KFC turns 30 in China, but plans to remain a 'young brand'

After AI, anime and premium ice cream, top marketer Steven Li explains what's next for the fast-food giant.

Photo: KFC Weibo
Photo: KFC Weibo

When KFC partnered with Baidu to implement face-recognition technology at a self-order kiosk in one of its Beijing outlets late last year, it became a story that was widely covered by international media such as The Guardian and TechCrunch. It was not KFC’s first foray into AI. In the summer last year, the fast food chain already created some buzz when it collaborated with Baidu and Trio Isobar to launch Dumi, a robot that took orders from customers with voice-recognition technology at its Original+ concept store in Shanghai.

Asked if he was pleased with the media attention, Steven Li, senior vice president of KFC marketing with Yum China, said Dumi and the face-recognition kiosk were not mere marketing gimmicks. “We wanted to be low-key actually, because it was only a pilot. Our digital ecosystem has become very mature and we hope to embrace technology by partnering with tech companies,” Li told Campaign Asia-Pacific at the Yum China office in Shanghai recently.

With China at the forefront of digital technology and mobile payments, KFC has kept pace by launching its mobile app and going big on cashless payments and ecommerce in recent years. In the first fiscal quarter of 2017, mobile payments accounted for more than 30 percent of KFC’s sales in China, while delivery took up about 11 percent of its sales during the same period.

Steven LI

Li said bringing AI would be the next step forward to further increase convenience for its customers. Dumi, as he said, was a pilot that lasted nine months to see how voice-recognition technology would work in a retail restaurant environment in China, where accents and dialects vary widely. (Kolonel Fast Connect, a voice and motion-activated self-ordering kiosk that understands Cantonese, was launched in Hong Kong in April this year.)

“It’s very difficult. But in the nine months, we accumulated a lot of learning about AI, data, voice recognition…and discarding background noise," Li said. "It’s actually pretty tough, but fortunately, we almost got everything correct."

Chris Chen, CEO and chief creative director of Trio Isobar, pointed out that voice-recognition technology is fairly mature. The real innovation comes in transferring the technology to retail and user experience. “In real-life circumstances, the people who come to the stores don’t exactly fall into categories we have set out. Our experience taught us that we have to adjust accordingly,” said Chen.

Data powerhouse

A machine that speaks to customers and predicts orders may or may not reduce ordering time—after all Chinese customers have already been able to skip the line by ordering through mobile. Li admitted the brand hopes the novelty factor will keep customers interested. “Consumers feel that KFC is a young brand, that we know what future experience is all about,” said Li. “Having said that, it is not until the user experience becomes well designed that we will roll out this feature [in other restaurants], there is still a lot of work to be done. But we want to be the first brand in retail restaurant to try that, rather than the second.”

As it is, Li believes that machine learning will surpass that of the nuanced human interactions customers have with a cashier at the counter. “When you order through a device, it is actually a machine serving you," he said. "A machine will remind you of an unused coupon, predict your orders based on your transaction data, offering better services than a human waiter.”

Needless to say, part of KFC's strategy is also to be in full possession of the transaction histories of its customers as well as their vital data. That was the reason KFC launched its app in 2015; it more or less functions like a CRM system in the pocket, which also logs in customers' orders and their frequency of visits.

“Prior to 2015, we could only know what the customers think about our products through Weibo," Li said. "But now they can give us instant feedback on food quality and customer service on the phone and recommend their favourite products or send gifts to their friends.”

Li is full of praise for the app, calling its launch a milestone that overturned the brand’s advertising and marketing model. “Now that we have the app, we can publish content and reach consumers directly without going through the media channels,” said Li. In jest, he said the KFC brand is akin to a KOL itself with the high number of followers it has and the great volume of content it produces. 

“Of course, it is very hard to convince every Chinese consumer to download the app," he said. "But surely every one of them would at least have WeChat, Alipay or Baidu map. If we limit our digital services to only the app, then our user base would be limited."

He stressed that KFC intends to build an open digital ecosystem and welcomes partnership with different platforms. It is a winning strategy for KFC as having 'lite' versions of its apps on online payment channels gives it access to the customers’ transaction data. The brand was able to leverage user data available on Alipay to push special birthday offers in a campaign last year, for example.

Turning 30

Starting from its first store at Tiananmen Square in 1987, KFC is turning 30 in China this year, and has more than 5,200 stores across the country. Yum China, which owns the China rights to KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, as well as its own Little Sheep and East Dawning concepts, became a spinoff from Yum Brands in November last year. 

To celebrate the 30-year milestone, KFC is banking on nostalgia to bring customers back. For example, the brand brought back 1987 prices in a campaign in march (a piece of Original Recipe chicken and mashed potatoes for RMB 2.50 and 0.80, respectively). KFC's anniversary campaign is ongoing throughout the year, including a partnership with another brand, which Li preferred not to name yet but that has been in China for the same period of time.

"Pricing is an important issue in China," he said. "For the past 30 years, the income level and standard of living has been rising rapidly here. Growing affluence also means consumers are willing to pay premium price. We want to try to innovate our products because the customers demand better quality food," said Li. Although KFC is hardly a brand one would normally associate with premium ice cream, its RMB 25 Cremia ice cream, sold at five times the price of a regular soft serve, was a food craze that inspired queues around the block at its stores during its launch last year.
While some may say that life begins at 30, Li said KFC remains on track with its digital strategy and intends to be seen as a young brand. For that matter, the brand is going heavy on content marketing to reach out to the young consumers. 

Said Trio Isobar's Chen: "The younger generation is spread all over China from the first to the sixth tiered cities. But instead of segmenting them according to their geographical locations, we categorise them according to their interest, whether it is games or music."

The agency was behind a recent KFC collabortion with a mobile game, Onmyoji, which targeted eight Chinese cities. 

"A lot young people like to stay at home and play mobile games, their social world is almost virtual," Li said. "But by incorporating geolocation elements in this game, much like the style of Pokemon Go, we drew them to leave their home, at least once, and bring their friends to play the game in a KFC restaurant." He revealed that KFC will be introducing a jukebox feature in its restaurants in July, but instead of going full-retro, customers will be able to select songs on their mobile app. 

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

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