The top 25: #6 Hugo Shong, IDG Capital Partners

Rank last year: 4

In 1993, as managing editor of Electronic Business Asia Magazine, Hugo Shong, founding general partner of IDG Capital Partners, assisted IDG’s founder, Patrick McGovern, in establishing the $50m IDG Capital venture fund in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong, when the Chinese venture market was largely overlooked by investors.

McGovern, who died earlier this year, said in a Global Corporate Venturing profile: ”Everyone laughed at me for backing them [Chinese entrepreneurs] as there was no stockmarket and companies could not issue stock, so they said it was not the right environment.

“But I talked to Chinas then president, Jiang Zemin, and he promised stockmarkets by the end of the 1990s and we were encouraged by that and started investing in 1994. These investments included Tencent, where we invested $1.2m and sold it for $200m, Baidu where $2m turned into $700m, Soufun where we invested $1m for 10% that was worth $100m and Ctrip where $1m became $26m.”

Shong led many of these deals and oversees IDG’ businesses in 15 Asian countries. The company has established a partnership with top-tier Silicon Valley venture firm Accel to back both China-based entrepreneurs and US companies wanting to expand into China, such as Razer and BlueSprig.

At the time of the BlueSprig and Razer deals in December 2012, Shong said: “China has the worlds biggest number of internet users at more than 600 million people and large numbers of mobile phone users and we are now in the mobile internet age, which is creating very exciting opportunities, especially for China. The mobile internet will be the prevailing technology that will drive economic development in the next five to 10 years. The Chinese entrepreneurial community is very sophisticated, not just those that have studied abroad, so we will invest more there than outside China.”

Before travelling to the US to study, Shong was a reporter for Chinas Xinhua News Agency – a background similar to venture capital firm Sequoias chairman, Michael Moritz, who was a reporter for Time magazine. Shong also studied at Hunan University before gaining a masters degree at Boston University and finishing graduate programmes at the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy in 1987 and the Harvard Business School in 1996. His boardroom seats include dentistry company Glamsmile, Media China Corporation and Mei Ah Entertainment Group, according to news provider Bloomberg.