
The Yellow River in Lanzhou
Lanzhou is the capital of Gansu Province of Northwest China. Located on the banks of the Yellow River, it is a rapidly-growing city with a population of about four million. Lanzhou is famously the birthplace of Ramen. II also had Ramen for several meals on my business trip. Xining is the capital of Qinghai province, with a population of two million in the city itself and almost four million in its immediate suburbs. The city is famous for the Ta'er Monastery, which was built in in 1577, in memory of Tsong Khapa (1357-1419), founder of Gelug Sect or Yellow Hat Sect, a branch of Tibetan Buddhism). It is one of the six greatest monasteries of the Gelug Sect to which the Dalai Lama belongs. Xining is home to many Hui people, who are adherents of the Muslim faith. In the past, mosques in China were traditionally built in Qīngzhēnsì style, while modern-day mosques now more Arabic style. Xining is also renowned for the Qinghai Lake, the largest lake in China located in a mountainous area at an altitude of over 3,200m. It offers stunning views of the waters nestling peacefully in the surrounding mountains. When I visited, the area had already been blessed with the first snow of the winter. With mountain rising in the area beyond, the lake marks the starting point of the Huangtu Plateau.

➊➋➌ _ The Ta'er Monastery in Xining
➍➎➏ _ Breathtaking views of Qinghai Lake

We can easily cite examples of companies who have enjoyed huge success in recent years using a network-based business, including Google, Amazon and Facebook. Going forward, enterprises with a solid platform will continue to transform the world. Only ten years ago, Japan's MK Taxi was named the world's most successful taxi company. Japanese-style hospitality service is certainly one of the key strengths behind its success. Interestingly, however, we now consider Uber to be the world's largest taxi company. MK Taxi and Uber, the former is a traditional taxi company, holding numerous brand new vehicles ready to serve its customers and the latter without a single car, but operating a transportation business in a totally unconventional way. When we compare these two, we can clearly see how global trends are changing. Let me give another example. Until several years ago, Four Seasons and The Ritz-Carlton were frequently cited as the best hotels offering distinguished service. However, when it comes to citing which hotel has the largest size now, the two hotels wouldn't even be mentioned in the same breath as Airbnb. No doubt many of you have in fact already used Airbnb for a vacation.
Both Uber and Airbnb are platform-based companies operating around a network of customer information. We are a company who is still traditionally operating based on offline stores. A traditional business is based on a model of fixed-cost allocation. Let's assume we open an ARITAUM store at Myeongdong. We need to lease the store space, pay monthly rent, securing construction and interior design at a sizable upfront cost. However, once we have secured a constant flow of customers into the store, we can save variable costs significantly. It's the same case for a factory. The set up process for land purchase, building construction and machinery acquisition incurs KRW 100–200 billion of fixed costs. Once the factory enters a stable operation stage, however, variable costs are reduced significantly. Until the 20th century, this kind of business model with high upfront fixed costs and low variable costs dominated. In the 21st century, by contrast, many IT companies operate a business model based on high variable costs. Opening a website incurs much less upfront costs than opening a brick and mortar store. In contrast, the variable costs are significant. Since customer churn is very natural and easy, you need constant investment into marketing for customer acquisition and retention.
This kind of business model requires low upfront fixed costs and while its variable costs are unpredictable, making it difficult to generate profits regularly. I used to use Yahoo for its search engine instead of Google. Interestingly, Google, which used variable costs efficiently, rose to become an Internet powerhouse, while Yahoo's fortunes have slide. This highlights the many ups and downs present in the IT industry. Amazon has recently entered the offline grocery business, selling fresh food like milk or meat, which can easily spoil, offline. The plan is to let consumers place an order by smartphone or at a touchscreen kiosk near an offline location and then pick up groceries in person. Personally I love oysters. But, like most other people, I am reluctant to purchase fresh food like oysters online. It is because I prefer fresh oyster in season to frozen ones. Amazon is no doubt keenly aware of this problem. Although it has been very successful with innovative experimentations, it continues to push the limit by venturing to deliver fresh food. It will be interesting to see how the company will solve all the problems of online business, including large volatility, limitation of fresh food and lack of customer experience. Similarly, Warby Parker sells prescription eyeglasses online. Bonobos, an online men's apparel shopping mall, lets consumers try on clothing in its offline store and then place an order online. As described, the boundary between online and offline is becoming increasingly blurred. Now, the critical success factors are whether a company can build an efficient platform connecting online and offline, as well as how efficiently it can utilize customer information through centralized and distributed processing. Success is ultimately down to who can provide the better purchase experience.
Just as Amazon is trying to sell fresh grocery, we have to be able to offer diverse, but optimized experiences to customers. Lipstick should be customizable, like LANEIGE's Two Tone Lip bar. Foundation should enable customers to choose shades, formula and texture. It's the same for haircare products. We need to provide customized shampoos or treatments depending on each customer's degree of damage and level of moisture in the hair. We first discussed customized beauty products twenty years ago. Now, we are in the process of realizing that vision.
