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Sunday, September 1, 2013

Zhang Xin on being a businesswoman in China

Zhang Xin on being a businesswoman in China May 10, 2011 : Zhang Xin, chief executive and co-founder of Soho China, the property developer, tells Lifen Zhang, editor of FT Chinese, that Chinese businesswomen are more readily accepted than their counterparts in the West because of the entrepreneurial attitude of the country

http://www.forbes.com/profile/zhang-xin/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhang_Xin_(businesswoman)




Lessons from a self-made billionaire

By Pauline Chiou, CNN
July 11, 2013 -- Updated 1132 GMT (1932 HKT)


……...
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Worth $3.6 billion, Zhang Xin is the world's seventh richest self-made woman
  • Xin runs China's largest real estate developer
  • She rose from assembly line of a Beijing factory to property magnate
  • Her family partly owns a 40% stake in NYC's GM building
Leading Women connects you to extraordinary women of our time -- remarkable professionals who have made it to the top in all areas of business, the arts, sport, culture, science and more.
(CNN) -- Zhang Xin is an example of true grit success. She rose from the faceless assembly line of a Beijing factory to a property magnate richer than Donald Trump and Oprah.
Her company, SOHO China, literally changed the landscape of Beijing and Shanghai over the past two decades. Forbes magazine has listed her family's net worth at $3.6 billion.

And she's not stopping there. In a private transaction (not related to her company business), her family and the Safra banking family of Brazil just bought a 40% stake in the iconic GM building in New York City -- the building that houses the flagship Apple store on Fifth Avenue.
Zhang recently sat down with CNN's Pauline Chiou to talk about everything from her Beijing childhood to the volatile property market and how her 14-year old son tried to get a job at McDonald's.
Failure is part of the puzzle
CNN: Did you come across a lot of bumps in the road and a lot of failures?
Zhang Xin: Every day. I mean, I think that's just life. You will always bump into difficulties, challenges and problems. It appears to be that we seem to be doing quite well, but as it is now, we're still having challenges every day. So I think that's just nothing unique. That's just life.
Pivot and dribble around politics
CNN: You moved from residential real estate to commercial and now you're focusing on commercial. Why did you do that, especially when we see new home prices still rising?
ZX: Residential development has become very political. Government policies ...are against any prices going up because this is a very social issue.
The government comes out with policies that deal one day with this side [of the issue] another day with this side [of the issue]. We said, "Let's get out of this area. Yeah, let's move on to somewhere we can really exercise our skills as a developer."
I think the policies are so distorted. Like someone who's sick, you've taken so much medicine that you've lost the sense of which one works and which one doesn't. That's a little bit like the real estate market in China.
Grab the opportunities
CNN: On the Forbes' recent list of 24 self-made female billionaires, there are five women from China, one from Hong Kong. What is it about China and the women of your generation that allows them to achieve that highest level?
I think in terms of coming from a low base, coming from nowhere, we're all equal.
Zhang Xin
ZX: Women of our generation went through the Cultural Revolution, went through hardship, went through coming from nowhere. Suddenly, we see China's been given so many amazing opportunities. So women just seized the opportunity. I think in terms of coming from a low base, coming from nowhere, we're all equal.
In China, there are a lot of problems but also there are a lot of opportunities. Precisely because there are so many problems, things are not established; therefore, there are opportunities.
Have a life outside of work
CNN: You're a mother of two boys. You're a wife. How do you do the work-life balance?
ZX: I'm very, very focused on my children. In fact, I'm very religious about having breakfast with them every morning, having dinner with them every evening, and spend all the weekends with them that I don't work. So as long as I'm not traveling, I'm always with them and I go to their soccer and tennis matches. After dinner we'd just sit together and do homework with my children because they need help. I love doing that. It also makes me realize the world is so much wider than just your business world.

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