Promised Land
More and more American entrepreneurs are embarking on the road to Chinaand many have already found their fortunes.
Robert Kushner, founder and managing director of Pacific China
Industries Ltd., a 15-person company that develops and manufactures
novelties in China, hardly seems like a typical American
businessperson prospecting for gold in the Middle Kingdom. His Hong
Kong office is crammed full of tchotchke products-dancing rock
stars to mount on dashboards, collapsible corkscrews, sunglasses
holders-that seem far from the high-tech exports increasingly
flowing out of Chinese factories. He is not part of a massive
corporation like GM or Wal-Mart, multinationals that claim to be
best positioned to take advantage of China's size. He did not
enter China with a bang, the type of showstopping debut some
corporations think necessary to impress Beijing officials. He does
not possess a strategic vision of the People's Republic's
future. No, all Kushner does is make money.
"We have been able to establish ourselves as consistently
profitable," Kushner says. "I could have hardly imagined
when I left my Los Angeles law job in 1994 and washed up in Hong
Kong that, eight years later, I'd be making products sold at
most major U.S. retailers."
Kushner is an example of a growing trend in U.S.-China business.
Though huge multinationals grab the lion's share of attention
with their enormous investments in China-GM, Volkswagen and other
major auto manufacturers are drastically expanding their operations
in China-smaller companies like Kushner's actually have proven
among the most successful foreign operators. In fact, some
entrepreneurs' businesses in China have become so profitable
that large corporations have begun copying their strategies.
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Rough Road
Over the past two decades, as China has liberalized its economy,
several large companies have prospered by moving manufacturing into
China or, more rarely, by producing goods for the Chinese consumer
market. KFC, one of the first fast-food chains to peddle its wares
in the Middle Kingdom, now has branches in every province and an
outlet in Tiananmen Square, near a massive portrait of Mao
Tse-tung. Carrefour, the French supermarket chain, has gained a
loyal base of Chinese shoppers.
Yet more often than not, major multinationals have found making
money in China considerably harder than they expected. "China
tempts people because it has a billion potential consumers, but I
can count on two hands the number of big companies that have proven
profitable selling to China," says Joe Studwell, author of
The China Dream: The Quest for the Last Great
Untapped Market on Earth, a comprehensive book on
companies' attempts to penetrate the Middle Kingdom.
Some big companies misjudged the market. British brewer Bass
overestimated the number of Chinese people able to pay big money
for its premium lagers and stupefied potential Chinese customers
with promotions featuring dancing Scotsmen dressed in kilts. Other
giants have had their ideas expropriated, with little recourse.
Pepsi has sold its drinks in China for 20 years but admits it has
yet to make a profit; now it's accusing its Chinese
joint-venture partner of infringing on its intellectual property
rights.
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