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Alibaba, JD.com and WeChat give age-old Shanghai ice pop brand a new lease of life

Sales of Bright Food’s ice pops and ice cream grow six fold at Alibaba’s Hema after the ice cream maker disclosed tie-ups with e-commerce majors

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Bright ice pops make a comeback in Shanghai. Photo: sohu.com

China’s booming e-commerce has given Bright ice pop, an age-old Shanghai ice cream brand a new lease of life in the sweltering summer.

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While the nostalgic comeback of the ice pops, created and made by Shanghai Yimin No 1 Food since the 1950s, has played out well on Chinese social media, the food manufacturer’s expansion into e-commerce and new retail channels have opened up new distribution and sales opportunities.

Compared with fancier ice pops and ice cream by rivals Yili Group, Mengniu and Wall’s, Bright’s ice pops are basic, and priced no more than 1 yuan (US 15 cents) to 1.5 yuan a piece. Other fancier options cost more than 3.5 yuan each, which makes them a bigger incentive for convenience stores to carry these products.

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But the recent surge in demand for Bright ice pops by Shanghai millennials who grew up with the brand – from salty to red bean flavoured and ice cream bricks – has created a dilemma for Yimin, which acknowledged the shortage of supply at convenience stores.

Bright ice products are more readily available in packs of six to 12 pieces at supermarkets, hypermarkets and e-commerce sites. Single pieces are only available sporadically at certain convenience stores and family-run corner shops.

Bright ice cream brick. Photo: Weibo
Bright ice cream brick. Photo: Weibo
Contrary to conventional consumption behaviour, shoppers have called on Yimin on WeChat, China’s biggest social media app, to raise prices of its cheap, classic ice pops so that convenience stores will stock the products, and to rethink its distribution policy, a discussion that has gone viral in Shanghai.
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