Carol Huang
Oct 14, 2020

Maybelline to pull out of department stores in China

The brand will continue to rely more on online sales while opening more flagship and experience stores.

It will continue to open flagship stores and experience centres in China.
It will continue to open flagship stores and experience centres in China.

L'Oreal brand Maybelline will gradually quit using department store channel in China, adjusting its offline channels to offer more user experiences while expanding online sales.

According to Southern Metropolis Daily, L'Oréal confirmed the change and said it will continue to open flagship stores and experience centres in China.

Since 2018, Maybelline has been reducing its offline sales in supermarkets in line with a strategy to upgrade its brand image. General manager Wang Qianyuan of L'Oréal's makeup department said in an event earlier that Chinese consumers have a mature understanding of makeup products, and Maybelline would accordingly adjust its stores and image.

In its statement, L'Oréal said the reason to retreat from department stores is to "emphasise its unique image of a fashion brand and to better catering consumers' need."

Online sales have become L'Oréal's major source of income. According to its latest earnings report, online sales of increased by 52.4% year-on-year to €4.6 billion (US$5.4 billion). And since the beginning of 2020, sales from e-commerce contributed about 50% of L'Oréal China's sales.

Although the pandemic has made an impact on Maybelline's global sales, the impact in China is quite limited. Maybelline was one of the first makeup brands to start live-streaming sales as it adapted to the fast-changing Chinese environment. Early in 2016, it invited 50 internet celebrities to help sell lipsticks online, achieving 10,000 sales in two hours. Today, Maybelline still works with live-streamers in multiple channels to boost its sales online.

(This article first appeared on CampaignAsia.com)

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

9 hours ago

Disney Cruise Line VP on how the brand ventures ...

With a locally adaptive strategy, strong fan engagement, and Disney’s magical storytelling, Disney Cruise Line sets sail into Asia ahead of its December 2025 debut. Campaign speaks exclusively with VP and regional GM Sarah Fox before Campaign 360 next week.

10 hours ago

Omnicom set targets to cut staff costs by 10 per cent

Omnicom Group set targets to reduce its total staff compensation bill by 10 per cent ahead of its proposed acquisition of Interpublic Group (IPG), PRWeek has learned.

13 hours ago

Slack’s new hustle: From free chats to paid ...

With AI agents, structured integrations, and Slack Connect, Salesforce bets on transforming Slack from a chat tool into a marketer’s operating system.

13 hours ago

The emotional connection: A new normal in influencer...

Brand recall tends to be faster and stronger when associated with individuals who have established face value, says The InterMentalist founder.