The single biggest boost to worker productivity, and ultimately worker prosperity and nation building, was the advent of long distance communication. The very minute that a message could be sent 10, 100, or 1000 miles to another person, the world changed forever. No other “invention” has ever had the same impact on the world as telecommunications did, and yet today the story is intact. We all still need to be connected.
In the U.S. some would find it hard to consider that there are still large portions of the country that don’t have any form of high speed internet capability. Yet the fact is that in many rural areas the phone line is still the only way to communicate to the world. But consider this; in many areas of the developing world, they lack even the very basics of telephone services.
As developing areas such as Lower Asia enter their version of an industrial revolution, where the populations migrate from rural farming communities to more urban manufacturing and technology centers, the demand for telecommunications devices, services, and management explodes. This is exactly what we have seen in China over the past five years. In raw numbers, the statistics are staggering. In less than a decade, land line, and mobile phone services went from statistically zero, to over 825 million subscribers. The number of broadband using households in mainland China is already been estimated at over 57 million and could surpass the number in the US by the end of this year. That’s a mind boggling growth rate, but one in step with the China “miracle”.
Since the year 2000, China and very recently India, has accounted for some 30% of global economic growth. Never before in the history of man, has an area become as economically important as quickly as Southeast Asia has. Empowering the people and businesses that are responsible for such growth with the proper equipment and services is the Holy Grail of business. In a scene eerily reminiscent of the 1849 gold rush, hundreds of companies have rushed headlong into China trying to grab their piece of this incredible growth story. Many, if not most, have found it to be “harder than they thought”.
Business in China is done a bit differently than in the US and Europe. Customs are different, and without a precise knowledge of the local customs and how they are viewed, business simply will not get done. This is why some seemingly good ideas, don’t necessarily “fly” in China. What one needs is management that’s versed in local China customs and business etiquette, along with the proper products and services.
China Voice Holding Corporation has approached the concept of China/US business in a unique and highly profitable way. Imagine a holding company with the vision to take on businesses well versed in local Chinese law and customs, selling highly profitable equipment and services to this growing community. Now imagine the same holding company with divisions in the US, selling products and management services to established telecom firms. Then take it one step further, as they integrate the two, through a unique symbiotic relationship.
The China Voice concept relies on the belief that relationships are best made when they occur within true peer-to-peer corporate environments and industry networks that are based on reciprocity, evolving trust and partnerships. CHVC’s U.S. based public company provides a vehicle for Chinese businesses to become participants in America’s economy and free enterprise system. At the same time, U.S. businessmen are exposed to a market quite different from their own, but with local experience to help guide them around the common pitfalls, so that each side “wins” so to speak. It’s a brilliant business strategy, and one that will pay off to shareholders.
On the U.S. side of the equation China Voice consists of three companies, DT Net which is a Value-added distributor and manufacturer of broadband products and services, CVC International which is a Provider of telecom services to communications service providers, and Starcom Alliance who provides Discount Calling Cards that enable users to call anywhere in the world at significant savings.
In China proper, they consist of Bejing CVC which is one of the first non state-owned telecommunications service providers (“Telcos”) holding licenses to operate openly and legally for the delivery of advanced voice and data services throughout China. CandidSoft OA, which uses “OA” as the product trademark, separates products into 3 general categories: OA Cooperative Office Solutions, OA Integrated Office Solutions, and OA Unified Processing Solutions. Headquartered in Beijing, it is an international software company. Based in the Zhong-Guan-Cun Science and Technology Park, Candidsoft is able to utilize the local talents to research, develop, and establish information and communication platforms for businesses and government. Finally, Bejing Techview system Co., Ltd. is a Value-Added Reseller and Systems Integrator that specializes in network design and installation, integrated wiring construction, and network equipment, with a primary focus on providing large video conferencing solutions.
By integrating ideas, products and services through these channels, China Voice is well positioned to take advantage of the strengths that each underlying business is dominant in, and share it with the common goal of overall success. It would be hard to find a better formed business plan than that. China Voice is truly taking global trade to the next level, and doing it “in house” so to speak. Investors would be wise to look at this company now in its early stages.
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