China to recruit foreign experts through Internet

Foreigners who intend to work in China can have interviews with employers in China through the Internet.

From May 29 to June 4 this year, an online recruitment campaign will be launched by China Association for International Exchange of Personnel.

Foreign job hunters just log on www.e-jobfair.com, view the vacancies, submit their resumes, and ask to “meet” and “talk” with the employers through an audio-visual interaction system on the web.

The whole process is free and there is no need of downloading any plugs. It is the first time that such face-to-face online international recruitment has been made possible in China.

More than 500 Chinese educational institutions and companies have registered on the web site and more than 4,000 foreign job seekers have put forward their resumes there.

The web site also links with the world’s top three English teacher associations: TESOL, TESL Canada and IATEFL.

An incomplete statistics show that some 100,000 foreign teachers and experts are working in China. Nearly 5,000 universities and colleges have been approved by the State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs to have foreign teachers.

By People’s Daily Online

Headhunting Heats Up in China Market

Marie-Anne Hogarth
The Recorder
September 28, 2005

Earlier this year, New York-based recruiter Henry Lipschutz persuaded Kurt Berney, a prized partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, to join O’Melveny & Myers’ China practice.

Landing a skilled M&A partner like Berney who was willing to relocate to China was a coup. And it came from a cold call.

The world’s largest law firms are intensely interested in China and the other fast-growing economies of Asia. But firms eager to open or expand offices there are finding the supply of lawyers is outstripped by demand.

That’s creating opportunities for U.S.-based recruiters like Lipschutz, who says Asia now accounts for about 60 percent of his placements. For now, it’s a small market — there just aren’t that many partners in Asia willing to move around. But it’s expected to grow.

“There is tremendous opportunity for search work on the horizon [in China],” says Newport Beach, Calif.-based consultant Peter Zeughauser, who advises many firms on their China strategies. “It’s starting now and it will be a long run — maybe 15 to 25 years.”

Firms with established China practices, like O’Melveny, can recruit people like Berney, who are willing to take a specialty and move it overseas. Firms trying to launch a China practice, however, need partners who’ve been on the ground in Asia.

“There are a lot of legal recruiters actively recruiting in China — there is no shortage of people trying to do that,” says partner Howard Chao, who heads O’Melveny’s Asia practice. “Where things are tight are senior people with lots of China experience.”

Lipschutz, who points to the shortage of partners in explaining why he’s focused on recruiting second- to fifth-year corporate securities associates, agrees. “All the partner-level lawyers that should be in Asia have been there for the last three years,” he says.

Thomas Shoesmith is one of them. After starting his career with Cooley Godward, he joined the Shanghai office of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker. Earlier this year, recruiter Avis Caravello brought the IP litigator to Thelen Reid & Priest, where he’s launching the firm’s China practice.

“Tom would call me at 8 at night” — morning in China — “and the kids would answer the phone, ‘It’s Tom Shoesmith,'” Caravello said.

Despite the need for evening and even middle-of-the-night phone calls — there’s a 15-hour time difference between San Francisco and Shanghai — more U.S.-based recruiters are making inroads in China.

Zeughauser, who says he only represents partners who’ve told their current firms they are looking to leave, says he’s currently doing some work in China.

Major, Lindsey & Africa joined the small colony of Western recruiters with offices in Hong Kong a few years ago. Recruiters there are increasingly doing more work for U.S. firms that want to open in Beijing and Shanghai.

“Demand has been strong now for five years, but at least with respect to China, it does now seem to be hitting a fever pitch,” says Charles Fanning, a global practice leader at Major Lindsey who is based in San Francisco.

Joe Macrae, founder of Mlegal consulting, primarily does recruiting on behalf of U.S.-based firms in the London market. He says his firm is currently handling work on behalf of five candidates in Taiwan and Shanghai seeking to work stateside, or to move within their local markets. Silicon Valley recruiter Carl Baier recently handled work for candidates in China and India, and as a solo he forges deals with larger search firms in other parts of the world.

The biggest hurdle for recruiters is the shortage of recruits. “To the extent that we could find people in China, they would be very viable candidates,” says Caravello. “But it is like the needle in the haystack in Asia.”

Adding to the difficulty, talent searches in China have become increasingly specialized. Where firms employed generalists who could handle foreign direct investment, they’re now calling on specialists in IP, private equity and M&A, says Gregory Nitzkowski, co-managing partner at at Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker. The latter are especially in demand, recruiters say, as Chinese companies in the last year have developed an appetite for American ones.

As in other international markets, poaching is common. And as with many ex-patriot communities, lawyers in Hong Kong and China seem more often willing to make the move.

“There is more mobility in Asia,” says partner Michael Gisser, who co-heads the Asia-Pacific practice of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. “There is less stigma associated with job-changing by partners and associates alike. In the U.S., “if someone is on their third or fourth law firm, it is more likely to raise a question.”

While individual hires account for much recruiting, some firms prefer to bring on groups in the international market.

“Our London growth has been with groups and I love recruiting [that way],” says Morrison & Foerster Chairman Keith Wetmore. “I have higher confidence around quality and demonstrated team dynamics [with a group]. With a single person, you don’t know why they are in the market.”

Topic: Headhunting in the Mainland Chinese Market

Topic: Headhunting in the Mainland Chinese Market
October 2002 issue
with ART’s Managing Director

Interview Date: 14 September, 2002:

Q1. How does recruiting for the mainland Chinese market differ from recruiting for other markets?

A1. Every market is a little different, and we do not find China to be notably different from most world markets in most respects. It’s always the same question: “does this client’s business model and expectation coincide with this candidate’s experiences and career path?” The level of candidates that we recruit in China – mostly “C” level, VP level, Managing Director/ G.M. levels, and Director/ Manager levels – tend to be “global class” people. These are the same types of people that could and do operate successfully anywhere, be it in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taipei, San Francisco, New York, London, Zurich, etc. Most of these people have either lived, worked, or were educated in other parts of the Asia-Pacific, North America or Europe. These candidates might have known ART for years or might have heard about ART from trusted colleagues in China or abroad. They understand that the calibre of our candidates is high, and our clients’ expectations of them are high. Such people usually find us, or we find them through our network of contacts. Generally, good people recommend other good people, so in recruiting people in China we place some reliance upon trusted referrals to steer us in the right direction.

Depending upon the specific job, industry or business model, sometimes there are shortages of specific mainland China profiles. In that case, it might be necessary for an employer to seriously consider Hong Kongers, Singaporeans, Taiwanese and other Chinese speakers from abroad. The most notable of these would be a VP or “C” level person for a small early stage China division of a small or medium sized foreign company. Foreign startups in particular typically are founded by people who have limited finances and who work very hard with limited staff. When they seek senior managers for new Chinese operations, they often look for the same type of “shirtsleeves” person to head their China groups. Such people, however, can be a bit hard to find in mainland China, particularly since most foreign-trained or foreign-company experienced Chinese executives come from large multinationals. So a person whose resume might suggest a high suitability for an American employer (i.e., s/he worked for U.S. multinationals, s/he received an education in the U.S.), that person might not automatically be suitable at all for a Silicon Valley-type startup firm. While a Chinese finance manager at a major U.S. multinational might be supported by a very large China staff, that person taking a job as a CFO of a startup China division, might find himself or herself alone in a room with the expectation of “doing it all.” Most search firms operating in the China market do not appreciate this subtlety, and that is why many of their matches are not good fits for the candidate or the client. When we take on such assignments, then, we ask the employer to keep this factor in mind. When we discuss such jobs with candidates, if we do not see a lot of appropriate startup company experiences, we ask pointedly if such a job would interest her or him. We typically lay out scenarios: you will be expected to do all the work, you will not have a staff until business allows for hiring, you will have to do what ten others do at your present company, etc. We rather have nine candidates out of ten realize early that this would not be good for them, rather than to place someone in the wrong job.

Our focus in China tends to be people who are bilingual English/Chinese (Mandarin or Cantonese) speakers who are fully bicultural, which is to say that they are “at home” in China, familiar with mainland Chinese customers and business partners, and also are able to deal effectively with overseas companies, customers and business partners in the way that those companies would expect to be dealt with. Because China today is still a mix of people coming from state company experiences and domestic and foreign private company experiences, the overall numbers of Chinese middle managers and senior managers with the experience of running proper corporations or departments 100% along world class lines is still limited. In five or ten years, the expertise of Chinese managers will be truly outstanding, as today’s junior managers and middle managers hone their skills. We recruit middle managers today for middle management roles, because we know that they are valuable recruits today and critical for tomorrow’s CEO, CFO and VP placements. Right now, we are seeing in China many fully able world class managers, a larger number of managers with hybrid Chinese and foreign business styles, and a larger number that only could perform within their existing Chinese business models.

One somewhat different aspect of China recruitment is finding people who are suitable for joint ventures. While JV’s are found in every country, there is a perception by some clients that entering into a joint venture in China with a local partner is a “high stakes” proposition, bringing a potential of high gain along with potentially high risk. So when we look for a General Manager or Finance head who is to be the prime contact person with the JV partner, a special person must be found. Some people can work perfectly well in monitoring a JV with a state partner, while others only would be good with a private sector JV partner. Also, the goals of JV’s in China can vary significantly: it could be a transition for the foreign company to buy out a local partner, it could be a pure partnership, or it could be primarily a mechanism for funding or modernizing a local partner in return for a stake in future profits. JV General Managers or Finance Directors anywhere are always in a sort of high risk business model, regardless of the country, but in China, where cost accounting, manufacturing cost, and balance sheets are somewhat new concepts, it sometimes is hard for a prospective partner to fully understand what the local partner brings to the table, can bring to the table, or what it might take off the table. Each type of business model requires a manager suited to those ends. Most important is that the person be a trusted monitor and negotiator on behalf of our client’s interests.

Q2. Is there still a “hardship” premium for postings to China?

A2: We are very leery of any foreign candidate in China or any person seeking a position in China who feels the place is a “hardship posting.” In remote provincial areas, some special allowances might be quite justifiable, including for Chinese nationals relocated to those jobs, but in Beijing or Shanghai, a person calling for “hardship” premiums is probably someone that we would not be able to help.

It kind of reminds me of the story that used to circulate a decade ago about how a cost of a cup of decaffeinated coffee in a Tokyo hotel restaurant was $20. My comment to that is either don’t order decaf in a Tokyo 5-star hotel (drink tea instead), or don’t leave your country if you exactly want to recreate every shred of your past life, brick by brick, in another country. Certainly don’t expect that a prospective employer is going to happily coach you on to extract such benefits from their budget. A person who starts out feeling that China is a hardship posting probably should not be in China. There are benefits and problems in living in every city in the world. To a degree, “everything is negotiable,” but if the China job seeker is primarily focused on expat benefits, we get nervous that they might be more interested in locking in big amounts of cash and a luxurious lifestyle, rather than concentrating on the bottom line: making our client’s mission successful.Success involves commitment to a market, and success involves some sacrifice and risk taking. If the person comes into a tough job with all the comforts locked into an ironclad, long-term contract, where is the motivation to work hard? If an employer had to choose between two very closely matched candidates, one already living in China who only wanted a good salary, bonus and decent benefits package, versus another candidate who wanted all that plus a hefty expat package, which candidate do you think that the employer might regard more favorably? No employer is in a position to give away free money. If they are offering an expat package, it’s likely because that candidate was the best candidate interviewed for the job.

Many international executive search firms sometimes seem to push high cost expat candidates on their clients without even seriously considering capable local candidates with bankable credentials. We do not specialize in expatriate recruitment. Some percentage of our placements involve expat assignments, but every job search that we take on, regardless of the country, assumes that we should first try to find candidates already in that city or country. In some cases, a client can consider bringing in people from other cities or countries, and they might be willing to consider reasonable expat benefits on a case-by-case basis. Some candidates might have requirements such as school fees or housing allowances, but these candidates might be competing with very good local candidates who don’t need the employer to pay their food and rent, and who do not carry with their candidacy other such up-front burdens. The decision to consider one candidate with a reasonable total cost versus another with a higher set of requirements is left to the employer. We leave it to the employer to weigh the pluses and minuses of each candidate. Since our candidates are in 100 countries, we have a broad database of people to consider, depending upon the client’s budget and needs. If the employer has no budgetary limits to bringing in managers from abroad, that is not a problem for us, of course.

Nowadays, we see people in Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Australia, North America and Europe who are willing to take a job in China and who do not even ask for the cost of a plane ticket, because they perceive that there are great opportunities in mainland China. The person who might speak of a hardship premium for a posting in Shanghai or Beijing these days might be a person who is only half interested in the place or the opportunity. This more than likely would be a person who overestimates his or her own current market value, or underestimates the capabilities of his or her competition.

Q3. What are the main attractions of a China posting for candidates?

A3. The most obvious attraction is probably the vastness of personal career opportunities. Just to discuss finance jobs, a person who is currently a finance director at a hum-drum job might be pegged for a China VP of Finance job at a multinational engaged in financing a vast China market expansion plan, or a very exciting startup that might make him or her a millionaire. Currently, the economies of Hong Kong, Singapore, the U.S., Europe, and Japan have been slow, so many foreign firms are seriously focusing their attention on countries like China. This interest, as well as an expansion amongst local Chinese companies, causes there to be many interesting management opportunities for Chinese nationals and foreign professionals alike.

Having good work experiences in China is seen as an asset in most resumes of senior and middle management candidates. If you are a foreigner considering a job in China, the likelihood is that when you return to your home country after a China assignment, your profile might possibly be raised in the view of employers. It is one thing to “think global,” and it’s another thing to have actually “been global.”

The quality of the work in China, again only discussing finance jobs, can be very exciting. This is a country where much of the groundwork of creating formal finance structures, institutions and systems has only barely begun. A person who in his or her home country might not have the opportunity to make deals with the big players, much less help create financial systems, institutions and mechanisms for a country or industry, might possibly have the chance to do so in China.

Some people come to China because their family origins are in China and they would like to broaden their understanding of China.

Some people are returning migrants from abroad who, after several years working in foreign countries, feel that their best prospects are in serving as bridges between the country of their birth and the country of their professional lives.

Some people go to China in search of the proverbial proposition of selling their product or service to a billion people. These people might be motivated by big dreams or big money – or both.

Q4. What are the main drawbacks of a China posting for candidates?

A4. This answer really depends upon the location and the candidate. There can be a wide variety of issues that could make a China posting wrong for any one person. We therefore would highly recommend that a foreigner who has some interest in a China posting do a lot of research about the place in advance of considering applying for a job in China. In a thousand ways, life in China is not the same as in Taiwan, Hong Kong or Singapore, and even having Chinese fluency does not guarantee that one would be happy working in China or would be successful. Because of the many personal variables involved in such postings, ART tends to recommend to its client companies people who are already well experienced in or well established in the target city and market, be they Chinese nationals or foreigners. We think that by focusing on such candidates, we help minimize everyone’s risk of failure.

Q5. Can you give an estimate of the increase/decrease in demand by international firms for candidates willing to relocate to China?

A5. Our firm specifically prides itself on trying to present local candidates on six continents, so most employers coming to ART seeking managers for mainland China or other countries usually do not look for us to present them with people who are not already in the country where they need the person to be based. Often, in fact, many employers contact us to help find the replacement for their past or current expat managers. Typically it is a situation where the person being replaced is the “first generation” manager being rotated back to the home country. In other cases, it is a case of the person simply having failed, often due to lack of local language skills, lack of local business contacts, or a limited understanding of local business culture. If anything, we are seeing a greater demand for high calibre, internationally trained or internationally experienced local Chinese managers to run Chinese operations. There can be quite a challenge in finding these candidates, but they will be the future, and companies that are lucky enough to snatch these people up will have, in our opinion, a much better chance of success than putting in charge a foreign manager who might describe himself as a “China expert,” but who, shockingly too often, is usually a person who is not even capable of reading the day’s weather report in a local Chinese language newspaper.

Q6. Any other issue you feel may be of interest to international employers looking to place staff in mainland China?

A6. Too often executive compensation in China is tragically misperceived by foreign companies without regard to either the supply and demand of appropriate candidates or without regard to the value that a really good local Chinese candidate can bring to a foreign employer. What we sometimes see is this potentially reckless and simplistic thought process by some employers: “Wages in China are a fraction of our own, so a Chinese general manager’s salary should therefore be a fraction of a general manager’s in our own country.” Yes, it is true that the average general manager in China is much lower paid than the average general manager in most industrialized countries, but in China, an average general manager is someone who does not speak English well or at all, has never worked for a foreign company, and whose conception of profit and loss is one that a foreign company would never consider acceptable in running their China business unit.

The profile that most foreign companies seek for China is not the “average general manager.” Rather, it would probably be something closer to the average one-tenth of one percent of the Chinese private sector industrial managerial class. These are the people who might have U.S. MBA’s, who might have worked or lived in Europe, the US or Singapore, whose English is fluent, who perfectly understand foreign conceptions of business success and failure, and who have successful track records in China working as senior managers or general managers of foreign firms in China. Their salaries are high by Chinese standards because they are worth every penny, and their skills are constantly sought out by foreign firms. The first, easiest and worst mistake a foreign employer can ever make in entering the China market is to underpay their top local management team. Either you will not be successful in hiring the best managers that you need to shepherd your products and services properly into the Chinese market, or you will soon find that your key managers are giving you notice, because of the many opportunities offered them by your competitors and others, who do understand the value that their knowledge, skills, contacts and personal integrity can bring their companies.

China’s Recruiters Speeding Up

As multinational companies expand into China, the headhunting business is growing quickly and moving online, says Zhaopin CEO Liu Hao

Zhaopin was founded in Beijing in 1997 as an old-fashioned headhunting company. Since then, it has shifted much of its focus to the Internet, and has become one of China’s leading online recruitment firms. Still, Zhaopin hasn’t abandoned the old ways of doing business, continuing to run recruitment ads in newspapers, especially in smaller cities. Clients include many multinationals such as Microsoft (MSFT), Shell (RDSB), DaimlerChrysler (DCX), Hewlett Packard (HPQ), Motorola (MOT), and Intel (INTC). Advertisement

Thirty-six-year-old CEO Liu Hao has degrees in physics from Beijing University and the University of Washington in Seattle, and a law degree from Yale University. He recently met with BusinessWeek’s Beijing bureau chief, Dexter Roberts, at Zhaopin headquarters to discuss his Internet operation and the overall recruitment market in China. Edited excerpts follow:

How has your company developed recently?
We have been growing very rapidly, with 100% annual growth in revenues the last three years. A couple of years ago we were profitable, but in the last few years, with the speed up of our expansion — we have grown from 4 cities to 16 cities — we have not been profitable. In early ’04 we had fewer than 300 people. Today we are at about 1,000.

We are particularly strong in the multinational business. Think of the Fortune 500 companies — 95% of them are our clients. We are definitely not the largest recruiter in China. No. 1 is [Nasdaq-listed] 51job.com. But their strength is mainly in newspaper ads. They do only 20% of their business online. We instead are 60% online, with 20%-plus in newspapers. The rest of our revenues are from headhunting.

Why are you expanding into the interior of China?
We see this as the driver of our growth. In the past, the online market has really been centered in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou. Outside these cities it was just in the development stage. But China’s secondary cities also have huge populations. In the past, Internet penetration was not so high there, but that is changing.

For cities like Wuhan and Hangzhou, for example, their online jobs market might only be worth a couple million yuan ($125,000) right now. But in the next few years it will grow to 10 million yuan ($1.25 million). As multinational companies expand across China, we will go with them. We will probably be in 20 cities by yearend.

How bad is the talent shortage in China?
In the past, when companies first came into China, they were all struggling to fill managerial positions with people with solid operating experience. Chinese returnees with overseas degrees came back, but often had very little managerial experience. Over the last couple of years we have started to see a new pattern. General managerial staff is still in great demand, but the market demand is getting much more specialized.

For example, there’s an acute shortage of skilled workers such as specialized engineers. That’s particularly true in industries like autos, with the entry of BMW, Mercedes, and all the Japanese brands into China over the last few years. The pharmaceutical industry and the finance industries are also facing talent shortages. In general, sales and marketing professionals, medical care staff, and investment and fund managers are all facing serious shortages.

Are wage inflation and turnover a big problem right now?
China has doubled the number of people in its colleges over the last few years. That has had a deflationary effect on salaries for entry-level people. But in certain industries over the last couple of years, salaries have increased dramatically. For example, in the computer and Internet industries they have gone up 20% to 30% over the past year. Wherever you have venture capital flowing, salaries will go up. But in consumer electronics and the cell phone industry, we have seen that pay levels have dropped a little bit. So we actually see pockets of deflationary pressure.

Second-tier cities face a more severe problem. Cities other than Beijing and Shanghai have a particularly hard time keeping top talent. For example, take Xian. There are 100,000 to 200,000 college graduates in Xian every year. Xian is a city with a high educational level. But most graduates leave Xian after college. Beijing- and Shanghai-based companies offer higher salaries and a sexier work environment.

Chinese employees are known for changing jobs quickly. Why?
China’s job market is still not very mature, and professional ethics are still in the process of developing. We still see cases where job candidates will sign an offer and then decide not to take it. People also jump ship more often here in China. The general sentiment of society is impatience.

People are very ambitious. It’s like a virus affecting the job market: It is very hard to develop employee loyalty. People see working at a multinational as a stepping stone — something to put on their résumé before moving on. Talented people are being lured away by local or private companies. Others would prefer to start their own companies.

How does that drive your business?
A lot of employers are starting to realize that going online is the best way to find the kind of employees they want. Certain employers use the Internet as a way to screen employees — anyone the company would consider hiring should be proficient online. And a lot of multinationals are spending more online, while decreasing their print ads.

How do you see the overall online jobs market developing?
In Beijing, revenues from online job listings overtook newspaper listings last year and now lead by a large margin. Online jobs are growing at 30% a year now and were about 100 million yuan last year in Beijing. The size of the Shanghai market is a little smaller but growing at the same pace. Nationwide, newspaper revenues from recruitment ads are around 2 to 3 billion yuan, but growth is pretty much flat. The online recruitment market for all of China was probably around $50 million last year, and is growing at around 30%.

Any plans to take your company public?
Yes. Probably late next year. And it will most likely be on Nasdaq. It’s where all the Chinese Internet companies have gone

China triggered “global job boom”

10 million opportunities created ¡ª Xinhua

BOAO (Hainan): China has created some 10 million job opportunities for the world over the past five years, said Vice President Zeng Qinghong here on Saturday.

China had also been importing nearly $500 billion worth of goods annually since its entry into the World Trade Organisation in 2001, Mr. Zeng said. He was giving a keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Meeting 2006.

Highlighting the opportunities of development China has brought to the world over the past years, he said imports from Asian countries and areas increased 20 per cent year-on-year to hit $440 billion in 2005, accounting for 67 per cent of China’s total volume of imports.

Beneficial cooperation

Overseas investment by Chinese companies has increased by over 20 per cent annually, with 80 per cent of it made in Asia.

China will “unswervingly” pursue peaceful development and pay more attention to friendly and mutually beneficial cooperation with the world, especially with Asian countries and regions, Mr. Zeng said.

He said China’s smooth and fast development would provide more opportunities for regional cooperation in Asia. He said 2006 was the first year of China’s 11th Five-Year (2006-2010) plan.

In the coming five years, China would improve its mode of economic growth and focus attention on environment protection and resource-conserving to maintain a stable and relatively fast development.

By 2010, Mr. Zeng said China’s GDP would exceed $3 trillion, and the annual import volume will surpass $1 trillion. The energy consumption per unit would be reduced by 20 per cent, and the emission of pollutants would be cut by 10 per cent.

Mercer launches insurance JV in China

Maggie Zhang
2006-04-26

MERCER Human Resource Consulting, the world’s biggest insurance broker, launched a joint venture in China yesterday.

The venture, Shanghai Mercer Insurance Brokers Co Ltd, offers health-care benefits and advisory services to organizations in China. Mercer refused to identify its JV partner, saying it is awaiting the Chinese firm’s approval to disclose the information.

“We are ambitious and optimistic about the market and our business will grow rapidly,” said Edouard Merette, Asia-Pacific president of Mercer. “The potential is enormous as it’s still in the initial stages of the market in China.”

China’s insurance premiums topped 493 billion yuan (US$62 billion) last year. Premiums collected from the country’ insurance brokers were at about 10 billion yuan, accounting for a mere 2 percent of the total.

Considering the 2 percent figure, the insurance broker sector enjoys big growth potential, said Rosaline Chow Koo, regional business leader of Mercer Health & Benefits Asia. She also said China will be the fastest-growing market for the company.

The venture has 10 employees to start. But Merette said it will grow into the “thousands” in a fairly short period.

The US-based company holds a 24.9 percent stake of the venture, just under the 25 percent maximum a single foreign investor is allowed by regulators in the insurance sector. Its unidentified Chinese partner holds the remainder.

The China Insurance Regulatory Commission granted the license for the venture late last year with registered capital of 10 million yuan.

China is boosting its commercial insurance sector to partly absorb the nation’s US$1.8 trillion in household savings. Authorities want to increase combined insurance assets to 5 trillion yuan by 2010 from 1.6 trillion yuan at the end of March.

Germany’s SAP hopes to triple China staff by 2008

Last Update: 5:20 AM ET Mar 24, 2006

SHANGHAI (MarketWatch) — Germany’s SAP AG (SAP), the world’s biggest business software company by revenue, hopes to triple the number of its staff in China by 2008, a senior executive said Friday.
SAP now has 1,100 employees in China, including staff at a regional support center in the northeastern port city of Dalian, a laboratory in the central city of Chengdu and a new laboratory in Shanghai.

Get Me Personnel, We got hottest Job in China

Who’s got the hottest job in China? The HR guy.

Michael Cline has seen the front line of the piracy battle in China. As a vice president for global personnel at AO Smith, the maker of heaters and motors based in Milwaukee, he helped guide the firm’s China expansion from no plants in 2001 to multiple sites in four cities by 2005, and from zero employees to 3,000 people. Problems soon emerged: Employees were selling the company’s technology to outsiders, and sales staff were, he says, “leading a dual life” by also working for rivals.

“The environment here was very different from anything the company had faced before,” says Cline, who now runs a U.S. textile company in China. “I was spending 70% of my time” on China.

So AO Smith called in a U.K. consultancy called Control Risks to plug the security holes and help vet employees more carefully. They tried to root out nepotism by managers who directed business to companies controlled by family members, says Dane Chamorro, the China deputy manager with Control Risks in Shanghai. AO Smith declined to comment on the security issues. “There are a lot of messes here” in China, Chamorro says.

China’s economic boom and attendant surge in intellectual property theft and financial crimes are taxing the skills of personnel departments. The demand for those skills is making personnel into one of the hottest careers in China today. According to consulting firm Mercer, wages in China for top HR executives of multinational companies grew 20% in each of the last two years to $97,000–in a country where per capita income is 1% of that figure.

The risk of a bad hire is getting bigger as manufacturers transfer sophisticated technology to woo local consumers and overseas investment funds pour fresh capital into local businesses. Corporate-snooping outfits are thriving as clients demand more background checks on their partners and employees. After opening a Shanghai office in 2003, Control Risks has gone from 2 to 22 employees in the city and will add an office of 5 people in Hong Kong this year.

For decades after the Communists took over in 1949, workers spent their entire careers with one state-owned company and rarely moved to a different town. Although state-owned enterprises now account for only a third of the economy and workers are far more mobile, there are no good national databases for checking employment histories, education credentials and criminal records.

The cost to check out a potential or past hire can range from $100 to $5,000, more than in the U.S., where criminal, legal and credit databases are more easily checked. The expense and hassle deters some businesses from even bothering, says Control Risks’ Chamorro. Résumé fraud is rampant, and applicants frequently forge names on recommendation letters. “They don’t expect to be checked–that’s why they do it,” says Chamorro.

And don’t bother calling a former employer by phone. “If you call another part of China to ask about someone, people will tend to say everything is fine because they don’t want to risk trouble from saying anything bad,” says Simon Yin, cofounder of Hongren Club, an association based in Shanghai of about 1,000 personnel professionals. Yin is a big proponent of informal information exchanges about job applicants and of using references among group members.

“A lot of laws are there, but they don’t always help. You have to work internally,” says Arthur Yeung, who teaches at the China-Europe Business International School.

http://www.forbes.com/business/global/2006/0417/022.html

Low Costs, Plentiful Talent Make China a Global Magnet for R&D

Kathy Chen
Jason Dean
The Wall Street Journal, 14 March 2006

BEIJING — Multinational companies, drawn by a huge and inexpensive talent pool, are pouring money into research and development in China — a trend that promises to broaden the country’s huge role in the global economy.

The total number of foreign-invested RnD centers in the country has surged to about 750 from 200 four years ago, according to China’s Ministry of Commerce. And in a survey of multinationals published in September by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, China was by far the most frequently cited location for RnD expansion, well ahead of the U.S. and third-place India, China’s chief rival as an emerging innovator.

Still, China’s growth as a global RnD hub faces some constraints. Among them is the country’s weak protection of patents and other intellectual-property rights. That has encouraged some foreign companies, fearful of risking their trade secrets, to keep more cutting-edge research out of China, analysts say. But others have rushed to expand the scope of their development efforts here.

Whereas RnD investment in China initially focused on adapting existing products and technologies to the Chinese market, companies such as Procter & Gamble Co., Motorola Inc. and International Business Machines Corp., among many others, have been investing to expand their Chinese RnD operations to develop products for the global market.

PnG opened a research arm in China in 1988, consisting of two dozen employees concerned mainly with studying Chinese consumers’ laundry habits and oral hygiene. Today, the U.S. consumer-products giant runs five RnD facilities in China with about 300 researchers who work on innovations for everything from Crest toothpaste to Oil of Olay face cream.

The Chinese facilities have been a lead site for developing a new grease-fighting formula of Tide laundry detergent that sells in Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America. At one facility in Beijing’s university district, researchers use computer modeling to tinker with other promising formulas that chemists in white lab coats and protective glasses then mix and test. “We are developing capabilities in China that we can use globally,” says Dick Carpenter, director of PnG Technology (Beijing) Ltd.

Giving impetus to the RnD expansion in sectors from biotechnology to pharmaceuticals to semiconductors is China’s government. Having enlisted foreign investment to transform China into a manufacturing powerhouse over the past few decades, Beijing now is mounting a campaign to strengthen domestic innovation that could help push the country into more advanced niches of the global economy.

In his annual report at the National People’s Congress in Beijing, which ends tomorrow, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the central government will increase spending on science and technology by nearly 20% this year. “China has entered a stage in its history where it must increase its reliance on scientific and technological advances and innovation to drive social and economic development,” he said.

China’s State Council, or cabinet, recently said the country would seek to boost RnD investment to 2% of gross domestic product in 2010 and 2.5% by 2020. At a news conference Friday, senior officials outlined tax breaks and other tools they plan to use to meet that target. Last year, total RnD spending in China — not including foreign investment — reached $29.4 billion, rising steadily from $11.13 billion in 2000, according to the government.

China faces numerous obstacles to joining the ranks of the world’s innovation leaders — beyond its weak intellectual-property protections. Research spending is still small compared with that of developed countries; the U.S., for example, spends about 2.7% of GDP on RnD, compared with 1.3% of GDP in China last year. And much of what is spent in China still comes from foreign companies: Less than a quarter of Chinese midsize and large enterprises had their own science and technology institutions in 2004. Of China’s high-tech exports, valued at $218.3 billion last year, nearly 90% was produced by foreign-invested companies, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

Still, the RnD trend is bolstering China’s position relative to other developing countries, particularly India, which is also seeking to build its innovation abilities. India’s total domestic spending on RnD rose an estimated 9.7% to $4.9 billion, or 0.77% of GDP, in the fiscal year ended March 2005, according to India’s Ministry of Science and Technology.

India is also trying to build RnD, “but the scale of investment [compared with China] is not much” because of budgetary constraints, says V.S. Ramamurthy, a top official at the ministry. Foreign investment in Indian RnD has also lagged behind that of China, he says. And while Mr. Ramamurthy argues that the amount of investment isn’t the only way to measure RnD success, “it is a concern for us.”

Zhang Jun, director of the China Center for Economic Studies at Shanghai’s Fudan University, says that given time, “China’s advantages in this area will become more obvious…and its attractiveness will increasingly become stronger than India’s.”

Among China’s draws, he says: the relatively low cost of hiring engineers and researchers; a huge talent pool, including five million university graduates annually (one-fifth majoring in science or engineering); and China’s own huge market of 1.3 billion consumers. China offers its students abroad incentives to return once they graduate, including generous research grants and chances to run their own RnD projects.

One early returnee is Enge Wang. Mr. Wang, who had worked as a research associate at the University of Houston, decided to return to Beijing to conduct research under a Chinese Academy of Sciences program in 1995. At the time, he says, his U.S. colleagues and friends questioned his decision, but he says he is glad he made the move. Today, Mr. Wang is director of the Institute of Physics under the academy, one of China’s top research organizations, which is engaged in several RnD cooperative ventures with foreign companies.

China’s “research funding is getting much better,” Mr. Wang says, and as a result, overseas Chinese are flocking back from top U.S. institutions like Harvard University and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Talented returnees can secure enough backing “to build up their own lab and extend their research in one direction for 10 years,” he says. “It’s hard to find such conditions elsewhere.”

“There’s been a paradigm shift among foreign companies in China,” says Chen Zhu, a Chinese Academy of Sciences vice president. “Now, more foreign companies realize

China is not just a market but a country with huge amounts of talent.”

Motorola, which began investing in low-level RnD in China in 1993, now has 16 RnD offices in five Chinese cities, with an accumulated investment of about $500 million. The U.S. company has more than 1,800 Chinese engineers, and the number is expected to surpass 2,000 this year. They have recently begun developing new phones and other products for sale not only in China, but also overseas, executives say.

One phone developed in China, the A780, lets users write on the screen with just a finger, rather than a stylus. It’s now available in the U.S. and Europe. Another phone that can scan contact information from business cards using a built-in camera and enter it into a contact database is expected to be marketed in the U.S. “China is moving from the manufacturing center into advanced RnD,” says Ching Chuang, who heads Motorola’s Chinese RnD operations.

Microsoft Corp.’s basic-research lab in Beijing was only its second outside the U.S. when it opened in 1998. That China lab now employs about 200 full-time scientists, and the software giant expects its total RnD headcount in China to double in this year to about 800 researchers.

At IBM’s research lab in Beijing, Chinese scientists have led the development of several technologies now being used abroad. Among them: “voice morphing” software that can convert typescript or a recorded voice into another voice. “Our RnD now has a global mission,” says Thomas S. Li, director of IBM China Research Lab.

At the state-run Institute of Computing Technology, engineers are tackling one of technology’s tougher challenges: designing a computer microprocessor. Though still many years behind industry leaders like Intel Corp., the institute last year unveiled its second-generation microprocessor, with about the same computing power as mainstream chips in the late 1990s. This year, it plans to finish work on a third-generation chip that could narrow the gap.

China is also emerging as an RnD force in such sectors as nanotechnology, biotech and genetically modified crops. It was the first country to establish a full rice genome database, which has helped Chinese scientists develop hardier and higher-yielding strains of the staple cereal.

Swiss pharmaceuticals companies Novartis AG and Debiopharm SA have teamed up with the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica under the Chinese Academy of Sciences to conduct research into traditional Chinese medicines to look for treatments for malaria and Alzheimer’s disease. “This last decade, the progress we have seen in China’s scientific research sector is phenomenal,” says Ju Li-ya, director of Debiopharm’s China department.

China Job fair attracts Taiwanese

By Li Dapeng (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-04-10 05:40

The mainland’s first job fair directed at Taiwanese was held on Saturday in Xiamen, Fujian Province, with hundreds of job-hunters flocking to the fair in hope of snapping up one of 500 vacancies on offer.

The job fair, organized by human resources companies across the Taiwan Straits, was especially open to Taiwanese graduates and professionals.

More than 200 job-hunters attended the fair, including about 100 students and professionals from Taiwan, as well as 100 Taiwanese studying in universities on the mainland.

Lin Jia-yi, a Taiwanese college student, was one of many job-hunters travelling between different company booths at the job fair.

A recent graduate of Taiwan National Chengchi University, Lin is focusing on the mainland for her career.

“There are many more job opportunities here than in Taiwan,” Lin said. “Though I may earn less in the short term, my career prospects are very attractive.”

About 50 mainland and mainland-based Taiwan and overseas companies and institutions had over 500 vacancies on offer at the fair.

Wang Jianzhong, an official with Kunshan Human Resource Centre from East China’s Jiangsu Province said: “We didn’t find the suitable professionals we needed today, but we did get valuable information about the expectations and needs of Taiwanese people in relation to their career development on the mainland.”

“Job information about the mainland is still not transparent enough for Taiwanese talent, which has been the main obstacle for them starting their careers here,” said Steve Tsai, chief executive officer with Pan Asia Human Resources Management and Consulting Corporation, the fair’s Taiwan organizer.

“So the human resources organizations on both sides should co-operate to offer more information to help them,” Tsai said.

“Both sides are trying to make this kind of cross-Straits job fair a regular event,” added Tsai.

“The gap in salary between Taiwan and the mainland has caused many Taiwanese students to go back to work on the island after they graduate from mainland universities,” Zhao Shi-Cong, president of Taiwan Students Union, said.

Zhao said generally, a monthly salary of NT$20,000 to 30,000 (US$619-929) is available for graduates with bachelor degrees in Taiwan, while they would only receive 2,000 to 3,000 yuan (US$250-374) on the mainland.

According to him, about 9,000 to 10,000 Taiwanese students are studying at mainland universities.

Taiwanese professionals who are working in Xiamen can also enjoy a number of favourable tax regulations issued by local government, said officials with Xiamen Local Taxation Bureau.

For instance, the threshold for individual income tax for Taiwanese people working on the mainland is 4,800 yuan (US$600) starting from this year, which is 3,200 yuan (US$400) higher than that of their mainland peers.

Statistics from the bureau indicate more than 3,000 Taiwanese people are working in the city.