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PRIVACY
Enterprise

South West food and drink companies enter Chinese market with WeChat store

The initiative has been developed by Bristol-based chamber Business West

Blue Goose founders Lex Thornley (left) and Nick Ratsey(Image: Blue Goose)

Food and drink companies in the South West have begun selling their products in China via an online store launched by Bristol-based chamber of commerce Business West.

The initiative, called The Great British Food Store, is currently supporting 14 businesses in the region to break into the Chinese market using the country’s largest social media platform WeChat.

WeChat has a user base of 1.2 billion people with 40% of all Chinese e-commerce taking place on the platform.

Business West’s commercial director James Monk said that companies were increasingly recognising demand for British food and drink brands among China’s growing middle class as a “great sales opportunity”.

A report published last year by the Food and Drink Federation, showed that in 2020, while º£½ÇÊÓÆµ exports of food and drink fell for the first time since 2015, exports to China grew by 0.3%.

Business West is collaborating on the project with Regroup China, a digital marketing agency which specialises in Chinese cross-border e-commerce, and Elanders, an international logistics company based in North Tyneside that has 11 operations in China.

Elanders oversee the shipping and re-labelling into Chinese of goods. They are then stored at the firm’s bonded warehouse in Shanghai, with Chinese customers able to order deliveries to their homes within 24 hours.

Elanders managing director, Kevin Rogers said: “This cross-border e-commerce solution offers the simplest model for º£½ÇÊÓÆµ brands to sell to Chinese consumers and expand their export footprint.