Archives June 2008

Top Chinese online site to see transactions top 100 bln yuan in 2008

Taobao, Alibaba’s online consumer website, expects its transaction volume to surpass 100 billion yuan (14.4 billion U.S. dollars) in 2008, a 130 percent increase from the previous year, according to Liang Chunxiao, Alibaba’s vice president.

Speaking at a forum in Hangzhou, capital of east Zhejiang Province. Liang said with the rapid growth in China’s e-commerce market, Taobao’s customer base had soared in the first quarter, reaching 62 million from 53 million in 2007. Its transaction volume in the first three months hit 18.8 billion yuan, up 170 percent from the same period a year earlier.

“Taobao’s transaction volume has grown for four years and reached 43.3 billion yuan in 2007, an outcome that took supermarket retailers like Wal-Mart almost three decades.”

In total, 55 million domestic Internet users shopped online last year, spending 59.4 billion yuan, according to the Beijing-based China Internet Research Center.

Taobao is one of seven unlisted arms under the Hong Kong-listed Alibaba.com that was founded in 1999 by Jack Ma in Hangzhou. Its shares rose 122 percent on their trading debut in November.

Alibaba dominates the business-to-business segment in the country. Its consumer arms also include the online payment units Alipay and Yahoo China.

Taobao.com had maintained its leading position in the online shopping market last year and in the first quarter.

Growing consumer market attracts foreign investment

FOREIGN direct investment in China rose 37.94 percent in May from a year earlier to US$7.76 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said yesterday.

The growth decreased from the peak in January when FDI posted a 110-percent hike and compared with an increase of 54.97 percent in the first five months.

New foreign-funded firms fell 10.94 percent in May to 2,425, while the data through May dropped 20.95 percent from the previous year to 11,915.

“China is very cautious about the inflow of hot money, or speculative money, when the yuan has accelerated in appreciation. The slower pace of FDI and the cut in new foreign-funded firms indicated such concerns but also demonstrated investors’ focus on bigger and more capital-intensive projects,” said Li Maoyu, an analyst with Changjiang Securities Co.

The Chinese currency has appreciated about 5.3 percent so far this year against the dollar. The pace was much faster than the combined growth of 7 percent for the entire year of 2007.

But what can’t be denied is that China’s rapidly expanding consumer market also made the country an attractive destination for investment.

Robert Brown, chairman of Watson Wyatt Global Investment Committee, said China was fit for stable investment in the long term because of the dynamics and the established infrastructure here. Watson Wyatt provides investment consulting services to clients, including many institutional investors.

Meanwhile, the slower pace of FDI growth can help ease government concern over excess liquidity and lead to a less harsh macroeconomic control after consumer prices also eased in May, analysts said. The central bank ordered lenders to set aside more money as reserves last Saturday to curb liquidity and inflation.

The Consumer Price Index, the main gauge of inflation, eased to 7.7 percent in May from April’s 8.5 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said yesterday.

Investment from United States companies increased 25.09 percent in May from a year earlier while spending from European Union countries gained 35.2 percent.

Last year, China’s FDI grew 13.6 percent to US$74.8 billion.

In the first five months this year, the figure jumped by 54.97 percent to US$42.8 billion.

China software industry ranks fourth globally, but still a long way to go

China’s annual output value topped 583.4 billion yuan (84.5 billion U.S. dollars) in 2007, becoming the world’s fourth largest software producer. There was still a long way for domestic software companies to go, officials said here on Thursday.

Lou Qinjian, Industry and Information Technology vice minister, said at the International Software China 2008 show that the Chinese software industry had started from scratch since the country began its reform and opening-up three decades ago. It had grown into a fundamental industry with strategic importance to the country.

The country’s share of the global software industry rose from 1.2 percent in 2000 to 8.7 percent in 2007, with an annual growth rate of more than 30 percent due to a favorable policy environment.

Cao Jianlin, Science and Technology vice minister, said the country should make an even bigger effort in innovation and personnel training to sustain the industry’s long-term healthy development.

The International Software China 2008 opened in Beijing on Thursday and runs through Saturday. Its focus is on industrial policy planning, industrial standards, software technologies and development, investment and financing and enterprise personnel recruiting.

Female business leaders discuss “secrets” to career success

“I never use the advantage, or we call it disadvantage, as a woman while at work with my male colleagues,” says Dong Mingzhu, President of China’s Gree Electric Appliances, the top-selling air-conditioning manufacturer in the world, at a Women CEO Forum of the Global Summit of Women 2008 in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam on Saturday.

“I see no difference between women and men at work…I don’t ask for special treatment because I’m a woman. Gender is not important in business. What’s important is decisiveness, judgment, and action,” says the strong-minded lady, joined by hundreds of other female delegates, who packed the grand ballroom of the Melia Hotel in the downtown area of Hanoi.

The women from about 70 countries, many dressed up in exquisite and colorful traditional clothes, were discussing secrets to career success, and the different working performance between men and women.

Sophia Tong, General Manager of IBM in China’s Taiwan, considers loving, caring and considerateness as special gifts for women, which help them deal with things in a more gentle and easily-to-be-accepted way. She also believes women are good at multi-tasking, which enables them to handle different things properly at the same time.

However, she believes that women, especially Asian women, are not as bold as men, thus letting good chances to slip away from their fingers.

“You need to think big, and then take action,” she suggests.

Yasmin Mahmood, Managing Director for Microsoft Malaysia, describes women’s roles as “jogging plates in the air”, like Chinese acrobats, without one plate falling to the ground. “This amazing versatility enables women to move quickly from one style to another. It’s everyone’s, not just women’s responsibility to help women to transform.”

In order to become a successful woman in career, Sophia asks all women at the forum to “go global”, to gain multiple capabilities, and “most important of all, have a clear self-awareness, to know yourself well, to know what kind of person you are, and what you really want. ”

The six panelists, all of them leaders of their respective companies, agree that they are still working in a man-dominant working environment, and it’s very rare for a woman to climb to a top position.

Ann Sherry, CEO of Carnival Australia, says that in her company’s decades of history, only two women have managed to “climb” to the CEO position, including her.

Yukako Uchinaga, CEO of Berlitz International in Japan, says the top-ranking women in Japanese companies are still rare species, while the middle-level female managers are more and more commonly seen.

“Sometimes you’ll have to wait five, or ten years to move from the middle to the top, and many women stop trying during the process,” Yukako adds, “So my advice is: don’t give up!”

On personalities for a women to succeed in career life, Dong says she believes that passion and confidence are the two vital personalities in a woman’s career life. “Passion and confidence will make a woman love the job and be happy,” she says.

SW Tools (Simulators) it125sh

Job Title: SW Tools (Simulators)
Report To: Technical Manager
Location: __ Shanghai_
With operations in 50 countries and 68,000 employees, our client is a world leader in Mission-critical information systems for the Aerospace, Defense and Security markets with its global network of 20,000 high-level researchers.
Our client’s rich history goes back well over a century. Built slowly and with careful planning, the Group boasts remarkable cohesion and strength, and has often proven its ability to adapt its structures to prevailing conditions.
Leveraging a global presence and spanning the entire value chain, from prime contracting to equipment; our client plays a pivotal role in making the world a safer place. With the development in APAC, especially in China, they are looking for talents to join them.
Job Description:
1. Managing, maintaining and support of automatic control system for platform and libraries developed across multiple geographical sites
2. Performs scheduled and critical response software builds during development, integration test and system test
3. Maintain software baselines and user accounts in multiple version environments
4. Report build status
5. Update, create, and maintain automated build scripts and processes
6. Document Configuration Management procedures
7. Define and communicates branching and merging processes and timelines to the team.
8. Performs audits to verify compliance with standards and procedures.
9. Identify and recommend tools for improvement to process

Education Requirements:
1. Bachelor’s Degree (Software Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, or Computer Science) or equivalent
2. 3+ years of Software Configuration Management experience
Required Skills:
1. Extensive experience with Configuration Management concepts and procedures including source code management, build and release management, administration and automation of builds, and generation of audits and metrics;
2. Hands-on experience in managing multiple projects requiring branching, labeling and release processes;
3. Has overview over the whole system VOBC, ATS, Vehicle, Wayside, PMI, and MAU.
4. Experience in the use of version control systems such as CVS;
5. Proven knowledge of best practices software development lifecycle;
6. Strong attention to detail;
7. Excellent verbal and written communication skills;
8. Experience working in a team environment;
9. Strong hands-on troubleshooting skills;
10. Fluent in English.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_it125sh@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

SKF adds to investment in Dalian

SKF, the world’s leading bearing supplier, announced on Friday a new investment of 580 million yuan ($83 million) to the second phase of its Dalian factory in Northeast China’s Liaoning province.

With a 25,000 sq m facility added its current 80,000 sq m factory, completion of the second phase project in 2009 is expected to double manufacturing capacity.

The new factory is to support continued business growth in China and other parts of Asia, especially in the areas of renewable energy, metalworking, mining, construction and industrial transmission industries, according to Tom Johnstone, president and CEO of Sweden-based SKF group.

As a leading global supplier in the areas of bearings, seals, mechatronics, services and lubrication systems, SKF is represented in more than 130 countries and has 15,000 distributors worldwide.

The Dalian factory mainly manufactures large and medium size bearings. It was planned to go through three phases as it was launched in March 2005.

“Reviewing the past three years since the company’s establishment, the company’s business develops fast, stable and healthy,” said Sunny Chan, general manager of SKF (Dalian) Bearings and Precision Technologies Co Ltd.

The investment in the first phase of the Dalian factory was $20 million.

Johnstone said the group decided to accelerate the second step of the Dalian project because of “the strong demand of customers” and “strong performance of the facilities in Dalian”.

Earlier this year, SKF Dalian won the SKF group’s Excellence Award as well as the 2007 Dalian Preferred Employer Award.

Chinese companies face difficulties across border

Chinese investors in Vietnam are facing troubles amid the market turmoil in that country.

Many of them have had to convert their dong holdings into US dollars for fears of further depreciation. Some are facing labor unrest, with workers asking for pay rises to tackle the rising inflation. But most don’t intend to shut up shop and move out of the country as they have adopted a wait-and-see policy.

According to Yang Zhen, chairman of the Business Association of China in Vietnam, Chinese enterprises there are having problems getting loans. Raw material and labor costs have also been rising.

Yang’s opinion is echoed by Deng Xiaohua, a manager of Sichuan New Hope Group, the largest food company in China with an investment of 4.68 million U.S. dollars in Hanoi.

Deng said banks in Vietnam have been asking companies like his to pay a deposit as high as 90 to 110 percent since the crisis. Earlier, banks would happily allow them to do business using letters of credit. The company is thus facing capital flow problems.

Chinese enterprises have also been suffering income losses as the dong has been depreciating. “If you go to the bank and exchange dong to U.S. dollar today, you have to wait for your turn for 15 days because so many people want to do the same,” National Business Daily quoted a Chinese car parts seller in Vietnam as saying. “By the time the conversion is made, the dong will have depreciated even more.”

Vietnamese workers in some companies have also gone on strike demanding higher wages. Yang said the head of a plastic bag company from China was attacked during a strike and had to hide in a government hotel. Although the local government protects Chinese enterprises, small and medium-sized business will be affected if the strikes go on.

Yang said the large companies are less vulnerable to the market turmoil than the smaller ones. Most listed Chinese companies say their businesses have not been influenced much so far since the investment in Vietnam is small compared with the operation at home.

Zongshen Motorcycle Group, for instance, says the impact on it so far has been relatively small and the company plans to wait and see for a while before adjusting its policies.

Blackstone to open Beijing office

Robin Marriott

Blackstone is ramping up its regional presence in Asia with its first office in mainland China.

The group has so far opened offices in Tokyo, Mumbai and Hong Kong, but it is poised to add to the network with an office in China’s second biggest city and political hub.

Stephen Schwarzman, chairman and chief executive of the group, revealed the move as he outlined the firm’s growth around the world during a presentation at the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference in New York yesterday, telling delegates: “We just signed a lease in Beijing.”

In the last ten years, he said, Blackstone had opened in London, as well as a smaller office in France, Hong Kong, Tokyo and India.

“We are very rapidly growing. From 2005 to the current day staffing has grown by 100 percent as we move around the world. It is a business with enormous dynamism and 1,200 people,” he added.

Blackstone opened an office in Mumbai in 2005 to handle private equity and real estate investments and followed that up last year when it opened a satellite office in Hong Kong from where former Hong Kong financial secretary Antony Leung is directing operations as chairman of Blackstone Greater China. Earlier this month, the firm added new impetus to the region when it announced the launch of a hedge fund business Blackstone Altius Advisors, which it called a new “event-driven” strategy focusing on opportunities in the Asia Pacific region. That business is being headquartered in Hong Kong.

In an interview with PERE in March, president and chief operating officer Hamilton James said the firm was busy staffing up the Hong Kong office with real estate professionals. At the same time, he said the firm was adding professionals in Tokyo and Mumbai. Speaking of Asia, he told PERE: “Those markets will be a much larger portion of our real estate investing activity than they have been historically.”

Blackstone’s other activities in Asia include a fund of hedge funds and two closed-ended mutual funds, The India Fund and The Asia Tigers Fund. Its 10th real estate fund, which closed in April on $10.9 billion, and its fifth global buyout fund, closed on $21.7 billion in August 2007, are active in the region.

Futurestep Opens Global Recruiting Research Center in Shanghai

New Facility Addresses Growing Demand for Futurestep’s Strategic Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO) Services in China and the Asia Pacific Region HOUSTON, May 27

HOUSTON, May 27 /PRNewswire/ — Futurestep, a Korn/Ferry Company

(NYSE: KFY), today announced the opening of its newest research center in Shanghai, China. For Futurestep’s global and Asia Pacific RPO clients, the center will provide crucial services, including research, name generation,
sourcing and screening, market mapping, competitive intelligence, and in-time outsourced recruitment administration.

The opening will provide an important resource for addressing the tremendous growth in demand in China and across Asia for Futurestep’s Strategic RPO services, as well as its complete portfolio of Talent Acquisition solutions. While Futurestep has talent acquisition research and support resources around the world, the opening of the Shanghai facility also represents a new branding approach for the company’s research centers.

“The global research center concept is a key part of our strategy for competing in the global RPO market,” said Futurestep CEO Robert McNabb. “By providing strategic sourcing support, it enables our RPO teams to expand their
level of service to meet market demands. It is a cost-effective solution that provides a broader reach into passive and active candidate pools, resulting in
improved quality and client satisfaction.”

The Shanghai Global Research Center represents Futurestep’s commitment to growing its presence as a truly global provider of Strategic RPO services. In addition to its current lineup of global locations and support resources on
four continents, Futurestep plans to expand its reach with multiple new global research centers opening in key markets over the next two years.

To learn more about Futurestep, Strategic RPO, and its complete array of Strategic Talent Acquisition services, visit futurestep.com.

About Korn/Ferry International

Korn/Ferry International, with more than 80 offices in 39 countries, is a premier global provider of talent management solutions. Based in Los Angeles,
the firm delivers an array of solutions that help clients to identify, deploy, develop, retain and reward their talent. For more information on the Korn/Ferry International family of companies, visit kornferry.com.

About Futurestep

Futurestep, a Korn/Ferry Company, is the industry leader in strategic talent acquisition, offering fully customized, flexible solutions to help organizations meet specific workforce needs. Our full-spectrum portfolio of
services includes: Strategic Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO), Project-Based Recruitment, Mid-Level Recruitment, Interim Professionals and Consulting Services. With locations on four continents and a record of success
in securing top talent around the world, Futurestep provides the experience and global reach to identify, attract and retain the people who drive business
success. To learn more, visit futurestep.com.

SOURCE Futurestep

Talent shortage in China

By Liu Jie (China Daily)

Angie Eagan admits she is good at solving problems, and as the general manager with the headhunting firm Hudson Shanghai she is helping multinational companies in China find the talent they need – a task that she also admits isn’t always easy.

Hudson is a worldwide provider of permanent recruitment, contract professionals and talent management solutions worldwide.

With more multinational companies establishing and expanding their presence and more Chinese companies emerging, finding the right people to fill the right positions, especially at the leadership positions, is a challenge for any firm, according to Eagan, who has 20 years of experience in the field and has worked for 12 years in China.

“Multinational companies’ (MNCs) expectations for the capability of their local staffers are much higher,” says Eagan. “And many of them who have to localize their human resources management find getting the right people is not easy. Getting capable leaders is even more difficult.”

Her conclusions come from study and research by Hudson, meanwhile, a series of surveys from other firms confirm the findings. A survey by the US-based management consulting firm Hay’s found that finding the right people for leadership positions is the No 1 challenge for MNCs headquartered in Shanghai. It also conducted a survey on the Fortune Top 500 Companies, and 35 percent of the respondents said they believed recruiting and retaining capable senior executives with a global view and local knowledge is the toughest challenge.

Eagan cites an example. A senior executive whose company was a newcomer to China told her that his company’s job description is one level, but he has to hire people one level down and pay them two levels up. That is because he cannot find people meeting his demands but must also have somebody to support the group’s establishment and expansion here.

“This is the talent shortage in China. It’s truly a candidates’ market right now,” says Eagan.

Faced with the challenge, companies have shifted from being willing to continually hire to caring more about how retaining and training their employees.

Eagan specifically mentions the talent shortage in the middle and senior levels.

She says there is a lot of stress on executives for several reasons. One is that many managers are filling positions for which they are not trained, experienced or capable.

Second, companies are often growing quickly in China and even if some leaders are capable, their duties expand with the growth. If the company has trouble finding filling new positions, the managers end up doing two, or even three, jobs.

According to Eagan, people that MNCs need most are those who can meet with their levels and who will be leading their local companies within five to 10 years.

When a MNC wants to build its business in China, what it is really looking for are potential leaders, who learn the company’s business, and culture and are able to teach other people.

“Those are the most difficult people to find right now, what we called like the second-line managers,” Eagan says.

Basic characteristics

There are a few dynamics really important for business leadership in China. One is an ability to build strong business partnerships, which includes building partnerships with the government.

“This is something you might not do in another area of the world, but here you should think about your relations with the government and what you can do to aid the society,” says Eagan.

Companies also have to work with suppliers and customers – as well as sometimes with competitors – so partnership building is very critical.

Furthermore, a leader should have clear vision and sense of purpose, because there are so many unexpected, frequent changes in China that a business leader needs to be able to clearly articulate his or her direction.

A leader also needs to manage change and be able to put the steps in place to help people and encourage them to all move in the same direction.

“If you don’t change your company under these market dynamics, it means your company probably dies,” she says.

A corporate leader in China should also be really resilient, she says.

“If you hit a wall, you don’t fall back and say ‘Oh, no’, you just stand there and ask yourself, ‘Yes, how do I go around it, how do I go over it?’ says Eagan, adding that a leader has to be somebody who can absorb negative experiences and keep going.

Solution

As one of the world’s leading executive recruitment and related consulting services firms, NASDAQ-listed Hudson has over 148 offices in more than 20 countries and regions and 3,600 staff worldwide with 1,500-plus in Asia Pacific. Its revenue exceeded $1.4 billion in 2006.

Entering China in 2000, the firm has three offices under two brands in China: two Hudson offices in Shanghai and one in Hong Kong called Tony Keith which is in IT recruitment and acquired by Hudson last year.

Eagan says her pride in Hudson China comes from “exceptional people”. There are about 180 staffers in its China offices aged mostly 33 to 35. More than 90 percent are local consulting talents.

“We value our people, who are really good and professional,” say Eagan, adding that Hudson cares great deal about training and growing its people.

The firm has a large database, a professional research team and senior consulting service talents.

Consultants work with researchers to make sure they get the full picture of the industries that are looking for employees. Then they interview candidates, offering reports and suggestions for the clients. They negotiate with the clients and candidates on salary packages, positions and contracts. Ultimately they help the two sides seal contracts and related agreements.

“We typically run all process within four months, it’s very fast (compared with the average industrial level),” says Eagan.

To help retain and grow talent, Hudson has a talent management division to identify and train leaders and future leaders to take senior positions within three to four years.