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This Article is From Nov 18, 2021

China's Top Social Media Sales Promoters In Public Dispute With L'Oreal

The spat marks a rare public dispute for the retail industry in China, where companies have become increasingly reliant on popular culture personalities as a sales channel, marketing products in live streams followed by millions of fans.

China's Top Social Media Sales Promoters In Public Dispute With L'Oreal
Li Jiaqi and Viya pre-sold a combined 18.9 billion yuan ($2.96 billion) worth of goods on October 20.
Beijing:

China's top two livestreaming sales stars said they have suspended cooperation with French cosmetics giant L'Oreal over a dispute about prices during Alibaba Group's Singles Day shopping promotion earlier this month.

The spat marks a rare public dispute for the retail industry in China, where companies have become increasingly reliant on popular culture personalities as a sales channel, marketing products in live streams followed by millions of fans.

The two, Li Jiaqi and Viya, said on Wednesday in social media posts that the suspension of ties came after some followers complained, saying L'Oreal facial products they had promoted as carrying the biggest discounts of the year during Singles Day could be bought for less days later on L'Oreal's own platform.

According to Chinese media, Li Jiaqi and Viya pre-sold a combined 18.9 billion yuan ($2.96 billion) worth of goods on October 20 in pre-Singles Day promotions.

The two said they would offer compensation to followers, but that "several rounds of negotiations" with L'Oreal had not yielded a solution they considered satisfactory. They added they were giving L'Oreal 24 hours to come up with a plan.

In a statement, L'Oreal apologised to customers for a "too complicated promotion mechanism", and noted the "suggestions" made by Li and Viya. It did not comment further on its relationship with the two personalities.

L'Oreal said some consumers were able to purchase its products at a lower price on its platform because they used multiple discounts offered by the store and e-commerce platforms.

The spat became one of the most viewed topics on China's Twitter-like Weibo social media network on Thursday, with 450 million hits.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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