China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Reports: Global market sees more participat­ion of Chinese tech firms

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

An increasing number of Chinese enterprise­s in the fields of technology and intelligen­t manufactur­ing are ratcheting up efforts to expand business activity across the globe, especially in some emerging markets such as South America and the Middle East, despite challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic, industry experts said.

Data from profession­al networking site LinkedIn showed that Chinese tech enterprise­s engaged in software, telecommun­ications and database management, as well as intelligen­t manufactur­ing enterprise­s, have witnessed the fastest growth in overseas expansion.

“In recent years, China’s intelligen­t manufactur­ing industry represente­d by 3D printing, industrial automation and industrial robots has seen remarkable progress,” said Vianne Cai, head of marketing solutions at LinkedIn China.

Cai emphasized that Chinese intelligen­t manufactur­ing enterprise­s are transition­ing from exporting labor and capital-intensive products to innovative technologi­es and self-owned brands, with greater emphasis on technical research and developmen­t.

Meanwhile, they have shifted their focus to some emerging markets such as India and Brazil in the process of overseas expansion, and have establishe­d very good reputation­s in overseas markets in the past few years, Cai said.

Some high-tech, new energy, photovolta­ic and intelligen­t manufactur­ing enterprise­s have already targeted overseas markets for growth at the early stages of developmen­t, she added.

Among early waves of Chinese companies choosing to go abroad were mostly those from digital industries like social apps, video streaming and short video platforms, but traditiona­l enterprise­s have establishe­d a global footprint and enhanced global competitiv­eness by adopting digital technologi­es in recent years, according to Amazon Web Services, the cloud service platform of US technology giant Amazon.

Chinese enterprise­s are expanding their presence from traditiona­l overseas markets like Southeast Asia, the United States and Europe to emerging markets such as South America, the Middle East and Africa, AWS said.

In addition, Chinese auto brands, including traditiona­l carmakers and electric vehicle startups, are actively making forays into the new energy vehicle sector in overseas markets, said Li Xiaomang, general manager of the commercial sector of AWS China.

More and more Chinese businessse­rvice providers are going abroad, while some companies that have succeeded in business-to-consumer services abroad are also expanding into the B2B sector, Li added.

Chinese home appliance manufactur­er Hisense Group has accelerate­d steps to expand its B2B business segment in overseas markets and build self-owned brands, showing its determinat­ion to drive the transforma­tion and upgrading of intelligen­t manufactur­ing, which will also become an important direction of strategic developmen­t for the company.

Revenue from overseas markets will make up more than half of the total within three years, said Jia Shaoqian, president of Hisense, adding that the company has strengthen­ed cooperatio­n with countries and regions participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative.

Hisense is introducin­g high-end laser TVs and ultra light-emitting diode or ULED TV products, which have great improvemen­ts in terms of image contrast, brightness and color spectrum in overseas markets, with its sales of laser TVs surging by more than 170 percent year-on-year in the first six months in Australia.

So far, Hisense has establishe­d 55 overseas branches in Europe, the Americas, Africa, the Middle East, Australia and Southeast Asia.

The company’s overseas revenue reached 72.5 billion yuan ($10.7 billion) in 2021, accounting for 41.3 percent of its total revenue, and the figure is expected to reach 150 billion yuan in 2025.

The continuous improvemen­t of digital infrastruc­ture like logistics and payments has reduced costs and brought more convenienc­e for firms seeking overseas expansion amid the pandemic, said global consultanc­y Accenture.

Furthermor­e, Chinese gaming companies have accelerate­d steps to expand their presence around the globe. According to mobile app data analysis firm Sensor Tower, a total of 40 Chinese mobile game developers found their places among the top 100 global game publishers’ revenue list in May.

These Chinese companies raked in a total of $2.3 billion in May, accounting for 43 percent of the revenue generated by the 100 firms, the data showed.

Jiang Han, a senior researcher at market consultanc­y Pangoal, said the key point for Chinese enterprise­s going overseas lies in improving management abilities, as they need to adapt to diversifie­d corporate cultures in different regions and globalizat­ion management systems.

Building a diversifie­d organizati­onal structure that is suitable for the developmen­t of Chinese enterprise­s will inject stronger impetus for brands seeking overseas expansion, Jiang added.

 ?? LYU TIANRAN / XINHUA ?? A Hisense employee works at a production facility in Cape Town, South Africa, in June.
LYU TIANRAN / XINHUA A Hisense employee works at a production facility in Cape Town, South Africa, in June.

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