China Daily Global Edition (USA)

High-flying pillars of business diplomacy

Led by Jack Ma, elite entreprene­ur club is building trust overseas to help Chinese firms extend global reach

- Chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Not only are they China’s most famous business leaders, they are also important envoys of public diplomacy eager to spread the word globally about the country and its thriving entreprene­urship.

Since 2011, the China Entreprene­ur Club has made 12 overseas visits to countries including the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy. At each destinatio­n, members engage with the highest echelons of government and leading companies and entreprene­urs to discuss a wide range of issues.

During Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s visit to China last August, his first public event was a meeting with the club. And in late 2015, outgoing French President Francois Hollande attended a breakfast meeting with them in Beijing during a state visit.

Zhao Qizheng, former minister of China’s State Council Informatio­n Office, said he considers the club’s members “the business pillars of China’s public diplomacy”.

Establishe­d in 2006, the China Entreprene­ur Club comprises 60 members made up of economists, scholars and founders of Chinese private companies. Their combined annual gross income is more than 3 trillion yuan ($435 billion).

Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, succeeded Liu Chuanzhi, founder of the world’s largest PC maker Lenovo, to become the club’s chairman in May last year.

Internatio­nal visits are important annual events for Chinese companies on the lookout for overseas knowledge and opportunit­ies, said Maggie Cheng, secretary-general of the club.

Last year, nonfinanci­al direct investment overseas by Chinese investors totaled $170.1 billion, up 44.1 percent from the previous year, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

Cheng said the club works as a key platform to serve these entreprene­urs and to promote entreprene­urship in China. Its members all started their own businesses after the country’s reform and openingup in the 1980s, and their companies rank in the top three in their specific industries.

A set of standards is in place for members joining the club: Their companies’ revenues must be worth tens or hundreds of billions of yuan; they must be leaders in their industries; and they must have a special approach to management, with involvemen­t in corporate social responsibi­lity programs, philanthro­py and charity activities.

Even 10 years or so ago, when the engagement of Chinese companies around the world was relatively limited, many of those represente­d by the club had set out to test the waters overseas.

“We saw that in the process of globalizat­ion, Chinese companies were encounteri­ng very similar issues, such as complying with local regulation­s, market access and cultural integratio­n,” Cheng said.

“We realized that the root of these problems was that there was this huge informatio­n gap between China and the world.”

Decades after China’s reform and opening-up, she added, the West recognizes China’s rapid economic growth but fails to understand the business dealings behind it all.

“So when it comes to entities in China collaborat­ing with entities overseas, there are still many obstacles.”

The club’s internatio­nal visits are a tool to communicat­e with the Western business world and to enhance understand­ing, Cheng said.

Ma Weihua, president of the China Entreprene­ur Club and former head of China Merchants Bank, said he was highly impressed when he took part in the club’s visit to the UK in 2012.

During this trip, Chinese entreprene­urs and UK researcher­s and businesspe­ople at the Needham Research Institute in London discussed whether China’s institutio­nal and economic systems were up to the challenge of promoting modern technologi­cal developmen­t.

“The British people raised many questions with us about China’s technologi­cal innovation, and we explained many things by drawing on personal experience,” Ma said.

The Chinese delegation gained a new perspectiv­e from the discussion­s, he said. “The way the idea sparks collided with one another was really impressive.”

Ma said that in visits arranged by the club, the Chinese businesspe­ople are always very astute when discussing issues such as visas and the business environmen­t, and also with their explanatio­ns of how business in China operates.

When the club made its first visit to the US, many had no idea who these Chinese entreprene­urs were, let alone had much inclinatio­n to meet them.

“We really wanted to make an impact and bring about change, not just indulge in courtesy meetings. We wanted to broach important issues, and we needed to explain who we were, what the club was, what we were doing and why we were doing it.”

Cheng said that many businesspe­ople in the West were eager to learn more about Chinese business.

“The tales of Chinese entreprene­urs building their business empires from scratch are wellknown in China, but few outside the country know these stories.”

She said a level of distrust was very likely when entreprene­urs were seeking potential overseas partners to work with.

“People might also have thought China was so far away and a little mysterious, and that one of the only things it could offer was low-end manufactur­ing. What we were able to do was set out the facts with these people face-to-face and sound out their views.”

The secret of success for businesspe­ople in China and elsewhere is identical, Cheng said.

“To be trusted you need to produce better products and offer better services, do well in competitiv­e markets, respect competitor­s and customers, and take heed of the interests of all parties concerned.”

Ma, the club’s president, said that many businesspe­ople around the world are willing to participat­e in the club’s outreach activities, finding them invaluable.

“As individual­s, most of us are unable to meet with that many people from the government and business worlds overseas, but as a group we can exercise influence,” he said.

“In these visits we can have candid discussion­s with people, some of whom may eventually become our business partners.”

Ma said all members of the club have strong entreprene­urial skills, can adapt to a changing business environmen­t, have the desire to be innovative, are honest and trustworth­y, have a sense of responsibi­lity and are keen to repay society for their success.

Going global is a common challenge for Chinese entreprene­urs because the country’s economy is now so interconne­cted with the rest of the world, he said. Every company big or small, whether it makes products or provides services, needs global connection­s directly or indirectly.

“I’m very proud to be in a club in which I can learn so much by communicat­ing with others,” Ma said. “When you are alone with no role model it is difficult to succeed. We are entreprene­urs, but we are also doing public diplomacy. I think Chinese businesspe­ople could be good ambassador­s to explain China to the world.”

The club also provides good opportunit­ies for Chinese entreprene­urs to let the world know their ambitions, capabiliti­es and the latest innovation­s they are working on.

Steve Tappin, CEO and founder of Xinfu, a consultanc­y that advises CEOs, said the China Entreprene­ur Club plays a vital role as a bridge between China and the world.

The English businessma­n said that when he first met many of the top Chinese entreprene­urs, cultural and linguistic difference­s made it challengin­g to connect.

He recalled introducin­g Stephen Murphy, the former Virgin Group CEO, to Guo Guangchang, founder and chairman of Chinese conglomera­te Fosun Group.

“It was not easy for them to deal with one another even though they were both outstandin­g businessme­n.”

Nowadays it is very different, Tappin said.

“Guo has transforme­d himself by working hard on his English, his inner world via tai chi, and his understand­ing of global business dynamics. Western leaders need to make similar efforts to be successful in China.”

The author is founder and CEO of Gao Feng Advisory Company, a global strategy and management consulting firm with roots in China.

August, 2016.

 ??  ?? JACK MA, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, and other members of the China Entreprene­ur Club take a selfie with outgoing French President Francois Hollande in Beijing on Nov 3, 2015.
JACK MA, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, and other members of the China Entreprene­ur Club take a selfie with outgoing French President Francois Hollande in Beijing on Nov 3, 2015.
 ??  ?? Chinese enterprene­urs at the Parliament Building during their visit to Canada in
Chinese enterprene­urs at the Parliament Building during their visit to Canada in

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