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E-commerce player helps small companies make China connection

By | November 4, 2011, 7:11am PDT

Summary: Export Now will work with e-commerce giant Alibaba to list U.S. companies’ products on two sites focused on online Chinese consumers.

Aspire to sell products in China but not sure how to get started? Export Now is offering a new e-commerce service that is specifically focused on small and midsize businesses hoping to export their goods into China. The company is making its formal launch this month.

Essentially, Export Now will act as your company’s export partner, accepting goods on consignment that it will sell through a store called Tmall.com (warning, the site is in Chinese) and on Taobao.com, which is basically the biggest business-to-consumer Internet platform in the world. Tmall is run by Internet giant Alibaba; it has roughly 370 million registered customers.

Frank Lavin, the founder and global CEO of Export Now, and former U.S. Undersecretary of Commerce and Ambassador to Singapore, said more smaller companies are looking to international markets to counteract the protracted slowdown in the United States. However, many of them find it difficult to navigate the cultural and financial barriers it takes to tap overseas markets.

“The most expensive cost is customer identification,” Lavin said. “In these new markets, you are starting at zero.”

What Export Now offers is a twofold service: a technology platform that it uses to manage sales of U.S. companies’ products on the aforementioned e-commerce sites and logistics capabilities that navigate getting your products into the local market. Participating SMBs will pay a $3,000 start-up fee, which covers getting one pallet of products into China and listing for up to 12 months. The would-be exporters have to fill out an online profile page, along with payment information. They also need to create a page template that will be used to list its products; Export Now handles translation and listing activities. After the start-up fees, Export Now customers will also pay a 10 percent transaction fee for all products sold.

Lavin said Export Now is targeting three sorts of companies:

  • Those that have been trying to develop a strategy for China but that haven’t managed to get it off the ground yet
  • Those that have been thinking about exporting on a broader basis
  • E-commerce companies that are seeking to extend beyond the U.S. border

Export Now’s focus on China is driven not only by Lavin’s extensive experience with country and its culture but also because of its status as the world’s second largest economy. China is the third largest market for American exports, after Canada and Mexico, he notes. “Chinese consumers are affluent and sophisticated,” Lavin said.

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Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues.

Disclosure

Heather Clancy

Writing publicly about what the high-tech industry is actually doing to help itself and the world get greener or more sustainable is one way I figure I can contribute more meaningfully to said effort. I am also a big OMG-kind-of-fan of smart leadership, which is why the goodly folks who publish this blog let me go on about this topic and why I am always on the hunt for forward-looking business management ideas.

My daily writing is focused on looking for topics for my blogs, GreenTech Pastures and Business Brains. I also write often about emerging technology trends such as mobile computing, unified communications and cloud computing. Occasionally, I will pop up at an industry conference in some sort of speaking capacity. In cases where a speaking engagement involves a sponsor that may be covered in this blog, that fact will be disclosed in coverage as appropriate.

My corporate writing work usually consists of crafting research white papers about some aspect of technology. In the event that my commentary (in written, audio or video form) mentions a company for which I have provided consulting advice, I will disclose that fact. However, there is no connection between these projects and the topics that I'm covering in my blog.

Biography

Heather Clancy

Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues. Her articles have appeared in Entrepreneur, Fortune Small Business, The International Herald Tribune and The New York Times. In a past corporate life, Heather was editor of Computer Reseller News, where she was a featured speaker about everything from software as a service to IT security to mobile computing.

Heather started her journalism life as a business writer with United Press International in New York. She holds a B.A. in English literature from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, and has a thing for Lewis Carroll.

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RE: E-commerce player helps small companies make China connection
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