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Economy

Dongguan firms banking on brands

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2015-06-19 09:22China Daily Editor: Si Huan
A robot on display at the China Processing Trade Products Fair, which opened in Dongguan, Guangdong province, on Wednesday. The robot can talk in simple words with its owner and do some simple domestic chores such as turning on and off TV sets. (Photo/China Daily)

A robot on display at the China Processing Trade Products Fair, which opened in Dongguan, Guangdong province, on Wednesday. The robot can talk in simple words with its owner and do some simple domestic chores such as turning on and off TV sets. (Photo/China Daily)

Traditional processing trade companies from Dongguan, Guangdong province, have achieved sustainable business growth due to increased focus on self-developed brands and spending on e-commerce, industry experts said on Thursday.

Indications that the development trend is bound to catch on are evident at the ongoing China Processing Trade Products Fair, which opened in Dongguan, where a large number of processing trade companies reported higher orders, thanks to their self-developed products.

Luis Chiang, public affairs director of China Wonderland Nursery Goods Co Ltd, said the company's self-developed child safety seats are becoming popular in the domestic and overseas markets.

The company, which was established in the early 1990s as an original equipment manufacturer of car safety seats, has seen increasing demand in the domestic market for its newly launched items, Chiang said.

"It was mainly because we have made efforts to develop our own brands since 2009," Chiang told China Daily.

The company, a Taiwanese-invested venture based in Qingxi township of Dongguan, a traditional processing trade hub in the Pearl River Delta, now focuses more on development of self-owned brands rather than simply processing.

"Chinese parents are becoming more aware about child safety. Car seat sales in the domestic market have been growing steadily during the past few years," Chiang said.

According to Chiang, domestic market sales now account for more than 10 percent of the company's total sales. "The better performance in the domestic market has helped offset decreased business from the overseas markets," Chiang said.

Like Chiang's company, a growing number of traditional processing trade firms have started to pay more attention to self-owned brands.

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