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5 CIO tips for web presence in China

Make the most of the unique nternet operating environment in China

The growth of China's economy and consumer markets has made it a "must have" destination for European companies seeking to expand their business as Western economies stagnate. Today, 19 different Chinese provinces have over 10 million internet users, with the total Chinese nternet population exceeding 450 million users. At the same time, large European brands and e-commerce companies have multiple options for reaching those consumers. Some companies have successfully launched their own websites, leveraging their global brand recognition to tap into China's brand-conscious hipsters. Others have piggybacked on the massive customer bases of established Chinese destination websites, such as the incredibly popular Taobao Mall, with its 73 million online customers.

Regardless of a company's web entry point to Chinese consumers, it must back its Chinese online presence with a solid infrastructure strategy. Many of the early European movers into China's internet world have suffered through website and web application inaccessibility and performance lapses ? caused by poor networking capabilities within mainland China. These website performance lapses cost companies in terms of both real revenue and brand reputation. Just as with Western consumers, Chinese consumers quickly abandon poorly performing websites and seek out sites that consistently deliver the best end-user experience. To realize the full market potential of China, companies should take the following best practices to heart as they establish their China online strategy.

1. Actually Be in Mainland China

When it comes to China's internet, being close is nothing like being there. Many companies have attempted to reach Chinese consumers from datacentres in Hong Kong, Singapore, and other Asian nations. These efforts have proven ineffective. Content originating from outside of China must first pass through a filtering process, which can result in partial delivery of web pages or full-page delivery at reduced speed. In both cases, delivering content from abroad reduces the quality of the end-user experience.

After successfully passing through The Great Firewall, content frequently slows as it crosses mainland China. This is because datacentres located outside of mainland China lack the level of visibility and control needed to overcome the network peering issues within the mainland. Without enhanced BGP (improved peering) inside of mainland China, European businesses see lower-than-anticipated returns on the premium they pay for utilizing Hong Kong and Singapore datacentres. Datacentre operators in these locations fetch a hefty premium, because they offer support in English combined with performance improvements over European-based data centres. Nevertheless, SLAs tied to performance within mainland China are more difficult (sometimes not possible) and costlier to obtain.

2. Establish a Capabilities Profile

China's Internet is a fragmented network made up of multiple telecommunications networks, with no single network operator dominating in all regions. Additionally, Chinese networks peer poorly with one another relative to the network peering across Europe. The way a company decides to overcome these issues should be dictated by its capabilities profile. Should the company build out its own dedicated infrastructure, leverage a local managed hosting provider's services, or rely on a content delivery network (CDN) with a local China presence? The capabilities profile should answer questions, including and beyond the following, to help arrive at the optimal choice:

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How strong is our depth of knowledge in website content and application delivery?How well do we understand the China-specific Internet infrastructure challenges? How available and knowledgeable is our local team of resources in China?If we choose a service provider, who can manage them? (A managed hosting provider will require a local China staff member, while a CDN can be managed from anywhere in the world). Do the service providers we are evaluating offer services across all of China? (Some service providers only offer regional coverage or regional performance-related SLAs within China) Which service providers can help us to understand the Internet-related laws and regulations? (Licensing is an important issue and appears as Tip #5 below)

These types of pragmatic questions can set a company on the right path toward navigating the challenging China Internet.

3. Demand Service Provider Evidence of Performance & Customer Success

Numerous European companies have launched their China websites over the past several years. Some have built out their own infrastructure, while many have leveraged managed hosting service providers and CDN services providers. The proof is in the pudding when it comes to the success of these websites. Thanks to third party site performance measurement tools such as those provided by Gomez and Keynote Systems, IT teams can gather reliable evidence to discover whose websites are performing well in China and whose have a drastic need to improve. Service providers with strong China capabilities should have no problem producing a list of satisfied customers that successfully utilize their China delivery infrastructure. If they cannot, then a CIO should remove them from the short list of vendors under consideration.



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