World Championship later that year, the first time the event would be held in
China. Jack’s venture won the contract to make the official website for the race.
To win more clients, as with Hope Translation beforehand, Jack called on
his former students to spread the word and bring in business. Two of them duly
obliged.
He Xiangyang, a former student of Jack’s,
was working at the Qianjiang
Law Firm. Reluctant to list the firm’s name on the Internet, he gave Jack his
personal phone number instead. To his surprise, he started to receive phone calls
around the clock from prospective clients, many overseas, who told him they’d
got his number from China Pages. The once-skeptical lawyer started to think
there might be something to Jack’s story about the Internet after all.
Another former student was Zhou Lan, who would become Jack’s
secretary. Zhou was working at the Lakeview Hotel in Hangzhou when Jack
made a website for them, featuring the hotel’s brand-new
fourteen-inch color
TVs. Later that year, the United Nations held its Fourth World Conference on
Women in Beijing, attended by more than seventeen thousand participants,
including First Lady Hillary Clinton. A number of delegates traveled on to
Hangzhou after the conference. Booking rooms at the Lakeview,
they told the
hotel management it was the only hotel in Hangzhou they could find online. By
the following spring, the hotel had sold more rooms in the first three months
than the previous year, another demonstration of the power of the Internet.
Even with the help of Jack’s former students, China Pages needed more
clients if it was going to survive. But demonstrating what China Pages was all
about was not easy, for one very basic reason: In
Hangzhou at the time it was
impossible to get online.
Instead Jack came up with an alternative approach. First, he spread the
word through friends and contacts about what the Internet could do for their
business. He then asked those interested to send him marketing materials to
introduce their companies and products. Next Jack and his colleagues translated
the materials, and sent the material by mail to VBN in Seattle. VBN then
designed the websites and put them online. They then printed out screenshots of
the websites and mailed them to Hangzhou. Finally, Jack took the printed
materials to
his friends and announced that, although they couldn’t check this
themselves, their websites were now online. But without Internet access in
Hangzhou it was a challenge even explaining to his customers what “online”
actually meant. As sales pitches go, asking people who had never heard of the
Internet to fork over 20,000 renminbi ($2,400) up front to create, design, and
host a website they could never see was a challenging one. Jack worried that
people thought he was defrauding them. “I was treated like a con man for three