prophet as senior partner. He has more than 20 years experience working in China and has authored two books on the subject; Billions: Selling to the New Chinese Consumer and What Chinese Want: Culture, Communism and the Modern Chinese Consumer.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

The new rules of out-of-home in political advertising

With Australia’s federal election looming and political ad spend projected to increase by 21%, Digital out-of-home (DOOH) is bringing data, flexibility, and measurability to the table–without the algorithmic noise says Veridooh’s Jeremy Yang

3 hours ago

The biggest shift in PR history is not AI

Agencies need to address a fundamental shift in the nature of the PR industry, says Instinctif Partners’ Jim Donaldson

4 hours ago

Publicis grows 4.9% in Q1; says new business streak ...

Agency group is “extremely confident” it will hit annual growth forecast, expected to be between 4% and 5% in 2025

12 hours ago

Women to Watch 2024: Nicole Geekie, Jaywing

Geekie’s pivotal role in evolving Jaywing’s service offering now brings the agency more than half of its revenue from The Studio, underpinning the importance of performance-driven solutions to marketers.