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Startups see Taobao as launchpad to success

Updated: 2012-10-05 09:50
By Su Zhou ( China Daily)

Unlike most of his peers, who were looking for decent jobs with State-owned enterprises, multinational companies or government-funded institutions, when Wang Jiaxing graduated from university in 2010, the 23-year-old student was already running an online box-selling business with annual sales of more than 2.4 million yuan ($380,000).

At first, operating a store on Taobao, China's largest customer-to-customer online platform, was just a hobby for Wang, but he decided to try and make it his career and now the annual trade volume is around 24 million yuan and he has over 40,000 clients all over the country.

Startups see Taobao as launchpad to success

A Taobao.com billboard at an auto show in Beijing. The Hangzhou-based website has become the biggest online trading platform in China as well as the most important platform for thousands of online entrepreneurs. [Photo / China Daily]

 

"I could have got a job with a State-owned company, which would have been well-paid and stable," Wang said. "However I thought a job like that would be too monotonous and it would be more interesting work running a store on Taobao."

Even though his father owns a box-making factory which he may one day deal with, Wang's focus is on his own business.

"I think successful businessmen are not necessarily the smartest people, they are the most focused ones," Wang said. "And I am that kind of person."

There are many young people like Wang, who regard Taobao as the best way to start a successful company. They come from all over China, especially Zhejiang province, where Taobao and its parent company the Alibaba Group are based.

In September, Peking University and Aliresearch published a joint research report of online shops' owners, which shows that more than 80 percent of the store owners on Taobao were born between 1981 and 1994.

"In the past there were two types of jobs that graduates considered ideal, stable jobs with governments or State-owned enterprises, or well-paying jobs with big transnational corporations or financial institutions," said Chen Yu, director of the China Institute for Occupation Research at Peking University. "However, for young people today, starting their own business seems to be another attractive career path."

Nie Yurong, 24, a clothes designer, had an offer from a university in London, but she gave up the opportunity to study overseas as her online store was doing well.

Nie and her small team operate a store selling her brand "Uare", which had a total trade volume of 1 million yuan last year. The figure is expected to be more than double that this year. Now the designer is preparing to open her first non-online store.

Nie said running her Taobao store was a good learning experience, as she got to talk to customers directly and she had to negotiate with suppliers and manufactures herself.

"For startups, Taobao is a very good place to begin because they don't have to pay anything if they have no marketing plan," said Chen Shousong, an analyst at the Beijing-based research firm Analysys International. "Taobao also has a fully-fledged business system for displaying products, receiving payments and customer service, all of which make it easier for startups."

Moreover, the situation for startups on Taobao is relatively fair.

"What counts is only the quality of goods and services. This suits youngsters very well," said Chen Yu of the China Institute for Occupation Research.

However, the Taobao model is not without its problems. 

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