亚洲精品久久久久久一区二区_99re热久久这里只有精品34_久久免费高清视频_一区二区三区不卡在线视频

Home / Business / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Chinese exporters tap into home market
Adjust font size:

At a sales booth in a special trade fair here in southern China, Zhou was complaining how hard it was to sell her products.

"We sell them at factory-gate prices, but buyers still bargain. That makes me mad," said Zhou, a Taiwanese senior manager of Poly Dragon Industrial, which is based in the booming city of Dongguan neighboring Guangzhou, capital of China's manufacturing base Guangdong Province.

The trade fair she attended was co-organized by Guangdong and Hong Kong-listed e-commerce giant Alibaba.com. The two-day fair, opened on Saturday, was aimed to help small Chinese exporters tap into the domestic market amid weak overseas demand.

Organizers said the fair was attended by 400 small- and medium-sized exporting firms in Guangdong that displayed their company profiles at Alibaba's business-to-business division, and up to 30,000 big online sellers at taobao.com, China's largest consumer-to-consumer auction site owned by Alibaba.

Zhou's company, owned by a Taiwanese, produces high-end lighting, decorative accents and photo frames. More than 95 percent of its products are for export.

The financial crisis and global slump in demand for made-in-China products have taken a toll on tens of thousands of exporters in Guangdong, which produced more than a quarter of China's foreign trade last year.

In the first four months this year, Guangdong exported 98.5 billion U.S. dollars worth of goods, down 17.8 percent year on year. Its exports continued to decline for the sixth consecutive month since last November. Nationally, exports in the first four months totaled 337.42 billion U.S. dollars, down 20.5 percent.

Poly Dragon, though keeping its workforce of nearly 300 relatively stable, lost up to 20 percent of overseas orders. In response, it aimed to tap into the huge market to sell more products on the mainland. Last year it began to display the company profile in Chinese at Alibaba to attract domestic buyers. In the past, it only provided an English profile at Alibaba for overseas importers, Zhou said.

The road to return home, however, isn't easy. Besides cut-throat competition and a price war, she had to redesign many exporting products, which often featured Greek and Roman gods, angels and other religious figures from Western civilization.

These products were not popular among Chinese customers, particularly those in southern China, because they were unfamiliar with these gods and figures, she said. For the home market, the company would replace them with Buddha or bodhisattva, or maybe statues of sexy women.

In addition, selling products at home needed good marketing, which Zhou said was very complex. "I have not learned how to sell them in the domestic market," she admitted.

Zhou said her company would continue to make use of Alibaba and capitalize on China's booming online shopping in its effort to develop a domestic market. "China's market is so huge and we won't skip it."

China, with a population of more than 1.3 billion, is the world's largest potential market for seemingly everything, ranging from electronics and cars.

The Chinese government has been making favorable policies to encourage exporters to shift from their focus on overseas markets. So Zhou's company was by no means alone. But as many Chinese once-thriving exporters sought to tap into the domestic market, they found themselves facing a bumpy road.

Wang Dongping, general manager of Guangdong Top Umbrella, said he just couldn't strike the right note in domestic sales. Among the many problems were a totally different business model, no sales channel and inability to design products suitable for the Chinese market, he said.

Top Umbrella sold more than one million U.S. dollars worth of umbrellas, 90 percent of which was for export. It had been manufacturing umbrellas for Western companies such as Disney, Kaloo, Happy Rain and Coca-Cola.

Wang said he had good expectations for the domestic market and tapping into it was not a makeshift business strategy.

"I am planning to organize my own sales team. And I hope that domestic sales could account for up to 30 percent of my company's annual output in the next two or three years," he said.

Poly Dragon and Top Umbrella, both small-sized enterprises, were trying to expand their domestic sales through e-commerce. And they won a promise from Alibaba of more help.

Wei Zhe, CEO of Alibaba's B2B division, on Saturday promised that Alibaba would help China's small- and medium-sized enterprises as much as possible. "In the first quarter this year, our profit was 50 million yuan (7.3 U.S. dollars) less than the same period last year. But we gave assistance to some 50,000 SMEs, cutting service fees by 1,000 yuan for them. And we will continue doing so," he said.

According to Wei, Chinese exporters were facing at least four hurdles on their road to tap potential at home -- raising design capability, finding a sales channel, setting up an after-sales service network and building their own brand.

Many Chinese exporting firms used to manufacture through an OEM(original equipment manufacturer) arrangement with overseas brands and make products based on the design provided by overseas brands. Once the products finished shipment, they finished their tasks.

Alibaba aimed to give SMEs a cotton coat to pull through the economic winter, he said, claiming that the survival rate of SMEs that have used e-commerce methods was four times higher than that of others.

According to an industry report released in February by the Shanghai-based iResearch Consulting Group, an Internet market researcher, China's online transaction volume last year rocketed 128.5 percent year on year to 128.2 billion yuan, which was 65 times more than that of 2003. That meant every Chinese spent more than 1,600 yuan last year on online purchases, 582 yuan more than the previous year.

The report said a quarter of China's nearly 300 million netizens took to online shopping last year. In 2008, Taobao had a total consumer-to-consumer transaction volume of 98 billion yuan, more than double that of 2007, outselling all retailers in China including Bailian Group and Wal-Mart.

While Poly Dragon and Top Umbrella made a shot at e-commerce, others were trying in other ways. One of them was to team with domestic retail companies and became a supplier.

Chen Chaohong, a senior manager of Qingdao Liqun Group, a major retailer based in eastern China's Shandong Province, said making OEM arrangements with retailers seemed to be one of the most effective ways, particularly for those without their own brands.

He told Xinhua at the Canton Fair, known as China's largest export event, which ended on May 7, that his company had reached several manufacturing agreements with exporting firms. The fair was opened to a group of domestic buyers for the first time in its half-century history. The organizers hoped domestic deals could offset a plunge of overseas orders.

Such cooperation allowed both sides to do what they were best at -- exporting firms were good at manufacturing while supermarkets had excellent sales channels, he added.

At a sales booth in a special trade fair here in southern China, Zhou was complaining how hard it was to sell her products.

"We sell them at factory-gate prices, but buyers still bargain. That makes me mad," said Zhou, a Taiwanese senior manager of Poly Dragon Industrial, which is based in the booming city of Dongguan neighboring Guangzhou, capital of China's manufacturing base Guangdong Province.

The trade fair she attended was co-organized by Guangdong and Hong Kong-listed e-commerce giant Alibaba.com. The two-day fair, opened on Saturday, was aimed to help small Chinese exporters tap into the domestic market amid weak overseas demand.

Organizers said the fair was attended by 400 small- and medium-sized exporting firms in Guangdong that displayed their company profiles at Alibaba's business-to-business division, and up to 30,000 big online sellers at taobao.com, China's largest consumer-to-consumer auction site owned by Alibaba.

Zhou's company, owned by a Taiwanese, produces high-end lighting, decorative accents and photo frames. More than 95 percent of its products are for export.

The financial crisis and global slump in demand for made-in-China products have taken a toll on tens of thousands of exporters in Guangdong, which produced more than a quarter of China's foreign trade last year.

In the first four months this year, Guangdong exported 98.5 billion U.S. dollars worth of goods, down 17.8 percent year on year. Its exports continued to decline for the sixth consecutive month since last November. Nationally, exports in the first four months totaled 337.42 billion U.S. dollars, down 20.5 percent.

Poly Dragon, though keeping its workforce of nearly 300 relatively stable, lost up to 20 percent of overseas orders. In response, it aimed to tap into the huge market to sell more products on the mainland. Last year it began to display the company profile in Chinese at Alibaba to attract domestic buyers. In the past, it only provided an English profile at Alibaba for overseas importers, Zhou said.

The road to return home, however, isn't easy. Besides cut-throat competition and a price war, she had to redesign many exporting products, which often featured Greek and Roman gods, angels and other religious figures from Western civilization.

These products were not popular among Chinese customers, particularly those in southern China, because they were unfamiliar with these gods and figures, she said. For the home market, the company would replace them with Buddha or bodhisattva, or maybe statues of sexy women.

In addition, selling products at home needed good marketing, which Zhou said was very complex. "I have not learned how to sell them in the domestic market," she admitted.

Zhou said her company would continue to make use of Alibaba and capitalize on China's booming online shopping in its effort to develop a domestic market. "China's market is so huge and we won't skip it."

China, with a population of more than 1.3 billion, is the world's largest potential market for seemingly everything, ranging from electronics and cars.

The Chinese government has been making favorable policies to encourage exporters to shift from their focus on overseas markets. So Zhou's company was by no means alone. But as many Chinese once-thriving exporters sought to tap into the domestic market, they found themselves facing a bumpy road.

Wang Dongping, general manager of Guangdong Top Umbrella, said he just couldn't strike the right note in domestic sales. Among the many problems were a totally different business model, no sales channel and inability to design products suitable for the Chinese market, he said.

Top Umbrella sold more than one million U.S. dollars worth of umbrellas, 90 percent of which was for export. It had been manufacturing umbrellas for Western companies such as Disney, Kaloo, Happy Rain and Coca-Cola.

Wang said he had good expectations for the domestic market and tapping into it was not a makeshift business strategy.

"I am planning to organize my own sales team. And I hope that domestic sales could account for up to 30 percent of my company's annual output in the next two or three years," he said.

Poly Dragon and Top Umbrella, both small-sized enterprises, were trying to expand their domestic sales through e-commerce. And they won a promise from Alibaba of more help.

Wei Zhe, CEO of Alibaba's B2B division, on Saturday promised that Alibaba would help China's small- and medium-sized enterprises as much as possible. "In the first quarter this year, our profit was 50 million yuan (7.3 U.S. dollars) less than the same period last year. But we gave assistance to some 50,000 SMEs, cutting service fees by 1,000 yuan for them. And we will continue doing so," he said.

According to Wei, Chinese exporters were facing at least four hurdles on their road to tap potential at home -- raising design capability, finding a sales channel, setting up an after-sales service network and building their own brand.

Many Chinese exporting firms used to manufacture through an OEM(original equipment manufacturer) arrangement with overseas brands and make products based on the design provided by overseas brands. Once the products finished shipment, they finished their tasks.

Alibaba aimed to give SMEs a cotton coat to pull through the economic winter, he said, claiming that the survival rate of SMEs that have used e-commerce methods was four times higher than that of others.

According to an industry report released in February by the Shanghai-based iResearch Consulting Group, an Internet market researcher, China's online transaction volume last year rocketed 128.5 percent year on year to 128.2 billion yuan, which was 65 times more than that of 2003. That meant every Chinese spent more than 1,600 yuan last year on online purchases, 582 yuan more than the previous year.

The report said a quarter of China's nearly 300 million netizens took to online shopping last year. In 2008, Taobao had a total consumer-to-consumer transaction volume of 98 billion yuan, more than double that of 2007, outselling all retailers in China including Bailian Group and Wal-Mart.

While Poly Dragon and Top Umbrella made a shot at e-commerce, others were trying in other ways. One of them was to team with domestic retail companies and became a supplier.

Chen Chaohong, a senior manager of Qingdao Liqun Group, a major retailer based in eastern China's Shandong Province, said making OEM arrangements with retailers seemed to be one of the most effective ways, particularly for those without their own brands.

He told Xinhua at the Canton Fair, known as China's largest export event, which ended on May 7, that his company had reached several manufacturing agreements with exporting firms. The fair was opened to a group of domestic buyers for the first time in its half-century history. The organizers hoped domestic deals could offset a plunge of overseas orders.

Such cooperation allowed both sides to do what they were best at -- exporting firms were good at manufacturing while supermarkets had excellent sales channels, he added.

(Xinhua News Agency May 18, 2009)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read Bookmark and Share
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Exporters to get help as taxes to be cut
- Rebates on cards for lead-acid battery exporters
- Nearly 1,000 toy exporters shut down in south China in 2008
- Exporters warned against rising overseas credit risks
- China's exporters face payment risks
May 7-8 Brussels China-EU high-level trade talks

May 17-22 Hong Kong Heilongjiang-Hong Kong Trade Cooperation Seminar
- Output of Major Industrial Products
- Investment by Various Sectors
- Foreign Direct Investment by Country or Region
- National Price Index
- Value of Major Commodity Import
- Money Supply
- Exchange Rate and Foreign Exchange Reserve
- What does the China-Pakistan Free Trade Agreement cover?
- How to Set up a Foreign Capital Enterprise in China?
- How Does the VAT Works in China?
- How Much RMB or Foreign Currency Can Be Physically Carried Out of or Into China?
- What Is the Electrical Fitting in China?
亚洲精品久久久久久一区二区_99re热久久这里只有精品34_久久免费高清视频_一区二区三区不卡在线视频
一区二区三区四区五区视频 | 午夜精品福利电影| 狠狠色狠狠色综合日日五| 国产精品久久久一本精品| 欧美日韩国产在线| 欧美极品欧美精品欧美视频| 久久综合狠狠综合久久综合88 | 国产精品一区二区三区四区 | 国产日韩精品在线| 国产精品毛片| 欧美午夜国产| 欧美视频在线观看视频极品| 欧美日韩精品免费| 欧美日韩精品综合| 久久国产婷婷国产香蕉| 午夜精品久久久久久久久| 亚洲一二三区视频在线观看| 亚洲视频精品在线| 亚洲线精品一区二区三区八戒| 一本久久综合亚洲鲁鲁| 99国产精品国产精品毛片| 99xxxx成人网| 一本一本大道香蕉久在线精品| 99视频有精品| 亚洲尤物在线视频观看| 亚洲激情成人| 亚洲精品国产拍免费91在线| 亚洲理论在线观看| 亚洲国产日韩欧美| 亚洲精品之草原avav久久| 一本色道久久加勒比精品| 在线综合亚洲| 午夜激情一区| 久久精品日产第一区二区| 久久久国产视频91| 老司机免费视频一区二区| 欧美成人视屏| 国产精品成人免费| 国产免费成人| 在线播放豆国产99亚洲| 亚洲精品乱码久久久久久黑人 | 国产精品亚洲综合色区韩国| 国产日韩欧美日韩大片| 国产一区二区成人久久免费影院| 国产亚洲精品资源在线26u| 黄色亚洲精品| 亚洲欧洲日产国码二区| 一区二区黄色| 午夜精品一区二区三区电影天堂| 欧美资源在线| 日韩视频专区| 性一交一乱一区二区洋洋av| 久久成人这里只有精品| 欧美电影在线观看| 欧美特黄一级大片| 国产专区综合网| 亚洲精品久久久久| 亚洲欧美另类综合偷拍| 亚洲高清在线精品| 亚洲图中文字幕| 久久九九精品99国产精品| 欧美韩国一区| 国产精品制服诱惑| 亚洲国产一区在线| 亚洲视频一区在线| 久久精品视频网| 亚洲一级免费视频| 久久久久久久综合| 欧美日韩精品二区| 国模精品一区二区三区| 日韩视频亚洲视频| 欧美影院久久久| 在线一区观看| 蜜桃伊人久久| 国产精品国产自产拍高清av王其| 黄色一区二区三区| 亚洲第一毛片| 亚洲综合欧美| aa成人免费视频| 久久青草福利网站| 国产精品久久久久国产精品日日| 国产一区二区三区的电影| 日韩视频精品在线| 亚洲韩国一区二区三区| 性视频1819p久久| 欧美日韩另类综合| 在线不卡视频| 香蕉国产精品偷在线观看不卡| 一区二区三区www| 老司机精品视频网站| 国产伦精品一区二区三区四区免费| 亚洲精品欧美日韩| 亚洲国产一区二区精品专区| 欧美在线视频一区二区| 欧美日韩精品免费在线观看视频| 精品不卡视频| 午夜精品一区二区三区在线视| 在线视频你懂得一区二区三区| 老司机免费视频久久| 国产午夜精品视频| 亚洲欧美日韩高清| 亚洲一区网站| 欧美人成在线视频| 91久久久精品| 91久久精品国产91久久性色tv| 久久久亚洲高清| 国产欧美日韩在线视频| 亚洲香蕉伊综合在人在线视看| 野花国产精品入口| 欧美日本一道本| 亚洲肉体裸体xxxx137| 亚洲精品四区| 欧美国产先锋| 亚洲黄网站在线观看| 亚洲精品一区中文| 欧美极品色图| 亚洲精品乱码| 一区二区三区成人精品| 欧美日韩高清一区| 亚洲激情在线观看| 亚洲美女在线国产| 欧美啪啪成人vr| 亚洲毛片在线| 亚洲色图在线视频| 欧美三级电影网| 99热精品在线观看| 亚洲天堂网站在线观看视频| 蜜桃av一区二区三区| 亚洲国产精品成人久久综合一区| 欧美一区二区三区免费观看视频| 亚洲欧美三级在线| 欧美四级剧情无删版影片| 日韩视频国产视频| 夜夜嗨av一区二区三区四季av| 欧美激情免费观看| 亚洲国产天堂久久国产91| 亚洲国产你懂的| 久久久久久日产精品| 国产伦精品一区二区三区免费| 亚洲少妇自拍| 亚洲综合另类| 欧美国产日本高清在线| 99国产精品国产精品久久| 夜色激情一区二区| 欧美日韩高清免费| 日韩午夜av电影| 亚洲精品中文字幕女同| 欧美日韩亚洲视频| 99re国产精品| 亚洲欧美日韩直播| 国产精品综合不卡av| 亚洲欧美精品在线观看| 久久久之久亚州精品露出| 韩国三级电影久久久久久| 久久精品国产91精品亚洲| 久久性天堂网| 亚洲高清不卡在线| 日韩西西人体444www| 欧美日韩高清区| 翔田千里一区二区| 麻豆成人在线观看| 亚洲片区在线| 亚洲视频在线看| 国产视频精品网| 久久精品一区| 久久人人九九| 亚洲国产精品电影在线观看| 亚洲欧洲精品一区二区三区波多野1战4| 欧美日韩国产综合视频在线观看| 一本久久青青| 欧美一区二区女人| 狠狠爱综合网| 日韩视频国产视频| 国产一级久久| 亚洲精品一二三区| 欧美日韩亚洲一区二区| 亚洲一区二区欧美| 欧美成人免费网站| 日韩午夜av电影| 欧美专区在线| 亚洲国产va精品久久久不卡综合| 一区二区三区高清不卡| 国产精品色在线| 久久精品国产免费看久久精品| 你懂的一区二区| 亚洲网站视频| 欧美精品1区2区3区| 亚洲一区二区三区视频播放| 久久久噜噜噜久久| 亚洲精品偷拍| 麻豆精品在线观看| 这里只有精品视频在线| 欧美一区二区三区免费大片| 伊人成综合网伊人222| 在线综合亚洲欧美在线视频| 国产亚洲精品久久久久动| 亚洲精品激情| 狠狠色狠狠色综合系列| 中文高清一区| 一区二区视频免费完整版观看|