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Just like any other businesses, the online businesses too suffer from the unfair competition and the strange business activities from the Whales. Customers oftenly do consider so much on the cheaper priced goods over the quality.
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SignUp Now!It’s brutal out there—Hong Kong’s online retailers are getting squeezed by ultra-cheap Chinese competitors, and it’s not even a fair fight. Many of these mainland sellers benefit from lower production costs, subsidies, or economies of scale that local shops just can’t match. It’s like trying to run a mom-and-pop store next to a Walmart.Just like offline businesses, online businesses also face unfair competition. Right now. Hong Kong's online retailers are getting into an unfair competition. Online retailers from China offers the products so cheap that local retailers are finding it difficult to compete.
I think there won't be any policy to help the local retailers. To survive, they have to think of ways to face the competition. Selling more unique products and authentic products, offer better customer service. There is a reputable online retailer here recently offer free shipping charge for self-pick-up.It’s brutal out there—Hong Kong’s online retailers are getting squeezed by ultra-cheap Chinese competitors, and it’s not even a fair fight. Many of these mainland sellers benefit from lower production costs, subsidies, or economies of scale that local shops just can’t match. It’s like trying to run a mom-and-pop store next to a Walmart.
But here’s the thing: competing on price alone is a race to the bottom. Local retailers have strengths these big players often lack—faster shipping, better customer service, or niche expertise. The real question is, how can Hong Kong businesses differentiate instead of just slashing prices?
Maybe it’s hyper-local branding (‘Made for HK by HK’), exclusive products, or personalized service. What do you think—can local online businesses survive this wave, or do they need policy help to level the playing field?"**