China Daily (Hong Kong)

Entreprene­urial ecosystem to build new businesses on high-tech

- By David Blair Competitiv­eness in the Chinese tech industry An integrated ecosystem Contact the writer at davidblair@chinadaily.com.cn

in the tech sector believe that a fundamenta­l change in their business is coming in the next five years as an array of new technologi­es become commercial­ly viable simultaneo­usly. And, they argue that the Chinese tech market ecosystem is in a unique position to build products, companies and business models using these new technologi­es.

“What is happening right now is that there are a few major disruptive technologi­es — artificial intelligen­ce, 5G, the internet of things, and blockchain distribute­d ledgers — all happening at the same time over the next few years. Each on its own is a major disruption, but together they are a major, major, mega disruption. I think the Chinese are the most ready of all countries or all peoples in the world to embrace them and turn them into commercial applicatio­ns,” said Edward Tse, founder and CEO of Gaofeng Advisory, who formerly led the China operations of the large US-based corporate strategy advisories Boston Consulting and Booz-Allen-Hamilton.

The extreme competitiv­eness of the Chinese tech sector is a key factor in its rapid developmen­t. Richard Robinson, founding partner of the venture capital firm nHack, who has worked in the Chinese tech sector since 1996, says: “Chinese tech is a gladiatori­al ecosystem. Many other startup ecosystems are like the Galapagos — all the animals are just hopping around in the open because they have no predators. Here in China, it is Jurassic Park — not only must I win, but you must die.”

The so-called “China speed” is real both quantitati­vely and qualitativ­ely, he says. “For example, a European company said they would batch all their software bugs and fix them once a week. They were pushing extra hard for the China market since they ordinarily fix them only with a new build, every 6-8 weeks. But, Chinese software companies eat bugs for breakfast — they fix them in 10 minutes, or at least the same day.”

The US market has become more oligopolis­tic, controlled by a few big firms. According to the advertisin­g research firm WARC, Facebook and Google together receive 61 percent of the world online ad revenue and grabbed more than 90 percent of the revenue growth in 2017, making it very difficult for new startups.

Another key factor going forward for China’s tech sector is the “Shenzhen effect” — manufactur­ing clusters with deep networks, experience, expertise and easy supplier availabili­ty not available anywhere else will allow Chinese companies to integrate hardware in software. “5G is another step function. There is going to be stuff that we can’t even imagine that is going to be built in Shenzhen because of the proximity of all those people together,” Robinson said.

Experts also see Chinese government investment in infrastruc­ture and R&D as critical for the implementi­ng the coming tech opportunit­ies. Adair Turner, chairman of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, a New York-based thinktank supported by George Soros, says: “China has what I think is a sweet spot combinatio­n of state support but flourishin­g private enterprise. It is important to maintain that combinatio­n.”

“China is driving developmen­ts in battery technology. It has driven the developmen­ts in solar PV. In a whole load of ways it is getting on with things that are going to be central to the future technology of the world. They put together private entreprene­urship, a high savings rate, a state that is willing to invest in infrastruc­ture,” he explained.

Turner was earlier chairman of the UK Financial Services Authority and director-general of the Confederat­ion of British Industry.

“Yes, some of the money is wasted, but some of the high-speed rail and urban developmen­t projects create efficient structures to support industry. Excellent universiti­es are in many ways at the cutting edge of technology. This will continue to drive the medium-term success of the Chinese economy even if legitimate­ly and necessaril­y China steps back from some of the more contentiou­s ways it has been trying to drive developmen­t that has upset the Americans,” he adds.

Finally, because China is a very big market and because Chinese consumers use many online services, data are more comprehens­ive than in any other market. Edward Tse explains: “AI is really very simple, it is simply a machine learning algorithm …. The more data you get, the better you become. In my view, for most applicatio­ns, the Chinese have a much higher potential when it comes to commercial applicatio­ns than the Americans because of the size of the China market, the speed and intensity of Chinese entreprene­urship, and support from the government. You are going to see a lot of well-honedin and well-tuned business models and applicatio­ns coming from China, whereas the US is perhaps better in basic research.”

Robinson sums up the coming tech market: “There is going to be a whole other thing happening in the 2020s. Chinese companies have insanely deep war chests, hundreds of billions of dollars, so, after a macro-economic correction, they are going to invest around the world. It is going to be a whole different landscape in the digital space. There are probably going to be 6 billion people online, up from 3 billion now. Who’s going to be mopping up those next 3 billion. Will it be FANG (Facebook, Apple, Netflix, Google)? Or will it be Chinese companies?”

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