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Handcrafted economy: from small tools to big ideas

By Li Juncheng | China Daily | Updated: 2026-02-28 07:07
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JIN DING/CHINA DAILY

At the start of 2026, an unglamorous app quietly went viral. Its function was simple, almost childlike: users had to confirm every day that they were "alive". Miss two consecutive check-ins and the app would alert a preselected emergency contact. The app was launched for free, later rose to one yuan and then to eight ($1.16). Despite the rise in price, it still stormed to the top of the paid charts on Apple App Store.

Close behind on the download list was another unlikely hit: "Cat Fill-Light", a one-trick utility conceived by a young economist with very little coding experience. He used AI programming tools to turn a selfie-lighting idea into a product in an hour. Within a year, the app crossed one million downloads.

Together, they capture the logic of what might be called the "shoucuo", or handcrafted economy. The term "shoucuo" originally referred to gamers accomplishing difficult moves with nimble fingers. Today it denotes something broader: ordinary people — students, hobbyists, independent developers — transforming modest tools, open resources and a lot of elbow grease into functional products and real income. In garages and dorm rooms, with a soldering iron or a laptop and an AI assistant, innovators are bringing ideas directly to the market without any assembly line or venture capital.

This business model has historical roots. Many disruptive innovations began in humble settings. In 1976, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak built their first personal computer in a garage from electronic components bought at local markets. In 2006, Wang Tao hand-soldered DJI's first flight control system using second-hand oscilloscopes in a Shenzhen urban village. In 2015, Liu Jingkang pieced together fisheye lens modules in a cramped office, later founding YingShi Innovation, which redefined panoramic action cameras. These stories matter not because every garage venture becomes a household name, but because they reveal an essential truth: accessibility of tools matters more than the size of the office.

What's changed is the kit on the table. AI has lowered the programming barrier toward zero; modular supply chains have made hardware prototyping almost as easy as online shopping; and social media has become a no-cost storefront. Creators can monetize through content funnels, e-commerce, crowd-funding and corporate partnerships.

The result is a democratization of innovation. A solo developer can upload an app and earn meaningful revenue. A designer can sell a 3D model and collect per-download payments. "Handcrafted" is no longer a mere emblem of amateur creativity but has become a viable livelihood.

Local authorities have taken note of this shift. Suzhou has elevated the "one person company" idea to municipal strategy — hosting an AI-OPC conference last November to support the phenomenon. Shanghai has built a multi-track OPC ecosystem, combining cross-border pilot zones, cultural IP incubators and AI hubs. Districts are knitting together AI training, hardware prototyping and supply-chain hookups to give lone creators a one-stop service route from prototype to product.

The economic logic is clear: when the marginal cost of starting a business comes down, experimentation gets a boost and the odds of meaningful discoveries rise. Yet handcrafted innovation faces growing pains. Intellectual property lines are fuzzy when AI contributes code or design. Lightweight apps rushed to market may sacrifice robustness and user privacy. And the classic predator of grassroots creativity — large incumbents with scale and distribution power — can absorb, copy and eclipse nascent ideas. Policy must therefore walk a careful line: protect creators without sheltering inefficiency; promote standards without smothering improvisation.

Scale presents another challenge. Much of today's handcrafted output is "small but delightful": niche tools, playful gadgets, clever add-ons. That is not a weakness but reflects a form of value that industrial assembly lines rarely deliver — the satisfaction of something made with care and attention to a specific need. But converting that satisfaction into sustained economic dynamism requires an ecosystem that supports durability, integration into broader markets and responsible technical practices.

There is a cultural dimension too. Handcrafted innovation renews a familiar virtue: the value of trying, fixing and iterating with one's hands. It is not merely about replacing large-scale R&D with countless tiny experiments but reviving a social imagination in which technology belongs to the many, not merely the few. Every simple app and home-assembled gadget pushes back against the idea that innovation is the monopoly of sprawling labs and deep pockets.

Someday a student's low-cost power bank handmade in a dormitory might evolve into a company that rethinks battery longevity. A programmer's tiny tool might become a mainstream app. Those outcomes matter. But a more immediate and perhaps deeper change is psychological: when more people believe "I can build that", the supply of experiments swells and innovation becomes more porous and resilient.

The handcrafted economy is, in effect, a return to an older rhythm of innovation — one powered by curiosity, patience and proximity to everyday problems. AI, modular supply chains and supportive policy can amplify that rhythm, turning isolated acts of tinkering into sustained value creation.

Innovation, after all, has seldom arrived fully formed from the ivory tower. It has been rubbed smooth, soldered and debugged by many hands before it becomes something the world recognizes. If institutions can provide clear rules, basic protections and practical bridges to scale, then the "handcrafted" wave will not be a passing fad but a powerful engine of inclusive innovation. What is being hand-made today is not just gadgets and apps — they are the conditions under which more people will be empowered to shape the future.

The author is an associate researcher at the Institute of Finance and Banking of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and a senior research fellow at the National Institution for Finance and Development.

The views don't necessarily represent those of China Daily.

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at opinion@chinadaily.com.cn, and comment@chinadaily.com.cn.

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