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B2B,
B2C, Shanghai to E
E-commerce is a top priority for this east coast city hoping
to make up for lost time, participants at an IT forum said
yesterday.
"We can't let the chance of developing e-commerce slip away
in the new century," said Zhang Guangsheng, director of the
Shanghai Municipal Commercial Commission, noting that basic
retail has jest recently caught up with that of the United
States. "E-commerce is a challenge to the city's traditional
commercial pattern and an opportunity for the city to develop
its economy."
He said to help the city go forward instead of sideways, Shanghai
sponsored the conference. It is called the International Forum
on E-Business For Commercial Development.
At the two-day forum, which drew 300 people and ends today,
16 experts from IBM, Fudan University, BigStore Asia.com, Deloitte
Consulting, the Gartner Group and Exel Logistics Ltd are talking
about the various formats for doing business on the Net, including "business
to consumer (B2C)."
"China's e-commerce is still in an embryonic stage," said
Fudan University Professor Zhang Shiyong. "Only a small part
of the country's more than 1 million commercial enterprises
applies computer management. Even in Shanghai, I couldn't definitely
say that there is a commercial enterprise that has launched
modern management."
Of the country's 500 commercial websites, 85 per cent renew
the information every six months, and 90 per cent contain only
a photo of the general manager and the names of the photos
of products.
Experts agreed there is great potential to develop e-commerce
in China, especially in Shanghai.
With more than 1,100 e-commerce websites now in the country,
experts anticipate that with China's 15.4 million netizens,
Internet trade volume will be 500 per cent higher than that
of last year.
"E-commerce has had a great effect on the economy, so the
city government will pay great attention to developing e-commerce," said
Vice-Mayor Feng Guoqin. "The construction of B2B commerce will
be given priority to create a low-cost but large-scale commercial
operation in the city. Meanwhile, B2C should also be promoted." |