More than half of the city's industrial output in 2013 comes from technological products and research spending accounts for 4 percent of the city's economic output, compared with 2.1 percent for the entire country. These, according to the study, make Shenzhen "the top destination for entrepreneurs".
Shenzhen owes much of its appeal to entrepreneurs to a business-friendly environment. The country's first special economic zone has a tradition of "providing strong support for technological innovation and private entrepreneurship", said the city's former deputy mayor Zhang Hongyi.
And there is strong evidence Chinese authorities wants to replicate Shenzhen's formula to the rest of the country, hoping that a more supportive environment for innovation and entrepreneurship will drive productivity gains for the world's second largest economy, which has slowed to a 24-year-low of 7.4 percent last year.
At this year's annual parliamentary sessions, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has vowed to nurture entrepreneurship and inspire more innovation through supportive government policies. He challenged the country's traditional sectors to embrace the Internet and cloud computing, among other digital technologies, to boost efficiency and sophistication in a grand vision called "Internet Plus".
"This is all about connecting businesses to a digital agenda," says Ralph Haupter, a Microsoft CEO for the Greater China Region, "Get a piece of hardware, make that intelligent, get digital data and use data to make it better. That's Internet plus and that's how we think of having technology and bring them for innovative work in China."
Half a world away in Hanover, Germany, Chinese tech heavyweights, many of which are from Shenzhen, are staging a commanding presence and showcasing their cutting-edge technologies at the CeBIT technology fair.
In a keynote speech delivered at the opening of the trade fair, Jack Ma, founder of the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, said there has to be a solution for internet and the traditional sectors to work together.
"Internet companies can only survive when mouse and cement are brought together," Ma said, adding that companies in the future will shift their priorities to adaptability and user-friendliness from scale, standards and power.
Back in Shenzhen, that shift has become increasingly evident among Chinese companies Microsoft's Myerson said he had met with.
"When I meet with a team with Huawei, a team with Lenovo, or with Xiaomi, in all those cases, you're looking at that passion to really go and delight customers. That's the core that makes them possible to say 'how are we going to sell it, how are we going to make money doing it'." Myerson said.
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