Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 12, 2014

Who are the Chinese tourists?

Over the past 10 years, the Chinese outbound tourism has literally exploded, going from a mere 30 million in 2004, to a staggering 100 million per year. 
Its number of Chinese tourists is not the only thing that has drastically improved. The other worth talking about is definitely its relations with other countries. 
Today, we will catch a glimpse about how the two are inter connected and how they put China into a positive circle that will only keep spinning faster and faster within the next decade. 
First, to completely understand how things were, how they are and how they will be let's take a look at the Chinese tourists themselves

Who are the Chinese tourists?



Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 12, 2014

Ugar Family on the Silk Road

The Silk Road is kind of like the Last Frontier of China in the far Northwest part of the country.  For many years it was almost ignored by Tourists for not having good accommodations.  Today that has all changed with new hotels, the fast trains, historical sights of all kinds and of course the diversity of having several different cultures.  The main culture are the Ugars now mixed with many other cultures from near by countries.  The family of Ugars pictured here are just north of Urumqi which is the largest city in northwest China.  Once you leave the city, you go back hundreds of years as many Ugars and others live like their ancestors did centuries ago.  You will find them very friendly although few speak English.  That is why it is good to have a Ugar guide who speaks their local dialect and language.  The beauty of the Silk Road which extends from Xian to the border of western China  has much to offer in sights, history and culture besides the beauty of mountains and desert.  We have several private packaged tours of this wonderful area that include desert as well as mountain areas.  See our web site at  www.interlakechinatours.com and click on Packaged Tours and then Silk Road Tours for examples.  We also do customized private tours to your specific interests too.

Hand Embroidery in China

Although these pieces look like beautiful paintings, they are actually hand made embroidery.  This is just a small sample which you can find in museum like stores in many parts of the country.  The three at the top came from one of the museum shops in Chengdu.  The bottom one I purchased in a small village outside of LiJiang in the mountains north of Kunming.  The woman took 3.5 months to do it and it was her own design.  I have several others in our home.  Hand made embroidery has been made usually by women in the countryside to bring money in for the family.  In past days one could find these beautiful pieces very inexpensive.  My wife  found some antique pieces in a remote village where the family was selling items from their mother who had passed.  One was from the mid 1800's.  One needs to be very careful when purchasing embroidery as many are now made by computer in work shops these days.  Close examination will tell you which are hand made and which are machine made.  If they are very cheap, you can realize that they are probably machine made.  Silk threads of many colors often hand dyed are used to embroider the shading and with light on them they will come almost live.   Private customized tours can take you to these places without pressure to buy so that you may admire the work and yes if interested you can also purchase them.  For more information, please contact me at  interlak@eskimo.com   My name is Dave.
      CLICK ON THE PHOTOS FOR A FULL SCREEN VIEW!


Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 12, 2014

Seasons Greetings from London!


It's been a very warm Xmas in London this year, and I've been enjoying myself celebrating with lots of old friends and also new friends. I was fortunate to be invited to dinner at the Oriental Club in London recently,so here's a photo of me all dressed up forthe occasion. Lovely staircase and paintings, don't you think? Almost as impressive as your home?

Talking about home, I'm looking forward to going back to China for holiday at the end of this month and after travelling around there and S. E Asia, I'll be spending Chinese New Year (19th Feb) back in Beijing with my family.

Many thanks to you all for your continued support. I wish you and your families all the best for the New Year and I hope we can continue to be in touch.

Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 12, 2014

When selfi become a crime !

When selfi become a crime !

 

My China Photo Album of 25 Years

After 25 years of travel in China and posting photos on many web sights, my photo album has become quite large.  Google picks up these photos that I use and adds them to my photo web site.  You can find it at  www.picasaweb.google.com/ChinaDave1    It shows several albums but one has over 800 photos in it.  Some are duplicates.  I have always enjoyed photography and China is a fantastic country with so much variety that it is difficult not to take good photos.  I always refer to it as a photographers paradise.  I always carry a camera with me but one time I missed a shot that I still kick myself about.  I had left my camera in the car when we went to an outdoor café in the countryside.  A bus came by with cages of geese on top of the whole bus.  The geese all had their necks sticking out of the cages facing forward as if on tour.  All 200 of them.  Over the years I have missed other opportunities but also have gotten some great shots too.  I have had a few clients who are professional photographers and they have said that China is a great area for photography especially of rice terraces and their national parks for scenery.  Please enjoy looking at my albums.
        CLICK ON THE PHOTOS FOR A FULL SCREEN VIEW!



               They Call Me "ChinaDave"  with 25 Years of Travel in China!

Thứ Sáu, 12 tháng 12, 2014

China Visa Is Needed

It has just been announced that a visa to China which formally was only for one year for a multiple entry visa, a 10 year visa will now be available.   You will be able to enter China multiple times in a 10 year period without needing to apply each time.  Cost is still the same about $200 per visa through a Visa Service.   Your passport must be valid at least 1 year to obtain a 10 year visa.  If valid less than a year, then a 6 months visa will be issued.   If you would like a visa kit emailed to you, just advise me and I will have it emailed to you.  I just need to know which state you are located in as there are several Consulate Districts.. The new forms are now available reflecting the 10 year visa.  Visas either need to be applied for in person at one of the Chinese Consulates or sent to a visa service which will do it for you.   It is suggested that you  apply at least 4 to 6 weeks in advance of your departure.  If in the  future your passport expires having a 10 year visa in it that has not expired  you may summit your old passport with the new passport to keep the 10 year unexpired time of the visa.   Let me know if you would like a visa application emailed to you.  You can then apply for your visa directly yourself through a visa application service.  IF you have any questions on visas please let me know.  My email address is   interlak@eskimo.com   My name is Dave and better known to my friends as ChinaDave.

Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 12, 2014

One Expense We Forget

One expense most people forget about is laundry.  Most hotels in the cities have laundry service.  Leave it in the morning and it is back by night. On my recent trip I collected laundry lists from several hotels.  I chose a 4 star hotel in Shanghai as the best example.  3 star hotels are a bit less and 5 star hotels a bit more.  Laundry does not always include Pressing in many hotels.  That is extra.   Here is an average cost:   Man's Shirt  $6  pressing $4.    Pair of Men's Jeans.  $7.00 and $4 for pressing.    For women as example, a blouse is $6 and $4 for pressing if needed.  A dress is $9 and $6 for pressing.  Ladies slacks are $6 and $5 for pressing.  This is in the larger cities of course and less costly in the smaller or remote areas.  In the remote mountain areas however it may take more than one day as most hotels do not have dryers and clothes are hung out to dry. As you can see during a two or three week's trip that cost can add up.  My wife and I have polyester/nylon shirts and pants when we travel.  These can be washed by hand in your hotel room.  You flatten them out on a bath towel and then roll it up.  You then squeeze the tube to get some of the water out.  Then leave it for about 2 hours to let the water soak into the towel.  You then hang them on the string across the bathtub in all hotels and they usually dry over night.  Cotton clothing dries very slowly and usually takes a couple of days.  For more tips on travel in China, email us at   interlak@eskimo.com     My Name is Dave and I am always glad to answer your questions without expecting your tour business.  You might enjoy viewing my photo album of China Photoswww.picasaweb.google.com/ChinaDave1  and web site at  www.interlakechinatours.com
 

Thứ Bảy, 6 tháng 12, 2014

4 step before set up a Ecommerce Website in China

4 step before set up a Ecommerce Website in China 



1 - A comprehensive study of the Chinese market 

 Before you start to conquer the Chinese web, it is important to understand the Chinese market and the digital world, fundamentally different from that which was used to know in the West. So you have to get familiar with the Chinese web and its biggest players: Baidu, the leading search engine in China, Sina Weibo, the equivalent of Twitter and one of the most influential social networks in China, WeChat, the mobile application for instant messaging Tencent group, Alibaba, giant Chinese e-commerce, Youku, China's Youtube etc. Due to censorship by the government, ubiquitous on the web, domestic players have priority, and some major players in the Western web are made inaccessible (that is for example the case of Facebook, Google, Youtube).




 2 - Call for partners 

 Due to its specificity, the Chinese web access is difficult for a foreign company with no knowledge and experience in the field. Actors and web mechanisms are fundamentally different. Seek or partners with whom to cooperate, such as a digital marketing agency based in China, can prove to be a wise choice. It will advise you on the priorities to be performed on the mistakes not to make and is useful in the early months of activity.             


3 - A Chinese website 

 To get a place on the Chinese web, a website is the basis of any strategy. Your website should be translated into Chinese and must meet the standards of the country in this field. The websites in China are not like our western sites: they are responsible for information, images and text, and color codes are different. The homepage is particularly very important, both for Baidu for users: it must contain a maximum of information and clearly present the activity of the company and its offer so that it is no need to visit other pages to understand the concept and value of the site. The home page so has the role to capture the attention of consumers. To successfully design your site to this new clientele, the two golden rules are: inspire the design of the most influential Chinese web sites and find the balance between the culture of your company and the the country. A website in Chinese - Yoda Yoda, a Chinese website dedicated to cosmetics

 4 - An accommodation in China 

 It is advisable to host its website in China or Hong Kong to have a successful site. Indeed, the priority is given to national sites; China sites hosted outside are very slow to open and slow to navigation and there are risks they are censored by the Chinese government. You can even charge you for hosting your site or hire a company specialized in the field, such as Hi China. It is recommended to use multi-line services, regardless of the host used. .


Sources

Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 12, 2014

advertising in China exceeded 500 billion yuan

Sales of last year's advertising in China exceeded 500 billion yuan (US $ 81.3 billion). 


Yet those of traditional advertising fell by -2.75% For television - 9.17% for newspapers However, Internet advertising has seen an increase of 45.85% over the previous year, leading to a total of 63.8 billion yuan. (Source: People's Daily, the 43rd World Conference advertising) These figures show that the future of advertising is on the Internet. Yet to break into this market, you have to be able to solve a number of problems.

advertising in China 

 Here are the 10 challenges of an advertising company must address in the world of advertising in China Low international understanding among the Chinese staff, cultural differences and huge poor English While the trend is globalization, the Chinese who can move abroad to improve their English to a decent standard and really open up to an international culture remains low due to its cost. Therefore, only a minority of Chinese have a sufficient level of English to be able to easily understand the content published in the language of Shakespeare.


 So all communication and advertising agencies who wish to be present in the Chinese markets have to adapt, but it is very difficult because of cultural differences and language barriers.

Problem understanding the different consumers, especially wealthy consumers and campaigns with a generation gap
Due to the very sharp break in the history after the Cultural Revolution and the major economic rise of China, we are left now with a generation gap between those who have experienced deprivation and Maoist China and another type of Chinese, mostly made up of those born after the 80’s and 90’s, who are often called “little prince and princess”. This therefore makes it very difficult to correctly analyze the Chinese market to determine which target to choose and how to attract them because of this very important generation gap.
A very rigid protocol
Chinese have a very formal approach of business and hierarchy must be respected. This causes problems when you have to do business with Chinese companies. While discussing a business deal with your Chinese partner you must respect all the codes of good conduct to avoid problems that may cause you to lose a business opportunity because you could have offended the leader of the deal by doing something you thought was appropriate, according to your western standards.
Lack of communication training, staff must learn everything on the job
First, you should know that the Chinese have a very strong culture of investment, results, and achieving the lowest costs possible.
However, communication and marketing are disciplines whose results are often difficult to assess and quantify. As a consequence, these hold very little appeal to Chinese, so there is no real training in the field to allow the Chinese to gain expertise in these fields. Without proper training they have to learn everything on the job.
Secondly, although China has become a country where the internet has grown quickly, it is still very new, especially compared to countries like the USA.
Moreover, before the rise of the internet, media (TV and newspapers) were controlled by an iron hand by the state leaving little room for the possibility of communication training. Indeed, it is easy to communicate when there is only one message to be transmitted. With the rise of the internet, formation in communication started to make perfect only a little less than ten years ago. As such, Chinese communication and marketing experts are very few in number compared to westerners. These factors mentioned above have thus led to an acute shortage of trained candidates in communication


Sources : http://chairmanmigo.com/challenges-advertising-company-china/ 

Prices in China - Fall of 2014

Many people think that the Orient and China in particular is inexpensive.  As a Tour Operator, my clients receive a questionnaire when they return home asking about their tour.  One of the questions is:  Did you find China   More Expensive   Less Expensive  or   About what you thought.   3/4th of them this past year ticked  More Expensive.   I just returned in late Nov. 2014 from my 55th trip to China.  I have seen all the fantastic growth that must be seen and not read about.  Prices have increased as their economy has flourished.  Some tour operators have cheapened their tours by cutting out some services, using less expensive hotels in not so convenient locations and putting in Buffets rather than sit down and be served meals.  As a custom private tour operator I know how to save money and at the same time offer great tours with my Chinese partners.  We never cut the quality of our tours and still put our clients in well located hotels where it is easy and safe to be able to walk around in the evenings or day time on free days without worry. There are a wide range of prices in China and one needs to work with a tour operator that knows China and has the connections to obtain the best prices making your tour one to always remember.  A bargain tour is not a bargain if you are unhappy and just have to stick it out until you return home.  A well planned tour is long remembered after the cost is forgotten.  Bargain shopping is still available in some areas but one needs to be aware of the quality too.  For more information contact me at  interlak@eskimo.com  View my web sites at  www.interlakechinatours.com and Photo Album at  www.picasaweb.google.com/ChinaDave1

Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 12, 2014

Chinese Tourists in Hong Kong

Chinese Tourists in Hong Kong 


In its fourth week, Occupy Hong Kong has lost steam, and bright smiles that were on the young, idealistic faces were displaced by tired, tan eyebrows. The long term has become a slow grind. The crowds have thinned, and those who are still in the streets are not sure how long they should stay there. But as nobody development quite expected, protest camps have become new hot spots for tourists from mainland China to visit, Ogle, and photography with their cell phones.
"We know that people in Hong Kong call us locusts," Mr. Sun said, a visitor to the province of Guangdong. "But we fail to invade the city. We just want to see what it's like here, because it's so different from anywhere else in China."more information here


Road are still blocked 

The roads are still blocked near the government headquarters in Admiralty in the shopping district of Causeway Bay, Mong Kok and dense, where clashes with the police were rude. Each colorful camp site turned into a small village, each taking on its own character. The camp of the Admiralty, in particular, is packed with protest art, chalk drawings, handwritten notes, homemade posters, and wild brush calligraphy. Office workers have a nice picnic on the empty roads. Occupy Hong Kong has created large pedestrian areas, relieving the normally crowded sidewalks where locals and visitors once collided Brownian particle type.
view more here

Western cultural influence

As a former British colony and the hub of world trade, Western cultural influence is everywhere in the city, and Hong Kong protests took on an international flavor. A popular protest song is "Do you hear the people sing?" From "Les Miserables." Another is a song called "Boundless Oceans vast Skies" by a local group called Beyond, which was formed in the 1980s, influenced by Pink Floyd and British pop music. Signalling on the camp sites is often written in both Chinese and English, and messages have also appeared in Hebrew, Vietnamese, Czech, and many other languages. a massive banner deployed in the famous lyric display Admiralty John Lennon, "You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one." Some not own Hong Kong Lennon Wall, on which thousands of post-it bearing the wishes of Hong Kong. This is exactly the kind of cultural DNA that visitors like Mr. Sun came to Hong Kong for the experience. It's a little Chinese, but different. This is global. It seems outside without warning, self-defense, and coldness that is in the Chinese leadership when they interface with their foreign counterparts. Chinese citizens look to the outside as well, but the relationship is often commercial, not cultural.

Sun and his wife took turns taking pictures of each other in front of Lennon Wall, and then asked one of the college-age demonstrators to take a picture of two of them before the fluorescent post its. He spotted some visitors with sticks Selfie, and wondered if there were sold nearby.

disobedience 

Beyond the tourist attraction, a new type of exchange is ongoing. Visitors like Sun never saw civil disobedience practiced in real life. Or by visiting the Admiralty Causeway Bay and Mong Kok, they see that it's not a dirty business. Reasonable people express their dissatisfaction by reasonable means, and it is not always necessary for the riot police to stop the civil rights movement, which is the typical response by officials who govern north of Hong Kong.
One of Hong Kong Occupy criticism is that the protesters destroy the economy of the city, yet Hong Kong stocks have just posted the best monthly gain worldwide. In Hong Kong Occupy creation, the Hong Kong Tourism Board has recorded about 1.1 million visitors to the city, an increase of 4.8 percent compared to the same period of last year.
Attempts to censor news in mainland China on the protests turned against. Many Chinese citizens were not even aware that there was something to do in Hong Kong, so they could not avoid it. Shoppers from mainland China arrived en masse, and obtained the first row of seats to civil disobedience in action. Of course, some ignored the protests, and made their pilgrimages to Apple, Chanel, Louis Vuitton and flagship stores. But many others fell by the campsites for selfies, although gunfire or comments they posted on Weibo, China's version of Twitter, would later be deleted. Even now, protest sites see a good number of mainland Chinese tourists who stop to read the posters and banners. They take pictures of the information that is displayed for public viewing, and even record videos of teach-ins. Some even ask about why the students are there.
Earlier this week, C. Y. Leung reiterated Beijing's position again: Direct elections are not a possibility. Before a foreign press room, he added that "democracy would see the poorest people dominate the vote of Hong Kong" He was referring to the half of the city who earn less than $ 1,800 per month, as if being poor is a stain on his character and involves an opinion worthless.


With the support of the public in Beijing, Leung seems immune to public approval collapse, although it was revealed that he had received secret payments $ 6.4 million of Australian engineering firm. Much of protest art to the Admiralty revolves around Leung: it is a dog, it's a wolf, is a bloodsucker. But look Lennon Wall and you will find a different tone. Cheap stationery found desks and desk drawers around the world has been used to love letters to the city. Each square is a support rating, respect, adoration.
"When people in the mainland say they love the country, it is always linked to the government, there is always something official about it. But here, "said Sun," they love the city, but do not need to extend it to the government. This is something that is very different from the rest of China. It is pure. " Across China, there are red flags printed with white fonts that say I guo-love your country, be patriotic. Some are hung by individuals who are vying for membership in the Chinese Communist Party. Most of the others are taken by the Publicity Department, formerly known as the Propaganda Department. "I love my country," said Sun, "but I do not need others to tell me to do."

On Tuesday evening, several university student leaders sat down to negotiate with the government of Hong Kong. As many expected, the talks were unproductive, but massive crowds gathered to watch the televised debate on protest sites. Some of those who were in the audience of mainland China, and expressed astonishment that brief the concept of democracy could be debated on television and broadcast for public viewing.

In Admiralty, a student at Hong Kong University, shared a few well worn words. "We will stay until we get what we want," he said. And what Thomas and his cronies want? "For CY Leung to resign, "he replied." And direct elections, "he added later half-time. But when Thomas was pressed on Beijing's position from the first day that Hong Kong will not see the universal suffrage any time soon he was short of words.

Universal suffrage is not accessible to Hong Kong. Beijing does not give him, and Hong Kong's Chief Executive will not ask. In this sense, Occupy Hong Kong was designed to fail. But the movement creates new political leaders. They were in the streets every day, not necessarily squeezing microphones or megaphone, but definitely watch, learn, and do their part. Fifteen or twenty years later, assuming they have not left Hong Kong, assuming they have not been successfully threatened to keep his head down and his mouth shut, and assuming they still feel the urge to initiate change, they should be wiser, smarter, more resourceful. And they'll hit harder than anything the Beijing leaders have ever seen.
It's a win, no matter what happens in the coming weeks

sources 

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