The Nanfang » online shopping https://thenanfang.com Daily news and views from China. Sun, 12 Apr 2015 06:03:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.1.1 Feud Between Taobao and the Government Over Counterfeit Goods Heats Up https://thenanfang.com/government-crack-taobao-online-retailers/ https://thenanfang.com/government-crack-taobao-online-retailers/#comments Wed, 11 Mar 2015 07:50:21 +0000 https://thenanfang.com/?p=142168 The public feud between the Chinese government and giant online retailer Taobao has escalated with the government’s announcement that all e-commerce in China will now be under heavy regulation to prevent the sale of counterfeit and mislabelled goods. The Minister of State Administration for Industry and Commerce, Zhang Mao, said that e-commerce providers have to take “key […]

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The public feud between the Chinese government and giant online retailer Taobao has escalated with the government’s announcement that all e-commerce in China will now be under heavy regulation to prevent the sale of counterfeit and mislabelled goods.

The Minister of State Administration for Industry and Commerce, Zhang Mao, said that e-commerce providers have to take “key responsibility” for the sale of counterfeit goods, and promote “credibility and integrity” on their respective sites. He added that government regulators plan to increase supervision over the industry and propose new legislative bills focused on that aim.

Earlier this year, the Ministry published a report indicating that only 37 percent of goods sold on Taobao.com, Alibaba’s popular e-commerce platform, were genuine, as compared to 59 percent for other major online shopping platforms. Following the release of the report, Alibaba’s CEO, Jack Ma, met with Minister Zhang publicly to refute the findings.

Despite Ma’s assurance, Zhang maintains more needs to be done. “The reason why there are so many market violations is that the cost of breaking the rules is too low,” he said, adding the market will fundamentally improve if online retailers face harsher penalties.

To suggest China’s online retail industry has been booming would be something of an understatement. The industry enjoyed a 50 percent rise in sales in 2014, amounting to RMB 2.79 trillion (about US $450 billion), representing 10 percent of the country’s total retail sales.

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Sophisticated High Frequency Trading Comes to China’s Spring Festival Train Ticket Market https://thenanfang.com/sophisticated-high-frequency-trading-comes-to-chinas-spring-festival-train-ticket-market/ https://thenanfang.com/sophisticated-high-frequency-trading-comes-to-chinas-spring-festival-train-ticket-market/#comments Thu, 15 Jan 2015 03:00:25 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=35087 Scalpers are giving themselves an unfair advantage online to buy up train tickets this Spring Festival.

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chunyun

Every year, the world’s largest annual human migration arrives with chunyun, the time surrounding Spring Festival when Chinese all around the country are trying to go back to their families to celebrate the holidays. That means demand for train tickets is extremely high.

Buying tickets should now be easier than ever with the proliferation of online sales. However, some unscrupulous people are taking advantage of the system by buying up tickets to reselling them at a higher price by using sophisticated technology.

The scalpers are renting remote servers that give them a faster internet connection to sites like 12306, a ticket selling portal. Scalpers believe that by spending around RMB 100 a day to rent a private server with Beijing Telecommunications, they are given faster access to 12306, itself physically located in Beijing.

Despite getting blocked, scalpers like Chen Xiao organize themselves on social media networks like QQ where they share tips such as the private server trick. While intermediaries like Li Chong don’t make any guarantees that the scalpers are able to buy more tickets, they say they can provide a faster internet connection at the very least.

This Spring Festival, make sure you buy your train tickets well in advance.

Photo: czedu

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Alipay Lets iPhone Owners Send Cash With The Touch of a Finger https://thenanfang.com/use-alipay-on-your-iphone-with-the-swipe-of-a-finger/ https://thenanfang.com/use-alipay-on-your-iphone-with-the-swipe-of-a-finger/#comments Tue, 16 Dec 2014 04:00:07 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=34029 Make electronic payments with just a touch of your finger.

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alipay

Alibaba is now using Apple’s handy Touch ID function on newer iPhones to allow payments via the e-commerce giant’s Alipay system.

To make payments via Alipay, China’s largest online payments system akin to PayPal in the United States, users simply need to scan their fingerprint using the phone’s built in sensor. The feature comes with Alipay 8.4 but is only available on iPhone models that have Touch ID, which includes the iPhone 5S models or the newest iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.

Alipay has assured consumers that all fingerprint information will be stored in the phone, and not uploaded and shared with third-parties.

Apple is also rumored to be working with Alipay on enabling Apple Pay in China.

alipay fingerprintPhotos: KuaixunTechweb

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How Well Can You Sell to Foreigners? Hangzhou Launched Contest to Find Out https://thenanfang.com/hangzhou-contest-encourages-online-retailers-to-target-foreign-markets/ https://thenanfang.com/hangzhou-contest-encourages-online-retailers-to-target-foreign-markets/#comments Tue, 16 Dec 2014 01:30:02 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=34109 Hangzhou held a contest to encourage Chinese entrepreneurs to target foreign markets.

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Online-Shopping-eCommerce

Online retailers in China thrive domestically, but they rarely venture beyond Chinese borders. To help promote international expansion, Hangzhou recently held a contest to encourage university graduates to target foreign markets.

University graduates competed with each other to see who could be the most successful online “laowai” retailer. The contest featured cash rewards of up to RMB 10,000 and a chance to win two years of free rent in Hangzhou’s Network Innovation Park.

The winning company, “Albert”, had the corporate slogan, “Technology to shape the future, creativity and wisdom for life”. Albert promotes interactive technology outsourced to independent companies for design and manufacturing. As with other competitors, the Albert team used foreign social platforms to successfully promote its products.

Other participants included “i-life”, an anime online toy retailer boasting monthly revenues of RMB 10,000. The company is currently expanding into Russia and Brazil.

Photo: utexas.edu

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Alipay Launches in Australia as it Continues Its Global March https://thenanfang.com/alipay-now-available-in-australia/ https://thenanfang.com/alipay-now-available-in-australia/#comments Wed, 19 Nov 2014 01:15:39 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=32909 Alipay is taking steps to become a payment system around the globe.

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alipay

Chinese online payment system Alipay is spreading its wings far beyond China. The popular payment platform is now available down under.

The Alipay subsidiary, appropriately titled Alipay Australia, follows the recent launch of the company’s ePay Payment Program in the US, reports China Daily.

In conjunction with the Australian Postal Department, Alipay will provide access at 4,400 Australian stores and outlets. The local presence will give Australian consumers access to TMall and Taobao, and facilitate cross-border e-commerce. The joint agreement is expected to help Australian companies quickly expand into Chinese markets.

According to Forbes, Alipay is the largest mobile payment processor in the world, clearing approximately 80 million transactions per day, and processed US $780 billion worth of transactions in the year ended June 30.

Alipay is owned by Alibaba, which listed this year on the New York Stock Exchange.

Photo: China Daily

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Taobao: Where You Can Truly Buy Everything, Even Hot Female Models https://thenanfang.com/taobao-where-everything-is-for-sale-even-hot-female-models/ https://thenanfang.com/taobao-where-everything-is-for-sale-even-hot-female-models/#comments Thu, 13 Nov 2014 02:05:20 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=32702 Do you need a model? Do you have internet? Taobao has you covered.

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taobao models Shopping online is fun. It’s great to pick out something online in the privacy of your own home and then find it arrive at your door just days later.

Taobao is the granddaddy of online shopping in China, and was instrumental in making Singles’ Day (November 11) into the biggest retail shopping day of the year. And while Taobao has been noteworthy for offering an wide assortment of oddities for sale that range from virtual girlfriends, mourners for rent, and stuff you never knew you needed to buy, it seems that absolutely everything is available for a price on Taobao—even the Taobao models themselves.

taobao modelsModels are categorized on their Taobao page into several groups and styles such as nationality and location or by sub-categories like “cute“, “sexy“, “sweet“, “schoolgirl“, “office lady“, and “ethnic“.

Each page lists their height, weight, and professional experience along with a multitude of photographs. And if you’re the type of lurker who will peruse models’ pages without any intent of hiring them for a job, there’s still a way you can help out. Models’ pages also have a section for comments and fans, which also differentiates them.

With each page looking like an individual entry into a social network hub, it’s not hard to think of the Taobao model page as a virtual Facebook made up of preening, pouting girls with an enormous wardrobe but without pictures of the food they ate last night.

taobao models

taobao modelsSo now you know: if you’re in the market for a model, you can find one in China’s greatest online mall.

[h/t reddit]

Photos: Taobao

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Singles’ Day Grows from Humble Beginnings to Massive Shopping Bonanza https://thenanfang.com/a-beginners-guide-to-singles-day/ https://thenanfang.com/a-beginners-guide-to-singles-day/#comments Mon, 10 Nov 2014 02:00:37 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=32600 Catch up on how Singles' Day went from a self-deprecating day of celebration to one of China's most important retail days of the year.

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singles day youzi baozi

The traditional way to celebrate Singles’ Day is to eat four youzi (fried doughsticks) and a meat bun, which represents the dot between month and day.

David Beckham met with Jack Ma last week to develop a Singles’ Day promotion. Headlines have been flying around about China’s famous “Single’s Day”, with some comparing it to Black Friday for shopping in the United States. But what exactly is Singles’ Day? And why is it so important that Jack Ma is willing to pay David Beckham to promote it?

Singles’ Day” is something of a mash-up of Chinese superstition and Western consumerism. The holiday takes its name from the date, November 11, and is most often represented as 11/11. Visually, the date represents a bunch of sticks in a line, which gives it its Chinese name, “Bare Sticks Festival”, or 光棍节. Although there are many theories explaining the origin of Singles’ Day, the most common one is that it was concocted by lonely university students to celebrate being single and relieve themselves of the pressures of getting married and raising a family.

singles day

Chinese numerology places importance on certain dates that sound like something else. For example, January 3, 2014 (2014/1/3), is significant because it sounds close to, “Love you for the rest of my life, and the end of my years.”

While the holiday was conceived as a celebration of singlehood, November 11 has slowly gained traction as another holiday for couples to celebrate their “couplehood”. It is now commonplace for couples to reserve the date for their weddings.

Singles’ Day was eventually added to the many dates “Chinese Valentine’s Day” is celebrated, including the traditional western Valentine’s Day on February 14, White Day on March 14 when women are expected to give gifts to their partners, Qixi Festival/Girls Day/Seven Sisters Festival on the seventh day of the seventh month of the lunar calendar, and now Singles’ Day.

singles day

Singles’ Day has quickly become a lucrative commercial opportunity for retailers. Although singles have no one to buy gifts for, except presumably themselves, couples have each other. Taobao was the first online retailer to create Singles’ Day promotions, and it was soon copied by several other online retailers who all offer games and the promise of cash rewards or discounts. It has become so popular that many retailers now strategically remove their best selling items on Singles Day to help get rid of unwanted stock.

Photo: Chinaface, nipic, pchouse

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Order from US Amazon, Have It Arrive 3 Days Later in China https://thenanfang.com/amazon-to-deliver-to-china-from-its-international-stores-in-as-little-as-3-days/ https://thenanfang.com/amazon-to-deliver-to-china-from-its-international-stores-in-as-little-as-3-days/#comments Mon, 03 Nov 2014 06:00:23 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=32437 Order from Amazon US, Germany, Spain, France and Italy from the comfort of your Chinese living room. Through partnerships with EMS and UPS, goods will arrive in as little as three days.

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Move over Alibaba and Jingdong, Amazon wants a bigger piece of the Chinese e-commerce pie. According to a Tech in Asia report, the company will introduce global shipping of its products to Chinese customers faster than ever starting on November 11 this year, also known in China as ‘Singles Day’.

As The Nanfang reported previously, Chinese customers will be able to order goods from Amazon’s US, German, Spanish, French, and Italian stores and have them shipped to China. Perhaps most impressive though, Amazon claims that through partnerships with EMS and UPS, international orders will arrive at your front door in as little as three days.

The plan comes on the heels of popular American megastore Costco getting in on China’s e-commerce market. Through a partnership with Alibaba, the company will ship their popular oversized products to Chinese homes, coincidentally, also in as little as three days.

Amazon is hoping to capitalize on China’s appetite for international goods, as well as the common belief that goods manufactured elsewhere are better, and in some cases, safer (see tainted milk scandal, etc.) than their Chinese equivalent.

Despite increasing competition, China’s e-commerce market continues to grow at a ferocious pace. It is anticipated that by 2015, the market will be worth $540 billion. By 2020, China’s e-commerce market is projected to be worth more than that of the US, UK, France, Germany, and Japan combined.

Whether Amazon’s Chinese expansion will work remains to be seen. They no doubt have the infrastructure to compete with Alibaba and Jingdong, but then, arguably so too does eBay, Walmart, and Best Buy, all of whom have failed miserably in China.

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Popular Chinese Travel Website Accused of Selling Fake Travel Insurance https://thenanfang.com/online-flight-retailer-accused-of-selling-fake-travel-insurance/ https://thenanfang.com/online-flight-retailer-accused-of-selling-fake-travel-insurance/#comments Tue, 28 Oct 2014 01:00:23 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=32257 Buyer beware.

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delayed flights

Delayed flights are very common in China, so it seems only natural that an online ticket retailer like Qunar would offer flight delay insurance to its customers. However, according to a report by CCTV 13, the travel insurance may actually be fake.

Wang Zheng, who booked a flight using Qunar, purchased the optional delayed flight insurance for RMB 20. To learn exactly what was included, Wang contacted the company, Pacific Insurance. When he spoke to a representative, he was told that the company offered no such service.

Following the CCTV 13 report, Qunar announced that if their customers purchase flight insurance that proves to be fake, Qunar will compensate them to the tune of 10,000 times their original insurance fee.

 

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Costco Opens in China, and No Membership Fees! https://thenanfang.com/costco-debuts-in-china/ https://thenanfang.com/costco-debuts-in-china/#comments Mon, 20 Oct 2014 01:00:35 +0000 http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/?p=31899 Anyone for Kirkland Extra Fancy Unsalted Mixed Nuts? If so, you're in luck.

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costcoCostco, that warehouse supermarket with extra-large boxes of food, is about to enter the lucrative, yet increasingly crowded Chinese e-commerce market with its Chinese partner, Alibaba. Yet, unlike North American outlets, Chinese customers will not struggle to find parking spots at a giant retail store because Costco isn’t opening one. All of the shopping will be done online through the popular website, TMALL. That means customers will not be required to buy a membership. In addition to selling goods at sizes you never thought imaginable, Costco guarantees home delivery within three days.

Costco received over 10,000 orders on the first two days of opening (October 12-14) at its Hangzhou headquarters, including orders for three tons of Kirkland nuts, and 1.5 tons of dried cranberries.

To give you an idea of what Chinese shoppers are interested in, here are the top five recommendations:

1. Kirkland Extra Fancy Unsalted Mixed Nuts; 1130g, RMB 129

costco top five mixed nuts

2. Starbucks Italian-Style Instant Coffee; 3.3g x 24 bags, RMB 139

costco top five instant coffee3.  Ocean Spray Original Dried Cranberries “Craisins”; 1360g, RMB 59

costco top five craisins4. Pure cotton pyjama jumper for girls aged 4 years-old; RMB 85, two-for-one special, SOLD OUT

costco top five girls pyjamas5. Kirkland Extra Virgin Olive Oil; 2L, RMB 119

costco top five extra virgin olive oil

Costco’s emergence in China’s e-commerce market comes at a busy time for the country’s online retailers. Amazon China recently announced that its consumers will be able to directly order and receive shipments from its US website, while e-commerce giant Alibaba recently launched an initial public offering on the US stock market.

Photos: iCEO, Hexun

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