Expert Profile

Expert photo Denis Gihan
Partner of Citiheart Shanghai Trading Co. Apparel & Fashion industry January 2008 – Present    Partner of Offshore Development Information Technology and Services industry September 2006 – Present   Founding Partner of Dailymotion Internet

Meet Us In February 2010

Meet us in SPAIN and FRANCE

Konaxis Group China will be in Madrid on February 25/26, in Barcelona on February 27/28 in Paris from March 2nd to March9th, in Lyon from March 10th to March15th.

You want to work (or already work) with china? in Sourcing, technical subcontracting, high tech product? and wish to get some advices and informations from European expert on Chinese market? in order to buy in China and improve the follow up and quality process; So please feel free to contact us to meet us during the first 2weeks of September in Valence, Barcelona, Madrid and Paris.
 
Please click below link to fill in the form and we will reply soon.
 

 

Konaxis Newsletter Subscribe

We offer below content category for subscribe newsletter. Please fill in your name and email address.

 


 
 Select All
 China News  China Facts  China Trade Fairs
 How-to  China Products
 
Newsletter Language: English French Spanish



Currency Convert Service

Currency i have:
Currency i want:
 
How much i want:
That is what i get:
 


Weather

Shanghai,China


Now
30.png
Partly Cloudy
10°C, Windchill: 8°C
Wind: 11 kph N
Humidity: 62%
Visibility: 0 km
Preasure: 1,024 mb falling
Sunrise: 6:02 am
Sunset: 6:04 pm
Thu
30.png
Partly Cloudy
Hi: 9°C, Low: 7°C
Fri
32.png
Sunny
Hi: 20°C, Low: 13°C

Sourcing In China


To ensure the intermediary and the follow-up of your purchases in China: Search for supplier, factory auditing, negotiation, sampling, production follow-up, quality control, logistics

Meili



You are planning a trip to China? Buy in China?
Meili, your online assistant, answers to all your questions and helps you organize your trip to China.

Find an interpreter in China

Translate a document in Chinese

Rent a car in China

How To

No related how-to was found...

Facts & Figures In China

Political Bureau Of Ohe CPC Central Committee
The Central Politburo of the Communist Party of China or Political bureau of the CPC Central Committee is a group of 19 to 25 people who oversee the Communist Party of China. The power of the Politburo resides largely in the fact that its members generally simultaneously hold positions within the People's Republic of China state positions and with the control over personnel appointments that the Politburo and Secretariat have. In addition, some Politburo members hold powerful regional positions.
 

China Products

Sponsored by

Portable Speakers For IPod

    

Small but efficient design. Video Output to connect to TVs

China's Best Blogs And Sites

On Chemical - Biotech
China Economics Blog
Smart China Organization
China Challenges
Mysterious China Blog
How To Select Chinese Partners To Sell Into China?
Chemical - Biotech China 12/31/2009
Sino-Foreign partnerships -- be they formal joint ventures, long term contracts or informal best-efforts sales agreements -- aren’t necessarily bad solutions for western businesses aiming to sell into China, but they can lead to messes that can overwhelm your company if you are inexperienced, not knowledgeable or unprepared.

The advantage of a partnership
Though it now becomes much easier for foreign investors to set up Wholly Foreign Owned Enterprises (WFOEs) in China which are fully protected by Chinese laws, it’s still preferable to strike a partnership when you plan to sell in China.

Foreigners have traditionally come to China mainly for OEM or to buy finished goods, and they got much valuable experience about how to handle Chinese suppliers. But catering to Chinese customers, especially end customers, are worlds apart from Chinese supplier management. All the successful foreign brands attained their status through strong localization. You can not readily attract and hold your local customers by merely hiring translators and Asian middle managers. Your potential partners’ distribution networks, local streetwiseness and know-how, and many other local resources can open many doors for you or save you from sinking in -- if you select out the right ones.

Avoid incestuous relationship
Overseas Chinese, Singaporeans and Hong Kong citizens were used to be perceived as the perfect gap-filler at cross-cultural deal makings. But they now seem lost some of their appeal. After all, they are brought up in western ways of thinking and only yellow at face-value. One exception is Taiwanese who were indoctrinated under traditional Chinese pedagogic system but also were heavily influenced by western values and business practices. The colossal success of KFC in China attested to its “Taiwan gang” leadership’s deep knowledge of local market.

A good many westerners end up in incestuous relationships with partners who have more in common with them than with their Chinese target market. Choose the one works, not the one you like. Keep in mind that you are looking for complementary skills and capabilities -- not similarities.

Seek out the right balance
Before diving into a deal, cautiously weighing your potential partners’ size and capability is far more than necessary. If your partners are too big or powerful, your deal won’t matter much to them and they are hard to negotiate with. If your partners are too small or weak, they may not have sufficient resources to fulfill all of your requirements though the negotiating table will lean to your side. As game theory demonstrates, if the power level of the weaker partner diminishes below certain reasonable line the relationship will be distorted and lead to less economic outcomes.

If a prospective partner can only satisfy a fraction of your needs and you have to find additional resources, you would be best off hammering out a non-exclusive deal.

See through the over-promise
Many times a period after signing a contract, western investors were awakened to the scary fact that their Chinese partners were way from capable of delivering what they formerly promised. It is sad that some Chinese companies have a tendency to over-promise before the deal is closed, only confront you later with new demands for more resources, time or cash in order to fullfill what they promised earlier.

Find a partner who is not all of honeyed words and wonderful commitments, leave a certain margin and flexibility in the deal, and prepare in advance for any lag, delay or ineffectiveness.

Bookmark and Share