Per capita 200,000! Store manager 20 million! Why do competitors not dare to copy Fat Donglai's profit-sharing model?

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Listing | Zhongfang.com

Review | Li Xiaoyan

While most companies are still struggling with employee compensation and incentive mechanisms, Pang Donglai has once again redefined public perceptions of business ethics and corporate responsibility through an almost “shocking” asset distribution. Founder Yu Donglai publicly disclosed that the group’s net assets of 3.793 billion yuan were fully converted into employee equity, covering 10,194 employees, achieving full employee ownership and long-term sharing. Store managers average 20 million yuan, ordinary employees average 200,000 yuan, and Yu Donglai himself has not retained any rights. This sincere approach of not just making promises but delivering results has made Pang Donglai a refreshing exception in the business world.

This distribution plan is clear, transparent, and covers all employees, demonstrating fairness and value equivalence. According to official details, assets are precisely divided into three major groups: frontline employees, 8,913 people, receiving 47.7% or about 1.811 billion yuan, with 8,633 ordinary employees averaging 200,000 yuan, and 280 grassroots team leaders averaging 300,000 yuan; the management team, 718 people, receiving 39.9% or about 1.514 billion yuan, with 12 core store managers each receiving 20 million yuan, rewarding key personnel; the technical team, 563 people, receiving 12.3% or about 468 million yuan, with core technical staff eligible for up to 10 million yuan, supporting supply chain, quality control, digitalization, and other core capabilities. These three groups account for 100% of the assets, from frontline cashiers and stockers to store managers and technical backbone, everyone is a partner in the enterprise, breaking the traditional pattern of “capital monopoly and employee labor.”

Unlike one-time cash distributions, Pang Donglai converts assets into equity, establishing a long-term mechanism where 50% of profits are used for team bonuses and 50% for shareholder returns, allowing employees to share in the company’s long-term growth dividends. This is not just wealth distribution but also a rights affirmation—employees transform from “workers” to “partners,” shifting from passive execution to active creation, fully activating a sense of belonging and responsibility. Since 2000, Pang Donglai has adhered to profit sharing; this comprehensive asset rights confirmation is a continuation and elevation of that original intention, putting the “employee-centered” philosophy into practice through制度.

The core logic of Pang Donglai is to treat employees as “people” rather than “tools,” building a virtuous cycle through respect and trust. While the industry generally pursues cost reduction and efficiency, Pang Donglai takes the opposite approach: offering high salaries, 30-40 days of paid annual leave, and comprehensive benefits, ensuring employees have dignity, security, and hope. This kindness results in an extremely low turnover rate of 0.33%-2.3%, with employees valuing their positions and serving with dedication, which in turn drives a 90% customer repurchase rate, over 50% out-of-town customers, and industry-leading store efficiency. High salaries do not drag down the company; instead, they maximize human efficiency, creating a positive feedback loop of “treat employees well—provide quality service—grow reputation—improve performance—better rewards for employees.”

Even more remarkable is that Pang Donglai’s value spillover stimulates a healthy internal economic cycle in the region. Over 10,000 employees with stable high salaries buy homes, cars, and spend in the local area, directly boosting local catering, retail, and service industries; as merchants’ incomes increase, they further spend at Pang Donglai, fueling vibrant local commerce. A company’s goodwill transforms into the lively atmosphere of a city—this is the most vivid practice of corporate social responsibility—not just creating profits but also creating happiness and warmth.

In the face of widespread online discussion, “Can the Pang Donglai model be replicated?” has become a focal point. Objectively, under the current capital-driven retail logic, large-scale replication is extremely difficult, but this does not prevent it from becoming an industry benchmark and a value reference.

Three reasons make replication difficult: First, the founder’s original intention and vision are irreplaceable. Yu Donglai’s primary mission is “making employees happy,” voluntarily giving up personal rights, requiring senior executives to retire before age 60, and rejecting the consolidation of power and capital pursuit. This altruistic mindset beyond commercial calculations contradicts the profit-driven nature of most enterprises; second, brand and reputation barriers are hard to replicate. Yu Donglai brings traffic, and Pang Donglai relies on excellent service and integrity to build brand premium, equivalent to hundreds of millions in free publicity, which most ordinary companies cannot establish trust for in a short time; third, regional constraints and anti-expansion logic do not align with capital market demands. Pang Donglai has only opened 13 stores in 30 years, explicitly refusing to go public and actively controlling scale, resisting capital entrapment. This “small and beautiful” approach is entirely different from the industry’s pursuit of scale, listing, and harvesting.

However, difficulty in replication does not mean it is meaningless. The value of Pang Donglai lies not in being a template for copying but in redefining “why business exists.” It proves with practical, profitable actions that companies can thrive without squeezing employees, blindly expanding, or chasing capital—sometimes even longer and more dignified. It breaks the industry prejudice that “profit pursuit must be ruthless,” demonstrating that business can have warmth, bottom lines, and emotional resonance, offering a new set of values for all enterprises.

In an era dominated by traffic and capital pursuit, Pang Donglai’s approach is especially precious. It does not chase scale myths or indulge in capital games; it focuses on good products, excellent service, and caring for employees. With simple principles, it has carved out a solid path. Yu Donglai’s contribution is not just a nearly 4 billion yuan asset distribution plan but also a heartfelt answer to Chinese business—ultimate value is never about market cap or size but about making employees happy, customers assured, and society认可.

The story of Pang Donglai continues. It shows us through action that the best management is respect, the best motivation is sharing, and the best business is kindness. When companies put employees first, employees will carry the company on their shoulders; when business returns to human-centeredness and original intentions, it can unleash the most enduring vitality. This is the most valuable lesson Pang Donglai offers to this era.

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