China Auto Going-Global · Overseas After-Sales
After-sales is where going-global is really won.
I share what I learn working across Chinese auto brands, overseas distributors, and service partners — on what actually decides whether a brand lasts overseas. Field notes, frameworks, and the unglamorous fundamentals most people overlook.
Latest
Recent field notes.
What I’m seeing and thinking across markets, after-sales operations, and the going-global wave.
Designing Dealer Networks That OEMs Trust
For overseas distributors: what it actually takes to earn — and keep — brand exclusivity in a crowded, fast-moving market.
ReadParts, Warranty, and Trust: The Operating System of Going-Global
The unglamorous, decisive fundamentals of after-sales operations that separate durable brands from one-cycle exporters.
ReadTopics
Explore by theme.
The recurring themes in how Chinese auto brands succeed — or stall — overseas.
About
Who’s writing these notes.
I’ve spent my career at the seam where Chinese auto brands meet overseas markets — and where sales success lives or dies on after-sales execution.
[Portrait]
Markets
Where the work happens.
Regional after-sales reality across the markets Chinese brands are entering.
Southeast Asia
Thailand · Indonesia · Malaysia · Vietnam · Philippines
High competition, fast EV adoptionThe front line of China-auto going-global — mature dealership ecosystems but thin after-sales depth outside capital cities.
Middle East
UAE · Saudi Arabia · Qatar · Kuwait
Strong dealer groups, premium mixEstablished distributor networks and high margins; service expectations are premium and brand-sensitive.
Latin America
Brazil · Mexico · Chile · Colombia
Fragmented, regulation-heavyComplex local-content and homologation rules; after-sales networks must be built market-by-market.
Selected work
How these ideas play out in practice.
A few engagements where after-sales thinking moved the numbers.
Building a 120-dealer after-sales network across Southeast Asia
A Chinese EV brand was selling strongly but bleeding customers on wait-times and warranty friction across five SEA markets.
- 120+
- service outlets onboarded
- −42%
- average repair turnaround
- 34 → 71
- CSAT score (NPS-equivalent)
Turning a family dealership group into an OEM-preferred partner
A regional dealer group wanted to win exclusivity from a second Chinese brand but lacked the service depth OEMs demand.
- 2 brands
- exclusivity won
- +18 pts
- service-process audit score
- 6 mo
- from gap to qualified
Redesigning parts supply to protect uptime in Africa
A service-network operator was losing dealer trust as parts stock-outs stalled repairs across the region.
- 94%
- parts fill-rate
- −63%
- emergency air-freight spend
- 12 → 4 days
- average parts lead time
Get in touch
Reach me at hello@tobeyzhang.com — or via the contact page.