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January 2007
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Who best suits your trade purposes: factory or agent?

January 31st, 2007 by kelvincho

Another question often asked by importers is whether they should deal directly with the manufacturer (actual producer of the products) or whether they should go through an agent or trading company. The pros and cons for the buyer are detailed below:

Factory

Pros:

  • Lower cost by going straight to the source
  • Better chance of communicating your product requirements, especially if you have custom needs

Cons:

  • Possible lack of exporting experience
  • May insist on MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity)
  • May not be able to handle the exporting paperwork and /or logistics

Trading Company

Pros:

  • Can handle a multitude of different products and requests
  • Can usually avoid MOQ
  • Can usually do quality inspection on your behalf
  • Can arrange paperwork and/or logistics

Cons:

  • Cost maybe be higher
  • Not as familiar with specific product questions

China Factory

China Factory

 



Walking through a jade factory in China.

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Sex appeal sells private tutors in Hong Kong

January 30th, 2007 by kelvincho

 Hong Kong Sex Appeal

Hong Kong - Angela Yiu and Stella Cheng spent weeks meeting with fashion stylists and photographers before deciding on the miniskirts and high heels to wear in their promotion campaign.

They’re not models peddling perfume or sports cars. They’re English tutors who earn good money helping secondary school students pass Hong Kong’s grueling exams to get into college.

“Their long legs are the most beautiful ones in the tutorial industry,” said Ken Ng, head of Modern Education, one of the city’s biggest tutoring businesses. “This is our selling point.”

Sex appeal has become a hot selling point, just as important as teaching ability and knowledge, in Hong Kong’s hypercompetitive world of cram schools - or bou zap se in the local Cantonese dialect.

Attractive teachers are marketed like movie stars. Their schools show them off on billboards, full-page newspaper ads and TV screens in railway stations and on buses.

Some tutors have their own teams of stylists, fashion designers and photographers, Ng said. They also have personal Web sites, where potential students can see their photos, read their online journals and download video clips of “gag moments” in class.

It’s just the latest twist in the competition to grab the business of students caught up in Hong Kong’s make-or-break exam culture. Youngsters take two college exams during their seven years in secondary school, and they have to pass both to get into a university.

So hordes of students trek to after-school lectures at tutoring centers.

The Census and Statistics Department says one-third of the students in secondary schools sought private tutoring in the 2004-2005 school year, spending a total of $18.9 million a month - 25 percent more than five years earlier.

Industry pioneers such as Modern Education and King’s Glory each have about 10 centers around the city, each offering around 200 lessons a week.

All the companies boast of their ability to give youngsters an edge by predicting what questions will be asked in the exams, employing teams of full-time analysts who study patterns from previous exam papers.

With competition growing fierce on that front, the tutorial centers in recent years have increasingly focused on promoting their teachers as trendy icons consumable by students.

“When our rivals are equally good at predicting the exam questions, we need a new ground to outrun them,” Ng said. “And that is the tutor’s appearance.”

Last summer, Ng hired Yiu, who once won a modeling contest, to teach English along with Cheng, described by Ng as “a gorgeous former lawyer.”

Yiu, who has a business degree, said: “Being a model is not a long-term career. I should plan for the future. I know my good appearance has a market.”

Indeed, tutoring is one of the more profitable jobs in this Asian city. Top tutors who have more than 4,000 students can earn high salaries.

Elaine Chow, an advertising executive, said tutoring businesses are applying a “star-making” promotion technique in which tutors dress fashionably and are given nicknames like “the Godfather of Science,” “Brand-A tutor” or the “Queen of English.”

“In the advertisements, going to tutorial centers is portrayed as a trendy after-school activity more than a chance to acquire knowledge,” she said. “This is a twisted tutoring market.”

Percy Kwok, a former education researcher of the Chinese University of Hong Kong who studied the private tutoring phenomenon in 2003, said tutorial centers closely follow the consumption culture of youths to catch their attention.

“They may even expose tutors’ private life if necessary,” he said.

But he added that while tutorial centers have become highly commercial, they provide useful techniques in tackling exams, such as predicting question types. Daytime teachers don’t have comparable resources or the time to do that, he said.

Tutorial centers will continue, he said, “as long as university certificates and exam results are the best evidence to prove one’s competence and guarantee a stable income.”

Associated Press

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Up-Down Nine Shopping Street: Shang Xia Jiu Shopping Street

January 29th, 2007 by kelvincho

This is another shopping street in Guangzhou. Its name is pretty funny because in English it is Up-Down Nine. The street is a bit narrow and very crowded. Many shops selling everything, mostly clothes and shoes - very cheap. The houses here are very neat too as they look very classic.

Shang Xia Jiu

Shang Xia Jiu

 

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Who should pay for the product sample?

January 25th, 2007 by kelvincho

Product Sample

Samples are single products which are sent from a supplier to a buyer to represent the size, look and quality of the products the buyer will receive if he/she places a large order. Their role is to alleviate the risk of the buyer by giving them an understanding of what they will receive for their payment. Often buyers request samples from a number of suppliers in order to compare and contrast supplier offerings.

From a supplier perspective, samples are sent to the buyer by the supplier in the hope the buyer will find them acceptable and place an order. The debate surrounding the provision, payment and delivery of samples is a longstanding one.

From a buyer’s perspective

At a very basic level, many importers believe the cost of samples should be borne by the supplier as a legitimate and necessary marketing cost. Importers need to check a product’s form and quality in order to make an informed decision regarding an order.

From a seller’s perspective

Due to the risk associated with overseas trade, many suppliers feel that they can not continually absorb these costs without knowing if an order is backing it up. Suppliers also have to constantly differentiate between genuine buyers and price-checkers (suppliers’ own competitors).Below are some opinions from Alibaba.com buyers and sellers:

1. “The buyer must pay the delivery of sample goods because we don’t know yet if he will order.”
Romeo C. Hermogenes
RHA Trading & Consulting Services

2. “The sample cost should be borne by the R&D department of the supplier.”
Mr. Junaid Arif , Text’n'Style Corporation, Pakistan

3. “Samples up to a value of USD10.00 should be cost-free because it is in the interest of the seller to provide samples for scrutiny. Delivery charges should be paid by the buyer because it is in his own interest to check the quality and specifications of the goods in question.”
Ali Raza, Rehman Traders, Pakistan

4. “When requesting a sample, ask the supplier to factor the shipping cost into the price of the sample. I want the sample so I should want responsibility for delivery costs. But, as a show of good faith, a supplier should at least offer to pay for delivery since he IS trying to win you as a customer. My solution? When you request a sample, pay for the delivery. If you decide to order a larger quantity the supplier should take a few dollars off, as a show of good faith.”
Buying Office, Short Circuits, USA
Other considerations:

  • The exporter may ask for payment for samples. If the sample is not too expensive, payment can be refunded in the form of a discount once the buyer places an order. Depending on the company’s export policy, the customer and the cost of the sample, a $10 USD sample may be collected from an unknown buyer while a batch of 20 samples worth $200 USD may be given to a reputable chain store at no charge.
  • Some exporters may “tailor-make” the product sample in order to win the order. This may not be a true representation of the product quality of the actual product shipment itself.
  • Samples sent to buyers often require the “SAMPLE OF NO COMMERCIAL VALUE” label. In certain importing countries, samples without such a label can be treated as taxable goods.



Trade Only - Virtual Sample

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Hong Kong: Girls warned over teen sex

January 23rd, 2007 by kelvincho

Teen Sex

Nearly 50 percent of teenage girls interviewed in a survey have had pre- marital sex, according to the Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups. With the festive season around the corner, the group warned young girls of the potential danger of attending parties, saying they should be rational and avoid having casual sex.

The federation interviewed 105 girls aged 13 to 20 who used to patronize clubs and discotheques.

It said nearly half - 48.7 percent - had had sex before they reached 16, and 15 percent said they regretted it.

More than 46 percent of respondents said they had sex for the first time because their boyfriends asked for it, and 15.2 percent said they regretted what they had done.

The survey also found that more than 50 percent of the girls had only a fair knowledge of sex, while 36 percent said they did not consider the consequences of premarital sex.

More than 40 percent said they would opt for an abortion if they became pregnant, including legal or illegal surgery, and 39 percent revealed they did not take any safety measures while having sex with their partners.

Carman, 18, said she had sex with her boyfriend when she was 14 and became pregnant. She went for an abortion, accompanied by her parents.

Carman said she now regretted what she had done, saying she still felt bad. She advised teenage girls to think thoroughly before agreeing to have sex. “We should set our base line. We can’t cross it,” she said.

Chan Lai-shan, a social worker with the federation, urged girls to think clearly and not to pander to their boyfriends.

She also advised youngsters to be cautious about striking up relationships with strangers on Web sites. “It’s because there are a lot of people using fake names in cyberspace.”

Chan warned teenage girls or boys against attending parties where they are not familiar with the people and the environment.

“It will put you in a dangerous situation,” she said.

Mui Yuen-kwan, the federation’s youthline counselor, said girls should pay more attention to the party environment and see whether it is safe for them to leave late at night.

Hsu Siu-man, the group’s acting supervisor, said the Christmas season is particularly “risky” for young girls.

She urged teenagers to choose friends they can trust when attending parties.

They should know the nature and venue of the party and inform their parents before setting out.



S&M fashion show at the 3rd China International Adult Toys & Reproductive Health Exhibition. … (more) (



An interview with Muzi Mei (aka muzimei, Mu Zimei), the young Chinese woman who shot to fame in 2003 after starting a blog filled with descriptions of her sex life.

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