Before you register a company or commit capital, the most important question is whether your business model, timing, and target city are actually right for China. Our market entry strategy consulting answers that — with data, not assumptions.
The businesses that struggle in China rarely failed at execution — they failed at preparation. A rigorous market entry strategy is the difference between a well-timed launch and an expensive lesson.
Most foreign businesses approach China market entry in the wrong order. They research company structures — WFOE, Joint Venture, Representative Office — before they have answered the more fundamental questions: Is this market ready for us? Where in China should we be? What needs to change about our offering to win locally?
Choosing the wrong city, entering a saturated segment, or launching a product that doesn’t map to Chinese consumer behavior can cost two to three years of operational runway before the problem becomes visible. Getting the strategy right first is not a delay — it compresses the timeline to meaningful results.
China also moves fast. Regulatory windows open and close. Consumer trends shift at a speed that regularly catches foreign brands off-guard. Industrial policy incentives that made a city attractive two years ago may have changed. A strategy built on current, ground-level intelligence — not secondhand reports — is what separates a confident launch from a costly bet.
Our market entry strategy service is structured around five core workstreams, each designed to give clients a specific decision — not just information. We deliver findings in a format that can go directly into a board presentation or investor brief.
Assessment of demand, access barriers, and whether the market opportunity justifies the investment required to capture it.
Review of pricing, distribution, go-to-market, and product positioning for the China market specifically.
Mapped analysis of who is already operating in your space, how they win, and where the gaps are.
Structured identification of regulatory, operational, and political risks — with mitigation paths for each.
A sequenced implementation plan from initial setup through operational launch and first-year milestones.
Data-backed guidance on where in China to establish your first entity or operational hub, tied to your specific industry and supply chain needs. See our full City & Industrial Zone Selection guide for the criteria we use.
A market feasibility study is not a desk-research exercise. The China market has structural characteristics that generic industry reports consistently misrepresent — platform dominance, distribution fragmentation, regional variation in purchasing behavior, and a regulatory environment that affects what foreign companies can and cannot do in specific sectors.
Our feasibility assessments address three core questions:
The output is a clear go / wait / reconfigure recommendation, with the evidence behind each conclusion documented for internal review.
One of the most persistent mistakes foreign companies make is assuming their home-market business model translates directly to China. It rarely does — and the gaps are often not where companies expect them to be.
We map your current model against what works in China and produce a localization plan that covers pricing, channel strategy, partner selection criteria, and the minimum product or service adaptations needed for a viable launch.
China’s competitive landscape is frequently more crowded, more localized, and more price-competitive than foreign entrants anticipate. Domestic incumbents often have platform relationships, government connections, and cost structures that foreign brands cannot immediately match. At the same time, they typically have blind spots that a well-positioned foreign brand can exploit.
Our competitive benchmarking maps:
| What We Analyze | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Direct domestic and international competitors by segment | Establishes the actual competitive baseline you are entering against |
| Pricing positioning and perceived value drivers | Identifies where premium positioning is sustainable vs. where it will fail |
| Channel and platform presence | Reveals distribution gaps or overcrowded channels to avoid |
| Marketing and brand communication approaches | Shows what resonates with Chinese consumers in your category |
| Recent market entries (foreign and domestic) | Provides real-world reference points for timeline, cost, and outcome |
The output is a competitor map with differentiation recommendations — where to position, which segments to prioritize first, and which competitive advantages from your home market are genuinely transferable to China.
China market entry carries a risk profile that is different from most other markets — not necessarily higher, but different in character. The risks that actually derail foreign businesses are usually not the headline geopolitical ones, but operational and regulatory factors that are entirely manageable with the right structure in place.
We structure our risk assessment around probability and impact, and for each material risk we document a specific mitigation path — not a generic disclaimer. Clients leave with a clear picture of what they are accepting, what they are mitigating, and what they are transferring through structure or contract.
The final output of our strategy engagement is a sequenced, time-bound roadmap that connects strategic decisions to operational actions. This is what turns a feasibility study into a project plan your team can execute against.
The roadmap is calibrated to your specific business type, target city, and regulatory context — not a generic template. We build in decision checkpoints at each phase so that clients retain clear go/no-go control throughout the process.
We build your roadmap and timeline. Our initial consultation maps your market entry sequence — from regulatory checks and city selection through entity setup and operational launch — with realistic milestones your team can plan against.
Book a ConsultationOur market entry strategy consulting is designed for companies that are seriously evaluating China — not browsing. It delivers the most value when there is a real decision on the table and a leadership team that needs defensible answers to make it.
Still weighing entity type? Our WFOE vs. EOR Advisory guide and Entity Structure Planning guide walk through the trade-offs in more depth. If you are already operating in China and need help with ongoing compliance, HR, or operational management, our related services under Operate in China and ExpertInChina may be more relevant.
A full strategy engagement — covering all five workstreams — typically takes four to six weeks from kickoff to final delivery. Expedited timelines are possible for clients with a specific board or investor deadline. Individual workstreams (e.g., feasibility only, or competitive benchmarking only) can be scoped separately and completed more quickly.
Yes. In fact, companies entering China for the first time get the most value from strategy consulting, since they have no existing assumptions to unlearn and can build their approach correctly from the outset. We handle the full orientation — regulatory landscape, market dynamics, operational requirements — as part of the engagement.
In scope, the outputs are similar. In practice, our engagements are delivered by bilingual practitioners who have directly managed China entity setup and operations — not by generalist analysts working from secondary data. We are also structured for mid-market companies, not multinationals with six-figure consulting budgets.
Yes. We work across both open and restricted sectors, including industries where the Negative List limits foreign ownership or requires a joint venture structure. In restricted sectors, our feasibility work specifically addresses what structures are available, what operating models are compliant, and whether the regulatory constraints make full market entry worthwhile for your specific business case.
Yes. Clients who complete a strategy engagement with us and proceed to company registration in China move directly into our entity setup services without duplicating work. The city recommendation, structure decision, and business scope planning from the strategy phase inform the registration process directly.
Speak with our team to discuss your market, timeline, and what a structured entry strategy would look like for your business.