We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.
This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
A future rival for ebay ??
bo_drinker
Posts: 3,924 Forumite
Chinese EBay Rival Aims for 1 Billion Global Users
Owen Fletcher, IDG News Service
People who read this also read:
People Who Like This Also Like
Find a Review
Select Category Cell Phones Desktop PCs Cameras Hard Drives Monitors Notebooks Optical Drives Printers Projectors
Sort By Rating Rating Date Performance Price [URL="javascript:void(0)"]Get Reviews[/URL] [URL="javascript:void(0)"]Close[/URL]
Saturday, September 12, 2009 7:30 AM PDT
The company known as "China's eBay" will aim for expansion abroad in the long term, but first it wants more foreign products sold on its platform in China, it said Saturday.
Taobao.com, a booming auction and retail site, does not have a concrete plan for the overseas market but will likely target regions with cultural similarities to China first, said Daniel Zhang, the company's chief financial officer, in an interview.
Alibaba Group, Taobao's parent company, wants 1 billion global users shopping on the site in 10 years, group CEO Jack Ma earlier told reporters. The target, more than one-seventh of the world's population, compares with Taobao's current average of up to 25 million shoppers each day, said Ma.
"We have a long way to go," he said.
Alibaba Group, which also operates an online payment platform and Alibaba.com, a top site for businesses to trade wares, has increasingly shown global ambitions. The group recently launched a major U.S. advertising campaign for Alibaba.com, and Ma early this year led a team of executives to discuss potential partnerships with U.S. companies including Google, Amazon.com and eBay.
But Taobao has few users outside China so far and has not said how it aims to draw them. Taobao will look at an overseas debut in the long term, but first it will focus on further growth in China and encouraging sales of foreign products, said Zhang. One way it could do so is by hosting online stores for foreign retailers, such as it has done since April for Japanese clothes brand Uniqlo.
E-commerce is growing fast in China and people increasingly turn to Taobao, by far the leader in its market, for everything from clothes and make-up to mobile phones and household products. Taobao is also expanding beyond product sale hosting with new services such as online booking for plane tickets.
Taobao, which charges no transaction or item posting fees, expects to break even this year, a spokeswoman said. The company reported a ballooning transaction volume of 80.9 billion yuan (US$11.8 billion) in the first half of the year but draws most of its revenue from advertising.
Owen Fletcher, IDG News Service
People who read this also read:
People Who Like This Also Like
- China Mobile Powers up App Store With Symbian Deal</SPAN> 27611508
- China Unicom Follows IPhone Deal With Telef!nica Pact</SPAN> 27576322

Alibaba Mulls Yahoo China Future After Bing Deal</SPAN> 27661578
Report: China Tightens Rules for Online Music Providers</SPAN> 27558558
China Clears IPhone for Network, Puts Picture Online</SPAN> 27607348- Google's Departing China Boss Opens $115M Investment Fund</SPAN> 27576854

Find a Review
Select Category Cell Phones Desktop PCs Cameras Hard Drives Monitors Notebooks Optical Drives Printers Projectors
Sort By Rating Rating Date Performance Price [URL="javascript:void(0)"]Get Reviews[/URL] [URL="javascript:void(0)"]Close[/URL]
Saturday, September 12, 2009 7:30 AM PDT
The company known as "China's eBay" will aim for expansion abroad in the long term, but first it wants more foreign products sold on its platform in China, it said Saturday.
Taobao.com, a booming auction and retail site, does not have a concrete plan for the overseas market but will likely target regions with cultural similarities to China first, said Daniel Zhang, the company's chief financial officer, in an interview.
Alibaba Group, Taobao's parent company, wants 1 billion global users shopping on the site in 10 years, group CEO Jack Ma earlier told reporters. The target, more than one-seventh of the world's population, compares with Taobao's current average of up to 25 million shoppers each day, said Ma.
"We have a long way to go," he said.
Alibaba Group, which also operates an online payment platform and Alibaba.com, a top site for businesses to trade wares, has increasingly shown global ambitions. The group recently launched a major U.S. advertising campaign for Alibaba.com, and Ma early this year led a team of executives to discuss potential partnerships with U.S. companies including Google, Amazon.com and eBay.
But Taobao has few users outside China so far and has not said how it aims to draw them. Taobao will look at an overseas debut in the long term, but first it will focus on further growth in China and encouraging sales of foreign products, said Zhang. One way it could do so is by hosting online stores for foreign retailers, such as it has done since April for Japanese clothes brand Uniqlo.
E-commerce is growing fast in China and people increasingly turn to Taobao, by far the leader in its market, for everything from clothes and make-up to mobile phones and household products. Taobao is also expanding beyond product sale hosting with new services such as online booking for plane tickets.
Taobao, which charges no transaction or item posting fees, expects to break even this year, a spokeswoman said. The company reported a ballooning transaction volume of 80.9 billion yuan (US$11.8 billion) in the first half of the year but draws most of its revenue from advertising.
I came in to this world with nothing and I've still got most of it left. :rolleyes:
0
Comments
-
No is the simple answer0
-
Doesn't ring true unfortunately- expects to break even doesn't equate with millions of users a day...
Also, as has been seen with ebid, it doesn't matter how many sellers you have if you make no sales. A chinese company won't cut it over here, the first thing that springs to my mind as a buyer is cheap fakes and scams aplenty.This is my opinion. There are many others like it but this is mine:kisses2: Fiancee of the "lovely" DaveAshton :kisses2:I am a professional ebay seller. I work hard at my job, I love my job, if you think it's silly that's your problem not mine.
0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply
Categories
- All Categories
- 352.2K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 454.3K Spending & Discounts
- 245.2K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.5K Life & Family
- 259K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.7K Read-Only Boards