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Outdoor equipment market in China
By Qu Xiaozhen (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-07-07 14:53 For Sarah Xu, challenges and opportunities are separated by a "thin line" and the difference in outcome lies with the amount of effort put into to the getting the objective. As founder and chief executive of Runtitan Outdoor Manufacturing Co, a leading provider of Chinese outdoor equipment, she knows that her international competitors will present a long-term challenge to her company. This is, in part, due to China's growing zest for a healthy livestyle and sports, fueled by the nation's excitement of holding the Olympic games for the first time. "China's outdoor sports industry is undergoing an ever bright prospect as the Beijing Olympics is drawing near," says Xu. Established in the US in 1995 and brought to China in 1999, Runtitan specializes in the manufacturing and retailing of outdoor sports equipments ranging from sleeping bags, tents, backpacks, luggage and travel accessories to footwear, athletic apparel and outerwear, selling in major supermarkets across China and America such as Metro, Wal-Mart, E-Mart and Loogoo. The group is now facing the emergence and growing presence of international outdoor sports brands such as Columbia Sportswear, The North Face Cascade Designs and Timberland as they seek to become more established in the market. Xu, however, seems composed and confident about the situation. "We need more participants joining the massive market to boost this fledging industry as a whole," she says. Over the past ten years of development, Xu says that the company has established strong distribution channels and brand loyalty in China. "Most importantly, we know a lot about the needs of Chinese people and its market." she emphasizes. But this was not achieved overnight. Upon obtaining an MBA degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institution in New York in 1995, Xu set up Runtitan in Pennsylvania, the United States in 1999, aiming to tap into a land where outdoor sports was just starting from scratch. "At that time, people simply had no idea of what tents or sleeping bags were used for," Xu recalls. "We launched a 'family outdooring' concept and wanted to bring to the Chinese a leisure outdoor lifestyle, which was not well recognized at the beginning. But it proved to work." Later In 2001, she set up a camping site at Fengxian, Shanghai, where its manufacturing factory was based, inviting outdoor sports fans to get an idea of outdoor activities. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
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