Vivian Yang, Senior Media Manager, Tel.:+86 (10) 6599 9595; Email: vivian.yang@weforum.org
Beijing, People’s Republic of China, 22 April 2015 – Leading Chinese companies are making innovation a strategic priority in their business models to stay competitive in global markets, according to a new report released today by the World Economic Forum.
In analysing how innovation contributes to these companies’ globalization efforts, the report, Emerging Best Practices of Chinese Globalizers: Develop the Innovation Models, unravelled a dual-path framework. In the first path, companies become successful innovators in the domestic market first and then leveraged their advantage in innovation on the global market. In the second path, companies successfully expanded within the global market first and then leveraged its resources to enable innovation for long-term development.
“Innovation and globalization are intertwined, reinforcing each other as Chinese companies rise on the global stage”, said Olivier Schwab, Executive Director of the World Economic Forum’s Beijing office. “We found that high-tech companies tend to adopt the first path, while large state-owned enterprises often choose the second one at an early stage and then shift to the first as their globalization progresses.”
A closer study of the practices of Chinese globalization champions revealed the following four steps to keep them innovative on the global market:
“As Chinese companies are upgrading along the value chain in the new economic normal, we found that globalization champions are taking a long-term perspective on building innovation capabilities rather than looking for short-term returns,” said Steven Veldhoen, Partner, Strategy&, People’s Republic of China.
According to Strategy&, over 45% of globalization champions put innovation as their top priority in overseas strategy; more than 80% focus on business model innovation to satisfy customer needs, and one third of them employ 50% or more local employees.
China’s outward foreign direct investment (FDI) has seen significant growth over the past two years as Chinese companies have continued to invest overseas, rising to $108 billion in 2013 from $88 billion in 2012. In addition, the government continues to propose new international cooperation frameworks such as the “Silk Road Economic Belt” and the “21st Century Maritime Silk Road” to facilitate economic cooperation with other regions and countries, providing favourable international circumstances for Chinese companies to go global. These and other such macro policies and economic incentives will continue to facilitate the globalization process of Chinese companies.
The Emerging Best Practices of Chinese Globalizers report was based on a series of comprehensive interviews and surveys of 120 Chinese globalizing companies conducted over the past 12 months in collaboration with Strategy& (formerly Booz & Company). Half of the surveyed companies are regarded as globalization champions within China that have outpaced their peers in establishing global presence.
Notes to Editors
Find more information about Emerging Best Practices of Chinese Globalizers at www.weforum.org/chineseglobalizers
Watch Forum videos on YouTube at http://wef.ch/youtube or Youku at http://wef.ch/youku
Become a fan of the Forum on Facebook at http://wef.ch/facebook
Follow the Forum on Twitter at http://wef.ch/twitter and http://wef.ch/livetweet
Listen to the Forum Podcast at http://wef.ch/podcast
Read the Forum Blog at http://wef.ch/blog
Read Forum reports on Scribd at http://wef.ch/scribd
Upcoming Forum events at http://wef.ch/events
Subscribe to Forum News Releases at http://wef.ch/news
Connect with the Forum at http://wef.ch/connect