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Slick advertising, sports sponsorships help boost Chinese brands’ fortunes in Europe

Increased visibility at sports events beloved by Europeans could help Chinese brands appear less threatening, researcher says

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People visit the BYD stand at the Paris Motor Show in October 2022. Photo: Xinhua
Xiaofei Xuin Paris

Parisian Alexandre Martins still remembers Chinese electronics brand Xiaomi’s old stores in the French capital, where his parents and sister used to shop.

“They were at good locations, like Chatelet [a commercial area in central Paris] … I used to go scout for stuff and then buy them online,” Martins said.

The Chinese tech brand opened its first boutique in France in 2018, but had shut all of its stores in the country by 2022, opting instead to maintain a presence online and with partnered retailers and operators.

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“I don’t think they were making a lot of money … back then its image was not that good; there was always this sense that ‘Ah it’s Xiaomi, it’s a Chinese brand, the quality is not good’,” Martins said on Monday.

Xiaomi is now preparing for a comeback, announcing plans this month to open 500 new retail stores outside China this year, especially in “developed markets”. It said it aims to open 10,000 stores overseas in the next five years.

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The decision to close all its stores in France in 2022 “corresponded to an adjustment in Xiaomi’s retail strategy, which aimed to respond to the purchasing behaviour of the French”, the company said on Thursday.

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