I used to run a relatively successful internet-oriented startup in mainland China. Having spent most of a decade there since 2001, in fact the majority of my adult life, I considered it home. Unfortunately, the government - who initially woeed me to return to China with a reasonably lucrative scholarship - keeps making shitty decisions that just make it less and less attractive to live in. Increasing levels of internet censorship is one of them, making visas ridiculously hard to acquire (the Chinese consulate in a neighbouring country actually just flat out refused to even discuss issuing a tourist visa, earlier this year) is another.
I really hope the next generation of the communist party sort their shit out. Otherwise, China's basically going to continue breeding vast generations of uneducated, inward looking nationalists and stifling anything remotely like innovation that somehow manages to occur between the cracks. Foreign business professionals and overseas Chinese will continue to view time in China as a non-negotiable sentence of rice wine banquets, pollution, a complete vacuum in the upper-eschelons of conversationalism, a constant redoubling of cigarette smoke, spit, and bad Chinglish.
'Dajiudianwang' hotel reservation, ~2007-2009. We reached the same property network size as CTrip and ELong (3300+ individual property contracts across China), but also provided services in (non-broken) English, Japanese Korean, Thai and Vietnamese. We were highly automated, running a call center and paperless, digital fax workflow on a custom diskless Linux and asterisk on an E1 over private fibre.
I gave up on it because, despite basically winning Europe's largest travel-industry VC event in London in 2009, I didn't find a viable source of venture capital to expand our marketing, once the system was proven and almost break-even on self-funded capital. Basically locals wanted to take over, and foreigners didn't trust the Chinese legal system. I write it off as my 'Chinese MBA' now, and happily take a salary and less stress instead.
I'd be interested to pick it up again, if I found the right backers.
PS. Oh! David! Hey .. I think we corresponded once before. :)
Hey -- we chatted a couple of times actually -- I remember you ran into some pretty hardcore this-is-China experiences down south that I'm glad I never went through as well. Happy to hear you're doing well and that things have worked out. Let me know when/if you're coming back and we can meet up for drinks.
p.s. mostly asked the question just because I like to keep track of people who've done various things from here. Funny to think it really is such a small world.
I really hope the next generation of the communist party sort their shit out. Otherwise, China's basically going to continue breeding vast generations of uneducated, inward looking nationalists and stifling anything remotely like innovation that somehow manages to occur between the cracks. Foreign business professionals and overseas Chinese will continue to view time in China as a non-negotiable sentence of rice wine banquets, pollution, a complete vacuum in the upper-eschelons of conversationalism, a constant redoubling of cigarette smoke, spit, and bad Chinglish.