Digitizing dairy in
China
The CEO of China’s
second-largest dairy company describes how data and artificial intelligence are
shaking up how he does business.
Twenty
kilometers outside of central Beijing sits the sprawling headquarters
of China Mengniu Dairy, China’s second-largest dairy company. It might not
boast the same glossy exterior as China’s colossal technology companies’
campuses, and CEO Jeffrey, Minfang Lu admits that the dairy industry suffers
from a less-than-innovative image, but behind modest doors lies a rapidly
modernizing business.
Armed
with more data than its people can currently compute, Mengniu Dairy is
embarking on an effort to bring the centuries-old industry up to date through
the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in China and beyond. As it does, the
company hopes to innovate across everything from manufacturing and supply
chains to product development and marketing.
As
with everything in China, the scale of the ambition is huge. Each year, the
company sells 12 billion packets of product, chiefly milk and yogurt products,
which are produced across 58 manufacturing sites and more than 1,000
manufacturing lines in China. In addition to the impressive scale of production,
the company has access to 20 million “active” consumers who share information
about their product preferences and lifestyle habits through e-commerce and
social channels. Mengniu Dairy’s product-development, forecasting,
manufacturing, and marketing teams interpret these data, albeit not fast
enough.
By
tapping into consumer trends that extend beyond the immediate product, Mengniu
Dairy hopes to make milk and yogurt more appealing among a younger, savvier
Chinese consumer. A recent, and notable, example saw milk products featured in
a kung fu film alongside Alibaba CEO Jack Ma and kung fu star Jet Li. China is
in the midst of a transition from a country of people who do not drink much
milk and have perceptions of lactose intolerance to one where consumption
catches up with the research showing that 80 percent of Chinese people can
drink 200 milliliters of milk at a meal without adverse reaction. Plans are
afoot to expand Mengniu Dairy’s physical footprint, too, beyond China’s borders
and into Southeast Asia to capitalize on the government’s Belt and Road
Initiative.
In
December 2017, Mr. Lu sat down with McKinsey Quarterly to
share more about the company’s digital-transformation plan and how he hopes
technology can help its leaders better understand ever-changing Chinese
consumption habits.
The Quarterly: How
are some of the well-documented changing consumer habits shaping your business?
Mr.
Lu: One of the big changes is that consumers are more
mobile than before. People are on the move, they are traveling, and they have a
mobile phone wherever they go. We need to really take this seriously and see
how it will impact our model, and our route to market, and the way we
communicate with customers. In the past, you will see consumers go to a
supermarket, buy enough stock for one month, and go back each month, and your
job is done. This is no longer going to happen. Consumers have more choice.
They can go to a small convenience store; they can use their mobile apps and
have a product delivered to their home.
The Quarterly: How
are you using digital technology to tap into the changing consumer behavior?
Mr.
Lu: The new environment is all about data. If you look
at our industry, you will see a very long supply chain all the way from grass
to glass. You can collect data from farms and even from individual cows. When
you go into the supply-chain side and into manufacturing, you have much more
data. When you look at our logistics, we have a huge amount of milk, which is
transported across the nation. And then, on the consumer side, you see
consumers buying our products online, communicating with us online—and so there
is a lot of consumer transactional and interaction data.
Across
our entire chain of our business, data is available for us to translate into
knowledge about our business. But it’s all about how to use this data to
empower our decision making across our business activities.
More
and more, this is about using AI to help us to improve our ability to do
further analysis. Our capability to calculate and to analyze this data relies
on us using the newest knowledge.
Just
for example, at Mengniu, we collect four million tons of milk each year. We
sell 12 billion packs of product to our consumer, and we have 58 manufacturing
sites, more than 1,000 manufacturing lines, more than 2,000 SKUs. If you put
everything together, honestly, humans cannot do this analysis anymore.
So
today, we have kicked off some big projects—with Alibaba, for example—to use AI
to analyze our supply chain, to tell us where we should manufacture products,
to tell us where we should collect the milk, and to tell us how we can
transport these products to our customers so that we get the maximum efficiency
out of all this data.
The Quarterly: That
is a great example of how data are helping you tackle productivity challenges
internally. Can you talk about any other initiatives that will help you better
understand your customers?
Mr.
Lu: On the consumer side, we built an internal
capability to get the consumer data out of a huge database. We have 20 million
consumers who are actively talking to us in our data bank monthly. We know
exactly who they are, how they behave, and how they interact with us, and we
use this to adjust our product and adjust our formulation in order to meet
their needs.
At
the same time, consumers are also able to get access to more of the services
and products that we are offering, either through an online channel or through
membership interaction or through a microcommunity.
So
again, this gives a lot more transparency over how we run our business. We can
forecast for the next day instead of a month later. And we can read consumer
trends—whether they like more sugar, less sugar. They may also tell us where
they go in terms of what entertainment programs, dramas, and movies they are
watching. This provides a lot of possibility for us to get the access to our
consumer but also to give our consumer the ability to access us.
The Quarterly: How
do you see the changes you have been describing playing out over the next few
years?
Mr.
Lu: We need to see how we can use these changes in the
market to actively engage with our consumers, to provide personalized,
individualized products for the young and old, because they all have different
needs.
For
example, we are working on how to get our product to be more interesting and to
have a different taste profile that appeals to a younger audience. How can we
give consumers much more than nutrition? We need to give them enjoyment. We
need to give them excitement.
We
also want to work on the image of Mengniu, to become younger looking and more
fashionable. We cannot blame consumers for not liking milk or our packaging. If
we do these two things right, then I think we will be part of a consumer’s
healthy enjoyment of life rather than just a pack of milk sitting in the
fridge.
The Quarterly: If
China’s bold Belt and Road Initiative does indeed open the borders to increased
outbound and inbound trade, what is the opportunity for Mengniu Dairy to become
a global brand?
Mr.
Lu: Now, honestly, Mengniu is still very much a
Chinese company. But whereas in the past, the Chinese government or Chinese
companies were very good in terms of exporting machine equipment and
infrastructure capabilities, today we find, given the One Belt, One Road
strategy, there is opportunity for a consumer-goods company like us. We are
expanding into markets like Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, Myanmar, and
Bangladesh; we find huge opportunity in these markets.
For
example, I was in Indonesia recently. It’s amazing because in Jakarta, an area
of 15 million people, we know the consumers and they like our product. If we
take our product there, we will find out that there are a lot of similar
products and that they have the same preference [as Chinese consumers]. We have
tested two products in this market and got very, very good feedback.
It
also gives us opportunities to expand our products. In Southeast Asia, ice
cream is a very important category because, unlike China, you have no
seasonality. You can eat ice cream every day. And the same thing for the fresh
dairy products. Some of these markets are like China 20 years ago, like in
Myanmar and Bangladesh. We understand the consumer and the category trends as
well as the country trends.
With
One Belt, One Road, there is support from the local countries that are more
open to a Chinese company running business there. Alibaba is there. We can see
Jingdong is there. We can see also Xiaomi and Vivo—they are all there. This is
a different ecosystem today than in the past.
The Quarterly: Can
you explain the motivation behind your recent film collaboration with Alibaba
and Jack Ma?
Mr.
Lu: It was interesting because the motivation for the
film came from Alibaba—and from Jack Ma, who wanted to change the impression of
kung fu to make it fun, interesting, and part of modern Chinese culture and
bring it to the front of the consumer mind. This was the purpose of the film,
and that also resonates with what we at Mengniu want to do as well. We are not
just a milk manufacturer telling you what we can do; we want to be part of your
life.
McKinsey Quarterly March 2018
https://www.mckinsey.com/global-themes/china/digitizing-dairy-in-china?cid=other-eml-alt-mkq-mck-oth-1803&hlkid=fdff447f70464b0e83f3b6907a667bd1&hctky=1627601&hdpid=da624063-7f83-4d82-beb1-3498ea209b1f
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