US cosmetics firm Nu Skin is planning to recruit an army of up
to 5,000 direct sellers in Shanghai by the end of this year.
Expansion plans also include opening 100 service centers in the
city and 40 more specialty shops across the country, taking the
total to 180.
"Our strategy features a dual focus we give priority to
specialty shops with their full-time contracted employees on the
one hand, and service centers with their part-time direct selling
staff on the other," said Qiu Jinyun, president of Nu Skin China,
at a press conference in Shanghai yesterday.
The world's leading direct seller of personal care and nutrition
products, Nu Skin was granted a direct sales licence by the
Ministry of Commerce on Monday, five months after rival Avon
secured the first of the licences in the country.
"This direct sales licence shows government recognition of our
leading position in the business line. Abiding by the laws and
regulations also helped us gain the government's trust," said
Qiu.
"Despite having the direct sales licence, we still face
unprecedented competition from our peers," added Qu.
Apart from Nu Skin, the commerce ministry also granted licences
to three other companies selling nutritional supplements domestic
companies Ant Power and Zhen-ao, and Hong Kong-invested Pro-Health
Care.
In contrast to cosmetics giant Avon, Qiu said, Nu Skin is
following a cautious growth strategy in China.
The measured development model is more suitable for conditions
in China, as the direct-selling tactic has yet to be proven in the
country, he said.
Last year was a tough one for Avon in China, the Nu Skin
president believes, with its evolution from a retail model to
direct selling hampered by its 7,000 franchised stores across the
country.
"We have no such problems; we have no franchised shops and all
the 140 stores are specialty shops directly under Nu Skin," said Li
Chaodong, president of Nu Skin in Northern China.
According to the company, Nu Skin will tackle its direct selling
expansion in China in a series of steps.
Having established their presence in Shanghai, after three
months they hope to expand to Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian and
Guangdong provinces in southeastern China.
The final stage, yet to be timetabled, is full national
coverage.
In response to the direct sales regulations issued by the State
Council in 2005, Nu Skin has established a strict supervision
system for its direct selling staff and only certified sellers will
be allowed to market Nu Skin products outside of the specialty
shops, said Qiu.
A website publicizing basic information including prices and new
products and a 24-hour hotline will also help ensure things run
smoothly, he added.
(China Daily August 4, 2006)