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          Globalization is the new buzzword in e-commerce

          By Meng Jing (China Daily) Updated: 2014-11-12 09:52

          Globalization is the new buzzword in e-commerce

          Nation's Nov 11 shopping spree crosses borders around the world, reports Meng Jing.

          Inviting celebrities to promote a marketing event is business as usual in today's advertising world. But ever since the nation's Nov 11 Singles' Day online shopping event was launched by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd in 2009, this is the first time the e-commerce giant has used a large number of overseas super stars to do the job.

          From French movie star Sophie Marceau to Park Shin-hye, a rising actress in South Korea, the Hangzhou-based Alibaba spared no effort to leverage the influence of A-listers around the world to take the Chinese shopping bonanza global.

          "This year marks Alibaba's first globalized Nov 11 festival, and we want to make it easy for Chinese customers to buy from overseas vendors and overseas customers to buy from China," said Zhang Yong, chief operations officer of Alibaba Group.

          "This is only our first step. The goal is to make Nov 11 a global festival. In another five to 10 years, we want to host an event that helps consumers all over the world buy products from wherever they want," he said.

          As ambitious as the plan may sound, cross-border retail, which holds the promise of easy access to a wide selection of attractively priced merchandise not available locally, is heating up in China.

          Many major e-commerce players from Amazon China to Suning Commerce Group Co, China's biggest appliance retailer, have launched campaigns to help more domestic customers buy overseas products directly online during this year's shopping festival.

          Even companies that do not make globalization a priority in the Nov 11 online sales event have formed international ties to expand their presence in cross-border e-commerce.

          For instance, JD.com Inc, Alibaba's top competitor by market share in China's online retail world, formed a partnership earlier this year with the agriculture ministry of Australia to help bring more Australian agricultural products to Chinese dining tables.

          Going global has become the trend for e-commerce companies in China, just like earlier this year, most of them made going rural a major business direction-a tactic aimed at attracting more online shoppers in lower-tier cities and rural China.

          The highly anticipated Nov 11 shopping festival-China's largest online sales event with more than 50 billion yuan ($8.17 billion) worth of goods sold in 24 hours last year-is a good stage to debut global offerings.

          "As China's e-commerce market becomes more mature, online platforms cannot rely on Chinese consumers spending more and more each year on the same products. They need to expand their product range, which will increase the average purchase value in China, and they need to expand their customer base," said Neil Flynn, head equity analyst at Chineseinvestors.com, which covers US-listed Chinese companies.

          Vanessa Zeng, a senior analyst with Forrester Research Inc, said that with most of the Chinese e-commerce players having gone public, pressure to make a profit will increase.

          "Going global is all about finding the next growth point," she said.

          China's online retail market was valued at 1.8 trillion yuan in 2013, or 8 percent of the total retail market. The online shopping market expanded 46 percent year-on-year in the second quarter of this year, but momentum has slowed from peak growth rates in 2012 of more than 80 percent.

          "In this year's sluggish consumer retail market, we see the mass-premium segment is growing fast, including imported products. There is a segment of middle-income class consumers in first-tier and some second-tier cities. Their disposable incomes are reaching a critical mass to drive a sales takeoff in the mass-premium segment," said Adam Xu, a partner with multinational consultancy Strategy&, who said that growing consumer trade is one of the main reasons for the emerging trend of cross-border e-commerce in China.

          Globalization is the new buzzword in e-commerce

          Globalization is the new buzzword in e-commerce

          Singles Day shopping craze broadens e-commerce's reach 8 things you should know about 'Double 11'

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