Burberry said it will open a so-called "social retail" store in
Shenzhen in China's technology hub powered by Tencent technology
in the first half of next year that will blend retail and social
media to create digital and physical spaces aimed at attracting
customers.
Few other details were given.
But with its popular Wechat Pay online payment platform and
Weibo's vast social media clout in one of the world's largest
luxury goods market, Tencent offers Burberry a one-stop shop for
marketing and selling its products online and in stores.
Tencent's Wechat is China's dominant chat app.
"Social media is becoming such an important part of the luxury
customer journey, particularly in the inspiration phase, and
retail needs to keep pace with this," Burberry Chief Executive
Marco Gobbetti said in a statement.
"China was the obvious place to start as it is one of the
leading hubs for innovation and technology and Chinese consumers
are some of the highest users of social media."
Shenzhen is the neighboring city to Hong Kong on China's
mainland where sales are suffering as months of protests have
forced retailers to close stores.
The move also comes as more well-off Chinese consumers are
buying at home, deterred from overseas shopping trips due to the
weaker yuan.
Burberry, known for its traditional tartan pattern, posted
double-digit declines in Hong Kong sales in its latest earnings
released on Thursday although the popularity of collections by
designer Riccardo Tisci boosted overall sales.
Chinese retail giants like Alibaba <BABA.N> and JD.com <JD.O>
have also upped the ante in their battle for relevance in the
lucrative luxury goods market with the launch of luxury sites in
mid-2017 that boast labels such as Hugo Boss <BOSSn.DE>.
(Reporting by Tanishaa Nadkar in Bengaluru; additional reporting
by Pei Li and Brenda Goh in Beijing; editing by Josephine Mason
and Elaine Hardcastle)
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