On February 21, the 2016 China Information Technology Industry Conference jointly organized by the China Information Technology Industry Federation, China Software Association, and China Electronics Chamber of Commerce kicked off in Beijing. Chen Zhaoxiong, vice minister of China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MII), Wang Xudong, former head of MII, Qu Weizhi, executive vice president of China Information Technology Industry Federation and president of China Electronics Chamber of Commerce, Xie Shaofeng, director of the Informatization and Software Services Division of MII, Diao Shijing, director of the Electronic Information Division of MII, and other officials and business representatives attended the meeting. The representative of JUMORE was also invited to the meeting.
To praise some member units for their prominent contributions to China’s information technology industry, the conference conferred on them the first China Information Technology Industry Pegasus Award of China Electronic Chamber of Commerce. JUMORE was one of the candidates who won the award.
In recent years, with the innovation and revolution of China’s information technology and internet economy, the emerging industries, particularly cross-border e-commerce, intelligent manufacturing and electronic information technology, have been showing increasingly strong vitality. In this regard, JUMORE has made its own innovation and contribution.
The E4B (Ecosystem for Business) model initiated by JUMORE enables all enterprises, regions and countries around the world to connect, communicate and cooperate efficiently with each other for goods, services and information through the platform of JUMORE, and achieve mutual benefit and win-win situation. Unlike the traditional e-commerce model that simply provides transaction services, the E4B model is an ecosystem offering all-round services to enterprises.
The innovation and practice of JUMORE will make a contribution to the further development of China’s information technology industry, as well as to the real economy’s transition to electronization, informationization and digitization.