Everyone’s talking about the great Chinese economic engine. How can your small business get a piece of the action? How can you find out how to do business with China?
Here are some suggestions:
1. Visit your local public library in person or online.I know I say it often but your local public library is always a fantastic place to start to look for any kind of information; best of all, the information is
FREE! Visit your local public library or search their
online catalogue from the comfort of your home or office for titles (books, CDs, DVDs, etc.) including the terms “China” and “business”. New titles are being published all the time to take advantage of opportunities. For example, click
here for a sampling of titles found at the Oakville Public Library.
Not only can you search the physical holdings of your library, but you likely have
FREE access (with your library card) to the full-text of thousands of newspapers, magazines, journals, encyclopedias, tv and radio transcripts, and reference books. Go to what most libraries refer to as
online or electronic databases and, with your library card as your username, do a search using the terms “China” and “business”. These databases are just like searching Google or Yahoo! but your library pays for your access to the articles! Click
here for a link to the suite of databases at Oakville Public Library that provide business information (they have others too!).
2. Go to your regional business or economic development centre.For example, if you live in Halton Region, the
Halton Region Business Development Centre offers information, business advice, seminars and contacts for small business entrepreneurs to do business locally and globally. These centres partner with local libraries and government agencies to run inexpensive and sometimes
free workshops for small businesses. Take a look at the upcoming seminars in Halton Region – click
here.
3. Do online market research.Here are several good sites:
Statistics Canada recently published a document detailing
Canada’s trade with China from 1997 to 2006. This document (click
here) includes information like leading imports and exports. Notably, “Imports from China were five times higher in 2006 than in 1997 while exports to the country tripled.” Also, “By 2003, the country (China) had emerged as Canada’s second largest trading partner surpassing the U.K. and Japan.”
Industry Canada (Strategis)’s
Trade Data Online site (click
here) provides import and export data on more than 200 countries including China.
http://www.exportsource.ca/ and
http://www.importsource.ca/ – These
Government of Canada exporting and importing sites providing a wide range of tools from a network of federal, provincial and territorial departments and agencies to help Canadian businesses do business globally.
The
Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) offers research, financing and consulting. Click
here.
Export Development Canada is
Canada’s export credit agency and enables Canadian exporters and investors to expand their international business;
here is a link to their China report plus links to much more on China.
The Canadian Trade Commissioner in China assists Canadian companies looking for market opportunities in China. The site also links to:
The Embassy of Canada to ChinaThe Consulate General of Canada, GuangzhouThe Consulate General of Canada, Shanghai The Consultate General of Canada, ChongqingAccording to their site, the
World Bank’s “Doing Business” project (click
here) provides “objective measures of business regulations and their enforcement across 178 countries and selected cities at the subnational and regional level.
http://business-china.com/ – This site provides access to information on more than 120,000 Chinese businesses in six major languages as well as industries, products and services.
http://www.chinapages.com/ /
http://www.ectrade.com/ – This site contains trade categories to search for companies or products. This site is updated with news and economic information.
The
National Bureau of Statistics of China site provides demographic and economic statistics for China.
The
People’s Daily Online is China’s national newspaper. Click
here.
The
Conference Board of Canada is also an interesting place to find information. Most of their information is pricey but surprisingly you can get some of their outstanding reports for free. Here are links to two free reports:
“
China’s Productivity Boom: The Contribution of Restructuring to Growth and Competitiveness” and
“
Can China’s Growth Trajectory Be Sustained? "