Foreigners fill in Spring Festival courier gap
Updated: 2016-01-27 15:42
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||||
A student from Kazakhstan working as a Suning Tesco courier. [Photo / it.chinanews.com] |
If one day during Spring Festival, your door bell rings and a young foreigner is at your door with your parcels, don't be surprised.
Chinese e-commerce supplier Suning Tesco is hiring foreign students to work as couriers, to ensure efficient express delivery services during Spring Festival, China Business News reports.
The upcoming festival, China's Lunar New Year, is expected to leave online shopping sites short-handed due to an exodus of workers. But to stand out in a competitive market, Suning Tesco is looking for foreign part-time workers to keep business running normally, at least in major cities, during this time.
Suning Tesco has recruited a group of foreign students to be couriers in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Nanjing and Chengdu.
"All candidates need to receive training on basic greetings in Chinese and gestures, before they actually take on the job," said a worker from Suning Tesco's delivery department.
Russian exchange student from Guangzhou University, Ivan, is among the foreign couriers. "I never celebrated Spring Festival in China, very happy to have the chance to visit households, and experience real Chinese lunar new year greetings," he said.
Besides the shortage of employees, the express delivery industry was hit hard by the cold front that swept most parts of China.
Facing a slew of delays, the speed of parcel deliveries has slowed by 20 percent from Jan 20 to Jan 24, largely due to the bad weather, according to statistics from Cainiao, Alibaba's logistics arm. Couriers are also facing other barriers, such as traffic congestion and frozen fuel tanks.
Related Stories
Nubia makes a 'smart' choice with Suning 2016-01-05 10:22
Suning Internet Plus city complex settles down 2015-12-28 09:58
Jingyuan opens first Suning direct-sales store 2015-11-20 17:41
Today's Top News
UK adventurer dies on solo journey
Families of expats in China can stay longer
China's growth envy of developed world
Foreigners find hard to buy China's rail tickets
Rags to riches saga underlines China's transformation
Leaders address Iran's thirst for growth
UK's interest in China boosted by BBC TV series
Global push
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Acquisition bandwagon continues to roll |
South China's food touches the heart |
China wins fastener tiff with EU |
Global presence doesn't make a multinational |
Businessman heads revolution in China's canteens |
UK's interest in China boosted by latest BBC TV series |