The Labubu Effect: From Chinese Niche to Global Social Commerce Phenomenon - Pulse Advertising

The Labubu Effect: From Chinese Niche to Global Social Commerce Phenomenon

China has long been the engine of social commerce innovation. The story of Labubu toys illustrates how niche, quirky products can ignite cultural moments, scale into mass adoption, and even influence global social commerce trends.

September 25, 2025

Trend Setting Across TikTok

What starts as a playful collectible in China can, within weeks, dominate feeds across continents. This isn’t luck, it’s the result of China’s ability to merge social-first shopping experiences with hyper-adaptive marketing models.

TikTok: The Era of Social-First Shopping

Unlike in the West, where e-commerce and content often operate in silos, China’s Douyin ecosystem integrates them seamlessly. Entertainment, discovery, and checkout live in one scroll.

This is why trends like Labubu thrive. Douyin isn’t just showing users content; it’s predicting what they want before they know it, offering products in a way that feels organic, emotional, and irresistible. For global brands, this is the future of social-first shopping experiences. To predict what content will perform best for your own brand and understand your audience better, test our proprietary ai technology here.  

Social Commerce Best Practices from China

  • Agility beats hierarchy: Chinese brands collapse decision-making silos, allowing them to pivot campaigns in days, not months.
  • Creators lead commerce: Influencers aren’t just promoting products – they’re co-creating narratives that drive sales.
  • Emotion before transaction: Products succeed when they become part of a lifestyle story, not just a price tag.
  • Seamless UX: Checkout is integrated directly into discovery, minimizing friction.

These social commerce best practices are what make China the benchmark for the rest of the world.

What Global Brands Can Learn

The biggest lesson? China doesn’t just participate in trends, it creates them. For global marketers, this means adopting a more experimental mindset: testing micro-trends, leaning into predictive analytics, and designing campaigns that blend entertainment and commerce from the very beginning.