The wisdom of the Chinese has stood in good stead over the ages.
In recent times, the Chinese have mastered one more art, and that
is imitation. To paraphrase Charles Caleb Colton’s famous
quote: "Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery", China is now
the workshop of the world. It is not uncommon to hear of entire
products being reverse engineered and re-introduced in the market
at a much cheaper rate. This is the only market in the world where
a Baidu is more popular than Google, or dingdang.com beats down
amazon.com.
Somewhere this book too is in keeping with this new Chinese
profession. In the not so distant future, when readers would want
to look back in the past and try to determine a list of books that
would have tracked the growth of people, companies and the
technology sector as a record to what all China has to offer, this
book will come high on the list.
Readers of this book will find it similar to the existing titles
which have tracked the technology industry in the United States.
Readers can draw parallels between this book and The Silicon Boys
And Their Valley of Dreams by David A Kaplan, or The Nudist on the
Late Shift: And Other True Tales of Silicon Valley by Po
Bronson.
A writer who has covered the industry for Red Herring & The
Asian Venture Capital Journal, Fannin segregates the book into
three sections namely, Copycats, Venture Capitalists and
Innovators. In the beginning this segregation does not seem to have
much relevance, but its subtlety emerges as you finish the
book.
Fannin brings to the readers emotions that each and every one of
her subjects would have experienced, their trials and tribulations,
joys and sorrows. Bokee or “plentiful guests”, is the
Chinese terminology of blogging. In writing about Fang Xingdong and
his trials with blogging services in the country to launch
bokee.com, she puts forth a view of Gary Rieschel, an investor and
board member saying, “The commercial risk is that he
(Xingdong) is a CEO for the first time.” This is after the
company has run through $10 million in venture funding. No wonder
the book has received praise from some marquee names who straddle
the technology world, two of which are George Gilder and Jason
Pontin.
It’s interesting to read about Lingtu or “clever
maps” who has not only restricted the art of digital map
making to the Internet or the PDA, but also brought it to mobile
phones and laptops with built-in GPS; or about Liu Yingkui who runs
Oriental Wisdom and wants to put transacting almost all financial
products such as mutual funds, insurance through the cell phone.
The innovators drive their company with hard work and thrift that
is always associated with the Chinese, and an attitude that does
not have them running to exit their ventures at the first sign of
exorbitant cash being thrown at their faces.
In conclusion, the imitators have emerged as the innovators.
Strengthening the self without stopping and holding the world with
virtue has been put to test and has emerged victorious. What used
to be passed of as a cheap knock-off is now a billion dollar
company. David Rubenstein, Co-founder and Managing Director of
Carlyle Group has put his stamp and declared, “The center of
technology is shifting, and China is emerging as the other major
pole for innovation.”
At long last, all crows under heaven are black.