Imagine a digital market nearly as large as Europe and North America combined. It’s not science fiction. This ise-commerce in China: a $3 trillion-plus giant that continues to grow. For Italian SMEs, it’s no longer just an option, but a strategic frontier for scaling their business. If you’re wondering how to position your brand in this market, this guide will show you, step by step, how to tackle the challenge.
In this article, you will learn:
Forget everything you know about online selling. Entering the Chinese e-commerce market means immersing yourself in an ecosystem where shopping has become entertainment, social interaction, and discovery. Chinese consumers don’t just shop online; they live online.
With over a billion internet users, China alone accounts for nearly half of all online retail sales worldwide. This isn’t just a passing trend. It’s an established reality that continues to grow, offering you a customer base that no other market can match.
The average Chinese customer is young, a digital native, and almost exclusively "mobile-first." Ninety-five percent of users access the internet via smartphone, and this has completely changed the game. They don’t just search for a product on a website. They discover it in a completely different way, through:
This approach requires a complete shift in mindset. Having a good product isn’t enough. You need to know how to tell a story and get it across exactly where your customers spend their time.
In this hyper-competitive landscape, your products have a huge head start. “Made in Italy” is not just a label; for Chinese consumers, it is a brand that evokes quality, luxury, craftsmanship, and history. The rapidly growing middle and upper classes are willing to pay a premium for products that embody these values.
For Chinese consumers, an Italian product is more than just an object. It is a piece of culture, a status symbol, and an experience. From fashion to design, from wine to food, demand is strong and shows no signs of slowing down.
This perception is your best calling card. Capitalizing on it, however, requires a strategy rooted in a deep understanding of local dynamics.
Another key trend shapinge-commerce in China is “New Retail,” a concept coined by Alibaba. The idea is simple yet revolutionary: breaking down all barriers between online and in-store shopping to create a seamless, unified experience. Imagine stores where you try on a dress and buy it by scanning a QR code, or supermarkets where you scan a product to see its history and have it delivered to your home in 30 minutes. For your company, this means that your digital and physical strategies can no longer operate on separate tracks.
Entering the Chinese e-commerce market is like choosing where to open your boutique in Milan. It’s not enough to just rent any space; the street you choose determines who will see your storefront. It’s not just about putting your products online, but about becoming part of vibrant ecosystems, each with its own rules, audience, and logic.
For an SME, figuring out where to start can seem like a daunting task. The good news is that once you understand the key players, what seems like an impenetrable jungle turns into a strategic roadmap. The choice depends on who you are, what you sell, and what your goals are.
The Chinese digital landscape is dominated by a handful of major players. Each occupies a specific niche and caters to different needs. Understanding these differences is the first step toward matching your offering with the right demand.
The image below summarizes the decision-making process you face, highlighting the three factors that make China a unique opportunity: the size of the market, a "mobile-first" consumer base, and the perceived value of foreign-made products.

The decision tree illustrates how these key factors come together, creating fertile ground for Italian brands ready to make the right moves.
To help you navigate your options, we’ve created a comparison chart that highlights each platform’s strengths, target audience, and business model.
| Marketplace | Business Model | Primary Target Audience | Major Categories | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tmall / Tmall Global | B2C | Urban consumers, upper-middle class, brand-conscious | Fashion, Luxury, Cosmetics, Baby Products, Design | Established brands or those with a strong narrative that want to build prestige and a premium positioning. |
| JD.com / JD Worldwide | B2C (with tight control over logistics) | Urban consumers (primarily male) who value quality and authenticity | Electronics, Home Appliances, Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals, Food & Beverage | Brands for which authenticity, quality assurance, and flawless logistics (e.g., cold chain) are crucial. |
| Taobao | C2C / B2C | Consumers of all income levels, looking for variety and value | Non-brand-name clothing, Home goods, One-of-a-kind items | Small retailers, artisans, or brands testing the market with limited budgets and a more informal approach. |
| Pinduoduo | Social Commerce (C2B) | Price-sensitive consumers, especially in lower-income cities | Agricultural products, Consumer goods, Low-cost household items | Brands that focus on high volumes and aggressive pricing, capitalizing on the viral nature of group buying. |
Choosing the right platform, therefore, is a strategic decision. It all depends on where you want to position your brand in the minds of Chinese consumers.
Having a presence on Tmall is a statement of intent. It tells the market: "We are a serious, high-quality, and reliable brand." This is where Chinese consumers with high purchasing power go to find premium products. Opening a store on Tmall Global (its cross-border platform) requires an initial investment and adherence to high quality standards, but the reward is direct access to the heart of China’s premium consumer market.
For Italian fashion, luxury, cosmetics, and design brands, Tmall is not just a sales channel. It is a brand-building tool, essential for establishing credibility and authority.
The top-performing categories are apparel, beauty, accessories, and baby products. It’s the perfect choice for brands that are already well-known in the West or for SMEs with a strong enough track record to justify a premium positioning.
JD.com has built its empire on two pillars: speed and trust. Its business model, which involves direct inventory management and world-class in-house logistics, offers customers a double guarantee: authentic products and lightning-fast delivery, often within the same day.
This makes it the ideal partner for all product categories where authenticity and reliability are everything.
Top categories on JD.com:
If your strength lies in certified product quality and flawless logistics are a must, then JD.com is the strategic partner you’re looking for.
Once you’ve chosen a marketplace, the million-dollar question arises: how do you actually break into thee-commerce marketin China? There are two main approaches: the cross-border model (CBEC), which is agile and fast, or establishing a local presence, a more structured long-term investment.
There is no single right answer. The choice depends on your company’s maturity, investment capacity, and long-term vision.
Cross-border e-commerce (CBEC) is the fastest and most streamlined way to start selling in China. It allows foreign companies to reach Chinese consumers directly through platforms such as Tmall Global or JD Worldwide, without having to set up a local company.
The main advantages of the CBEC are:
Of course, this approach also has its limitations. Logistics can be slower, and consumers may perceive the brand as being less "local."
Establishing a local presence, on the other hand, is a much more significant step. It involves setting up a wholly foreign-owned enterprise (WFOE) or a joint venture. At that point, you operate in every respect as a Chinese company.
Choosing to establish a local presence is not just an operational decision, but a powerful message to the market. It conveys commitment, professionalism, and a long-term vision—factors that build deep trust with Chinese consumers and partners.
The advantages of a local presence are:
The main drawback is the initial investment, which is much higher in terms of both capital and time. Setting up a WFOE can take several months and requires a thorough understanding of local regulations.
Imagine this: you’ve convinced a customer, closed the sale, but then the package gets lost or the payment is declined. It’s the worst-case scenario for anyone selling online.
Logistics and payments aren’t just technical details—they’re the key to your success in China. Mastering them isn’t an option; it’s the only way to turn customer interest into actual revenue and a solid reputation.

In China, logistics is a race against time and a test of precision. Consumers are accustomed to extremely high delivery standards, with packages often arriving within 24 to 48 hours. Meeting these deadlines is the bare minimum required to be taken seriously.
Logistics strategies depend on the sales model you have chosen:
The goal is to dominate "last-mile delivery"—that is, the final, crucial leg of the shipping process. This is where customer satisfaction is made or broken. Flawless warehouse management is the foundation of it all; to learn how to optimize it, check out our guide to warehouse management software.
The real challenge of logistics in China isn’t shipping a product, but getting it there in record time with flawless tracking. The perception of your brand’s efficiency depends almost entirely on this.
Now let’s talk about payments. If you think you can use traditional credit cards, you’re mistaken. Here, the market is an almost complete duopoly dominated by two “super-apps” that handle over 90% of mobile transactions: Alipay and WeChat Pay.
Ignoring these payment methods simply means you won’t make any sales. Imagine a customer who gets to the checkout and doesn’t see the payment method they’re used to: that’s almost guaranteed to result in an abandoned cart.
The key is integration. Major platforms like Tmall Global and JD Worldwide already have these solutions built in. If, on the other hand, you sell through your own website, you’ll need to use an international payment gateway that supports both Alipay and WeChat Pay. This isn’t just a technicality; it’s a strategic choice that directly impacts your conversion rate.
Entering the Chinese market isn’t just a matter of translation. It’s about “speaking” Chinese—a language made up of unique culture, customs, and communication channels. To sell successfully in the Chinese e-commerce market, it’s not enough to simply adapt what works in Italy; you need to build a strategy from scratch, tailored to the local consumer.
The starting point is the localization of the brand and the product. And I’m not just talking about translating a name. I’m talking about a deep cultural immersion to adapt names, colors, and messages so that they resonate with Chinese values.

Forget how you use social media in the West. In China, social media isn’t just a “channel” for marketing—it is the channel. These are ecosystems where people discover brands, read reviews, and make purchases. Choose the right platforms and use them the way the Chinese do.
Nowhere else in the world has influencer marketing reached the scale it has in China. Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) and Key Opinion Consumers (KOCs) don’t just “recommend” a product—they sell it, live, to millions of people. Live-streaming e-commerce isn’t a fad; it’s a multi-billion-dollar industry.
A single live-streaming session, if well-executed with the right KOL, can generate in just a few hours a volume of sales that would take months to achieve in Europe. The trust consumers place in their favorite influencers is a powerful asset.
For an Italian brand, partnering with the right influencer isn’t just a promotional move. It’s a way to gain immediate market validation and direct access to a vast, already-targeted audience.
Content, just like the brand itself, must be tailored to the Chinese audience. This translates to short videos for Douyin, in-depth articles on WeChat, and carefully crafted visuals for Xiaohongshu. Customer service must also be impeccable: immediate, personalized responses available on the right channels (first and foremost WeChat) are the norm. Meticulous planning is essential, as we explain in our guide to creating an effective marketing plan.
Finally, your strategy must be aligned with the Chinese retail calendar. Events like Singles' Day (11.11) and the 618 Shopping Festival aren't just sales periods. They are major national events that drive a huge portion of annual sales.
In the Chinese market, simply having a presence isn’t enough—you have to stay one step ahead. That’s where ELECTE, our AI-powered data analytics platform, comes in. It’s not just a tool; it’s a strategic co-pilot that turns data chaos into a tangible competitive advantage.
In such a fast-paced environment, making decisions based on instinct is like driving blindfolded. You need a clear, unified view of everything that’s happening. That’s exactly why we built ELECTE, an AI-powered data analytics platform for SMEs: the platform connects to all your data sources—from sales reports on Tmall and JD.com to inventory data and your CRM—providing you with immediate insights.
The first step to optimizing sales is to stop viewing data as scattered pieces. ELECTE the process of bringing it all together, allowing you to see connections that would otherwise remain hidden.
By combining these data streams, you can finally answer critical questions. "Which campaign generated the most sales for that product?" or "Are we about to run out of stock of our best-seller due to an unexpected surge in demand?" Having these answers allows you to act quickly.
Forget about spending hours compiling reports. With ELECTE, you can set up automated custom reports that track your most important Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). You can monitor metrics such as conversion rate, average order value (AOV), and customer acquisition cost (CAC), filtering by platform or product.
As shown in the screenshot below, the ELECTE dashboard transforms complex numbers into intuitive charts.
This view lets you quickly identify sales trends and performance by category, providing practical insights without requiring you to be a data scientist.
The real magic of artificial intelligence, however, lies in its ability to look to the future. ELECTE machine learning algorithms to analyze historical data and identify patterns, helping you predict what will happen tomorrow.
For the Chinese market, forecasting isn’t a luxury—it’s a necessity. Knowing weeks in advance what demand will be like for the 618 Shopping Festival allows you to optimize inventory, plan campaigns, and set prices strategically, thereby maximizing margins.
This shift toward a data-driven business is a global trend, evident in the rise of digital B2B. A comprehensive study on B2B e-commerce estimates that the global B2B market will reach $61.9 trillion by 2030. Platforms like ELECTE, which leverage machine learning, excel at connecting data to generate sales forecasts with a single click, thereby reducing operational costs.
With ELECTE, you can simulate different pricing scenarios to understand their impact on demand and profits, or identify which products are frequently purchased together to create effective promotional bundles. You’re no longer reacting to the market—you’re driving it. To see other real-world applications, read our article on practical examples of artificial intelligence.
Entering thee-commerce marketin China is an ambitious undertaking, but with the right strategy, you can turn it into a growth engine for your business. Here are the key points to keep in mind:
Still have some doubts? That’s normal. Entering the Chinese market is a major step. We’ve compiled the most common questions here, along with straightforward answers to give you the confidence you need.
For an Italian SME, the most common approach is the cross-border e-commerce (CBEC) model. The big advantage? You don’t have to set up a Chinese company. The key requirements are:
Costs can vary significantly. Cross-border is the most affordable option, but it’s not free. Consider investing in three main areas:
This is perhaps the most important question. In China, the "first-to-file" principle applies: whoever registers the trademark first becomes its owner.
Don’t wait. Register your trademark in China before you even start thinking about how to sell your products, covering both the original name and any potential Chinese version. Ignoring this step leaves you vulnerable to “brand squatting” and counterfeiting.
Are you ready to turn the complexities of the Chinese market into winning business decisions? With ELECTE, you can automate sales analysis, forecast demand, and optimize every aspect of your strategy.
Find out how ELECTE give your business in China a competitive edge →