Australia's postal service opened a store whose only customers are personal shoppers for Chinese buyers
- Australia Post opened a concept store that sells health and beauty products that customers ship to China.
- The pilot is targeting Daigou, which are overseas personal shoppers. The market is worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
- Business Insider visited one of these stores in Sydney, Australia, and found it was small and rather empty, but well-stocked with baby formula, baby goods, skin care items, and vitamins.
- Baby formula is difficult for many Australian parents to purchase, a problem often blamed on Daigou personal shoppers who ship the products overseas.
SYDNEY, Australia - Australia's national postal service has opened a retail outlet that only sends mail to China.
The concept store, located in the Sydney suburb of Chatswood, doesn't provide any normal postal services like selling stamps or mailing parcels around the country. Instead, it sells health and beauty products that can only be shipped to China.
According to Australia Post the purpose of the store is to "test customer demand for selected products to be sent to China."
"This store is not a Post Office. It will sell a limited number of lines, such as health and beauty products, in conjunction with international freight options," a spokesperson said.
At this stage it's just a pilot store and there are no plans to extend it to more than one location, but its very existence hints at the spending power that foreign Chinese shoppers wield in Australia.
Overseas personal shoppers, known as "Daigou," are incredibly popular with Chinese buyers who have had to contend with a wave of counterfeit products and are still scarred from a contaminated milk scandal that killed six infants a decade ago. Plus, desirable foreign brands can be so expensive in China, that paying someone in Australia to physically buy and ship the product is much cheaper.
Tens of thousands of Daigou - many of them Chinese students - can earn thousands of dollars a week selling health and beauty items via WeChat, Weibo, Tmall, and Alibaba.
When a giant store designed just for Daigou opened recently in Sydney, 150 Daigou attended and 730,000 Chinese shoppers live-streamed the event.
Inside Australia Post's concept store for Daigou
Australia Post's concept store is located on a side street next to Chatswood's Westfield shopping center.
It's a little difficult to find as Australia Post doesn't list the location on its online directory. A staff member at Australia Post's main Chatswood post office gave some confusing directions, but made clear to this reporter that the store is meant for Chinese tourists.
Chatswood seems like an odd location to target Chinese tourists. The CBD is a short train ride away and Australia Post's grand post office in Sydney is a ten-minute walk from the Sydney Opera House. But it is a strong multicultural hub - those with Chinese ancestry are the largest demographic, making up 34.1% of the community, and it turns out the state's most popular shopping center for Chinese travelers staying longer than a month is found in Chatswood.
Business Insider finally found the concept store after asking for help from a postman in the middle of his route who knew the shop by its address - 45 Victoria Street. We entered the store when doors opened around 10 a.m. on Wednesday.
The store is rather small, but the left wall is fully stocked with various types of baby formula, vitamins, and skin care items.
Three other stands were filled with a range of small products. Many of these were aimed at mothers: items like sippy cups, soaps, pregnancy vitamins, milk powder, cod liver tablets for kids, and chewable vitamin D for kids. There was also a range of cardboard-packaged, eco-looking products for kids, including toothbrushes and toothpaste.
Some products were also geared toward adult shoppers; things like soaps, sunscreen, feminine wipes, even dishwashing liquid. Popular brands like Swisse, Blackmores, Natio, Sukin, Trilogy, and the Cancer Council were also available, as were items that could be bundled in gift packs.
There were two staff members at a back counter - one of whom confirmed parcels can only be sent to China and no other countries. On a wall on the right side of the store, there were at least 200 flat-packed cardboard boxes and a long table, likely designed for Daigou to pack their purchases.
In the twenty minutes that Busines Insider perused the shelves, only two female shoppers entered, but it soon became clear they knew each other and one of them left shortly afterwards. No purchases were seen.
The only other people in the store were five men in suits who were discussing business-to-business and busines-to-consumer markets in China and how to deal with Chinese customs checks. At one point, one of the men inquired about this reporter, who had been taking photos inside the store. After learning she works for a news organization, the man walked away silently and rejoined the others who continued their discussions on the Chinese market.
Selling baby formula is a controversial move
Australian baby formula is one of the most popular products for Chinese shoppers.
In 2015, half of all Australian baby formula sold in supermarkets was being shipped to China, accounting for more than $200 million in sales. The next year, supermarket shelves infamously ran dry of baby formula, and producers had to increase their production runs while stores grappled with limiting customers to a certain number of tins per purchase.
Finding enough formula is still a problem for parents, and the major chain store, Coles, recently moved its tins behind the counter in some of its locations - the same area where cigarettes are kept. Customers can now only buy two tins each.
But formula is available at Australia Post's concept store, and appears to be a major part of the store's strategy. The baby food takes up twice as much space as that of other major product categories.
Price vary widely compared to large supermarkets
Compared with Australia's two major supermarkets, Coles and Woolworths, the prices at Australia Post vary widely.
A number of tins are more expensive for Australia Post customers. Some have relatively small price differences: from twenty cents to a couple of dollars, but one container of the baby formula Aptamil was $10 more expensive.
The biggest savings seems to be for a formula from Nestlé, the world's largest maker of infant food, which is $5.49 cheaper, an amount that can add up quickly for new parents.
With some estimates that Daigou buy as much as 80% to 90% of infant formula sold in Australia, opening a shop and shipping center in Chatswood is a strategy that may well pay off for Australia Post.