A growing cohort of design-literate Singaporeans are booking flights to Foshan, China's manufacturing heartland, treating it as a sourcing destination rather than a tourist one. They arrive with Pinterest boards, room dimensions, and camera rolls full of reference imagery, negotiating directly with factories for pieces that would cost multiples at retail. This is taste made operational: the consumer has cut out the middleman, the showroom, and the brand story entirely. When a demographic this affluent starts self-directing its own supply chain, the question for every premium furniture and interiors brand is not how to compete on price but whether the showroom format itself still has a function.
Three stories today point to the same structural shift: consumers are removing intermediaries with increasing sophistication. Singaporeans are flying to Chinese factories with floor plans instead of buying from showrooms.
Knicks fans are watching Finals highlights on YouTube instead of subscribing to the broadcaster. Malaysian tourists are learning destinations from a Chinese social app instead of consulting a travel brand. In each case, the consumer built a more efficient route to what they actually wanted, and the incumbent format, the showroom, the subscription wall, the destination marketing board, was simply too slow to see it coming.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.