Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Global Yellow Pages Limited (GYP), previously known as Yellow Pages Singapore, is a real estate developer and digital search company. [1] It was listed on the Singapore Exchange on 9th December 2004. The company was based in Singapore, New Zealand and Australia. [2]
Taobao Marketplace facilitates consumer-to-consumer retail by providing a platform for small businesses and individual entrepreneurs to open online stores that mainly cater to consumers in Chinese-speaking regions (Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) and abroad, [5] which is made payable by online accounts. Its stores usually offer an ...
Daigou (Chinese: 代购 [2]; pinyin: dàigòu; lit. 'surrogate shopping') [1] [3] [4] is an emerging form of cross-border trade [5] [6] [2] in which an individual or a syndicated group of exporters [5] outside China purchases commodities (mainly luxury goods, but sometimes also groceries such as infant formulas) for customers in China.
There are more than a few investors around the world excited about the rise of the Chinese consumer. In fact, McKinsey recently predicted that China's GDP will continue to grow at almost 8% ...
Today, the expression yellow pages is used globally in both English-speaking and non-English speaking countries. In the United States, it refers to the category, while in some other countries it is a registered name and therefore a proper noun. The term Yellow Pages is not a registered name within the United States and is freely used by many ...
A telephone directory, commonly called a telephone book, telephone address book, phonebook, or the white and yellow pages, is a listing of telephone subscribers in a geographical area or subscribers to services provided by the organization that publishes the directory. Its purpose is to allow the telephone number of a subscriber identified by ...
Chinese consumer flocked to the storied U.S. brand; as many as 80% of all Buicks were sold in China. “The Buick has a royal bloodline,” one Chinese salesman told the Wall Street Journal in 2004.
Chinese consumers opened the year of the dragon with a surge in spending, in China’s first Lunar New Year since 2019 to be unaffected by COVID. The holiday period is an important barometer for ...