Title: smartanalyst, inc.
1smartanalyst, inc. www.smartanalyst.com
Shampoo and Hair Care Market in Taiwan and
Malaysia Analysis KM Reference Number 3826 May
5, 2004
Analyst Commentary
Notice This SA Executive Briefing Report
presentation is compiled from the World Wide Web
and other sources solely for internal use by the
client specified above for the specific and
limited informational and research purpose
described above. SmartAnalyst locates and
organizes this information so that the client can
directly access the sources and proceed with
their own analysis and evaluation. SmartAnalyst
does not espouse any opinion or make any
recommendations as to the significance of the
data provided or its use by the client.
SmartAnalyst does not make any representation
regarding the accuracy or completeness of the
information selected.
2TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Executive Summary
- Asia Pacific Market
- Overview of market in Malaysia
- Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- Values in Malaysia Market
- What Advertisements convey
- Overview of market in Taiwan
- Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- What Advertisements convey
- Market Dynamics
- Links and Sources
- Methodology
3Executive Summary
- Overview
- In 2001 (for which the latest statistics are
available in the public domain), Malaysia and
Taiwan accounted for 140 mn and 247 mn,
respectively, of retail hair care market. - Malaysia
- PG and Unilever are fighting it out for the top
slot. Unilevers Sunsilk has recently overtaken
Pantene. The third slot is held by PGs Rejoice.
Along with Kao, these players account for nearly
50 of the hair care market. - Pantene has repositioned itself by stressing the
end result (shining hair) in shampoo category
rather than the earlier model of asking the
customer to identify the type of hair and pick
the right technologically correct choice of
Pantene sub-brand. Dove conveys the message of
smoothness with non-traditional advertising like
having a long satin cloth hang down from the
ceiling of a concourse into a Dove bottle.
Sunsilk hangs cloth ads on pillars to convey the
message of softness. - Hair care market beyond shampoo hectic
lifestyle, environmental pollution and regular
consumption of junk food have led to hair loss
and balding among the young. Hair-loss programs
offered by salons and hair care centers offer to
tackle hair loss and balding. To fill the gap,
smaller companies provide easier and affordable
programs using herbal extracts to treat hair loss
and balding. - Advertisements in Malaysia focus on shining,
long, black, swaying hair in women. And
traditional anti-dandruff line for men. Ad wars
are fought mostly on TV. The top three shampoo
market players are also the top three in TV ad
spends. The TV ads also focus on non-hair
attributes like confidence, modernity,
togetherness.
4Executive Summary
- Taiwan
- Shampoos are one of most strongly contested
markets in Taiwan. Kao holds a 22 volume share
of the shampoo market compared with FUICs 2O.
Kaos lead brand is their top seller in Japan,
Pure shampoo. FUICs main weapon is Timotei,
also brand leader in Japan. Unilever has been
consistently making attempts to achieve
leadership in Taiwan's dynamic shampoo market. - Kao, the leader in shampoos, has re-formulated
for Taiwanese hair, water, and washing habits.
Kao also has hair care salons and an RD facility
to help keep track of consumer needs, product
performance and check competition. Kao became the
first marketer to introduce a telephone hot-line
for customers to call the company with questions
or complaints. Timoteis ad campaign did not work
in the beginning. It was based on images of
blonde Scandinavian girl. Black-haired Taiwanese
consumers found the blonde hair imagery too way
out to relate to. Dove managed to transfer its
brand value as a soap into its shampoo. Earlier,
PGs Ivory tried the same but failed. - Ads focus on long, black, shining hair. Non-hair
attributes stressed are confidence and the
ability to overcome fears of closeness due to
hair problems.
5Asia Pacific Market Overview
Retail Value of Asia Pacific Hair Care Market in
2001
Country Value in mn
Malaysia 139.6
Taiwan 247.1
Marketshare of Brands in Hair Care
Brand Market Share
Pantene Pro- V 5.1
Lux 4.5
Bigen (Hoyu) 4.1
Vidal Sassoon 3.0
Rejoice 2.7
Merit 2.6
Levenus 2.4
Head Shoulders 2.2
Sunsilk 2.2
Others 71.4
Retail Value by Segments
Segment Value in mn
Shampoos 2186.1
2-in-1 products 1448.3
Conditioners 1917
Styling Agents Sprays 1248.5
Colorants 1464.2
Perms Relaxants 49.1
Source Euromonitor
6Market Overview Malaysia 1
- Shampoo Market
- A fragmented market. Nearly half of it held by
three players PG, Unilever and Kao, who also
account for the top three ad spends on TV. - There are a host of brands struggling to maintain
low, single-digit share. - SunSilk overtook Pantene at the top in 2003,
according to AC Nielsen. SunSilk had 18.7 of the
market (12.2 in 2002), while Pantene held 18.3
(21.4 in 2002). PG's Rejoice occupies the third
slot. - During Jan-Sep 2003, the shampoo brands spent
RM47.4 mn in ad campaigns. - About 86 of that adspend was in the beauty
category, as opposed to baby shampoo, medicated
shampoo and conditioners. - Shampoo Conditioner segment is among the top 5
products in terms of adspends on TV. In fact, the
shampoo war is fought largely on TV. - Both PG brands run exclusive campaigns.
Unilever's SunSilk focuses on TV, but also
spends around 23 on other media.
Player Adspend on TV in a year
PG 24.07 RM mn
Unilever 36.28 RM mn
Kao 27.36 RM mn
Top TV Ad Spends By
Players (source AC Nielsen)
7Market Overview Malaysia 2
- Major players offer a full range of shampoos to
fit different consumers needs and different
spending levels. - Increasingly common conditions such as brittle
hair, dropping hair and balding are driving up
the demand for repair shampoos and two-in-one
shampoos (shampoo plus conditioner). - Beyond Shampoo
- Hectic lifestyle, environmental pollution and
regular consumption of junk food have led to
hair loss and balding among the young. - Hair-loss programs offered by salons and hair
care centers offer to tackle hair loss and
balding. Hi Tech equipment are used by certain
companies such as SVENSON. However, these
programs are expensive and beyond the reach of
most consumers. - To fill the gap, smaller companies provide easier
and affordable programs using herbal extracts to
treat hair loss and balding. - 2 out of 10 women color their hair. The "in"
colours are the red shades. - More of the younger generation of
fashion-conscious men color their hair. - Market Size
- One estimate puts the market size of the hair
care market to be RM 450 mn. Of this, RM 390 mn
is derived from retail sales and the rest from
salons and other outlets.
8Major Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- PGs Pantene
- In Malaysia, as across Asia, Pantene is
positioned as a premium, hair care mega-brand. A
survey in Readers Digest chose Pantene as the
Platinum Super Brand among shampoos and
conditioners. - Research showed that Pantene had lost unique
benefits and was viewed as the most expensive
shampoo on the shelf, with no perceived benefit
to justify that cost. Pantene has revamped its
strategy in line with the new strategy
implemented in other markets. - Previously, Pantene offered consumers benefits
based on a particular hair type. For example,
damaged hair would become non-damaged, healthier
hair. With the "Reborn" campaign, Pantene
promised consumers a transformation, the ability
to achieve a particular look they have always
wanted. - Most consumers misdiagnose their hair type,choose
the wrong shampoo which leads to dissatisfaction
with results. Based on these findings, PG and
Grey revamped the Pantene brand with new
packaging, colors and 5 new names - Smooth
Sleek, Sheer Volume, Hydrating Curls and Vibrant
Colors - marketed by end hair looks, rather than
by hair type. - Classic Clean is a fall back, for consumers who
used to buy the normal variant, but are not sure
which "new look" product they want to buy. - Pantene Pro-V's range of shampoos and
conditioners are marketed as products that offer
the best damage protection, making hair up to
seven times healthier.
9Major Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- Pantene (continued)
- Campaigns
- Emphasis on Shine Consumers who purchase
Pantene shampoo or conditioner would take part in
a contest and have a chance of winning up to RM
30,000 worth of diamond jewelry. - Bald Mystery Women Teaser Female "protesters,"
covered with masks which made them look bald,
called for a change in high foot-traffic areas -
a ploy which caught the attention of media and
engineered significant word-of-mouth. When they
reappeared on the streets, they were transformed
into beautiful girls with flowing hair. - Awareness of new Pantene reached as high
as 81 in the first week of the launch and the
new strategy grew Pantene's sales of shampoos and
conditioners to retailers more than 20. - Greys integrated media strategy
"Reborn, aired on TVs in Malaysia, Thailand,
Indonesia, the Philippines, India, Vietnam and
Singapore was the largest initiative in the
history of the Pantene brand. -
-
10Major Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- Unilevers Sunsilk And Dove
- Unilevers wanted to convey the softness of its
Sunsilk shampoo. It posted ads on the pillars,
printed on soft cloth. - Satin cloth was hanged from the high ceilings in
lobbies and concourses which cascaded down
escalators - shampoo-like, into a giant Dove
shampoo bottle downstairs. - MindShare Malaysia, the media agency for
Unilever, came up with a novel TV campaign for
Sunsilk In the middle of a popular TV program,
the screen suddenly goes black like a telecast
interruption-for a few seconds. Then slowly the
black screen transforms into shimmering black
shiny hair with the message in Malay 'Black hair
that shines. - Sunsilk is perceived as a local brand by
consumers in Malaysia. - PGs Rejoice
- Aims to build a brand that is fun, energetic,
fuss-free and simple. - It is a shampoo and conditioner. In addition,
there is hot oil essence for hair care. The
emphasis in advertisements is on the hair care
aspect of the shampoo. - Event Campaign PG held a Shampoothon,
shampooing 1000 heads with Rejoice, at a shopping
center in a single day. The event was filmed and
telecast.
11Major Shampoo Brands and Strategies
- PGs Rejoice (continued)
- Blind Trial Rejoice commissioned 100 hair
stylists in Malaysia to test Rejoice for two
weeks but by hiding the identity. Rejoice was
transferred to generic bottles and given to them.
Rejoices end line the solution for bad hair is
finally here. - Results
- 83 gave the shampoo a rating of "like/like very
much - 72 voted Rejoice "much better/slightly better"
than general shampoos on the market - 79 agreed the hair was very soft after using the
shampoo - Sub-brand Rejoice Rich targets consumer who go
for messy, time-consuming and expensive hair
treatments by offering to eliminate these
hassles. - Follow-Me (Earth Chemical Co, Japan)
- Has been recently introduced in Malaysia.
- Advertising titled "no more messy flakes"
emphasizes that the "Scalp Care" formula that
contains vitamin B5 and UV protection, while text
on the bottle highlights the "cool and
refreshing" sensation that results from use.
12Common Promotions and Distribution Channels
- Promotional counters at major shopping centers
and pharmaceutical outlets are used to attract
shoppers. - Cut-out coupons are first advertised in daily
newspapers. Consumers can cut out the article in
exchange of free samples at designated outlets
during the promotion period. - Sales persons distribute samples at
crowd-catching areas. - The products are usually very attractively packed
with informative illustrations. - Samples are distributed to individual households.
This is done by dropping the water-resistant
sachets into letter-boxes. - Television advertisements in womens magazines.
As Malaysia is a multi-racial country, the
magazines are available in three major languages
English, Malay and Chinese.
13Values Trends in Malaysian Hair Care Market
- Malaysia is principally a Muslim country and a
certain wariness of western popular culture is
present. This affects hair care market too. - Among those who can afford to spend up to 400
per hair treatment, Rebonding is increasingly
popular. Demand for it is so great, salons like
The Hair Shop have had to limit the number of
customers for rebonding each day. (Rebonding
keeps the hair straight even after shampoo). - Hair stylists stress the importance of
maintenance. They advocate a hair cut once every
five weeks instead of every six months. Harsh
climate and constant blow-drying are known to
harm the hair. - Images evoked in advertisements targeted at women
are straighter hair, bouncier hair, long and
shining hair, long and black hair. - Curls are meaningless in Malaysia. No one has
them or aspires for them. Volume of Hair is
another concept that people dont usually relate
to. For men, the traditional anti-dandruff and
bouncier lines work in shampoos. - Fancy names some salons are now called hair
care solution centers. Staff assisting consumers
in selecting hair care products in shops are
called Beauty Advisors. - Hair Color trend More and more women and men
realize they can enhance, add texture and
personalize their natural hair colour. In
Malaysia, the percentage of users of hair
colorants is very small. However, the potential
to create a market with home-colorant product
that is reliable, safe, affordable and
easy-to-use is promising. Red shades are
considered most suitable for Asian hair and their
darker complexion. Conversely, the global trend
is now moving towards hair colours like ashtone
or silverblonde.
14What Advertisements convey - 1
- TV is the medium on which ad wars are fought.
Typical TV ads on shampoos run for 30 seconds,
sometimes 15 seconds. There is a story line and
end line. Languages used are Malay, Chinese and
English. - For example, for Sunsilk, Black Shine hair
wash range, the ad goes like this - Title Lady with Long Black Hair 30 secs
- Story Line A woman uses a computer in a room.
She looks at different clothing and she looks
at her long hair on the mirror. - End Line Shines naturally.
- Language Malay
- Among the non-hair aspects brought to fore are
- Modernity, Well-educated women, Working women
- Enhanced feeling of Togetherness thanks to the
effect of shampoo (man and woman dancing and
womans hair swaying in Pantene Pro-V ad) - For men, enhanced ability of men to attract women
(Two men one scratching his head another
smiles, and a lady touches his hair Head
Shoulders Anti-Dandruff Shampoo) - Family (A lady talks about her hair. A child
touches her hair. Dove) - Confidence (A lady walks confidently amidst a
group of young men. Rejoice) - Smoothening Difficult relationships (A man
introduces his girlfriend to his family. His mom
touches her hair. Rejoice)
15What Advertisements convey - 2
- Among the hair aspects brought to fore are
- Black shining long hair
- Swaying hair
- As straight as a rebond
- Experiencing the REAL difference
- For softer, NATURALLY black hair
- REBORD hair with a HEALTHIER shine
-
16Market Overview Taiwan
- Shampoos are one of most strongly contested
markets in Taiwan. - Kao holds a 22 volume share of the shampoo
market compared with FUICs 2O. Kaos lead
brand is their top seller in Japan, Pure
shampoo. FUICs main weapon is Timotei, also
brand leader in Japan. - Unilever has been consistently making attempts to
achieve leadership in Taiwan's dynamic shampoo
market. - About 50 of Taiwanese households buy at least
one shampoo. - One estimate forecast a 7.4 growth in hair care
market and volume to touch 452.8 mn in 2004. - In 2000, Dove, marketing its moisturizing
strength, claimed a 9.2 of the marketshare only
after two months, and 12.7 after five months on
shelves. The fact that Kao and Timotei are still
the top two brands indicates that Doves growth
has plateaued since then early days. -
-
17Brands and Strategies
- Taiwanese women are highly selective
about hair care choices. So brands think twice
before applying a global or regional campaign in
Taiwanese market. - Kao
- Kaos approach to Taiwan shows a certain degree
of sophistication. Shampoos and hair care
products have been re-formulated for Taiwanese
hair, water, and washing habits. - Kao also has hair care salons and an RD facility
to help keep track of consumer needs, product
performance and check competition. - Kao became the first marketer to introduce a
telephone hot-line for customers to call the
company with questions or complaints. - Timotei
- Timoteis flip, flop, flip In Japan, Timoteis
emotive Scandinavian advertising and positioning
as a shampoo that offers superior mildness
enabled it to overtake Kaos Pure, to become
brand leader. In Taiwan, similar advertising,
based on images of blonde Scandinavian girl ran
into problems. Black-haired Taiwanese consumers
found the blonde hair imagery too way out to
relate to. Some feared if Timotei would turn
their hair blonde. - The campaign was changed to feature
black hair. Perversely, consumers didnt notice
the difference, so the blonde girl was
re-introduced. Promotions and merchandising
helped get the message across and now Timotei is
challenging Kaos Pure for leadership.
18Brands and Strategies
- Dove
- Is positioning itself as a gentle, clean and
gentle shampoo. Was introduced in Taiwan in 2000. - OM, Taipei does the advertisements. The campaign
is based on both local market needs and consumer
insights, while adhering to the brand's global
testimonial advertising format. - Unilevers challenge was in converting a strong
soap brand into a shampoo brand. While the
functionality of cleansing was the only attribute
emphasised in soap, in shampoo it was not enough.
The attribute of making a woman feel good was
focused. - Taiwanese women were familiar with Dove as a
moisturizing brand. Dove Bar was already deeply
rooted among local consumers. - Mild," "gentle" and "moisturizing" were values
already associated with it by Taiwanese women.
Unilever claims that it converted these to
shampoo. - Dove's success is credited to to three factors
- The right category and consumer insights for
launch. - Ability to build credibility in hair care and
relevance with women. - Leverage on the strength of Dove's communication
format, testimonials.
19Brands and Strategies
- Pantene and others from PG
- Pantene communicates a soft and feminine feel in
addition to the basic shampoo functional benefit
delivery. - Vidal Sasoon communicates expression of
individuality, showing a much more confident and
outgoing personality type than before. - Head Shoulders communicates not only the key
functional benefit (danddruff cleansing) but an
added cosmetic advantage. - Meanwhile PGs shampoo strategy has been to
introduce premium priced brands such as Pert, (a
2-in-1 shampoo). While these only account for 12
of market volumes, they have made PG brand
leader in value with a 25 share of the NT 2.5
Billion (about 62 million) retail shampoo and
conditioner market. - Pantene was reformulated, a new advertising
campaign was launched. The new ads focus on how
it makes users' hair look, rather than on the
technology of Pantene and how it makes hair in
general look (which was the line earlier). - The new television and print ads feature the tag
line, "love your hair," and emphasize individual
consumers. In the past, Pantene ads featured
models. - PGs Ivory was a brand that tried to convert its
values of soap into shampoo and failed. - Fructis targets a younger, unisex demographic.
Fructis' positioning is more in strengthening
hair than in conditioning it.
20What Advertisements convey - 1
- The advertisements are usually in Mandarin,
English. - A typical ad runs like this
- Media Television
- Product Pantene Pro-V, Black / Long Black Hair
Wash Range - Title Lady with Long Hair
- Story Line The lady with long hair talks and
opens the room. The product appears and her hair
becomes smooth. - End Line Lets wash you more comfortably.
- Duration 30 seconds
- Language Mandarin
- Hair Attributes focused in advertisements
- Long smooth hair (An actress touched her long
hair in a crowd). - Softer, smoother and moisturized hair (A lady
talks while her hair is focused). - Shining hair (Sunlight passes through a hair
strand). - Cooler way to get rid of dandruff (a lady vacuums
a mans hair)
21What Advertisements convey - 2
- Non-Hair Attributes focused in advertisements
- Swimming is often a setting for the ads for hair
care, indicating a large number of women and men
who swim, among the target audience. - Confidence (A woman with swaying hair walks
through a crowd of men). - Overcoming fear of togetherness (A woman leans on
a mans shoulder. The line reads You dont have
to hide when you are close. -
22Market Dynamics in Taiwan
- Declining population growth has meant players
have been forced to seek sales growth by adding
new lines or offering product variations to
existing lines. - The Taiwanese consumer continues to be bombarded
with information. So companies have reacted in an
attempt to cut through the clutter. Communication
has moved beyond simply "educational" advertising
which solely communicates functional benefits, to
a more subtle proposition incorporating appeals
to deeper emotional factors driving consumers
into the category and brand franchise. - How to get one's message through the clutter
requires increasing innovation, rather than the
traditional heavy reliance on television
advertising alone. - The success of PG's SK II, which rose to become
one of the top selling skin care products in
department stores, bore testimony to the high
purchasing power of female consumers aged 35 and
above. Perhaps it points at potential
opportunities for hair care players launching
products for mature consumers. - The outbreak of SARS in 2003 highlighted the
growth of the direct sales channels such as
internet sales and catalogue shopping as
consumers turned to these channels to avoid
public places. This applies to hair care products
too. There is a spurt in direct to home
marketing.
23Links and sources
- Information accessed through Nexis
- http//www.ice.it/estero2/kuala_lumpur/market.pdf
- www.ads.xtremeinformation.com
- http//www.grocersreview.co.nz/archives/jul03_3.ht
m. - http//adtimes.nstp.com.my/archive/2001/jun15.htm
- http//www2.gol.com/users/kilburn/taiwan.htm
-
24Methodology
- The research was conducted out of information
gleaned from websites of individual players,
advertisement magazines, research organizations
and others. - Information regarding advertising strategies is
scanty in the public domain. - Proprietary sources such as Dialog and Nexis were
also used to access information. - Information on consumer segmentation too was rare
to come by. - Information on marketshare of shampoos in the two
countries too was scanty on the public domain.