Like many companies in the first half of 2020, ADG China has gone through a period of adjustment in the face of the pandemic. Our great team in Beijing has worked tirelessly over the past seven months, starting with the shutdown in China and through the waves of disruption globally, which has led to severe travel restrictions for foreign business visitors to China, among other hurdles.
While these new restrictions have made doing business in China even more complex, our clients have seen continued demand from Chinese partners and markets. Our Western technology clients in enterprise software, connected devices, and consumer solutions are all actively engaging in China.
Although they currently can’t jump on a plane and meet with potential partners and prospects, we are facilitating virtual meetings between our clients and key Chinese decision makers multiple times per week, in addition to our daily contact throughout our partner and service provider ecosystem. (To handle the shift in operations, we’ve purchased three additional video conferencing systems and tripled our broadband capacity in our Beijing office).
Some of the tech sectors that we’ve been helping our Western clients to grow during 2020 include SaaS, data analytics, smartphones, IoT, AI/ML, and life sciences/bioinformatics, among others. Our deep, long-standing connections within each of these industries (as well as many others) has allowed us to continue working at full capacity throughout the year. So whether we’re doing China market validation, business development, building/running operations, or any of the other multiple services we provide, we have been able to both adjust and continue to drive our clients’ business.
For many reasons, we believe that the second half of 2020 is a smart time to begin exploring or committing to the China market. We suggest that tech companies currently weighing their China exploration/entry/expansion strategy for the remainder of 2020, even with the pandemic ongoing, should at a high level consider these and other factors:
So, whether the impetus is to sell to one of the only growing markets of 2020, or to take advantage of a relatively “slow year” (for China at least) to explore and validate the opportunity China affords, Western tech companies should be thinking hard about China right now.