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Back to business

Updated: 2012-08-06 11:03
By Zhang Yue ( China Daily)

Among them and one of the biggest is Overseas Chinese Scholars (OCS), a one-week event held by Dalian government, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, the Ministry of Science and Technology and the Organization Department of the CPC Central Committee.

Back to business

Back to business

"This year, the companies that have received most support from the government are in the fields of information technology, biotechnology and new energy development," says Gong Liming from the department of technology of Liaoning province on recapping this year's OCS event in June.

The event attracted more than 1,800 overseas returnees to Dalian and more than 800 projects.

Zhang Qun, a 41-year-old who returned to China and set up his company in Dalian in 2009, won support from last year's OCS.

He will receive a start-up fund of 2 million yuan ($314,000) and will be able to utilize a 200-square-meter work zone for free for three years.

Since 2001, more than 3,200 overseas returnees who set up their own business have been enjoying similarly favorable policies.

"We want to attract more brilliant young Chinese to return to the motherland," says Wang Xiaochu, vice-minister of Human Resources and Social Security.

However, Zhang says after living in Japan and the United States for 13 years, he did not have sufficient understanding of his home country. Recruitment, he says, is a tough issue.

His company, INTESIM, deals with simulation techniques and requires a lot of research and technical work.

"Only when I returned in 2009 did I notice that in China, technicians are not easy to find. More and more young people are going for higher education, but less are doing the handy work," he says. "Also, young people in China are lacking research skills in particular areas."

Zhang is now working with Tsinghua University in Beijing and several universities in Dalian.

"I have to make sure that once they finish their degrees, Dalian is the place they are willing to stay at," he says.

He is also working with students studying overseas to ensure that "once they return, the company will become their career choice".

While people like Zhang enjoy favorable government policies, Li is working hard.

As the education service agency is a relatively new industry, and he did not receive any preferential policy from OCS this year, Li is raising funds from angel investors, such as Xu.

"Compared with those who studied abroad during the 1990s, overseas returnees like Li are very different," Xu says. "They've stayed abroad for a long time, sometimes since middle school. They grew up with both Oriental and Western culture, and their experience was much more ground-breaking."

Huang Teng, head of Xi'an International University, who also started his own education business in 1992, thinks that China still has a lot to do for young business starters.

"When I started the school in 1992, most entrepreneurs like us lacked good ideas about business due to the confined social environment," Huang says.

"But this generation is best at ideas. When I was in the US, I noticed that many universities have majors that teach students how to start their own business. I hope our country will do the same to help young entrepreneurs."

Huang's university has been helping more than 3,000 graduates run their own business since 1992.

He hasn't gone to bed before 2 am since the company started as he has been studying the service and marketing strategies of other well-known education agencies.

"I have to say that returning to China and starting my own business has been tough," Li says.

"Overseas experience doesn't make it any easier for me than other entrepreneurs. When I recruited my first employee, a certificate from Kyoto University did not make me any more credible than other young bosses.

"But I still encourage students to study overseas. No matter what you do afterward, overseas experience builds confidence and broadens horizons.

"You will be sure about yourself, and when you come back, even if you start your business the hard way like I did, you see a whole different world in yourself. It's a great treasure."

Contact the writer at zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

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