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Taobao villages are rural Chinese villages where the local economy has developed to focus extensively on e-commerce via the Taobao platform. [1]: 112 Alibaba's research division defines Taobao villages as those in which (1) businesses are located in an administrative village in a rural area, (2) the village's annual e-commerce revenues exceed RMB 10 million, and (3) the village has either an ...
Taobao is a Chinese online shopping platform. It is headquartered in Hangzhou and is owned by Alibaba. According to Alexa rank, it was the eighth most-visited website globally in 2021. [3] Taobao.com was registered on April 21, 2003 [4] by Alibaba Cloud Computing (Beijing) Co., Ltd.
Tmall.com was first introduced by Taobao in April 2008 as Taobao Mall (simplified Chinese: 淘宝商城; traditional Chinese: 淘寶商城; pinyin: Táobǎo Shāngchéng), a dedicated B2C platform within its consumer e-commerce website. The key difference between Tmall and Taobao is Tmall is a B2C platform but Taobao is C2C.
Taobao grew to become China's largest C2C online shopping platform and later became the second most visited website in China, according to Alexa Internet. [86] [87] Taobao's growth was attributed to offering free registration and commission-free transactions using a free third-party payment platform. [88]
China is the world's largest market for e-commerce. Domestic e-commerce firms have the greatest share of China's market, with foreign companies having a comparatively small presence. The expansion of e-commerce in China has resulted in particular e-commerce patterns like the development of Taobao villages and livestreaming e-commerce.
After a three-year development period between 2016 and 2018, China’s livestreaming e-commerce industry became popular in 2019. Today, it is a well-established ecosystem which in 2020 counted over 8,800 companies and 1.23 million live hosts, known in China as Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs), according to Shanghai-based new retail research firm iResearch. [3]
Tao Piao Piao (Chinese: 淘票票; pinyin: Táo Piào Piào, lit: 'hunting for tickets'), or Taopiaopiao, is an online movie ticket distributor and film promotion service. Together, Taopiaopiao and its main rival Maoyan control approximately 80 percent of movie ticket sales in China.
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s (NYSE:BABA) Taobao and Tmall Group are collaborating with ByteDance-owned Douyin to draw users from the Chinese short video platform, aiming to boost their presence ...