Wang Jianlin explains “new tactics for brick and mortar business”: 1,000 Wanda Plazas will be under operation within the next 10 years
Dec 19,2017
Following is the transcript of Chairman Wang Jianlin’s speech:
Today, I heard a new idea of “Smart Retail” proposed by Mr. Zhang Jindong. So far, four major Chinese companies that perfectly integrate the Internet with retail have created three new terms: New Retail by 阿里巴巴, Smart Retail by Mr. Zhang Jindong, and Unbounded Retail by JD.com. Now, it is Pony Ma’s turn to raise his ideas. But I want to suggest that all these new ideas and strategies fall under the same theme – retail.
Mr. Zhang Jindong has given me a chance to present a keynote speech, and I’d like to share with you my own experience of “new tactics for brick and mortar business” in the limited time available. As Mr. Zhang Jindong said just now, the Internet has had a great impact on brick and mortar businesses since it entered China over 20 years ago, especially in the era of online shopping, threatening and even killing off a lot of physical stores.
As many people are wondering: are there still prospects for brick and mortar businesses? Is it worth investing in brick and mortar businesses? In the past two years, it seems that brick and mortar businesses have re-boomed as many internet companies and giants have shifted their focus towards offline expansion. As a representative of China’s brick and mortar business, Wanda has suffered very little and even no impact from e-commerce in recent years.
For example, customer flow, revenues and rents are three core indexes for Wanda Plazas opened in the past 5 years. The first two are for our customers, while the last one is for Wanda. These indexes witnessed a QoQ growth of over 6% on average over the past 5 years, indicating not only that incomes increased, but also the increase in per customer transaction. In terms of investment, Wanda Plazas witnessed their fastest growth in the past 2 years. Wanda opened 25 Wanda Plazas a year at most before 2016. In 2016 and 2017, however, over 50 new Wanda Plazas were opened each year, representing an increase of 100%. Moreover, we have a grand vision to run about 1,000 Wanda Plazas within 10 years (as of 2028) from next year.
What does it mean? Taking this year’s data as an example, a Wanda Plaza run for over 1 year receives an average of 20 million customers annually, while a Wanda Plaza in a third, fourth and even fifth tier city may receive 13 to 15 million due to the decline of populations in small cities. It also indicates that 1,000 Wanda Plazas will receive a total of 13 to 15 billion customers a year. Assuming that a customer visits Wanda Plaza 30 times a year, a proper frequency, we can conclude that about 500 million customers are revisiting customers. Then, I estimate that China will have an urban population of over 1 billion people, and, excluding little kids and the very elderly, about 600 to 700 million of them will be our customers. Thus, 1,000 Wanda Plazas will cover 90% of the cities in China, and 2/3 of customers with purchasing power will be Wanda’s revisiting customers.
Now, I’ll share you something about the tactics to apply brick and mortar business in this era of online shopping or smart retail in combination with the practices of Wanda over the past two decades, mainly including the following four aspects:
I. Positioning as a social center
Wanda Plaza has never been positioned as a shopping center since it was launched. In the past, we called Wanda Plaza the business center, but we began to repeatedly emphasize Wanda Plaza’s role as a living center, a social center in a more fashionable style, 7 or 8 years ago. With regard to urban commerce, I discovered three trends.
First, there is no longer a single business center. In the past, almost all cities had only one business center, such as Wangfujing in Beijing and Nanjing Road in Shanghai. But now, as a city expands, it has more than one business center. Second, a lot of commercial complexes emerge. One-stop businesses spring up, and individual medium-sized and small stores are impacted by online stores. However, to be fair, the physical stores will be impacted as well even though there is no impact from network. Third, online shopping emerges. Considering the aforesaid trends, we accurately positioned ourselves to avoid threats. We positioned life and social communication – rather than retail – as our focus. Wanda Plazas are launched at the city-level, regional-level and community-level, but we position all the Wanda Plazas as social centers.
II. Highlighting the experience consumption
The network strikes the retail part of business, i.e. the so-called “bag consumption.” There are two kinds of consumption: bag consumption and experience consumption. The former is a kind of physical consumption where the consumers buy things and go away. The latter means that the customers enjoy life, for example, by having a meal, doing fitness exercises, swimming, singing, watching a movie, etc. The network consumption has a great impact on the bag consumption. But it can never replace this kind of experience consumption that can be realized only in a real scene.
Over a decade ago, I gave a speech in Hangzhou on how to run a business center, and I used the word “eating” to describe how a business center was formed. At that time, people usually ran two or three restaurants in the business center, and planned to provide interim catering places for consumers. But I said, “No, we should turn business centers into urban centers where diners come and do some business as well.”
Today, I will add that a business center comes not only from “eating” but also from “playing” as a result of plenty of entertainment experiences. Wanda Plaza emphasizes the experience consumption a lot. Our Planning and Design Institute raises a mandatory condition required for new and old stores upon adjustment that the proportion of a business’ format with regards to experience consumption should be no less than 60% or it will be rejected. There is one more goal that we will try to make the business format proportion of experience consumption reach 70% within three or four years. The higher proportion that experience consumption reaches, the less strikes it may suffer. And the appeal and irreplaceability of business centers will improve and become more valuable due to more experience consumption.
Now there is also a term in Europe and America called the “anti-shopping-center.” In fact, in view of the development of Chinese commercial complexes, commerce in China is in an entirely different way from that of Europe and America. The commercial complexes in Europe and America are located in the suburbs and have at most two or three floors, with outer parking lots. Chinese commercial complexes are built higher with more food and entertainment together. Now, Europe and America are learning more from Chinese commercial complexes