A more open environment for direct selling is nourishing China's cosmetics
market
----By Lindsay Frangs
 |
The cosmetics industry in China stands alone in its ability to fulfill the
needs of three key stakeholders: businesses, the customer and the government. An
ever-expanding customer base is the vision of any company; a growing product
range available at a respectable price is any customer's dream; and increasing
foreign investment is the government's greatest desire.
The Chinese cosmetics
industry is valued at around RMB85 billion annually, with industry experts
predicting growth rates of between 25 and 50 percent in the next 10 years. With
the growing spending power of Chinese consumers, new research and development
centers opening up and relaxing legislation, it is a wonderful world of color,
especially for the cosmetic direct-selling market.
Recently, the Chinese
government dropped prohibitive laws against direct sales companies. US-based
Avon was the first company to receive a license in February 2006. The Ministry
of Commerce (MOFCOM) approved Avon's application for direct selling, allowing
the company to hire independent promoters to sell products directly to
consumers. Avon, Amway, Nu Skin and Mary Kay were the major contenders pushing
the cause during the past few years and consequently the doors have finally been
eased open.
New models
Following a 1998 ban on direct selling due to lack
of control over pyramid schemes, companies have been operating under
restrictions for the past seven years. Foreign-invested direct-sales companies
were allowed to continue selling door-to-door through an independent sales
force, however, they had to open shops and sign labor contracts with all their
salespeople, whose income would be based solely on their own sales rather than
those of the people they recruited.
The past 12 months have seen progressive
steps by the Chinese government to get direct selling back into the retail game.
In April 2005, a trial permit was issued to Avon allowing "official" operation
in Tianjin, Beijing and Guangdong province. This was followed by the release of
a new direct selling legislation effective as of December 1st of last year, with
the final step being the awarding of the first direct selling license in
February 2006.
"The benefits of the granting of licenses are threefold,"
explains Paul Haacke, Vice President of Marketing, Nu Skin China. "Firstly, the
obvious advantage is that it will allow the selling of products away from fixed
retail stores. But more importantly, the license allows Chinese nationals to
participate in part-time work. To date, nationals have only been allowed one
job, and therefore it was a considerable risk to quit their job to follow a
career path in cosmetics. Now they can test the water part-time." Haacke
concludes, "The third benefit is that we now have the government stamp of
approval on this business model."
The new law focuses on three requirements
for direct-selling companies in China. First of all, foreign-funded
direct-selling companies are required to invest a minimum of RMB80 million and
exist as a business outside of China for at least three years. Domestic
companies must have cumulative sales of RMB500 million for three years before
they can apply to enter the direct-selling business. Secondly, every direct
selling company must put down a deposit starting at RMB20 million. The deposit
is set aside for handling consumers' complaints, fines and compensation. The
size of the deposit prevents smaller, weaker companies from entering the market.
Lastly, there is a limit on the levels of trainee numbers. Training courses held
at a company's headquarters can include no more than 600 people. At
provincial-level branch companies, the limit on trainees is 400; in-store
training has a limit of 200; and in smaller places, 50 is the cap.
The
industry's global players have few or no issues with these increased
regulations, but they are concerned about a fourth condition relating to
compensation. Angela Keung, president of the Hong Kong Direct Selling
Association and general manager of Amway Hong Kong, says, "The direct-sales laws
are designed to force direct selling into a single-level marketing-type (SLM)
structure with commission-based compensation capped at 30 percent of personal
sales. The Chinese regulations tie the percentage to an individual salesperson's
sales. In nearly all traditional direct-sales organizations, salespersons are
allowed to be compensated on sales-support services." This aside, the new
regulations favor foreign companies due to the stringent capital and sales
requirements that domestic companies may find hard to fulfill.
Foreign
companies that have been struggling to restructure their direct selling business
models in line with the Chinese legislation welcome a positive outlook. Almost
all the big names saw a decline in sales over the past years, in contrast to the
increases seen across the board for retail cosmetic companies. "We have made a
lot of effort to restructure our business model, but it needs some slight
changes," said Gan Chee Eng, vice-president of Amway China.
"Sales in this
fiscal year (from September 2005 to August 2006), may be lower than in the
previous year, but any business decline will be within our expectations," Gan
said. Amway has not yet applied for a direct selling license and under the
ruling can operate as is until December 1st, 2006.
Pretty good
Direct
selling does have distinct advantages, and China stands to benefit greatly from
this retail method. Customers get personal, comprehensive information on the
product and have it delivered to their door. It is a cost-effective, efficient
marketing channel for small businesses and new products. Direct sales can offer
new employment opportunities for individuals, particularly in poorer rural
areas. The skills learned through direct selling are transferable and can be
used by individuals to build new business ventures. While the industry respects
and supports efforts to protect the public from fraud, this need not limit the
growth of legitimate direct-selling firms.
Haacke of Nu Skin says, "When we
started business in China in 2003 we focused on the provinces in eastern China
due to the obvious reasons of higher income of the population in those areas and
better infrastructure for advertising and retail store set up." He explains,
"Now we have stores in every province in China and employ 3,600 active sales
representatives and approximately 1,500 support staff."
Mary Kay employs
340,000 sales staff, Avon has 74 branches employing nearly 2,000 associates and
Amway has 140 stores located in every province with a sales force of 120,000
sales representatives, as well as a team of 80,000 authorized agents. With this
significant employment volume having been created in an industry under apparent
restrictions, experts are positive about the future.
Global cosmetic
manufacturers are also increasing their dedication to China through acquisitions
of local brands, relocation of their regional headquarters to China,
introduction of research centers and development of Chinese-centric cosmetic
brands. Nu Skin has two of its three major research and development centers
located in China with the third in Utah at the global headquarters. "Nu Skin has
an analytical laboratory in Shanghai with 30 staff and a second lab in Beijing
employing 20 staff," Haacke says. We also have the Nu Skin manufacturing plant
in Shanghai. All products sold in China are manufactured in Shanghai and about 5
percent is for export."
This follows the trends of non-direct selling global
cosmetics manufacturers. L'Oréal opened a research facility in Pudong (Shanghai)
in September 2005. Shiseido, Japan's biggest cosmetics maker, unveiled a new and
expanded research facility in Beijing in November 2005, a week after the launch
of Estée Lauder's new facility in Shanghai, all signs of an expanding makeup
market. Put the two sectors' sales figures together and you could be looking at
a beautiful new business opportunity.
Regulatory makeover
The Cosmetics
Working Group outlined specific changes it wished to see in how its industry is
overseen in the EU Chamber's 2005 Position Paper. The Working Group now has an
opportunity to see its recommendations acted upon, as new regulations for the
sector's main regulatory bodies, the Administration for Quality Supervision,
Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) and the Ministry of Health (MOH), are in the
process of drafting new rules. Among the key recommendations from the Position
Paper were: - Unify the double certification system currently in force for
imported cosmetics and ensure equal treatment of imported and domestic
non-functional cosmetics.
- Reconsider AQSIQ and MOH's requirements of
certificates for Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (also known as BSE, or Mad Cow
Disease) for any single import.
- Unify AQSIQ and MOH's conflicting
compulsory standards for cosmetics.
- Standardize the Chinese translation of
INCI names.
- Reduce consumption tax rates for make-up products to match the
8 percent rate for skin and hair care products.
- Revise the current State
Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) regulations on advertising that
are not in conformity with the provisions of the 1995 Advertising Law and
international practices.
Seeking harmony
Cosmetics may be a flourishing
business in China, but foreign companies continue to face difficulties arising
from an antiquated, inefficient regulatory regime that tends to cause more
confusion about the rules than clarity. "The authorities still have an old
approach to cosmetics," says Christian Chatelard, Chairman of the European
Chamber's Cosmetics Working Group. "Transparency is not their main
characteristic."
The problem is that two separate government bodies supervise
the industry - the Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine (AQSIQ) and the Ministry of Health (MOH) - and they frequently get
their wires crossed. In some instances they impose overlapping, redundant rules,
Chatelard says. For example, AQSIQ and MOH each require separate but practically
identical import certificates for cosmetics, an extra step that can delay
imported goods' arrival in the Chinese market by up to six months.
In other
cases, Chatelard says, "What is regulated on one side is the opposite of what is
regulated on the other." Indeed, both AQSIQ and MOH have their own conflicting
sets of hygiene standards for cosmetics (AQSIQ's are nearly two decades old),
making it possible for some products to receive MOH's approval but not AQSIQ's.
Chatelard says this double regulating stems from the fact that Chinese
authorities have been attempting to "make a melting pot of regulations", picking
and choosing standards from the US, Europe and Japan. "Sometimes it's not very
harmonious," he says.
Both MOH and AQSIQ are currently in the process of
drafting new regulations, which Chatelard hopes the Chamber can help influence.
His wish? "We would like to be under the supervision of only one organization.
That would be clearer for us." While he sees that outcome as unlikely, it is no
reason to stop trying. "The authorities have been receptive, yes, but we still
need to push further for more harmonized regulations."
(Source: sinomedia Picture: www.my.avon.com)