
VS

Li
Guoqing (李国庆), the co-CEO of
Dangdang China's largest online retailer of books,
CDs and videotapes, said that if
Dangdang's biggest competitor
Joyo had remained Chinese he would have had a much harder life. Obviously, he is right.
Joyo was the No. 1 in the market before. But since
Amazon's acquisition,
Joyo has been going downwards and lagged far behind
Dangdang.
Joyo is not alone.
Eachnet shares similar experience.
Eachnet used to be the No. 1
auction site in China with over 60% market share. However,
Eachnet gradually became mediocre after being acquired by
Ebay. The new Chinese entrant,
Alibaba's
Taobao entered the market and quickly surpassed
Eachnet. Now
Taobao has firmly established itself as the most popular online auction site in China and the gap between the two is growing. Foreign
internet companies do not seem to adapt well in China. Need more evidence? Google is trailing behind
Baidu while Yahoo is struggling.
Why foreign
internet giants fail to win the competition against their Chinese counterparts? This is a question that many have tried to answer. I'm not going to do it here, but I have been keen to hear what those who have been personally engaged in the competition would say. Here are some of them.
The outspoken Li
Guoqing ,once on a TV program, ridiculed
Ebay by telling a story about
Ebay's inefficiency. He says that once
Ebay's Chinese team decided to change some Chinese fonts on
Eachnet. The Chinese team could not do it right away. They needed to report to the US headquarter of
Ebay to obtain an approval before they could actually do the change. The approval did not come soon and one China-based Chinese executive of
Eachnet was very angry and threatened to resign. After all the farce, the change of fonts was finally done, which was not quick. I know the story sounds absurd and I am not sure if it is true. But from my personal experience with a foreign company in China, I tend to believe the story. If you have followed the news,
Ebay and
Tom formed partnership and Tom's former CEO Wang
Leilei (
王雷雷) became the CEO of
Eachnet. When he began to work at
Eachnet's Shanghai office, he was not impressed. He once said
Eachnet's staff had the bad habit of doing every thing by emails,
powerpoint files, etc. They did things in a less straightforward way. He thought they had gone too far, which was less efficient. Anyway, Wang himself failed to lead
Eachnet out of oblivion and then quit. Another well known resignation from
Yahoo China was
Xie Wen (谢文).
Xie, the former CEO of
Hexun, was invited to lead Yahoo China as CEO by
Alibaba's Chairman Jack Ma (马云). But after a meeting in the US with Yahoo CEO
Jerry Yang,
Xie decided to resign. His resignation was just about 40 days from his appointment. Rumors say
Xie had not won the support he needed to change Yahoo China. The reason for his resignation has not been disclosed.
I assume the above does give a glimpse at why
foreign internet giants stumble in China. Has any of them improved? I don't see it for the time being. Actually, those
foreign internet giants deserve a big 'thank you' from their Chinese competitors for destroying those Chinese companies acquired.