China will launch a national enterprise informatization quotient
(EIQ) -- an index to measure the application level of information
technology (IT) among enterprises -- to promote IT applications in
businesses, which will be used first as a key index for the ranking
of the top 100 electronic companies made by the Ministry of
Information Industry beginning next year.
"We are collecting opinions from governmental departments, experts
and enterprises on the composition of indices we will adopt in the
system, and the preliminary survey will soon start," said Jiang
Qiping, deputy director of the National Informatization Evaluation
Center, yesterday at a forum on the promotion of information in
China.
He
said the key indices will be set this year and surveys in some
pilot enterprises will also be finished.
While the national organization is still studying the way to
conduct EIQ such evaluations, local governments have begun to put
it into practice on a trial basis.
Yu
Xuelin, deputy director of the information working office of
Tianjin Municipality, said her city had selected 20 enterprises to
conduct a survey on the scale of IT applications in their
operations and management.
The municipality will expand the survey to 300 to 500 manufacturing
businesses next month and will eventually include all enterprises
in the city.
"We hope our researches in Tianjin will provide some value to the
establishment of the national EIQ system," Yu said.
She said Tianjin will soon set up an informatization research and
evaluation center to lead the survey and promotion of IT
applications in enterprises.
Enterprises also placed high hopes on the establishment of a
national EIQ system.
"The release of EIQ will provide us a good source to judge the
potential of our market," said Arthur Chang, managing director of
US domain name registry provider VeriSign's Asia Pacific
operations.
He
said that the company had decided to continue to pour its sources
into domain name registration and corporate e-mail systems in
China, where more than 90 percent of enterprises do not have their
own domain name, which is called a "trade mark on the
Internet."
"Comparing the present some 600,000 domain names with China's 10
million plus enterprises, we can see the potential will be great,"
said Chang.
The NASDAQ-listed company has 20 partners in China to help develop
its domain name registry.
(China Daily June 12, 2002)
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