Entry strategy

How you enter China matters as much as whether you enter


Most China entry strategies are not wrong in substance. They are wrong in order.


Each decision constrains the next. Legal structure locked before the business model is confirmed. Partners selected before positioning is clarified. Capital committed before the competitive environment is mapped.


The further you travel in the wrong order, the more expensive the correction. The decisions that are hardest to correct are almost always the ones made earliest. The order matters.

Strategy follows validation

Strategy is a structured sequence

Built on the evidence base validation provides - demand signals, competitive intelligence, channel data

No data, higher risk

Strategy rests on assumptions that may not survive first contact with the market

Timing of commitment matters

The objective of a staged entry strategy is simple: delay locking in decisions that are costly or difficult to undo

Market entry is iterative by nature

China market entry is iterative. One decision changes the next - and sometimes forces earlier decisions to be revisited. A distributor discussion may change your pricing assumptions. Pricing may change the legal structure you need. Regulatory realities may change which regions are commercially viable. That is normal.

The cost of premature commitment

The mistake is not iteration. The mistake is committing too early. Some companies lock themselves into structures, partners, or operating models before the commercial assumptions behind them have been tested in-market. Front-load the strategic thinking on the hardest-to-reverse decisions - but delay the commercial commitments until the commercial premise is validated.

Where China entry strategies typically break

The failure modes are not exotic. They are predictable, and they recur across sectors and entry types

Legal structure locked before commercial model is validated

A legal foothold is necessary for validation. The mistake is locking in the full structure - registered capital, scope of business, location, scale - before validation has revealed what the entity needs to support. Restructuring a Chinese entity is materially harder than restructuring elsewhere, and the cost lands when the company can least absorb it.

Start with a minimum viable wholly foreign-owned enterprise. It can be set up lean in and does not require significant capital. Design the full structure around what validation reveals - not around what entry was assumed to require.

The decisions that define your entry

Five key decisions define the entry. Each one constrains the next


Phasing and resource model

Entry is a sequence of funded stages, not a single commitment. Getting the phasing right protects capital and creates structured decision points.


Competitive positioning

Chinese market competition does not mirror European competition in pricing, feature expectations, or brand perception. Effective positioning requires specific calibration for the market context. A translation of your existing European positioning is not a China positioning.


Channel model

How your product or service reaches the customer: direct, through a partner, through platforms, or a combination. Each carries a different cost structure, control profile, and speed to market. The channel model is not a distribution decision. It is a strategic positioning decision, and it shapes every downstream choice.


Partner selection

The partner you enter with determines more than access. It determines your pricing power, your visibility into customer data, your relationship with distribution infrastructure, and your degree of strategic dependency on a single actor.


Who brings you through the door shapes what doors remain open. This is a structural decision, not a relationship decision.


Legal structure

Legal structure and entity type govern what you can do, what you own, and how you exit. The right vehicle depends on sector, product type, IP sensitivity, and intended scale. The wrong vehicle is not always immediately visible - it typically becomes a constraint when you need to move quickly or change direction.

How we work on this

01

Think hard about the hardest decisions early

We work outward from the validated commercial premise. The decisions that shape everything else - channel, positioning, partner architecture, entity structure - get the most analytical work upfront. The commitment itself waits until the commercial premise holds. We front-load the thinking, not the contracts

02

Build in stages, expect to loop

Entry strategy is built in stages, not in one pass. A distributor conversation can shift the pricing model. Pricing can shift the entity choice. We plan for the loop, not against it.

03

Work with you, not for you

We work alongside your team. The sequence is specific to your business, your sector, and your entry timing. The deliverable is not a report. It is a short, pragmatic plan with a clear first move.