Bài công khaiNguồn: hbr.org1 phút đọc

How Chinese Firms Are Saving Western Brands

A growing number of Western consumer brands are regaining momentum after being acquired by emerging‑market owners—often Chinese firms—challenging the assumption that such deals inevitably dilute brand value. Sellers tend to fall into two groups: legacy brands whose differentiation eroded after decades of outsourcing, and younger brands that hit a growth ceiling without access to scale, manufacturing depth, and new markets. When turnarounds succeed, acquirers typically pair light‑touch integration and long investment horizons with three capabilities many Western owners have weakened: tighter value‑chain control for manufacturing efficiency, faster design and R&D iteration, and digital‑first marketing and e‑commerce execution. For Western executives facing deglobalization and intensifying competition, the implication is pragmatic: Brand survival may require rebuilding integrated capabilities, or, in some cases, choosing a deliberate smart exit, majority partnership, or partial divestment that aligns the brand’s ambitions with an owner’s operational and growth engine.

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Nguồn gốchbr.orghttps://hbr.org/2026/06/how-chinese-firms-are-saving-western-brands

Tóm tắt nhanh

A growing number of Western consumer brands are regaining momentum after being acquired by emerging‑market owners—often Chinese firms—challenging the assumption that such deals inevitably dilute brand value. Sellers tend to fall into two groups: legacy brands whose differentiation eroded after decades of outsourcing, and younger brands that hit a growth ceiling without access to scale, manufacturing depth, and new markets. When turnarounds succeed, acquirers typically pair light‑touch integration and long investment horizons with three capabilities many Western owners have weakened: tighter value‑chain control for manufacturing efficiency, faster design and R&D iteration, and digital‑first marketing and e‑commerce execution. For Western executives facing deglobalization and intensifying competition, the implication is pragmatic: Brand survival may require rebuilding integrated capabilities, or, in some cases, choosing a deliberate smart exit, majority partnership, or partial divestment that aligns the brand’s ambitions with an owner’s operational and growth engine.


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