Marketing in China Explained

How China’s platforms, policies and culture reshape the job of marketing; with real-world brand examples and actionable playbooks.

On the surface, the job looks the same: insight, positioning, creativity, measurement. But China’s digital ecosystem runs on different rails – different platforms, different rules, and a different tempo. You will work inside “walled gardens” like WeChat (Weixin), Douyin, Xiaohongshu, Taobao/Tmall, JD, Pinduoduo, and Baidu rather than the Meta-Google-Amazon triopoly. Tencent’s own filings put Weixin/WeChat at around 1.41 billion monthly active users in Q2 2025 – that is where the centre of gravity sits.

China search also is not “Google with different fonts”. Baidu leads, typically around the mid-50s to 60 percent share, and Google is a rounding error – that changes SEO, content hosting and analytics decisions.

This article is full of helpful links – if you find that any are broken please let me know so I can update them – will@marketingmadeclear.com.

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The Rulebook You Must Know – and Design For

1) Advertising Law – absolute claims and national symbols

The Advertising Law of the PRC bans “absolute terms” like best, No.1, and national-level, and prohibits using national flags and anthems in ads. Creative and legal teams need an alternative copy palette – comparative claims require careful grounding.

Some potentially useful sources:

2) Data and privacy – PIPL, DSL and cross-border data

China’s Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) is GDPR-ish in spirit but different in mechanisms. Sensitive data needs separate consent and cross-border transfers require formal routes such as a security assessment, standard contracts, or certification.

Some resources for navigating these issues:

3) Live-streaming and influencer commerce

China didn’t just popularise live shopping, it built a whole compliance stack around it. Three layers matter: platform duties, host/merchant qualifications, and content red-lines. If you’re used to Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) guidance and the house rules of the platforms you are used to, think broader: in China, multiple regulators set expectations and platforms share legal accountability alongside merchants and streamers.

Helpful sources:

4) Operating a site in China – ICP recordals and hosting

If you host in Mainland China you will need ICP registration (and a commercial ICP licence for revenue-generating sites). It is a MIIT requirement and affects speed, SEO and risk of blocking.

Potential sources:

The Platform Playbook – and How it is Different

Note: you will live more inside platforms, less in open-web funnels. Build journeys around super-apps, mini-programs and messaging – and plan for private traffic (your own pools of customer contacts you nurture directly).

Channel roles at a glance

Platform Core role When to use Notes
WeChat (Weixin) CRM, content hub, service Always-on, loyalty, service flows Mini-program shops, Groups, customer service; ~1.41bn MAUs
Douyin Awareness + direct commerce Short video and live shopping GMV growth underlines commerce-native model
Xiaohongshu (RED) Word-of-mouth, lifestyle discovery Beauty, fashion, travel, wellness ~300m MAUs; KOCs drive credibility
Tmall/Taobao, JD, Pinduoduo Marketplace retail Category depth, price play, big festivals Singles’ Day and 618 - plan early, subsidies common
Baidu Search, SEM, brand safety Capture demand, regulated verticals Local hosting/ICP improves results
  • WeChat is your operating system for owned relationships – content, customer service, mini-program stores, automation, and private traffic (WeChat marketing guide). On private traffic strategy, see intro to WeChat private traffic and this useful primer on what private traffic is and why it is growing (Marketingblatt explainer).

  • Douyin is not just TikTok – it is a mature commerce platform with native stores and live-selling at scale. For a side-by-side view, see TikTok vs Douyin in e-commerce and an update on Douyin’s GMV growth (ECDB analysis).

  • Xiaohongshu (RED) is a high-intent word-of-mouth engine – fantastic for KOC seeding and considered purchases. See RED’s e-commerce expansion (Reuters coverage) and a demographics and use-case breakdown (Daxue guide).

  • Marketplaces and festivals – 11.11 (Singles’ Day) and 618 dominate trading calendars. Growth has been mixed lately, but participation remains huge. See Singles’ Day 2024 results (Reuters wrap) and 618 2025 performance (Reuters coverage).

  • Baidu remains the capture-demand workhorse – hosting and ICP recordals matter for crawl and stability (China search share; ICP concepts).

Culture and Consumer Context you will Feel on Day One

Speed and iteration

Decision cycles are short, pilots move fast, and live shopping can pivot your weekly plan. New national consumer-rights implementation rules effective July 2024 tightened penalties for false marketing and price discrimination, so pair speed with compliance checks.

See consumer-rights regulations overview for more info.

Guochao – the “national tide”

A structural shift towards domestic brands and Chinese cultural cues among younger consumers. Foreign brands can still win, but must localise with intent. See this guochao trend primer and a perspective on implications for Western brands.

Walled-garden measurement

Each platform is a closed loop. Cross-platform attribution is messy, so plan realistic KPIs per “garden”.

Festivals as conversion engines

Singles’ Day and 618 are “campaigns of campaigns”, but margins are thinner as subsidies rise (see what Singles’ Day is and how it is celebrated).

Language and copy craft

Given the ad-law constraints on superlatives and national symbols, winning copy leans on proof points, demonstrations, social proof and experience – particularly in live streams.

For more info on this one, see Advertising Law – English text.

Day-to-day: what it is like to be a marketer in China

  1. Your CRM is social by default
    WeChat is not just a “channel”. It is CRM, service, content and commerce in one. Build mini-program shops and service flows, then cultivate private traffic via official accounts and groups (WeChat marketing guide; private traffic intro).

  2. Social equals retail
    On Douyin, content and checkout live together. It is where you launch, test SKUs and build creators into your go-to-market. Douyin’s 2024 GMV growth underlines how commerce-native it has become (Douyin GMV growth; TikTok vs Douyin e-commerce differences).

  3. Compliance is creative
    Workflows must accommodate PIPL consents (especially for sensitive data), explicit disclosures and ad-law copy reviews. If you are streaming, plan for platform responsibilities and presenter guidelines (PIPL – DigiChina; SAMR live-streaming guidance).

  4. Hosting and SEO
    If Mainland performance matters, consider ICP recordal and local hosting/CDN – it changes crawlability and stability on Baidu (ICP concepts).

How Chinese brands market differently at home versus overseas

Haier – Kitchen and Home Appliances

Haier – at home it is a household-name white-goods brand; abroad it often leads with local badges. In the US it bought GE Appliances in 2016 and largely markets under the GE brand equity Americans already trust – a classic house of brands choice.

See more information on Haier’s GE Appliances acquisition.

Douyin (TikTok) – Social Media

Domestically, Douyin is a commerce super-app with in-app stores and robust live shopping. Internationally, TikTok has been adding TikTok Shop features, but still lags the Chinese model and must navigate geopolitical concerns – which shapes tone and branding

See TikTok vs Douyin in e-commerce or a feature comparison and US-market insights.

Xiaohongshu (RED) – Social Network and Commerce

In China, RED’s community-first, commerce-later model builds credibility for high-consideration categories. Outside China, its footprint is smaller and content often syndicates through creators on Instagram or TikTok instead (RED’s e-commerce push).

Shopping festivals themselves are brand-building levers for domestic players. Local brands lean hard into 11.11 and 618 with platform-funded subsidies and KOL/KOC seeding; overseas they simply cannot recreate that gravity well, so they pivot to retail calendars like Black Friday and Cyber Week (Singles’ Day 2024 context; 618 2025 results).

Tactics that travel well – and how to adapt them

What will surprise a Western marketer

Your content calendar is a trading plan

Singles’ Day and 618 act like national promotions baked into culture. The upside is huge, but margins and logistics need early modelling, not just media plans (Singles’ Day explainer).

Copy constraints force better proof

Without best/No.1, you lean on demonstrations, social proof, certifications and specific claims. The work often becomes more concrete and less fluffy (enforcement guidance on “absolute terms”).

“CRM” is a chat thread

Customer service, after-sales and content are intertwined, often inside WeChat. It is closer to relationship retail than blast-and-convert (WeChat marketing guide).

A simple entry plan for foreign brands

  1. Choose your core garden – WeChat if you need owned relationships and service, Douyin/RED if discovery drives your category.

  2. Stand up compliance – word lists (Ad Law), consent flows (PIPL), live-stream SOPs, and a Chinese hosting/CDN decision with an ICP plan if needed (Advertising Law – English text; PIPL – DigiChina; ICP concepts).

  3. Pilot with creators – 1-2 hero KOLs plus 50-200 KOCs on RED; iterate the product story via Douyin live rooms (RED’s e-commerce push).

  4. Design for festivals – even if you do not go all-in on 11.11 or 618 immediately, align promo logic and supply chain so you can scale into them in year two (618 2025 results).

Case note: “Are they Chinese?” – when origin recedes behind branding

Haier ↔ GE Appliances (US) – customers see GE and a US manufacturing story; the Chinese parent is structurally true but not the front-end brand. It is a textbook local-first brand architecture choice (Haier buys GE Appliances).

ByteDance – Douyin at home, TikTok abroad – identical DNA, different product maturity, rules and brand posture. TikTok Shop is catching up, but Douyin remains the reference standard for social commerce (TikTok vs Douyin e-commerce differences).

Final thoughts

Marketing in China is not “harder” – it is different. You will plan more inside platforms, treat compliance as a creative constraint rather than a hurdle, and you will build owned audiences in chat-native channels. If you are used to UK/AU/US playbooks, the biggest gains come from embracing private traffic, live commerce, and a festival-first retail rhythm – while rewriting your copy and data practices to fit the law.

TL;DR

  • China runs on WeChat + Douyin + RED + marketplaces + Baidu rather than the Western triopoly. WeChat sits at roughly 1.41bn MAUs – build CRM and service there (Tencent Q2 2025 results).

  • The Advertising Law bans superlatives and national symbols in ads – learn alternative proof-led copy (Advertising Law – English text).

  • PIPL governs data – design consent flows and plan cross-border data routes early (PIPL translation).

  • Live commerce is mainstream and regulated – get SOPs for creators and platforms (SAMR live-streaming guidance).

  • Guochao means culture-led localisation matters more than ever (guochao trend primer).

  • Expect to design for festivals like 11.11 and 618, but mind margins and ops (Singles’ Day 2024 wrap).

If you want, I can add sector-specific playbooks next – food, beauty, and tech – plus a live-stream SOP checklist and a ready-to-use WeChat mini-program brief.