What happens when a blind-box toy phenomenon decides it wants a permanent spot on your kitchen counter?
According to recent industry hiring spikes, Chinese pop-culture and toy giant Pop Mart is pulling back the curtain on a major strategic pivot. The company has begun aggressively recruiting top-tier talent across small domestic appliance (SDA) research and development (R&D), procurement, and quality control.
While the brand hasn’t dropped an official press release just yet, the industry writing is on the wall: Pop Mart is no longer content with just licensing its characters to third-party appliance brands. They are building their own hardware pipeline.
Beyond the Blind Box: The Search for a Second Growth Curve
For years, Pop Mart’s bread and butter has been the highly addictive, collectible blind box. But collectibility has a ceiling. To sustain long-term growth and transition from a trendy toy brand into a lifestyle staple—much like Disney or Sanrio—Pop Mart needs its intellectual property (IP) embedded in everyday life.
Unlike a collectible figurine that sits passively on a shelf, small appliances offer high-frequency daily interaction. Every time a consumer makes a morning espresso or grabs a cold drink, they interact with the brand. Furthermore, younger consumers are increasingly buying appliances based on aesthetics, emotional resonance, and “vibe” rather than raw technical specifications. This plays directly into Pop Mart’s core strength: emotional design and IP marketing.
The LABUBU Lesson: Why Licensing Failed the Quality Test
Pop Mart isn’t entirely green to the appliance space. They previously dipped their toes in the water via third-party licensing partnerships, resulting in limited-edition LABUBU-branded retro refrigerators, coffee makers, and desktop fans.
The most famous experiment—the LABUBU limited mini-fridge—initially triggered a massive wave of hype. It sold out instantly and saw resale prices skyrocket on the secondary market. However, the bubble burst quickly. Because the product was an OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) white-label unit with basic performance but a massive premium price tag, buyers quickly complained about mid-tier build quality and sluggish after-sales support. Resale values plummeted.
The takeaway for Pop Mart was clear: In the white goods and appliance sector, utility is king. You can sell a toy purely on emotional value, but an appliance must work reliably, or the consumer backlash will damage the IP itself.
The Strategy: “IP + Lifestyle” Instead of Technical Warfare
Pop Mart’s recruitment drive for internal R&D signals an attempt to solve this quality control bottleneck. By taking design, procurement, and quality verification in-house, they can tightly control product standards while cutting out the heavy markups associated with third-party licensing.
Industry analysts note that Pop Mart has no intention of competing head-to-head with traditional white goods giants like Midea or Haier on pure performance or scale. Instead, they are carving out a distinct niche: functional, high-aesthetic home goods that prioritize emotional value.
The Verdict for WhiteGoodsNow
The crossover between pop culture and home appliances is getting crowded. Sanrio has mastered licensing, and MINISO has scaled white-label collaborations. Pop Mart’s decision to handle hardware internally is a much riskier, high-capital play.
For the appliance industry, it’s a space worth watching closely. If Pop Mart can successfully balance the emotional allure of its characters with robust product reliability and solid after-sales service, they might just write a brand-new playbook for the premium SDA market.
