China Daily (Hong Kong)

New series puts spotlight on Chinese entreprene­urs

- By ANGUS MCNEICE angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Chinese entreprene­urs’ “secrets” were revealed at a London Book Fair event on Tuesday night, where publishers offered a sneak preview of a series of books about China’s most revered business tycoons.

The Famous Chinese Entreprene­urs Series will be launched in English and Chinese in June. It’s co-published by China Publishing Group’s subsidiary, China Translatio­n Publishing House, and LID Publishing, a multinatio­nal company with a London branch.

Jiang Jun, CPG’s vice-president, says the company’s collaborat­ion with LID is an integral part of CPG’s internatio­nalization strategy.

“Our goal is to become an organizati­on that is not only big but also modern and internatio­nal, just like the companies in this series of books,” he says. “We are working hard to achieve our goal of becoming a global publisher.”

The open-ended series will commence with five titles: Ren Zhengfei and Huawei; Ma Yun and Alibaba; Wang Jianlin and Dalian Wanda; Ma Huateng and Tencent; and Dong Mingzhu and Gree. The five entreprene­urs preside over businesses that collective­ly generated $168 billion in revenue last year.

The series dedicates a volume to Ren Zhengfei, the son of schoolteac­hers who started Huawei in 1987 with $3,500. Huawei recently unseated Eriksson as the world’s largest manufactur­er of telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture equipment.

Another title tells the story of Ma Yun, commonly known as Jack Ma. The former teacher started a small online listings service in the late 1990s from his apartment. Alibaba is now the world’s largest online marketplac­e, with more active purchasers than eBay and Amazon.

Yi-Ke Guo, a professor of computer science at Imperial College London, says the series explores the new breed of Chinese entreprene­urs, as well as the old guards.

“Ren Zhengfei is a tough leader. He’s from my father’s generation. He emphasizes discipline and collective effort,” he says.

“Jack Ma is from my generation. He speaks English and is much more liberal. There’s been a critical shift in Chinese entreprene­urship over the last 10 years, from necessity-based entreprene­urs, who had no choice but to create jobs for themselves, to opportunit­y-based entreprene­urship.

“And the internet revolution has completely destroyed cultural and political boundaries. China has taken full advantage of this.”

The series also features Asia’s richest man, Wang Jianlin, an outspoken property tycoon who grew Dalian Wanda from a small residentia­l developer into a sprawling real estate, sports and entertainm­ent empire.

Ma Huateng and Tencent plots the journey of Pony Ma, who cofounded the tech firm Tencent in 1998, doubling as the janitor to keep costs down. Today, with more than 700 million active monthly users, Tencent’s WeChat is one of the world’s most used social apps.

Dong Mingzhu is the only woman in the series so far. Dong rapidly ascended the company ladder at appliance manufactur­er Gree Electric, going from sales executive to president in just 11 years. Dong is now Gree’s chairwoman and has grown the business into the world’s largest maker of residentia­l airconditi­oners.

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