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  • Home > News > Details
    Dropout inspires farmers to become e
    2015-05-04

    "I realized that it was easy to sell goods on the Internet," Sun said. "I felt like a new world had opened for me."

    Several months later, after visiting IKEA Shanghai with his wife, Sun decided to invest in the furniture business.

    "The structures of the furniture there were not complicated," said Sun. "I told myself I could make similar products."

    Sun bought a 400-yuan shelf and started to visit furniture makers in his hometown, asking them to reproduce the design. But starting a business turned out to be much more difficult than he had imagined. He took the sample to more than 30 carpenters, all of whom failed to accomplish the task at a reasonable price.

    "I was startled when I visited carpenters. They chopped coffins out of pieces of wood directly with an ax. Due to the price of the raw material and the workers' salaries, the shelves they made cost much more than IKEA's."

    After changing the specifications of the shelf, Sun and a carpenter finally managed to manufacture a copy that was cost-effective. It earned Sun almost 100,000 yuan in the first month it was on sale. In 2007, he invested 100,000 yuan to start a furniture factory. Sales in the first six months reached more than 1 million yuan.

    Rumors spread among the farmers in the village that Sun was earning a fortune by running an illegal business. Many of them did not understand how a young man could earn money while spending all his time in front of a computer.

    In 2008, after Sun helped a friend to start an online store to sell furniture, many of the farmers asked him to help them set up online businesses. By the end of the year, more than 200 online stores were operating in the village.

    Now the village has 200 furniture factories, and 14 express delivery companies have established distribution centers for the villagers. It also has design companies and material suppliers.

    More than 90 percent of the village's young people, including college graduates and migrant workers, chose to come back and start their own businesses.

    Some of the online stores sell other goods such as shoes and mobile phones. Shaji township, which has jurisdiction of the village, now has more than 8,500 online stores.

    Qiu Chaoliang, Shaji's Party chief, said the township's online sales reached 2.6 billion yuan last year.

    "E-commerce has improved the local logistics industry greatly," said Qiu. "It has also improved the roads and Internet speeds and helped to establish an industrial park for the villagers. Dongfeng village and Shaji township now look totally different compared with nine years ago."

    Sun has established an e-commerce association to regulate the market, provide training for villagers and negotiate with the material suppliers and express delivery companies.

    "I hope that the sales of my store will reach 50 million yuan this year," said Sun. "I also hope that I can create a well-known brand for my furniture.

    "One of my goals is to invent five new articles of furniture every month. I hope they will be of such value that their owners will be reluctant to throw them away when they move."

    cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn

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