Online with the Times

来源 :China Pictorial | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:victinfy
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  Nyima is a businessman resid- ing in Jinchuan County, Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. After growing up in Aba, he traveled to Shannan Prefecture in Tibet Autonomous Region and later India in the 1990s to do business. In 2009, he returned to Aba where he established a company producing yak jerky, one of the prefecture’s most popular products. His highquality, tasty and affordable jerky was soon sold in many Chinese cities and even exported to Russia.


  In 2013, Nyima opened an online store on Taobao, China’s biggest online marketplace. In contrast to the situation in his brick-and-mortar shop, online sales were quite disheartening in the initial stage. “At first, only a few of my staff could operate an online shop, let alone promote products,” he lamented. He soon found a solution. Along with training his employees, Nyima hired eight internetsavvy workers to help him explore the online market. “Young people are fasterlearners and I think most of them master computers and the internet very quickly. My new employees did a great job in terms of online marketing. Things have gradually become easier while our online shop maturing.”
  Nyima’s story is common in Aba today. The prefecture administers 13 counties mainly consisting of highland and alpine valleys, which have given birth to quite a few international tourist destinations including Jiuzhaigou Valley, Huanglong Scenic Area, Wolong National Natural Reserve (a home of giant pandas), and Four Maidens’ Mountain.
  For centuries, a multitude of ethnic groups have inhabited Aba, including Tibetan, Qiang, Han, and Hui. They work together to develop the land, especially since the founding of People’s Republic of China in 1949. Recently, an exhibition focusing on the development and achievements of Aba opened in Beijing. The seven-day exhibition, housed in four showrooms, traces the progress of Aba over past decades, through geographical conditions, economic growth and infrastructure development.
  Many facets of the prefecture’s rapid development in recent years are worth a closer look, such as development of information technology and a fast-growing logistics industry. Today, many locals prefer to buy things on the internet via smartphones. Businessmen in Aba, a community of Tibetan and Qiang people, also sell ethnic specialties on the internet. A random search for just “Aba” on Taobao returns 100 pages of Aba products, including snacks, fruits, ethnic-style rings and necklaces, home decorations, herbs and traditional medicines.


  In contrast to Nyima, the younger generation in Aba is definitely more experienced in terms of utilizing the internet. Seng Gema, a 26-year-old from Qiang ethnic group, returned to Aba to start his own online business after graduating from a university in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province, in 2012. Along with his younger sister, they launched an ethnic accessory business. “Since both my sister and I graduated from universities in major Chinese cities, I think we are more open to new ideas and bolder when trying new things such as the internet,” he opines.
  The two have a clear division of labor. While his younger sister is responsible for negotiating with local craftsmen and factories to acquire the refined accessories, Seng’s task is to explore the online market and boost sales. In 2014, they witnessed sales of 2 million yuan. “I still believe we need to do more to attract more people to our shop, and we still have much to learn,”remarks Seng.


  Traditional industries are also booming in Aba. Traditional Chinese herbs, for example, have brought wealth to many locals. Norbu Drolma, 45, now cultivates Sichuan fritillary bulbs instead of crops on her land. Known for its ability to cure coughing and reduce phlegm, Sichuan fritillary bulbs sells quite well in the domestic market. “Planting them is not as difficult as I thought it would be,” Drolma grins. “Also, my family and I get technical support from our local agricultural bureau. We earn much more from planting fritillary bulbs than crops.” Additionally, mushrooms, grapes, plums, and animal husbandry have reaped huge profits for locals.
其他文献
At 10 a.m. on November 2, 2015, dragged by a tractor, China’s first home-made large passenger aircraft, the C919, rolled off the final assembly line of the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, Lt
期刊
From June 25 to 28, 2015, the city of Guiyang, Guizhou Province, will host the 2015 Eco Forum Global Annual Conference, themed “New Agenda, New Normal and New Action.” Since its founding in 2009, the
期刊
Amidst a yellow flower sea, the China Pavilion of Milano Expo 2015 looks like rising and falling wheat waves. Walking up the stairs, the audience will be exposed to a large field of wheat created by L
期刊
Is it possible for living photographers to capture historical figures from a century ago? Contemporary Chinese photographer Zhou Yulong has made it happen.  Zhou’s work focuses on “portraits” of prest
期刊
Historical Narrows  By Wang Jun  Published by China CITIC Press, July 2015  This collection of nine stories written since 2010 by Wang Jun, a journalist at Xinhua News Agency, recounts China’s unprece
期刊
Every World Expo is a Gala for gorgeous pavilions. Starting with the Crystal Palace at the first World Expo in 1851, followed by the Eiffel Tower at the Paris Expo in 1889 to the Atom Tower at the Bru
期刊
On May 12, 2015, a biopic about Deng Xiaoping, dubbed“chief architect” of China’s reform and opening-up, and his U.S. visit during his tenure as vicepremier of China’s State Council premiered in Beiji
期刊
A special kind of canary inhab- its the Canary Islands off the northwest coast of Africa. The bird is highly sensitive to carbon monoxide, dozens of times more than human beings. Such a sensitive bird
期刊
The China Pavilion at Expo Milano 2015 is China’s first national pavilion built at an overseas World Expo. A brainchild of Lu Yichen and a design team with Tsingua University’s Academy of Arts and Des
期刊
Early summer of 2015 brought Beijing landscapes dotted with lush plants and flowers. Just after sitting down, Xu Dongdong reveals Souls of Creatures in Four Seasons, his latest series of paintings whi
期刊