HOW TO SCALE PROFITABLY AMONGST THE TOP 10% OF STUDENTS IN CHINA ( OVERCOMING THE CONSUMER MINDSET)

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Picture this: You’re 21, you just landed in China, and reality hits. The “study abroad dream” feels like a nightmare because the exchange rate just crushed your allowance. You’re broke, the rules are rigid, and Google Translate is your only friend.

Most students wait for a miracle. The 10% create one. Here is how Sean and Sunday did it.

The Sean Narrative: From “Broke Student” to ¥25k/Month, no joke.

The Trap/shock: Sean spent his first three months in 2021, like most of us, managing tiny transfers from home, talking about 20 to 50k, watching the exchange rate eat his lunch money. (Priority purchases was the standard💔)

The Catch: While others used their first break to travel, Sean stayed on campus for the first 2 months break. He spent hours everyday mastering Mobile Photography and Conversational Mandarin, yep! Those simple nihao’s that we take for granted. 

The Strategy: He walked into a local shop one day with his translator and little awkward Chinese, just imagine the amount of "Tingbudong" he got that day💔😅. Nevertheless he offered to shoot a short video of their products for free. 

The Result:  One of the owners from these small vendors posted Sean’s videos on Duyin ( Chinese ticktock), over a long period of going to many small shops, and vendors a bigger brand saw the “Global Eye” quality and asked if he could do a short video for them, so they hired him. Keep in mind that Sean did this free offers a lot before bagging his first official job. 

The Lesson: He reinvested his first ¥300 into a lighting kit instead of a night out. He chose the Provider Mindset over the Consumer Mindset.

The Sunday Narrative: The “Survival Chinese” Bridge

The Trap: Sunday arrived with zero language skills, but he saw “War” at the local logistics warehouses—African traders and Chinese staff couldn’t understand each other.

The Catch: He didn’t wait for HSK 2 or 4, he mastered “Survival Chinese”, yep that one where you imagine it first before talking 🥲—specifically terms for shipping, weights, and billing.

The Strategy: He became the Sorting Specialist (Fēnjiǎn zhuānjiā). He helped those who were lost, bridging the gap between Chinese systems and African needs.

The Result: He stopped being a “Customer” paying fees and became a “Partner” earning them.

The “HAFRIK” Marketing Strategy:

Be Social: Your next gig isn’t on a job board; it’s in a WeChat group or a musical competition.

Ask Questions: If you see a “mess” (like a bad English translation on a manual), offer to fix it.

The 2026 Rule: Use foreign bank accounts for online side shifts to stay below the radar.

The Bottom Line: Success in China isn’t about the degree on your paper; it’s about the solution in your hands.

 

 

 

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