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A friend of mine with one of China’s leading online retailers just sent me an article listing out food and beverage companies that are using JD.com to market and sell their product in China. For more on JD.com, check out this week’s New York Times story on it. The article my friend sent me is entitled, China: JD.com expands imported food program.
Our China lawyers have long advocated a “distributorship-type” model as a lower cost and oftentimes better alternative for foreign companies looking to sell their products into China The following posts (going all the way back in 2010) detail why a distributor/reseller model can be a better way to “get into” China than via a WFOE or a Joint Venture and explain the ins and outs of such a model in China:
It makes particular sense for food companies to sell their food and beverage products into China through distributors and resellers. China’s food safety regulations, import laws and food and beverage distribution systems can be immensely complex, and someone like JD.com is likely going to be better able to navigate these things in China than you are.
But it takes more than just saying “yes” to a company like JD.com to succeed with selling your food or beverage products into China. Even if you end up using an established China food or beverage distributor for your products, you should, at minimum, do the following:
For many American food and beverage companies, relationships with companies like JD.com make perfect sense, so long as they are done right.
We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.