Software park a magnet for IT firms
Updated: 2013-04-24 10:49
By Zheng Yangpeng in Beijing and Li Yu in Chengdu (China Daily)
|
||||||||
Gu said though the entrepreneurial atmosphere in Chengdu is not as strong as in China's first-tier cities, and financing firms are not as accessible as in Beijing or Shanghai, an enabling environment for technology start-ups, especially in the mobile Internet sector, has rapidly taken shape over the past two to three years in Chengdu.
Another attractive feature for Gu and Li's companies is Chengdu's relatively lower labor costs, which Gu estimated to be only half of that of Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.
"Those first-tier cities do have greater access to high-end talents but because of the intense competition there, highly skilled employees are more likely to switch jobs frequently. Here we have a much lower turnover rate," Gu said.
Both Gu and Li said they are grateful for the park's effort to organize a collective hiring program. Their companies could join the campus recruiting as well as flying to Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen to hire employees. Organizing their own campus hiring campaign separately could cost them much more money.
Gu said the biggest challenge for his company is to transfer the Camera360 from a "tool" to a "platform" that helps its users manage their photo albums and share the photos with others, much like the function of instagram from the US.
"By shifting from a tool to a platform, we can add a social networking dimension to the application and increase users' loyalty," Gu said.
With these talented and devoted people and an enabling environment, who could deny Gu would not create another instagram and the possibility of Chengdu becoming the next Silicon Valley?
- Volvo Chengdu plant to start production in June
- Chengdu makes inroads as key transportation center
- Chengdu leading light of development in western China
- Sichuan Airlines to fly between Chengdu, Melbourne
- Chengdu targets $50b in trade this year
- Chengdu ready to show investors it has much more than pandas
- Children gathered together as healing process begins
- Fears surface after hippo kills tourist from Shanghai
- Rescuers win people’s hearts
- Law to curb tourism price hikes
- House damaged, life continues in Sichuan
- Relief reaches isolated village
- Rainfall poses new threats to quake-hit region
- Funerals begin for Boston bombing victims
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Life resumes in 'isolated island' |
Supplies pour into isolated villages |
All-out efforts to save lives |
American abroad |
Industry savior: Big boys' toys |
New commissioner
|
Today's Top News
Industry faces recovery fight
China's 2nd aircraft carrier will be 'larger'
China thanks countries
for quake relief aid
China, US to enhance mutual trust
Beijing protests Diaoyu incident
Copyrights take a bite out of Apple
Four new H7N9 cases
Landslide kills 9 in SW China
US Weekly
Beyond Yao
|
Money power |