国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Domestic

Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy

By Yu Tianyu (China Daily)
Updated: 2011-01-10 10:08
Large Medium Small

Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy

Employees sit behind a glass wall adorned with Taobao. com logos at the company's office in Hangzhou in East China's Zhejiang province. Qilai Shen / Bloomberg 

BEIJING - It was the moment of truth for Chinese e-shoppers on Dec 21, grabbing up discount items at China's largest e-commerce site Taobao.com since the site launched its shopping carnival with the biggest promotions of 2010.

In contrast to the choruses of complaints about rising prices heard at regular storefronts, there was enthusiasm everywhere, not least among the online retailers, who rang up a very Merry Christmas.

Starting at midnight Dec 21, about 750 million items went on sale for cut-rate prices, seducing e-shoppers to grab their credit cards out of their wallets.

Related readings:
Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy Portal opens for businesses
Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy US eyes Chinese Net shoppers
Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy Alibaba.com enhances security measures
Taobao all-nighter whips e-shoppers into buying frenzy Alibaba builds B2C platform to fend off rivals

Presenting discounts averaging 50 percent, the eBay-like site also offered free shipping for all items, which ranged from clothes, food, textiles, cosmetics and jewelry, to electronics.

Nocturnal online vendors across China sought to cash in on the frenzy, while e-shoppers dreamt of buying the products of their dreams.

Zhu Qian, a 23-year-old office worker for a bio-tech company in Nanning, the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, had been waiting in front of her computer screen for hours for a chance to buy a 1,500 yuan ($227) coat on sale at 90 percent off during the shopping spree. Her boyfriend struggled with another laptop to help Zhu snag the prize.

"The reason we were so crazy was because of the really low prices," Zhu said. "I had been holding back my urge for fashion items for a long time because I found my salary could buy less and less."

For 22-year-old Song Tingting in Beijing, the spree was less happy. "I went to bathroom for a few minutes, and in that time, 300 fur skirts were sold. Not one was left for me."

She said: "When I woke up at 3:00 am for the half-priced gold bars, 20 bars were snatched up in less than three seconds, before I had time to even click my mouse."

But lucky or not, millions of online shoppers like Zhu and Song flocked to Taobao, eager to part with their money.

In the first minute, 10,000 sales were made on the site, and 1,500 Christmas-theme nightdresses sold out. Within five minutes, the luggage and bag store Kelehui sold 705 pieces of luggage. In ten minutes, the fashion boutique Pink Large Dolls had a 1 million yuan turnover.

A Taobao official said: "Since 10 am, the hourly turnover hit 100 million yuan, a record in China's online retail history."

By 2 pm, 17 e-stores had more than 10 million yuan in sales and six others had 5 million yuan, the official said.

Cao Qing, of Qigege Boutique, said: "It was really exciting when all of the staff were staring at the screens and clicking away."

Cao was still euphoric, saying sales broke 4 million yuan by 3 pm that day.

Not only small items, but big deals, too. A 168,880 yuan pearl necklace was sold by Urban Princess, a popular online jewelry store.

The Taobao official said that consumer groups have expanded and diversified, further adding to the red-hot activity round the sale.

Wang Shao, a 25-year-old news magazine editor in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, spent almost 90 percent of her salary at Taobao. "Some brands, like ZARA and H&M, haven't officially launched in Wenzhou, so I have to buy them online through agents, who charge me 30 yuan for each piece," Wang said.

"It is still worthwhile," she added.

Fashion-savvy Chinese consumers were out in force throughout the spree, buying up trendy items that had stolen their hearts.

Replicas of the engagement ring Prince William gave Kate Middleton, priced at 20 yuan to 10,000 yuan, were among the most-viewed items.

American skin and lip care brand Evolution of Smooth has also stirred a craze on the Chinese market without officially launching here.

Good-looking playboy Chuck Bass, of the hit TV series Gossip Girl, was using Smooth Sphere lip balm to lure many a Chinese girl into buying on Taobao. At least 3,000 of the lip balms were sold within 12 hours.

Yang Xueshan, vice-minister of industry and information technology, predicted that the transaction volume of China's e-commerce is expected to surpass 4 trillion yuan in 2010, as online shopping would reach 400 billion yuan.

达孜县| 文昌市| 乌拉特前旗| 铁力市| 卓资县| 阳城县| 高密市| 苏州市| 嵩明县| 安徽省| 绥德县| 永新县| 平利县| 东乌珠穆沁旗| 永康市| 剑阁县| 新乐市| 金乡县| 中西区| 桦川县| 浏阳市| 沾益县| 格尔木市| 鄱阳县| 东兴市| 察雅县| 花莲县| 武川县| 桦南县| 海伦市| 石台县| 新建县| 鹿邑县| 湘乡市| 罗田县| 松滋市| 增城市| 湛江市| 孝感市| 济南市| 合肥市|