Shawn Jiang Xiaofeng – China Advocate
For multinational companies, the Chinese market can sometimes feel like a moving target. As the founder of a Beijing-based communications firm, I frequently field questions from global brand leaders trying to decode this landscape. With economic shifts and geopolitical tensions dominating the headlines, it is easy to feel uncertain. Yet, to borrow a phrase from McKinsey’s China Chairman Joe Tsai, “the next China is still China”. The sheer size and potential of the market remain irreplaceable. The game hasn’t ended, but the rules have certainly evolved.
Here is what global communicators need to know to navigate the “new” China.
The Five-Year Plan is Your Business Playbook
In many parts of the world, a “five-year plan” is merely an internal corporate document. In China, you need to treat the entire country as a massive multinational corporation that operates on its own strategic blueprint. We are currently entering the 15th Five-Year Plan, which marks a decisive pivot from traditional GDP data-driven growth to a model focused on innovation, high technology, and a green transition for China’s massive industrial base
For global brands, this is the ultimate guide to where you will be welcomed—and where you won’t. If your strategy is simply to sell low-value products without bringing innovation or green technology to the table, you may no longer be the guest of honor.
Smart brands are upgrading their narratives. They are moving from an “In China, for China” message to “In China, for Global”.
By establishing local R&D hubs and proving that their presence advances Chinese industries, companies can align their corporate success with national interests
State Media: The Ultimate Influencers
The Chinese digital ecosystem is entirely distinct. We don’t have Facebook or Instagram; we have WeChat, Douyin (the Chinese counterpart to TikTok), Zhihu (Chinese version of Quora) and RedNote (similar to Instagram). But the most surprising plot twist for Western communicators is who actually rules these platforms.
On Douyin, the top accounts aren’t necessarily pop stars or sports icons—they are often state media outlets like Xinhua, the state-run news agency, or CCTV News (CCTV is China Central Television, the country’s largest state-owned television broadcaster).
State media plays a dominant role in shaping public perception and business reputation. Our top advice to clients is always to build strong, trust-based relationships with these mainstream outlets. As long as you steer clear of non-negotiable geopolitical “red lines”—such as the One China policy—the rest of the landscape is a fiercely competitive, free market. Play by those few foundational rules, and you have ample room to operate.
The Unexpected Crisis: An Internal Trust Deficit
When we talk about reputation management in China, most executives immediately worry about the government or local media. However, I would argue that the biggest trust issue facing multinational companies today isn’t external; it is internal.
I was often invited to speak publicly. Recently, I addressed a room of PR and Government Affairs heads at an American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) event. The atmosphere was tellingly subdued. There was a palpable sense of over-caution; budgets are tightening, and many local leaders seem to be in a “wait-and-see” mode rather than taking proactive steps.
There is a growing gap between overseas headquarters and their local Chinese management teams. Global HQs are often hesitant to invest time and capital as freely as they once did. This skepticism trickles down, leaving local employees feeling insecure about their jobs and the company’s commitment to the market.
You cannot win in a highly competitive market if your local team suffers from low morale.
This hesitation has also led to a significant decline in the PR “share of voice” for many U.S. firms. However, market dynamics abhor a vacuum. This retreat by some traditional players has created a massive strategic opening. We are seeing aggressive moves from European or Middle East competitors and fast-growing Chinese domestic firms who are stepping in to fill the void, capturing mindshare that was once the stronghold of Western, particularly U.S., giants.
As communication advisors, our mission has expanded. We are no longer just managing external perceptions; we are bridge-builders tasked with closing the internal “trust deficit”, such as facilitating quarterly “China briefings” for global HQs to align expectations from the inside out.
Before you can conquer the market outside, you have to do your own housekeeping.
It isn’t just an HR task—it is a strategic communication imperative to ensure brands don’t cede their future in the world’s most dynamic market.