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Smaller cities key to Watsons' growth

By WANG ZHUOQIONG (China Daily) Updated: 2014-12-11 08:19

Smaller cities key to Watsons' growth

People walk past a Watsons store in Nanjing city, East China's Jiangsu province, Aug 6 2014.[Photo/IC]

The Watsons chain of health and beauty stores will continue to strengthen its presence using existing stores in first-and second-tier cities and expanding in lower-tier cities in the Chinese mainland, even as the retail market in the nation slows, a company executive said.

The chain operates under the A. S. Watson Group, Asia's largest health and beauty retailer.

Christian Nothhaft, chief executive officer of Watsons China, told China Daily that the company is expanding in the nation faster than its competitors.

It has 100 percent coverage of the first-tier cities. In second-tier cities, the company still sees "a lot of store expansion possibilities", he said. Watsons aims to have 3,000 stores by early 2017.

"Emerging cities are so many in number and spending behavior is becoming more sophisticated and demanding. There are still opportunities for us selling innovative products," he said.

The retailer is present in more than 70 percent of third-tier cities. The figure is about one-third in fourth-tier cities, where there is huge growth potential.

"So our growth potential is horizontal, growing store numbers in both existing and new cities," said Nothhaft.

Watsons has more than 4,000 stores and more than 1,000 pharmacies in 12 Asian and European markets. Its parent A.S. Watson Group is a Hutchison Whampoa Ltd company.

About half of its brand's stores globally are in China. On Dec 2, Watsons opened its 2,000th store in China, in Tianjin municipality.

The company is not only finding new customers. It is also seeking to provide products that existing customers really want, he said.

"We did an adjustment according to customer needs," he said, citing the huge number of new products Watsons offers every year and emphasizing the significance of its own brand products.

Watsons-branded products, which have risen from very small shares of the total to more than 50 percent now, will keep growing, said Nothhaft.

To compete with retailers that have spent more on the Internet, Watsons China has expanded to social media, mobile apps and e-commerce. The retailer has its own website and online stores at major e-commerce websites including Tmall, JD.com and Amazon.cn.

This year, some of its stores in Shanghai began offering Wi-Fi service. The company aims to cover more cities in 2015 to directly engage with customers with product and coupon offers.

To support deliveries of orders from physical stores and online channels, Watsons set up nine distribution centers in China. About 60 million items on average are shipped every month from the centers. "It is important that you manage them yourself," he said.

According to Euromonitor International, the health and beauty specialist retail market in China is valued at 976.1 billion yuan ($159 billion) this year.

Jason Yu, general manager of Kantar Worldpanel China, said the firm's data show that average spending by customers on each visit to Watsons this year was up 8 percent to 94 yuan, thanks to its clear market position and in-store shopping experience.

He said that Watsons' biggest challenge amid the growth of e-commerce is how to get shoppers into its brick-and-mortar outlets more often.

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