German cosmetics brand battles boring image
Last August, German skincare label Nivea announced that Rihanna
would no longer serve as the public face of the brand, dropping the
singer only a year after signing her to endorse its products.As Stefan Heidenreich, incoming chief executive at Beiersdorf which owns the Nivea brand, then put it, the Barbadian pop star had developed “a no-go” reputation.
“I do not understand how Nivea can be brought into association with Rihanna… Nivea stands for trust, family and reliability,” he added, rather austerely.
A look at a few of Rihanna’s Nivea ads may help to shed light on the matter. In one commercial a family is seen moisturising with Nivea lotion while Rihanna’s sultry hit California King Bed plays in the background. The original pop video for the song featured the star in lingerie, writhing in bed with a male visitor. Not quite the association that Herr Heidenreich has in mind, perhaps.
“The good old days of making easy money are long-gone,” Nivea’s newly appointed general manager in China, Pan Yufeng, told 21CN Business Herald.
Perhaps that’s not so surprising for a brand that has been in China for almost a century, arriving long before competitors like L’Oreal and P&G. The German firm sent its sales representatives from Hamburg to sell its products as early as 1914. But the fact that it was such an early player in the market can mean that Nivea struggles to excite some of China’s local consumers. Like many German consumer brands, says Pan, the problem hasn’t been a lack of brand recognition. The real challenge is that some shoppers have found the brand “boring”, Pan admits.
At present, China contributes about 5% of Beiersdorf’s revenue. But it wants China to be a larger part of its global business: in five years, the goal is for the percentage to reach 10%.
To achieve that target, Nivea has its sights squarely set on men’s skincare and to generate more of the ‘cool’ factor it has hired Taiwanese actor Ke Zhendong as the spokesperson for its men’s skincare line. The move was designed to appeal to a younger demographic, although Pan admits it was controversial at head office, with his German bosses reluctant to sign up new celebrity endorsers after their recent experience of parting company with the anything-but-boring Rihanna.
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