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| pryuen |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:09 am |
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Joined: 25 Feb 2003
Posts: 46895
Location: Hong Kong/China
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An old article 4 yars ago that further substantiated what we're discussing about.
If Dr. Moranus bothered to open the link that Temuchin provided him with and read that blog entry of Li Dan, or researched further on who Warren Liu (the author of KFC in China: Secret Recipe for Success) is, he will know KFC’s success in China had not been brought about by US Gwei-lo, Asian Americans, Hong Kongers, Singaporeans, BUT SOLELY by the enterpreneurship and savvy of the Taiwanese Gang, which comprised of Tony Wang Ta-Tung, Sam Su and a couple other core Taiwanese professionals that KFC recruited and built in the mid 80s. Tony Wang Ta-Tung, (born 1944 in Sichuan, China but moved to Taiwan prior to the Communist takeover in 1949, raised and educated in Taiwan and USA) was the one who laid the foundation for UFC to enter China; Sam Su followed Tony Wang to take hlem and steered KFC China's business.
Quote:
KFC - 'a foreign brand
with Chinese characteristics'
By John Sexton
One of the many mysteries of modern marketing is how KFC, a once rather lack-luster American fast food brand, outperformed all competitors and in particular arch rival and world market leader McDonald's, to become the biggest restaurant chain in China.
Whether measured by number of restaurants, revenue, or market share, KFC is far and away the number one restaurant brand in China. Even more striking is its dominance over McDonald's, a position that is reversed in nearly every other country. McDonald's has 800 branches in China, compared to KFC's 2200 and, with KFC opening 300 new branches per year, the gap is widening.
KFC China is not just outperforming the competition. In 2007 it contributed more than 20 percent of global revenue of parent company Yum!, whose brand portfolio includes Taco Bell and Pizza Hut. It is a proportion that is likely to grow up to and beyond 50 percent, according to Taiwan-born Warren Liu, a former member of the company's Greater China executive committee.
Liu, who was with Yum! for three years from 1997, and is in Beijing to promote a book about his experience with the company, is very clear about the reasons for this remarkable success story. KFC China, he says, quite simply went native.
The first important move was to recruit a local senior management team; not so simple in 1987 when KFC opened its first restaurant not far from Chairman Mao's Mausoleum in downtown Beijing. Back then nobody in Chinese mainland had experience of running a fast food chain, so KFC did the next best thing. They recruited what Liu affectionately refers to as "the Taiwan gang."
Liu says it was crucial for firms trying to enter the market back then to have an understanding of China and the Chinese cultural context "so deep that it is intuitive," to understand the Chinese people's "mixed feelings, of love and hate about the West, to understand Chinese history, language, the influence of Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism, this is especially important if you are in the consumer goods industry."
KFC looked at recruiting from Hong Kong, then still a British colony, Singapore, and other areas in Asia but in the end found its core team in Taiwan. "Why particularly Taiwan?" said Liu. "The education system in Taiwan at the time was very Sino-centric. We learnt Chinese history, Chinese geography; we studied the Tang dynasty poets Du Fu and Li Bai. The Taiwan gang was the best available substitute for a local team."
The second factor underpinning KFC's success, according to Liu is product localization. Liu said the company has constantly sought to adapt its offerings to the local palate. For some years customers have been able to order congee (rice porridge) with thousand year old eggs. But six months ago, Liu said, he had a kind of epiphany. "I woke up and turned on the early morning news and realized KFC was selling youtiao [a kind of Chinese doughnut]. I realized KFC has entered a new plateau. Youtiao are the quintessential Chinese breakfast. I was speechless. That's localization as extreme as it can be."
Asked if KFC might prove vulnerable to the kind of economic nationalism seen around Coca Cola's proposed takeover of China's Huiyuan juice company, Liu replied, "KFC is still seen as a foreign brand but it's a foreign brand with local characteristics." Not everyone may agree. In 2007 the All China Federation of Trade Unions accused KFC and Pizza Hut of paying their employees in Guangdong Province less than the minimum wage. The ACFTU has recently stepped up a recruitment campaign targeting foreign companies that have resisted unionization.
Liu said his primary motivation for writing the book was not to help multinationals conquer the China market, but to help Chinese firms who have ambitions to go abroad. "For the last decade the Chinese government has been urging the most capable of Chinese enterprises to step out. So far the results have not been impressive. That's an understatement. So I hope people here can learn from the KFC experience in China" |
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| dodonose |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:59 am |
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Joined: 18 Mar 2003
Posts: 1291
Location: New York
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| Don't people in China have anything better to do? It's like, even if some dleague player goes there, there's a crowd waiting with signs. |
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| PhilNYC |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 8:22 am |
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Joined: 16 Aug 2004
Posts: 2265
Location: NJ/NY Metro Area
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dodonose wrote: Don't people in China have anything better to do? It's like, even if some dleague player goes there, there's a crowd waiting with signs.
True...but in this case, it's the starting PG from the Houston Rockets, not some d-leaguer... |
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| Malorkayel |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 8:28 am |
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Joined: 14 Nov 2003
Posts: 8901
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It shows that people in China have the freedom to celebrate as they see fit.
That's a good thing. |
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| shokenchi |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 9:56 am |
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Joined: 10 Nov 2004
Posts: 7533
Location: Guangxi
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shows they appreciate players. have yao got this kind of attention in usa?  |
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| dodonose |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 1:06 pm |
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Joined: 18 Mar 2003
Posts: 1291
Location: New York
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Phil, I'm not talking about this specific case. Just in general. I should have added that in my original post.
PhilNYC wrote: dodonose wrote: Don't people in China have anything better to do? It's like, even if some dleague player goes there, there's a crowd waiting with signs.
True...but in this case, it's the starting PG from the Houston Rockets, not some d-leaguer... |
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| pryuen |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:08 pm |
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Joined: 25 Feb 2003
Posts: 46895
Location: Hong Kong/China
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dodonose wrote: Phil, I'm not talking about this specific case. Just in general. I should have added that in my original post.
PhilNYC wrote: dodonose wrote: Don't people in China have anything better to do? It's like, even if some dleague player goes there, there's a crowd waiting with signs.
True...but in this case, it's the starting PG from the Houston Rockets, not some d-leaguer...
Well, personally don't think this phenomenum is UNIQUE ONLY in China. It happens EVERYWHERE.
You have to understand in every country, there are always travellers flying in either as tourists or first time visitors or business delegations.
So it is NATURAL that representatives from travel agencies or inviting companies or relatives/friends holding signages with the names wirtten on them or other conspicuous signages waiting to greet the incoming visitors/guests. |
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| Malorkayel |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:27 pm |
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Joined: 14 Nov 2003
Posts: 8901
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In America, we have entire TV shows dedicated to bums like the Kardashians. Also, women throw themselves to any minor celebrities and child actors get sexually molested.
You want to talk like some fans in Asian airports with signs and cameras like it's a big deal... nega please. |
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| temuchin |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:33 pm |
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Joined: 01 Apr 2004
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dodonose wrote: Phil, I'm not talking about this specific case. Just in general. I should have added that in my original post.
PhilNYC wrote: dodonose wrote: Don't people in China have anything better to do? It's like, even if some dleague player goes there, there's a crowd waiting with signs.
True...but in this case, it's the starting PG from the Houston Rockets, not some d-leaguer...
well there are shenanigans. some of those people in some of those mob scenes that annoy you might be bought.
Hollywood definitely pays Indians and SE Asians. there was a controversy when tom cruise paid a bunch of people to come cheer his movie in mumbai. the North Koreans hired fans for soccer matches etc. I often wonder if those korean stars who have thousands of people who show up in Thailand or Europe actually are that popular.
not saying Lin pays ppl but some of the cheering crowds for Kobe back in the day might have been paid off by the promoter to make the entire event better... obviously it's not going to cost them much at all to hire some coolies. then Chinese, like all humans are stupid sheep. seeing huge mass of people cheering some black basketball player would only increase the numbers at the next stop
some American shows pay audiences to come and laugh hard as well. studios plant and pay for reviews etc etc.
so yeah some of it might be suspicious. cheering for Lin though isn't weird at all. he was the most exciting thing in the NBA even during a season that carefully orchestrated the coronation of Lebron |
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| Malorkayel |
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:48 pm |
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Joined: 14 Nov 2003
Posts: 8901
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It doesn't take much to get fans. Just look up youtube and you'll find hundreds of channels where regular people have thousands of fans.
But yeah, some of these photo ops are staged. In the media, it's very rare that what you see is real.
One of my co-workers got paid to go on reality shows and pretend/say what the producers want. Sometimes not even for money, but just a limo ride and parting gifts. |
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