How to adapt your product’s UX for the Chinese market – The Next Web
Did you know TNWs Couch Conference has a track fully dedicated to exploring new design trends this year? Check out the full Sprint program here.
Having started MING Labs in China in 2011, we have seen a big development from the old-internet world of overladen landing pages, to digital products of world-class defining design today. In parallel, we have seen the move from clunky desktop applications with small user bases, to the mobile-first B2C revolution to the rise of the super apps that are the new all-encompassing ecosystems in the market.
Throughout those major shifts in digital products and behaviors, some preferences have remained constant that differ from those in Western markets. Understanding what is actually different, and what is just a different stage of development, is an important factor when launching your product in the market. From key differences in UX requirements to the preference for larger ecosystems and a different understanding of value, China is unique in many aspects (as are other markets, to be sure).
Over the years, we have helped many startups and MNCs to launch their products, built and validated in their home markets, into the Chinese market.
We have thereby seen many of those differences in action and came to certain conclusions on what a good approach of scaling into China should be.
Read: [Good design should be inclusive and accessible but whats the difference?]
This article is therefore mainly aimed at those thinking about, tasked with, or actively working on expanding into the Chinese market, and who are wondering what that means for their digital products and services.
When launching in a new market that has some important dissimilarities from your home market, essentially you have three choices in product adaptation.
1. Minimal
At the very least you will have to translate the interface into Mandarin, to make your product accessible. Additionally, there might be certain legal requirements for your industry you will have to adapt to if you want to do business in China. Replacing certain pieces of technology might also be necessary, in order to get through the Great Firewall (many Western services are blocked).
2. Localized
At this stage, you might be redesigning the UX of your product to fit the local market tastes or you might port your product onto local platforms (such as the WeChat and Alibaba ecosystems). In the Marketing, you might also adapt your messaging to emphasize the points that would resonate more with Chinese customers.
3. China business
In some cases, it might be necessary or advantageous to pivot your target audience or business model, which will result in a very different way of doing business. Your core value creation might still be relevant, yet other parts of the business have to change drastically. We call this China Business as the local operations will be very dissimilar for your other operations in a China-focusedapproach.
The trade-off here is that with an increasing China customization you are reducing your Economies of Scale, as a very localized business will not be scalable into other markets and will need a lot of local, dedicated resources, whose learning you cant leverage in your global expansion. At the same time, a low level of customization will stay highly scalable, yet might not yield success as it is a very specific market.
That trade-off and the decision is by no means trivial. Finding a good answer typically requires taking on a beginners mindset (going back to the Exploration stage) and first testing your product and value proposition locally.
Assume that you have lost productmarket-fit as you enter China, and start over with an open mind, local research , and fast iterations to the right approach.
In the next parts, we will assume that you have come to your conclusion and you are opting for a Localized approach (as Minimal is straight-forward and China Business goes to Business Design). What exactly then are the differences in UX design and local platforms you should be aware of and adapt to?
Some of the preferences in design and interaction are rooted in Chinese culture. There are few things to be aware of that make a big difference:
1. Collectivism
On an international scoring of Individualistic versus Collectivistic cultures, China scores among the highest on the Collectivistic scale. This means that every context is about the group, the larger unit, and deviating from group norms or standing out is not desirable. Similarly, group approval and high degrees of communication and social context are important.
2. High-Context Culture
The Chinese culture, and also language, are very high-context. This means that every interaction needs to be seen through myriad lenses of context, instead of being taken at face value. In a low-context culture, a no is a no. In a high-context culture, it can mean ask again, not yet, not like this, have your boss ask me, lets have a drink first or many other things. The context of when it is said, how and by whom matters to understand the answer.
3. Chinese calligraphy
4. Complex Language
The Chinese language is low on grammatical complexity, yet very intense on the complexity of the vocabulary. There are over 20,000 characters in use and different combinations mean different things. Not only is it very tedious to type in Chinese (which means drawing characters or typing in Pinyin to find the right characters), but it is also impossible for search engines to understand whether you made a mistake in your query and suggest corrections.
These are substantial differences from the West and also from some other Asian cultures. And they invariably manifest in specific preferences from social interaction to communication styles and UX design.
The cultural differences manifest in different preferences regarding UX and service design, which produce the services you see on the Chinese internet today. While they often have Western inspirations or counterparts, they work differently in some key aspects. Including:
1. Practicality > Aesthetics
As typing Chinese is painful and auto-correct is not an option, websites are created to allow for browsing as the main behavior rather than searching. What that also means is that aggregating functionality is popular, as quantity and context make it seem useful rather than cluttered. From the early stages of the internet and the local differences, patterns have formed that are now deeply ingrained. Respect them, and do not try to enlighten them.
2. Social anywhere
Everything lives within a social context and the group is more important than the individual. Hence everyone is always connected and sharing. Wangwang is hugely important for Alibaba, because users dont trust the information on the website. They want to speak to people. Similarly, reviews are more trusted than in the West. Do not save on customer service. Always have ways of direct contact and chat available.
3. Everything connected
No experience exists in isolation, it is always embedded in a context and connected to everything else. O2O is a very important trend that has taken over in much of the physical space in China. The key is to remove friction and media breaks for the consumers and connect experiences in the most straightforward way possible. The most popular services in China are dynamic, lively, high-context, and interesting, offering discounts, games, and other interactions.
These are a few guiding principles to consider when redesigning your digital experience for China. Driven by cultural differences, these are expectations that exist with consumers today towards any product or service.
How you incorporate them is up to your creativity, and again we would recommend short and fast iteration/feedbackloops and a discovery mindset, rather than a big-bang design approach.
Any thoughts on product adaptations for China would be incomplete without the considerations of local platforms first and foremost super apps. These are applications owned by the biggest ecosystem players in China (Alibaba, Meituan, Tencent), which aggregate many different services into one touchpoint, offer foundational layers of identity and payments to tie them together, and allow for third parties to write small applications that can be pulled into that powerful context.
As their platforms essentially monopolize consumer attention across verticals, the companies owning them generally let new trends play out, invest in them, and later buy them out. Therefore, creating larger and larger kingdoms that lock in consumers. They are therefore a great distribution channel and are very open to partner with and enable new entrants. It also means that without them, you are facing a heavy up-hill battle.
Of course, there are trade-offsto be aware of. Where on Amazon you run the risk of the marketplace introducing their own brand of products to price you out, Alibaba essentially owns the consumer and their data, with a stark indifference to who wins the battle for their wallet. If you enter with a novel product, Chinese competitors will soon copy you and there is no one to protect you from it.
In terms of platforms, probably everyone is more or less familiar with WeChat and Alipay. Some of the key ecosystems that are open to a degree to integrate with. The way to get in there, except for acquisition, are mini-programs. This is a rising trend of apps-in-apps that are becoming very important for business.
Mini programs account for the majority of customer interaction already in all major consumers verticals. They have only really been launched in their current shape about over a year ago but are taking over quickly. They are becoming entry points into engagement with brands from shared content, over quick entry to the official accounts. Mini programs are the new beachhead to customer interaction.
They are not great for retention. Usually, they underperform other owned touchpoints, such as native apps and web applications, in terms of retention. Tencent has invested a lot of effort to make them stickier and they are improving already. With high barriers to get people to install native apps though, Mini Programs are a great entry point to then lead people over to install native apps.
Mini programs are ideal for simple and low-frequency use cases. Entry is easy, retention is low. Yet they are powerful at mitigating media breaks and reducing friction. So, identifying the right use case is key. Like order to the table at a restaurant. The more complex or frequent a use case is, the stronger the need for an app or web app.
In China, customer preferences pivot quickly, and markets move fast.
Competition is happening at a breakneck pace, with todays lauded innovation being the next spectacular failure tomorrow. To successfully launch into this environment, it is paramount to keep an explorers mindset, be aware of underlying foundational differences, and iterate quickly. And to keep iterating and adapting even after a successful launch, as the market and the customers will keep moving on, in a country where change has been the only constant for decades.
This article was originally published on uxdesign.cc
Read our daily coverage on how the tech industry is responding to the coronavirus and subscribe to our weekly newsletter Coronavirus in Context.
For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.
The rest is here:
How to adapt your product's UX for the Chinese market - The Next Web
- LBG Media Acquires TikTok Agency Uncovered to Expand Social-First Marketing Capabilities (LBG) - Yahoo Finance UK - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- British public tend to say harms of social media have outweighed the benefits - YouGov - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- The Week in Tech: A ban on social media and an unlikely comeback - Marketing Week - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Winners And Losers Of Q1: Sprout Social (NASDAQ:SPT) Vs The Rest Of The Sales And Marketing Software Stocks - TradingView - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- U.K. Social Media Ban Signals Shift for Youth Marketing - The Impression - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- How can the industry adapt to the social media ban? - DecisionMarketing - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Are prices really dropping in the US, as Trump claims? - Al Jazeera - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- The UKs U16 social media band is set to shake up beauty marketing as we know it - Cosmetics Business - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- "All sticks, no carrots: Experts react to UK social media ban for under 16s - City St George's, University of London - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Jason Beckley: Growth belongs to brands that think and operate social-first - cbn.com.cy - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- The 2 minutes and 46 seconds of Pauline Hanson's speech that she thinks matters - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- More countries are pushing for youth social media bans. Is the world reaching a tipping point? - Radio-Canada - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Explainer: What Social Media Bans Mean for Marketers - The Business of Fashion - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Britain will ban under-16s from social media apps, including TikTok and YouTube - NPR - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Eight in ten parents say social media use has a negative impact on children - YouGov - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Dentsu brings back 360i brand as social-first solution primed for AI - Marketing Dive - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- The earlier preteens are on social media, the more likely they may be to use substances - CNN - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Teaser campaigns have become one of the music industrys most powerful marketing tools - The Conversation - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Social media ban to enforce major marketing rethink - DecisionMarketing - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- UK parents support an under-16 social media ban but what do their children think? - The Guardian - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- 'I hope this isn't a marketing stunt.' The destructive art of hacking attentionand what comes after - Fast Company - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- When social media stops being social: Marketing beyond the feed - Performance Marketing World - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- Why young people say the social media ban is not working six months on - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- From Social Media Strategy to Client Success: A Q+A with Olivia Gambuti 25, 26 - Pace University - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- How Jelly Belly is repositioning its brand for social epicureans - Marketing Dive - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- The Rise of the "SMB Creator": How Small Businesses are Leveraging Social Media and AI to Capture Consumer Attention - PR Newswire - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Emplifi Fuel Drives 60% Increase in Social Media Engagement for Brands and More than 85% Growth in Audience - PR Newswire - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- SGMC Health Wins Swaay.Health Award for Best Use of Social Media - SGMC Health - June 3rd, 2026 [June 3rd, 2026]
- Detroit Small Businesses Navigate the Pressure To Stay Visible on Social Media - Detroit Regional Chamber - June 3rd, 2026 [June 3rd, 2026]
- NC lawmakers zoom in on addictive apps as they social media restrictions for teens - KOLN | Nebraska Local News, Weather, Sports | Lincoln, NE - June 3rd, 2026 [June 3rd, 2026]
- What do Britons think are the biggest harms of social media for children in their own words - YouGov - June 3rd, 2026 [June 3rd, 2026]
- RCBs IPL triumph sparks a wave of brand creativity on social media - Storyboard18 - May 31st, 2026 [May 31st, 2026]
- Influencers are promoting dangerous peptides on social media and regulators are struggling to keep up - The Conversation - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Une Femme pairs wine with literature for co-branded social promotion - Marketing Dive - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Brands rethink youth reach as social restrictions grow in SEA - thecurrent.com - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Instagram truly is the new LinkedIn: why gen Z is using social media to get hired - The Guardian - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Marketing Masterclass: Can your business survive on social media alone, or is a website a must? - channeleye.media - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Is social media becoming the driver of store visits? - Exchange4Media - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Ogilvy wins global and local Social Media awards including Smarties Agency of the Year 2026 - Bizcommunity - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Social media, investor decks and NI 43-101: Are your promotions offside? - MLT Aikins - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- AI Reshapes the Decision-Making Chain: How Can Brands Seize the "Next Super Entry Point"? - eu.36kr.com - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Thermacell appoints Born Social for social strategy - marketingreport.one - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Digital marketing trends 2026: How AI, search and social will reshape growth - AZ Big Media - May 20th, 2026 [May 20th, 2026]
- Envoyage invests in product, marketing and business development with three key appointments - travelweekly.com.au - May 20th, 2026 [May 20th, 2026]
- Building Portable AI Workflows That You Can Take Anywhere - Social Media Examiner - May 20th, 2026 [May 20th, 2026]
- Exposing marketing tactics and strategies driving the global growth of nicotine pouches - World Health Organization (WHO) - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Creator content drives brands on Snapchat - Social Media Today - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Social insights fail to reach decision-makers: Heres what the numbers say - Marketing Dive - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Big Tech turns to Sesame Street, Girl Scouts to deflect scrutiny over kids' screen time - Reuters - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Social media personality, another injured after fight leads to shooting outside Montgomery County Courthouse - WSMV - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- I used AI to help market my bagel shop. Then the one-star reviews came in. - Business Insider - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- OpenAI is looking to grow its international marketing exec lineup - Marketing Brew - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- AnyMind Group launches AnyAI OMO to help brands turn online buzz into offline retail growth - AnyMind Group - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Social media influencer arrested, accused of refusing to pay for almost $400 of food at restaurant - KWQC - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Snapchat says what it means to be a teenager hasnt changed - Social Media Today - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- All things creator marketing with Katie Gohman - Marketing Brew - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Changan Automobile names Ogilvy global partner for digital and social media operations - bestmediainfo.com - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- A new Erewhon competitor just opened in West Hollywood with no marketing or social media. It's counting on you to post about it - Fast Company - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Social media influencer arrested after allegedly refusing to pay nearly $400 bill at Nashville restaurant - WSMV - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Digital Marketing Statistics 2026: Key SEO, PPC, Social Media, Email, AI Search, and Conversion Benchmarks - ALM Corp - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Social media influencer arrested, accused of refusing to pay for almost $400 of food at restaurant - KBTX News 3 - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- PGI conducts awareness campaign on responsible social media use for teenagers - The Tribune - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Hashtags: What they are and how to use them effectively - Sprout Social - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- 7 Social Media Automation Tools That Will Make Your Job Easier - Hootsuite Blog - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Joseph Fiennes on parenting, politics and banning children from social media: Stand up, Keir, this is your kids generation - The Guardian - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- The Science of Attention: Creating Short-Form Videos People Wont Skip - Social Media Examiner - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Social Savvy: Discover the marketing opportunities of podcasting and online audio content March 2026 - Floor Daily - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Regulatory And Compliance Regulations In Influencer Marketing And Advertising - Social Media - Nigeria - Mondaq - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Targets digital chief breaks down the retailers creator overhaul - Marketing Dive - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- LinkedIn launches Ad Agency Certification to showcase LinkedIn Ads knowledge - Social Media Today - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Meta adds more insight tools to Edits to enhance video projects - Social Media Today - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Your feed is overrun with clips this is the cutthroat community of clippers behind it - The Verge - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Early reviews of Australias social ban are in and they arent good - AFR - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- How Effective Are Virtual Reality Experiences as Destination Marketing Tools? - University of Central Florida - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Social media promotion, ease of access increase risk of adolescent inhalant misuse - Illinois News Bureau - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Teacher on leave for allegedly making social media post about Trump attempted assassination - fox8live.com - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Whenever I leave social media, I hear from friends and family more oftenthere's a reason why, tech experts say - CNBC - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Stop Comparing: Challenging Self-Love Standards on Social Media and Beyond - The Cornell Daily Sun - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Life stage matters more than age for in-app brand promotions - Social Media Today - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Who do tipsters really work for? Following tipsters on social media linked to higher gambling risk in adolescents - Medical Xpress - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]