China Daily

Chinese startups negotiate choppy weather

Survey shows hardware, realty, education sectors see many failures

- By HU YUANYUAN and CHEN MEILING

Chinese startups, especially those in hardware, education and real estate sectors, have struggled to survive their first four years, according to a survey report.

The World INS Conference report, compiled by Urwork and the Standard Ranking City Institute, sampled 150 enterprise­s that went bankrupt this year.

Some 70 of the 150 firms, or nearly 47 percent, were set up in 2013;17 percent were set up in 2012, and almost 13 percent in 2014.

“Because of the fierce competitio­n, most of the failed startups are in the sectors of hardware, education, properties, O2O (offline-to-online) and automobile­s,” said Xie Liangbing, president of the Standard Ranking City Institute, one of the publishers of the report.

“As those areas are the most attractive business sectors for investors, they take a big slice in the sample for the research.”

After the boom in China’s internet-related innovation and entreprene­urship market since 2015, startups saw moderate growth last year, with both entreprene­urs and investors becoming more cautious, according to the report.

Three enterprise­s shut in their first year of operations.

In June, e-commerce giant JD Group announced its used goods trading platform, JD Kumai, which opened in February, closed. It now wants to transform its business model.

Xianyu.com, a similar website of JD’s competitor Taobao, however, became popular, having been a part of traditiona­l e-commerce since 2015.

The booming Chinese bikesharin­g market also saw the demise of Wukong Bicycle less than five months after its establishm­ent, the first failure of its kind.

According to the report, most of the startups and incubators were in the first- and second-tier cities with rich human resources and a mature market.

Meanwhile, more and more enterprise­s are starting up to better serve the real economy with their innovative ideas.

According to Xu Shaoshi, head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, startup accelerato­rs helped stabilize and optimize the economy while boosting employment.

The number of innovation and entreprene­urship platforms grew rapidly to 7,953 by 2016, topping the world rankings, data from the Torch High Technology Industry Developmen­t Center of the Ministry of Science and Technology showed.

Such platforms include accelerato­rs, maker spaces and technology business incubators. Of the three categories, incubators surged from 2 in 1987 to 3,255 in 2016.

The report said the number of national maker spaces reached 1,300 last year, more than double that of previous several years.

The innovation and entreprene­urship platforms now constitute an orderly industry, it said.

At the same time, incubators are focusing more on profession­al and tailored services. In 2016, profession­al incubators were about half of tech startup incubators, the report said.

...those areas are the most attractive business sectors for investors, they take a big slice in the sample for the research.”

Xie Liangbing, president of the Standard Ranking City Institute

Contact the writer at huyuanyuan@chinadaily.com.cn

 ?? WU KAI/ FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Selfie-taking visitors soak in the atmosphere at the 2017 Startup Week in Shanghai earlier this month.
WU KAI/ FOR CHINA DAILY Selfie-taking visitors soak in the atmosphere at the 2017 Startup Week in Shanghai earlier this month.

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