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Milking the China market

China market

Mark Tanner provides some insights into the liquid milk market in China and explains how brands have tracked changing consumer behaviours and preferences and adapted their products and marketing accordingly.

Good old-fashioned plain white milk brands were some of the biggest beneficiaries of the pandemic. Not long after the pandemic struck, renowned Chinese doctors and even the Government were advocating drinking milk as a way to build the body's immune system to help fend off the dreaded Covid.

The pandemic-induced growth in milk has shown no signs of abating. Liquid milk revenue was up 19 percent in July this year from 2022 on Alibaba platforms. It retained its position as the most popular dairy category, accounting for 35 percent of sales.

Unfortunately, the rise in milk consumption hasn’t been shared evenly across brands. Like most categories in China, the marketplace for liquid milk is looking awfully Darwinian, with a brand’s ability to adapt to compete and survive in China’s market more pronounced than before the pandemic.

There were 21 percent fewer brands selling any real volume of milk online in July than a year earlier. Foreign brands have been particularly poor at adapting, with their share of liquid milk sales dropping 12.8 percent in Q2 last year, to 8.3 percent in Q2 in 2023.

For the dairy category as a whole, foreign brands account for over a quarter of revenue.

Believe it or not, plain white milk has been among the most dynamic of China’s dairy categories. The most successful brands have tracked changing consumer behaviours and preferences and adapted their products and marketing accordingly.

When we launched our Dairy Tracker in 2020, our data highlighted a number of areas where foreign milk brands were falling behind such as format, essential claims and over-discounting.

Based on our latest Dairy Tracker data, China’s market for liquid milk is much more sophisticated than in 2020. Foreign brands appear to be using fewer insights and data in their decision-making than domestic brands, given their claims and offerings appear to resonate less than pre-pandemic. This has been exacerbated by foreign-based decision-makers having very little exposure to China over the Covid years.

Throw in some logistical challenges, and foreign brands were always going to struggle to retain and grow their share since 2020.

But not all is lost. Although the weighted average price of milk has dropped 13 percent from a year ago, this has largely been driven by a glut of supply in the market. A sizeable portion of consumers continue to demand high-end milk products that meet their needs.

Australian dairy brands have managed to increase their price premium by 25 percent over the past 12 months with a limited fall in overall revenue. Other large producers haven’t done so well. New Zealand brands have seen a slight drop in their average weighted sales prices and revenue, while German brands have seen the average price paid for milk fall by over a third.

Brands that have best tapped into the premium end of the market have leveraged and promoted unique milk sources, unique farming environments, incorporated buzzwords into their communications and introduced highly-specific nutrients for specific functions.

One example of including melatonin with milk, playing to the consumer insight that a lot of Chinese drink milk before bed to help them sleep, coupled with 36 percent of Chinese suffering from frequent insomnia, and 67.4 percent of people have purchased products that claim to enhance sleep.

 

Liquid Milk Market report

There are lessons from China’s liquid milk category that most brands can learn from. For dairy brands interested in learning more about what China’s liquid milk market looks like now, and what the most successful brands have been doing to tap into its growth, we’ve put together a Liquid Milk Market report. The report delves a lot deeper into the insights above, and introduces many more findings and lessons. It uses the valuable data from our Dairy Tracker in an easy-to-read, actionable report.

 

You can purchase the report here. To contact Mark Tanner email mark@chinaskinny.com

 

 

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