Emma Lee, Author at TechNode https://technode.com/author/emmalee/ Latest news and trends about tech in China Thu, 29 Dec 2022 03:44:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://technode.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cropped-cropped-technode-icon-2020_512x512-1-32x32.png Emma Lee, Author at TechNode https://technode.com/author/emmalee/ 32 32 20867963 Will China’s 618 shopping event lose its appeal? https://technode.com/2022/06/14/will-chinas-618-shopping-event-lose-its-appeal/ Tue, 14 Jun 2022 13:35:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168809 618For those who are taking a close look at the country’s second-largest shopping extravaganza, this year’s edition of 618 might seem like 2020 all over again, yet if anything the situation is even more austere. ]]> 618

First launched in 2010 by China’s e-commerce giant JD, the 618 shopping event has evolved into a major mid-year shopping event that has driven online consumer spending over the decade. However, consumers are becoming more cautious during a pandemic-hit economic downturn and growing tired of more frequent shopping events stimulation over the past decade.

The event was originally created as a competition for the Alibaba-backed Singles’ Day shopping event (on November 11). Both events chose dates carefully. 618 is a nod to JD’s founding date of June 18, while Singles’ Day is an unofficial day that the Chinese internet uses to take jabs at people who are not in a relationship. 

Similar to Singles’ Day, the 618 shopping festival has grown out of its founding platform and become a promotional event across all major Chinese e-commerce platforms. The event is also considered a barometer for consumer spending capacity and new shopping trends in China.

2022 might be the toughest 618 

For those who are taking a close look at the country’s second-largest shopping extravaganza, this year’s edition of 618 might seem like 2020 all over again, yet if anything the situation is even more austere. Lots of local media outlets have dubbed this year’s edition of 618 as the “toughest” in history. 

When the pandemic first spread across China two years ago in early 2020, the 618 festival that year largely delivered, thanks to government stimulus and the country ending large-scale lockdown two months ahead of the event. It achieved much-needed big sales numbers and signaled a gradual return to economic normalcy at the time. However, the circumstances for this year put the success of the shopping bonanza in some doubt.

In both years, China was just coming out of lockdowns which had taken a toll on the country’s faltering economy and led to subdued consumer sentiment. But the timing is different. In 2020, Covid-19 broke out in January and most pandemic-related lockdowns were removed in early April. By the time 618 arrived in June, the state had already stepped in to boost consumption by launching a series of digital subsidy programs over April and May. On top of that, the two-month gap allowed more time for manufacturing and logistics companies to recover from the lockdowns ahead of the shopping festival. 

This year, however, there’s less time for the market – either consumer sentiment, merchants, or logistics companies – to react since the months-long lockdowns to control new Covid-19 outbreaks in cities like Beijing and Shanghai were only lifted on June 1, just as many retailers were gearing up for the 618 shopping festival with pre-promotion and early deals. Moreover, recent trends make it obvious that Chinese consumers will be even more cautious in 2022 than they were near the start of the pandemic.

For example, as a working mom with two primary school kids in Beijing, Liu Chunying didn’t pay much attention to this year’s 618 promotion until later as she was busy living under a partial lockdown. She used to rely on the festival’s deals to stock up on as much as 70% of her purchases. This year, she only started making a shopping list after Beijing lifted most of the lockdowns in June. Liu added that she will only buy necessities and refrain from impulse buys this year. 

In terms of size, the 618 festival achieved a gross merchandise value (GMV) of RMB 578.5 billion ($89.6 billion) across all platforms in the eighteen days from June 1 to June 18 in 2021, according to data from Syntun. The figure is second only to the GMV of Singles’ Day in terms of shopping festivals in China. The 2021 GMV for 618 represented a yearly growth of 26.5%, but also a slowing from the 43.8% surge recorded in 2020 and driven by pent-up post-lockdown consumption.

Although post-Covid consumption proved to be an effective driver for 618 sales in 2020, market watchers aren’t optimistic about a repeat this year. Data and analytics company GlobalData projects that China’s retail channel will lose steam in 2022 after a stellar run in 2020 and 2021. The downward trend will have a spillover effect into 2023 with the home retail category bearing the brunt of consumer fiscal austerity, the firm said.

Covid-19 prevention measures are major headwinds, according to Bobby Verghese, a consumer analyst at GlobalData. “The stringent Omicron lockdowns in Beijing and Shanghai had a debilitating impact on consumer livelihoods and the economy. Bereft of workers, factories and businesses came to a standstill. With people confined to their homes, the customer footfall in physical retail stores waned, while online retailers were unable to make deliveries due to supply chain disruptions,” he said in a press release sent to TechNode.

Promotion deals in the pandemic era

China’s top online sellers such as JD, Alibaba, Pinduoduo, Douyin, and Kuaishou, have launched a series of efforts to revive consumption for 618 since mid-May. The enhanced promotion efforts come as e-commerce giants such as Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo have recorded historically-low revenue growth in the first quarter of this year, as the companies have been hit by both Covid lockdowns and tighter reins from regulators since last year.

JD, Alibaba, and Pinduoduo are offering an immediate RMB 50 ($7.50) discount for every purchase of around RMB 300 across their platforms. This is the largest discount in recent years compared with the more standard RMB 20 to RMB 30 discount on RMB 200 orders.

They have also rolled out merchant support plans, from offering immediate payment transfers for merchants joining 618 promotions to ensuring liquidity to cut service fees to lower costs. The moves are also in line with the state’s call for platform companies to assist struggling small- and medium-sized businesses.

Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace has launched a “metaverse mall” for this year’s 618 to create a virtual shopping venue for customers, tapping into the rising metaverse boom.

Are shopping holidays losing their shine?

618 and Singles’ Day are far from the only shopping carnivals in China. To draw customers and drive sales, e-commerce platforms have established a list of festivals that span all year round. Chinese consumers are increasingly overwhelmed by a dazzling array of shopping festivals celebrating nearly every major holiday, from Spring Festival to Children’s Day.

Even Singles’ Day experienced a lackluster year in 2021. Although still recording new highs in GMV, the shopping bonanza posted the slowest growth in its history: just 9%, compared with up to three-digit growth in its heyday. 

After more than a decade of development focused on big promotional activities and skyrocketing sales numbers, the market is adapting to a new definition of “success” for such festivals, focusing on achieving brand awareness and turning those drawn in by short-term promotional campaigns into long-term loyal customers. Against this backdrop, this year’s 618 may see considerably slower growth than usual for reasons other than just disruptive Covid lockdowns.

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Chinese education giant New Oriental finds new success in livestream e-commerce https://technode.com/2022/06/13/chinese-education-giant-new-oriental-finds-new-success-in-livestream-e-commerce/ Mon, 13 Jun 2022 08:00:57 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168785 New OrientalNew Oriental is among several tutoring companies pivoting to new business ventures after China’s crackdown on the private tutoring industry last July. ]]> New Oriental

Ever since China abruptly cut off the bulk of income for most private education companies last summer, the businesses have had to make some difficult decisions. For New Oriental, once the leader of the sector, it meant letting go of most of its tutors for the K-9 grades and setting up a new livestreaming e-commerce unit to make up for some of the lost income. 

Until this month, New Oriental’s new live e-commerce initiative had been lackluster at best. Daily sales hovered around less than RMB 1 million ($150,000) in the past six months, according to data from livestreaming tracking platform Huitun. But suddenly, New Oriental’s fortunes are looking up. It all changed after the firm’s hosts, all former tutors, started to teach English while selling goods over their livestreams. 

On June 10, during a session selling bags of rice, the host pulled out a small whiteboard and asked the audience whether they thought the price of RMB 80 was fair. She then wrote three English phrases — “bargain,” “cost-effective,” and “unforgettable” — on the whiteboard and began teaching an unexpected course on how to use these phrases in real life. This unique style of selling has quickly made New Oriental’s livestreaming sessions a sensation on the Chinese internet. 

Why it matters: China’s blooming livestream e-commerce sector has become increasingly crowded as thousands of Chinese celebrities and online personalities flock to commercialize their followers or cash in on online fame. Only those with relatively unique selling points or characters are able to stand out and attract buyers’ attention.

READ MORE: Edtech will survive China’s crackdown, but it won’t be the same

Details: Livestreaming session and video clips of Oriental Select, New Oriental’s livestream ecommerce arm, went viral across Chinese social platforms over the weekend after hosts started to offer short, free English teaching sessions during the live shopping sessions.

  • Oriental Select’s account on Douyin, the platform where the brand livestreams, has gained more than 1.6 million followers in three days since June 10. An 18-hour-long livestream held on June 11 recorded RMB 19.9 million in sales, a jump from the RMB 4.5 million New Oriental’s founder Yu Minhong achieved on his December debut.
  • Instead of the hard-sell advertising style used by most Chinese e-commerce livestreamers, hosts at Oriental Select, all former teachers at New Oriental, display a laidback attitude when selling through the livestreams. 
  • When promoting a corn product on a livestream session held on Monday, former English teacher Dong Yuhui said he hoped the corn would remind the buyers of their “good-old days” as a child when they were “young and carefree.” He then took out a board and wrote down the expressions in English.
  • On Monday, New Oriental’s share price increased by more than 16% in Hong Kong after the company’s livestreams began to take off over the weekend.  

Context: Battered by China’s private tutoring clampdown, the country’s edtech majors such as New Oriental, Gaotu, and TAL all stopped providing after-school tutoring services targeting students up to K-9, a major source of their revenue, in the mainland Chinese market in the second half of 2021. Shares of the three companies plunged roughly 100% since the regulatory measures were announced in July.

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TikTok parent ByteDance seeks India comeback through partnership: report https://technode.com/2022/06/02/tiktok-parent-bytedance-seeks-india-comeback-through-partnership-report/ Thu, 02 Jun 2022 08:10:52 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168567 Tiktok US buyoutIf ByteDance successfully re-entered India, it could pave the road for other Chinese companies like Tencent and Alibaba. ]]> Tiktok US buyout

TikTok owner ByteDance is looking to re-enter the Indian market through a partnership with local company Hiranandani Group, nearly two years after being banned in one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, Indian media outlet Economic Times reported on Wednesday.

Why it matters: ByteDance’s effort to re-enter India, if successful, could pave the road for other Chinese companies, including major players such as Tencent and Alibaba, to access a market that’s undergoing rapid growth in mobile internet and one where they have already invested tens of billions.

  • ByteDance’s effort to gain access to India through a partnership is reminiscent of some of the solutions international companies have sought when faced with blocks in China. The Chinese government requires foreign companies engaged in “restricted” areas, such as chemicals and machinery like engines and cameras, to set up a joint venture with a local Chinese partner to run in the country.
  • Even if Chinese tech giants could make a successful comeback, they would still have to catch up with India’s quickly changing market, which has fostered its own alternatives in the absence of Chinese firms.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Does India need China tech?

Details: ByteDance is in discussion with Mumbai-based realty major Hiranandani Group in an attempt to re-enter India, the Indian media outlet Economic Times reported.

  • Joining forces with a local company is expected to help ByteDance avoid government scrutiny in India, the company’s second-largest market and a country where it had more than 2,000 employees before being banned in 2020.
  • Details of the partnership remain elusive since the talks are still at a very early stage. But ByteDance has informed Indian regulators about its intentions, the report said. A senior government official told Economic Times that there’s been no official approach yet, but that they will examine the requirements when the companies seek government approval.
  • Hiranandani Group runs data center operations. A partnership would allow ByteDance to store user data within the country, therefore making it compliant with local regulations.
  • ByteDance didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiries on the matter when reached on Thursday morning.

Context: The Indian government banned nearly 200 Chinese apps from June to September 2020 as China and India engaged in a border conflict. Some of the most popular Chinese apps and services, including TikTok, WeChat, Shein, and Alipay, have remained on the blacklist. 

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Douyin sees e-commerce sales more than tripled in the past year https://technode.com/2022/06/01/douyin-sees-e-commerce-sales-more-than-tripled-in-the-past-year/ Wed, 01 Jun 2022 06:05:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168533 Chinese short video platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou are quickly taking away the market shares of Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo.]]>

TikTok’s Chinese version Douyin announced on Tuesday that its online sales more than tripled for the year ending in April, an impressive growth rate for the e-commerce upcomer when other majors are slowing down due to an economic downturn in China.

Why it matters: Chinese short video platforms like ByteDance-backed Douyin and Kuaishou are quickly taking away the market shares of e-commerce giants like Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo, thanks to their widely popular social content.

  • Douyin chose to announce sales numbers and growth plans on the eve of China’s 618 shopping festival to build momentum for the mid-year spending frenzy, a local media outlet in Chengdu reported.

READ MORE: 618 is not just about e-commerce platforms anymore

Details: Douyin’s gross merchandise value (GMV) surged 320% year-on-year in the year ending in April as the company sold more than 10 billion products, president of Douyin E-commerce Wei Wenwen said (in Chinese) at a Douyin e-commerce conference on Tuesday.

  • At the online meeting, Douyin rebranded the concept of “interest e-commerce” as “full-field interest e-commerce” after rolling out the idea last April. The company hopes to highlight its ability to attract consumers through multiple channels such as short videos, livestreaming, its search function, and more, said Wei at the conference.
  • The firm didn’t give a specific GMV figure, but people with knowledge of the matter told Caixin that Douyin achieved more than RMB 800 billion GMV in 2021 and is expected to bring in between RMB 1 trillion and RMB 1.2 trillion this year. However, the company said the figure is “inaccurate” in response to Caixin. 
  • Douyin E-commerce, which became a stand-alone business unit only two years ago, achieved fast growth by tapping into Douyin’s 600 million daily active users. Douyin generates more than 200 million short videos and holds 9 million livestream sessions per month in a bid to convert user attention to sales. 
  • Douyin’s Wei said she believes plenty of opportunity remains in the sector and that the platform aims to take more than 50% of the industry’s growth market in the future.

Context: Although still holding the lion’s share of the market, Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo are recording decelerated growth as they face macroeconomic headwinds, regulatory challenges, and pandemic control measures.

  • Alibaba’s global consumer-facing businesses generated RMB 8.3 trillion in GMV for the year ending in March, remaining relatively flat compared to the RMB 8.1 trillion recorded a year ago. In 2021, Pinduoduo’s GMV increased 46% year-on-year to RMB 2.4 trillion, while JD’s GMV grew 26.2% year-on-year for the same period. Kuaishou’s GMV increased 78.4% year-on-year to RMB 680 billion in 2021.
  • Douyin’s e-commerce sales dwarfed its global sibling TikTok, which reportedly achieved nearly RMB 6 billion GMV in 2021.
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Online grocer Dingdong Maicai halts operations in several lower-tier cities https://technode.com/2022/05/31/online-grocer-dingdong-maicai-halts-operations-in-several-lower-tier-cities/ Tue, 31 May 2022 09:43:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168493 Dingdong is pivoting from expanding by all means to prioritizing profitability, a trend that has been visible among top tech majors. ]]>

Dingdong Maicai plans to suspend operations in several lower-tier cities in China, joining a slew of grocery delivery platforms downsizing amid a cooling market.

Why it matters: Dingdong is pivoting from expanding by all means to prioritizing profitability, a trend that has been visible among many of the top players like Meituan and Alibaba.

  • Dingdong’s cutback in lower-tier cities comes when China’s top-tier cities, Shanghai and Beijing, see surging demands for groceries, driven mainly by panic buying during lockdowns and uncertain times as the Covid-19 outbreak surged again in the country. 

Details: Dingdong will stop providing delivery services in two cities in the eastern province of Anhui — Xuancheng and Chuzhou — from 6 p.m. Tuesday, according to a May 29 report from Ahwang (in Chinese), a regional media outlet. The firm will also halt operations in the northern city of Tangshan in Hebei province and the southern city of Zhuhai in Guangdong province around the same time.

  • Dingdong users’ group chats in these cities will be dissolved, and the company will refund any outstanding balance in users’ prepaid accounts, according to a statement from the company.
  • Suspension of services in these cities is part of the “company’s normal business adjustment and optimization,” a Dingdong representative told TechNode on Tuesday.
  • The Ahwang report added that the company’s business in Guangdong province’s Zhongshan and Zhuhai is also undergoing adjustments. Meanwhile, services within the Yangtze River Delta area, where the firm expects to achieve profitability soon, remain unaffected.
  • TechNode found that Dingdong users in Shanghai still can’t order freely as of Tuesday morning. Instead, they have to compete for limited amounts of order slots, a measure that was introduced amid soaring demand and staffing shortage during the city’s Covid-related lockdown that began in late March. 

Context: Online grocery and food delivery teams at various Chinese tech giants were among the worst-hit units in the country’s ongoing mass tech layoff. Dingdong reportedly launched a series of job cuts in January this year.

  • Along with around 150 US-listed Chinese companies, Dingdong has been added to US’s Securities and Exchange Commission’s provisional delisting list targeting foreign companies that have failed to comply with the country’s financial audit rules. 
  • In its fourth-quarter earnings of last year, the grocery delivery company said that it achieved profitability in Shanghai for the quarter. 
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How Shein became China’s ‘TikTok for e-commerce’ https://technode.com/2022/05/31/how-shein-became-chinas-tiktok-for-e-commerce/ Tue, 31 May 2022 00:30:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168408 Shein's success could be attributed to a range of factors, from its affordable fashion positioning to viral online marketing strategies on social platforms like Instagram.]]>

Shein was among hundreds of thousands of Chinese startups that tapped into the country’s emerging cross-border e-commerce industry when it was founded in 2008 in the eastern city of Nanjing. 

More than a decade later, it’s a Chinese fast fashion decacorn (a private technology company worth more than $10 billion) with a market cap of $100 billion. Only three other tech juggernauts — ByteDance, Alibaba’s Ant Group, and SpaceX — have surpassed that benchmark, according to Crunchbase’s private unicorn list.

Shein is a much lesser-known name than its local peers like Alibaba and JD. Its relative anonymity is largely due to its unusually low profile, typified by the lack of public information on its mysterious founder Xu Yangtian, also known as Chris Xu. However, Shein is a name that is increasingly difficult to ignore, as its extraordinary growth has more people comparing it with big-name rivals like Amazon and Zara.

A list of impressive numbers backs up the hype about Shein. In May 2021, Shein overtook Amazon as the most downloaded shopping app in the US, a position it has largely maintained ever since, according to App Annie. The company’s revenue totaled $16 billion in 2021 after expanding at breakneck three-digit growth rates over the past few years. The rising firm is also a venture capitalist’s darling: Shein has received a combined $2.1 billion in funding from reputable investors, including Tiger Global Management, Sequoia Capital, and IDG Capital, since its establishment.

Such incredible growth (and hype) led internet analyst Matthew Brennan to label Shein the “TikTok for e-commerce.” While the comparison points to how the two Chinese companies are achieving a phenomenal rise globally, it’s also important to understand the underlying lessons of their explosive growth — and how they have combined Chinese and western business models to create a new type of online giant.

Where did Shein come from?

Shein is an online fast-fashion company based in China and sells globally, from clothes to accessories to shoes at super-cheap prices. Started as a platform targeting female shoppers, the site now expanded to offer an increasing selection for kids and men.

Unlike Chinese peers focusing on the domestic market, Shein is engaged only in overseas e-commerce markets, which was a less competitive vertical when it was founded ten years ago. 

Its main operation and manufacturing centers are still based out of China, but the company sells to more than 150 countries in nearly every major market in the world, from Europe and North America to Latin America and Southeast Asia. However, its presence in the Chinese market is nearly zero – out of choice.

Why Shein?

The company’s success could be attributed to a range of factors, from its affordable fashion positioning to viral online marketing strategies on social platforms like Instagram.

Offering a diversity of products to consumers quickly and affordably is a common playbook for fast fashion brands to achieve success. Shein has taken that practice to a whole new level.

Shein female apparel sold for less than $10 (Image credit: TechNode)
  • Huge diversity for ultra-cheap prices: Shein’s products are astonishingly cheap, generally below $20, making products from rivals such as Zara, ASOS, H&M, and Boohoo appear relatively expensive. In addition, the platform offers around 600,000 products for sale at any one time. Another area where it outmaneuvered its rivals is with a shorter lead time, from design to shipping, of a typical five to seven days. The firm actually aims for a much shorter three-day turnaround, from design to production, according to a Reuters report. Compare that with around three weeks for a garment from Zara and Shein’s appeal begins to become clear.
  • Flexible production: Shein works with more than 6,000 suppliers, many of whom are small businesses that make Shein-branded products in small batches. The company will increase production if the products become popular and cut short other items if they’re less popular based on real-time consumer feedback. The model is not unlike the consumer to manufacturer (C2M) model that’s been picked up by many Chinese e-commerce giants such as Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and JD. It connects manufacturers and consumers to produce tailored products at lower prices through the application of AI-powered data analytics.
  • Platform independence: Shein’s rise comes at a time when many Chinese sellers relied on bigger platforms such as Amazon to sell products to overseas users. Being its own platform, Shein is able to use AI algorithms for supply chain and manufacturing upgrades, rather than relying on platform companies like Amazon for customer acquisition, which also gives away control of user data. Recently, Amazon’s year-long removal of Chinese sellers from its platform since early 2021 has also made Shein’s independent model more appealing
  • KOL marketing: The brand first gained popularity among young customers, especially teenagers, by running online marketing campaigns on social media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok through cooperation with KOLs or influencers. The strategy is similar to TikTok’s approach of matching content creators with users. KOL marketing also lies behind the success of a series of Chinese online-first, or online-only, brands like cosmetics seller Perfect Diary.
  • Addictive shopping experience: For Shein consumers, the shopping experience can become super addictive when offered the chance to choose from a vast number of products, especially knowing that one doesn’t have to worry about their budget. The app also boosts engagement with a range of fun features. For example, users who check the Shein app daily receive points, which can be converted into coupons when making purchases. 

Controversies

Shein’s meteoric rise has also attracted scrutiny from the public. Many questioned the ethics of its ultra-low prices, accused the company of lacking transparency, and raised concerns about its treatment of workers, such as low pay, poor safety conditions, and the use of underage workers.

More than 80% of nearly 700 suppliers audited in 2021 had at least one major risk factor, according to a sustainability and social responsibility report the company released in 2021 under public pressure. The report shows that just 12% of the company’s suppliers were able to claim zero violations from a list that included items such as forced labor and serious environmental pollution. The company said that it had threatened violators with closure if the situation was not remedied immediately.

An investigative report conducted by Chinese media outlet Sixth Tone found that staff at one of Shein’s subcontractors often work 15-hour shifts in order to meet deadlines, although the company said it was committed to “upholding high labor standards.”

The firm’s other controversies include selling a pendant necklace with a swastika sign and repeated allegations of copyright infringement (in Chinese).

What’s next?

With deep roots in China, Shein seems to be distancing itself from its home country as geopolitical tensions and regulatory scrutiny over China-related tech companies increase. 

The company has made a Singapore entity its parent firm and is aggressively expanding its presence in the city-state, Reuters reported in February. The story added that Chris Xu, Shein’s founder and CEO, has become a permanent resident of Singapore, although the company’s spokesperson later denied this claim. 

Xu’s reported application for Singaporean residence comes amid talks that the company is preparing for an IPO. This is reminiscent of a similar move by Haidilao founder Zhang Yong, who gained Singaporean citizenship before the hotpot chain went public in 2018. Zhang topped the city state’s rich list in 2019.

Shein is facing a few headwinds. The firm was among the first batch of 59 tech companies, including TikTok and WeChat, to be banned in India, as the relationship between the world’s fastest-growing economies turned sour in 2020 after a border conflict.

The company also sees intensified competition, even as it continues to grow. At least 10 Chinese fast-fashion companies, such as Cider, Urbanic, and ChicV, are chasing global consumers, while tech giants such as Alibaba and ByteDance are also digging into the sector with Shein-like platforms.

The past decade was certainly Shein’s heyday of development. However, the company’s growth has shown signs of slowing as its sales increased 60% year-on-year in 2021, a much slower rate than its 250% jump in 2020. The company is likely to face more challenges as it attempts to sustain its high-speed growth – and live up to its $100 billion valuation.

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JD records slowest quarterly growth since 2014 amid Covid resurgence in China https://technode.com/2022/05/18/jd-records-slowest-quarterly-growth-since-2014-amid-covid-resurgence-in-china/ Wed, 18 May 2022 07:41:57 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=168064 JDJD faces several headwinds, from Covid-19 lockdowns in many Chinese cities to sluggish retail consumption to a weak macroeconomic outlook.]]> JD

Chinese online retailer JD posted mixed results for the first quarter of this year on Tuesday. The company beat market expectations on revenue but recorded its slowest revenue growth as a public company as net losses widened for the quarter.

Why it matters: JD, along with rivals including Alibaba, faces several headwinds, from Covid-19 lockdowns in many Chinese cities to sluggish retail consumption to a weak macroeconomic outlook.

  • The revenue growth rates of major Chinese e-commerce tech giants have been hitting new lows since late last year. JD rivals Alibaba and Pinduoduo, which have yet to release their first-quarter results, recorded their slowest revenue growth for the fourth quarter of last year.
  • These companies are adjusting their operational structures and product lines to adapt to a challenging economic environment.

Details: JD’s total revenue increased 18% year-on-year to RMB 239.7 billion ($37.8 billion) for the first quarter of this year, beating the $35.6 billion high-end estimation compiled by Yahoo Finance. However, this is its slowest growth since JD went public on the US market in 2014.

  • In the first quarter, total revenue for the company’s core retail business increased 17% year-on-year to RMB 217.5 billion, while the company’s second-largest business segment, JD Logistics, climbed by 22% to RMB 27.4 billion compared with the same period last year.
  • The company’s net loss for the reporting period was RMB 3 billion compared to a net income of RMB 3.6 billion one year ago. These increased costs and expenses related to investment in infrastructure, research and development, as well as order fulfillment and employee benefits, which were hiked up by recent lockdowns in Chinese cities.
  • “Since the start of 2022, we have seen many challenges arise in our external environment, including the Covid resurgence, supply chain disruptions, and weak consumer sentiment, among others,” JD’s chief executive officer Xu Lei said in the company’s earnings call, held on Tuesday.
  • Recent omicron outbreaks in China have a much more significant impact on the supply chain than in 2021 because of higher contagion rates, Xu pointed out. While the Covid-19 outbreak in 2020 brought “some positive effect” to the internet and e-commerce sectors by accelerating the online migration of users, the ongoing outbreak has “hit both online and offline enterprises heavily.”  

Context: On Tuesday, China’s top political advisory body held a consultation session to promote the digital economy. Vice Premier Liu He emphasized support for the platform economy and the list of digital companies overseas.

  • China’s online retail sales increased 6.6% in the first quarter of this year, the slowest growth rate since June 2020, according to data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics. On the bright side, more consumers have chosen to buy goods online over the past two years. The online retail sales for physical goods accounted for 23.8% of total retail consumer goods sales in the four months ending April, up from 18.6% for the same period in 2019.
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Alibaba’s DingTalk faces layoffs and team optimization  https://technode.com/2022/05/13/alibabas-dingtalk-faces-layoffs-and-team-optimization/ Fri, 13 May 2022 08:09:04 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167926 DingTalk, Alibaba's enterprise communication and collaboration app, was present at CES Asia 2019 to showcase its hardware products in Shanghai, China on June 11, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)The downsizing conversation of DingTalk, one of Alibaba’s major business lines, is another sign of stress within the Chinese tech community. ]]> DingTalk, Alibaba's enterprise communication and collaboration app, was present at CES Asia 2019 to showcase its hardware products in Shanghai, China on June 11, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)

Alibaba’s workplace collaboration app DingTalk has been at the center of layoff discussions on Chinese social media this week. Some people indicated the platform faces a massive 30% job cut, while others suggested a standard organizational adjustment that affects less than 10% of the staff.

Why it matters: Chinese tech companies have seen rounds of layoffs over the past few months. The downsizing conversation of one of Alibaba’s major business lines is another sign of stress within the Chinese tech community. 

  • Alibaba and Tencent currently lead the country’s workplace app market with DingTalk and WeCom.

Details: Talks of DingTalk’s layoff started circulating on Chinese social media on Thursday. The workplace app will reportedly cut less than 10% of its employees this year, according to a widely circulated comment posted on China’s LinkedIn-like platform Maimai. The user, who identified himself as an Alibaba employee, said on the platform that the cut will be 10% of the staff (in Chinese), rather than 30% previously circulated on the platform (in Chinese), which would have been the largest layoff for an individual Alibaba unit this year.

  • A 10% cut is considered within the normal range of an organizational adjustment for DingTalk, according to Chinese media outlet 36Kr (in Chinese), citing unnamed DingTalk staff. The 36kr source said DingTalk removes around 4% to 10% of low-performing employees annually. This year’s headcount change is looking to be similar to previous years after DingTalk removed 6% of low-performing employees and some people left voluntarily in 2021, the source added.
  • DingTalk announced a series of strategic changes in March as the company prioritizes its transition to a platform-as-a-service (PaaS) business. DingTalk will focus on developing key features in core collaboration and productivity functions, such as file-sharing, project management, and video call. Meanwhile, the platform will leave other tasks to third-party developers and partners, such as hardware and industry applications.
  • The company didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiries on the matter when contacted on Friday morning.

Context: Chinese productivity apps are hoping to commercialize their services after investing heavily into the market’s pandemic-driven boom since 2020.

  • DingTalk launched paid versions in March, while ByteDance reportedly aims to accelerate the commercialization of its workplace communication app Lark, aiming for a global revenue goal of RMB 6 billion ($940 million) by 2026.
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Top 5 Chinese tech firms have lost nearly half of combined market cap in 2 years https://technode.com/2022/05/09/top-5-chinese-tech-firms-have-lost-nearly-half-of-combined-market-cap-in-2-years/ Mon, 09 May 2022 10:49:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167731 Apple worths almost half of the top 5 Chinese tech giants.After enormous growth, the top 5 Chinese tech giants have lost at least 46% of their combined market cap over the past two years.]]> Apple worths almost half of the top 5 Chinese tech giants.

Chinese tech watchers and venture capitalists are growing increasingly concerned over the long-term market appeal of Chinese tech companies. Industry leaders are sharing and quoting a Chinese financial infographic comparing the changing market capitalization of Apple and top Chinese firms over the past two years to show just how much the value of China’s tech giants has dropped. 

Why it matters: After two decades of enormous growth, the top five Chinese tech giants have lost at least 46% of their combined market cap over the past two years in the face of headwinds from saturating markets, pandemic outbreaks, trade tensions, and rigorous government regulations.

(Image credit: TechNode/Ward Zhou)

Details: Chinese tech companies are less valuable than they were two years ago. On April 26, Chinese financial media outlet Jin10 Data published an infographic (in Chinese) showing the drastic shrinkage in the valuation of China’s top tech firms. The infographic compared the market cap of US smartphone maker Apple with Chinese tech firms, showing that Apple’s $2.7 trillion valuation was worth more than double the value of China’s top 49 tech firms combined.

  • The graphic highlights the stark market cap difference by comparing Apple and Chinese tech firms’ April market cap data with those from two years ago. On April 27, 2020, Apple, valued at $1.2 trillion at the time, roughly equaled the combined valuation of the top five Chinese tech firms — Alibaba (which had a market cap of $548.2 billion), Tencent ($508.7 billion), Meituan ($74.9 billion), JD.com ($66.2 billion), and Pinduoduo ($59.4 billion). Two years later, Apple’s valuation has more than doubled while many Chinese tech firms’ valuation has decreased or stagnated, making the former now worth more than 49 top Chinese tech firms combined. 
  • Chinese financial writer Wu Xiaobo cited the infographic in a post titled “What’s wrong with us?” lamenting the loss of the “upbeat spirit” of China’s business world.
  • China’s tech clampdown has wiped hundreds of billions off the valuation of Alibaba and Tencent, China’s two largest tech companies, amid the US-China trade war and the country’s antitrust clampdown since April 2020.
  • On Monday, the market cap of Tencent, currently the most valuable Chinese tech firm, slumped to $427.6 billion, while Alibaba’s market cap has more than halved to $247.5 billion. Pinduoduo also lost more than $10 billion in valuation.
Cap changes of Chinese tech giants in two years.
A Chinese financial infographic showing the shrinking market value of Chinese tech companies sparked concerns among Chinese tech watchers. (Image credit: TechNode/Ward Zhou) Credit: Jin10.com

Context: The change in value of China’s biggest tech firms only reflects listed companies. Some of the country’s biggest tech players that remain private are not included in the comparison, such as ByteDance, Huawei, and Alibaba’s Ant Group.

  • China is recording slow growth in the number of unicorns, or startups valued at more than $1 billion and not yet listed on a stock exchange, according to the Global Unicorn Index 2021 released by Hurun Research Institute in December. In 2021, China counted 301 unicorns, or 28% of the 1,058 unicorns worldwide, down from 41% in 2019.
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INSIGHTS | Is noodle chain the new blue ocean for China tech VCs?​ https://technode.com/2022/05/09/insights-is-noodle-chain-the-new-blue-ocean-for-china-tech-vcs/ Mon, 09 May 2022 02:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167649 Hefu NoodlesChinese-style noodle chain restaurants first became tech investor darlings in 2021 when the industry faced tightened regulation.]]> Hefu Noodles

Once focused on Chinese tech companies, venture-capital funds are pouring money into new noodle chain brands that sprung up in the country. Even tech giants like Tencent, the social and gaming behemoth, and an active investor, are doubling their bets on the sector. The capital inflow and media attention on a very specific food and beverage vertical highly resembles China’s coffee craze four years ago – and has many observers referencing the spectacular rise of Luckin Coffee.

Chinese-style noodle chain restaurants first became tech investor darlings in 2021 when the industry faced tightened regulation while the country’s consumers became increasingly willing to spend more on quality products and experiences. There were twelve noodle chain investment deals in the first half of that year, with a combined total of RMB 1 billion injected into the emerging area. The market scale of Chinese noodle restaurants is expected to be worth RMB 346 billion ($52 billion) by 2022, according to Chinese data analytics firm iiMedia Research.

So will China’s noodle chain market see the emergence of the “next Luckin”? Or, more importantly, will the market craze maintain its momentum?

Insights

Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.

Blurring boundaries between tech and consumption brands

Before its spectacular, highly controversial downfall after a financial fraud scandal, Luckin helped grow the popularity of coffee culture in a majority tea-drinking nation and fostered the growth of a trillion-dollar market in China. 

Coffee chains are not tech businesses, but Luckin borrowed a playbook from tech companies by building its ordering and delivery services around mobile apps while adopting online-first marketing and branding strategies typical of internet companies. It’s perhaps no surprise that Luckin adopted an internet-based approach to the coffee business, given the company shares the same founding team of car-sharing platform CAR, Inc. But it was nevertheless a fresh approach when Luckin first rose to stardom in 2018.

Luckin is still trying to recover from the aftermath of a shocking RMB 2.2 billion accounting fraud scandal. Still, the company’s approach to entering a traditional industry with heavy discounts and an online-first marketing strategy has been picked up by many companies and viewed by numerous investors as a proven business model.

This model has been partially tested in China’s milk tea industry, which has seen the rise of bubble tea giants like HeyTea and Nayuki attracting funds from tech majors. Tencent has invested in HeyTea and Canadian coffee chain Tim Hortons, while ByteDance has backed Shanghai-based coffee chain Manner.

Venture capital attention has since been turned to a slew of verticals in food and beverage. Hotpot brands (for example, Lanxiong Hotpot), Chinese pastry chains (such as Bao Shifu), and packed stewed snacks (including Tencent-backed Shining Taste) are also getting investor attention. But for many investors, noodles, one of China’s favorite staple foods, is the next break-out vertical to win over.

The race to be Luckin for noodles

Luckin’s approach has prevailed in China’s noodle market over the past year. Armed with funding, a host of noodle brands have targeted rapid offline expansion combined with online marketing campaigns to quickly capture market share. Here are a few rising players in China’s new noodle chain brands.

  • Hefu Noodles: A top player in the field, this decade-old brand of Beijing-style noodles operates more than 380 stores across China as of February. It has so far secured six funding rounds totaling RMB 1.6 billion. The company’s most recent Series E booked RMB 800 million in July 2021 from investors, including CMC Capital, Tencent, ZWC Partners, and Longfor Capital. With a market valuation of RMB 7 billion, the company is gearing up for an overseas IPO this year.
  • Chen Xianggui: This Lanzhou-style noodle chain restaurant has received more than $300 million in funding since its establishment in 2020. Investors include Source Code Capital, an investor in ByteDance and Meituan, and Huaxing Growth Capital, the tech and entertainment-focused venture capital arm of financial institution China Renaissance. The company’s valuation reached nearly RMB 1 billion, with the most recent RMB 200 million funds secured last November.
  • Majiyong: Tencent invested in the operating body of Majiyong, an upstart beef noodle brand, in late January. Last May, the Shanghai-based food chain received an angel round from renowned tech investors, including Sequoia Capital, Gaorong Capital, and K2 Venture Capital, at a valuation of RMB 1 billion ($160 million).
  • Yujian Noodles: The valuation of the Chongqing-style noodle chain reached RMB 3 billion after receiving RMB 100 million in funding in September last year. Investors include Country Garden Venture Capital, the investment arm of property developer Country Garden, and restaurant chain Xijiade. 

Noodles 2.0: standardize noodle-making 

Chinese have been cooking and eating noodles for thousands of years, creating many varieties and styles of noodle dishes, making the category a rich, busy place for competition. While traditional Chinese noodle joints have shabby storefronts and affordable pricing, the new noodle chains have chic dining settings and are often located in malls and business areas, offering a Chinese-style fast food alternative for urbanites. 

Such stores are usually accessible through various online food delivery platforms and offer streamlined membership services embedded in popular social media apps such as WeChat. The noodle newcomers also charge higher prices with better service and chic settings. For example, a typical bowl of tomato and beef noodles at Hefu Noodle costs RMB 38, much higher than similar items sold at below RMB 20 in traditional shops.

On top of that, the new breed of noodle chains save on operating costs by standardizing and streamlining food production at “central kitchens,” which are back-end facilities that pre-prepare frozen packages of noodle toppings for the restaurants. This model saves chains on the cost of hiring professional chefs for in-store cooking while making better use of storefront spaces for diners.

Will the Luckin recipe work?

For investors, capital flows to where it could make the biggest profit. Tech venture capitalists are shifting attention to new consumer consumption brands when China continues to clamp down on the tech sector. Combining that with a growing base of comfortable Chinese consumers looking for better dining and life experiences, investors see the food industry as a new, safer sector to chase potentially mouthwatering returns. 

There’s no doubt that capital support is an indispensable element in developing an emerging industry, but it’s not the only or even the most important factor for a successful business. Luckin’s ousted founder and chairman Lu Zhengyao (Charles Lu) was among the first to launch a new Chongqing-style noodle shop (called Quxiaomian) last year in an attempt to duplicate Luckin’s success. But the brand received a lukewarm reception from diners and was soon forced to downsize operations.

An excessive inflow of hot money can also harm the long-term development of a market. From subsidy-fueled market grabbing wars to skyrocketing valuations, China’s tech market has seen multiple “bubbles” burst over the past two decades. The latest case was the community group-buy industry, where even top players collapsed after the venture craze ebbed last year.

In addition, the noodle market is facing obstacles before it can really take off. As with any offline business in China at the moment, noodle chains are dealing with dropping foot traffic as China fights a new wave of Covid-19 outbreaks with strict lockdown measures, which seem unlikely to end any time soon. The new noodle chains are not only competing with their peers but also with traditional noodle stores, which better cater to the taste of more price-sensitive users and sometimes hold a rustic charm and human touch that the newcomers can’t replicate. 

However, with the inflow of capital and market attention, the new noodle chains are a sector worth following.

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Meituan halts community group buying service in Beijing https://technode.com/2022/04/27/meituan-halts-community-group-buying-service-in-beijing/ Wed, 27 Apr 2022 09:18:50 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167482 grocery, buyMeituan suspended the Beijing operations of Meituan Select, joining rivals in scaling back community group buying businesses. ]]> grocery, buy

On Tuesday, Meituan suspended the Beijing operations of Meituan Select as the Chinese food delivery and local life service giant joins local peers in scaling back community group buying businesses.

Why it matters: Meituan and Pinduoduo led China’s community group-buy craze that took off two years ago. Meituan Select’s withdrawal from Beijing has raised market speculations about the company’s further retreat from the cooling market

  • The company halted the service despite a recent surge in consumer demand for grocery products, driven by panic buying in the city after finding new coronavirus outbreaks.
  • The news came two weeks after a major layoff in Meituan, which reportedly hit grocery delivery services Meituan Select and Meituan Maicai, as well as enterprise-facing food distribution arm Kuailv, the worst.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Will Shanghai lockdown change the game for community group buying?

Details: Meituan stopped receiving orders for Meituan Select, a community group buying service that offers next-day grocery pickup services, in Beijing from Tuesday. The company has removed Meituan Select from the homepage of its main app and its WeChat mini program, local media outlet Caixin reported.

  • Amid a market downturn, Meituan Select planned to shut down operations in loss-making cities a few months ago, according to Caixin’s report, which cited an unnamed employee at the company. Beijing was one of Meituan Select’s loss-making cities due to high delivery and order fulfillment costs and low margins.
  • Although Meituan has taken a step back from the community group buying services, the Beijing-based company has joined grocery peers as it has beefed up its support for on-demand grocery delivery service Meituan Maicai to cope with the recent Covid-19 outbreak in Beijing.
  • The company declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode on Wednesday morning.

Context: China’s grocery delivery craze is losing momentum as the industry sees withering investment. After witnessing the collapse of a group of smaller players, deep-pocketed companies like Meituan, Didi, and Alibaba are retreating from the market after struggling to find a commercialization path.

  • Meituan recorded a net loss of RMB 23.5 billion ($3.6 billion) in 2021,  compared with a net profit of RMB 4.7 billion in 2020. The company’s operating loss from new initiatives such as Meituan Select expanded to RMB 38.4 billion in 2021 from RMB 10.9 billion in 2020.
  • Community group buying teams at various Chinese tech giants are among the worst affected by the ongoing layoffs in Chinese tech companies.
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Chinese online grocers increase stock to calm panic-buyer in Beijing as the city organizes mass Covid tests https://technode.com/2022/04/25/chinese-online-grocers-increase-stock-to-calm-panic-buyer-in-beijing-as-the-city-organizes-mass-covid-tests/ Mon, 25 Apr 2022 08:42:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167373 China’s online grocers respond quickly to a surge in demand in Beijing after the capital city announced a surge of local Covid cases. ]]>

Major Chinese online grocery platforms are increasing their product supplies in Beijing as residents rush to stock up on food and daily supplies after the capital city announced a surge of local Covid cases. 

Beijing health authority said on April 24 that the city found a local Covid outbreak has spread for a week, with more than 40 local cases since April 22, prompting locals to worry about facing lockdowns and supply shortages like Shanghai. 

Why it matters: Having learned from what happened in Shanghai, China’s online grocers respond quickly to a surge in demand in Beijing. However, pressure on operation and supply chains remain as potential omicron outbreaks expand to other cities in the country. 

Details: Chinese online grocers like Meituan, Dingdong Maicai, and JD increased their stock and extended operation times as Beijing residents rushed to online platforms and offline supermarkets to stock up on daily supplies,  such as food and toilet paper.

  • On Monday, Meituan’s grocery arm Meituan Maicai will increase product supplies three to five times and raise its sorting workforce by 70%. On top of that, the company said the service would begin receiving and delivering orders around the clock starting April 24.
  • Alibaba’s Freshippo and JD’s 7Fresh plan to double or triple their stock, while Dingdong Maicai will increase its stock of staple goods by 150%, local media outlet GeekPark reported.
  • On April 24, Dingdong Maicai saw a 50% growth in daily orders in Beijing. The platform said it plans to increase supplies to Beijing by 1.5 times and has set up a dedicated group to ensure deliveries in Beijing. 
  • Offline supermarket chains Carrefour and Wumart expect to triple their usual stock.

Context: Beijing has reported a sudden spike in locally confirmed infections since April 22, with 42 Covid-19 cases reported over the past three days.

  • Shanghai residents have had difficulties buying food supplies online since ongoing Covid-19 prevention measures immobilized more than 25 million people in the city over the past month.
  • Online grocery platforms have served as a lifeline for residents in Shanghai since a city-wide lockdown began in late March. However, surging orders quickly overloaded the city’s online grocery operations.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Will Shanghai lockdown change the game for community group buying?

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Huya, Douyu begin layoffs amid tightening regulations on game livestreaming https://technode.com/2022/04/24/huya-douyu-begin-layoffs-amid-tightening-regulations-on-game-livestreaming/ Sun, 24 Apr 2022 08:33:12 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167336 Layoffs at Huya and Douyu are another blow for Chinese gaming giant Tencent, a major shareholder in both of the companies. ]]>

Chinese game streaming platforms Huya and Douyu have begun slashing headcounts as China’s mass tech layoff continues, Chinese media outlet Tech Planet reported Friday.

Why it matters: The pair joined China’s large-scale layoffs among tech companies as the country tightens restrictions on the game livestreaming industry.

  • Layoffs at Huya and Douyu are another blow for Chinese gaming giant Tencent, a major shareholder in both of the companies. The Chinese State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) blocked a merger deal between Huya and Douyu in July 2021 to avoid “further strengthening Tencent’s dominance in the game streaming market.”
  • In mid-April, China resumed issuing gaming licenses to Chinese game makers after an eight-month freeze. But the regulator has yet to resume issuing licenses to overseas games. 

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Chinese tech giants are still slashing headcounts

Details: Huya’s layoff mainly affects its international business department, which has more than 200 employees, or around 10% of the company’s total headcount, according to the report. The company is planning a 70% cut in its international arm, while its domestic business will also face a 20% layoff. Douyu is reportedly planning for a 30% layoff, targeting teams for gaming business development and livestream agent services.

  • The international teams at both of the companies will bear the brunt of the layoffs as they operate in a new business area that demands more investment, the report cites an unnamed employee of Huya as saying.  
  • Douyu said the layoffs are just part of their “normal human resources optimization,” according to the report.
  • Regulatory headwinds and decreasing user bases led to weak financial performances for the two companies during 2021. Huya recorded a net loss of RMB 312.7 million ($49.1 million) for the fourth quarter of 2021 after consistently posting profits since its IPO in 2018. Douyu posted a net loss of RMB 193.2 million for the same period.

Context: Huya and Douyu account for a combined 70% of China’s game livestreaming market, the SAMR said in July 2021. Huya owns a 40% market share and Douyu 30%.

  • Earlier this month, Tencent said it will shutter its game streaming platform Egame by June due to a “change in business strategies.”
  • China’s gaming industry has felt the layoff chills since the beginning of this year, with many of the key players trimming their headcounts.
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Pinduoduo gears up for on-demand retail push: report https://technode.com/2022/04/21/pinduoduo-gears-up-for-on-demand-retail-push-report/ Thu, 21 Apr 2022 05:19:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167281 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphoneShanghai’s recent Covid outbreak has pushed companies to rethink the importance of last-mile delivery capabilities, which is a weak point for Pinduoduo. ]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Pinduoduo is seeking offline retailers to join its platform as the e-commerce titan tries to expand into on-demand retail businesses, local media outlet Beijing Business Today reported on Monday.

Why it matters: As a latecomer to the game, Pinduoduo enters a crowded sector that already includes established incumbents such as Meituan, Ele.me, and JD Daojia.

  • Shanghai’s Covid outbreak since March has prompted companies to rethink the importance of last-mile delivery capabilities, which is a weak point for Pinduoduo and is plaguing many major online grocers to deliver on time during the outbreak. At the usual time, on-demand retailers offer 30-minute or one-hour delivery as a standard service, but such promises became unsustainable during lockdowns.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Will Shanghai lockdown change the game for community group buying?

Details: Pinduoduo is recruiting local offline retailers, front-end warehouse operators, wholesalers, and couriers in China’s first-tier cities of Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen.

  • For starters, the platform will focus on fruits, especially more perishable ones like watermelon and durian, a poster obtained by Beijing Business Daily reads. On-demand retail for more product categories such as gifts, flowers, and cakes is also being tested, the report added.
  • Pinduoduo expects potential fruit retail partners to have the delivery capabilities to fulfill intra-city orders they receive through the e-commerce app within 24 hours. The delivery timeline is currently expanded to 48 hours during the pilot period.
  • In other words, the platform will not take care of delivery for offline retailers like its rivals Meituan and Ele.me. Pinduoduo will only serve as a central platform for the retailing partners to access users. Pinduoduo claimed to have 868.7 million annual active users in 2021.
  • Pinduoduo assured retailers in the poster that the delivery won’t be challenging to handle because they will divide the market into small delivery areas to the level of city districts and counties to make the business feasible for retailers.
  • Pinduoduo didn’t respond to TechNode inquiries on the matter when contacted Wednesday afternoon.

Context: Pinduoduo has been adopting an asset-light approach to e-commerce since its establishment in 2015. While pushing to help more farmers access a wider market, the company has gradually moved to invest in logistics, warehouses, and other infrastructure since 2020.

  • In February, Pinduoduo tested a pickup service to receive and send parcels on users’ behalf through partnerships with major couriers to expand its delivery capabilities. But the service was soon suspended because the firm hadn’t filed for a license to run a delivery business in China.
  • The market scale of China’s on-demand retail market is expected to reach RMB 900 billion ($140 billion) by 2024, data from research agency iResearch shows.
  • Nearly all of the major e-commerce companies have tapped into the market. The annual transacting users on Meituan’s on-demand retail service Instashoping reached around 230 million in 2021. Last year, JD launched a one-hour delivery service in partnership with Dada Group, the company behind JD Daojia and backed by JD and Walmart. Alibaba operates a range of services in the sector from Tmall Supermarket to Ele.me and Taoxianda. And in January, ByteDances’s Douyin piloted a logistics service called Yinzunda.
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The Big Sell | Will Shanghai lockdown change the game for community group buying? https://technode.com/2022/04/19/the-big-sell-will-shanghai-lockdown-change-the-game-for-community-group-buying/ Tue, 19 Apr 2022 03:27:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=167167 Shanghai groceriesFor millions stuck in Shanghai, purchasing daily goods has become a hassle. Community group buying has revived, thanks to its flexibility.]]> Shanghai groceries

In locked-down Shanghai, Zhang Chen was standing by her community gate, waiting to pick up apples to be delivered to her apartment compound. She reveled in her luck at striking the apple deal because fruit had become a rare treat in the metropolis locked down since late March in response to a new Covid-19 outbreak. The city authorities prioritize delivering essential foods like rice and vegetables to the city’s 25 million residents. 

A neighbor who bought 15 kilograms of apples through a community group’s bulk buy last week was willing to split the order with her, saving Zhang days of waiting in this challenging time. 

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

Some Shanghainese have been locked in their homes since early March, when the city was only doing partial lockdowns. Shanghai began a two-stage city-wide lockdown on March 28 and promised to reopen by April 5, which never happened. The lockdown has been extended, and as of the time of writing, most of the city is still under lockdown. The unexpected long locking period has left many residents unprepared and scrambling to find food and supplies.  

At 10 in the evening, the little square in front of Zhang’s community gate was crowded with other people like her, either collecting their deliveries or waiting for their food to arrive. Meanwhile, more residents were clinging to their phones at home, waiting for their group buying heads to tip them off the arrival of their purchases. Delivery times have become unpredictable as truck drivers are asked to show negative Covid test results certificates to deliver goods across the city.

Zhang’s phone rang. Her neighbor called to confirm her identity because they were only connected on WeChat and had never met before. It turned out the neighbor was a casually-dressed woman standing right next to her. After collecting a big box of apples, the pair split the apples by counting out half for each because no one had a scale. Neither woman cared about who got slightly more weight in these unprecedented conditions. 

“I already bought some apples last week. But they disappear so quickly because I have a big family to support. My parents are under lockdown with us to take care of the kids,” Zhang said.

For millions stuck in Shanghai like Zhang, purchasing daily necessities has become a hassle over the month as they have been forced to stay home. During the lockdowns, reliable delivery platforms have become lifelines for people living in the financial hub, China’s second-largest city with a 25 million population. 

As other online grocery delivery services struggle to keep up with the city’s spiking online orders, community group buying has revived, thanks to its flexibility. But analysts say that a regional resurgence of the service won’t turn the tide for the cooling sector.

It’s a ‘last-mile’ problem

Shanghai’s current food shortage problem is more about how to deliver food to residents rather than a lack of national food reserves, according to the city authorities. 

Shanghai’s deputy mayor Chen Tong said at an April 7 press conference that the city had sufficient food reserves to feed locked-in residents for the foreseeable future.  Chen pointed out that the current problem lies in the lack of last-mile delivery forces, the couriers who complete the last leg of a delivery process. 

“The battle against the epidemic has affected the quality of life for Shanghai residents. There are cases when food supplies can’t be delivered to residents’ homes. We are trying our best to address the problem,” he said.

As part of the municipality’s pandemic fighting initiative, all major grocery delivery companies, like Meituan, Alibaba’s Freshippo, and Dingdong Maicai, are attempting to keep up with the rocketing online demand across categories from vegetables and rice to fruits. 

Different business models, different solutions

China’s decade-old grocery delivery industry consists of players operating under various business models. For example, self-operated platforms like Dingdong Maicai and huge grocery retailer marketplaces such as JD Daojia and Meituan.

The various business models mean the platforms are confronting locked-down circumstances differently.

The sudden surge in orders soon overloaded nearly all mainstream grocery delivery platforms, including Alibaba’s Freshippo and Ele.me, Meituan, Dingdong Maicai, JD, and MissFresh.

These services usually rely on powerful teams for a promised 30-minute delivery for individual customers, but operations have become strained this time when the labor shortage is a critical issue.

grocery buying bot
A consumer using hacking software to place orders on Dingdong Maicai. Credit: TechNode/Ward Zhou

Many users of services like Dingdong set their alarm clocks for early morning to scramble for the limited number of orders couriers can deliver that day. For example, Zhang Menglin, a mother of a six-year-old, tried for a few days only to find the websites and apps repeatedly crashed due to soaring demand. After an experience similar to Zhang’s, TehNode reporter Ward Zhou resorted to using an app that repeatedly clicks the “buy” button, thus upping his chances of placing an order.

Instead of giving away hefty cash donations for disaster alleviation, Chinese tech majors have resorted to a more practical approach to address Shanghai’s delivery labor shortage: providing more hands. 

Grocery platforms and supermarket chains, including Ele.me, JD, Dingdong Maicai, and Yonghui pledged in early April to move more than 6,000 staff to the Shanghai by April 11 while also leveraging autonomous delivery vehicles, according to a rough count by local media outlet Awtmt. 

Of the total, the Alibaba-affiliated services Ele.me, RT-Mart, Freshippo, and Cainiao account for a combined 3,000 workers, mainly filling delivery and sorting positions. 

Meituan launched urgent deliveries and vowed to move at least 1,000 delivery workers to the city after its vice president Mao Fanglie made a rare public appearance at Shanghai’s April 7 government briefing. 

Pinduoduo, WeChat benefit from community group-buying surge 

In normal times, community group-buying platforms operate by selling products in bulk through group heads, typically stay-at-home mothers or local store owners who collect orders from residents in nearby housing compounds. The platform’s couriers drop off products at community stores or the compounds’ gates for consumers to pick up overnight. 

This model has emerged as a more reliable food source for millions of people in Shanghai, compared with the above-mentioned platforms catering to individuals. On the one hand, the models’ bulk sale approach allows grocery apps to make the best use of their available delivery forces. On the other hand, customers are much more tolerant of the less predictable delivery times. 

“I have given up on grocery delivery apps like Dingdong after multiple failed tries and depend solely on community groups buying my food now,” said Wang Jia, a 40-year-old Shanghainese. 

After being locked down for three weeks in Shanghai, the reporter of this article tried to order bread from JD on April 9. Instead of its standard same-day delivery, the retailer’s app showed the bread would arrive in two weeks. In frustration, the reporter turned to her neighborhood’s group buying head, which delivered two loaves of bread in two days. She was thrilled and grateful to get bread for her six-year-old daughter’s breakfast sandwich. 

Besides the veteran group heads already in the business before the outbreak, novices are becoming group-buying leaders, both to meet their own needs and to help neighbors. 

Given that most group heads communicate and promote their products through various WeChat groups, WeChat-based mini-programs gained popularity among group-buying participants.  They are Pinduoduo’s community group buying service Kuaituantuan, Tencent’s e-commerce feature Weidian, and WeChat Jielong.

Platforms like Freshippo and Carrefour have moved to a wholesale model too, requiring a minimum price or number of orders to support delivery. That’s similar to the community group buying model, except that unpaid volunteers, who are locked-down residents themselves,  are functioning in the group heads’ intermediary role. E-commerce platform Pinduoduo also rolled out wholesale services in the city, encouraging individuals to resell the goods to their neighbors.

A comeback for community group buying?

The inflow of venture capital and internet giants plays a bigger role than real consumer demands in driving the rise and fall of the community group-buying industry.

—Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iiMedia Research

However, looking beyond its current boom in Shanghai, the dust had already settled for China’s grocery community group-buying vertical after a crazy ride in the past two years. High regulatory fines and cash-burning battles put the sector on the brakes. As the market tide ebbs, the once red-hot sector has become an area where tech giants have enacted deep headcount counts amid industry-wide layoffs

Covid-driven demand will become an opportunity for the broader online grocery shopping industry, and the trend will live on after this wave of epidemics subsides. But it won’t be a game-changer for the failing community group-buying vertical, according to Echo Gong, a Shanghai-based analyst with global research agency Coresight. 

Data from market intelligence agency Emarket shows that online food and vegetable sales reached an annual growth rate of 61.4% in 2020 when the coronavirus hit China the hardest. The growth rate slowed down to 24.6% in 2021, but the sector nonetheless was still growing. “Shanghai’s epidemic will reinforce the use of online grocery shopping for certain groups, such as the elderly who didn’t use the platforms before,” Gong told TechNode.

But it’s a different case for the community group-buy vertical. “Most of the group leaders who initiated group-buy are motivated to help each other during difficult times. Most of the parties engaged in the group-buys now, either group heads, volunteers, vegetable suppliers, or catering services providers, are not profit-driven. After the pandemic, it will be difficult to keep them motivated without incentives,” she said.

Long-term drivers: VC, tech giants

“The inflow of venture capital and internet giants plays a bigger role than real consumer demands in driving the rise and fall of the community group-buying industry,” said Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iiMedia Research, echoing Gong’s opinion. 

Shanghai’s Covid outbreak highlighted the importance of last-mile delivery capabilities. Zhang said he’s bullish on companies with mature inter-city delivery forces like Meituan and JD, as well as Freshippo, all of which have strong offline presences.

“At the end of the day, the industry threshold and winning factor for a platform is the ability to ship products to customers in an efficient and timely manner,” said Zhang.

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Meituan begins job cuts to lower costs: report https://technode.com/2022/04/11/meituan-begins-job-cuts-to-lower-costs-report/ Mon, 11 Apr 2022 07:39:22 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166942 retail e-commerce MeituanMeituan becomes the latest Chinese tech major to begin large-scale layoffs. Companies are replacing veteran employees with cheaper new hands. ]]> retail e-commerce Meituan

Meituan is in the midst of job cuts that will affect nearly every business unit at the food delivery and life services giant, Chinese local media Caixin reported on April 9. Meanwhile, the company is hiring simultaneously for new positions created by “business adjustment,” the story said.

Why it matters: Meituan becomes the latest Chinese tech major to begin large-scale layoffs. Facing the twin headwinds of a cooling economy and regulatory pressures, Chinese tech giants are replacing higher-income veteran employees with cheaper and less-experienced new hands to lower operation costs.

Details: Meituan’s layoff will affect all sectors, including the company’s core food delivery and hotel booking businesses, the report says. Grocery delivery services Meituan Select and Meituan Maicai and enterprise-facing food distribution arm Kuailv face the deepest cuts of up to 20%, Caixin reported, citing unnamed sources with knowledge of the matter.

  • Meituan’s current round of layoffs started on April 8. The company aimed to do it in “low-profile and quick,” Meituan’s employee told the Chinese media outlet. Laid-off workers’ lost access to the company’s internal communication tool within hours of their termination, the report cited an unnamed employee. The layoff is expected to last until the end of this month.
  • Meanwhile, the company has posted nearly 700 job openings since April 8, mainly for positions in Meituan Select, Meituan Maicai, Instashopping, and its autonomous vehicle delivery department. Since March, the company has posted more than 2,000 positions, equal to the total number of new positions opened at the firm in the past three years.
  • The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) recently talked to 12  major tech names, including Tencent, Alibaba, Meituan, Pinduoduo, and JD, about workforce levels in response to recent layoff news. Between July 2021 and mid-March this year, 216,800 workers left the 12 companies, while 295,900 new staff joined, representing a net increase of 79,100, the regulator said. Tech majors told the regulator that their staffing is “generally stable” considering the relatively high employee turnover in the tech sector. 
  • Meituan has recorded a net increase of 17,000 employees since July last year and has pledged to recruit more fresh graduates this year, according to the CAC’s statement.

Context: Amid increasing tech layoffs, Chinese internet majors created a euphemism for firing workers. Companies such as JD and Bilibili now congratulate employees on losing their jobs by sharing cheery notes titled “graduation notice” from human resources departments, prompting widespread complaints on Chinese social media platforms. 

  • Meituan’s expenditure on staffing increased 61.4% year-on-year to RMB 34.8 billion ($5.5 billion) in 2021, representing the company’s second-highest cost after delivery fleet expenses.
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Alibaba tests Xiaohongshu-like social shopping app Taibang https://technode.com/2022/04/01/alibaba-tests-xiaohongshu-like-social-shopping-app-taibang/ Fri, 01 Apr 2022 08:12:38 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166709 Alibaba joined other local peers in following Xiaohongshu’s zhongcao strategy to maintain its dominance in China's e-commerce market. ]]>

Alibaba is testing Taibang, a new fashion and social shopping app similar to Xiaohongshu, as the Chinese e-commerce titan tries to consolidate its dominance in China’s e-commerce market.

Why it matters: Alibaba joined a slew of local peers such as Meituan and ByteDance in following Xiaohongshu’s zhongcao (meaning sowing grass) strategy, a business model that drives sales through reviews on social media platforms. 

  • Competition in China’s e-commerce sector is reaching new heights with the entry of deep-pocketed players like Meituan and ByteDance.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Meituan expands in e-commerce, rivaling Alibaba and JD

Details: Taibang, a wordplay on “super great attitude” in Chinese, is a fashion and social commerce platform targeting China’s Gen-Z, a more culturally confident generation that was born and raised during China’s economic boom. 

  • With the slogan “created in China with attitude,” Taibang brings together a wide range of Chinese designer brands while helping customers to understand their brand stories. In addition, the app encourages users to communicate and share their fashion and life attitudes in an attempt to create a dynamic community.
  • The app is available for download on Chinese app stores and is currently being tested by users on an invite-only basis.
  • Alibaba also expanded investment into rural e-commerce with the launch of Fengyun and diversified its operation model by rolling out Maoxiang in February.

Context: China’s Gen-Zers, those born between 1996 and 2010, have become the new engine of China’s consumption growth. Alibaba is trying to tap into the young demographic that favors traditional culture and has a need for individual expression. 

  • This is not Alibaba’s first experiment with a “sowing grass” model. The company launched a “Zhongcao” marketing campaign on its Taobao marketplace ahead of last year’s “Singles Day” shopping festival.
  • ByteDance’s Xiaohongshu clone Lemon8 has reportedly reached one million downloads in Japan after two years of operations.
  • Meituan launched its Xiaohongshu-like pilot shopping review feature Guangguang, initially tested as Zhenxiang, in March.
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Baidu, iQiyi among five Chinese companies added to SEC delisting list, market expects more to come https://technode.com/2022/03/31/baidu-iqiyi-among-five-chinese-companies-added-to-sec-delisting-list-market-expects-more-to-come/ Thu, 31 Mar 2022 06:41:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166652 US regulator added five more Chinese companies to a growing delisting listThe SEC's possible delisting push targeting Chinese companies brings further uncertainty to volatile Chinese tech shares.]]> US regulator added five more Chinese companies to a growing delisting list

On Wednesday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) added five more Chinese companies, including search giant Baidu and video streaming site iQiyi, to a growing list of companies that may face delisting from the US stock market. Market analysts expect the list to grow.

Why it matters: The US regulator’s possible delisting push targeting Chinese companies brings further uncertainty to volatile Chinese tech shares, which have experienced a turbulent year due to regulatory crackdowns in their home country.

  • The SEC’s delisting moves may expand. Paul Gillis, an accounting professor at Peking University, wrote in a March 24 tweet that he believes all 271 Chinese companies listed in the US will eventually be added to the delisting list after they file annual reports with an opinion from a Chinese auditor, which is due May 2. Bill Bishop, the author of the China commentary newsletter Sinocism, echoed a similar view in the Thursday newsletter
  • On March 16, Vice Premier Liu He held a high-level meeting. He signaled China’s willingness to discuss with US authorities to keep the country’s companies investible in the US, saying that a concrete cooperation plan is underway while officials of the two countries are “maintaining good communications.”

Details: In a Wednesday statement, the SEC named five Chinese companies – Baidu, iQiyi, online brokerage platform Futu Holdings, aquaculture equipment provider Nocera, and biopharmaceutical company CASI Pharmaceuticals Inc. – to its provisional list for possible delisting.

  • The US regulator gives these companies 15 business days to submit evidence to oppose the commission’s charge, meaning a deadline of April 20.
  • On Wednesday, Baidu closed down 2.6% on the Nasdaq market. iQiyi closed up 0.4% but dropped 3.8% in after-market trading. Futu slid 2.9%. 
  • Baidu said in a Thursday response that it has been “actively exploring possible solutions.” The company pledged to comply with applicable laws and regulations in China and the US and strive to maintain its listing status on Nasdaq and the Hong Kong stock exchange.
  • The market reaction was calmer compared to the SEC’s first round of delisting announcement of Chinese companies on March 10. Share prices of included companies tumbled as much as 25% back then. A more expected move from the SEC and Chinese regulators’ previous proactive stance may help explain the market reaction.

Context: In December 2020, the Holding Foreign Companies Accountability Act (HFCAA) became law in the US. The statute bars the trading of non-US companies on the US stock market if it can’t provide accounting access to US regulators for three consecutive years. Chinese laws have long prohibited foreign regulators from accessing Chinese capital market documents, putting US-listed Chinese companies in the crosshairs of HFCAA. The aforementioned Chinese companies are among the first batches to be identified for being in alleged breach of the act.

  • Wednesday’s announcement brought the total number of companies on the SEC’s delisting watchlist to 11 after naming six firms earlier this month. On March 10, the SEC put five Chinese companies on potential delistings for the first time. They are fast-food chain Yum China Holdings, biotech groups BeiGene, HutchMed Limited, Zai Lab Limited, and technology firm ACM Research. It added Weibo to the list on March 23.

The article has been updated with Baidu’s statement. 

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Kuaishou tops Q4 estimates, shares drop on livestream crackdown fears https://technode.com/2022/03/30/kuaishou-tops-q4-estimates-shares-drop-on-livestream-crackdown-fears/ Wed, 30 Mar 2022 09:16:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166631 KuaishouKuaishou posted better-than-expected financials for the fourth quarter of last year, but the company’s shares dropped more than 6%.]]> Kuaishou

TikTok’s Chinese rival Kuaishou posted better-than-expected financials for the fourth quarter of last year, but the company’s shares dropped more than 6% as regulators signaled a tightened scrutiny of livestreaming e-commerce.

Why it matters: Kuaishou’s share drop reflects market concerns over further potential regulatory measures aimed at the livestreaming industry. The Chinese government has already stopped some of the top livestreaming celebrities, such as Viya and Cherie, from livestreaming and removed their public social media profiles due to their tax evasion behaviors.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Tamed livestreamers and Tencent stake cuts 

Details: Kuaishou’s revenue increased by 35.0% in a year to RMB 24.4 billion ($3.8 billion) in the fourth quarter of 2021, exceeding the high end of forecasts ($3.76 billion) compiled by Yahoo Finance. The company’s total revenues for 2021 grew by 37.9% year on year to RMB 81.1 billion.

  • However, the company’s shares dropped 6.24% today on the Hong Kong stock exchange despite opening high this morning after its Tuesday earnings report. A commentary posted by China’s state-backed China Taxation News may have triggered a change in market sentiment, according to local media. The state tax media called for stricter taxation policies for livestreamers.
  • Analysts remain bullish on the long-term prospects of the company. Thomas Chong, analyst of investment bank Jefferies, said he expects “market share gains to continue in online marketing and e-commerce GMV with solid user growth trends and rising engagement” in the first quarter of 2022. 
  • The company’s annual report also revealed a major change in its revenue structure. Online marketing services overtook livestreaming to become the firm’s largest revenue source in 2021. Kuaishou’s online marketing services recorded RMB 42.7 billion of revenue last year, a 95.2% yearly increase. That’s 52.6% of the company’s total revenue, up from 37.2% a year earlier. Meanwhile, livestreaming revenue decreased by 6.7% in a year to RMB 31 billion in 2021. Its share of the company’s total revenue dropped to 38.2% in 2021 from 56.5% in 2020.
  • E-commerce is another revenue driver for the company. Revenue for the company’s other services, mainly e-commerce, doubled to RMB7.4 billion in 2021. The company attributes the growth to “optimizing supply, content, services, technology and user experience.”
  • The company’s globalization initiative, a move to compete with ByteDance on the international market, started to show “positive effects” in the fourth quarter after boosting operational efficiency and implementing more disciplined budget plans. The company said it saw increased daily active users, user time spent, and retention rates in the overseas market without further details.
  • Kuaishou’s average monthly active users hit 578.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2021, growing 21.5% in a year.

Context: After a high-profile IPO in March 2021, Kuaishou has been fighting an uphill battle amid fierce domestic competition from TikTok sister app Douyin. The Beijing-based company recently underwent massive layoffs alongside other Chinese tech majors downsizing in the economic downturn. 

Additional contributions by Ward Zhou

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The Big Sell | Meituan expands in e-commerce, rivaling Alibaba and JD https://technode.com/2022/03/29/the-big-sell-meituan-expands-in-e-commerce-rivaling-alibaba-and-jd/ Tue, 29 Mar 2022 02:36:10 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166558 Meituan, deliveryMeituan is expanding to Amazon-like territory, selling physical goods, a sector that will put it in competition with Alibaba and JD.]]> Meituan, delivery

From food delivery to travel booking, Meituan earned itself the title of the “Amazon of services” in China by providing a wide range of services that touch nearly every aspect of Chinese people’s lives. Now, the giant service app is expanding to Amazon-like territory, selling physical goods, a sector that will put it in competition with local retail giants like Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

Operated under a platform model, Meituan already has a footing in physical goods e-commerce: It’s among the most popular choices for on-demand or next-day delivery of fresh produce and groceries. Yet that is a small fraction of China’s trillion-dollar online retail market. Starting by selling food and beverages, the company now aims to become a comprehensive e-commerce platform, selling not only daily services (food deliveries) and groceries, but also tangible goods like consumer electronics, cosmetics, and clothing.

Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo, the three largest e-commerce platforms in China, still dominate China’s online retail market. But the space is no longer a three-horse race after the entry of a slew of rivals such as short-video apps Douyin and Kuaishou. Meituan wants to take a bite of the physical goods e-commerce pie too. 

Meituan, a relative latecomer, has quite ambitious plans, based on some aggressive moves over the past month. In early March, the company rolled out direct sales services for physical goods. Meituan’s pilot shopping review feature, initially tested as Zhenxiang, was rebranded as Guangguang and formally launched this month with additional social and entertainment elements. On top of that, the everything app also dipped its toe into the hot cross-border shopping sector by integrating a global retailing section into the e-commerce channel of its main app. 

Taking a leaf out of rivals’ playbooks

Meituan’s earliest foray into e-commerce dates back to 2013, but it closed that business three years later to focus on food delivery. The company revived efforts in late 2020 by setting up a new marketplace, Tuanhaohuo, and then moved on to update the platform to a full-fledged business unit and rename it Meituan E-commerce (our translation) in 2021.

Facing a sophisticated market, Meituan is taking a leaf out of the playbooks of rivals like Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo by adopting market-proven models and features. While discussions on the ethics of copying business models and features continue, it’s still common for Chinese internet firms to “borrow” ideas from each other. 

Meituan is known for beating rivals with better executions. After all, Wang Xing, Meituan’s CEO and the master of “copy to China,” started Meituan in 2011 as a clone of the then high-flying Groupon and beat more than 100 other Groupon copycats, becoming the sector’s leader. 

Screenshots of (left to right) Meituan’s self-operated store, shopping review feature Guangguang, and a global shopping channel from Meituan E-commerce. (Image credit: TechNode)

Meituan vs JD: In mid-March, Meituan rolled out a new e-commerce service under the direct sales model to sell products directly to customers in a model similar to JD.com. Through a Beijing-based subsidiary, Meituan launched many “self-operated stores” on its e-commerce platform, selling beverages and snacks for starters, such as the Chinese energy brand Eastroc Beverage, rice and meat seller CR NG Fung, and snack brand Xiaowanxiong. Under the model, Meituan functions as the main operating body for controlling product quality, sourcing, and delivery. Although Meituan’s popular Instashopping service offers on-demand service for non-food deliveries, it is operated through cooperation with third-party offline merchants. Meituan’s direct sales model previously only applied to its grocery group-buy unit Meituan Maicai. Meituan followed Alibaba to become the second Chinese tech major to embrace the direct sales model for physical product e-commerce this year.

Meituan vs Alibaba: Meituan renamed and relaunched its shopping review feature Zhenxiang as Guangguang (“shopping around” in English) to tap into the content-driven e-commerce trend. It’s no coincidence that the new name is the same as Taobao’s Guangguang, a content channel where merchants, influencers, and consumers publish short blog posts to recommend products. Meituan intentionally made its new feature a namesake of Taobao’s Guangguang in the hopes of picking up some of the clouts of its rival, local media reported. Taobao’s Guangguang now claims more than 200 million monthly active users after launching in 2020. 

All e-commerce giants are trying to emulate the Zhongcao model, a marketing strategy first popularized by Instagram-like Xiaohongshu. The term zhongcao (“planting grass”) refers to the idea that favorable and comprehensive reviews of a product can sow the mental seeds that nudge consumers to buy it. 

Meituan intends to increase traffic and improve conversion and repurchase rates with the new review feature, said Esme Pau, senior director at Tonghai Securities. 

Cross-border e-commerce: Meituan this month unveiled a global shopping channel to tap cross-border commerce, a popular vertical that gained momentum during the coronavirus pandemic. The channel sells items sourced from Australia, Japan, the US, and other countries to Chinese shoppers. The most popular categories are skincare products, baby products, apparel, and vitamins. The state considers such platforms part of its efforts to boost exports and imports. 

Meituan is a serious e-commerce contender

E-commerce is too big a pie for any tech company to ignore in China. Meituan, with its vision as a platform company, won’t stop with just a small fraction of the market.

Meituan’s accelerated e-commerce drive aligns with the strategic shift announced last October, when the company upgraded its strategy from “food plus platform” to “retail plus technology” searching for new growth points. 

Meituan CEO Wang Xing sees the direction of e-commerce moving from an “everything store” to “everything now.” On an earnings call for the Hong Kong-listed company’s third-quarter performance of 2021, Wang said, “retail will be our focus and remain the main area where we will do our fundamental capabilities in the future. So please understand ‘retail’ in a broader sense as to sell goods or services to end customers.” 

Analysts told TechNode that they are quite bullish about Meituan’s e-commerce prospects. The company has the right toolkit to push into retail e-commerce, including its existing on-demand delivery network, platform capabilities, user base, and merchant relationships, according to Michael Norris, research and strategy manager at marketing and sales firm AgencyChina. “Going forward, one of the keys will be to build user habits to shop from Meituan in more contexts,” he said.

It’s not a decision propelled by recent market developments. Meituan’s push into wider e-commerce through Instashopping predates China’s regulatory pressure on things like mandatory lowered fees for core food delivery businesses, Norris added.

Zhuang Shuai, founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian, predicts Meituan’s e-commerce business could achieve an annual gross merchandise volume of around RMB 1 trillion ($160 billion) soon. Norris estimated that the goal would be attainable within the next three years. The estimated volume is around the same size as the e-commerce volume from ByteDance’s Douyin.

Zhuang notes that the company is also leveraging its e-commerce business to attract more delivery orders to best use its logistics capacity. Food delivery alone can’t satisfy Meituan’s delivery capacity because of the low-traffic hours between meals. 

During a March 25 earnings call, Meituan managers stressed that they would prioritize allocating resources to the e-commerce business. “The rationale for expanding retail goods e-commerce was to bring value to retailers and customers while increasing job opportunities for [Meituan’s] delivery couriers,” said Pau.

Bad timing for e-commerce?

Meituan is entering a crowded market where incumbents are reeling from slowing growth. In 2021, Alibaba and Pinduoduo reported the slowest revenue growth since their respective IPOs in 2014 and 2018. JD also posted its weakest revenue growth in six quarters. The sluggish revenue growth for the major players comes against a dip across the overall market. Data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics shows that online spending on physical goods, including food, clothing, and cosmetics grew by just 12% year-on-year in 2021. The slowest pace since recording such data started in 2015.

“We believe the timing is good,” said Tonghai analyst Pau. Meituan, like all other Chinese internet players, will need to diversify its revenue stream to be sustainable long-term, she said, referring to tightened regulatory pressures on its core businesses in food delivery, in-store coupons, hotels, and dining. 

Meituan is thus fighting an uphill battle but is nonetheless making an important strategic move, according to Zhuang, the Bailian founder. “The food delivery market has reached its ceiling, but e-commerce is a much larger market with no foreseeable ceiling,” he said. Despite the slowdown, e-commerce is still growing and companies providing good products and services to customers will always stand out from the crowd, he believes. 

Meituan’s advantage in e-commerce, or any other new endeavor, lies in its ability to aggregate all kinds of services and products into a one-stop super app ecosystem, Zhuang said. The company still relies heavily on its more popular food delivery and travel services to attract users. E-commerce is only a supplement function on the main app, for now.

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JD expands layoffs, cuts in core business units: report https://technode.com/2022/03/28/jd-expands-layoffs-cuts-in-core-business-units-report/ Mon, 28 Mar 2022 09:12:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166564 JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.comJD is expanding its layoffs, cutting people in nearly every business unit, including its core retail businesses.]]> JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.com

Chinese online retailer JD is expanding its layoffs, cutting people in nearly every business unit, including its core retail businesses, local media outlet Jiemian reported on March 27.

Why it matters: JD’s layoffs will be worse than the market initially expected. China’s months-long tech layoff, which started late last year, shows no sign of ending. Big-name behemoths like Alibaba and Tencent began broader layoffs earlier this month.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Chinese tech giants are still slashing headcounts

Details: In addition to laying off people in its community group-buy unit Jingxi, JD is expanding the recently-launched layoffs to its core businesses, including JD Retail, JD Technology, JD Logistics, and JD’s international business department, Jiemian reported, citing several employees at the company.

  • JD plans to cut between 10% to 30% of the jobs, with cut rates varying by the departments, according to a widely-circulated internal spreadsheet revealed by local media
  • For example, JD Retail will face a 10% to 30% layoff in technology, business development, and platform operation positions, while the firm’s international business unit will be cut by 10% to 15%. 
  • The company’s community group buy service Jingxi remains the worst-hit unit. Some of the unit’s regional teams will let go of the entire team, such as the teams in Guangdong, Jiangxi, and Sichuan provinces.
  • The Jiemian report said that there are few opportunities for internal transfers since the layoff affects the whole company.
  • The company declined to comment on the layoff news when contacted this Monday.

Context: On March 11, JD posted a RMB 5.2 billion ($0.8 billion) net loss for the fourth quarter of last year and reported its weakest revenue growth in six quarters.

  • Slowed economic growth, fierce competition, and trade tensions are weighing down the revenue growth of China’s e-commerce giants. Alibaba and Pinduoduo recorded their slowest quarterly revenue growth in the fourth quarter of 2021 since their respective IPOs in 2014 and 2018.
  • In December, Tencent weakened its ties to JD by distributing around $16.4 billion worth of shares in the online retailer to its shareholders as interim dividends. Both companies said their partnerships won’t be affected, although Tencent’s shareholding in JD will be reduced from 17% to 2.3%.
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Alibaba layoff will hit local life service units the hardest: report https://technode.com/2022/03/18/alibaba-layoff-will-hit-local-life-service-units-the-hardest-report/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 03:56:22 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166347 AlibabaAlibaba’s layoff comes after the company recorded its slowest revenue growth in 2021 since it went public on the New York exchange in 2014.]]> Alibaba

Chinese e-commerce titan Alibaba is planning for a major layoff in which key business focuses like food and grocery delivery will bear the brunt of the cuts, Chinese media outlet 36Kr reported on Thursday night.

Why it matters: Alibaba’s layoff comes after the company recorded its slowest revenue growth in 2021 since it went public on the New York exchange in 2014. The company’s financials partly reflect China’s weakened local consumption and intensified regulatory crackdown

  • Alibaba and Tencent, two of the most powerful tech giants in China, are the latest to join China’s tech job cuts which has hit nearly every major firm.
  • Like its peers, Alibaba’s primary target for the layoff is to scale back loss-making teams and downsize areas with high regulatory risks, such as online grocery and food delivery services.

Details: Alibaba is mainly shedding jobs in its location-based customer business unit, which consists of food delivery services such as Ele.me and coupon and deal service Koubei, 36Kr reported, citing unnamed sources with knowledge of the matter. Alibaba is planning layoffs that could cut more than 15% of its workforce, about 39,000 staff, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

  • Core business teams, including e-commerce teams in Taobao and related businesses, Alibaba Cloud, and Cainiao Logistics, will not be affected by the cuts.
  • Ele.me, which is facing fierce competition from Meituan, had started laying off people in January this year, the report said. The unit aims to cut between 15% to 20% of its workforce, mainly targeting positions in offline business development, regional marketing, and operation. 
  • Downsizing efforts are also happening in other local consumer services. For example, since last year, Koubei has downsized its operation to focus on first-and second-tier cities. Mapping service Amap and online travel unit Fliggy also began small-scale layoffs this year, according to the report.
  • Alibaba’s local customer service recorded an adjusted loss of RMB 5 billion ($783 million) on RMB 12 billion revenue in the quarter ended December 2021.
  • Freshippo, an online and offline grocery business that demands heavy operation, recorded a layoff of around 20% in market operation positions and may consider further salary cuts; the report cited several Freshippo employees. 
  • In addition, Alibaba’s grocery group-buy business Taocaicai is also shedding around 20% of headcount as the sector cools off.

Context: Taking notice of the gloomy economic outlook, China’s State Council sent a reassuring signal to the broader market in a Wednesday meeting, promising support for the platform economy, introducing market-friendly policies, and rolling out “predictable” regulations.

  • The profitability prospects of food delivery businesses dimmed as Beijing called for major platforms like Meituan and Ele.me to reduce fees for small businesses suffering during the ongoing coronavirus outbreaks.
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China tech stocks surge as Beijing pledges support for economic stability https://technode.com/2022/03/17/china-tech-stocks-surge-as-beijing-pledges-support-for-economic-stability/ Thu, 17 Mar 2022 09:12:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166328 economic stability, China tech stocksShares of major Chinese tech firms soared after China pledges to adopt policies favorable to economic stability on Wednesday]]> economic stability, China tech stocks

US-traded shares of major Chinese tech firms soared after the State Council, China’s cabinet, pledges to adopt policies favorable to economic stability in a meeting held by Vice Premier Liu He on Wednesday.  

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index, which tracks stocks of Chinese companies, jumped 33% on Wednesday to 7,230 points. 

Zhihu, known as China’s Quora, led the jump with a 79% increase on Wednesday trading, followed by Kingsoft Cloud’s 72%, online grocer Dingdong Maicai’s 66%, and a 64% jump by housing broker Ke Holdings. Around 160 Chinese companies recorded a 10% share jump or higher, according to a rough count by local media iFeng. Tech majors like Alibaba, JD, Baidu, and Pinduoduo, climbed by around 40%.

Why it matters: The Wednesday meeting is the first major policy adjustment after China’s year-long crackdown on prominent areas across the board, from the capital market to internet companies to real estate. Tech companies, especially those under the platform economy model, were among the worst-hit during the regulatory clampdown. However, the country kept increasing investment in hard and core technologies like semiconductors and smart manufacturing.

  • With favorable policies, the State Council sends a reassuring signal to investors after Chinese tech stocks saw intense sell-offs over the past weeks.

Details: China’s Vice Premier Liu He said the Chinese government will “actively introduce market-friendly policies and prudently introduce policies that have a contractionary effect,” according to a briefing of the Wednesday meeting.

  • The Chinese government said that it will continue to support companies to seek listings in the overseas markets. The remarks come less than a week after the US Securities and Exchange Commission named five Chinese companies for potential delisting. The meeting added that China and US regulatory bodies have “maintained good communication and made positive progress” in the regulation of US-listed Chinese firms and said a concrete cooperation plan is underway.
  • The meeting also clarified China’s regulatory moves on big internet platforms. It said to complete rectification work on these platforms but asked for “steady,” “predictable,” and “transparent” regulations, a notable different tone from last year’s sudden and intense regulatory moves.  

Context: Chinese leadership is under pressure to keep economic growth steady when the country faces challenges from all sides, from slowing consumption to Covid resurgence to international pressure from the Russia-Ukraine war. 

  • Premier Li Keqiang, speaking at China’s “two sessions” meeting in early March, said that the Chinese economy should expand by “around 5.5%” this year. It’s the lowest target for the country in 30 years, but still higher than the World Bank’s expectation of 5.1% and the International Monetary Fund’s prediction of 4.8% for 2022.
  • China’s 2021 economic growth took a hit in the latter half of the year after regulators launched a series of crackdowns that eliminated industries like private education and crypto mining and slowed growth and enthusiasm in games, overseas IPOs, and other tech-related areas. Averaging out at 8.1%, the country’s 2021 GDP growth fell sharply from 18% in the first quarter to 4% in the fourth quarter. 

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Chinese tech giants are still slashing headcounts

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Consumer Rights Day 2022: Livestreaming scams, privacy breaches, malware https://technode.com/2022/03/16/consumer-rights-day-2022-livestreaming-scams-privacy-breaches-malware/ Wed, 16 Mar 2022 12:37:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166319 Livestreaming and Consumer Rights Day 2022Livestreaming fraud, forced app downloads, and privacy violations were exposed during this year’s “3.15 Gala” national TV broadcast.]]> Livestreaming and Consumer Rights Day 2022

Livestreaming fraud, forced app downloads, intrusive ads, and privacy violations were among the malicious online practices exposed during this year’s “3.15 Gala” national TV broadcast.

Unlike previous March 15 shows, yesterday’s Consumers Rights Day celebration didn’t single out Apple, Alibaba, Baidu, or any other high-profile companies or brands for reprimands. The offenders this year were little-known small fry. 

This gala’s subdued tone reflects Beijing’s desire to stimulate consumer spending and economic growth, even as the country struggles with a rising wave of COVID-19 outbreaks and geopolitical pressures. 

China’s 2021 GDP growth took a notable hit in the latter half of the year. Averaging out at 8.1%, growth tumbled from 18% in the first quarter to 4% in the fourth quarter. In between, regulators began a broad crackdown that eliminated or crippled internet industries, including crypto mining, private education, and online games.   

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Making sense of China’s big tech crackdown

Undercover in livestreaming e-commerce 

In its 31st annual outing, the two-hour program spotlighted some obscure companies engaging in a dark side of e-commerce livestreaming, a sector that’s under intensified scrutiny by the state.

One segment showed how undercover CCTV reporters discovered a Guangdong livestreamer’s false claims of owning jade and emerald factories with the aim of grossly inflating prices and selling counterfeit jewelry and Buddha images. The Guangdong agency, Yongdexiang, was shown selling jade Buddha images for RMB 198 ($31) while telling customers the items had been purchased for double that amount. In fact, Yongdexiang had bought them for RMB 88 each. Livestreamers’ selling price could sometimes be as high as five to ten times their original purchase price.

A livestreaming agency in Yunnan province called Shilipai set up a dramatic price bargaining scene between livestreamers and fake jade ornament manufacturers. The purpose was to convince viewers they were being offered the best deal. Other scenes featured artificial backdrops in the livestream that resembled a Myanmar gemstone showroom. Customers thought they were buying jade directly from the Southeast Asian country famed for its high-quality jade. In fact, the livestreams were being staged from studios in office buildings in Kunming.

Smartwatch and smartphone snoops

The gala also showed companies grossly misusing people’s personal information. A Zhengzhou-based company called Lvqian was exposed for building a business around stealing users’ phone numbers and selling them to call centers. The company was able to steal the phone numbers by getting a device’s media access control address, a common network address also known as the MAC number. MAC numbers’ unique identifications are assigned to devices for internet access. 

Some smartwatches made for kids were also revealed to have little privacy protection because they use outdated Android operating systems (OS). As a result, they enable hackers to collect detailed user information without permission. Without timely security patches, an outdated OS can even enable eavesdroppers to surveil users. Devices with an outdated Android OS are common in China since Google services were blocked in China in 2010.  

Malware and Wi-Fi trickery

A few software companies that trick users into downloading malicious software to mobile and desktop devices were also exposed in the TV consumers gala. Malware that displays low-quality ads in forced pop-ups may be a mere annoyance, but some types can steal users’ privacy information or trick users into downloading even more harmful programs. This year’s “3.15 Gala” finally shone light on abuses consumers have been complaining about for the better part of a decade. 

An app called “Free Wi-Fi Unlocker” tricks users looking for ways to access password-protected Wi-Fi systems. Once they download the app, it forcibly installs ads on their devices. Baizhu, a small software company founded in 2012, was exposed for building the so-called speed downloader options on various sites and app stores, tricking people into downloading malicious apps and intrusive ads. 

After the TV exposé, Free Wi-Fi Unlocker is now inaccessible across all app stores. Baizhu emptied its social accounts after the gala and local authorities are reportedly looking into the company. 

Following Consumers Day, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said in a March 16 statement that the agency will finally start thorough investigations of companies involved in leaking personal information or forcing malicious software onto users’ devices, citing the Personal Information Protection Law, Cybersecurity Law, Telecommunication Regulations, among other regulations. 

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Tencent reported to be cutting 20% of its workforce https://technode.com/2022/03/15/tencent-reported-to-be-cutting-20-of-its-workforce/ Tue, 15 Mar 2022 06:11:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166278 TencentDeep-pocketed tech titans such as Tencent and Alibaba have largely maintained their headcount until recently.]]> Tencent

Chinese tech giant Tencent is reportedly laying off around 20% of its staff, joining a lengthy list of tech firms that have started to trim their workforces since last year.

Why it matters: Deep-pocketed tech titans such as Tencent and Alibaba, which are generally less vulnerable to small market fluctuations, have largely maintained their headcount until recently. The two giants have not been immune to China’s ongoing economic downturn, regulatory curbs, and international trade tensions.

  • Tencent’s rival Alibaba is reportedly slashing around 30% of its employees amid a market downturn.

Details: Tencent began downsizing its team at the end of last year, Chinese media outlet 36kr reported on Tuesday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • Tencent is laying off less than 20% of its staff based on business adjustments, according to the report. Other reports said the company plans to cut 30%, targeting employees older than 35-years-old.
  • Sources told 36Kr that the firm’s Cloud & Smart Industries Business Group (CSIG) and Platform and Content Group (PCG) were taking the biggest hits. At the same time, the Interactive Entertainment Group (IEG) has a much lower layoff rate which only affects non-core businesses.
  • The CSIG will shed more than 20% of its workforce by the end of 2022, a management figure in the group told 36Kr. The unit’s online education business division bore the brunt of the downsizing cuts due to the sweeping private education crackdown, which began last July. The edtech unit will merge with other businesses in the future, the report added.
  • The remaining CSIG employees will face more pressure as the company aims for profitability for the Group this year.
  • Job cuts in PCG are near 10% now and continue to grow, several PCG employees told the outlet.
  • CSIG, PCG, and IEG are the three largest business groups within Tencent, each group employs around 20,000 people. The Corporate Development Group, Technology Engineering Group, and Weixin Group – smaller groups with less than 10,000 employees – remain relatively unscathed amid the workforce adjustment.

Context: Job prospects look grim in the Chinese tech sector as top tech firms ranging from ByteDance to Baidu, iQiyi and Kuaishou have slashed their headcounts since last year. Online education and fintech, two areas under harsh government scrutiny, are the worst-hit areas.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Chinese tech giants are still slashing headcounts

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JD Logistics to buy rival Deppon for $1.4 billion https://technode.com/2022/03/14/jd-logistics-to-buy-rival-deppon-for-1-4-billion/ Mon, 14 Mar 2022 08:35:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166244 The deal is the latest move by JD in building its logistics infrastructure network, a foundational service for China’s e-commerce market.]]>

JD Logistics, a Hong Kong-listed logistics arm of the e-commerce giant JD, has entered an agreement to buy a 67% stake in courier rival Deppon Logistics Co., Ltd. for RMB 9 billion ($1.4 billion).

Why it matters: After a fierce price war, China’s express and logistics industry is undergoing a market consolidation whereby small players have begun merging with giant competitors. 

  • The deal is the latest move by JD in building its logistics infrastructure network, a foundational service for China’s e-commerce market, through external acquisition and investment. The e-commerce titan has backed many other logistics and delivery companies such as China Logistics Property Holdings Co., Kuayue Express, and Dada Nexus.
  • Through investments, JD is tapping into different verticals in the logistic and supply chain businesses. Deppon provides “differentiated services” and “the overlap is not much” to JD Logistics’ core business, according to Thomas Chong, analyst at investment bank Jefferies. Deppon focuses on large items, freight transportation, and manufacturing customers. JD Logistic’s other subsidiaries, Kuayue focuses on air freight and enterprise clients, while Dada Nexus focuses on-demand inter-city grocery and parcel delivery to individual consumers.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Is China’s courier price war reaching a tipping point?

Details: JD Logistics’ investment in Deppon will be achieved through acquiring a 99.99% equity in Ningbo Meishan Baoshui Area Deppon Investment Holding Company Limited, an investment vehicle that holds a 66.5% stake in Shanghai-listed Deppon Logistics, JD Logistics announced in a March 13 filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange.

  • Upon the completion of the deal, Deppon’s financial results will be consolidated into JD Logistics’ as a subsidiary business, according to the statement.
  • Deppon’s brand will be maintained for independent operation, thus providing a favorable career path for the team, local media Lieyun reported, citing an internal speech made by Yu Rui, CEO of JD Logistics. The comment resolves previous rumors about JD’s plan to merge Deppon’s business and dissolve its team.
  • Since Deppon is listed on the Shanghai stock exchange, JD Logistics will make a mandatory general offer for all Deppon shares at a price of RMB 13 per share. The transactions are subject to regulatory approvals and other closing conditions.

Context: JD Logistics’s revenue increased 43% year-on-year to RMB 105 billion in the fourth quarter of last year, according to the company’s 2021 financial results, its first annual earnings released to the public since it went public last May.

  • Though still loss-making, JD Logistics’ revenue from non-JD customers exceeded half of the total revenue for the first time in 2021, hitting 56.5%. The logistic company has long hoped to  rely less on business from its parent company.
  • Deppon is a logistics company known for its large parcel deliveries. It provides a wide range of solutions, including small and large parcels deliveries, full truck load transportation, and warehousing management in China.

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US-listed Chinese tech companies face steep selloff as delisting concerns loom https://technode.com/2022/03/11/us-listed-chinese-tech-companies-face-steep-selloff-as-delisting-concerns-loom/ Fri, 11 Mar 2022 10:16:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166204 major Chinese tech companiesSome analysts think the SEC's move is more about politics than financials. The delist might grow as more companies report earnings.]]> major Chinese tech companies

On Thursday, the US-traded shares of major Chinese tech companies saw steep drops as the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) named several Chinese companies that face delisting.

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index, which tracks stocks of Chinese companies listed in the US, plummeted by as much as 10% on Thursday to 6,535 points, the biggest slide since October 2008, Bloomberg reported.

Shares in more than 10 US-listed Chinese tech companies fell more than 10%. For example, iQiyi dropped 21.71%; Pinduoduo fell 17.49%; Bilibili 14.10%; NIO 11.90%; Parkson China 10.94%. Alibaba and Xiaopeng dropped by 7.94% and 9.01%, respectively.

(Image credit: TechNode/Ward Zhou)

Why it matters: The market sell-off is a sign that investors are taking notice of a tougher stance from the US stock market regulator towards US-listed Chinese companies. 

The SEC said Thursday that five Chinese companies, fast-food chain Yum China Holdings, biotech groups BeiGene, HutchMed Limited, Zai Lab Limited, and technology firm ACM Research, may face delisting for failing to disclose information, according to the Holding Foreign Companies Accountability Act (HFCAA). 

The US passed the act in 2020, but this is the first time that the SEC has threatened companies of an actual delisting. The five named companies can submit evidence disputing the commission’s charges until March 29.

According to the act, Chinese companies and their auditors would have to open their books to US inspections, which companies like Alibaba and Baidu had previously refused to do. 

READ MORE: US-listed Chinese firms are on thin ice

Politics or financials: Responding to the SEC’s delisting warnings, the Chinese government said it welcomes measures to improve companies’ financials but is “against politicizing securities regulations,” according to a Friday response from the China Securities and Regulatory Commission.  

Some analysts think SEC’s move is more about politics than the companies’ financials. “Most things are about politics now, both in China’s own domestic securities regulation, or US-China securities regulation disagreement,” Ren Liqian, director at exchange-traded fund sponsor and index developer WisdomTree Investments, said in a Friday Twitter post

She expects the SEC list to grow as more companies report 2021 annual earnings in which the auditor information is used.

Tech companies that released their fourth-quarter earnings from last year took the brunt of the market blow. On Thursday, JD shares sank 16% even though its Q4 earnings beat market expectations. Shares of Ke Holdings slumped 24% after posting a Q4 report, which investment bank Jefferies considered a “turnaround story.”

“Today’s company earnings numbers are also not bad”, Ren noted. “It’s less about this year’s fundamentals, but how much the US wants to tie Chinese companies to Russian sanctions and future impact on fundamentals,” she posted.

Meanwhile, the incident may further boost the Hong Kong stock exchange, a popular alternative to the US market for Chinese tech companies. Since Alibaba launched a dual listing in Hong Kong in 2019, many Chinese tech firms started to look to list closer to home amid the backdrop of escalating tensions between China and the US. This homecoming trend grew stronger after Luckin’s fraud scandal.

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Two sessions 2022: 5 Chinese tech leaders weigh in  https://technode.com/2022/03/10/two-sessions-2022-5-chinese-tech-leaders-suggest-policy-directions/ Thu, 10 Mar 2022 08:30:22 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166139 Tech leaders in two sessionsThe annual meetings of the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the advisory Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) being held this week are most important for the windows they provide into the government’s economic targets and policy priorities in the coming year.  But the so-called “two sessions” meetings also enable some top private enterprise executives who are […]]]> Tech leaders in two sessions

The annual meetings of the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the advisory Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) being held this week are most important for the windows they provide into the government’s economic targets and policy priorities in the coming year. 

But the so-called “two sessions” meetings also enable some top private enterprise executives who are members of the two bodies to present recommendations for policy directions publicly. This year, airing perspectives from tech industries were founders of Tencent, Baidu, NetEase, Xiaomi, and Geely. Their recommendations perhaps won’t be taken up by government authorities this year but might merit serious official consideration in future years.

READ MORE: China’s Two Sessions 2022: More 5G, rural e-commerce, semiconductors, and other tech priorities

Risky new technologies

In his ninth year as an NPC delegate, Pony Ma, founder and CEO of Tencent, urged more emphasis on the digitalization of pillar industries, standardized processes, and customized support for specialized high-tech enterprises. He also warned about the market risks inherent in the emerging sectors of the metaverse, non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and Web 3.

With regulatory risks remaining a major concern for tech giants, the billionaire’s comments largely aligned with the government’s bigger picture initiatives ranging from digital transformation to the call for large enterprises to fulfill their social responsibilities and work toward carbon neutrality. Ma made no comments about online gaming, a key revenue source for his company and an area in which many other delegates advocated for harsher regulation.

Ma also called for the government to build a social emergency network for sending disaster warnings and coordinating rescue resources by learning from the flood relief experiences in Henan and Shanxi last year. He suggested mobilizing local groups like community volunteers, food and package delivery workers, and ride-hailing drivers to be trained for natural emergencies.

Green transport and cultural IP

Robin Li, founder and CEO of Baidu, focused his remarks on autonomous driving and green computation. He urged the government to give more support so China can take the lead in commercializing fully autonomous driving. Specifically, he suggested government support for companies testing autonomous cars without safety drivers, preparing roads for automated cars, and building smart transportation infrastructure.

Li also proposed the creation of more green AI services as a way to achieve China’s goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2060. China should optimize AI algorithms to minimize carbon emissions and develop big models that cut energy consumption. He also recommended public data centers set up ways to measure their carbon emissions.

According to NetEase founder and CEO Ding Lei, building a global intellectual property (IP) platform for exchanging cultural IP, digital video, and musical content should be a national priority. It’s an area that NetEase, the parent of popular music and video streamer NetEase Cloud Music, has already tapped this year with the launch of the beat trading platform BeatSoul in January.

Ding also called for more research on sodium-ion batteries as an alternative to the more popular lithium-ion ones to lower the price of batteries. In addition, recycling and rental services for lithium-ion batteries were also proposed as possible measures to address the issue.

Recycling, recharging, swapping 

Lei Jun, co-founder and chairman of Xiaomi, recommended the government improve consumer electronic waste recycling and set unified standards for monitoring carbon emissions of new energy vehicles (NEVs). Not coincidentally, the smartphone maker made plans to build its own electric vehicles last year.   

Lei called to consolidate three core processes (trading of used products, reproducing, and scrap dismantling) into one recycling system. Government should pay more attention to safeguarding former owners’ privacy in the recycling process, Lei said, by setting up third-party organizations to erase personal data found in second-hand devices. 

Lei urged the government to build high-voltage fast-charging stations for NEVs on a large scale. He also suggested the government build a national platform to help different companies jointly develop fast charging and other essential techs.

Li Shufu, founder and chairman of automaker Geely, proposed that battery-swapping stations be built across the country, so more people could adopt NEVs without worrying about finding charging stations. 

Li called for regulators, industry groups, and market players to establish unified and generalized standards for swapping technologies. The government should green light rules to speed up approval for swap stations’ land use and cut red tape involved in getting permits to sell swappable electric vehicles (EVs), Li said. 

Although Tesla CEO Elon Musk views battery swapping as an “unlikely” solution and many others worry about the technology’s scaling problems, Chinese companies are jumping into the market in the hope that the service can work at scale in the world’s biggest EV market. Separation of the battery from the vehicle, along with battery-leasing options offered by carmakers, could also reduce the upfront purchase price of EVs, which could increase competitiveness and boost adoption. Beijing showed its support for the technology by defining swap stations as complementary to charging facilities in its “new infrastructure” investment plan for 2020.

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China’s Two Sessions 2022: More 5G, rural e-commerce, semiconductors, and other tech priorities https://technode.com/2022/03/09/chinas-two-sessions-2022-more-5g-rural-e-commerce-semiconductors-and-other-tech-priorities/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 12:45:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=166129 China two sessions 2022Tech priorities revealed in China's 2022 Two Sessions: expand 5G infrastructure, set up a national system of data centers, and more. ]]> China two sessions 2022

Beijing this year aims to expand 5G infrastructure, set up a national system of data centers, keep a tight regulatory grip on big platforms, and push e-commerce in rural China, according to goals set forth this week at the annual lianghui  (“two sessions”) meeting of the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

China plans to bolster the tech sector by increasing state funding in key areas such as chip manufacturing and improving the capital market so more tech firms can raise money domestically. Having a growing and self-sustained tech sector is central to the government’s plan to achieve these set targets, according to government reports presented in the meeting.

Given the ongoing surge in the pandemic in China, an economic slowdown, and uncertain global geopolitical pressure, many of the goals for 2022 will be particularly challenging to achieve. The GDP growth target of 5.5% is ambitious, despite being the lowest in a decade (It was 6% last year; no target was set in 2020 due to the pandemic). 

Members of the NPC and CPPCC, the nation’s top legislative bodies, meeting from March 5 to March 11, emphasized the need for a stable growing economy as China prepares to host the all-important 20th Party Congress in autumn. This year is also the second year in China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021 to 2025), which is set to make the country wealthier and more equal, growing China’s per capita GDP to the level of moderately developed nations and expanding its middle-class. 

Achieving self-sustainability in semiconductors and strategically important areas such as AI, biotechnology, and advanced manufacturing tools and machines are high on the government’s priorities. The government will fund small startups that possess innovative tech in the manufacturing, fostering what they called “little giants,” according to the Ministry of Finance’s report filed to the meeting and released to the press.

New energy vehicles will continue to be embraced. The government aims to build more green energy power structures to ease its reliance on fossil fuels. In key growth areas like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangdong, the state will fund national laboratories and tech innovation hubs to attract tech talents. 

Reassuring capital markets

China will “promote the development of venture capital,” Premier Li Keqiang said on March 5 at the opening of the six-day NPC assembly. The remarks sent an assuring signal to worried tech venture capitalists after China’s year-long tech crackdown erased trillions of dollars in market cap from Chinese tech majors like Alibaba, Didi, and Meituan. However, the country will still be mindful of the systematic risks brought by “unregulated and disorderly expansion of capital,” Li said in the government work report.

Despite the fears spawned by last year’s regulatory crackdowns, venture capital investments in China jumped almost 50% from $86.7 billion in 2020 to a new record of $130.6 billion for 2021, data from research firm Preqin shows. However, venture capital pivoted to financing hard tech areas like semiconductors and robots rather than highly-regulated areas like edtech. 

In addition to leveraging venture capital, the country plans to improve the operation of public capital markets by reforming China’s new third board, an over-the-counter share trading platform serving small and medium enterprises (SMEs). China made the first step of reform by launching the Beijing Stock Exchange last November, targeting small tech startups and enhancing the connectivity of the multi-level capital markets.

Infrastructure priorities: 5G, data centers 

Regulatory crackdowns on large internet platforms will likely continue this year, as the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, the state’s prosecutor, said in the NPC that it plans to closely monitor anti-monopoly, anti-competitive behaviors, and guide the capital market to orderly development. 

China plans to construct more 5G stations and further utilize data as a critical national resource to bring more value from its increasingly digitized economy. China’s economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said in a report released to the assembly that it will launch several “major infrastructure projects,” building 5G networks, artificial intelligence (AI), and an integrated national system of big data centers.

China elevated data to one of the key economic resources in the 14th Five-Year Plan released last year. In 2021, China laid the groundwork for keeping data secure with a slew of regulations. This year, it will further the work to allow data to be better classified and defined to better share and trade data, said the NDRC report. 

Building countryside e-commerce

As China faces continued weak consumption in 2022, the government hopes to compensate by expanding rural e-commerce. The government work report proposed to strengthen the construction of business ecosystems in county-level communities and to improve rural delivery services. The economic planner’s report shows that express delivery services now cover more than 80% of the country’s administrative villages, which will “further unleash consumption potential in rural areas.”

In 2021, China’s total online retail sales increased 14% year on year to RMB 1.3 trillion ($206 billion), or 30% of China’s overall retail consumption of RMB 4.4 trillion, according to NDRC’s report.

In addition, the economic planner wants to boost cross-border e-commerce as part of its efforts. For example,  China plans to expand the scope of the pilot scheme for cross-border e-commerce retail imports and started planning on building seaports, inland ports, and overseas warehouses.

Smaller manufacturing startups

In 2021, manufacturing accounted for 27.4% of China’s GDP. The country aims to upgrade this key sector by nurturing homegrown startups specializing in robotics, automation, industrial software, and other smart manufacturing tools. 

Since the US-China trade war in 2018, China has rushed to reinforce its manufacturing supply chains and make sure it doesn’t rely too much on foreign supplies in core technologies. China has funded more than 4,700 startups since 2021 and plans to invest in 3,000 more this year.

The government called the state incubation the “little giants” project, setting out to give out RMB 10 billion ($1.58 billion) over the years to fund startups in key manufacturing areas. These areas include high-end machine tools, aerospace equipment, marine engineering equipment, advanced railway equipment, electric power equipment, new materials, biomedicine, and high-end medical equipment. 

Yet more support for semiconductors

China’s semiconductor industry has seen an exponential increase in investments and government support since 2019, as the country’s top chipmakers faced US sanctions. The government vowed to rely less on foreign technology in its chip production, but the complexity of this high-tech industry means China’s pursuit of self-sufficiency will be a long-term effort. 

The government vowed to keep throwing money and support into this effort. China’s Ministry of Finance said in its report to the NPC assembly that it would channel funds to the integrated circuits industry through market measures. It would also give tax cuts to the chip industry, alongside other sectors like industrial mother machines, 5G, biotech, and agricultural equipment. 

The NDRC said it will guide semiconductor makers to gradually expand their production, stabilize supply chains in and outside of China, and will help them connect with suppliers. It also vowed to pay close attention to raw materials prices, helping suppliers and manufacturers secure production resources. 

’Moderating’ clean energy policies and supporting NEVs

Chinese policymakers have faced significant challenges as they tried to meet ambitious carbon reduction goals over the last year, ranging from heavy reliance on coal to a nationwide power crisis.

China will continue its efforts to reduce the use of coal and promote renewable energy sources, according to the government work report. And yet, the moves to reach its emissions peak will be done “in a well-ordered way,” Li said, adding that energy supply will be ensured “in accordance with overall planning,” in addition to efforts to build wind and solar power plants. 

Last year, the central government imposed strict measures by enforcing energy consumption mandates and intensity limits. As a result, at least a dozen Chinese provinces introduced power cut measures in September. This, along with soaring energy prices, forced many factories to reduce or even halt their operations late last year. 

Beijing will also push the country’s EV industry forward to drive consumption and cut carbon emissions. The NDRC, the economic planning agency, said in its report that it will continue to boost purchases of NEVs and build more battery charging and swapping facilities. Meanwhile, the  Ministry of Finance pledged to maintain subsidies and tax exemptions for NEV purchases.

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Meituan lowers fees less than two weeks after state’s suggestion https://technode.com/2022/03/02/meituan-lowers-fees-less-than-two-weeks-after-states-suggestion/ Wed, 02 Mar 2022 08:59:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165934 Meituan, deliveryMeituan made the move less than two weeks after regulators asked platforms cut fees for restaurants suffering from the coronavirus outbreak.]]> Meituan, delivery

Chinese food delivery giant Meituan has reduced commission fees for merchants to help alleviate the operational pressures they face following the pandemic prevention measures enacted in the past two years.

Why it matters: Meituan, which counts on food delivery as its main source of revenue, made the move less than two weeks after Chinese regulators suggested in a guideline that food delivery platforms cut fees for restaurants suffering from the coronavirus outbreak.

  • Meituan’s shares plunged 15% on Feb. 18 when the new guideline was issued. But a commentary from the state media Economic Daily said the market was “overreacting” (in Chinese). The guideline aimed to drive consumption and recovery after Covid rather than crack down on platforms, the commentary said. Investment bank Jefferies maintained its “buy” rating for Meituan after the release of the guidance.
  • Meituan’s commission cut may well trigger similar moves from rivals such as Alibaba-backed platform Ele.me.

Details: Meituan rolled out six supportive measures both to lower the costs and increase revenue for merchants operating on its platform, according to a Tuesday statement.

  • The company will cut half of its technological commissions, capping them at RMB 1 ($0.16) per order, for restaurant owners from pandemic-hit areas who suffer a daily sales drop of more than 30%. The policy will be effective as soon as a region is placed in full or partial lockdown and will end once the lockdowns are lifted.
  • More than one million merchants facing operation difficulties will be eligible for a commission rate of less than 5% by the end of this year, lower than the average 12% commission usually charged. 
  • The company added that it aimed to bring more transparency to its commission structure this year. Last May, it changed its previous flat fee policy to a flexible one that’s based on various factors such as order price and delivery distance. 
  • In addition, Meituan is offering customized operational services to 100,000 merchants, helping them to improve storefront designs, develop food delivery menus, and launch marketing strategies. It will also provide free hardware, such as order printers and scanners, to merchants facing operational difficulties.

Context: Chinese food delivery platforms, such as Meituan and Ele.me, have been criticized for charging small merchants excessive rates over the past few years.

  • Meituan still faces regulatory risks after receiving a $534 million antitrust fine last October.

READ MORE: There are no food delivery winners

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Chinese edtech sector to have its first IPO since education crackdown https://technode.com/2022/03/01/chinese-edtech-sector-to-have-its-first-ipo-since-education-crackdown/ Tue, 01 Mar 2022 09:43:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165888 Fenbi’s listing is the first IPO from China’s edtech industry since last July, when the sector was hit by a series of regulatory moves. ]]>

Fenbi Education, a Chinese edtech platform catered to adult learners, filed for an initial public offering in Hong Kong on Monday, according to the Chinese media outlet Sina Tech.

Why it matters: Fenbi’s listing is the first IPO from China’s edtech industry since last July, when the once-booming sector was hit by a series of regulatory crackdowns on curriculum tutoring services targeting students up to the 12th grade (K-12).

  • Fenbi, which means “chalk” in Chinese, provides online and offline test preparation services for adult professionals, as well as vocational training. It focuses on offering courses for various tests such as the civil officer examinations, teacher qualification certificates, and postgraduate entrance examinations.

READ MORE: Chinese edtech upended by sweeping regulations

Details: Fenbi said it plans to go public in Hong Kong but did not disclose the size of the IPO. Bloomberg reported on Monday that the firm could raise about $300 million. China International Capital Corporation, Citibank, and BofA Securities will serve as co-sponsors for the listing.

  • The fund will be used to develop courses, enhance student recruitment, and improve technological capacity and digital infrastructure, according to the company.
  • The company’s revenue reached RMB 2.6 billion ($416 million) in the first nine months of 2021, up 80% year-on-year. However, while Fenbi’s revenue expanded, its net loss also widened, almost doubling from RMB 362 million in 2020 to RMB 782 million over the first nine months of 2021.
  • Fenbi’s average monthly active users increased by 38% year-on-year from 4.7 million in 2020 to 6.5 million in 2021, slowing from the 62% growth rate for 2020. Since its founding, paid users have reached 45.3 million in December 2021.
  • Founded in 2015, the company now operates in 260 cities across 31 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities in China.
  • Fenbi’s CEO Zhang Xiaolong, who shares the same name as the better-known Tencent vice president and “father of WeChat”, holds a 35% stake in the company. Tencent owns 14% of the company and other shareholders include IDG, Matrix Partners, and Hillhouse Capital.

Context: Fenbi is an early entrepreneurial effort from the team behind the online tutoring app Yuanfudao, before the edtech unicorn decided to focus on the more lucrative K-12 segment.

  • In February 2021, the firm raised $390 million in a Series A led by IDG Capital and Trustbridge Partners.
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The Big Sell | Meituan faces a profit pinch as China orders lower fees https://technode.com/2022/02/28/meituan-faces-a-profit-pinch-as-china-orders-lower-fees/ Mon, 28 Feb 2022 10:27:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165844 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan faces a profit squeeze as Chinese regulators order platforms to cut fees to help small businesses. ]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

Meituan faces a profit squeeze as Chinese regulators order platforms to cut fees to help small businesses. Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is exploring rival JD.com’s direct sales model, one that Alibaba’s billionaire founder and former chief executive Jack Ma predicted would become “a tragedy in the future” in 2015. China’s Craiglist, 58.com, came under public scrutiny for recommending fake jobs to a user who was later trafficked to Cambodia as a “blood slave”. Kuaishou planned to block links to Alibaba and JD.com while building its own e-commerce business. Tencent closed social group-buy mini-program Xiao’e Pinpin, while ByteDance pulled the plug on a Shein-like fashion site just three months after its launch.

Meituan faces regulatory headwinds

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

News: Chinese on-demand delivery platforms, led by Meituan and Ele.me, are facing regulatory headwinds for monetizing the services they provide. Fourteen Chinese authorities, including the National Development and Reform Commission, issued a new guideline that requires goods delivery platforms to cut fees for restaurants. The guideline involves supporting policies for various service industries from catering and restaurants, to retail, tourist travel, and transportation. It’s designed to lower the operation costs for merchants who have been hit by pandemic prevention measures, according to a statement announced Feb. 18. Shares of Chinese life services app Meituan fell more than 15% on the news.

Insights: Reduced service fees will impact the financial performance of local life services giants like Meituan, for which food delivery accounted for more than half of its revenue in the third quarter of 2021. Chinese food delivery platforms, such as Meituan and Alibaba-backed Ele.me, have been criticized for charging excessive commissions from small merchants over the past few years. In one of the biggest merchant push-backs at the peak of the Covid-19 outbreak in April 2020, the Guangdong Restaurant Association accused Meituan of exploiting merchants by charging excessive commission rates that “most of the restaurants can’t endure.” In China, food delivery platforms charge commissions based on merchants’ size. Some small restaurants have to pay up to 18% to 20%, higher than the 10% to 15% commission rate proposed by the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce in 2021.

News Link: TechNode

Cat filling in a dog’s shoe

News: Alibaba launched a new e-commerce service called Maoxiang under the direct sales model within its business-to-consumer marketplace Tmall on Feb. 18. The model would give the e-commerce giant more control over product quality, sourcing, and delivery in a manner similar to rival JD.com. The platform, which will be focused on consumer electronics products in the beginning stage, is in discussions with consumer electronics brands, including smartphone maker Realme, to join the platform, local media outlet LatePost reported. An Alibaba executive told local media outlet Guancha that Maoxiang won’t replace Tmall’s branding.

Insights: China’s top two e-commerce sites, Alibaba and JD.com, started with very different business models. Alibaba counts marketing services and commissions from third-party merchants as revenue sources, while JD earns a mark-up by selling products that it holds. The question of which model is better has been a long-running talking point. Alibaba’s “platform” model can yield higher margins than JD’s asset-heavy direct retail approach, which has to cover various extra costs, from warehousing to delivery. However, JD’s direct sales model offers better services with more quality control and strong logistics.

However, the distinction in the business model between the two companies has increasingly blurred. For example, JD expanded to adopt Alibaba’s platform model as early as 2017, while Alibaba runs a grocery store chain called Freshippo, which uses the direct retail model. But this is the first time that Alibaba has added a direct retail business to its core e-commerce marketplace Tmall.

With its model highly reliant on online user traffic, Alibaba is trying out new models to stave off the challenge of short video apps like Douyin, Kuaishou, and social commerce apps like Pinduoduo and Xiaohongshu. Moreover, tapping into a model that offers better products and services aligns with China’s consumption upgrading trend.

The new initiative is a major business shift led by Turdy Dai, the newly-assigned head of Alibaba’s Chinese e-commerce business. Dai reshuffled the back-end operations of Taobao and Tmall to bring the two pillar businesses together. 

News Link: TechNode (story 1, story 2)

58.com under fire amid job scam accusations

News: Chinese web-based classified site 58.com has come under fire after a Chinese national accused the site of hosting fraudulent job advertisements, which led him to fall victim to a human trafficking gang in Cambodia. The victim, surnamed Li, found a nightclub security guard position on 58.com last May. He then traveled to Guangxi province for an interview but was smuggled into Cambodia by a criminal gang and forced to work various telemarketing fraud schemes. Since September, his captors began repeatedly extracting blood from him, putting his life in danger. Police rescued Li with the help of local organizations. 58.com said in a Feb. 17 response that it would cooperate with the police investigation, although it had “not yet established” whether the fraudulent job ad had appeared on its platform.

Insights: As China’s Craiglist counterpart, 58.com provides classified ads for a diverse range of categories, such as recruitment, real estate, and second-hand goods and cars. Once a tech major in China, the company has lost momentum over the past few years after gaining a controversial reputation for being involved in many criminal lawsuits. This current scandal brings 58.com’s business ethics to public attention again. Other Chinese tech companies have also faced criticism for providing space to fraudulent or misleading advertisements, as long as they bring in revenue. In 2017, Li Wenxing, 23, was found drowned months after being recruited online by a pyramid scheme posing as a software company via Boss Zhipin, a direct hiring site. Apart from online recruitment, misleading health and medical information online is another area that has drawn public ire, most prominently in the case of Baidu’s “Wei Zexi Incident”.

News Link: Reuters

Kuaishou to block external links to Taobao and JD

News: On Feb. 22, Chinese short video app Kuaishou announced a plan to block external links to Taobao and JD.com, beginning in March. Taobao product links will be barred from displaying within the video app, while JD links will be blocked from showing in the shopping cart during livestreaming sessions, but will still be accessible through shopping charts in short videos and on information pages. The company has attributed the forthcoming changes to “agreement adjustments” without providing further details. 

Insights: Short video apps and e-commerce platforms have historically worked closely together within the trend of content-driven e-commerce. Video apps boast traffic and content, while e-commerce sites have brands and supply chains. As short video sites, notably Kuaishou and Douyin, build up their own e-commerce businesses, they want to keep users within their own ecosystem instead of sending buyers to other platforms to make purchases. Kuaishou reportedly achieved a gross merchandise value of RMB 680 billion ($108 billion) in 2021 and plans to achieve between RMB 900 billion to RMB 970 billion GMV in 2022.

News Link: TechNode

Business scale-back of tech majors

News: Tencent will shut down its social group-buy mini-program Xiao’e Pinpin, a feature that was expected to rival Pinduoduo when it was launched in 2020. Dmonstudio, a Shein-link fashion shopping website reportedly owned by ByteDance, is set to shut down three months after its launch. The lack of user interest is the most likely reason for the closure, according to local media. Meanwhile, JD Finance, the financial arm of JD, has stopped providing specialized services for college students, while ByteDance sold the operating body of online brokerage service Dolphin Securities to ChinaLin Securities.

Insights: Chinese tech majors are downsizing amid weakening consumer spending, intensified competition, and tightening regulations. China’s six major tech firms, collectively known as BATTMD (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, Meituan, and Didi), have closed or scaled back more than 20 projects since 2021, according to a rough count by local media outlet Geek Park. Edtech, fintech, and businesses that affect the benefits of small merchants and the daily life of regular people, such as grocery delivery, are facing business adjustments due to tightened regulations.

News Link: Guancha, TechNode, SCMP

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Alibaba goes after JD’s direct retail model with new e-commerce app https://technode.com/2022/02/18/alibaba-goes-after-jds-direct-retail-model-with-new-e-commerce-app/ Fri, 18 Feb 2022 04:13:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165617 AlibabaAlibaba is trying out different models to boost growth amid weakening spending, intensifying competition, and tightening regulations. ]]> Alibaba

Chinese tech giant Alibaba is launching a new online platform running a direct sales model, similar to rival JD’s, Chinese local media LatePost reported on Wednesday. The new platform, called Maoxiang (our translation), will first focus on consumer electronics. 

Why it matters: Alibaba is trying out different models to boost business growth amid weakening consumer spending, intensifying competition, and tightening regulations

Details: Alibaba plans to rebrand its business-to-consumer (B2C) marketplace Tmall app to Maoxiang, LatePost reported, citing unnamed sources. Alibaba’s B2C retail group led the project and launched it at the end of last year.

  • Maoxiang will adopt a direct retail model. The online platform can sell branded merchandise directly to consumers, having more control over sourcing, quality, storage, delivery, and after-sales.
  • For starters, the platform will focus on selling consumer electronics products, big-ticket items that JD also focused on during its early days.
  • Alibaba is in discussions with several consumer electronics brands, including smartphone maker Realme, to join the platform. 
  • SF Express and Danniao Logistics are possible couriers for the service to ensure next-day doorstep delivery, the report added.
  • Alibaba didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiry when contacted on Thursday.

Context: Alibaba and JD, two of the largest e-commerce platforms in China, rose to prominence by adopting different business models. Alibaba operates under a “platform” model, where it derives revenues from online marketing services and commissions from third-party merchants selling on its marketplaces. Meanwhile, JD runs more like an online supermarket and earns mark-up by selling products it holds. 

  • JD expanded to adopt Alibaba’s “platform” model as early as 2017 by introducing retailers, small merchants, and individuals to its business.
  • In January, Alibaba’s domestic e-commerce business launched a major organizational reshuffle to connect the back-end operations of the company’s two core e-commerce marketplaces Taobao and Tmall.
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China’s viral metaverse social app Zheli halts downloads https://technode.com/2022/02/14/chinas-viral-metaverse-social-app-zheli-halts-downloads/ Mon, 14 Feb 2022 09:47:37 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165402 Zheli’s emergence has further fueled the ongoing metaverse frenzy in the country which has been building since last year.]]>

Only three days after China’s metaverse social app Zheli topped the App Store in China, an impressive feat for a newcomer, the app’s owners pulled the platform from app stores across the country to address various controversies.

Zheli, which means “gel” in English, is a 3D avatar maker that allows users to share their daily lives with friends and shows users’ approximate location and mode (at school, at work, or near a shopping mall). 

The app provides fashionable characters and outfit options to create a customized avatar. It became an instant hit in China after its launch in January. Zheli allows users to add up to 50 friends via the app.

Why it matters: The quick rise of Zheli, less than one month since its launch, is a rare success story in China’s social networking industry, which has been long dominated by Tencent’s super app WeChat. Zheli’s emergence has further fueled the ongoing metaverse frenzy in the country, which has been building momentum since last year.

  • On Feb. 11, Zheli replaced WeChat as the most downloaded app in the App Store in China with a record high of 435,000 downloads. It’s the first time an app has taken the top download ranking from WeChat since 2019.
  • Chinese tech giants Baidu, Tencent, and ByteDance have been investing and developing metaverse features and services in the wake of the global metaverse craze.
  • China’s metaverse social networking companies also includes Soul and ByteDance’s Party Island.

Details: Beijing Yidian Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd, the operator of Zheli, said in a Feb. 13 announcement that it had removed the app from app stores and suspended new user registration voluntarily to improve the experience for existing users.

  • The firm cited various stability issues (slow loading time, constant crashes) as the major reason for the removal. But it denied having collected user information without permission when users made friend referrals through third-party messaging tools like WeChat and QQ. Last week, users claimed that the company violated users’ privacy. 
  • “I like the app for its designs and youth culture, but there’s still a lot of room for improvement functionality-wise,” Echo Gong, an analyst from research agency Coresight, told TechNode. 
  • Users can invite new friends on the app either through phone contact list or WeChat. But it could be a time-consuming experience as WeChat doesn’t support direct link invites and users might have to open browsers to complete the process. 
  • Zheli’s communication functions are still limited to photos and microblogging, less diversified compared with mainstream social platforms, which offer formats such as long texts, short videos, and emojis, Gong added.

READ MORE: Metaverse in China: Investors and tech leaders say they are prepared

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Tencent vows to promote core social values in content production reshuffles https://technode.com/2022/02/11/tencent-vows-to-promote-core-social-values-in-content-production-reshuffles/ Fri, 11 Feb 2022 08:44:20 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165390 TencentTencent is the latest among China’s tech giants to make changes to their business to stay safe amid wider regulatory crackdowns.]]> Tencent

Chinese tech giant Tencent has launched a major reshuffle in its entertainment and content production business, setting “social responsibilities” as the primary goal for film production arm Tencent Pictures.

Why it matters: Tencent is the latest among China’s tech giants to make changes to their business to stay safe amid wider regulatory crackdowns.

  • Tencent, along with Alibaba and Meituan, have taken the brunt of China’s regulatory wrath over the past year.
  • Chinese tech companies are scrambling to show their willingness to comply with the country’s broad goal of lessening inequality (reaching “common prosperity”) to stay on the safe side of an intense period of regulatory changes

READ MORE: Insights | Why Chinese tech giants are becoming very generous

Details: Tencent has merged Tencent Pictures, a unit under the company’s Platform & Content Group, with its Corporate Development Group, Chinese media outlet Jiemian reported on Thursday. Cheng Wu, vice president of Tencent Group and CEO of e-publisher China Literature, will oversee the business.

  • After the adjustment, Tencent Pictures will focus on producing content that promotes Chinese core values to “take more social responsibility,” according to the report.
  • Tencent Pictures affiliates such as television and film production company New Classics Media and China Literature’s film production unit will lead the development of the group’s existing commercial IPs.
  • An anonymous source told Jiemian that commercialization will no longer be the top priority for Tencent Pictures, which has a new commitment to producing content promoting mainstream values, such as A Lifelong Journey, a TV series now airing on state broadcaster CCTV.
  • Tencent could not be reached when contacted by TechNode on Friday.

Context: In 2014, Chinese President Xi Jinping called on local artists to present socialist core values in their works.

  • In January, Tencent replaced the dystopian ending of the cult classic movie “Fight Club” with a happy ending and cut all nude scenes in a version streamed on Tencent Video. The company later restored the ending after a global backlash.
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Meituan tests shopping review feature similar to Xiaohongshu https://technode.com/2022/02/10/meituan-tests-shopping-review-feature-similar-to-xiaohongshu/ Thu, 10 Feb 2022 08:48:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165340 Meituan, known as the “Amazon of services” in China, is testing the feature for its physical e-commerce service, while fending off competition from rivals like ByteDance and Alipay in the area of local lifestyle business.]]>

Meituan is testing Zhenxiang, a shopping review feature similar to the one used by lifestyle community platform Xiaohongshu, as the Chinese food delivery and local services giant aims to boost its e-commerce business.

Why it matters: Meituan, known as the “Amazon of services” in China, is testing the feature for its physical goods e-commerce service, while fending off competition from rivals like ByteDance and Alipay in the area of local lifestyle business.

READ MORE: ByteDance is trying to take a bite of Meituan’s cake

Details: Zhenxiang, a shopping review community, is being tested among a group of users, most of whom have already used its e-commerce service Tuanhaohuo.

  • The feature is now displayed in the most prominent part of Meituan’s e-commerce interface for pilot users. It was launched in December but was initially only accessible through less conspicuous entry points.
  • Zhenxiang allows users to post product evaluations and tips in the form of notes, photos, and short videos for other potential buyers’ reference. Users can also rate products with a five star system, from “bad shopping experience” to “highly recommended.”
  • A Meituan spokeswoman confirmed that the company is working on the pilot project, adding that it’s just one of its usual range of experiments aimed at testing new features.
  • By integrating the product review feature into the app, Meituan could drive its e-commerce sales under the Zhongcao model, a marketing strategy that was first popularized by Xiaohongshu, local media Lu Lu Finance explained.
  • The term Zhongcao (“planting grass”) refers to the idea that favorable and comprehensive reviews of a product can sow the seeds of an urge to buy in consumers. The actual action of purchase is referred to as Bacao (“pulling up grass”) in Chinese. 

Context: Content has emerged as the driver of Chinese e-commerce over the past three years. Chinese tech platforms like Taobao, short video apps Douyin and Kuaishou, and China’s Quora-like site Zhihu have also leveraged the Zhongcao model to boost e-commerce growth.

  • Meituan has begun testing an expansion into the sale of physical goods online, entering into partnerships with consumer electronics companies, cosmetics brands, garment brands, and physical bookstores in order to diversify the physical product offerings on the platform.
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Bilibili employee death reignites overwork debate in China https://technode.com/2022/02/08/bilibili-employee-death-reignites-overwork-debate-in-china/ Tue, 08 Feb 2022 06:06:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165280 bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime gameThe sudden death of a Bilibili employee has renewed public discussions about the persisting overwork culture of Chinese tech companies.]]> bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime game

A content moderator at Chinese video streaming site Bilibili died on Feb. 4 while working a Lunar New Year holiday shift. On Monday, the company said that the deceased employee didn’t work excessive hours before his death, but online influencers say otherwise.  

Why it matters: The sudden death of the Bilibili employee has renewed public discussions about the persisting overwork culture of Chinese tech companies. The news has drawn extra attention since it happened during the Lunar New Year holiday, China’s all-important annual public holiday.

  • Under mounting public scrutiny, Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba, ByteDance, Meituan, and Kuaishou have tried to improve staff’s working conditions by either introducing shorter working hours or enhancing worker benefits.

READ MORE: Insights | Why ‘996’ just won’t go away 

Details: A Bilibili employee, nicknamed “Twilight Muxin” died of a brain hemorrhage on Feb. 4 after working a holiday shift from home during the seven-day break for the traditional Chinese New Year, according to an internal Bilibili memo shared with TechNode on Tuesday.

  • The male employee felt unwell on the afternoon of Feb. 4 and was rushed to the hospital. He was pronounced dead around 8:00 p.m. on the same day after hours of rescue attempts failed to revive him. The employee joined Bilibili in May last year and worked in the company’s content review department.
  • Facing heightened scrutiny over its content from Chinese authorities, Bilibili, a Nasdaq-listed streaming site, had a sizable 2,400-member content moderation and auditing team as of 2020, roughly 30% of the company’s headcount at the time.

Conflicting narrative: There are two different narratives regarding the employee’s cause of death. Weibo workplace blogger “Wang Luobei” first broke the news on Monday around noon, blaming the company’s grueling work schedule for the tragedy. Bilibili denied the employee had worked overtime in a Monday memo, stating that he had worked 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. each day during the Spring Festival, considered “regular working hours.”

  • The deceased employee, an AI audit team leader based in Wuhan, had worked five consecutive 12-hour shifts from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. during the New Year holiday, according to the blogger’s sources.
  • Bilibili says in the memo that it has set up a special team to cooperate with the police and the employee’s family to follow up on the matter.

Context: Chinese labor law dictates that work schedules should not exceed eight hours per day and 44 hours on average per week. Given specific circumstances, workers can put in a maximum of three hours per day and 36 hours per month of overtime. 

  • Overtime work culture in Chinese tech firms drew widespread public ire in 2019 after software engineers used Github to protest the so-called 996 work schedule (9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week) of tech giants JD, Xiaomi, and ByteDance.
  • E-commerce giant Pinduoduo also faced public ire regarding its alleged overwork culture after two employee deaths in early 2021.
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INSIGHTS | Chinese tech giants are still slashing headcounts https://technode.com/2022/02/08/insights-chinese-tech-giants-are-still-slashing-headcounts/ Mon, 07 Feb 2022 21:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165289 Over the past year, at least 35 Chinese tech companies scaled back their teams. The cuts affect nearly every major vertical. ]]>

Chinese tech companies are still laying off large numbers of employees in the aftermath of a year of regulatory crackdowns. While annual team adjustments are common in tech industries, investors and market watchers are alarmed by the scale of the recent job cuts and what they indicate about the underlying regulatory upheaval.  

Over the past year, 35 companies scaled back their teams according to a rough count made by one local media outlet. The cuts affect nearly every major vertical, from education and short video, to gaming and e-commerce, with thousands of people losing their jobs. In some cases, whole business departments were dissolved. Deep-pocketed tech titans such as Alibaba, ByteDance, and Baidu, which are generally less vulnerable to small market fluctuations compared to startups, were not immune to these cuts.

Insights

Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, published in the subscriber-only TechNode Premium newsletter.

It’s normally exclusive to TechNode subscribers, but we’re making this issue free as a sample of our work.

The current wave of layoffs, still ongoing in the lead up to the Chinese New Year, stands in stark contrast to the hefty incentives distributed by Chinese tech heavyweights in their heydays around the mid-2010s. At that time, an employee might enjoy a bonus in the form of pay equivalent to 100 months of salary or even a Tesla car. The incentives were intended both to show the tech giants’ muscle and to lure talent.

The most obvious difference in the Chinese tech industry today is a tightened regulatory environment. China offered extensive support to tech innovation and entrepreneurship from the beginning of 2010, with initiatives such as the launch of a state-backed entrepreneurship and innovation program in 2014. In the years after the launch of the program, China witnessed the rise of some of the most prominent tech names in the country such as Didi, Pinduoduo, and Xiaohongshu. Even though regulations, such as those on anti-monopolistic practices, existed back then, the government often failed to enforce them, helping boost the growth of budding companies.

Government attitudes shifted sharply in 2020 when Beijing launched the first industry-wide regulatory crackdowns as the authorities tried to exert greater control over tech companies, particularly those with large platforms. State actors still say they support tech innovation, but the support increasingly only applies to hard tech industries like semiconductors, new energy vehicles, and biotech.

The elimination of practices and services that no longer comply with the raft of new regulations has been a major source of these slashed headcounts, but leaders of tech giants are also being driven to urgently reduce loss-making units and improve operational efficiency.

Job cuts in headlines

News of mass layoffs has dominated China’s tech headlines in recent months.

  • TikTok owner ByteDance reportedly laid off more than 1,000 staff from its edtech business in November following the deeper cuts made in the sector in August. The tech titan, known for its sprawling business lines, cut its talent development center and scaled back its Human Resources department in December. The company reportedly dissolved its investment unit in January by laying off 100 employees as authorities stepped up antitrust scrutiny of the country’s tech giants.
  • Douyin rival Kuaishou laid off mid-level managers and low-performing employees in December and cut jobs across key units such as e-commerce, globalization, and algorithm recommendation in January. Employee benefits were slashed in December.
  • Chinese search giant Baidu has started layoffs at its mobile business arm, which oversees its search and mobile businesses, several Chinese media outlets reported in December.
  • IQiyi, a Baidu-backed video streaming affiliate, laid off 20% to 40% of its workforce in December as the Netflix-like firm tries to reduce costs amid increasing losses. That means the layoff could wipe out some 1,500 to 3,000 positions based on the company’s nearly 7,800 headcount in 2020.
  • Perfect World, a Chinese game developer, plans to cut up to 1,000 staff, local media reported on January 25.
  • Giant tech firms including ByteDance and Alibaba adjusted their organizational structures, while also making business adjustments and job cuts.

Worst-hit sectors

Online education companies targeting after-school tutoring of students up to the ninth grade were among the worst-hit verticals as China’s crackdown on the sector essentially banned companies from offering services related to core curriculum subjects.

All major players in the field, including New Oriental, TAL, and Gaotu, terminated their after-school tutoring services in the wake of the crackdown on the private education sector. In one of the largest edtech layoffs, New Oriental founder Yu Minhong confirmed in his WeChat Moments feed last month that the company dismissed 60,000 workers and saw revenue fall by 80% in 2021.

READ MORE: Edtech will survive China’s crackdown, but it won’t be the same

E-commerce, another highly-regulated area, is also experiencing downsizing. Fresh produce delivery giants that survived a 2021 market consolidation are trimming operations to save costs. Online grocer Dingdong Maicai reportedly planned to cut from 20% to 50% of the workforce at its core business units in January, while Meicai, a Chinese app that supplies farm-to-table produce for restaurants, laid off around 40% of its remaining workforce after halving headcounts in September.

Youzan, one of China’s largest e-commerce service companies, is reportedly planning to lay off 1,500 people, or nearly 30% of its employees in early 2022.

Downshifting for years

Chinese tech companies have been gradually reducing headcounts over the past few years as the country’s economy felt strain long before the pandemic hit. However, a combo of regulatory curbs on everything from technology to education and a renewed virus-induced public health crisis is creating further headwinds for local big tech firms. They are being forced to drastically cut costs to keep themselves afloat as more challenges await in 2022.

This wave of layoffs is the result of multiple events, such as Beijing’s education crackdown and the cyclical economic downturn, Chinese media outlet Leiphone wrote in a Jan. 21 article. Chief among them was Beijing’s draft amendment to its Anti-Monopoly Law, released in October and dropped a hammer on the country’s internet giants. 

With scant regulation and China’s population producing massive numbers of customers, the country’s large tech companies enjoyed supercharged growth rates over the past two decades. Tech giants therefore are used to attracting and retaining large numbers of workers with huge salaries and comprehensive benefits. The result was many redundant positions and overall inefficient use of human resources. Now, the heavyweights are beginning to realize that they must stretch their budgets in an environment where it is no longer so easy to reap huge profits, the Leiphone report said.

By slashing headcounts from loss-making business units or units now facing stringent regulation, tech companies are phasing out less profitable activities  in order to achieve efficiency and bigger profit margins, experts told local media Shenran Caijing in December.

Fearing a looming recession, executives from Chinese big tech firms have vowed to focus on core businesses and value creation. In November, Tencent Chairman Pony Ma said the company will ramp up efforts around its main sources of revenue, such as cloud services and gaming, while Alibaba and Kuaishou have set their sights on the overseas market as a major growth driver. And yet, as companies are taking more steps to reduce costs, the only thing that seems certain is that industry will face slower development, the report said.

“Do I look like a loser?”

Under the weight of repeated COVID-19 outbreaks, a further economic slowdown, and a string of regulatory crackdown across industries, it has become fairly standard for Chinese tech firms to let go of tens of thousands of employees at a time. While mass layoffs like these are usually discussed as an indicator of a company’s struggles and changing strategies, they are also life-changing decisions for a vast number of talented and dedicated individuals who have spent their youth with these companies.

Wu Jing, a former employee at iQiyi, still vividly remembers the moment she lost her job in December. In an interview with Chinese media outlet Jiemian, she said it only took five minutes for her and her supervisor to finish their conversation. When she went back to her cubicle and checked her phone, rumors that the Baidu-backed video platform planned its largest-ever layoff sweep had begun spreading on Chinese social media.

Wu joined iQiyi four years ago when the Chinese Netflix-like firm was thriving. Two of the company’s variety shows, “The Rap of China” and “Idol Producer,” were huge successes and kicked off fierce competition among idol-focused variety shows in the domestic video streaming market. IQiyi went public in March 2018 at $18 a share, but since then, the share price has fallen by more than two-thirds.

Aware of the company’s anemic pace of growth, Wu had made plans to jump ship in 2022, but the layoff was quick and came as a surprise. Haunted by the feeling of abandonment, she now asks herself, “Do I look like a loser?”

Fresh graduates are not immune to these cuts either. Chen Yi, a former engineer at ByteDance’s gaming unit Ohayoo, lost his job late last year, just months after passing a strict selection process, according to a Jan. 25 report by media outlet 21st Century Business Herald. The report said that nearly all of Chen’s peers were let go by ByteDance’s gaming studio, among waves of layoffs as the TikTok owner sought to lower costs as it faced a potential growth bottleneck.

“The layoff just happened so suddenly that I wasn’t prepared,” said Chen.

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JD Technology plans Hong Kong IPO of up to $2 billion this year: report https://technode.com/2022/01/25/jd-technology-plans-hong-kong-ipo-of-up-to-2-billion-this-year-report/ Tue, 25 Jan 2022 02:05:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=165075 JD TechnologyJD Technology’s expected listing is one of a number of long-awaited IPOs from Chinese vertical giants, including Hello Inc. and Ximalaya.]]> JD Technology

JD Technology, the financial technology arm of Chinese online retailer JD.com, is preparing an IPO that could raise between $1 billion and $2 billion in Hong Kong this year, IFR reported Monday.

Why it matters: JD Technology’s expected listing is one of a number of long-awaited IPOs from Chinese vertical giants, including bike rental app Hello Inc. and podcast platform Ximalaya. The latter two suspended IPO procedures last year after the Didi cybersecurity review put a halt to the overseas listings of Chinese tech giants.

  • JD Technology’s possible IPO comes after the company withdrew from a planned Shanghai STAR Market IPO in April 2021 amid antitrust regulations in China’s fintech sector, which led to the halting of Ant Group’s proposed dual Hong Kong and Shanghai IPO.
  • JD Technology’s Hong Kong IPO plans could set an example for other IPO candidates as authorities set up clearer regulations for Chinese companies seeking to go public outside the mainland market.

Details: The JD affiliate is discussing the listing with investment banks including Bank of America, CITIC Securities, and Haitong International, according to financial information provider Hithink Royal Flush Information.

  • The company declined to comment on the news when contacted Tuesday morning.
  • JD Technology’s revenue grew from RMB 9.1 billion ($1.4 billion) to RMB 18.2 billion between 2017 and 2019, according to the company’s prospectus filed with the Shanghai STAR market in 2020.

Context: In 2013, JD spun off its financial technology services to form an independent fintech unit JD Finance, which operates a series of loan businesses and provides AI and blockchain-based financial services. JD Finance was renamed JD Digits in 2018 and then changed its name again in 2021 to JD Technology, as it diversified its business line to include cloud, artificial intelligence, and IoT offerings. 

  • Last year, JD sold JD Cloud and its artificial intelligence business to JD Digits for a combined valuation of $2.4 billion, before the financial unit changed its name.
  • In January, the Cyberspace Administration of China required companies that control data of more than 1 million users to undergo a cybersecurity review before they seek overseas listings. It’s currently unclear whether this new requirement applies to Hong Kong listings that are not deemed to be related to issues of national security.
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JD teams up with Shopify to help international merchants sell in China https://technode.com/2022/01/19/jd-teams-up-with-shopify-to-help-us-merchants-access-chinese-market/ Wed, 19 Jan 2022 03:14:01 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164958 JD and Shopify have entered a strategic partnership to help global brands sell in the Chinese market and Chinese merchants sell overseas.]]>

Chinese online retailer JD and Canadian e-commerce platform Shopify have entered a strategic partnership to help global brands sell in the Chinese market and Chinese merchants looking to sell overseas.

Why it matters: Expanding beyond home markets, especially in the competitive e-commerce sector, is a daunting task even for tech majors like JD and Shopify. With lessons learned from Amazon’s withdrawal from China and JD’s own setbacks in overseas expansion, Shopify is teaming up with a local partner, saving costly tasks such as initial user acquisition, infrastructure construction, and providing insights to the local market.

  • JD, which already has a solid presence in the Southeast Asian market, is advancing its global expansion. The tie-up with Shopify comes shortly after JD opened its first brick-and-mortar store in Europe last week.
  • The deal will compete with other major players in China’s cross-border e-commerce sector, such as Alibaba’s Kaola.

Details: Under the partnership, JD will allow Shopify merchants to list their products on the company’s cross-border e-commerce platform JD Worldwide, giving them access to more than 550 million active buyers in China, according to a Tuesday statement from the company.

  • JD will support expedited onboarding and help Shopify merchants sell their products within three to four weeks, a much shorter process than the previous 12-month time frame. The company will achieve this through technical means, including intelligent translation and smart price conversion.
  • JD also opened up its end-to-end fulfillment capabilities to Shopify merchants by leveraging the company’s logistic power, including China-US cargo flights, US warehouses, more than 1,300 warehouses, and more than 200,000 couriers in China.
  • Additionally, JD will support selected Chinese brands to set up their direct-to-consumer channels through Shopify, helping Chinese brands and merchants reach consumers in Western markets.
  • Aaron Brown, Vice President of Shopify, refers to the partnership as “a major step” in solving cross-border commerce for merchants. “The future of commerce is commerce everywhere—and that starts by removing barriers to entry to one of the most important e-commerce markets in the world,” Brown said in the JD announcement.

Context: To spur foreign trade growth, Beijing has been promoting the construction of cross-border e-commerce pilot zones since last year. China’s cross-border e-commerce imports and exports reached RMB 1.98 trillion ($311.7 billion) in 2021, up 15% year on year, according to data from China’s General Administration of Customs.

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ByteDance rival Kuaishou opens up e-commerce feature to local merchants https://technode.com/2022/01/18/bytedance-rival-kuaishou-opens-up-e-commerce-feature-to-local-merchants/ Tue, 18 Jan 2022 08:43:46 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164923 KuaishouContinuing its recent focus on e-commerce, Kuaishou is expanding into the competitive local services market. ]]> Kuaishou

Chinese short video platform Kuaishou has opened its e-commerce store to local merchants managing online-to-offline services, including everything from food delivery to hospitality.

Why it matters: Continuing its recent focus on e-commerce, the Beijing-based company is expanding into the competitive local services market, which already includes fierce rivals such as Meituan, ByteDance’s Douyin, and Alibaba’s Alipay.

  • Kuaishou’s move to extend its homegrown services business comes on the heels of a December partnership with Meituan. Under the deal, Kuaishou users have gained access to Meituan’s services through a Meituan mini-program within the short video app.
  • The short video app has begun venturing into e-commerce, along with livestreaming and gaming, to commercialize its user base.

READ MORE: ByteDance is trying to take a bite of Meituan’s cake

Details: In addition to physical products, merchants can now sell various services through Kuaishou’s online store Kwai Shop, according to a Tuesday statement from the company.

  • Merchants offering 15 categories of services, including food and drink, hospitality, healthcare, entertainment, film, and transportation ticketing, can apply to set up their own stores on the platform from Jan. 15.
  • With their own Kuaishou store, merchants can manage their service listings to drive transactions and potentially convert online customer attention into offline service sales.
  • To attract merchants, the platform is offering incentives to business operators. Kuaishou has pledged to encourage new store registrations with a promotion plan that offers individual stores up to RMB 1,000 ($158) and viewership from 50,000 customers.
  • American chain KFC, hotpot chain Haidilao, Meituan’s hotel booking service, and healthcare clinic chain iKang are among the earliest brands to launch their stores on the platform.
  • “The growth of the traditional in-store group-buying business model is slowing down, and merchants are in urgent need of new service models to attract users and to promote purchasing frequency,” Zhu Yunbo, head of Kuaishou’s local life service unit, said in a statement shared with TechNode on Tuesday. 

Context: Kuaishou, China’s second-largest short video-sharing app, reportedly laid off up to 30% of its workforce in December as Chinese tech giants weather a market downturn.

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The Big Sell | Tamed livestreamers and Tencent stake cuts https://technode.com/2022/01/18/the-big-sell-tamed-livestreamers-viya-and-tencent-stake-cuts/ Tue, 18 Jan 2022 03:48:34 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164890 Viya, Li Jiaqi, livestreamingChinese regulators extended the clampdown on top-earning livestreamers such as "livestreaming queen" Viya and "lipstick king" Li Jiaqi. ]]> Viya, Li Jiaqi, livestreaming

Chinese regulators extended the clampdown on top-earning influencers in the past month by tightening scrutiny over e-commerce sales stars such as “livestreaming queen” Viya and “lipstick king” Li Jiaqi, along with “the godmother of WeChat commerce” Zhang Ting. Tencent shed large stakes in both online retailer JD and Singapore’s SEA, owner of Shopee—possibly in response to mounting pressure from antitrust regulators. Job cuts among Chinese tech giants extended from video app Kuaishou and fashion e-commerce site Mogu. Inc., to online grocer Dingdong Maicai and fresh produce service Meicai. Cross-border e-commerce titan Globalegrow and online luxury seller Secoo fell from grace. And Alibaba overhauled its domestic e-commerce business.

1. Viya and other top e-commerce influencers tamed

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.

News: Taxation authorities in Huangzhou municipality in Zhejiang province imposed a RMB 1.34 billion ($210 million) fine on China’s top livestreamer Viya for tax evasion on Dec. 20. Viya’s social media accounts on all mainstream platforms such as Weibo, Douyin, and Taobao Live, where she had more than 120 million fans, were erased from public view overnight. Four days later, Li Jiaqi, another top livestreamer and a sales rival of Viya, was summoned by Zhejiang Consumers Council for questioning over various unregulated practices. Meanwhile, on Dec. 23, the Market Regulation and Monitoring Administration of Yuhua District in northern China’s Shijiazhuang city opened a pyramid scheme investigation into Ting’s Secret, an online cosmetics brand founded by Taiwanese celebrity couple Zhang Ting and Lin Ruiyang.

Insights: The recent fines of and investigations into top celebrities and livestreamers signal that Chinese authorities are expanding their crackdown on the illicit e-commerce practices of individual influencers, who increasingly wield as much power as platforms. Similar to the $2.8 billion fine imposed on Alibaba for antitrust violations last April, punishment of the most prominent figures is regarded as a warning for everyone in related fields to fall into line. In the wake of Viya’s fine, more than 1,000 livestreamers stepped forward to pay back taxes. The crackdown on top influencers may offer growth opportunities to hosts with small and medium-sized followings, given that the demand for brands to sell and consumers to purchase products through livestreaming is still growing. Also, tighter reins on high-income individuals come at a time when Beijing is beefing up its “common prosperity” initiative to redistribute wealth in the country.

News links: CNN, Global Times, TechNode

2. Tencent slashes shares in JD and Shopee-owner SEA

News: Tencent plans to reduce its shareholding in online retailer JD from 17% to 2.3% by selling interim dividends to shareholders, making it no longer JD’s top shareholder. Both Tencent and JD said their business partnerships wouldn’t be affected by the shareholding change. On Jan. 5, Tencent further unloaded 14.5 million shares in Singapore SEA, owner of Southeast Asian online retailer Shopee, for $3 billion. The Chinese tech giant dropped its stake in SEA from 21.3% to 18.7% and plans to further cut its voting stake in the company to less than 10%.

Insights: Tencent’s share sale drummed up expectations that the firm and other tech peers may shed holdings in their portfolio companies as Beijing takes a closer look at the extensive reach they have on China’s internet. Since Tencent has been one of the most active Chinese investors over the past few decades both inside and outside China, its portfolio now includes vertical giants such as JD, Pinduoduo, Bilibili, Meituan, and Didi. A Tencent tie-up has been an invaluable endorsement for startups, bringing them easy accessibility to various services under the Tencent umbrella from the likes of WeChat to hit games. 

So what’s at stake in the share reductions? They raise concerns that existing partnerships will change. Tencent said in its statement about the JD share distribution that it invests in companies to “help fund the development and expansion [of their portfolios]” and exits the investment when the company is “consistently capable of self-financing their future initiatives.” 

In the case of SEA, Tencent may have been merely seeking financial returns, according to sources from Chinese media outlet Caixin. Nonetheless, cutting ties with Tencent would help SEA, long regarded in Southeast Asia as a Tencent agent outside China, to ease regulatory risks it faces in foreign markets, a Caixin source said. 

Tencent might further reduce its shares in other Chinese tech companies, but the shareholding change won’t affect their strategic partnerships, Aron Li, an analyst at Tiger Brokers, told TechNode. Regardless, share prices of JD, Pinduoduo, and Bilibili dipped on the news. Similarly, the resignation of Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang from the board of Weibo is being interpreted as a signal that Alibaba is cutting its ties with the Twitter-like super app.

News link: TechNode, Reuters 

3. Layoff rumors shake e-commerce unicorns

News: On Dec. 22, Tencent-backed fashion commerce site Mogu Inc., more widely known as Mogujie, was reported to be laying off more than 30% of its staff, mainly from the company’s tech department. This was followed in early January by reports that Kuaishou had launched a new round of layoffs, with 10%-15% of positions in the e-commerce team losing their jobs. Adding to the wave of reported layoffs was news of job cuts in the fresh produce and grocery industry. Last week, Chinese restaurant produce supplier Meicai cut another 40% of its staff after halving its workforce in September last year,while Dongdong Maicai was reportedly planning a sweeping layoff as well. The latter denied the news, saying that any personnel moves were simply a “normal adjustment” within the company.

Insights: Job cuts have mounted in China’s tech sector over the past few months after a tumultuous year in which Chinese regulators rolled out a series of measures to rein in the industry. E-commerce platforms have not been exempt from such scrutiny. Although they sell different product lines, both Mogu and Kuaishou have bet on livestream e-commerce to drive revenue. Regulatory headwinds for live commerce make that a difficult task, especially for smaller players who also face rivalry from incumbents like Alibaba-backed Taobao Live and ByteDance’s Douyin. Layoffs at Dingdong Maicai and Meicai underline the further cooling of China’s online grocery craze which last year witnessed a slew of casualties such as Tongcheng Life and Shixianghui. Even the once deep-pocketed players like US-listed Dingdong and Meicai are feeling the chills of market consolidations.

News Link: TechNode (Story 1, Story 2, Story 3, Story 4

4. Collapse of Chinese vertical e-commerce giants Globalegrow and Secoon 

News: Cross-border e-commerce giant Globalegrow is entering clearance procedures after filing for bankruptcy in June 2021. Valued at RMB 40 billion in 2017, the company racked up more than RMB 3.3 billion in debts as of 2020. Separately, Chinese online luxury retailer Secoo filed on Jan. 5 for bankruptcy and restructuring in Beijing No.1 Intermediate Court, data from China’s corporate intelligence site Tianyancha showed. However the company subsequently denied the bankruptcy reports to local media and revoked its bankruptcy application on January 6. Shares of the Nasdaq-listed company are trading at $0.38 per share with a market cap of $27 million. That’s more than 96% from an all-time cap high of $770 million in 2018.

Insight: While some are still struggling to stay afloat, an increasing number of former heavyweights in the e-commerce sector are falling from grace. Both Globalegrow and Secoon are among the early bellwethers. With more than a decade of history, the pair had led the country’s cross-border e-commerce and luxury e-commerce sectors, respectively. Globalegrow’s asset-heavy approach in running cross-border business with substantial product inventory and lots of locations and warehouses collapsed during the pandemic. The company reported around RMB 3 billion in losses in 2020, whereas it recorded an RMB 710 million net profit in 2017. In contrast, Secoo has faced a years-long decline even though it has outlived many of its early-stage competitors. Jing Daily attributes the fallout to over-diversification, an issue that has led to the failure of many former tech giants including Leshi.

News link: Jiemian (in Chinese), NetEase Tech (in Chinese)

5. Alibaba restructures back-end operations of Taobao, Tmall

News: Alibaba announced on Jan. 7 a major organizational reshuffle aiming at connecting the back-end operations of its core retail marketplaces Taobao and Tmall. Led by the company’s head for domestic business Turdy Dai, three operation centers were set up to focus on platform strategies, user expansion, and development for merchants.

Insights: Alibaba is further integrating its C2C online marketplace Taobao and B2C platform Tmall as the company seeks to realign its two cornerstone services to create more synergies. As consumer growth is reaching a ceiling in China, Alibaba is hoping the move will reinforce its commitment to enterprise-facing services. In addition to aiming to improve consumer experience, the change is intended to offer a streamlined path to convert small and medium-sized individual merchants on Taobao into enterprise clients on Tmall. The aim is to assist the development of these smaller sellers while keeping them within the Alibaba ecosystem. Breaking barriers between the two services should also cut costs and improve organizational efficiency within the company. Tmall, formerly known as Taobao Mall, was spun off from Taobao in 2011 to address different user demands.

News link: TechNode

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ByteDance acquires two new entertainment companies: report https://technode.com/2022/01/17/bytedance-acquires-two-new-entertainment-companies-report/ Mon, 17 Jan 2022 08:57:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164801 ​​ByteDanceByteDance has acquired cinema ticketing platform Yingtuobang and online comics service Yizhikan Comics to expands its entertainment services.]]> ​​ByteDance

Chinese tech unicorn ByteDance has acquired cinema ticketing platform Yingtuobang and online comics service Yizhikan Comics to further ramp up its push into the entertainment market, Chinese media outlet Tech Planet reported on Monday.

Why it matters: With the new acquisitions, the Beijing-based TikTok developer is further expanding the reach of its entertainment empire, which already consists of short video apps, short and long-form videos, news aggregation, online novels, gaming, music streaming, idol management, and virtual idols.

  • Although both acquisitions are focused on early-stage startups, ByteDance’s purchases come as tech peers such as Tencent and Alibaba are distancing themselves from portfolio companies in response to mounting pressure from antitrust regulators. 

Details: ByteDance acquired Yingtuobang — a Shanghai-based ticketing startup that supports online purchases, seat reservations, and coupon redemption in more than 8,000 cinemas and theaters across China — last month, Tech Planet reported today.

  • Following the deal, Yingtuobang will maintain its enterprise-focused ticket business. Douyin will help to promote the company’s consumer-facing ticketing services, the report added. Yingtuobang is now marked as a recommended ticket purchasing channel on the short video app, along with Tencent-backed Maoyan and Alibaba’s Taopiaopiao, two of the largest players in the field.
  • ByteDance’s acquisition of Yingtuobang is in line with the company’s push toward local lifestyle services, the home turf of Meituan.
  • Additionally, ByteDance recently acquired Yizhikan Comics through wholly-owned company Beijing Dingzhen Technology Co., Ltd, Tech Planet reported. Yizhikan is an online marketplace that allows users to buy e-comic books and web cartoon services.
  • A ByteDance representative didn’t immediately respond to TechNode’s inquiries on the matter when contacted on Monday.

Context: Both online ticketing and comics are important, expanding verticals in the entertainment field in China.

  • China’s e-comics industry has grown at a rate of more than 20% in the past five years, and the market was expected to reach RMB 4.6 billion ($780 million) in 2021, according to a 2020 report from iMedia Research (in Chinese).
  • ByteDance’s bet on ticketing platforms comes just ahead of China’s week-long Spring Festival national holiday, which saw a record RMB 7.8 billion in box office revenue last year.  
  • ByteDance was once an investor in popular online comics platform Kuaikan but exited in 2019 after Tencent stepped in as a stakeholder.
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Alibaba overhauls domestic commerce unit to bring Taobao and Tmall closer together https://technode.com/2022/01/07/alibaba-overhauls-domestic-ecommerce-units/ Fri, 07 Jan 2022 08:37:16 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164617 Alibaba China tech investmentThis is Alibaba's first organizational reshuffle since Trudy Dai was named last December as head of the tech giant's China digital commerce unit.]]> Alibaba China tech investment

Chinese tech giant Alibaba announced a major organizational reshuffle on Thursday with the goal of further integrating its core domestic e-commerce businesses.

Why it matters: This is the first organizational reshuffle since Trudy Dai, a founding member of Alibaba, was named last December as head of the tech giant’s China Digital Commerce unit. The unit manages the company’s domestic commerce platforms such as Taobao, Tmall, Alimama, Taocaicai, and Taobao Deals, as well as its B2C retail business.

  • The adjustment comes as Alibaba faces headwinds on multiple fronts from increasing competition, a regulatory crackdown, and a slowing economy.

Details: While maintaining the dual-branding strategy for Taobao and Tmall, the company will set up three new business centers to connect the back-end operations of the two e-commerce platforms and related services under the business unit, according to a Thursday internal letter which was made public by local media.

  • One center, focused on improving user experience, is to be helmed by Yu Feng (whose internal company nickname is Xuande), the former head of Taobao Live. 
  • The second, dedicated to product operations and development, aims to better serve merchants on Taobao and Tmall. This center will be overseen by Yang Guang (nickname: Chuixue), a former member of the management team at Taobao and Tmall. 
  • The third is focused on upgrading platform operation mechanics and digitizing merchant operating systems. It will be run by Wang Mingqiang (nickname: Sihan), current president of AliExpress and former head of Taobao search.
  • Adjustments are also being made to the company’s content generation business, with new heads named for livestreaming and social shopping services.
  • Alibaba Group Chief Technology Officer Cheng Li (nickname: Lusu) and Chief Risk Officer/Chief Customer Officer Zheng Junfang (nickname: Shitai) will fill the same roles for the domestic e-commerce business unit. That unit includes Taobao, Tmall, and Alimama.
  • The changes aim to “upgrade user experience, improve client values,” and “encourage innovation,” according to the internal letter. All the new appointments will report directly to Dai.

Context: Alibaba announced in December that it had created two new units: one for its domestic e-commerce businesses and the other for international e-commerce businesses. Trudy Dai will lead the domestic unit, and Jiang Fan will head the global one.

  • Alibaba’s retail marketplaces served 953 million annual active consumers in China as of Sept. 30, 2021, according to figures from the company.
  • Alibaba experienced a tumultuous year in 2021. The company was hit with a $2.8 billion fine for antitrust violations.
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WeChat’s mini program ecosystem sees promising growth in its 4th year https://technode.com/2022/01/06/wechats-mini-program-ecosystem-sees-promising-growth-in-its-4th-year/ Thu, 06 Jan 2022 09:01:29 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164585 WeChat mini program attracted more than 450 million daily active users (DAUs) in 2021, up 12.5% from 400 million DAUs in 2020. ]]>

WeChat’s app store-like mini program ecosystem attracted more than 450 million daily active users (DAUs) in 2021, up 12.5% from 400 million DAUs in 2020, according to figures released on Thursday by the Tencent super app.

Why it matters: Mini programs have seen increasing adoption in China and WeChat’s latest figures suggest users have grown used to operating on apps-within-an-app rather than going to multiple standalone platforms. 

  • Mini programs allow users to access an array of services without leaving the main app. The system offers merchants a chance to access a vast pool of users by building lightweight apps within WeChat, an ubiquitous app in China, instead of having to develop a separate app and convince users to go there. 

Details: WeChat mini programs have expanded their user base and seen growing usage over the past year, head of Weixin Open Platform Lake Zeng said on Thursday at WeChat Open Class Pro 2022, an annual event for WeChat business partners and developers held in Guangzhou.

  • Ahead of the system’s fifth anniversary on January 9, it was revealed that WeChat mini programs topped 450 million DAUs in 2021, with users spending 32% more time on them each day when compared with 2020.
  • In 2021, the total number of mini programs increased 41% year-on-year, while mini programs supporting payment transactions grew by 28%. Users who pay through mini programs soared 80% year-on-year. Small- and medium-sized companies drove 90% of the growth, Zeng said. 

The pandemic accelerated mini program adoption: The company said that more than 700 million users have accessed pandemic control services such as Covid-19 tests and vaccination appointments through mini programs on WeChat, cultivating habits of using the embedded app function. 

  • Sectors hit the hardest by the pandemic, including catering, tourism, and retail, saw their transaction volumes on mini programs double year-on-year in 2021.
  • During the pandemic, the number of active mini programs offered by overseas merchants grew 268% over the past two years, with total transaction volume surging 897% in the same period. 

Context: Launched in 2017, WeChat mini programs have been aped and adopted by a host of Chinese apps, including Tencent’s QQ, JD.com, Baidu, Meituan, Alibaba’s Alipay and Taobao, and ByteDance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin. 

  • WeChat’s healthy growth for mini programs comes as the total number of native apps in Chinese app stores has slumped more than 40% over the last three years amid regulatory crackdowns and a mature market.
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Taiwanese actress Zhang Ting faces pyramid scheme probe amid livestream crackdown https://technode.com/2021/12/30/taiwanese-actress-zhang-ting-faces-pyramid-scheme-probe-amid-livestream-crackdown/ Thu, 30 Dec 2021 09:20:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164398 Zhang Ting and Lin Ruiyang are the latest celebrity influencers to get caught up in the broad crackdown on e-commerce related malpractices. ]]>

A Chinese market regulator has started a pyramid scheme investigation into Ting’s Secret, an online cosmetics brand founded by Taiwanese celebrity couple Zhang Ting and Lin Ruiyang, continuing China’s crackdown on e-commerce related malpractices.

Why it matters: Zhang and Lin are the latest celebrity influencers to get caught up in the broad crackdown that first targeted e-commerce giants but is now extending to illicit practices of individual influencers, who increasingly wield as much power as platforms.

  • China’s recent e-commerce influencer crackdown has affected top livestreamers including Viya, Zhu Chenhui (also known as Cherie), and Lin Shanshan.
  • Chinese social e-commerce sites that adopt a decentralized network of members to sell products are under increased scrutiny from Chinese authorities wary of potential pyramid schemes and tax evasion.

Details: The Market Regulation and Monitoring Administration of Yuhua District in Shijiazhuang said that it had launched an investigation in June into Shanghai Dowell Trading, the operator of Ting’s Secret, in a Dec. 23 letter quoted by local media The Economic Observer.

  • The regulator has frozen company assets worth RMB 600 million ($94 million). The move was in response to reports (in Chinese) by a non-governmental anti-scam organization on Dowell’s alleged use of pyramid schemes.
  • Shanghai Dowell Trading said in a Wednesday response that “it is a legally operating company” and “welcomes authorities to help check their risks.” “The company is operating normally and will cooperate with relevant departments,” the statement said.
  • Shanghai Dowell Trading has the three characteristic features of a pyramid scheme, Li Xu, the founder of the anti-scam organization, told The Economic Observer. Li highlighted the multi-layered management structure and that members must pay a fee or purchase products to join and that their income depends upon the number of members they recruit.

Context: Founded by the Taiwanese actor couple in 1996, Shanghai Dowell Trading sells cosmetics and skincare products, mainly through online channels. It promotes its business through social messaging tools like WeChat and livestreaming platforms such as Taobao Live and Douyin.

  • Shanghai Dowell Trading was once an acclaimed taxpayer in Shanghai’s Qingpu District, contributing RMB 2.1 billion in 2018 alone. In addition to TV actors Zhang and Lin, the company also has had several celebrity shareholders and endorsers, including actresses Lin Chiling and Tao Hong.
  • Over the past few years, Chinese regulators have hit social e-commerce companies with a series of fines, including Peanut Diary and Nasdaq-listed Yunji for their use of pyramid schemes.
  • China’s livestreaming boom has drawn in numerous celebrities—such as actors and singers—seeking to monetize their fanbases. The current round of crackdowns is part of Chinese authorities’ push to remind the public that the internet is not outside the law.
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Softbank-backed industrial robot maker YouiBot raises $47 million https://technode.com/2021/12/29/softbank-backed-industrial-robot-maker-youibot-raises-47-million/ Wed, 29 Dec 2021 06:35:01 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164380 YouiBot, a Chinese industrial mobile robot maker, said Tuesday that it has raised more than RMB 300 million ($47 million).]]>

YouiBot, a Chinese industrial mobile robot maker, announced Tuesday that it has received more than RMB 300 million ($47 million) in two additional funding rounds of Series B, led by venture capital firm FG Venture and private equity company Xicheng Jinrui respectively.

Why it matters: The investment highlights the funding trend for industrial robotics manufacturers, a crucial ingredient in smart manufacturing, which is regarded as an essential part of China’s initiative to become a global leader in core technologies by 2025.

READ MORE: Robotics is facilitating China’s digital transformation in manufacturing and construction

Details: The deals are follow-up investments for a $15 million Series B the company received in May this year. Other investors of the current funds are IDG, and returning investors, including Pine Venture, SIG, BlueRun Venture, SoftBank, and SOSV’s HAX Accelerator.

  • YouiBot said the proceeds will be used for research and development, team building, and market expansion.
  • The financing will boost the company’s total fund raised to more than RMB 500 million to date.
  • The five-year-old company offers services in 26 provinces and cities in China,  with products exported to more than 30 countries, including Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, and Germany.
  • YouiBot claims to be one of the few companies that can realize a high positioning accuracy of ± 2mm for mobile robots. The company’s software-hardware integrated solution has been used by semiconductors, 3C, and electric power manufacturers.

Context: YouiBot was founded by Zhang Zhaohui and Bian Xu, alumni of China’s prestigious Xi’an Jiaotong University, in 2017. The company develops solutions for factory automation and logistics management, as well as inspection and maintenance for various industries.

  • The company’s early-stage investors include ZhenFund, C&I Capital, Innoangel Fund, and XJTU 1896.
  • To achieve the shift from a low-end manufacturer to a high-end producer, China released the ‘Made in China 2025’ plan in 2015, targeting local robot manufacturers to supply half of the domestic market by 2020 and 70% by 2025.
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Kuaishou teams up with Meituan to fend off Douyin challenge https://technode.com/2021/12/28/kuaishou-teams-up-with-meituan-to-fend-off-douyin-challenge/ Tue, 28 Dec 2021 06:12:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164340 KuaishouKuaishou and Meituan will work closer to fend off their common rival Douyin, which is venturing into Meituan’s core business offerings. ]]> Kuaishou

Short video app Kuaishou and food delivery giant Meituan announced a strategic partnership to connect their platforms on Monday.

Why it matters: With the deal, Kuaishou and Meituan will work closer to fend off their common rival Douyin, the TikTok’s Chinese version, which is accelerating its foray into Meituan’s home turf of local lifestyle services.

  • Tencent, which owns a 21.6% stake in Kuaishou, is also a major investor in Meituan.
  • Kuaishou has adopted an open attitude towards external partnerships in driving growth, especially towards companies in Tencent’s portfolio. In 2020, the short video app also signed a cooperation deal with Tencent-backed online retailer JD.com.

READ MORE: ByteDance is trying to take a bite of Meituan’s cake

Details: Kuaishou announced the partnership with Meituan at its Ecological Opening Conference held on Monday. The new deal between the two companies allows Kuaishou users to access Meituan’s lifestyle services, such as ordering food, through a newly launched Meituan mini-program without leaving the short video app.

  • Meituan’s mini-program on Kuaishou currently only supports its core food delivery features, allowing users to browse restaurant listings, place orders, and access after-sales services. Users can also redeem vouchers and make reservations through the mini-program.
  • In a Monday statement (in Chinese), the food delivery giant said that it plans to expand offerings in the mini-program to include more categories such as booking hotels, homestays, travel attractions, and beauty salons.
  • In the tie-up, Kuaishou is giving Meituan access to its large user base (573 million monthly active users in China in Q3 this year). In return, it hopes to gain higher user retention by integrating daily services.  
  • The short-video company also launched its “one-stop open platform” at the Monday event. The new platform incorporates a series of features such as mini-programs, service accounts, point of interest interfaces, and various tools that help merchants and service providers to manage their branding, marketing, and supply chains.

Context: Kuaishou is China’s second-largest short video platform by daily active users, behind only ByteDance’s Douyin.

  • Listed this February in Hong Kong, the company has seen significant stock price volatility over the past few months due to weaker-than-expected earnings guidance and regulatory concerns.
  • Kuaishou reportedly began a new round of layoffs in December, one month after co-founder Su Hua stepped down as CEO.

Update: The article is updated with Kuaishou’s Chinese user number. 

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Lark, ByteDance’s Slack-like app, eyes $1 billion global revenue in five years https://technode.com/2021/12/23/lark-bytedances-slack-like-app-eyes-1-billion-global-revenue-in-five-years/ Thu, 23 Dec 2021 06:42:21 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164263 LarkLark is ByteDance’s bet on the enterprise-facing services sector, which has been boosted as remote work apps gain tractions.]]> Lark

TikTok owner ByteDance plans to accelerate the overseas commercialization of its workplace communication app Lark in the coming year, Chinese local media outlet LatePost reported Wednesday. The company aims to achieve a global revenue of RMB 6 billion ($940 million) in the next five years.

Why it matters: Lark, known as Feishu in the Chinese market, is ByteDance’s bet on the enterprise-facing services sector, which has been boosted as remote work apps gain traction globally due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

  • ByteDance, long celebrated as an “app factory”, listed Lark as one of its six business units, or strategic focuses, in a November reshuffle.
  • Chinese tech peers Alibaba and Tencent currently lead the country’s workplace app market with DingTalk and WeCom.

Detail: ByteDance plans to seek new growth points for the business in the overseas market as Feishu, Lark’s Chinese sister app, faces growth bottlenecks in the domestic market, according to the report.

  • The app already operates in countries such as the US, Singapore and India, and plans further expansion in African countries, starting with global companies with China operations.
  • Feishu recorded 4.5 million daily active users in November, up from 3 million in March. But the figure still fell far short of its goal of reaching 10 million daily active users in the first half of this year, LatePost reported.
  • In comparison, Alibaba-backed DingTalk said (in Chinese) in October that it has 500 million individual users and 19 million enterprise clients. Tencent’s WeCom had more than 130 million daily active users and 5.5 million enterprise clients by the end of 2020.
  • The company didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiries when contacted Thursday morning.

Context: ByteDance first developed Feishu as an internal tool in 2016, began marketing the platform as a business in 2019, and launched the international version Lark in April 2019.

  • ByteDance has built a whole line of enterprise collaboration apps including video conferencing app Feishu Meeting and Feishu Jisuban, a lightweight version of the original app.
  • Despite Lark’s new international focus, capturing a share of the overseas market is likely to be challenging, with incumbents such as Slack and G Suite currently dominating.
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ByteDance becomes world’s largest unicorn with $353 billion valuation: Hurun report https://technode.com/2021/12/20/bytedance-becomes-worlds-largest-unicorn-with-353-billion-valuation-hurun-report/ Mon, 20 Dec 2021 10:06:36 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164167 Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short videoByteDance has maintained growth, despite China’s tech crackdown and US sanctions this year. The firm’s valuation has more than tripled from a year earlier. ]]> Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short video

TikTok owner ByteDance is the world’s largest unicorn with a market valuation of $353 billion (RMB 2.25 trillion), according to a Monday unicorn ranking list from the Hurun Research Institute. Alibaba affiliates Ant Group and Cainiao take the second and ninth spots, respectively, with valuations of $150 billion and $34 billion.

Why it matters: ByteDance, one of China’s top tech IPO candidates, has maintained growth, despite China’s tech crackdown and US sanctions this year. The firm’s valuation has more than tripled from $80 billion a year earlier. 

Details: The Hurun Research Institute released on Monday its Global Unicorn Index 2021, a ranking of startups valued at more than $1 billion and not yet listed on a stock exchange. “A unique feature of China’s startup ecosystem is the ability of big tech companies to spin off unicorns, with 49 of the world’s 50 ‘spun-off’ unicorns coming from China, such as Ant Group, spun off from Alibaba in 2014,” said Hurun Report chairman and chief researcher Rupert Hoogewerf. Based in Shanghai and Oxford, England, Hoogewerf is also known by his Chinese name, Hu Run.

  • Compared to China’s tech giants, Hoogewerf said that global tech giants like Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet are “not as active” as their China counterparts when it comes to investing in unicorns.
  • Other prominent Chinese firms that made the annual annual list include JD Technology, WeBank fintech services, fashion retailer Shein, Instagram-like lifestyle community Xiaohongshu, and drone maker DJI.
  • The report listed 1,058 unicorns worldwide, double the number since 2020. Hoogewerf calls 2021 the “most successful year for startups ever.” China now counts 301 unicorns, or 28% of the global total. Most focus on e-commerce, healthcare, or artificial intelligence.
  • The total value of these unicorns is $3.7 trillion, or equivalent to the GDP of Germany, according to the report. 
  • The report named Sequoia Capital the most successful unicorn investor with investments in 206 unicorns in its portfolio. The US venture capital firm is followed by another US investor, Tiger Fund, and Japanese investor SoftBank. Chinese investors Tencent and Hillhouse occupy the eighth and the tenth positions, respectively, on the list. 

Context: Chinese big tech companies have faced regulatory headwinds since autumn 2020 when Beijing stepped up its crackdowns on market monopolies and cybersecurity lapses.

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The Big Sell | Will short video apps rule livestream e-commerce? https://technode.com/2021/12/17/the-big-sell-will-short-video-apps-rule-livestream-e-commerce/ Fri, 17 Dec 2021 03:33:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164121 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoAs people spend more time on short video platforms, the apps could become super apps like WeChat, which cover every aspect of our daily lives, including e-commerce.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo

Livestream e-commerce is proving to be a trend with staying power, rather than a flash-in-the-pan phenomenon driven by pandemic-crazed online consumption.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.

E-commerce sales achieved through livestreaming represented more than 10% of China’s total online retail sales in 2020, according to data from iResearch. The research agency forecasts that the proportion will reach 24.3% by 2023. 

E-commerce giants, such as Alibaba and JD.com, as well as short video sites, notably Douyin and Kuaishou, have tapped into the livestream boom to boost their online commerce businesses.

For now, e-commerce platforms still rule the livestreaming roost, but Douyin and Kuaishou are catching up quickly as Chinese users’ experience and shopping preferences evolve. Experts we talked to said short video apps pose a threat to Alibaba’s dominance in live e-commerce.

READ MORE: How e-commerce and livestreaming became frenemies

Same service, different operating rationales

From a user’s perspective, e-commerce and short video apps offer very similar livestream shopping experiences. However, the operational models of these two types of platforms mean they approach live e-commerce differently.

Users on e-commerce platforms like Taobao and JD open these apps with clear shopping intentions. Therefore, the livestream sales performance of stores on Alibaba’s Tmall depends on the traffic to the store or brand itself, an employee from a business process outsourcing company in the livestream industry told TechNode. 

“If the store (brand) is well-recognized and has its own user base, the sales will be high, and vice versa,” he explained, asking to stay anonymous because his employer did not give him the permission to speak.

Meanwhile, the primary goal of livestreaming on Douyin is always to drive sales—not platform branding or customer relations—said the same source. “Most Douyin users haven’t established the habit of shopping on the short video platform. It’s highly probable that they are diverted to the livestreaming session for potential impulse buys while browsing some funny video clips.” 

It’s thus not surprising that Taobao’s traffic is more stable while traffic from Douyin and Kuaishou tends to be sporadic and unpredictable. The difference in platforms leads to different demands on livestreamers and support teams. Tmall store livestreamers tend to adopt a lean approach. One livestreamer can run a session after becoming familiar with prices and basic product information.

In contrast, Douyin’s livestreamers, whose primary goal is to retain audience attention and convert that attention into sales, usually need about three support staff to run a session. The extra staff perform tasks such as uploading the product links and changing prices, he explained.

Douyin versus Kuaishou

As for the livestream battle within the short video arena, Douyin has the upper hand over Kuaishou so far. Douyin aims to reach RMB 1 trillion ($160 billion) in gross merchandise value (GMV) on its platform this year. Meanwhile, Kuaishou expects to achieve a GMV of RMB 650 billion this year. That’s a downsized adjustment from the beginning of the year, when it set a GMV target of between RMB 750 billion and RMB 800 billion. 

“Kuaishou’s commercialization started earlier by building e-commerce based on social trust and connecting directly to the starting point of the supply chain,” said Xin Youzhi, a top livestreamer widely known as Xin Ba. He has 95.6 million followers on Kuaishou. 

Xin Youzhi, or Xin Ba, introduces cosmetics during a livestream session on Kuaishou. (Image credit: Xinxuan Group)

To compare Kuaishou and Douyin, the livestreamer sales star explained that Kuaishou has a strong bond with users, who have dubbed themselves lao tie, or “buddies” in English, a term of endearment for the fans of livestream hosts. First gaining popularity among users in China’s lower-tier cities, the Tencent-backed firm is often described as the less sophisticated rival of ByteDance-owned Douyin. 

Merchants on Kuaishou were among the first to adopt the C2M (consumer-to-manufacturer) model, under which they directly give user feedback to upstream supply chain manufacturers. They thus can significantly reduce the marginal and intermediate costs and enable customers to buy more affordable products.

Meanwhile, Douyin has more social media features than Kuaishou. But the two video platforms are learning from each other to strengthen their e-commerce ecosystems, said Xin.

Short video as e-commerce challengers

E-commerce platforms are still far ahead in livestream e-commerce revenues. Taobao Live achieved a GMV of more than RMB 500 billion in the 2021 fiscal year ended March 2021. Douyin’s livestream GMV was RMB 100 million in 2020, according to a comparable fiscal calculation standard adopted by Alibaba. Douyin boasted a livestream GMV of RMB 500 billion in 2020, of which RMB 100 million was achieved through Douyin stores, according to a report by Forward Research Institute.

Compared with e-commerce platforms, short video platforms have advantages in terms of customer traffic and livestreaming scenarios, according to Xin Youzhi.

“Livestream e-commerce” for now puts the emphasis on e-commerce, not livestream. “Users on e-commerce platforms like Taobao and JD will buy, with or without livestreams,” said Sandy Shen, VP analyst with the digital commerce team at research and advisory company Gartner.

“As people spend more time on short video platforms, the apps could become super apps like WeChat, which cover every aspect of our daily lives, including e-commerce,” said Shen. 

Young shoppers lead the way

The trend is already apparent among Chinese youth. “Millennials, the core user group of short video apps, could be easily converted to consumers on these platforms,” said Shen. 

She added that short video apps are becoming an important entertainment and information channel for people from lower-tier parts of the country, where e-commerce platforms like Alibaba and JD have lower penetration. For this group, it’s natural for them to buy through a platform they are familiar with, according to Shen.

User attention is only the first step on the way to winning the e-commerce market, however.

“In the early stage, the live commerce industry relied on customer traffic, KOLs and livestreamers, but the core of live commerce is still e-commerce. That means e-commerce is always driven by products rather than by people. Customer traffic is not a panacea,” said Xin, who also runs his own retailer and livestream company Xinxuan Group.

In the meantime, the industry is also getting to the point where it has to face and adapt to a new developmental stage. The industry needs to push its limits with respect to people, goods and business models, according to Xin.

The short video apps still need time to improve behind-the-scenes capabilities from supply chain and logistics to KOL talent training and regulation compliance, Xin added.

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Short video creators banned from copying TV dramas without permission https://technode.com/2021/12/16/short-video-creators-banned-from-copying-tv-dramas-without-permission/ Thu, 16 Dec 2021 07:11:50 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164122 Kuaishou vs Tiktok feature imageChinese regulators banned short video creators from unauthorized spreading of content taken from other platforms' long-form TV dramas. ]]> Kuaishou vs Tiktok feature image

China’s audio-visual content regulator on Wednesday banned short video creators from unauthorized editing and spreading of content taken from other platforms’ long-form TV dramas. 

Why it matters: The development gives legal backing to the claims of Chinese video streaming platforms, including Tencent Video and iQiyi. Both have accused short video platforms of copyright infringement and unfair competition by copying video clips from their hit long-form TV dramas. 

Details: China Netcasting Services Association (CNSA), a government-affiliated association with regulatory power, updated a comprehensive set of guidelines (in Chinese) for short video content on Wednesday.  

  • The updated rules are intended to “remove vulgar and pandering content” and “counter the spread of illegal and pirated content,” according to the statement.

New rules: Under the new regulations, industry players are required to ban a wide range of content on their platforms, including:

  • Content edited or adapted from films, TV dramas, or online TV series without authorization from the original producers.
  • Films, TV dramas, online TV series, and foreign content that is banned or hasn’t been approved by state broadcasting authorities.
  • Content that encourages users to participate in cryptocurrency mining and trading.
  • Content that harms the growth of minors, such as drinking, violence, and drugs.

Context: The CNSA, which has more than 600 industry members, first released short video guidelines in 2019 to regulate the rapid growth of the short video industry. The association includes state-owned broadcasters such as CCTV and internet media companies from Alibaba and Tencent. 

  • More than 70 TV and film institutions and 500 actors signed a joint statement in May, calling on short video and social media apps including Douyin, Kuaishou, and Weibo to respect copyright and stop re-editing and spreading pirated content.
  • Short video apps, which have a heated rivalry with the longer video platforms, also screen their own homegrown content, especially short dramas
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Chinese regulator suspends homework answer search apps https://technode.com/2021/12/14/chinese-regulators-suspend-homework-answer-search-apps/ Tue, 14 Dec 2021 08:16:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=164044 China’s Ministry of Education on Monday suspended the filing and review process for homework search apps. ]]>

China’s Ministry of Education on Monday suspended the filing and review process for homework search apps that allow students to upload pictures of exam questions and search for related answers.

Why it matters: The move signals an extension of China’s sweeping edtech crackdown that began in July with the online after-school tutoring sector targeting K-12 students, once the most lucrative sector of China’s private tutoring market.

READ MORE: Chinese edtech upended by sweeping regulations

Details: The education ministry said in the Monday statement (in Chinese) that it will suspend the filing and review process for all homework apps targeting primary and middle school curriculum courses, pausing approvals for related edtech apps. Those apps already listed on its filing platform must be taken down.

  • The review process and relisting of homework apps will resume once developers get approval from local educational authorities.
  • Online tutoring apps that could be affected include Yuanfudao’s Xiaoyuan Souti and Zuoyebang, although both of the apps have recently shifted their focus and labeling themselves as tools for parents and teachers.
  • Zuoyebang has started the re-application process, a representative told TechNode. The company added that use of the app in the meantime won’t be affected and that the app is still available on app stores despite its removal from the ministry’s filing platform.
  • The ministry cited negative impacts on students as the reason for the suspension, saying that the apps may make students “lazy,” affect independent thinking, and result in lousy learning habits by violating the rules of education and teaching.

Context: “Snap and search questions” is a popular feature in Chinese homework apps; it enables users to search for answers by taking screenshots of homework questions, thereby avoiding the difficulties of inputting hard-to-recognize characters, mathematical symbols, and equations.

  • Despite its popularity, the feature sparked controversy this June when a student from China’s Hubei province was caught searching for answers with Xiaoyuan Souti (a homework search app) while taking the college entrance exam. The app’s maker said it reported the case to relevant authorities and didn’t answer the student.
  • Edtech platforms such as Tipaipai and Afanti said in August that they would no longer offer homework search features.
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Bilibili to test shopping cart feature for livestreaming: report https://technode.com/2021/12/08/bilibili-to-test-shopping-cart-feature-for-livestreaming-report/ Wed, 08 Dec 2021 08:19:19 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163943 bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime gameBilibili is getting serious in livestream e-commerce, hoping to diversify its revenue sources. The firm has tried to expand in the area.]]> bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime game

China’s youth-focused video site Bilibili may launch a shopping cart feature in its livestream pages in the coming weeks, Chinese media 36kr reported on Tuesday.

Why it matters: Bilibili is getting serious about livestream e-commerce, hoping to diversify its revenue sources. The firm has previously made a few tentative steps in the area.

  • Compared with market incumbents like Alibaba and Douyin, Bilibili is late to the livestream commerce game, which has seen rapid growth due to the pandemic. The Shanghai-based firm tries to differentiate itself from other platforms by selling products relating to its core content of anime, comics, and games (ACG). 

Details: The video site, listed on both the Nasdaq and Hong Kong exchanges, is talking with several content creators about introducing a shopping cart feature for livestream shopping, 36kr reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • Similar to the shopping experience offered on Taobao Live and Douyin, users will be able to click into a shopping cart embedded in the livestream interface to browse product listings and place orders.
  • Bilibili will support the livestreamers by allocating more traffic to them. The feature is already in a small-scale test stage, a second source told 36kr. 
  • The feature would offer Bilibili’s content creators a new way to make money from their popularity.
  • In its fourth-anniversary celebration event held in September, Bilibili introduced four content creators selling ACG products such as art toys and costumes during a four-hour livestream. It was viewed as an attempt to try out livestream commerce.
  • Bilibili did not respond to TechNode’s request for comment on Wednesday morning.

Context: Bilibili’s third-quarter revenue was RMB734.0 million ($113.9 million), representing an increase of 78% from the same period in 2020. E-commerce accounted for 14% of the company’s revenue. 

  • In November, Bilibili obtained a payment license, moving one step closer to launching its own online payment service, an important step for tech companies looking to build a closed-loop shopping experience for users. 
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Beyond Expo | Robots will replace humans for indoor deliveries https://technode.com/2021/12/07/beyond-expo-robots-will-replace-humans-for-indoor-deliveries/ Tue, 07 Dec 2021 06:34:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163898 Now widely used in shopping malls, office buildings, hotels and residential areas, robots are especially apt for solving the “last-100-meter-delivery problem.”]]>

“Robots will replace human labor for indoor delivery in the future with higher efficiency and lower costs,” Yao Jincheng, founder and CEO of robot maker 3S Robotics, predicted at Beyond Expo on Saturday. 

Now widely used in shopping malls, office buildings, hotels and residential areas, robots are especially apt for solving the “last-100-meter-delivery problem,” or the final stop step of delivering products to a customer, according to Yao.

Yao’s comments come against the backdrop of a rising industry. The global market for indoor delivery robots was valued at $6.1 billion in 2020 and is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 17% to reach $158 billion by 2027, showed a report by research agency Astute Analytica.

In addition to making deliveries, service robots are also undertaking a number of other roles, such as giving directions, taking care of the elderly or the disabled, assisting medical diagnosis and treatment, education, and entertainment.

Di Min, chairman of service robot maker Nanjing University Electronics, said he believed that technology and market resources are helping propel the sector. The company, which is mainly engaged in developing service robots for banks and financial institutions, says its robots have been deployed in more than 220,000 bank branches in China. 

Zhu Hanqi, CEO and founder of Enhanced Robotics, added that the industrialization and upgrading of the supply chain is providing another boost for the scaled application of robots. “Thanks to the rise of DJI, the price of drone motors dropped as the supply chain matured,” he said. 

“In contrast with internet companies, the service robot industry needs support from manufacturers along the industrial chain. That’s why the manufacturing centers in China, like the Greater Bay area and areas around Jiangsu province, are more advanced in the sector,” said Zhu, whose company develops AI-enabled consumer exoskeletons for fitness and hiking.

The commercial application of robots at scale still faces a number of challenges however. Beyond simply developing the best hardware, companies in the sector must take into consideration the regulations surrounding use of indoor delivery robots in commercial spaces as well as how they can be adapted to existing infrastructure, according to Yao, who cited the case of providing service robots for the Beyond Expo as an example. 

“To prepare for the event, we spent more than one month testing our delivery and temperature-taking robots in six hotels that accommodate Beyond Expo participants under the guidance of Macau travel agencies and hygiene authorities,” he explained.

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Beyond Expo | Standardization and industrialization are the future of logistics robots https://technode.com/2021/12/06/beyond-expo-standardization-and-industrialization-are-the-future-of-logistics-robots/ Mon, 06 Dec 2021 03:00:46 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163852 "Logistics robots will become standardized parts like motors, ready to be used in various industries in the next five years," said an industrial insider.]]>

“Logistics robots will become standardized parts like motors, ready to be used in various industries in the next five years,” said Xia Huiling, founder and CEO of intelligent sorting robot developer Libiao Robotics, at the Beyond Expo tech conference held in Macau on Friday.

In agreement was Zhu Junda, CEO of smart warehouse systems and equipment developer HC Robotics, when asked to predict the five-year outlook for the industry. “Warehouse and logistic robots should be widely-used tools with low thresholds for adoption,” he said. 

The panel was co-organized by GLP, a global investor and business operator in logistics, real estate, and infrastructure.

The robotics industry always looks to the future, but the panelists adopted a very practical approach in judging the present success of a company: whether its products will create value for clients, in very concrete and quantitative ways. 

“The pursuit for efficiency is our foremost principle in making all decisions when developing a product,” said Xia. 

She explained her points with the case of Uniqlo. After adopting sorting robots developed by Libiao Robotics in a warehouse with daily shipment capacity of more than 400,000 parcels per day, the Japanese garment retailer shortened the time from receiving an order online to delivering it from warehouses from eight hours to three hours. The number of staff was reduced by 75% and all the new warehouse employees only need one day of training before starting to work. 

“Value creation is only meaningful through these figures,” she said.

“The robotics industry may have a fancy aura surrounding it. But in essence, it’s still a business about moving things around. The core problem we are addressing now is how to move goods from one place to another at higher efficiency and lower costs, and to store more goods within fixed space,” said Zhu of HC Robotics. The company develops automated and modular storage shelves and warehouse management system solutions.

He Wenzhong, new energy special assistant to CEO at GLP, said the key for future success in logistics robots will be building a decentralized logistics network in order to remove the repetitive work resulting from a system that relies on big and centralized distribution hubs. 

Zhao Yue, chairman of smart logistics solution provider Seer Group, said the key for success is to build an ecosystem that connects every link along the industrial chain to create synergistic effects. Zhao’s company develops software solutions including controllers, logistics digitalization, and visual AI. Zhao referred to Seer’s products as the “smart brains” for logistics robots. Seer’s software solutions are used by more than 600 automatic hardware companies worldwide, said Zhao.

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Robots, flying cars, and other cool tech gracing Beyond Expo https://technode.com/2021/12/04/robots-flying-cars-and-other-cool-tech-gracing-beyond-expo/ Sat, 04 Dec 2021 02:44:58 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163833 Beyond Expo has been underway at the Venetian Convention and Exhibition Center in Macau since Thursday. The three-day offline tech summit and exhibition has attracted more than 300 exhibitors promoting everything from robots and biotech to smart cities.]]>

Beyond Expo has been underway at the Venetian Convention and Exhibition Center in Macau since Thursday. The three-day offline tech summit and exhibition has attracted more than 300 exhibitors promoting everything from artificial intelligence and biotech to smart cities. Giant firms such as Tencent, China Telecom, Alibaba, and Huawei joined with upcoming vertical unicorns to showcase their latest technological developments and products.

Here are some highlights in case you missed out.

Innovations from giant firms

Tencent booth at Beyond Expo (Image credit: TechNode)

At Tencent’s booth, the company demonstrated 15 ways its technologies are applied in smart cities, industrial chains, and healthcare, mainly concentrating on commercial applications in the Greater Bay Area, which consists of nine cities in the southern Guangdong province, Hong Kong and Macao.

One example was Tencent’s cooperation with the Macao Water Supply Company. Tencent’s productivity app, WeCom, has greatly improved the working efficiency of his company, according to Hu Jianchao, head of the water firm’s pipeline management department.

Before adopting the app, the company relied on phone calls to learn about water pipeline emergencies. Lack of real-time updates often led to miscommunications. WeCom has streamlined the emergency treatment process by digitizing case details such as the location of the emergency, onsite pictures, and the staff in charge of the case, Hu explained.

China Telecom booth at Beyond Expo (Image credit: TechNode)

Telecom carrier China Telecom has developed a smart city transportation platform for Macao by integrating technologies including IoT, artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and big data. The app, which claims more than 100,000 daily active users in the city, supports major features like route management and bus stop reporting.

The company’s 5G-enabled robot dog drew a large crowd at the event. The dog can be useful in various scenarios such as accompanying and guiding visually-impaired people in emergency rescues, said Chen Zhanhong, a representative from the Macao subsidiary of China Telecom. 

Visitors trying out 5G-enabled VR headsets at the Huawei booth. (Image credit: TechNode)
Alibaba’s smart hotel solution: Guests can control appliances, room temperature, and lights using Alibaba’s smart voice assistant, Tmall Genie. (Image credit; TechNode)

Robots at work

Service robots are well on track for commercial applications as traditional sectors turn to automation to increase efficiency and slash labor costs. The trend got a strong boost from the pandemic, which gave rise to the new concept of “non-contact delivery.”

Now, service robots are giving directions at malls, supermarkets, museums, and hotels, as well as delivering food in restaurants, taking care of the elderly, and assisting with medical treatments.

Left to right, Putdu Technology’s robots for food delivery, air disinfection, and hotel food service. (Image credit: TechNode)
A robot guide and food delivery robots developed by Softback-backed Keenon  (Image credit: TechNode)
Hotel delivery robots developed by service robot developer S3 Robotics. The company also develops robots for taking human temperatures, disinfection, and education. (Image credit: TechNode)

Cars take to the air

As electric vehicles and autonomous driving become more familiar concepts to Chinese consumers, entrepreneurs are exploring the future of daily transportation.

EHang 216 showcased at Beyond Expo (Image credit: TechNode)

Developed by Chinese drone maker EHang, EHang 216 is a dual-seat passenger grade autonomous aerial vehicle designed for short- to medium-range air transportation. The passenger drone can travel at a maximum speed of 130 km/h. It can fly for 21 minutes with a full-load capacity of 220 kilograms.

Voyager X2 showcased at Beyond Expo (Image credit: TechNode)

Xpeng Huitian, an autonomous aviation unit of electric vehicle maker Xpeng Motors, showcased its “flying car” prototype Voyager X2 at the event. With eight propellers on four axes, the passenger drone could carry two adults. It has a maximum load of 200 kilograms. The electric drone can travel 35 minutes at between 80 and100 kilometers per hour on one charge.

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The Big Sell | After L’Oreal’s livestreamer spat, is a new e-commerce era dawning in China? https://technode.com/2021/11/29/loreals-livestreamer-spat-li-jiaqi-e-commerce/ Mon, 29 Nov 2021 06:20:16 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163724 Viya, Li Jiaqi, livestreamingThe rare public spat shed light on the hidden machinations between livestreamer KOLs and brands, who were once inanimate partners looking to capitalize on the live sales trend but have seen such relationships grow increasingly complex.]]> Viya, Li Jiaqi, livestreaming

Discussion around a high-profile spat between French cosmetics giant L’Oréal and China’s top livestreamers Li Jiaqi and Viya filled Chinese social media last week. 

In a rare public dispute for the retail industry, the duo accused the cosmetics brand of failing to deliver on its promises in giving them the lowest price for a face mask product as part of pre-sale promotions for this year’s Singles Day shopping festival, the Chinese equivalent of Black Friday in the US.

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Furious users, who made purchases through the pair’s livestreams only to discover the product was available for cheaper days later on a separate L’Oréal’s livestream, voiced their discontent with the cosmetics company after it was publicly called out by the star livestreamers, and demanded the brand refund the difference.

With the popularity of live commerce, brands have become increasingly reliant on popular livestreamers as a sales channel to drive their revenue. The incident shed light on the hidden machinations between livestreamer KOLs and brands, who were once inanimate partners looking to capitalize on the live sales trend but have seen such relationships grow increasingly complex.

In recent years, China’s e-commerce environment has shifted to favor sustainable growth and profitability, not a win-at-all-costs pursuit of gross merchandise value (GMV). But that doesn’t mean that brands have abandoned steep discounts as a sales tactic – far from it, many are using such promotions to lure in customers who they then hope to build long-term relationships with. The dispute shows how much power – and sometimes how little agency – KOL livestreamers have as part of such collaborations.

A brief timeline

  • Oct. 20: Several top livestreamers, including Li Jiaqi and Viya, promote L’Oréal’s Revitalift Filler mask in their livestream sessions on the first day of Alibaba’s pre-sales for Singles Day 2021. Fifty masks are sold for RMB 429 ($67), a deal that’s promoted as the lowest price all year. Li Jiaqi and Viya sell more than 800,000 units of the product, raking in around RMB 350 million.
  • Nov. 1: Consumers find that the same product package is being sold more than a third cheaper at only RMB 257 on a livestream held by L’Oréal’s Tmall store. Angry buyers who placed orders via the pair’s livestreams ask the brand to refund the difference. The livestreamers redirect users to complete purchases on the brand’s Tmall stores.
  • Nov. 17: Li Jiaqi and Viya explain in seperate statements that L’Oréal’s RMB 200 discount to users who spent more than RMB 999 is the cause of the price difference. “This is unfair for consumers who watched their clock to tune in to our show on October 20,” both streamers declare. The livestreamers suspended their collaboration with L’Oréal, giving the company 24 hours to come up with a solution. In a recognition of how damaging this could be to their personal brands, both stars pledge to compensate users out of their own pockets if the cosmetics company fails to make amends.
  • Nov. 18: L’Oréal apologizes for the confusing promotion mechanism and explains that some consumers were able to purchase its products at a lower price in its online store because they used multiple discounts offered by the store and e-commerce platforms. After this fails to quell the backlash, the skincare giant says in a second statement that it will offer shopping vouchers to affected customers to settle the dispute.

Even this announcement fails to satisfy some users, however. “Why do I need the voucher? You expect me to buy your products again?” asked Weibo user “Wuyuemeirendemengda”.The sentiment is shared by many. A hashtag on the microblogging platform, “Why do I need the vouchers”, attracted 110 million views.

The condemnation was joined by state-backed media outlet People’s Daily, which criticized the company in a post from its Weibo account, saying the cosmetics brand’s blaming of complicated promotion mechanisms fails to address the more serious accusations of false advertising.

Others argued there was no “significant wrongdoing” on the part of the company because the promotion on its own store covered various products, while the promotion by the livestream KOLs only covered a single product. Regardless, the incident demonstrated the pitfalls of livestream strategies and resulted in several days of heated debate – not to mention some awkward headlines for the French brand.

A new way to shop the sales

Whereas Singles Day was once about hopping from store to store in search of a deal, the emergence of livestream e-commerce has seen hundreds of millions of buyers swarm to these virtual sales rooms to trust in livestream stars to guide them to the best bargains.

Fans of the “lipstick king” and the “livestream queen”, nicknames for Li Jiaqi and Viya, have spent lavishly and fearlessly because they believe the livestream figureheads will bring them the best deals. Consumers expect the products they recommend to be of high quality and to be sold at a low price that can’t be beaten anywhere else on the internet – thus, trust is crucial. 

This idea is so important to the presenters’ personal brands and income, that Li Jiaqi even starred in a hit variety show ahead of this year’s Singles Day which showed him bargaining with some of the biggest cosmetics firms in the world. Entitled Offers to Every Girl, the eight-episode show saw Li argue with firms including LVMH and Perfect Diary, bringing sales heads to their knees to gain extra-low prices.

The marketing worked. Buyers spent a combined RMB 18.9 billion during Li and Ziya’s livestream sessions on Oct. 20, the first day of Taobao’s Singles Day 2021 pre-sales.. 

Such numbers are only possible because the top KOLs have mostly delivered on their promises, yet this year things are beginning to change as brands shift their focus to store streaming or corporate streaming, a channel that addresses their new strategic focus of long-term growth.

Rise of the store-specific livestream

While the livestream model that Li Jiaqi and Viya have made their names with still retains enormous popularity, store-specific livestreaming, where brands or merchants promote their products through their own flagship stores either on Tmall or other platforms, is on the rise.

In its early stages, the live e-commerce industry relied on KOLs and livestreamers to bring them the traffic, but now an increasing number of mature brands are launching their own livestream sessions rather than relying on KOLs to promote their products, according to Echo Gong, an analyst at research agency Coresight. The trend is especially clear among companies that have already built a strong brand awareness and therefore feel increasingly emboldened to attract their own audiences. 

In addition to saving on the hefty commission fees star livestreamers now command, merchants also believe that they can direct user attention to their own marketing channels for long-term operations, thus building user loyalty. This trend was on full display during this year’s Singles Day shopping festival, where numerous merchants focused on long-term benchmarks such as customer retention, operating profit, and customer lifetime value, rather than judging themselves purely on sales numbers, according to a report research institute Bain released before Singles Day.

READ MORE: Singles Day 2021: Slower growth, more sense

During last year’s Singles Day promotional period, more than 60% of Taobao Live’s revenue came from corporate livestreams. According to data from iResearch in 2020, the sales of store-specific livestream accounted for 32.1% of the total live e-commerce industry in 2020, and it is expected to reach nearly 50% by 2023.

Xin Youzhi, also known as Xinba, a top livestreamer KOL with 95.6 million followers on video app Kuaishou, says he’s optimistic about store-specific livestreaming in the future. “The core of live commerce is still e-commerce,” he told TechNode “That means e-commerce is always driven by products rather than by people. Customer traffic is not a panacea.”

Conclusion: There’s no getting away from the fact that discounts will still be the most effective means to attract users for the foreseeable future given Chinese buyers’ long-ingrained taste for deals.

But promotions come at a cost. Instead of spending a huge chunk of their budgets on celebrity livestreamers, brands are increasingly looking to spend more tactically with the goal of attracting users to their own stores.

Disputes like the one between L’Oréal and its star livestreamers appear to damage everyone without a clear winner emerging. This specific incident tarnished the French brand’s image, while Li Ziqi and Viya were suspected in some quarters of monopolistic behavior.

The price bargaining power of livestreamers is “scary”, Weibo user Zeicha declared in a post on the microblogging platform in the wake of the public spat. “Similar to e-commerce marketplaces like Taobao, top KOL personalities like Li and Viya are platforms themselves. Instead of distributing customer traffic among the merchants, they hold onto the traffic on their own.”

Brands seem to have woken up to this too, meaning we could now be set for a whole new phase of livestreaming e-commerce.

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ByteDance begins another round of edtech layoffs: source https://technode.com/2021/11/25/bytedance-begins-another-round-of-edtech-layoffs-source/ Thu, 25 Nov 2021 04:43:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163663 Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short videoByteDance is laying off more than 1,000 staff from its edtech businesses following the deep cuts it made in the sector in August. The newer round is concentrated in the K-9 education units, a person with knowledge of the matter told TechNode. The person declined to be identified. Why it matters: TikTok owner ByteDance is […]]]> Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short video

ByteDance is laying off more than 1,000 staff from its edtech businesses following the deep cuts it made in the sector in August. The newer round is concentrated in the K-9 education units, a person with knowledge of the matter told TechNode. The person declined to be identified.

Why it matters: TikTok owner ByteDance is the latest Chinese tech giant to retreat from online tutoring services targeting students up to grade nine, or K-9. All are responding to China’s crackdown on private tutoring services in late July.

  • The current layoff comes only three months afters job cuts in August.

Details: The layoffs will affect more than 1,000 employees. The source said ByteDance is mainly cutting in business units that offer after-school tutoring services for primary and middle school curriculum courses. This once lucrative sector is now fast downsizing.

  • ByteDance’s after-school tutoring services for K-9 students include pre-K education platform Guagua Long and online course livestream apps Qingbei and Xuelang.
  • Local media LatePost (in Chinese) reported Wednesday that this round of layoffs also affects core teams in product development, operations, and research and development. In contrast, in August, ByteDance laid off edtech workers mostly in supporting teams such as sales and tutoring.
  • ByteDance staff on English tutoring platform Kaiyan, education hardware teams, and school collaboration teams were also affected in this round of job cuts, LatePost reported.
  • The company’s edtech business has cut roughly a third of its headcount from 15,000 at the beginning of this year to fewer than 10,000 now, according to Late Post.

Context: Over the past two months, China’s top private education companies TAL, Gaotu Techedu, and Koolearn Tech have announced plans to stop offering curriculum tutoring services to students in K-9 grades in response to China’s broad ban on private tutoring services in late July.

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Youth coding platform Box.Game raises $5 million to tap metaverse trend https://technode.com/2021/11/23/youth-coding-platform-box-game-raises-5-million-to-tap-metaverse-trend/ Tue, 23 Nov 2021 08:02:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163585 Box.Game, a China-based coding platform for youth, has closed a $5 million angel round to help build a 3D virtual world.]]>

Box.Game, a China-based coding platform for youth, has closed a $5 million angel round to help build a 3D virtual world where young users can create, play, and socialize.

Why it matters: The funding is a sign of how hot the metaverse concept or its buzzword value has become globally. The company claims it is the first youth-focused metaverse project in China to attract new funds this year.

  • Coding is taught in STEM courses, which are considered “quality education” in China. Compared with online tutoring for compulsory curriculum subjects, they have been less affected by China’s sweeping crackdown earlier this year on private schooling targeting K-12 students.

Details: Box.Game said in a Nov. 18 press release shared with TechNode that the round was led by Atypical Ventures, a venture firm founded by former DCM partner and Kuaishou angel investor Ruby Lu. The project was incubated by Codemao, a leading coding and AI education company.

  • The proceeds will be used to support the development of “a metaverse for teenagers and youths” to create an interconnected virtual world of their own. 
  • With the round, the company plans to expand its existing 50-member team and to launch content creator incentive plans.
  • Sun Yue, the Codemao founder who also leads Box.Game, said the Web-based multiplayer content creation platform would rely on organic growth rather than large-scale marketing for short-term growth.
  • The company emerged as a youth-focused platform but Sun expects it to expand to other age groups. “Box.Game aims to be a metaverse for creators of all ages,” he told TechNode.
  • Amid tightening regulation of online education and gaming in China, Sun said coding training is among the few subjects the state encourages for extracurricular education. “Content creation can take multiple forms, and gaming is just one of them. We provide the platforms, and it’s up to the creators to decide what content they will take,” Sun said. He added that the company will comply with local regulations while facing a global market.
  • “We have seen the creativity of Chinese children on the Box.Game platform and were impressed by those young users,” said an Atypical Ventures representative.

Context: Parent company CodeMao is a top edtech firm. It has received total of more than $360 million in funding from investors such as Hillhouse Capital and the investment arm of smartphone maker OPPO. In addition to the domestic Chinese market, the Shenzhen-based firm plans to expand to other Asian countries and Europe.

  • With its self-developed Box 3D Engine, creators can build various content, from games to art items, on the platform.
  • Starting from an incubated project within Codemao in 2018, Box.Game was launched in June this year. As of September, the platform has reached 1 million monthly active users, about 8% of whom are game developers.
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Tencent ends content creator incentive project after wide backlash https://technode.com/2021/11/19/tencent-ends-content-creator-incentive-project-after-wide-backlash/ Fri, 19 Nov 2021 06:59:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163543 tencent antitrust techwar gaming streaming WeChatThe competition among tech giants for quality content is reaching a fever pitch in China. Tencent launched a content incentive plan in July. ]]> tencent antitrust techwar gaming streaming WeChat

Chinese tech giant Tencent announced Thursday it was ending its content creator incentive plan called “Project Dawn” after prompting wide backlash from content creators.

Why it matters: The competition among tech giants for quality content is reaching a fever pitch in China, but creators are pushing back against what they see as attempts to devalue their work.

Details: Tencent’s open content platform said in a Thursday statement (in Chinese) that it has terminated its content creator incentive program “Project Dawn,” which aimed to lure original content creators with monetary rewards for their work. On top of that, the company apologized to creators that were affected by the program.

  • Tencent launched the project in July, pledging to give RMB 10 million ($1.5 million) in subsidies to empower and attract more video content creators to its platform. The project aimed at creators from various popular platforms such as Bilibili, Xiaohongshu, and video apps like Kuaishou, promising to help the creators promote their content across platforms and increase their revenue. 
  • Several creators on the Chinese video platform Bilibili began to voice their discontent (video, in Chinese) last week, claiming Tencent tricked them into joining the program, which failed to deliver its promises. 
  • The creators claimed that Tencent ran the program through a number of multi-channel networks (MCNs), which would take as much as 90% of the one-off incentive fee of RMB 200 promised to each creator by the platform.
  • Bilibili creators who gave their ID information to MCNs after joining the program found their videos, which had already been uploaded on Bilibili, were copied to the Tencent platform and labeled as exclusive content there. As a result, their accounts were subsequently blocked on other sites for alleged piracy. Tencent refuted these claims in its statement, saying that it has never labelled content exclusive, “nor has it tried to obstruct creators’ profile on other platforms.”
  • Tencent said content creators that want to leave their platform can cancel their account, an option that only became available on Nov. 9. Those who want to stay will now get the promised income from Tencent directly, instead of through MCNs, the company said.

Context: This is not the first time Tencent has faced a content creator backlash. The company’s online reading arm China Literature was subject to an author revolt due to what they saw as exploitative rules in 2020.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Who owns ‘internet literature’?

Update: The story has been updated with Tencent’s statement on exclusive content complaints.

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Alibaba hints WeChat access problems responsible for community group-buy suspension in Guizhou https://technode.com/2021/11/17/alibaba-hints-wechat-access-problems-responsible-for-community-group-buy-suspension-in-guizhou/ Wed, 17 Nov 2021 07:51:07 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163479 Chinese regulators had ordered tech giants to tear down walls between the services. But blocking moves to fend off competition still persist. ]]>

Alibaba’s community group-buy arm Taocaicai suspended operations in southwestern China’s Guizhou province on Tuesday. Chinese media attributed the suspension to its accessibility issues within the WeChat ecosystem.

Why it matters: Despite Chinese regulators ordering tech giants to tear down walls between the services, blocking moves to fend off competition still persist.  

  • The road to success in China’s community group-buy market, even for e-commerce giants the size of Alibaba, remains bumpy. Since mid-2021, market consolidation has wiped out some of the top rivals in the industry.

READ MORE: China’s grocery delivery fever is cooling down

Details: Taocaicai said in a Tuesday statement that it will stop operations in Guizhou. The firm stated that it will update the digital system for the region to “avoid the service barriers incurred by connectivity issues,” insinuating its lack of access to Tencent’s superapp WeChat is to blame. The company didn’t mention a timeline for resuming services in the region.

  • Although the statement refers to the reason for the suspension in vague terms, an employee of Taocaicai told Chinese media Tech Planet (in Chinese) that the move is largely the result of the application experiencing delayed software updates on WeChat’s mini-program system (an app-store-like ecosystem within the app). The delay leads to inferior user experiences, the source added. 
  • Taocaicai failed to get its WeChat mini-program updates approved for more than seven months despite continuous efforts to communicate with the platform, says Antonio Liu Neng, who identified himself as a programmer at Taocaicai in a post published on professional networking platform Maimai. By comparison, Tencent-related community group-buy platforms such as Meituan Select and Duoduo Maicai update weekly.
  • WeChat mini-programs are a vital channel for community group-buy services to reach customers, especially in lower-tier cities where people rely on WeChat more for daily tasks and transactions. 
  • Delayed updates to WeChat mini-programs harm Taocaicai’s ability to attract and retain users with sophisticated social functions such as lucky draws and coupons, said the Tech Planet report.
  • However, the suspension won’t affect much of Alibaba’s community group-buy business, since Guizhou represents only a small portion of the company’s activity, said the report. The platform recorded more than 13 million daily orders in November, trailing only Meituan Select and Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai in volume, thanks to growth in provinces such as Guangdong, Jiangsu, Hubei, Anhui, Shandong, and Henan.

Context: Alibaba, which has placed big bets on community group-buy services, is aiming to take over the market share left after rivals like Tongcheng Life and Shixianghui exited in recent months.

  • In September, Alibaba rebranded its community group-buy services to Taocaicai by incorporating two existing community grocery services, Freshippo Market and Taobao Maicai.
  • Authorities have made it clear that companies must stop blocking links to rivals’ services on their apps.
  • Alibaba and Tencent have begun to heed Beijing’s orders over the past few months by partially opening their services to each other.
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Singles Day 2021: Slower growth, more sense https://technode.com/2021/11/15/singles-day-2021-slower-growth-alibaba/ Mon, 15 Nov 2021 03:48:43 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163396 Singles Day is still a big deal, but people were less obsessed with the shopping event this year, at least as indicated by sales trends.]]>

Deng Shuang, a Shanghai mother of a six-year-old, stayed up past midnight Nov. 10 just so she could snag an RMB 90 ($14.11) discount limited to customers who paid before 1:00 am on Nov. 11. But there were many fewer impulse buys for her on this Singles Day. “This year, I only buy stuff that’s useful,” she said.

Ding Zhe, a Shanghainese engineer, said he’s never been caught up in the Singles Day shopping frenzy. But he almost doubled his budget to RMB 1,800 this year. “My increased spending is not due to rising spending enthusiasm, but a result of real consumption demand,” he explained.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

Singles Day is still a big deal, but people were less obsessed with the shopping event this year, at least as indicated by sales trends. Total sales still grew, but the growth rate was much slower, back to the tempered trajectory before the 2020 surge fueled by the pandemic.  

Also known as Double 11, the Singles Day holiday was started by college students as a cheeky meme to mock their singlehood. Alibaba turned the day into an online shopping festival in 2009. More than a decade later, it’s China’s largest shopping extravaganza and stretches over 11 days. Alibaba alone booked RMB 498.2 billion ($74.1 billion) gross merchandise value (GMV) during its Singles Day promotion last year, dwarfing Black Friday’s $9 billion GMV take in the US for the same year.

Skyrocketing sales were almost the only thing e-commerce platforms cared about for most of the history of Singles Day. But this year, they have more important matters at stake. 

Chinese e-commerce giants are seeking to prioritize broader and longer-term goals toward common prosperity and sustainability, themes that align with Beijing’s drive to reshape China’s economy. On top of that, retailers are also looking sideways for sustainable growth and profitability instead of winning top-line growth during the shopping season at all costs.

Alibaba’s chief marketing officer, Chris Tung, described the shift as a “coming-of-age moment” for the festival to take more “social responsibilities.”

All the changes point to a quieter 2021, but what’s more important is how the e-commerce titan will keep the retail ball rolling in the face of regulatory headwinds, fierce competition from rivals, and waning enthusiasm from retailers and buyers alike.

Alibaba’s slowest GMV growth ever

It was a lackluster year for Alibaba’s Singles Day event in terms of sales growth. The creator of the shopping event generated RMB 540.3 billion ($84.5 billion) in GMV during the 11-day promotion that started Nov. 1. That figure represents 8% growth from the RMB 498.2 billion GMV last year—a steep fall from the 26% year-on-year growth recorded in 2020. It is the first time in the past decade that Alibaba has recorded single-digit growth for Singles Day. Yet that figure wasn’t surprising, since it is basically consistent with the slower 13% year-on-year GMV growth rate for the financial year ended in March this year. 

Alibaba Vice President Yang Guang emphasized the “social responsibilities” of the festival in a Friday statement, calling this year’s festival a “meaningful milestone” as part of the company’s commitment towards building a sustainable future.

JD.com, however, reported a faster growth rate in Singles Day GMV than Alibaba. The online retailer recorded RMB 349.1 billion in GMV during the event, an increase of 28% on the company’s 2020 figure for the period, compared with 33% year-on-year growth in last year. 

As usual, Pinduoduo didn’t release any Singles Day sales figures. According to Douyin, livestream sessions on the platform attracted 39.5 billion viewers, and a total of 577 merchants achieved more than RMB 10 million GMV during its 16-day promotion from Oct. 27 to Nov. 11.

Nov. 11, the date which was the source of the festival, has become less important in generating sales ever since Alibaba, the largest player in the game, extended shopping windows last year.

China’s overall e-commerce sales across platforms for Nov. 11 dropped for the second year in a row to RMB 314.6 billion. That’s 6% down from RMB 332.87 billion recorded last year, according to data from China-based data services company Syntun.

Alibaba’s Tmall accounted for 57% of the total GMV on the day, followed by JD’s 27.6%, and Pinduoduo’s 6.4%, the report shows. 

Competing for fickle customers

Competition among platforms remains fierce and customer loyalty continues to decline. Over half of consumers surveyed by Bain & Company this year said they would buy from three or more platforms during Singles’ Day.

Tech companies encouraged spending with bigger discounts, quicker delivery, and more social services this year. 

  • Alibaba buyers get a RMB 30 discount for every RMB 200 spent at all its stores, compared with RMB 40 discount for every RMB 300 spent last year. 
  • Alibaba and JD kicked off this year’s Singles Day promotion at 8:00 pm Nov. 10, four hours earlier than the traditional launch time. 
  • Alibaba introduced a shopping cart sharing function, which allows users to check what their friends are buying during the event, thus adding more social elements to the shoppertainment experience. 
  • JD.com rolled out the on-demand “Nearby” channel, offering fast one-hour delivery services of high-quality products from nearby stores.
  • This is the first Singles Day for JD to support payment with China central bank’s digital currency, which was released in December last year. More than 100,000 consumers made 240,000 purchases on the platform during the 11-day festival, says the company.

National goals in retail language

From hefty fines to stricter market guidelines, tech giants have learned some hard lessons in the past year as Beijing abandoned its laissez-faire attitude in favor of tightened regulation of the sprawling growth of Chinese tech companies. 

It’s no secret that Chinese tech firms are scrambling to heed Beijing’s call for broader goals like common prosperity and sustainable growth by committing hundreds of billions RMB to charitable efforts. 

In the wake of changes in macro environments, e-commerce titans, especially Alibaba, are bearing the brunt of regulator wrath. So it made sense that Alibaba would use Singles Day, its most efficient marketing tool, to translate Beijing’s policy changes into retail language relevant to the mass consumers.

READ MORE: Insights | Why Chinese tech giants are becoming very generous

Singles Day promotion priorities reflected every major regulatory push from the state:

  • Promoting green lifestyles: During this Singles Day, Alibaba’s Tmall featured a dedicated vertical to showcase energy-efficient and low-impact products, as well as issuing RMB100 million worth of “green” vouchers to incentivize shopping decisions that contribute to an environmentally-friendly lifestyle.
  • Reducing carbon emissions during delivery: Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao Network introduced package recycling to reduce the carbon footprint. Similarly, JD also pledged to reduce packaging wastes, adding that the 2021 Singles day promotion will be the largest ever where renewable energy is being used. Last year, President Xi Jinping announced that China aims to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060.
  • Supporting vulnerable populations: Alibaba’s Taobao app introduced an option for “senior mode” for senior citizens, answering the state’s call to bring the elderly online. Alibaba will make a RMB 1 donation for every successful social media share of its “Goods for Good” program, which enables merchants to make donations to senior citizens or left-behind children in remote areas.

Although the state is promoting the common prosperity concept and tech giants are spreading the word, experts expect the impacts of the common prosperity initiative will be long term. There will be a “very limited effect” on consumption in the short term, according to Liu Jing, professor of accounting and finance and associate dean at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business (CKGSB) in Beijing. 

“My guess is that it will only hit the luxury sector if the overall economy stalls or if the government actively tries to tamp down luxury consumption. The demand for luxury goods is a natural sign of economic prosperity,” he said.

The question of what can replace GMV as the most direct indicator of e-commerce festival success has become more acute. “There are no intuitive replacements,” said Michael Norris, head of research and strategy at Agency China. 

“If I were an e-commerce platform, I’d direct analysts’ attention towards growth in average user spend during e-commerce festivals,” he said.

Merchants look at user fidelity

Along with a shift in focus by e-commerce platforms, merchants and brands are also seeking a new definition of Singles Day success—one that’s centered around long-term growth rather than big figures for one event.

Despite extended promotions, the magic of Singles Day is “fading away,” according to Sharry Wu, EY Greater China’s consulting business transformation leader. 

“Mid-to-small ‘new retail brands’ are at a disadvantage in resource competition, and Chinese consumers are also contemplating purchase decisions during 11.11 due to the concern of mendacious price drops and product service quality,” she said.

Brands are less attracted by major platforms like Taobao Tmall and JD due to the intense battle in volume prices, according to Wu. To compete for sales, e-commerce platforms and retailers should learn about their customers through data,” she added.

In addition to GMV and monthly active users, James Yang, a Bain & Company partner in the Greater China retail practice, suggests brands judge themselves against benchmarks such as net promoter scores (an index measures the willingness of customers to recommend a company’s products or services to others), customer retention, operating profit, and customer lifetime value. 

“Retailers should think beyond just Singles Day to invest in winning during a broader spread of events across the year,” he said.

Consumer enthusiasm wanes

Consumers are losing their appetites with the proliferation of shopping festivals and abstruse discount methods. They will become more rational in spending, observed Echo Gong, an analyst with research agency Coresight. “More and more consumers will do their own research before placing the orders, and only buy big-ticket items at the biggest discounts.”

The China Consumers Association, a state-backed advocacy group, warned consumers on Nov. 4 of misleading prices during Double 11. 

Lower-tier cities are the main driver of new user growth, although consumers from higher-tier cities will still be the major shoppers. A report from Bain & Company expects more first-time Singles Day shoppers from lower-tier cities than from first and second-tier cities.

They may not be first-time online shoppers, however, given that platforms like Pingduoduo have reached many consumers in lower-tier cities. It’s therefore possible that shoppers from smaller cities will take part on Taobao’s platforms during such a big sales day, according to Zhang Gang, assistant professor of economics at CKGSB.

Conclusion: After more than a decade of development, e-commerce platforms and brands should understand that Singles Day is not their guaranteed sales booster.

Singles Day is good news for consumers looking to buy products at a lower price. But whether the event is sufficient to stimulate economic recovery hinges on how effectively new brands emerge to create new demand and how widely Singles Day penetrates across the country, according to CKGSB’s Zhang Gang.

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China proposes a rating system for internet platforms https://technode.com/2021/11/01/china-proposes-a-rating-system-for-internet-platforms/ Mon, 01 Nov 2021 08:17:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163051 Alibaba China tech investmentChina is continuing to beef up efforts to regulate the internet by establishing an oversight framework for its technology sector; the proposed rating system follows numerous penalties this year for offenses ranging from monopolistic practices to data breaches.]]> Alibaba China tech investment

China’s top market regulator introduced Friday a draft rating system for Chinese internet companies in an attempt to define their services and corresponding responsibilities. 

Why it matters: China is continuing to beef up efforts to regulate the internet by establishing an oversight framework for its technology sector; the proposed rating system follows numerous penalties this year for offenses ranging from monopolistic practices to data breaches.

READ MORE: China’s tech giants aren’t ‘immune’ to antitrust anymore

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) on Oct. 29 issued for public comment draft guidelines for a rating system for Chinese internet platforms that includes platforms’ future responsibilities. 

  • The Chinese market watchdog will classify internet platforms into six categories according to industry, namely online sales, life service, social entertainment, information, financial services, and computational applications.
  • The platforms are further classified into super, large, and medium-and-small based on their user scale, business type, and capacity.
  • The regulator defines super platforms as those having more than 500 million annual active users, a wide range of business types, and a market value of more than RMB 1 trillion ($156 billion). The description applies to tech giants such as Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, and Meituan.
  • Large platforms are defined as having more than RMB 50 million annual active users and a market valuation of more than RMB 100 billion. The draft doesn’t give specific benchmarks for medium and small platforms, only referring vaguely to them as having “certain” users and market caps, among other criteria.
  • Super platforms are expected to uphold more responsibilities by playing a leading role in promoting fairness in competition, opening up their ecosystems, securing data, developing risk management, and fostering innovation.
  • The concept of a “super platform” will be “conducive to deepening the understanding of antitrust issues and addressing the balanced development of platforms,” according to SAMR.
  • The public comment period runs until Nov. 8. SAMR gave no indication when the rules would go into effect.

Context: The total value of Chinese internet platforms with a market cap greater than $1 billion increased from $770.2 billion in 2015 to $3.5 trillion in 2020, with an average annual compound growth rate of 35.4%, according to data from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology.

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Meituan establishes Amazon-style special team led by founder Wang Xing https://technode.com/2021/10/29/meituan-establishes-amazon-style-special-team-led-by-founder-wang-xing/ Fri, 29 Oct 2021 05:36:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=163012 retail e-commerce MeituanMeituan launches a new business strategy, seeking new growth points amid intensifying regulatory pressure. ]]> retail e-commerce Meituan

Chinese food delivery giant Meituan has begun to carry out a new business strategy, focusing more on growing its retail business. The company made a few top-down organizational changes to support its new strategy, pivoting from “food plus platform” to “retail plus technology,” Chinese media LatePost reported on Wednesday. 

Why it matters: The Tencent-backed firm is seeking new growth points amid intensifying regulatory pressure. 

Details: Meituan founder and Chief Executive Officer Wang Xing announced in an internal meeting on Wednesday that the company is going to set up a special team to oversee the operation of its retail business, the new business priority for the company, LatePost reported.

  • The team includes five members, including CEO Wang Xing, Wang Puzhong and Chen Liang. The latter two are senior vice presidents overseeing the company’s home delivery and grocery delivery arms, respectively. The other two members are Guo Wanhui, the head of restaurant produce delivery platform Kuailv, and the head of Meituan app Li Shubin.
  • The company has integrated the business of Meituan Youxuan, a community grocery unit and Kuailv to increase efficiency. Chen will lead the integrated team with assistance from Guo.
  • With the move, Meituan is taking a leaf out of Amazon’s book, which created a similar D-team in 2008, a critical transitional phase for the e-commerce giant to shift to a digital giant.
  • Guo Qing, a member of the company’s senior executive team called S-team and manager of its transportation unit, is going to leave the company to work on his own startup, according to LatePost. Home delivery president Zhang Chuan reportedly will replace Guo.
  • Meituan declined to comment on the story when contacted by TechNode Friday morning.

Context: Meituan and several other Chinese tech giants have been under growing scrutiny from regulators as well as the public. Meituan was fined RMB 3.4 billion ($534 million) for anti-competitive practices earlier this month. 

  • Meituan has suffered a brain drain over the past years, with at least eight executives leaving since 2019. Senior vice president and co-founder Wang Huiwen left the company at the end of 2020.
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Singles Day to see more first-time shoppers from lower-tier cities: report https://technode.com/2021/10/28/singles-day-to-see-more-first-time-shoppers-from-lower-tier-cities-report/ Thu, 28 Oct 2021 08:04:26 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162971 For this year’s Singles Day shopping festival in China, there will be more first-time shoppers from lower-tier cities than from first and second-tier cities.]]>

For this year’s Singles Day shopping festival, there will be more first-time shoppers from lower-tier cities than from first and second-tier cities, according to a report published Wednesday by management consulting firm Bain & Company.

Why it matters: The change highlights a symbolic shift for e-commerce growth in tier-three cities and below, cities often projected as the new growth engine for e-commerce in China.

READ MORE: Singles Day 2020—bigger, longer, and more live

Details: Chinese consumers remain passionate about the annual fall event, China’s largest online shopping festival. Started as a one-day event by e-commerce giant Alibaba thirteen years ago on Nov. 11, it has grown to a month-long shopping spree with participation by scores of platforms. Overall, 95% of the 3,000 netizens who joined the survey hoped to make purchases, according to the Bain report.  

  • About half of those surveyed said they plan to spend more than last year; only 8% plan to reduce the spending. The average expected expenditure per customer was RMB 2,104 ($329). Female buyers are expected to spend more than males.
  • China’s e-commerce market remains fragmented, with more than 50% of the consumers intending to shop on at least three platforms, the report shows.
  • “Retail in China is approaching a point where there can be no growth strategy without a loyalty strategy,” said James Yang, a co-author of the report. 
  • Over the past decade, Chinese customers grew used to deep discounts and aggressive competition between platforms as both platforms and brands focused on getting large GMV (Gross Merchandise Value) figures. Platforms are placing less emphasis on GMV these days. 
  • The report points out that retailers and platforms are paying more attention to new benchmarks, like customer lifetime value and consumer retention; these measures can help them to win “during a broader spread of events across the year,” the report said.
  • E-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD are already cultivating loyalty with membership programs offering more values, better customer support, and faster deliveries.

Context: The first platform to launch Singles Day this year, Alibaba began events on Oct. 20, emphasizing sustainability and inclusiveness. 

  • Alibaba’s Taobao online marketplace crashed and stayed down for 17 minutes on opening day due to a traffic spike generated by a sudden inflow of “over enthusiastic” customers, the company explained in a Weibo post.
  • Top KOLs like Austin Li and Viya achieved total sales of RMB 18.9 billion during their livestreaming sessions on Oct. 20.
  • JD launched its month-long promotion for Singles Day on Oct. 17, by adding to its campaign a new on-demand delivery feature together with its grocery delivery affiliate Dada Nexus Group.
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INSIGHTS | Is China’s virtual idol boom a marketing trend with staying power? https://technode.com/2021/10/27/insights-is-chinas-virtual-idol-boom-a-marketing-trend-with-staying-power/ Wed, 27 Oct 2021 02:38:43 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162934 Virtual idols are on the upswing this year thanks to technological developments, the coming-of-age of teenagers as independent consumers.]]>

Less than six months after Ayayi first popped up on the Twitter-like social network Weibo in May, she had attracted more than 512,000 followers, many of them millennial female office workers. A hashtag of her name has pulled more than 5.5 million views on lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu. A fashion-forward, white-blonde 20-something with flawless skin, Ayayi is still relatable.

She posts about mundane matters like commuting on the Beijing subway or watching grandpas play chess on the sidewalks. Soon a powerful influencer, she snagged deals to promote upscale brands like Louis Vuitton and Givenchy. Somehow, she even has time to work as the digital manager of Alibaba’s Tmall Super Brand.

Insights

Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.

But then, Ayayi is not human. She is a virtual idol developed by Shanghai-based Ranmai Technology. She is one of over 20 virtual characters trending on Xiaohongshu, receiving lots of attention from fashion names searching for new channels to engage with consumers. With multiple job titles from NFT artist to fashion brand manager, Ayayi has worked with brands such as Sandro, Bose, and Fila. Ranmai Technology, a startup that develops digital human images and storylines, reportedly has a net worth of RMB 600 million (around $93.9 million).

Xiaohongshu, often referred to as China’s Instagram, already embraced an active KOL (key opinion leader) community as an efficient marketing vehicle for brands to promote their products on the social commerce platform. The company is now taking a virtual turn for its KOL strategies.

Xiaohongshu is among a slew of Chinese tech firms scrambling to capitalize on China’s virtual idols boom of the past two years. Early on, virtual idols caught the attention of tech giants like Alibaba and ByteDance.

But will the current buzz prove to be a high watermark for the industry? Or are the virtual idols here to stay?

Bottom line: Virtual idols remain a niche market targeting only a small group of ACGN (animation, comic, game, and novel) fans, although Chinese companies have been developing digital characters for the past decade. The sector is on the upswing this year thanks to technological developments, the coming-of-age of teenage ACGN fans as independent consumers, and China’s recent crackdown on the fan economy due to scandals involving human idols.

“Because China’s digital landscape is rapidly changing, it’s difficult to predict whether virtual KOLs born in the current ecosystems will be able to keep up with the way the digital ecosystem will evolve. But one thing is certain: major Chinese tech companies are all jumping on the virtual KOL bandwagon.”

— Pablo Mauron, partner and managing director of Digital Luxury Group

What are virtual idols?

Virtual idols are computer-generated animated images. Developers use advanced animation and rendering technologies to produce characters with finely detailed facial expressions and body movements. 

While they resemble real human beings to varying degrees, the virtual figures in the “metaverse” may boast even greater diversity. Different forms fulfill different roles. In addition to hiring virtual idols from the West like the fashionista influencer Noonoouri (created by German designer Joerg Zuber) and the freckled “musical artist” Lil Miquela (the brainchild of little-known Los Angeles media startup Brud), China is creating plenty of its own popular and profitable virtual personas.

From left, images of popular idols Luo Tianyi, Ling, and singing group A-Soul.
  • Virtual idols have various personas such as singers, bands, KOLs/influencers, and broadcasters. Some are derivatives from existing IPs, virtual counterparts of human idols (e.g., pop star Jackson Yee with his virtual counterpart Qianmiao), or avatars of consumer brands.
  • Virtual singer Luo Tianyi is one of China’s most famous virtual idols. The 9-year-old singer with elongated anime-style limbs has more than 5 million followers on Weibo. She has represented such companies as Chang’an Automobile, Huawei, and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank.
  • Ling is a persona that combines classical Chinese beauty with contemporary style. She has 422,000 followers on Weibo, and has promoted brands such as Tesla, Vogue, and hip tea chain Nayuki.
  • A-Soul, a virtual pop girl group, became an instant hit on Chinese video-sharing site Bilibili after its launch in late 2020. The group, developed by Chinese celeb agency Yuehua Entertainment and Bytedance, has more than 3 million fans across platforms, mostly China’s young anime fans.
  • With the development of technology, computer-generated figures have acquired  increasing resemblance to human beings over the years, evolving from 2D animated figures like Luo Tianyi to 3D virtual figures such as Lil Miquela
  • The trend got another boost due to the growing global interest in the metaverse, an online world where people exist and communicate in shared virtual spaces. (Stay tuned for TechNode’s metaverse feature next week).

Virtual idols as a business

Virtual idols are deployed for various lines of business such as brand endorsements, live broadcasts, and even offline marketing campaigns.

Reggie Ba-Pe is the co-founder of Club Media, an entertainment agency that created virtual punk artist Ruby 9100 and a few months ago launched Shanghai-based virtual persona Maie. Ba-Pe reckoned that virtual humans are expensive, production heavy, and time-intensive.

Virtual idols as a marketing tool: As members of China’s Gen Z grow into independent consumers, they are bringing their tastes and wallets with them. And it’s no surprise that the brands are adapting the latest fads to tap consumers.

  • Tie-ups with brands are a main revenue source for virtual idols. The fact of the matter is that brands need to be where their audiences are and audiences are flocking to virtual spaces, said Ba-Pe, speaking from the experience of cooperating with Adidas for a co-branded sneaker “designed” by Club Media’s digital artist and stylist Ruby 9100m. 
  • “Younger audiences are shying away from traditional social media and gravitating towards video games and virtual spaces. These virtual spaces will need content, culture, and entertainment just like physical spaces and that’s why we are seeing a global migration into what is being coined “the metaverse,” he explained.
  • For the entrepreneur and music producer, virtual humans and idols are a “critical portal” for brands to enter and navigate the metaverse and will be “more important to brands than the other way around.”

A rising industry in figures:

China’s Gen Zers, the country’s digital natives who show a great appetite for  ACGN content, are the major force driving this boom.

  • The market size of China’s virtual idol industry increased 70.3% year on year to RMB 3.46 billion in 2020, according to a report from iiMedia Research. The consulting agency expects the market to be worth RMB 6.22 billion by 2021.
  • Meanwhile, the scale of virtual idol-related markets, including AR and VR, will reach RMB 107.5 billion in 2021, up from 64.7 billion in 2020, the report says.
  • Around 80% of the more than 2,000 netizens who joined the survey have the habit of following celebrities or idols from time to time, and 63.6% of them support and pay attention to the related developments of virtual idols. 
  • A dozen virtual idol startups, like Yunbo AI, DeepScience, and Wanxiang Culture, have received fundings this year. Most of the companies are still in early stages, either angel or A round, with investments in tens of millions RMB (about $2 million to $5 million).

Tech giants jump on the bandwagon

Tech giants are among the most avid advocates of the virtual idol trend, together with companies along related lines such as entertainment companies, brands, and media startups. By building virtual idol IPs or cooperation with existing idols, the tech giants try to enrich their existing e-commerce, gaming, and short video businesses with more interesting content.

  • Tencent, which already made big bets in the metaverse, launched a virtual idol men’s group based on their game Honor of Kings.
  • Bilibili, the acclaimed “spiritual home” of Chinese ACGN fans, is the controlling shareholder of startup Shanghai Henian Information Technology,  developer and operator of Luo Tianyi. Bilibili is also one of the earliest platforms in China to broadcast virtual idol concerts.
  • ByteDance got rights to singing girl group A-Soul after entering an alliance with Beijing-based celeb agency Yuehua Entertainment through a strategic investment. A-Soul is the first virtual addition to ByteDance’s pool of celebrity marketers that includes famous singer Wang Yibo. With advanced interactive capabilities, A-Soul has been employed for livestreaming e-commerce duties. 
  • Along with ByteDance, Alibaba invested in Yuehua. Alibaba also rolled out virtual livestreamers such as Xiao Dangjia to boost its booming live e-commerce business. The e-commerce giant named virtual influencer Ayayi as “digital manager” of Tmall Super Brand. She launched an NFT digital mooncake with Alibaba for this year’s Mid-Autumn Festival.
  • IQiyi is the owner of Dimension Nova, a virtual idol variety show, and Rich Boom, a virtual idol group featuring trendy culture and pop music.

A better choice than human celebrities for brands?

Human celebrities and virtual idols do not cannibalize each other, according to Mauron. Ba-Pe of Club Media agrees: “Virtual idols are about as much a threat to human KOLs as Coke Zero is to Diet Coke … Virtual idols are not threats to human ones at all.” 

Still, virtual idols as influencers have pros and cons for marketers.

Pros:

For brands, a less risky choice than real idols:  The volatility of working with humans has been on full display this year after several celebs fell from grace due to scandals ranging from alleged tax evasion and sexual assault to sharing opinions out of step with ruling Party ideology. This leaves virtual idols as less risky choices. 

Full tailoring: The content to be broadcast can be tailored to meet the needs of brands on every level. Idols can achieve things that real people cannot, and their images can be wholly controlled.

Extensive application scenario: The application scenarios for virtual idols are more extensive. Virtual figures are more accessible to fans for one-on-one interaction, usually of the chatbot level of complexity. Moreover, they can be present 24/7 on multiple sites.

Cons:

Legality for business endorsement: Virtual idols’ partnerships with brands work under cooperation agreements similar to endorsements. However, China’s Advertising Law bans endorsers, legal persons or organizations, from endorsing goods or services they have not used or received. 

  • There are still questions about whether virtual KOLs can be classified as endorsers, or whether brand-virtual KOL collaborations fall within the scope of advertising.
  • “There’s still room for interpretation when it comes to the legality of the matter,” said Mauron. 

Relatability: While virtual KOLs sound good on paper, DLG’s Mauron notes that digital personas may not have the same kind of personalities and color as human KOLs, making it harder for consumers to relate to them. “Without that element of relatability, it might also be more difficult to generate conversions with these virtual KOLs,” he said.

The virtual world is not immune to real-world problems. The data-faking issue that’s prevalent in human celebs’ metrics is also applicable to virtual idols. A Deloitte report reminds all organizations that wish to deploy avatars of the need to pay great attention to privacy and ethics issues.

Conclusion

It’s still too early to say whether virtual people will be marketing mainstays or passing fad.  But given the digitization of almost every cultural touchpoint, experts we talked to expect it is here to stay in some form. 

“Clearly, we are moving towards an increasingly digital future, rich with entertainment in these digital worlds. Regardless, if you’re an idol or a fan, the only way to engage with these new digital realms will be via an avatar.” said Ba-Pe.

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Luckin reports doubled revenue in first half of 2021 https://technode.com/2021/10/22/luckin-reports-doubled-revenue-in-first-half-of-2021/ Fri, 22 Oct 2021 04:59:37 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162858 luckin coffee starbucks fraud misconduct false salesChinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee released its unaudited financial report for the first half of 2021, posting doubled revenue.]]> luckin coffee starbucks fraud misconduct false sales

On Thursday, troubled Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee released its unaudited financial report for the first half of 2021, posting doubled revenue and narrowed losses.

Why it matters: This is Luckin’s first normalized financial report after the company admitted to reporting fraudulent sales numbers of $310 million in April 2020. The company filed bankruptcy in the US in February but managed to remain relevant in China’s competitive beverage market. 

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Luckin is not dead

Details: The company recorded RMB 3.2 billion ($492.9 million) revenue in the first half of 2021, leaping 106% year on year from RMB 1.5 billion in the same period of 2020.

  • The company warned that its performance in the first half of 2020 was “materially adversely affected” by the Covid-19 pandemic and advised investors to consider these factors when evaluating the growth metrics.
  • Chairman and CEO Guo Jinyi attributed the revenue growth to revenue increase from self-operated stores, increased order frequency, higher prices, and improved cost structure.
  • Revenue from core business product sales jumped 89% year on year to RMB 2.7 billion. Net loss fell 86.4% to RMB 211.4 million in the reporting period.
  • The company operates 5,259 stores as of June, including 4,018 self-operated stores and 1,241 franchised “partnership stores.”
  • Luckin is shifting to an asset-light model by growing more franchised stores. Luckin takes up to 40% of a franchised store’s profits once it reaches an agreed earnings threshold, depending on the size of the store.
  • The number of self-operated stores decreased by 5.8%, and partnership stores increased by 50.6% in the period. Self-operated stores achieved an operating profit margin of 16.3%. 
  • Revenue from partnership stores surged 357.8% year on year to RMB 441.2 million. 
  • Partnership store revenue accounted for 13.9% of Luckin’s total revenue in the first half, up from 6.2% in the same period last year.
  • The company’s average monthly transacting customers increased 35.1% year on year, from 7.8 million to 10.5 million, in the first half of 2020.

Context:  Luckin is attempting a comeback over the past year by settling the financial fraud. 

  • The firm agreed to pay a $180 million penalty to the US Securities and Exchange Commission to settle charges of sales fabrication in December 2020.
  • In September, Luckin settled a US class-action lawsuit, resolving some US investors’ claims against the company. Settlement amounts will be calculated based on a global settlement of $187.5 million.
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Xiaohongshu apologizes for misleading travel reviews https://technode.com/2021/10/18/xiaohongshu-apologizes-for-misleading-travel-reviews/ Mon, 18 Oct 2021 08:13:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162739 Over the past few years, Xiaohongshu has struggled to maintain users’ trust due to misleading and fraudulent reviews.]]>

Chinese social e-commerce app Xiaohongshu apologized for “deceitful” reviews of tourist attractions on the platform over the weekend to address mounting customer complaints. 

Why it matters: Xiaohongshu first emerged as a trusted review platform for China’s young middle-class consumers. But over the past few years, the company has struggled to maintain users’ trust due to misleading and fraudulent reviews.

  • Travel and tourism spot recommendation is an increasingly popular category on Xiaohongshu in addition to reviews of consumer products from cosmetics to garments.

READ MORE: Xiaohongshu battles to regain user trust amid KOL purge

Details: Xiaohongshu, also known as Little Red Book or RED, issued a statement on Sunday to offer their “sincere apologies” for failing to provide trustworthy reviews.

  • The app came under fire in the past few weeks. Users found some travel reviews from the app exaggerated the scenery by showing pictures with heavy beautifying filters.
  • A Weibo hashtag titled “Drastic contrast of filtered pics on Xiaohongshu” had attracted 400 million views as of Monday morning.
  • Xiaohongshu said in the statement that they will give more exposure to reviews that could help users to avoid such “traps.”
  • The app said it already required users and KOLs to avoid using too many beauty filters, especially when giving recommendations for cosmetics, fashion, and stores. The company reminds users that their reviews could be used to influence buying decisions before they post to the platform.

Context: Once an internet darling, Xiaohongshu has struggled in recent years to balance a scalable monetization model while maintaining its community feel. It has previously battled user trust issues and is facing fierce competition from other platforms. 

  • Xiaohongshu has received investments from Alibaba and Tencent. It is rare for two Chinese tech rivals to invest in the same company.
  • The company is reportedly mulling a Hong Kong stock market debut as soon as this year after suspending a proposed New York IPO plan this July due to Beijing’s stricter reins on overseas listings.
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LinkedIn to close China site amid ‘challenging operation environment’ https://technode.com/2021/10/15/linkedin-to-close-china-site-amid-challenging-operation-environment/ Fri, 15 Oct 2021 04:53:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162708 LinkedIn said “a more challenging operating environment” is one of the reasons behind its decision to close China site.]]>

LinkedIn said Thursday it will shut down the localized version of its services in China later this year. The professional social network cited “a more challenging operating environment” and “greater compliance requirements” as reasons for the move.

The Microsoft-owned firm plans to launch InJobs, a new standalone job app in China, later this year. The new app won’t include social feeds or post sharing. It only serves as a job listing and application portal. 

China is LinkedIn’s third-largest market, with 54 million users and behind the US and India, according to LinkedIn’s official statistics. LinkedIn’s withdrawal marks another significant retreat of US tech giants from China due to regulatory reasons and fierce local competition. Google left China more than a decade ago. Amazon ceased support for third-party merchants on its China site in 2019 after losing its market share to local competitors.

LinkedIn had previously tried to tap the Chinese market with fully localized service but to no avail. In 2015, the company rolled out a business social networking app called Chitu. The app failed to compete with local rivals like Maimai. LinkedIn shut down Chitu in 2019.

LinkedIn entered the Chinese market in 2014. Microsoft acquired the company in 2016.

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Meituan faces data privacy controversies after antitrust fine https://technode.com/2021/10/11/meituan-faces-data-privacy-controversy-after-antitrust-fine/ Mon, 11 Oct 2021 07:23:36 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162613 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan has come under fire for data privacy issues ranging from intensive location tracking to account safety loopholes.]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

Chinese life services app Meituan has come under fire for data privacy issues ranging from intensive location tracking to account safety loopholes.

Why it matters: Data privacy complaints are yet another blow to the Chinese “super app” Meituan, which was recently fined $534 million for antitrust violations.

Details: A Chinese gadget review vlogger named Xuanningxuan Sir criticized the app for tracking his location even when he’s not using it.

  • The Meituan app was reportedly tracking the vlogger’s location every five minutes around the clock on Oct. 8, according to a two-minute screen-shot video he shared in a Weibo post on Sunday. “This is creepy. What on earth do they want to do?” he asked in the post.
  • Xuanningxuan’s concerns are shared by many. On microblogging platform Weibo, the hashtag “Meituan app tracks user location all day around” had attracted 100 million views as of Monday morning.  
  • Separately, Wang Sicong, the son of China’s one-time richest man Wang Jianlin and a serial tech investor, reported his account on Meituan’s restaurant review app Dianping was stolen. The news also made local headlines on Monday.
  • Wang, known for being vocal online, reported the incident in a Sunday Weibo post. Xuanningxuan suggested on Weibo that an account security loophole could be the reason for Wang’s situation. Dianping only requires a phone number and birthdate for users to change the bound phone number of an account, potentially leaving accounts vulnerable to hackers.
  • Dianping responded to local media and said they had frozen Wang’s account to prevent further data leakage.

Context: Data privacy issues have drawn increasing attention in China, both from individuals and regulators. In August, the country approved one of the world’s strictest data privacy laws, aiming to curb data collection by technology companies.

  • Meituan is not the only company that faces such concerns. WeChat was criticized last week for regularly accessing users’ photo albums even when the app is not used. A statement from parent company Tencent promised to end the practice.
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Meituan fined $534 million for antitrust violations https://technode.com/2021/10/08/meituan-fined-534-million-for-antitrust-violations/ Fri, 08 Oct 2021 10:31:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162576 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan, a Chinese food delivery giant, was fined 3.4 billion ($534 million) for antitrust practices on Friday. ]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

China’s top antitrust regulator on Friday imposed a RMB 3.4 billion ($534 million) fine on Chinese food delivery giant Meituan for antitrust practices. 

Why it matters: The hefty penalty on Meituan is yet another anti-competitive strike from Chinese regulators. In April, regulators slapped a record $2.8 billion fine on Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba for similar offenses.

READ MORE: Big Sell | Antitrust comes for Meituan

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top market watchdog, said in a Friday statement (in Chinese) that it had issued a $534 million fine on Meituan six months after launching an investigation of the food delivery giant. 

  • Regulators said the investigation found that Meituan had forced restaurants and other merchants to list exclusively on its platform, a practice commonly known as “forced exclusivity.” 
  • Meituan punished merchants who refused to comply by charging higher commission rates, giving them less exposure on the app, and imposing other unfair practices.
  • The penalty is equivalent to 3% of Meituan’s RMB 114.7 billion revenue generated in the calendar year of 2020 in China. For comparison, Alibaba’s April fine was about 4% of its annual revenue.
  • The regulator also required Meituan to refund exclusive partnership deposits to merchants on the platform, amounting to RMB 1.3 billion.
  • The regulator ordered the company to revamp its operations and file self-examination compliance reports to SAMR for the next three years.
  • The company said in a Friday response (in Chinese) that it has “accepted the penalty with sincerity and will ensure our compliance with determination.”

Context: China’s antitrust crackdowns this year have punished some of the country’s best-known tech companies, including Tencent and Alibaba.

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JD.com, Baidu invest $400 million in elevator ad firm Xinchao https://technode.com/2021/10/08/jd-com-baidu-invest-400-million-in-elevator-ad-firm-xinchao/ Fri, 08 Oct 2021 07:48:52 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162568 JD.com and Baidu have jointly invested $400 million in elevator advertising firm Xinchao Media Group as returning investors.]]>

JD.com and Baidu have jointly invested $400 million in elevator advertising firm Xinchao Media Group.

Why it matters: The two Chinese tech giants are returning investors in the Chengdu-based media company. The deal is a major external investment for JD following a management reshuffle. In May, Hu Zhengwei, the former executive board of investment firm Warburg Pincus, became JD’s investment unit head, replacing JD’s vice president Hu Ningfeng. 

Details: The deal makes JD the largest shareholder of Xinchao, according to a report by China STAR Market. Xu Lei, president of JD, is now a board member of Xinchao.

  • JD confirmed the investment with TechNode but declined to disclose the specific amount it invested.
  • Xinchao’s corporate website says the company is valued at more than $2 billion. 

Context: Xinchao operates more than 650,000 digital advertising panels in elevators across 105 Chinese cities, reaching 200 million middle-class consumers and serving more than 23,000 clients, according to the company website.

  • JD led a RMB 1 billion investment in Xinchao in 2019, while Baidu led a RMB 2.1 billion fund in the elevator-ad company in November 2018. Other investors include home furnishing chain store Red Star Macalline, classified ad site 58.com, and edtech platform TAL Education.
  • The company plans to invest RMB 10 billion in the next five years, aiming to operate 2 million digital ad panels and reach 300 million to 500 million middle-class Chinese residents.
  • JD.com’s e-commerce rival Alibaba has made similar investment moves, holding a 6.6% stake in Focus Media, another elevator ad company, after investing $15 billion in July 2018.
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The Big Sell | Is China’s courier price war reaching a tipping point? https://technode.com/2021/09/28/big-sell-is-chinas-courier-price-war-reaching-a-tipping-point/ Tue, 28 Sep 2021 05:29:52 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162401 singles day logistics alibabaThe vicious price war among Chinese couriers has taken a toll on an industry that’s often referred to as the “backbone” of e-commerce.]]> singles day logistics alibaba

Over the past two years, the vicious price war among Chinese delivery companies has taken a toll on an industry that’s often referred to as the “backbone” of the country’s e-commerce boom. Recently, signs have emerged that the grueling battle may finally be reaching a breaking point.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

Beginning in September, six delivery services started to charge an extra RMB 0.1 ($0.02) per parcel, a major change in pricing strategy, given that courier companies have charged less than delivery costs for years in pursuit of capturing market share. 

The companies that joined the price increase are some of the biggest in the sector: ZTO Express, YTO Express, STO Express, Yunda Express, Best Express, and J&T Express. All pledged to use the extra money to boost delivery worker incomes and protect their rights. 

The change is mainly a response to intensifying regulatory pressure to improve conditions for delivery workers. But there are other, perhaps more pressing motivations for Chinese courier companies to use this shift to mark the beginning of the end for a price war that has had an impact on the long-term and sustainable development of the industry.

“The price war shows signs of easing, but there’s still a long way for the whole industry to get back on track to healthy development,” Lei Zhongnan, CEO of logistics tracking platform Kuaidi 100, told Chinese media recently.

Express delivery is no longer a lucrative business: Data from China’s National Post Bureau (NPB) shows that the volume of parcels delivered in China surged 40.1% year on year to 67.3 billion in the first eight months of this year. That’s already 81% of last year’s volume of 83 billion units. 

  • However, the expansion in volume comes on top of a much slower revenue growth. Revenue generated from the sector climbed 23.4% year on year to RMB 650.9 billion over the first eight months, or 74% of 2020’s RMB 875 billion total revenue, NPB data shows.
  • China’s express delivery market is a highly concentrated one that’s dominated by a few top players including SF Express, Alibaba-backed Best Express, and a number of couriers collectively known as “Tongda Operators” — ZTO Express, YTO Express, STO Express, and Yunda Express. The six operators represented more than 80% of China’s express delivery market in 2020, according to data from market intelligence platform askci.com.
  • In a crowded market, the companies, mostly offering the same services, had been relying more and more on lowering prices to gain market share. Per parcel delivery price dropped 13.1% year on year to RMB 9.8 ($1.5) in the first half of this year.
(Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

The negative impact of the price war is explicit in the gloomy financial reports of the major players, as courier companies see their revenue skyrocket while profits sink. Six out of the seven listed courier businesses achieved double-digit revenue growth in the first half of this year; YTO and ZTO lead the group with an over 30% year-on-year revenue jump. But net profits slumped across the board, with STO suffering the steepest plunge of more than 300%. STO and BEST Express are recording losses.

  • Delivery companies are less willing to bleed for market share. In August, per parcel delivery price of YTO Express increased 5.45% month on month, or a 0.95% increase compared with a year ago. 
  • Similarly, SF Express and Yunda Express increased per parcel price by less than one percent month on month, although the figures still represent year on year drops. 
(Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

How the war began: Despite competitive tensions, there was a delicate balance among major courier companies before 2019. But that balance was disrupted by the entrance of Southeast Asian delivery upstart J&T in 2020. Founded by a Chinese entrepreneur in Indonesia, J&T Express expanded to China later after becoming a quick success in the Southeast Asian market in 2015.

  • The company expanded rapidly, reaching the 20 million parcel per day milestone within 10 months of entering China, a feat that took rivals like STO, YTO, ZTO, and Yunda Express more than a decade to achieve. Its most effective weapon is, of course, price cuts.
  • In one of its fiercest campaigns, which took place in March last year, J&T offered nationwide delivery for just RMB 0.80 per parcel for users in Yiwu, China’s eastern commodity center, compared with the RMB 1.2 to RMB 1.3 per parcel offered by rivals.
  • Similar to “Tongda” couriers’ early boom being driven by orders from Alibaba marketplaces, J&T’s initial boom in China has mainly been driven by delivery for e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo, which accounts for around 80% of its orders. 

Price wars in the China tech arena are generally fueled by venture capital and express delivery is no exception. J&T has received multiple hefty rounds of investment over the past two years at sky-rocketing valuations.

  • J&T Express completed a $1.8 billion financing round at a valuation of $7.8 billion in April, higher than market cap for STO Express, Yunda Express, and YTO Express at the time.
  • The company closed a $250 million strategic investment deal in August.
  • J&T Express reportedly plans to raise over $1 billion from a U.S. initial public offering (IPO) as soon as the fourth quarter, at a $5 billion valuation.

Delivery workers are working more for less: Price wars have also led to lower incomes for delivery drivers who earn on per package delivery fees. As delivery drivers shift to other industries for better pay, the delivery worker shortage has become a serious problem for courier companies. 

  • China had more than 4 million express delivery workers in 2020. But as a result of deteriorating working conditions and lower pay, the voluntary turnover rate of express logistics personnel climbed to 33.1%, the highest across all industries.
  • Increased pay and better working conditions could solve the labor shortage, but for courier companies, higher pay for workers means increased costs, making their low-price model economically inefficient.

Regulators have recently stepped in to protect the rights of express and food delivery drivers as part of the state’s efforts to help lower-income workers amid the authorities’ declared aim of creating “common prosperity.” Local and central government agencies have rolled out rules trying to end unreasonable low-price deliveries.

  • April 9: The municipal postal authority in Yiwu cracked down on delivery services J&T Express and Best Express for price-dumping, partially closing their distribution centers in the county-level city.
  • April 22: Zhejiang provincial government issued a guideline forbidding courier companies from taking parcel orders at lower than the cost of delivery. E-commerce platform operators were also warned against using technological means to interfere with merchants’ choice of couriers.
  • July 8: Seven central government regulators, including the Ministry of Transport, the State Post Bureau and the National Development and Reform Commission, issued guidelines to protect the rights of express delivery workers, including measures aimed at ensuring more reasonable salaries, having companies buy them social insurance, and clarifying the companies’ responsibilities to protect workers’ rights.

What’s next?

  • Increased pay and improved welfare may alleviate the delivery force shortage to a certain extent. An experienced courier can handle 200 to 300 parcels per day, an anonymous delivery worker told local media. That means the RMB 0.1 per parcel increase would boost their average monthly income by about RMB500.
  • Instead of providing similar services, the couriers are trying to expand their product lines. “Tongda” couriers have expanded into the high-end express delivery market, and SF Express has upped its investment in cold chain delivery and delivery installment services.  
  • Some companies are ditching price wars altogether. Lan Haisong, CEO of ZTO Express, said it’s “irrational and unsustainable” to compete for market share with “unnecessary” price cuts. ZTO Express topped the seven major courier businesses with RMB 180 million net profit in Q1 this year.

Conclusion: Price wars have been a successful weapon for market entry for many delivery companies such as J&T. But such tactics are not likely to last. The state is tightening its regulation on irregular pricing, while there is renewed focus on the rights of delivery workers and the impact on the user experience. Increasing costs also mean that a number of major courier companies are now turning their backs on the delivery price wars. 

Also in the news

Investors bet on robot delivery: Increasing labor costs have propelled the growth of robotic delivery technologies recently. This month, investment has flocked to a bunch of business-faced startups ready to apply robotic delivery tech in various fields, from warehouse management to the service industry.

  • Chinese service robot maker PuduTech announced a RMB 500 million ($78 million) investment on Sept. 14.
  • Keenon Robotics made public the next day the completion of a $200 million Series D funding led by returning investor SoftBank.
  • Hai Robotics, a Chinese warehouse robotics startup, announced on Sept. 22 two financing rounds totaling more than $200 million.

Alibaba expands community group-buy push amid rival startup fallout: Consolidation in China’s community group-buy market continues. As startup casualties increase, Alibaba is pushing further to fill the market gap left by the collapse of smaller rivals.

  • Alibaba-backed online grocer Nice Tuan is reportedly downsizing its operations in August.
  • Meicai, a Chinese app that supplies farm-to-table produce for restaurants, has been reducing its operations and laying off employees this month.
  • Chengxin Youxuan, the community group-buy unit of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Global, shut down operations in 22 provinces, accounting for more than 60% of its service locations.

Alibaba rebranded its community group-buy unit to “Taocaicai” on Sept. 16 as some rivals have lost momentum after rounds of market consolidation. The new brand will incorporate Freshippo Market and Taobao Maicai, Alibaba’s two existing community grocery services.

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​​Luckin Coffee reaches $187.5 million settlement deal with investors https://technode.com/2021/09/22/%e2%80%8b%e2%80%8bluckin-coffee-reaches-187-5-million-settlement-deal-with-investors/ Wed, 22 Sep 2021 07:57:43 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162283 Luckin Coffee is striving for a business turnaround and repairing its image after the April 2020 fraud scandal. ]]>

Luckin Coffee has settled a US class action lawsuit, resolving some US investors’ claims against the company, which admitted in April 2020 to fabricating $310 million in sales. Settlement amounts will be calculated based on a global settlement of $187.5 million, according to a company statement issued Sept. 19. 

Why it matters: The bankrupt company, striving for a business turnaround, is moving a step further to repair its image after the fraud scandal

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Luckin is not dead

Details: The settlement plan is still subject to approval from courts in the US and Cayman Islands, according to a Tuesday statement from the company, which is registered in the Cayman Islands.

  • Luckin’s chairman and chief executive, Guo Jinyi, said this settlement will resolve a “significant contingent liability” for the company, allowing it to “move forward with a greater focus on operations and execution of strategic plans.”
  • The company also reported Tuesday in its annual report that revenue increased 33.3% year on year to RMB4.0 billion ($618.1 million) in 2020, despite being hit by the pandemic. The revenue growth was primarily driven by price increases, said the company.
  • Luckin operated 3,929 self-operated stores as of 2020, a drop of around 15% year on year from 4,507 stores in 2019. As a result of the ongoing restructuring, the number of the company’s partnership stores nearly tripled to 874 in 2020 compared to 2019. 
  • Shares of the company, still available on the OTC market after delisting in July, climbed nearly 40% to $15 per share so far this year on business turnaround prospects. That is well below its historic peak of $50 per share reached in January 2020 when it was listed on the Nasdaq.

Context: The fraud perpetrated by the once high-flying coffee chain has made regulators and investors more wary of Chinese tech companies.

  • Luckin agreed in December to pay a $180 million penalty to the US Securities and Exchange Commission to settle charges of sales fabrication.
  • China’s State Administration for Market Regulation imposed an RMB 61 million fine on Luckin and a group of affiliated companies last September for creating unfair competition by stating fraudulent sales figures.
  • Lu Zhengyao, the ousted founder of Luckin, is trying to make a retail comeback with his noodle chain restaurant Qu Xiaomian.
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Emerge 2021 | Innovation listens to the market https://technode.com/2021/09/18/emerge-2021-innovation-listens-to-the-market/ Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:17:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162249 Listening to market demands is a key component for innovation, a process that, by definition, turns ideas into solutions to add value for customers.]]>

Listening to market demands is a key component for innovation, a process that, by definition, turns ideas into solutions to add value for customers. Kapil Kane, director of innovation at Intel China, learned this lesson on the field as the head of the company’s corporate startup accelerator GrowthX.

Kane recalled that the six-year-old accelerator was focused on developing projects involving robots or drones in the first few years. These things “seemed very cool” but they are “difficult to bring to the market in a timely fashion,” he said, addressing a half-full audience attending TechNode’s Emerge 2021 conference in Beijing on Friday.

Through talks with such Chinese clients as Alibaba and Tencent, the US chipmaker gradually learned what kind of innovations are necessary from the users’ perspective. In some cases, changes made in response to customer demands would open a completely new market for the clients, he added.

Instead of going for the moon-shooting ideas, Kane and his team shifted their innovative approaches in pursuit of something they call “adjacent innovations.” “We don’t try to change or build a new thing. We try to use what we have and create new applications on top of that, which bring value to our customers in the industry,” he said.

Some believe big names like Intel have the edge in advancing innovations with abundant resources, financially or otherwise. Another cohort, led by Amazon’s billionaire founder Jeff Bezos, trusts that the nimbleness and flexibility in small teams are true propellers to unlock innovations.

An organization’s size doesn’t matter for Kane, however. Companies that aspire to encourage internal innovation should forge a platform or mechanism to facilitate idea flow and growth. “The key is to take that first step to get moving. And also to get some small wins step by step,” he said.

Co-working, as a relatively new working mode, has been linked with startups and entrepreneurship for allowing extensive cost savings and better opportunities for networking.

Sean Lim, general manager at real estate and co-working space operator TianRun Asset Management, takes a similar customer-concentric approach for running shared spaces, or modern hubs for startup and innovation culture. As space operators, it’s important to understand what are the challenges and requirements the startups face so as to support their development by creating an ecosystem that incorporates crucial factors, like funding opportunities, government support, and occasions to connect with similar-minded peers. 

Covid-19 has drastically changed the coworking industry, along with a series of businesses that are offline in nature. “It’s all about offline before the pandemic when everyone had a workstation”, said Lim. After the pandemic, companies are adopting a safer approach to utilizing space.

Since sales teams spend so much time outside the office anyway, many companies are thinking about moving them away from the office permanently to reduce staff density due to social distancing concerns. Some also are thinking about moving their R&D teams to more decentralized locations because of cost concerns. Others adopt a more hybrid approach, he explained.

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Fintech firm XTransfer becomes a unicorn following $138 million Series D https://technode.com/2021/09/17/xtransfer-china-b2b-fintech-firm-unicorn-following-138-million-series-d/ Fri, 17 Sep 2021 07:49:11 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162203 The capital signals investor confidence in services supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).]]>

XTransfer, a Chinese cross-border financial and risk management services provider, announced Friday that it raised $138 million in Series D. The round lifts the fintech firm to unicorn status. A unicorn is an unlisted startup valued at $1 billion or more.

Why it matters: The capital signals investor confidence in services supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

  • The funding round came as China’s cross-border trade bounces back in the post-pandemic period. China’s import and export volume surged 23.7% year on year in the first eight months of this year, according to data from China’s General Administration of Customs. 

Details: US investment firm D1 Capital Partners led the current round with participation from existing investors.

  • The proceeds will be used to upgrade XTransfer’s products, invest in big data and artificial intelligence, bolster the anti-money laundering (AML) risk management system, and recruit talent for overseas expansion, according to the company’s statement.
  • “Cross-border e-commerce is growing by leaps and bounds due to policy support,” said Bill Deng, founder and chief executive of XTransfer. 
  • “For exporters, the latest round of overseas expansion has been a lot different from a few years earlier, marked by diverse sales channels and fragmented orders. Digitization is a major trend amid cut-throat market competition,”  he added.

Context: Founded in 2017, Xtransfer specializes in business-to-business (B2B) cross-border financial services. It serves a client base of approximately 150,000 SMEs, mostly in China.

  • XTransfer generates revenue by collecting foreign exchange service fees from clients.
  • The Shanghai-headquartered company didn’t disclose total funding but had raised $30 million at the time of the B round in 2019. That was followed by two undisclosed batches in the C round.
  • Investors in previous rounds include Yunqi Partners, Gaorong Capital, 01 Capital, eWTP Capital, Telstra Ventures, MindWorks Capital, and Lavender Hill Capital Partners.
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SoftBank leads $200 million D round in Chinese service robot startup Keenon https://technode.com/2021/09/15/softbank-leads-200-million-d-round-for-keenon-chinese-service-robot-startup/ Wed, 15 Sep 2021 08:53:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162155 The two hefty deals this week highlight rising investor attention to the robot delivery market, an emerging sector ready for commercialization and on the rise thanks to the booming non-contact economy in the post-epidemic era. ]]>

Chinese server robot maker Keenon Robotics announced Wednesday that it received $200 million in Series D funding led by returning investor SoftBank. Keenon says it is the largest funding ever in the service robot sector. 

Keenon’s funding news comes just one day after rival PuduTech announced a RMB 500 million ($78 million) investment.

Why it matters: The two hefty deals this week highlight rising investor attention to the robot delivery market, an emerging sector ready for commercialization and on the rise thanks to the booming non-contact economy in the post-epidemic era. 

  • SoftBank Vision Fund, a venture capital fund of Japan’s SoftBank Group conglomerate, steps further into the robot delivery industry, adding to its bets on semi-humanoid robot Pepper and industrial robot maker Youibot.
  • By the end of this year, the global robot market is expected to be worth $33.6 billion, according to a report (in Chinese) released during the World Robot Conference this week. The Chinese robot market accounts for around RMB 83.9 billion, or 39% of the global market, the report shows.
  • The market for service robots, which Keenon and PuduTech are engaged in, is forecast to be worth RMB 30.3 billion by 2021. The segment will be worth RMB 60 billion by 2023, thanks to growth in visual guided robots and accompanying robots.

Detail: The company didn’t disclose the size of SoftBank’s investment. Other investors in the round include CICC ALPHA and Prosperity7 Ventures, a diversified growth fund of Aramco Ventures. China Renaissance is the exclusive financial advisor for this financing.

  • The proceeds will be used by Keenon to “drive innovation through its in-house R&D to provide new, efficient, and cost-saving applications” and for “scaling its current robot platform through the expansion in new markets and identifying new prospects to promote growth and boost revenue”, according to company founder Tony Li. 
  • “We believe robotic solutions can have a profound impact across the services industry by assisting with repetitive, tedious workflows,” said Kentaro Matsui, managing director of SoftBank Group, in the statement.
  • Keenon currently has more than 10,000 clients in over 60 countries located in Asia, Europe, and North America.

Context: Founded in 2010, the Shanghai-based company offers commercial service robots and intelligent delivery solutions for industries such as real estate, healthcare, and hospitality. Starting with a server robot in restaurants, Keenon gradually expanded its application to hotels, karaoke lounges, hospitals, and other scenarios.

  • SoftBank Ventures Asia led a nine-digit yuan series C round in Keenon in December last year. Investors from earlier rounds include Source Code Capital and Yunqi Partners.

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Insights | Why Chinese tech giants are becoming very generous https://technode.com/2021/09/14/insights-why-chinese-tech-giants-are-becoming-very-generous/ Tue, 14 Sep 2021 02:42:21 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=162109 Under intensifying regulatory pressure, Chinese tech giants are scrambling to show their willingness to operate and invest in compliance with the state’s broad goal of “common prosperity.”]]>

Philanthropy is shifting from a “nice to have” initiative to a “must have” commitment for Chinese tech giants.

Chinese internet firms ramped up their donations for the public good over the past few months, giving away billions of dollars to causes ranging from technology innovation to bridging income inequality. The move is widely viewed as an effort to placate a state that lately seems to be scrutinizing their every move.

Bottom line: Under intensifying regulatory pressure, Chinese tech companies are scrambling to show their willingness to operate and invest in compliance with the state’s broad goal of “common prosperity.” The change forced these tech titans, many already suffering selloff pressure due to tighter state reins, to seek a balance between shareholder interests and the higher operating costs due to huge donations.

Insights

Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.

Brief timeline: Tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent are already active donors through their corporate funds. The companies’ billionaire founders are also writing large checks for charity from their personal foundations. Alibaba’s Jack Ma topped Forbes annual China charity list with nearly $500 million in donations in 2020. Tencent’s Pony Ma came in third with about $402 million, and ByteDance’s Zhang Yiming was fifth with $189 million. Pinduoduo’s Colin Huan topped the Hurun China Philanthropy List 2021 with donations totaling $1.9 billion.

Unlike previous donations that tended to be sporadic initiatives by individual companies, there’s a newfound generosity from nearly every major tech company over the past few months. 

  • Tencent invested RMB 50 billion ($7.7 billion) in “sustainable societal innovation” projects in April. The gaming titan later doubled the sum, giving an additional RMB 50 billion to the company’s “common prosperity fund” in August.
  • Alibaba announced in August an investment of RMB 100 billion across ten key initiatives to promote common prosperity in China. The company will establish the Alibaba Group Common Prosperity Advancement Working Committee, chaired by chief executive Daniel Zhang, as a permanent mechanism dedicated to delivering on the key initiatives by 2025. The committee will focus on technology innovation, economic development, high-quality employment creation, care for vulnerable groups, and the establishment of a common prosperity development fund.
  • Pinduoduo rolled out in mid-August a RMB 10 billion agriculture initiative to address critical needs in the agricultural sector and rural areas such as food security and agricultural technology. In March, Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang stepped down as chairman after giving away 2.37% of his shares, worth $1.85 billion, to charity last year.
  • Meituan’s founder and CEO Wang Xing in June donated $2.3 billion worth of Meituan shares; his company is still undergoing an antitrust probe by regulators following his controversial comments hinting of discontent with the government, wiped tens of billions of dollars off Meituan’s market value.
  • Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun transferred $2.2 billion worth of shares in the company to the corporate Xiaomi Foundation and the personal Lei Jun Foundation in July. This is in addition to the nearly $1 billion that Lei announced in April he would donate to charity.
  • Zhang Yiming, founder of TikTok developer ByteDance, is giving RMB 500 million of his own money to establish an education fund. 

Compared with previous donations, tech firms’ burst of generosity over the past months was mainly directed towards the goal of public welfare and reducing inequality, a goal made explicit in the company’s five-year plan released this March.

The donations are mainly directed to fields like technology innovation, poverty alleviation, welfare of low-income groups, agricultural/rural development, education, basic science/research, healthcare, and small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME) support.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Tech in the five-year plan

A change in priorities for economic growth

When former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping ended the country’s planned economy and embraced a free market in the 1980s, he said allowing some people and regions to get rich first would speed up economic growth and achieve the ultimate goal of common prosperity. Now, the priority seems to be shifting to the latter.

  • On Aug. 17, Chinese President Xi Jinping called for the nation to achieve “common prosperity” in a speech, asking to rationally “adjust” excessive incomes and for wealthy individuals and companies to return more to society.
  • Xi’s call came as Chinese authorities stepped up regulation of tech companies in multiple areas, including antitrust, data security, and privacy, ending the country’s long-standing laissez-faire regulatory approach towards the tech sector.

The changes also came as income inequality becomes an increasingly pressing problem in Chinese society.

  • China’s top 1% own nearly 31% of the nation’s wealth, according to a study by Credit Suisse.
  • Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said in May 2020 that 600 million people, or roughly 42.9% of China’s population, have a monthly income of RMB 1,000.
  • China received a score of 0.465 on the Gini index of the World Bank, which measures economic inequality. The score ranges from zero to one, with one meaning complete income inequality. A score of 0.4 or above is considered at a “warning level.”
  • “Alibaba is a beneficiary of the strong social and economic progress in China over the past 22 years. We firmly believe that if society is doing well and the economy is doing well, then Alibaba will do well,” said Daniel Zhang, chairman and chief executive of Alibaba Group, in a company statement on Sept. 3.
  • Resentment toward tech companies is growing in China. Whether restaurant owners on food delivery platforms or startups in crowded verticals, small businesses feel they are squeezed by the digital behemoths.

Investor sentiments

While donating tens of billions of dollars for social initiatives out of their profits, the Chinese tech companies, mostly listed, face the double pressure of convincing investors that they are making the right decision to sacrifice short-term profits for long-term growth prospects.

  • Chinese tech stocks have experienced a stunning sell-off since the beginning of this year as Beijing widened its crackdown. Intensified regulations over monopolistic behaviors, overseas listings, and data security, coupled with massive fines, wiped out hundreds of billions of dollars in market value of Chinese tech companies.
  • “As platforms grapple with increased regulatory scrutiny inside and outside of China, investors will need to come to grips with the impact of regulatory burden and compliance costs on EPS (earnings per share) and ROIC (return on invested capital),” said Michael Norris, head of research and strategy at AgencyChina.

How effective philanthropic displays will be? 

But the efforts raise other questions: Will these philanthropic displays be enough to ease the wrath of regulators? Norris thinks there’s little chance internet platforms can avoid regulation through their social impact investments. 

  • “However, these investments can signal internet platforms are responsible market participants. This hits the right notes with regulators who’ve been tasked with curbing exploitative practices and market irregularities,” Norris said. 
  • “Think of it as stakeholder capitalism, with Chinese characteristics,” he added.

New opportunities under the disguise of donation?

The government’s attention to areas like tech innovation, agriculture, education, and basic science means opportunity for tech companies. By entering these strategic areas, they could expect returns from those donations, or investments, if they have aligned their business with the broader strategic goals properly. But the time for such returns may be long.

  • Started as a social ecommerce platform, Pinduoduo has become laser-focused on “digitizing agriculture”, an initiative that aligns with the government’s drive to modernize agriculture and boost development for rural areas.
  • Pinduoduo said in a statement that the company will be able to “get back” because the users “have placed their trust” in the platform.
  • “I observed that both Tencent and Alibaba pledged to support SMEs. This might mean that some of the investment is applied to existing subsidies or retains discounted take rates,” said Norris. 

A lasting change?

China has lagged when it comes to charitable efforts, partly due to China’s tradition of passing fortunes through a family line. Back in 2010 when Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and billionaire investor Warren Buffett invited Chinese moguls to a dinner to discuss philanthropy, lots of them turned down the invitation for fear of being asked to make a donation.

However, there’s been a significant change in charitable giving, especially since 2008, when donations struck a chord with larger groups due to the Sichuan earthquake. Donations for fighting the COVID-19 outbreak and helping victims of the recent flood in Henan peaked as tech firms tried to fulfill their social responsibilities, a concept specified in the country’s corporate law.

Chinese tech billionaires still have a long way to go to be on track with philanthropic models comparable to western counterparts like Gates.

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Chinese produce startup Meicai cuts operations and lays off workers: report https://technode.com/2021/09/06/chinese-produce-startup-meicai-cuts-operations-and-lays-off-workers-report/ Mon, 06 Sep 2021 07:46:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161897 Meicai, a Chinese app that supplies farm-to-table produce for restaurants, has been reportedly reducing its operations.]]>

Meicai, a Chinese app that supplies farm-to-table produce for restaurants, has been reducing its operations and laying off employees, Chinese media Jiemian reported on Friday.

Why it matters: Cutbacks came after Meicai failed to expand its online grocery delivery business and in July shelved a US IPO plan.

  • The company experimented with a grocery community-group buy model to compete with Pinduoduo and Meituan last year. It halted those operations early this year to refocus on servicing restaurants.

Details: Meicai has closed its research and development center in Chengdu, Chinese media Jiemian reported. The company also plans to cut at least half of its employees in several teams in its Beijing headquarters, including product development, sales, and finance.

  • The layoffs started two weeks ago and are expected to end in mid-September;  they will affect new employees and mid-level managers. 
  • Meicai partially confirmed the downsizing in a Saturday statement, saying the company is conducting “organizational optimization.” The statement said all branches are running as usual.

Context: Founded in 2014, Meicai largely focuses on supplying farmers’ produce directly to restaurant owners. 

  • Meicai is competing with Meituan’s enterprise-facing food distribution arm Kuailv in the business-to-business produce market. Kuailv also cut back its services in late August. 
  • The company has received investments from renowned investors, including Tiger Global Management, Hillhouse Capital, and GGV Capital. The firm raised $800 million in its most recent round in 2018.

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Dingdong Maicai posts mixed results in first-ever quarterly report https://technode.com/2021/08/31/dingdong-maicai-mixed-results-in-first-ever-quarterly-report/ Tue, 31 Aug 2021 08:27:50 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161736 dingdong maicaiAfter a downsized IPO, the Chinese online grocer faces souring market sentiment and increasing regulatory scrutiny. ]]> dingdong maicai

Online grocery Dingdong Maicai posted mixed results for the second quarter ended June in its first-ever quarterly report published on Monday.

Why it matters: After a downsized IPO, the Chinese online grocer faces souring market sentiment. Investor enthusiasm toward the online grocery delivery industry has cooled as the sector grows more competitive and attracts regulatory scrutiny. 

READ MORE: ​​The Big Sell | China’s grocery delivery fever is cooling down

Details: Dingdong Maicai recorded second quarter revenue of RMB 4.6 billion ($719.6 million), climbing 77.9% year-on-year.

  • The company’s gross merchandise volume for the reporting period reached RMB 5.4 billion, increasing 80.8% year-over-year from RMB 2.9 billion in the same quarter of 2020.
  • However, Dingdong’s net loss more than doubled to RMB 1.7 billion, compared with RMB 714.5 million a year ago.
  • The number of average monthly users on the delivery platform reached 8.4 million, up 39.1% from a year ago.
  • Dingdong Maicai manages its own warehouses in residential neighborhoods for quick delivery. The company operated 1,136 such facilities as of June, more than double the 625 warehouses of rival MissFresh.
  • “Geographically speaking, we achieved 49.8% year-over-year growth in our GMV from our most mature markets in the Yangtze Delta region,” said Liang Changlin, founder and chief executive officer of Dingdong, in an emailed statement, referring to the area along Yangtze River in eastern China which includes Shanghai, as well provinces of Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Anhui. 
  • Growth was mainly driven by a rise in customers and an increase in purchase frequency from existing users.
  • In the third quarter, the company expects a 100% year-on-year revenue increase and improved gross margin. Dingdong also expects its net losses to narrow over the next two quarters. 
  • Shares in Dingdong closed  at $21.31 in overnight trading in the US on Monday.  The company’s offering price was $23.5 apiece.

Context: Dingdong Maicai raised $95.7 million after making its New York debut in late June. The company downsized its IPO by more than 74% from its initial $357 million target set earlier in the month. MissFresh, which filed for a US IPO on the same day as Dingdong, raised $273 million in a Nasdaq IPO on June 26.

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China edtech giants cut tens of thousands of jobs: report https://technode.com/2021/08/26/china-edtech-giants-cut-tens-of-thousands-of-jobs-report/ Thu, 26 Aug 2021 08:59:55 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161599 GSX TALEdtech majors are downsizing their operations after regional education authorities rolled out localized plans to impose the country’s sweeping regulations.]]> GSX TAL

Chinese edtech giants including Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao have reportedly cut tens of thousands of jobs amid a sweeping crackdown on the country’s private education industry.

Why it matters: Edtech majors are downsizing their operations after regional education authorities rolled out localized plans to impose the country’s sweeping regulations aimed at reining in private education services. 

Details: Edtech giants have shed tens of thousands of jobs either through layoffs or voluntary departures, local media Late Post reported on Wednesday. Based on the report, TechNode calculated that the edtech sector lost at least 48,000 jobs in recent months. Yuanfudao, Zuoyebang, and TAL Group have shut down some of their regional support centers, which are often used as offline locations for teachers and sales teams. 

  • Edtech unicorn Yuanfudao’s staff dropped from around 50,000 this spring to 37,000, according to the Late Post report. Rival Zuoyebang’s headcount reportedly dropped from 35,000 to 20,000, while peer TAL Group’s fell from over 70,000 to around 50,000 in the same period. The losses are a result of job cuts and employees leaving due to uncertainty brought about by the government’s new regulations.
  • Yuanfudao has been downsizing its regional offices since August. The firm closed one service center in the southern Chinese city of Nanchang, a source told TechNode. The source, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, added that the company had stopped offering one of its online courses, Xiaoyuan AI, and either laid off or reassigned related staff.
  • Zuoyebang has closed three of its 14 regional support centers. Four of the remaining centers have cut teams supporting primary school courses. The Alibaba-backed company didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiries when contacted Thursday morning.
  • TAL’s online education unit plans to shut down eight out of its 13 regional centers. The change will affect more than 10,000 employees, Late Post reported.
  • Yuanfudao declined to comment and Zuoyebang didn’t respond when TechNode contacted them Thursday morning.

Context: In July, senior party and government officials banned all private tutoring companies that teach public school curriculum, including edtech companies, from earning profit, raising capital, or going public. The move is an extension of China’s curb on unruly development in the private education sector,

  • Chinese edtech platforms are shifting their offerings for K-12 students away from curriculum training to art, music, programming, or other courses. 
  • ByteDance reportedly laid off half its in-house pre-kindergarten tutors in August due to the regulation. The Chinese AI giant once invested heavily in the online education industry.
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Alibaba-backed Nice Tuan scales back operations as market consolidates https://technode.com/2021/08/23/alibaba-backed-nice-tuan-scales-back-operations-as-market-consolidates/ Mon, 23 Aug 2021 09:34:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161485 Nice Tuan is the latest grocery startup to scale back its operations amid consolidation in China’s highly competitive grocery market.]]>

Alibaba-backed online grocer Nice Tuan is reportedly downsizing its operations, according to an internal letter (in Chinese) made public on Saturday and in various Chinese media reports. 

Why it matters: Nice Tuan is the latest grocery startup to scale back its operations amid consolidation in China’s highly competitive community group buy market.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | China’s grocery delivery fever is cooling down

Details: Chinese media reported that the Nice Tuan laid off staff at short notice with no severance pay, prompting many workers to complain on various social media. In the internal letter, Nice Tuan didn’t mention those that had been laid off but said it would launch “major” reforms in some low-profit areas. 

  • TechNode found that Shanghai users couldn’t place orders through the company’s WeChat mini program as of Monday morning.
  • Chinese media QQ News reported that Nice Tuan had stopped operating in several cities, including Changchun, Harbin, Jinan, Zhangzhou, Fuzhou. 
  • The company will prioritize markets in central China’s Hunan and Hubei provinces, as well as southeastern China’s Jiangxi province, a company representative told Chinese media 36Kr, adding that operations in some highly loss-making areas will be shut down.
  • The company said in the letter that it plans to integrate some of its regional operations into Alibaba’s grocery retail business unit (including Fresh Hippo and other community group buy services). The company will share Alibaba’s operational resources, supply chain, and partners, Nice Tuan founder Chen Ying said in the letter.
  • The company’s page on Weibo is filled with employee complaints, accusing it of forcing workers to quit without severance pay and violating the country’s labor law. 
  • A Weibo user with the handle of Yansideyulalala said more than 100 workers in the company’s Chengdu office were laid off on Saturday without any advanced notice or severance pay. TechNode couldn’t verify the user’s identity. 
  • The company didn’t respond to TechNode’s Monday requests for comments. 

Context: Nice Tuan has received more than $1.2 billion in funding since it was founded in 2018. The firm received its most recent investment, a $750 million Series D, in March from Alibaba, DST Global, GGV Capital, and others.

  • Since last year, Chinese tech giants such as Pinduoduo and Meituan have entered the competitive community group-buy market, squeezing out smaller players by offering customers generous discounts to gain market share. 
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Bilibili earnings top estimate but share drops on Chinese regulatory concerns https://technode.com/2021/08/20/bilibili-earnings-top-estimate-but-share-drops-on-chinese-regulatory-concerns/ Fri, 20 Aug 2021 07:32:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161440 bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime gameBilibili’s share dropped on better-than-expected results, highlighting investors' concerns about China’s tech crackdowns. ]]> bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime game

Chinese video streaming site Bilibili on Thursday posted better-than-expected financial results for the quarter ending in June, but the company’s shares dropped as regulatory concerns linger.

Why it matters: Bilibili’s share drop reflects investors’ concerns about the loss-making company amid China’s regulatory crackdowns on the tech sector. 

READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | ‘Bilibili is becoming Chinese Youtube’

Details: Bilibili’s revenue jumped 72% year-on-year to RMB 4.49 billion ($696.2 million) in the second quarter of this year, topping the high end of the forecasts (RMB 4.25 billion to RMB 4.35 billion) compiled by Yahoo Finance. The company’s share dropped 6% on Thursday on the Nasdaq.

  • Bilibili’s stock hit a low in 2021 earlier this week as China’s tech crackdown continued to trigger sell-offs affecting a wide range of listed Chinese tech majors, including Alibaba and Tencent.
  • Bilibili keeps attracting more users who are spending more time on the platform. The firm’s monthly active users jumped 38% year on year to 237 million in the second quarter. Users spend, on average, 81 minutes on the platform every day, a record high.
  • The company’s net loss widened 96% from RMB 570.9 million to RMB 1.12 billion due to rising marketing, administration, and research and development spending.
  • Sam Fan, Bilibili’s chief financial officer, attributed the company’s revenue growth to the rapid rise of its advertising business, which grew more than 200% since the same period in 2020 and represented 23% of Bilibili’s total net revenues, according to the earnings report. 
  • The company expects its net revenues for the third quarter of 2021 to be between RMB 5.1 billion and RMB 5.2 billion.
  • CEO Chen Rui said he feels “optimistic” about China’s regulatory moves in the video content and gaming content industry. “We believe our industry is experiencing fast growth, certain regulation is actually beneficial for this industry’s long-term and healthy growth,” Chen said during a Thursday earnings call. 

Context: Bilibili hit a record of more than 65 million daily active users in early August, making it China’s third-largest long-form video site, following iQiyi and Tencent Video.

  • Bilibili started in 2012 as a content hub for Chinese fans of animation, comics, and games. The company has in recent years evolved into a mainstream video site offering a variety of content. 
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The Big Sell | China’s grocery delivery fever is cooling down https://technode.com/2021/08/19/the-big-sell-chinas-grocery-delivery-fever-is-cooling-down/ Thu, 19 Aug 2021 13:02:21 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161392 A new round of consolidation in China's community grocery delivery market is wiping out all but the largest players. ]]>

If you have been looking at China’s grocery delivery market over the past two years, you’ve had a pretty wild ride. It’s been crazy out there. Before the pandemic, it was a startup fad—but once people across China locked down, tech giants and venture capitalists pumped billions into the field.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

The turnover of China’s community group-buy market surged by 120% year on year to reach RMB 75 billion ($12 billion) in 2020, according to data from research agency 100EC. The figure is expected to increase 38% year on year to RMB 104 billion in 2021. Despite the growth, the market is getting tougher for the smaller players.

While sales are rising, the investment fervor surrounding China’s grocery delivery market is quickly cooling down. A new round of consolidation is wiping out all but the largest players. 

Collapse of startups: In July, two major online grocery startups withdrew from the market. Both are regional market leaders that have received multiple funding rounds from tech giants and renowned VCs.

  • July 8: Tongcheng Life, a Chinese grocery delivery startup, announced that it has filed for bankruptcy. The company reportedly owed a combined RMB 200 million ($31 million) debt to over 1,000 suppliers. As one of the earliest entrants to the market, the firm was once valued at more than $1 billion, after receiving more than $306 million financing since its establishment in 2018.
  • July 28: Tencent-backed Shixianghui ended its community group-buy service amid fierce competition in the market and regulatory pressure. The service’s website and mini-app are no longer functioning. 
  • Aug. 13: Baoneng Shengxian, a grocery delivery startup in Western China’s Xi’an city, was reported to be facing insolvency issues amid layoffs, storefront shutdowns, and rumored delays to salary payments.

All three of these companies use the “community group buy” model, which relies on once a day deliveries to central locations to offer ultra-low prices. In the more high-end on-demand delivery market, two non-giants Dingdong and MissFresh made it to IPO in late June.

Venture capital continues to flow into community group-buy, but it’s been winner-takes-all for the top platforms. In the first five months of this year, Tencent-backed community group-buy platform Xingsheng Youxuan received $3.1 billion in funding, and Alibaba-backed Nice Tuan secured $750 million. Their combined fundraise represents over 95% of funding for the market during the period, a report from corporate intelligence database Qichacha shows.

Profits in view for grocery delivery leaders?

Chinese tech giants only began to make direct plays in the grocery delivery businesses during the most recent boom, starting in 2019. Before then, China’s biggest tech companies tapped the sector only through investments in startup leaders, a lean approach that sought to stay abreast with the latest tech trends without expanding heavily.

Tech titans including Alibaba, Pinduoduo, Meituan entered the grocery market about two years ago, intensifying competition in the already crowded sector. Rivalry in the area turned into a cash-burning subsidy war that not even the deepest-pocketed players could sustain. Tech giants, now operating their homegrown business, not only compete with each other, but also startups they previously invested in.

Chaotic, cash-fueled expansion prompted regulators to issue a list of restrictions on group-buy businesses, forbidding predatory pricing to beat out competition, as well as cracking down on falsely advertising discounted prices and posting misleading product information.

Under this financial and regulatory pressure, tech giants started to pivot their grocery business strategy from loss-making expansion, to monetizing existing businesses. The biggest players in the field are seeing results.

  • Duoduo Maicai expected to record positive gross profits from July. Meituan Youxuan expects to record gross profit in some regions, local media reported.
  • Ride-hailing giant Didi scaled back a community group-buy grocery unit Chengxin Youxuan. The unit laid off about a third of its staff, began an all-staff pay cut, and relocated its head office from Chengdu to Beijing and Hangzhou. 

Report: nearly 45% of beauty brand sales take place during two shopping festivals

China’s two major online shopping festivals—Singles Day in November and 618 in June—account for nearly 45% of total annual cosmetics sales, according to data from thirty beauty brands on Alibaba’s marketplace Tmall. Digital agency DLG surveyed the brands in July for a report on shopping festivals.

While sales figures on the platform throughout the rest of the year are somewhat consistent, months with a local celebration or festival, including Chinese New Year and Chinese Valentine’s Day, also known as Qixi, account for a slightly higher percentage of sales, according to the report.

Luxury brands may not have to give major discounts to win shopping festival traffic, DLG wrote. Brands have also taken advantage of the consumption deluge by launching new collections and limited editions at full price during shopping festivals, and boosted sales through buy now, pay later schemes like installment plans.

“Unlike discount driven holidays in the West, these festivals are critical occasions for brands to launch new products, introduce innovative shopping experiences and create touchpoints with loyal and new customers alike,” said James Lin, head of Fashion and Luxury for North America Alibaba Group, in the report.

Also in the news: 

China helps merchants after Amazon bans: Since May, Amazon has blocked up to 50,000 Chinese sellers on its platform, citing “improper use of the review function” as the reason.

  • Shenzhen, China’s cross-border e-commerce hub, is offering RMB 2 million subsidies to cross-border sellers for each “independent store” or website they build to diversify online sales channels.
  • Li Xingqian, director of China’s Foreign Trade Department at the Ministry of Commerce, said in July that the state would help companies to comply with international standards while protecting their “legitimate rights and interests.” Li called the problems “growing pains” in China’s cross-border e-commerce industry.

Tech investors set sights on consumer retail: Chinese venture capitalists, typically backers behind technology startups, are chasing after nascent consumer brands selling everything from foods and beverages to cosmetics. It normally takes decades to build brand awareness, but some emerging brands are scaling at tech-like speeds by leveraging logistics, social media, and e-commerce.

  • Charles Lu, the Luckin founder who fell from grace after the 2020 financial fraud scandal, is back in the retail game with noodle restaurant Qu Xiaomian. TechNode visited one of its first locations in Beijing and had a very ordinary bowl of noodles.
  • Nayuki, the Luckin-like bubble tea chain that raised $656 million in its Hong Kong debut this June, came under scrutiny Aug. 2 after state news agency Xinhua reported on hygiene issues in two Beijing stores. The news sent the company’s share down 10%. A later statement from the company said inspectors found no evidence of food safety violations.

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Social e-commerce startup Beidian may owe millions to merchants https://technode.com/2021/08/13/social-e-commerce-startup-beidian-may-owe-millions-to-merchants/ Fri, 13 Aug 2021 07:24:47 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161214 Beidian may become another smaller Chinese e-commerce platform facing cash shortages, as it reportedly uses a controversial sales strategy.]]>

Beidian, a Chinese social retail startup, is reportedly in arrears with their payments to thousands of merchants. According to several Chinese media news reports, the company may owe at least RMB 130 million ($20 million) to about 1,300 merchants. 

Why it matters: Beidian may become another small Chinese social e-commerce platform facing a cash shortage, as it reportedly utilizes the controversial sales strategy of multi-level marketing, also known as pyramid selling. 

  • In 2017, China fined NASDAQ-listed social commerce company Yunji RMB 9.6 million for pyramid selling, the country’s first penalty against such practice. A court in Hunan province froze RMB 30 million of online seller Zebra Prime in 2020. Online retailer Peanut Diary fined RMB 9 million for pyramid selling in February. 

Details: Beidian announced on Monday that it plans to change its business model from a direct-sale online retailing platform to a shopping guide site, which redirects shoppers to other e-commerce platforms like Alibaba’s Taobao. The announcement, made public on Tuesday, prompted merchants to travel to Beidian’s head office in the eastern city of Hangzhou, asking for money back. 

  • On Monday, more than 60 merchants and suppliers gathered at the headquarters of Beibei, the parent company of Beidian, demanding the company to return their owed payments and deposits, Chinese media 21 Tech reported. However, the crowd found the company had moved out and emptied its head office in Hangzhou.
  • A merchant surnamed Sun told (in Chinese) media site Lanjinger that Beidian stopped paying her in May. Sun started selling on Beidian in late 2018.
  • Beidian merchants sell a wide range of products, including fresh groceries, food, baby products, skin care products, toys, and cosmetics. Normally, Beidian takes a 25% commission and pays merchants a month after sales close. Merchants told Chinese media that many of them are owed several months’ worth of payouts. The highest overdue payment is about RMB 5 million. It’s still unclear what triggered Beidian to withhold merchants’ payments. 
  • Beibei Group, Beidian’s parent company, reportedly cut around 500 or half of its headcounts in April.
  • Beidian could not be reached for comments on Friday.

Context: Beidian was founded by Alibaba alumni Allen Zhang in August 2017 as a subsidiary of Beibei Group, a maternal and children’s product e-commerce platform. Apart from its social e-commerce business, the firm drew controversies for adopting a multi-level revenue-sharing model that’s similar to some pyramid schemes. It encourages existing store owners to recruit more members with cash incentives. Members get paid in commission based on the referrals they attract. 

  • Beidian closed a $126 million financing round in 2019 from Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia Capital, Sinovation Ventures, and others.
  • Beidian’s parent company Beibei Group is a major player in China’s baby product market. The group operates maternal and infant product marketplace Beibei.com and Ximei, an invite-only e-commerce app for premium brands. The company has received a total of over $224 million in four funding rounds from investors like IDG Capital and Sequoia Capital China.
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No ByteDance job for Alibaba #MeToo manager https://technode.com/2021/08/10/no-bytedance-job-for-alibaba-metoo-manager/ Tue, 10 Aug 2021 04:35:48 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161099 ByteDance, ShanghaiA former Alibaba manager at the center of China's latest #metoo case was in the process of applying for a job at ByteDance.]]> ByteDance, Shanghai

Wang Chengwen, a former Alibaba employee who has been the focus of a #MeToo event after a female subordinate accused him of sexual assault, was applying for a job at ByteDance, according to various media reports Monday. 

Why it matters: Alibaba is facing intense public backlash over its handling of the employee sexual assault case. The company initially refused to fire Wang after the female employee reported the case, according to her recounts. 

READ MORE: Alibaba faces public outrage for alleged employee sexual assault case

Details: ByteDance confirmed the news with TechNode on Tuesday, saying they had the interview without knowledge of the sexual assault case and had stopped the interview process. 

Wang was evidently trying to switch jobs before the case became public over the weekend. He had passed the first round interview for a position at ByteDance, the company confirmed.

ByteDance said they will not hire employees with moral issues, adding that they will strengthen talent background checks.

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Alibaba faces public outrage for alleged employee sexual assault case https://technode.com/2021/08/09/alibaba-faces-public-outrage-for-alleged-employee-sexual-assault-case/ Mon, 09 Aug 2021 09:43:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161069 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe case in Alibaba rekindled a public discussion on the difficulties and danger Chinese women often face at work. ]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba faces public outrage after a female employee accused her supervisor and a client of molestation and sexual assault in an internal post made public over the weekend. Her name was not revealed. She also accused the company, which refused to fire the supervisor because it wanted to “protect her reputation.” Alibaba has fired the alleged perpetrator and several of his managers after the news sparked public outrage on Saturday.

Why it matters: The case rekindled a public discussion on the difficulties and danger Chinese women often face at work. Once viewed as open, progressive, and lucrative alternatives to other employers, China’s internet giants are now facing a reckoning.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Founders behaving badly

Details: In a lengthy internal post, a female employee at Alibaba’s grocery unit Taoxianda accused her supervisor Wang Chengwen and a client of sexually assaulting her during a work trip in the eastern city of Jinan on the night of July 27. The post was leaked and made public over the weekend, quickly going viral on Chinese social media platforms. On Monday, it remains as one of the most discussed topics on Chinese social platforms such as Weibo and WeChat.

  • According to the woman’s post, several of the company’s department heads tried to silence her after she reported the incident to the unit’s management. Senior managers told her they had decided not to fire Wang to “protect the accuser’s reputation.”
  • In the post, the woman said she became intoxicated and lost consciousness after being forced to drink at a work dinner. She later learned through surveillance footage that she was “kissed,” “touched,” and “brought into an empty room” by a client.
  • The woman said she woke up the following day in a hotel room naked, vaguely recalling being coerced into sexual acts by Wang. Through surveillance videos, she learned Wang had entered her hotel room four times during the night. 
  • The woman called the police on July 28, and reported the incident to Alibaba on Aug. 2. 
  • On Aug. 8, local police in Jinan said they are investigating the case in a Weibo statement.

Alibaba’s reaction: On Aug. 7, when the case first became public, Alibaba told media outlets that the company had suspended Wang, and wouldn’t tolerate behaviors like molestation and sexual assault. In a report after investigating the incident, Alibaba said that related managers and its human resources department “lacked empathy and made major judgment mistakes,” according to Caixin.

  • Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said in the statement that the company had fired Wang, who confessed to performing “intimate acts with [her] while she was inebriated.” Two executives of its neighborhood retail business, Li Yonghe and Xu Kun, have resigned for “not making timely decisions or taking appropriate action.”
  • Alibaba Group has a “zero-tolerance policy” against sexual misconduct and ensuring a safe workplace is a “top priority,” an Alibaba spokesperson wrote in a response to TechNode’s queries on Monday.

Anger on Weibo: A Weibo hashtag titled “Alibaba female staff was sexually assaulted”, had attracted 740 million views as of Monday morning. Some Chinese netizens are unhappy with the company’s responses. 

  • A Weibo user with the handle of Nüde (meaning woman’s ethic in Chinese) wrote, “It took so long for the company to finally fire Wang. That’s because they made the move under social pressure rather than considering his behavior punishable.”
  • “If what the female worker describes is true, this is not Alibaba, it’s the 40 thieves”, said a commentary posted by a WeChat account run by People’s Daily, referring to the Arabian folktale “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.“ 

Context: Alibaba has previously prompted public outcry for sexual incidents and its company culture. 

  • Jiang Fan, then president of Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, was removed from the company’s partners committee after an alleged affair with a social media influencer in 2020. Jiang was widely seen as a potential successor to Daniel Zhang, the current CEO of Alibaba Group.
  • Alibaba’s billionaire founder Jack Ma faced criticism for an off-color joke encouraging married employees to have more sex in 2019.
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ByteDance cuts edtech headcount amid private tutoring crackdown: report https://technode.com/2021/08/05/bytedance-cuts-edtech-headcount-amid-private-tutoring-crackdown-report/ Thu, 05 Aug 2021 12:52:48 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=161004 Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short videoByteDance is grappling with the fallout from regulations that limit edtech companies’ business operations and financial activities.]]> Shanghai ByteDance Douyin TikTok Tiger Global short video

ByteDance is scaling back its online education businesses and laying off half of its in-house Pre-K tutors, according to a report by Late Post (in Chinese) on Thursday. 

Why it matters: ByteDance is grappling with the fallout from recent regulations that impose strict limits on edtech companies’ business operations and financial activities, and completely ban online tutoring for pre-school children. The company is scaling back its Pre-K focused-businesses and focusing more on other sectors such as vocational education.

  • The new rules are seen as an attempt to ease pressures on school children, who have suffered from China’s highly-competitive education system, and boost birth rates by reducing living costs for families in the country’s major cities. 

Details: The layoffs affect employees of Dali Education, ByteDance’s standalone edtech brand that runs the short video giant’s education products, including Pre-K education platform Guagua Long and one-on-one English tutoring app GoGoKid, Late Post reported. 

  • Guagua Long will suspend sales of all its online trial courses by mid-August and lay off  half of in-house tutors by the end of August, according to the report..  
  • GoGoKid, the company’s English tutoring app targeting kids up to 12 years old, had been removed from app stores in China on, TechNode found on Thursday. ByteDance will shut down the platform completely, according to Late Post.
  • TechNode was unable to independently verify the report. A ByteDance spokeswoman declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode on Thursday.
  • Discussions around ByteDance’s layoffs have also circulated this week on professional networking platform Maimai. Maimai user Kunlun Dizi, who identified himself as an employee of Dali Education, said he had been laid off.

Context: In an internal meeting held in June, Chen Lin, CEO of Dali Education, said that the company management is “very confident and patient” about its education business and will continue to invest without any layoffs, according to Chinese media outlet Pingwest.

  • Chinese edtech giants including Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao are also rumored to be laying off staff, as Chinese officials tighten regulation governing the private tutoring market.
  • In October 2020, ByteDance launched edtech brand Dali Education to host all its education businesses. The unit had 10,000 employees after launch.
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Didi scales back community group-buy unit Chengxin Youxuan https://technode.com/2021/08/05/didi-scales-back-community-group-buy-unit-chengxin-youxuan/ Thu, 05 Aug 2021 09:44:56 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160996 Didi Chengxin YouxuanCutbacks at Chengxin Youxuan come as two community group-buy rivals abandon the market after years of costly cash-fueled expansion. ]]> Didi Chengxin Youxuan

China’s ride-hailing giant Didi reportedly scaled back a community group-buy grocery unit, Chengxin Youxuan, Chinese media Late Post reported on Wednesday. The unit is pivoting its business strategy from loss-making expansion to earning money.

Why it matters: Cutbacks at Chengxin Youxuan come as two community group-buy rivals, Tongcheng Life and Tencent-backed Shixianghui, abandon the market after years of costly cash-fueled expansion. 

Details: Chengxin Youxuan began to scale back its business in June, according to Late Post‘s report. The unit laid off about a third of its staff, began an all-staff pay cut, and relocated its head office from Chengdu to Beijing and Hangzhou. 

  • Chengxin Youxuan has reportedly laid off around 30% of its employees since July. Most laid-off staff were in city management, business development, operations, and logistics and located in central Hunan and Hubei province, the report said.
  • Chengxin Youxuan canceled bonuses in August, meaning a 20% pay cut for all workers. The unit also reduced travel subsidies. 
  • Didi moved Chengxin Youxuan’s main office from Chengdu to Beijing and Hangzhou, closing the Chengdu office.
  • The unit will relocate some staff back to Beijing and Hangzhou to focus on product research and development and data analytics, while sending more staff to front-line operational positions, Late Post writes, citing employees at the company.
  • Didi didn’t respond to TechNode’s inquiries, made Thursday morning.

Context: In May, The Information reported that Didi planned a separate listing for the grocery unit as early as next year, hoping to bring a new revenue source to maintain growth as its core ride-hailing business slowed down. 

  • In March, China’s top market regulator fined five community group-buy platforms a total of RMB 6.5 million (around $1 million) for price dumping. Targets included Chengxin Youxuan and rival platforms backed by Pinduoduo, Meituan, and Alibaba.
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Didi app ban ignites race for ride-hailing market share https://technode.com/2021/08/02/didi-app-ban-ignites-race-for-ride-hailing-market-share/ Mon, 02 Aug 2021 05:27:48 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160867 ride hailing mobility china didi t3 faw dongfeng changan government regulationAs Didi struggles with regulatory pressure and an app suspension, its rivals have begun a price war in bids to win over users and drivers. ]]> ride hailing mobility china didi t3 faw dongfeng changan government regulation

At 9 a.m. on a recent Thursday, Sheng Li got out of a Didi ride at his office in downtown Shanghai. The ride-hailing company has had a rough ride recently, but for users like Sheng, Didi is still the first choice when hailing a car.

The 28-year-old office worker says he’s been experimenting with other apps lately. He’s noticed longer wait times as Didi struggles amid a “cybersecurity investigation,” temporary removal from Chinese app stores, and lawsuits from angry US investors.

Sheng told TechNode he doesn’t worry about the privacy and security issues the regulators are investigating. “That’s a matter for the state, not us,” he said. For him, it all comes down to price, service, and wait times.

Still, a Shanghai taxi driver surnamed Wu told TechNode that he has shifted his driving time to other platforms including aggregator Amap (Gaode Ditu in China), as there are now “much fewer orders” from Didi (our translation). Some former Didi users even deleted the app from their phones in a show of patriotism, the Shanghai-based driver added.

Founded in 2012 as Didi Dache, Didi has long been dominant in China’s ride-hailing market. It fended off an early challenge from Uber, buying out the US company’s Chinese operations when it left the market in 2016. The most recent estimates put its share at 90% of the Chinese market.

Now, challengers are racing to take advantage of Didi’s troubles. Like Sheng, millions of Chinese users are trying out other ride-hailing platforms. The rivals have begun a price war, offering steep discounts and subsidies to win over users and drivers.

Default Didi

Didi remains the default for most users TechNode met during rush hour interviews in Shanghai. Although Didi apps are no longer available for download on Chinese app stores, those already on users’ smartphones still work.

Chris Sun, a Shanghai-based video producer did not hesitate when choosing Didi to hail a ride to the city’s railway station for a business trip last week. Speaking to TechNode on July 22, Sun said he had no plans to try other services, adding that he “has got used to” Didi, despite some technical flaws such as inaccurate pin locations from drivers (our translation).

Chen Jie, a recent graduate, is also sticking with Didi. The 23-year-old tried Alibaba-backed Amap last year, but immediately switched back to Didi, frustrated by long waits at peak times.

Springing into action

Shopping and delivery titan Meituan, a longtime rival of Didi, relaunched its standalone ride-hailing aggregator app Meituan Dache on July 13, followed by a WeChat mini-app with the same name last week.

Meituan has offered ride-hailing services since February 2017, but shut down its standalone app in 2019 to cut expansion costs. Since then, it’s been available only as a mini-program within Meituan’s main app.

The company has boosted its subsidies to attract users after the long absence. Using a RMB 10 ($1.54) coupon, TechNode paid RMB 23.4 for a nine-kilometer trip on Meituan Dache on July 16 in Shanghai. A ride on Didi for the same route cost RMB 35 on July 2.

Upstart T3, a joint venture of state-owned automakers FAW, Dongfeng, and Changan, is among the most ambitious contenders. From its base of 21 cities and 15 million users in 2020, the two-year-old ride hailer has set goals to enter 15 new cities and add an average daily order of 1 million rides by the end of July, Chinese media reported, citing a company memo. 

Daily downloads of the T3 app on iOS peaked at 60,000 million on July 2, later stabilizing to around 40,000. In June, T3’s app was downloaded just 10,000 times a day, according to data from app-tracking service Qimai. Chinese media report that T3 staff have been working long overtime hours as the Nanjing-based company rushes to expand.

Alibaba-owned aggregator and mapping service Amap, launched in 2018, is also offering massive subsidies to both riders and drivers, including RMB 100 coupons for rides and a one-week zero-commission period to new drivers. Amap downloads on iOS have more than doubled since July.

Meanwhile, Tencent and GAC-backed Ontime is offering 50% off coupons plus a RMB 25 incentive to those who invite a friend to use the platform and take their first trip. Not everyone is joining the price war.

Chinese media reported that management at Caocao Chuxing have decided not to drive down prices,, but the company has adopted the infamous 996 work schedule following Beijing’s investigation into Didi.

Future landscape

Didi could be back on app stores later this month. Regulations specify that cybersecurity reviews should take no more than 45 days, and 45 days after Didi’s review began will be Aug. 16. However, the same regulations authorize regulators to extend the review if they find that the matter is especially complex or serious.

Some observers believe that Didi could face significant threats from smaller ride-hailers that are expanding their presence in China’s growing inland cities.

“Didi is mature in tier-one cities but not in second or lower-tier cities. There is still an opportunity for online ride-hailing in China, and Didi will not have a 90% share in China forever,” Tu Le, founder and managing director of business intelligence firm Sino Auto Insights, said during an online interview on July 6.

Didi controlled more than 90% of China’s ride-hailing market share before the government’s investigation into the company. There might be “double-digit” market share redistribution if the subsidy war meaningfully deteriorates the Didi app or mini-program core experience, according to Michael Norris, head of research and strategy at AgencyChina.

The supply of drivers, who are sensitive to subsidy and platform policy changes, will be key to winning the battle. “Didi’s competitors need to poach drivers to the point Didi’s app becomes unreliable to hail a ride,” he said.

“The competitive landscape depends on how hard Meituan pushes. Recall that Meituan, with one eye on its balance sheet, backed away from self-operated ride-hailing in late 2018. Meituan’s foray into community group-buy, including associated financing activities, have primed investors for big moves.” Norris said.

Meituan declined to comment on the story.

Still, at least one ride-hailer has decided to advance at its own pace. Rather than spending lavish sums for a victory likely to be temporary, Shouqi, operated by the namesake automaker, has publicly stated its goal is high-quality development, focusing on passenger and driver safety along with data security. With a footprint in over 170 Chinese cities, the state-backed company is now the country’s sixth biggest ride-hailer but lags far behind Didi in monthly active users, according to figures published by app tracking firm Aurora Mobile in May.

“China’s ride-hailing market has always been strictly regulated. Looking ahead, compliant, healthy, and sustainable development will be the major path for all the players,” a Shouqi spokesperson told TechNode on July 20 (our translation).

Read more: How did Didi get in trouble with data regulators?

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Next major player exits Chinese community group-buy https://technode.com/2021/07/30/next-major-player-exits-chinese-community-group-buy/ Fri, 30 Jul 2021 02:09:01 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160834 a bunch of grocery delivery vegetables community group-buyOnce-major community group-buy player Shixianghui's website and WeChat mini-app are offline following the departure of several key executives.]]> a bunch of grocery delivery vegetables community group-buy

Chinese online grocer Shixianghui appears to have ended its community group-buy service amid fierce competition in the market and regulatory pressure. The service’s web site and mini-app are no longer functioning. Meanwhile, the company is raising funds for a new snack store business.

Why it matters: The Tencent-backed firm is the latest company to exit the highly crowded community group-buy market, which relies on part-time distributors using WeChat groups to sell groceries to their neighbors. Recent exit signals that the market is going through a new round of consolidation.

  • Shixianghui’s retreat from community group-buy comes only three weeks after rival Tongcheng Life went bankrupt.

Details: Shixianghui’s official website and its WeChat mini-program are no longer accessible since last week. On Monday, local media found the company had moved out and emptied its head office in Wuhan. Once valued at $500 million, Shixianghui showed multiple signs of a possible shutdown in recent weeks.

  • Both the website and the mini-program do not load as of Friday afternoon, with the mini-program displaying an endless loading wheel.
  • Several senior managers left the company this month. Dai Shanhui, founder and chairman of Shixianghui, exited the platform’s operating body on June 30. Senior partner Du Fei announced his departure in a Weibo post on Monday.
  • However, Dai denied bankruptcy rumors. He still owns more than 80% of the company, according to information from corporate intelligence database Tianyancha. In an interview with local media, he said that the firm is undergoing a business transition rather than going bankrupt.
  • The company’s new community snack chain store Ailingshi is reportedly completing a funding round of up to $30 million.

Context: An early player, Shixianghui was once making profits before tech majors such as Alibaba, Didi, and Pingduoduo entered and competed with heavy subsidies.

  • Dai claimed in a January interview that the company earned profits in all its locations in 2020, about 50 cities across China. The company brought in around RMB 200 million to RMB 300 million per month in sales.
  • In March, Shixianghui was among the five community group buy companies fined for irregular pricing by China’s market regulator, the State Administration of Market Regulation. The other four companies were Didi’s Chengxin Youxuan, Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai, Meituan’s Meituan Youxuan, and Alibaba-backed Nicetuan.
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Ant-backed bike rental app Hello Inc. pulls US IPO plan https://technode.com/2021/07/28/ant-backed-bike-rental-app-hello-inc-pulls-us-ipo-plan/ Wed, 28 Jul 2021 06:24:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160778 Hello Inc.Hello Inc, formerly known as Hellobike, is the latest Chinese tech company to abandon overseas IPO plans amid increased scrutiny.]]> Hello Inc.

Hello Inc., a Chinese bike rental app backed by Ant Group, canceled plans for a New York IPO amid tightening regulatory scrutiny on overseas IPOs

Why it matters: Formerly known as Hellobike, Hello Inc. is the latest Chinese tech company to backtrack on overseas IPO plans since Chinese regulators tightened review processes on overseas listings in early July. 

  • As a bike-sharing and transportation app, Hello’s possession of users’ traveling and mapping data, alongside its overseas funding plan, could attract attention from China’s cyberspace authority, which banned ride-hailing giant Didi from app stores shortly after it listed in New York. 

READ MORE: How did Didi get in trouble with data regulators?

Details: The Shanghai-based company is applying to withdraw an IPO plan filed in April, according to a Tuesday filing to the US Securities and Exchange Committee. 

  • A Hello spokesperson told TechNode that the company made the decision with “careful consideration by the company’s management.”
  • “We will advance the IPO procedure in accordance with national regulatory requirements and the capital market environment in the future,” the person added.
  • Hello may now seek to list in markets like Hong Kong or Shanghai Stock Exchange’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market, according to people from the company familiar with the matter. The company has been operating on losses in the past three years, according to its prospectus.

Context: Since July, a slew of Chinese tech firms, including social commerce app Xiaohongshu and fitness app Keep, have suspended overseas IPO plans. 

  • China’s cybersecurity authority is revising regulations to require companies that control data of more than one million users to seek regulatory permission before filing for overseas IPOs.
  • Hello is one of the main players in China’s bike-sharing market, competing with Didi’s Qingju, and Meituan Bike. The company is a survivor of China’s bike rental craze that began around 2017. 
  • In addition to Ant Group, Hello is backed by top investors, including Fosun Group, GGV Capital, and Shenzhen Venture Capital.

READ EVEN MORE: INSIGHTS | The bike rental boom is dead. Long live bike rental

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Chinese edtech upended by sweeping regulations https://technode.com/2021/07/26/chinese-edtech-upended-by-sweeping-regulations/ Mon, 26 Jul 2021 11:01:09 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160722 yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids childrenBeijing unveiled new rules on Saturday that will bar edtech companies from earning profits, raising capital, or going public.]]> yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids children

Beijing unveiled new rules on Saturday on the country’s private education sector, barring after-school tutoring companies, including edtech companies, from earning profits, raising capital, or going public and imposing new limits on extracurricular study.

Why it matters: The new rules will end IPO hopes for online education startups like Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang, and limit fundraising for the already listed. Companies that cannot comply with new rules could be forced out of business.

Details: Top-level party and government bodies released on Saturday a directive (in Chinese) to “reduce the burden of students enrolled in compulsory education.” The directive requires private tutoring companies to re-register as non-profit organizations, bars local authorities from approving any new companies, and orders local authorities to re-examine previously registered online education companies. 

  • The directive was jointly issued by the General Office of the Central Committee, the administrative branch for the party’s top leading groups, and the General Office of the State Council, the Chinese cabinet.
  • Shares of US-listed tutoring companies TAL Education, Gaotu Techedu, and New Oriental Education lost at least half of their value Friday as the document began to be widely shared.
  • The new rules forbids after-school tutoring companies teaching school subjects to pursue IPOs or accept foreign investment. Listed education companies will not be allowed to issue new equities and raise money in stock markets.
  • The new rule bans companies from teaching school subjects on weekends and holidays. 
  • The rules also forbid companies to provide online courses to children three to six years old. Chinese children typically start primary school at the age of seven.
  • Chinese authorities will also re-evaluate existing online education companies and cancel business licenses for companies that fail to meet the new requirements. 
  • China’s after-school education industry has been “severely hijacked by capital,” said a Monday op-ed (in Chinese) from the state-owned newspaper China Education Daily, republished by the Ministry of Education. 

‘Worst case’ for investors: Rumors of a crackdown on after-school education had been around for months, said Ted Mo Chen, a Shanghai-based edtech entrepreneur and TechNode contributor. But the new policy is “the worst-case scenario expected by the market,” he told TechNode.

  • Investors who haven’t cashed out from recently listed or would-be public edtech companies “will not get a fruitful exit,” Chen said.
  • Chen advised companies to take out classes focusing on school subjects. “If they can, switch to professional or skills training, or non-test subject education such as arts, sports, and character-building,” he added.

Relief for parents? Ding Zhe, a father of a five-year-old in Shanghai, said he expects the new rule to ease financial pressures for parents. Ding pays a combined RMB 40,000 ($6,175) per year after-school courses for his daughter, including English, math, and painting. Ding said he will continue to pay for some after-school courses, but he will worry less because other children won’t be studying extracurricular programs.

Context: Investors have rushed into the online education sector since 2016, and many doubled down last year as the sector boomed during the Covid-19 outbreak. 

  • In 2020, Chinese edtech companies raised a combined RMB 53.93 billion, equivalent to the total funding received over the past four years, a report from data intelligence service 100EC shows.
  • Tencent-backed Spark Education, which provides online education for K-12 students, filed for a Nasdaq IPO in June. Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang, two of the country’s most valuable edtech startups, were also rumored to be planning for IPO after receiving a combined $5.9 billion funding in 2020.
  • The new regulation comes two months after Beijing imposed the maximum penalty on Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao for unfair competition.

READ MORE: The Chinese gaming startup outperforming Tencent overseas

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Flying car, triphibian vehicle and other cool things at Taobao Maker Festival 2021 https://technode.com/2021/07/21/flying-car-triphibian-vehicle-and-other-cool-things-at-taobao-maker-festival-2021/ Wed, 21 Jul 2021 10:44:27 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160589 Xpeng Huitian, an autonomous aviation unit at electric vehicle maker Xpeng Motors, showcased a “flying car” prototype at Taobao Maker Festival 2021. ]]>

On a sweltering overcast Monday in Shanghai, thousands of hip, young Chinese people arrive at an exhibition hall in the far-west of the city. They’re there to check out the Taobao Maker Festival.

Currently in its sixth year, the festival is organized by e-commerce giant Alibaba. Every summer, the company turns Taobao, its popular online shopping platform, into a bustling real-life market, inviting young tech entrepreneurs to showcase new prototypes and products. The e-commerce leader is hoping to continue to capture young consumers’ attention.

The average age of festival merchants is 30 years old, with the youngest just 21 years old, said Chris Tung, Alibaba’s chief marketing officer, at a press briefing held on July 16. The event itself is not specifically tech-focused. The online retailer defines a maker broadly as any entrepreneur who creates a new concept or a product. 

Tung called Taobao Maker Festival “a window into the young people of China”. “What it is today for young people is what it will be tomorrow for commerce,” he said.

Products and services showcased at the festival cover almost everything: futuristic tech gadgets, unique Chinese-style handicrafts, new escape room concepts, plant-based meat, and more.

As always, we focused on tech-related makers’ stories at the festival, hoping to get a preview of the future trends.

Flying cars

As electric vehicles and autonomous driving become more familiar concepts to Chinese consumers, entrepreneurs are exploring the future of daily transportation.

Xpeng Huitian’s Voyager X2 flying car prototype at Taobao Maker Festival on July 19, 2021 (Image credit: Technode/Emma Lee)

Xpeng Huitian, an autonomous aviation unit at electric vehicle maker Xpeng Motors, showcased a recently revealed “flying car” prototype at the event. With eight propellers on four axes, the passenger drone could carry two adults. It has a maximum load of 200 kilograms (441 pounds). Voyager X2, the electric drone, can travel 35 minutes at between 80-100 km per hour on one charge. The flying car completed its first crewed test flight in June.

“X2 supports autonomous capabilities and could be used for air patrols, search and rescue, and medical transportation,” Xpeng Huitian representative Zhang Yongjiu told TechNode.

Soco Xray electric vehicle at Taobao Maker Festival on July 19, 2021 (Image credit: Technode/Emma Lee)

Also in transportation, Soco Xray is a triphibian electric vehicle that can travel in the air, on land (including snow and ice), and on water. Super Soco, a Nanjing-based electric scooter company, developed the prototype of the vehicle. 

The scooter maker sells its vehicles through Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms and more than 2,000 brick-and-mortar stores worldwide. The company sells scooters to over 73 countries.

A girl trying out Exway skateboard at Taobao Maker Festival on July 19, 2021 (Image credit: Technode/Emma Lee)

Shenzhen-based electric skateboard manufacturer Exway offers skateboards that can travel 30-60 kilometers on one charge. Charging can take up to two hours. More than 70% of the company’s products are sold to overseas markets, a company employee said. 

Low calories and low fat

Young Chinese are embracing healthier and greener food trends. Since 2019, plant-based meat has been in vogue. This year, low-calorie and low-fat food are leading the scene. 

Boohee booth at Taobao Maker Festival on July 19, 2021 (Image credit: Technode/Emma Lee)

Boohee, a Chinese health management app that claims to have more than 120 million users, introduced crispy meat, a healthy potato chip-style snack that is made of protein and low in calories and fat. 

Low-calorie Konjac burger of Baoji Dujiaoshou at Taobao Maker Festival on July 16, 2021 (Image credit: Taobao)

Baoji Dujiaoshou, which means muscular unicorn, launched a low-calorie burger with a transparent patty that contains only 4.18 calories. 

By Nice, a brand that produces low sugar and fat desserts, launched broccoli and melon ice cream, which contains fewer calories than a banana.

NFT real estate

Chinese artist Huang Heshan showed off a virtual real estate art project in non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Huang has partnered with NEAR Protocol and blockchain gaming firm Web3Games for the NFT project. 

A young couple choosing virtual “wedding apartment” (Image credit: screenshot from Ifeng video)

Called TooRich City, or Butu Garden in Chinese, the project includes more than 300 villas and high-end units. Butu means “not going bald” in Chinese, expressing the artist’s hope that people won’t lose their hair over skyrocketing property prices in China. 

Huang created a fictional virtual character named Fulitu for the virtual real estate project. Fulitu is a bald, wealthy, and undereducated real estate developer. But in contrast to some real-life Chinese developers, Fulitu cares about regular Chinese people and develops housing for the poor.

READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | What China thinks of NFTs

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The Big Sell | Regulators target price discrimination https://technode.com/2021/07/15/regulators-target-price-discrimination/ Thu, 15 Jul 2021 02:46:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160455 e-commerceChinese regulators are about to get a lot more involved in how e-commerce brands set prices, in a crackdown on a practice called price discrimination.]]> e-commerce

Three months after a sweeping crackdown on “forced exclusivity,” Chinese regulators are moving to take more control over Chinese e-commerce companies’ pricing. The latest target of Chinese market watchdogs is price discrimination.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.

China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) indicated that it would take a tougher stance on price discrimination when it proposed regulations on consumer pricing practices on July 2. Price discrimination is a kind of personalized pricing, where companies charge customers different prices for the same product or service by analyzing purchasing habits.

An online travel agency might hike up the price of an airline ticket for a user who is a regular big spender or has a history of last-minute purchases. Platforms even appear to charge their most loyal customers higher prices, who they think would be willing to pay more.

Meituan came under fire in late December after a viral WeChat post accused the food delivery giant of charging its paid members higher delivery fees than its free users. The writer of the post said that he was charged RMB 4 ($0.6) more for a delivery fee than a free user, even though he ordered from a member account for which he paid RMB 6 to RMB 15 per month. Meituan said the extra charge was made in error. TechNode could not independently verify the writer’s claims. 

Research conducted by Fudan University shows that ride-hailing apps charge an “Apple tax” to iPhone users, a group that is generally considered as premium in China. The report shows that iPhone users are more likely to get the pricier “chauffeured rides” and receive less of a subsidy compared with Android users. 

The new regulations would also punish price fixing, price dumping, and price fraud. Included in the 12 pages of proposed rules is a section on the pricing strategies of China’s tech economies, or companies using “new business models,” to use the regulator’s term.

SAMR is seeking public comment on the draft rules through Aug. 2.  

Companies operating under these “new business models” would be subject to a fine equivalent to 0.1% to 0.5% of their sales if they are found to charge different prices for the same product or services by leveraging big data and other technological means to predict users’ willingness to pay. The draft also forbids businesses from dumping products at low prices to create a monopoly. 

Illegal gains would be confiscated and companies could be required to suspend their business operations during a  rectification process. For serious violations, they could even lose their business licenses. 

Under Chinese law, price discrimination is already illegal. But Chinese regulators have largely tolerated these practices for the past two decades. 

Chinese consumers grapple with discrimination 

Amazon first experimented with price discrimination back in 2000, when the global e-commerce titan charged different prices to individual customers for the same DVDs. The company stopped in response to swift consumer backlash and still avoids the practice two decades later.  

But Chinese online businesses are widely believed to employ the revenue-boosting tactic. Platforms deny that they charge different prices to different customers—but few consumers believe it.

User complaints about the practice flood social networks and mass media. As of the end of June, there were over 1,300 submissions about price discrimination on Sina’s Black Cat consumer platform alone. The complaints concern nearly all major tech names in China, from e-commerce giants Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo, to food delivery apps Meituan and Dianping, to online travel platforms Ctrip, Qunar, and Alibaba’s Fliggy, to ride-hailing apps like Didi.

While price discrimination exists across industries, it is more prevalent in areas that offer services than those that sell physical and standardized products. “Sectors like online travel and ride hailing are more vulnerable to the practice compared with e-commerce and food delivery, which offer standardized physical products at steady costs,” said Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iiMedia Research.

Denials from companies haven’t boosted user trust. Most consumers still believe price discrmination is ubiquitous in China. Results from a consumer report conducted in 2019 show that an overwhelming 88% of those surveyed believed online platforms leverage user data for personalized pricing to make users pay as much as possible. Meanwhile, nearly 60% said they have experienced the phenomenon.

Ctrip and Alibaba declined to comment when reached by TechNode.

A woman surnamed  Hu, a membership user of Ctrip, sued the online travel platform for price discrimination last year. She had reserved a hotel room for RMB 2,889 a night in July 2020 but, on checking out, she discovered the price of the room was only  RMB 1,377. A court in Zhejiang province ruled in favor of Hu, requiring Ctrip to pay RMB 4,777 in compensation.

A tricky concept

Although many users believe they face price discrimination, it’s difficult to prove—and its been going on for centuries.

In some ways, companies are bringing back an old way of pricing. People haggled over prices for most of our commercial history until the Quakers invented the “fixed” retail price tag in the mid-19th century. If people pay different prices for the same products, it’s difficult to tell whether it’s a discount or an overcharge.

Users believe that a variety of user data such as birthdate, educational background, occupation, geographic location, past purchases, web visits, and social media “likes” are used to feed the pricing strategies. The fact that personal data is freely traded on Chinese black markets for tiny sums has made the problem worse.

“As a matter of economics, there are both scenarios where price discrimination benefits certain categories of consumers and promotes overall consumer welfare and efficiency and also scenarios where it does not,” Nathan Bush, a partner with multinational law firm DLA Piper, explained to TechNode. 

A platform generally applies the practice to charge higher prices to customers who it concludes will be willing to pay more, mainly targeting premium members. These companies charge their lowest prices to users about whom they have the least data, raising prices once they see evidence of loyalty. 

From a seller’s point of view, the goal is to charge each customer the highest price he or she is willing to pay. Regulators and consumers see it as an unruly, unfair practice that does not benefit consumers. 

The Chinese term for the concept, “shashu,” literally translates as “killing someone you know,” underlining the fraudulent aspect of the practice by which platforms take advantage of the customers who use or trust them the most.

Crackdown on price discrimination

While there are laws forbiding price discrimination on the books, Chinese regulators rarely examined e-commerce platforms’ pricing strategies before 2020. Things started to change late last year as regulators waged a war on anti-competitive practices in the online world.

The 1997 Price Law (in Chinese) says merchants should price their products and services based on “production and operation costs and market supply and demand conditions.” It forbids merchants from “implementing price discrimination” when providing “the same products or services.”

The country’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law (in Chinese) also forbids practices such as “implementing differentiated treatment in transaction conditions such as the price” for the same goods. The clause, however, only applies to companies with a “market-dominant position,” or companies that enjoy more than 50% of a “relevant market.”

“Whereas the Anti-Monopoly Law treats price discrimination and predatory pricing as potential ‘abuses’ by dominant firms, the older Price Law contains much broader rules against price discrimination and predatory pricing that are not limited to dominant firms,” said Bush.

“Perfect” price discrimination—when a business charges a different price on every sale in an effort to get the highest possible price every time—is rare in conventional markets, but e-commerce makes it possible for companies to try, Wu Weiming, senior partner at Shanghai-based Allbright Law Firm, wrote in a note (in Chinese).

“On the internet, differentiated pricing for different consumers becomes possible. It is difficult for consumers to notice from their own web pages or mobile terminals even if their prices are different from other consumers,” Wu wrote. 

Not only market-dominant players

In November, SAMR proposed a set of antitrust guidelines targeting internet platforms. The guidelines for the first time pointed out that pricing products or services differently according to customer purchasing power, consumption history, or user preference is considered monopolistic behavior.

The guidelines, formalized in February, call for stricter regulation of unfair pricing practices. But the supplement to the Anti-Monopoly Law once again only applies to companies with dominant market positions. So far, SAMR has only deemed Alibaba a dominant player in China’s e-commerce market, fining the e-commerce giant $2.8 billion for “forced exclusivity” in April.

However, SAMR’s July 2 draft provision on illegal pricing activities is a major step closer to cracking down on price discrimination by all online marketplaces, because it also applies to non-dominant marketplaces like JD.com and Pinduoduo.

More hurdles to overcome

Even though the state is issuing tough regulations to crack down on price discrimination practices, there are more hurdles to overcome when it comes to execution. 

The unpredictability and uncertainty in pricing as a result of peak or low seasons and hours, among other factors, may lead to big price fluctuations. Therefore, it’s difficult to collect evidence to prove that the companies have boosted prices based on an individual customer’s characteristics.On top of that, regulating the practice will need the companies to share, at least with monitoring authorities, their recommendation and pricing algorithms, Chen Wenming, a lawyer with Zhejiang Xiaode Law Firm, told local media. This is a prime obstacle to regulating the practice, since most companies will be reluctant to offer this critical information, Chen said.

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Alibaba-backed fashion rental app YCloset shuts down after five years https://technode.com/2021/07/14/alibaba-backed-fashion-rental-app-ycloset-shuts-down-after-five-years/ Wed, 14 Jul 2021 08:28:37 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160435 YCloset’s collapse comes as investor sentiment sours toward the once-popular fashion rental market, which has proven to be capital intensive.]]>

YCloset, a fashion rental startup, is shuttering its operations after five years. The company took its last orders on Tuesday.

Why it matters: YCloset’s collapse comes as investor sentiment sours toward the once-popular fashion rental market, which has proven to be capital intensive. As YCloset scaled, it struggled to keep up with high expenses in shipping, dry cleaning, and staying abreast of the latest fashion trends. 

  • The fashion rental market boomed in China in 2017 as the country embraced the “shared economy,” an umbrella term meaning businesses exchanging services on a pooled resource. The term applies to tech firms such as ride-hailing giant Didi. Bike rental firm Ofo and car rental app Togo were two notable failures.

Details: YCloset stopped taking orders from users on Tuesday. The firm plans to discontinue support for sales and online channels by August 15, including services on its main app, WeChat mini program, and its website, according to a July 9 letter from the company addressed to customers.

  • YCloset claimed it once reached 20 million users. The company said it is “deeply sorry” for the inconvenience caused by its decision to shut its doors and thanked its customers for their five years of support. The firm didn’t provide a reasons for the closure.
  • Pablo Mauron, Partner & Managing Director China at Digital Luxury Group, told TechNode that the YCloset consumers “could not opt for one-time rentals, and brands in the subscription pool were not that inaccessible in terms of price either.”
  • “I would not say that the clothing renting model is unsustainable in China. With the right positioning and options for consumers, it can potentially work,” Mauron added.
  • YCloset is also known as Yi23. Yi means clothing in Chinese.

Context: Founded in 2015, YCloset operated a business model similar to US counterparts Stitch Fix and Rent the Runway. The company targeted female users and allowed subscribers to rent branded apparel and accessories. 

  • The Beijing-based company charged a monthly subscription fee of RMB499 ($70) for unlimited rentals. Three to five pieces of clothing could be rented at one time. 
  • The firm also helped brands promote their products by encouraging users to buy the rentals. 
  • The company raised a combined $70 million in six rounds of financing from prestigious investors like Alibaba, SoftBank, IDG Capital, and Sequoia Capital, according to intelligence database Crunchbase
  • YCloset’s most recent investment was received in 2018 from Alibaba, a backer of American fashion rental platform Rent the Runway.

UPDATE: The story has been updated with a new quote.

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Online home furnishing platform Tubatu files for $108 million IPO https://technode.com/2021/07/12/online-home-furnishing-platform-tubatu-files-for-108-million-ipo/ Mon, 12 Jul 2021 09:35:38 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=160329 Tubatu screenshotsTubatu runs an online marketplace to match customers, decoration companies, designers, and construction material providers. ]]> Tubatu screenshots

Tubatu, a Chinese home furnishing platform, filed for an initial public offering on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange’s tech-focused Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) late last month.

Why it matters: Tubatu runs an online marketplace to connect customers, decoration companies, designers, and construction material providers. China’s domestic stock market is gaining traction among tech companies in China amid stricter scrutiny of US listings

  • Tech-focused markets, including Shenzhen’s GEM board and Shanghai Stock Exchange Science and Technology Innovation Board, are popular listing destinations for medium-sized tech firms, often leaders in smaller vertical markets.

Details: Tubatu plans to raise RMB 700 million ($108 million) by offering up to 60 million shares, according to its prospectus filed on June 30. The filing came three years after a failed attempt to go public in Hong Kong.

  • Tubatu said the raised funds will be used for improving technological capability, upgrading information systems, and expanding regional coverage, among others.
  • The firm’s revenue increased from RMB 583 million to RMB 680 million in 2018 to 2019, but that figure dropped to RMB 615 million in 2020 due to the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • The company’s net profit more than doubled between 2018 and 2020 to reach RMB 86.6 million.
  • Tubatu claims to serve about 114,000 renovation companies and 9,000 material suppliers currently.
  • Based on its IPO size, Chinese media expect the company’s market valuation to be around RMB 3 billion, much lower than the RMB 10 billion valuation cited in Hurun’s 2020 Global Unicorn Index.
  • Tubatu’s low market valuation comes from an over-reliance on online service revenues, such as matching landowners with decoration companies. Revenue from online services represented 99.94% of the company’s total revenue in 2020, up from 96.34% in 2019 after the company scrapped a low-profit home decoration service.

Context: Home furnishings is a big market in China, where apartments often come without finishes like paint, cupboards, or flooring. China’s online home decoration market reached RMB 400 billion ($61 billion) in 2020, according to data from research agency iiMedia.

  • The company also offers construction supervision services and Zhuangxiubao, a payment app that ensures customers only pay after satisfying renovations.
  • Founded in 2008, Tubatu has raised a combined $216.5 million in three rounds of financing, according to intelligence database Crunchbase. Its last round was in 2015 when it raised $200 million from Sequoia Capital, Matrix China, and 58.com in its Series C.
  • Qeeka Home, a rival of Tubatu, has seen its share price more than halved since it debuted in Hong Kong in 2018.

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Luckin updates 2019 financials in first filing since it admitted fraud https://technode.com/2021/07/01/luckin-updates-2019-financials-in-first-filing-since-it-admitted-fraud/ Thu, 01 Jul 2021 11:03:12 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159851 Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucksThe financial update indicates Luckin Coffee is taking the first step back to normalcy as it prepares for a comeback. ]]> Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucks

Chinese chain store Luckin Coffee released an amended 2019 financial statement on Wednesday, its first financial reports since it admitted to fabricating sales in April 2020.

Luckin’s stock price jumped up more than 20% on the news. The company was delisted from Nasdaq in June 2019 and now trades through the over-the-counter market or pink sheets.

Why it matters: The filing revealed that the company spent almost twice what it earned in 2019, suggesting that giving away free coffee may not be a sustainable business model. It reported a loss of $454 million for the year, compared to $434.5 million in revenue. The statement also confirmed how the size of the fraud, and gave the amount of fictional costs for the first time.

READ MORE: The Big Sell | Luckin is not dead

Details: Luckin released restatements of unaudited results of the second and the third quarter of 2019, as well as an unaudited result of the fourth quarter of 2019. The fourth-quarter result, released for the first time to the public, was postponed due to the fraud scandal.

  • Luckin disclosed in the update that the company inflated its 2019 revenue by nearly RMB 2.12 billion ($328.3 million), slightly less than the RMB 2.2 billion previously estimated. The company’s fabrication grew more than four times over the quarters of 2019, from RMB 250 million in the second quarter to RMB 1.17 billion in the fourth quarter.
  • According to the new figures, net revenue in the second and third quarters of 2019 reached RMB 653.4 million and RMB 843.2 million, respectively, restated from RMB 870.0 million and RMB 1.5 billion in earlier, false filings.
  • Luckin reported losses of RMB 1.13 billion on RMB 1.05 billion in revenue for the fourth quarter of 2019. The losses doubled from the same period last year, while revenue went up 125.6%. 
  • Total operating expenses in the fourth quarter of 2019 were RMB 2.19 billion, representing an increase of 97.2% from the same period a year ago. The company says this growth was driven by business expansion. 
  • The company attributes the growth in revenue in the fourth quarter to attracting new customers and repeat customers by issuing coupons, discounts, and adding non-coffee drinks. 
  • Luckin said on Wednesday in a separate statement (in Chinese) that as of June, it operates more than 5,200 stores in China. The statement, if verified, could mean the company has again overtaken Starbucks as the largest coffee chain store in China. Starbucks runs 5,000 stores in the country, according to its website.

Context: Luckin admitted accounting fraud in April 2020. Several employees, including its COO, had fabricated transactions for much of 2019, amounting to an estimated RMB 2.2 billion in falsified sales.

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Dingdong Maicai raises $95.7 million in diet-size IPO https://technode.com/2021/06/30/dingdong-maicai-raises-95-7-million-in-diet-size-ipo/ Wed, 30 Jun 2021 05:41:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159710 Dingdong MaicaiDingdong Maicai debut receives a lukewarm reception, even after cutting original IPO target by 74% a day before the debut. ]]> Dingdong Maicai

Chinese on-demand grocer Dingdong Maicai raised $95.7 million in a US IPO on Tuesday after pricing its shares at the lower end of the range. 

Why it matters: Dingdong Maicai’s debut received a lukewarm reception, even after cutting its original IPO target by 74% a day before the debut. Coming days after its rival MissFresh’s disappointing Nasdaq debut, it reflects declining market sentiment for Chinese online grocers. 

Details: Dingdong Maicai went public on the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday, just four days after its rival MissFresh debuted to a disappointing result on Nasdaq

  • Shares of Dingdong Maicai inched up 0.09% on the first trading day, and rose 5.23% in after-hours trading.
  • The company raised only a quarter of its original target of $357 million. It reduced the target 74% to $94.4 million a day before. 
  • Dingdong Maicai’s founder and CEO Liang Changlin told local media that the company has “sufficient cash” after raising a combined $1.03 billion in two funding rounds finalized in April and May this year.
  • Liang added that those private investments had allowed Dingdong to be flexible in the IPO. “Fundraising is not the primary goal for this IPO,” Liang told local media

Context: MissFresh closed at $8.65 on Wednesday, after falling more than 30% from its $13 offering price.

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Dingdong Maicai cuts US IPO target by 74% https://technode.com/2021/06/29/dingdong-maicai-cuts-us-ipo-target-by-74/ Tue, 29 Jun 2021 08:49:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159655 dingdong maicaiDingdong’s downsizing signals a cooling appetite for Chinese online grocers as the sector grows more competitive and attracts regulatory attention]]> dingdong maicai

Online grocer Dingdong Maicai slashed the target for its US initial public offering by nearly 74% on Monday, just three days after the company’s rival MissFresh debuted to disappointing results on the Nasdaq. 

Why it matters: Dingdong’s downsizing signals a cooling appetite for Chinese online grocers as the sector grows more competitive and attracts regulatory attention. 

  • Dingdong’s rival MissFresh saw its shares drop by more than 30% following its Nasdaq debut on June 25. 

READ MORE: MissFresh shares sink on IPO as grocery faces bumpy ride

Details: In a Monday filing, Dingdong Maicai said it plans to raise $94.4 million in its US IPO, down by more than 70% from its original target of $357 million. Chinese media reported that Dingdong plans to go public on June 29 on the New York Stock Exchange.

  • The Shanghai-based company plans to offer fewer shares, reducing its offering from 14 million shares to 3.7 million.
  • Dingdong set a price range of $23.5 and $25.5 per share.

Context: Founded in 2017, Dingdong Maicai offers fresh produce and grocery deliveries through a mobile app. The platform’s most popular categories are vegetables, fruit, and seafood. 

  • The company saw its orders more than triple between 2019 and 2020, thanks to a surge in demand for grocery delivery services during the coronavirus pandemic. 
  • The company secured more than $1 billion in investment in April and May. Investors include some of the most prestigious global funds, such as SoftBank Vision Fund, Tiger Global Management, and Sequoia Capital China.
  • Dingdong Maicai and MissFresh are operating on losses and burning cash to fend off fierce competition from tech giants, such as Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and Meituan.
  • China’s market regulator has kept a close watch on the online grocery sector. In March, regulators fined five platforms totaling RMB 6.5 million (about $1 million) for irregular pricing. The companies included Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai and Didi’s Chengxin Youxuan. Dingdong wasn’t fined, but the company has been punished by regulators for food safety complaints at least 19 times, Chinese news reported.

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MissFresh shares sink on IPO as grocery faces bumpy ride https://technode.com/2021/06/26/missfresh-shares-sink-on-ipo-as-grocery-faces-bumpy-ride/ Sat, 26 Jun 2021 09:51:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159587 Chinese online grocery delivery startup MissFresh met a weak reception in US markets Friday, as investors cool on the competitive grocery delivery market. ]]>

Chinese online grocery delivery startup MissFresh (Meiri Youxian) met a cool reception in US markets Friday. It raised $273 million in a Nasdaq IPO after pricing its shares at $13, the lower end of the expected range. The Tencent-backed company’s shares plunged 26% to close at $9.6.

It’s the latest sign of investor concerns about China’s competitive grocery delivery market.

The rise of “community group buy” has attracted a stampede of players backed by deep-pocketed tech giants like Pinduoduo and Alibaba, triggering a costly price war at the discount end of the market. Stricter regulatory control also casts a shadow. MissFresh, which offers on-demand delivery in more upscale markets, is not a community group buy platform.

MissFresh’s on-demand rival Dingdong Maicai reportedly also trimmed the price of its offering in the face of negative market sentiments. It doesn’t help that both MissFresh and Dingdong are still in the red. 

MissFresh CEO Xu Zheng told TechNode that the company has plans to defend its turf and expand into the “sinking market” in an exclusive interview after the company’s US stock debut.

China’s neighborhood retail market is “massive,” with market value forecast to reach nearly RMB 15.7 trillion by 2025, Xu said. “The market of this size is big enough to accommodate diversified user demands and different business models,” he said.

Watching costs

MissFresh is cutting back on delivery infrastructure in a bid to achieve profits. The company’s core grocery delivery businesses is built on “distributed mini warehouses” (DMW), which the firm claims to have invented.

Grocery delivery operated under the DWM model will continue to be the company’s main source of revenue, Xu said, but it will focus on what Xu describes as “high-quality” growth. 

The DWM model, in which products are picked from warehouses placed in residential neighborhood for quick delivery, delivers quick order fulfillment and lower attrition rate, but it’s expensive. Pre-pandemic, these costs threatened to sink the industry.

The DMW model saw a resurgence in 2020, when China’s online grocery delivery market received an unexpected boost from the pandemic, as locked-down consumers went online.

READ MORE: Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce

The model is used by many companies including MissFresh, Dingdong Maicai, and Meituan Maicai. But the market boom created an increasingly competitive field that offers few opportunities other than cash-fueled growth.

While its rivals have poured money into aggressive expansion plans, MissFresh has gradually downsized its physical operations over the past two years. The company’s prospectus showed that it was operating only 631 mini-warehouses in 16 cities as of March, less than half its 2019 count of over 1,500.

The company has focused on high-yield buyers: Xu said he’s targeting young mothers, aged between 26 to 45. The company booked a high per order sales of RMB 94.6 (about $14.5) for its on-demand retail business in 2020, the highest among its peers, according to iResearch.

The strategy has paid off with a narrowed net loss. MissFresh’s net loss dropped to RMB 1.7 billion in 2020, from RMB 2.9 billion one year before. By contrast, Dingdong’s net loss widened to RMB 3.2 billion in 2020 from RMB 1.9 billion in 2019 as the company pushed harder for expansion.

But there’s also downsides. Cutbacks in operations have meant slowed growth. The company booked RMB 6.1 billion revenue in 2020, slightly higher than its RMB 6.0 billion in 2019. Meanwhile, Dingdong Maicai recorded RMB 11.3 billion in revenue in 2020.

Cheaper community group buy services, which bundle deliveries for a whole neighborhood into a once-a-day drop-off, have done better in lower-tier markets.”

Digitizing the wet market

Facing intensified competition in its core business, Xu said MissFresh is poised to break into lower-tier markets with an approach that works together with the wet markets that currently rule the roost.

“Fresh markets remain the go-to place for fresh produce shopping. In big cities, offline wet markets represent 30% to 40% of fresh produce shopping, and they represent 70% to 80% of the shoppings in small cities or towns,” said Xu (our translation).

MissFresh plans to use its IPO proceeds to fund efforts to digitize China’s offline wet markets and enhance AI-driven retail cloud services. The company plans to invest a combined 40% of funds raised in the two initiatives, on par with the 50% proceeds budgeted for sales, marketing, and technology for the on-demand retail business. The rest will be used for general corporate purposes, according to the company’s prospectus.

Both of the new businesses are quite young. The company launched its intelligent fresh market business in the second half of 2020. It promises to help wet markets to optimize their merchant mix, while providing electronic payments, online marketing, and customer management tools. The company’s retail cloud business initiative, launched in 2021, offers AI-based smart supply chain, smart logistics, and smart marketing solutions to enhance automation level and efficiency.

The two businesses are targeting emerging markets in lower tier cities, where upcoming community group-buy rivals like Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai and Xingsheng Youxuan first took off.

Xu sums up the team’s innovation philosophy as “respecting the underlying market laws and breaking the rules”. “While respecting the underlying laws of different market, we should be prepared to break outdated rules,” said Xu.

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618 is not just about e-commerce platforms anymore https://technode.com/2021/06/24/618-is-not-just-about-e-commerce-platforms-anymore/ Thu, 24 Jun 2021 09:29:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159520 618, China’s second-largest shopping festival, has captured the attention of a slew of new players, including short video apps and grocery platforms.]]>

China’s second largest annual shopping festival, 618, has traditionally been a key battleground for the country’s e-commerce companies. But this year, the stakes are higher. E-commerce platforms not only have to contend with each other, but with an ambitious group of short-video and grocery delivery apps looking to grab a piece of the pie. 

Since online retailer JD.com launched the shopping festival in 2010 to mark its anniversary on June 18, the event has grown into a mid-year shopping extravaganza. The festival is second only to Singles’ Day, created by Alibaba in 2009 and held annually on Nov. 11. 

This year, e-commerce sales across platforms grew by a quarter year on year to reach RMB 578.5 billion ($89.6 billion) during the festival, data from China-based data services company Syntun shows. 

E-commerce platforms still hold the home-court advantage, but are defending multiple fronts. New rivals like short video platforms Douyin and Kuaishou offer enticing interactive and social content at a time when e-commerce companies are grappling with the increasingly diverse demands of users.

Upcomers

The decade-old 618 shopping extravaganza is no longer a three-horse race. Gone are the days when Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo were the only players going head to head. Now, nearly all major Chinese apps are looking to capitalize on the event. 

While it’s not the first time that short video apps Douyin and Kuaishou have taken part in 618, the two companies appear to be getting serious about the event. Neither have released their sales figures for the shopping festival, but both companies are making significant inroads. 

  • Douyin went all-in on 618 promotions this year by hosting  a slew of promotions. The company started its pre-sales campaign as early as May 25. The company also rolled out a game called “The Interaction City” to engage users, and provided commissions to entice merchants. 
  • Douyin didn’t reveal sales figures, but said merchants on the platform nearly tripled their revenue compared with last year.
  • Instead of 618, Kuaishou celebrated its own shopping festival, dubbed 616, on June 16th. Held just two days earlier than 618, the festival is able to capitalize on the shopping season but is unique enough for Kuaishou to brand the festival as its own. Like 618, 616 is a month-long event that spans from May 18 to June 16. The company didn’t release overall figures, but said its sales in May more than doubled compared with a year earlier. 

Varied approaches

While short video apps have large user bases with extended user retention, they have relatively underdeveloped e-commerce ecosystems. 

To make up for this, the apps have taken different approaches to expand their e-commerce businesses, either by integrating online shopping into their platforms to convert awareness into purchases, or by leveraging established advantages in content to expand market share and deepen cooperation with brands, Chris Mulliken, consulting partner at EY, told TechNode.

“Others continue to expand sales conversions but through external links to other platforms,” said Mulliken. Short video apps have also partnered with e-commerce platforms—as long as the retailers only play the role of supplier or logistics service provider.

In the lead up to 618 last year, Kuaishou reached a deal with JD, allowing Kuaishou users to  purchase the e-commerce giant’s self-run products without leaving the short video app. This allowed Kauishou to lock users into its app, while leveraging JD’s stock and delivery capabilities. Douyin struck a similar deal with Suning in 2020.

Grocery delivery

Short video apps aren’t the only one with their sights set on 618, grocery and fresh produce delivery platforms are also upping the ante. Overall sales through on-demand grocery delivery apps, such as JD Daojia and Meituan Shangou, reached RMB 17.8 billion during this year’s 618, Syntun data shows. The Syntun report shows JD Daojia topped the category, followed by Alibaba’s fresh produce delivery service Taoxianda and Meituan’s Shangou.  

  • JD-backed on-demand retail platform JD Daojia doubled sales from June 1 to June 18 compared with the same period last year. On June 18, the peak of the festival, the company set a new sales record of more than RMB 300 million, the most it had ever made in a 24-hour period.
  • Meanwhile, Meituan’s grocery delivery business Meituan Shangou rolled out 618 promotions for the first time, targeting the grocery category.

“In the post-pandemic era, O2O platforms are seizing more opportunities brought by change in consumer behavior and economic recovery”, EY’s Mulliken said.

“We see a future wherein all of these future trends converge—social media, online video, livestreaming, e-commerce—into integrated platforms that provide a premier customer engagement experience which then can conclude with the consumers making a purchase,” he added.

E-commerce giant still rules, for now

This years’ 618 saw new sales records, but growth is slowing. 

As China’s mobile internet population reaches its ceiling, there are fewer first-time online users to acquire, forcing the companies to go after the existing internet users. This group tends to maintain a loose connection with a particular app and use multiple apps at the same time.

“It is the ‘relationships’ and ‘content’ that triggers online purchases, rather than promotion activities,” according to Zhuang Shuai, the founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian. Nevertheless, e-commerce companies are still coming out on top.

China’s overall e-commerce sales across platforms for the 18 days from June 1 to 18 reached RMB 578.5 billion ($89.6 billion), according data from Syntun. Sales grew 26.5% year on year, but slowed from a growth rate of 43.8% in 2020. Growth during last year’s  618 was mainly driven by recovered consumption demand and government support to drum up China’s post-Covid recovery. It’s a big increase from 11.8% year on year growth in 2019.

Syntun’s report shows that livestream e-commerce has gained traction. During this year’s festival, sales through livestreaming reached RMB 64.5 billion, or 11% of the total value of all goods sold. 

Alibaba still leads the pack in terms of total 618 sales. The company is followed by JD and Pinduoduo, according to Syntun. JD was the only company to release sales figures, while all other companies described growth in vague terms. 

  • Alibaba published overall sales data last year but did not release figures for this year. The company recorded RMB 698.2 billion in gross merchandise volume last year. Tmall, the company’s business-to-consumer marketplace, more than doubled the number of brands it offers on the platform, reaching 250,000 this year. 
  • Huge discounts are still a major selling point for Tmall, which served up RMB 10 billion in consumer coupons and subsidies for this year’s festival. 
  • Livestreaming was another highlight for Alibaba. All three of China’s top livestreaming celebrities—lipstick king Li Jiaqi, Viya, and Cherie— aired on Taobao Live during the festival. 
  • This year’s 618 was a big deal for Alibaba. It was the first shopping festival since the company’s record antitrust fine. 

JD did release sales numbers. The company racked up a record RMB 343.8 billion between June 1 to June 18, up from RMB 269.2 billion last year. 

  • The figure represents a growth rate of  27.7%, lower than last year’s  33.6%. 
  • JD’s 618 marketing campaigns ran between May 24 and  June 20, during which more than 90% of the core brands on its platform participated in the event, the company said. 
  • Around 90% of consumers received their orders either on the same day or with next day delivery during the festival.

Pinduoduo also did not publish its overall sales figures. The company said it offers value-for-money products throughout the year, so its users don’t need to wait for shopping festivals to get good deals. 

  • The company emphasized celebrating the two year anniversary of the RMB 10 billion subsidy program in late May, rather than 618.

Suning booked a 117% year-on-year increase in sales volume of imported beauty products and a 106% year-on-year jump for imported wellness products, the company said, without providing concrete figures. Suning said it saw a “significant increase” in sales of imported products during its 618 shopping festival, according to the company. 

Free from forced exclusivity

With stricter regulation on monopolistic practices, this year’s 618 was China’s first forced exclusivity-free shopping festival of the past decade. 

Forced exclusivity, which forced merchants to sell exclusively on one platform, was widely adopted by e-commerce companies as they sought merchant resources. This was especially true during shopping festivals, when every merchant is scrambling to fill orders. 

Massive orders during a few peak days may result in over-subscription from buyers. As a result, platforms signed exclusivity agreements with merchants to ensure sufficient stock to fill orders.

One of the most notable forced exclusivity incidents occurred during 618 in 2019. Home electronics manufacturer Galanz accused Tmall of hiding its products from search results after the company rejected Tmall’s plea to remove its listings from rival platform Pinduoduo.

Without forced exclusivity, brands can list on as many platforms as they want in order to access customers, resulting in a situation when every e-commerce platform offers a similar lineup of brands and products. Under these circumstances, providing users with unique shopping experiences, through livestream and short video for example, could be key to the success of platforms in the future. 

However, the over-subscription issue could persist, leading to more pressure to fulfill orders and increase delivery efficiency during the festival. 

For e-commerce latecomers like Douyin, removing forced exclusivity levels the playing field, allowing short video apps that aspire to expand into the e-commerce market to avoid the harsh battles Pinduoduo faced when challenging Alibaba a few years ago.

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The Big Sell | Luckin is not dead https://technode.com/2021/06/21/luckin-is-not-dead/ Mon, 21 Jun 2021 05:11:38 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159379 Luckin Coffee ShanghaiA year after getting kicked off Nasdaq, former unicorn Luckin Coffee is still delivering cheap coffee in China.]]> Luckin Coffee Shanghai

Out of all the Icarus stories in China tech, Luckin Coffee’s is one of the most spectacular. Founded in 2017, in under two years the delivery-focused company was the country’s second-biggest coffee chain, raising half a billion dollars in a US IPO. By the end of 2019, it had more stores in China than Starbucks—and had the larger chain beat on prices.

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It didn’t last. In April 2020, Luckin Coffee admitted to fabricating $310 million in sales, the most spectacular fraud admission we had seen in a while in China tech. As shares of the company plunged by as much as 75% in a single day of trading, the Chinese internet wrote it off with a snarky epitaph: “Hey Wall Street, thanks for the free coffee!” By May 22, 2020 shares hit $1.39, from a January high of $50.02.

The disgraced company faced multiple class action lawsuits from shareholders and was delisted from Nasdaq on June 29, 2020. Chairman Lu Zhengyao defaulted on a $518 million loan. In February this year, the company filed for bankruptcy.

But Luckin is still very much alive: despite some closures, its stores are still a ubiquitous presence in Chinese office districts, and this summer it even launched a new range of fruit drinks. On the over the counter markets—the largely unregulated home for stocks that can’t make into a traditional exchange, its stock has recovered to around $9 per share. It’s even reporting higher revenue despite cutting stores.

Is Luckin a comeback story?

It’s hard to say. 

With high-profile marketing campaigns and steep discounts, Luckin changed habits for millions of Chinese consumers. It helped get office workers hooked on reasonably priced coffee, and it still dwarfs its closest competitors in size. But with hipper, low-priced beverage chains nipping at its heels, it’s not clear if Luckin will be the beneficiary of the coffee culture it built.

Luckin seeks profit

Luckin went into bankruptcy with a huge asset: a vast network of busy stores. With its meteoric rise ended, the company has promised to stop burning cash for growth, and raised prices in an effort to turn a profit with the business it has. Bankruptcy administrators Alvarez & Marsal have told the court they are “optimistic” the firm will survive and resume growth.

Price increase & less coupons: For consumers, the most obvious change is increased prices and fewer coupons. Luckin told Chinese media in May that store heads could apply to raise prices up to RMB 3 for each drink, amounting to a RMB 1 or RMB 2 rise considering discounts. Meanwhile, the company stopped giving free drink coupons to first-time buyers. Its current coupons offer around 50% discount, compared with the more aggressive 80% or 90% discounts at the peak of its marketing campaign before the scandal.

Wang Jia, a 38-year-old avid coffee drinker from Shanghai, told TechNode she still orders regularly from Luckin, but receives fewer coupons compared with one year ago.

TechNode staff in Beijing and Shanghai were able to order a black coffee with delivery for RMB 14 ($2.17), discounted from a notional standard price of RMB 26. In China, the most basic drink is an Americano, usually priced at RMB 20.  

Fewer stores: To cut costs, Luckin also closed down about 609 of its self-operated stores, bringing the total from 4,507 to 3,898 at the end of November 2020. The chain is no longer bigger than Starbucks, but it remains a clear second. No other coffee chain has 1,000 stores.

“Luckin has made a decision to turn away from an expansion-at-all-costs approach and prune its network of coffee chains. From outward appearances and occasional company updates, this decision has reduced the number of under-performing stores.” Michael Norris, research and strategy head at institute AgencyChina. 

Existing stores are operated thinly to manage staffing costs. A 40-square-meter Luckin store TechNode visited in downtown Shanghai depends on only one staff member to handle more than 700 orders per day, an employee told TechNode.

Franchise model: Luckin, which previously insisted on running its own stores, launched a franchise model in January. The company does not collect franchise fees from its partners, but becoming a Luckin franchisee requires an upfront investment of between RMB 35,000 to RMB 37,000 for storefront decoration, equipment, and a deposit. Luckin then takes up to 40% of the store’s profits once it reaches an agreed earnings threshold, depending on the size of the store.

Double down on existing users: Instead of spending heavily to acquire new users, Luckin focuses on getting value from regular customers, encouraging repurchasing by funneling them to a private user pool on social network tools such as WeChat Work. After scanning a QR code in a Luckin store at the request of a staff member, TechNode joined a WeChat group where the company sends discounts and coupons to nearly 100 customers. The tactic, commonly known as “private traffic,” is a popular marketing tool in China for increased user intimacy with brands and improved consumer retention rate.

Is it working?

Since delisting, Luckin has not published financial reports, so it’s hard to say whether the company is making headway on profits. In April, Luckin said it will publish corrected 2019 and 2020 earnings “as soon as possible.” But some figures have come out through the bankruptcy process.

When last seen, the company’s bottom line was in the red: in Luckin’s last financial statement, it claimed a loss attributable to shareholders of $324 million for the nine months ending September 2019. Of course, without the fake sales it would probably have looked worse.

Luckin appointed Alvarez & Marsal (A&M), a Cayman Islands-based consultancy which oversaw the liquidation of Lehman Brothers, to oversee its restructuring. The coffee chain owes millions to investors who bought into its January 2020 bond offering. The liquidators most recently released revenue information for 2020, reporting increased revenue despite a steep cut in store numbers. 

Luckin scored revenue growth in 2020, A&M said. The auditor estimated the net revenue for 2020 to be between RMB 3.8 billion and RMB 4.2 billion, compared with RMB 3.0 billion net revenue for 2019. That’s a 27% to 40% year-on-year increase. Nothing significant compared with three-digit growth before, but healthy enough for a tumultuous year. 

“It’s a reach to make predictions about the company’s current operating status based on last year’s data because there have been lots of developments in the market since then. But consumers and the market reckon that the company’s operations are getting better. The beverage industry is highly profitable. Avoiding large-scale store closures during the most difficult times in last year’s pandemic is obvious evidence that the company is doing well,” Mark Zhang, analyst from Tiger Brokers told TechNode (our translation).

Some of its stores managed to break even for the first time in August 2020, and in September 2020, 60% of Luckin’s self-operated stores were profitable on the store level, the liquidators reported. The company claimed $710.3 million in cash and cash equivalents as of Nov. 30, 2020.

New business focuses start to pay off

  • As of Nov. 30, 2020, Luckin has 894 franchised “partnership stores.”. This line of business was loss-making as of June 2020, but by November, 70% had reached the profit threshold required to share profits with the company. These thresholds vary between stores.
  • A&M claim that “increased number of our transacting customers, purchasing  frequency per customer, higher effective selling prices of freshly-brewed products and our increased efforts in enriching our product portfolio” drove higher returns.

The company still faces debt trouble

  • $467 million from 0.75% convertible senior notes are due 2025. One group of investors that holds 84% of said bonds has sued Luckin in the Cayman islands.
  • Luckin entered into a restructuring agreement with a group controlling 59% of aggregate principal of the shares on March 16, which will give them back 91%-96% of the value.
  • Ordinary shareholders also have claims based on the fact that the company misrepresented its financials. In a statement, the company said it is negotiating non-disclosure agreements with these plaintiffs.
  • Luckin paid a $180 million penalty to settle accounting fraud charges brought by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Raising money: The company received new investments from Centurium Capital and Joy Capital on April 15. Centurium Capital put in $240 million and Joy Capital invested an additional $10 million in senior convertible shares. Both of the funders were early-stage investors of the company and sat on the original board of Luckin. 

“The company’s original investors, a motley crew with ties to Lu Zhengyao, haven’t given up on the concept. Query, however, whether they believe in the company’s strategy and competitive position or whether they are clinging onto the prospect of a lucrative exit,” Norris said. Norris previously criticized the company’s reliance on the personal networks of its founder in a 2019 TechNode article.

Vending machines: In January 2020, Luckin announced $865 million in post-IPO fundraising to fund growth and “unmanned” vending machine strategy. Due the the turmoil caused by its fraud admission, the firm suspended all expansion of the vending machines business in May 2020.

  • Luckin started recruiting partners for its coffee vending machine program, Luckin Express, in March this year. As of December 2020, the company operated 150 vending machines for the program, which is loss making, according to the A&M report.
  • The company has nothing about snack vending initiative Luckin Pop Mini, so local media supposes they have dropped the latter.
  • A short report that rocked Luckin’s shares in January 2020 focused on vending machines, alleging that the company overpaid for the machines in a related party transaction.

Fool me once…? 

Luckin admitted to bad corporate governance and simply inventing sales figures out of whole cloth. Has it changed enough to be trusted?

  • Luckin’s board of directors has undergone a slew of changes since its fraud admission, including the ousting of Charles Lu and Sean Shao in July, and reinstating of Sean Shao at Centurium Capital’s request in September.
  • Transparency about the company’s financial status remains limited, with auditors being replaced twice. Auditor EY was replaced by Marcum Bernstein & Pinchuk LLP in December 2020. The latter was subsequently replaced by Centurion ZD in April 2021. Marcum says it “believes that it has not gathered sufficient independent third-party data or conducted sufficient audit procedures to complete the audit.”
  • Only two out of the eight directors on the board had no personal ties with the company as of June 2020. The majority of directors must be independent to list on Nasdaq, where Luckin shares were traded before being delisted last year.

The Luckin legacy

Luckin is alive, and so is the model it started. But the world is different now—in part because of Luckin’s success. Coffee shops and beverage chains mushroomed in China over the past year. 

“Previously, Luckin was fighting to take shares from Starbucks. Now, Luckin is trying to complete the same objective, while grappling with Luckin-imitator coffee chains, such as Manner Coffee. It’s unclear whether the company has what it takes to fight a two-front war for coffee-drinkers’ wallets,” said AgencyChina’s Norris.

Local rivals like Manner Coffee (in Chinese) and Coffee Box have become new investor darlings in the coffee segment. Manner, which operates more than 100 mostly Shanghai-based stores, eschews discounts and deliveries, offering app-based pick up at a consistent price (RMB 15 for an Americano, with few to no discounts). Coffee Box, which started as a delivery service for Starbucks and Costa before setting up its own brand in 2014, shut down almost all of its brick-and-mortar stores to focus on online channels after setting up a joint venture in June last year with China’s largest gas station chain Sinopec. The joint venture plans to sell coffee in Sinopec’s Yijie convenience stores as “Yijie Coffee,” and targets 3,000 locations in gas stations and beyond by 2023.

Milk tea and fruity drinks chains also pose a challenge as the boundary between the coffee and tea fads is blurring. That means coffee chains also face competition from IPO candidates like Naixue’s Tea and Heytea, both of which now serve coffee. HeyTea operates more than 700 stores as of December, up from 390 one year ago, while Naixue’s Tea has nearly 500 stores as of 2020.

And, of course, Luckin faces international competitors. Starbucks is becoming more localized and online through a partnership with Alibaba. Fast food chains KFC and McDonald are increasing their coffee forays. Canadian coffee chain Tim Hortons is expanding its China operations after an investment from Tencent in February. 

“There are too many beverage brands to choose from in big cities like Shanghai. Instead of constantly purchasing from one single brand, I buy from several brands, and will choose whichever brands that are most accessible or most affordable at the time,” said Wang Jia.

UPDATE: An interview has been rephrased to remove the implication that Seesaw is a Luckin imitator.

Additional contributions by Julia Lu and Louis Hinnant

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Alibaba Cloud offers to build livestream shopping platforms for global clients https://technode.com/2021/06/09/alibaba-cloud-offers-to-build-livestream-shopping-platforms-for-global-clients/ Wed, 09 Jun 2021 08:55:26 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=159067 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAlibaba Cloud is offering a paid service to merchants from around the world to help them build their own livestream shopping. ]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Alibaba Cloud on Tuesday unveiled a new service to help global online merchants set up their livestreaming platforms. The e-commerce giant was one of the first to popularize livestream shopping.

Why it matters: China is leading the trend in livestream shopping. Alibaba, a leader in the sector, wants to capitalize on its expertise as the model gains popularity outside of China.

  • Livestream shopping took off in China in 2019. By the end of 2020, the model quickly attracted 388 million shoppers, more than a third of China’s 989 million internet users.

READ MORE: Insight: How e-commerce and livestreaming became frenemies

Details: Alibaba Cloud now offers a paid service to global merchants hoping to build livestream shopping platforms of their own, the company announced at the virtual Alibaba Cloud Summit 2021 on Tuesday.

  • The company said it plans to leverage its livestreaming technologies, including “distributed real-time video processing technology” and “uninterrupted signal transfer,” to help customers cut down delay time during virtual sales sessions, it said in a statement emailed to TechNode.
  • The service also offers replays of livestreams, livestreaming applications and user interfaces, real time subtitle translation for cross-border livestream, among others.
  • In a separate press release, the company said it will invest $1 billion to support startups and train new technical talents in the Asia-Pacific region over the next three years.

Context: Alibaba’s cloud computing subsidiary is supporting the new service. Alibaba Cloud, once a reliable growth engine for the company, needs new growth areas. The unit’s revenue for the March quarter increased 37% year on year, the slowest pace since 2014. The loss of a major “top-class customer,” reportedly Tiktok, is the main reason for slowed growth in the quarter.

  • The Chinese e-commerce giant is trying to export its success in livestream commerce to other parts of the world.
  • 388 million Chinese shoppers bought products through livestreams as of December 2020, a report by state-backed research agency CNNIC shows. The figure represents 39% of China’s 989 million netizens.
  • According to a report by China Consumers Association, Alibaba’s Taobao Live takes the lion’s share of the market, representing 69% of all livestreaming shoppers in China.
  • Outside of China, other retail giants are starting to invest in livestream shopping. Walmart partnered with TikTok last December to have the first pilot test of livestream shopping experience in the US on the video platform.
  • In 2019, Amazon launched its live platform, which allows influencers to promote items and chat with potential customers.
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INSIGHTS | China’s tech giants are planning an investment spree https://technode.com/2021/06/07/insights-chinas-tech-giants-are-planning-an-investment-spree/ Mon, 07 Jun 2021 04:28:47 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158942 Alibaba China tech investmentChina's big tech vow to up tech investment to keep up with post-pandemic trends—including changing government priorities and a wave of new regulation. ]]> Alibaba China tech investment

Chinese tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent have long had the reputation of being some of the most active investors in China. They are behind a host of unicorns, from ride-hailing giant Didi to edtech platform Yuanfudao.

Now, they’re looking inwards, pledging to reinvest the money they make into new ventures ranging from supply chain digitization and grocery delivery, even if it means hammering their profits.

Insights

Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, published in the subscriber-only TechNode Distilled newsletter.

Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said in an earnings call in May that the company will invest all its incremental profits into core strategic areas. These funds include the difference between the company’s current year profits and those of the previous year. 

Tencent has made a similar pledge, aiming to sharply increase investments this year. Meanwhile, Pinduoduo said it will boost investments in logistics infrastructure and agricultural science.

In some cases, these pledges represent up to 15% of these companies’ annual incomes, according to analysts.

“While we don’t expect to see significant [returns] in the short term, we believe these investments will create sustainable long term profit growth for investors,” Esme Pau, analyst at China Tonghai Securities, told TechNode. 

Bottom line: Chinese tech majors Alibaba, Tencent, and Pinduoduo have all promised to up their investments as their users change behavior in the wake of the pandemic and stricter regulations weigh on tech firms’ businesses.

Tech investment hikes

Alibaba will invest all of its “incremental profits” in 2022, after a hefty $2.8 billion antitrust fine triggered its first quarterly loss in nine years. The company didn’t specify an amount, but Bloomberg has estimated that the total amount could reach RMB 25.8 billion this year, or 15% of the company’s RMB 172 billion non-GAAP net income for 2021 fiscal year.

  • Non-GAAP figures usually exclude irregular or non-cash expenses to smooth out high earnings volatility. In Alibaba’s case, this figure excludes the $2.8 billion fine, which is reflected in the company’s RMB 142.3 billion net income for 2021.
  • Alibaba has promised that its investments will be “highly targeted and disciplined,” given the potential size of its spending spree.
  • The company’s investment priorities include technology innovation, support programs for merchants to lower their operating costs, improving user acquisition and user experience, upgrading merchandising and supply chain capabilities, and new business initiatives, according to CEO Daniel Zhang.

Focused spending: A source with knowledge of the matter told TechNode that livestreaming, Alibaba’s Pinduoduo competitor Taobao Deal, and Cainiao Logistics will be the focus areas of these investments.

  • Funding for Alibaba’s livestreaming business will be focused on training livestreamers, helping more merchants use its livestreaming services, and improving livestreaming technology, the source added.
  • Livestream is an important segment for the company. Alibaba’s Taobao Live, China’s largest player (in Chinese) in e-commerce livestreaming, recorded a gross merchandise volume of RMB 500 billion in fiscal year 2021.
  • Taobao Deal, which offers value-for-money products for price-conscious consumers, is working to integrate suppliers from its wholesale e-commerce platform 1688.com to boost Taobao Deal offerings.
  • Investments in Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao will be used to improve the company’s cross-border delivery capabilities by building and upgrading its global logistics infrastructure, the source said.

Tencent will plow a larger portion of its incremental profits this year into investments, as China’s internet industry undergoes “a heavy investment phase,” the company said in its first-quarter earnings report. 

  • The social media and gaming giant also announced a RMB 50 billion fund that will invest in areas such as basic science, education innovation, carbon neutrality, and food provision, the company said.
  • In an earnings call with analysts in April, Tencent President Martin Lau said the company would invest up to 20% of its incremental profits. 
  • It’s unclear how much Tencent’s incremental profit will be this year. The company’s profit for 2020 was RMB 127 billion, with an incremental profit of RMB 29.4 billion. That would amount to around RMB 5.9 billion in investment.
  • Tencent said it would channel the funds into enterprise services, gaming, and short-form video apps, largely in line with the company’s past investment strategy.
  • As of the end of May, gaming made up around 17% of Tencent’s past investments while business services totaled 13.3%, according to Itjuzi (in Chinese), which tracks China’s venture capital market.

Pinduoduo, which claims to have a larger user base than Alibaba, plans to increase spending in areas along the agriculture industrial chain, where typically digitalization remains low. At the same time, the company is narrowing in on logistics, an area requiring massive, long-term investments. 

  • The company has not specified the amount it intends to invest.
  • Nevertheless, Pinduoduo plans to boost spending on logistics infrastructure ranging from cold-chain transport to warehousing and delivery. 
  • For a company like Pinduoduo, logistics is even more critical given its increasing focus on perishable agricultural products. 
  • While continuing to fund its grocery pick-up business Duo Duo Maicai, Pinduoduo will “invest heavily” in logistics infrastructure technology, said Tony Ma, vice president of finance and the company’s de facto chief financial officer. 
  • Pinduoduo recorded RMB 2.9 billion in net losses during the March quarter. The company had RMB 83.4 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments as of March.

What about the others?

We haven’t seen the other tech majors making such a fuss about investment, but here’s what we know.

Meituan: In March, Meituan warned about losses due to heavy investment in its community group buy service Meituan Select, which CEO Wang Xing called the company’s “best opportunity in five years.” 

  • Retail, especially the community group buy business, continued to be Meituan’s largest investment area, the company said after reporting a RMB 3.9 billion net loss in the first quarter of this year.

JD: The company didn’t say much in its recent filings or in response to TechNode’s queries. JD continues to invest in new opportunities in cooperation with suppliers and brands, Chief Financial Officer Sidney Huang said in the company’s first-quarter earnings call. 

The effects

Hit to profits: Huge investment promises will mean less short-term profits.

  • After Alibaba announced its investment plan on May 13, Bloomberg revised its estimate for Alibaba’s non-GAAP net income growth rate to 15% from 19% year on year for the 2022 fiscal. 
  • Alibaba’s Chief Financial officer Maggie Wu said it would be “stupid” to promise short-term profit to long-term investors because “there are so many competitors who are investing large amounts to gain a foothold in the market.”

Long-term vision: The investments imply that these tech giants see big post-pandemic opportunities.

“This focus on reinvestment comes as China’s leading internet companies double down on capital-intensive growth opportunities,” said Michael Norris, senior analyst at AgencyChina. 

“Whether it’s reimagining retail, facilitating same-day or next-day delivery, or building out cloud computing infrastructure, it’s not cheap,” he added.

Tightened regulation is also likely a factor, as companies align their businesses with current government priorities, such as basic science, rural revitalization, food/energy/water provision, carbon neutrality, and technology for senior citizens.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Tech in the five-year plan

“Tightened regulation is likely to create a healthier ecosystem and a more competitive market, which might reduce the moat of these giants and slow down their growth,” said Pau from China Tonghai Securities.

These investments reflect a change in how digital giants see their role in the economy, Norris said.

“When they first burst onto the scene, China’s digital giants tended to be a thin, interfacing layer between consumers, products, services, and attention. Now, as China’s digital giants work on digitally transforming entire industries, that layer becomes thicker and more capital intensive,” he added.

Subject to crackdowns? Tech firms’ vast investment plans may meet with regulatory roadblocks as Beijing tightens antitrust grips on their anti-competitive practices, especially with unreported mergers and acquisitions (M&A) coming under scrutiny.

  • While tech majors’ investments may be focused internally, venture capital investment and acquisitions are also likely to be part of the plan.
  • Before the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) fined Alibaba a record RMB 18.2 billion in April, most antitrust fines imposed on tech companies were related to a clause in China’s antitrust law that requires firms to report M&A deals that could create a monopoly.
  • An overhaul of the law, which is expected to take effect this year, will allow regulators to issue fines up to 10% of the company’s annual revenue over unreported deals.
  • The changing regulatory climate means tech giants now have to report their investment deals that could create “dominant players” in a market to the authorities. Antitrust regulators like the powerful SAMR would have a say in those deals.

China is also cracking down on the so-called disorderly expansion of capital, vowing to prevent firms from growing their businesses into every sector of the economy and forming monopolies. 

For those tech giants seeking to grow even bigger via investment, this could be a warning sign.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Antitrust push in China tech

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New regulation sets off wave of job chaos in Chinese edtech sector https://technode.com/2021/06/02/new-regulation-sets-off-wave-of-job-chaos-in-chinese-edtech-sector/ Wed, 02 Jun 2021 10:48:06 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158798 yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids childrenBeijing is stepping up its scrutiny on the online tutoring sector. Tencent-backed edtech firm Yuanfudao is the latest company reacting to that regulation. ]]> yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids children

Tencent-backed edtech company Yuanfudao attempted to withdraw or defer job offers to more than 2,000 new university graduates as regulators barred a key service. It is the latest Chinese online tutor to move to downsize operations in response to increased regulatory scrutiny.

Why it matters: Beijing is stepping up its scrutiny on the country’s online education sector, which boasts eight of the fifteen edtech unicorns as of early 2020.

  • A new revision in China’s Minors Protection Law, which took effect on June 1, bans kindergarten and private tutoring institutions from teaching elementary-school courses to pre-school students. 
  • The law affects most major Chinese edtech giants, such as Yuanfudao, Zuoyebang, GSX Techedu, Vipkid, and ByteDance, which also has a major presence in online education.
  • Investment sentiment, both from venture capitalists and individual investors, could turn cold on the sector due to uncertainties brought by regulation, putting an end to capital enthusiasm triggered by online tutoring after the pandemic.

Details: Yuanfudao, the Chinese unicorn valued at $15.5 billion, withdrew or delayed job offers to new hires, most of them were fresh graduates, in pre-school tutoring, local media Phoenix Weekly’s business section reported on Monday.

  • Zhang Yun (pseudonym), a university graduate, told Phoenix Weekly’s business section that Yuanfudao asked her to choose to either defer the offer till September or lose it right away. She had given up other options to accept the offer. Zhang said she had already rented a place in a new city to prepare for job. Other Chinese media outlets have reported similar cases. 
  • A Yuanfudao spokesman told TechNode that the job offer change affected about 2,000 people, whose offers were either canceled or deferred. But the company has since set up a special unit to help graduates who face “real difficulties” in finances, such as those who have signed housing contracts or rejected other offers. He added that the company had also walked back some cancellations and allowed some new hires to start work as planned. 
  • US-listed rival GSX Techedu reportedly trimmed a third of its headcount starting in late May as the company shut its pre-school education business for children aged between three to eight.

Context: Over the past few years, regulators have issued various rules on the online education sector to curb what they view as chaotic growth.

  • Chinese regulators have imposed the maximum penalty on Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao in May, two of the country’s most valuable edtech startups, for unfair competition.
  • Four major edtech platforms—TAL Education-backed Xueerxi, GSX Techedu, Koolearn Technology, and Gaosi Education—were fined for deceptive pricing practices in April.
  • Since July 2019, Beijing has required all foreign teachers to hold valid teaching credentials and required companies to make public all related information, such as certificates and work experience details.
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JD-backed electronics reseller Aihuishou files for US IPO https://technode.com/2021/05/31/jd-backed-electronics-reseller-aihuishou-files-for-us-ipo/ Mon, 31 May 2021 10:12:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158621 AihuishouAihuishou, a Chinese electronics resale platform backed by JD.com, filed an application for an IPO on the New York stock exchange on Friday. ]]> Aihuishou

Aihuishou, a Chinese electronics resale platform backed by e-commerce giant JD.com, applied to an initial public offering (IPO) on the New York stock exchange on Friday. 

Why it matters: The Shanghai-based company is one of China’s largest second-hand goods platforms. Unlike its larger peers, Alibaba’s Xianyu and 58.com’s Zhuanzhuan, it focuses on electronics. JD.com is Aihuishou’s biggest investor, owning 34% of its ordinary shares before the offering. 

  • Expect to see a new wave of Chinese technology companies from lesser-known sectors file for IPOs as more Chinese unicorns are maturing. 

Details: Aihuishou is operating at a loss, but it is narrowing the gap.  

  • The company listed a placeholder amount of $100 million in its Friday IPO filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with no price range for the shares.
  • In the first quarter of this year, the company’s net revenue increased by 118.8% yearly to RMB 1.5 billion. From 2019 to 2020, revenue increased 24% from RMB 3.9 billion to RMB 4.9 billion in 2020. 
  • From 2019 to 2020, the company narrowed its operational loss by 37% from RMB 731.8 million to RMB 458.8 million. It booked an operational loss of RMB 111.4 million in the first quarter of this year.
  • Kerry Chen, the company’s CEO, said in a Friday investor letter that the company was long “misunderstood” as “a company that simply dismantles smartphones and re-purposes metals,” but it has since “set new industry standards” by standardizing a previously chaotic market. 
  • The proceeds raised from the offering will be used to develop technology, diversify service offerings, and the company’s online marketplace’s sales channels.  

Context: The company was founded in 2011 as an online platform buying and reselling second-hand phones and other consumer electronics.

  • In June 2019, Aihuishou acquired Paipai from JD.com. Paipai is an online retail platform that allows businesses to sell pre-owned products directly to consumers. 
  • The company entered into a partnership in May with the popular short-video app Kuaishou to reach the video-streaming platform’s massive user base.
  • China’s second-hand electronics market is lucrative. In 2020, Chinese people bought and sold 189 million used devices, generating RMB 252 billion in gross merchandise volume, according to a report cited in the company’s IPO filing document.
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JD Logistics expects non-JD customers to drive growth: CEO https://technode.com/2021/05/28/jd-logistics-expects-non-jd-customers-to-drive-growth-ceo/ Fri, 28 May 2021 08:27:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158532 logistics JD Logistics Alibaba e-commerceJD Logistics is counting on customers outside the JD ecosystem to power growth following its Friday IPO, said CEO Yu Rui.]]> logistics JD Logistics Alibaba e-commerce

JD Logistics, the newly-listed logistics and supply chain spin-off of JD.com, is counting on customers outside the JD ecosystem to power growth, its CEO told an online press conference today after the company’s Hong Kong stock debut.

“We have maintained great trajectory in external user growth since opening in-house delivery capacity to external users in 2017. Integrated supply chain solutions will continue to be our business priority in serving external users,” CEO Yu Rui said.

The company’s core business is broader than delivery—it offers warehouse management and inventory forecasting services as a one-stop shop for logistics.

The company’s prospectus reported RMB 73.4 billion ($11.5 billion) in revenue in 2020. Of the total, revenue from external clients represents RMB 34 billion or 46.2% of the revenue. JD Group and other affiliated parties accounted for the remaining 53.8%.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | The only rundown you’ll need on JD Logistics’ IPO

Shares surge on IPO: Shares soared on 18% in early trading this Friday as the company debuted on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The shares are still trading 4% up as of Friday afternoon.

  • The company raised $3.2 billion in the IPO after pricing its shares at HK$40.3, at the lower end of the expected range.
  • The proceeds raised will be invested in technology development and expanding the company’s logistics network to global and lower-tier markets, according to Yu.

Going global: The company also expects growth in international e-commerce, an area that saw an extraordinary surge during the pandemic as China brands made more overseas sales and Chinese consumers made more direct purchases from overseas. It’s something “JD Logistics could not afford to miss,” said Yu.

  • The company plans to build more logistics infrastructure overseas, focusing on North America and Europe.
  • JD Logistics will also looks at Southeast Asia and South America, following trends among Chinese brands.

Price war: Meanwhile, China’s logistics market is witnesses a brutal price war among major couriers in the market, driven partly by the rise of new entrants like J&T Express. But Yu said impacts on JD Logistics will be “limited.”

  • Addressing the competition from rivals, Yu says JD Logistics’ core strength is “integrated supply chain” services
  • Yu said the delivery services’ role is to acquire clients for the supply chain business as well as generating revenue.

Context: In March this year, JD.com invested $800 million in Dada Nexus, JD’s US-listed on-demand delivery joint venture, which a complementary business to JD Logistics’ overnight shipments.

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Pinduoduo doubles down on agriculture after posting revenue beat https://technode.com/2021/05/27/pinduoduo-doubles-down-on-agriculture-after-posting-revenue-beat/ Thu, 27 May 2021 05:37:03 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158371 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphoneFacing intensified competition in China’s e-commerce market, Pinduoduo has focused on "digitizing agriculture" and the grocery sector.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo posted better-than-expected results for the first quarter of this year, readying for more investments in agriculture research and logistics.

Why it matters: Facing intensified competition in China’s e-commerce market, the Shanghai-based company has become laser-focused on “digitizing agriculture” and the grocery sector.

  • Investment into agriculture aligns with the government’s drive to modernize agriculture. It’s also a priority for rivals like Alibaba and JD.

Revenue beat: Pinduoduo posted first quarter revenue of RMB 22.2 billion ($3.4 billion), climbing 239% year-on-year from RMB 6.5 billion in the same quarter of 2020. The increase was primarily driven by revenue increase from online marketing services and merchandise sales. 

  • Revenue beat the average analyst estimate of $3.2 billion compiled by Yahoo Finance.
  • Pinduoduo’s annual active buyers rose 31% year on year to 823.8 million as of March, slightly higher than Alibaba’s 811 million.
  • But the company’s budget sensitive users continue to spend less than Alibaba’s. Based on its latest GMV figures Pinduoduo, had per-user spending of RMB 2,115 in 2020, compared to Alibaba’s RMB 9,200 in Q1 2021.  
  • The company’s net loss attributable to shareholders narrowed to RMB 2.9 billion from RMB 4.1 billion in the same quarter of last year, though the figure is significantly wider compared with an RMB 1.4 billion net loss in the previous quarter.
  • Despite the revenue beat, shares of Pinduoduo dropped 5.5% on Wednesday amid regulatory concerns and lingering impact of departure of founder Colin Huang in March.
  • The company’s shares have sunk by about 40% from a historic high in February this year.

Focus on ag: The discount e-commerce platform is doubling down on a pivot to agriculture, now describing itself in investor materials as “the largest agriculture platform in China.”

  • Pinduoduo announced a plan to boost investment in logistics infrastructure, the e-commerce backbone that is even more critical for perishable agricultural products. 
  • “In building China’s first agri-focused infrastructure, our priority remains partnering existing third-party service providers first and foremost on everything from cold-chain logistics, warehousing, sorting, and delivery,” said Chen Lei, Pinduoduo chairman and chief executive officer, during the Wednesday earnings call.
  • The firm also announced a partnership with the Singapore Institute of Food and Biotechnology Innovation (SIFBI) for studies on nutritional impact from replacing traditional animal proteins with plant-based proteins.

Context: China has imposed fines totaling RMB 6.5 million on five community group-buy platforms in March, including Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai, for irregular pricing.

  • The ongoing regulatory crackdown on Chinese internet firms casts shadows on the e-commerce company. The Shanghai Consumer Council ordered Pinduoduo to address consumer rights issues this May.
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Meituan merchants pay less on nearby orders, more on long https://technode.com/2021/05/25/meituan-merchants-pay-less-on-nearby-orders-more-on-long/ Tue, 25 May 2021 08:47:54 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158292 Meituan, deliveryMeituan is addressing complaints that it charges restaurants too much to help them delivery food. But it might just be that delivery is expensive.]]> Meituan, delivery

A new commission system for Meituan food delivery has lowered the platform’s cut of short-distance orders, but raised fees for long-distance, merchants told the leading food delivery platform.

Why it matters: Meituan has been criticized for charging excessive commissions to small merchants. The company is trying to ease public frustration and bring more transparency to the company’s operations amid a wider regulatory crackdown on Chinese tech firms.

  • Since May, Meituan has moved away from a fixed commission fee to one that charges restaurants different rates based on factors including store exposure, IT services, delivery distance, order price, and delivery time.
  • Meituan came under the spotlight of China’s antitrust crackdown in April, shortly after Alibaba was hit with a record-breaking $2.8 billion fine.

Details: Under the new system, merchants say, fees for orders within a three-kilometer delivery distance are lowered, but that they are paying more on longer-distance orders, according to a notice (in Chinese) published by the company after a meeting with merchants held May 20.

  • Many merchants asked during the meeting why they have adapt to a new and complicated system rather than take a flat cut on commission rates, according to the notice.
  • Meituan argued that the thins margins of food delivery would make lower commissions across the board unsustainable. “Structural adjustments for the fee system can help the entire food delivery ecosystem to develop in a more profitable and healthier direction,” the company wrote.
  • Delivery costs represent around 83.1% of commission revenues, and Meituan records a profit of just RMB 0.28 ($0.04) per order, according to data from the company’s 2020 annual financial results.
  • The company also wrote that it plans to expand its food delivery business development team by around 30% this year in order to better address the demand of merchants.

Context: In an open letter published April last year, the Guangdong Restaurant Association accused Meituan of exploiting merchants by charging excessive commission rates that “most restaurants can’t endure.”

READ MORE: There are no food delivery winners

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Antitrust comes for Meituan https://technode.com/2021/05/21/antitrust-comes-for-meituan/ Fri, 21 May 2021 03:11:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158195 Meituan delivery local servicesAs Meituan dominates food delivery, many of the restaurants whose food it delivers are struggling to get by. Regulators are asking why.]]> Meituan delivery local services

Xiao Yu, the owner of a Nanjing sandwich restaurant has a bittersweet feeling about food delivery services, an industry that feeds or creates jobs for millions of Chinese. The longer he uses delivery platforms like Meituan and Eleme, the more bitter his sentiment becomes. 

Yu, who asked to be identified by his nickname, understood that cheap, quick food—sandwiches with chicken, pork, omelets, or salad—would rely mostly on delivery orders, at lower margins than dine-in. But even so, he was surprised how hard it’s been to make ends meet. “The number of food delivery orders is generally three or four times that of dine-in orders, but the profit margin is far lower,” he told TechNode.

As merchants’ dependence on food delivery increases along with the popularity of the service, it has become more and more difficult for vendors like Yu to make a living, despite the ever-increasing number of orders.

A commission fee of around 20% per order, plus logistics fees and other marketing expenses charged by food delivery giants eat up an increasingly large share of the merchant’s profits.

“The profit margin for food delivery orders is 40% at the most, after deducting various costs. In comparison, it’s a 60% to 70% margin for dine-in orders,” Yu said. He noted that the 40% margin can only be reached by pricing meals slightly higher for food delivery orders. If priced at the same level as dine-in orders, the margin for food delivery orders would be even lower. 

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The delivery platforms are drawing complaints from the drivers too. The stressful working conditions endured by two-wheeled food delivery drivers drew public ire after a Beijing official exposed issues involving low wages and impossible delivery deadlines. Wang Lin, a deputy director at Beijing’s Bureau of Human Resources and Social Security, earned merely RMB 41 ($6) on a 12-hour undercover shift last month.

For the past few years, frustration with the platforms has been building among small merchants and delivery drivers, two integral parties involved in the booming industry that brings them relatively little benefits. 

With an announcement from China’s national watchdog last month, we learned that the biggest delivery platform of them all is finally being investigated for monopolistic practices. If the Alibaba investigation is any model, Meituan could end up paying a penalty of billions of dollars. The company’s stock closed Thursday at HK$ 273 ($35) when the Hong Kong market closed, down nearly 40% from its peak.

Meituan under antitrust probe

An offer you can refuse: One focus of the Meituan antitrust probe by China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) will be the issue of “choose one of two,” also known as forced exclusivity. The term describes practices that attempt to get merchants like Yu to sign exclusively with one platform. 

The Meituan probe comes shortly after Alibaba was given a record RMB 18.2 billion fine for practices including forced exclusivity. Analysts are looking for parallels between the companies’ competitive practices.

In the case of food delivery, exclusivity is more incentivized than forced. Yu lists his restaurant on both Meituan and Ele.me, which has meant that each app deducted 20% of an order price as a commission fee, with a minimum of RMB 4.5. The commission rate would be 15% if he agreed to list on only a single platform. Representatives of both platforms call Yu and pay visits to his store “all the time,” he said, asking him to drop the other platform. However, with an average order size of RMB 16, he’d still be paying almost a quarter of each order owing to the minimum charge.

In an unscientific survey, TechNode staff checked 30 restaurants they had ordered from recently and found that 27 were listed on both apps. 

READ MORE: What is ‘forced exclusivity’? And why did it get Alibaba fined $2.8 billion?

Monopoly or duopoly? A key factor in any antitrust investigation is to determine who has a monopoly. Chinese law defines any company with more than 50% of a “relevant market” to be a dominant player, subject to more stringent oversight.

Meituan easily meets that definition. Its share of the delivery (in Chinese) market increased to 65.8% in the third quarter of 2019, up from 60.1% during the same period of 2018, according to a report by local research agency TrustData released in February. Over the same period, the share held by rival Ele.me declined from 29.3% to 27%.

As a non-dominant player, Ele.me is unlikely to be fined for forced exclusivity under the anti-monopoly law. However, the practice may also be forbidden under other laws, such as the e-commerce law and price law. We’ve also seen regulators get creative with market definitions to bring smaller companies under the law.

Penalty size: Meituan could face a penalty ranging from RMB 4 billion to RMB 12 billion, according to a report by investment bank Bank of Communication International. Alibaba was fined RMB 18.2 billion, or 4% of its domestic revenue in 2019, although the maximum fine allowable for antitrust violations is up to 10% of domestic revenues. Meituan reported revenue of RMB 114.8 billion in 2020. Bloomberg analysts predict that Meituan will get a smaller fine in keeping with its size. Four percent of the company’s 2020 revenue would be RMB 4.6 billion.

Share movement: Like Alibaba, Meituan’s shares rose slightly after the announcement of the probe, probably because it eliminated a major source of uncertainty for the company. Meituan shares had plunged more than 40% from record highs in February as China’s sweeping antitrust campaign gathered steam and investors anticipated losses from investment in new businesses.

The antitrust probe ultimately will have only a temporary impact on Meituan shares, although the fine could amount to billions of RMB, according to Mark Meng, an analyst from Tiger Brokers. “The goal for the investigation is to strengthen monitoring of the tech market and improve fair competition, rather than shake or dismantle a business,” he said.

Why forced exclusivity?

History of fines: Meituan has already been fined at a local level for forced exclusivity on multiple occasions.

  • June 2017: Jinhua city’s market watchdog, in eastern China’s Zhejiang province,  issues RMB 526,000 fine to Meituan for unfair competition.
  • February 2021: The Intermediate People’s Court of Jinhua, Zhejiang province, rules (in Chinese) that Meituan should pay Ele.me RMB 1 million for asking merchants to list exclusively on its platform.
  • April 2021: Ele.me ordered to pay Meituan RMB 80,000 for unfair competition by a court in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province.
  • April 2021: Intermediate People’s Court in Huai’an, Jiangsu province, orders Meituan to pay RMB 352,000 in compensation to Ele.me for forcing vendors to shut their outlets on its Alibaba-backed rival.

“I don’t think these platforms thought too much about regulatory scrutiny before,” a market analyst told TechNode, asking to stay anonymous because the matter is sensitive. “The fines were too small to worry about, and by the time the regulator does anything, you’ve already screwed over a key competitor,” the source said.

Compared with e-commerce, forced exclusivity matters more in food delivery, “as a narrow range of food options can lead users to abandon a particular app,” he said.

Spilled milk? There’s not much competition to protect in food delivery, with 93% of the market taken by Meituan and rival Ele.me, according to TrustData.

There’s little space for small, specialized platforms to find a niche in food delivery, which is a much smaller market compared with e-commerce. There are e-commerce platforms focusing on cross-border business, maternity, fashion, but it’s hard to imagine a food delivery platform that serves only one cuisine.

Michael Norris, research and strategy manager of Agency China, argued that the implications for consumer choice and platform competitiveness are higher for food delivery than e-commerce. “The impact is amplified when you exclusively sign up whole restaurant chains across the country.”

However, Norris says, “I do wonder whether the multiplicity of forced exclusivity fines at a local level will lead to a higher penalty level.”

“Fair competition in food delivery will benefit the consumers and incentivize enthusiasm in merchants. It will also prevent platforms from overdraft their management resources, credibility and values for the society,” said Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iMedia Research.

Will anything change?

With little competition, an end to forced exclusivity won’t necessarily bring much relief to merchants like Yu. The two dominant platforms face little pressure to lower commissions for restaurants that have no choice but to rely on delivery.

Meituan made a change (in Chinese) to its commission system this month. Instead of a set percentage of order value, it now charges vendors according to distance, order price, and delivery time. Merchants also say there has been less pressure from both Meituan and Ele.me to sign exclusive deals.

“Meituan will separate these fees out. This also helps regulators understand how Meituan charges merchants, and the extent to which those respective fees are increasing,” said Norris.

Meituan CEO Wang Xing argued in the company’s Q4 2020 earnings call that these details will show that the company’s high take rate is “reasonable,” rejecting comparisons to the much lower portion of sales collected by e-commerce platforms like Taobao. “That’s an unfair comparison because we are providing merchants a market-based transaction service. Also, we are fulfilling the actual physical delivery,” Wang said.

Under the new system, the commission rate for Yu’s restaurant orders dropped slightly, but still represents a substantial portion of his sales. 

“We still haven’t seen changes that could bring material benefits to the industry or merchants. The only benefit is that agents of the platforms no longer bug us to sign an exclusive deal. It seems that merchants are the only ones who care about this,” Yu said.

Other risks loom: labor issues, and more 

The antitrust probe isn’t the end of Meituan’s problems.

After a brief share rise following the announcement of the probe, Meituan shares plunged over 20% on Monday due to new uncertainties: festering labor problems and a controversial speech from CEO Wang Xing, an outspoken entrepreneur who has substantial influence in China’s tech world.

After a Beijing bureaucrat went undercover to experience the poor working conditions of drivers, a Meituan representative revealed in a meeting that the firm only pays RMB 3 commercial insurance per day for each of its more than 10 million drivers, instead of the full insurance packages required for employees by labor laws. The company says it is not liable for such fees since the drivers are employed by “zhongbao” (literally, crowd outsourcing in Chinese), contract delivery companies that typically provide services to multiple platforms.

The news reignited online anger around the long-standing issue of poor working conditions of delivery drivers. Tiger Brokers’ Meng says the dispute highlighted the question of whether gig economy practitioners should enjoy the same rights as a company’s legally contracted employees. “This kind of labor dispute poses a serious threat to platform companies like Meituan and Didi,” he said.

“Although driver safety and social security payments are outside the current antitrust probe’s scope, it does intensify the regulatory specter which has precipitated a recent collapse in Meituan’s share price,” Norris said.

Meituan further suffered a $2.5 billion plunge in market cap after the company’s CEO Wang posted last week a 1,100 year-old poem criticizing an ancient Chinese emperor for quashing dissent. The move is reminiscent of Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech in criticising China’s financial system, which was followed by suspension of Ant Group’s IPO, a series of regulator crackdowns on his business empire, and months-long disappearance of himself from the public.

The public and investors remain on the edge over regulatory risks, but antitrust is no longer the only concern.

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Ele.me fined $77,000 over prices and unlicensed restaurants https://technode.com/2021/05/18/ele-me-fined-77000-over-prices-and-unlicensed-restaurants/ Tue, 18 May 2021 06:07:26 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158095 food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courierShanghai's market watchdog has imposed an RMB 500,000 fine on food delivery app Ele.me for misleading consumers on prices and food safety.]]> food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courier

Shanghai’s market watchdog has imposed an RMB 500,000 ($77,000) fine on Alibaba-backed operator of food delivery app Ele.me for misleading consumers on prices and food safety, according to an announcement Monday.

Why it matters: This fine is the latest move in a broader crackdown on the country’s biggest internet companies, across sectors and for different violations.

  • The amount is trivial for the company, but it’s likely to take it as a warning.
  • The fine on the Alibaba-backed company comes as its rival Meituan is still under antitrust investigation.

Check out TechNode’s Techlash Tracker for an overview of the crackdown.

Details: Shanghai’s market regulator announced Monday April 30 fines totaling RMB 500,000, for giving misleading pricing about its services and hosting non-qualified merchants.

  • From July to August last year, Ele.me promoted within its app special deal zones offering up to 90% discounts to lure customers. An investigation found that not all the deals listed in the promotional zones offered the low discounts the app promoted.
  • The regulator imposed an RMB 300,000 fine under China’s Price Law.
  • At the same time, the company was penalized for listing 62 unlicensed restaurants in Tianjin.
  • For failing to fulfill its responsibility to monitoring merchant qualifications, Ele.me received another RMB 200,000 million fine for violating China’s Food Safety Law.
  • Regulators said the Shanghai-based firm did not request a hearing after receiving the notice on April 26.
  • Ele.me could not be reached immediately for comment.

Context: The fine comes amid a wave of penalties for large and small platform companies.

  • China’s top antitrust regulator recently issued a record RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine on e-commerce giant Alibaba for antitrust practices.
  • Sherpa, a Shanghai-based English-language food delivery app, was fined RMB 1.2 million in April for abusing a monopoly position in English-language food delivery.
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Alibaba to invest in key growth areas after posting losses, revenue beat https://technode.com/2021/05/14/alibaba-to-invest-in-key-growth-areas-after-posting-losses-revenue-beat/ Fri, 14 May 2021 05:24:58 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158004 alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shoppingWith the penalty issued in April, the Alibaba seeks to move forward and focus on key strategic areas such as long-term rivalries.]]> alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shopping

Chinese online retail conglomerate Alibaba posted mixed results for the quarter ended March 31, reporting better-than-expected revenue and net losses for the first time since going public as a result of its record-setting $2.8 billion antitrust penalty.

Why it matters: Regulation was a major uncertainty for Alibaba following a probe of the company launched late last year. With the penalty issued in April, the e-commerce giant is now seeking to move forward and focus on business such as long-term rivalries from competitors like JD.com and Pinduoduo, which recently overtook Alibaba in user numbers.

Details: Alibaba is planning to invest all of incremental profits in the coming year into core strategic areas, the company’s management said in a call held Thursday with analysts.

  • The company reported an operational loss of RMB 7.7 billion after accounting for a $2.8 billion fine levied by Chinese market watchdog in April. The net losses attributable to ordinary shareholders was RMB 5.48 billion.
  • Alibaba posted RMB 187.4 billion ($28.6 billion) revenue for the quarter ended March, a 64% year-over-year increase compared with RMB 114.3 billion in the same quarter a year ago. Revenue beat the high end of analyst estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance.  
  • Revenue for fiscal year ended March jumped 41% year on year to RMB 717.29 billion, driven by growth in the core commerce businesses as well as Alibaba Cloud, Wu said in a statement.
  • Sun Art, the supermarket chain Alibaba acquired for $3.6 billion in October, was a major contributor to revenue growth, contributing RMB 42.9 billion or around 6% of the total annual revenue.
  • Priorities include technology innovation, merchant solutions, user acquisition and experience enhancement, supply chain, and infrastructure, company executives said without specifying the expected investment sum.
  • Chief financial officer Maggie Wu encouraged investors to look at the long-term profit when responding to concern about profits in the coming year. The company promised that its investments will be “highly targeted and disciplined.”
  • Tiger Brokers analyst Mark Meng said that for Alibaba to deal with the impact from the regulators all in one quarter was positive. “There’s no need to be pessimistic given Alibaba’s business growth is still robust and the penalty, though hefty, is one-time and small in proportion to Alibaba’s overall quarterly revenue” (our translation).
  • Growth in Alibaba Cloud, once a reliable engine for the company, is losing momentum. Revenue of Alibaba’s cloud business increased only 37% year-on-year, slowest pace since 2014. Wu attributed the drop to the loss of a “top-class customer in the internet industry” without naming the firm.
  • Meng said that the former client was TikTok, which was forced to end its partnership with Alibaba when it began facing scrutiny from the US.
  • Alibaba forecasted that revenue for the year ending March 2022 will rise at least 30% year on year to exceed RMB 930 billion.
  • Alibaba shares fell 6% in New York trading on Thursday, while its Hong Kong shares dipped 5% Friday morning.

Context: China’s top antitrust regulator issued a RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine to e-commerce giant Alibaba on April 10 for anti-competitive practices including forced exclusivity. 

READ MORE: What is ‘forced exclusivity’? And why did it get Alibaba fined $2.8 billion?

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Grocery app Dingdong Maicai secures $330 million funding https://technode.com/2021/05/12/grocery-app-dingdong-maicai-secures-330-million-funding/ Wed, 12 May 2021 05:38:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=157939 dingdong maicaiDingdong Maicai has raised $330 million in a funding spree that has exceeded $1 billion for the grocery app so far this year.]]> dingdong maicai

Dingdong Maicai has raised an additional $330 million in a funding spree that has totaled more than $1 billion for the grocery app so far this year.

Details: Dingdong Maicai, a Chinese fresh produce and grocery e-commerce platform, has raised $330 million in a D Plus round led by the SoftBank Vision Fund, according to an announcement (in Chinese) from its advisor Cygnus Equity.

  • The round follows less a month after the company received in April a hefty $700 million D Round led by DST Global and Coatue Management for business expansion, supply chain investment, and team building.
  • Cygnus Equity declined to offer further detail including the company’s latest valuation based on the round when reached by TechNode Wednesday morning. The Shanghai-based investment bank was also the advisor for and an investor in the company’s D Series in April.
  • Dingdong Maicai could not immediately be reached for comment.

READ MORE: The Chinese startup leading the pack in grocery delivery

Context: The four-year-old company operates more than 1,000 warehouses across 29 cities in China as of April.

  • Along with grocery delivery services offered by JD Daojia and Meituan, the pandemic boosted Dingdong Maicai’s business last year.
  • China’s online grocery boom has drawn in more investors as well as competition from tech majors such as Alibaba and Pinduoduo.

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China levies maximum fine on edtech giants for unfair competition https://technode.com/2021/05/10/china-levies-maximum-fine-on-edtech-giants-for-unfair-competition/ Mon, 10 May 2021 06:13:27 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=157787 edtech regulation yuanfudao zuoyebangSAMR said in a statement on Monday that it is imposing RMB 2.5 million ($389,000) fines each on edtech platforms Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao.]]> edtech regulation yuanfudao zuoyebang

Chinese regulators have imposed the maximum penalty on Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao, two of the country’s most valuable edtech startups, for unfair competition amid a broader crackdown on its biggest internet companies.

Why it matters: Beijing is expanding its scrutiny of tech firms to the online education sector following extensive fines on various segments from e-commerce to community group-buy platforms.

  • The penalty comes on the heels of the fines levied on four major edtech platforms—TAL Education-backed Xueerxi, GSX Techedu, Koolearn Technology, and Gaosi Education—for deceptive pricing practices.

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) said in a statement (in Chinese) on Monday that it had imposed RMB 2.5 million ($389,000) fines each on Zuoyebang and Yuanfudao. The regulator also issued regulatory warnings to the startups, two of China’s most valuable (in Chinese) online tutoring platforms.

  • The investigation showed Zuoyebang fabricated information about its teachers’ work experience, falsified user reviews, and gave misleading details about its services in order to boost orders.
  • The Alibaba-backed company fraudulently claimed on its website to be a partner of the United Nations, according to the notice.
  • SAMR pointed out that both of the two companies falsely advertised discounted prices to boost orders.
  • A Zuoyebang promotional campaign on its own app and official stores on Tmall and JD markets offered a discount of around 21% off of online courses priced up to RMB 3,280 (around $510). Yuanfudao also lured customers with special deals, such as offering RMB 399 package courses for RMB 9. Investigations showed that no transactions at these prices had ever been recorded.
  • Zuoyebang confirmed news of the penalty with TechNode, and pledged full compliance with the order and rectification of improper marketing behavior and misleading pricing.
  • A Yuanfudao spokeswoman said that the company had already started inspecting various channels and had removed all the improper marketing banners.

Context: Investors have rushed into the online education sector, which has seen a boost during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Yuanfudao, focused on the K-12 age group, raised over $3.5 billion in 2020 from investors including Tencent, DST Global, and Jack Ma-backed Yunfeng Capital.
  • Rival Zuoyebang received a combined $2.35 billion funding last year from investors including Alibaba, Tiger Global Management, SoftBank Vision Fund, and Sequoia Capital China.
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Didi plans grocery unit IPO as early as 2022: report https://technode.com/2021/05/07/didi-plans-grocery-unit-ipo-as-early-as-2022-report/ Fri, 07 May 2021 07:50:31 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=157702 didi ride hailing carpooling serviceDidi is gearing up its grocery delivery business as a new revenue source as growth in core ride-hailing business plateaus.]]> didi ride hailing carpooling service

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is reportedly gearing up to carve out its grocery delivery unit for a separate listing as early as 2022, a year after a planned listing for its core business slated for this summer, The Information reported on Thursday.

Why it matters: The Beijing-based transportation giant is gearing up its grocery delivery business, a community-based group-buy platform, as a new revenue source amid slowing growth in its core ride-hailing business.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | As ridesharing market plateaus, Didi tries everything

  • Major tech companies, from Alibaba to Meituan, are pushing aggressively into the community group-buy sector despite tightening regulatory control.
  • Chinese tech giants often manage different business lines that are too complicated to operate under a single entity, and tend to spin off their non-core businesses via IPOs. JD.com affiliate JD Health debuted on the Hong Kong stock exchange in December, while the bourse just approved JD Logistics for a separate IPO. Fintech arm JD Digits withdrew its application to list on Shanghai’s STAR Market in April.
  • The Didi news comes shortly after it reportedly filed confidentially with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for an initial public offering that could raise several billion dollars at a valuation of at least $100 billion.

Details: In a discussion with investors, Didi executives said that they intend to take its community group-buy unit Chengxin Youxuan public sometime between 2022 and 2023 , The Information reported citing people with knowledge of the matter. The exact timing hasn’t been finalized.

  • The report said the discussion took place during recent fundraising talks for the unit.
  • For the round, existing investors Citic Private Equity and angel investor Wang Gang will contribute $1.2 billion, while Didi purchased $3 billion of Chengxin’s convertible bonds, according to the report.
  • The news echoed Bloomberg’s February report of a $4 billion round for the grocery arm, which is intended to boost its growth amid increase demand.
  • The report did not specify the location for the potential listing.
  • Didi spokeswoman declined to comment on the news when contacted by TechNode on Friday afternoon.

Context: Community group-buying firms, including Tencent-backed Xingsheng Youxuan and MissFresh, have attracted billions in startup investment.

  • In March, China’s top market regulator levied fines totaling RMB 6.5 million (around $1 million) on five community group-buy platforms, including Chengxin Youxuan and rival platforms backed by Pinduoduo, Meituan, and Alibaba, for price dumping.
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GOME founder eyes post-prison comeback with home furnishings https://technode.com/2021/04/30/gome-founder-eyes-post-prison-comeback-with-home-furnishings/ Fri, 30 Apr 2021 08:56:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=157571 GOMEHuang Guangyu, founder of electronics retail giant GOME, made his first appearance on Thursday after 12-years in prison, announcing a home furnishings push.]]> GOME

Huang Guangyu, the founder of electronics retail giant GOME Retail, made his first public appearance on Thursday after 12 years in prison, announcing a home furnishings push for the company.

Details: The physical electronics giant introduced a new app offering home furnishing products and solutions at the event.

  • Huang, formerly the richest person in China, pledged to return his company to its former glory within 18 months when his parole ended February.
  • The company predicts RMB 500 billion ($77 billion) home furnishing revenue within the future three years.

Context: Huang was among the first group of risk-taking businessman to benefit from China’s opening up in the 80s and 90s. He rose to prominence as the man behind home appliance chain GOME Retail since 1990s, an era before China’s business world was dominated by tech giants.

  • Huang was sentenced to 14-years’ imprisonment in 2010 for illegal business operations, insider trading, and corporate bribery. He was released from prison last year for good behavior.
  • Huang was known as China’s richest man at the time he was imprisoned in 2010, with a net worth of at least RMB 45 billion.
  • Huang’s wife Du Juan has been managing GOME’s operation during his imprisonment, when China’s retail market underwent a fundamental change in going online.
  • GOME has struggled to adapt to online retail. It has tied up with online retailers including Pinduoduo and JD in an effort to build digital presence.
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What is ‘forced exclusivity’? And why did it get Alibaba fined $2.8 billion? https://technode.com/2021/04/15/what-is-forced-exclusivity-and-why-did-it-get-alibaba-fined-2-8-billion/ Thu, 15 Apr 2021 04:13:58 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=157073 alibaba, tmall, e-commerceAlibaba was hit with a $2.8 billion fine for anti-competitive practices including "forced exclusivity." What is it, and why did the platform use it?]]> alibaba, tmall, e-commerce

China’s months-long investigation of Alibaba for anti-competitive practices concluded on Saturday as the e-commerce heavyweight was slapped with a record RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine for violating the Anti-Monopoly Law for a variety practices, most importantly “forced exclusivity.”

The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top market regulator, defined Alibaba’s dominant market position in a 24-page decision released on April 10. Alibaba’s annual revenue from e-commerce services accounted for more than 70% of the combined revenue from China’s top 10 e-retail platforms, while its overall turnover represents more than 60% of China’s online retail sales during 2015 to 2019, according to SAMR.

The regulator determined that Alibaba had been “abusing” its market dominance by imposing “forced exclusivity” on merchants, a practice in which platforms force merchants to sell their wares on only one company’s platform or services.

“I think this is a good thing to bring more competition, both for the market and for the long-term growth of Alibaba itself. Alibaba’s high gross margin and its high pay to employees are to some extent determined by the company’s monopolistic position,” (our translation) Song Peijian, a professor at the Business School of Nanjing University, told TechNode.

The Big Sell

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“It’s like the platform is collecting taxes from the merchants. There are cases when merchants are recording hundreds of millions of RMB but still can’t make money from their business. That’s unimaginable in the traditional industry,” Song added.

What impact will the penalty and the ban on forced exclusivity have on Alibaba? And what is forced exclusivity—the main violation authorities cited in their decision—and why was forced exclusivity so important that Alibaba kept going despite multiple warning signs?

Record-breaking penalty

The fine Alibaba received is the largest in the history of Chinese antitrust law, breaking a record set by a fine imposed on US chipmaker Qualcomm. In February 2015, Qualcomm agreed to pay a fine of $975 million to settle a 14-month investigation into its anti-competitive practices led by the National Development and Reform Commission of China.

The Alibaba fine is also the second-largest antitrust penalty worldwide for a single company, according to a research note by the law firm Dentons China. The largest fine in history remains the European Union’s EUR 4.34 billion (around $5.2 billion) fine on Google in 2018 for using its Android mobile operating system to illegally “cement its dominant position” in search.

While the RMB 18.2 billion penalty, 4% of the group’s 2019 revenue, is China’s largest for antitrust violations, the sum is small compared to Alibaba’s more than RMB 312 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of 2020. The 4% penalty is also well short of the maximum 10% permitted in the antitrust law.

Alibaba shares in Hong Kong and US both jumped on news of the conclusion of the investigation—regarded as a major source of uncertainty for the e-commerce platform—despite the fact that the penalty was double the rumored sum of $1 billion.

“Determination of the penalty means Alibaba’s antitrust case has come to an end. A series of negative events has dragged Alibaba’s market cap near to a historic low. As long as it is slightly favorable, the stock price will usher in a rebound,” Wang Shan, an analyst at Tiger Brokers, told TechNode (our translation).

Michael Norris, research and strategy manager of Agency China, said that immediate market response to the fine reflects “a belief the regulatory overhang over Alibaba will conclude shortly.”

“It’s highly arguable the regulatory uncertainty over anti-trust investigations has done more damage to Alibaba’s share price than the fine for ‘forced exclusivity’,” he added.

The record-breaking fine against Alibaba is a direct sign that China has become a major antitrust regulator internationally, said Deng Zhisong, a partner at Dentons China.

While pledging full compliance with the administrative decision, the company played down its impact, saying that it expected no material impact on its business from the end of forced exclusivity, according to Chairman Danial Zhang during the Monday briefing. In addition, management said Alibaba will spend billions to lower merchant costs, responding to allegations that they’ve been overcharging merchants.

Forced exclusivity and timeline

Many Chinese tech giants have been accused of different forms of ‘forced exclusivity,” also known as “choose one of two.” Alibaba’s version forces merchants to sell exclusively on its marketplaces, such as Taobao and Tmall. Changing to a multi-platform format means its merchants can now sell on rival platforms like Pinduoduo and JD.com.

Vendors already operating on multiple platforms are prohibited to join rivals’ promotional events, such as the June shopping festival known as “618” and year-end shopping spree Singles Day. Merchants who don’t comply face punishment such as reduced marketing resources, decreased search result rankings, and even bans from Alibaba’s marketplaces.

  • September 2010: Fights over forced exclusivity in China’s tech world date back more than a decade ago when Qihoo 360 sued Tencent for forcing hundreds of millions of users to choose between security software offered by Qihoo and Tencent’s QQ. Known as the 3Q war, this landmark case was China’s first first major tech antitrust case and helped to establish jurisdiction for similar cases.
  • November 2012: Alibaba, which popularized the annual “Singles Day” sales promotion on Nov. 11, trademarked the shopping festival in an attempt to exclude rivals from holding promotions under the same theme. JD.com and other e-commerce companies launched Singles Day sales anyway, forcing merchants to take sides in a battle between platforms.
  • July 2017: JD and flash sale retailer Vipshop released a joint statement, accusing Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace of monopolizing the market by forcing merchants to sign exclusive deals with Alibaba.
  • June 2019: Home electronics manufacturer Galanz accused Alibaba’s Tmall of removing its products from search results after the electronics manufacturer refused to remove listings from rival platform Pinduoduo.
  • October 2019: Alibaba PR head Wang Shuai dismissed concerns over the matter, stating that “so-called forced exclusivity is a non-issue.”
  • November 2019: China’s market regulator during a forum in Hangzhou reminded more than 20 e-commerce players that forcing businesses into exclusive agreements with one marketplace is illegal.
  • March 2019: China’s market regulator introduced a set of e-commerce rules, including terms prohibiting practices that facilitate forced exclusivity.
  • December 2021: Chinese market regulators launch an anti-monopoly investigation targeting Alibaba.

Forced exclusivity practices exist in other platform industries too. Restaurant owners are also pressured to take sides with food delivery platforms like Meituan and Ele.me. Those willing to list exclusively on one of the food delivery platforms enjoy a lower commission fee. Similarly, drivers on ride-hailing platforms benefit from lower commission rates if they only work using one app.

Why forced exclusivity

Alibaba Chairman Zhang said eliminating forced exclusivity would have no material impact on Alibaba’s business. But if the practice didn’t matter, why did the company keep it so long in the face of lawsuits and pressure from regulators?

Alibaba, China’s top e-commerce platform for decades, had faced intensifying competition from rivals like Pinduoduo, JD, and more recently, mini programs on Tencent’s WeChat and short video apps including Douyin and Kuaishou. Forcing exclusivity on its merchants helped fend off rivals, making it harder for them to offer competitive selections of goods.

“It’s a crucial measure in the early development of online marketplaces, but not so important for a business as big as Alibaba (our translation),” said an analyst who asked to stay anonymous for sensitivity of the matter.

Despite forced exclusivity, the SAMR report showed that Alibaba’s market share has been gradually declining over the years. Its annual revenue accounted for 86.0% of earnings from China’s top 10 e-retail platforms in 2015. The figure has been dropping by single-digit percentages each year ever since to 71.2% in 2019. Its overall sales volume in proportion to China’s online retail sales declined to 61.8% in 2019 from 76.1% in 2015.

In March, Pinduoduo overtook Alibaba as China’s largest online selling platform in terms of number of users. Pinduoduo reported that it reached 788.4 million annual active buyers in 2020 compared with Alibaba’s 779 million annual active buyers during the same period.

Although Alibaba’s core e-commerce business still outperforms Pinduoduo in other key metrics, including revenue, gross merchandise volume, and per-order sales, Pinduoduo’s growth in user base is a warning sign for the tech giant that has dominated China’s e-commerce for decades.

Norris said forced exclusivity may also have been a means to keep Alibaba merchants’ digital marketing spend with Alimama, Alibaba’s digital marketing arm, rather than spread across multiple platforms.

Is it a monopoly?

Before accusing Alibaba of monopolizing the e-commerce market, regulators had to answer a question: Is there any such thing as an e-commerce market? E-commerce giants from Alibaba to Amazon have argued that e-commerce is just one among many forms of retail, and that its biggest companies should be seen as reasonably sized players in a retail market that includes malls and supermarkets.

SAMR rejected this argument on Saturday, finding that e-commerce is a separate market, and for the first time laying out a definition of an online services market and a method to measure the market share of a player in such a market.

While SAMR has been pushing to revise laws and regulations to keep up with its antitrust campaign in tech, it relied on established law dating to 2009 in its Alibaba decision, suggesting that the recent tech antitrust push was possible under the old law.

SAMR’s analysis used an approach familiar from traditional antitrust cases, known as “demand-side substitution analysis.” It said that the functions of online marketplaces, such as Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, are “non-interchangeable with offline marketplaces,” and that online marketplaces serve different merchants than offline marketplaces because the scope and costs of their services are different. 

China’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law defines a player with more than 50% of a “relevant market” as a “dominant player.” In defining Alibaba as a dominant player in the online marketplace, SAMR cited data about Alibaba’s service revenue from merchants; China’s e-commerce market’s Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, a standard measure of market concentration; analysis of Alibaba’s leverage in negotiations with merchants; as well as Alibaba’s “strong abundant finance resources and advanced technological abilities.

Regulators are working on changes to antitrust law that may make it easier to prove monopoly status in future internet cases. In January 2020, SAMR proposed an amendment to China’s Anti-Monopoly Law, which will take into consideration factors such as network effects—services that rise in value as their user bases grow—as well as company size and data assets when determining whether a company is a dominant player. SAMR also in March finalized a set of guidelines helping regulators define relevant market share in the internet sector.

Going forward

Alibaba clearly seeks to move on from the antitrust investigation. Vice Chairman Joe Tsai said on Monday during the conference call with investors, media, and partners that the company has “put this matter behind us.” Tsai added that he was not aware of any other investigations involving the company relating to the Anti-Monopoly Law, although the regulators continue to conduct a broad review of Chinese tech firms’ investment transactions.

Levying a sizable fine on one of China’s largest internet sites highlighted the state’s increased scrutiny of conglomerates, sending shivers down the spines of many Chinese tech peers. 

Just two days after Alibaba’s fine, regulators announced a $180,000 penalty on Sherpa’s, a Shanghai-based English-language food delivery app targeted toward foreigners.

In the wake of the penalty, regulators summoned on Tuesday 34 of the country’s largest technology companies from various segments, including ByteDance, Baidu, JD, Pinduoduo, Ctrip, Bilibili, and Qihoo 360. The regulator warned every major internet firm in China to heed the Alibaba example.

Beijing gave Chinese online platforms a one-month window to rectify practices that were unfair to competition, such as forced exclusivity, user data leaks, and price discrimination. SAMR said those that failed to comply with regulatory requirements in follow-up checks will be “severely” punished. 

Alibaba is already moving to respond to this pressure. For years, China’s tech giants strived to construct their self-sustained ecosystems in order to lock users in. But in a surprising move since mid-March, Alibaba took a step to open up its ecosystem by bringing Taobao Deal and re-commerce service Xianyu to Tencent’s WeChat. This may be a sign that the thick walls tech companies built against one another are beginning to crack.

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Alibaba pledges end to forced exclusivity after $2.8 billion penalty https://technode.com/2021/04/12/alibaba-pledges-end-to-forced-exclusivity-after-antitrust-penalty/ Mon, 12 Apr 2021 04:41:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156902 alibaba tmall e-commerce antitrust regulation pinduoduoAlibaba chairman Daniel Zhang also vows to spend billions to lower costs for merchants after a record-breaking antitrust fine.]]> alibaba tmall e-commerce antitrust regulation pinduoduo

Shares in Hong Kong for Alibaba Group jumped 8% after company chairman Daniel Zhang promised on a call with investors on Monday an end to its practice of forced exclusivity following a RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) penalty for antitrust practices.

Why it matters: The penalty imposed onto Alibaba, a bellwether of China’s tech sector, highlights Beijing’s continued efforts to curb anti-competitive practices at major tech firms, which were seen as practically “immune” to such regulations before.

  • The RMB 18.2 billion penalty is equivalent to 4% of the group’s 2019 revenue, and is by far China’s largest for antitrust violations, dwarfing recent punishments levied on peers Tencent and Vipshop.

Details: Alibaba Group does not expect a material impact on its business by ending forced exclusivity, Zhang said during a Monday briefing on the company’s response to the penalty. Forced exclusivity is a practice in which e-commerce companies punish merchants who also sell on competitor platforms, and was the primary reason for the penalty, according to the regulator. Zhang also said the e-commerce giant would spend billions to lower merchant costs.

  • The company will report to regulators on its progress in eliminating exclusive arrangements and platform improvements. Zhang promised that the company will keep communication with regulators “open and transparent.” Alibaba was required to submit a self-examination report plan within 15 days of the penalty announcement.
  • The company will invest more on improvements in areas like merchant training and development of the merchant back end workstation, Zhang said. “We don’t view this as a one-off cost, but as a necessary investment to enable our merchants to have a better operation on capital,” he added.
  • Vice Chairman Joe Tsai said he is not aware of any other investigations involving the company relating to the anti-monopoly law, although the regulators continue to conduct a broad review of Chinese tech firms’ investment transactions.
  • CFO Maggie Wu said the penalty will be reflected in the group’s net income in the March quarter results.
  • Wu added that the company’s merchant support initiatives will be reflected in both top- and bottom-line growth, with reduced fees and charges to merchants and increased investments in business growth measures. The company has reserved billions of RMB for the expense, she said.
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China regulator fines Alibaba $2.8 billion for antitrust violations https://technode.com/2021/04/10/china-regulator-fines-alibaba-2-8-billion-for-antitrust-violations/ Sat, 10 Apr 2021 05:27:58 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156888 alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.comA record penalty on Alibaba highlights Beijing’s continued efforts to curbs on anti-competitive practices by China’s largest tech firms.]]> alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.com

China’s top antitrust regulator has issued a RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine on e-commerce giant Alibaba for antitrust practices including “forced exclusivity.” The fine is the largest antitrust penalty ever issued in China.

Why it matters: The record penalty on Alibaba, a bellwether of China’s tech sector, highlights Beijing’s continued efforts to curb anti-competitive practices at major tech firms.

  • The business empire of Jack Ma, the once high-profile billionaire behind Alibaba and financial affiliate Ant Group, has been under heavy scrutiny since Ant’s highly anticipated initial public offering was suspended in November last year.

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top market watchdog, said in a Saturday statement (in Chinese) that it has issued a RMB 18.2 million fine on Alibaba, nearly four months after launching an investigation in December last year.

  • Regulators said the investigation’s main focus was “forced exclusivity”, a practice in which platforms force merchants to use only one company’s platform or services.
  • The penalty is equivalent to 4% of the group’s revenue generated in the calendar year of 2019 in China.
  • Under article 47 of China’s Anti-monopoly Law, companies can be fined between 1% to 10% of annual sales for monopolistic practices.
  • The regulator also ordered Alibaba to revamp its operations and file self-examination compliance reports to SAMR for three years.
  • Alibaba says in a Saturday response that it has “accept the penalty with sincerity and will ensure our compliance with determination.”
  • The company added that will hold a public conference call on Monday to discuss the decision.

Context: Alibaba has been in a years-long public spat over the subject of “forced exclusivity” with rivals including Pinduoduo, JD, and Meituan. These companies say Alibaba has used its size to force merchants off their platforms.

  • The investigation result comes shortly after Alibaba was overtaken by Pinduoduo as the largest e-commerce platform in China by number of users. Pinduoduo describes itself as a major victim of Alibaba’s forced exclusivity practices.
  • Alibaba is not alone. Internet giants including Tencent, Didi, and Baidu have recently been hit with antitrust fines, most for failing to report M&A deals to regulators.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Antitrust push in China tech

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Holiday economy, Dingdong Maicai secures $700 million round: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/04/07/holiday-economy-dingdong-maicai-secures-700-million-round-retailheads/ Wed, 07 Apr 2021 07:23:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156760 A three-day weekend saw increased spending. Online grocery delivery platform Dingdong Maicai secured a hefty $700 million round. And more...]]>

A three-day weekend witnessed increased spending on domestic travel and entertainment. Online grocery delivery platform Dingdong Maicai secured a hefty $700 million round. Re-commerce site Zhuanzhuan received $390 million in funding, while rival Xianyu expects gross merchandise volume to surge 70% year on year in 2021. A merger between power bank companies Jiedian and Soudian will create the largest player in the sector.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of April 1–7.

Holiday economy

  • Data from China’s Ministry of Culture and tourism shows that tourist sites received 102 million domestic visitors during the Tomb-Sweeping Day three-day weekend, which ended April 5. This marks a 144.6% year on year increase, and a 94.5% recovery from the same period in pre-pandemic 2019. Domestic tourism revenue during the period increased 228.9% year on year to RMB 27.2 billion ($4.2 billion), or 56.7% from the same period in 2019. (21th Century Business Heard, in Chinese)
  • Travel orders made through online travel platform Trip.com surged over 300% year on year during the three-day holiday, on par with figures for the same period in 2019. (Jiemian, in Chinese)
  • China’s box office takings topped RMB 821 million during the holiday. (Xinhua)

Community group-buy cash-in

  • China’s online grocery delivery platform Dingdong Maicai has secured $700 million D round led by DST Global and Coatue to invest in business expansion, supply chain and team. The other investors joined the round include Tiger Global Management, General Atlantic, CMC Capital Partners, and Sequoia Capital. (International Finance News, in Chinese)
  • Dai Shan, a partner of Alibaba Group, says in an internal letter that the core mission of Alibaba’s “MMC” department is to support the digital upgrading of China’s more than 6 million “mom and pop” stores. The newly established unit is widely regarded as the e-commerce platform’s response to the red-hot community group-buy model. The company has not said what, if anything, MMC stands for. While the most popular group-buy businesses rely on “group heads”—usually owners of offline stores, housewives, or white collars workers with a side gig—to promote products to their neighbors, MMC focuses on providing product souring and supply chain management to owners of small stores, according to Dai. (Donews, in Chinese)
  • Chinese fresh food chain operator Qiandama is heading for an Hong Kong initial public offering as soon as this year, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter. One of the sources says the offering could raise $400 million to $500 million, in addition to a planned pre-IPO round of about RMB 2 billion. (Bloomberg)

Crossing the streams

Alibaba is planning to bring its re-commerce service Xianyu, or Idle Fish, on Tencent’s WeChat mini-app platform, shortly after embedding bargain app Taobao Deals in the rival app. (Jiemian, in Chinese)

Re-commerce platforms

  • Zhuanzhuan, the re-commerce platform owned by classifieds giant 58.com, has raised a combined $390 million funding from Greater Bay Area Homeland Development Fund and Qingyue Fund. This is the first funding the firm received since its merger with electronics recycling platform Zhaoliangji in April last year. The company says its revenue has increased over 200% year on year in 2020, making it the third straight year to double its revenue. (Shanghai Morning Post, in Chinese)
  • Alibaba-backed re-commerce platform Xianyu expects to record RMB 500 billion gross merchandise volume (GMV) this year, local media reported. That will be a nearly 70% year-on-year surge based on the business’ RMB 200 billion GMV from last year as revealed by Alibaba’s annual earning report. (Lanjing, in Chinese)

READ MORE: China re-commerce faces tug of war between growth and trust

When our power banks combine…

Power bank rental companies Jiedian and Soudian announced a merger Thursday, the same day rival Energy Monster went public on the Nasdaq market. The new company says it will have a combined 360 million users—which is more than Energy Monster’s 219 million. (Ebrun, in Chinese)

Logistics

Alibaba logistics arm Cainiao announced Tuesday an agreement with US-owned air cargo company Atlas Air to launch a flight operation program linking Hong Kong, China to Bogota, Colombia and Lima, Peru, with Santiago, Chile or Sao Paulo, Brazil as the connection point. (Cainiao statement)

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H&M faces Xinjiang backlash, Alibaba bets on grocery delivery: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/03/31/hm-faces-xinjiang-backlash-alibaba-bets-on-grocery-delivery-retailheads/ Wed, 31 Mar 2021 04:26:17 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156591 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mH&M was wiped from Chinese e-commerce sites and service apps. Alibaba and DST Global led a $750 million round in community-based grocery app Nice Tuan.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Last week, H&M faced China’s ire over allegations of forced labor in Xinjiang, and was subsequently wiped from Chinese e-commerce sites and service apps. Alibaba and DST Global led a $750 million round in Chinese community-based grocery app Nice Tuan. Social media and e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu hired new chief financial officer amid IPO rumors.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of March 25 – 31.

E-commerce responds to Xinjiang cotton boycott

  • H&M has been removed from China’s e-commerce platforms including Alibaba’s Taobao, JD.com, and Pinduoduo as well as service apps from ride-hailing platform Didi to map apps from Tencent and Baidu. The Swedish fashion brand is facing a backlash over its decision to stop sourcing materials from the Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region, a major cotton producer and home to China’s Uyghur minority, against which the country’s government is accused of significant human rights violations. (The Wall Street Journal)
  • NetEase Yanxuan, the private-label e-commerce brand of Chinese tech firm NetEase, voiced its support for Xinjiang cotton, pledging to continue its use, help farmers to develop more products, and source more raw materials from within the country. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • A number of international brands such as Nike, Adidas, and Uniqlo are also losing steam in the country for expressing concern about alleged human rights violations in Xinjiang. (SCMP)

IPOs and funding

  • Chinese grocery app Nice Tuan has raised a $750 million round led by Alibaba Group and DST Global to bolster its supply chain and fresh produce offerings. Other participating investors include D.E. Shaw & Co., Anatole Investment, Jeneration Capital, and Dragoneer.(Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • Chinese social e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu has hired a former Citigroup executive to oversee its financial management amid reports that it is eyeing a public listing in the US, according to a report by The Information. (TechNode)
  • Two Shanghai-based venture capitalists have accused Cai Guangyuan, chief executive of power bank rental company Energy Monster, of reneging on a deal to give them a joint 3% stake in the business. The dispute is poorly timed—the company recently filed a prospectus for a US listing. (Reuters)

Growth in logistics

  • Alibaba’s Cainiao Smart Logistics Network announced Monday a partnership with Hong Kong Air Cargo, a subsidiary of Hong Kong Airline, to begin cargo flights to Southeast Asia. In the first phase of the cooperation, Hong Kong Air Cargo will operate flights to hubs Manila, Kuala Lumpur, and Bangkok on behalf of Alibaba’s logistics arm. (Ifeng, in Chinese)
  • China’s same-city logistics service provider Shansong Express has received RMB 125 million in funding for a Series D2 from Shunwei Capital, N5 Capital, SIG China, Tiantu Capital, Oceanpine Capital, Alpha Square Group, Axiom Asia Private Capital, Qianshan Capital, and CF Capital. SIG China became the company’s largest institutional investor after the round. The Beijing-based firm had upwards of 100 million users as of 2019. (Tencent News, in Chinese)

Meituan losses

Meituan booked net losses of RMB 2.3 billion ($345 million) in fourth quarter of last year as the Chinese food delivery giant ramped up investment in the community-based grocery business. The company warned that investment in grocery services will continue to weigh on its profitability, although growth in its core food delivery and in-store business earned a better-than-expected RMB 37.9 billion in revenue for the reporting period. (Bloomberg)

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Social commerce app Xiaohongshu hires CFO ahead of likely IPO: report https://technode.com/2021/03/26/social-commerce-app-xiaohongshu-hires-cfo-ahead-of-us-ipo/ Fri, 26 Mar 2021 04:59:36 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156524 xiaohongshu taobao social tiktok e-commerceXiaohongshu, the $6 billion firm backed by Alibaba and Tencent, could join an increasing list of Chinese tech firms heading to the public markets.]]> xiaohongshu taobao social tiktok e-commerce

Xiaohongshu, a Chinese social media and e-commerce platform, has hired a former Citigroup executive to oversee its financial management as the company eyes a public listing in the US, according to a report by The Information.

Why it matters: Xiaohongshu, the $6 billion firm backed by Alibaba and Tencent, may be joining a growing list of Chinese tech firms heading to the public markets.

  • An early pioneer of China’s content-driven e-commerce trend, Xiaohongshu, also known in English as Red, faces intensifying competition from short-video platforms like ByteDance’s Douyin and Tencent-backed Kuaishou.

Details: Xiaohongshu has named Yang Ruo, a former Citigroup investment banker, as its chief financial officer overseeing the compilation of financial strategies as well as financial management and internal control, a company spokeswoman told TechNode on Friday.

  • The Shanghai-based company is considering a US listing as early as this year, The Information reported citing people familiar with matter. Investors said the IPO could value Xiaohongshu at more than $10 billion, according to the report, up from a valuation of $6 billion in early 2020 according to sources cited by Bloomberg.
  • The company is in discussion with several banks, but has not settled on a target raise, according to The Information.
  • A Xiaohongshu spokeswoman denied that the company is planning an IPO when contacted by TechNode on Thursday morning.

READ MORE: Xiaohongshu bids to reinvent itself, again

Context: In a similar move, TikTok parent ByteDance hired former Xiaomi executive Shou Zi Chew as chief executive, a sign that has been widely interpreted as preparation for its highly anticipated IPO.

  • Founded in 2013 , Xiaohongshu gained popularity among China’s young, middle-class, and mostly female consumers hungry for insight on lifestyle and fashion. Users can also buy products directly through the platform.
  • The company defines its model as B2K2C, where key opinion leaders help merchants to promote their product to customers. 
  • Xiaohongshu had over 100 million monthly active users as of June, 70% of which were born after 1990, according to company data.
  • After surging in popularity early on, the content-driven app has struggled to land on a scalable monetization model while maintaining its community feel. It battled user trust issues and competition for user attention from other platforms.
  • The app was reportedly raising a Series D of at least $400 million at a valuation of $6 billion in January last year, following a $300 million round at $3 billion valuation in 2018.
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Pinduoduo founder steps down, Taobao on WeChat: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/03/24/pinduoduo-chairman-steps-down-alibaba-on-wechat-retailheads/ Wed, 24 Mar 2021 04:50:03 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156438 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphoneColin Huang, the Pinduoduo founder, stepped down as chairman. Alibaba is said to be planning to launch Taobao Deals on WeChat as a mini program. ]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Colin Huang, the 41-year-old founder of budget e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, has stepped down as chairman. Alibaba is said to be planning to launch Taobao Deals, a Pinduoduo rival, as a WeChat mini program. JD.com will invest $800 million in the on-demand delivery platform Dada Nexus. An online poll showed that Chinese users plan to abandon power bank rentals in the case of a fee increase.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of March 18 – 25.

End of an era for Pinduoduo

  • The billionaire founder of Pinduoduo, Colin Huang, stepped down as board chairman just as the e-commerce giant overtook its rival Alibaba as China’s largest online selling platform by user size. (TechNode)
  • Chen Lei, Pinduoduo CEO and chairman, told the Wall Street Journal that the company will “keep plowing revenue back into subsidies” until it “supplants Alibaba as the default shopping platform for perhaps a billion Chinese consumers.” The firm plans to boost ad income to earn a profit while keeping the hefty subsidy program going. Despite its huge user base, Pinduoduo’s $324 average annual spend per active buyer in 2020 was less than a quarter of Alibaba’s average annual spend per user during the same time period. (Wall Street Journal)

E-commerce giants

  • Alibaba Group plans to launch Taobao Deals as a mini program on Tencent’s mega chatting app WeChat, according to a Bloomberg source. Taobao Deals is Alibaba’s response to rival Pinduoduo. Cooperation between Alibaba and Tencent—two of China’s most exclusive technological ecosystems—is a clear indication that Beijing’s anti-monopoly efforts are taking effect. (Bloomberg)
  • JD.com said it will invest $800 million in Dada Nexus, giving the Chinese online retailer a total 51% stake in the on-demand delivery company by combining its existing shares. (TechNode)

Power bank rentals

  • An online poll conducted by Chinese business newspaper 21st Century Business Herald showed that around 80% of the users said they would stop renting power banks if fees were hiked again. The most recent price increase raised the average per-hour rental fee to RMB 4 ($0.6), up from RMB 1 charged when the service first took off in 2017. Rental fees for devices at high traffic locations like cinemas, tourist spots, and airports are as high as RMB 6 per hour. A Weibo hashtag titled “Power bank rental fee increase from RMB 1 to RMB 4” had attracted 260 million views as of Tuesday morning. In China, a power bank can be purchased for around RMB 50. (21st Century Business Herald
  • One week after filing for a US IPO, Chinese power bank rental firm Energy Monster announced Friday a partnership with food delivery platform Ele.me to cooperate on channel operation resources, merchants, and membership services. Starting April, Ele.me will add Energy Monster’s services to its app. Users will also be able to call Ele.me drivers to pick up the power banks they forget to return. (Tencent Tech)

Content-driven e-commerce

  • In the coming year, microblogging platform Weibo plans to support the growth of 10 million merchants who use high-quality content to sell by dedicating RMB 100 million worth of traffic and cash incentives. (Sina Tech, in Chinese)
  • Weibo reported net revenue of $513.4 million in the fourth quarter of last year, a 10% year-over-year increase. Advertising and marketing revenues accounted for 88% of total revenue. The company’s monthly active users reached 521 million in December, a net addition of approximately 5 million on a year-over-year basis. (Weibo)
  • Sina, operator of the Sina news portal and Weibo’s controlling shareholder, announced the completion of its merger through which the Nasdaq-listed company had planned to go private. The company has filed with SEC for delisting of its shares. (Sina statement)
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JD.com to invest $800 million in online grocer Dada Nexus https://technode.com/2021/03/23/jd-com-to-invest-800-million-in-online-grocer-dada-nexus/ Tue, 23 Mar 2021 05:13:37 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156417 Dada jd.com logistics JD deliveryChinese e-commerce giant JD.com said it will invest $800 million in on-demand delivery company Dada Nexus as it pushes further into logistics.]]> Dada jd.com logistics JD delivery

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com said it will invest $800 million in Dada Nexus, the company behind on-demand grocery delivery platform JD Daojia and on-demand delivery platform Dada Now.

Why it matters: The investment underscores JD’s commitment to growing its presence in the logistics sector, which has seen rising demand due to shelter-in-place measures during the pandemic.

  • Dada Nexus’ core strength in on-demand delivery—completing most deliveries to users within a three-mile radius in under an hour—is highly complementary to JD’s existing logistics operations, which focus on overnight shipment.
  • Shares of Dada Nexus surged more than 11% Monday on the news.

READ MORE: Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce

Details: JD.com has entered into a share purchase agreement with Dada Nexus to buy $800 million of newly issued ordinary shares, according to a statement (in Chinese) from the company.

  • The new shares were priced at $29 apiece, the Dada Nexus share price as of market close on March 19, the last trading day prior to the agreement.
  • After the transaction, JD.com will hold approximately 51% of Dada’s shares, taking into account its existing holdings.
  • “The company’s increased investment will facilitate both sides to promote the expansion of on-demand retail and delivery, as well as omni-channel collaboration,” Xu Lei, chief executive officer of JD Retail, said in the statement.
  • The deal will help the company further diversify its retail services, improve business partners’ operating efficiency, and deliver better services for its customers, JD said.
  • Dada Nexus’s total net revenues surged 85.2% year on year to RMB 5.7 billion in 2020, according to the company’s fourth-quarter earnings filed on March 8.

Context: Dada Nexus is an entity created by a merger of on-demand delivery platform Dada Now and JD Daojia, JD Group’s former on-demand local retail arm.

  • The company raised $500 million from Walmart Inc. and JD in 2018.
  • The Shanghai-based company went public on Nasdaq in June, raising $320 million.
  • JD Logistics, the logistics arm of e-commerce giant JD.com, filed on Feb. 16 its prospectus for an initial share offering on the Hong Kong stock exchange.
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CHINA VOICES | Tech in the crosshairs on CCTV consumer rights day https://technode.com/2021/03/22/china-voices-tech-in-the-crosshairs-on-cctv-consumer-rights-day/ Mon, 22 Mar 2021 05:38:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156397 315 consumer rights galaA focus on tech in an annual consumer rights broadcast underlines changing attitudes to privacy and other hot-button tech issues in China.]]> 315 consumer rights gala

Like Roman dictators, consumer brands in China have good reason to beware the Ides of March. It’s the date of the national broadcaster’s consumer rights gala, a two-hour festival of exposés famous for undercover sting operations.

The annual broadcast, known as the “3.15 Gala” after its date, is appointment television, promising embarrassing revelations about well-known companies. It can drive consumer outrage and crackdowns from regulators, and it’s often followed by unwelcome attention from other media. 

This year, tech came under heavy fire. Out of nine segments in the broadcast, the first four focused on allegations about misuse of technology. Well-known brands like Qihoo 360 search, UC browser, and the job search sites Zhilian and Liepin came under fire for accusations related to false advertising and poor privacy protection. At least five companies saw their apps kicked off Chinese app stores in the days following the show.

Major state media have repeatedly focused on tech-themed investigations. Renwu Magazine, owned by the People’s Daily group, has been on the warpath over working conditions, with viral investigative work targeting both pressure on delivery drivers and extreme limits on toilet time for white-collar workers. The same magazine was also among outlets that highlighted concerns over invasive use of face recognition

CCTV investigates CCTV

The broadcast began by accusing retailers of misusing face recognition to monitor visitors to their stores.

CCTV reported that Kohler, an American bathroom fixture brand, installed closed-circuit cameras in many stores to capture customers’ facial information without user consent. The company installed cameras with face recognition capabilities in thousands of its stores, allowing the company to identify and track consumers across multiple visits to different showrooms without their consent.

In addition to Kohler, CCTV said that more than 20 brands have installed face recognition systems in their stores across the country, including well-known brands like BMW and Max Mara. A manager at a surveillance camera supplier told undercover reporters they have already installed millions in different stores. 

Officially implemented on Jan. 1, 2021, China’s new Civil Code bans processing personal information without consent. 

Resumes for sale

The program also accused three well-known online recruitment platforms for leaking job seekers’ resumes: Zhaopin, 51Job, and Liepin. All three have since been removed from a number of Chinese Android app stores.

Online recruitment platforms are the first choice for most people to seek jobs. However, they are doing a bad job protecting user’s personal information. CCTV’s reporter paid RMB 7 (about $1) to a buyer in a QQ group called “58 Zhilian Fans” for one resume from Zhaopin, including the applicant’s name, gender, age, photo, contact information, work, and education experience. 

It appears that the black market in resumes serves both actual recruiters as well as scammers interested in personal information. 36Kr, which examined the practice following CCTV, reported that for small businesses it can be cheaper to buy a resumes secondhand and contact possibly hires directly than to register an account.

Weak privacy protections make it easy for resume brokers to export resumes in bulk. On Zhaopin, anyone with a corporate account can download an unlimited number of resumes. The registration of corporate accounts is also loosely regulated on these platforms. CCTV found that applications with fake certificates could pass through the application process.

Snake oil

Ads for fake medicine have plagued search since 2016, when a college student named Wei Zexi died after receiving an unproved cancer treatment promoted by ads on Baidu which were not clearly distinguished from search results, prompting a widespread outcry. The case drew wide public attention, forcing the tech giant to change its advertising practices and Chinese regulators to tighten control. 

Three years on, CCTV accused the Alibaba-backed UC Browser and Qihoo’s 360 Search for displaying results that appear organic but are in fact advertisements. 

The broadcast also accused intermediaries of helping unlicensed firms promote medical products. Normally, a company needs authorization to advertise a medical product or treatment. But third-party ad agents for the two companies told undercover reporters that they could use idle accounts that were previously registered by authorized companies.

“No need to fear accounts being blocked after posting questionable information. We can always switch to another one, because we have hundreds of them,” said one agent for 360 Search.

Both of the apps were removed from all major Chinese Android app stores two days after the exposé.

Some of these fake ads are pretty dangerous: The Beijing News found that ads on “a search engine” recommended ineffective treatments for heart attacks.

After searching with the keyword of heart attack, the results display a list of medical advertisements. One of them says the disease could be cured by taking their traditional Chinese medicine without surgery. 

A contact from the recommended hospital told Beijing News over phone that the coronary stents treatment typically used in hospitals could only stretch the blood vessels, rather than dissolve the blood clot. And patients taking such surgery have to take western medicines their whole life. In contrast, their traditional Chinese medicine can dissolve blood clots, and patients don’t have to take medicines after being cured. The medicine will cost about RMB 3,000 ($460) a month depending on different cases.

When chatting with an agent from the hospital through WeChat, the app warned the reporter about the contact and warned to beware of fraud. Doctors at an authorized hospital said “Stents are a standard treatment for heart attack, because blood clots are difficult to remove.”

Malware targeting the elderly

Last in the tech block, the program criticized four malware cleaner apps—Tencent’s Mobile Phone Manager Pro, Memory Optimization Master, APUS’s Superior Cleaning Master, and Smart Cleaner for collecting user information and pushing scam advertisements, suggesting that these scams target the elderly.

The program said some of the cleaners were malware themselves, featuring a 70-year-old woman surnamed Li. Li said that her phone became very slow even though she often cleans viruses and memories in smartphone with cleaner apps. It turned out that these apps are doing the exact opposite of what they say.

A third-party test agency consulted by CCTV found that Mobile Phone Manager Pro read users’ app list more than 800 times, GPS location more than 50 times, smart device code 900 times, and SIM card code 1,300 times within less than 10 seconds. Using this data, CCTV reported, the apps helped target users with vulgar content and scams.

Where’s Elon?

Many Chinese consumers and media were surprised that Tesla was not named at the broadcast. The EV maker has been a popular target online and in Chinese media during the past year, with accusations ranging from sharp sales practices to safety issues. Huxiu commented on the absence, and warned that the company is likely to face more consumer and media pressure.

Skeptical public 

Most of the named companies, including Zhaopin.com, Liepin.com, 51job.com, UC Browser, and 360 search had issued apologies hours after the gala concluded, promising to address the mentioned issues. 

Given previous experience, the public remains skeptical about whether public embarrassment will actually lead companies to solve the issues. Chinese netizens voiced their concerns on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo.

Responding to the Weibo hashtag “Monitoring institutions help to save RMB 4,4 billion consumer costs,” a Weibo user with the handle Fuchenruyi wrote:

“The monitoring institutions could have done a better job. We watch 315 gala every year, yet each year has more shocking cases.” 

Another Weibo user, with an unprintable name, wrote

“315 International Consumer Rights Day might as well be renamed “315 Apology Day.” Afflicting customers who wait for 315 to solve their complaints only get perfunctory apologies…”

Rednet, a news outlet backed by Hunan provincial government, cautioned that:

In most cases, the exposure of product quality scandals only brings short-term attention, rather than solving the problems completely. After a short while, the same problems will revive and become even worse. Obviously, it’s impossible to eliminate all of the quality problems with one single show, which is held only once per year and could only cover a few cases.

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Pinduoduo founder steps down as chairman as users surpass Alibaba https://technode.com/2021/03/18/pinduoduo-founder-steps-down-as-chairman-as-users-surpass-alibaba/ Thu, 18 Mar 2021 05:15:48 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156339 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaPinduoduo founder Colin Huang will devote himself to food and life sciences, areas that overlap with the firm's new business focus.]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba

The billionaire founder and chairman of Pinduoduo, Colin Huang, has stepped down as board chairman and handed responsibilities to company chief executive officer Chen Lei just as the e-commerce giant overtook its rival Alibaba as China’s largest online selling platform.

Why it matters: Chinese workplace culture is to a great extent influenced and shaped by founders’ personalities and management styles. The departure of a leader as notoriously driven as Huang is expected to prompt a significant shift at Pinduoduo.

  • The company’s share prices slumped 7.1% Wednesday on the news.  
  • Huang’s resignation comes at a time when the company faces criticism for its grueling overtime culture, brought to light after the highly publicized deaths of two employees and complaints from others.

READ MORE: Tech in the five-year-plan

Details: Colin Huang said in a letter sent to shareholders on Wednesday that he had resigned as the company’s chairman. Chen Lei will take over while continuing in his existing role as CEO.

  • Huang’s voting rights were passed to the board, but the 1:10 super voting rights attached to his shares will no longer apply. He pledged to hold his 29.4% share of Pinduoduo for the next three years.
  • Huang said he is embarking on a new journey exploring food and life sciences.
  • Along with shareholder letter, Pinduoduo reported fourth quarter revenue of RMB 26.5 billion ($4.1 billion), climbing 146% year on year from RMB 10.8 billion in the same quarter of 2019. The growth was primarily driven by an increase in ad revenue and contribution from merchandise sales, the company said. Pinduoduo’s revenue beat the high end of analyst estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance.
  • The company’s active buyers in 2020 jumped 35% year on year to 788.4 million from 585.2 million in 2019, overtaking rival Alibaba, which reported 779 million annual active users during the same period.
  • The e-commerce platform is repositioning itself as China’s largest agriculture platform, according to CEO Chen Lei’s comments during the earnings call held Wednesday evening, as it shifts toward selling agricultural products and offering services to farmers. 
  • Chen said Pinduoduo’s gross merchandise volume (GMV) for agricultural products doubled on an annual basis to more than RMB 270 billion in 2020, though it remained a modest share compared with the company’s total GMV of RMB 1.7 trillion for the year.

Context: Serial entrepreneur Huang, 41, has stepped away from the company he founded five years ago to devote himself to the research of food and life science. The areas have significant overlap with Pinduoduo’s new business focus—agriculture. Agritech was mentioned in the 14th Five-Year Plan an important industry for China, which seeks to shore up agricultural efficiency and innovation.

  • Colin Huang handed his CEO role to Chen Lei in July.
  • Forbes once listed Huang, a former Google employee, the second-richest man in China, on its Real-Time Billionaires List, though he had fallen to 24th place as of publication.
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ByteDance is trying to take a bite of Meituan’s cake https://technode.com/2021/03/18/bytedance-is-trying-to-take-a-bite-of-meituans-cake/ Thu, 18 Mar 2021 04:35:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156313 Douyin Shanghai short video ByteDanceByteDance ups its push into local lifestyle to boost revenue sources as IPO rumors loom. Is the upstart ready to take on Meituan?]]> Douyin Shanghai short video ByteDance

A few years ago, ByteDance was a media company. Now it’s moving from e-commerce into restaurant coupons.

ByteDance is on its way to building a business empire encompassing nearly every aspect of Chinese consumers’ daily lives. With core competency in content aggregation, the TikTok parent company has already expanded to entertainment, e-commerce, productivity, gaming, education, competing head-on with big names like Tencent, Baidu, and Alibaba. 

The tech giant recently accelerated its foray into local lifestyle, a RMB 1.3 trillion (around $199.9 billion) market that is dominated by long-standing incumbent Meituan, which operates two of China’s largest local lifestyle apps, Meituan and Dianping. Local lifestyle is a catch-all term for in-person services such as restaurants, movies, entertainment, and beauty care. Tech companies engaged in these areas typically adopt the O2O, or online-to-offline model, which entices online consumers to make purchases of goods or services from bricks-and-mortar stores by leveraging location-based features.

Western tech titans tend to focus on excelling in their own territory. In contrast, Chinese tech giants strive to build ecosystems that capture all aspects of users’ daily lives. The first generation of tech giants—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent—each created its own ecosystem. ByteDance is heading down the same path.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

ByteDance is pushing into local lifestyle services in order to diversify and boost its revenue stream to support both the company’s rapid pace of development. With an IPO rumored to be coming soon, the company will also want to show strong revenue figures.

ByteDance recorded around RMB 240 billion of revenue in 2020, according to The Information, which cited people with knowledge of the matter. Revenue from its primary advertising business accounted for RMB 175 billion, or 72.9% of the total. The company has decreased its heavy reliance on ad income, which in 2019 accounted for over 90% of revenue. It may still need to improve that balance in order to fend off risk.

By advancing into lifestyle services, ByteDance is taking on a new rival: O2O giant Meituan. It’s a potentially Freudian moment for ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming, who has close connections to Meituan founder Wang Xing. Both men hail from the same town in rural Fujian, and they have a history. When Wang founded social media platform Fanfou in 2007, Zhang was his tech partner. They haven’t worked together since 2009, but the two CEOs appear to remain fond of each other, speaking highly of each other in public.

Deeper discounts, for now

Douyin’s newly launched local lifestyle section consists of four segments: group deals for restaurants and hotels, top lists for scenic spots, hotel reservations, a gourmet guide populated by reviews from social media influencers, and location-based check-in with prizes. The features have some overlap but are all focused on restaurant and accommodation reservations. Participating businesses are currently only located in top-tier cities including Beijing and Shanghai.

Screenshots of local lifestyle service offerings on Douyin. (Image credit: TechNode)

For users, Douyin’s local life offerings are largely a Meituan alternative. 

In addition to easy access to user attention, an obvious edge for the service is pricing. A Sichuan noodle restaurant chain in Shanghai is currently offering up to 60% off through campaigns marketed through Douyin’s new feature, while discounts from the same restaurant are only 30% on Meituan and Dianping. 

It’s hard to say how long the company will maintain its pricing edge, but it is an efficient and time-tested way to draw its first round of customers. 

“Meituan and Dianping are my go-to apps for lifestyle services. But if we can get a better bargain on Douyin for the same service, why not?” Deng Shuang, a Shanghai-based housewife who watches e-commerce livestreams on Douyin, told TechNode.

Merchants are also open to the new option thanks to Douyin’s favorable word-of-mouth reputation as an efficient marketing platform. Sandwich shop owner Xiao Yu spent RMB 500 for one promotional video on Douyin in an attempt to draw users to his restaurant which opened just two months ago. The review video, featuring a Douyin social media influencer visiting his Nanjing-based store, tripled daily sales of the store to RMB 3,000, increasing daily orders to more than 200 from around 70 per day. The traffic boost sustained for over a week. He told TechNode that the store’s initial low traffic may have exaggerated the growth rate, but he was satisfied with the results. Given this experience, he’s keen to try out the new group-buy feature if it launches in Nanjing.

At present, merchants with a Douyin enterprise account can use the service for free, partially lowering merchant marketing expenses. The current zero commission policy may be a big attraction for merchants who generally pay steep commission fees to Meituan of around 10%.

What’s ahead

User enthusiasm alone, however, won’t guarantee success for Douyin’s local lifestyle business. There are two difficulties in using Douyin to promote such destinations, according to Michael Norris, research and strategy manager of Agency China.

“The first is a technical challenge—whether Douyin can support the purchase and redemption of coupons as efficiently as Meituan’s Dianping,” he said.

As it gets started with the business, Douyin both cooperates directly with offline stores and acts as a traffic platform that helps to promote services offered by third-party platforms. A server at a Shanghai noodle restaurant told TechNode that she has seen few customers using Douyin group-buy coupons compared with those from Meituan’s apps. In another test, a meal voucher that a TechNode reporter purchased through Douyin could not be found in the restaurant’s ordering system. Restaurant management eventually noticed that the voucher was issued by another local lifestyle platform, Xiangku, and Douyin was only promoting the service. 

“The second is a user journey and experience challenge—in the case of restaurants, users generally search and redeem a discount coupon as they pay for the meal. How Douyin plans to support this behavior is key to whether it can be a credible threat to transactions in Meituan,” Norris says.

Although the products look similar, Douyin’s product is embedded in a different ecosystem—which probably means a different strategy.  

Meituan is all about convenience. People who are looking to buy food or services use Meituan to search for bargains available near their location to purchase immediately, usually for restaurants nearby while shopping or after finishing a meal at a restaurant. In addition, Meituan’s food delivery services, more frequently-used services although lower in margin, help the platform to accumulate merchants users. Meituan’s model relies on both ads and commission to make money.

Douyin appears to be counting on getting people excited enough that they’ll make a special trip to try a new restaurant. Based on its content and “Point Of Interest” feature, Douyin is trying to create demand using content marketing tactics including livestreams, videos, and other media. When a consumer sees that a friend owns an item, or an internet influencer recommends a restaurant, it plants a mental seed.

Another challenge will be very quickly ramping up and capturing a wide offline merchant network. Unlike e-commerce for physical goods, selling local lifestyle services is rooted in recruiting as many offline merchants as possible. The number of participating merchants is a crucial baseline for luring more customers. It is a difficult market to catch up in since such offline recruitment requires big teams and plentiful resources to support heavy offline operations. As a result, it is unlikely that Meituan will lose its first-mover advantage in the near term.

Broader e-commerce push

It’s no secret that Douyin has big plans for e-commerce, a coveted revenue source for tech firms. After earning RMB 500 billion in gross merchandise volume (GMV) in 2020, Douyin set a RMB 1 trillion (in Chinese) GMV goal for its e-commerce business in 2021. The company has launched a number of initiatives to increase sales transacted through Douyin, including shoppable short videos and livestreams. 

ByteDance is broadening its livestreamed e-commerce business to include online sales of services, or the local lifestyle sector.

READ MORE: Bytedance gaming play doesn’t threaten Tencent—yet

“A subset of these shoppable videos include coupons and group-buying deals for tourist attractions and eateries. The group-buying feature gives merchants, whatever they’re selling, new ways to facilitate purchases,” Norris said.

ByteDance has been adjusting internally, shuttering smaller or less successful ventures and investing further in businesses that are mature or seen as proven business models, in preparation for a public listing, according to a number of media reports. It shut down (in Chinese) paid knowledge-sharing services Haohao Xuexi and closed its smartphone business by integrating the Smartisan team into the education hardware unit. Meanwhile, it acquired the Wikipedia-like Baike.com and built an internet of vehicles team.

ByteDance appears to be willing to try anything and everything to power growth and stay ahead. It has been keeping pace with virtually all the bandwagons with huge market potential. Its leadership doesn’t seem to mind failure, only missing out on the next big thing in China’s cutthroat technology race. 

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China tightens grip on e-commerce, sharing economy IPOs: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/03/17/china-tightens-grip-on-e-commerce-sharing-economy-ipos-retailheads/ Wed, 17 Mar 2021 06:40:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156272 Taobao livestreamingRegulators rolled out a set of rules closing livestream e-commerce loopholes. Two of China's largest 'sharing economy' firms filed for US IPOs. ]]> Taobao livestreaming

Last week, China’s market regulator rolled out a set of new rules addressing newer innovations in the e-commerce market. Two of China’s largest “sharing economy” firms filed for public listings in the US. Online housing firm Beike posted its first profitable year, while the parent company of budget cosmetics brand Perfect Diary reported fourth quarter losses despite a jump in revenue.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Mar. 11 – 17.

More discipline for China e-commerce

China’s market regulator introduced on Monday a set of e-commerce laws pertaining to recent developments in the ever-evolving sector, including livestreamed sales, user data privacy, and forced exclusivity. (TechNode)

Sharing economy giants head for IPO

  • Energy Monster, the Softbank-backed Chinese power bank rental company, has filed for an initial public offering in the US. A February IFR report said the company aims to raise $300 million. The prospectus showed that the firm had received a D round exceeding $200 million led by Alibaba’s Taobao China and CMC Moonlight Holdings, followed by CGI and Hillhouse Capital. The company’s total 2020 revenues increased 38.9% year on year to RMB 2.8 billion ($430.6 million) from RMB 2.0 billion in 2019. However, its net income more than halved to RMB 75.4 million in 2020 from RMB 166.6 million in 2019 as people spent less time in public places during the pandemic. (SEC filing)
  • Bike rental firm Hello Inc. filed confidentially with the US Securities and Exchange  Commission for an IPO in the US market, according to sources cited by Bloomberg. (TechNode)

Earnings season

  • Chinese online housing firm Beike announced Monday that its fourth quarter revenue rose 57.6% year over year to RMB 22.7 billion, and it booked net profits of RMB 1.1 billion compared with RMB 3.1 billion in losses the same period in 2019. Gross transaction value improved 65.4% year on year for the reporting period. The company posted net income of RMB 2.8 million for the fiscal year ended December, the first profitable year since its public debut in August. (Beike)
  • Yatsen Holding Ltd., parent of budget cosmetics brand Perfect Diary, reported a fourth quarter net loss of RMB 1.5 billion compared with net profit of RMB 46.2 million the same period a year earlier, driven by rocketing marketing expenses. Its revenue during the quarter increased 71.7% year on year to RMB 1.9 billion thanks to user base growth. (Caixin)

Livestream e-commerce

The value of China’s livestream e-commerce market jumped 121.5% year on year to RMB 961.0 billion in 2020, up from RMB 433.8 billion in 2019, while growth decelerated from 226.2%. The number of shoppers who make purchases via livestream is expected to rise 8.2% to 635 million in 2021, up from 587 million in 2020.  (Iimedia Research, in Chinese)

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New e-commerce laws address livestreams, forced exclusivity https://technode.com/2021/03/17/china-expands-e-commerce-laws-to-livestreams-exclusivity/ Tue, 16 Mar 2021 17:31:23 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156222 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoChina’s market regulator debuted a set of e-commerce laws targeting new developments, including livestream sales, user data privacy, and forced exclusivity.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo

China’s market regulator introduced on Monday a set of e-commerce laws pertaining to more recent developments in the sector, including livestreamed sales, user data privacy, and forced exclusivity.

Why it matters: The new rules addressing newer innovations in China’s massive e-commerce industry are an important complement to the E-commerce Law that came to effect in 2019.

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation, China’s market regulator, unfurled (in Chinese) rules regulating transactions made online at the annual 315 consumer rights protection gala held Monday.

  • The rules require platforms which sell via social e-commerce and livestream e-commerce as well as merchants on these platforms to comply with the responsibilities of online transaction marketplaces as described in the law. Selling via livestreams and social media are innovations that have gained popularity since the release of the e-commerce law in 2019.
  • Livestream e-commerce platforms are required keep the videos for at least three years after the end date of the live video session.  
  • The platforms have to gain user consent for the collection and utilization of personal information including biometric data, medical and health information, and financial accounts.
  • The new rules will also ban services that engage in misleading practices such as falsifying selling volume and audience numbers, or promoting favorable reviews over others.
  • The guidelines also prohibit practices that facilitate “forced exclusivity,” including suppressing product listing rankings of merchants who decline to sell exclusively on one platform, removing or blocking such online stores, and raising service fees for such sellers.
  • The measures are important for “improving the online transaction supervision system, regulating the online transaction space, maintaining fair competition, and creating secure online consumption,” a report from state-backed news agency Xinhua cited the regulator as saying.

READ MORE: New law brings structure, discipline to the willful world of Chinese e-commerce

Context: China has stepped up regulation of the flourishing e-commerce industry over the past few years.

  • China’s Electronic Commerce Law came into effect in 2019.
  • In June, the China Advertising Association (CAA) issued rules banning false and misleading advertising on livestreams and requiring real-name registration from both merchants and individual livestreamers.
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Ant Group-backed bike-rental app Hello Inc files for US IPO https://technode.com/2021/03/11/ant-group-backed-bike-rental-app-hello-inc-files-for-us-ipo/ Thu, 11 Mar 2021 06:34:22 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156135 Hello bike-rental bike sharing MobikeHello Inc's filing shows that the sector's few remaining players now seek sustainable growth after reckless expansion in earlier years.]]> Hello bike-rental bike sharing Mobike

Chinese bike-rental firm Hello Inc has filed for an initial public offering in the US, Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Why it matters: A survivor of China’s bike rental bubble, the Shanghai-based company is among the largest bike-rental firms in the country. If Hello successfully lists, it would be the first US-listed Chinese bike-rental company.

  • Hello is signaling with the IPO—including the disclosures and accountability that come with a public listing—a shift to sustainable growth, following a backlash against bike-rental apps for breakneck but reckless expansion in earlier years.
  • After multiple rounds of consolidation, China’s bike-rental market is now dominated by firms that are backed by deep-pocketed giants: Ant Group-backed Hello, Didi’s Qingju, and Meituan Bike, formerly Mobike.
  • The company also operates electric bike-rental and ride-hailing businesses, all part of the “sharing economy” facing scrutiny as part of a broader regulatory tightening over China’s Big Tech.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | The bike rental boom is dead. Long live bike rental

Detail: The company chose to file confidentially with the US Securities and Exchange  Commission, according to sources cited by Bloomberg, exercising an option that is becoming popular owing to the flexibility it allows for timing and pricing.

  • Hello is working with China International Capital Corp., Credit Suisse Group AG, and Morgan Stanley for the listing, according to the report.
  • The size of the targeted raise was not disclosed, though a previous IFR report said that the firm looks to raise as much as $1 billion, according to Bloomberg.
  • A company spokesperson declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode on Thursday morning.
  • Hello had 400 million registered users as of October for its bike rental business which it operates in more than 460 cities. It rents out electric bikes in 400 cities and offers car ride-hailing services in over 300 cities.
  • The company had 300 million registered users in 2019, when it said it was China’s largest two-wheel transportation app.

Context: Hello Inc. launched in 2016, two years after Mobike and Ofo, and quickly gained traction as the first bike-rental app to focus its business on China’s smaller cities.

  • The firm, also known as Hellobike, Hello TransTech and Hello Global, merged with  Shanghai-listed competitor Youon Bike in October 2017.
  • In addition to Ant Group, the company is backed by top investors including Fosun Group, GGV Capital, and Shenzhen Venture Capital.
  • Companies within the broader sharing economy in China earned more than RMB 3.38 trillion ($519.6 billion) in transactions in 2020.
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Community group-buy firms fined, women boost consumption: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/03/10/china-fines-community-group-buy-firms-she-economy-retailheads/ Wed, 10 Mar 2021 05:28:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=156072 community group-buy group-buyingChina fined five community group-buy platforms for price dumping, the "she economy" is on the rise as modern Chinese women power growth.]]> community group-buy group-buying

Last week, China fined five community group-buy platforms for price dumping. The “she economy” is on the rise as consumption from Chinese women grows. Cross-border e-commerce site Ymatou and coffee chain Manner Coffee receive new funding.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Mar. 4 – 10.

Curbing community group-buy

China’s top market regulator levied fines totaling RMB 6.5 million (around $1 million) on five community group-buy platforms for price dumping, reinforcing Beijing’s efforts to regulate the red hot industry.

The companies subject to the penalty are Didi’s Chengxin Youxuan, Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai, Meituan’s Meituan Youxuan, Alibaba-backed Nicetuan, and Wuhan-based Shixianghui. (TechNode)

Female consumers power growth

  • Chinese female shoppers make household purchasing decisions in 75% of homes, according to a report released by online retailer JD.com, and are spending increasingly more on themselves as a proportion to the household. The report was released on International Women’s Day, which falls on March 8. Women are driving growth in a diverse range of categories such as cosmetics, baby products, luxury goods, alcohol, cars, and mobile gaming, the report said citing Meha Verghese, executive at agency MediaCom. (JD)
  • A Pinduoduo consumption report identified the same trend, saying that the female users are spending more on products and services to “please themselves.” The sale of lipstick, skincare products, and apparel top the sales growth chart, according to the report. (Tencent Tech, in Chinese)
  • A total of 2.72 million female drivers work for Didi across Asia, Latin America, Russia, and Australia, according to a report from the ride-hailing giant. China accounts for 2.37 million of the total. Many women, who are often also caregivers and homemakers, turned to gig economy apps due to economic uncertainty caused by the pandemic, the report said. (Ifeng, in Chinese)

Earnings season

  • Chinese online grocer JD Daojia reported RMB 2.02 billion ($308.62 million) in revenue during the fourth quarter, an increase of 69.9% year on year. The revenue missed the $309.18 million average estimate compiled by Yahoo Finance. The company’s full-year net revenues in 2020 amounted to RMB 5.74 billion, a year-over-year increase of 85.2%. Total gross merchandise volume for the year of RMB 25.3 billion more than doubled compared with 2019. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • Fourth quarter revenue for China’s online travel platform Trip.com dropped 40% year on year to RMB 5 billion, which the company attributed to the pandemic. The decline in revenue slowed compared with 48% year-on-year drop in Q3 and 64% in Q2, signaling a gradual recovery of domestic travel market. (KrAsia)

This week in funding

  • Ymatou, the Chinese cross-border e-commerce site backed by microblogging platform Weibo, has closed a Series D Plus worth hundreds of millions of RMB from Prosperity Investment, local media reported. (36kr, in Chinese)
  • Chinese beverage chain Manner Coffee received investment from investors including Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings at a valuation of $1.3 billion. The Luckin rival operates more than 100 stores across the country, mostly located in Shanghai. (Ebrun, in Chinese) 
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INSIGHTS | Tech in the five-year plan https://technode.com/2021/03/05/insights-tech-in-the-five-year-plan/ Fri, 05 Mar 2021 07:36:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155993 china cybersecurity law rules critical information infrastructure five-year planNext week, China will issue its 14th Five-Year Plan, setting priorities for the next five years. Here's what we expect to see in the tech arena. ]]> china cybersecurity law rules critical information infrastructure five-year plan

As China’s legislature prepares to meet tomorrow, we’re bringing you a special edition of our Insights column: a preview of tech in the 14th Five-Year Plan. We’ve looked through the last plan, and the documents describing priorities for the new one, to give you our baseline expectations for key tech areas in the new plan.

Greetings from Beijing, where the weather is just turning to spring, the air this week feels like taking a bath in an ashtray, and, across town, about 3,000 people are getting together Friday to kick off the annual meeting of China’s national legislature.

This is one of the big meetings: This year, the National People’s Congress will approve China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, which will set out the government’s economic priorities for the next half-decade. The meeting lasts from March 5 to March 11, and in previous years the plan has come toward the end of the session.

Technology and innovation are sure to play a leading role. “Innovation-driven development” was one of the first topics addressed in the 13th Five-Year Plan, issued in 2016, and the phrase is equally prominent in previews of the new plan.

What is (likely) new is emphasis on another key phrase: “self-sufficiency.” As the US has used its control of key technologies as a weapon, China’s efforts to produce its own have a new urgency.

For people with tech projects, the start of a new plan period means opportunity. The “money spigot” for homegrown tech and innovation is likely to get even more generous, said Uny Cao, vice president at the Zhejiang University Intellectual Property Exchange Center and friend of TechNode.

What are we looking for when the new plan is published next week? What’s likely to get the most attention—and which will get less? Below, you’ll find TechNode’s roundup of key mentions of technologies we expect to see highlighted in the 14th Five-Year Plan.


How to read a five-year plan

Macro focus: Above all, five-year economic plans are strategic documents. The most important decisions will be macro goals for the economy as a whole: whether to set a GDP target and how high; how to pace the economy’s transition to meet a 2060 carbon neutrality goal; and how to balance such factors as imports, exports, investment, and consumption. We’re not going to cover all those issues below: You’ll find lots of sharper macro commentary from our friends and colleagues at other outlets.

Don’t expect details: A five-year plan gives you a 10,000-foot view of the government’s priorities, reflecting agreement on goals but probably not how to reach them. If you’re interested in a topic, look for more specialized plans issued by ministries and provinces for implementation.

Compare, compare, compare: Most important political documents don’t make much sense in isolation. To identify key decisions, policy analysts compare successive versions of the same plan to see what’s changed—additions, subtractions, or even changes in the order of topics may indicate shifting priorities. We’ve looked at the 13th Five-Year Plan (full text in English), which ended in 2020, to set a baseline for key technology issues.

Decisions, not surprises: You probably have already heard of most topics to be covered by the Five-Year Plan. Stakeholders across the Chinese political system have been advocating, piloting, and negotiating ideas for years in the hopes of influencing this plan. Much like a major plan in any political system, it bears the fingerprints of hundreds or thousands of political actors of all kinds.

Basis for our expectations: Last October, the Party’s Central Committee met in Beijing to discuss the upcoming five-year plan in a meeting called the Fifth Plenum. The most relevant of the reports that meeting produced was the Central Committee’s “Suggestions” or “Guidelines” for the 14th Five-Year Plan. Although much shorter—around three pages compared to three hundred—the structure of this document usually parallels that of the published five-year plan. We heavily relied on it to make the predictions below.


Data

A new approach to data management will reverberate across tech industries. The next stage of China’s tech policy will shift from an emphasis on developing cybersecurity and big data, to building up the data economy.

Mentions in the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last five-year development plan focused on building up cybersecurity and control over data. But it also set goals to get government offices to share data with each other and industry.

  • The 13th plan promised crackdowns on black markets for personal data, and strengthened privacy protection for big datasets, including government credit information systems. The government also aimed at opening up government big data to the public through a digital platform.
  • The 2017 Cybersecurity Law was the first big step for reform of China’s information security. Implementation of the Multi-Level Protection Scheme, a key part of the CSL, picked up in the summer of 2020, Carly Ramsey, who leads regulatory and political risk consulting at Control Risks in Shanghai, told TechNode. 

READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law

Expectations in the 14th Five-Year Plan: In the Fifth Plenum guidelines, data has joined an impressive new crowd: “[We will] advance the marketization and reform of the economic factors of land, labor, capital, technology, and data.” When a Communist Party puts you on the same level as labor and capital, you know you’ve made it big.

The Fifth Plenum guidelines call for the development of a rules-based data economy. Or as they put it: Establish basic systems and standards for data property rights, transactions and circulation, cross-border transmission, and security protection to promote the development and utilization of data resources.

“Ensuring the fluid circulation of data is now an economic imperative,” said Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at Beijing-based strategic advisory firm Trivium. “In practical terms, that means that the overarching theme of China’s data policy over the next five years will focus on allowing data to be shared, transferred, bought, sold, and utilized,” Schaefer said. The plenum’s recommendations called for “systems and standards” in data property rights, market mechanisms for data, as well as cross-border data transfers.

READ MORE: China sets the rules for its new data economy

So what? “The 14th Five-Year Plan will mark the beginning of a new era in China’s approach to data policy,” Schaefer said. China is stepping up from the securitization of data resources to developing a system in which data can be exploited as a resource. In the upcoming plan period, we can expect more support for trade in data alongside a continued crackdown on bad cybersecurity practices and insufficient privacy protections.


Environment

One of the biggest components of the 14th five-year plan deals with action to combat the environmental damage that followed years of rapid industrialization and economic growth. In the wake of a vow to set China on a path to carbon neutrality by 2060, economic planners will be under pressure to come up with big changes. China’s tech sector stands to benefit: To reach the country’s emissions goals, investment in clean technology could reach $16 trillion in the next 40 years.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 2016 plan laid out targets to reduce carbon emissions by cutting the country’s carbon intensity—the amount of carbon dioxide produced for every unit of GDP. Through subsidies, state planners pushed prices in the solar industry so low that it effectively went from being a high-tech sector to a commodity business.

  • The document laid out action plans to combat air, water, and soil pollution. By last year, Chinese cities were expected to meet “good” air quality standards for more than 80% of the year. 
  • The plan sought to reduce the country’s reliance on coal-fired power plants, and promote environmentally friendly construction and mining. 
  • Also included were “improvements in supportive policies” for renewable energy sources.

Expectations: The new plan will likely clarify how China will reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon net zero by 2060, goals laid out to the UN General Assembly by President Xi Jinping in September.

  • The thrust of Xi’s speech has been factored into energy and environmental planning in the new five-year plan.
  • The new plan will likely outline ambitious capacity and consumption targets for wind and solar energy production, while placing further caps on coal-fired power plants. 
  • Energy storage is also expected to play an important role in the new plan, as China seeks to improve grid and power security. 
  • It is unlikely that there will be a move away from carbon intensity caps to hard carbon caps, as the country attempts to balance economic growth and cutting emissions, analysts said. 
  • While the last five-year plan placed emphasis on reducing emissions from energy production, the new plan will place increased focus on minimizing pollution from industry, including steel and transportation. 
  • Further integration between China tech and energy industries is expected, a goal laid out in the 13th five-year plan. 

So what? The world is waiting to see how China plans to reach its emissions targets by 2060. We expect the plan to create more targets and pressure on local governments to improve carbon emissions, but details on how these will be implemented—and how cleantech investment will be affected—will likely be spelled out in lower-level plans.


Autos

A pillar of China’s economic growth, the automotive sector has long been dominated by well-established foreign brands, which hold more than 60% of the market share, while domestic automakers are concentrated in the low-end segment. But that is changing as China’s strength in electric vehicles is boosting its position on the global industry value chain, thanks to strong policy support over the past five years.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: When China’s cabinet in 2010 initiated a development plan (in Chinese) for seven strategic emerging industries, new energy vehicles (NEVs) was one of them. In 2016, Beijing set an ambitious target of 5 million sales of NEVs in the coming five years, a number which would mark the beginning of mass adoption. This initiative became part of Beijing’s larger goal of becoming the world’s next innovation powerhouse.

  • The central government carried out a series of stimuli to foster a new source of economic growth—by offering subsidies for NEV purchases, especially for all-electrics and plug-in hybrids—in both public and private transport sectors.
  • China’s top policymakers also vowed to achieve major breakthroughs in battery technologies, such as a higher energy-density level, which enables a longer driving range as well as better resistance to extreme temperatures.

Expectations: NEVs were briefly mentioned as one of the strategic emerging industries in the fifth plenum guidelines, but with no detail about the growth outlook.

  • However, according to a policy paper released by the State Council in November, NEV sales were projected to account for 20% of total new car sales by 2025, up from the 2020 level of just 5.4%.
  • Beijing also expected “significant improvement in the competitiveness” of its homegrown players in the fields of battery safety and in-car operating systems, among others, while promoting highly autonomous vehicles for commercial use cases in pilot programs. 

So what? China’s electric vehicle market staged a strong rebound after disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic last year and has remained the world’s biggest market since 2014. However, there have been bumps on the road, including electric car fires and the ongoing auto chip shortages.

China also lags the US in the vehicle autonomy competition, raising calls for more effort put toward core technology advancement. Pledging for quality growth amid rising superpower tensions in the next five years, Beijing would have to stay the course in boosting the sector, while realizing little near-term profit.


Semiconductors

Chinese leaders have long vowed to achieve “self-reliance” in strategic technologies, and semiconductors are one of the priorities. The sector is expected to get major attention as China issues its development blueprint for the next five years.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The five-year plan ending in 2020 saw semiconductors, along with other high-tech sectors like robotics, smart transportation, and virtual reality, as “new areas of growth” for the nation’s economy, but didn’t make production of semiconductors a strategic priority.

  • Priorities certainly have changed over the past five years as Chinese leaders realized how troublesome it is to rely on foreign imports of semiconductors. Huawei is a brutal example.

Expectations: In 2015, China set a goal to make 70% of the chips it uses by 2025 as part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative. Now the question is how China will achieve that goal. The country only produced 6% of the semiconductors it consumed in 2020.

  • The fifth plenum vowed to implement a series of “foresightful and strategic” technology research projects including integrated circuits, quantum information, AI, and neural science.
  • Despite the industry’s importance, the National Development and Reform Commission didn’t include semiconductors on a list published last September of “strategic emerging industries.” Electric vehicles and artificial intelligence were on the list.
  • The central government will increase investment in the domestic semiconductors industry through vehicles like the National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund.
  • More favorable policies towards domestic chip companies are likely such as tax breaks and heavier tariffs on imported electronic components.
  • Bloomberg cited sources as saying that Beijing has added in a draft of the 14th five-year plan “a suite of measures to bolster research, education, and financing” for the semiconductors industry. 

E-commerce

E-commerce falls under the broader concept of the digital economy, a major theme in the plan that also covers 5G, artificial intelligence, and big data. E-commerce is expected to play a greater role in driving China’s economic growth in the next plan period.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The development plan that ended in 2020 set out to expand the e-commerce sector by facilitating its deep integration with traditional industries and prioritizing its governance. China sought to integrate e-commerce into various areas including education, healthcare, culture, and tourism to drive innovation.

  • The 13th five-year plan set out expectations for China’s e-commerce transactions to exceed RMB 40 trillion ($6.19 trillion) in 2020, the last year of the plan—double the transaction value in 2015. The figure includes RMB 10 trillion from online retail businesses. The sector was projected to employ more than 50 million people by the end of 2020.
  • The period of the 13th plan showed mixed results for e-commerce. The country missed the plan’s goal of RMB 37.21 trillion in e-commerce transactions in 2020. Online retail sales hit their target, however, totaling RMB 11.76 trillion in 2020, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed.

Expectations: China expects online commerce to continue supporting its macro strategies, notably poverty alleviation and the One Belt One Road initiative. E-commerce has become an important means for China’s rural dwellers to sell their agricultural products. With more free trade zones on the horizon, China looks to expand its cross-border e-commerce market in the next five years.

  • As a booster for both domestic and international commerce, the industry plays a central role in goals set for the “dual circulation” concept, which refers to spurring domestic as well as global demand, creating circumstances where the two boost each other’s growth. The idea featured predominantly in recent policy statements, although the term has been a policy meme for several years.
  • Chinese regulators are stepping up monitoring for unfair competition and monopolistic practices.
  • Consulting agency Jiuhou Zongheng has forecast that China’s e-commerce transactions will reach RMB 50 trillion by 2024.

Blockchain

Blockchain could be a new item in the 14th plan. It’s had plenty of attention at top levels in the past year.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Zilch. Blockchain was not on top policymakers’ agenda back in 2016.

Push from the top: The technology had its breakout moment in Chinese policy in October 2019, when President Xi Jinping praised the technology at a Politburo study session.

  • Since then, local governments have embraced blockchain governance projects and tried to spur innovation in the field.
  • The National Development and Reform Commission is supporting the development of the Blockchain Services Network, an “internet of blockchains.”

No crypto: Chinese regulators are not big fans of one of the technology’s most popular applications: cryptocurrencies. The past year’s clampdown on unregulated cryptocurrencies “is meant to clear a path to regulated forms of digital assets, starting first with DCEP [the central bank’s R&D project that includes the digital RMB],” said Michael Sung, co-director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University, told TechNode.

Expectations: The technology was not mentioned in the 14th plan guidelines issued after the Fifth Plenum.

  • The cryptocurrency mining industry might be negatively affected by financial de-risking campaigns and sustainability goals. The industry consumes vast amounts of electricity and is dependent on volatile crypto assets. 

READ MORE: Inner Mongolia may ban crypto mining: Blockheads

So what? China is already very interested in blockchain, but has not given the technology the same level of support as, say, electric vehicles. A name-check in the 14th plan would seal its status as a key technology and could pave the way for a national blockchain roadmap.


Antitrust

China has recently tightened antitrust regulations on tech companies. Regulators started at the end of last year to look at tech giants’ market dominance and to use anti-monopoly tools to limit them. The country also changed antitrust laws and rules to better rein in big tech. As top leaders of China repeatedly vow to “strengthen anti-monopoly” and “rein in disorderly capital expansion,” what has affected tech companies so far seems to be just the start of severer crackdowns.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 13th development plan mentioned breaking industry monopolies and rooting out market barriers. It also intended to establish an “efficient antitrust law enforcement system,” deepen international antitrust law enforcement cooperation, and check administrative monopolies.

  • In 2018, China created the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), a  trustbuster that centralized antitrust power previously dispersed among  four market regulators.

Expectations: China is already on the move to rein in big tech with anti-monopoly tools. If the new plan pushes government agencies to impose stricter antitrust regulations and break monopolies, tech giants like Tencent, Alibaba, and Bytedance may feel a lot more pain.

  • China’s antitrust regulator drafted an amendment to the Anti-Monopoly Law in January 2020; China may push to finalize the law during the period of the 14th five-year plan.
  • The fifth plenum also called for the establishment of an “efficient antitrust law enforcement system” and to “break industry monopoly.”
  • SAMR has said tightening antitrust regulations leads the 2021 agenda for the agency.
  • While companies like Tencent and Alibaba are already under the spotlight, SAMR may launch more antitrust investigations into big tech companies. 
  • A few antitrust lawsuits between tech companies are set for court hearings this year. Among them are the Douyin vs. WeChat, and JD.com vs. Alibaba cases. The results of cases will provide precedents for how the antitrust rules that took effect in February will be interpreted by the courts.

Rural areas and agriculture

Agriculture, the foundation for feeding China’s 1.4 billion population, is facing a new round of restructuring and modernization. The countryside is a growing focus for tech companies because it is home to a group of maturing consumers as well as being a lower-cost manufacturing hub. That makes aligning with rural developments a big goal for these internet firms.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last plan placed a high priority on continuous modernization of rural areas and the agricultural sector. The plan promoted integration of agriculture and e-commerce and encouraged the application of big data and internet of things tech in agriculture.

  • President Xi Jinping announced China’s “complete victory” in eliminating “absolute poverty” at a grand gathering held February 25 in Beijing. In the past eight years, nearly 100 million rural residents were lifted from poverty, Xi says.
  • Tech giants including Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and Didi Chuxing were rewarded for contributions in the poverty alleviation initiative.

Expectations: China is expected to continue to focus on improving the quality, safety, and profitability of the sector, goals that require technological assistance.

  • The focus of China’s agricultural development will shift from increasing production to improving quality, according to The China Agriculture Outlook (2020-2019) released this past April.

Policymakers are counting on tech in a plan to improve both farmers’ output and their incomes, said Even Pay, an associate director at Trivium:

“Policymakers are preparing for a future where there are fewer farmers. Some of them may be older, and in need of equipment to make their jobs easier. They also hope to attract some young people back into farming by making the work easier and more interesting—like operating ag machinery or flying drones.”

“Another big reason the government is supporting agtech is the “dual circulation strategy”—which looks to make domestic consumption the main driver of China’s macroeconomic growth. Right now China’s rural areas have the greatest growth potential of anywhere in the country—provided farmers’ incomes go up.”


Fintech + digital yuan

Fintech and the digital yuan might get a direct mention in the 14th plan.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Fintech was directly mentioned only once in the last plan. That plan called for a risk monitoring and crisis management system for all financial activity, including “internet finance.”

  • “Microfinance,” “inclusive finance,” and “green finance” were included in the plan, but these categories also refer to traditional financial tools, said Jonas Short, head of the Beijing office at Everbright Sun Hung Kai.
  • The plan called for microfinance to be made more “transparent” and regulated, while “Internet+inclusive finance” was to be promoted, and a green finance system was to be set up.
  • The 13th plan also mentioned the development of “multilayered” and “non-cash” “payment systems,” although it didn’t mention digital payments specifically.

Fintech development: Since the release of the 2016-2020 plan, the use of fintech has skyrocketed, and an overwhelming majority of Chinese citizens now make use of some sort of digital finance, whether that’s for lending, investment, or insurance.

  • The Ministry of Commerce released a fintech development plan in 2017, focused on cybersecurity, digital payments, and risk prevention.  
  • As big tech came to play an increasingly important role in China’s finance, especially with regards to consumers and SMEs, authorities started laying down the rules: In 2020, Chinese regulators ramped up their efforts to regulate fintech companies, especially after Ant Group’s IPO was suspended in November 2020. Rules for microlending, antitrust, and digital payments have been released since.

Digital yuan: China’s central bank has been working on a digital form of cash, the digital yuan, since 2014. If implemented, it will be the first state-backed digital currency by a major economy. The central bank appears to have accelerated the development of the currency in 2019 after Facebook announced its Libra project. Trials for the e-CNY started in late 2020 in four Chinese cities: Chengdu, Shenzhen, Suzhou, and Xiong’an.

Expectations: The guidelines directly called for the improvement of “the level of financial technology.” They also included language similar to the previous plan’s regarding inclusive and green finance, as well as on financial risk prevention and monitoring.

  • The guidelines called for continuing R&D on digital currency.

So what? China’s fintech industry will continue to grow, especially given a lift in the 14th plan. But incumbents will face more competition as a result of antitrust regulations and the opening up of payments systems that DCEP will bring. Tech companies dabbling in finance will also be increasingly brought under the fold of financial regulation.

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China issues maximum fines on community group-buy firms https://technode.com/2021/03/03/china-fines-five-community-group-buy-firms-for-irregular-pricing/ Wed, 03 Mar 2021 07:24:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155912 community group-buy group-buyingChinese regulators imposed a RMB 6.5 million (around $1 million) fine on the five biggest community group-buy platforms for irregular pricing.]]> community group-buy group-buying

China has imposed fines totaling RMB 6.5 million (around $1 million) on five community group-buy platforms for irregular pricing.

Why it matters: Beijing is moving to regulate the red hot community group-buy industry as part of a recent campaign to curb the power of China’s internet giants.

  • Fines targeting the growing sector comes as the state has stepped up regulation of internet giants over the past few months. China has extended various degrees of penalties on tech majors including Alibaba, Tencent, JD.com, and Vipshop.

READ MORE: Friendly neighbors are the key to China’s community group-buying craze

Details: The State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) said Wednesday that it decided to levy fines on five community group-buy companies after more than two months of investigation. The platforms are some of the biggest in the sector, and hold “a large share of the group-buy market,” according to regulator.

  • Didi’s Chengxin Youxuan, Pinduoduo’s Duoduo Maicai, Meituan’s Meituan Youxuan, and Alibaba-backed Nicetuan are each subject to a fine of RMB 1.5 million. Wuhan-based Shixianghui was fined RMB 500,000, according to the notice.
  • The investigation showed Chengxin Youxuan, Duoduo Maicai, Meituan Youxuan, and Nicetuan leverage their capital advantage to compete for market share by selling products at prices lower than cost, according to SAMR. All of the five falsely advertised discounted prices to boost orders.
  • The companies were fined the maximum penalties due to the negative impact of their practices, a SAMR spokesperson said in a press conference (in Chinese) on Wednesday.
  • The spokesperson said that using irregular measures to squeeze offline community economies will create market disorder and lead to social instability. At the same time, unfair competition among the tech firms will hurt consumer interests in the long run.

Context: The government summoned representatives from tech majors including Alibaba, JD.com, Meituan, Tencent, Pinduoduo, and Didi for a meeting in December to discuss oversight of the group-buy sector.

  • Regulators issued a list of restrictions on group-buy businesses, forbidding predatory pricing to beat out competition as well as falsely advertising discounted prices and posting misleading product information.
  • The state-run People’s Daily said in a commentary that tech companies should focus on innovation for bigger benefits instead of “thinking about the traffic of a few bundles of cabbage and a few pounds of fruits” (our translation).
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Suning sells 23%, Tencent invests in Tim Hortons: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/03/03/suning-sells-stake-tencent-invests-in-tim-hortons-retailheads/ Wed, 03 Mar 2021 05:31:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155841 Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailerSuning.com sold a 23% stake in a nearly RMB 15 billion deal and Tencent invests in the Chinese operations of Canadian coffee chain Tim Hortons.]]> Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailer

Suning.com sold a 23% stake in a nearly RMB 15 billion ($2.39 billion) deal and rival Gome Retail raised HK$4.5 billion through private placement. Tencent invested in the Chinese operations of Canadian coffee chain Tim Hortons. Alibaba and Pinduoduo were recognized for their poverty alleviation efforts.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Feb.25 – March 3.

Home appliance titans

  • Suning.com, the Chinese household appliance and electronics online seller, sold a 23% stake to Shenzhen-based state-owned companies in a deal worth RMB 14.82 billion ($2.28 billion). (TechNode)
  • Franchise partners that run stores under Suning.com’s “Retail Cloud” platform plan to add 300 more new locations to its existing 8,000 outlets. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • Suning archrival Gome Retail announced Tuesday that it raised HK$4.5 billion through private placement to bankroll its online and offline expansion. The firm said on Monday it had redeemed RMB 484 million in bonds issued in 2018. (Donews, in Chinese)
  • Youzan Technology, a subsidiary of loss-making e-commerce service provider Youzan, filed its paperwork for a public listing on the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange via introduction. Shares for its other arm, Tencent- and Baidu-backed Youzan China, will be taken private after the share transfer from Hong Kong’s growth enterprise market, where it listed in 2018. (Lanjing, in Chinese)

Coffee craze continues

  • Tencent participated in a round of funding for the Chinese arm of Canadian coffee and snack chain Tim Hortons. The amount raised was not disclosed. (TechCrunch)
  • Genki Forest, a popular Chinese beverage firm, has become the biggest shareholder of Never Coffee. After the deal, Genki Forest will hold a 51% stake in the specialty coffee and e-commerce platform. (Pandaily)

Poverty alleviation

  • Chinese e-commerce heavyweights Alibaba and Pinduoduo are listed among 1,500 outstanding institutions awarded for their contributions to the state’s efforts to fight poverty. The award were extended to commemorate China’s “complete victory” over “absolute poverty” as announced by Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday. Meanwhile, Cheng Wei, founder of ride-hailing app Didi Chuxing, was recognized individually for efforts to support the initiative. (KrAsia)
  • Alibaba and New Hope Group, an agricultural products manufacturing company, are discussing collaboration on an e-commerce project that aims to solve key problems in the agricultural industry. The program will train 200,000 farmers in the next three years. (Ifeng, in Chinese)

Ed tech

  • Chinese online tutoring platform Vipkid said that it expects to reach profitability this year. (TechNode)
  • Chinese online education platform GSX Techedu said that an internal investigation it initiated in response to accusations of fraud from a group of US short sellers in 2020 discovered no evidence of financial misdoing. (GSX statement)

Market metrics

  • Market value for 74 listed Chinese e-commerce companies reached RMB 10.94 trillion in 2020, a jump from 2019 when 66 which were valued at RMB 6.45 trillion, according to a report from research and intelligence agency 100ec.cn. The market cap of Alibaba, Meituan, and Pinduoduo totaled RMB 6.99 trillion in 2020, accounting for more than 60% of the overall figure. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • The market size of China’s business-to-business cross-border e-commerce sector reached RMB 3.7 trillion in 2019, according to Monday report by research agency iResearch. The sector accounts for 74.1% of China’s cross-border e-commerce market. The figure is expected to hit RMB 4.5 trillion in 2020, and further jump to RMB 5.7 billion in 2021. (iResearch, in Chinese)

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UPDATED: Suning.com sells 23% stake to state-backed investors https://technode.com/2021/02/25/suning-shareholders-to-sell-stake-as-cash-crunch-looms/ Thu, 25 Feb 2021 08:47:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155719 Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailerThe sale comes as Suning.com and its parent company scramble to pull together cash to repay a combined RMB 15.8 billion of bonds this year.]]> Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailer

Chinese household appliance online seller Suning.com said on Sunday that it sold a 23% stake to state-owned investors in a deal worth RMB 14.82 billion ($2.28 billion).

Why it matters: The sale comes as Suning.com and its parent company Suning Appliance Group scramble to pull together cash to repay debts.

Details: Suning.com sold a 23% stake to state-owned investors, according to a statement shared to TechNode on Sunday.

  • Shenzhen-listed Suning.com had announced in a filing on Thursday that shareholders of the company are planning to sell a 20% to 25% stake in the retailer.
  • A 25% stake in the company could be worth around RMB 16 billion ($2.5 billion) based on Suning.com’s latest share price, according to Bloomberg.
  • Shenzhen International Holdings Ltd., a logistics infrastructure developer, acquired 8% and Shenzhen municipality-backed Kunpeng Capital bought a 15% stake.
  • According to the statement, former actual controller and Suning.com founder Zhang Jindong and Suning Holdings together hold a 16.38% stake in the company. Kunpeng Capital holds 15%, Shenzhen International Holdings owns an 8% stake, and Suning Appliance holds 5.45%.
  • Zhang and his affiliated companies combined hold a more than 21% stake in the company, a company spokesperson told TechNode.
  • The company now has no controlling shareholder and no actual controller, according to the statement.
  • The company’s shares were suspended on Thursday for five trading days to avoid price fluctuations resulting from the change.

Context: Suning.com and its parent company are on the hook for a combined RMB 15.8 billion of bonds payable this year, Bloomberg reported citing data from rating firm China Chengxin International Rating Company.

  • As of January, Suning.com’s billionaire founder Zhang was the largest shareholder with a 20.96% stake, followed by Alibaba-backed Taobao’s 19.99%, and Suning Appliance’s 19.88%.
  • The company began in 2018 selling its shares in Alibaba, which had been acquired through a strategic alliance in 2015.
  • The online retailer’s newly established e-commerce unit Yunwang Wandian received RMB 6 billion in December from its Series A.
  • Suning.com acquired 80% equity interest in Carrefour China, paying RMB 4.8 billion in June 2019.

Updated: added detail on the size of the share sold, the investors, and the new ownership stakes, and updated headline to reflect changes.

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Tencent-backed Vipkid says it will be profitable in 2021: report https://technode.com/2021/02/25/tencent-backed-vipkid-says-it-will-be-profitable-in-2021-report/ Thu, 25 Feb 2021 07:29:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155708 VIPKID education app edtech marketingVipkid says it will reach profitability this year after more than a year of streamlining its business after missing out on investors flooding the edtech industry in 2020.]]> VIPKID education app edtech marketing

Chinese online tutoring platform Vipkid said that it expects to reach profitability this year after making a number of internal changes, following a flood of investment in the market in 2020 which skipped over one of its largest players.

Why it matters: The news could boost investor confidence in the company’s outlook. Observers and shareholders have criticized Vipkid for prioritizing growth over sustainability and pushing sales rather than addressing core needs such as technology.

  • Investors turned cold on the company in 2019 as its customer acquisition and other costs rocketed, and after what many viewed as overextension into different class models.
  • The company received its last round of funding in 2019, missing out on a surge in edtech investments in 2020.
  • Vipkid now faces intensified competition from a host of deep-pocketed rivals like Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang.

READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | Can VIPKID make a profit?

Details: Zhang Yuejia, co-founder of Vipshop, said to Chinese media outlet Late Post that the company expects to achieve corporate profitability in the second half of this year at the latest.

  • The company has undergone a raft of internal adjustments beginning in 2019, the report said. It reduced employee headcount to 7,000 from 12,000 last year and lowered its rent by RMB 30 million ($4.7 million), moving its office out of pricy downtown real estate.
  • The company will lay off an additional 10% to 30% of its employees before the end of this year, according to the report.
  • Company CEO Mi Wenjuan said in a letter that the company will streamline its offerings to one-on-one online classes, courses combining live English tutors with artificial intelligence-powered online assistants, as well as AI English and math classes for kids.
  • Vipkid will reduce its K-12 “dual-teacher big class” offerings, in which a foreign teacher instructs large classes and a Chinese teacher coaches smaller groups, an area dominated by rivals Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang.
  • After a year of adjustment, the company said in August that it had reached per customer profitability for two consecutive quarters.

READ MORE: Edtech and Covid-19: It’s complicated

Context: Vipkid received its Series E led by Tencent in 2019 without specifying the size of the round.

  • With an initial aim of raising $500 million, the company struggled to secure the funding and was forced to lower its goal to around $150 million, Reuters cited a source as saying.
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JD Logistics IPO, Eleme driver complaints: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/02/24/jd-logistics-ipo-eleme-driver-complaints-retailheads/ Wed, 24 Feb 2021 06:28:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155639 JDJD Logistics filed for a public listing in Hong Kong. Eleme apologized for a poorly planned driver reward system during the Spring Festival holiday. ]]> JD

JD Logistics filed for a public listing in Hong Kong. Grocery app Dingdong Maicai and Dmall are reportedly eyeing a US listing. Eleme apologized for a poorly planned driver reward system during the Spring Festival holiday. Trip.com rolled out an executive rotation program and fresh produce app Meicai lost its chief financial officer.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Feb. 15 – 24.

JD Logistics IPO

  • JD Logistics, the logistics arm of e-commerce giant JD.com, filed on Feb. 16 its prospectus for an initial share offering on the Hong Kong market. It could be the online retailer’s third publicly traded unit after its healthcare arm went public in December. JD.com will continue to hold more than 50% of the stock in JD Logistics. (SCMP)
  • JD Logistic’s delivery hubs in Germany, the UK, and the Netherlands are expected to begin testing operations by the end of May. Chinese companies including Huawei will be among the first batch of firms using its services in the countries. (Blue Technology, in Chinese)

IPOs on the way

  • Chinese grocery app Dingdong Maicai is reportedly gearing up for a US listing that may come as soon as this year. (Bloomberg)
  • Online retailer Dmall E-commerce Co. is planning a $500 million US IPO that that could come the second half of the year, Bloomberg reported. Chinese supermarket chain Wumart Group, which backs Dmall, is also weighing a Hong Kong listing. (Bloomberg)

Big tech blunders

  • Food delivery giant Eleme apologized in a Weibo post for poor judgment in an incentive plan to keep delivery drivers working through the Spring Festival holiday. Eleme rolled out a reward system that promises up to RMB 8,200 ($710) in financial incentives. To get the bonuses, drivers were required to reach weekly delivery targets from Jan. 11 to Feb. 28. The threshold for first three periods was around 250 orders, but jumped to more than 380 orders in the fourth week, a target some drivers said was impossible as many stores remained closed during the holiday. The company said in the statement that it will add more incentives and adjust the targets accordingly. (Pandaily)

READ MORE: Delivery drivers brace for low-pay Chinese New Year away from home

  • A Chinese consumer in a public WeChat account accused e-commerce platforms like Taobao of accessing and reading unsent user messages to customer service members. A screenshot of a dialog between the buyer and a Taobao service agent showed that an answer was given before the question was sent. A Taobao employee denied the accusation and explained that it could be caused by a network delay. (The Paper, in Chinese)

Management change

  • Chinese online travel giant Trip.com rolled out an executive rotation program, according to which each term lasts one to two years. Senior executive Xiong Xing was appointed the first acting CEO under the program.  (China Travel News)
  • Meicai, the Chinese app that enables farmers to sell their produce directly to restaurants, announced Friday the departure of its chief financial officer Wang Can whose appointment in July was widely translated by local media as a sign that the company was accelerating its IPO process. Wang’s departure could potentially affect Meicai’s plans to list during which it reportedly seeks to raise around $300 million. (Bloomberg)
  • Zhang Wei, public relations director of Alibaba’s digital media and entertainment business, passed away at his home before the Spring Festival holiday, which began Feb. 12. The news didn’t catch much public attention until a viral post alleging that Zhang committed suicide by jumping from Alibaba’s Beijing headquarters, hinting that work pressure caused his depression. Zhang’s family denied the rumors in a Wednesday statement, saying that they are “extremely distressed by the untrue remarks” and “only wish him peace and tranquility.” (Southern Metropolis Daily, in Chinese)

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China re-commerce faces tug of war between growth and trust https://technode.com/2021/02/11/china-re-commerce-faces-tug-of-war-between-growth-and-trust/ Thu, 11 Feb 2021 07:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155464 Xianyu idle fish second-hand re-commerceRe-commerce, or secondhand shopping, is growing fast in China. But users are finding scams and counterfeits mixed in with the bargains.]]> Xianyu idle fish second-hand re-commerce

Veronica Zhang uses re-commerce, or secondhand selling, platforms regularly, but she’s always careful about the people she’s dealing with. The one time she let her guard down, she was nearly defrauded.

The mom of a five-year-old uses the platforms both to buy and sell. Although she uses them less frequently than mainstream shopping apps like Taobao and JD.com, she says they are good places to find bargains on certain products like baby strollers and picture books. Children her son’s age tend to outgrow clothes and toys very quickly, she explained to TechNode, and selling lightly used kids stuff is good for both her wallet and her home, so why not?

“Baby exercise mats in very good shape are up to 50% cheaper than the retail price of a brand new one,” Zhang said (our translation). To close a good bargain or make a sale, however, requires lots of research. “I normally spend hours or a few days checking the sales history of the seller or buyers, comments from previous buyers, as well as their credit scores, before finding a potential candidate to proceed for payment,” Zhang added.

Usually, the Shanghai native limits her purchases from these platforms strictly to a few categories like toys, books, and vouchers and event tickets. She avoids products that could affect the health of her child or herself, such as food items or skincare products. 

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

After a few satisfactory deals, Zhang was feeling safe. Then, in December 2018, she listed for sale a RMB 2,000 ($309) prepaid card for online retailer JD.com on Alibaba-backed secondhand platform Idle Fish, known as Xianyu. The card was a gift from her company.

She sold the card without her usual background research. After Zhang sent the buyer the gift card account number and password online, however, the buyer claimed the prepaid card was invalid and requested reimbursement. Zhang still had the physical card as proof, and immediately called the police, who told JD.com to freeze the account. It turned out the buyer used the gift card immediately upon receiving the codes from Zhang. Finally, after Idle Fish customer service ruled in Zhang’s favor when settling the dispute, she got the payment. But it took her a whole week to resolve the issue, dealing with the police, the buyer, JD, and Idle Fish.

“I may continue to use the platform, but will be even more cautious in choosing the people I’m dealing with,” Zhang said.

Secondhand e-commerce on the rise

Product brands, consumers, and even the government have called upon major Chinese e-commerce platforms to halt the sale of fake goods for as long as the marketplaces have operated. More recently, e-commerce giants have made an effort to weed out various illicit products, and have gained some ground thanks to the development of newer technologies. The potential to list on global stock markets has also provided stronger motivation to operate an above-board business.

However, problems with fraud and counterfeits are still rife in the relatively new secondhand market, a smaller industry with players that have little budget for additional operational costs and less motivation to go through the trouble.

In China, secondhand e-commerce generally refers to markets for lower-value used goods, excluding expensive items such as cars and houses. The sector gained momentum in China as an environmentally friendly lifestyle choice, embraced by a younger generation of consumers. Moreover, selling and exchanging “idle” stuff has become a necessity for more affluent consumers who need the room in their homes.

China’s secondhand e-commerce market increased 53.2% year on year to RMB 248.69 billion in 2019, and is expected to grow 44.2% to RMB 373.55 billion in 2020, according to a report from e-commerce database EBT published in July. The market size increased more than eight-fold compared with its RMB 4.5 billion value in 2015, although its annual rate of growth slowed to double digits in 2018 after more than 600% year-on-year growth in 2016.

The biggest platforms include Alibaba’s Taobao spin-off, Idle Fish, and Tencent-backed Zhuanzhuan, which were each valued over RMB 20 billion in 2019. Trailing these two sites are a series of smaller vertical players, including JD-backed secondhand electronics platform Aihuishou, fashion and luxury reselling app Plum, and book resale platforms Duozhuayu and Yuelin.

However, these marketplaces are increasingly earning a reputation as a wild west in which real bargains come mixed with fraud, counterfeits, bait-and-switch pricing, and illegal products such as salacious comics and wild animals.

READ MORE: Second-hand shopping takes off on Chinese apps

Market chaos

Zhang is far from alone. A January report released by the state-backed consumer rights protection organization of eastern Jiangsu province showed that more than 90% of the 10,615 users surveyed have had negative experiences on secondhand shopping apps. User complaints involved a variety of illicit practices, including counterfeits, pirated online courses, pirated video and audio content, lewd comics, and more.

The complaints name 12 platforms including Idle Fish, Zhuanzhuan, Paipai, 58.com, Plum, and Aihuishou. In the same month, the authority summoned the platforms and called on them to rectify their business practices.

Some consumers mistakenly purchase knockoffs, but a significant number of consumers do so intentionally, and shop on secondhand platforms largely because the monitoring is more relaxed. Such apps contain products labeled as a “quality fake” or “fake.”

TechNode found a merchant on Idle Fish advertising a pirated video replay of lectures for an English training course from Zebra AI for RMB 18. When TechNode asked about buying the product, the seller sent a WeChat account name, and asked to make a deal off the platform. Via WeChat, she told TechNode the real price was RMB 35—still a savings compared to the RMB 2,000 Zebra AI charges for the course. 

In order to leverage user traffic, professional sellers, who stock loads of brand new products, flood the secondhand platforms designed for amateur sellers selling their own unused stuff.

Users who click into a product entry tagged at super low price on Idle Fish are likely to be redirected to a professional Taobao seller’s storefront, only to find the item priced at going market rates.

Empty bottles, packaging, and receipts of expensive cosmetics are also for sale on secondhand sites, indicating a gray market for counterfeit product sales. One Idle fish user sells packaging of luxury skincare brand SK-II for RMB 70, while another sells empty bottles of La Mer for RMB 50. These could be used by counterfeiters, but some Chinese consumers collect packaging from luxury brands for their own use.

Packaging of luxury products and empty cosmetics bottles sold on re-commerce platforms (Image credit: TechNode)

Secondhand platforms have a history of providing a home for such gray markets. Users in recent years have been caught selling unlicensed medicine and cigarettes, used underwear, wild animals, as well as listing services from prostitutes.

Grow big, then grow up

Sales of counterfeits and other illegal goods and practices are nothing new in China’s e-commerce industry, but established platforms have taken steps to regulate their marketplaces. Monitoring secondhand e-commerce is more difficult because the majority of sellers are individuals, rather than professional merchants or enterprise retailers concerned with credibility, according to local media reports.

In some cases, transactions are not carried out on the platform. The Jiangsu consumer council survey showed that around half of the transactions are completed within the app, while the rest are directed to other social apps to avoid monitoring.

When TechNode contacted the ZebraAI video seller, she immediately shifted the conversation to WeChat, making it difficult for Idle Fish to monitor the transaction and any payment.

Monitoring is still optional for platforms, according to Song Peijian, professor at the Business School of Nanjing University.

In its early days, Taobao was known as a safe haven for sellers hawking fakes and low-quality goods, but it has developed systems to regulate its marketplace. 

“Taobao started to invest heavily in addressing the dark side of e-commerce as a super-sized marketplace that faced public and regulatory scrutiny,” Song said. Secondhand platforms have less motivation to do so when the market is still relatively small, he added.

Despite its growth, the secondhand market is still at an early stage and the size is too small for serious regulation, said Song. Idle Fish, a clear leader in the market with over 70% market share, is the largest player with approximately RMB 200 billion gross merchandise value (GMV) sold in fiscal year 2020, a small fraction of RMB 7.05 trillion ($1 trillion) GMV earned in the wider Alibaba ecosystem during the same period.

In other words, the companies are ignoring trust issues as they work to survive and grow. 

Platforms run the risk of losing users to rivals if rigorous rules barring fakes and other illicit products are implemented. “In spite of the legal concerns, there certainly is user demand for illegal products and they will go to other platforms,” Song said.

Plus, Song said, monitoring costs money. 

To some extent, the platforms are not all to blame, Song said. Weak enforcement of e-commerce laws laws, in place since 2019, has left space for illegal products and practices to flourish. Local governments can also be reluctant to push too hard on major taxpayers like Alibaba and Pinduoduo. It’s easy even for more mature platforms to backslide when constraints become lax, he said.As a Chinese idiom says, when the water is clean, fish cannot survive. Similarly, a market won’t get a chance to grow big if too much regulation is in place when it’s young, Song said.

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Delivery drivers brace for low-pay Chinese New Year away from home https://technode.com/2021/02/10/delivery-drivers-brace-low-pay-chinese-new-year-away-from-home/ Wed, 10 Feb 2021 09:55:44 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155457 delivery drivers investment covid-19 meituan ecommerce, covid-19, entertainment investmentDelivery drivers were promised extra cash if they didn't return to their hometowns during China's most important holiday. Things are shaping up differently.]]> delivery drivers investment covid-19 meituan ecommerce, covid-19, entertainment investment

In Zhangjiagang, in eastern Jiangsu province, an often unsung profession is in high demand this Lunar New Year season; delivery drivers.

The city, home to one of the many ports along the Yangtze river, emerged from the pandemic’s first year mostly unscathed with few reported COVID-19 cases. 

But like the rest of China, following a resurgence of infections in January in several parts of the country, the city’s 1.2 million residents have been subject to economic and transport controls leading up to the year’s biggest holiday, designed to discourage travel.

While many residents, determined to reunite with family, have skipped town early in order to avoid being snared by transport restrictions, a large portion of China’s population has chosen to refrain from going home for the week-long holiday, which begins Feb. 11.

In a normal year, the holiday is a peak time for brick and mortar stores, as consumers rush to snag gifts after returning home. But this year, much of that demand is shifting online. E-commerce and logistics are left scrambling to retain a labor force.

What sounds like a golden opportunity for delivery workers who stayed on the job, however, may be playing out differently in practice.

New year’s surprise

It was 8:15 p.m. in Shanghai. Kuang was sitting on his electric scooter outside the Grand Gateway in Xujiahui, a commercial district in the city. He looked down at his phone. There was only one order in his Ele.me food delivery app. 

Compared with January, he said, orders have plummeted. 

For delivery drivers who did not go home, the volume of work has been a far cry from what they were promised by delivery platforms. With drivers paid per delivery, slow days mean little pay. 

In nearby Zhangjiagang, Wang, a manager of the downtown area of rival delivery platform Meituan, told TechNode that he expected a shortage of drivers during this Chinese New Year. Many had already gone home, he said, and wouldn’t be returning until after the week-long holiday, which falls between Feb. 11 and 17 this year.

Delivery platform Meituan posts hiring information on the food delivery box in Zhangjiagang. (Image credit: TechNode/Jiayi Shi)

After a resurgence of COVID-19 infections in parts of China in January, central and local authorities have called for people to “spend the holidays where you are.” People who travel home, especially to rural areas, face a variety of barriers ranging from mandatory quarantine to regular testing. Meanwhile, some urban companies are offering workers bonuses to stay on through the holiday.

The Spring Festival is China’s most important holiday, and in a normal year almost everyone would spend it with family. Transport authorities project the number of trips to be made during this period to drop from 3 billion in 2019 to 1.7 billion. 

Delivery drivers won’t stop during CNY

With many people choosing to spend their holidays away from their hometowns, Spring Festival shopping has posed a new challenge to delivery and logistics, which have become a part of China’s economic backbone. 

During the first wave of lockdowns in 2020, logistics companies were caught with only a holiday-period skeleton crew, struggling to get staff back to work while focusing on relief deliveries to the then-epicenter of Hubei province. 

Online retailers have witnessed an explosion in purchases during what is normally a slack season. Data from shopping platform JD.com shows a whopping 55% year-on-year increase in orders destined for other cities during the last 13 days prior to the Lunar New Year, while for its grocery spinoff JD Daojia, the volume was twice that of the comparable period last year. 

Even China’s own State Post Bureau marked a growth in online purchases in the period leading up to the festival, in contrast with previous years when orders experience a steep drop in the week prior to the holiday. Its numbers indicate the amount of parcels being sent nationwide increased 28.94% year-on-year between Jan. 20 and Feb. 3, although lockdowns had swept China by this time in 2020, creating what could be a low base for comparison.

Deliveries during the holiday season are normally handled by JD Logistics, SF Express, and the state-backed China Post, the few companies that accept orders in this period. Much of the industry, which employs fleets of delivery workers and machines outside the national holiday, cease operations during what is normally a seven-day break.

Nearly all delivery platforms announced they will continue to operate during the Spring Festival. 

“Last year the pandemic didn’t really break out until the holiday [was underway] and the stores were all closed already.” Wang said. “This year is different. As per state policy, many stores will stay open during the holiday so there will be more orders.” 

The government’s call to “spend the holidays where you are” will fuel growth in the delivery market during the Lunar New Year, said Zhao Guojun, director of the Post Development and Research Center of Beijing University of Post and Telecommunications.

Bidding war or nice little gesture?

More than previous years, delivery companies have raised their financial incentives from previous years in an attempt to attract couriers to work for their platforms during the holiday.

  • Cainiao, the logistics arm of e-commerce giant Alibaba,, is earmarking RMB 200 million ($31 million) in financial incentives for delivery staff who work during the holiday.
  • JD Logistics will increase its budget for frontline employees, such as couriers and warehouse staff, doing holiday overtime to RMB 200 million, doubling the RMB 100 million first announced in January.
  • SF Express plans to distribute a total of more than RMB 620 million in additional pay and incentives during the holiday.
  • Delivery drivers who work between Feb. 4 to 26 on Meituan were offered up to RMB 2,610 in bonuses, with requirements such as signing into the order app on a regular basis and fulfilling a certain number of orders.

But while platforms are touting bonuses, several delivery drivers who spoke to TechNode said they were uncertain how much extra cash they would actually make. 

Li, an Ele.me driver in Zhangjiagang, expects the bonuses to be offset by slow business. In normal times, he says, he can make up to 90 deliveries on a good day, but when asked if this was likely during the new year holiday, he said he couldn’t be sure. His normal pay is RMB 3 to 5 per order, rising to RMB 15 each after 20 orders have been fulfilled. 

“The number of orders will change every day during the holiday,” he said. “I’m not expecting to get too much money from the platform.”

Yet for many workers, it’s travel restrictions, not cash incentives, that are keeping them away from family, especially given that some already forewent reunions in 2020 due to an escalating epidemic.

Tang, a Meituan driver, told TechNode that he would be quarantined for an entire month in total if he went back to his hometown in Sichuan province then came back to Shanghai, the city where he works. 

Still, the bonuses were better than nothing.

“Most of my non-Shanghainese colleagues won’t go back to their hometown,” he said, checking his phone for incoming orders. “The pay isn’t a lot, but it’s handsome enough given the circumstances. I will go back home after the holiday, when quarantine policies are removed.”

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TikTok eyes social shopping, Luckin bankruptcy: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/02/10/tiktok-eyes-social-shopping-luckin-bankruptcy-retailheads/ Wed, 10 Feb 2021 05:01:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155378 tiktok national security US app bansTikTok is planning to roll out a livestream shopping feature, coffee chain Luckin filed for bankruptcy in the US, Vipshop.com is fined RMB 3 million.]]> tiktok national security US app bans

ByteDance’s international short video app TikTok is planning to roll out a livestream shopping feature in an effort to duplicate in the US the success of Chinese version Douyin. Troubled coffee chain Luckin filed for bankruptcy in the US. E-commerce site Vipshop.com was fined RMB 3 million for unfair competition. Didi Chuxing is raising $4 billion funding for its community-based grocery delivery unit.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Feb. 3 – 10.

TikTok bets on social shopping

TikTok, Beijing-based ByteDance’s short video app, is reportedly planning several new features for its e-commerce expansion in the US. The move builds on the success of a similar push from its Chinese version Douyin, now a major player in China’s livestream e-commerce market.

Livestream shopping has become widely popular in China. Another features allows TikTok users to share links to products and automatically earn a commission. The viral short video app piloted a shoppable experience with Walmart in December. (Financial Times)

Luckin bankruptcy

Luckin Coffee filed for bankruptcy protection in the US on Friday to fend off US creditors during a liquidation process that is already underway in the Cayman Islands, where it is registered. The company will continue its China operations, “including paying suppliers, vendors, and employees.” The filing comes almost a year after the company admitted falsifying RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million) in 2019 sales. (TechNode)

Regulator scrutiny

Beijing has imposed a RMB 3 million fine on the operator of Vipshop.com for unfair competition, just a month after the flash sale online retailer was penalized RMB 500,000 for irregular pricing. (TechNode)

Didi boosts group-buy unit

Ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is planning to raise $4 billion for its community group-buying unit, doubling down on the rising sector to diversify its revenue streams amid slowing growth in its core business. Didi could chip in $3 billion while seeking about $1 billion from external investors. (Bloomberg)

READ MORE: Friendly neighbors are the key to China’s community group-buying craze

Fresh produce e-commerce

Suning Logistics, part of omni-channel retailer Suning Group, rolled out Su Xian Da, a new fully linked cold chain solution from warehousing to distribution. The service offers cold-chain delivery service to consumers within 48 hours. Suning, along with a group of online sellers and delivery services, will continue its logistics and delivery services during the weeklong Spring Festival holiday, generally a low season for China’s logistics industry. (Tencent, in Chinese)

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China fines Tencent-backed Vipshop for unfair competition https://technode.com/2021/02/08/china-fines-tencent-backed-vipshop-for-unfair-competition/ Mon, 08 Feb 2021 04:51:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155325 vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduoRegulation pressures on Vipshop comes as the Tencent portfolio is recording a historical high in share price after doubling its price over 2020.]]> vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduo

Beijing has imposed a RMB 3 million fine on the operator of Chinese flash sale online retailer Vipshop.com for unfair competition.

Why it matters: Coupled with a RMB 500,000 penalty for irregular pricing dealt out in December, regulation pressure is rising as Tencent-backed Vipshop’s share prices reach historical highs after doubling over 2020.

  • How the government addresses Vipshop, a major Chinese e-commerce player, could signal what’s ahead in the ongoing anti-monopoly investigation of its bigger peer, Alibaba.

Details: China’s State Administration for Market Regulation, the country’s antitrust watchdog, announced Monday it will fine Vipshop RMB 3 million (around $464,000) for unfair competition.

  • In order to gain a competitive advantage, Vipshop had developed and utilized a system to obtain information about brands that sell through its and competitor’s platforms from August to December last year, according to the announcement.
  • The data collected were referenced for monopolistic practices such as pressuring brands or merchants to only sell on its platform, a practice called “forced exclusivity.” It would throttle traffic, block, or even remove from the platform products from merchants that sell on multiple platforms, and boost traffic to sellers that sold exclusively on Vipshop.

READ MORE: Forcing sellers into exclusivity deals on marketplaces is illegal: regulator

  • The company confirmed the news in a Weibo post, saying that it did not object to the facts in the ruling, and that it will comply and “rectify and reform” to maintain market order.

Context: China has stepped up regulation of internet giants over the past few months.

  • In December, Beijing issued antitrust-related fines for three acquisition deals involving Alibaba, Tencent-backed China Literature, and an SF Express subsidiary. Each of the companies was fined about RMB 500,000.
  • China’s market regulator fined JD.com, Alibaba’s Tmall, and Vipshop RMB 500,000 each for irregular pricing in the same month.
  • Vipshop is reportedly considering a secondary listing in Hong Kong. The Beijing-based company went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2012, raising a total of $71.5 million.
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Kuaishou IPO, Alibaba earnings, Singles Economy: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/02/03/kuaishou-ipo-alibaba-earnings-singles-economy-retailheads/ Wed, 03 Feb 2021 06:41:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155126 kuaishou tiktok douyin IPO livestream video appIntensifying regulation cast a shadow over the upcoming Kuaishou IPO while Alibaba beat market expectations for its December quarter. ]]> kuaishou tiktok douyin IPO livestream video app

Intensifying regulation of livestream e-commerce has cast a shadow over the upcoming Hong Kong IPO for Tencent-backed Kuaishou. Alibaba beat market expectations for its December quarter. The “Singles Economy” boosted online sales of diminutive home appliances and food. Tencent-backed job listing site Boss Zhipin gears up for a US IPO.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Jan. 28 – Feb. 3. 3.

Kuaishou IPO risk factors

Stricter regulation of e-commerce livestreams, a potential revenue growth engine for short video app Kuaishou, brings uncertainty to the Douyin rival’s imminent Hong Kong listing. Analysts have said increased regulation from Beijing could slow the booming market’s momentum and harm the profitability potential of involved companies. (SCMP)

Alibaba earnings

Alibaba Group topped market revenue expectations for the December quarter and reported first-ever profits for its cloud computing business. The company’s revenue in the December quarter grew 37% year on year to RMB 221.08 billion ($33.88 billion), while non-GAAP diluted earnings per share was RMB 22.03, an increase of 21% year over year. (TechNode)

Singles Economy

The Singles Economy, involving the production and consumption of goods and services aimed at singles or people who live alone, is on the rise in China, according to reports from Pinduoduo and Nielsen. Beijing’s call for people to limit travel during the upcoming weeklong Spring Festival holiday to prevent another coronavirus surge has proved a boost to the trend, which involves marketing petite home appliances such as rice cookers and refrigerators and smaller food portions. Market segmentation is on the rise in China as the silver economy for senior citizens and the “small town youth economy” for youngsters in lower-tier cities and towns gain recognition. (Pandaily)

Job board IPO

Chinese online job listing site Boss Zhipin, also known as Zhipin.com, has chosen Goldman Sachs and UBS as underwriters for its US stock market debut through which it aims to raise $300 million. The company plans to go public this year. CEO Zhao Peng said in July 2019 that the company is already profitable. (IPO Zaozhidao, in Chinese)

Holiday online spending surge

Parcels for Spring Festival purchases processed by Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics network from Jan. 20 to 31 surged 50% compared with the corresponding time period preceding last year’s holiday (Jan. 6 to 17), highlighting an increase in online purchases for the holiday. (Sina, in Chinese)

Online travel regains investor interest

Hong Kong-based online travel platform Klook announced the completion of a $200 million Series E led by Aspex Management and followed by existing investors including Sequoia Capital China, SoftBank Vision Fund 1, Matrix Partners China, and Boyu Capital. (Caixin Global)

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Alibaba tops consensus, cloud unit posts profits https://technode.com/2021/02/03/alibaba-tops-consensus-cloud-unit-posts-profits/ Wed, 03 Feb 2021 05:13:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=155183 alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.comProfitability and momentum from non-core units like cloud computing and logistics may help Alibaba boost investor confidence amid increasing scrutiny.]]> alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.com

Chinese retail conglomerate Alibaba posted better-than-expected revenue growth for the quarter ended December and first-ever profits for its cloud-computing business.

Why it matters: The e-commerce giant has had a rocky past few months. An anti-monopoly investigation, the suspension of the public listing for its financial affiliate Ant Group, and speculation about the location of its once high-profile founder Jack Ma after a months-long disappearance from the public spotlight have pressured the company, once seen as a darling of China’s tech sector.

  • Profitability and robust momentum from its non-core cloud-computing and logistics businesses could help build investor confidence at a time when the company faces increasing regulatory scrutiny.

Details: December quarter revenue grew 37% year on year to RMB 221.08 billion ($33.88 billion), beating the $33.35 billion average analyst estimate compiled by Yahoo Finance. 

  • The company attributed revenue momentum to growth in its core commerce business boosted by the Singles Day promotion held in November, as well as strong growth in its cloud-computing business.
  • However, growth excluding revenue from Sun Art, a supermarket chain the company acquired in October, rose 27% during the quarter, signaling a deceleration from the 30% seen in the September quarter and 34% year-on-year growth in the June quarter.
  • Core commerce revenue jumped 38% year on year to RMB 196 billion ($30.3 billion), accounting for 88% of total company revenue, thanks to a recovery in consumer spending in China.
  • Cloud computing income reached RMB 16.1 billion, up 50% year on year and representing 7% of total revenue, primarily driven by robust growth from customers in the internet and retail industries, as well as the public sector. 
  • “The cloud division is one-fifth the size of AWS, but it already has many advanced cloud services addressing the needs of key verticals, and it is growing twice as fast as AWS,” Martin Garner, chief operating officer at market information and intelligence agency CCS Insight, wrote in an email to TechNode on Wednesday.
  • Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders rose 52% to RMB 79.43 billion during the quarter compared with RMB 52.31 billion from the same quarter in 2019. Alibaba’s equity investments in public companies recorded big increases in value, boosting the bottom line.
  • Monthly active users of Alibaba’s China marketplaces reached 902 million, an increase of 21 million from the previous quarter. Taobao Deals, Alibaba’s Pinduoduo counterpart, surpassed 100 million monthly active users as the company continues to focus on budget buyers in lower-tier markets.
  • Cainiao, Alibaba’s logistics arm, finished the quarter for the first time with positive cash flow. It earned RMB 11.4 billion ($1.8 billion) during the time period, up 51% over the same period a year ago.
  • Alibaba chairman Daniel Zhang offered few updates on the ongoing anti-monopoly investigation during the earnings call held Tuesday night, but reiterated that the company’s “cooperative, receptive and open mindset” toward the investigation.
  • Regulator scrutiny of Ant Group has raised concerns that a potential reduction in consumer credit services such as Huabei would impact consumer spending on Alibaba’s e-commerce market places. Zhang said Alibaba attracts buyers with “comprehensive and high-quality product and service offerings” and that payment using Huabei represents “a very small percentage” of total credit granted under Huabei. He added that the vast majority of Alibaba buyers “have linked their payment accounts to multiple funding sources, including credit cards.”
  • Alibaba shares fell 3.9% on Tuesday in New York, while its Hong Kong-listed shares declined 3.9% in morning trading on Wednesday.

READ MORE: Singles Day 2020—bigger, longer, and more live

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Friendly neighbors are the key to China’s community group-buying craze https://technode.com/2021/01/27/friendly-neighbors-are-key-to-chinas-group-buying-craze/ Wed, 27 Jan 2021 10:02:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154991 community group-buy group-buyingFor many, finding a good deal is the main reason to join a community group-buying platform. Socializing with neighbors is a reason to stay.]]> community group-buy group-buying

Mimi Tao walked outside of her residential compound at seven in the morning as usual, but found that the driver had already dropped off the products at the front gate and left. After checking her order list and confirming all the products were accounted for, she hauled them all back to her garage and began the deliveries to residents on her list. There were cherries, apples, imported snacks, rice, and even handmade wontons from a local store in Suzhou. It usually takes Tao about two hours to complete the deliveries. 

Tao is the organizer of the group-buying platform Linxuanhaohuo for her residential development in Zhangjiagang, Suzhou in eastern Jiangsu province. She started the job in August 2018, after a friend’s recommendation. Tao works full time as an accountant as well. She says she usually spends four to five hours every day coordinating the orders and posting products on the WeChat group of 219 people she manages. 

“I am busier on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays because I need to deliver products on these days,” Tao said (our translation). 

Tao is not the only person in the apartment complex who manages a community-buying group. She has a competitor in the compound—Maggie Xu, who works for another platform, the name of which roughly translates to Tongcheng Life. Xu’s group is double the size of Tao’s and the platform offers a wider variety of products. 

The day’s orders in Maggie Xu’s garage. (Image credit: Maggie Xu)

Group-buying platforms have their own mini programs on WeChat which customers use to place their orders. Each day, organizers post links in the chat group to products that are popular or are on sale. Xu usually starts putting product links in the group chat around 9 a.m. She first posts links for products on promotion, and then fruits. In the afternoon she posts links for snacks such as yogurt, sweets, and nuts, and then sometimes eggs. As Spring Festival approaches, gift boxes are also popular in the group. 

Resurgence of online fresh groceries

China’s grocery market is large—it is expected to be worth RMB 11 trillion ($1.8 trillion), the world’s largest, in 2023, according to research agency IGD. But it’s complicated—rather than a weekly trip to the supermarket, most Chinese consumers visit a variety of stores and marketplaces to stock their pantries.

Chinese companies from small to large have been trying to figure out how to sell groceries online for years. Venture capitalists fueled the craze by injecting hundreds of billions of yuan in the sector since its first boom around 2013.

The earliest attempts included asset-heavy approaches like Dingdong Maicai, which ran its own warehouses and logistics systems, and marketplace operators like Meituan and JD Daojia that offered delivery support for offline vendors.

However, within the broader online grocery category, selling fresh produce online has proven a hauntingly difficult task. Selling highly perishable goods with significant logistics requirements has driven more than a few fresh produce platforms out of business, from Amazon-backed Yummy77 to Xianpinhui. The most recent example is the collapse of Dailuobo, a grocery upstart that burned $92 billion in five months. 

China’s community-buying trend can be traced back to the early days on platforms like Meituan and Dianping, which offered Groupon-like deals. Community-based group-buying emerged around 2016 within chat groups on ubiquitous messaging app WeChat. The model gained momentum around 2018, especially in second-and lower-tier cities after WeChat launched its mini program ecosystem.

The Covid-19 outbreak changed Chinese consumers’ daily routine of shopping for fresh food and daily necessities offline. Although the behavioral shift boosted all businesses in the grocery delivery sector, community group-buying has taken off. One platform, Xingsheng Youxuan, has attracted investment from a number of tech giants, and was valued at $5 billion as of its latest round of funding led by Tencent. 

The group-buying model addresses the pain points of online grocery deliveries. Many group leaders themselves operate small mom-and-pop stores, which become informal hubs for such platforms. This saves on overhead costs such as running an offline storefront and expensive last-mile deliveries. Pre-ordering and overnight deliveries lower the attrition rate for fresh food compared with storing big piles of inventory at a nearby location to sell. Meanwhile, group leaders, motivated to acquire users through their own social networks for higher commission, help the platform save on user acquisition costs. 

The community group buy platforms are popular in second- and lower-tier cities in China, often outside of service areas for big-name online platforms such as Alibaba’s Freshippo. Some 85% of group leads for the community-based group-shopping model platforms are based in second-or lower-tier cities, according to a report (in Chinese) from Kaiyuan Securities.

Lower-tier cities and rural areas are also powering the next stage of overall e-commerce growth in China. Its shoppers are viewed as being more inclined toward social shopping experiences, given the quick rise of social e-commerce site Pinduoduo.

Bargain-hunting buyers

Unlike other sectors in China’s tech industry, there’s no big player monopolizing the community group-buy market. It’s more like a collection of stores, where customers place orders on different platforms according to what kind of products they want, such as fruit, seafood, or snacks. Some residents will buy eggs on one platform and cherries on another. 

For most of the buyers, finding a good deal is the main reason to join a community-buying group. Some residents in Zhangjiagang told TechNode that they have joined more than one group-buying platforms to compare prices. Customers aren’t loyal to a platform; what matters is the price of the product and how well the platform handles the order fulfillment.

Partially due to platform competition and partially because of consumer demand, group leaders have started to promote products from multiple platforms (in Chinese) within the WeChat groups they manage, and offline pickup centers serve several platforms.

Xu said her mother-in-law had used Duo Duo Maicai exactly twice to take advantage of the platform’s free gifts for new shoppers. Unlike many group-buying platforms that deliver products to customers’ front doors, Duo Duo Maicai opened offline stores outside of compounds for customers to pick up. 

“She hasn’t bought anything since then because there are fewer products on their platform and they don’t support home delivery service,” she said.

China’s Big Tech moves in group buying

  • Alibaba has launched Taobao Maicai, an e-commerce service that sells daily products. Users order online and collect purchases at a nearby pick-up point. Alibaba led the $196 million investment in grocery e-commerce site Nice Tuan in November.
  • JD.com poured a massive $700 million strategic investment into community grocery e-commerce platform Xingsheng Youxuan. Company founder Richard Liu, who has taken a back seat in the company’s daily operations, will reportedly lead the business segment, which will focus on lower-tier cities.
  • Pinduoduo rolled out in August Duo Duo Maicai, a next-day self-pickup grocery service in Nanchang and Wuhan, and has since expanded into most provinces. Management said the company is “prepared to go heavy in building” the logistics demands for agricultural products in the Q3 earnings call last year, referring to the importance of its Maicai business.
  • Meituan co-founder Wang Xing said the company plans to expand its grocery retail business to 1,000 cities by the end of the year.
  • Didi launched Chengxin Youxuan, a fresh produce and grocery service under the community group-buying model, in June. The company told TechNode in September that the platform fulfills more than 550,000 orders per day in three cities in southwestern Sichuan province. 

The community aspect

Discussions with neighbors who share the same interests is a reason for shoppers to stay active on one platform. 

Deng Chanling, a stay-at-home mom in Shanghai, became an organizer for group-buying startup MMchong after using the service for a year. When Deng moved to her new neighborhood in October 2019, the part-time job helped her to get to know her neighbors. She now knows most of her 200-member WeChat group from offline promotional events, she told TechNode.

The workload of less than 20 hours a week gives her a comfortable balance between a job and taking care of her son, who is in primary school. Deng earns around RMB 3,000 ($462) a month, and RMB 6,000 during peak holiday seasons, through the 10% commission she earns from her sales in exchange for promoting the products, using her space for product storage, and logistics services.

The income is far from sufficient to support a family in a metropolis like Shanghai, but good enough for the time and energy she invests daily, Deng said.

The company delivers the products to Deng’s home the morning after a group order is placed, every other weekday. “It usually takes me an hour or two to sort out the orders. My neighbors will drop by to pick up their orders in the afternoon.” she said. She only delivers the parcels to a doorstep if the order is higher than RMB 108. 

The part-seller, part-user role of the group leaders help the platform select what products to sell, a crucial factor in differentiating from rivals. MMchong constantly updates its product listings. Deng says she tests samples recommended by suppliers and gives her feedback as a user before the platform determines whether or not to sell it. 

Deng doesn’t rely on the job to make a living, but some co-workers do. There are group heads who earn monthly income of around RMB 15,000 by mobilizing the whole family. “In such cases, they are operating on a larger scale and can afford to rent their own pickup storefronts,” Deng said.

Scorching hot market

As the community group-buying sector grows in size, smaller group-buying platforms are feeling the pressure. Xu said the competitive market has affected her commission rate. When she first started in 2018, she would net around 10% to 11% commission on each product, but now she earns just 6% to 7%.

“Last year there were not so many group-buying platforms so we had a high commission rate,” she said. “Now, more platforms have joined and they give a lot of coupons and discounts to attract customers, so the platform ended up cutting our commission.”

At the onset of the group-buying war last year, tech giants that set their eyes on the model had been poaching staff from existing players like Xingsheng Youxuan and Nice Tuan by promising to double or triple their salaries for similar positions, according to local media. In one case, most of Xingsheng’s employees at a Wuhan delivery center jumped ship to Pinduoduo within two weeks, forcing the downtown center to suspend its business. 

Competition between platforms starts with suppliers, according to Deng, the MMchong group lead. “Our supplier for sweet corn, a top seller on our platform last year, says that they have already sold out this year’s harvest to higher bids,” she said.

A threat to offline markets, maybe

Experts expect group-buy platforms to eclipse grocery stores. “There’s no chance for supermarkets larger than 500 square meters to survive in the next year or two given the increasing adoption of community-based grocery e-commerce,” (our translation) Ye Guofu, founder and CEO of Chinese low-cost retailer and variety store chain Miniso, said in December.

Pinduoduo cited an estimate from Goldman Sachs: By 2025, nearly half of China’s grocery shopping will take place online, up from 20% currently, and reach about $1 trillion in sales.

For Xu, she hasn’t set foot in the neighborhood supermarket for a while. She believes group-buying will replace the offline supermarket one day.

“I can just order online and the products will appear at my door the next day,” she said. “The price is also cheaper, so why not?”

However, there is still a lot of uncertainty in the sector. 

The government summoned tech majors including Alibaba, JD.com, Meituan, Tencent, Pinduoduo, and Didi for a meeting in December. Regulators issued a list of restrictions on group-buying businesses, forbidding predatory pricing to beat out competition as well as falsely advertising discounted prices and posting misleading product information.

The move follows a few months after these companies pushed into the sector with rock-bottom prices for fresh groceries, charging RMB 0.99 (around $0.15) for a box of eggs and RMB 0.01 per 500 grams (around a pound) of cabbage. The state-run People’s Daily ran a commentary telling tech companies to focus on innovation for bigger benefits instead of “thinking about the traffic of a few bundles of cabbage and a few pounds of fruits.”

Using low prices to attract users is reminiscent of the subsidy wars seen in many industries, but particularly tech-related sectors, from ride-hailing to bike rentals. Such an early intervention from state regulators comes against the backdrop of intensifying tech regulation, but could also be a result of the importance of fresh produce and grocery, a sector considered too vital to the masses for hot money to mess up. 

Many people have relied on group-buying platforms for daily groceries, rivals to offline supermarkets that also stock standardized and durable goods such as packaged snacks and detergents.

But there are exceptions, including neighborhood wet markets that consumers in China still depend on for the day’s fresh vegetables. Freshness still outranks convenience for many shoppers, particularly older generations who would rather make the daily trip outside rather than risk allowing a platform employee select food for the family dinner.

Xu stopped posting links for vegetables to the group after many complaints about quality. Tao said one of the advantages of living in second- and third-tier cities is their proximity to the countryside, which means easy access to fresh vegetables and seafood. For Tao and her family, going to the wet market for vegetables is a deeply ingrained habit.

“Usually it’s my mother-in-law who buys the vegetables and she is more picky and wants to see them before buying them,” Tao said.

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ByteDance joins Spring Festival ad war, edtech funding: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/01/27/bytedance-joins-spring-festival-marketing-war-retailheads/ Wed, 27 Jan 2021 06:27:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154969 alipay bytedance wechat pay mobile paymentByteDance joins the annual Spring Festival marketing blowout. Alipay prepares for the 2021 red envelope war. Edtech attracts more investment.]]> alipay bytedance wechat pay mobile payment

ByteDance joins the annual Spring Festival marketing blowout with Douyin’s RMB 1.2 billion cash giveaways. Alipay is readying its part in this year’s red envelope war. Edtech startup Huohua Siwei received $150 million in its Series E3, while Warburg Pincus-backed online tutoring platform Zhangmen aims to raise $300 million in a US IPO. Luckin Coffee tries to motivate employees with an incentive plan.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Jan. 21 – 27.

ByteDance joins Spring Festival party

  • Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, announced plans to distribute RMB 1.2 billion in cash giveaways during the annual CCTV Spring Festival gala to be held on Feb. 11. The Bytedance-owned short video platform replaced Pinduoduo as the the sole sponsor of China’s annual blockbuster of TV advertising events. The company rolled out a digital payment feature earlier this month, recalling WeChat Pay’s 2014 move in gaining its initial user base, an incident referred to by Alibaba founder Jack Ma as the “Pearl Harbor attack.” (Xinmin.cn, in Chinese)
  • Alipay will launch its Five Fu (meaning good fortune) card-collecting campaign on Feb. 1 for its fifth year to distribute cash prices in exchange for user attention during the Spring Festival holiday. Tencent’s WeChat was the first to digitalize the centuries-old Chinese tradition of giving red envelopes with the rollout of the feature in 2014. The massive popularity of its digital red envelope feature allowed the app to convert hundreds of millions of social media users to payment users for WeChat Pay, then a budding Alipay rival. Alipay rolled out the the Five Fu campaign, a similar digital red packet feature, in 2016 and more than 600 million users have taken part since. Alipay users have continued to participate in the gamified campaign despite the significantly lower value of the red envelopes—less than RMB 2 (around $0.31) in total per person compared with RMB 271.66 in 2016. (PingWest, in Chinese)

Edtech firms cash in

  • Huohua Siwei, a K-12 online math and science education platform, received $150 million in a third batch of its Series E which valued the company at $1.5 billion. (TechNode
  • Online tutoring platform Zhangmen, backed by Warburg Pincus, hired Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse Group AG as underwriters for its US public offering that could raise more than $300 million. (Securities Daily, in Chinese)

Luckin tries to boost staff morale

Embattled Luckin Coffee announced on Monday an equity incentive plan for 2021 in order to “retain, attract and motivate” employees and directors as the company’s management navigates internal turmoil. The plan, with a 10-year term, has a maximum number of 223 million Class A ordinary shares, represented by around 28 million American Depositary Shares, to issue as part of the plan. Shares of the company, still trading on the OTC market after its July delisting, jumped 25% on Tuesday to close at $12.97 apiece, gaining more than 50% since the beginning of this year, though still well below a historic peak of $50 reached in January 2019 when it listed on the Nasdaq. (SEC)

Jack Ma’s reappreance

Alibaba’s billionaire founder Jack Ma made his first public appearance after staying out of the public eye for nearly three months since regulators began a crackdown on his tech empire. (TechNode)

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Edtech firm Huohua Siwei valued at $1.5 billion https://technode.com/2021/01/25/edtech-firm-huohua-siwei-valued-at-1-5-billion/ Mon, 25 Jan 2021 06:37:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154905 Huohua SiweiK-12 online math and science education platform Huohua Siwei received $150 million in a third batch of its Series E, which totals $400 million.]]> Huohua Siwei

Huohua Siwei, an education platform backed by Tencent and short video app Kuaishou, has been valued at $1.5 billion after receiving its latest batch of funding amid intensified investor interest in China’s online education sector.

Why it matters: Massive investments have flowed into China’s edtech market since the Covid-19 outbreak which forced millions to remain sequestered at home.

  • China’s K-12 online education market received a combined RMB 50 billion ($7.72 billion) in 2020, exceeding the sector’s total funding in the preceding 10 years, figures from data intelligence agency Fast Data showed.
  • Services targeting the K-12 age range have attracted the most attention from investors once students pivoted to distance learning during the Covid-19 lockdown.

Details: Huohua Siwei, a K-12 online math and science education platform, received $150 million in a third batch of its Series E. Trustbridge Partners led the funding with participation from existing investors including Tencent, local media outlet LatePost reported.

  • The round followed a $150 million Series E1 in August and $100 million Series E2 in October. Together, the three batches total $400 million.
  • The latest financing round valued the firm at $1.5 billion, a 50% increase compared with the $1 billion valuation in August during the first batch.
  • LatePost cited a source as saying the company had recorded income of nearly RMB 1.5 billion on revenue of RMB 3 billion in 2020.
  • The Beijing-based company is reportedly gearing up for a $500 million listing in the US that could take place as soon as this year, according to a Bloomberg source. The report said that Huohua is working with Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs on the proposed listing.

Context: Since its founding in 2016, the company has received a total of nearly $600 million in seven rounds of financing from tech peers like Tencent, Kuaishou, and Yuanfudao as well as venture capital firms including Sequoia Capital China, IDG Capital, and GGV Capital.

  • Investor interest in Chinese online education platforms has been increasingly focused on large platforms such as Huohua, leaving fewer opportunities for smaller players in the field.
  • Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang, two Chinese edtech unicorns, accounted for around 80% of the total funding received during the year, according to the report.
  • Xuebajun, an K-12 education app that received $200 million in funding since it was founded in 2013, is reportedly insolvent. Local media reports attributed the collapse of the company to its “1V1” or 1:1 teacher-to-student ratio model, which was criticized as costly and difficult to scale. 
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Pinduoduo blasted for user privacy breach, Luckin franchises: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/01/20/pinduoduo-blasted-for-privacy-breach-luckin-opens-to-franchisees/ Wed, 20 Jan 2021 06:45:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154813 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphonePinduoduo is under fire again for deleting pictures from a user’s photo album without consent. Luckin opens up to franchises in lower-tier cities.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Last week, Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo was again under fire for deleting pictures from a user’s smartphone photo album without consent. Luckin opens itself to franchises as the embattled Chinese coffee chain tries to restart its offline expansion in lower-tier cities. E-commerce giants led by Alibaba are gearing up for the upcoming Spring Festival shopping season.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Jan. 14 – 20.

Pinduoduo backlash, again

The Shanghai-based e-commerce platform was denounced on Chinese social media for infringing on data privacy after a user accused the app of remotely deleting screenshots in his smartphone photo album without consent.

The user saved screenshots as evidence to support a complaint he made about the company. In a marketing campaign, Pinduoduo had promised a RMB 100 ($16) cash reward to users who invite a friend to the app. The user only received a small voucher after doing so.

Pinduoduo responded in a statement (in Chinese) that it deletes the original picture in its app if it is edited, causing an erroneous command to delete related photos in the user’s smartphone album. The firm pledged that it will no longer delete users’ original photos once they are edited. (Liehuw, in Chinese)

  • On Jan. 12, Pinduoduo launched Duo Duo Maicai in Shanghai, highlighting the e-commerce giant’s big bet on expanding its community group-buying business into the more competitive markets in major metropolises. (21st Century Business Herald, in Chinese)

Luckin the franchise

Luckin Coffee announced a partner recruitment program on Monday, inviting franchisees in 22 provinces and autonomous regions, including Sichuan, Shanxi, Heilongjiang, and Jilin to join the coffee chain. The firm has continued its offline expansion efforts, especially to lower-tier cities, despite its management tumult.

Cities where Luckin already had a solid presence, such as Beijing, Shanghai, and most of China’s provincial capitals, are excluded from the program.

The company will not collect franchisee fees from the partners, but becoming a Luckin franchisee requires an upfront investment between RMB 35,000 to RMB 37,000 for storefront decoration, equipment, and deposit. (Luckin, in Chinese)

Upcoming Spring Festival

  • Short video app Douyin has taken over from Pinduoduo as the sole red packet sponsor for this year’s CCTV Spring Festival gala in February, local media reported Friday. The Shanghai-based firm is facing a wave of negative media coverage after two employee deaths which many attribute to its compulsory overtime work schedule. (KrAsia)
  • Alibaba’s Tmall kicked off on Wednesday the shopping season for Spring Festival holiday, which falls on Feb. 12 this year. Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao is setting aside RMB 200 million for delivery staff incentive pay for working during the holiday. (Ebrun, in Chinese)

WeChat levels up in e-commerce

  • The gross merchandise value of WeChat mini program commodity transactions doubled in 2020, reaching around RMB 1.6 trillion in 2020 based on the RMB 800 billion GMV figure the company disclosed for 2019. (TechNode)
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WeChat doubled mini program GMV in 2020 https://technode.com/2021/01/20/wechat-doubled-mini-program-gmv-in-2020/ Tue, 19 Jan 2021 19:02:18 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154776 wechat e-commerce tencent shopping mini programThe Covid-19 pandemic accelerated consumer adoption of e-commerce on WeChat and powered growth, as confined shoppers spent more time browsing on the app. ]]> wechat e-commerce tencent shopping mini program

The amount of goods sold on digital storefronts accessed via instant messaging app WeChat doubled in 2020 as the mega social platform becomes an increasingly popular entry point for online shopping in China.

Why it matters: WeChat parent company Tencent is a rising challenger for the sector’s biggest players, including Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo.

  • Mini programs are an important growth driver for apps, functioning as an entry point for Chinese mobile users to access online services, according to a Quest Mobile report published in July.
  • The Covid-19 pandemic accelerated consumer adoption of e-commerce on WeChat and powered growth, as confined shoppers spent more time browsing and shopping on the app.

Details: The gross merchandise value (GMV) of WeChat mini-program commodity transactions doubled in 2020, the company announced Tuesday at its 2021 Weixin Open Class PRO conference held in Guangzhou.

READ MORE: Why analysts don’t trust GMV, and why they use it anyway

  • GMV booked through the “lightweight” apps on the chatting platform reached around RMB 1.6 trillion ($247 billion) in 2020 based on the RMB 800 billion GMV figure the company disclosed for 2019.
  • In comparison, Pinduoduo posted RMB 1.46 trillion GMV for the 12-month period ended Sept. 30, 2020. WeChat mini program GMV includes sales from lightweight apps belonging to other platforms including Pinduoduo.
  • Daily active users for WeChat mini programs increased by a third to 400 million in 2020 from 300 million in 2019, out of WeChat’s massive pool of 1.2 billion monthly active users.
  • There were  731 million annual active buyers on Pinduoduo as of end-September, and 757 million on Alibaba platforms as of June.
  • Fast-moving consumer goods and fashion brands were among the platform’s categories that recorded the most rapid growth, with GMV surging from two- to five-fold.
  • Per user, the number of mini programs used rose 25% and the average transaction value increased 67% year on year in 2020, according to the company.
  • WeChat Search, the app’s built-in search function, saw its monthly active users exceed 500 million for the first time.
  • WeCom, WeChat’s enterprise and work communication tool, serves more than 5.5 million organizations and has more than 130 million active users.
  • The company is planning more integration this year between official accounts, mini programs, and its short video feature, Channels.

READ MORE: New Wechat e-commerce tools point to Tencent’s ambitions

Context:  First introduced in 2017, mini programs have become ubiquitous on many of China’s biggest apps, including Tencent’s QQ, Baidu, Meituan, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Taobao, as well as Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin.

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Home rental giant Ziroom is jilting landlords https://technode.com/2021/01/13/home-rental-giant-ziroom-is-jilting-landlords/ Wed, 13 Jan 2021 08:50:36 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154120 ziroom, second landlord, apartment rentalLandlords told TechNode that house rental platform Ziroom has been demanding cuts in its rent, and walking away from leases if they refuse.]]> ziroom, second landlord, apartment rental

In August 2019, Sarah Zhang (pseudonym used at the request of interviewee) signed a five-year lease with home rental platform Ziroom to manage an apartment she owns in the nearby city of Nanjing. Based in Shanghai, she chose the so-called second-landlord platform to handle maintenance and tenants in the hope of saving time and travel costs. Instead, it was the start of even more trouble.

At the time, the second-landlord industry was booming. Zhang received offers from multiple platforms, bidding up the price of her apartment.

Ziroom wasn’t offering the highest rent, but it had the best reputation. Zhang chose the SoftBank-backed platform, believing she was starting a long-term relationship.

Zhang agreed to share the cost of renovations with Ziroom. She agreed to waive eight and one-half months of rental income during the five-year lease: The first four and one-half months of the lease would cover turning the one-family apartment into a three-tenant dorm, and one month’s worth of income in each of the following years would cover maintenance and other expenses.

After four and one-half months, Zhang started to receive monthly rental income in January 2020. Her choice of Ziroom turned out to be wise—as landlords on competing platforms Danke and Qingke complained of payments that came late or not at all, her apartment paid like clockwork through the worst of the pandemic year.

That is, until November, when she got a surprising call from a Ziroom housing agent. The platform wanted her to accept a lower rent. If she didn’t like this, the agent said, Zhang could end the contract—but she might be required to reimburse Ziroom for remodeling costs.

Zhang was furious. She had held up her end of the bargain, but now the platform wanted to change the terms.

The platform said that it was forced to cut rents by a market downturn, but Zhang was sure the company was still making a profit from the contract. While she was receiving a monthly rental income of around RMB 1,000, Zhang calculated that the platform was making at least RMB 2,000 per month from her apartment. The apartment is subdivided into three separate rooms, each of which could rent for around RMB 800 per month at market prices.

“There were tenants living in my apartment in Nanjing when they forced the rental cut on me,” said Zhang. The tenants moved out during her dispute with the company, but she does not know why.

Zhang says Ziroom called an end to the contract without her consent and suspended rental payments in December. By sending her the password of the apartment, the platform handed back her property.

The 47-year-old Shanghainese is now planning to sue the company to demand it honor the contract or pay her compensation, after writing a letter to the Nanjing city government to ask for government intervention.

Join the club

Zhang is not the only Ziroom landlord facing similar demands to renegotiate rents. Although the number of Ziroom landlords being affected is not clear, TechNode found a chat group on messaging tool QQ that has attracted close to 1,600 angry landlords across the country. Dozens of them say they plan to take the dispute to court to either enforce the contracts or get more compensation.

Ziroom, which managed more than 1 million apartments across the country as of November 2019, is facing rising user complaints. They come on the heels of the rapid downfall of troubled rival Danke; both platforms adopt the controversial second-landlord model.

Real estate serves as an investment pool for many people like Zhang. In some cases, landlords rely on rent to make mortgage payments.

Landlords accuse the high-profile company of using manipulative tactics to trick landlords into terminating their contracts, according to conversations in the QQ group. 

Ziroom is also distancing itself from old users. Xu Xibai is a Beijing-based Ziroom landlord who helps his parents to communicate with the platform for an apartment they own in suburban Beijing. After renting out the apartment to Ziroom for five years, Xu received a call from a Ziroom employee in July. The employee “required” him to immediately lower the rent for the 100-square-meter apartment near the Sixth Ring Road from RMB 4,700 to RMB 2,700 per month.

The steep cut, and the brusque tone of the person on the phone, led the 38-year-old international politics scholar to believe Ziroom wasn’t trying to negotiate. Instead, Xu believed the company was hoping to make landlords take the blame for ending the contracts, hence reducing compensation, he told TechNode.

As with Zhang, Ziroom told Xu that the company would charge him compensation for the renovation expenses. When he received a final two-month rent payment in November, it was RMB 5,800 rather than the usual RMB 9,400 per two months, but Ziroom did not break down the reason for the RMB 2,600 shortfall.

Xu didn’t talk directly to the tenants before they left, in part because Ziroom suggested he speak with them after ending the contract. Xu believes direct communication with tenants would suggest he consented to Ziroom’s ending the contract.

Like Xu, Zhang saw the request to cut rent as an excuse to break a contract. “The rent cut could be a random figure that ranges from hundreds to thousands of RMB per month,” Zhang told TechNode. “Even if you agree to the rent cut, they will end your contract anyway and you will get less compensation per month,” she says.

TechNode repeatedly reached out to Ziroom to comment on the matter, but hasn’t heard back. 

In a written note that’s widely circulated among Ziroom users, Miao Mingyu, a law professor at the University of Chinese Academy of Social Science, wrote that Ziroom has been bombarding landlords with phone calls requesting reductions in rent and threatening to end contracts. Miao created the QQ group to offer legal advice to the landlords.

But Miao writes that Ziroom’s tactics, while coercive, generally don’t give landlords grounds to sue. Ziroom may postpone the rental payments to exert pressure on landlords but is rarely late enough to count as breaking a contract, he says. Miao wrote that probably only 50 out of more than 2,000 landlords with whom his team has had contact could file a credible lawsuit. 

Why break contracts?

It’s not entirely clear why Ziroom is jilting landlords, as it continues to take on new properties while abandoning old ones. It doesn’t appear to be short of cash, but may be trying to cut costs as a slower housing market and the collapse of major rivals present opportunities to pick up cheaper leases.

Chinese second-landlord platforms, such as Ziroom, Qingke, and the recently-tanked Danke, run on a model similar to the office-rental platform WeWork: They rent apartments from landlords on long-term leases, renovate them, and then rent out individual rooms.

In a healthy second-landlord business, the platform earns profits from the difference between lower-cost leases to landlords and higher rentals from tenants. But in their race for growth, platforms competed for limited housing resources in an attempt to gain a larger market share, thus pushing up the rents owed to landlords.

The weakness of the model was obvious: It could easily fall apart if rental demand suddenly dropped. When COVID-19 swept the country in the first half of 2020, that’s precisely what it did as people lost jobs and migrant workers stayed in their hometowns due to the national lockdown coupled with the economic downturn. Platforms that leased apartments at very high prices from landlords were forced to rent out at lower rates than they had anticipated. 

Even before the disruptions of 2020, the home rental platforms had received a heavy blow in July 2019, when the state rolled out new rules to prohibit any changes to the internal structure of a building, including the use of partition walls to increase the number of housing units available for rent. 

Xu suspects Ziroom regretted overpaying as competition in the second-landlord market cooled down. For Xu, the ultimate cause of the landlord disputes is Ziroom’s attempt to ditch over-priced apartments. In his most recent lease, renewed in late 2019, his rental income from Ziroom was increased from RMB 4,000 a month to RMB 4,700, a big jump according to market rates at the time. 

However, Zhang argues that the platform didn’t overpay, noting that she chose Ziroom over other platforms that offered higher rental income for her apartment. The driver for Ziroom’s recent moves is “nothing other than the pursuit of higher profits,” she says. “Danke’s collapse gives Ziroom more opportunity to create a monopoly. By ditching low-profit units, the platform is chasing higher profit.”

Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iiMedia Research, says Ziroom’s recent disputes are more a result of the market downturn as fewer people migrate between cities due to the pandemic. 

“The low occupancy rate of home rental platforms, as a result of slower population flow, led to less income for companies like Ziroom, which have skyrocketing fees to cover from rental fees to apartment owners, maintenance fees as well as bank loan interest,” said Zhang. 

Ziroom faced criticism of exploiting users this past February, when it reportedly suspended rent payments to apartment owners while still collecting rent from tenants. In response, the platform offered a rent-free month or other discounts to those affected by whose income was affected by the pandemic.

In good health

Ziroom does not appear to be short of cash. After receiving $1 billion from investor SoftBank Vision Fund in March, the company recently announced the acquisition of rival Best Bond.

At the same time, Ziroom rolled out a plan to take over apartments previously managed by Danke in eight cities including Shanghai and Guangzhou, keeping tenants in their apartments at the same rent and waiving service fees to new landlords.

Local reports point out that taking over Danke’s ready-to-rent apartments could also save time and remodeling costs for Ziroom as it expands into its rival’s former territory.

In response to public concerns, Ziroom responded in mid-November to a user on Quora-like platform Zhihu, saying that the company’s services were operating normally with rental loans/rental income ratios “far less than” the legal maximum of 30%. In contrast, Danke’s ratio was over 80%. Ziroom also stopped signing new rental loan contracts on Nov. 27. The statement also says its occupancy rate is higher than last year’s level.

These signs suggest Ziroom is “financially stable so far,” according to Capucine Cogné, a real estate industry specialist with Swire Properties. The risks are not too high, Cogné added, but “part of me is a bit doubtful of how perfect the picture they are portraying is.”

Unlike troubled rivals Danke and Qingke, Ziroom is still private, meaning that it is required to release far less information. Yet it claims to be the largest player in the field, managing twice the number of rental units as the other two combined did prior to their collapses.

However, the rising number of user complaints shows that the way Ziroom does business is increasingly brutal.

Disgruntled landlord Zhang asked a question about the mammoth rental platform, now valued at $6.6 billion. “With eroded trust and credibility, who will trust their properties to Ziroom?”

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Ele.me faces backlash, Luckin coup: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/01/13/ele-me-faces-backlash-luckin-coup-retailheads/ Wed, 13 Jan 2021 06:21:15 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154546 contactless delivery eleme ele.me alibaba on demand delivery driverEle.me is criticized for its treatment of the family of a deliveryman who died on the job. The US may ban American investors from Alibaba and Tencent.]]> contactless delivery eleme ele.me alibaba on demand delivery driver

Chinese food delivery giant Ele.me was criticized for its low compensation for the family of a deliveryman who died while on the job. The US is considering banning American investors from Alibaba and Tencent. A number of US-listed Chinese firms seek out alternatives to the country’s stock market. Luckin Coffee endures a new round of its ongoing power struggle.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Jan. 7 – 13.

Big tech’s labor practices under fire

  • Netizens denounced Alibaba-backed Ele.me for its response to the sudden death of a 43-year-old deliveryman who worked for the platform via its on-demand logistics service Fengniao. In an initial response to the driver’s death at work, the company said “There is no direct labor relations between the rider and the platform” (our translation) and it would only provide a RMB 2,000 (around $308) compensation out of “humanitarianism.” Relenting to public criticism of its first response, Ele.me said in a Friday statement that it will raise the insurance payment for the worker’s family to RMB 600,000 (SCMP)
  • A one-minute video showing a Chinese food delivery driver setting himself on fire in front of a Fengniao delivery station in the eastern Chinese city of Taizhou went viral on Chinese social media on Tuesday. (TechNode)
  • A video posted by a former Pinduoduo employee detailing poor working conditions at the company went viral amid renewed discussions of compulsory overtime work schedules at Chinese tech companies. The video from the disgruntled former employee follows two recent deaths of Pinduoduo employees. (TechNode)

US-listed Chinese firms feel the squeeze

  • E-commerce giant Alibaba, along with rival Tencent, may be cut off from US capital. (The Wall Street Journal)
  • In response to the US forcing Chinese companies from its stock market, Chinese online retailer Vipshop, livestreaming platform Joyy, and Tencent Music are reportedly seeking secondary listings in Hong Kong. (Dealstreet Asia)
  • Secoo, the Nasdaq-listed luxury retailer, has launched a privatization plan, joining a growing list of US-listed Chinese companies fleeing the American stock market amid worsening trade tensions. (Caixin Global)

Red-hot tea market

  • Management at beverage chain Luckin Coffee has demanded the removal of Guo Jinyi, who was named its CEO in July after the company’s April financial fraud scandal, citing cronyism and incompetence. They also asked to launch an independent investigation into Guo’s conduct. (Caixin Global)
  • Beijing-based tea beverage brand Willcha raised an eight-digit funding round from angel investors, which it said will be put toward offline expansion. China’s tea beverage market has drawn more than RMB 3 billion investment between 2010 to 2020, data (in Chinese) from corporate intelligence service Qichacha showed. The market has surged over the past decade with number of registered merchants increasing more than tenfold to 87,000 in the first 11 months of 2020 from 7,410 in 2010. Venture capital invested in the sector reached a historical high of RMB 104 million in 2020. Bubble tea brand Naixue’s Tea reportedly received more than $100 million in January at a nearly $2 billion valuation. (TechNode Cn, in Chinese)
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Ele.me driver self-immolates to protest wage dispute https://technode.com/2021/01/12/ele-me-driver-self-immolates-to-protest-wage-dispute/ Tue, 12 Jan 2021 08:21:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154472 food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courierA short video showing individuals putting out the flames engulfing a deliveryman working for Ele.me in Jiangsu province went viral on Chinese social media.]]> food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courier

A video showing a Chinese food delivery driver setting himself on fire in front of a delivery station belonging to Fengniao, the logistics provider for Ele.me, has gone viral, refocusing the spotlight on poor working conditions in China’s tech industry.

Details: A short video [warning: graphic content] showing individuals putting out the flames engulfing a deliveryman in downtown Taizhou, a city in eastern Jiangsu Province, went viral on Chinese social media. The individual was sent to the hospital reportedly in a condition presenting no risk to life.

  • The one-minute video shows the scene from Monday morning when a man is found laying in the street with flames all over his body. Local residents rush to the spot and put out the the fire with extinguishers. The man is highly emotional after the flames are put out, saying “I don’t even want my life, I want my hard-earned money back,” (our translation) to the crowd.
  • The wage dispute involved the driver signing an exclusive contract to work for Fengniao, and then missing work days with the company to work for other platforms, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
  • A Weibo hashtag titled “Jiangsu deliveryman burns himself with gasoline” had attracted 1.28 million views as of Tuesday morning.
  • Ele.me confirmed to TechNode that the man was a former employee of a third-party hiring agency working for Fengniao.
  • “We are saddened by the tragic event. The situation is currently under investigation and we are unable to comment at this stage,” an Ele.me spokesman said.

Context: Chinese tech companies are accused of compelling excessive overtime schedules as well as financial pressure on their workers.

  • Working conditions for the millions of food delivery drivers powering the rise of major internet lifestyle platforms have long been an issue in China, including incidents from deliveryman strikes to a driver stabbing a store employee.
  • Alibaba-backed Ele.me draw public ire after saying it will only pay RMB 2,000 (around $310) compensation to the family of a 43-year-old courier who died on the job. The company later raised the compensation to RMB 600,000.
  • Alibaba rival Pinduoduo is facing a similar backlash for its culture of overtime.

READ MORE: Food delivery: Drivers take the risks. Platforms reap the rewards.

Updated: included statements from the company and detail about the wage dispute.

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Fired Pinduoduo employee says company exploits workers https://technode.com/2021/01/11/fired-pinduoduo-employee-says-company-exploits-workers/ Mon, 11 Jan 2021 07:28:10 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154376 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphonePinduoduo is the target of a fresh wave of online criticism for its alleged coverup through its punishment of the whistleblower.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

A former Pinduoduo employee is speaking out about poor working conditions at the Chinese e-commerce giant after posting online a photo of a co-worker being taken away by an ambulance from the company’s Shanghai headquarters.

Why it matters: The former employee’s complaints about the e-commerce company has further fueled social-media backlash against overtime work schedules at Chinese tech firms. Pinduoduo is the target of a fresh wave of online criticism for its alleged coverup through its punishment of the whistleblower.

  • Last week, the death of 23-year-old Pinduoduo employee reignited online discussions about the overtime work culture at Chinese tech giants.
  • On Jan. 9, another Pinduoduo employee died after jumping from the 27th floor of an apartment building in Changsha, the capital of central Hunan province.

Details: The morning of Jan. 7, the employee, surnamed Wang, witnessed a co-worker taken away by an ambulance at an exit of Pinduoduo’s Shanghai headquarters. He posted anonymously a picture of the scene on Chinese social networking platform Maimai, where the topic quickly went viral.

  • Pinduoduo fired Wang the next day. In a statement sent to TechNode, Pinduoduo denied firing Wang for his Jan. 7 Maimai post, saying it ended Wang’s work contract because he had previously posted several comments the firm considers “extreme,” in violation of the company’s employee guide. Pinduoduo included comments it attributed to Wang including “I want to kill XX” and “I want Pinduoduo to die” (our translation) on Maimai as examples.
  • Since he was fired, Wang has continued to speak out against what he says are toxic working conditions at Pinduoduo, where pressure to work excessive hours is endangering employees’ health.
  • “Employees at Shanghai headquarters are required to work more than 300 hours per month.. and workers at the grocery unit have to work more than 380 hours per month,” Wang said in a 15-minute vlog on video platform Bilibili. Chinese labor law specifies a standard 40-hour work week.
  • His complaints include a number of details about the company’s working conditions, including a limited number of toilets, shortened official holidays, and delayed year-end bonuses.
  • Wang’s firing has also drawn public ire over Maimai’s user privacy practices, since Pinduoduo was able to quickly identify him despite his anonymous posting. Maimai CEO Lin Fan has denied (in Chinese) that the company shares user data to third parties.

Context: Overtime schedules like the infamous “996” and “10-12-6” have drawn widespread attention as recent deaths of tech employees are stoking intense public discussion.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS: 996 and China speed—Slowing growth in the face of a changing workforce

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Pinduoduo faces probe after worker death, e-commerce giants fined: Retailheads https://technode.com/2021/01/06/pinduoduo-faces-probe-after-worker-death-e-commerce-giants-fined-retailheads/ Wed, 06 Jan 2021 06:29:06 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154306 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphoneThe death of a Pinduoduo employee reignited discussions about overtime work at Chinese tech giants. A Chinese regulator slapped fines on e-commerce firms.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

The death of 23-year-old Pinduoduo employee reignited online discussions about the overtime work culture at Chinese tech giants. A Chinese market watchdog slapped fines on JD.com, Alibaba’s Tmall, and Tencent-backed Vipshop for “irregular pricing” practices.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Dec. 31 – Jan. 6.

Overtime culture in the spotlight, again

The sudden death of an employee of e-commerce giant Pinduoduo renewed public discussion about the work culture at Chinese tech companies, accused of encouraging or even requiring grueling work hours.

The employee, surnamed Zhang, worked for the company in the western Chinese administrative region of Xinjiang. Zhang fainted on her way home after finishing work at midnight on Dec. 29. After six hours of first aid, Zhang, who joined Pinduoduo in July 2019, was pronounced dead. Her death didn’t get much public attention until a self-identified acquaintance of Zhang’s blamed Pinduoduo’s grueling work schedule as the cause for her death in a post (in Chinese) on professional social media platform Maimai. The post has drawn more than 3,500 shares, while the hashtag, “Pinduoduo employee sudden death” was viewed more than 270 million times as of Wednesday on microblogging site Weibo.

The e-commerce firm then responded to a thread discussing the news via its official account on Q&A platform Zhihu in defense of the illegal but commonplace practice: “Who isn’t exchanging their life for money? I’ve never thought of this as a problem with money, but rather as a problem of this society” (our translation).

Pinduoduo quickly deleted the response, and later published a lengthy post on Weibo, explaining that the comment was posted by an employee from a partner company. The employee forgot to log out from the official Pinduoduo account when sharing his opinion. Pinduoduo apologized and pledged to tighten control over their management.

The labor supervision department in Shanghai, where Pinduoduo is registered, has launched a probe into the company’s working conditions.

However, investor interest in the company appears resilient. Share prices for Nasdaq-listed Pinduoduo had more than tripled in 2020, and surged 12% on Wednesday after falling 6% on the news Tuesday.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS: 996 and China speed—Slowing growth in the face of a changing workforce

  • A Chinese netizen based in Hangzhou voiced a complaint online after her company’s human resources department used data collected from a smart cushion to track her working hours, local media reported. As the developer of the smart cushion, the company responded in a statement that it asked employees to test the product in order to collect relevant data and promised it wouldn’t use the data to evaluate employee performance. (Jiemian, in Chinese)

Regulation enforcement

Chinese market watchdog, the State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR), has issued fines of RMB 500,000 ($76,657) each for JD.com, Alibaba’s Tmall, and Tencent-backed fashion e-commerce site Vipshop for irregular pricing strategies during this year’s Singles Day shopping festival held on Nov. 11.

SAMR offered a detailed list of more than 20 products that were affected by irregular pricing across the three platforms. For example, a gift box of pastries sold on JD.com was priced at RMB 149 on Nov. 4 for the Singles Day promotion where buyers could get an RMB 20 rebate for orders over RMB 100. However, the product was priced RMB 10 lower on Nov. 3. (Reuters)

Online consumption in 2020

  • Transaction volume in 2020 for China’s food delivery market is expected to hit RMB 835.2 billion, 14.8% higher than that in 2019, according to the state-backed media outlet Guangming Online. Growth decelerated sharply from the 30% year-on-year increase seen in 2019. The penetration rate of food delivery services in the first three city tiers reached 96.3%, according to the report. (Guangming Online, in Chinese)
  • Total box office revenue in China reached RMB 20.42 billion in 2020, making it the largest movie market in the world for the first time thanks to the country’s largely successful coronavirus pandemic response. However, the revenue still marks a significant 68.2% decrease from 2019. Alibaba-backed Taopiaopiao and Tencent-backed Maoyan dominate the online movie ticketing market in China, where around 90% of film ticket sales happen online. (Maoyan statement)
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Alibaba empire under pressure, VCs flood edtech: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/12/30/alibaba-empire-under-pressure-vcs-flood-edtech-retailheads/ Wed, 30 Dec 2020 06:07:36 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=154125 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentChina launches an anti-trust probe into Alibaba and summon executives from Ant Group, Luckin continued to grow in 2020, investment into edtech surged.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Last week, China launched an anti-trust probe into Alibaba and called in its financial services affiliate Ant Group for a meeting. Beverage chain Luckin Coffee’s growth slowed but continued in 2020. China’s K-12 edtech giants Zuoyebang and TAL Group received funding boosts, while rival Xuebajun is reportedly insolvent.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Dec. 24 –30.

Alibaba founder’s empire facing scrutiny

  • Chinese market regulators announced on Thursday an investigation of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba for anti-competitive practices. (TechNode)
  • On the same day, regulators called in executives at Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Group for a meeting about regulation compliance. (TechNode)
  • China’s market watchdog summoned on Dec. 22 six of China’s largest consumer internet businesses, including Alibaba, Tencent, JD.com, and Meituan, for a meeting about tightening control over community group buying. It warned the firms about predatory pricing and selling counterfeits. (The Wall Street Journal)

Luckin’s rising revenue

A recent report submitted by Luckin Coffee’s liquidator to a Cayman Islands court offered a glimpse into the troubled coffee chain’s finances. Reeling from its sales fraud, ensuing Nasdaq delisting, and impact from the pandemic, Luckin reduced its store count 13.5% to 3,898 as of the end of the third quarter from 4,507 in end-2019.

Luckin Coffee earned RMB 1.15 billion ($176.3 million) in Q3, a 35.8% increase over the same period a year earlier. In Q2, revenue grew 49.9% year on year to RMB 980 million, while Q1 revenue—prior to its fraud admission—totaled RMB 565 million, 18.1% higher than the same period a year ago. Customer growth and purchase frequency powered growth, according to the company.

Luckin Coffee agreed earlier this month to pay a $180 million penalty to settle accounting fraud charges brought by the US market regulator. (Pandaily)

Edtech firms cash in

  • Chinese edtech unicorn Zuoyebang announced Monday the completion of a more than $1.6 billion round from investors including Alibaba Group and SoftBank’s Vision Fund, as well as existing investors Tiger Global and Sequoia Capital China. The funding comes six months after a $750 million Series E received in June this year, raising the company’s total funds received to over $3.4 billion. (Reuters)
  • Yuanfudao, another Chinese edtech firm, secured $300 million from Jack Ma’s Yunfeng Capital. This is the company’s third funding round received this year, following a $1 billion G1 round in March and $1.2 billion G2 round in October. (KrAsia)
  • TAL Education, a K-12 after-school tutoring services provider in China, announced on Tuesday a $3.3 billion private placement plan led by tech venture capital firm Silver Lake. The private placement will account for a combined 6.5% of the company’s outstanding shares. (TAL)
  • Zhangmen, a Warburg Pincus-backed Chinese online tutoring platform, is reportedly seeking to raise $300 million in a US stock market listing. (Bloomberg Quint)
  • Xuebajun, an K-12 education app that received $200 million in funding since its establishment in 2013, is reportedly insolvent. Nearly 10,000 employees and teachers are owed payment and 100,000 users, who pre-paid for their services, have been affected, a self-identified employee of the company said in a WeChat post. The company has not officially filed for bankruptcy. (Sina, in Chinese)

Supermarkets and tech

  • The average daily orders from Sam’s Club‘s nearly 100 warehouses in China have increased more than 10-fold in the three years since the American membership-only retailer entered into a partnership with Chinese grocery delivery platform JD Daojia. JD Daojia provides one-hour delivery to the wholesaler’s online orders. (Dada, in Chinese)
  • Walmart, the supermarket chain behind Sam’s Club, hosted on Dec. 18 a one-hour livestream on TikTok, where users can purchase products featured by the livestreamers without leaving the app. (TechCrunch)

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China launches anti-monopoly investigation into Alibaba https://technode.com/2020/12/24/china-launches-anti-monopoly-investigation-into-alibaba/ Thu, 24 Dec 2020 04:30:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153968 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAs sister company Ant Group faces challenges from finance regulators, Alibaba is confirmed to face an anti-monopoly investigation.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Chinese market regulators announced an anti-monopoly investigation targeting Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Dec. 24. The same day, they summoned executives at affiliate Ant Group for a meeting about regulation compliance issues.

Why it matters: An investigation targeting Alibaba, a bellwether of China’s tech sector, highlights the country’s latest efforts to curb anti-competitive practices by China’s largest tech firms, which were practically “immune” to such regulations before.

READ MORE: China’s tech firms aren’t ‘immune’ to antitrust any more

  • Chinese government previously adopted a laissez-faire attitude to the sprawling growth of Chinese tech companies like Alibaba and Tencent’s walled-garden empires. With a series of recent moves, Beijing is moving to clamp down on monopoly behavior and enforce increasingly stringent market and financial regulations.

Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation, China’s top market watchdog, said in a Thursday morning statement (in Chinese) that it has launched an investigation into accusations of monopolistic practices at Alibaba.

  • The announcement didn’t offer much detail about the process and scale of the investigation, but named “forced exclusivity,” a practice in which platforms force sellers to use only one company’s platform or services, as a key focus of the investigation.
  • Alibaba says in a Thursday response that it will “actively cooperate with the regulators on the investigation,” emphasizing that its business operation are continuing as normal.
  • Alibaba’s Hong Kong shares dropped 8.1% on the news in Thursday trading.
  • Over the coming days, sister company and fintech giant Ant Group will be meeting with top finance regulators in a parallel challenge to its dominance.

READ MORE: Ant Group to meet regulators ‘in the coming days’

Context: Alibaba has been in a years-long public spat over the subject of “forced exclusivity” with upcoming rivals like JD, Pinduoduo, and Meituan.

  • Alibaba’s PR head Wang Shuai dismissed concerns over the matter last year, stating that “so-called forced exclusivity is a non-issue,” and arguing that criticism was a tactic used by rival platforms to lash out at competitors and whip up negative public opinion.
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Meituan and price boosting, livestreamers sell fakes: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/12/23/meituan-and-price-boosting-livestreamers-sell-fakes-retailheads/ Wed, 23 Dec 2020 06:12:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153917 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan was blasted last week after a viral WeChat post accusing it of price discrimination. Another top livestreamer was found to be selling counterfeits.]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

Chinese on-demand services app Meituan was blasted last week after a WeChat post accusing the food delivery giant of price discrimination went viral. Yet another top Chinese livestreamer was found to be selling counterfeits. JD.com apologized for an advertisement for its financial services arm featuring a denigrative depiction of a migrant worker.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of December. 17 – 23.

Meituan blamed for price discrimination

A WeChat post accusing Meituan of charging its paid members higher delivery fees than its free users went viral last week, renewing netizen attention to the topic of price boosting by Chinese tech companies. A user with the nickname “Piaoyi Shenfu” said in the post that he was shocked to discover that he was charged RMB 4 ($0.6) more for a delivery fee when ordering from a paid account that costs him RMB 6 to RMB 15 per month.

The Weibo thread (in Chinese) titled “Meituan accused of exploiting members” had attracted 720 million views as of Wednesday with many users reporting similar experiences as Piaoyi Shenfu.

The Tencent-backed company denied discriminating against paid users in a Thursday response, claiming that the additional delivery fees were caused by an error in the app’s location cache.

However, netizens remain unconvinced. Piaoyi Shenfu posted a follow-up post Tuesday, saying the company’s false excuse showed its insincerity.

A Weibo user accused Alibaba’s Taobao and online travel giant Ctrip of using similar tactics. Ctrip, which has been accused in the past of price optimization, denied the accusation and asked the netizen to provide evidence of the claim.

In November, Beijing rolled out a draft rule to curb monopolistic practices such as forced exclusivity and price discrimination, where customers are asked to pay different prices for the same product based on data gathered from users. (Piaoyi Shenfu, in Chinese)

Top livestreamers sell knockoffs

Luo Yonghao, an iconic Chinese tech entrepreneur who turned to livestream commerce after the failure of the smartphone company he founded, apologized in a Weibo post on Dec. 15 for selling knockoff sweaters bearing French brand Pierre Cardin labels in a November livestream. Luo’s company said it is establishing a research lab and cooperating with third-party institutions to tighten quality control.

In addition to Luo, several other top livetreamers were found to be endorsing and selling counterfeit products. Kuaishou’s top livestreamer Xin Youzhi, also known as Xin Ba, was slammed for selling fake bird’s nest soup, while “Lipstick King” Li Jiaqi was accused of saying the ordinary hairy crabs he sold were from Yangcheng Lake, the famed area in China for premium grade lake crab. (People.cn, in Chinese)

Business values

  • JD.com Digits, JD’s financial arm readying its public listing in Shanghai, apologized on Friday for an advertisement featuring a depiction demeaning of migrant workers. The ad, which went viral on social platforms, features a scene where a poorly dressed migrant worker travels with his mother by airplane. Unfamiliar with air travel, the man asks the attendant to open the window for his airsick mother. While the surrounding travelers deride him for the request, the attendant informs him that a seat upgrade would cost him RMB 1,300 (around $200). While the migrant worker cannot afford the sum, a well-dressed businessman suggests that he take an instant loan of RMB 150,000 from JD Digits for emergencies like this to “avoid being looked down upon by rude people.” (Caixin Global)
  • Alibaba Group came under scrutiny last week when news broke that clients of its cloud computing business could screen for ethnicity using its facial recognition software, enabling the identification of Uighurs and other ethnic minorities. In response to the news, the company removed the software and said it would not allow its technology to be used for targeting specific ethnic groups. (The New York Times)
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Luckin agrees to $180 million fine for US fraud https://technode.com/2020/12/18/luckin-agrees-to-180-million-fine-for-us-fraud/ Fri, 18 Dec 2020 07:11:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153811 Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucksLuckin Coffee has agreed to pay a $180 million penalty to settle accounting fraud charges brought by the US market regulator.]]> Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucks

Troubled Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee has agreed to pay a $180 million penalty to settle accounting fraud charges brought by the US market regulator.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said on Wednesday it levied the penalty against Luckin for defrauding investors. The company “intentionally fabricated” more than $300 million in retail sales from April 2019 to January 2020 by using related parties to create false sales transactions through three separate purchasing schemes, according to the statement.

“Luckin employees attempted to conceal the fraud by inflating the company’s expenses by more than $190 million, creating a fake operations database, and altering accounting and bank records to reflect the false sales,” the SEC said.

The SEC penalty followed four months after the Chinese market regulator imposed a RMB 61 million ($9 million) fine on Luckin and a group of affiliated companies for creating unfair competition by engaging in sales fraud.

Shares of the company, still available on the OTC market after delisting in July, surged 96% to close at $7.35 on Thursday, well below its historic peak of $50 per share reached in January when it was listed on the Nasdaq.

Some view the surge as a sign that traders expect a turnaround for the disgraced coffee chain. The company may be readying for a “better version of its former self” after business restructuring and fines, according to Luke Lango, analyst at InvestorPlace research firm.

Luckin’s credibility, however, has been badly damaged. Industry watchers hold Luckin up as an example of the deception possible when US investors trade shares of foreign companies where due diligence is difficult. Further, the accounting fraud has helped position Chinese tech companies in the crosshairs of regulators and short sellers.

Luckin Coffee will have paid a combined $190 million for its fabricated sales scandal to domestic and US regulators. The company will also be held accountable for charges from China’s Ministry of Finance, which overseas violations of China’s Accounting Law, stock investors, and owners of its convertible bonds. 

The company claimed it had $780 million cash or cash equivalents on its balance sheet as of late June.

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China’s direct-to-consumer brands, with Parklu’s Kim Leitzes https://technode.com/2020/12/17/chinas-direct-to-consumer-brands-with-parklus-kim-leitzes/ Thu, 17 Dec 2020 05:35:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153776 KOLs influencer direct-to-consumerCan direct-to-consumer brands break free of China's e-commerce giants? TechNode asks maven Kim Leitzes about the rise of companies like Perfect Diary.]]> KOLs influencer direct-to-consumer

A new breed of young, Chinese, digital direct-to-customer brands are scaling at amazing speed by leveraging China’s thriving e-commerce and social sectors. It normally takes decades to build brand awareness, but these companies are leveraging social media to get to scale at tech-like speeds. 

A key factor in their rapid growth is an online-focused marketing strategy that includes content marketing across platforms driven by social media influencers, known in China as key opinion leaders (KOLs).

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

Budget Chinese direct-to-consumer cosmetics brand Perfect Diary took just five years to get from start to an IPO that raised $617 million in New York debut in November. It leveraged a dedicated KOL strategy laser focused on China’s social media-savvy consumer generations. The five-year-old brand quickly became a household name and a top seller in the color cosmetics category. It came to account for 4% of China’s color cosmetics market, trailing only L’Oreal and LVMH’s combined 20% market share in 2019, according to a Euromonitor report from June.

Built on social

Perfect Diary first gained recognition on social media network Xiaohongshu, also known as RED, through a KOL-focused strategy. It paid media influencers from movie stars, top KOLs, and lesser-known KOLs to generate product review videos and notes about their products. Later, it expanded to other platforms to build a profile that now spans Tencent’s WeChat, ByteDance’s Douyin, and Bilibili.

To launch a new perfume in 2019, the company cooperated with a pyramid of 150 influencers and spent at least RMB 80,000 on promotions for the product on the Xiaohongshu platform. As of September, the brand had collaborated with nearly 15,000 KOLs of varying popularity with different follower bases.

  • December 2016: Huang Jinfeng, previously the COO of Chinese skincare brand Unifon, founded Perfect Diary in Guangzhou as an e-commerce-based cosmetic brand targeting young Asian female users.
  • November 2018: Perfect Diary is the first brand to reach RMB 100 million in gross merchandise value (GMV) on Tmall in the color cosmetics category on Singles Day that year.
  • June 2019: Parent company Yatsen Holdings expands product lineup by acquiring cosmetics brand Little Ondine.
  • December 2019: The Guangzhou-based company is reported to set the goal of opening 600 stores within three years.
  • April 2020: Yatsen receives $100 million financing from Boyu Capital and Tiger Global Management at a $2 billion valuation.
  • June 2020: The company launches its third brand, Abby’s Choice, to focus on “masstige” skincare products, or prestigious products for the mass consumer.
  • September 2020: Yatsen receives a $140 million strategic investment from Loyal Valley Capital, The Carlyle Group, and Warburg Pincus at a valuation exceeding $4 billion.
  • November 2020: The company raises $617 million in its listing in its New York debut. The prospectus showed its net revenues nearly doubled to RMB 3.27 billion ($481.9 million) in the nine months ended September from RMB 1.89 billion in the same period a year earlier. The company had a combined 23.5 million customers as of end-September.

The rise of Perfect Diary is an example of the growth potential of young Chinese online brands. Others include fashion brand Shein, cosmetics rival Florasis, and ice cream brand Zhongxuegao.

The popularity of KOLs, increasingly the source triggering purchases, is beginning to create opportunities for brands to declare independence from major e-commerce platforms like those run by Alibaba. Some have started to move customers to new platforms like Wechat stores, which give the brand more control of the relationship.

Kim Leitzes, chief executive of influencer marketing platform Parklu, learned respect for KOLs the hard way. When she moved to China in 2010, she struggled to navigate the Taobao jungle, spending up to eight hours a week to do research for what is worth buying, reading reviews, chatting with the sellers, ordering, and returning some time.

“It was quite a process for e-commerce” for Leitzes. Eventually, she decided to start a blog about what was best to buy. The efforts eventually evolved into Parklu, a play on Park Avenue, a point of connection. From the experience of creating content and growing an audience, she began to learn the power of influencers, who then were referred to as bloggers.

KOLs, usually lifestyle models who buyers look up to, helped a generation of Chinese consumers find the wheat in mountains of chaff. The rise of brands like Perfect Diary is the latest solution to option overload.

Parklu is an analytics platform that helps brands to match, manage, and measure their KOL-focused marketing strategies in China. The Shanghai-based firm specializes in the fashion, luxury, and beauty industries and covers more than 100,000 KOLs across all of China’s major social media platforms. 

Responses below have been edited for brevity and clarity.

TN: What makes Chinese online-first brands so remarkable?

Kim Leitzes, co-founder and CEO of Parklu (Image credit: Parklu)
Kim Leitzes, co-founder and CEO of Parklu (Image credit: Parklu)

KL: We call it China speed. During the information age, news spreads quickly. The first reason behind the change is structural and only e-commerce makes this possible. Brands relied on retail distribution channels many years ago. Beauty brands had to sell through a department store, which took time to build out the physical presence and train retail staff on that whole distribution model. The second thing is that there’s been a tactical change where social media has made it possible to build direct and consumer brands very quickly. In a not-too-distant time ago, a lot of the sales revenue was still happening offline even though there was e-commerce. A lot of customer acquisition didn’t have the targeting and precision power of social channels, so the whole customer acquisition model was slower. Now you have so many formats where you can reach consumers directly, and therefore scale and grow much faster.

The real secret sauce to these direct-to-consumer brands, particularly in China, is that they experiment and iterate. If they decide on Friday they’re going to launch a new campaign, it could be live as soon as Monday. On the contrary, brands that existed before this social commerce age may make marketing plans one year ahead. There’s not a lot of experimentation happening on a day-to-day basis. But what you’ll see with these online first brands, they’re not necessarily trying to plan every nuance and they’re able to execute much faster. 

In the case of Perfect Diary, they cooperate with the entire spectrum of influencers from celebrity to top-tier KOLs to mid-tier KOLs down to KOC (key opinion consumer). Some people might think that the growth of these brands is purely fueled by overzealous venture capital, but behind it they’re experimenting and iterating tactics that haven’t really strictly scaled until now. There’s a long list of things that they’re deploying, ranging from private traffic to virtual influencers, to KOC marketing.

TN: A lot of online sales happen on major platforms like Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo. Do these young Chinese brands want to sell using their own sales channels, such as WeChat mini program stores or self-run sites, which allows for independence? How will it influence their branding and marketing campaign strategies?

KL: The process will be pretty slow for China’s e-commerce to become more fragmented, instead of concentrated on major e-commerce marketplaces. For any brand, to decide moving to a homegrown e-commerce model, they have to answer the question of whether they are able to balance the cost benefit for acquiring that traffic for their own site, or whether it has a better ROI in the long run than on mainstream e-commerce marketplaces like Tmall. It takes time for that math to work. Most of our clients operate across different platforms: their own sites, WeChat stores, and Tmall flagships. They still see a majority of traffic going to Tmall because the Chinese consumer has the habit to search and do their e-commerce purchases there.

For e-commerce challengers like WeChat’s mini program stores, the brands would come up with a differentiated e-commerce experience. Through buying from the brand directly, the consumers should get a different kind of product, for example. There should be a reason to drive the change.

TN: Some expect that these young Chinese brands will only be popular for a short time relative to traditional brands. What are your tips for longevity?

KL: The modern consumers—whether they’re Gen Z or millennial—want to buy brands that they identify with. For example, the reason KOL marketing works is because they have built up a community of fans and followers who identify with them. When a brand works with that KOL, they’re opting into that mindset and that trust factor. In many ways, the sustainability of any brand comes down to who and how are they nurturing that community. It doesn’t necessarily mean that brand building is just an exercise of beautiful, professionally generated content. It’s also encouraging the voices of actual customers and promoting KOL content. It’s across the spectrum, but certainly, it is very much about knowing your customer, and making sure that not just the content you as a brand create speaks to them but also your biggest advocates, your KOLs, are also doing that as well. It’s not just a bunch of buzzwords. It can also be measured in terms of the content and conversations about a brand.

TN: Let’s take a peek under the hood. What is the matching process for KOLs and brands?

KL: For Parklu, the actual matching process is done through five factors based on an algorithm that we’ve developed over the past several years. We look at KOL relevancy, their advocacy, content quality, community—which is primarily about engagement factors—and audience demographics, location, age, etc. Each of the five factors are further broken down. We do both pre-campaign evaluation for KOLs and then analysis for the post-campaign performance. To help a sportswear brand to find a KOL, for example, the system would analyze amongst the brand library of fitness and sportswear products, and relevant keywords mentioned by the KOLs. Does the audience engage more or less, or positively or negatively compared to other content as well as the changes in average benchmark metrics.

TN: Content, including text, videos, and livestreams, are driving e-commerce growth. What’s the next big content format?

KL: We call that the advent of video-driven commerce, or v-commerce. We really believe we are just getting started. The adoption of 5G will accelerate to e-commerce. You see companies like ByteDance were doing such an incredible AI recommendation engine with a commerce mindset. It’s certainly for entertainment and surprise but ultimately that connection with commerce is the foundation as they build out that platform.

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Pinduoduo launches payments, community grocery scrutiny: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/12/16/pinduoduo-launches-payments-community-grocery-scrutiny-retailheads/ Wed, 16 Dec 2020 06:39:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153754 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphonePinduoduo unveils its own payment tool, Nanjing market watchdog steps up regulation on community-based grocery e-commerce market.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Pinduoduo unveiled its own payment tool, Duoduo Pay, to lure users from Alipay and WeChat Pay. Nanjing authorities stepped up regulation of the community grocery e-commerce sector. Online retail penetration in China rose 25% to a quarter of the population in the first 11 months of this year compared with a year ago.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Dec. 10 – 16.

Pinduoduo unveils Duoduo Pay

Chinese e-commerce titan Pinduoduo on Thursday rolled out its own payment tool, Duoduo Pay, as it moves to close the service loop within its ecosystem for its 731 million users.

To activate the payment tool, Pinduoduo users have to register with their real names and then link a credit or debit card to their accounts. Duoduo Pay supports basic payment features such as account recharging and cash withdrawals. Its features are minimal compared with those offered by Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay.

Duoduo Pay is supported by Fufeitong, a Shanghai-based third-party payment service founded by the local Shanghai government to facilitate online payment of utility bills. Pinduoduo became a controlling shareholder after acquiring a 50.01% stake through a Shanghai-based subsidiary in January.

By luring users to its payment tool, Pinduoduo could both lower the cost for financial transactions—it paid RMB 516 million in 2019 to use Tencent’s WeChat Pay—and keep user payment information within its own system.

Payment is a crucial infrastructure service for Chinese tech giants that aim to keep users within its own service ecosystem. E-commerce giant JD.com, food delivery app Meituan, ride-hailing app Didi, and smartphone maker Xiaomi are all promoting their own payment options to attract users from WeChat Pay and Alipay. (36kr, in Chinese)

Community grocery e-commerce sizzles

Authorities in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing rolled out on Dec. 9 a guideline targeting unfair competition and shadowy practices in the red-hot community grocery e-commerce sector.

  • The watchdog warned tech firms to cease “dumping” products prices below cost, a practice platforms use to beat out competition. The authorities also prohibited the platforms from falsely advertising discounted prices and posting misleading product information.
  • Management at top players including Alibaba, Meituan, Didi, Suning were summoned for a meeting, where they signed an agreement promising to comply with the rules. Competition between Chinese tech companies can turn cutthroat when battling for market share in an emerging sector, from ride-hailing to food delivery. (Jiemian, in Chinese)

JD.com poured a massive $700 million strategic investment into community grocery e-commerce platform Xingsheng Youxuan, the company announced on Friday. (Ebrun, in Chinese)

READ MORE: Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce

Pandemic a boost to China’s online retail

Growth in China’s online retail sales decelerated to 11.5 % year on year in the first 11 months of 2020 from 16.5% in the same period last year, according to data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

China’s online retail sales totaled RMB 10.54 trillion (around $1.61 trillion) in the same time period, according to the report. Sales during the period were 0.6% higher than those during the first 10 months, signaling a gradual recovery for the world’s second-largest economy.

More Chinese consumers shifted to online purchases during 2020, the report said, with online retail sales for physical goods accounting for 25% of total sales for retail consumer goods in the reporting period, up from 20.4% during the same period last year. (National Bureau of Statistics, in Chinese)

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JD Health IPO surge, online grocery boom: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/12/09/jd-health-ipo-surge-online-grocery-boom-retailheads/ Wed, 09 Dec 2020 06:18:55 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153564 jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhcShares of JD Health, the JD.com healthcare unit, jumped 56% after its mega debut in Hong Kong, and Alibaba launched community-based grocery services.]]> jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhc

Shares of JD Health, the JD.com healthcare unit, jumped 56% after its mega debut on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday. Alibaba rolled out community-based grocery pickup services in two Chinese provinces. JD.com is in discussions to acquire the community grocery e-commerce unit of Meicai.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Dec. 3 – 9.

JD Health shares surge in Hong Kong debut

JD Health’s long-expected public offering raised $3.5 billion in net proceeds, making it the largest debut on the Hong Kong stock market this year. Share prices on Tuesday closed 56% above the offer price at $110 each.

JD Health said the proceeds will be used for business expansion, research and development, potential investments and acquisitions, and general corporate purposes. The listing followed an $830 million investment from Hillhouse Capital in August, which brought the company’s total funds raised to $1.8 billion. Investor attention toward JD Health highlights a growing market interest in healthcare and biotech industries as a result of the pandemic. (Bloomberg)

Online grocery, the next battlefield

The Covid-19 pandemic boosted China’s grocery delivery market, shifting consumption online. The sector is attracting China’s biggest e-commerce companies thanks to user purchase frequency and relatively inelastic demand.

  • Alibaba has launched Taobao Maicai, an e-commerce service that sells daily products including produce, meats, snacks, liquor, and skincare items. Taobao Meicai is a “community-based” grocery e-commerce service, where users in the same neighborhood order online and collect purchases at a nearby pick-up point or join in on group buys. Operated by Alibaba’s online-offline retail unit Freshippo, the service now runs in several cities in central China including Wuhan in Hubei province, and Changsha and Zhuzhou in Hunan province. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • JD.com may be in discussions to acquire Meijia Maicai, the community-based grocery retailing unit of fresh grocery site Meicai, for no more than $200 million. (Time Weekly, in Chinese)
  • The popularity of grocery e-commerce is pressuring offline retail. “There’s no chance for supermarkets with more than 500 square meters to survive in the future one or two years given the increasing adoption of community-based grocery e-commerce,” Ye Guofu, founder and CEO of Chinese low-cost retailer and variety store chain Miniso, said at China Entrepreneur Summit in Beijing on Sunday. (Hexun, in Chinese)

READ MORE: Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce

Tech accessibility

  • Baidu’s artificial intelligence voice assistant Xiaodu is testing a special mode for seniors in response to Beijing’s call to lower the tech barrier for the elderly. (Huanqiu.com, in Chinese)
  • Alibaba, China Braille Library, and Zhejiang University jointly launched a new program with the goal to create a more friendly digital environment for the visually impaired. The project involves building an audio content database planned to contain more than 100 movies, as well as developing language character recognition technology and smart home facilities. (Sina, in Chinese)

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New Wechat e-commerce tools point to Tencent’s ambitions https://technode.com/2020/12/02/new-wechat-e-commerce-tools-point-to-tencents-ambitions/ Wed, 02 Dec 2020 07:28:17 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153304 wechat tencent e-commerce social consumer marketingTencent continues its gradual push into e-commerce with new search and marketing features aimed at helping brands reach consumers on Wechat.]]> wechat tencent e-commerce social consumer marketing

Chinese tech giant Tencent continues its gradual push into e-commerce with new search and marketing features aimed at helping brands reach consumers on its giant messaging app, Wechat.

New Wechat features for marketers

Tencent is developing a new feature lineup to help narrow the distance between marketers and consumers, according to George Xie, head of consumer packaged goods planning for Tencent marketing solutions, at the Luxury Society Keynote Shanghai 2020 Summit on Thursday. Following Tencent’s acquisition of Chinese search engine Sougou, the search feature previously only accessible Wechat’s Discovery tab has been prominently placed within chat windows. In addition to in-app search, the firm released in mid-November a hashtag feature, which redirects users either from a chat window or a Wechat Moment post to the hashtagged topic for more information. Hashtags can refer to content in Wechat “Channels,” a short video feature that began testing livestream functions in October.

Wechat already offered a set of services for online marketing and sales. Wechat official accounts help brands push promotions and advertising campaigns while engaging with users. Mini programs allow content, often from official accounts, to link directly to a checkout page, and consumers can use Wechat Pay to make purchases without leaving the app.

Social DNA

Long seen a promising platform for e-commerce, Wechat’s massive monthly active user base of 1.2 billion has lured online marketers into using the app as a social touchpoint for advertising and promotions. Tencent is aiming to close the entire e-commerce loop on the app, to build out capabilities so it can offer brands a place to acquire, interact, and engage with users who then make purchases.

Wechat’s “social DNA” is a competitive edge for the company’s e-commerce push because “whenever there’s less re-direction [in the consumer purchasing process], there’s higher conversion,” Xie said.

Discovery and engagement is more natural when the user journey starts with content shared by friends or come from the brand’s officially registered Wechat mini-program stores, Xie added. References from friends or promotions from authorized stores are reassuring for Chinese consumers, who are very conscious of product quality and authenticity, he said.

READ MORE: Why Wechat mini-programs are the cutting edge of e-commerce

Tencent’s annual report showed that gross merchandise volume (GMV) booked through Wechat mini-programs surged to RMB 800 billion in 2019, making it the fourth largest online platform in terms of GMV, following Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and JD.com. GMV for sales placed through Wechat surged 210% year on year in the first eight months of this year, Xie said.

Retail sales via social commerce in China has significant growth potential, according to data from market intelligence firm Emarketer. Sales in the segment are expected to reach $242.41 billion this year and nearly double to $474.81 billion by 2023. Retail sales via social apps account for 11.6% of total commerce sales in 2020 and is expected to reach 14.2% by 2023.

The decade plan

Tencent, while a giant in the social and gaming sectors, has struggled to gain a foothold in e-commerce. Unsuccessful e-commerce ventures included Paipai and Yixun before the company retreated to merely holding equity in JD.com and Pinduoduo.

Wechat is spearheading Tencent’s e-commerce ambitions, but the company is wary of damaging user experience. Market watchers meanwhile have complained (in Chinese) about the company’s slow progress in e-commerce.

For Tencent’s e-commerce initiative to succeed requires a major change in consumer shopping habits. A majority of online shopping traffic still goes to platforms like Alibaba’s Tmall because “Chinese consumers have their habits to search and do their e-commerce purchases there,” Kim Leitzes, chief executive officer of marketing platform Parklu, told TechNode.

However, Wechat stores could work as an e-commerce option that provides a differentiated shopping experience or products for brands, she added.

Wechat Work for CRM

Enterprise communication app Wechat Work now has 250 million registered users as more and more brands use the app for customer relationship management (CRM), Xie said. Wechat Work allows brands and their sales associates to manage customer relationships in a decentralized fashion by creating and engaging with their private customer pool. At the same time, consumers using Wechat Work can be connected to the company’s CRM databases, allowing brands to retain a direct connection with customers without the need for a sales rep intermediary. The app also offers digital data analytics tools to help brands better allocate their resources.

READ MORE: WeChat Work will disrupt social selling

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China to bridge tech gap for seniors, Meituan posts strong Q3 results: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/12/02/china-to-bridge-tech-gap-for-seniors-meituan-posts-strong-q3-results-retailheads/ Wed, 02 Dec 2020 06:21:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153343 seniors elderly shanghai streetChina launched a new initiative last week to help seniors bridge the digital technology divide. Meituan posted better-than-expected earnings for Q3.]]> seniors elderly shanghai street

China launched a new initiative last week to help seniors bridge the digital technology divide. Meituan posted stronger-than-expected earnings for the quarter ended Sept. 30. An e-commerce subsidiary of Chinese omni-channel retailer Suning completed its RMB 6 billion ($912 million) Series A.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Nov. 26 – Dec. 2.

Lowering tech barriers for seniors

China’s State Council rolled out on Thursday a major guideline introducing a set of new measures to help the elderly better adjust to technological innovations. While the measures require relevant parties to preserve non-digital services, they also encourage new tech innovations targeted at seniors.

In particular, the state specifies that accessibility should be evaluated for technologies used in transportation, consumption, healthcare, recreation, and other public services should be addressed.

The plan follows reports of several incidents where seniors were denied access to public services for failing to use the digital options. In one example, an elderly man in central China’s Hubei province tried to pay for his medical insurance in cash, which was rejected because the agency only accepted online payments.

China’s population is increasingly aging. Persons aged 60 or above accounted for 18.1% of the country’s population in 2019, up from 12.5% in 2009, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed. This segment of the population accounts for 60 million or 6.7% of China’s online users, meaning that there are nearly 200 million Chinese seniors not online, a growth opportunity for online technology companies. (CWW.net, in Chinese)

Earnings season rolls on

  • Meituan, China’s food delivery and local lifestyle service, on Monday reported RMB 35.4 billion in revenue for the third quarter, a 29% increase driven by rising demand for takeout meals. The revenue beat the average estimate of RMB 34 billion, according to data cited by Bloomberg. Profits for the quarter reached RMB 6.3 billion. Revenue from the core food delivery business increased by 32.8% year on year to RMB 20.7 billion. The in-store, travel, and hotel unit—another major revenue source —is recovering at a much slower speed from the lingering effects of the pandemic with revenue up a modest 4.8% year on year. (Meituan)

READ MORE: Meituan-Dianping in uncertain times

  • Online fashion and lifestyle platform Mogu Inc on Monday reported revenue of RMB 112.5 million ($16.6 million) for the September quarter, falling 43.1% year on year from RMB 197.9 million earned in the same quarter last year. Both commission revenues and marketing services plunged due to a restructuring of the company’s business towards a live video broadcast-focused model. Facing intense competition from local rivals, Mogu doubled its bet on Mogu Live, the livestream unit which earned 74% of the company’s total GMV in the quarter. GMV generated through livestream sessions surged 42% year on year to RMB 2.3 billion in Q3. (Mogu)
  • Dada Nexus, the parent company of JD-backed on-demand services platform JD Daojia, announced Tuesday that it intends to offer 9 million American Depositary Shares (ADS). The proceeds will be used for marketing, user acquisition, research and development, as well as general corporate purposes. JD Group, a cornerstone investor of the company that invested $41.6 million in the company’s public listing in June, will subscribe for ADS worth a maximum of $50 million in this offering. The company reported strong top-line growth in Q3 with revenue surging 85.5% year on year to RMB 1.3 billion. (JDDJ statement)

Suning ramps up e-commerce

Suning announced its e-commerce subsidiary, Yunwang Wandian, had received the proceeds from its RMB 6 billion Series A. The subsidiary provides supply chain, cloud, and after-sales services to third-party sellers on its marketplaces. Established in November this year, Yunwang Wandian was valued at RMB 25 billion before the investment. Investors include state-backed Shenzhen Capital Group and Shenzhen Luohu Guidance Fund Investment. (CNR, in Chinese)

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India bans Alibaba apps, JD Logistics readies $5 billion IPO: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/11/25/india-bans-alibaba-apps-jd-logistics-readies-5-billion-ipo-retailheads/ Wed, 25 Nov 2020 05:43:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153147 India China TikTok ban weChat Modi app banIndia adds 43 Chinese apps to its lengthy blacklist including Alibaba platforms, Chinese online retailer JD.com's affiliate companies move closer to IPOs.]]> India China TikTok ban weChat Modi app ban

This week, India added 43 Chinese apps to its lengthy blacklist including Alibaba platforms. Chinese online retailer JD.com’s quest to publicly list its affiliate companies came a step closer to reality with both logistics and healthcare subsidiaries preparing their stock market debuts. China’s media regulator tightened its grip over the livestream industry. A Tencent-backed online recruiting platform was again under fire for failing to screen job postings.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Nov. 19 – 25.

India expands China ban

Border tensions have escalated to a broader tech war—India blocked another 43 Chinese apps on Tuesday, expanding the total number to more than 200. Alibaba’s global marketplace Aliexpress and livestreaming platform Taobao Live as well as several other dating and gaming platforms were added to the blacklist, joining a lengthy roster that already include some of China’s biggest apps such as Wechat, Tiktok, Weibo, and Alipay. Similar to earlier bans targeting Chinese apps, the government cited national security as the reason for the move. (Bloomberg)

IPOs and acquisitions

  • JD Logistics, the logistics unit of Chinese online retailer JD.com, is looking to raise $5 billion in its IPO, a figure that would value the company at $40 billion. The valuation is much higher than its reportedly $30 billion valuation from late 2019. The public offering could come in 2021 and JD is choosing between Hong Kong and the US for the listing, according to a source cited in the IFR report. The JD affiliate operated approximately 750 warehouses that covered an aggregate gross floor area of over 18 million square meters, according to an internal letter (in Chinese) written in August by JD Logistics CEO, Wang Zhenhui. (IFR)
  • JD Health, the healthcare arm of JD.com, is looking to raise $4 billion in Hong Kong’s largest listing of this year, potentially valuing the company at $29 billion. The offering is scheduled for Dec. 8, local media reported. The deal has attracted cornerstone investors including Hillhouse Capital Group, Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC, and several long-term funds, according to Hong Kong-based media. (Reuters)
  • Yatsen Holding, parent company of Chinese online cosmetics brand Perfect Diary, raised $617 million in its New York debut on Nov. 19, selling 59 million American Depositary Shares for $10.5 apiece. The four-year-old firm said the proceeds will be used for company operations, strategic investments and acquisitions, product and technology development, and offline expansion. (Beijing News, in Chinese)
  • Bluecity, the Nasdaq-listed parent of China’s largest gay dating app Blued, has fully acquired local rival Finka for RMB 240 million ($36.4 million). The acquisition comes three months after Bluecity acquired China’s lesbian social networking app Lesdo. (Bluecity)

Regulating livestreams

  • China’s National Radio and Television Administration rolled out on Monday a new rule that requires hosts and audiences of live-streaming platforms to register using their real names in a move to tighten control over China’s flourishing livestream market. The rule also banned teenagers from sending virtual gifts after several teenagers bankrupted their parents by tipping livestream hosts tens of thousands of yuan. The move could significantly impact revenue for companies including Kuaishou, Huya, Douyin, and YY Live. (Nikkei)
  • US short seller Muddy Waters said revenue from livestreams for China-focused platform YY Live is “around 90% fraudulent” in a 71-page report released Nov. 18.  The report said the company’s international livestream platform Bigo could also be inflating figures. The report followed shortly after Baidu announced its plan to acquire YY Live.(Muddy Waters)

READ MORE: US-listed Chinese firms are on thin ice

China tech’s dark side

  • Tencent-backed online recruiting app Boss Zhipin drew public ire this week after local media reported that employers are using the platform for recruiting prostitutes. The company denied the claim, saying that it has rigid rules in place to control job postings and block accounts once sensitive words are detected. The company was criticized in 2017 for failing to screen jobs involving a pyramid scheme, which reportedly lead to the death of a 21-year-old university graduate. (Beijing News, in Chinese)
  • Shi Miao, formerly vice president of Cainiao Logistics, was arrested in September, accused of receiving improper payments of several million yuan, according to an internal announcement made public last week. Shi, who began working at Cainiao in 2016, resigned from his roles at Cainiao in June. (Late Post, in Chinese)
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Pinduoduo to raise $6.1 billion in convertible note offering https://technode.com/2020/11/20/pinduoduo-to-raise-6-1-billion-in-convertible-note-offering/ Fri, 20 Nov 2020 05:13:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153060 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentPinduoduo is jumping on strong investor sentiment following its positive Q3 earnings to raise cash for new business channels and expenses.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo is planning to raise up to $6.1 billion through a convertible notes offering and equity.

Why it matters: Pinduoduo is looking to fundraise amid buoyed investor confidence on the company’s first-ever quarterly profit, reported in the quarter ended September. The fast-growing e-commerce platform plans to fund new business channels and cover rising expenses.

  • Robust third quarter results sent Pinduoduo shares up more than 20% on Nov. 12.

Details: The company is offering $1.75 billion in convertible senior notes due in 2025, as well as 28.7 million American Depositary Shares (ADS) at $125 apiece. There is a greenshoe option of $250 million in notes and 4.3 million ADS, bringing the total offering potentially as high as $6.1 billion. Pinduoduo said the offer was oversubscribed.

  • The proceeds will be used to “strengthen its balance sheet and make strategic investments in infrastructure, expanding business operations, making future acquisitions, and entering partnerships,” the company said in a statement on Wednesday.
  • During the earnings call held last week, Pinduoduo management highlighted two points of focus for the company: its “New Brand” initiative where the platform provides support to merchants and manufacturers under the “consumer-to-manufacturer” business model, and the produce and grocery pick-up service, which began taking off after the pandemic lockdown.
  • “We are seeing large-scale changes in consumer habits as a result of Covid-19, which are accelerating digital transformation across different sectors,” Chen Lei, chief executive officer of Pinduoduo, said in the statement. “We are prepared to invest capital and resources to improve our platform and build infrastructure to capture key opportunities.”

Context: Pinduoduo had already received nearly $1.8 billion before going public, and continues to actively fundraise even after its $1.6 billion Nasdaq debut in 2018.

  • Pinduoduo offered $1 billion convertible notes in September 2019 to fund its expansion into higher-tier domestic markets.
  • Undisclosed long-term investors invested $1.1 billion in the e-commerce company through a private placement in March.
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Singles Day 2020—bigger, longer, and more live https://technode.com/2020/11/19/singles-day-2020-bigger-longer-and-more-live/ Thu, 19 Nov 2020 05:36:29 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=153005 Singles Day Alibaba HQSingles Day, now an 11-day shopping season, once again smashed sales records for China’s major e-commerce platforms. But are shoppers tired?]]> Singles Day Alibaba HQ

Singles Day this year once again smashed sales records for China’s major e-commerce platforms. If the year’s most popular shopping event is a barometer of the country’s economic health, as often perceived, the patient is on their way to a full recovery from the year of Covid. But Chinese e-commerce titans didn’t reach GMV heights the old-fashioned online way. New bells, whistles, and windows made it all possible.

Singles Day owes its origins to Alibaba, which back in 2009 decided to make over Nov. 11, then best known as an anti-Valentine’s Day. Also known as Double 11, Singles Day was first marketed as an opportunity for singletons to cheer themselves up with a little frivolous spending on discounted wares. Twelve years later, Singles Day is a multi-day extravaganza patronized by nearly everyone in China and in many places beyond.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

(Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Alibaba booked RMB 498.2 billion ($74.1 billion) in gross merchandise volume (GMV) during the promotional period stretching from Nov. 1 to Nov. 11. That figure was 26% more than the company booked for Singles Day in 2019, and represented the fastest growth rate in three years, according to Jiang Fan, president of Alibaba’s affiliate sites Tmall and Taobao. To put the figure into perspective, sales were double the net worth of MacKenzie Scott, the ex-wife of Amazon chief Jeff Bezos and the richest woman in the world.

Meanwhile, Alibaba rival JD.com recorded RMB 271.5 billion in GMV during Singles Day, an increase of 33% on the company’s 2019 figure for the period. Despite the skyrocketing GMV, JD expects a lower operating margin for the fourth quarter of the year, partially due marketing expenses for promotional events like Singles Day.

Record-breaking billions aside, more interesting is how Alibaba and other online players kept the retail game ball rolling and the smartphones clicking amid a macro environment complicated by intensified competition, trade tensions, and a global pandemic.

11 days of Singles Day

First of all there were the extended sales windows, with novel ordering conditions. For Chinese online buyers, Singles Day isn’t only about Nov. 11 any more.

Nov. 11, the date which was the source of the festival, has become less important in terms of generating sales. China’s overall e-commerce sales across platforms for Nov. 11 dropped to RMB 332.87 billion from RMB 410.1 billion booked last year, according to data from China-based data services company Syntun.

Instead, Alibaba mounted two sales periods. First came “pre-sales,” during which customers put down deposits to guarantee a discount later. These spanned two phases: Oct. 21 to Oct. 31, and Nov. 4 to Nov. 10.

The actual sales took place during the traditional 24-hour shopping window on Nov. 11, and in a new one from Nov. 1 to Nov. 3. Pre-sale customers had to log back into the app during this time to complete their transactions, and other products went on sale.

Alibaba’s GMV from Nov. 1 to 00:30 am Nov. 11 was RMB 372.3 billion, contributing nearly 75% of the total GMV Alibaba achieved during this year’s 11-day Singles Day shopping festival, which means people are mostly done shopping before the typical Nov. 11 shopping window starts. 

A lengthened Singles Day allowed consumers to take more time to browse and grab deals, couriers to have less pressure in processing the orders, and merchants to get more exposure and selling opportunities, according to Alibaba. And foremost, it was a spur to consumption.

But a dozen customers TechNode spoke to had grown tired of spending much time on Singles Day shopping.“ This year’s Singles Day was over for me after I paid to hold several pre-sale orders on Nov. 1. I’ve already got most of the stuff I want to buy,” said Deng Shuang, mother of a five-year-old based in Shanghai.

Different sales lenses

The two checkout periods have led to a new approach for calculating and reporting GMV. “That means we’ll have to live with less frequent GMV updates, and need to look at Singles Day consumption “through different lenses,” said Agency China’s Norris. GMV is an important figure for observers to translate the performances of e-commerce platforms during high-profile sales like Singles Day and 618. Alibaba’s release of 11-day sales will make its figure directly comparable with JD, which has always disclosed 11-day figures for the event. 

The two e-commerce platforms have been involved in a public spat over different ways of calculating GMVs. In 2017, Alibaba public relations head Wang Shuai mocked JD for releasing an extended 11-day Singles day sales figure, saying, “JD could calculate their annual orders for Singles Day for as long a period as it wants.” 

Xu Lei, then chief marketing officer and now chief executive officer of JD Retail, fought back, suggesting that Alibaba’s massive 24-hour GMV is driven by pent-up consumption from users who all wait to place orders on Nov. 11 in order to get a discount. “If you start the pre-sale 20 days early (which practically halts sales because customers know they can buy the same product at a better price on Singles Day) and account all the GMV for one day, why can’t we let the merchants to do their business normally and count the 11-day sales?”

Meanwhile, the smaller players are more reluctant to present their Singles Day figures. As usual, Pinduoduo didn’t release sales figures for any shopping events, whether for Singles Day or for 618. The company’s explanation: Their users don’t need to wait for twice-yearly sales to get the best value for their money because they get the best value on Pinduoduo platform “every single day.” Another Singles Day participant, Suning, only says its online orders surged 75% from Nov. 1 to 11.

Livestreaming at center stage

Livestreaming, which has created a lot of buzz all year long, also stimulated consuming appetites.

Livestreaming sales this year have become an “indispensable marketing tool,” Alibaba says. Although it released no total livestream figures for the 11-day festival, the company claims that 33 livestreaming channels generated more than RMB 100 million in GMV each, and over 500 channels generated RMB 10 million each during the period. Despite the impressive numbers, the market should remain wary—data faking is running rampant in the industry. 

By rough comparison, livestream sales represented 7.5%—about RMB 20 billion—of the group’s overall GMV of RMB 268.4 billion on Nov. 11, 2019.

Research firm KPMG expects China’s livestream e-commerce market to be worth RMB 1.05 trillion this year, double the RMB 433.8 billion figure of 2019. In addition to the traditional KOL-endorsement model, livestreaming is increasingly part of the way brands do digital marketing and brand communication. Stores take the lead to run their own livestreaming sales; 70% of transactions on the Taobao Live originated on merchants’ self-run livestreams, according to Taobao Live.

Despite Singles Day’s popularity and its stimulating economic effect, there is no guarantee that the event and its shopping festival siblings will continue their galloping annual growth. Unhealthy spending behaviors are attracting increased public scrutiny.

Anxiety about debt-funded consumption

One week before Singles Day launched, Netease Yanxuan, a private brand e-commerce platform backed by game giant Netease, declared it was “quitting” this year’s shopping battle. The company claimed its goal was “rational spending” in a fight against “overconsumption” and “complicated discount gimmicks.”

Although the firm also says it plans to bring the “most steep discounts of the year,” NetEase’s declaration resonated with many online buyers, who have been bombarded with sales since the beginning of this year.

Singles Day comes on the heels of the 618 and Golden Week shopping events, as well as Singles Day’s little brother Double 12 and Black Friday. It’s no surprise then that analysts are detecting consumption fatigue among consumers. There is less need for consumers to engage in a shopping frenzy at a particular time since the discounts are always there, Norris points out. 

Despite the exhaustion, e-commerce platforms still posted huge figures— Zhuang Shuai, founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian, said many consumers just can’t pass up participating in a big event. “From a consumer psychology point of view, the bandwagon effect will take hold, leading to more consumption when buyers are under the broader influence of platform and merchant promotions as well as the media,” he says.

People are also worrying that platforms trap compulsive shoppers into spending more than they can afford. Said Yan Li, a 34-year-old Shanghai doctor who shops online only when absolutely necessary: “I seldom rush-buy. These made-up shopping festivals driving impulse buying feel like April Fools’ Day to me.”

A good-humored buzz term went virtual on Chinese social platforms this season: “balance payers” (weikuanren), referring to the shock impulse pre-buyers face when the payment period arrives after a week of pre-sales.

They are also the so-called hand-choppers (duoshoudang)—the addicts who just won’t stop buying unless they lose their clicking finger. The country’s fintech and online lenders, which have come to the rescue of these impulse buyers, owe much of their rise (in Chinese) in the past few years to the attractions of the top festivals of consumerism. 

Regulators have started to ask tough questions about this business model, suggesting that we may soon see new rules to limit consumer debt. A central bank-linked commentary that preceded Ant Group’s IPO fiasco accused Ant’s Huabei debt product of tricking Taobao customers into borrowing more than they intended or could afford.

However, Esme Pau, an analyst at equity firm China Tonghai Securities, remains optimistic and believes the latest round of consumer finance regulatory tightening will have “limited impact” on the GMV growth of e-commerce platforms during shopping festivals.

“The new online lending guidelines primarily impact Jiebei [which is primarily used for offline consumption], rather than Huabei [primarily used for e-commerce]. Jiebei has higher APR [annual percentage rate], lower registered capital and higher leverage,” she says.

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Faked livestream data, proptech struggles: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/11/18/faked-livestream-data-proptech-struggles-retailheads/ Wed, 18 Nov 2020 07:32:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152984 livestream e-commerce tabao alibaba tiktokA falsified data scandal involving Chinese online celebrities shined light on livestream metrics; proptech companies are reportedly in troubled waters.]]> livestream e-commerce tabao alibaba tiktok

Falsified data scandals involving Chinese online celebrities shined light on the legitimacy of livestream metrics. Reports that Chinese online housing companies are nearing insolvency are on the rise. Chinese e-commerce giants meanwhile have expanded the Singles Day promotion across their ecosystems to include local services and online travel.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Nov. 12 – 18.

Boosting livestream data 

Real-time data from a Singles Day livestream session showed that 3.1 million people tuned in to the event which featured several online celebrities including the popular stand-up comedian Li Xueqin. However, a Chinese media outlet reported that only 11,000 were actual viewers while the rest were generated by “brushing,” or “click farming,” where sales, order, or viewership figures are inflated to spur buzz.

Livestreams are hosted on e-commerce platforms, which entrust media operations firms to execute the event. The latter then outsources viewership and livestream interaction metrics to a click farm company, a person who works on a livestream event team told local media.

The report cited an employee from a software company focused on statistics inflation, who said that the company’s “brushing” machines were running on full capacity during the whole Singles Day season.

Chinese regulators are stepping up control on the livestream industry, which has seen a big boom since the beginning of this year. (Tencent Tech, in Chinese)

In the meantime, Wang Han, a well-known show host in China, made headlines this week for a possible data inflation snafu during a livestream session held on Nov. 6. Local media reported on Tuesday that the event resulted in a massive 76.% refund rate, possibly as a result of order brushing. A reported 1,012 out of the total 1,323 orders for products ranging from vacuum cleaners, televisions, and water purifiers were returned for refunds, ostensibly as a result of boosted false orders. (The Paper, in Chinese)

Mixed signals from proptech

  • Chinese online housing firm Beike posted better-than-expected results for the third quarter, the company’s first quarterly results after raising $2 billion in a New York listing in August. The company earned net revenues of RMB 20.5 billion ($3.0 billion) in Q3, an increase of 70.9% year on year, beating the market consensus estimate of $2.59 billion. The company forecasted Q4 total net revenues will jump approximately 33.5% to 40.5% year on year to between RMB 19.2 billion and RMB 20.2 billion. (Beike)
  • Shares of online housing platform Danke surged 75% in US trading after Chinese media reported that real estate broker firm Woaiwojia may acquire the cash-strapped company. Amid rising complaints from tenants and landlords, Danke had reportedly been planning to file for bankruptcy, less than a year after going public in January. The company denied the claims in a post on Chinese microblogging service Weibo. (Tencent News, in Chinese)
  • A new wave of negative press broke over online rental platform Ziroom for exploiting landlords. Apartment owners who signed contracts with the “second landlord” platform were required to either “voluntarily” lower 20% of rents while rental fees for tenants were not lowered, local media reported. Those who refused to lower rents could exit the contract but were required to pay a hefty fee to the platform for remodeling. Reports of Danke’s potential bankruptcy raised concern about Ziroom, which runs under a very similar model. Ziroom responded to a user on Quora-like platform Zhihu, saying that the company’s services, like moving, cleaning, and maintenance are operating normally with more than 95% of customers satisfied with their services. (China Economic Weekly, in Chinese)

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | ‘Second landlord’ platforms get tenants in debt to fund growth

Beyond Singles Day

  • JD-backed on-demand services platform JD Daojia more than doubled its sales during the Singles Day promotion on Nov. 11 compared with last year. The average delivery time shortened by eight minutes compared to last year. According to the platform’s data, product assortment is constantly expanding, from supermarket groceries and fresh produce to medicine, pet supplies, cosmetics, apparel, and mobile phones. (JDDJ statement)
  • Online travel, a sector among the worst hit during the pandemic, leveraged the shopping festival to aid recovery. Hotel reservation orders on Alibaba’s travel arm Fliggy more than doubled during the 11-day campaign. The 11 airlines taking part in the promotion collectively sold more than 100,000 fly-as-you-wish packages on the platform. (Travel Daily, in Chinese)
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Margin worries overshadow JD Q3 revenue growth https://technode.com/2020/11/17/margin-worries-overshadow-jd-q3-revenue-growth/ Tue, 17 Nov 2020 10:46:29 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152928 JDShares in JD fell 7.4% in US trading on Monday, even though earnings for the e-commerce platform exceeded expectations for the third quarter.]]> JD

Shares in JD.com fell 7.4% in US trading on Monday, reflecting concerns that its profit margin is likely to shrink in the fourth quarter, even though earnings for the e-commerce platform exceeded expectations for the third quarter.

Details: JD.com reported net revenue of RMB 174.2 billion ($25.7 billion) in the third quarter of this year, a 29.2% year-on-year increase. This was on par with 28.7% year-on-year growth for the same period of 2019. Q3 revenue was also close to the $25.76 billion that was the average of analysts’ forecasts as compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • The company’s diluted non-GAAP earnings for the quarter was 50 cents per share, beating the Yahoo analysts’ average of 40 cents per share.
  • The number of the company’s annual active customers increased by 32.1% to 441.6 million in the 12 months ending September 30, from 334.4 million in the same period last year. The figure represents the fastest growth rate in three years, JD chief financial officer Sandy Xu said in the conference call. She noted that lower-tier cities were responsible for about 80% of the more than 100 million customers added in Q3. Despite the growth, JD fell short of Alibaba’s 757 million active users and Pinduoduo’s 731 million for the period.
  • Due to JD’s plans to invest in initiatives like supermarkets and delivery infrastructure, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts expect the company’s operating profit margin to decline sharply in Q4, deepening a seasonal trend observed in 2019. JD’s non-GAAP operating margin slid from 2.2% in Q3 2019 to 0.4% in Q4. Shopping sites in the last quarter of the year typically spend heavily on subsidies and marketing for big promotional events like Singles Day.
  • JD’s cost of revenue increased by 28.5% year on year during Q3, to RMB 147.4 billion, up from RMB 114.7 billion in Q3 2019.
  • JD Plus, JD’s paid membership program, recorded more than 20 million members in October. Individual members typically shop more frequently and spend more than non-members.

Context: JD.com’s gross merchandise volume (GMV) increased 33% year on year to RMB 271.5 billion for the Singles Day period from Nov. 1 to Nov. 11 this year. That compared with Alibaba’s GMV figure of RMB 498.2 billion for the same period.

  • JD Health, the healthcare unit of JD.com, is planning a listing in Hong Kong.
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Pinduoduo shares soar 20% on Q3 earnings surprise https://technode.com/2020/11/13/pinduoduo-shares-soar-20-on-q3-earnings-surprise/ Fri, 13 Nov 2020 05:41:56 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152786 pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphoneThe results renewed investor confidence in Pinduoduo, which had missed expectations in earlier quarters and faced scrutiny for its continued losses.]]> pinduoduo e-commerce alibaba tech war iphone

Share prices for Pinduoduo rocketed 20% in New York on Thursday after reporting robust top-line growth which easily beat analyst estimates as well as a surprise adjusted quarterly profit—its first since going public in 2018.

Why it matters: The results renewed investor confidence in Pinduoduo, which had missed market expectations in earlier quarters and faced mounting scrutiny for its inability to turn a profit.

  • Chinese tech stocks plunged earlier this week after Beijing rolled out on Tuesday anti-trust draft rules aimed at some of the country’s biggest internet companies. Pinduoduo shares dipped along with its peers but creeped upward on Wednesday. The new rules could benefit smaller platforms and have more impact on larger names, Barron’s reported citing analysts at research firm Morningstar.
  • Alibaba shares closed down around 9% on Wednesday on news of the rules, shadowing its Singles Day feat of booking gross merchandise volume of RMB 498.2 billion during the promotion.

Details: Pinduoduo posted third quarter revenue of RMB 14.2 billion ($2.1 billion), climbing 89% year on year from RMB 7.5 billion in the same quarter of 2019. Revenue reached the high end of analyst estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance. Growth decelerated from the 129% annual rate seen in Q3 last year.

  • Pinduoduo’s annual active buyers rose 36% year on year to 731 million in the 12 months ended September, representing a net add of 48 million from Q2. The user size is on par with rival Alibaba, which added 15 million to reported 757 million annual active buyers in the quarter ended September.
  • However, Pinduoduo’s clientele are significantly more budget-conscious that those of its peers. Annual spend per active buyer on the platform in the 12-month period ended September was RMB 1,993 ($293.6), an increase of 27% from RMB 1,567 over the same period last year. Annual spend per active buyer for rival Alibaba was around RMB 9,000 per buyer, and approximately RMB 6,000 for JD.com.
  • The company recorded its first quarterly adjusted profit with non-GAAP net profit attributable to shareholders hitting RMB 466 million compared with a net loss of RMB 1.6 billion the same quarter a year ago. Adjustments noted in its filing included share-based compensation and interest payments related to its convertible bonds.
  • Pinduoduo will continue to invest in its “New Brand” initiative by providing support to merchants and manufacturers under the “consumer-to-manufacturer” model.
  • The company recently launched Duo Duo Maicai, an agricultural product sales channel. To address the specific logistics demands for produce, the company is “prepared to go heavy in building” and “accelerating the development of agriculture infrastructure,” David Liu, vice president of strategy, said during the earnings call held Thursday night.
  • Tiger Brokers analysts expect the company will swing back into a loss in Q4 given the huge marketing expense for Singles Day. However, they are bullish on the company’s long-term prospects. “Profitability is just a matter of time after the model is proven,” the analysts wrote in a research note.

Context: Pinduoduo and Alibaba, two of the largest e-commerce platforms in China, have long been locked in a public spat about “forced exclusivity,” whereby marketplace platforms force sellers to exclusively list on one online marketplace.

  • Chinese market regulators began to curb such unfair practices last year, reminding more than 20 e-commerce sites on a forum that forced exclusivity is illegal.
  • Intensified” forced exclusivity efforts from rivals has weighed on Pinduoduo’s performance, according to the company.

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China’s Singles Day sales top RMB 332 billion across platforms https://technode.com/2020/11/12/chinas-singles-day-sales-top-rmb-332-billion-across-platforms/ Thu, 12 Nov 2020 07:06:52 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152742 alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.comChinese e-commerce giants including Alibaba and JD.com have announced new record-breaking sales for Singles Day, the 11-day shopping extravaganza that ended Wednesday at midnight. Why it matters: Singles Day, typically a 24-hour event, has evolved into a weeks-long shopping festival. Alibaba, credited with popularizing the promotion, extended the event this year by creating two shopping […]]]> alibaba singles day Pinduoduo e-commerce JD.com

Chinese e-commerce giants including Alibaba and JD.com have announced new record-breaking sales for Singles Day, the 11-day shopping extravaganza that ended Wednesday at midnight.

Why it matters: Singles Day, typically a 24-hour event, has evolved into a weeks-long shopping festival. Alibaba, credited with popularizing the promotion, extended the event this year by creating two shopping windows that combined spanned Nov. 1 to 11.

  • Singles Day is the world’s largest sales event and is considered an informal bellwether for China’s economic health.
  • The two checkout periods mean that gross merchandise volume (GMV) recorded on the actual Nov. 11 date do not total all of the sales for the promotion, as in prior years.

Details: Alibaba booked RMB 498.2 billion ($74.1 billion) in GMV for the Singles Day promotional period of Nov. 1 to 11, an increase of 26% compared to the same timeframe in 2019, according to the company.

  • JD.com, which always discloses 11-day figures for the event, recorded RMB 271.5 billion in GMV during the same period, rising 33% year on year compared with the 28% annual growth seen last year, to RMB 204.4 billion.
  • China’s overall e-commerce sales across platforms for Nov. 11 dropped to RMB 332.87 billion from RMB 410.1 billion booked last year, according data from China-based data services company Syntun. This figure does not include total sales for the 11-day period for all e-commerce platforms.
Singles Day shopping GMV across platforms on Nov. 11.
  • Alibaba lengthened the shopping period to 11 days to allow consumers more time to browse and grab deals while easing pressure on the logistics infrastructure, therefore creating a better shopping experience, Alibaba chief executive officer Daniel Zhang said during the September quarter earnings conference held on Nov. 5.
  • Despite splitting its sales with the first checkout window from Nov. 1 to 3, Alibaba remained the biggest Singles Day player on Nov. 11, accounting for 59% of total sales compared with 66% last year. JD.com accounted for 26% of sales compared with 17% last year, while Pinduoduo’s share stayed flat at 6% and Suning declined slightly to 3% from 5% a year ago.
  • Chinese couriers processed 3.9 billion parcels during the 11-day time period, according to data from the State Post Bureau. More than 675 million parcels were processed on Nov. 11, up 26% year on year. The number of packages during the post-promotional period between Nov. 11 to 16 is expected to rise 28% compared with last year to 2.9 billion, double the average daily number.
  • Brands are continuing to leverage the shopping event to promote new products. Syntun data showed 6.4% of the total 31 million stock-keeping units (SKUs) on sale on Nov. 11 were newly launched products, up from last year’s 5.4%.
  • Home appliances, smartphones and consumer electronics, apparel, and cosmetics were the most popular product categories.

Stepped-up scrutiny: The event took place as authorities tightened regulations over internet companies to curb anticompetitive practices, such as forced exclusivity and price discrimination.

  • The new rules have weighed on Chinese tech firms. Alibaba share prices in New York closed down around 9% on Wednesday since the draft rule was released on Tuesday, Beijing time. Share prices for JD.com dipped more than 2% during the timeframe.
  • In addition to government scrutiny, Alibaba is weathering the impact from its fintech affiliate Ant Group’s public offering debacle.

READ MORE: China widens antitrust rules to rein in internet firms

Context: First popularized by Alibaba in 2009, Singles Day has become the biggest national shopping promotion day in China.

  • This year’s shopping promotion comes as the whole country is focused on driving post-pandemic domestic consumption.

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China rolls out monopoly curbs, CIIE promotes cross-border trade: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/11/11/china-rolls-out-monopoly-curbs-ciie-promotes-cross-border-trade-retailheads/ Wed, 11 Nov 2020 05:39:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152673 cross-border global trade e-commerce importCIIE was held Nov. 5 - 10 to promote cross-border e-commerce amid a bruising trade war while Beijing rolled out rules aimed at curbing monopolies.]]> cross-border global trade e-commerce import

Beijing rolled out on Tuesday draft rules to curb anti-competitive practices at tech companies. The China International Import Expo (CIIE), a government-backed trade fair, was held Nov. 5 – 10 to promote cross-border e-commerce amid a bruising trade war and global pandemic. Alibaba and e-commerce service provider Youzan both released their earnings reports for the third quarter of this year.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Nov. 5 – 11.

Tightened control from Beijing

  • China’s State Administration for Market Regulation issued draft rules with the aim to block potentially unfair competition from tech giants leveraging their market dominance.
  • The new rule could affect Alibaba, Tencent, JD.com, and Meituan—Chinese tech titans that cultivate their own, usually exclusive, ecosystems.
  • The draft rules covers a group of anti-monopolistic practices such as forced exclusivity and price discrimination, where customers are asked to pay different prices for the same product, based on data gathered from users.
  • Chinese tech shares fell on the news in Hong Kong. Meituan shares plunged 10.5% on Tuesday, while JD.com sank 8.3%. Alibaba dropped 5.1% and Tencent declined 4.4% the same day. (Reuters)

READ MORE: Explainer: China’s tech ecosystems and the barriers between them

E-commerce giants at CIIE

  • At the third annual China International Import Expo (CIIE), Chinese e-commerce platform Alibaba said Thursday that it had fulfilled its pledge to import goods worth $200 billion by 2023 despite the uncertainties brought by the coronavirus pandemic. It surpassed its first-year goal by 123%, and hit its second-year goal by 102%, according the company. The number of new foreign brands selling through Tmall Global, Alibaba’s cross-border e-commerce platform, surged 125% compared with a year ago to more than 26,000 from 84 countries. (Tencent News, in Chinese)
  • JD.com said that it on track to achieve its target of buying RMB 400 billion (around $61 billion) in imported brand goods by 2021, a goal the firm set at the second CIIE held last year. The company reached its 2019 target of importing RMB 100 billion in imported goods set at the first expo in 2018. (Jrj.com, in Chinese)
  • The escalating intentions between China and Australia raised concerns among Chinese importers of Australian products, vendors at CIIE said. China is reportedly planning to ban at least seven categories from Australia including coal, wood, wine, and lobster. Australia joined this year’s CIIE after saying earlier that it would pull out from the event. (SCMP)
  • China said that it hopes cross-border commerce to play a bigger role in invigorating foreign trade. (CGTN)
  • Beijing rolled out Monday a new guideline for the development of the import trade industry, encouraging the the development of cross-border e-commerce pilot zones, setting up an evaluation system for the pilot zones, and building inventory centers abroad. (Ebrun, in Chinese)

Alibaba, Youzan

  • Alibaba posted better-than-expected results Thursday with revenue rising 30% year on year to RMB 155 billion in the quarter ended Sept. 30. However, the company’s share price in New York weakened on slower sales growth and the suspension of finch affiliate Ant Group’s IPO. (TechNode)
  • Youzan, the Chinese e-commerce service provider backed by Tencent and Baidu, earned RMB 1.3 billion in revenue during the third quarter, rising 65.4% year on year. Merchants using Youzan booked RMB 72.3 billion in gross merchandise volume (GMV) during the time period, outperforming the same period last year by 90%. Youzan chief executive officer Zhu Ning said in an internal letter on Monday that he expects GMV for Youzan merchants to exceed RMB 100 billion this year. Zhu noted in the letter that the company is upgrading its investment unit and is looking to invest in ecosystem partners, corporate service peers, and new merchants. (Youzan, in Chinese)

Updated: added details about vendors importing Australian goods at CIIE.

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Alibaba joins $1.1 billion investment in luxury e-tailer Farfetch https://technode.com/2020/11/06/alibaba-joins-1-1-billion-investment-in-luxury-e-tailer-farfetch/ Fri, 06 Nov 2020 07:13:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152572 alibaba Farfetch investment Richemont luxury fashion e-commerceAlibaba Group and Richemont are investing a combined $1.1 billion into Farfetch, a UK-based online luxury retailer building a bigger presence in China.]]> alibaba Farfetch investment Richemont luxury fashion e-commerce

Alibaba Group and Cartier-owner Richemont announced Thursday a combined $1.1 billion strategic investment into Farfetch, the UK-based online luxury and fashion retailer building an increasing presence in China.

Details: As part of the partnership, Alibaba and Richemont will invest $300 million each in private convertible notes issued by the New York-listed luxury fashion retailer, according to a statement from Alibaba.

  • The two companies will each invest $250 million in Farfetch China, taking a combined 25% stake in a new joint venture that manages Farfetch’s China operations.
  • Existing investor Artemis, the controlling shareholder of French luxury giant Kering, will buy $50 million Class A ordinary shares in Farfetch.
  • After the deal, Farfetch will launch luxury shopping channels on Alibaba’s platforms including Tmall and cross-border marketplace Tmall Global to tap into the company’s massive user base of 757 million.
  • In the meanwhile, the two firms will cooperate to develop omni-channel retail solutions for e-commerce websites and apps.

Go deeper: The partnership makes Farfetch one of the few companies to receive investment in and cooperation with the two rival e-commerce ecosystems headed by Alibaba and JD.com. This highlights Chinese tech firms’ eagerness to tap into the online luxury market.

  • Chinese consumers have expressed a strong appetite for luxury brands over the past few years. Consultancy firm Bain expects Chinese shoppers to make up nearly half of all luxury sales by 2025, up from representing 35% global luxury spending in 2019.
  • JD.com, which has been locked in a battle with Alibaba’s Tmall to win over luxury consumers, invested $397 million into Farfetch in 2017. The Chinese online retailer merged its luxury goods platform Toplife with Farfetch in 2019.
  • Tencent, the Alibaba rival and JD.com investor, participated in a $250 million investment into Farfetch with investment firm Dragoneer in January.
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Alibaba shares dip on slowing sales, Ant Group IPO delay https://technode.com/2020/11/06/alibaba-shares-dip-on-slowing-sales-ant-group-ipo-delay/ Fri, 06 Nov 2020 06:55:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152551 alibaba, tmall, e-commerceAlibaba posted on Thursday stronger-than-expected earnings for the September quarter but its shares prices fell on slower growth and Ant Group's delayed IPO.]]> alibaba, tmall, e-commerce

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba reported stronger-than-expected results for the September quarter, but its share price in New York declined 2.7% on slower sales growth and the suspension of the dual public listing for its fintech affiliate Ant Group.

Why it matters: Alibaba’s sales were buoyed in the September quarter from an economic rebound in China, much like the preceding quarter. But the Ant Group public offering mishap weighed on the parent company, which holds a third of the fintech company.

  •  The Thursday dip in share price followed a 8% drop on Tuesday in New York after the Shanghai exchange halted Ant Group’s mega listing due to “significant changes” in the regulatory environment.

READ MORE: Ant Group IPO delay and Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech

Details: Alibaba reported revenue of RMB 155 billion ($23 billion) in the quarter ended Sept. 30, representing a 30% year-on-year increase from the same period in 2019, the company said in a statement on Thursday. The earnings beat the average analyst estimate compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • Revenue growth decelerated significantly from the 40% year on year growth figure seen in the same period of last year, but was still a strong quarter for Alibaba given lingering coronavirus impact, according to Marina Koytcheva of CCS Insight. Its results are “strongly suggesting that the transition to online shopping and digitalization of services is a sustainable trend even as life in China has now mostly returned to its pre-pandemic normal,” she said in an emailed comment.
  • Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders fell 60% year on year to RMB 28.8 billion, mainly attributable to a one-time gain from equity interest in Ant Group last year as well as share-based compensation expenses during the quarter, according to the filing.
  • Representing 84% of total revenue, the company’s core e-commerce revenue increased to RMB 130.9 billion. The figure grew 29% year on year compared with 40% year on year growth in the same period last year.
  • Taobao Deals, Alibaba’s Pinduoduo-like business targeting value-conscious consumers, became a key driver for user acquisition as the company competes head-on with rivals like Pinduoduo and JD.com in expanding to lower-tier markets. Taobao Deals launched a major new update in March, and monthly active users jumped 75% quarter on quarter to 70 million as of September.
  • Cloud computing revenue grew 60% year over year to RMB 14.9 billion, driven by growth in revenues from customers in the internet, finance, and retail industries.
  • Cost of revenue in the quarter was RMB 89.9 billion, or 58% of revenue, up 3% year on year mainly driven by increased cost of inventory from direct sales businesses such as Tmall Supermarket.
  • Domestic consumption, cloud computing and data intelligence, and globalization will remain the company’s three long-term growth engines, Daniel Zhang, chairman and chief executive officer of Alibaba Group, said in a statement.
  • Zhang said in a conference call with analysts that the company is “actively evaluating the impact” of the regulation change on Ant Group’s listing and “will take appropriate measures accordingly.”

Context: Ant Group this week will begin refunding Shanghai investors who had placed orders for the postponed public listing.

  • Alibaba sold its stakes in Meinian Onehealth Healthcare Holdings, Shanghai-listed medical examination services provider, according to a Meinian filing on Wednesday.
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Meituan mulls second IPO, Alibaba inks Farfetch deal: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/11/04/meituan-mulls-second-ipo-alibaba-inks-farfetch-deal-retailheads/ Wed, 04 Nov 2020 05:48:54 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152469 retail e-commerce MeituanMeituan is gearing up for a secondary listing on mainland market while Alibaba plans to invest $300 million in UK retailer Farfetch.]]> retail e-commerce Meituan

Chinese food delivery giant Meituan is mulling a secondary listing on the mainland. Alibaba is planning to invest $300 million in Farfetch, the UK-based online luxury retailer that has been expanding aggressively in the Chinese market. Singles Day got off to a strong start while regulators stepped in to reinforce market order. 

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Oct. 22 – Nov. 4.

 Another Meituan listing

  • Meituan, the Chinese food delivery and service platform, is considering a secondary listing on the mainland Chinese market, Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter. The source said the debut could come as soon as next year. Chinese media outlet Caixin reported that the company is in preliminary discussions with several brokers including CITIC Securities, Huatai Securities, and Huajing securities. Caixin’s source said that Meituan is deliberating between Shanghai’s STAR Market and Shenzhen’s Chinext exchanges. The decision would depend on leniency toward profitability requirements for listed companies, according to the source. (Bloomberg)
  • Yatsen Holding, the parent company of Chinese online-first cosmetics brand Perfect Diary, on Friday filed for a listing in New York. The 4-year-old company also operates color cosmetics and skincare brands Little Ondine and Abby’s Choice. The three brands combined sold products to 23.4 million consumers in 2019. (SEC filing)
  • Chinese short video and livestreaming app Kuaishou is reportedly readying to file a prospectus for a listing in Hong Kong as early as this week, with both Tencent and Alibaba affiliates participating. (The Beijing News, in Chinese)

E-commerce M&A

  • Alibaba is reportedly in talks to invest nearly $300 million in Farfetch, the London-based online retailer of luxury goods. The two companies plan to set up a Chinese joint venture. Alibaba competitors JD.com and Tencent are both investors in the platform. (The Information)
  • Luo Yonghao, bankrupted founder of Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan who returned to prominence with e-commerce livestreams, entered a preliminary agreement to sell 35% to 51% of his livestreaming company to cable manufacturer Sunway Co. Luo, who is still on China’s debt blacklist, said in September that he had returned nearly RMB 400 million ($60 million) of the more than RMB 600 million he owes. (Chinanews, in Chinese)

Strong Singles Day start

  • JD’s whole-day sales for Monday, the first day of the Singles Day shopping festival, surged 90% year-on year. Dairy products, shampoos, and rice topped the fast-moving product category, while smartphones, washing machines, and televisions were the top three bestsellers for electronics. (Netease News, in Chinese) 
  • Hundreds of millions of consumers flooded to Taobao and Tmall to place orders and check out the 14 million discounted items at midnight on Monday. On Oct. 21, the first day of the presale, Tmall Global’s gross merchandise volume increased by more than 90% compared with the same day a year earlier, according to a company statement.

Regulators in the move

  • Five Beijing market regulators including the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Market Supervision and Administration and the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau summoned nine major Chinese e-commerce platforms including JD.com, Tmall, and Meituan. Authorities urged the sites to tighten control over various promotional campaigns during the Singles Day period. The move is to crack down on practices such as false advertising, order-brushing, and fraud. (Beijing Daily, in Chinese)
  • China’s banking and insurance regulator warned investors in a notice released on Oct. 28 about potential risks involved in purchasing financial products, such as cryptocurrency and foreign currencies, through livestreams. Some livestream operators are not qualified to sell financial products and may engage in fraud and misleading practices, it said. (Xinhua, in Chinese)

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EMERGE 2020 | Not just a hard sell, livestreams help build a brand image https://technode.com/2020/11/02/emerge-2020-not-just-a-hard-sell-livestreams-help-build-a-brand-image/ Mon, 02 Nov 2020 06:41:38 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152357 livestreams livestreaming marketing Taobao alibaba e-commerce marketingLivestreams are increasingly a marketing tactic, allowing brands to build a rapport with consumers and influence purchasing decisions.]]> livestreams livestreaming marketing Taobao alibaba e-commerce marketing

In China’s tech context, livestreams are inextricably linked with e-commerce. Its sales-boosting effect is enticing more brands to integrate livestreams into their digital marketing and brand communication strategies in order to deliver compelling content for a strong brand connection, according to experts at TechNode’s Emerge 2020 conference held in Shanghai on Thursday.

Livestream-driven sales, though still important, is no longer the sole metric used to gauge its value. It is increasingly becoming a branding and marketing tactic that allows brands on various e-commerce platforms to show their products, build consumer rapport, and influence purchasing decisions. Tmall has integrated livestream replays to its product pages, for example, and Chinese millennial brand Shein launched a virtual livestream festival.

More livestream applications

Applications for livestream are various and it is a matter of what merchants or brands want to achieve by leveraging the format, Pablo Mauron, partner and managing director of Digital Luxury Group (DLG), said during the panel discussion. He cited a recent example from Louis Vuitton which staged and streamed its Spring/Summer 2021 Show in Shanghai as a typical non-sales-driven approach for livestreaming.

Michael Norris, research and strategy manager of Agency China, agreed. “Larger brands, such as SK-II and Aptamil, use elaborate branded sets to broadcast their livestreams. These broadcast studios become the home of product information, Q&A with the audience, celebrity cameos, as well as special offers and promotions.”

With this shift, Mauron said that companies should adjust their strategies accordingly. “Strategy around [livestreaming] is not the same as… a sales associate that is going to stream to a closed audience of existing clients to generate impulse buying and selling them new products,” he said.

However, changing the consumer’s perception of livestream could take time, because “the industry matures with other channels developing specific approaches… Also it requires brands and marketers in general to build the right understanding and framework around it, and to tackle it the right way,” Mauron explained.

Brands—particularly luxury brands once considered conservative in adopting new marketing strategies—are signaling they are ready to relinquish total control. “Livestreaming is a perfect example where it is going to be hosted by someone that is different from [the brand], that the codes according to which that performance that is going to be delivered is going to be different from what a brand would stage,” Mauron said.

What makes a great livestreamer

The livestream e-commerce boom has catapulted livestreamers to the center of the spotlight.

Speaking from her own experience, Maggie Fu, an internet influencer and co-founder of social media brand Melilim Fu, said livestreaming allows users to get a sense of being close to hosts. “People can see what you are doing, feel your personality through real-time interactions.”

Fu said that the key is to actually understand what the consumers want, rather than forcing consumers to buy. The entertainment aspect of watching the livestream and nice discounts are also crucial factors to attract eyeballs.

For Mauron, livestreamers’ success also depends on the ability to generate an element of credibility. “One of the key recipes of successful livestreaming if you talk about sales-driven livestreaming, is the fact that that raw format delivers something that somehow appears as more trustworthy than highly staged and polished and somehow artificial communication.”

Top livestream hosts like Viya and “Lipstick King” Li Jiaqi have become known worldwide. But they have not appeared out of nowhere. “They actually gone through many business cycles with ups and downs from a long time ago,” helping them to build their personality, and therefore strong connections with the users, Fu said.

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Baidu nears $4 billion deal to nab Joyy’s China unit: report https://technode.com/2020/10/28/baidu-nears-4-billion-deal-to-nab-joyys-china-unit/ Wed, 28 Oct 2020 06:29:03 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152229 Baidu AI insightsSearch giant Baidu is near a deal to acquire US-listed Chinese video-streaming platform Joyy's China operations in order to boost its livestream business.]]> Baidu AI insights

Search giant Baidu is reportedly nearing a deal to acquire US-listed Chinese video-streaming social platform Joyy’s China operations in an attempt to boost its livestream business.

Why it matters: Baidu’s expansion to the red-hot livestream sector is a move to diversify its revenue streams as its core advertising business loses ground to rivals like Bytedance.

  • Baidu, along with Alibaba and Tencent, was known as “BAT,” the three biggest tech companies in China. But the company has seen the gap between its market valuation and those of its two peers widen as tech upstarts like Bytedance and Meituan catch up.
  • Baidu’s current $46 billion market capitalization has fallen far short of Alibaba’s $860 billion and Tencent’s $734 billion valuations.

Details: Baidu is nearing a deal to acquire Joyy’s Chinese operations for a deal worth $3 billion to $4 billion, local media Jiemian reported citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • Baidu will take over Yy, the entertainment show livestream app targeting Chinese audiences, the app’s content operations, technology, and team after the deal, according to the report.
  • China operations play a much lesser role for Joyy, which is increasingly focused on the global market. Overseas users represent 91% of the company’s 457.1 million monthly active users, according to the company’s second quarter earnings report.
  • The deal could be a win-win cooperation for both companies. Joyy’s livestream business provides Baidu the necessary technologies and user base to start with and Joyy can narrow its focus on global expansion.

Context:  Baidu began testing out the livestream space this year. In April, it began recruiting livestream hosts and merchants in preparation for the launch of an live-stream e-commerce platform. At the same time, it added live-stream features to its main search app, its video-streaming app Haokan, and communication platform Baidu Tieba.

  • Baidu’s ad revenue shrank 8% in the second quarter of this year compared with the same quarter a year earlier.
  • Joyy sold its controlling interest in game-streaming platform Huya to Tencent in August. Tencent merged Huya with its rival Douyu to form a single dominating player in the e-sports market.
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Pre-Singles Day delivery chaos, produce app Yiguo goes bust: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/10/28/pre-singles-day-delivery-chaos-produce-app-yiguo-goes-bust-retailheads/ Wed, 28 Oct 2020 05:46:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152234 singles day logistics alibabaA troubled week for logistics companies ahead of Singles Day amid delivery driver strikes and Alibaba-backed Yunda Express's boycott of an SEA rival.]]> singles day logistics alibaba

China’s logistics industry had a troubled week just as the industry ramps up for the Singles Day high season with reports of delivery driver strikes across the country. Alibaba-backed Yunda Express joined a boycott against a Southeast Asian rival that is expanding quickly into the Chinese market. Meanwhile, Yiguo, the Alibaba-backed fresh produce retailer, went bankrupt.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Oct. 22 – 28.

Courier protests ahead of Singles Day

Chinese logistics firms are facing pushback from their delivery fleets amid widely circulating reports about labor strikes on social media platforms over the last week. The strikes reportedly affected several major couriers in the country—STO Express, YTO Express, ZTO Express, Best Express, and Yunda Express. Operations for the five companies, collectively known as “’Four Tong One Da” in reference to the second characters in their Chinese names, are significantly hampered in second- and third-tier cities, according to reports.

The “deliveryman strike” hashtag on China’s microblogging platform Weibo drew 13 million views, while more than 13,000 Weibo users joined the discussion. Customers also flooded other social platforms like Douban (in Chinese) and Baidu Tieba to express their discontent with delayed parcel deliveries.

Two delivery driver strikes took place on Oct. 19: one in Fuzhou, a city in eastern Fujian province, and another in Shanghai, according to China Labour Bulletin’s Strike Map. There have been at least 25 courier strikes this year, according to the map. Workers are protesting lowered wages or delayed pay.

The uncertainties brought by the strikes have raised concern over e-commerce platforms’ order fulfillment capacity, as the industry gears up for the busiest shopping season of the year ahead of the Nov. 11 Singles Day promotion. Several couriers denied strike rumors, telling local media that their offline distribution centers are “operating normally” in preparation for the upcoming shopping festival. (Lieyunwang.com, in Chinese)

Boycott of SEA interloper

Chinese logistics firm Yunda Express has prohibited all of its offline franchisees from cooperating with newcomer J&T Express. Both receiving or delivering parcels on behalf of the Southeast Asian rival is forbidden, according to a statement made public on Oct. 19, local media reported. Orders in process will be returned to the sender or will require the receiver to pick them up. Franchisees that violate the rules will receive a fine of up to RMB 5,000 ($745). Yunda’s move follows shortly after local rivals like YTO Express and STO Express instituted similar rules.

Given the immensity of China’s logistics landscape, most Chinese courier companies operate under a franchise-based model in order to achieve economies of scale. The franchise partnership is technically an exclusive deal that prohibits franchise agents from cooperating with other couriers, but it is a common practice for franchisees to cooperate with several logistics brands at the same time.

By reiterating the exclusive operating rules, Yunda is fending off competition from J&T, the delivery upstart that began expanding aggressively in China beginning in March. J&T seized market share by offering subsidies and leveraging rivals’ existing distribution networks, a move called “network squatting.”

J&T was founded in 2015 by the founder of Oppo Indonesia, Li Jie, with funding support from Duan Yongping, the Chinese billionaire entrepreneur behind smartphone brands Oppo, Vivo, and a key investor of Pinduoduo. In China, J&T cooperates with e-commerce players like Pinduoduo, Suning.com, and Douyin. (Southern Metropolis Daily, in Chinese)

Another fresh produce casualty

Yiguo, once a prominent Chinese fresh produce e-commerce platform, is undergoing bankruptcy and reorganization procedures, marking the fallout of yet another high-profile player in the sector. The company accrued debt totaling RMB 2.3 billion and held net assets of RMB 1.1 billion as of June this year, according to local media.

Yiguo is a prominent fresh food brand under Alibaba, which holds a more-than 35% stake in the company through affiliated companies. Its most recent $300 million round was raised from Alibaba’s Tmall in 2017.

The Alibaba tie-up helped Yiguo multiply its gross merchandise value thanks to traffic support from Tmall’s fresh produce business, Tmall Supermarket Fresh. However, overreliance on Alibaba’s support made the company vulnerable to external changes. In 2018, Alibaba announced that it was handing over operations of Tmall Supermarket Fresh from Yiguo to its own retail store chain Freshippo. The shift dealt a heavy blow to Yiguo’s business, which drew over 90% of its orders from Tmall in 2017. The platform had been in a tailspin ever since.

Just 10 months after the bankruptcy of rival Taojiji, Yiguo is another cautionary tale for fresh produce e-commerce platforms despite a boost this year from the pandemic lockdown period. (Tencent, in Chinese)

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Online tutor Yuanfudao lands $1.2 billion on doubled valuation https://technode.com/2020/10/22/online-tutor-yuanfudao-lands-1-2-billion-on-doubled-valuation/ Thu, 22 Oct 2020 06:46:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152070 yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids childrenChinese online education unicorn Yuanfudao closed a $1.2 billion Series G2, totaling funds raised this year to $2.2 billion.]]> yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids children

Chinese online education firm Yuanfudao announced the completion of a $1.2 billion Series G2 which valued the company at $15.5 billion, according to a statement sent to TechNode.

Details: DST Global led the round, a second batch of Yuanfudao’s Series G, with participation from CITICPE, GIC, Temasek, TBP, DCP, Ocean Link, Greenwoods, and Danhe Capital.

  • The statement also made official a $1 billion Series G1 received in April this year, and confirmed a report by local media on Wednesday about a second batch. Together, the two rounds boost the total raised in the Series G to $2.2 billion.
  • The G2 financing round increased Yuanfudao’s valuation to $15.5 billion, almost doubling its $7.8 billion valuation from six months ago.
  • The Beijing-based firm plans to use the cash for educational technology innovation, to accelerate new curriculum product development, and expand its online education service system, according to the statement.
  • The company said that two of its core businesses—live tutoring platform Yuanfudao and Zebra AI Class which targets pre-school students—have amassed a combined 3.7 million users.

Context: In China’s crowded online education market, Yuanfudao is competing with rivals like Zuoyebang and Vipkid.

  • Archrival Zuoyebang, also focused on K-12 sector, is reportedly closing a $700 million to $800 million round, according to a Chinese media report. Similarly, the round comes on the heels of a hefty $750 million Series E received in June this year.
  • Investors are rushing to the online education sector, which has seen a boost as a result of the pandemic.
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Direct sales model opens opportunities for Chinese brands https://technode.com/2020/10/22/direct-sales-model-opens-opportunities-for-chinese-brands/ Thu, 22 Oct 2020 06:25:28 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152060 e-commerceChinese consumer-facing brands are trying to cut reliance on Taobao and Amazon. Direct sales are an alternative to reliance on platforms.]]> e-commerce

Pre-sales for China’s Nov. 11 Singles Day shopping festival began this morning, marking the kickoff of the country’s biggest e-commerce season. As a dizzying array of activities—including steep sales and weeks-long promotional games—push product, Chinese brands will rack up the year’s biggest sales figures.

But Alibaba is no longer the only game in town. As platforms like Instagram make it easier than ever to reach consumers abroad, some brands are finding they can go it alone.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

An increasing number of Chinese brands are finding success in overseas markets, and more are going around third-party platforms to sell directly to shoppers hailing from North America to Southeast Asia. The trends sees export brands attempting to circumvent the global sourcing soup which has ensnared conventional selling channels during a year in which they have been walloped by the Covid-19 pandemic and hobbled by geopolitics. 

Refining the overseas sales model

E-commerce in China is dominated by a few massive platforms, which offer sellers an array of infrastructure and services from payment to marketing. When Chinese brands have looked for overseas markets, they’ve tended to rely on Amazon as the global equivalent. 

This situation, however, is changing, with more Chinese consumer-facing brands and retailers choosing to build their own online channels—either websites or apps—to sell directly to consumers rather than relying solely on marketplace platforms.

Direct-to-customer sales are on the rise amid a growing trends for Chinese businesses to sell to overseas markets via digital cross-border channels.

  • We don’t know how big the direct sales market is, but e-commerce site tools company Ueeshop CEO Lin Yongpeng predicts 50% growth year-on-year.
  • “The changes of consumer behavior that’s brought about by the pandemic is here to stay. Considering the supply and demand, we are optimistic about the long term development of cross-border e-commerce businesses in the long run. Of course, companies that take their bets early will enjoy the first-mover advantages,” Tiger Brokers analyst Eline Wang told TechNode.
  • China announced in May plans to build 46 cross-border e-commerce pilot zones across the country, bringing the total number to 105. The zones will offer preferential policies such as tax exemptions on retail exports.

Third-party shopping sites, such as Amazon and Alibaba cross-border e-commerce platform Aliexpress, are benefiting from the shift, but their role in helping Chinese cross-border brands expand globally is taking a back seat to direct-to-customer channels.

Singles Day

Nov. 11 began as a day when single adults celebrated their unattached status—symbolized by the standalone “1” numerals in the 11-11 date. Alibaba first popularized the day as a shopping promotion in 2009, marketing the day as an opportunity for singles to treat themselves with a little frivolous spending. Falling five months after the mid-year 618 shopping festival and a month after the Golden Week holiday, it has evolved into a weeks-long sales season.

But this year, there’s a question mark over the sales season: shopping platforms and governments have been subsidizing consumption almost all year in a bid to drive post-Covid recovery. These sales produced the biggest-ever 6.18 spending festival. After a year of heavy shopping, do consumers have any appetite left? 

China’s cross-border e-commerce market

China’s cross-border e-commerce market, which includes both imports and exports, has grown swiftly over the past few years. Sales for this retail segment hit RMB 186 billion ($27.8 billion) in 2019, with average annual growth of 49.5% each year since 2015, according to a report (in Chinese) from Askci Consulting. Sales are expected to reach RMB 280 billion in 2020.

  • The proportion of imports among total e-commerce sales surged past 20% in 2018, from less than 10% between 2008 to 2012, the Askci showed. 
  • China cross-border online sales jumped (in Chinese) 52.8% to RMB 187.4 billion in the first three quarters of this year, compared with the same period a year earlier. To compare, overall import and export trade volume rose 0.7% year on year during the same period, according to data from the General Administration of Customs.

Direct to customers

More Chinese brands are taking an approach to online sales familiar from Western brands. Fashion brands like H&M and the Gap have always tried to get customers to buy from their own sites or apps rather than a third party platform. Unlike them, however, Chinese brands adopting direct sales models have stayed online, avoiding costly investments in brick and mortar.

  • Many Chinese brands have been active in global markets for years through platforms like Amazon, but increasing traffic from social networks like Instagram has encouraged Chinese brands to try self-run online stores built on brand awareness. With online marketing costs hitting a historic low, there seems to be little reason to continue relying on a single selling channel.
  • The number of brands opting to sell directly to customers is rising in markets across the globe. Direct-to-consumer brands in India, another vast and growing e-commerce market, reported 78% annual growth in third-quarter sales through their own websites, compared with 31% year-on-year growth during the same time period for the overall e-commerce industry, according to a report from e-commerce platform Unicommerce. The report showed the number of brands building their own websites jumped 51% during the same period. 

Shein: the pioneer

Shein, a Nanjing-based fast-fashion brand, has been one of the most successful companies at leveraging direct-to-consumer sales to boost international growth. Practically unknown to Chinese customers, the retailer is already the leading fast fashion app in a handful of Western countries, including the US, France, Spain, and the UK.

  • Reuters ranked the Chinese retailer is ranked the largest online fashion company in the world by sales of self-branded products, overtaking established rivals like Zara and H&M, citing data from Euromonitor.
  • The Shein app notched 229.4 million downloads as of end September, compared with H&M’s 123.5 million and Zara’s 90.6 million, Sensor Tower data showed.
  • Though it sells to nearly every country, nearly half of Shein’s customers are in North America, according to September data from Similar Web. Europe is the firm’s second-largest market, where Italy represents 11%, France 7%, and Spain 5% of the company’s total users.
  • The 12-year-old fashion retailer doubled traffic and sales from its official website in 2019 compared with the previous year. Annual gross merchandise volume (GMV) hit RMB 20 billion in 2019 and exceeded (in Chinese) RMB 40 billion for the first half of 2020. It is expected to reach RMB 100 billion this year, local media reported.
  • Shein’s success could be attributed to a range of factors, from its affordable fashion positioning to viral online marketing strategies on social platforms like Instagram and Pinterest. But its direct-to-consumer model is the foundation for its success, facilitating brand storytelling, a CRM system, and cost management.
  • The company reportedly received in August hundreds of millions of dollars in its Series E at a $15 billion valuation, and is aiming for a US listing as early as this year, a source with knowledge of the matter told TechNode.
  • It hasn’t all been smooth sailing. The company has seen its fair share of controversy, from selling a necklace featuring a swastika pendant to alleged copyright infringement (in Chinese).
  • Other Chinese brands exporting to overseas buyers through self-run websites include Anker, a Changsha-based electronic accessories manufacturer, and electronics gadget seller Banggood.

When in-house makes sense

Brands considering self-run e-commerce websites need to weigh a number of considerations built into each selling model, including time, effort, access to customer data, and upfront costs as well as long-term cost-savings.

  • Sales or branding: Selling through third-party e-commerce platforms is, in a large part, buying traffic from their huge user bases. Platforms leave little space for merchants to create a unique customer experience; the priority is driving sales rather than connecting with customers and brand-building. Proprietary e-commerce platforms, meanwhile, are better platforms for companies looking to tell a brand story and increase customer interaction as well as brand loyalty. However, third-party e-commerce platforms, with its massive user base, may offer brands an easier start and better chance to take off.
  • Cost of traffic is higher for brands operating on third-party e-commerce platforms due to competition between rival brands listed on the same marketplace. Direct channels can be more profitable in the long term; however, brands need to invest time and effort in building its user base in the beginning. Incremental costs for getting self-operated channels up and running reduce over time, said Tiger Brokers’ Wang. 
  • User data ownership. Brands that are leveraging marketplaces like Amazon don’t have direct access to user data, a coveted asset for precise customer targeting and other marketing and merchandising functions. On the contrary, brands operating their own online stores have full ownership over customer data, local media (in Chinese) points out.
  • Regulations: Marketplace sites have their own set of rules, governing everything from product categories to the number of SKUs that can be listed. For example, Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) sellers, who partner with the platform to keep large inventories in the company’s warehouses for quick delivery times, are vulnerable to the platform’s policy changes. In 2016, Amazon raised its fees before the holiday season due to limited warehouse space, impacting many FBA sellers. 
  • However, the absence of platform regulation in direct sales also creates risks of shady practices like sales of counterfeits, inviting new regulations. In April, the General Administration of Customs rolled out a set of rules for supervising product returns on cross-border e-commerce sites, offering streamlined processes for product returns and expanding logistical support, and more.

Why now?

B2C commerce sites selling directly to customers isn’t new. Chinese e-commerce companies Lightinthebox and DX.com reached their height of popularity around 2013 before losing ground to third-party platforms due lack of branding and sales of counterfeit items.

  • A new wave of direct sales pioneers, including Anker and Shein, have seen impressive growth over the past two years. Their success is drawing more followers.
  • The US was the most important market for most Chinese direct-to-consumer e-commerce sites. Markets such as Mexico, Italy, and Ireland are also seeing robust growth, Ueeshop’s Lin said in a recent speech (in Chinese).
  • A wide array of supporting tools and services have helped pave the way for self-operated channels. E-commerce site builders Shopify and Magento, sorting systems (in Chinese), and third-party payment solutions have lowered the threshold for brands looking to build their own channels. Companies servicing self-run e-commerce sites are enjoying the boom as a result: Shopify’s total revenue in the second quarter nearly doubled to $714.3 million from the same quarter a year earlier. New stores created on the Shopify platform grew 71% in Q2 2020 compared with Q1 2020.
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Singles Day sales begin, ed tech firms nab hefty funding: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/10/21/singles-day-sales-begin-ed-tech-firms-nab-hefty-funding-retailheads/ Wed, 21 Oct 2020 07:01:43 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=152013 Singles Day Taobao alibabaChina is already gearing up for Singles Day, while two of the country's largest ed-tech firms each nabbed in hundreds of millions of dollars in investment. ]]> Singles Day Taobao alibaba

Early start for Singles Day

Singles Day this year, normally a one-day shopping festival held on Nov. 11, will have two sales windows, Alibaba said in statement sent to TechNode on Tuesday. The first will take place Nov. 1 – 3 in addition to the actual day. Pre-sales for its first sales window starts Wednesday, marking the onset of the shopping festival for the year. Pre-sales require users to pay a deposit beforehand in order to enjoy discounted prices when the formal sale begins.

China’s shopping festivals are expanding both in number and duration, especially at a time when the state is investing heavily to drive domestic consumption for post-coronavirus recovery.

Livestreaming, which surged during last year’s event, is expected to take the center stage this year. Li Jiaqi, the “Lipstick King” with 33 million followers on Taobao Live, drew more than 160 million viewers in a seven-hour livestream session on Tuesday evening, mainly hawking cosmetics. 

Ed tech unicorns grab big bucks

Chinese online education unicorn Yuanfudao reportedly raised a $1 billion Series G2 led by DST Global with participation from seven to eight other investment capital firms, Chinese media outlet Late Post reported. The round follows a G round of the same size raised in April. The round reportedly valued the company at $15.5 billion, almost doubling its $7.8 billion valuation from six months ago.

Late Post also reported that Yuanfudao rival Zuoyebang is closing a $700 million to $800 million round, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Investors for the reported round include Fountainvest Partners, Softbank, Sequoia Capital China, and Tiger Global Management. Similarly, the round comes on heels of a hefty $750 million Series E received in June this year.

Investors flocked to China’s online education market, especially the more lucrative K-12 education sector, when the coronavirus pandemic forced to students to study from home during lockdown. (Late Post, in Chinese)

Taobao Taiwan shuts down

Taobao Taiwan, the e-commerce platform run by Claddagh Venture Investment, will be shut down by the end of 2020 after the UK-registered operator refused to re-register as a China-backed entity.

Claddagh said it made the decision due to “multiple uncertainties in the market.” The platform stopped taking orders on Oct. 15, and will gradually wind down support services like payment and delivery. The company pledged to help merchants deliver existing orders to buyers.

The Taiwanese authorities declared that Claddagh was in fact controlled by mainland Chinese tech giant Alibaba and issued an ultimatum to the company in August, requiring it to either re-register as Chinese-backed or leave the island.

Claddagh works with Alibaba, which holds a 28.8% stake in the investment firm, through brand authorization. Alibaba’s share in Claddagh is lower than the 30% criteria for any company operating in Taiwan to be deemed a Chinese investment-backed business. The local authorities still viewd the company as a Chinese investment, saying that the UK firm relies heavily on Alibaba to run Taobao Taiwan.

Chinese tech firms are increasingly feeling the weight of political tensions between the straits and beyond. Sales of video-streaming services operated by Chinese companies like Iqiyi and Tencent were barred in August. (The Paper, in Chinese)

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Golden Week, Bytedance tests cross-border e-commerce: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/10/14/golden-week-economy-crossborder-e-commerce-retailheads-2/ Wed, 14 Oct 2020 06:32:21 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151844 e-commerceGolden Week prompts a consumption surge, Tiktok owner Bytedance tests cross-border e-commerce, and Tencent doubles it bet on livestreaming.]]> e-commerce

Golden Week, China’s national holiday that spanned Oct. 1 to 8 this year, prompted a surge in domestic spending which drove a robust rebound in consumption as pandemic effects begin to recede. Tiktok owner Bytedance tests cross-border e-commerce, and Tencent doubles it bet on livestreaming.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Oct. 1 – 14.

Golden Week shines

  • Chinese tourists took 637 million domestic trips during the eight-day Golden Week, generating revenue of RMB 466.6 billion ($69.7 billion), according to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. However, China’s battered travel market still has a long road to recovery. This year’s number of domestic trips was around 80% of last year’s figure, even with the additional day, while revenue was 70% of last year’s RMB 650 billion. Trip.com, China’s largest online travel platform, trumpeted lackluster wins to offset the downturn in its lucrative international travel business. (TechNode)
  • China recorded RMB 3.7 billion of box office revenue from October 1 to 7, second only to last year’s RMB 4.5 billion during the same period, according to data from the National Film Special Fund Office. This year, the state mandated a 75% operating capacity for public places including theaters. China’s online ticketing services like Maoyan Entertainment and Alibaba-backed Taopiaopiao benefited the most from the surge. (Tencent News, in Chinese)
  • China Union Pay recorded online transaction volume of RMB 2.52 trillion during the holiday, up 8.3% year on year. China’s centralized online payment clearinghouse Nets Union Clearing Corporation reported that daily transaction value during the holiday increased 47% from the previous year, a sharp deceleration from the 163% annual growth seen during last year’s holiday. The number of daily transactions increased by nearly 42% year on year during the holiday, down from 80% annual growth last year. (Mpaypass, in Chinese)

Bytedance enters cross-border e-commerce

  • Bytedance, the owner of short video apps Douyin and Tiktok, is testing a cross-border e-commerce project named Fuxiang Haigou, which offers special sales for branded products from a dozen countries. The service is accessible through mini-programs on the company’s news aggregation app, Toutiao, as well as Douyin. (Ebrun, in Chinese)
  • Shein, Chinese fast fashion app primarily targeting overseas markets, entered a partnership with Canada’s installment payment service Paybright as the Nanjing-based company continues to expand its global footprint. With annual gross merchandise volume of RMB 20 billion in 2019, the Chinese fashion retailer’s popularity among teen consumers in the US, Europe, and the Middle Eastern markets is on the rise. The company is reportedly aiming for a US IPO this year. (Newswire)

Tencent gears up for livestream e-commerce

  • Tencent’s mega messaging app Wechat is reportedly testing on a select group of users a livestream function on Channels, the Douyin-like short video feature it launched in January. The feature does not support virtual gifting now but allows viewers to like and comment on the livestreams. The livestreamer can share the sessions in Wechat chat groups as well as their Moments newsfeeds. Integrating a livestream feature to Channels highlights Tencent’s ambition to tap into short video and livestream e-commerce business, creating a new facet for competition with Douyin and Kuaishou. (Sina Finance, in Chinese)

Alibaba vs. Miniso

  • Taobao Deals, Alibaba’s take on Pinduoduo targeting China’s bargain-seekers, opened its first offline experience store on Friday, selling products from manufacturing partners for as low as RMB 1. The move helped promote an online shopping campaign on the low-priced shopping app from Oct. 10 – 31. The company reportedly plans to open 1,000 such stores within three years. Taobao Deals, also known as Taobao Tejia, said it had around 40 million monthly active users as of June 2020, growing rapidly after a major update in March. Meanwhile, Alibaba’s expansion to offline retail for low-price products competes with Tencent-backed household product brand Miniso. Miniso filed its prospectus with the US Securities and Exchange Commission in late September for a New York listing. (Ebrun, in Chinese)

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Golden Week helps China’s travel apps inch toward recovery https://technode.com/2020/10/13/golden-week-helps-chinas-travel-apps-inch-toward-recovery/ Tue, 13 Oct 2020 08:56:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151760 virus outbreak 2019-nCov coronavirus epidemic China travel platform refund cancel Bejing Wuhan Ctrip Qunar tourismThe Golden Week holiday offers a glimpse of the pace of recovery for China’s battered travel industry, which has been badly hit by the pandemic.]]> virus outbreak 2019-nCov coronavirus epidemic China travel platform refund cancel Bejing Wuhan Ctrip Qunar tourism

The Chinese National Day holiday, known as “Golden Week” for spurring travel and other consumption, ended on Thursday. This year, the holiday was watched particularly closely—as the last major holiday of the year, it was seen as a harbinger of whether China’s battered tourism industry would rebound quickly following the onset of the pandemic early this year.

Shift to domestic travel

Although the virus may be less of a concern for Chinese tourists compared with those in other countries, the government and consumers themselves remained cautious about traveling overseas.

  • Golden Week travel this year was primarily driven by domestic travel, when in recent years the holiday has been viewed as a time for Chinese tourists to take overseas trips.
  • Last year there were more than 7 million (in Chinese) overseas trips made during the holiday. This year, various restrictions on visa applications and quarantine requirements have made cross-border trips impractical.
  • The focus on domestic trips could further slow a full rebound for China’s largest online travel platform, Trip.com, which earned around 35% of its revenue through international travel in the first half of 2019.
  • Demand for short journeys increased, giving rise to self-driving tourism as more holiday makers sought to avoid package tours and exposure to crowded public transportation centers.
  • The shift boosted car rental businesses during the holiday. The number of car rental days on Trip.com platform climbed 50% compared with a year ago, the company said in a statement sent to TechNode. Average spending per car rental order exceeded RMB 2,000. Southwestern Yunnan province and southern Hainan province were popular tourist destinations for those driving themselves.

Competition among travel platforms

  • The shift to domestic tourism has weighed on China’s largest online travel platform, Trip.com. The company has been focused on growing its international travel business amid sharpening competition from Alibaba’s Fliggy and Meituan in domestic travel.
  • In 2018, the company said that it was aiming for its global travel business to make up 40% to 50% of its total revenue within five years.
  • Trip.com expects its revenue to drop by around 50% year on year in the third quarter after it reported that its second quarter revenue plunged 64% year on year.
  • China’s online travel industry is among the worst-hit sectors by the pandemic, which began spreading widely in the country during Spring Festival holiday, the world’s largest human migration event.

Edging toward normalcy

China, where the coronavirus first appeared late last year, had an early start advantage in post-pandemic economic recovery as the government’s measures to control the spread of the virus have largely proved effective. However, the impact of the epidemic is expected to linger as rates of infection worldwide remain stubbornly high. 

  • China tourists generated RMB 466.6 billion ($69.7 billion) in revenue from 637 million  domestic trips during the eight-day Golden Week holiday, according (in Chinese) to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. The holiday was extended by one day thanks to overlap with the Mid-Autumn Festival this year.
  • The number of domestic trips was around 80% of last year’s 782 million during the seven-day holiday, which generated nearly RMB 650 billion in tourism revenue.
  • Revenue from this year’s Golden Week tourism accounted for around 70% of revenue earned during the same holiday a year ago. This is a significant improvement over tourism revenue earned during this year’s Tomb Sweeping Day in early April, which sank 80% compared with a year ago.
  • China’s tourism watchdog expects the country’s tourism revenue as well as the number of tourists to halve in 2020
  • Official controls have loosened, but remain in place. Scenic spots like Beijing’s Forbidden City required online reservation in advance and operated at 75% capacity during the holiday. Municipal governments including Shanghai recommended that students and their families refrain from travel. Those who traveled out of the city would have to quarantine for 14 days, which effectively eliminated travel plans for many families, even short-distance trips.

New regulations lend pressure

In addition to the travel slowdown brought by the pandemic, China’s tourism industry is also facing new challenges from the government, which is stepping up regulation of the market.

  • China’s first laws regulating online travel platforms and agencies took effect on Oct. 1. It includes a raft of rules that ban the abuse of big data and other new technologies used in unfair business practices such as user targeting to boost prices, removing negative user reviews, and more.
  • Consumers have accused large Chinese online travel platforms, including Trip.com and Alibaba-backed Fliggy, of charging higher prices to customers who they think will be willing to pay more for the same product or service by analyzing user data. Both companies have denied the allegations.
  • Implementation is expected to quash such practices in the online travel market, where price manipulation is common. It may also act as an example for other sectors that are thought to use similar tactics, such as ride-hailing and e-commerce.
  • The rules could have short-term cooling effects on revenue while long-term benefits could include better user retention. An industry analyst told Xinhua (in Chinese) that without the rule, there was little reason to do away with the practice, which could grow revenues 20%.

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Luckin fined, VCs seek out new Chinese brands: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/09/29/retailheads-luckin-fined-vcs-seek-out-new-chinese-brands/ Tue, 29 Sep 2020 11:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151528 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsLast week, the state market regulator fined Luckin and the companies that assisted its sales fraud. New Chinese brands are attracting investor attention. ]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps

Luckin fined, rolls out a new strategy

  • Chinese authorities imposed a RMB 61 million ($9 million) fine on Luckin and a group of affiliated companies for creating unfair competition by engaging in sales fraud. This is the first fine the Chinese coffee chain operator has received after admitting to financial fraud in early April. (TechNode)
  • Luckin, still reeling from the scandal, adjusted its growth strategy to focus on shoring up the repurchase rate for existing users rather than attracting new users. To cut costs, it is using privately managed groups on Tencent’s enterprise communication app Wechat Work to push coupons, encouraging repeat business. Users scan QR codes displayed in its offline stores or WeChat official account posts. Luckin has reportedly amassed over 180,000 private traffic users, and the figure is growing at around 60,000 per month. (Iresearch, in Chinese)

VCs investing into China’s new brands

New Chinese brands are capitalizing on growing consumer interest in domestic brands and products, especially those featuring traditional Chinese styles and cultural elements. E-commerce giants like Alibaba and short video apps like Kuaishou are beefing up support for such brands with more online traffic as well as updated supply chains.

  • Perfect Diary, China’s hit e-commerce-based cosmetic brand, reportedly received $140 million investment at a valuation of $4 billion, double the $2 billion market cap it was rumored as having earlier this year. Private equity firms Warburg Pincus and The Carlyle Group invested $70 million each in the round as the company prepares a US listing reportedly slated before year-end. Zhang Donghao, chief financial officer of e-commerce site Vip.com, will reportedly join the three-year-old company to oversee stock market debut protocols. (All Weather TMT, in Chinese)
  • Jiangxiaobai, a Chinese liquor brand, announced Sept. 24 the completion of a Series C for an undisclosed amount led by China Renaissance’s Huaxing Growth Capital. Baillie Gifford, Loyal Valley Capital, CMB International, Kunyan Investment Management, and Wens Investment joined the round. (Xinhua, in Chinese)
  • Miniso, a Tencent-backed household product brand, filed its prospectus with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Sept. 24 for a New York listing. In the same week, the company facing scrutiny over product safety concerns. The Shanghai medical product regulator found that chloroform levels in a nail care product sold by the company was 1,400 times higher than the standard allowed by the state.  (Sina Tech, in Chinese)

Grocery delivery battle, now even hotter

  • Users of Alibaba’s food delivery platform Eleme will soon be able to order from Tmall Supermarket, Alibaba’s online grocery marketplace. Orders will deliver to users within an hour for some locations or a half-day for others, rather than the previous 1 to 2 day delivery window for orders placed via the Taobao or Tmall apps. The move follows shortly after Alibaba made products from Freshippo available on the platform, as the e-commerce giant further integrates its local lifestyle services. (Krasia)
  • Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi rolled out last Friday an independent app for its grocery delivery platform Chengxin Youxuan, a program it began piloting in June. The company said the service had more than 550,000 orders per day in three cities within China’s southwestern Sichuan province. The pilot will expand to more provinces in September. Entering the market means the company will be competing with grocery delivery giants ranging from Meituan to Alibaba. (Tech Globe, in Chinese)

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JD Health preparing for Hong Kong listing https://technode.com/2020/09/28/jd-health-preparing-for-hong-kong-listing/ Mon, 28 Sep 2020 07:11:27 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151496 jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhcThe filing from JD Health comes at a time of growing market interest in the healthcare and biotech industries as a result of the pandemic.]]> jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhc

JD Health, the healthcare unit of JD.com, on Sunday filed a draft prospectus for a listing in Hong Kong, making it the third affiliate of the e-commerce company looking to go public this year. 

JD announced on the same day that its intends to spin off JD Health by way of a separate listing on the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange. After the spin-off, JD Group will remain the largest shareholder in the company with a 81% stake through its subsidiary JD Jiankang. All the other shareholders, include private equity firms Sum Xi Holdings and Triton Bidco Limited, each own less than a 5% stake in the company.

JD Health’s core business is its retail pharmacy unit and online healthcare consulting services. The company earned revenue of RMB 8.8 billion ($1.3 billion) in the first half of this year, up 76% compared with the same year-ago period. Its revenue grew 32% year on year in 2019 and 46% annually in 2018.

The company’s main revenue sources are sales of pharmaceutical and healthcare products under JD’s direct sales model, commission and service fees from third-party merchants, as well as advertisements from suppliers and merchants, according to the prospectus.

JD Health has received with a total of $1.8 billion in funding since it was established, according to Crunchbase. The company’s latest $830 million investment was received in August from Hillhouse Capital.

The filing comes at a time of growing market interest in healthcare and biotech industries as a result of the pandemic. JD Health is competing with multiple rivals including Alibaba-backed Ali Health, Tencent-backed Wedoctor, and Pingan Good Doctor.

After a rough 2019, the e-commerce giant has been gaining momentum since the beginning of this year when e-commerce become one of the few industries which benefited from Covid-19. The company’s share prices surged more than three-fold to a historical high of $79 apiece in late August compared with around $20 at the beginning of 2019.

In addition to a Hong Kong dual listing of the core online retail business, JD’s grocery delivery unit Dada JD Daojia went public in the US in June and its fintech unit JD Digits filed for an initial public offering at Shanghai’s STAR Market in July.

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Covid-19 squeezes Trip.com in Q2 as global travel stalls https://technode.com/2020/09/25/covid-19-squeezes-trip-com-in-q2-as-global-travel-stalls/ Fri, 25 Sep 2020 06:39:44 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151447 trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19Trip.com continued to grapple in the second quarter from stifling effects from the pandemic, and it expects the fallout to extend into the third quarter.]]> trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19

Chinese online travel giant Trip.com continued to grapple in the second quarter from effects from the pandemic, and said Thursday that it expects the fallout to extend into the third quarter.

Why it matters: Trip.com’s business has not recovered from travel suspensions resulting from Covid-19. The company’s domestic travel segment saw “strong momentum of recovery,” but a “steep decline” in international travel weighed. The firm expects that the pandemic’s negative impact will linger.

  • The upcoming Golden Week holiday which runs from Oct. 1 to 8 is expected (in Chinese) to boost the Chinese online travel market, especially at a time when restrictions on cross-border travel remain tight.
  • Trip.com’s international travel segment made up 35% of its total revenue in the first quarter of 2019 and may continue to weigh on the company’s performance in the long run.

Details: Trip.com reported net revenue of RMB 3.2 billion ($448 million) in the quarter ended June 30, falling 64% year on year, according to the company’s filing after market close in the US on Thursday. Its revenue beat the high end of estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance at $379.5 million.

  • The company forecasted net revenue to decrease by approximately 47% to 52% year over year for the third quarter of 2020.
  • Net loss attributable to shareholders in Q2 increased to RMB 476 million from RMB 403 million in the same period in 2019 but narrowed considerably compared with the RMB 5.4 billion seen in the previous quarter.
  • Four major business lines including accommodation, air ticketing, and various in-destination services are recovering, CEO Jane Sun said during the earnings conference call. “On the whole, pricing remains significantly reduced on a year over year basis, but the gap has been narrowed month by month,” she said.
  • The company’s shares traded slightly higher to close at $27.75 each on Thursday. Trip.com shares have been on a steady growth trajectory since March as life in China returns to normal, although it still nearly 40% lower than its peak price in January.

Context: Trip.com is reportedly mulling delisting from Nasdaq amid intensifying tensions between the US and China.

  • The company is joining tech giants like Alibaba in offering discounts and coupons to spur traveler consumption.
  • The Chinese online travel agency entered into a strategic partnership with e-commerce giant JD.com in a bid to tap the domestic tourism revival.
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Wework China secures $200 million, cedes control https://technode.com/2020/09/24/wework-china-secures-200-million-cedes-control/ Thu, 24 Sep 2020 05:58:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151385 wework china co-working neumann failed ipoWework China is pulling back from its aggressive expansion and cutting costs after its dramatic downfall last year involving a failed IPO.]]> wework china co-working neumann failed ipo

Shared workspace firm Wework said Thursday that it had secured a $200 million investment in its loss-making China operations led by private equity firm Trustbridge Partners, which assumed control over the unit’s operations.

Why it matters: The troubled co-working firm is pulling back from its aggressive expansion and cutting expanses after its dramatic downfall last year, which sank its valuation to $2.9 billion from $47 billion.

  • Opportunities brought by the Covid-19 pandemic could help buoy prospects for the China unit, which the company has said faces regulatory hurdles.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Will co-working survive WeWork?

Details: Parent firm We Co. relinquished operational control of the company to Trustbridge Partners, according to Bloomberg, but will collect an annual fee for the use of the Wework brand and services.

  • Trustbridge Partners operating partner Michael Jiang was appointed Wework China’s acting CEO, according to a company statement. Before joining Trustbridge, Jiang was a senior vice president at services mega-app Meituan.
  • Both Wework and Trustbridge said they see a growing demand for space-as-a service in China as companies “reassess their real estate portfolio and adapt to the new needs of workers in a post Covid-19 world.”

Context: Wework China opened its doors in 2016 and now operates around 100 locations across 12 cities, serving more than 65,000 members. In December, the company managed 120 locations.

  • In January, Trustbridge and Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings were reportedly in talks to purchase a majority stake in Wework China, which valued the business at $1 billion, significantly less than its $5 billion valuation in September 2018.  
  • Wework’s Greater China region earned $93.56 million during the first half of 2019, accounting for 6% of the company’s total revenue. The company’s US and UK operations contributed the lion’s share.
  • Ucommune, a Wework China rival, walked away from a $100 million US IPO in favor of a backdoor listing, a maneuver allowing companies list publicly through a merger or acquisition.

Disclosure: Ucommune is a TechNode investor.

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Luckin and affiliates fined $9 million, more penalties may come https://technode.com/2020/09/23/luckin-and-affiliates-fined-9-million-more-penalties-may-come/ Wed, 23 Sep 2020 05:48:55 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151343 Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucksLuckin and its partners may receive more fines amid continuing investigations by regulators and investors at home and abroad.]]> Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucks

Chinese authorities ordered troubled coffee chain Luckin Coffee and a group of affiliated companies to pay a fine of RMB 61 million ($9 million) for creating unfair competition by engaging in sales fraud.

Why it matters: Luckin Coffee is receiving its first fine six months after admitting to financial fraud in early April. Regulators and investors at home and abroad are still investigating the company, which may see more penalties as inquiries conclude.

Details: Issued Tuesday by China’s top commerce watchdog, the State Administration for Market Regulation, the fine was applied to 45 companies, including two Luckin entities and 43 other companies that helped the coffee chain inflate its sales.

  • The regulator is the executive authority of China’s Unfair Competition Law. It found that Luckin, assisted by multiple third-party partners, inflated its sales, costs, and profits from August 2019 to April 2020. The practices violated competition laws and misled the public, it said.
  • China’s Ministry of Finance, which overseas violations of China’s Accounting Law, is also investigating Luckin, as is the US Securities and Exchange Commission, stock investors, and owners of its convertible bonds. Moreover, management led by Charles Lu are said to be facing criminal charges over the scam.
  • Luckin said it has “carried out an overall rectification on the related issues” (our translation) in a statement on Chinese microblogging site Weibo on Tuesday. “We will further improve our operations according to related laws and regulations.”

Context: Two months after short seller Muddy Water tweeted a short report from an anonymous author, Luckin admitted on April 2 that it fabricated RMB 2.2 billion in sales in 2019, causing its shares to plunge more than 80% within a week.

  • Luckin management has been fighting for control over the company since April. In a September board meeting, founder Charles Lu lost when his opponent Sean Shao made a comeback after briefly being ousted from the board two months earlier.
  • The scandal from the once high-flying coffee chain put Chinese tech companies in the crosshairs of regulators and short sellers.

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Alibaba’s digital factory, pet e-commerce booms: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/09/23/retailheads-alibabas-digital-factory-pet-e-commerce-booms/ Wed, 23 Sep 2020 04:52:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151300 e-commerce alibaba digital factory manufacturingAlibaba rolled out its Xunxi Digital Factory program, while the pet e-commerce industry and healthtech sector are booming amid the Covid-19 pandemic.]]> e-commerce alibaba digital factory manufacturing

Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba officially rolled out its digital factory program Xunxi Digital Factory last week after running a pilot project since 2018. E-commerce rivals Alibaba and Pinduoduo both furthered their moves into logistics, the backbone of online shopping. The pet economy market, meanwhile, is gaining attention in China.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Sept. 16-23.

Alibaba’s digital factory

  • Alibaba Group unveiled on Sept. 16 the Xunxi Digital Factory featuring its cloud computing infrastructure and internet of things technologies. The Hangzhou-based factory offers small- and medium-sized companies a digitalized manufacturing supply chain that allows for customizable, more responsive production. Under the company’s new manufacturing model, a program Jack Ma introduced in 2016, Xunxi is primarily focused on apparel manufacturing in its early stages. The company said that the factory has nearly doubled manufacturing efficiency by leveraging new technologies such as real-time resourcing, as well as process and cost planning. (36kr, in Chinese)

Logistics: backbone for e-commerce

  • E-commerce platform Pinduoduo has entered a strategic agreement with China Post, the state-backed postal service, to offer farmers support for their sales, logistics, and finances. China Post also pledged to build 150 agricultural production centers over the next three years. The cooperation highlights Pinduoduo’s efforts to deepen its agricultural product strategy. (Donews, in Chinese)
  • Cainiao Guoguo, Alibaba-backed parcel delivery service plans to double its user base to 400 billion in the coming year, CEO Li Jianghua said on Sunday. Additionally, the company is going to support scheduled deliveries in 100 cities, build 200,000 delivery stations across the country, and use recyclable packaging materials in 30 cities, Li said. (Tencent News, in Chinese)

 Pet e-commerce on the rise

  • JD Daojia, JD.com’s on-demand retail joint venture, launched a pet supplies shopping promotion with New Ruipeng Group, a leading pet service in China. As part of a partnership inked in July, orders for pet products placed on JD Daojia will be delivered directly from nearly 1,000 physical stores run by New Ruipeng. The orders will arrive within an hour in first-and second-tier cities like Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu, and Shenzhen. New Ruipeng inked a similar deal (in Chinese) with Meituan’s on-demand delivery arm to capitalize on the popularity of grocery delivery. (JD Daojia, in Chinese)
  • Petkit, pet specialty retailer and smart service provider, announced on Friday the completion of its Series C Plus led by current investor Qiming Venture Partners, joined by GGV and Ince Capital. The company said the funding reached eight digits in dollar value. The company’s most recent $20 million C round was received in 2019 from Qiming Venture Partners. (Petkit, in Chinese)
  • Boqii Holdings, China’s top pet-focused online retailer, filed on Sept. 8 with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for a listing with a fundraise goal of $115 million. The pet e-commerce platform is extending its offline reach to connect brand partners, pet product manufacturers, pet stores and pet hospitals. The market size of China’s pet industry nearly tripled to RMB 204.9 billion ($30.2 billion) in 2019 from 2014, and is expected to reach RMB 449.5 billion in 2024, according to Boqii’s prospectus citing data from Frost & Sullivan.(SEC)

Healthcare boom

  • JD plans to spin off its health care unit JD Health in a Hong Kong listing. The timing for the debut will depend on market conditions, according to a filing from the online retailer on Monday. JD Health is the latest JD.com affiliate preparing to go public in a recent spree. Mergers and acquisition deals as well as IPOs in China’s healthcare and biotech sector have surged amid the Covid-19 epidemic. (JD)
  • A Hangzhou-based Pinduoduo affiliate set up a heath care subsidiary in Shanghai on Sept. 17, according to corporate intelligence service Tianyancha. Headed by Pinduoduo’s general counsel and VP of finance Zhu Jianchong, the subsidiary’s business scope includes telemedicine, medical services, health food sales, and medicine sales.  (Tianyancha, in Chinese)
  • AliHealth, which rebranded as Yilu Fukang in early September, celebrated its fourth anniversary on Sept. 16. (Tencent News, in Chinese)
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JD Health may file $1 billion Hong Kong IPO by end-month https://technode.com/2020/09/18/jd-health-may-file-1-billion-hong-kong-ipo-by-end-month/ Fri, 18 Sep 2020 05:08:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151133 jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhcJD Health is the latest JD.com affiliate preparing to go public in a recent spree amid mounting investor interest in healthtech.]]> jd alihealth tencent healthcare online hospital china regulator nhc

JD Health, the healthcare unit of Chinese online retailer JD.com, is preparing to file for an initial public offering in Hong Kong as soon as this month, Bloomberg reported Thursday.

Why it matters: JD Health is the latest JD.com affiliate preparing to go public in a recent spree. The potential listing comes amid mounting investor interest in the broader online healthcare sector triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Covid-19 is bolstering investments as well as mergers and acquisitions in online health care and biotech. There were $3.9 billion worth of health care-related deals in Hong Kong during the first half of the year. The whole year figure in 2019 was $3.8 billion, according to data from Mergermarket.
  • JD Health is competing with multiple rivals including Alibaba-backed Ali Health, Tencent-backed Wedoctor, and Pingan Good Doctor.

Details: JD Health could raise at least $1 billion in a Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO), according to Bloomberg sources who declined to be identified because the information is private.

  • The sources said the IPO size and timeline are still subject to change.
  • The IPO news comes just one month after the company announced the completion of a $830 million investment from Hillhouse Capital through the purchase of Series B preference shares.
  • A JD.com representative declined to comment to TechNode on Friday.

Context:  Since the beginning of this year, several of the e-commerce giant’s business units have listed or are preparing to IPO, including the Hong Kong dual listing of the core online retail business, the US IPO of grocery delivery unit Dada JD Daojia in June, and a filling to Shanghai’s STAR Market for fintech unit JD Digits in July.

  • JD Health began as an e-commerce platform that sold pharmaceutical products such as vitamins and supplements, medical supplies, and Chinese traditional medicine.
  • The platform was spun off from the parent company in May 2019. It is diversifying its services with the launch of traditional Chinese medicine, head and neck medicine, and heart disease services centers by hiring the country’s top specialists.

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Bytedance builds walls for its budding e-commerce ecosystem https://technode.com/2020/09/17/bytedance-builds-walls-for-its-budding-e-commerce-ecosystem/ Thu, 17 Sep 2020 03:28:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151090 short video Douyin TikTok Bytedance short video livestream social mediaBytedance is blocking links to e-commerce stores on livestreams in flagship video app Douyin as it vies for a share of e-commerce.]]> short video Douyin TikTok Bytedance short video livestream social media

China’s tech world consists of multiple and loosely connected empires or ecosystems, led by three tech kings collectively known as BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent). While the old kings expand the scope of their kingdoms to capture more and more of our daily lives, a fourth fiefdom is quickly expanding its boundaries: Bytedance. 

Most users outside of China know Bytedance as the company behind Tiktok, but its holdings are far more than the popular short video app. Known as the “app factory” in China, the tech giant operates nearly 30 apps according to our tally, covering various categories ranging from entertainment, productivity, gaming, and online education, among others. The company also constantly launches experimental new apps, and ruthlessly cuts those that don’t succeed.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

In the last two years, the rise of a new kind of online retail has created an opportunity for Bytedance to jump into the biggest arena in all of China tech: e-commerce. While livestreaming e-commerce is still small relative to overall e-commerce, the QVC-like format has seen massive growth since last year. With an edge in video, Douyin, the Chinese version of Tiktok, is riding the e-commerce livestream wave into the rich home waters of Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo.

The short video giant first got involved in e-commerce by referring traffic to e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD. It was being paid for sharing the traffic, and kept its hands off the more lucrative e-commerce business.

But as shoppers began buying directly from livestreamers, the app integrated shopping features and got some traction in 2019, reaching RMB 10 billion in gross merchandise volume (GMV) for the year. With livestream e-commerce booming in the wake of Covid-19 lockdowns, the company has set a far more ambitious GMV goal for 2020: RMB 200 billion. 

Now, Douyin is moving to pocket all the revenue from selling goods during livestreams. To achieve this goal, Douyin has announced a series of e-commerce updates starting at the beginning of this year. With the most recent announcement on Aug. 26, the company is breaking alliances with e-commerce giants.

Starting Sept. 9, all the orders placed during Douyin’s livestream sessions to third-party e-commerce platforms have to go through Douyin’s service Star, according to the Aug. 26 statement. Then, on Oct. 9, the platform will block all third-party e-commerce referral links on livestream sessions.

“Douyin’s recent move shows its ambition in the lucrative e-commerce market, which saw greater growth driven by Covid-19,” Eliam Huang, analyst at retail research company Coresight Research told TechNode.

Douyin’s e-commerce push

Douyin started its push into e-commerce in late 2018, mainly through partnerships with e-commerce platforms to provide refer traffic. But as the app launched its own retail features, it began to favor stores running on its own platform. Its new moves, especially those rolled out in the past few months, are throttling referral traffic to existing retailers such as Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, and JD.

  • Mar. 2018: Douyin announces e-commerce deal with Taobao, and added a shopping cart icon to the app, linking users to Taobao stores.
  • May 2018: Douyin introduces Douyin shops, online stores only accessible via the app.
  • May 2019: Douyin rolls out product search feature within the app.
  • June 2020: Owner Bytedance consolidates control of retail-related functions across Douyin and other apps under new e-commerce department.
  • Aug. 2020: Douyin says it will charge a 20% commission fee for orders transacted on third-party platforms. The rate for Douyin stores is only 5%.

Douyin is still playing catch-up in the livestream e-commerce sector. Taobao Live, the clear champion, sold GMV of around RMB 200 billion in 2019. Runner-up Kuaishou reportedly (in Chinese) reached GMV of RMB 35 billion in 2019. The Douyin rival originally set its 2020 GMV goal at RMB 100 billion, but upgraded the target to RMB 250 billion after Douyin released its goal.

Where the money is

E-commerce, gaming, advertising, and the emerging membership model are the most lucrative and popular monetization channels for Chinese internet companies.

Until now, Douyin had mostly been focused on ad revenue, holding audience attention with entertainment content. Bytedance has seen phenomenal growth in this area. Its share of ad spend nearly doubled to 22% (estimated) in 2019—trailing only Alibaba, which holds 33% of the ad revenue pie.

But the company needs more to support its $100 billion market valuation, under fire as it grapples with the potential sale of a large share of its most valuable overseas asset: Tiktok. Adding a robust e-commerce business could do the trick.

Tiktok alone is reportedly valued at $50 billion. Bytedance, meanwhile is facing headwinds overseas amid rising China-US trade tensions and political tensions with India. Under adverse global business conditions, the company might be forced to shift its attention to the domestic market, where it needs new revenue sources other than the ad businesses of flagship apps Douyin and Toutiao.

Ads are the minor leagues in China’s internet economy: Digital ad spend in China is forecast to reach $74.33 billion in 2020, while China’s e-commerce market was worth $1.94 trillion in 2019, according to Emarketer.

The company expects to generate income beyond ad revenues by leveraging the 400 billion plus daily active users on its platform. Expansion to China’s e-commerce sector, a coveted revenue source for tech firms, is a logical next step, both because of the market’s massive size in China as well as the close ties between livestreaming and its core short video business.

More importantly, e-commerce is a crucial link in creating a closed loop online ecosystem in China. Its absence would ultimately hurt the company’s ad revenue, said Zhuang Shuai, founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian.

Zhuang “E-commerce and advertising are inseparable,” Zhuang told TechNode. If Douyin lets platforms like Alibaba and JD have its traffic, it runs the risk that they will capture all the revenue, he says—and the same goes for other ad platforms like Weibo and Sina.

The content platforms get paid for sharing their traffic with e-commerce sites, but once users have switched to browsing deals their attention often stays in the e-commerce app. This shift of attention ultimately costs the advertisers the resource they’re selling.

My colleague Sheng Wei, who covers content and entertainment topics including Bytedance for TechNode, says that e-commerce is an important business for Douyin as it searches for revenue sources in addition to advertisement. 

“Douyin is competing with e-commerce platforms for ad revenues and a homegrown e-commerce business could bring more value for the company,” he told me.

To complete its business loop, Bytedance has obtained a payments license (in Chinese), which is an important link in e-commerce transactions.

Douyin is not the only Chinese tech firm that has looked to e-commerce to boost growth. Companies like Baidu and Weibo all have tried to expand into e-commerce over the past decade, though neither achieved much success. 

Is Douyin ready?

Bytedance has conquered new fields before. But success in the hyper-competitive world of e-commerce is far from assured.

E-commerce is a complicated system, requiring companies manage a range of links from supply chain, operating system, membership, performance evaluation, and after-sales services. Douyin, a latecomer to the field, has a basic infrastructure in place, but it still has a lot to work on.

Before blocking links, Douyin’s own retail channel was already taking a larger share of sales. From May to August 2020, Douyin shops’ sales rose from RMB 50 million to RMB 100 million per month, while third party sales through Douyin fell from 63 million to 43 million per month, according to data from Chanmama.

In addition, it formed a partnership with Suning.com in July, under which the omnichannel retailer opened its products, logistics, and after sales services to Douyin store operators. The deal allows Douyin to capitalize on Suning’s offline retail and supply chain resources while keeping users in the Douyin app. 

The partnership was tested during Suning’s 818 shopping festival held on Aug. 18. A Douyin livestream session hosted by celebrities Jia Nailiang and Guan Xiaotong drew 51 million viewers (in Chinese). GMV for the 10-hour session hit RMB 230 million.

In a similar deal, short video rival Kuaishou partnered up with JD, allowing its users to purchase JD-held inventories without leaving the short video app.

However, there is more to do. “Douyin will need to invest and make sure its infrastructure will enable its users to enjoy a smooth shopping experience, such as managing supply chain and logistics which are e-commerce giants’ strength,” said Huang.

Next step: building a loyal user base

The new policy will not only change the dynamic between Douyin and its e-commerce rivals, but pose new questions to merchants, social media influencers known as KOLs (key opinion leaders), and users who are accustomed to using Taobao or JD.com for deal transactions.

Merchants on e-commerce sites will have to either give up Douyin as a traffic source, or build a Douyin store from scratch in addition to running their existing stores, increasing operation costs. 

It will also take time for KOLs (key opinion leaders) and MCNs (multi-channel networks), or content creator agencies, to adapt to the change, used as they are to focusing on Taobao and JD. In addition, some KOLs are contractually obligated to send traffic to third-party e-commerce platforms. This is risky for Douyin, as KOLs may switch to rival platforms rather than adapt.

For users, purchasing from in-app stores is a more streamlined shopping experience. Removing the additional step in the customer journey may result in better user retention rates for third-party links. But customers have lots of things to consider when choosing a platform, from pricing, product quality control, to logistics, to after-sales services. Douyin will have to compete on all these fronts to retain users.

Frenemies for the near future

Chinese shopping and video platforms are increasingly becoming frenemies as e-commerce and content blend together. For Bytedance and Alibaba, the push-and-pull dynamic will continue. Even though Douyin is competing with Taobao in livestream e-commerce, it still has a deep interdependence with the e-commerce platform for its classic short video business. 

Douyin is both an advertising distribution platform that sells its traffic to Taobao, and a content platform that sells products directly. Alibaba is a major client of Douyin, representing around a quarter of Douyin’s annual ad revenue. which was estimated to be RMB 80 billion in 2019, a source close to Alibaba told local media

Douyin’s blocking of referral links does not apply to short video posts, only livestreams. In 2019, Douyin and Taobao signed a RMB 7 billion cooperation agreement that covers RMB 6 billion ad revenue and RMB 1 billion e-commerce commission revenue. On Aug. 21, just a week before the livestream link block, the two companies renewed their advertising and commission agreement, reportedly almost tripling the deal’s value (in Chinese) to RMB 20 billion in 2020.

Zhuang thinks it’s too early to say whether Douyin will take a step further to block referral to short videos. “It still depends on how well the market responds to its e-commerce business and growth of revenues.”

“Douyin’s move, in the long run, will facilitate the development of the e-commerce sector, especially in the area of creating curated content to engage consumers. In the context of [the] rising cost of customer acquisition, platforms who are able to deliver content that drives conversion will win,” Coresight’s Huang said.

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Food delivery backlash, VCs snub e-commerce: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/09/16/retailheads-food-delivery-backlash-vcs-snub-e-commerce/ Wed, 16 Sep 2020 05:42:29 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=151026 food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courierChinese food delivery giants draw public ire, Dianping's symbolic retreat is made official; and VC interest in e-commerce wanes.]]> food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courier

Last week, Chinese food delivery giants were again the target of public ire. Meanwhile, Dianping’s symbolic surrender to Meituan is made official and Tencent Weibo gives a final curtain call. Venture capitalist interest in e-commerce platforms wanes despite booming consumer demand.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of Sept. 7-16.

Work hazards for delivery drivers

  • In response to public condemnation revived by a viral post about food delivery driver hardships, Eleme and Meituan rolled out an option for users to grant couriers five- or 10-minute buffers on delivery times. However, the option elicited criticism of the platforms from state media and industry experts. They believe the companies, rather than the consumers, should shoulder the burden for pushing couriers to take dangerous risks to meet stringent deadlines set by platform algorithms. (TechNode)

Online winners and losers

  • Meituan Dianping, the Chinese local lifestyle service giant created through a 2015 merger between two arch rivals, will simplify its name to Meituan, according to a filing on Sept. 11. Merged as equals five years ago, the Dianping review app still widely used, but is minimized in strategic decisions. As market consolidation continues, China has witnessed many mergers between leading verticals. Similarly, Baidu Waimai, once China’s third-largest food delivery business, lost its brand after merging with Alibaba-backed Eleme, and later rebranded as Star Ele. (HKSE)
  • Tencent Weibo, once a close competitor of Sina Weibo, is going to suspend its services and operations starting Sept. 28. The platform is one of the Wechat and QQ parent company Tencent’s few stumbles in social networking. (Tencent News, in Chinese)

Investors overlooking e-commerce

  • In August, China’s e-commerce sector drew a total of RMB 11.7 billion ($1.72 billion) in funding, down 45.3% from RMB 21.38 billion in the same period last year, according to data from E-commerce Research Center. The funds went to 33 companies, including JD Health and fresh grocery sites Yipin Shengxian and Xiaotu Maicai. Local lifestyle e-commerce was the most popular sub-category, accounting for RMB 8.58 billion in investment during the month. The drop in China’s e-commerce venture capital aligns with the global market, where e-commerce investment in 2020 is also languishing. (Jiemian, in Chinese)

Leadership departures at Alibaba affiliates

  • Chen Lei, manager of Alibaba’s second-hand shopping app Idle Fish, or Xianyu, has left Alibaba, the company confirmed to local media on Sept. 10. No details about the reason for departure were provided, but it was reportedly due to an extramarital affair. Formerly a central figure in the development of Taobao’s virtual coin system and Taobao Live, Chen was appointed as head of Idle Fish in July 2019, reporting directly to Tmall president Jiang Fan. Jiang himself was demoted in April due to alleged affair with a Chinese social media influencer. Second-hand goods selling has been picking up momentum in China. (Hupu, in Chinese)
  • Eleme chief technology officer Zhang Xuefeng stepped down from his position after five years with the food delivery platform. Zhang, who told local media he would be spending more time with his family and on hobbies, is one of the executives from Eleme’s founding team before it was fully acquired by Alibaba in 2018. Zhang’s leave comes as Alibaba is drumming up its push in local lifestyle services against Meituan. (Sina News, in Chinese)

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Alibaba ups logistics stake, coffee war, livestream apps battle for shoppers: Retailheads https://technode.com/2020/09/09/retailheads-alibaba-ups-logistics-stake-coffee-war-livestream-apps-battle-for-shoppers/ Wed, 09 Sep 2020 05:28:02 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150855 alibaba tmall e-commerce antitrust regulation pinduoduoAlibaba raises its bet in the logistics industry, China’s coffee war continues to brew, Bytedance adds a crucial piece to its e-commerce puzzle.]]> alibaba tmall e-commerce antitrust regulation pinduoduo

Alibaba increased its stake in courier YTO Express, raising its bet in the logistics industry. China’s coffee war continues to brew. Douyin owner Bytedance added a crucial piece to its e-commerce puzzle, while rival Kuaishou is also setting ambiguous goals for its e-commerce push.

Retail
headlines

China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of August 31-September 9.

E-commerce downstreams

  • Alibaba further increased its stake in Chinese logistics giant YTO Express by 12% to 22.5%. Alibaba rival JD.com had reportedly suspended its support for YTO Express in September. Alibaba has been deepening its relationships with logistic firms through cross-shareholding. It holds stakes in major delivery companies like ZTO Express, STO Express, Yunda, and Best. Alibaba also holds a 63% stake in its affiliate Cainiao Smart logistics, which these major couriers also hold shares of. (SSE filing, in Chinese)

Buzz from China’s beverage industry

  • The Luckin power struggle continues as founder Charles Lu loses control of the troubled coffee chain. Sean Shao, chairman of the special committee responsible for Luckin’s internal investigation and a major opponent to Lu, was named an independent director in a board meeting held on Sept. 2, two months after he was removed from the same position. (Sina Tech, in Chinese)
  • Coca-Cola-backed coffee chain Costa is closing around 10% of its stores in mainland China across cities like Qingdao and Shenzhen. The Starbucks rival will operate nearly 400 offline stores after the downsizing, far fewer than Starbucks’ 4,400 stores. A Costa representative told local media that the company is still confident about growth potential in the China market, where it is still looking to open new stores. (National Business Daily, in Chinese)
  • Coffee Box, the struggling Chinese coffee chain the subject of shutdown rumors during the coronavirus outbreak, made a major comeback last week. In a Sept. 3 statement, the company, which began reducing its store count last year, said it would be expanding to more cities as well as improving delivery times for customers on various online and offline platforms including Tmall, convenience stores, and gas stations. Local media suggested new funding was fueling the move. The company did not mention a capital injection in its statement. (Coffee Box WeChat Official Account, in Chinese)
  • Heytea and Naixue’s Tea, two top bubble tea chains in China, are reportedly planning for Hong Kong listings in 2021. Naixue’s Tea was reportedly aiming to float shares in the US earlier this year. As beverage categories blur in China, bubble tea chains are competing head-on with coffee chains. (iFeng, in Chinese)

Short video apps shift into e-commerce

  • Tiktok owner Bytedance obtained a license for running third-party payment services by acquiring a Wuhan-based fintech company, local media reported on Sept. 3. The move would smooth its path to expanding into e-commerce, where payment is a crucial link. This is the Chinese tech giant’s fourth fintech license. It already holds licenses to operate online insurance, online brokerage, and online microcredit businesses. The company applied for five financial licenses in Hong Kong in August. (Yicai, in Chinese)
  • Short video app Kuaishou will launch an “incubation project” which aims to help more than 100,000 new businesses reach annual sales of RMB 1 million ($146,000) on its platform. The Tiktok rival pledged to build more than 100 industrial bases across China and train upwards of 10,000 livestreamers during the period. (Caixin Global)
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Weibo pulls Instagram-like social app Oasis from app stores https://technode.com/2020/09/05/weibo-pulls-instagram-like-social-app-oasis-from-app-stores/ https://technode.com/2020/09/05/weibo-pulls-instagram-like-social-app-oasis-from-app-stores/#respond Sat, 05 Sep 2020 05:13:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=116813 The app's logo bears remarkable resemblance to one created by a South Korean design studio. ]]>
A screen shot of the Oasis official Weibo account. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese microblogging platform Weibo pulled its newly launched social and lifestyle app Oasis Wednesday from Android and iOS app stores after a user posted about a striking similarity between its logo and another created by a South Korean design firm for a music festival.

The removal is a preemptive move from Weibo, according to an announcement posted Wednesday on the Oasis official Weibo account. The company did not immediately respond to TechNode’s requests for comment on Thursday.

Why it’s important: Weibo’s latest project marking its push into the image-based social network sector, Oasis garnered widespread public attention immediately following its launch, ranking at the top of Apple China App Store’s free app list.

  • Weibo opened Instagram-like Oasis to public testing on Monday, positioning itself in direct competition with rival platforms including Xiaohongshu.
  • The move is seen as a push for future growth. Net revenue for Weibo, which had 211 million daily active users as of June, remained flat in the second quarter of this year and net profits declined more than a quarter to $103 million in Q2 from $140 million the same period a year ago. The account with the most followers topped 50 million, while this number is more than 200 million Instagram followers for celebrities like Kim Kardashian on competing social media platform Instagram.
  • Xiaohongshu was removed from Chinese app stores in August after complaints about misleading content.

Details: A Weibo user named Wang Yuan pointed out on Wednesday that the Oasis logo shares a striking similarity with one that a South Korean design firm, Studio Fnt, created for the country’s Ulju Mountain Film Festival in 2015.

  • Weibo CEO Wang Gaofei commented Wednesday on a tech blogger’s post which shared Wang’s initial discovery, saying “Noticed, and it’s been pulled from shelves.”
  • The app also posted an apology for technical problems caused by user requests inundating its servers despite the invitation-only testing phase.
  • It is unclear when the app will be made available again for download.

Weibo testing new social lifestyle app, Oasis

Context: The app does not have e-commerce functionality at this stage, though an industry expert TechNode spoke with on Tuesday said that he expects that the app will add an e-commerce function in the future to tap on the social e-commerce rise in China.

  • China’s social e-commerce market is expected to be worth up to $180 billion by 2021 according to China Internet Watch, a digital consulting company.
  • Instagram, along with a series of popular services like Google, Facebook, and YouTube are blocked in China.
  • Similarly, Chinese tech firm Sohu also hit bumps in the road in its push into social media. The firm’s social app Huyou was pulled from app stores a few days after launch in June before returning to stores in August.
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Bilibili invests $66 million for stake in production firm https://technode.com/2020/08/31/bilibili-invests-66-million-for-stake-in-production-firm/ Mon, 31 Aug 2020 05:30:21 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150581 bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime gameA tie-up for Bilibili with content production powerhouses will strengthen its draw to audiences beyond the ACG community.]]> bilibili video sharing livestreaming anime game

Video-streaming site Bilibili announced on Monday a $66 million strategic investment in media production company Huanxi Media.

Why it matters: Bilibili has been broadening its content beyond the anime, comic, and game (ACG) content for which it became known to more mainstream entertainment offerings. A tie-up with content production powerhouses will strengthen its appeal to audiences beyond the ACG community.

READ MORE: Bilibili looks beyond anime to mainstream entertainment

Details: Bilibili is subscribing for 347 million shares of Hong Kong-listed Huanxi Media at HK$1.48 per share for HK$513 million or $66 million, a 2.63% discount to the closing price on Friday, according to the filing. The entertainment platform said it will hold a 9.9% stake in Huanxi after the deal.

  • Under a five-year cooperation agreement, Bilibili will hold exclusive broadcasting rights to Huanxi’s film and television content in addition to its in-house platform.
  • All revenue generated from licensed content broadcasted through the Bilibili platforms will be shared between the two companies after deducting related costs, according to the filing.
  • Bilibili will set up a designated channel on its site for streaming licensed content from Huanxi.
  • Meanwhile, Bilibili will be given priority to invest in film and TV projects that are majority-owned by Huanxi. The two companies will actively develop merchandise related to film and television content.

Context: Popular Chinese filmmakers Ning Hao and Xu Zheng control the production studio. Huanxi has built its reputation around curated offerings rather than mass market content which would put it in direct competition with Iqiyi, Tencent Video, and Alibaba’s Youku.

  • As coronavirus shuts China’s movie chains nationwide in January, Huanxi sold its anticipated blockbuster “Lost In Russia” to Bytedance, owner of short video apps Douyin and Tiktok, as well as virally popular news aggregator Toutiao, in a RMB 630 million deal for a direct-to-streaming release.
  • The move drew backlash from movie chains against the decision.
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Alibaba trumpets return to ‘normalcy’ in Q1 2021 https://technode.com/2020/08/21/alibaba-trumpets-return-to-normalcy-in-q1-2021/ Fri, 21 Aug 2020 07:19:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150271 alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shoppingShares of Alibaba closed lower on Thursday despite better-than-expected results for the June quarter as most of its businesses rebounded.]]> alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shopping

Shares of Alibaba closed slightly lower on Thursday despite its better-than-expected results for the June quarter which showed that most of its businesses had rebounded to pre-pandemic levels.  

The company’s revenue jumped 34% year on year to RMB 153.75 billion ($21.76 billion) for the quarter ended June, beating average analyst estimates of $21.34 billion for the e-commerce giant’s first quarter in the 2021 fiscal year. Core commerce retail and cloud computing businesses continued to be the main drivers for robust revenue growth.

Income from operations increased 42% in the quarter to RMB 34.71 billion, or 23% of the total revenue, from RMB 24. 38 billion, or 21% of revenue, in the same quarter of 2019. Meanwhile, the cost of revenue in the quarter increased by 40% year on year to RMB 84.52 billion due to increased contributions from direct sales businesses such as Tmall Supermarket and New Retail.

“Our domestic core commerce business has fully recovered to pre-Covid-19 levels across the board, while cloud computing revenue grew 59% year over year,” Maggie Wu, chief financial officer of Alibaba Group, said in a statement.

Falling short

The biggest theme of Alibaba’s June quarter result was “back to normalcy.” The majority of analysts TechNode spoke with saw the results as very “impressive,” demonstrating resilience in Alibaba’s businesses.

But share prices sagged 1.0% on Thursday in New York, signaling that investors expected more. While the company trumpeted a rebound, it was not seen as a complete return to “normalcy.”

Alibaba’s 34% year-on-year revenue growth during the quarter was robust, but it fell short of the roughly 40% average quarterly growth in the 12-month period before Covid-19.

The company’s core commerce business unit reflected the same deceleration. It generated RMB 133.32 billion in revenue in the June quarter, weakening to 34% year-on-year growth compared with 44% in the same year-ago period. Growth was mainly driven by higher purchase frequency and increasing penetration into lower-tier cities through Taobao Deals, which gained approximately 40 million monthly active users since its launch in March.

Covid-19 is still weighing on Alibaba, which earns much of its revenue from advertisement and commission fees. Both saw slower annual growth in the quarter.

Wang Shan, an analyst at Tiger Brokers, attributes this to Alibaba’s Covid-19 support policies, under which it waived platform and rental fees as well as commission for merchants on various platforms within its ecosystem from anywhere from two to six months. She further pointed out that downsized advertising budgets as a result of the pandemic also had an adverse impact on the company’s ad business.

Cloud computing revenue grew to RMB 12.35 billion, primarily driven by increased revenue contributions from both public cloud and hybrid cloud businesses. It clocked 59% annual growth in the quarter, the slowest growth since the 2018 fiscal year except for the March quarter.

Local life business unit, including Eleme and Koubei, slowed considerably under twin pressures of the Covid-19 pandemic and rising competition from Meituan. It grew 15% year on year compared with 137% in the same period a year ago.

Broader headwinds

The year 2020 has proven a difficult year for China tech firms and Alibaba may be shouldering an outsized portion of the pressure as a global firm whose performance is seen as an informal indicator of the Chinese economy.

Alibaba’s historical valuation is related to much “bigger picture issues,” John Freeman, vice president at CFRA Research, wrote in an email. “The risk for BABA is tied to the macro-economic situation, political risk, and possibility of a trade war,” he said.

Covid-19 is under control in China, but the far-reaching impact to the economy is far from over, said Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina.

The country’s disposable income and urban consumption are still recovering, which means Alibaba’s consumers are still feeling the strain of reduced salaries and take-home pay. “Alibaba is only as strong as consumers’ wallets,” Norris added.

Others remained optimistic about the company’s longer-term growth prospects. “In the longer term, Alibaba is well-positioned to benefit from synergies arising from the deepening integration of its e-commerce platform (Tmall/Taobao) and its new retail and lifestyle ecosystem. We expect sustainable monetization improvements with the expansion of services offerings and stronger user acquisition and retention,” said Esme Pau, an analyst at equity firm China Tonghai Securities.

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Xiaohongshu bids to reinvent itself, again https://technode.com/2020/08/20/xiaohongshu-bids-to-reinvent-itself-again/ Thu, 20 Aug 2020 03:46:57 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150226 A user browses the Xiaohongshu app. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)Xiaohongshu got big fast, but it's never found a way to earn money. Can a new pivot to "key opinion customers" turn things around?]]> A user browses the Xiaohongshu app. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)

Alibaba and Tencent rarely invest in the same startup. Xiaohongshu, the social media and e-commerce hybrid commonly regarded as China’s Instagram, is one of the few exceptions.

Joining the select ranks of industry disruptors like Didi Dache and Bilibili, the app quickly generated immense buzz. But the market is increasingly putting a question mark over the company’s promise. Now, it’s pivoting yet again in a bid to recapture its early magic.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

Founded in 2013 by Charlwin Mao and Miranda Qu, Xiaohongshu, also called Little Red Book or Red, gained popularity among China’s young, middle-class, and mostly female consumers hungry for lifestyle and fashion tips. A favorite among investors, the consumption-oriented social media platform accumulated over $400 million in funding. Its most recent round, in June 2018, raised $300 million from the likes of both Alibaba and Tencent, among others, and valued the company at $3 billion.

Despite rapid early-stage growth, the content-driven app has struggled to land on a successful and scalable monetization model while maintaining its community feel. Unsuccessful attempts to commercialize have disappointed analysts and investors, who are losing patience with the company. So far, the app is still primarily a recommendation tool for users to post reviews and conduct research before making their purchases. With users heading to other e-commerce platforms or offline stores for the purchase itself, Xiaohongshu is leaving out the most lucrative link of an online buyer’s journey.

To reclaim public attention, Xiaohongshu unveiled a new strategy at its RED for Future Conference on July 22, even as most other companies cancelled big offline events due to Covid-19. 

Since monetizing consumer interactions through e-commerce has hit a wall, the company is branching into a model that targets brands and other businesses. To that end, Xiaohongshu unrolled a string of features to help brands promote themselves. The new measures include:

  • Platform commission reduced to from 20% to 5%, identical to the commission charged by Tmall in the fashion and cosmetics industries. If traffic is coming from Xiaohongshu livestream ads, the sales commission decreases even lower to 3%.
  • Online traffic funneling to promote new brands and livestreamers,
  • Support plans to connect merchants to consumer reviewers who have large followings.

But will the pivot be enough to turn the company around?

Search for identity

Xiaohongshu is hard to define. It began as a PDF guide to luxury shopping in Hong Kong, and made its mark in the tech world in 2013 as a user-generated content (UGC) community, which encouraged users to post pictures and reviews of luxury goods. The style-obsessed app later adopted a cross-border e-commerce model, operating as both a proprietary e-commerce platform and third-party vendor—models resembling JD and Alibaba’s Tmall respectively. The aim was to become a place where people could find overseas niche products, but the effort failed after facing immense competition from established e-commerce giants like Alibaba, who have far superior supply chains. 

The app then switched to social e-commerce by creating more product categories and introducing Chinese local brands. However, the model didn’t work well either for the reasons mentioned above.

At its event in July, the company stressed its strong position as a lifestyle content community, minimizing its e-commerce element. At the same time, it proposed a transition to B2K2C (business-to-key opinion consumer-to-consumer) model, which would elevate key opinion consumers, or KOCs, as the link between brands and consumers.

Trust issues

One of Xiaohongshu’s main challenges has been balancing its two constituencies: users and advertisers.

The company’s first pivot to serving brands dates back to the beginning of 2019. That year, a series of major moves to commercialize the platform met with strong resistance, first from regular consumers, and then from KOLs. 

In January, the company launched an influencer platform, then followed up with a brand account platform and CPC (cost-per-click) advertising system in March. The accelerated efforts to monetize triggered backlash from users who began questioning the app’s credibility. In April, local headlines reported fake product reviews and scandals involving fraudulent content scandals.

When Xiaohongshu tried to address the customer trust issue by purging suspicious KOL accounts, many disheartened influencers balked at the severe response. In the aftermath of the negative PR crisis, Xiaohongshu was pulled from both Android and Apple’s local App Stores in July and only managed to return three months later.

The current strategy is an evolution of the company’s 2019 plans, amended to resolve the major problems it faced last year. While KOCs are able to market on any social media platform, Xiaohongshu appears more responsive to trending reviews and can promote lesser-known accounts more quickly. The personable and seemingly unbiased appeal of KOC marketers present a possible avenue for the platform to fix its credibility gap from last year’s crisis.

Squaring the circle?

Key opinion customers, the newest buzzword in the influencer world, emerged in 2019 as an alternative to glossier, more professional key opinion leaders (KOLs).

In theory, KOCs are more trustworthy than KOLs. They are real customers who promote the brand without being paid to. So far, users seem to accept this form of marketing better than KOL hype. 

But Elijah Whaley, chief marketing officer at KOL marketing platform Parklu, says Xiaohongshu is taking shortcuts with KOCs that threaten to undermine user trust. Instead of treating KOCs as customers, Whaley said, the app treats them as just another kind of KOL, encouraging brands to pay KOCs for promotions.

KOCs are everyday consumers who typically have a few hundred followers—far less than the thousands or millions of followers who anoint KOLs with celebrity status. Whaley argues that brands need to keep them separate from paid pitchmen to keep their cachet.

  • “KOLs are in the business of building influence and monetizing influence,” Whaley writes. “KOLs might or might not truly love the brands they collaborate with, which occasionally brings their authenticity into question. KOC evangelize the brands or products they love because they want to help their family, friends, and colleagues make better purchase decisions…One of the most significant challenges to KOL marketing is scalability due to the fees and high-touch nature of managing campaigns, whereas KOC marketing strategies benefit from scales of economy.”

On the brandwagon

At the same time, the company is jumping on the livestream e-commerce bandwagon. As a latecomer, Xiaohongshu experimented with livestreaming in June last year, but the function was not officially launched until November. Compared with incumbents like Taobao Live, Xiaohongshu is pushing more niche brands or high value products. After a quick browse on the app, I found that most Xiaohongshu livestreamers have dozens, or at most hundreds, of viewers—well below the scale of audiences on Taobao Live.

As e-commerce livestreaming hits its ceiling in driving sales, Xiaohongshu is taking a different approach by stressing its role in branding and marketing, rather than striking massive GMV figures. 

Taobao, which pioneered e-commerce livestreaming, also noticed the change. The top goal of livestreaming is branding, then it’s to bring new and very loyal customers and finally it’s the sales, Yu Feng, head of Taobao content e-commerce department, told local media this June.

Jie Si, head of Xiaohongshu open platform and e-commerce operations, said he expects advertising revenue to become the “pillar” of Xiaohongshu’s business. “E-commerce is only a part of our ecosystem. The primary goal is to service the demand of our customers,” he said. In addition to ad income from CPC advertising and branding, the lifestyle app also generates revenue from commissions from brands, membership fees, and a paid promotion tool called “Chips.”

Red flags remain

Xiaohongshu had over 100 million monthly active users (MAUs) in June, up from 85 million one year ago, according to company data.

However, third-party research firm QuestMobile reports a different outlook—a picture of stagnation. The research shop says that from June 2019 to March 2020, the number of Xiaohongshu’s MAU has contracted by roughly 10%, from 85 million to 77 million.

The 77 million MAU figure shows 15.3% year-on-year growth, but it is a much slower pace compared with the growth at Kuaishou and Bilibili, competitive platforms that are also looking into ad income. Both tech firms saw over 30% year-on-year growth from the windfall of users due to the Covice-19 pandemic.

“In tech, stagnation is a big red flag, contraction is a burial shroud. Very few social networks resurrect from MAU contraction,” Whaley said, who said he was disappointed by Xiaohongshu’s KOL purge last year. “Who cares about commercialization if there is a declining number of people to commercialize to,” he added.

The coronavirus pandemic has caused a considerable drop in advertising spending. Tech firms are benefiting with brands spending more on digital marketing, trying to access users who are spending more time online. But advertisers are flocking to the biggest platforms more than ever, which means a tougher situation for medium-sized vertical platforms.

In the competition for ad revenue, Xiaohongshu faces tough rivals like Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, and Bytedance (BATB). China’s four most valuable tech companies accounted for a combined 86% of all digital advertising revenue in 2019, according to Totem Media. 

With its 100 million MAU, Xiaohongshu will also have a hard time challenging other content platforms like Tiktok and Kuaishou, which boast 518 million and 443 million MAU in June, respectively.

Steep climb ahead

To reach its next growth phase, Xiaohongshu has several hurdles to cross: regaining trust from users, entering the livestreaming business as a latecomer, and boxing out its rivals for advertising income. The company is putting its faith in its new B2K2C model to get them there. But such a strategy requires time to see results, which for the company is in short supply. Investors are already losing interest.

It’s been over two years since Xiaohongshu’s last funding injection. The company reportedly reached a break-even point in its finances late last year. It is reportedly fundraising for a $6 billion valuation, doubling what it achieved in its last round in 2018. It is a critical time for the company to produce a more convincing monetization model that will induce investors to open their purses.

No doubt Xiaohongshu still owns a key step in the journey of many consumers, particularly in the 18- to 35-year-old female demographic, but the clock is ticking for the company to show whether it can maintain that status, or achieve more.

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Tesla urges workers to defend company in Pinduoduo spat https://technode.com/2020/08/19/tesla-urges-workers-to-defend-company-in-pinduoduo-spat/ Wed, 19 Aug 2020 10:15:28 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150197 electric vehicles tesla EVs EVThe head of Tesla China urged employees to speak up in defense of the company on social networks amid a public spat with Pinduoduo over a Model 3 group buy.]]> electric vehicles tesla EVs EV

The head of Tesla China urged employees to speak up in defense of the company on social networks amid a public spat with online marketplace Pinduoduo over a discounted Model 3 group-buy purchase.

Why it matters: Tesla’s reputation in China for poor treatment of its customers and arrogant business practices is growing as a result of the public squabble. Pinduoduo’s circumvention of Tesla’s restrictive direct-sales only channel meanwhile threatens to open the door to other third parties looking to gain from the brand’s strong consumer demand.

  • Tesla has a direct sales model in China with a retail network of 58 showrooms across major Chinese cities in addition to its online sales channel. It opened a flagship store on Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace earlier this year, but only for traffic from customers looking to test drive and purchase car accessories.

Details: Zhu Xiaotong, Tesla’s global vice president and the top boss in China, on Monday called for employees to speak up and defend Tesla’s direct sales retail model in cyberspace, Chinese media reported citing persons close to the company. 

  • Zhu urged “every employee to take action” (our translation) on behalf of the company on social media networks. Given the limited manpower and budget in the company’s public relations, Zhu also asked employees to fight back against slander by reporting rumors to internet regulators.
  • Tesla then sent a statement to Chinese media on Wednesday, in which it accused Pinduoduo of twisting the truth and manipulating public opinion for its own benefit.
  • On Tuesday, the e-commerce platform told Chinese media that a Wuhan-based customer who had been refused the Model 3 delivery had placed a new order along with valid auto insurance with the assistance of Pinduoduo and Yiauto, a Chinese car dealer company.
  • Tesla countered, saying that the sedan was not delivered according to its normal procedures. The Model 3 it delivered had been ordered in late July, long before the customer’s later order involving Pinduoduo, which it canceled, according to Tesla’s statement.
  • This contradicts the Wuhan buyer’s story to Chinese media that he placed the new order in a family member’s name after Tesla cancelled his group purchase Model 3 and has blocked him from placing a new order, the electric carmaker said.
  • Pinduoduo said it was “disappointed” that Tesla was making it difficult for some of their fans to get their dream car and “will do everything” to protect consumers’ rights, the company said to TechNode in an emailed statement.
  • The company reiterated to TechNode that the Wuhan buyer, who paid the discount price, has received the car. 
  • Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Context: Along with Chinese car dealer Yiauto, Pinduoduo in July began promoting a group buy flash sale, offering five randomly selected buyers the chance to purchase a Tesla Model 3 at a discount of RMB 40,000 ($5,770), if 10,000 people signed up for the campaign.

  • Tesla denied on July 21 via microblogging site Weibo that it was involved in the promotion, saying that it didn’t provide vehicles for the group buy. The campaign meanwhile hit the target number of sign ups, and five selected buyers paid for the vehicles.  
  • A Shanghai-based buyer from the same flash sale has received the vehicle, local media reported.
  • Pinduoduo, the social e-commerce platform known for its steep discounts, has a history of clashing with premium brands when applying its subsidy strategy to drive sales.
  • In addition to Tesla, Pinduoduo’s aggressive discounting tactics has reportedly irked the likes of Apple and Dyson.
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JD.com cites ‘record’ 618 for Q2 earnings beat https://technode.com/2020/08/18/jd-com-cites-record-618-for-q2-earnings-beat/ Tue, 18 Aug 2020 07:32:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150175 JDJD’s stronger-than-than expected comes amid a market warm-up while domestic consumption is slowly recovering from the disruption brought by the pandemic. ]]> JD

JD.com shares closed nearly 8% higher on Monday after the Chinese online retailer posted robust top-line growth for the second quarter of this year, and announced a $830 million investment in its healthcare unit, JD Health.

Why it matters: JD announced its stronger-than-than expected results against a backdrop of domestic consumption slowly recovering from the disruption brought by the Covid-19 pandemic.

  • Both the release of pent-up demand and shifting consumer behavior from offline to online boosted momentum for e-commerce giants in the quarter.
  • Fresh from its June debut on the Hong Kong stock exchange, this is a critical time for JD with retail chief Xu Lei gradually taking over for founder Richard Liu as the Chinese online retailer’s new leader.

READ MORE: Much needed big numbers from 618 shopping festival

Details: JD.com reported net revenue of RMB 201.1 billion ($28.5 billion), representing a 33.8% increase from the same period in 2019, the company said in a statement on Monday. The revenue beat the high end of analyst estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • The company’s net income attributable to ordinary shareholders was RMB 16.4 billion in the second quarter compared with RMB 600 million for the same period last year.
  • Company CFO Sandy Xu attributed the strong growth to an improving macroeconomy and “record-high” 618 promotion, referring to its annual anniversary sale event held on June 18.
  • The company also announced that healthcare unit JD Health received a $830 million investment from Hillhouse Capital through the purchase of Series B preference shares.
  • The company’s annual active customer accounts increased by 29.9% year-on-year to 417.4 million in the 12 months ended June. “Over 80% of our new users added in the quarter came from lower-tier cities, the highest level on record,” Xu said during the earnings call on Monday.
  • The cost of revenues rose in line with revenue growth, increased by 34.5% to RMB 172.4 billion for the second quarter of 2020 from RMB 128.2 billion for the second quarter of 2019.

Context: JD began this year moving to list a number of its affiliated companies, including JD Logistics, grocery delivery Dada JD Daojia, and fintech unit JD Digits.

  • JD.com rival Alibaba will report quarterly results before the market open on Thursday, and Pinduoduo will release its Q2 report on Friday.

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JD Group partners with Trip.com in tourism push https://technode.com/2020/08/17/jd-group-partners-with-trip-com-in-tourism-push/ Mon, 17 Aug 2020 06:09:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=150103 JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.comWith the deal with China's largest online travel agency, JD is diversifying the products and services on offer as well as enriching its marketing channels.]]> JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.com

JD Group, the parent company of e-commerce giant JD.com, has announced a strategic partnership with China’s biggest online travel agency Trip.com to integrate their traffic and supply chains as the country’s travel industry works to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Why it matters: JD’s push into the tourism sector underscores its confidence in the industry’s revival, which was brought to near-standstill during the lockdown.

READ MORE: Normalcy tracker: How China is adjusting to life after Covid-19

Details: JD Group and Trip.com inked a partnership under which the two companies would cooperate across various sectors including user traffic funneling, marketing, business development, and e-commerce, according to a statement from the company on Sunday.

  • The Beijing-based online retailer is adopting a more open approach towards partner cooperation, diversifying the products and services on offer as well as enriching its marketing channels.
  • Under the deal, JD will connect Trip.com with its 8 million enterprise clients and 400 million individual users.
  • Meanwhile, the firm expects the tie-up will help diversify its business operations and upgrade its supply chain capacities.

Context: JD is on a shopping spree this month with a $100 million strategic investment in supply chain enterprise Li & Fung Group, the acquisition of home appliance chain 5 Star Electric, and RMB 3 billion ($432 million) acquisition of courier Kuayue Express.

  • A corporation with Trip.com comes three months after JD inked a partnership with short video platform Kuaishou, a move to drive sales through livestreaming.
  • The e-commerce giant renewed its push into the tourism market through an agreement with state-owned tourism operator Beijing Tourism Group (BTG) in July and pumped RMB 450 million into travel service Caissa in April for a 7.4% stake.
  • JD rival Alibaba has a solid presence in the travel market with its tourism unit Fliggy.
  • Trip.com, formerly known as Ctrip, is reportedly considering delisting from Nasdaq. The company is offering discounts and coupons to spur travel consumption.
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Flash sale retailer Vipshop eyes secondary Hong Kong listing: report https://technode.com/2020/08/13/flash-sale-retailer-vipshop-eyes-secondary-hong-kong-listing-report/ Thu, 13 Aug 2020 06:35:55 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149955 vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduoVipshop is the latest in a series of US-listed Chinese tech companies mulling a secondary offering in Hong Kong to hedge the risks of a China-US tech war.]]> vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduo

US-listed Chinese online discount retailer Vipshop is reportedly considering a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Why it matters: Vipshop is the latest in a series of US-listed Chinese tech companies that are mulling a secondary offering in Hong Kong to hedge the risks of a China and US tech war.

  • The flash sale platform ranked a distant fifth with an around 2% share of China’s retail e-commerce market in 2019, following rivals such as Alibaba, Pinduoduo, JD.com, and Suning.com, according to a report from research institute 100ec.com.
  • Vipshop’s share prices nearly tripled over the last 12 months to reach upwards of $20 apiece from around $7 in August 2019. Meanwhile, share prices for Alibaba rose 50% and JD.com jumped 100% over the same period.

Details: Vipshop is in preliminary discussions for a secondary listing on the Hong Kong market, following the footsteps of Alibaba and JD.com, according to a report by Reuters research firm IFR citing people familiar with the matter.

  • The listing could come as early as this year, according to the report. No details regarding the size of the offering were disclosed.
  • The company could not be reached for comment on the matter on Thursday.

Context: Tencent, which now holds a 9.6% stake in the company, has been increasing its stake in Vipshop over the last two years.

  • Tencent integrated Vipshop and JD.com, another Vipshop investor, into its mega instant messaging app Wechat to deliver a steady stream of new customers for both platforms and shore up its defenses against Alibaba.
  • Vipshop went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2012, raising a total of $71.5 million.
  • Share prices for US-listed Chinese technology stocks jumped in July after a domestic stock market rally reached fever pitch.

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Pinduoduo launches fashion mini program on Wechat https://technode.com/2020/08/11/pinduoduo-launches-fashion-mini-program-on-wechat/ Tue, 11 Aug 2020 07:39:39 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149831 pinduoduo duochao wechat mini program fashion socialThe new Pinduoduo mini program marks the e-commerce giant's latest move to increase user engagement by boosting social interactions. ]]> pinduoduo duochao wechat mini program fashion social

Pinduoduo has rolled out a Wechat-based mini program that focuses on creating an online fashion shopping community for China’s younger consumers.

Why it matters: The new mini program is Pinduoduo’s latest move to increase user engagement by boosting social interaction.

  • The platform’s growth is slowing: Active buyers in the 12-month period ended March 31, 2020 totaled 628.1 million, a year-on-year increase of 42% compared with 50% annual growth in the same period a year earlier.
  • Pinduoduo is competing with fashion community incumbents in the sector such as Xiaohongshu or Red, Dewu, formerly Poizon, and Nice.

READ MORE: Sneakerheads are China’s latest set of unlikely blockchain users

Details: Shanghai Xunmeng Information Technology Co., Ltd., Pinduoduo’s China-based operating body, rolled out last week Duochao, a fashion and lifestyle mini program on Wechat, local media reported on Monday.

  • Duochao is an online community where fashion enthusiasts can post their favorite items via the platform’s central content feed, as well as share their passion for street fashion, from sneakers to clothing and accessories.
  • The mini program does not have e-commerce functionality at this stage, though it is widely expected, according to local media.
  • Seventeen fashion brands including Nike, DC, Y-3, and Fog have launched official accounts on the platform.
  • For now, Duochao does not have a standalone app or website. The program is currently not accessible through Pinduoduo’s main app.
  • With the new mini program, Pinduoduo is tapping its popularity with China’s younger consumers. A massive 78% of Pinduoduo users are under 35 years old, according to data from Iimedia (in Chinese). The 24-and-under segment accounts for 24% of the total user base.

Context: Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang just left the board of Shanghai Xunmeng on August 3, one month after he abdicated the position of CEO to focus on the e-commerce giant’s long-term strategies.

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Colin Huang exits board of Pinduoduo’s China operating body https://technode.com/2020/08/07/colin-huang-exits-pinduoduo-board/ Fri, 07 Aug 2020 06:40:43 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149696 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaHuang’s exit from the Pinduoduo board is the latest development of his withdrawing from the e-commerce giant's daily operations. ]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba

Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang left the board of the company’s main operating body in China on August 3, one month after he abdicated the position of CEO to focus on the e-commerce giant’s long-term strategies. Huang still sits on the board of Pinduoduo Inc., US-listed entity that’s incorporated in the Cayman Islands.

Why it matters: Coming on the heels of last month’s leadership reshuffle, Huang’s exit from the board is the latest in his withdrawal from the company’s daily operations.

  • Huang may appear to relinquish control, but he still holds significant power over the company: He holds 80.7% of voting shares and sits on Pinduoduo’s powerful Partnership, a superboard created to override the board of directors.
  • Other key Pinduoduo leaders followed Huang’s lead with similar moves, triggering widespread speculation about what’s going on within the company as well as the future of the e-commerce giant.

READ MORE: What’s really behind Pinduoduo leadership switcheroo?

Details: Colin Huang and Pinduoduo CEO Chen Lei exited the board of Shanghai Xunmeng Information Technology Co., Ltd., the China operating subsidiary of Pinduoduo,  local media (in Chinese) reported on Thursday, citing information from corporate data platform Qichacha.

  • Co-founder Sun Qin stepped down from his roles as legal representative, board chairman, and general manager of the company.
  • General Counsel Zhu Jianchong replaced him as the legal person, executive chairman, and general manager.
  • The company says the leadership changes are part of an adjustment to the company’s Variable Interest Entity (VIE), a structure adopted by many Chinese tech startups to lure foreign investment.
  • The move won’t impact the company’s operation, Pinduoduo said.

READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Can superboards save China tech from one-man rule?

Context: The change in Huang’s position came shortly after he was named China’s second-richest man, replacing Alibaba’s Jack Ma. Huang, who was worth $45.4 billion as of June 22, is second only to Tencent founder and CEO Pony Ma in net worth.

  • Huang has already stepped down from top management roles from several Pinduoduo affiliates in Hangzhou and Shanghai since 2018.
  • Similarly, Richard Liu, the JD founder who was embroiled in a sexual assault scandal in 2018, is also gradually taking a back seat at the company to avoid key man risk.

Correction: A previous version of the story didn’t clarify that Huang only exited the board of the Shanghai-based operator of Pinduoduo’s China operations, rather than the board of the US-listed entity that’s incorporated in the Cayman Islands.

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Netease Cloud Music joins Alibaba customer-loyalty program https://technode.com/2020/08/06/netease-cloud-music-joins-alibaba-customer-loyalty-program/ Thu, 06 Aug 2020 08:07:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149627 NeteaseAlibaba is building out its digital ecosystem by adding Netease, the popular music-streaming platform, to its customer loyalty program.]]> Netease

Netease Cloud Music announced Wednesday that it will offer its music streaming services to members of 88VIP program, a customer loyalty scheme by Alibaba.

Why it matters: Alibaba has been building out its ecosystem through new partnerships with other digital service providers. The company aims to satisfy the entirety of its users’ everyday demands without them having to leave its network of apps.

  • The deal marks the first time 88VIP has offered a service outside of the Alibaba family.
  • The partnership is expected to integrate the user base of both parties, improve the overall experience, and increase customer loyalty.
  • Netease Cloud Music claimed 800 million registered users in April.

Read more: Explainer: China’s tech ecosystems and the barriers between them

Details: Netease Cloud Music’s annual subscription, valued at RMB 179 ($26), will become a new membership perk for 88VIP users.

  • 88VIP members will be able access Netease Cloud Music’s membership services beginning August 7 at no additional cost.
  • Alibaba users with a Taoqi Value (a score calculated from a user’s purchase history and individual credit) greater than 1,000 can purchase 88VIP membership for a discounted price of RMB 88. Users who do not have a Taoqi Value greater than 1,000 pay a membership price of RMB 888.
  • The company hopes that the difference between the two membership fees will prompt users to spend and engage more with the the ecosystem’s offerings in order to raise their loyalty score.

Context: Launched in 2018, 88VIP offers a variety of perks and privileges to members. The digital membership card offers access to all of Alibaba platforms’ loyalty benefits at once, including Tmall Supermarket, video streaming app Youku, food delivery Ele.me, music streaming service Xiami and ticketing service Taopiaopiao.

  • Last September, Alibaba bought a minority stake in Netease Cloud Music with a $700 million co-investment alongside Yunfeng, the investment firm of Alibaba founder Jack Ma. Netease remains the controlling shareholder after the deal.
  • After closing the investment, Netease Cloud Music began cooperating with other Alibaba-backed services such as Alipay and Youku. The music streaming app will work closely with Alibaba’s entertainment unit in film and and television distribution, as well as in entertainment ticketing, said a Netease representative cited in local media.
  • Alibaba acquired Kaola, formerly a cross-border e-commerce unit under Netease, with $2 billion in September last year.
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Meituan shares hit all-time high as business activity rebounds https://technode.com/2020/08/05/meituan-shares-hit-all-time-high-as-business-activity-rebounds/ Wed, 05 Aug 2020 09:01:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149594 Meituan, deliveryShares of Meituan have recovered amid rebounding offline business activity and China's gradually improving economic conditions.]]> Meituan, delivery

Shares of China’s multi-service platform Meituan Dianping closed at an all-time high on Tuesday, as investors continued to buy into the Tencent-backed super app.

Why it matters: Meituan business is widely exposed to Covid-19: Most of the merchants on its platform operate offline and the services they offer are highly dependent on disposable income and consumer confidence.

  • As the pandemic’s impact in China has leveled off and lockdowns have been lifted, offline business are gradually coming back to life.
  • Tuesday’s gains in Meituan’s stock signal that investor confidence in the economy is returning.

Details: Meituan’s market cap hit a company high of HK$1.28 trillion ($182.53 billion) on Tuesday with shares up 8.67% to close at HK$218 apiece.

  • Meituan’s billionaire founder and chairman Wang Xing added RMB 12.6 billion ($1.8 billion) to his personal net worth on Tuesday, bringing the total to more than RMB 118.3 billion.
  • “Meituan is not a company that exists for the high share price, and that is even more true for me personally,” (our translation) said Meituan’s outspoken founder Wang Xing in a Tuesday post on Fanfou, the social media platform he founded.
  • Hong Kong stock exchange ended higher on Tuesday, led by strong gains in technology firms.

Context: Meituan’s share price has more than doubled in 2020 after starting the year at about HK$100 in January, then sliding to roughly HK$70 in March during the height of the coronavirus lockdown.

  • Meituan’s grocery delivery business, along with a number of other companies in the sector, boomed during the pandemic while the country was under lockdown.
  • Meituan is testing a new Pinduoduo-style group buying feature for its core food delivery services.
  • To fend off rival Ant Financial, Meituan in July blocked payments through Alipay, which is expanding into the local services sector—traditionally Meituan’s core business.
  • As it continues to rebound, Meituan is expected to see co-founder and senior vice president Wang Huiwen retire from management by the end of 2020.
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Former Alibaba, Huawei workers asked to halt ‘996’ schedule at Microsoft https://technode.com/2020/08/04/former-alibaba-huawei-workers-asked-to-halt-996-schedule-at-microsoft/ Tue, 04 Aug 2020 08:12:04 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149522 996 alibaba microsoft huaweiMicrosoft China workers are taking action against peers who worked at Alibaba and Huawei, saying they have brought the '996' work culture with them.]]> 996 alibaba microsoft huawei

Employees of Microsoft China called out colleagues who had formerly worked at Huawei and Alibaba to stop the “996” work schedule, saying that they were disturbing the company’s work culture.

Why it matters: The conflict returns to the spotlight the controversial 996 practice, where tech company employees are encouraged to work from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week.

  • A Github post protesting the 996 work schedule among Chinese developers received widespread support on the open development platform in April last year.

Read more: 996 and China speed—Slowing growth in the face of a changing workforce

Details: Microsoft workers in the company’s Suzhou office are taking action against colleagues who previously worked at Alibaba and Huawei, saying that they continue to work the grueling 996 work schedule after joining Microsoft, local media outlet Jiemian reported (in Chinese).

Screenshot of the employee alert program shared by the Zhihu user (image credit: TechNode).
  • The former Huawei and Alibaba employees compete to work extra hours and often send messages in work chat groups around midnight, the report said citing Microsoft employees.
  • Some Microsoft employees have developed a program to spot people that are online late at night, which sends alerts asking them to stop working, according to the report.
  • However, an anonymous user who self-identified as one of the developers of the program posted on Quora-like platform Zhihu, saying the program was developed as a joke and was not intended to be launched.
  • The person also clarified in the post that there is no “boycott” within the company, and requested that people stop “spreading rumors.”
  • Alibaba and Huawei are known for embracing the 996 work schedule. With nearly everyone following this unspoken rule, no one leaves their seat when working hours end, the report said, citing an Alibaba employee.

Context: China Labor Law dictates that work schedules should not exceed eight hours per day and 44 hours on average per week. Given specific reasons, workers can put in a maximum of three hours per day and 36 hours per month of overtime. “Obviously, the 996 work schedule is illegal,” said state-backed media Xinhua (our translation).

  • At the height of last year’s 996 protests, employees at Microsoft have started a petition asking the company to pledge to protect the viral GitHub repository advocating against the Chinese tech industry’s 996 workweek from possible censorship. 
  • Jack Ma, the outspoken Alibaba founder, drew criticism after making controversial remarks on 996 last year.  “To be able to work 996 is a huge blessing,” he said in a blog post.
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Bytedance to protect Tiktok’s ‘uniqueness’ in possible US buyout: CEO https://technode.com/2020/08/03/bytedance-to-protect-tiktoks-uniqueness-in-possible-us-buyout-ceo/ Mon, 03 Aug 2020 10:13:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149500 tiktok national security US app bansZhang said in the memo that Tiktok is currently engaged in preliminary discussions with an unnamed tech company to ensure it will still be available to US users.]]> tiktok national security US app bans

Bytedance, the company behind popular short video platform Tiktok, will put the company’s users, employees, and vision at the forefront as it attempts to counter the possibility of further bans abroad, CEO Zhang Yiming said in a letter to employees on Monday.

Why it matters: The low-profile billionaire commented on his concerns in deciding Tiktok’s future as the short video app faces a possible ban in the US and swirling rumors that American tech giant Microsoft could acquire its US operations.

  • US President Donald Trump, who is expected to further crack down on Chinese software companies, has given Bytedance a deadline of September 15 to negotiate Tiktok’s sale.

Details: Zhang said in the memo that Tiktok is currently engaged in preliminary discussions with an unnamed tech company to ensure the service will still be available to US users. The letter was obtained by Chinese media.

  • Zhang said the firm will protect Tiktok’s “uniqueness” and hopes the platform’s user experience won’t be affected by changes that could come with the sale.
  • The CEO said that he would take into consideration the interests and career paths of Tiktok’s team when thinking about the future of the short video app.
  • Zhang hopes Tiktok’s final settlement will align with the company’s broader vision, which aims to “inspire creativity and enrich life,” he said.
  • In the letter, Zhang confirmed that the US Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which reviews deals by foreign acquirers for potential national security risks, required Tiktok to sell its US operations.
  • The company didn’t seek clearance from CFIUS when it acquired Musical.ly, which was later integrated into Tiktok, for $1 billion in 2017.
  • “We still haven’t come up with the final plan, so the public attention and rumors surrounding Tiktok may last for a while,” he said in the letter (our translation).

Context: Along with the rising tensions between China and US, trouble for Tiktok in the US has been brewing for months. Bytedance has been seeking a solution to increased scrutiny of Tiktok’s US operations by pursuing a deal with a possible buyer for the platform.

  • Bytedance and Microsoft have resumed negotiations for a buyout of all Tiktok operations in the US after US President Donald Trump said on July 31 he would ban the video-sharing app and oppose the potential deal. 
  • Tiktok is also among 59 apps that were removed from app stores in India at the end of June, with the Indian government citing national security concerns. Meanwhile, Japanese lawmakers are also eying a possible ban as security concerns over the Chinese government’s access to user data rises globally.

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Zoom will be local version-only for Chinese users https://technode.com/2020/08/03/zoom-will-be-local-version-only-for-chinese-users/ Mon, 03 Aug 2020 07:02:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149468 Zoom Teleconference US-China Censorship Chinese governmentZoom is removing direct service support in China, highlighting yet another retreat for the company in the Chinese market.]]> Zoom Teleconference US-China Censorship Chinese government

Video-chat service Zoom will stop offering direct services to users based in China, although it will still be accessible through the company’s local partners.

Why it matters: Zoom, the US-based company founded by Chinese-born Eric Yuan, has been caught in the crosshairs of the trade war and rising political tensions between the two countries. Removing direct service support in China highlights yet another retreat for the company in the Chinese market.

  • Zoom users surged as a popular choice for business professionals during the global lockdown resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic.
  • Zoom’s move may hand domestic apps with video conferencing and productivity features, like Alibaba’s DingTalk and Tencent’s WeChat Work, the opportunity to attract more users.

Details: Zoom will suspend services, sales, and updates for users with a billing address in mainland China beginning August 23, Chinese media (in Chinese) reported Monday, citing an announcement from the company.

Read more: Is Zoom crazy to count on Chinese R&D?

  • Zoom, which previously operated its China business through direct sales, online subscription, and partner sales, is now shifting to a partner-only model with its technology embedded in partner offerings, the company said in a statement to TechNode on Monday.
  • The firm suspended the online subscription model for its China-based services two months ago.
  • “Users in Mainland China may continue to join Zoom meetings as participants,” Zoom added.
  • The company has recommended several authorized partners, including local video conferencing service provider Bizconf, Zhumu.com and Umeet, as shown in the official website of Donghan Telecom, one of Zoom’s Chinese partners which runs the website Zoom.com.cn.
  • The company said in the statement that its local partners, all of whom feature embedded Zoom technology, will provide better-localized services to users.

Context: After the company was temporarily blocked in China last fall, Chinese Zoom users began switching to localized versions of the app, including those provided by Shanghai Donghan and Shanghai Huawan.

  • Zoom suspended individual users in China from hosting meetings on the platform in May.
  • The company admitted in April that some user calls had been “mistakenly” routed through data centers in China, resulting in a backlash by foreign government agencies and companies over fears of Chinese surveillance and censorship.
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Meituan blocks payment via Alipay as rivalry intensifies https://technode.com/2020/07/30/meituan-blocks-payment-via-alipay-as-rivalry-intensifies/ Thu, 30 Jul 2020 07:56:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149304 Meituan delivery local servicesThe move highlights efforts from Meituan to fend off competition from Alipay, which is moving into the local services sector—Meituan's home turf.]]> Meituan delivery local services

Chinese online to offline giant Meituan has suspended Alibaba-backed payment tool Alipay as a payment option for some users on its services super app.

Why it matters: While not the first time it has suspended Alipay payments, Meituan’s move highlights efforts to fend off competition from the payment platform, which is moving into the local services sector—the company’s home turf.

  • As the competition intensifies, China’s tech behemoths are raising the walls surrounding their respective ecosystems by blocking services from rivals or offering more benefits to ensure user loyalty.

Read more: Explainer: China’s tech ecosystems and the barriers between them

A screenshot of the Meituan app. (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Details: Some Meituan users discovered on Wednesday that they were unable to pay with Alipay when placing orders for food delivery services on the app, Chinese media reported.

  • The food delivery giant supports a range of payment options including its proprietary Meituan Pay, as well as Wechat Pay, Apple Pay, and payment services provided by Chinese banks.
  • Only one out of around a dozen Meituan users TechNode reached out to on Thursday was unable to use Alipay on the Meituan app. How the company selects users is unclear.
  • Meituan did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
  • The move could indicate that the suspension will widen to more users, although it appears to only affect a small group of users as of Thursday afternoon.
  • Meituan founder Wang Xing asked (in Chinese) in a social media post on Thursday, “Why doesn’t Taobao support Wechat Pay? It has more active users and lower transaction fees” (our translation) in a post on Fanfou, the social media platform he founded.
  • An informal online poll in an online news story about the move gauged netizen sentiment on the tactic: 53% out of nearly 12,000 respondents said the move wouldn’t affect their lives, while 47% said it would have a great impact.

Context: Alibaba, which still holds a 1.48% stake in Meituan, was an early investor in the company. But the relationship between the two companies soured after Meituan joined rival Tencent‘s camp in 2016.

  • The rivalry heated up after the e-commerce giant acquired food delivery platform Eleme in 2018.
  • Alipay parent Ant Financial announced in March a plan spanning the next three years to build a digital ecosystem. The payment app aims to expand beyond financial services into a platform featuring third-party service providers which provide other lifestyle conveniences for its users.
  • Ant Group, Alibaba’s fintech affiliate, plans for dual listings on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, reportedly targeting a $200 billion valuation, in what would be one of this year’s biggest IPOs.
  • This is the third time that Meituan has blocked Alipay after two instances in 2016 and 2018. Meanwhile, Alipay rival Wechat Pay, the popular payment service developed by Meituan investor Tencent, holds a prominent spot on the app.
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Mini programs are the new mobile app growth driver: report https://technode.com/2020/07/29/mini-programs-are-the-new-mobile-app-growth-driver-report/ Wed, 29 Jul 2020 06:29:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149207 mini programs wechat alipay meituan bytedanceMini programs are an increasingly important growth driver for apps, functioning as an entry point for Chinese mobile users to access online services, according to a recent report on Chinese internet trends in the first half of the year. Why it matters: These lightweight applications are becoming must-have features for mainstream apps. They offer a […]]]> mini programs wechat alipay meituan bytedance

Mini programs are an increasingly important growth driver for apps, functioning as an entry point for Chinese mobile users to access online services, according to a recent report on Chinese internet trends in the first half of the year.

Why it matters: These lightweight applications are becoming must-have features for mainstream apps. They offer a diverse range of functions without requiring users to download separate programs or leave the main app.

Read more: Wechat mini programs: the future is e-commerce

Details: Monthly active users (MAU) for Wechat mini programs reached 829 million in June, up 11.6% year on year compared with 743 million a year ago, according to a Quest Mobile report published on Tuesday.

  • Mini programs are an important channel for main apps, especially those offering high-frequency services like food delivery, according to the report.
  • Eleme’s main app had 45 million MAUs as of June, while its mini program on the Alipay app had 33 million MAUs, with just 1.65 million overlapping users. Meituan’s Wechat mini program meanwhile had 97 million MAUs in June, almost double the main app’s 54 million.
  • Mini programs offer a lightweight, convenient way to try out a limited version of a service, and are a crucial channel for apps to acquire new users who want to use the full range of services, the report said.
  • Lifestyle services was the most popular category among Wechat mini program users in June, followed by video, shopping, tools, and transportation. Lifestyle services and video also topped the charts for Alipay and Baidu mini programs.
  • Users of healthcare services surged more than nine-fold (up 841%) year on year due to the wide application of health codes. Online education, car-hailing, and rental services also saw users on Wechat mini programs more than doubled year on year in June.
  • China’s retail sales in June weakened 1.8% year on year, an improvement from the 20.5% year on year decline in February during the country-wide lockdown, though growth slowed on an annual basis from a 9.8% increase in June last year.
  • Online retail sales accounted for 25.2% of China’s total retail sales in June, up from 20% in June last year.

Context: First introduced by Wechat in 2017, mini programs have become ubiquitous on many of China’s biggest apps, including Tencent’s QQ, Baidu, Meituan, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Taobao, as well as Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin.

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Pinduoduo readies a wholesale service, dialing up Alibaba rivalry https://technode.com/2020/07/28/pinduoduo-readies-a-wholesale-service-dialing-up-alibaba-rivalry/ Tue, 28 Jul 2020 08:00:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149114 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentChinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo is testing a new wholesaling service which connects merchant buyers with manufacturers and wholesalers.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo is testing a new wholesaling feature named Duoduo Pifa, which connects merchant buyers with manufacturers and wholesalers.

Why it matters: Expanding into enterprise services highlights Pinduoduo’s ambition to attract and retain business customers, an increasingly important component for its ecosystem.

  • The launch of Duoduo Pifa further fans its rivalry with Alibaba, which has been operating its own B2B wholesale site, 1688.com, since 1999.

Details: Pinduoduo recently launched a new service dubbed Duoduo Pifa, or Duoduo Wholesale, for merchants that procure goods for resale, according to a report from Chinese media outlet Jiemian.

  • The feature is still under development but has been opened for merchant applications.
  • Pinduoduo recently added to its merchant app a supply management function consisting of wholesale supply and direct shipping options.
  • For the direct shipping option, the wholesalers will provide shipping and after-sale services to consumers on behalf of the merchant.
  • The feature is free from commissions and promotion fees for now, local media reported.

Context: Alibaba and Pinduoduo are increasingly moving onto one another’s home turf.

  • Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao is expanding its direct-to-customer selling platform for bargain-seeking consumers, Pinduoduo’s core user group.
  • To speed up offline expansion and increase supply chain efficiency, Pinduoduo invested in the household appliance and electronics retailer Gome Retail, similar to Alibaba’s partnership with Gome rival Suning.
  • Pinduoduo said it had around 585 million active buyers and 5.1 million active merchants in 2019.
  • One of Alibaba’s earliest business units, 1688.com is a top domestic wholesale marketplace in China, providing sourcing and online transaction services to merchant buyers.
  • As of March 31, 2020, 1688.com had approximately 900,000 paying members who use the service for additional services, such as premium data analytics and upgraded storefront management tools, as well as customer management services.

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Indian court summons Jack Ma, Alibaba in worker lawsuit https://technode.com/2020/07/27/indian-court-summons-jack-ma-alibaba-in-worker-lawsuit/ Mon, 27 Jul 2020 06:49:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149075 Alibaba's Jack Ma in November 2015.The employee said that he was fired for his objections to media manipulation practices at Alibaba-owned UC Web amid tense diplomatic relations.]]> Alibaba's Jack Ma in November 2015.

An Indian district court has summoned Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and its founder Jack Ma in a lawsuit from a former employee of web browser firm UC Web complaining that he was wrongfully fired for objecting to the company’s practices of censoring content and publishing false news.

Why it matters: The employee said that he was fired over his objections to media manipulation practices at Alibaba’s UC Web, another high-profile dispute at a time of tense diplomatic ties between China and India following a deadly clash along a shared border.

  • UC Web’s UC Browser was ranked second in the Indian mobile browser market with a 23% share, according to TechCrunch citing data from third-party analytics firm StatCounter. It trailed Google Chrome which holds a massive 63% share.
  • UC Browser was among the 59 apps banned by the Indian government in late June over national security concerns. Other blacklisted apps include short video platform Tiktok, messaging app Wechat, Baidu Maps, and microblogging platform Weibo.

Read more: Life in India after Tiktok

Details: A court in Gurgaon, a satellite city of New Delhi and location of UC Web’s main Indian office, summoned Ma and around a dozen Alibaba representatives and business units for a wrongful termination lawsuit, Reuters reported on Sunday, citing court documents. A former UC Web employee said he was wrongfully fired after objecting to what he saw as censorship and fake news distributed on company apps, according to the report.

  • Pushpandra Singh Parmar, who said he worked as an associate director at the UC Web office in Gurugram until October 2017, alleged the company censored content seen as unfavorable to China and promoted false news through its apps UC Browser and UC News, according to documents obtained by Reuters.
  • “UC has been unwavering in its commitment to the India market and the welfare of its local employees, and its policies are in compliance with local laws. We are unable to comment on ongoing litigation,” a UC India representative said in a written statement to TechNode on Monday.
  • Wang Shuai, Alibaba partner and chairman of Alibaba’s marketing and public relations committee, confirmed that UC India received the court notice in a comment on Wechat Moments, local media (in Chinese) reported.
  • Wang said that the Indian unit is working on the issue according to relevant procedures, adding jokingly that it has been hard to find Ma after his retirement. He claimed to have failed to reach Ma after trying to reach out to him for a whole day and jokingly suggested the team try its luck in the HBB Music Bar nightclub, which Ma founded.

Context: Alibaba in 2014 acquired UCWeb, best known for its popular mobile browser UC Browser. It is now part of the e-commerce giant’s digital media and entertainment group.

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Meituan is testing a group buying feature for food deliveries https://technode.com/2020/07/24/meituan-is-testing-a-group-buying-feature-for-food-deliveries/ Fri, 24 Jul 2020 08:42:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=149012 Meituan delivery local servicesMeituan is taking a leaf out of Pinduoduo’s book by integrating social elements to its food delivery business hoping boost user engagement.]]> Meituan delivery local services

Meituan-Dianping is testing a new Pinduoduo-style group buying feature for its core food delivery services, Chinese media reported.

Why it matters: The Chinese food delivery giant and services platform is taking a leaf out of Pinduoduo’s book by integrating social elements in its platform to boost user engagement for food delivery from restaurants.

  • After five years of fast growth, China’s food delivery industry is losing steam as the market saturates. Transaction volume in the sector expanded at 30% year on year in 2019. While still healthy, it was the slowest growth in four years, according to a report from mobile intelligence platform Trustdata.
  • Meanwhile, Meituan is seeking new ways to maintain growth momentum in the face of competition from old rival Ele.me, as well as new threats like mobile payments platform Alipay, which is exploring local services—Meituan’s home turf.
  • Targeting price-sensitive groups, Meituan’s new group buying feature could help the company consolidate its foothold in lower-tier cities, a major growth engine for the food delivery industry.

Details: Pinhaofan, Meituan’s new social shopping feature for food delivery, is available through its WeChat mini program, National Business Daily reported (in Chinese).

  • The feature encourages users to share food links from Meituan’s WeChat mini-program with their friends and family to earn discounts through group buying, according to the report. The model resembles the “social e-commerce” strategy that underpins the tech giant’s phenomenal growth over the past four years.
  • Currently under early testing, the feature is only available in Wuhu, a third-tier city in eastern China’s Anhui province, another sign that Meituan is targeting lower-tier markets.
  • The company is offering generous subsidies to customers who use the feature and promises free delivery with no packaging fees. Restaurants typically charge customers RMB 1 ($0.14) to RMB 2 per dish for the takeaway packaging.
  • Compared with normal buying, there are limitations on orders made through Pinhaofan. Customers who place orders together are required to order from a limited menu at the same store. In addition, each user can initiate or join up to four orders every day, according to the report.
  • A Meituan spokeswoman declined to comment when reached by TechNode for further details on Friday.

Context: Meituan previously added a group buying feature covering physical products such as beauty products, household appliances, fruits, and snacks to its WeChat mini program in 2018.

  • The company announced an organizational adjustment in early July to launch a premium business division for community group buying services.
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Tencent-backed Missfresh raises $495 million https://technode.com/2020/07/23/tencent-backed-missfresh-secures-495-million-in-funding/ Thu, 23 Jul 2020 07:45:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148981 Missfresh appMissfresh is one of several grocery delivery companies to unexpectedly benefit from the Covid-19 outbreak in China.]]> Missfresh app

Tencent-backed grocery delivery startup Missfresh has raised $495 million in funding, billing the round as the largest single fundraising in China’s grocery delivery industry, Chinese media reported.

Why it matters: The deal reflects growing investor confidence in the cash-burning sector after the country saw a massive surge in demand for fresh food deliveries following the outbreak of Covid-19.

  • The unexpected boost came as whole cities were placed under lockdown to curb the spread of the disease, forcing people to stay at home.
  • The resurgance of the grocery delivery market offers a boost to several players in the sector, including JD Daojia, Meituan, and Ele.me, Dingdong Maicai.

Read more: Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce

Details: Missfresh’s $495 million round was led by a fund under state-backed China Capital Investment Group, Latepost reported (in Chinese). Social media giant Tencent, Tiger Global, Abu Dhabi Capital Group, and the Suzhou and Changshu Government Industrial Fund also participated in the round.

  • Missfresh was valued at $3 billion before the investment. The company’s new valuation was not disclosed.
  • The proceeds from the round will be used to build the company’s supply chain and spur innovation in its business model, Latepost quoted Wang Jun, Missfresh’s chief financial officer, as saying. Wang added that the company has reached profitability.

Context: Founded in 2014, Missfresh has received more than $1 billion in funding from investors including, Tencent, Tiger Global, and Goldman Sachs, the company’s website shows.

  • Missfresh operated more than 1,500 warehouses as of the middle of last year, serving nearly 25 million monthly active customers.
  • Fresh grocery e-commerce is a challenging sector due to the high attrition rates of perishable goods and the significant logistics requirements, which weigh heavily on margins.
  • The sector boomed a few years ago, culminating in multiple firms bowing out, included Amazon-backed Yummy77 and Xianpinhui, and most recently Dailuobo.
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Is the e-commerce livestream hitting its ceiling? https://technode.com/2020/07/23/is-the-e-commerce-livestream-hitting-its-ceiling/ Thu, 23 Jul 2020 04:27:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148967 livestream e-commerce livestreamAs QVC-like digital sales sweep China, merchants have started to believe that you can sell anything if it's on a popular e-commerce livestream. It turns out that there are limits.]]> livestream e-commerce livestream

Wu Xiaobo is a famous finance and company-focused writer, with a brand built on bestselling books and an annual year-end show in which he shares insights into the business world. So of course, he figured he could sell milk powder on an e-commerce livestream. Spoiler alert: he was wrong.

Like thousands of other Chinese celebrities and online personalities, Wu was venturing into livestreaming e-commerce, a mashup of online chat show and QVC-style hard-sell advertising that’s become the hottest thing in the world of Chinese marketing in 2020.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

Livestream e-commerce shows have reached dizzying sales figures, with celebrity salespeople like star influencer Viya regularly selling RMB 72 million ($10.3 million) in a three-hour show. 

Other business figures have tried their hands as celebrity spokespeople. Dong Mingzhu, chairwoman of home appliance manufacturer Gree Electric, sold RMB 310 million worth of goods in a three-hour live stream in May. As Wu has said, “You are not living the year 2020 if you have never watched or hosted a livestream session” (our translation).

Wu Xiaobo e-commerce livestream
Wu Xiaobo during his livestream on Taobao Live (Image credit: Emma Lee)

Wu’s June 29 debut on Taobao Live, the Alibaba-owned platform that accounts for nearly 60% of the market by transactions, was much anticipated. Themed on promoting “new national products” from Chinese domestic brands, the stream was advertised on billboards at train stations and airports, while Taobao Live promised to do everything it could to push users to view. Wu himself spent over a month preparing. 

34 brands paid up to RMB 600,000 for a spot on the five-hour show, with the cheapest “flash sale” slots going for RMB 300,000. While exact figures were not announced, if each of the 34 merchants paid the lowest price Wu would have earned RMB 10 million for the show.

It was a commercial flop. Even though 8.3 million people tuned in to watch Wu pitch products like milk powder, snacks, and bedsheets, they bought only RMB 22 million worth of featured goods. One brand representative told local media that it paid the full RMB 600,000, and earned less than RMB 50,000 during the event, far short of the company’s sales target of RMB 1 million to RMB 1.5 million. Yashily, one of the brands that paid to be featured, sold only 15 tins of milk powder.

Silly season for livestream e-commerce

Livestream e-commerce has reached the silly stage—and may be finding the ceiling for its meteoric growth. For the past three years, the format has appeared unstoppable. The market size is expected to more than double to RMB 961 billion in 2020 from RMB 434 billion in 2019. Brands, and influencers, have scrambled to get a seat on the rocket ship, trusting that anyone with a big audience can deliver big sales.

E-commerce and live-streaming platforms are clamoring for star power. Alibaba’s Taobao Live invited more than 300 celebrity performers to take part in its livestream campaign during June’s 618 shopping festival for what was billed as the largest celebrity broadcast in history.

Turns out, there is a limit to Chinese consumers’ desire to buy products endorsed on a celebrity stream. Despite gravity-defying sales figures, the basic principles of marketing still apply to livestreaming e-commerce. 

Most importantly, the person pushing your product should have some connection to it. Wu wrote in a self-critical post on microblogging platform Weibo on July 10 that he and his sponsors made a crucial mistake: They assumed his business-oriented audience would be interested in buying a random assortment of household goods, like snacks, bedsheets, toilets, chairs, and laundry detergent.

While Wu’s flop is the highest-profile streaming disaster, there have been others. Singer and performer Ye Yiqian sold only 10 Chinese tea sets after including them in a livestream session focused on beauty products. The stream had attracted nearly 900,000 viewers.

Next lesson: A big fan base doesn’t automatically equal trust, the currency that drives online purchases. Unlike more popular livestreamers like top-ranked Taobao Live KOL Viya, who tries out products and introduces them based on her own experience, Wu relied on co-hosts to do the talking while he mostly played the “listener” role.

Expensive lessons for merchants

Brands pay celebrities big money to promote their products. 

Live commerce sellers take a commission fee or a flat fee, more commonly known as “appearance fee,” or both, for promoting a certain product. Compensation is based on various factors, including a livestreamer’s popularity and a brand’s recognition.

Under the commission model, livestreamers need to deliver results since their earnings are directly tied to sales. However, livestreamers paid an appearance fee are compensated to promote the brand, regardless of how much gets sold.

During last year’s Singles’ Day shopping festival, “Lipstick King” Li Jiaqi charged an appearance fee of RMB 60,000, plus a 20% commission. For skincare products, that rate could be as high as RMB 150,000. Meanwhile, anchorwoman Li Xiang got paid RMB 800,000 for a five-minute promotion of a high-end down jacket to an audience of 16.2 million people. She didn’t sell a single garment. 

The exorbitant price tag of these promotions, along with potentially disappointing sales, could force brands to consider switching to other distribution channels. 

Fake data

In China, it’s no secret that marketers have turned to inflating sales figures to spur buzz. The stark difference between livestream audiences and orders has led to questions over purchased livestream views and potentially fake sales data.

The most common practice in boosting live commerce sales figures, like other forms of e-commerce, is “order brushing.” The practice involves sellers ordering their own products or getting others to order on their behalf. Such orders are often canceled later, resulting in higher order cancellation rates than the norm for livestreams on e-commerce platforms. 

A source from a multi-channel network agency told local media this month that the average order cancellation rate is around 20%. Industry watchers have become highly suspicious of order brushing on livestreams across platforms, since some see cancellation rates up to 35%, the source said, without mentioning specific companies. One such case involves celebrity comedian Xiaoshenyang, who sold 20 lots of baijiu, a sorghum-based white spirit, during his livestream session, of which 16 were canceled the next day.

Another trick involves calculating sales based on full price products without accounting for significant discounts. 

Finance writer Wu revealed in his letter that there was more than a RMB 28 million difference between the two figures for his livestream. The GMV for items at the full price was more than RMB 50 million, while the actual total paid price amounted to RMB 22 million GMV.

Is the rocket running out of fuel?

With live-stream e-commerce seeing a big upswing since the beginning of last year, shady practices have brought the attention of Chinese regulators. The China Advertising Association this month (CAA) issued a set of rules to restrict false and misleading advertising on livestreams. The notice also forbids livestreamers from order brushing and bans faking transaction metrics.

The hype around livestreamed e-commerce is threatening its sustainability, especially as regulators set their sights on the sector. Optimism is still rife, as the industry has grown so fast. But the sector may have hit its limit. 

Wu’s big flop shows that you can’t sell anything with a livestream. It’s time for brands and merchants to start figuring out what products livestreams work for—and how much it’s really worth paying for them.

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Alibaba’s Kaola wants to become China’s online Costco https://technode.com/2020/07/22/alibabas-kaola-wants-to-become-chinas-online-costco/ Wed, 22 Jul 2020 09:03:23 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148925 Kaola wants to boost engagement and user retention as Chinese tech giants vie for dominance in the country's cross border e-commerce sector. ]]>

Kaola, Alibaba’s cross-border e-commerce platform, is undergoing a major shift to a membership-based model as it seeks to become China’s Costco for online buyers.

Why it matters: Kaola’s move to adopt a membership-based model is aimed at driving user engagement and retention. The company faced slow growth before being aquired by Alibaba.

  • The upgrade also highlights Alibaba’s efforts to explore varied business models and differentiate product lines in the same sector.
  • Kaola, along with its Alibaba-owned Taobao Global, is a source of stiff competition for other platforms in the cross-border e-commerce sector, including JD’s cross-border e-commerce unit, VIP.com, and Suning Global.
  • Kaola’s focus on membership will heat up its rivalry with foreign counterparts like the US’ Costco and Sam’s Club, which are also building their online presence to attract affluent Chinese shoppers. 

Details: Kaola will continue to focus on cross-border e-commerce, but adopt a membership model similar to Costco, the company announced on Tuesday.

  • Priced at RMB 279 per year (around $40), Kaola’s members will gain access to premium discounts, lower delivery fees, and support from multilingual shopping assistants.
  • Regular buyers can still purchase goods on the platform but will be unable to access the premium features.
  • Kaola has been preparing for the shift since the end of April, when it began trial operations of the new membership feature.
  • After the change, Kaola will refocus its product listings, supply chain, and merchant selection based on the demands of members to offer more cost-effective and exclusive products, the company said.

Context: Alibaba’s Tmall Global and Kaola controlled more than half of China’s cross-border e-commerce market in the first quarter of 2019, according to data from research firm Analysys.

  • Alibaba became a principal player in the country’s cross-border market after acquiring Kaola from gaming giant NetEase for $2 billion in September last year.
  • China’s cross-border e-commerce sales are expected to drop 4.6% year on year to RMB 10.3 trillion ($1.5 trillion) form RMB 10.8 trillion in 2019 as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to report from research institute Iresearch.
  • During the 2018 China Import Expo, Alibaba pledged to import $200 billion of foreign goods by 2023. At the same event, Kaola, which was still owned by NetEase, said it would import RMB 20 billion worth of overseas products.

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Chinese users can now order Starbucks coffee on Taobao https://technode.com/2020/07/21/chinese-users-can-now-order-starbucks-coffee-on-taobao/ Tue, 21 Jul 2020 10:06:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148900 Alibaba Starbucks coffee partnershipThe new service expands on previous partnerships between Starbucks and Alibaba, including voice ordering on virtual assistant Tmall Genie]]> Alibaba Starbucks coffee partnership

Starbucks is expanding its partnership with Alibaba by allowing its customers to order food and beverages through four of Alibaba’s flagship apps, the companies announced on Tuesday.

Why it matters: The partnership represents the deepening ties between Alibaba and Starbucks, offering new growth opportunities for both companies as China bounces back from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

  • Cooperating with Starbucks on its “Starbucks Now” platform, the coffee giant’s mobile order and pickup service, falls in line with Alibaba’s focus on local lifestyle services as offline services in China see an uptick in usage after the outbreak.

Details: The new partnership allows customers to order food and beverages through the newly launched Starbucks Now feature in Alibaba’s apps, including e-commerce platform Taobao, digital mapping and information provider Amap, local services app Koubei, and mobile payments app Alipay.

  • These apps serve nearly 1 billion customers in China, the coffee chain’s largest and fastest-growing market.
  • By activating Starbucks Now through any of the four apps, users can pre-order and pay for their Starbucks beverages and food online, and then pick them up in-person at most Starbucks stores across the Chinese mainland.
  • Launched in May 2019, Starbucks Now was previously only available through the Starbucks China mobile app. More than 93% of Starbucks stores support the services as of 2019, according to the company’s announcement.

Context: Alibaba and Starbucks began their partnership in 2018 to stave off rivalry from upstart Luckin Coffee. The Chinese coffee chain in April admitted to sales fraud, dealing a massive blow to the company, which resulted in the removal of four directors, including co-founder and former chairperson Charles Lu, from its board.

  • Starbucks and Alibaba’s previous partnership is wide-ranging and covers Starbucks deliveries through Alibaba’s local services platform Ele.me, new retail grocery chain Freshippo, and voice ordering on virtual assistant Tmall Genie.
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Wechat is testing a new e-commerce mini program feature https://technode.com/2020/07/16/wechat-is-testing-a-new-e-commerce-mini-program-feature/ Thu, 16 Jul 2020 05:05:12 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148721 wechat westore tencent e-commerce weidianWestore on the Wechat platform is one of Tencent's latest efforts to build up its e-commerce product lines as it takes aim at rivals including Alibaba.]]> wechat westore tencent e-commerce weidian

Tencent rolled out on Tuesday a mini program-based shop builder tool Minishop on its super messaging app Wechat as the company accelerates its push into e-commerce.

Why it matters: Minishop is among Tencent’s latest efforts to build up its e-commerce product lines. Tencent’s foray into the e-commerce industry is positioning Wechat in direct competition with Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo.

  • Tencent is capitalizing on the popularity of Wechat mini programs, the lightweight applications that run within the super app, to set up its own online marketplaces.

Read more: WeChat mini programs: the future is e-commerce

Details: Minishop, or Weixin Xiaoshangdian, offers basic functions such as product listings, order management, payment, logistics, and after-sales service as well as built-in streaming features, according to a company statement (in Chinese).

  • Minishop is a free-to-use mini program that helps merchants create their own merchandising shops on Wechat. 
  • The feature supports more than 1,500 product categories, including smartphones, consumer electronics, apparel, home appliances, and pet goods.
  • There is no deposit required to open a store, a common practice for other e-commerce platforms including its predecessor Weixin Xiaodian as well as Alibaba’s Taobao. To build up the initial user group, the service is free and there are no development costs for now.
  • During the testing period, enterprises can apply for up to 50 stores and household businesses can register up to five stores. The service will open up to individuals in the future.
  • The new Wechat-based e-shop mini program will replace Weixin Xiaodian, which the company stopped updating on July 9 and will gradually phase out.
  • Minishop is a more online commerce-friendly alternative to Weixin Xiaodian. Its high vendor threshold and lack of flexibility gave rise to third-party software-as-a-service (Saas) solutions.
  • Minishop poses a threat to Weimob and Youzan, third-party Saas WeChat store solutions backed by Tencent and Baidu.

Context: Tencent, the backer of Pinduoduo and JD.com, has been taking aim at the online retail sector—rival Alibaba’s home turf—in recent years.

  • In April, Tencent launched mini-program Xiao’e Pinpin, a Pinduoduo counterpart that allows users to purchase products at lower prices by forming groups.

Correction: An earlier version of the story referee to Minishop by the incorrect name Westore, and did not make it clear that Minishop is a mini program store builder rather than a centralized store.

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Luckin names new chairman and CEO in power shakeup https://technode.com/2020/07/14/luckin-names-new-chairman-and-ceo-in-power-shakeup/ Tue, 14 Jul 2020 07:44:28 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148626 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsChinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee replaced founder and former chairman Charles Lu with its acting CEO, Guo Jinyi.]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps

Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee has named Guo Jinyi, a co-founder and the company’s acting chief executive officer as its new chairman and CEO, replacing founder and former chairman Charles Lu.

Why it matters: The power struggle in the topmost ranks of the embattled Chinese coffee chain may finally be drawing to a close. However, its future prospects are gloomy after it was delisted on June 29 following a second warning from the US regulator.

  • Lu fought to retain control of Luckin after directors attempted to oust the founder over his alleged involvement in the accounting fraud it admitted in April.

Details: Luckin said in a Monday filing that an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders held July 5 resulted in the removal of four directors, including Charles Lu, from the board.

  • Yang Jie and Zeng Ying were appointed during that same meeting as independent directors. On July 12, the board voted to add Cha Yang and Liu Feng to the independent board director list.
  • Despite his ouster, Charles Lu is reportedly seeking to stay in control of the company by ensuring his allies are voted to the board.

Context: Guo joined Luckin Coffee in October 2017, working on the construction of Luckin’s logistics and distribution system. Similar to his predecessor, former Luckin CEO Qian Zhiya, he worked with Lu as the assistant to the chairman for auto rental firm Car Inc.

  • He previously worked at China’s Ministry of Transport and as a research assistant at the China Academy of Transportation Sciences. 
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JD Group renews tourism bid with BTG deal https://technode.com/2020/07/13/jd-group-renews-tourism-bid-with-btg-deal/ Mon, 13 Jul 2020 07:48:56 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148569 JDJD Group and tourism services operator Beijing Tourism Group have agreed to partner on the construction of intelligent services and smart cities.]]> JD

JD Group, parent company of e-commerce giant JD.com, has inked a strategic partnership with a state-owned tourism operator as the online services conglomerate strengthens its presence in the travel industry.

Why it matters: JD’s renewed push into the tourism sector underscores its confidence in the industry’s revival, which was brought to near-standstill by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Details: On Monday JD Group announced a partnership with Beijing-based tourism services operator Beijing Tourism Group (BTG) on the construction of intelligent services and smart cities.

  • As part of the deal, JD Group and JD’s technology service arm JD Digits have made a strategic investment of undisclosed size in Beijing BTG Huilian Technology, a subsidiary. It will act as the main body for the cooperation, promoting digitization of consumer-facing services in the tourism group.
  • JD will help BTG build digital insights and private cloud platforms in order to improve its management of customers, merchants, and logistics, as well as capital and information flow.

Context: In June, JD sold all of its 21% stake in Tuniu, once a top online travel agency in China, for $65 million, five years after leading a $500 million round in the company in 2015.

  • The BTG investment comes more than one month after JD pumped RMB 450 million ($63 million) in travel service Caissa, for a 7.4% stake.
  • Travel in China is beginning to show signs of recovery as new cases of the novel coronavirus decline.
  • Tech giants like Alibaba—a JD.com rival which has a solid presence in the travel market with its tourism unit Fliggy—and Ctrip are offering discounts and coupons to spur travel consumption.
  • BTG is involved in various areas of the tourism segment including travel agencies, dining, hotels, shopping, and entertainment.
  • Operating assets worth more than RMB 10 billion, the company is behind 132 brands including four domestically listed entities: hotel chain BTG Hotels, retail business Wangfujing and Beijing Capital Retailing Group, and roast duck restaurant brand Quanjude. The company operates more than 7,000 offline stores across 400 cities.
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Alibaba touts ‘unstoppable’ digitization as growth engine https://technode.com/2020/07/10/alibaba-touts-unstoppable-digitization-as-growth-engine/ Fri, 10 Jul 2020 07:44:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148454 alibaba zhang e-commerce infrastructure livestreaming taobaoChina’s ongoing digital transformation is attracting attention from the state as well as the country's biggest tech companies including Alibaba.]]> alibaba zhang e-commerce infrastructure livestreaming taobao

Alibaba chairman Daniel Zhang set out a series of new goals for the e-commerce giant in a new era where “digitization is the new norm” in the company’s annual report released Friday.

Why it matters: Spurred by the Covid-19 pandemic, China’s ongoing digital transformation is attracting attention from the state as well as the country’s biggest tech companies looking to build high-tech infrastructure for cloud computing, supply chains, 5G networks, electric vehicles, digital finance, and more.

“Our digital economy infrastructure–from digital commerce to digital finance to logistics to cloud computing–empowers the whole society with the potential and opportunity to innovate and incubate even more new ideas.”

—Alibaba Chairman Daniel Zhang in a letter to shareholders

Details: Included in Alibaba’s 2020 report for the fiscal year ended March was a letter from Zhang to shareholders, which laid out the company’s long-term growth prospects.

  • By 2024, the company aims to increase its annual active customers in China to more than 1 billion from its current tally of 780 million, Zhang said in the letter.
  • The e-commerce giant plans to facilitate more than RMB 10 trillion ($1.4 trillion) of consumption on its platforms, a 40% increase compared with the company’s $1 trillion gross merchandise volume in the 2020 fiscal year.
  • Longer-term goals include reaching 2 billion consumers globally and providing the necessary infrastructure to support 10 million small businesses reach profitability on its platforms by 2036. 
  • Zhang said that the company is supporting its goals with investments in digital infrastructure related to digital logistics, digital e-commerce, cloud computing, and digital e-commerce.
  • Despite all the uncertainties, the one thing for certain is “that the ongoing digital transformation of our economy and society will be unstoppable” Zhang said.
  • The company’s total revenue increased to RMB 509.71 billion in the reporting period, up 35% year on year from RMB 376.84 billion in fiscal year 2019.
  • Zhang added that Alibaba will continue to pursue the three strategic pillars of globalization, under which it’s already serving 180 million users outside China, growth in China’s domestic consumption, and big data powered by cloud computing.

Context: Alibaba rival JD.com is also investing heavily in infrastructure projects, including its in-house logistics network, smart supply chain, and technology innovation.

  • China, which set out the importance of the “new infrastructure” initiative during its Two Sessions event, plans to spend RMB 1 trillion on the initiative with half going to high-tech industries.

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US-listed Chinese tech stocks rise amid boom in home markets https://technode.com/2020/07/09/us-listed-chinese-tech-stocks-rise-amid-boom-in-home-markets/ Thu, 09 Jul 2020 06:56:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148347 US regulator added five more Chinese companies to a growing delisting listPrices for US-listed Chinese tech firm stocks surged as domestic stock markets rally, bolstered by bullish op-eds in state-run media.]]> US regulator added five more Chinese companies to a growing delisting list

Share prices for US-listed Chinese technology stocks including e-commerce giants Alibaba and JD.com reached historical highs on Wednesday after a domestic stock market rally reached fever pitch.

Why it matters: The jump in share prices for major US-listed Chinese tech firms followed recent gains for Chinese equities.

  • The Shanghai Composite soared around 9% this week, aided by a bullish front-page editorial from state-owned China Securities Journal and growing optimism triggered by economic recovery after the Covid-19 lockdown.
  • The gains come in spite of growing scrutiny of publicly traded Chinese firms over potential accounting issues.

Read more: As China tech stocks surge, a fundraising window opens

Details: Alibaba shares climbed 9.0% to close at $258 on Wednesday, its market valuation gaining around $6 billion to reach a historical high of $701.08 billion.

  • JD.com’s market cap hit $102.93 billion on Wednesday after its shares jumped 6% to close at $65 apiece. It became the fifth listed Chinese tech company to pass the $100 billion mark, joining Alibaba, Tencent, Meituan, and Pinduoduo.
  • Share prices for Hong Kong-listed companies also climbed—Tencent jumped 6.6% and Meituan rose 2.5% as of publication.
  • Blue City Holdings, the owner of China’s largest LGBT dating app Blued, soared 46% in its Nasdaq debut after raising $85 million.
  • Other Chinese tech stocks which climbed on Wednesday: microloan service Qudian surged 36%, app developer Cheetah Mobile jumped 31%, influencer platform Ruhnn was up 20%, and JD-backed grocery delivery service Dada-JD Daojia rose 13%.
  • Baidu and Pinduoduo were relative underperformers, rising a respective 2.2% and 1.4%.

Context: Chinese internet firms are returning to domestic markets, including secondary listings for Alibaba, JD.com, and Netease in Hong Kong, and JD Digits on Shanghai’s STAR market.

  • Sina, a Chinese online news portal and minority owner of microblogging service Weibo, may delist and go private after 20 years of trading on the Nasdaq.
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Charles Lu is out at Luckin, but his influence may linger https://technode.com/2020/07/06/charles-lu-out-at-luckin-but-his-influence-may-linger/ Mon, 06 Jul 2020 08:09:23 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148149 Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founderThe CEO, COO, and many other employees of China coffee chain Luckin Coffee have been fired after the company admitted to accounting fraud in April.]]> Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founder

Shareholders of scandal-hit Luckin Coffee have voted out founder Charles Lu, the company’s chairman, along with three other board directors during an extraordinary general meeting held on Sunday, local media reported.

Why it matters: The removal of half of the company’s board of directors is the culminating step in US-listed Luckin’s top management shakeup. The company’s CEO, COO, and many other employees have been fired after the company admitted to accounting fraud in April.

  • Lu’s removal from comes shortly after he survived the first round of an ouster which began last week.

Details: Despite being removed from the board, Lu may still retain the upper hand in the power struggle over Luckin, according to local media reports.

  • The three other directors who were removed were opposed to Lu.
  • They are Sean Shao, chairman to the special committee responsible for Luckin’s internal investigation, and Li Hui and Liu Erhai, two crucial figures in Lu’s funding network who then initiated the campaign to remove Lu after the accounting fraud scandal broke.
  • Zeng Ying and Yang Jie, two executives who are reportedly Lu allies, were named as independent board directors.
  • Lu might still control of the board, but he may soon lose his grip over the company as lenders led by Credit Suisse target his family’s assets to recoup losses upwards of $500 million losses resulting from the scandal.
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Online housing firm Beike looks to raise $2 billion in US IPO https://technode.com/2020/07/06/online-housing-firm-beike-looks-to-raise-2-billion-in-us-ipo/ Mon, 06 Jul 2020 05:52:11 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148122 BeikeA listing for Beike on a US exchange bucks a trend among Chinese technology firms, which are turning to domestic listings]]> Beike

Beike, a Chinese online housing platform backed by Tencent and Softbank, is reportedly gearing up for a US listing that could raise $1 billion to $2 billion.

Why it matters: Beike’s application for a listing on a US exchange bucks a trend among Chinese technology firms, which are turning to domestic listings due to deepening tensions between the two countries and aftershocks from Luckin’s fraud admission.

  • With a potential share offering upwards of $1 billion, Beike could be one of the largest tech IPOs this year.
  • China’s housing market is rife with companies using high-risk models.

Read more: INSIGHTS | ‘Second landlord’ platforms get tenants in debt to fund growth

Details: The Beijing-based company is in discussions with cornerstone investors including Morgan Stanley for a US listing as early as the third quarter, reported All Weather TMT (in Chinese).

  • The company expects its revenue to double this year, and was reportedly profitable in 2019.
  • Beike’s $14 billion valuation and slim profits may discourage investors, according to the All Weather TMT report citing a private equity investor familiar with the transaction.
  • Beike has already filed a confidential listing application with the US Securities and Exchange Commission to go public on Nasdaq. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are leading the offer coordination, Nikkei Asia Review reported.
  • The company declined to comment on Monday, but told local media on Friday that it does not have an IPO timetable for now.

Context: Beike, an online listing platform that helps users find properties, is an offshoot of Chinese real estate brokerage Lianjia, or Home Link. More than 370,000 real estate agents across 110 cities use the platform, which operated more than 40,000 offline outlets as of April this year.

  • Beike received its $2.4 billion Series D Plus in March from a consortium led by Softbank’s Vision Fund. In July 2019, the firm secured $1.2 billion in a Series D led by Tencent at a $10 billion valuation.
  • Beike rival Fangdd raised $78 million via a downsized US IPO in November.
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Luckin’s Charles Lu survives first round of ouster https://technode.com/2020/07/03/luckins-charles-lu-survives-first-round-of-ouster/ Fri, 03 Jul 2020 05:56:17 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=148008 Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founderCharles Lu may still face a shareholder vote on to remove him as a director during an extraordinary general meeting to be held on Sunday.]]> Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founder

Luckin Coffee announced Thursday that Charles Lu will remain board chairman of the embattled Chinese beverage chain after a proposal to remove him from the position failed to get the number of votes needed to pass.

Why it matters: The struggle for control at the coffee chain after an investigation into its accounting fraud points to deep involvement from top management.

  • Local authorities reportedly have found emails Lu, also known as Lu Zhengyao, sent to colleagues to instruct the fraud, which means Lu is likely to face criminal charges in China.
  • The investigation into Luckin is attracting wide media attention, as well as intensifying scrutiny of a number of other US-listed Chinese tech stocks.

Read more: Charles Lu: The man behind Luckin and China’s fastest IPOs

Details: The proposal to remove Charles Lu from his positions as a director and board chairman did not get more than the two-thirds of votes needed to pass the resolution during a board meeting held on July 2, according to a company statement.

  • The board proposed removing Lu as a director and board chairman based on the recommendation of a special committee formed for the internal investigation, according to a Wednesday statement.
  • Lu may still face a shareholder vote on resolutions that could remove him as a director during an extraordinary general meeting to be held on Sunday, where shareholders will also vote on whether to remove at least three other directors beside Lu, according to a Bloomberg report.
  • The company’s former chief executive officer, Qian Zhiya, former chief operating officer, Liu Jian and certain employees reporting to them participated in the fabricated transactions, according to the statement.
  • The company inflated its 2019 net revenue by approximately RMB 2.12 billion ($300 million), and boosted costs and expenses by RMB 1.34 billion, it said in the statement.

Context: Luckin Coffee fired CEO Qian Zhiya and COO Liu Jian from their positions in May.

  • The company received a second delisting notice from Nasdaq in June for failing to submit the 2019 annual report, less than a month after receiving its first notice on May 19 for “public interest concerns” and “fabricated” transactions.
  • Chinese car rental Car Inc may soon sever all formal ties to Lu, founder of Luckin, Car Inc, and Ucar.

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Pinduoduo founder steps down as CEO, but not away https://technode.com/2020/07/02/pinduoduo-founder-steps-down-as-ceo-but-not-away/ Thu, 02 Jul 2020 08:18:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147964 pinduoduo colin huang e-commercePinduoduo appears to have learned from business rivals, particularly Alibaba and JD.com, during a critical time for the company.]]> pinduoduo colin huang e-commerce

Colin Huang, the 40-year-old billionaire behind e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo, stepped down as the company’s chief executive officer on Wednesday, handing day-to-day operations over to chief technology officer Chen Lei. 

Also known as Huang Zheng, the founder will remain chairman of the board, one of two members of an administrative super committee called the Pinduoduo Partnership, and retains a significant majority in company voting rights. Along with Chen’s appointment, the company named a general counsel and vice president of finance.

Pinduoduo’s new captain

Five years ago, Huang founded Pinduoduo, now China’s second-largest e-commerce platform, along with a team formed from his previous startups. 

  • Chen Lei: The new CEO worked alongside Huang as the CTO of Xinyoudi, a gaming studio Huang launched in 2011. He continued to work with Huang at Ouku.com as an architect engineer in 2007 and was named Pinduoduo’s CTO in 2016. 
  • Zhu Jianchong: Senior vice president of strategy and legal at Pinduoduo since November 2018, Zhu was appointed the company’s general counsel on Wednesday. Previously, Zhu was a partner at the Beijing office of White & Case LLP, overseeing cross-border public and private mergers and acquisitions after serving various roles at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP.
  • Ma Jing was named the vice president of finance. He began at Pinduoduo in June 2018, coming from Chanel’s China business, where he held finance-related roles for 17 years. Pinduoduo has never had a CFO, rare for a listed tech company of its size, and a fact that has raised eyebrows. Ma’s vice president of finance role is the closest equivalent.

Huang downsizes his share but retains control

The shakeup goes beyond a management reshuffle. A Wednesday regulatory filing showed that Huang reduced his personal holdings in Pinduoduo to 29.4% from 43.3% but retained strong control over the company with 80.7% of voting shares, down from 88.4%. 

The change in Huang’s stake followed shortly after wide media coverage of his new ranking as China’s second-richest man, replacing Alibaba’s Jack Ma. Huang, who was worth $45.4 billion as of June 22, was next only to Tencent founder and CEO Pony Ma in net worth.

In an open letter on Thursday, Huang details his share distribution plan for various new initiatives.

  • Huang transferred roughly 371 million ordinary shares, or about 7.74% of the company’s total shares, to the Pinduoduo Partnership to support fundamental science research, social responsibility activities, and to further incentivize future management. 
  • Additionally, Pinduoduo’s founding team donated a total of 113 million Pinduoduo shares, or 2.37% of total shares, to Starry Night Charitable Trust, a charitable foundation dedicated to promoting social responsibility development and scientific research.

Huang’s handover of the CEO role may seem reminiscent of Jack Ma’s departure from Alibaba last year, but both Huang and the company he built are much younger. While Huang has said that he is relinquishing running day-to-day operations to provide “space and opportunities for the team to grow,” he will remain heavily engaged in the company’s strategic planning. 

A Reuters column points out that the five-year-old company stuck in “startup governance mode,” against a backdrop of intensifying scrutiny of US-listed Chinese technology companies. The company said that replacing Huang with Chen and appointing two other key management hires addresses governance shortcomings.

“This division of labor will help us steer the company in its next phase of growth and development. As the company evolves, the corporate structure and management structure also have to evolve and keep pace with developments.”

—Chen Lei, Pinduoduo CEO, in a statement sent to TechNode

Lessons learned from rivals

Huang appears to have learned from his business rivals, particularly Alibaba and JD.com, during a critical time for the company. Pinduoduo has been scrutinized by short-sellers, while others have called for a change in strategy.

The concept of Pinduoduo Partnership, which aims to “ensure the sustainability and governance” of the company is similar to that of Alibaba Partnership, a cornerstone for Alibaba’s organization structure. It may also be a way for Huang to retain control of the company he founded.

Huang and Chen are the first and currently only members of the Partnership Committee, which was formed in 2018 and is entitled to appoint executive directors and nominate and recommend the chief executive officer.

Pinduoduo representatives drew distinctions between the body from the Alibaba equivalent. Unlike Jack Ma, Huang can be voted out by other partners and faces mandatory retirement at the age of 60. Huang will be 60 in the year 2040.

“The Partnership is not meant to be a decision-making body,” Huang said in a statement. “It is more of a cultural guardian to ensure that the values of Ben fen [Pinduoduo’s core value that essentially means to adhere firmly to one’s own duties and principles] are carried on.”

Established almost a decade ago, Alibaba Partnership was the foundation for Alibaba’s succession plans and the reason why Ma had the confidence to announce his 12-month draw-down.

From JD.com, however, Huang has learned about key-man risk. The company is one of the rare tech firms in China without an official co-founding team. With Richard Liu’s absolute rule, JD.com suffered greatly during the founder’s rape accusation scandal and the lack of a succession plan. JD.com is gradually recovering as Liu retreats from operations and retail chief Xu Lei takes the lead.

“Building up capable lieutenants, and giving them appropriate shareholding, will be an ongoing consideration,” Michael Norris, research and strategy manager at marketing and sales firm AgencyChina, told TechNode.

Moreover, Pinduoduo needs a more rational “shared brain,” consisting of diversified and professional talents to improve the operating efficiency and governance level of the platform, e-commerce analyst Lu Zhenwang told local media.

Update: The story has been updated with comment from Pinduoduo on differences between Pinduoduo’s and Alibaba’s Partnerships.

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Ant Group’s Mybank taps micro enterprises in 5 year plan https://technode.com/2020/07/01/ant-financials-mybank-taps-micro-enterprises-in-5-year-plan/ Wed, 01 Jul 2020 07:08:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147887 mybank ant financial credit ratingAlong with Ant Financial's Mybank, other tech giants are targeting micro and small enterprises by offering low-interest or interest-free loans.]]> mybank ant financial credit rating

Alibaba-backed online lender Mybank announced on Tuesday a five-year plan to expand its loan services to more small and micro enterprises.

Why it matters: Micro and small businesses—among the hardest hit during the Covid-19 lockdown—play a central role in China’s economy.

  • Small and micro enterprises account for over 90% of business entities in China, and contribute 80% of national employment and 60% of China’s GDP, according to data from the People’s Bank of China.
  • Likewise, tech giants including Tencent, Meituan, Pinduoduo, and JD are also ramping up their efforts to support micro and small enterprises by offering low-interest or interest-free loans.

Details: Mybank, an online private commercial bank under Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Group, said in a statement that it plans to support 10 million micro and small enterprises over the next five years. It will leverage supply chain finance and expand rural lending efforts as part of the plan.

  • Under the plan, the Zhejiang-based bank is offering interest-free vouchers for business loans totaling RMB 300 billion ($42.4 billion). It will cooperate with 2,000 county and village managers to provide loans in rural areas.
  • Through partnership with China’s three policy lenders—China Development Bank, the Export-Import Bank of China, and the Agricultural Development Bank of China—Mybank has sent three batches of one-month interest-free vouchers in the past month, a company spokesperson told TechNode. Businesses that receive a voucher don’t have to pay interest for the month.
  • RBM 30 billion worth of interest-free vouchers will be distributed before the end of this year, the company said.
  • Special attention has been given to women entrepreneurs with a pledge to serve 40 million female business owners with the aim to provide more economic opportunities.
  • Mybank and its partners have served 29 million (in Chinese) small and micro enterprises in China as of June 2020, including street vendors, Simon Hu, CEO of Ant Group and chairman of Mybank, said at the Mybank Microfinance Partner Conference on Tuesday.
  • The average loan is RMB 36,000 and 80% of the companies had never previously received business loans from a bank.
  • Micro and small businesses in China have shown resilience during the Covid-19 pandemic, with 98% of them repaying their loans on time, according to Hu.

Context: Established in June, 2015, Mybank, officially known as Zhejiang E-Commerce Bank Co. Ltd., is an internet-only lender majority-owned by Alibaba.

  • China’s online banks, led by Alibaba’s Mybank and Tencent’s Webank, are seeing rapid growth thanks to wide application of new technologies and the popularity of mobile payments in the country.

Correction: an earlier version of the story referred to Ant Group by an earlier name, Ant Financial.

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China to implement first rules on livestream e-commerce in July https://technode.com/2020/06/30/chinas-first-livestream-e-commerce-conduct-code-to-come-effect-in-july/ Tue, 30 Jun 2020 09:20:59 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147843 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoChinese regulators are stepping up its efforts to regulate false claims and misinformation in the burgeoning livestream e-commerce market.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo

China is taking steps to regulate its booming livestream e-commerce market with the first set of rules for the sector to take effect on Wednesday.

Why it matters: With livestreamed e-commerce seeing a big upswing beginning last year, Chinese regulators are stepping up efforts to bring more order to the market.

  • Consumers have accused livestream hosts of misleading advertising, endorsing products for a fee while claiming recommendations are an “opinion.”
  • Increased scrutiny will change how livesteamers partner with brands and present products to consumers.

Details: The China Advertising Association (CAA) issued a notice on June 24 about rules to be implemented on July 1 which restricts false and misleading advertising on livestreams and requires real-name registration from both merchants and individual livestreamers.

  • The notice ordered e-commerce livestreams to give “comprehensive, truthful, and accurate” descriptions of the product and services to guarantee the consumers’ right to know and to choose.
  • The notice forbids livestreamers from using false advertising, vulgar content, and exaggeration to mislead consumers.
  • Platforms that host livestream sessions should maintain self-censorship and support training for its hosts.
  • CAA will publicly denounce parties in breach of the notice and request relevant authorities to investigate in cases where laws or regulations have been broken.

Context: China’s broadcasting regulator urged e-commerce platforms to tighten the reins in preparation of Singles Day last year, foreshadowing the market control mechanism.

  • The move is in response to an episode involving livestream mega host Li Jiaqi, the “Lipstick King,” who has nearly 28 million followers on Taobao Live, during Singles’ Day promotion involving a purportedly nonstick skillet which burned an egg during his show.
  • Among the exaggerated and misleading claims, another key opinion leader during a livestream claimed the skincare product she introduced contained an ingredient that won the “Nobel Prize for cosmetics.” The livestreamer apologized for the misinformation later.

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Chinese edtech giant Zuoyebang raises $750 million https://technode.com/2020/06/29/chinese-edtech-giant-zuoyebang-raises-750-million/ Mon, 29 Jun 2020 05:42:47 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147742 Zuoyebang edtech online tutoring tutor livestreamOnline tutoring platform Zuoyebang closes its Series E amid a growing interest from investors for opportunities in edtech during the pandemic.]]> Zuoyebang edtech online tutoring tutor livestream

One of China’s top online tutoring platforms Zuoyebang announced Monday the completion of a $750 million Series E led by Fountainvest Partners and Tiger Global.

Why it matters: The coronavirus pandemic has drawn investor interest to China’s biggest education technology players as students were forced to study from home during lockdown.

  • The funding comes fewer than three months after rival Yuanfudao raised a $1 billion Series G at a valuation of $7.8 billion.

Details: Company founder CEO Hou Jianbin revealed the financing in an internal letter made public on Monday.

  • Other investors in the round include Qatar Investment Authority, Sequoia Capital China, Softbank Vision Fund I, Tiantu Capital, and Xianghe Capital, according to a statement from the company.
  • The edtech startup said it has amassed upwards of 800 million registered users, of which 170 million are monthly active users and 50 million are active on a daily basis.
  • The company said it has seen strong growth in its livestreaming business—full price subscriptions rocketed by more than 10 times over the past two years, and surged 400% year on year in 2019. The firm registered more than 1.3 million users for the 2020 spring semester livestreaming courses.
  • The proceeds will be invested in course development and new products as well as the innovation of new models and new businesses, Hou said.
  • More than 90% of China’s nearly 200 million K-12 aged students have access to broadband networks, according to Hou. “How to use technology to improve learning efficiency is the mission of online education. This is also a gift from this era,” (our translation) he said in the letter.

Context:  Reuters reported in early June a pre-investment valuation of $6.5 billion.

  • The company has raised more than $1 billion funding from its six previous funding rounds combined, according to corporate intelligence platform Tianyancha. The Softbank Vision Fund I led the company’s most recent $500 million Series D+ in November 2018.
  • Zuoyebang was launched in January 2014 as a program incubated under Chinese search engine Baidu’s Q&A site Baidu Zhidao. The team was spun out in 2015 to build a Q&A platform dedicated to students of middle and primary school age.
  • Initially starting as a tool where users would upload photos of their homework to get answers, Zuoyebang expanded to offer one-on-one Q&A sessions in 2014 and livestreamed tutoring in 2016.
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Much needed big numbers from 618 shopping festival https://technode.com/2020/06/24/much-needed-big-numbers-from-618-shopping-festival/ Wed, 24 Jun 2020 13:15:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147646 618 JDA lot of people were counting on a big 618 to kickstart consumption—and early numbers from China's second-biggest shopping festival suggest it worked out.]]> 618 JD

China’s online shopping festivals are usually about racking up the biggest sales, but things were slightly different for this year’s 618 festival, the mid-year shopping frenzy that ended on Thursday of last week. In China, shopping festivals have become landmark events that are used to build a “new normal” for sales volumes and to test e-commerce infrastructure. “This year’s peak volume [for Singles’ Day] will become the norm for the next year,” Alibaba’s Jack Ma once boasted.

First launched in 2010 by JD.com on June 18 to mark its anniversary, 618 spread to other commerce platforms as a lower-profile rival of Singles’ Day—China’s biggest shopping festival, which was created by Alibaba and is held annually on November 11. 

Record-breaking GMV still matters, but the weeks-long shopping event is gaining additional importance as a tangible symbol of economic recovery and commercial innovation after the coronavirus pandemic. After lockdown policies forced the shopping experience to move online, the state stepped in with a brand-new digital subsidy program worth billions, and brands are taking advantage of the popularity of livestream e-commerce to boost their business.

The Big Sell

The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.

Key Figures:

  • Alibaba dominated 6.18 shopping festival with a total of RMB 698.2 billion in sales over the 18-day period.
  • Alibaba offered coupons worth RMB 14 billion, while JD offered subsidies of RMB 10 billion. Meanwhile, the state has handed out RMB 5.6 billion in spending support as of May as part of its ongoing post-Covid consumption plan.
  • Percentage of online shopping (out of total retail) jumped from 20.4% in December to 24.3% in June.

Here’s how it went down in 2020.

A showdown moment for e-commerce platforms

Annual shopping events like 618 and Singles’ Day are high-profile showdowns for e-commerce players. Observers use sales totals from shopping holidays to gauge which platforms have pulled ahead and who has fallen behind. Updates on shopping events are often dubbed “battle reports” by both the companies and local media to hype up the competition. 

Alibaba still leads the pack in terms of total sales, but their rival JD is catching up quickly. 

  • Alibaba booked RMB 698.2 billion in sales over the 18-day shopping festival. The company didn’t publish overall sales data last year, addressing growth over time by saying only that more than 100 brands enjoyed a higher GMV for 618 this year than they did for Singles’ Day 2019.
  • JD, which had its Hong Kong IPO on June 18, racked up a record RMB 269.2 billion in sales from June 1 to June 18, up from RMB 201.5 billion in last year. That’s 33.6% growth compared with last year’s 26.6% uptick. The sales are on par with Alibaba’s RMB 268.4 billion one-day Singles’ Day sales on November 11, 2019.
  • Pinduoduo did not publish overall sales figures for 2020. When contacted by TechNode, they said only that their sales of baby formula increased 510% year-on-year—and that their users don’t need to wait for twice-yearly sales to get the best value for their money because they get the best value on Pinduoduo platform “every single day.” 

Subsidized shopping propels post-Covid recovery

This year’s 618 festival comes as Beijing is gradually easing coronavirus lockdowns and encouraging people to go out and spend money again. The state has even launched a new digital coupon program to incentivize consumers to re-open their wallets after a difficult spring. Current sales data does indicate signs of economic recovery as the outbreak recedes.

To incentivize user consumption, subsidized shopping has become the order of the day. For an RMB 327 order that I placed for menswear on Alibaba’s Tmall during the 618 festival, I received a discount of just over RMB 80. That discount comprised RMB 60 from Tmall and RMB 20 from the brand itself—on top of an RMB 2 government consumption coupon. 

  • The digital coupons issued by the state and distributed over various platforms—such as Alipay, WeChat, and shopping apps—totaled RMB 5.6 billion by the end of May. Though not issued specifically for the promotion, these digital coupons bolstered the consumption-boosting efforts and will continue beyond the holiday.
  • Alibaba says this year’s 618 festival featured the biggest giveaway of consumer coupons and subsidies in the event’s history, totaling over RMB 14 billion in value.
  • Pinduoduo claimed they had no upper limit for subsidies for the festival, doing anything they could to sweeten the GMV percentage increase. The company also pledged to make coupon usage easy by removing various pre-sales and deposit payment tricks that are popular on other platforms. (Such tricks are often very complicated, with bargain-seekers often joking that you need a talent for math to get the best deals.)
  • JD.com planned to offer RMB 10 billion in subsidies, another RMB 10 billion in coupons, and “hundreds of billions of RMB worth of discounts.”
  • China’s omnichannel retailer Suning launched their “J-10%” subsidy plan, targeting household appliances, mobile phones, computers, and groceries. The company pledged the products sold on its platform would be at least “10% lower than other major e-commerce platforms,” evidently benchmarking their rival JD. This is clearly a direct response to JD’s similar subsidy program aimed at Suning in 2012.

Despite the expansive subsidy campaigns, the competition among mainstream e-commerce platforms, during 618 and beyond, is still “rational,” according to Liu Yuan, an analyst at UBS Investment Research. “There’s still sustained revenue and profit growth across platforms,” he said.

The months-long lockdown has turbocharged China’s transition to an online world and propelled a huge leap in online shopping. 

The percentage of online shopping (out of total retail) jumped from 20.4% in December to 24.3% in June, according to data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics. “We expect the figure to jump to nearly 40% within four to five years, although it may drop slightly in the near future because of the gradual recovery of offline businesses,” Liu said. 

“Export companies, factories, and farmers who leverage on online channels to boost their sales may contribute to the growth during the 618 festival,” he added.

Livestreaming is a must-have

Similar to Singles Day, which usually launches with a star-studded countdown gala, 618 is increasingly filled with glitz and glamour, and livestreaming has further blurred the line between shopping and entertainment.

Livestreaming was already a big deal during last year’s Singles’ Day, but the feature is now a must-have for shoppers after livestream e-commerce gained momentum during the pandemic. 

Analysts project that sales achieved through livestream e-commerce will total RMB 961 billion in 2010, compared to 2019’s total of RMB 433.8 billion. Livestream shopping is expected to make up 8.7% of all online purchases. 

  • As JD geared up for the 618 promotion, the company entered a partnership with Kuaishou on May 27 in a deal that allows Kuaishou users to purchase JD’s self-run products directly without leaving the short-video app.
  • Alibaba’s Taobao Live invited more than 300 performers and celebrities to join livestream sessions during the festival.

To reach a wider audience, livestreamers partnered with e-commerce platforms and attended popular variety shows as part of the 618 campaign. Viya, the “livestreaming queen” with 28 million followers on Taobao Live, joined several of the country’s top reality shows, such as “Go Fighting,” to participate in their livestreams.  

Conclusion

As sales rebound, 618 has basically fulfilled the hopes placed upon it by both e-commerce platforms and the government: to spur post-Covid consumption recovery as the biggest shopping event after a months-long nationwide lockdown. Coming at this critical time, 618 has a chance to step out of the shadow of the more established Singles’ Day.

The strategies adopted by e-commerce platforms have proved effective. Livestream e-commerce will continue to be an important tool to reach increasingly online buyers, while subsidized shopping—either through discounts or coupons—will be key to retaining users in a weak economy, as more price-sensitive users from lower-tier cities become the major growth engine for e-commerce.  

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Luckin shares plunge 12% on second delisting warning https://technode.com/2020/06/24/luckin-shares-plunge-12-on-second-delisting-warning/ Wed, 24 Jun 2020 04:32:12 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147559 luckin coffee starbucks fraud misconduct false salesEmbattled coffee chain Luckin disclosed that it had received a second delisting notice from Nasdaq, less than a month after the first.]]> luckin coffee starbucks fraud misconduct false sales

Shares of Luckin Coffee plunged 12.3% on Tuesday after disclosing that it received a second delisting notice from the Nasdaq exchange.

Why it matters: A second notice adds weight to the troubled coffee chain’s potential to delist. The company’s share prices have plunged upwards of 80% since admitting accounting fraud in April.

  • The second notice comes less than a month after the firm received a delisting notice on May 19 for “public interest concerns” and “fabricated” transactions.

Details: The delisting notice was sent in response to the company’s failure to file a Form 20-F, or annual report, for the period ended December 31, 2019, according to a statement from the company.

  • The company says it has been “working diligently to explore possible ways to file the annual report as soon as possible” citing Covid-19 and the internal investigation as reasons for the delay.
  • The US Securities and Exchange Commission requires foreign private share issuers to file their annual reports within four months of the end of the fiscal year.

Context: The company’s shares surprised with a 21.6% rally in late May attributed to rumors that restaurant giant Yum China and Tencent-backed fast food chain Tim Hortons China were considering purchasing company assets including its app and customer data, in addition to speculation on social media that the company would be acquired.

  • Banks including Credit Suisse have won a court order seeking to liquidate entities controlled by Luckin Coffee Chairman Lu Zhengyao, or Charles Lu, according to a SCMP report.
  • Chinese car rental Car Inc may soon sever all formal ties to Lu, founder of Luckin, Car Inc, and Ucar.

Read more: Luckin fraud admission leaves more questions than answers

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Trip.com is offering heavy discounts to reignite travel demand https://technode.com/2020/06/23/trip-com-is-offering-heavy-discounts-to-reignite-travel-demand/ Tue, 23 Jun 2020 07:37:42 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147494 trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19Trip.com, one of China’s biggest online travel agencies, introduced on Tuesday a range of initiatives in an effort to revitalize its core business after Covid-19 lockdowns.]]> trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19

Trip.com, one of China’s biggest online travel agencies, introduced on Tuesday a range of initiatives in an effort to revitalize its core business after the Covid-19 pandemic brought most of the world to a standstill.

Why it matters: After its business plummeted during the epidemic lockdowns around the world, Trip.com is joining tech giants like Alibaba in offering discounts and coupons to spur traveler consumption.

  • As new cases in China die down, travel is beginning to show signs of recovery.
  • After years of global expansion efforts, Chairman James Liang said during the Q1 earnings call in end-May that the company would focus on domestic travel for the near term given the “uncertainties outside of China.”
  • The new promotion is part of a global promotion including hotels in more than 180 countries, signaling that the company is readying a post-Covid-19 strategy.

Details: At an online event held on Monday, Trip.com announced it would giving customers access to steep discounts of up to 60% on flexible advance reservations with more than 30,000 hotels located in upwards of 180 countries.

  • Under a new marketing model, the company formerly known as Ctrip plans to hold a series of in-destination livestream broadcasts from destinations across the world.
  • The livestreams will offer additional exclusive discounts. The company has said that millions watch its livestreams, which account for more than $70 million in sales.
  • In a joint report with Google, Trip.com found that short-haul travel, safety, and flexibility are new priorities for the travel industry in the near future.
  • In response to shifting traveler priorities, the company is making its pandemic-era change fee waiver program a permanent fixture with its “Flexibooking” guarantee.

Context: The Nasdaq-listed company operates travel booking sites including Ctrip, Skyscanner, and Qunar.

  • Trip.com recorded a net loss of RMB 5.4 billion ($754 million) in Q1 this year, down from net income of RMB 4.6 billion in the same period last year.
  • Along with its travel platform peers, the company began in early February to waive fees normally charged for canceling or changing bookings for hotels, tours, and airplane and train tickets when Covid-19 lockdowns began to take hold.
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Pinduoduo founder becomes China‘s second-richest man on 618 surge https://technode.com/2020/06/22/pinduoduo-founder-becomes-chinas-second-richest-man-on-618-surge/ Mon, 22 Jun 2020 06:06:38 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147474 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaThe 40-year-old Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang saw his net worth rocket in June on the back of surging sales from the annual 618 shopping promotion.]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang has surpassed Alibaba founder Jack Ma to become the second-richest man in China, according the real-time billionaire list compiled by Forbes.

Why it matters: Pinduoduo’s 40-year-old founder, also known as Huang Zheng, saw his net worth rocket in June, triggered by robust sales growth during the annual June 18 shopping promotion known as 618.

Details: Huang, an ex-Googler, is now China’s second-richest man with a net worth of $45.4 billion, second only to Tencent’s Ma Huateng whose net worth is $52.6 billion. Huang holds a 45% stake in social e-commerce platform, Pinduoduo. Jack Ma, who retired last fall from the daily operations of Alibaba to focus on philanthropy, saw his net worth fall to $43.9 billion from $45 billion as of 5 p.m. the previous trading day.

  • Pinduoduo didn’t reveal sales figures during the period, saying only that sales of milk formula increased 510% year on year during the period.
  • “Pinduoduo users don’t need to wait twice a year to get the best value for their money because they get the best value on our platform every single day,” the company said in a statement.
  • Shares of Nasdaq-listed Pinduoduo have more than doubled in value since the beginning of the year, boosting the e-commerce company’s market cap from $44 billion on Dec. 31, 2019, to $104.89 billion as of Monday.

Read more: Pinduoduo growth story needs a new chapter

Correction: An earlier version of this story accidentally reported 2019 sales figures for the 6.18 shopping festival as though they were from this year. In fact, Pinduoduo has not published overall sales figures for the festival this year. The story has been updated with a statement from the company.

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Alibaba reshuffles executives in fintech, travel, retail units https://technode.com/2020/06/19/alibaba-reshuffles-executives-in-fintech-travel-retail-units/ Fri, 19 Jun 2020 06:15:10 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147356 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentThe Alibaba restructuring involved fintech affiliate Ant Financial, online travel platform Fliggy, retail, and entertainment units.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Chinese e-commerce and technology giant Alibaba unveiled on Thursday a series of management changes across various business units, the first after founder Jack Ma’s formal departure from the company in September.

Why it matters: The current management reshuffle takes place amid rising competition from rivals JD.com and Pinduoduo in its core-commence business and Meituan in the local lifestyle sector.

  • Alibaba typically restructures once a year with the aim to promote new talent and focus management on opportunities. This year, intensifying competition and the Covid-19 outbreak has weighed on its online travel, entertainment, local lifestyle businesses.
  • Now that Ma has officially departed from the company’s management, Zhang is beginning to build his own executive team as the company works to gain traction in several sectors amid an economic downturn.

Details: The restructuring announced on Thursday involved various business units, including fintech affiliate Ant Financial, online travel platform Fliggy, as well as retail and entertainment businesses.

  • Ant Financial, which operates mobile payment platform Alipay, appointed Ni Xingjun, one of the company’s earliest IT architects, as its new chief technology officer, Reuters reported.
  • Lin Xiaohai, Alibaba vice president and general manager of B2B retail unit LST, is now the CEO of supermarket chain RT-Mart and reports directly to Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang.
  • Zhuang Zhuoran, CTO of Alibaba’s cultural and entertainment unit and COO of the video streaming platform Youku, was named the new president of Fliggy.
  • Fan Chi, vice president of Alibaba Group and Fliggy executive, will be joining Alibaba’s cultural and entertainment unit to oversee the newly created OTT (over-the top) streaming video and sports unit.
  • The company told TechNode the reshuffle is a “normal management adjustment” within the group.

Context: The company released internal restructuring plans on the same day (June 18) last year, the date of a major shopping promotional period for the country’s e-commerce platforms known as 618.

Read more: INSIGHTS | Founders behaving badly

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JD.com shares gain 5.7% in Hong Kong debut https://technode.com/2020/06/18/jd-com-shares-gain-5-7-in-hong-kong-debut/ Thu, 18 Jun 2020 05:04:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147307 jd.com IPO hong kong ecommerce retail alibabaJD’s debut made it the third Chinese tech firm to launch a secondary listing in Hong Kong, following rival Alibaba and gaming giant NetEase.]]> jd.com IPO hong kong ecommerce retail alibaba

Shares of Chinese online retailer JD.com rose 5.7% on Thursday, its first day of trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Why it matters: JD.com is the third Chinese tech firm to launch a secondary listing on the Hong Kong exchange, following rival Alibaba in September and gaming giant Netease last week. It was one of the largest market debuts for a Chinese tech firm as well as for the Hong Kong market this year.

  • A secondary listing of the company’s core retail business is just a first step. JD is planning to take its affiliates public over the next two years, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.
  • More dual listings may on their way. Chinese search engine Baidu and online travel platform Trip.com are reportedly gearing up for a Hong Kong IPO.

Details: JD.com shares opened at HK$239 ($30.8) on Thursday in Hong Kong, up from the offering price HK$226 per share.

  • The e-commerce giant said the IPO would raise HK$29.77 billion in net proceeds.
  • The company will use the proceeds to “invest in key supply chain based technology initiatives to further enhance customer experience while improving operating efficiency,” it said in a statement.
  • JD’s US shares closed up 1.7% in Wednesday trading.

Context: JD’s Hong Kong IPO falls on the 22nd anniversary of the company’s founding in Beijing on June 18, 1998. The anniversary is also one of China’s largest shopping extravaganzas, known as 618.

  • JD.com said in a filing to the Hong Kong bourse that the US government’s efforts to increase regulatory access to audit information could cause uncertainties, including delisting from the US markets.
  • The deal is hailed as a homecoming for the company against a backdrop of escalating tensions between China and the US and following a string of Chinese tech companies that have admitted accounting fraud or have had accusations leveled against them.
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China’s largest gay dating app Blued files for US IPO https://technode.com/2020/06/17/chinas-largest-gay-dating-app-blued-files-for-us-ipo/ Wed, 17 Jun 2020 05:48:01 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147209 Blued Grindr gay dating appBlue City Holdings Ltd., the company behind China’s gay dating app Blued, filed its application on Tuesday to offer shares on the Nasdaq exchange. Why it matters: Blued, which boasts 49 million users, is the largest social dating app for China’s LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) community, according to a report by consultancy Frost […]]]> Blued Grindr gay dating app

Blue City Holdings Ltd., the company behind China’s gay dating app Blued, filed its application on Tuesday to offer shares on the Nasdaq exchange.

Why it matters: Blued, which boasts 49 million users, is the largest social dating app for China’s LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) community, according to a report by consultancy Frost & Sullivan.

  • The company’s application to list on a US exchange bucks the current trend of Chinese tech companies showing increased interest in Hong Kong listings.
  • US government agencies are pushing for more stringent rules on foreign companies including those from China, following a string of accounting scandals led by Luckin.
  • Still, a listing in the US may garner more interest than one on its home turf, which holds less progressive views on LGBTQ communities.
  • Blued’s global expansion may challenge US counterparts Grindr and Hornet.

Details: The company used a placeholder amount of $50 million as a fundraising target, according to the filing. A September Bloomberg report cited a source that said the IPO was expected to raise around $200 million at a $1 billion valuation.

  • China, where the LGBTQ population is still a controversial and highly regulated group, remains the Beijing-based company’s primary market.
  • But the app is also building a global presence with nearly half of the company’s 6 million monthly active users from outside of China including India, South Korea, and Thailand as of March 2020, the company said.
  • Blued is still loss-making, but its net loss attributable to shareholders has narrowed to RMB 27.9 million ($3.9 million) in Q1 2020 from 195.9 million from the same period a year earlier, according to the filing.
  • Besides its core dating feature, the app also runs livestream content and surrogacy matchmaking service Bluedbaby, as well as healthcare service He Health.
  • Livestreaming is the company’s primary revenue source, generating RMB 670 million or 88.5% of the company’s revenue in 2019. The company earns its remaining portion of its revenue from membership services, advertising, and others.
  • The founding team holds 37% of the company through Blue City Media. Shunwei Ventures, the venture capital firm started by Xiaomi founder Lei Jun, owns 12.3% of the firm, and is the largest institutional investor. Other shareholders include CDH entities, Liberty Hero, and Crystal Stream Fund.
  • AMTD Global, CLSA Limited, Loop Capital Markets, and Tiger Brokers are joint bookrunners on the deal.

Context: Launched in 2012, Blued has received a total of RMB 130 million of venture capital in seven financing rounds.

  • Beijing Kunlun Tech, the Chinese owner of Grindr, in March sold 99% of its stake in the US gay dating app, a year after US regulators pressed for disposal over national security concerns.

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Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is testing grocery e-commerce https://technode.com/2020/06/16/chinese-ride-hailing-giant-didi-is-testing-grocery-e-commerce/ Tue, 16 Jun 2020 05:32:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147164 Didi Chengxin YouxuanEntering the e-commerce market means Didi will be competing in a cutthroat industry against grocery delivery giants ranging from Meituan to JD Daojia.]]> Didi Chengxin Youxuan

Ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing is piloting a new grocery e-commerce project in Chengdu as it looks to diversify its revenue streams.

Why it matters: The e-commerce pilot is Didi’s latest push to expand beyond its core ride-hailing business, which has been hit hard by the Covid-19 epidemic.

  • Grocery e-commerce was one of the few business segments that saw strong demand during the coronavirus outbreak.
  • Entering the market means the company will be competing in a cutthroat industry against grocery delivery giants ranging from Meituan to JD Daojia.

Details: Chengxin Youxuan is a fresh produce and grocery “community e-commerce platform” for shoppers who live within a certain vicinity of one another, local media reported.

  • Users can access the service through a WeChat mini-program, which offers flash sales of daily groceries and basic supplies including vegetables, fruits, paper products, and snacks.
  • Without a courier fleet, the service only supports next-day pick-up at nearby offline stores, putting it at a disadvantage compared with grocery delivery rivals.
  • Didi is operating the service through partnerships with third-party warehouses and stores.
  • The service is currently active for residents in Chengdu, which has lower operating costs and less competition compared with megacities like Beijing and Shanghai.
  • The company on Tuesday confirmed to TechNode that the project is under small-scale pilot testing, calling it “one of Didi’s new efforts to address the new demand of users in the post-Covid-19 era.”

Context: The company in March launched home delivery service “Paotui,” where users can request couriers to run errands, from picking up laundry to delivering groceries.

  • Didi is also began hiring van drivers in May in two provincial capitals as part of an early-stage move into the logistics industry.
  • The “community e-commerce” concept isn’t new but gained traction during the Covid-19 lockdown.
  • The company sells to shoppers who live within the same communities to save on distribution costs, helping to keep prices low. Shoppers can also band together for group buys.

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INSIGHTS | Who owns ‘internet literature’? https://technode.com/2020/06/15/insights-who-owns-internet-literature/ Mon, 15 Jun 2020 04:19:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147117 china literature, internet literaturePowered by grassroots fans, Chinese 'internet literature' is big business. It does for Chinese film and TV what Marvel comics do for Hollywood.]]> china literature, internet literature

Who owns “internet literature”?

If you ask the 8.1 million authors registered with China Literature, the Tencent-backed ebook platform that’s almost synonymous with the genre, they do. 

While a few internet lit authors hit it big and turn pro, most are hobbyists. Internet literature is China’s equivalent of fan fiction, a grassroots literary scene famous for schoolyard romance, swashbuckling adventure, and—especially—time-traveling modern heroines who are sent back to teach the Qing Dynasty a thing or two and marry a prince. 

If you ask Tencent, or the new management it installed at the platform in April, it’s the publisher. They began their tenure by offering authors a new contract—one that proposed taking away their royalties and claimed film and TV rights for anything published on the platform.

Authors and fans revolted, with millions of authors refusing to continue serialized stories in protest. Now Tencent is in retreat, but it hasn’t changed its ambitions to tame internet literature and turn it into the IP-generating engine of a multimedia empire. There’s a lot at stake in a fight over fan fiction.

Bottom line: Powered by grassroots fans, Chinese “internet literature” is big business. Dominant platform China Literature does for Chinese TV what Marvel comic books do for Hollywood movies, offering a reliable supply of already popular characters, plots, and settings. But Tencent’s efforts to harness online writers to its multimedia ambitions set off a writers’ revolt, forcing the company to seek a balance between catering to the internet lit community and exploiting it as a source of raw narrative material.

Ebook nation: Online literature first took off almost two decades ago. It has long surpassed print: Chinese readers consumed an average of 14.6 books via screens or smart speakers compared with 8.8 print books in 2019, according to a survey conducted by China Audio-video and Digital Publishing Association. 

The change in reading habits fostered a boom of web-based literature, with popular genres including martial arts adventure tales, known as Wuxia, fantasies, campus life, contemporary romance, thrillers, and more. Internet literature is so popular that Disney has tried to use it to sell Star Wars in China, reaching a deal in 2019 to support authorized fan fiction on China Literature.

The king of internet lit: China Literature, best known for its QQ Reading and Qidian apps, is the largest player in China’s RMB 20.48 billion (around $2.89 billion) digital reading market with a 25.2% market share in 2019, according to a report from Big Data Research (in Chinese). Second-ranked Ireader holds 20.6%, and Alibaba-backed Shuqi follows with 20.4% market share.

A brief timeline:

  • May 2002: Qidian is founded by a group of fantasy story writers.
  • April 2013: Tencent poaches the founders of Qidian from then-market leader Shanda Cloudary. 
  • May 2013: At Tencent, the Qidian team launches online publishing platform Chuangshi.
  • March 2015: Tencent founded China Literature by merging homegrown online literature unit Tencent Literature and Cloudary.
  • January 2015: Tencent merged Cloudary, the online publishing business of Shanda, creating joint venture China Literature, or Yuewen, which includes all online publishing sites and digital reading services owned by the two.
  • Nov. 2017: China Literature raises about $1.1 billion through a 2017 listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange, one of the largest IPOs for the city that year.
  • Aug. 2018: China Literature acquires Chinese digital production company New Classics Media (NCM) for around $2.2-2.3 billion.
  • April 2020: China Literature replaces its founding management team, which is also Qidian’s founding team, with a team of senior executives from Tencent.
  • Late April 2020: Writers contracted to China Literature begin to voice their discontent on April 28 about a new contract which includes the removal of the site’s paywall for premium content and grants the platform authority to license content without permission from authors.

From micro-payments… The pioneer platform was Qidian, which launched in mid-2002 and found success with the micro-payment model for premium content in late 2003. 

Qidian focused on serials: authors would release a few pages at a time, while readers paid a few RMB for each installment. This revenue is split between author and platform, creating an opportunity for hobbyist authors to earn money that laid the foundation for what is now a massive 8.1 million author community.

Qidian stayed independent until 2013, when Tencent took it over in a dramatic series of events.

…to licensing: As online literature got big, China Literature discovered a new way to monetize: film and TV rights. Beginning in 2013, internet companies began mining the online literature sector as a source of ideas for film and TV content. Compared with pennies in the jar from online reading, a TV deal is big bucks for a popular author.

  • Last year, the company helped facilitate the adaptation of more than 160 online literary works into movies, television shows, games, animation, and comics, up from 130 in 2018. 
  • Online books are a major source of characters and plots for television—which often copies dialogue straight out of the source material.
  • Popular books come with a built-in fanbase, making them a safe bet for TV producers.
  • An author known as “Maoni” earned RMB 65 million (about $9 million) from the rights to his popular novel “Joy of Life,” which became a hit TV series last year.
  • China Literature earns revenue from fixed licensing fees as well as revenue sharing deals on licensed content.

The threat of free: The paid reading model worked for years, with the first wave of Chinese online users—mostly better-off young readers from first- and second-tier cities—content to pay for premium literature. As the market grew saturated, however, users from lower-tier markets, less willing to pay for online content, became the driver of growth. 

In 2018, Qutoutiao’s Midu and Lianshang Literature disrupted the market by offering all content for free. The app bombarded readers with constant, disruptive ads, which were the primary revenue source for such platforms, but they caught on with budget-conscious readers. 

The number of paid online reader subscribers in China dropped 27% to 330 million in Q4 2019 from 420 million in Q1 2018, while those with free accounts surged five-fold to 250 million in Q4 2019 from 50 million in Q1 2018, data from Big Data Research showed.

China Literature suffered significantly from the change. Revenues from its online business, mostly paid reading subscribers, declined 3.1% on an annual basis to RMB 3.71 billion in 2019 compared with a 9.7% increase in 2018 and 73.3% year-on-year increase in 2017. 

Where the money is: With subscription revenue in decline, China Literature has committed to IP. It’s quickly overtaken subscriptions as a source of revenue. In 2018, China Literature brought adaptations in house with the $2.25 billion acquisition of television and film production company New Classics Media (NCM).

  • NCM is paying off with blockbuster TV dramas including “The Joy of Life,” “Memories of Peking,” and “The Best Partner,” all based on bestselling online novels from the platform.
  • In 2019, China Literature earned 53% of its total revenue this way, up from 19.9% in 2017.
  • Meanwhile, revenue from online reading fell to 44.5% in 2019, from 83.6% in 2017.
  • The company’s revenues from intellectual property operations increased by 341.0% year-over-year to RMB 4.42 billion in 2019.
  • The surge is mainly driven by consolidation of NCM’s revenues in 2019, and an increase in revenue from IP-related self-operated online games and co-invested drama series.

The ‘pan-entertainment’ strategy: Tencent executive Cheng Wu has been talking about developing multimedia properties since 2011 under a strategy he calls “pan-entertainment.” In pursuit of a pan-entertainment empire, Tencent has built a foothold across all verticals. 

While film and TV adaptations are usually the flagships, the strategy calls for IP to serve every part of the entertainment portfolio. While film and TV adaptations are usually the flagships, the strategy calls for IP to serve every part of the entertainment portfolio, with brand tie-ins appearing in music and games alongside TV adaptations.

Cheng was appointed CEO of China Literature in April. With additional executive roles in Tencent’s film and TV holdings, his appointment signals a commitment to turning the platform into an IP factory.

All your IP are belong to us: This year has seen Tencent accelerate its push for licensing. In April, it replaced the original management team from Qidian with Tencent executives. Then, in May, the company proposed a revamp to its author contract which would remove the paywall for all content on the site, in an attempt for the platform to catch up with free reading platforms—ending subscription royalty income for authors. It also assigned all rights to film and TV adaptations to the platform.

Tactical retreat: Authors revolted at the new contract, with millions refusing to continue stories on the platform and fans taking to social media to criticize the company. In the face of this backlash, the company pulled back, issuing updated contracts for its writers on June 3. The new contract has three versions: authors can opt to allow adaptations, and decide whether the platform can charge readers for content or offer it for free.

The company’s new president, Hou Xiaonan, denied that the company was considering an all-free model and pledged to continue to “forge payment mechanisms” for authors.

Peace at hand? The move may have settled the dispute for the time being, satisfying at least some authors (in Chinese) who say on social media that they can see the company’s “commitment” to solve the problem. 

But for others, it may have spurred a tug-of-war between the platform and authors over IP rights.

Although the company is making compromises now, they may grab control over author IP in a more subtle way in the future since the general [monetization] trend is shifting,” (our translation) wrote renowned online writer Zeng Dengke, known as Angry Banana, in a lengthy Weibo post about the controversy.

The pan-entertainment market is yet another battlefield for the internet giants. China Literature is the largest player, but not the only one in the sector. It’s up against rivals backed by Alibaba, Baidu Inc., and ByteDance, who are also looking to build their own entertainment empire. Conflict with writers could risk access to readers and the IP pool, but giving up on the IP strategy is not an option for Tencent.

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Big data allows tax authorities to collect on ‘brushed’ e-commerce sales https://technode.com/2020/06/12/big-data-allows-tax-authorities-to-collect-on-brushed-e-commerce-sales/ Fri, 12 Jun 2020 09:00:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147087 harmony OS merchants e-commerce brushing tax authorities regulatorTo better regulate the industry, China’s E-commerce Law in 2019 made order 'brushing' illegal, along with a number of other unscrupulous practices.]]> harmony OS merchants e-commerce brushing tax authorities regulator

Chinese e-commerce shop owners reliant on “order brushing,” a practice of falsifying sales numbers, may now be required to pay taxes based on the inflated figures with the implementation of a new tax law.

Why it matters: The new rule is likely to bring more order to the industry over the long term, but an immediate implementation could deal a heavy blow to small online merchants, many of whom are struggling to recover from the impact of Covid-19.

  • Wider application of big data technologies has brought more transparency to the e-commerce market, enabling taxation regulators to compare their data with that from the e-commerce platforms.

Details: Chinese taxation authorities began sending alerts in late May to merchants on various e-commerce platforms like Tmall and JD.com, warning about risks of unpaid taxes from 2017 to 2019, local media reported.

  • The first group of nearly 2,000 merchants in Beijing were warned of such irregularities and were required to make a supplementary payment based on the inflated numbers by early June.
  • “Big data analysis and comparison show that the company’s sales revenue reported to tax regulators in 2017 to 2019 is quite different from the sales revenue calculated by the e-commerce platforms,” the notice warned.
  • The firm involved is required to conduct a self-examination and pay the taxes and late fees if necessary, according to the notice.
  • If implemented, the taxes could have heavy consequences for merchants that have engaged in the practice.
  • A merchant who has inflated RMB 10 million in sales would have to pay more than RMB 1 million (around $140,000) in taxes, Xu Yafeng, founder of skincare brand MIyouth Fullness, wrote in a Weibo post.

Context: In an attempt to better regulate the industry, China’s E-commerce Law in 2019 made order “brushing” illegal, along with a number of other unscrupulous practices like rewarding positive consumer reviews with money.

  • Order brushing, in which sellers use fake accounts to “buy” their own products and boost sales numbers, is a common scam that online sellers use to boost their ratings on various platforms.
  • Merchants sent empty packages as part of order-brushing.
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Tencent moves to integrate movie and fan fiction platforms https://technode.com/2020/06/11/tencent-moves-to-integrate-movie-and-fan-fiction-platforms/ Thu, 11 Jun 2020 10:47:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=147049 tencent antitrust techwar gaming streaming WeChatTencent ups its bet on pan-entertainment market with appointment of fan fiction-like platform chief to movie ticketing board.]]> tencent antitrust techwar gaming streaming WeChat

Tencent-backed movie-ticketing platform Maoyan Entertainment appointed China Literature CEO Cheng Wu a non-executive director Tuesday. In addition to running China’s largest fan fiction-style literature platform, Cheng is also a vice president at Tencent and Tencent Pictures’ CEO.

Why it matters: Cheng’s new role signals further integration of Tencent’s entertainment holdings, and a continued effort to yoke internet literature to the TV and movie cart.

  • Tencent is building a digital empire that covers every facet of entertainment: online literature, video, music streaming, movie and TV production, and gaming.
  • “Internet literature”—similar in tone to fan fiction, but often based on history or original characters rather than existing IP—is a major source of stories and characters for television, making it strategically important across mediums.
  • Appointing executives to two entertainment-related companies within a short period of time marks a turn in Tencent’s hands-off investment style, underlining the company’s commitment to the pan-entertainment market.

Details: Cheng’s new role comes shortly after he took the reins of China Literature, China’s top online publisher, in April 2020.

  • In addition to his other roles, Cheng is the vice-chairman and executive director of Huayi Tencent Entertainment Company, a Hong Kong-listed joint venture between Tencent and the entertainment company Huayi Brothers.
  • Liu Lin, another Tencent executive and former senior vice president of Maoyan parent Meituan Dianping, was also named to Maoyan’s board as independent non-executive director.

Context: Maoyan, a ticketing platform that spun off from Meituan in 2015, is expanding into the broader entertainment industry as China’s box office revenue is experiencing a downturn. Meanwhile, China Literature is shifting toward licensing deals for tv and movies, a shift that has alienated some authors and fans.

READ MORE: China’s largest e-book seller faces writer backlash

  • Maoyan and Tencent Video reached a partnership in 2019 to integrate their ecosystems by converging traffic, promoting a joint membership program, and sharing data.
  • China Literature’s original business model focused on charging readers for access to self-published fiction, but as licensing deals became profitable it has shifted focus.
  • Cheng’s appointment also saw the final exit of China Literature’s founding management.
  • Meanwhile, Alibaba is building a rival pan-entertainment giant with a set of services ranging from online reading app Shuqi, to video streaming Youku, to music streaming unit Xiami.
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Chinese tech giants’ new market: street vendors https://technode.com/2020/06/09/chinese-tech-giants-new-market-street-vendors/ Tue, 09 Jun 2020 07:47:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=146904 street vendors street market Sinan Mansions ShanghaiTech giants rush to join newfound national support for street vendors, but this time it's street vendors' turn to say "sorry, not interested."]]> street vendors street market Sinan Mansions Shanghai

One night, it was an ordinary walkway in a residential compound in an eastern suburb of Beijing. The next night, it was a night market. Days later, it was gone again. 

For a short while, dozens of stalls were set up along a walkway inside the community of around 40,000 residents, selling clothes, packed food, flowers, and accessories.

Wang Meng, 28, was one of those vendors, selling earrings and hairpins. 

“In the past, security guards would chase us away immediately,” she told TechNode on Wednesday. “A few days ago people rushed to the street and set up their stalls following Premier Li Keqiang’s remarks on street vendors. The guards tried to cast us out, but in the end they failed.”

The night bazaar popped up during a brief regulatory vacuum in Beijing after Premier Li said street markets were to be legalized on June 1, declaring the so-called “street-stall economy” an “important source of jobs.” This particular market vanished as quickly as it appeared, as Beijing authorities clamped down on spontaneous markets after a five day window. 

But elsewhere in China, cities have lifted bans on hawking on public streets in an effort to reboot the economy after the coronavirus outbreak. Chengdu in the southwest province of Sichuan and Nanjing in Jiangsu province have set up thousands of designated areas for street vendors to operate in, state media China News Service reported Thursday.

Li’s public support has made “street vendor” one of China’s hottest buzz phrases—the “internet Plus” or “AI” of summer 2020. Unsurprisingly, tech companies are also jumping on the bandwagon, offering a series of services and incentives tailored for street vendors, including interest-free loans, mobile payment tools, and even food vans for stallholders.

However, vendors interviewed by TechNode were not very interested in tech companies’ much-hyped offerings.

Thanks, but no thanks

Wang resigned her position as a middle manager at a wealth management firm in May. She now makes an average of around RMB 400 ($56.3) per day from her stall, which is equipped with just a table and a lamp.

She sources stock from e-commerce giant Alibaba’s business-to-business (B2B) marketplace 1688.com. The site announced last week it would offer RMB 70 billion in interest-free loans for street vendors for an undefined period of time, allowing them to stock up goods from the platform without paying before they’ve sold them.

Wang says she is aware of the service, but she is not using it. “I prefer to grow my business within the realm of my financial ability,” she said.

Following on the heels of the Alibaba announcement, e-commerce firm JD.com launched the “Spark” plan on Tuesday, pledging approximately RMB 50 billion worth of goods to supply stall owners and shopkeepers and providing up to RMB 100,000 of interest-free credit per merchant.

On the same day, retailer Suning.com said it would offer stall owners free space to store wares in 10,000 freezers in Suning convenience stores and Carrefour supermarkets across the country, according to local media reports.

Other tech companies responding to Beijing’s call to support street vendors include Tencent’s instant-messaging app Wechat, which said it would offer plans (in Chinese) to help with the “digital transformation of small businesses.” Alibaba’s payment tool Alipay said in a blog post (in Chinese) on Tuesday it would also provide small businesses with interest-free loans.

Wang also runs an accessory shop on Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao which she opened last month. When asked about the incentives offered by tech companies, she said she is more worried about making sales face to face than digital transformation. 

Is ‘street stall economy’ the next business fad?

Policy and regulation can have a significant impact on the tech world, especially in China. From mass entrepreneurship to the artificial intelligence boom, government-backed initiatives have created lots of opportunities for Chinese entrepreneurs. 

Tech majors often react swiftly to government initiatives. In a Wechat post, Alipay responded to Premier Li’s call in the tone of a young pioneer reporting for duty: “Premier Li, we are already making plans!” The payments platform promised to help to raise income for small businesses from digital operations by 20% and the availability of online loans by 20%.

Chinese tech firms looking for new sources of growth likely also see the “street stall economy” as a new opportunity. Chinese tech companies have long trumpeted so-called “internet thinking”—a business philosophy used by low-margin internet-based services that attract new users by offering them free services or goods. After amassing a sizable user base, they monetize by leveraging online advertising and paid services.

With the potential for street markets to grow into bigger businesses, tech companies are offering them interest-free loans in order to capture their business now in hopes to later sell them lucrative services such as high-rate lending, payment systems, to raw material supply.

Most of the tech companies that are offering interest-free loans to street vendors already offered loans to small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at sky-high rates.

JD.com offers an online lending service for small businesses with an annual interest rate of 11%, according to its website (in Chinese). Alipay parent company Ant Financial offers a loan service targeting SMEs with an annual rate of up to 17.2% through its online Mybank (in Chinese). By comparison, China’s targeted medium-term lending facility, the Chinese central bank’s policy lending tool for small and private firms, has an annual rate of 2.95% as of April, according to Reuters.

Part-time vendor Li Nan told TechNode she’s looking at loans, but worries they won’t be free forever.

Li, a 22-year-old sales assistant at an internet company based in Beijing, sells prepared seafood she makes at home in the evenings at the same marketplace where Wang’s stall is located. She resigned from her previous company early in the year with the hope of finding a new job after the Spring Festival holiday in late January. However, it took her three months to restart her career because of the Covid-19 outbreak which brought the economy to a standstill. Her new company pays her around RMB 2,000 less than her previous job, she told TechNode.

Li says street selling is just an initial step and she wants to open her own—indoor—seafood restaurant in the future.

“Of course interest-free loans provided by tech companies may help me expand my business considering my financial situation,” she said. 

However, Li believes that those loans won’t always be free. “By the time I open my restaurant, I will choose services that suit me the best,” she said.

Come back later (at least in Beijing)

However, Li’s restaurant plans may have to wait for Beijing’s strict city management policies. On Saturday, the City Urban Administrative and Law Enforcement Bureau of Beijing pledged to purge “illegal behavior including street vending,” according to official newspaper the Beijing Daily (in Chinese). 

The authorities took action ahead of the announcement. On Friday night, after the city management authorities and security guards took over the night market, street vendors vanished from the street as quickly as they appeared a few days before.

The tech giants are still powering ahead with plans for the street stall economy—but you may have to get outside the fifth ring road to see the results.

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Homemade food platform Home Cook is shutting down https://technode.com/2020/06/08/homemade-meal-app-home-cook-is-closing/ Mon, 08 Jun 2020 07:43:45 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=146862 Home-Cook homemade meal dishes entrepreneur Home-Cook connected "merchants," or home cooks, with local users looking for homemade dishes, and was a fad at the peak of the sharing economy trend.]]> Home-Cook homemade meal dishes entrepreneur

Homemade meal delivery app Home Cook is closing its business down, according to messages sent to users on May 31, asking them to apply for refunds before June 1.

Why it matters: Home Cook’s collapse highlights the downfall of a once-popular fad, China’s homemade meal delivery apps, which promised to make home cooks into entrepreneurs from their kitchens.

Details: The app has been removed from the Apple China App Store and user registration for the app downloaded on Android platforms has ceased to work, TechNode has observed.

  • The Beijing-based company halted its operations in April, citing the impact from the coronavirus pandemic for the move, according to local media reports.
  • Company founder Tang Wanli, a former Alibaba employee, exited the company in 2019, according to Chinese business research platform Tianyancha.com.
  • As a top player in the sector, Home Cook had 3.5 million registered users and more than 40,000 merchants as of 2017.

Context: Founded in 2014, Home Cook is a mobile app that connected “merchants,” or home cooks, with local users looking to purchase homemade dishes. Orders could be picked up from sellers or arranged via third-party delivery service.

  • The service was a fad as part of the sharing economy concept in 2015, when rental services for cars, bikes, and offices created new opportunities for Chinese entrepreneurs.
  • However, users began to ebb as adoption of restaurant food deliveries grew increasingly mainstream and food security concerns started to draw regulator attention.
  • The Covid-19 pandemic, which put a halt on nearly every online-to-offline business, was the last straw for the struggling industry.
  • The company is competing with rivals like Mishi and Youfan.
  • China’s food security monitoring authority rolled out a notice in 2016, requiring all food operators to display their food production permits and business licenses in their stores.
  • This was a huge blow to homemade meal platforms, most of which only required IDs and health certificates to start a business.

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No apartment, but rent still due—Qingke tenants trapped in rental loan contracts https://technode.com/2020/06/08/no-apartment-but-rent-still-due-qingke-tenants-trapped-in-rental-loan-contracts/ Mon, 08 Jun 2020 05:07:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139684 qingke rental platform proptechTroubles for apartment rental platform Qingke highlight the risks in the industry, where highly leveraged financing is used to achieve scale very quickly. ]]> qingke rental platform proptech

Tenants of Nasdaq-listed apartment rental platform Qingke say they’re finding themselves out of a home and in debt as the company comes under fire online after failing to pay rentals or deposits to its users, fueling rumors of insolvency.

Why it matters: Qingke’s troubles highlight the risk that rental loan contracts pose to both tenants and lenders.

  • Like other “second landlord” companies, Qingke relies on rental loans to accelerate growth—a bit of fancy financing that brings in a whole year’s rent in advance while leaving both tenants and the platform on the hook to lenders.
  • For tenants, the model replaces rent payments with debt service to a third party. Tenants can owe payments even after being evicted.
  • The Covid-19 outbreak, which brought a halt to China’s home rental market, created a cash crunch.

Read more: China’s WeWork for houses reveals rental loan risks

Details: Qingke admitted a cash strain in an announcement released on May 29, but says their business is running normally and pledged to pay debts. But tenants say they are being forced out of apartments as Qingke misses lease payments.

  • Dissatisfied apartment owners who encountered rental payment delays are forcing tenants to leave their apartments. “We have been ousted by the landlord because Qingke has delayed payment for three months. The electricity and water in the house have been cut off,” Jiang Dongyue, who rented two houses from Qingke in Shanghai, told TechNode.
  • After graduating from college, tenant Gemini Cai took out a rental loan to sign a one-year contract with Qingke, but was forced to move out of her apartment in Hangzhou one month later by the apartment owner.
  • Cai’s deposits and rental loans amount to nearly RMB 20,000 (about $2,800). She only lived in the house for one month, which costs RMB 1,400. “With the rental loan contract still going on, I have to pay the rest of the loan even though I’m not living in their apartment,” Cai said (our translation). She has already moved back to her hometown due to financial pressure.
  • “I don’t believe a word from this unscrupulous company,” Cai told TechNode.
  • Another Shanghai resident, Ruth Yang, moved out of a Qingke apartment last month because Qingke terminated their rental contract without notifying her. Yang still hasn’t received a refund for her rent and deposit.

Context: Qingke, founded in 2012, rents shared houses targeting young professionals. The company raised $46 million in its Nasdaq listing in November, down from the original goal of $100 million.

  • The bike-sharing company Ofo likewise funded operations using advance payments, relying on deposits paid by riders. Millions of Chinese consumers lost their deposits when the company collapsed.
  • Qingke’s peers include Ziroom, Mofang Apartment, and Danke Apartment.
  • Qingke rival Danke encountered similar blowback after applying exploitative business practices in February to ease a cash crunch.
  • Danke drew attention from China’s finance and insurance regulatory watchdogs, which launched a joint investigation into the rental loan practices of apartment-hunting platforms in February.
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Chinese lender Qudian is now luxury e-tailer Secoo’s biggest shareholder https://technode.com/2020/06/04/chinese-lender-qudian-is-now-luxury-e-tailer-secoos-biggest-shareholder/ Thu, 04 Jun 2020 04:46:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139617 Qudian fintech microloanBuying into Secoo could help struggling Qudian resuscitate its consumer lending platform by expanding into luxury e-commerce.]]> Qudian fintech microloan

Chinese micro-loan lender Qudian has agreed to buy $100 million worth of shares in Secoo Holdings, making it the Chinese luxury e-retailer’s largest shareholder with a 28.9% stake.

Why it matters: Buying into Secoo could help struggling Qudian resuscitate its consumer lending platform by expanding to luxury e-commerce consumers.

  • Expansion to online sales of costly luxury products could help lure customers into Qudian’s financial system.
  • Qudian rolled out Wanlimu, a luxury online retailer site, in March. The platform quickly gained momentum with heavy discounts and aggressive marketing tactics.
  • However, many remain skeptical of the high-end beauty products sold on the platform at bargain basement prices, a red flag which has in the past signaled either counterfeit products or a problematic business model.

Details: New York-listed Qudian has agreed to purchase more than 10 million newly issued Class A ordinary shares of Nasdaq-listed Secoo for an aggregate purchase price of up to $100 million, or a per-share price of $9.80, according to a joint statement released on Wednesday.

  • The two companies will enter into a strategic partnership to cooperate in the online luxury e-commerce sector.
  • The cooperation will cover various areas such supply chain management, user acquisition and retention, quality appraisals, post-sales services, and financing solutions, according to Qudian founder and chairman Luo Min.
  • The partnership will bring value to both Secoo and our Wanlimu platform, Luo said.
  • Secoo will use the investment proceeds to further strengthen its supply chain and enhance user experience, Secoo founder and chairman Li Rixue said in the statement.
  • In response to the news, Qudian shares rose 4.7% and Secoo shares soared 52.6% on Wednesday.

Context: Six-year-old Qudian started out as a consumer credit firm. It raised $900 million in its 2017 stock market debut, then the biggest US IPO by a Chinese fintech firm.

  • A government crackdown on microlending has weighed on the company’s performance since its stock market debut. The company saw its market value plummet from around RMB 10 billion just after its IPO to just RMB 433 million as of Wednesday.
  • Alibaba’s Ant Financial, an early backer, dumped its entire stake in the company in 2019 after it ended its partnership in 2018.

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Gaming giant Netease to list in Hong Kong on June 11 https://technode.com/2020/06/02/gaming-giant-netease-to-list-in-hong-kong-on-june-11/ Tue, 02 Jun 2020 05:28:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139458 Netease IPO gaming e-commerceNetEase’s deal, hailed as a homecoming for a Chinese company returning to a local stock exchange, will be Hong Kong’s largest listing so far in 2020.]]> Netease IPO gaming e-commerce

Chinese tech giant Netease announced its long-anticipated Hong Kong listing on Tuesday, offering a detailed plan for its debut on June 11.

Why it matters: Netease will be the second US-listed Chinese tech giant to launch a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange, following Alibaba’s blockbuster Hong Kong listing in November.

  • Netease’s deal, hailed as a homecoming, will be Hong Kong’s largest listing so far in 2020, according to Refinitiv data cited by Reuters.
  • JD.com is reportedly also planning a dual listing in Hong Kong as early as June.
  • Tech majors like Baidu and Ctrip are reportedly planning similar moves, according to news reports.

Details: The company will make its debut on the Hong Kong stock exchange on June 11 with the ticker “9999,” according to the company filing on Tuesday.

  • Netease plans to offer a total of 171,480,000 shares in the global offering. Of the total, 5.15 million shares will be offered locally in Hong Kong and 166.33 million shares will be offered internationally.
  • The public offer price will not exceed HK$126 ($16.26) per share. Reuters reported that the company is aiming to raise around $2.6 billion through the secondary listing.
  • CICC, Credit Suisse, and J.P. Morgan will serve as the joint sponsors and joint global coordinators for the deal.
  • The proceeds will be used for “globalization strategies and opportunities.”

Context: Netease, traded publicly on Nasdaq since June 2000, earns nearly 80% of its revenue from gaming. The Tencent rival has more than 140 mobile and PC games across various genres.

  • Netease’s e-learning unit Youdao went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2019.
  • Netease Cloud Music is second to leader Tencent Music in terms of user base, according to data analytics service Jiguang. Netease is planning a separate listing of its music business, which the company said had more than 800 million registered users in 2019.
  • The company has a number of other businesses including private label brand e-commerce platform Netease Yanxuan, cross-border e-commerce marketplace Kaola, which it sold to Alibaba for $2 billion in September, as well as an online media outlet, an e-mail service, and others.
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JD.com buys $100 million convertible bonds in Gome Retail https://technode.com/2020/05/29/jd-com-buys-100-million-convertible-bonds-in-gome-retail/ Fri, 29 May 2020 02:54:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139352 Office workers & computers at Chinese internet company 996JD and GOME, both of which have their forces in consumer electronics sales, are traditionally being considered as competitors. ]]> Office workers & computers at Chinese internet company 996

Online retailer JD.com said on Thursday that it will buy $100 million worth of convertible bonds in Gome Retail, one of China’s largest physical electronics chains.

Why it matters: Chinese online retailers are working closely with physical electronics chains to expand their offline presence and product categories as well as complement their supply chain networks.

  • JD and Gome have been considered competitors as both have core competencies in consumer electronics.
  • JD’s investment in Gome Retail comes shortly after its rival Pinduoduo invested $200 million worth of convertible bonds in the Hong Kong-listed electronics chain in April.
  • Another Alibaba vs Tencent alliance is taking form: Both JD and PDD are backed by Tencent and Alibaba is a major backer of Suning, another major electronics chain.

Details: JD and Gome Retail said in a joint statement on Tuesday that they are entering a strategic partnership for all-inclusive cooperation that ranges from service efficiency improvement to supply chain capabilities and financial services development.

  • Foreshadowing the partnership, Gome Retail launched their flagship store on JD in March.
  • Gome Retail is the latest addition to JD’s investment portfolio, including electronics chains such as 5Star, D.Phone, and Lenovo‘s Lecoo.
  • Both Pinduoduo and JD invested in Gome Retail through convertible bonds, which is a “very smart way” for them to test out such investments, according to local media citing an investor.
  • They can either hold the convertible bond or convert them to Gome shares depending on the effectiveness of their partnerships as well as the company’s future performance, according to the investor.

Context: NASDAQ-listed JD is reportedly gearing up for a secondarily listing Hong Kong as early as June.

  • Alibaba invested $4.6 billion in Gome rival, Suning, in 2015 to facilitate a range of collaborations.
  • To expand its online traction, JD on Wednesday teamed up with short video app Kuaishou in a deal that allows Kuaishou users to buy JD products without leaving the app.
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Alibaba is recruiting Tiktok and Instagram KOLs for international ‘shoppertainment’ https://technode.com/2020/05/28/alibaba-is-recruiting-tiktok-and-instagram-kols-for-international-shoppertainment/ Thu, 28 May 2020 06:36:56 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139295 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAliexpress is on the hunt for over content creators and influencers globally to build up its influencer network worldwide.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Aliexpress, Alibaba’s e-commerce platform that sells goods made in China to international customers, is on the hunt for over 100,000 content creators and influencers globally as the e-commerce titan tries to build up its influencer network worldwide.

Why it matters: Keen to expand beyond its home market, Alibaba has been using locally-tested innovations, either in business model or technology, to fuel its global expansion. It’s testing the country’s red-hot livestream e-commerce trend in the global market this time.

  • Livestream e-commerce gets really big in China where almost all tech majors jumped on board, from video apps Douyin, Kuaishou to Alibaba’s e-commerce rivals Pinduoduo and JD.
  • Alibaba’s leading the trend in China with its livestreaming unit Taobao Live.
  • Social commerce is attracting attention from global players such as Facebook.

Read more: How e-commerce and livestreaming became frenemies

Details: Newly launched “Aliexpress Connect” is a platform dedicated to content influencer campaigns.

  • The platform helps to pair influencers both with Aliexpress and brands that are selling through the marketplace.
  • Influencers can sign up with Aliexpress Connect through their Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tiktok, or Google accounts.

“As e-commerce continues to grow and ‘shoppertainment’ reshapes the landscape and changes the way people shop online, influencers and content creators are playing a more important role in driving retail transformation and e-commerce success.”

Wang Mingqiang, general manager of AliExpress.
  • Wang also sees this as an effort with social benefits, which is “a great source of job creation and income, especially during the Covid-19 crisis.”

Context: Launched in 2010, Aliexpress allow vendors in China to sell small quantities of goods to overseas shoppers at wholesale prices. 

  • Aliexpress is popular in Russia, the United States, Brazil, Spain, France, and Poland.
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How e-commerce and livestreaming became frenemies https://technode.com/2020/05/27/how-e-commerce-and-livestreaming-became-frenemies/ Wed, 27 May 2020 13:15:39 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139282 Taobao livestreamingLivestreaming e-commerce is very, very big. But who will win a fight for eyeballs between shopping and video platforms? Can anyone take on Taobao Live?]]> Taobao livestreaming

Baidu’s billionaire founder Robin Li. “Home appliance queen” Dong Mingzhu, of electronics maker Gree. Luo Yonghao, the indebted online celebrity founder of smartphone maker Smartisan. China’s livestreaming industry has welcomed a flurry of high-profile figures over the past few months.

Our new in-focus series will feature in-depth reporting on the latest developments in key areas:

  • VC activities and outlook 
  • A changing landscape in China’s auto industry 
  • Chinese tech giants’ overseas expansion
  • Innovations in e-commerce

Find out more about the in-focus series.

This week, we offer you The Big Sell.

Livestreaming is really, really big. From its low-budget, grassroots origins, it has become a mainstream habit and an essential part of marketing in post-Covid-19 China.

Livestreaming is closely intertwined with e-commerce, short videos, and gaming. China’s livestreaming-derived market grew to RMB 61 billion (about $8.6 billion) in 2019, and is projected by research firm Equalocean to achieve a 12% compound annual growth rate to reach RMB 100 billion by 2023.

“As e-commerce and content blend together, shopping and video platforms have become frenemies”

Among various segments under the umbrella concept, livestreaming e-commerce has emerged as a key monetization model for players in the field—and a key marketing tool for businesses trying to reach China’s digital audiences. China’s livestreaming e-commerce market is expected to reach RMB 23.6 billion, on a 520 million live-show app user scale in 2020, the Equalocean report says.

Spokesperson or salesperson?

The most famous streams are hosted by celebrity KOLs, who build up loyal audiences with QVC-style online shows. The most famous, like “lipstick king” Li Jiaqi, are household names and fodder for memes far beyond e-commerce platforms.

But thousands of humbler streamers act as virtual salespeople, explaining products to potential customers. Lu Lu, who runs a virtual vegetable shop on Taobao Live, is a good example. When an order comes in, the stream (requires app download) shows her weighing out produce and preparing it for shipment.

Many e-commerce livestreamers come across more like a virtual salesperson than celebrity endorser, patiently explaining products on camera and fielding questions from live viewers. While browsing the product page for, say, an electronic toy or a brand of face cream, shoppers will often see a link to either a livestream or a recorded stream in which one of these streamers demonstrates the product.

Turbocharged growth comes with some serious growth pains, and the industry may have to contend with more regulation soon. Users have complained about false advertising, vulgar content, and misleading exaggerations. Currently, rules on false advertising are not applied to KOLs’ “product reviews,” but this loophole could be closed.

The Covid boom

Covid-19 was an unexpected boon for livestreaming e-commerce in China. Many brands and retailers have turned to livestreaming to help reduce the impact and losses from the epidemic. It has prompted businesses closely tied to offline showrooms to try online events—even electric carmakers Nio and Tesla.

According to China’s Ministry of Commerce, more than 4 million e-commerce live broadcasts were hosted in the first quarter of 2020, the key period when China was under countrywide lockdown due to the outbreak.

Compared to entertainment livestreaming, livestreaming e-commerce has a better chance of turning windfall users into recurring users by building up new marketing options for brands and an enriched shopping experience for consumers.

Read more: INSIGHTS | Brands turn to livestreaming as China stays home

The livestreaming players

Pretty much every company with a stake in either e-commerce or livestreaming has tried to combine the two. E-commerce platforms, like Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and JD, as well as short-video platforms such as Douyin and Kuaishou have all jumped on the bandwagon.

With a significant head start and a massive user base, Taobao is the elephant in the room, the one everyone else is responding to with varying success. In an increasingly crowded field, the challenge now for each of these platforms is how to differentiate itself from its peers and stand out by targeting different groups of buyers and brands.

It’s hard to compare exactly how the players stack up—as data on this phenomenon is still limited—but here’s a rough guide:

Taobao Live

  • As one of the earliest pioneers of the “livestream + e-commerce” model, Alibaba’s Taobao Live is the clear heavyweight champion, with estimated 2019 GMV between RMB 200 billion and 250 billion.
  • It’s one of the largest livestreaming platforms, whether in terms of the merchant size, user base, or sales achieved. 
  • The platform accounted for nearly 60% of e-commerce streaming transactions in 2019. 
  • It generated sales of RMB 20 billion during Alibaba’s November 11 Singles’ Day 2019 shopping holiday, or 7.5% of the total RMB 268.4 billion sales.
  • Taobao Live is available both as an in-app feature on its parent marketplace Taobao, and as a standalone app.
  • Just like Taobao, Taobao Live’s most popular product categories are women’s garments, skincare, food, and jewelry. 
  • The platform is introducing big-ticket items such as cars and real estate, as well as consumer electronics.
  • These popular categories reflect the fact that the platform is dominated by women and younger users. 
  • Nearly 70% of Taobao Live’s audience are women, while most of the consumers belong to the post-’80s and post-’90s generation, says a Taobao report (in Chinese).
  • Sales on the platform are driven heavily by top-tier KOLs, like Viya and “lipstick king” Li Jiaqi, who have highly sophisticated MCNs (multi-channel networks) behind them. 
  • These professional content production agencies, now numbering more than 6,500, are a major force driving China’s livestream boom.
  • An overall 20% (around 140) top MCN institutions on the platform contributed almost 75% of Taobao Live’s traffic and 80% of its GMV, according to the 2020 White Paper on Taobao Vendors.
  • However, Taobao’s dependence on professional MCNs is highly costly to vendors. 
  • Everbright estimates that marketing costs on Taobao Live eat up about 20% of GMV, with 70% of the spend going to MCNs, while Alibaba marketing platforms Alimama and Taobao Live take 10% and 20% respectively.

Social media: The most serious challengers to Taobao Live come not from e-commerce, but rather livestreaming. As livestream e-commerce matures, social media players Kuaishou and Douyin have made plays that leverage their traffic and KOL resources. 

These forays began as partnerships with e-commerce platforms to pilot livestreaming e-commerce features, but the companies gradually built up their own e-commerce capacities and ended the partnerships as trials developed into full-fledged services that keep users in the app when they buy.

Kuaishou

  • Kuaishou launched livestreaming in 2017 to a relatively gender-balanced user base with a typical user in a third- or fourth-tier city..
  • Kuaishou reportedly achieved an estimated GMV of about RMB 35 billion in 2019, and aims to multiply that to RMB 250 billion in 2020.
  • Livestream e-commerce accounted for 19% of Kuaishou’s RMB 55 billion revenue in 2019, although 60% of the revenue still came from virtual gifts associated with traditional entertainment livestreaming. 
  • These figures reflect the platform’s KOL-centered online culture, where users address each other as laotie (“old chap”), a colloquial term used in northeast China to refer to unbreakable brotherhood.
  • Thanks to strong connections with users, Kuaishou’s e-commerce conversion is five to ten times higher compared to its peer Douyin, according to a report by Frees Fund. 
  • But the products are mainly low-margin and low-price, with sales under RMB 50 accounting for 63.3% of total sales, compared with Douyin’s 41.5%.
  • The most popular categories are personal care, cosmetics, clothing, local specialty foods, and alcohol.

“Power seems to be shifting toward video platforms”

Douyin

  • Douyin did not emphasize livestreaming until 2019. Since then, the business has grown very quickly by encouraging KOLs to transfer their accumulated fans from short-video to livestreaming and online consumption.
  • Douyin predicts RMB 200 billion in GMV on the platform in 2020.
  • Unlike Kuaishou, Douyin relies on short-video quality and attractive products to make sales, rather than relationships between fans and content providers.
  • Douyin users are largely concentrated in higher-tier cities, with purchasing power that results in larger ticket orders.

Read more: Why Kuaishou beats Douyin for e-commerce

Other e-commerce players: Taobao’s e-commerce peers are stuck in the lightweight division for livestreaming, with substantially smaller user bases and sales than Taobao and the video platforms, handicapped by business models that emphasize value for money over fashion-driven impulse buys. Nonetheless, Pinduoduo and JD have built real, if smaller, user bases around livestreaming.

Duoduo Live:

  • As a marketplace, Pinduoduo has enjoyed robust growth since its establishment with a unique model that encourages users to get together with friends to buy in bulk.
  • But livestream e-commerce didn’t win attention from Pinduoduo until recently, when growth slowed down.
  • The Shanghai-based firm officially rolled out Duoduo Live as an add-on within the app in January 2019—after testing the livestream feature the previous November—making it a relative latecomer to the field.
  • Over 1 million, or 20-30% of Pinduoduo’s 5.1 million active merchants have opened livestream sessions, according to data from the company.
  • Users aged between 20 to 35 years old contribute the most to GMV.
  • Pinduoduo’s approach to livestreaming is drastically different from Alibaba’s. With its distinctive consumer-to-manufacturer model, it has leaned heavily on the virtual salesperson model. 
  • Duoduo live audiences likely have a potential buy in mind before loading a stream (e.g. drawn in by a discount or social referral), and will use the stream to gain more information before making a decision.
  • Duoduo Live’s livestream sessions are centered around products, meaning they’re cheaper for merchants than Taobao Live’s slicker MNC-driven streams. 
  • The anchors, often amateur KOLs, are mostly people with a stake in the product—CEOs of manufacturers, government officials for promoting agriculture products from their towns, or even the sellers themselves. 

JD Live

  • Livestreaming is a poor fit for JD’s brand, which is built on keeping things simple for users. 
  • JD Live is still playing catch-up to Taobao Live, following a similar high-production value approach. Many streams use an “expert + celebrity + host” format, which combines rich content with expert knowledge and a link to purchase. 
  • It also serves as a medium to educate users and build brand awareness. 
  • Like Taobao, this model means high costs for merchants.
  • JD Live has partnered with both Douyin and Kuaishou to leverage their traffic and KOL network, in addition to building up super KOL celebrities to promote premium products. 
  • On Wednesday, JD announced a new deal with Kuaishou which will allow Kuaishou viewers to make purchases from JD without changing the app.
  • Like Taobao Live, JD Live is also diversifying product categories from consumer electronics, beauty, and food to big-ticket items like real estate. 

Who owns livestreaming eyeballs?

As e-commerce and content blend together, shopping and video platforms are becoming frenemies. On the one hand, they rely on each other: Video apps boast traffic and content, while e-commerce sites have brands and supply chains. On the other hand, they are competing to be the central platform for the new model.

Alibaba has the best of both worlds, with its Taobao Live emerging as a major content platform in its own right.

But the rival e-commerce sites do not have the same traction with in-house content, creating a dilemma. For JD and Pinduoduo, integrating with video apps means handing over some of their crown jewels—control of advertising, product search, and customer data. It’s no wonder that these partnerships can fall apart.

Power seems to be shifting toward video platforms. In the previous partnership model, video apps usually directed users to e-commerce apps such as Taobao and JD to finalize the purchase.  

However, as a new deal between Kuaishou and JD allows users to purchase JD products without leaving the app, JD is giving up its users’ eyeballs to drive sales.

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Kuaishou users can now buy JD products without leaving the app https://technode.com/2020/05/27/kuaishou-users-can-now-buy-jd-products-without-leaving-the-app/ Wed, 27 May 2020 03:45:05 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139236 digital yuan JD.com JD Jingdong ecommerceThe closer relationship between Kuaishou with JD comes a few months after a hiccup with Taobao Live.]]> digital yuan JD.com JD Jingdong ecommerce

Short video app Kuaishou and e-commerce giant JD announced today a new partnership as the Chinese tech titans are gearing up for China’s biggest mid-year shopping extravaganza 618 on June 18.

Why it matters: China’s e-commerce platforms and short video apps are working closer while livestream e-commerce is gaining traction. In the tie-up, e-commerce apps have their strengths in brands, supply chain, and after-sales support, whereas video apps have their advantages in rich content and access to potential buyers.

  • Kuaishou’s closer relationship with JD comes a few months after a hiccup with Taobao Live, the Alibaba-backed livestream major that supports a similar referral feature.
  • Livestream e-commerce, on the cusp of its boom, is expected to become a new driver for the upcoming shopping spree 618.
  • The festival comes when the country is trying to boost domestic consumption to offset the economic slowdown resulted from the coronavirus outbreak.
  • JD shareholder Tencent invested $2 billion in Kuaishou last year in Kuaishou’s $3 billion pre-IPO round, giving Kuaishou a valuation of around $28.6 billion.

Read more: Why Kuaishou beats Douyin for e-commerce

Details: The new deal allows Kuaishou users to purchase JD’s self-run products directly without leaving the short video app, offering a more streamlined shopping experience.

  • An existing deal between the two parties, inked last June, transfers Kuaishou users to JD app for completing the purchase.
  • This deal ensures Kuaishou users always stay inside the app, encouraging more impulse buying.
  • Buyers who place orders through Kuaishou could enjoy the same delivery and after-sales services provided by JD, according to a statement from the online retailer.
  • In addition, the two companies will work together in building up their supply chain networks, brand marketing, and digital capacities.
  • The new feature will be live in mid-June during JD’s mid-year shopping festival 618 and Kuaishou’s 616 shopping festival.

Context: Kuaishou reportedly multiplied its goal for live e-commerce gross merchandise volume (GMV) this year to RMB 250 billion ($35 billion), up from last year’s RMB 35 billion.

  • In comparison, Taobao Live achieved a GMV between RMB 200 billion to RMB 250 billion in 2019, while Douyin’s goal for this year is RMB 200 billion, according to local media.
  • Both Alibaba and JD are working Kuaishou rival Douyin for similar e-commerce referral features.
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Meituan says Covid-19 effect to extend beyond Q1 losses https://technode.com/2020/05/26/meituan-says-covid-19-effect-to-extend-beyond-q1-losses/ Tue, 26 May 2020 05:36:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139160 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan Dianping reported first quarter losses that were smaller than expected, with its core food delivery business showing signs of rapid recovery.]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

Meituan Dianping reported smaller than expected losses in the first quarter as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak, sending its share prices up more than 8% in Tuesday trading.

Why it matters: Earnings season offers a closer look at how Chinese tech majors and potentially the country’s wider economy are weathering the aftermath of the pandemic.

  • Earnings from the first quarter, the period worst hit by the outbreak, are likely an important gauge to evaluate the scale and degree of the pandemic’s impact on various industries.
  • Different sectors have seen varying degrees of exposure. Meituan was more widely exposed due to the heavily offline nature of most of its businesses, while gaming giant Tencent saw a boost in gaming revenue as people turned to online entertainment while stuck at home.

Details: The company’s total Q1 revenues declined 12.6% year on year to RMB 16.8 billion ($2.4 billion) from RMB 19.2 billion in the same period of 2019, according to the company’s earnings report released on Monday.

  • Meituan’s revenue beat the average analyst estimate of RMB 16.11 billion in revenue according to Refinitiv IBES data cited by Reuters.
  • Q1 losses totaled RMB 1.58 billion, compared with an RMB 1.43 billion loss for the same year-ago period. Prior to Q1, the company had recorded profits for the past three consecutive quarters.
  • The food delivery industry was recovering rapidly, company founder Xing Wang said during the earnings call held Monday night, with daily order volume returning to around 75% of the pre-pandemic level by the end of the quarter. Meituan’s core food delivery revenue decreased 11.4% year on year to RMB 9.5 billion in Q1.
  • Revenue from the company’s in-store, hotel, and travel segment plummeted 31.1% year on year as consumers limited dining, travel, and other consumption.
  • Short-term profitability “is never our priority,” Wang said during the call, adding that the company will allocate resources toward helping merchants resume business, improve their efficiencies, and digitize their operations.
  • Meituan said that effects from Covid-19 would continue to weigh on the company’s performance for the rest of 2020. “Factors including the ongoing pandemic precautions, consumers’ insufficient confidence in offline consumption activities and the risk of merchants’ closure would continue to have a potential impact on our business performance,” the company said in a separate statement on Monday.

Context: Meituan faces a renewed challenge from Alibaba in the local lifestyle services segment from Alipay, which has redoubled efforts to attract users.

  • During the coronavirus outbreak, Meituan faced mounting complaints from merchants which accused the platform of implementing excessive commission fees and exclusive partnership clauses.
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Pinduoduo posts strong revenue but bigger loss in Q1 https://technode.com/2020/05/22/pinduoduo-posts-strong-revenue-but-bigger-loss-in-q1/ Fri, 22 May 2020 14:59:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=139079 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentChinese e-commerce company Pinduoduo posted mixed results for the first quarter of this year on Friday. Why it matters: The fallout from the Covid-19 outbreak weighs on the Q1 performances of Chinese e-commerce platforms. Similarly, JD released slowed-down Q1 revenue in mid-May. Pinduoduo, a strong competitor to JD’s runner-up position in China’s e-commerce market, surpasses its e-commerce […]]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce company Pinduoduo posted mixed results for the first quarter of this year on Friday.

Why it matters: The fallout from the Covid-19 outbreak weighs on the Q1 performances of Chinese e-commerce platforms. Similarly, JD released slowed-down Q1 revenue in mid-May.

  • Pinduoduo, a strong competitor to JD’s runner-up position in China’s e-commerce market, surpasses its e-commerce rival after price surge on May 12. It’s next only to Alibaba, which remains a far leader.
  • Social commerce is attracting attention from global players such as Facebook.

“Despite the unprecedented challenges in the first quarter, Pinduoduo has grown and now serves more than 600 million active buyers.”

Colin Huang, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Pinduoduo

READ MORE: Pinduoduo growth story needs a new chapter

Details: The company’s total revenues increased to RMB 6.54 billion ($923.8 million) in Q1 this year from RMB 4.54 billion in the same quarter of 2019.

  • The company’s active buyers in the twelve-month period ended March 31, 2020 were 628.1 million, an increase of 42% from 443.3 million in the twelve-month period ended March 31, 2019 compared with a 50% increase from a year ago.
  • The company’s operating loss more than doubled to RMB 4.39 billion in Q1 from RMB 2.12 billion in the same quarter of 2019.
  • With Covid-19 being contained in China, Pinduoduo’s daily orders reached 65 million, up from an average of 50 million daily orders in mid-March, according to the company.

Context: In a move to increase operating efficiency, Pinduoduo inked a strategic partnership with GOME Retail in April. Under the deal, the e-commerce upstart is investing $200 million worth of convertible bonds in the household appliance and electronics retailer.

  •  Pinduoduo secured $1.1 billion in a private share placement from a number of long-term investors in April, just six months after raising $1 billion by offering convertible bonds.
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Exclusive: JD is getting ready for an affiliate IPO spree https://technode.com/2020/05/20/exclusive-jd-is-getting-ready-for-an-affiliate-ipo-spree/ Wed, 20 May 2020 03:50:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138923 JDJD is pulling a Tencent: spinning off and IPO'ing its affiliates. JD needs the cash to continue its battle against Alibaba and other upstarts.]]> JD

Chinese online retailer JD is setting up tentative timetables to take its affiliates public over the next two years, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told TechNode.

The company will focus on its secondary listing in Hong Kong this year, JD Logistics in 2021 and then JD Digits in 2022, according to the source who declined to be named as the information is confidential.

The Chinese e-commerce giant is expected to see some of most valuable assets go public:

  • Secondary listing
    • Details about JD’s Hong Kong listing have begun to emerge although the company remains silent on the matter.
    • The dual-listing could come as early as June, local media reported.
    • Despite impacts from Covid-19, it has beaten market expectations with $20.6 billion net revenue in the first quarter of this year.
  • Dada Nexus
    • The company behind on-demand grocery delivery platform JD Daojia and delivery platform Dada Now, filed for a US IPO on May 13. JD is the largest shareholder of the firm with a 51.4% stake.
  • JD Logistics
    • The logistics unit was spun off in 2017.
    • It is reportedly in early discussions with banks in December to raise $8 billion to $10 billion through an IPO.
    • The business raised $2.5 billion in February 2018 from a range of backers including investment firm Hillhouse Capital, China Development Bank Capital, as well as Tencent.
    • Once a loss-making business, JD Logistics gained momentum over 2019 and recorded a 91% revenue jump year-over-year in the first quarter.
  • JD Digits
    • Formerly JD Finance, this affiliate offers data processing capabilities and the implementation of data technologies with AI and IoT among its core strength. 
    • Its data technology output includes its core capabilities on data warehousing, data mining, visual analysis, alongside other data-related functions. 

The potential listing spree comes as the company’s retail chief Xu Lei is gradually taking over from founder Richard Liu the company’s new leader.

Read more: JD readies for life after Richard Liu

JD.com isn’t the only Chinese tech giant seeking to bring its assets public. Tencent, a shareholder, has a bunch of its affiliates listed since 2017, including search engine arm Sogou, online reading unit China literature, online-only insurance firm Zhong An and Tencent Music. It’s also planning for IPO of healthcare affiliate WeDoctor. The Chinese internet titan had a bumper year with 16 portfolio firms going public in 2018.

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Chinese fitness app Keep raises $80 million on the rise of home workouts https://technode.com/2020/05/19/chinese-fitness-app-keep-raises-80-million-on-the-rise-of-home-workouts/ Tue, 19 May 2020 06:13:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138834 Keep social fitness covid coronavirus home workoutFollowing reports in October of significant layoffs, Beijing-based social fitness app Keep has announced $80 million in new funding.]]> Keep social fitness covid coronavirus home workout

Chinese social fitness app Keep has raised $80 million in a Series E, reportedly gaining unicorn status after the funding round.

Why it matters: The capital raise signals investor confidence in China’s social fitness app market, which boomed during the Covid-19 self-isolation period when millions were confined indoors.

  • During a capital shortfall in late 2019, Keep had fallen onto hard times and in October reportedly laid off up to 15% of its staff.
  • China’s online fitness apps saw user numbers jump 12% year on year in the first quarter of 2020, a report from research institute Iresearch showed.

Details: Jeneration Capital Management led the round with participation from returning investors including GGV Capital, Tencent, Morningside Venture Capital, and Bertelsmann Asia Investments, according to Chinese media reports.

  • The new capital will go toward the development of a comprehensive sports solution that integrates various businesses under its belt from content generation and workout community management to hardware, according to the reports.
  • The Iresearch report showed Keep leading the pack in user base growth, which jumped 23.2% year on year in Q1. Users accessed the service through 18.1 million devices per month for an average of 20.4 minutes per day.

Context: Beijing-based Keep, founded in 2014, started as a mobile fitness community that provided online fitness training programs.

  • The company gradually expanded its offline presence into fitness equipment, wearable hardware, and workout apparel. In 2018, it opened first offline gym, Keepland, and then launched sales for its own treadmill and stationary bike.
  • The company says that it has over 200 million registered users and more than 3.6 billion user exercise data entries at present.
  • The company’s most recent $126 million Series D was received in July 2018 from a consortium led by Goldman Sachs with the participation of Tencent, GGV Capital, and Morningside Venture Capital.
  • The company competes with workout apps including Yuedongquan and Xiaomi Sports.
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Charles Lu: The man behind Luckin and China’s fastest IPOs https://technode.com/2020/05/19/charles-lu-the-man-behind-luckin-and-chinas-fastest-ipos/ Tue, 19 May 2020 04:12:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138823 Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founderWho is Luckin chairman Charles Lu, and why is he still running the show after the company admitted to major revenue fraud? ]]> Lu zhengyao Luckin charles chairman founder

Troubled beverage chain Luckin fired CEO Qian Zhiya and COO Liu Jian from their positions last Tuesday after a month-long upheaval following its fraud admission in April. However, the market remains skeptical about the company’s dedication to change.

Despite the downfall of two senior executives, the man at the top is still the same. Chairman Charles Lu, or Lu Zhengyao, still holds control over the company after the leadership shuffle, although his name was removed from the company’s nominating and corporate governance committee.  

To Luckin watchers, this suggests nothing essential has changed: the company Lu built is a reflection of his personality and his network of friends.

Though not as well-known as Alibaba’s Jack Ma or Tencent’s Pony Ma, Lu definitely belongs to China’s group of self-made billionaires with from-scratch business empires. The 51-year-old has three listed companies and one pre-IPO firm under his belt.

He’s an impatient man, given to cursing in public posts at rivals and at those who question his business models. He’s known for taking companies from foundation to IPO at breakneck speeds—18 months car-hailing Ucar, and 19 months for Luckin. He’s known for an obsessive focus on growth, constantly raising money and spending it on expansion.

When Luckin wanted to borrow more and grow more and it couldn’t show numbers to justify it, it turns out, it made them up.

From country boy to billionaire

Charles Lu, the youngest among five children, was born in Pingnan County in southern China’s Fujian province in 1969. With his father a craftsman and his mom a village cadre, Lu came from a comfortable small-town home. 

After excelling in school, Lu enrolled in the University of Science and Technology in Beijing in 1987. It was quite a feat back then for a small town boy to get the chance to study in universities in Beijing, a resident of the same town told local media. After working for the government in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province for three years, Lu resigned to start his own business in 1994. Lu later told Chinese media one reason was that he wanted to wear fancier pants than the government dress code allowed.

Going into business

  • 1995-2003: Lu earned his first pot of gold from two companies DITEL Technology, a firm that trades telecoms parts and systems and Beijing Huaxia, a top VoIP calling agent in China in the early 2000s.
  • 2005: Lu founds UAA (Joint Automobile Club), which dealt with car service, car repairs, and insurance.

Going big with Car, Inc.

  • 2007: Lu taps China’s booming car rental market with Car Inc., which receives RMB 1.2 billion (about $169 million) funding from Lenovo-backed Legend Capital in 2010. 
  • At Car Inc, Lu pioneered the aggressive cash-fueled expansion tactics that defined his later companies. Charles Lu spent half of the Legend funding on buying new cars, making the company the largest car rental company in China. He then lowered car rental prices by 30% to 50% to grab market share.
  • Car, Inc goes public in Hong Kong in 2014, with shares surging nearly 29% on its debut from HK$8.5 (about $1.1) to HK$10.96 apiece. Car Inc. share prices hit record highs in May 2015, trading at nearly HK$ 20 apiece. In the following nine months, Lu and other investors cashed out $1.6 billion or 42% of the company’s total share. During the process, the company’s share price dropped to less than HK$8 and it further dipped to a bit over HK$ 2 after Luckin’s fraud was revealed.
  • 2015: Charles Lu decided to open Ucar to tap China’s ride-hailing boom. Different from Didi that relies on private cars and crowd-sourced drivers, Ucar offers its services with an in-house fleet and licensed drivers. The company raised four rounds of over RMB 10 billion funding within ten months from including Warburg Pincus and, again, Legend Capital. Less than two years after its establishment, the company lists on China’s China’s National Equities Exchange in July 2016. One week after the IPO, Lu pledged all of his 90 million shares, or 11.9% of the company’s outstanding shares to a bank to raise RMB 500 million.

Going bigger with Luckin

  • 2018: Lu invested in Luckin Coffee, a start-up built by one of Zhengyao’s ex-employees led by Qian Zhiya and Yang Fei, both of whom helped Lu in incubating the Ucar project. As board chairman, Lu Zhengyao owned 30.53% in Luckin, an investment fund owned by Lu’s sister  owned 12.4%, and CEO Qian Zhiya owned 19.6%, according to Luckin’s initial prospectus.
  • 2018: Lu took over car maker Baowo Auto Car to provide cars to Ucar and Car.Inc.
  • May 2019: Luckin went public on Nasdaq to raise $651 million.

‘Trimming his nails’

Luckin’s newly appointed CEO Guo Jinyi is, like predecessor Qian Zhiya, a former executive with Car Inc., the car rental firm earlier backed by Lu. Most assume that Lu is the real decision-maker behind both of them.

In the April fraud admission, COO Liu Jian was held accountable for the fabrication. As the case drew increasing attention from the public, CEO Qian Zhiya, who lost significant voting rights in the company after a loan default, was also removed. Local media, who believe the rot goes all the way to the top, were not satisfied. 

Firing Qian and Liu was as painful for Lu as trimming his nails, wrote one commentator. 

A highly divisive figure

Lu got a controversial reputation since the companies he backed followed a strikingly similar growth path: entry to an emerging market with massive capital, snap market share quickly by providing subsidies and market campaigns, hype up market valuation for an IPO, and then quick financial exit by the founding team and early investors before the hype wears off. 

Many of those who lost money—even peer entrepreneurs such as Li Xiang, founder of EV maker Lixiang—call him a snake oil salesman (in Chinese). They argue that Lu’s companies aren’t trying to earn money off customers, just to fleece investors in an updated version of China’s 2VC model

Lu’s companies are accused of “harvesting” newbie investors through IPOs, most notably in the cases of Car Inc. and Ucar.  People may argue there’s nothing wrong with founding teams cashing out IPOs, it’s a different case when the primary goal for an IPO is for them to cash out, which is commonly followed by a share plunge that hurts the interests of public investors.

Another trademark of Lu is his fundraising approach, which is usually referred to as “Wechat Moments” fundraising in a sense that he’s working with a closed loop network that includes his blood relatives, loyal employees as well as investors of his previous projects. These friends usually cash out early, with Lu.

But Charles Lu isn’t walking away from Luckin, or from Ucar yet, even as the companies appear to be collapsing. Luckin has claimed on various occasions that its stores are operating normally, and it still offers coupons to retain customers. The coffee chain opened 10 outlets a day in its home market in the second quarter as of May, bringing its total number of stores to 6,912, a report from Thinknum Alternative Data shows.

Apart from Luckin, Lu’s companies are all auto-related businesses. Baowo makes cars, it sells them to Car Inc., and Car, Inc. then rents them to Ucar. It would be a vertically integrated masterpiece if it had any customers.

Among the firms, Car Inc. and Ucar are recording losses with shares trading at low level. Meanwhile, Baowo is also struggling with debt. But Lu still appears to hope that he can save Luckin, and use it to save his other companies.

With Luckin, he’s trying to build a super app for high-frequency services to bring user traffic to its business ecosystem. Luckin was expected to bring traffic to Lu’s declining car empire.

If Lu’s business collapses, he’ll still be a wealthy man. But it appears that he is unable to give up on the image of himself as a peer of the titans.

The future for Lu’s business empire and himself may be determined the courts. Luckin is being sued on both sides of the Pacific. As the key figure behind the company, Lu, together with Luckin former COO Liujian, current CEO Guo Jinyi, are among the defendants in these lawsuits.

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Alibaba’s Jack Ma resigns from Softbank board https://technode.com/2020/05/18/alibabas-jack-ma-resigns-from-softbank-board/ Mon, 18 May 2020 07:07:26 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138728 Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retailMa’s resignation from the Softbank board of directors is the second departure of a high-profile ally to founder Masayoshi Son in just a few months.]]> Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retail

Japan’s Softbank Group said Monday that Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma has resigned from its board, a role that he held for 13 years, on the same day that it announced a JPY 500 billion ($4.7 billion) share buyback.

Why it matters: Ma’s resignation from the Softbank board is a continuation of his ongoing retreat from business to focus on philanthropy, and is the latest departure by a high-profile ally of Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son.

  • Softbank’s Vision Fund lost billions last year when its big bet on Wework imploded. The company’s other flagship investment, Indian hotel chain Oyo, began massive layoffs after the Covid-19 outbreak all but immobilized global travel.
  • Softbank is buying back shares to bolster its stock price after its portfolio of startup investments lost value.
  • Tadashi Yanai, founder and CEO of Uniqlo parent Fast Retailing, resigned in December from the company’s board to focus on his fashion business as Softbank battled with the fallout from Wework’s failed IPO.

Details: Ma’s role as a board director will expire on June 25, according to Softbank’s Monday announcement.

  • Three new members were nominated and the final election, pending shareholder approval, will be held on June 25.
  • The three board members proposed are Softbank chief financial officer Yoshimoto Goto, Lip-Bu Tan, CEO of chip design software firm Cadence Design Systems and chairman of venture capital firm Walden International, and Yuko Kawamoto, a professor at Waseda Business School. Tan and Kawamoto are external directors and Kawamoto will be the only female board member.
  • Softbank will buy as many as 135 million shares or about 6.7% of total shares by March 2021, according to a separate statement released on Monday.

Context: Jack Ma stepped down in September from his day-to-day role at the e-commerce giant he founded in 1999.

  • Ma, once an English teacher in Hangzhou, has been devoting himself to education during his retirement. During the coronavirus outbreak, he has donated through his charity foundation testing kits and masks to countries afflicted by Covid-19 including the US, all of Africa, Italy, and Spain.
  • Son is known for his early investments in internet giants Alibaba and Yahoo!.

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Chinese online grocer JD Daojia files for US IPO https://technode.com/2020/05/13/chinese-online-grocer-jd-daojia-files-for-us-ipo/ Wed, 13 May 2020 07:17:20 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138476 JD Daojia US JD.com Walmart IPOThe JD Daojia IPO filling to a US stock market bucks the current trend among US-listed Chinese firms, which are showing increased interest in Hong Kong.]]> JD Daojia US JD.com Walmart IPO

Dada Nexus, the company behind on-demand grocery delivery platform JD Daojia and delivery platform Dada Now, filed its application on Tuesday with the US securities regulator to offer shares on the Nasdaq stock exchange.

Why it matters: JD Daojia’s filing for an initial public offering (IPO) on a US exchange bucks the current trend among Chinese US-listed firms, which have shown increased interest in Hong Kong listings. Led by Alibaba, the country’s tech giants currently favor the Hong Kong market amid escalating US-China tensions and concerns over fraud.

  • The move highlights the company’s confidence in China’s on-demand grocery delivery market, which surged during China’s country-wide lockdown that began in February, sequestering millions at home to avoid spreading the virus.

Details: In its filing, the company uses a placeholder amount of $100 million as a fundraising target. A source cited by tech media outlet The Information said in August that the IPO was expected to raise $500 million.

  • JD Daojia partners with more than 89,000 stores, serving 27.6 million active customers in more than 700 Chinese cities with delivery services for fresh groceries, flowers, medicine, beauty, household items, and other products.
  • In 2019, net revenue reached RMB 3.1 billion ($437.8 million), growing around 60% year on year, according to the company’s prospectus.
  • Net revenue for the first quarter of 2020 more than doubled to RMB 1.10 billion from RMB 526.5 million in the same period a year ago.
  • The company is still loss-making, though net losses narrowed 20% year on year to RMB 279.3 million in Q1 2020 from RMB 336.9 million in Q1 2019.
  • Goldman Sachs, BofA Securities, and Jefferies are joint bookrunners on the deal.

Context: JD Daojia raised $500 million from Walmart and JD.com in 2018.

  • The company is a grocery delivery joint venture between e-commerce platform JD.com and on-demand delivery platform Dada.
  • JD.com, JD Daojia’s largest shareholder with a 51.4% stake, is reportedly planning for a secondary listing on the Hong Kong exchange.
  • The company is in competition with with Meituan, Alibaba’s Ele.me, and Dingdong Maicai.
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Luckin apologizes to staff after month-long fraud tumult  https://technode.com/2020/05/13/luckin-apologizes-to-staff-after-month-long-fraud-tumult/ Wed, 13 May 2020 05:36:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138447 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksLuckin apologized to its employees for the upheaval following its fraud admission in early April, and on the same day removed its CEO and COO.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Embattled Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee issued an apology letter to its employees on Tuesday evening for the upheaval following its stunning fraud admission in early April.

Why it matters: Luckin had remained relatively silent about its moves following the April 2 disclosure of fraud to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The apology and appointment of new leadership on the same day mark a distinct change in leadership style.

  • The company on Tuesday fired CEO Qian Zhiya and COO Liu Jian from their positions.

Details: “We would like to express our sincere apologies for all the troubles the incident has brought upon your family,” the company said in a letter addressed to its employees on Tuesday, according to Chinese media reports.

  • The company said that it is grateful to its employees for their hard work in maintaining normal operations of stores, supply chain, and product innovation during a difficult time.
  • The board has appointed Guo Jinyi as acting CEO of the company to oversee the firm’s daily operations as the fraud investigation continues.
  • Like his predecessor Qian Zhiya, Guo was also formerly an executive with Car Inc., the car rental firm backed by Luckin chairman Lu Zhengyao.
  • The company named new board members Wu Gang, a longtime Mcdonalds executive and a Luckin senior vice president, and Cao Wenbao, an airline executive.
  • The Starbucks challenger also pledged in the letter to restructure the company and rebuild its values under its new leadership.

Context: Luckin disclosed in early April that its COO had fabricated around $310 million in sales in 2019, triggering a plunge in share price of around 80%.

  • US regulators, as well as China’s top market regulators, have launched probes into Luckin Coffee.

Updated: added detail about Luckin’s two new board members.

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A bumpy week for China’s logistics market https://technode.com/2020/05/12/a-bumpy-week-for-chinas-logistics-market/ Tue, 12 May 2020 06:34:09 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138339 Hive Box logistics courier antitrustChina's logistics industry experienced a tumultuous time since May with the whole country is under transition to normalcy. ]]> Hive Box logistics courier antitrust

China’s logistics industry has been in tumult as the country begins a return to normalcy: Hive Box pisses off customers; courier services raise prices; and SF Express launches a food delivery service.

Here’s a roundup of recent headlines.

China’s largest package locker operator faces user boycott

Hive Box, China’s largest self-service package locker operator backed by Chinese courier giant SF Express has come under fire for charging extra fees for delayed parcel pickup.

Hive Box announced (in Chinese) on April 29 that users who failed to pick up parcels from their lockers within 12 hours will be charged RMB 0.5 ($0.07) for every additional 12 hour increment, capped at a maximum of RMB 3.

Users immediately began protesting, with thousands of users commenting on a state media Weibo post, declaring that they would stop using the service if the new rule was implemented. Several communities in Hangzhou, Shanghai, and Beijing warned they would suspend the use of Hive Box lockers.

User discontent rose futher after Hive Box’s parent company announced a merger with China Post’s package locker unit on May 6. The move gives the Shenzhen-based firm a bigger monopoly with a nearly 70% market share.

Hive Box responded in a Weibo post published on May 9 that the fee is intended to help the firm better serve users. The company said that it plans to encourage early pickup by offering cash incentives but made no mention of a change to its original plan to implement late fees.

Self-service parcel lockers evolved as a way to increase delivery efficiency, allowing deliverymen to offload parcels at lockers instead of making time-consuming deliveries to individual addresses.

While some users liked the self-service model, others preferred delivery to their doorsteps and complained about worsening user experience. In most cases, delivery workers left parcels at such lockers for their own convenience, without gaining approval from consumers.

Price hike from major couriers

Over the past week, China’s major logistics companies including STO Express, YTO Express, Best Express, and Yunda Express announced that they are raising prices, citing rising costs as a result of reinstated highway toll fees.

The news drew ire from many users who pointed out that the company was using toll fees as an excuse, but it never lowered prices when the toll was lifted three months ago.

Similarly, SF Express increased its prices for international parcels from countries like China, South Korea, Thailand, Singapore, and Malaysia sent to Europe, the Americas, and other Asian countries.

Cainiao Network, Alibaba Group’s logistics unit, has launched an international postage service for global shipments of essential items such as surgical masks to more than 20 countries and regions globally, including the US, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.

China’s logistics industry is gradually returning to normal. In April, more than 6.25 billion parcels were delivered in the country, up 27% year on year, according to data from China Post Bureau.

SF Express rolls out food delivery business

Chinese express delivery and logistics giant SF Express launched a new platform to focus on food delivery services for enterprises, triggering speculation about yet another big player in China’s competitive food delivery market.

Dubbed Fengshi, the service is currently accessible via Wechat mini program. It offers delivery from more than 100 restaurants including popular restaurant chains Pizza Hut, Yoshinoya, and Domino’s,

Instead of a move to expand to the food delivery market, the company said to local media that the service was incubated as an internal program and had started as a way to meet food delivery demands of its own team.

Although designed as a food delivery app for corporate group meal reservations, the service also supports small batch orders, allowing for individual order placements.

With its massive delivery network, SF Express is a strong potential competitor in China’s food delivery, dominated by duopoly Meituan Dianping and Alibaba’s Ele.me.

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JD.com may list in Hong Kong as early as June https://technode.com/2020/05/11/jd-com-may-list-in-hong-kong-as-early-as-june/ Mon, 11 May 2020 05:22:06 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138268 JDThe dual listing in Hong Kong for e-commerce giant JD.com could follow just months after rival Alibaba's blockbuster secondary listing in the same city.]]> JD

Chinese online retailer JD.com could be offering share subscriptions on May 25 for its long-anticipated Hong Kong listing, according to media reports, with a debut on the city’s board as early as June.

Why it matters: JD.com’s secondary listing on the Hong Kong board will follow just a few months after rival Alibaba’s $13 billion blockbuster debut on the city’s bourse. It was one of the largest market debuts for a Chinese tech firm as well as for the Hong Kong market in the past year.

  • The listing comes at a critical time. JD.com’s retail chief Xu Lei is gradually taking over for founder Richard Liu as the Chinese online retailer’s new leader.
  • In addition to the dual listing, the Beijing-based firm is reportedly preparing for separate listings of its logistics arm and grocery delivery affiliate Dada-JD Daojia.
  • The deal is hailed as a homecoming for Chinese companies and a win for the Hong Kong stock market amid escalating US-China tensions.
  • Chinese search engine Baidu, online travel platform Trip.com, and Netease, China’s second-biggest gaming firm, are reportedly planning to dual list in Hong Kong.

Details: Chinese media have reported that JD.com is planning to raise $3 billion in its Hong Kong debut that could come as early as June. Bloomberg reported in April that it was seeking $2 billion for its Hong Kong offering.

  • The firm hired investment banks UBS and Bank of America as underwriters for the listing, local media reported.
  • A JD.com spokesman declined to comment on the news when contacted by TechNode.

Context:  JD reportedly filed a confidential application to list in Hong Kong as early as June, Bloomberg reported.

  • In January 2018, founder and CEO Richard Liu indicated that the company was considering a dual listing either in Hong Kong or mainland China.
  • Hong Kong removed its restriction on dual-class share structures in April 2018 to open the door for firms that sought to have share classes with different voting rights.
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JD launches yet another Zoom clone into an already crowded market https://technode.com/2020/05/09/jd-launches-yet-another-zoom-clone-into-an-already-crowded-market/ Sat, 09 May 2020 05:17:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138203 JD is the latest Chinese tech major to tap remote work tool market. JD is competing with global rivals as well as local competitors.]]>

JD has rolled out a Zoom-like video conferencing app, JoyMeeting, amid its push into enterprise-facing services.

Why it matters: JD is the latest Chinese tech major to tap the remote work tool market.

  • Interest in workplace technologies, such as productivity and videoconference tools, arose along with Chinese tech giants’ transition to enterprise-facing services.
  • Enterprise tech is believed to be an emerging growth point for tech firms in China, where consumer-facing services are already mature.
  • By entering the sector, JD is competing with global rivals like Zoom as well as local competitors Tencent, Alibaba, and ByteDance.
  • While the pandemic is spreading across the world, Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance are increasingly setting their sights on the global market by doubling down on global versions of their workplace apps. 

Read more: Chinese tech firms eye the work collaboration app market

Details: JoyMeeting, developed by JD subsidiary Jingdong Shangke Information, was a video conference tool previously only available to JD’s team and partners.

  • JoyMeeting comes with videoconference features for one-on-one conversations, meetings, interviews, and lectures

Context: It is a common practice among large Chinese tech firms to develop homegrown communication apps to facilitate workflows as well as keep their data secure. More companies are opening their internal work apps, developed and tested within the company, to mark territory in the growing market. 

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JD.com partners with LG to sell RMB 5 billion in goods using C2M https://technode.com/2020/05/08/jd-com-partners-with-lg-to-sell-rmb-5-billion-in-goods-using-c2m/ Fri, 08 May 2020 07:37:40 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138175 jd.com JD LG South Korea C2M partnerJD.com and LG inked a deal to sell RMB 5 billion in goods using emerging e-commerce model, consumer-to-manufacture, or C2Mr.]]> jd.com JD LG South Korea C2M partner

JD.com has signed a partnership with South Korean manufacturer LG Electronics to sell RMB 5 billion ($707 million) worth of products on the e-commerce platform.

Why it matters: Chinese e-commerce giants are increasingly partnering with manufacturers to facilitate product development and marketing. The trend propelled emerging e-commerce models such as consumer-to-manufacturer (C2M), which connects consumers and producers to manufacture tailored products at lower prices. 

  • The defining feature of a C2M model is highly competitive pricing brought about by connecting factories with consumer insights, such as preferences, location, and behaviors.
  • The C2M model has powered Pinduoduo’s rapid ascent and is now gaining momentum among Pinduoduo rivals including Alibaba and JD.com. 
  • Covid-19 has made health-related home appliances more popular across online marketplaces. JD sales for air purifiers and steam sterilization washing machines surged during the pandemic, the company said.

Details: Under the partnership, the two companies will cooperate in a range of areas, including product development under the C2M model, smart supply chain operations, marketing, offline expansion, and manufacturing of exclusive products. 

  • LG will also invest in JD Home Appliance Stores and set up more than 1,000 whole-house appliance demonstration stores, creating smart offline retail platforms in lower-tier markets.
  • The two companies have already worked under the C2M model for small home appliances. In May 2018, they started to develop C2M air purifiers, beauty tools, hand-held vacuum cleaners, and clothing care steam “styler” systems based on JD.com data. 

Context: JD.com rolled out its C2M unit Jingzao in 2018. The platform now offers products including custom shirts, luggage, towels, and bedding.

  • JD also partnered with electronic brands such as Lenovo, Konka, HP, and Dell to develop tailored products under the C2M model.
  • Alibaba boosted its C2M push recently with plans to transform 1,000 manufacturers into “Super Factories” with output exceeding RMB 100 million ($14 million) each within the next three years.
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Chehaoduo raises $200 million from Sequoia and Softbank https://technode.com/2020/05/07/chehaoduo-raises-200-million-from-sequoia-and-softbank/ Thu, 07 May 2020 08:29:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138106 The extra cash for Chehaoduo indicates renewed interest from venture capital funds in China’s online auto trading industry.]]>

Chehaoduo Group announced on Wednesday the completion of $200 million funding from Sequoia Capital China and Softbank Vision Fund. The company is backed by 58.com and is also parent company to online used car platform Guazi and new car seller Maodou.

Why it matters: The deal indicates renewed interest from venture capital funds in China’s online auto trading industry. The industry is among the worst-hit sectors since the Covid-19 crisis took hold in mid-January.

  • China’s venture capital dealmaking is gradually bouncing back.
  • Softbank’s Vision Fund has faced major setbacks in some of its flagship investments.
  • Vision Fund flagship investment WeWork saw its valuation slashed by over 80% after failed IPO last year, while Oyo runs into similar trouble with massive layoff plan across the world.

Details: The funds, a follow-up tranche to the company’s Series D, will bring the total funding of the round to $1.7 billion. The Beijing-based firm received $1.5 billion in a Series D from Softbank at a $9 billion valuation in February 2019.

  • The company says the the proceeds will be used to strengthen coordination of after-sales services between Guazi and Maodou and to boost car sales market recovery from the pandemic.
  • Chehaoduo claims its new and used car businesses were both profitable in Q4 2019.
  • It has recorded overall profits for the new car and used car businesses in the fourth quarter of 2019, fulfilling it’s pledge made in mid-December.
  • For next stage of growth, Chehaoduo CEO Yang Haoyong expects to create greater synergies between various business unites of the company and to deepen cooperation with regulating institutions, OEMs, dealers, and other partners.

Context: Previously known as Guazi, Chehaoduo was created in 2017 after the merger with Maodou. Both brands are aggressively expanding to online and offline sales channels. 

  • Guazi rival Uxin has been struggling since 2019 amid blows from a short-selling report in April last year to the job suspension news in March.
  • Covid-19 has negative impacts on China’s used car trading market, which saw sales volume dropped 24.06% year on year to 949,700 vehicles in March this year, according to figures from China Automobile Dealers Association.

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China’s largest e-book seller faces writer backlash https://technode.com/2020/05/06/tencent-owned-e-book-seller-faces-writer-backlash-for-controversial-contract/ Wed, 06 May 2020 07:28:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=138016 Online reading tencent ebook china literatureThe uproar over China's largest e-book platform, owned by Tencent, is the latest dispute against Chinese tech giants accused of exploiting partners.]]> Online reading tencent ebook china literature

The online publishing arm of Chinese internet giant Tencent is facing backlash from its author community over controversial contract revisions which grant the platform unfettered rights to the content it distributes.  

Why it matters: The uproar over e-book publisher China Literature is the latest dispute against Chinese tech giants facing increasing accusations of forcing exploitative rules on its partners by leveraging market monopolies. 

  • The controversy comes on the heels of a major leadership change at China Literature announced on April 27 when the company’s senior founding management team was replaced by executives from Tencent, its largest shareholder.
  • China Literature is the largest player in China’s RMB 20.48 billion (around $2.89 billion) digital reading market with a 25.2% market share in 2019, according to a report from the research institute BigData Research. Second-ranked Ireader holds 20.6% and Alibaba-backed Shuqi followed with 20.4% market share.

Details: Writers contracted to China Literature began to voice their discontent beginning on April 28 about a new contract that began circulating first among writers and then on various Chinese social media platforms.

  • The potential contract included several clauses that were deemed unfavorable or unfair to writers. The most controversial point is the removal of the platform’s paywall for all content on the site in favor of a free content business model that relies on advertisements as its primary revenue source, according to local media reports. The potential move will lower writers’ income, which primarily comes from subscription fees and tips from their readers.
  • Under the revised contract, the authors are required to unconditionally hand over the copyright for all content to the platform, which in turn can license copyright without the authors’ consent.
  • The company confirmed on May 3 that the proposed contract was in fact sent to writers in September, and pledged (in Chinese) to revise the clauses based on user feedback.
  • In the May 3 statement, the company said that paid content is still the foundation of the company, adding that a completely free model is “impossible and unrealistic.”
  • China Literature did not respond to TechNode’s attempts to reach the company for comment.

Context: China Literature, which holds contracts with more than 8 million writers, was founded in 2015 through a merger between Tencent Literature and Cloudary, which Tencent acquired from Shanda.

  • China Literature raised $1.1 billion in a 2017 Hong Kong IPO.
  • In China, an industry chain surrounding online literature intellectual property is taking form. Chinese tech giants Tencent and Alibaba each own their own entertainment ecosystems spanning music, games, TV dramas, and movie production. 
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Alibaba tightens its grip on China’s logistics sector with 2% stake in Yunda https://technode.com/2020/04/30/alibaba-tightens-its-grip-on-chinas-logistics-sector-with-2-stake-in-yunda/ Thu, 30 Apr 2020 07:24:41 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137867 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentThe investment in Yunda is the latest step from e-commerce giant Alibaba to tighten its ties with the Chinese courier service industry.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Chinese tech giant Alibaba has acquired a 2% stake in Shenzhen-listed logistics company Yunda Holdings, continuing its push into the logistics industry.

Why it matters: Alibaba’s investment in Yunda is the latest move for the Chinese tech giant as it tightens its ties with the country’s courier giants. The e-commerce company already holds stakes in top Chinese logistics companies, including ZTO Express, YTO Express, STO Express, and Best.

  • Good service and rapid delivery are important components of the online shopping experience in China.

Details: Alibaba now holds 44.5 million shares, or a 2% stake in Yunda through its Hangzhou-based investment arm, according to the courier’s 2019 annual report (in Chinese) filed to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Wednesday.

  • The e-commerce giant is now Yunda’s eighth-largest shareholder, while Shanghai Luojiesi Investment Management, the entity founded by founder Nie Tengyun, still holds a majority 52.2% share.
  • The company did not reveal the investment amount of the deal. Alibaba’s share in Yunda is worth around RMB 1.31 billion ($185 million) calculated at the RMB 65.32 billion market cap as of Wednesday trading.

Context: Revenue from China’s delivery sector jumped 24.2% year on year to RMB 749.78 billion in 2019, according to a report from Chinese research institute Qianzhan Industry Research. The annual growth rate of China’s delivery industry revenue stabilized at around 25% in 2017, significantly slower than the approximately 40% year on year rate of growth that began in 2011, the report showed.

  • Shanghai-based Yunda is one of several couriers that work with Alibaba through its logistics arm, Cainiao.
  • Chinese courier companies including YTO Express, STO Express, ZTO Express also own stakes in Cainiao. Alibaba invested an additional RMB 23.3 billion in Cainiao in November, boosting its holdings in the logistic unit to approximately 63% from 51%.
  • In order to build a global logistics network, Alibaba started to invest in overseas logistics companies, like Singaporean Logistics Company SingPost, early on.
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There are no food delivery winners https://technode.com/2020/04/29/there-are-no-food-delivery-winners/ Wed, 29 Apr 2020 04:02:51 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137449 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OVarious parties involved in Meituan’s food delivery ecosystem are pointing fingers at one another over missing profits. It doesn't look good.]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

In 2019, following years of astounding growth, China’s food delivery market was worth $86.2 billion. With their sights set on massive market potential, Chinese tech firms had scrambled to enter the sector in search of what was seen as a surefire road to profits. As always, they adhered to the prevailing model of running a business in China’s tech world—snapping up market share with marketing campaigns and massive user discounts, building the brand, and finally monetizing the business leveraging market dominance.

Meituan Dianping, which holds more than 60% of the Chinese food delivery market, has emerged as the winner of the cutthroat food delivery battle. However, when the food delivery giant moved to the final step—monetization—things did not go strictly according to plan.

Various parties involved in Meituan’s food-delivery ecosystem are increasingly pointing fingers at one another. Merchants accuse Meituan of imposing hefty commission fees, while the company claims it is running the business on low margins. Meituan’s delivery fleet has held labor strikes in reaction to lowered wages, and users have their own complaints about paying higher prices for food. It appears to be a game without a winner.

That’s all, folks! You’re reading the last issue of In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s biweekly series on the O2O giant, originally published April 22.

TechNode members get access to exclusive series like this. Over the next month, we’ll be preparing to launch new newsletters tracking the Chinese tech giants as they go overseas, the e-commerce market, and startups and funding. Become a member to read them all!

Merchant pushback

In an open letter published on April 10, the Guangdong Restaurant Association (GRA) accused Meituan of exploiting merchants by charging excessive commission rates that “most of the restaurants can’t endure.” The complaints also pointed to unfair partnership clauses, which require merchants to sign exclusively with the platform.

The allegations further cooled the relationship between Meituan and its merchants, which were already tense following similar allegations from restaurant associations from Chongqing, as well as in Hebei, Yunnan, and Shandong provinces in February.

Discontent among small merchants was already brewing last year after the company announced a major rate hike in January 2019.

Meituan has a different story to tell, however. Wang Puzhong, a Meituan senior vice president responsible for the company’s food delivery business, argued that the company is not aiming for short-term profitability and operates on a very thin margin.

“After the launch of Meituan Waimai, we lost money for five consecutive years. Even in 2019, when we broke even for food-delivery services, the average profit per delivery order was less than RMB 0.2 (about 3 cents) in the fourth quarter, accounting for 2% of revenue,” Wang said.

Wang noted that the company has invested most of its income to help merchants develop professional delivery services, attract orders, and improve digital infrastructure.

Meituan’s share is too high—or is it?

GRA’s main criticism of Meituan is its high commission rate, which can be up to 26% for some new businesses, according to the association. It called on the company to lower its commissions rates by 5% or more.

Meanwhile, Meituan’s annual report showed that the average commission rate for its food-delivery business is 12.6%. In response to the GRA letter, the company said that more than 80% of businesses on its platform pay a commission of between 10% to 20%.

The discrepancy between the figures cited by the two parties is attributed to commission rate differences between merchants of different sizes. The average commission rate for small merchants is generally higher, as they lack bargaining power against the giant platform.

The platform’s low commission rates are usually enjoyed by restaurant chains, like McDonald’s. These are the brands that food-delivery platforms want to include anyway because of their brand value, and will do so for a lower commission.

GRA data shows that none of the 120 merchants in Haifeng County in Guangdong have commission rates lower than 20%.

Gross profit for most of the restaurants stands at around 50% to 60% of their total revenue, the operator of a chain restaurant told local media. The sources in the story said that most of the merchants they know are either breaking even or losing money after spending around 30% of revenue on Meituan for the commission fee and various marketing costs, and 20% to 30% for overhead costs like water and electricity bills.

Hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic, the restaurants that are maintaining their business post-outbreak are more reliant on online orders than before, when they were able to balance online and more profitable offline orders. Thus, the cost of commission fees has become a bigger concern for those restaurants facing a business downturn as a result of the outbreak.

At the same time, many restaurants need more than one food-delivery platform to attract a sustainable number of sales, leading to more complaints about Meituan’s exclusivity agreements. The GRA said the company may be in violation of China’s anti-monopoly laws since it already accounts for 60% to 90% of Guangdong’s food delivery market.

The two parties reached a consensus, announcing a joint statement where Meituan pledged to return between 3% to 6% of commission fees to “good-quality merchants” as well as to remove the exclusivity requirement.

Both Meituan and GSA made concessions in the agreement. Instead of cutting commission rates as requested by the association, the commission-return pledge means that merchants still have to pay the original commission rate, and will receive the rebates in their Meituan accounts to spend on marketing campaigns and to buy traffic on the platform.

While not exactly the kind of cash the merchants were seeking, it will help merchants looking to boost the number of their online orders. However, the company doesn’t specify what makes a “good-quality merchant.”

The removal of the exclusive partnership policy is a significant move given the competition between Meituan and Ele.me.

Where did profits go?

While the coalition led by the GRA and Meituan has temporarily ended, the problem remains. If both merchants and Meituan say they are not making money from the business, then where have the profits gone?

Meituan’s Q4 report shows food-delivery fleet accounts for a large chunk of the company’s revenues. A total of RMB 41 billion, or more than 80% of commission revenue, went toward paying driver salaries.

However, delivery drivers have complained about pay cuts and some have held labor strikes to voice their grievances. The debate over delivery driver working conditions peaked when a Meituan driver stabbed a shopping assistant to death last October.

Meituan drivers fall into two different categories. Zhongbao delivery workers have no contractual obligation to the company, while delivery drivers contracted through labor-management intermediaries have regular working hours and orders.

Both of the groups have multilayered management teams over them, including the delivery station head, the team running the labor-management intermediaries, as well as a regional and a department manager within Meituan.

The multilayered management structure is partially determined by the nature of the food delivery business, which requires support to manage on-demand and point-to-point delivery. Other costs like extra packaging also add up.

Though food delivery is seen as a low-margin business, industry watchers think RMB 0.2 per order is too low a profit for Meituan. “It needs to better allocate its resources to increase efficiency and lower the costs if the figure is true,” a market watcher said to local media.

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China’s top regulators are investigating Luckin Coffee https://technode.com/2020/04/28/chinas-top-regulators-are-investigating-luckin-coffee/ Tue, 28 Apr 2020 06:04:07 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137689 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksThe astounding fraud admission from beverage chain Luckin has put more US-listed Chinese companies in regulator and short-seller crosshairs.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Chinese top market regulators have launched a probe into Luckin Coffee, the troubled beverage chain under public scrutiny after admitting accounting fraud in April.

Why it matters: An investigation into Luckin by China’s most powerful business regulatory agencies is a sign that the country is intensifying efforts to hold the coffee firm accountable for its misconduct.

  • The case is now also under the jurisdiction of local courts after a group of Chinese investors who lost money on Luckin Coffee filed a batch of lawsuits to a court in the southeastern city of Xiamen, where the company is registered.
  • Luckin’s astounding fraud admission has put more US-listed Chinese companies in regulator and short-seller crosshairs.

Details: More than a dozen officers from the country’s top regulators including the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the State Administration for Market Regulation, and the State Taxation Administration raided Luckin’s Beijing headquarters on Sunday, Bloomberg reported citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • Luckin Coffee confirmed the investigation in a Weibo post on Monday, adding that it was “actively cooperating” with the regulator, and that its stores across the country were operating normally.
  • Under the International Organization of Securities Commissions memorandum of understanding, China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has provided audit working papers for 23 overseas-listed companies to relevant monitoring institutions, according to CSRC. Of the total, the working papers from 14 companies were handed to the US Securities Exchange Committee (SEC) and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

Context: Luckin Coffee disclosed in a filing to the SEC on April 2 that several employees including its COO had fabricated transactions for much of 2019.

  • The falsified sales amounted to an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million). The news sent the company’s shares down 75% the day of its filing.
  • In January, short-seller Muddy Waters Research tweeted a link to an anonymous report which claimed that the coffee chain was defrauding investors by fabricating operational and financial numbers.
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Alibaba removes youngest partner Jiang Fan after affair accusation https://technode.com/2020/04/27/alibaba-removes-youngest-partner-jiang-fan-after-affair-goes-public/ Mon, 27 Apr 2020 09:40:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137591 Jiang Fan AlibabaJiang Fan was widely seen as a potential successor of Zhang Yong, the current CEO of Alibaba Group. This tough career setback of the 35-year-old Jiang might mean a change to the e-commerce giant's succession plans.]]> Jiang Fan Alibaba

Alibaba announced today that it has removed Jiang Fan, president of the company’s marketplaces Taobao and Tmall, from its list of partners after an investigation into Jiang’s alleged affair with a social media influencer who is a co-founder of Alibaba-backed KOL agency Ruhnn.

Read more: INSIGHTS | Founders behaving badly

Why it matters: Jiang Fan was widely seen as a potential successor to Zhang Yong, the current CEO of the Alibaba Group. This tough career setback for the 35-year-old Jiang, who is also the youngest member of Alibaba’s partners’ committee, might mean a change to the e-commerce giant’s succession plans.

  • Chinese tech tycoons are increasingly facing public scrutiny over their private lives. The drama surrounding Jiang Fan comes after a rape accusation against JD’s Richard Liu and a divorce drama for Dangdang co-founder Li Guoqing.
  • JD founder Richard Liu is gradually taking a back seat in the operation of the e-commerce giant after the scandal hit company shares by nearly 70% in late 2018.

Details: Alibaba removed Jiang Fan from its partners committee and demoted him from senior vice president to vice president, local media reported.

  • Jiang’s alleged lover, Zhang Dayi, is a key influencer at KOL agency Ruhnn, who brought in half of its total sales for nearly three years.
  • However, Alibaba says the internal investigation shows that Jiang was not involved in the company’s decision to invest in Ruhnn in 2016.
  • Neither preferential policies towards Ruhnn nor Zhang Dayi’s Taobao and Tmall stores were discovered during the investigation, Alibaba said.
  • The company clawed back Jiang’s 2019 annual bonus for the misconduct.

Context: On April 17, a Weibo user described by Chinese media as Jiang Fan’s wife posted a statement that warned social media influencer Zhang Dayi, not to “mess around” with her husband. Jiang has asked the company to launch an investigation into his own behavior.

  • Alibaba-backed Taobao has an 8.56% stake in Ruhnn, according to the company’s prospectus.
  • The Hangzhou-based influencer firm went public in April 2019, raising $125 million in its NASDAQ IPO. Ruhnn shares dropped 5.53% on Friday trading.
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Ousted Dangdang co-founder breaks into HQ in attempted coup https://technode.com/2020/04/27/ousted-dangdang-co-founder-breaks-into-hq-in-attempted-coup/ Mon, 27 Apr 2020 06:32:27 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137568 Dangdang founder Li GuoqingDangdang was once a top e-commerce platform, but a drawn-out power struggle as well as divorce drama between Li and his ex-wife and co-founder has clouded the company's future. ]]> Dangdang founder Li Guoqing

On Sunday, the deposed co-founder of Dangdang, Li Guoqing, broke into the company’s Beijing headquarters. He and six others took control of the company’s official seals in an attempt to regain control of the company.

Why it matters: Dangdang was once a top e-commerce platform, but a drawn-out power struggle as well as divorce drama between Li and his ex-wife and co-founder, Yu Yu, has clouded the company’s future.

  • Corporate seals, sometimes called a “chop,” are considered a company’s legal signature. Once the seal is stamped on a document, the document is considered legally effective and binding.

Details:  Li, who grabbed nearly 50 company stamps and financial seals on Sunday, claims this is only the first step. Li said to local media that he will build his own team for a final takeover of Dangdang.

  • A video of the whole coup shows the group encountered little pushback from employees.
  • In a letter to employees distributed during the visit, Li says he will take over the company’s operations, while Yu Yu will no longer be executive director, legal representative, nor general manager.
  • Kan Min, vice president of the company, said to local media that Li’s claims in the letter are not true, adding that Dangdang has reported this case to the police.
  • The company declared void the seals taken by Li.

Context: Founded in 1999, Dangdang started as an online bookseller and expanded into a massive e-commerce company. Despite Dangdang’s early rise to prominence, the online bookseller gradually lost the battle with younger competitors like JD.

  • In February 2019, Li Guoqing announced in an open letter that he has left the company, indicating a peaceful handover.
  • In October, Li said he filed for a divorce in July last year, but Yu didn’t agree.
  • Things turned ugly after Li claimed in an October interview that he was forced to leave the company by Yu, In the video interview, he can be seen losing his temper and throwing a glass of water on the floor
  • Yu fought back, accusing Li of domestic abuse, extramarital affairs with men, and stealing RMB 130 million out of their joint savings account.
  • The outspoken entrepreneur has drawn criticism for sexist comments. He defended Yu Minhong when the New Oriental Group founder blamed women for the country’s declining moral standards as well as Richard Liu when the JD founder was embroiled in a rape scandal.
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In rambling letter to investors, Pinduoduo founder predicts his company will lead a new market order https://technode.com/2020/04/26/pinduoduo-founder-predicts-new-market-order-with-his-company-as-leader/ Sun, 26 Apr 2020 05:34:24 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137514 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaColin Huang, founder of Pinduoduo, suggests companies with new business models are expected to outrun their older rivals.]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba

In a letter to investors, Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang suggests that companies with new business models, a group that Huang portrayed Pinduoduo as leading, are expected to outrun their older rivals in a world that’s witnessing a “reestablishment.”

Why it matters: The already intense rivalry between Pinduoduo and arch-rivals like Alibaba and JD is reaching a fever pitch as the Covid-19 is moving more Chinese shoppers online.

  • Instead of playing catch-up, the four-year-old company now claims to be China’s second-largest e-commerce platform with 585.2 million active buyers, next only to Alibaba.
  • Both Alibaba and JD have rolled out their counterpart apps that adopt similar models of Pinduoduo. More rivals like Alibaba-backed Suning are reportedly joining the battle.

When this tiny virus was dropped into our world, it acted just like a catalyst in a test tube, accelerating the formation of a whole new world. Inevitably, some dimensions of the previous world are being restructured, some rules are being rewritten. The impact of this sweeping force will fundamentally and permanently change the world we are in now. Just like what I explained in the previous shareholder letters about PDD’s formation, new models are bound to emerge and grow in a whole new setup. We are indeed seeing the phasing out of some as new ones emerge. It is the time of reestablishment.”

—Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang in the letter to investors

Details: Included in Pinduoduo’s 2019 annual report released Saturday was a letter from its founder and CEO Colin Huang which sought to reassure shareholders about the company’s long-term growth prospects.

  • Different from the previous public letters that mainly address the company’s operations and strategies, Huang explained this time his thoughts on the Covid-19 pandemic as well as the history of time, mentioning the theories of big thinkers from Newton to Einstein.
  • By predicting a new world setup, he believes new models will prosper the most. He predicts old models will be phased off, without mentioning the company’s rivals by name. 
  • The company has recorded  RMB1.01 trillion ($144.6 billion) of gross merchandise volume from 585.2 million active buyers in 2019. That’s RMB1,720 ($247.1) of annual spending per active buyer, up 53% year on year from RMB 1,127 in 2018, the company’s 2019 report shows. 

Results may vary: Public reception of Huang’s letter has been mixed. While some appreciate Huang’s philosophic thinking, others complain the letter is missing the point and offers no valuable detail for investors.

When Einstein wrote down his famous E = MC2, he elegantly (in some sense also arrogantly) depicted a physical world in his mind. However, what he did not explain in his theory of relativity is the relationship between the human mind and the physical world, nor the relationship between energy and information.”

—Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang in the letter to investor

Context: Pinduoudo posted weaker-than-expected revenue for the fourth quarter of 2019 in March. The company expects disruption caused by coronavirus outbreak will have negative impacts on its Q1 result.

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Updated: Suning says no Pinduoduo clone plans https://technode.com/2020/04/24/suning-is-launching-a-pinduoduo-clone-in-may/ Fri, 24 Apr 2020 09:28:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137465 Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailerThe entry of Suning into the budget shopping market will further fan the contentious competition in the bargain hunting sector.]]> Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailer

Chinese omnichannel retailer Suning.com is reportedly planning to launch a new shopping app targeting bargain-seeking consumers by the end of May, taking aim at e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo.

Why it matters: Suning’s entry to the budget shopping market will further fan the contentious competition in the sector, which already seen fierce rivals like Pinduoduo and Alibaba.

  • Taobao Special Offer Edition app, Alibaba’s Pinduoduo clone, topped the rankings for the most-downloaded free app on Apple’s China App Store in March.
  • Rival Gome Retail entered a strategic partnership with Pinduoduo this week with plans to capitalize on the later’s huge user base and technological capabilities. The move draws a comparison between the tie-up between Suning and Alibaba.

Details: Chinese media Jiemian reports that Suning is launching a Pinduoduo clone this May as a core move for the year to build up its online shopping ecosystem, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • The Nanjing-based company is recruiting 100 core merchants since April 23, says the source.
  • The report says it has got confirmation from Suning, which disclosed that the new project is dubbed as Yizhimai. It will be overseen by Zhang Kui, manager of the company’s group-buying division Suning Pingou.
  • The app is expected to be launched around May 20.
  • The company denied plans to launch a PDD clone in a written email to TechNode, saying that it is only a rumor.

Context: Suning has been pushing its offline expansion to various segments including convenience stores, supermarkets, and department stores.

Amid a series of offline expansions, Suning acquired 80% equity interest in the Carrefour China in June 2019.

The company has been selling its shares in Alibaba since 2018 along with hefty spending for omnichannel expansions.

Update: The story is updated on April 27 to include the company’s denial of the rumor.

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Luckin is being sued by Chinese investors under brand new law https://technode.com/2020/04/23/luckin-is-being-sued-by-chinese-investors-under-brand-new-law/ Thu, 23 Apr 2020 08:22:19 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137401 Luckin CoffeeLawyer of these Luckin investors said it is the first time investors have tried to hold a company accountable in China for fraud perpetrated on US markets. ]]> Luckin Coffee
Luckin

A group of Chinese investors who lost money on Luckin Coffee have filed the first in a batch of lawsuits to a local court over the beverage chain’s alleged accounting fraud, the lawyer representing them told TechNode Thursday. They are suing the company for making false financial statements that led to investor losses.

The US-listed Chinese company may fall under Chinese courts’ jurisdiction for fraud, thanks to a recent revision to China’s Securities Law. The new law, which came into effect March 1, added a clause that expanded its authority to cover overseas-listed Chinese companies that have domestic investors.

Yang Zhaoquan, director of Beijing Vlaw Law Firm, said it is the first time investors have tried to hold a company accountable in China for fraud perpetrated in US markets. 

He told TechNode that he has sent out documents for the first lawsuit to a court in the southeastern coastal city of Xiamen, where Luckin is headquartered.

Luckin announced on April 2 that a preliminary internal investigation showed that it reported an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($311 million) worth of phony sales to investors, from the second to the fourth quarter of 2019.

Shares of the company plummeted 75.6% on the disclosure that day. Shares of the company were suspended from trading on April 7. The closing price of its shares was $4.39, only 8.8% of its all-time high.

Luckin did not immediately respond to TechNode’s request to comment on the news.

Read more: Luckin fraud admission leaves more questions than answers

10 suits to come

Vlaw law firm began recruiting (in Chinese) plaintiffs for lawsuits against the company on April 7, looking for Chinese investors and China-based expats who held or purchased Luckin shares from Nov. 13 to April 2.

Yang expects to file a total of 10 independent cases over the coming days, each representing a single investor. The plaintiffs seek to recover the money they lost on Luckin’s stock, as well as commissions paid to brokers, Yang said.

Yang said that one of the investors lost 70% of their investment when the stock crashed.

While the current suits name only Luckin as the defendant, Yang said he and his clients will consider listing auditors and brokers that participated in Luckin’s stock issuance as respondents depending on the development of the cases.

History of fraud

The company already faces lawsuits in the US from law firms that launched investigations into it on behalf of the company’s US investors.

Foreign investors have long complained that Chinese firms listed in the US get away with fraud because of a legal loophole between the two countries: China’s old Securities Law didn’t claim jurisdiction over Chinese companies listed overseas, while US courts and regulators who do have jurisdiction have little to no power to enforce judgments in China.

“In the last 10 years, we’ve been responsible for delisting over a dozen China-based companies for fraud, but nobody has gone to jail, nobody has paid a fine. It is not illegal in China to steal from US investors,” Dan David, the founder of Wolfpack Research, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on April 7.

On the same day, the US-based short seller and securities analysis firm released a short-selling report, accusing Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi of inflating its 2019 revenue by up to 44% and overstating user numbers by up to 60%.

“Prior to this, investors couldn’t claim in China for their losses because of overseas-listed Chinese companies’ financial misconduct,” Yang said. This is the first case trying to achieve that and it could set a precedent that such misconduct has consequences, he said.

However, the new law allows only Chinese and China-based investors to sue in Chinese courts. Most American investors will still count on claiming any cash through US courts.

Unclear jurisdiction 

While the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s top securities regulator, denounced Luckin’s financial chicanery, legal experts have questioned whether the company falls under Chinese securities laws’ rule.

Liu An, a securities lawyer at Beijing-based law firm Dentons China, said in an interview with reporters on April 3 that the new law may not apply to Luckin if it can prove that its fraud stopped before the law came into effect this March.

The new Securities Law also added a clause that bans foreign securities regulators from investigating or gathering evidence in China, making formal an obstacle some US investors have complained about for years. The law, however, said foreign regulators can team up with their Chinese counterparts to investigate publicly traded companies.

“The CSRC pays high attention to Luckin Coffee’s financial misconduct and condemns the company for those financial misconduct behaviors. Publicly traded companies, wherever they are listed, should strictly comply with relevant markets’ law and regulations and fulfill their duties of accurately revealing financial information,” the agency said in a statement on March 3.

Cao Yu, vice president of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission” said on Wednesday that Luckin’s accounting fraud is a “harsh lesson,” while saying that the commission has a “zero tolerance” attitude towards such behavior.

Liu said during the interview that Nasdaq-listed Luckin does not fall under the CSRC’s jurisdiction, so the commission could only release a statement condemning it.

However, the CSRC said in the statement that it would launch an investigation into Luckin Coffee’s alleged financial misconduct “based on arrangements around international securities regulations.”

“It doesn’t seem possible that the CSRC will launch the investigation on its own initiative. It may choose to cooperate with the US Securities and Exchange Commission,” Yang told TechNode.

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JD.com finally launches mini programs https://technode.com/2020/04/23/jd-com-finally-launches-mini-programs/ Thu, 23 Apr 2020 08:08:47 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137387 JDJD introduced its mini program open platform on Wednesday, joining a list of Chinese tech giants that leverage the technology.]]> JD

Chinese online retailer JD introduced its mini program open platform on Wednesday, joining a list of Chinese tech giants that leverage the technology.

Why it matters: JD’s adoption of mini program is relatively late in the game. The lightweight applications, which offers a diverse range of functions without leaving the main app, are increasingly a key, must-have feature for mainstream apps.

  • JD claims more than 270,000 third-party merchants on its platform.

Read more: WeChat mini programs: the future is e-commerce

Details: JD’s mini program will be open to brands and merchants on JD’s platforms as well as external partners from various industries, including home appliances, baby and maternal care, cars, sport, education, and hospitality.

  • The mini programs can be adapted for the WeChat platform thanks to the company’s strategic partnership with Tencent.
  • The mini programs are accessible through various apps in the company’s ecosystem such as its main app and JD Finance. It will also be introduced to 7FRESH and JD Health.
  • The newly-launched feature is still under development. A test shows that it’s placed in an inconspicuous place now instead of a more prominent access point along the lines of WeChat.
  • A group of services, including Tencent-backed Yonghui Superstores and JD Electric Appliances and electronics rental service Jingxiaozu, have launched their mini programs.
  • More brands, including China Telecom, Burger King and Mehood Hotel, ehi Car Services, will join in the coming months.
  • The company is recruiting more merchants, according to a JD spokesperson.

Context: First pioneered by WeChat in 2017, mini-programs have been adopted by leading Chinese super apps, including Tencent’s QQ, Baidu, Meituan, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Taobao, as well as Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin.

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Is WeChat losing its appeal to luxury brand marketers? https://technode.com/2020/04/22/is-wechat-losing-its-appeal-to-luxury-brand-marketers/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 05:47:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137218 WeChatWeChat is morphing from ad platform to marketing Swiss Army Knife for luxury brands as livestreaming competitors eat up pure ad spending. ]]> WeChat

The world of WeChat marketing is changing. For years, the super app was the alpha and omega of digital marketing in China, with more than a billion monthly active users and a whole industry’s worth of supporting services. But as user growth plateaus and other social media challenge WeChat’s lock on eyeballs, a report finds that WeChat is morphing from ad platform to a marketing Swiss Army Knife for luxury brands. 

In a report issued April 9, the Digital Luxury Group (DLG) and marketing automation specialists JINGdigital wrote that WeChat is evolving from a broadcasting platform into a broader customer relationship system, even as competing apps eat into its ad share.

Along with a user growth and engagement time slowdown, WeChat saw decelerating WeChat community growth in 2019. The growth rate of luxury brands that have over 100,000 followers on their WeChat official accounts slid to 18% in the first half of 2019 from 38% for the same period last year, according to the DLG and JINGDigital report. Those with less than 100,000 followers saw an even steeper slide to 6% in the reporting period from 31% a year ago.

Meanwhile, users are spending more time on short video and livestreaming, helping apps that lead in these formats emerge as the profitable new forms of marketing. Top luxury brands are trying to leverage the new models, marked by Louis Vuitton’s launch of livestreaming sessions on Xiaohongshu. Livestreaming is gaining popularity with the rise of content-driven e-commerce trends, although the format typically features a less premium shopping experience, akin to a traditional TV infomercial.

The shift in user attention to short video and livestreaming is reflected in the migration of ad budgets from brands, a major source of revenue for tech firms. ByteDance, the creator of Douyin, TikTok and news aggregation app Toutiao, has eroded ad revenue share from older tech peers Tencent, Baidu, and Alibaba.

Back on WeChat, brands are adjusting marketing strategies to focus on what the platform is best at. In addition to moving to a full-service model, they’re also shifting to a more focused, closer relationship with customers through WeChat.

Breadth to depth

“I don’t think WeChat official accounts are losing their attraction for users,” said Kai, chairman and partner of JINGdigital at a marketing webinar held on April 9. “There’s over 10 million official accounts as of last year, a slower growth is expected simply because the base is already very large,” he said.

At the same time, brand marketers are developing a more nuanced view of what WeChat official accounts are good for, Kai said. Until two to three years ago, the number of followers was the most important metric for measuring the success of WeChat accounts. The indicators later evolved to include unfollow rates, and the most recent center of focus has become material business impact—sales boost or conversion rates, he said.

“WeChat has slowly moved from being merely an information outlet towards a full service platform. It’s a pool the brands are trying to channel all their customers into,” said Kai.

Pablo Mauron, Partner & Managing Director China at DLG said that customers are moving from broad to deep brand engagement. “If my expectation towards WeChat is to have daily content that entertains me then I may pay attention to a broad number of brands. As my expectation for WeChat evolves to be a platform to speak with customer services, to buy your products, to make an appointment, my list of fifty brands that I found interesting probably shrinks to five. That does not mean they are less interesting—just that my expectations have changed,” he said.

Post-Covid comebacks

Luxury or not, brands are embracing e-commerce to maintain business during the global epidemic.

Even though the situation is getting better in China, traffic and sales at offline shops haven’t totally recovered. Mauron said that brands are trying to reawaken dormant customers as much as reach new ones.  “Most of the brands that expect revenue to pick up in China focused on CRM and re-engaging with clients, rather than just picking up where they have left before and focusing on acquisition,” he said.

Kai shared one interesting observation from a high-end fashion brand during the outbreak. Among the rising online transaction volume, those that come through tractional centralized channels like Tmall came down, but transaction volume being triggered by those client advisers through WeChat, the mini programs for example, are a lot higher as the private traffic on WeChat. “The brands still need to recruit new followers to enrich the funnel of potential customers… and monetizing through WeChat services is the close loop effort,” Kai said.

More posts

As growth slows down, luxury brands are posting content more often to public accounts. WeChat service accounts, favored by marketers, are allowed to push articles into followers’ inbox four times a month. More brands have hit this limit in recent months.

DLG and JINGdigital report shows that 67.52% of luxury brands on WeChat are using all four pushes per month, up from merely 17% in last year.  

Brands surveyed are changing how they use their pushes, with single-article pushes taking the lead over multiple. Over 78.32% of the brands surveyed choose to release a single article with each push, up from 42% last year. While cumulative engagement of multiple-article pushes is usually higher than single-article pushes, it comes at a cost in content production.

Thursday and Friday evening saw the most pushes but Mauron warns that A/B Testing is still the most reliable method to determine appropriate timelot for WeChat pushes.

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Bytedance doubles down on workplace tech with Feishu lite https://technode.com/2020/04/22/bytedance-doubles-down-on-workplace-tech-with-feishu-lite/ Wed, 22 Apr 2020 04:59:01 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137288 Feishu bytedance lark workplace enterprise productivity tiktokByteDance is building up a whole product line of enterprise collaboration apps to tap into workplace demands under different scenarios.]]> Feishu bytedance lark workplace enterprise productivity tiktok

Bytedance introduced on Tuesday a light version of its enterprise messaging app Feishu, just two months after releasing its video conferencing app Feishu Meeting.

Why it matters: The TikTok owner is doubling down on enterprise-facing services as remote work apps gain traction globally due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

  • The company began building a whole line of enterprise collaboration apps beginning with Feishu, known as Lark in overseas markets, as it ramps up its offerings for the workplace from instant messages and cloud storage to video conferencing.
  • The Beijing-based company reportedly plans to launch a Google G Suite clone soon, to focus on cloud-based file management and document editing.
  • Chinese tech peers Alibaba and Tencent are leading the country’s workplace app market now with Dingtalk and WeChat Work.

Details: Feishu Jisuban, or Feishu Lite (our translation), is a lightweight version of the original app, offering a simplified user experience by focusing on key features.

  • The new app comes with features from the original Feishu app, including messaging, calendar, file sharing, and video conferencing.
  • Administrative features, like applications for recruitment, procurement, and reimbursement, are absent in the light version.
  • Users are unable log in to Feishu and Feishu Lite at the same time.

Context: Feishu was developed as an internal tool before Bytedance began marketing the platform as a business in 2019. The international version was launched in April 2019 as Lark.

  • Market leaders Alibaba and Tencent are also building a more comprehensive lineup of workplace apps over the past few months.
  • Alibaba introduced Zoom clone Alibaba Cloud Conference last week, shortly after the launch of its Dingtalk Lite in early April. Tencent rolled out an international version of Tencent Meeting, a Zoom rival the company introduced in December 2019.
  • Tencent’s WeChat began blocking links to Feishu inside the app. Users have to manually copy and paste Feishu links into browsers to access them.
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Pinduoduo invests $200 million in retail giant GOME https://technode.com/2020/04/20/pinduoduo-invests-200-million-in-retail-giant-gome/ Mon, 20 Apr 2020 03:08:56 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=137087 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentPinduoduo will integrate GOME's product range, logistics and after-sales customer service to its platform.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Pinduoduo announced Sunday a strategic partnership with GOME Retail. The e-commerce upstart is investing $200 million worth of convertible bonds in the household appliance and electronics retailer.

“This strategic partnership is a win-win-win. Consumers win because they get a wider range of top domestic and international brands at competitive prices, GOME wins because they can broaden their access to our 585.2 million users, and PDD wins because we enhance our foothold in household appliances and electronics.”

David Liu, Vice President of Strategy at Pinduoduo, says in a statement

Why it matters: Chinese retailers, both online and offline, are working together to increase operational efficiency and improve user experience by leveraging each others’ user base, supply chains, and technological capabilities.

Listen: An interview with Pinduoduo’s David Liu

Details: Pinduoduo is planning to integrate GOME’s product range, logistics and after-sales customer service to its platform.

  • The bonds will carry a coupon of 5% per annum and a tenure of three years.
  • If converted at HK$1.215 per share, Pinduoduo would own 1.28 billion shares or approximately 5.6% stakes in GOME.
  • Pinduoduo indicates that they have sourced the fund from its $1.1 billion private share placement completed last month. The company said then that they would use the proceeds to help finance growth, upgrade the shopping experience for our users and to offer more subsidized products.
  • Pinduoduo will add GOME’s product range—including top domestic and international brands like Haier, Midea, Toshiba, and Siemens—onto their platform at the same, or lower price.
  • PDD will provide GOME with digitalization strategies, technology, subsidies, and after-sales service.

Context: Pinduoduo and GOME have been working together since as early as 2018. On March 21, the two companies jointly held a promotion to give away RMB 500 million worth of discounts and consumption subsidies on more than 6,000 items.

  • GOME is operating over 2,600 offline retail stores across 776 cities as of 2019. Of the total, 1,026 are located in county-level cities.
  • Pinduoduo failed market expectations for a second consecutive quarter in Q4. The COVID-19 outbreak is expected to further weigh on first-quarter results.
  • Alibaba invested $4.6 billion in GOME rival, Suning, in 2015 to facilitate a range of collaborations.
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Short seller says China edtech firm GSX inflated revenue by 70% https://technode.com/2020/04/15/short-seller-says-china-edtech-firm-gsx-inflated-revenue-by-70/ Wed, 15 Apr 2020 05:54:14 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136867 GSX TALBeijing-based GSX is the latest US-listed Chinese firm facing close scrutiny in the wake of fraud disclosures from coffee chain Luckin and edtech peer TAL.]]> GSX TAL

US short-seller Citron Research has accused Chinese online tutoring company GSX of defrauding investors by inflating its 2019 revenue up to 70%, sending the company’s share prices down in Tuesday trading.

Why it matters: The Beijing-based edtech upstart is the latest US-listed Chinese firm facing close scrutiny in the wake of a fraud disclosure by beverage chain Luckin and online education peer TAL.

  • Short sellers have also set their sights on Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi and classifieds site 58.com.
  • Citron’s report comes two months after short-seller Grizzly Report accused GSX of faking sales and financials by order “brushing” and overstating its net profit in 2018 by 74.6%.
  • China’s online education industry is bearing the brunt (in Chinese) of the blow, with shares for New Oriental, GSX, Netease’s Youdao, and Liulishuo declining after NYSE-listed TAL disclosed fraudulently inflated sales from one if its business units.

Read more: US-listed Chinese firms are on thin ice

Details: Citron Research calls GSX “the most blatant Chinese stock fraud since 2011” and asks that trading of its shares be halted and for an immediate internal investigation in a report published on Tuesday.

  • GSX’s revenue surged 431% year on year to $2.11 billion in 2019 from $397 million in 2018, according to the company. Citron Research said in its report that it believes the growth is vastly inflated.
  • GSX, which claims in its prospectus to be the third-largest online K-12 after-school tutoring service in China in terms of gross billings in 2018, is absent from a group market share reports conducted by the government, media, and third-party think tanks, according to the Citron Research report.
  • Chen Xiangdong, GSX founder and CEO, denied the fraud accusations in response to former fraud concerns. “Integrity is the most precious element in our value system since the first day of GSX,” he said in a Weibo posting on April 8.
  • GSX shares plunged around 12% mid-day before closing down 0.6% on Tuesday.
  • Citron’s report has attracted attention from law firms including Atlanta, Ga.-based Holzer and Holzer LLC which are launching investigations.

Context: Founded in 2014, GSX is an online education platform targeting K-12 after-school tutoring services in a large class format.

  • The company went public on the NYSE in June to raise $208 million at the mid-point of its targeted range at $10.5 a share.
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Meituan-Dianping in uncertain times https://technode.com/2020/04/15/meituan-dianping-in-uncertain-times/ Wed, 15 Apr 2020 02:58:13 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136725 retail e-commerce MeituanMeituan-Dianping is just $20 billion short of its founders' ambitious valuation goal. Facing virus economics, it's focusing on profit.]]> retail e-commerce Meituan

In 2015, Meituan-Dianping founder Wang Xing set an ambitious target of a $100 billion valuation by 2020.

As of early March of this year, Meituan’s valuation was $80 billion, $20 billion short of its original goal. As the Covid-19 pandemic has left much of the world reeling, it’s unlikely to hit the target this year.

This article first appeared in In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on the rising tech giant, on April 8.

Didn’t get this in your inbox? Get in touch and we’ll fix it!

Last week, the food delivery giant released its Q4 earnings results, which came in strong—thanks largely to wider profits in its core food delivery segment. For the first time, the company had managed to turn both its operating profit and operating cash flow positive.

Meituan’s strong profits were largely driven by commission revenue from services including food delivery and travel booking platforms. However, this could mean trouble for Meituan as the revenues from these segments are and will continue to be under pressure for the rest of the year from the aftershocks of the virus outbreak.

Uncertainties loom

The coronavirus outbreak hit China’s food delivery, tourism, and dining industry hard. Despite a strong 2019 performance and an upswing in delivery demand during the lockdown, Meituan has warned of the adverse impacts that may last throughout 2020.

In its Q4 earnings report, the company indicated that its core business segments are all facing “significant challenges” on both the demand side and supply side, predicting that revenue growth will decline and operating losses will widen in the first quarter.

Meituan can no longer depend on commission fees for profits as it did in 2019. In the fourth quarter, commission fees accounted for around 65.2% of the total RMB 28.2 billion (around $4 billion) in revenue.

In 2019, Meituan’s commission revenues had increased 39.4% to RMB 65.5 billion from RMB 47 billion in 2018, mainly driven by growth from food delivery—which accounted for more than 75% of its commission revenue.

With the outbreak, however, the number of orders on its food delivery platform dropped. It will likely be months before the order rate recovers to pre-coronavirus levels.

Banking on commission revenue

After recording losses in 2018, mounting financial pressures to turn a profit had forced Meituan to increase revenue from commissions; squeezing revenue out of workers and merchants can maximize profitability in the short-term is faster than investing in R&D and new business expansion efforts. And when the company went public in late 2018, it created even more urgency to achieve profitability.

Read more: MEITUAN IN FOCUS | A matter of timing

Early last year, the company began intensifying its money-making efforts, which included lowering pay for its delivery fleet and raising its commission rate.

Meituan and other food-delivery platforms have been facing pressure from F&B associations and merchants to keep commission rates low. In February, regional food and beverage associations criticized Meituan for raising commission fees to more than 20% during the Covid-19 outbreak.

The company’s Q4 earnings report, however, indicated that it had waived commission fees for restaurants and other local services nationwide throughout the month of February as part of its relief initiative for businesses coping with the outbreak. The company also said it has returned a portion of commissions to participating merchants nationwide to be used for online promotion and marketing efforts.

Meituan said it plans to put more focus on other fast-growing areas including advertising and online marketing services, which accounted for 17.5% of total revenue or RMB 4.9 billion in Q4. Food delivery remains a low-margin business in which profitability is elusive—even for Meituan, which holds 60% of the Chinese market.

For 2019, commission revenue from food delivery service was RMB 49.6 billion, but food-delivery driver costs alone totaled RMB 41 billion. This means more than 80% of commission revenue went toward paying driver salaries.

In Q4, Meituan did manage to raise the profit margin for its food-delivery segment to 17.7%, up 13.4% from the same period in the previous year, but not without significant pushback from restaurants and drivers.

As its largest revenue component faces uncertainties, Meituan’s money-making unit—travel and hotel booking—has been among the hardest hit as a result of travel restrictions within the country and abroad.

Meituan’s in-store, travel, and hotel segment saw impressive growth last year, and contributed the most to Meituan’s overall gross profits. The segment grew by 25.6% year-on-year in 2019 to RMB 222.1 billion. Its profit margin was 88.8%, up from 86.8% in the previous year.

But it’s far too early to say that China’s travel industry has recovered.

Trip.com, Meituan’s travel booking rival, used its own Q4 earnings results to warn that its revenue in the first quarter could fall by as much as half.

Read more: Meituan faces challenge from Alipay on its home turf

The company’s efforts to push into other new business segments and R&D seem half-hearted, and are unlikely to cushion it from expected revenue losses in the upcoming months.

Last month, Meituan announced its decision to abandon its cloud business—an area seen as a top business priority for rival tech giants including Alibaba and Tencent. Meituan’s investment in R&D projects also dropped last year, with expenses declining to 8.7% from 10.8% in terms of percentage of revenues—the lowest since the company went public.

Despite recording strong growth in 2019, Meituan will face significant challenges as the economy slowly recovers—as well as from rising competition in the coming months, which may force it to rethink its profit strategy.

Although it’s difficult to gauge the impact of the pandemic on Meituan’s businesses, the lifestyle services landscape will almost certainly look different in 2020.

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US-listed Chinese firms are on thin ice https://technode.com/2020/04/13/us-listed-chinese-firms-are-on-thin-ice/ Mon, 13 Apr 2020 06:43:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136680 Proposed changes to China’s cybersecurity review process may make it more difficult for companies to raise funds overseas.After Luckin Coffee's spectacular admission of fraud, more Chinese companies are finding themselves in the crosshairs of regulators and short sellers.]]> Proposed changes to China’s cybersecurity review process may make it more difficult for companies to raise funds overseas.

After Luckin Coffee’s spectacular admission of fraud, more Chinese companies are finding themselves in the crosshairs of regulators and short sellers. Some are trying to get out in front of them.

TAL Education, an online tutoring platform, said last Tuesday that one of their employees may have inflated its sales figures. This has thrown a bombshell into capital markets by setting off the second accounting scandal in a week of US-listed Chinese companies.

The Beijing-based company has seen most of its share gains since the beginning of this year wiped out after the revelation. TAL shares traded down 6.74% to close at $52 per share on Wednesday.

Also on last Tuesday, Iqiyi, a Netflix-like Chinese video platform was accused of overstating sales. Muddy Waters, the short seller behind Luckin’s downfall, tweeted a link to a report by 11-month-old short-seller Wolfpack Research, alleging that iQiyi inflated its 2019 revenue by 27% to 44% and overstated user numbers by 42% to 60%. 

Bottom line: The reputation of Chinese tech firms on US markets is suffering as a fresh wave of accounting wrongdoings linked to Luckin. TAL Education revives investor concerns over corporate malpractice among US-listed Chinese firms. These simmering accounting fraud scandals create more uncertainty for Chinese companies seeking to raise funds on US markets and opportunities for short-sellers. But read each short report on its own merits.

What happened: TAL writes that, based upon a routine internal audit, the company suspects that an employee of the company’s “Light Class” segment may have “conspired with external vendors to inflate sales of the business by forging contracts and other documentations.”

Sales of “Light Class,” an after-school tutoring platform for primary school students, accounted for approximately 3% to 4% of the company’s total estimated revenues for the fiscal year 2020, which ended Feb. 29, 2020.

The company says the employee has been taken into custody by the local police while emphasizing a “zero tolerance” stance towards illegal acts.

Safe Luckin distancing: TAL’s decision to out its own accounting faults is among the signs that Chinese companies are readying themselves for post-Luckin impact. Although the two cases are both accounting fraud, TAL’s revelation appears to concern a smaller figure and could be a voluntary move from the company to minimize negative impact.

  • TAL’s revenue for the fiscal year ended February 2020 is expected to be around $3.35 billion to  $3.37 billion. Based on the 3% to 4% estimation made by the company, Light Class accounts for $100 million to $135 million. The company did not say how much of this figure it attributes to fabricated sales.
  • By comparison, Luckin’s falsified sales concern around 75% of the total revenues for the first three quarters of 2019, a whopping $310 million. This is a serious fraud accusation the company was probably forced to reveal under the pressure of independent directors.
  • TAL likely feared that US regulators will undertake wider-scale investigations of US-listed Chinese firms, Shen Meng, executive chairman of Chanson Capital told local media. The same report observed that TAL’s situation would be worse if the issue had been first discovered by regulators or short-sellers.
  • Muddy Waters, the short seller also involved in the Luckin case, also went short on TAL in 2018 for allegedly fabricating data as early as 2016. TAL denied the allegations at that time, but the company’s shares slumped before recovering over the following years.

When it rains it pours: Many of China’s fast-growing companies have come under scrutiny since the beginning of this year.

  • February 2020: Short-seller Grizzly Reports releases a report, calling China’s Craigslist 58.com an “accounting house of cards with little economic substance.” The short seller says the company failed to disclose that its biggest acquisition Ganji, which the company acquired for $2.8 billion, has seen revenue plummet by over 95% since the acquisition by 58.com in 2015..
  • That same month: Another Grizzly report says GSX, a Chinese e-learning company, has drastically overstated its profitability. GSX founder Chen Xiangdong calls the report “groundless” in an interview with local media.
  • April 2020: Wolfpack Research releases a short-selling report accusing iQiyi of exaggerating revenue. iQiyi’s share prices fall 11.2% Tuesday morning before bouncing back to gain 3.2% by market close. 
  • Shares of TAL competitor New Oriental Education & Technology Group also fell 2.4% on Wednesday.

Bad company: Luckin-related firms have also seen disturbing share fluctuations since last week.

  • Car Inc., a Hong Kong-listed firm that shares the same funding network and whose executives went on to found Luckin, saw its shares halved since Luckin’s Friday announcement. 
  • Luckin’s China mainboard-listed partners also come under fire. Shares of Focus Media, a major advertising partner of Luckin, took a hit after the data tracked by CTR Market Research showed that Luckin overstated its advertisement spends. Other companies related to Luckin include logistics partner SF Logistics, and cheesemaker Milk Ground. 

What’s next: China is no stranger to financial irregularities. Previous scandals have resulted in low valuations as well as low market liquidity of US-listed Chinese firms.

  • All foreign companies that list in the US must have their financial statements audited by an independent firm. The fraud cases point to a particular weakness in audit procedures and raises questions to the credibility of reports from audit firms.
  • Projected tightening regulation and weak investor confidence in the US might push Chinese companies to the Hong Kong stock market, which is already the largest IPO destination in 2019, or even mainland markets.
  • Chinese tech giants like JD, Baidu, Trip.com are reportedly planning dual listings on the Hong Kong market, following Alibaba’s blockbuster $13 billion listing in November.

Past performance does not guarantee future results: However, corporate credit should be evaluated based on the individual companies, say analysts from online brokerage platform Tiger Brokers. “There’s no point to short on all US-listed Chinese firms,” the analysts said.

  • Just because a bunch of short-sellers have been right doesn’t mean you should believe the next one. Short sellers sometimes place their bets wrong—even Muddy Waters has had whiffs, like its 2012 attack on New Oriental.
  • At the same time, Luckin has created an opportunity for small-time shorts to get traction. Wolfpack, the short seller that gained attention after the iQiyi report, was less than one year old. The firm was founded by Dan David, a featured protagonist of finance documentary The China Hussle,  in May 2019. 
  • Its previous reports on SMART Global Holdings, a provider of specialty memory, storage and hybrid solutions, communication and network service GTT Communications, and Chinese news aggregation app Qutoutiao, weren’t well received. 
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Meituan is selling Huawei smartphones and cosmetics from Sephora https://technode.com/2020/04/13/meituan-is-selling-huawei-smartphones-and-cosmetics-from-sephora/ Mon, 13 Apr 2020 05:41:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136679 Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service AmazonMeituan is drastically expanding offerings from physical stores on its platform to tens of thousands of products, taking aim at rival Alibaba.]]> Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service Amazon

Chinese food delivery giant Meituan is drastically increasing the number of physical products for sale on its platform to tens of thousands of items, including mobile phones and cosmetics, in an expansion beyond its core service businesses.

Why it matters: Meituan, China’s biggest online seller of services, is pushing onto the home turf of longtime rival Alibaba as it expands into online sales of physical goods.

  • Meituan’s expansion comes one month after Alibaba’s Alipay intensified its offerings in local lifestyle services, a move to compete with Meituan’s all-purpose app.
  • Expansion to more product categories will also help offset a slowdown in sales brought by the Covid-19 outbreak.
  • The move may put Meituan in competition with other e-commerce majors like JD.com.
  • While strong demand for grocery deliveries were one of Meituan’s bright spots during the lockdown, the firm warned of Q1 losses due to the broader impact of the coronavirus pandemic after posting profits for three consecutive quarters.

Read more: Meituan faces challenge from Alipay on its home turf

Details: Consumers can now order Huawei products like smartphones and tablets on Meituan for delivery in Beijing, Shanghai, and Wuxi, according to an advertisement posted on the company’s official account on messaging platform WeChat. Flagship Huawei stores in the capital city promise that smartphone orders will arrive within an hour.

  • Users can also buy cosmetics and beauty products from Sephora outlets in 16 cities, including Beijing and Shanghai.
  • A wider selection of everyday goods are available through chain stores such as Miniso and Watson.
  • Ordering goods from physical stores on Meituan means that products arrive on a rapid timeline, similar to food deliveries on the platform.
  • Meituan could not immediately reached for comment.

Context: Meituan began testing an expansion into selling physical goods online two years ago.

  • Since 2018, the company has listed Hailan Home, a menswear fashion brand, on its platform.
  • It recently entered an agreement with 72 physical bookstores, allowing users within 10 kilometers to place orders and have books delivered within 30 minutes.

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Trip.com wants to buy Luckin co-founder’s car rental platform https://technode.com/2020/04/10/trip-com-wants-to-buy-luckin-co-founders-car-rental-platform/ Fri, 10 Apr 2020 06:22:03 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136593 trip.com ctrip delisting NasdaqTrip.com would use Car Inc. to expand their own car rental business.]]> trip.com ctrip delisting Nasdaq

Chinese online travel giant Trip.com is in talks to buy Car Inc., a car rental firm with deep connections to Luckin Coffee, local media reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Lu Zhengyao is the chairman of both Luckin Coffee and Car Inc.

Why it matters: China’s online travel market is gradually creeping back as the pandemic shows signs of leveling off in the country. While travel giants are gearing up for the pent-up travel demands, Car Inc. saw its shares more than halved since Luckin’s sales fraud announcement last Thursday. It may offer a good buy for Trip.com to expand its car rental business.

Read more: Luckin fraud admission leaves more questions than answers

  • Shares of Car Inc. traded down since last Thursday amid concerns over the firm’s ties with Luckin Coffee, also chaired by Car Inc. board chairman Lu Zhengyao.
  • Lu and Luckin chief executive Zhiya Qian have handed over shares in the embattled Chinese beverage chain to investment banks after a $518 million loan default.
  • Trip.com, an OTA giant, was among the worst-hit tech giants during Covid-19 outbreak. The company expects its Q1 revenue to fall by as much as half as a result of travel suspensions.
  • Car rental services may see a surge because cars are deemed as safer (in Chinese) means of public transportation. Experts expect the epidemic to last till next year.

Details: Trip.com is in discussion with Car Inc. for a possible acquisition of the Hong Kong-listed company, an anonymous source told local media.

  • With the acquisition, Trip.com plans to merge the business of Car Inc. with eHi, a car rental partner of Trip.com, according to the report.
  • The two parties haven’t come to agreements on details of the case, the report added.
  • Trip.com representative declined to comment on the news when contacted by TechNode today.
  • Luckin’s Lu Zhengyao is considering resigning as chairman of Car Inc., a move to distance himself from the car rental company, thus to convince investors that the group is independent of Luckin.

Context: On April 2, Luckin Coffee admitted to sales fraud that involves an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million), sending its shares down 75.6% on the day.

  • Liu Jian, Luckin’s chief operating officer who’s been accused of being responsible for Luckin fraud, worked at Car between 2008 and 2018 before he joined Luckin in May 2018.
  • Trip.com has seen a rise in the overseas car rental business in late 2019. The company expected the number of customers using its overseas car rental services would have tripled year-on-year by the end of 2019 winter holiday season.
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Dingtalk goes global with version tailored to Asian markets https://technode.com/2020/04/08/dingtalk-goes-global-with-version-tailored-to-asian-markets/ Wed, 08 Apr 2020 08:56:50 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136442 DingTalk, Alibaba's enterprise communication and collaboration app, was present at CES Asia 2019 to showcase its hardware products in Shanghai, China on June 11, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)Dingtalk Lite is tailored for Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong and Macau.]]> DingTalk, Alibaba's enterprise communication and collaboration app, was present at CES Asia 2019 to showcase its hardware products in Shanghai, China on June 11, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)

Chinese tech giant Alibaba introduced Dingtalk Lite, the global version of its popular productivity app Dingtalk, to multiple app stores across key Asian markets on Wednesday.

Why it matters: China has witnessed a recent work collaboration boom driven by millions stuck at home during the Covid-19 outbreak. Local tech giants, increasingly shifting to enterprise-facing services, are setting their sights at the global market as the pandemic is spreading across the world.

  • Dingtalk’s global version comes only two weeks after rival Tencent launched an international version of its video conferencing app Tencent Meeting. Bytedance is also running Lark, a global version of the enterprise messaging tool Feishu.
  • Emerging tech firms like Pinduoduo are reportedly catching up in the area.
  • China’s business productivity platforms like Dingtalk, WeChat Work, and Feishu recorded traffic spikes during the coronavirus outbreak while hundreds of millions work from home. 
  • Despite the traffic boost driven by the coronavirus, global rival Zoom hasn’t been able to regain momentum in China after it was temporarily blocked in September.

“With rising demands on remote working and distance learning due to the coronavirus outbreak, we hope to leverage our leading technology to support businesses and schools to maintain operation as much as possible.”

DingTalk CTO Hugo Zhu in an emailed statement

Details: Dingtalk Lite is tailored for users in Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Macau. The app’s interface is available in Japanese, English, and Traditional Chinese.

  • Lite comes with necessary features such as messaging, file sharing, and video conferencing.
  • Most notably, Dingtalk Lite lacks the admin features most China-based users hate.
  • The app supports video-conferencing for over 300 people simultaneously and a live-broadcast function for more than 1000 participants.
  • The app offers AI-enabled translation of messages in 14 languages including Chinese, Japanese, English.
  • It’s compatible with multiple operating systems including iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows.
  • Zhu added that video-conferencing for businesses and live broadcast for online classes have seen the strongest demand in Asia, due to an increasing number of cities implementing different levels of lockdowns and self-isolation.  

Context: Dingtalk claims more than 10 million enterprise users and more than 120 million student users across China.

  • Despite the recent rise, Dingtalk faces backlash from users, especially students, for arguable user experinces.
  • Chinese productivity apps including Dingtalk, WeChat Work, and Lark were recommended by UNESCO as the platforms that can facilitate distance learning during the coronavirus outbreak. 
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Luckin CEO loses ‘significant’ voting rights after loan default https://technode.com/2020/04/07/luckin-ceo-loses-significant-voting-rights-after-loan-default/ Tue, 07 Apr 2020 07:48:35 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136267 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsThe default followed almost immediately after Luckin disclosed that its head of operations had fabricated billions of RMB worth of sales for most of 2019.]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps

A group of lenders is preparing to sell 76.4 million shares of Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee after a company controlled by the family of the coffee chain’s chairman defaulted on a $518 million loan.

Luckin

Why it matters: The default followed a disclosure on Thursday that Luckin Coffee’s head of operations had fabricated billions of RMB worth of sales for most of 2019, sending the company’s share prices plummeting.

Details: On behalf of a syndicate of lenders, Goldman Sachs said Monday that it has started the enforcement process “in order to satisfy the borrower’s obligations” on a $518 million margin loan.

  • The borrower, Haode Investment Inc., is an entity controlled by the family of Lu Zhengyao, chairman of Luckin’s board of directors. The total shares include some from a trust controlled by the family of Qian Zhiya, the company’s CEO.
  • Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, Haitong, CICC, and Barclays were among the list of lenders, according to a Reuters report.
  • Lu’s voting interests in the company will not decrease even if all the pledged shares were sold, but Qian’s beneficial and voting interests would “decrease significantly,” Goldman Sachs said in the statement.
  • A total of 515,355,752 Class B ordinary shares and 95,445,000 Class A ordinary shares were pledged to secure the loan.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that the banks could lose up to $100 million from the loan.
  • In response to the news, Luckin shares tumbled 18.4% to close at $4.39 per share on Monday, after sinking 75.6% on Thursday on the fraud disclosure.

Read more: Luckin Coffee admits to sales fraud

Context: Luckin said on Thursday that an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million) worth of its sales from the second to the fourth quarter of 2019 were fabricated by its COO and a number of employees who reported to him.

  • Before the company’s debut on Nasdaq in May, Lu was said to be seeking a loan of at least $200 million from banks including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley using Luckin shares as collateral, which the company denied.
  • Lu lost $1 billion, or 60% of his net worth, on the drop in share price, according to Bloomberg.
  • In April last year, Luckin registered RMB 45 million worth of movable assets as collateral to a Beijing-based firm, in an early sign of a cash crunch.
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INSIGHTS | Luckin—out of luck https://technode.com/2020/04/06/luckin-out-of-luck/ Mon, 06 Apr 2020 03:15:09 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136234 Customers of Luckin Coffee wait in line to place their order at the counter in Pudong, Shanghai on April 4, 2019. (Image Credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)The Olympics may have been delayed, but we saw a gold medal dive from Luckin Coffee's shares. Its fraud is a cautionary tale—but about what?]]> Customers of Luckin Coffee wait in line to place their order at the counter in Pudong, Shanghai on April 4, 2019. (Image Credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)
Luckin

The Olympics may have been delayed, but we got to see a gold medal dive anyway: Luckin Coffee dropped 75% in a single day’s trading as news emerged that nearly half its sales were fictional. The company claims to be investigating a scheme to falsify sales data perpetrated by the company COO, among others.

The company looks set to go out as it came in, in a wash of free coffee. Customers are flocking to its stores to cash in coupons. On the Chinese internet, commentators have already written a likely epitaph—”Hey Wall Street, thanks for the free coffee!”

Bottom line: Luckin is the most spectacular case of fraud we’ve seen in a while—and not all that surprising, coming from a company that has long had warning signs. It’s probably a cautionary tale about something—but you can take your pick of morals. 

Meteoric rise:

  • October 2017: Luckin Coffee is founded in Beijing by former Car Inc COO Qian Zhiya and former CMO Yang Fei.
  • June 11, 2018: The company raises a $200 million Series A from Joy Capital, the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), Legend Capital and Centurium Capital. Joy, Legend and Centurium all have connections to Car Inc.
  • Dec. 12, 2018: Luckin raises $200 million in a Series B, led by GIC and China International Capital. This round gave them a $2.2 billion valuation.
  • March 12, 2019: Reuters reports that Luckin Chairman Lu Zhengyao has sought to trade a role in the IPO in return for a $200 million personal loan.
  • April 3, 2019: Luckin registered RMB 45 million ($6.7 million) worth of movable assets as collateral to a Beijing-based firm, in an early sign of a cash crunch.
  • April 18, 2019: The company raises $150 million in a Series B+ from BlackRock and an unnamed investor. The round put them at a $2.9 billion valuation.
  • April 22, 2019: Luckin files for an IPO with the US SEC. To be listed on the Nasdaq under the symbol “LK,” the company set a placeholder amount of $100 million to be raised in the filing. Rumors from February put the IPO at $300 million.
  • May 16, 2019: Luckin exceeds expectations to raise $561 million in IPO.
  • Sept. 3, 2019: Luckin spins off tea business as “Fawn Tea.”
  • November 2019: Luckin store count passes Starbucks at about 4,200 stores, making it China’s most common coffee chain.
  • Jan. 21: Luckin announces $865 million in post-IPO fundraising to fund growth and “unmanned” vending machine strategy.
  • Feb. 1: Luckin shares plunge 19% as short-seller Muddy Waters publicizes allegations of inflated sales figures and self-dealing made by an anonymous third party. Luckin denies these allegations.
  • April 2: Luckin admits that it fabricated RMB 2.2 billion in sales in 2019, causing its shares to plunge 75.6%.

Growth at a high cost: Luckin was built on a simple idea: you can buy growth. The company’s celebrity CMO—and ex-con—Yang Fei even wrote a book about it, as reported by TechNode contributor Michael Norris. Everything it did cost big money: opening 4,500 stores in slightly over two years, and then handing out free coffees to bring customers in and to keep them loyal. 

In its early stages, the spending was backed up by an argument that China was on the verge of becoming a major coffee-drinking nation. But as it progressed, the quest for growth led Luckin into more and more whimsical bets: 

  • Luckin pushed into fancy teas in 2019, a field so crowded that Luckin isn’t even the only player whose logo is a deer
  • I’m honestly not sure what happened to the company’s vow to push into overseas markets.
  • Most recently, Luckin raised most of a billion dollars to fund a push into vending machines—which is rather less crowded, since competitors like BingoBox have already flopped.

When did it turn to fraud? We don’t know for sure when Luckin started making up numbers, but we can see why. The company spent hundreds of millions of its investors’ dollars to buy growth, and as it went back for more, it had to show that it was on a road to profit. It is, however, very possible that fraud went beyond what the company has already admitted.

  • According to the company’s Thursday statement, falsified sales began with the company’s Q2 results—its first as a public company. 
  • The fake sales allowed it to claim—in the now-disavowed Q2 report—that year-on-year sales grew 698%; in Q3, it boasted that net losses had fallen from about 200% to only 30% of revenue. 
  • In as-yet unconfirmed allegations, the Muddy Waters-linked report that accurately predicted false sales also claimed that the company inflated the costs in its vending machine push in order to cover up a need to raise funds for ongoing operations, and to transfer money to related parties in self-dealing transactions.

Why did they own up? Norris speculates that Luckin’s admission of fraud was forced by its own board. The company’s Q4 and annual results have been slow to emerge. Whether they are past the filing deadline is unclear, but Norris suggests that independent directors refused to sign off on the results, forcing the company to investigate.

It may be that the scheme wasn’t really meant to last: Pre-IPO, Norris argued that the company might not be intended to achieve profits; suggesting that, like a car with sawdust in the transmission, it was built only to make it to market and let sellers walk away with cash.

Expiration dates: It’s a commonplace in Chinese commentary that the company is a sort of national Robin Hood—taking money from Wall Street investors and spending it on free coffee for Chinese people. Chinese users have scrambled to Luckin to place orders, some to show their support for the company, but more for fear their coupons will expire. 

  • Luckin stores were full of buyers on Friday, while its app and WeChat mini-program crashed due to a traffic spike, local media reported.
  • The situation echoes the last days of ofo share bikes, when 10 million users applied for refunds as the company collapsed in 2018.

Is it a drinking lesson…: Luckin’s closest peers are fast-growing fancy tea sellers Heytea and Naixue. Like Luckin, they’re spending big to grow fast with a hot beverage. But maybe they can make a Luckin-like model work with a little more patience. After all, Norris told TechNode, even after you discount half Luckin’s sales it’s still sold a lot of coffee.

…pseudo-tech,…:  Maybe the lesson is to beware companies dressed up as tech startups. Luckin is competing with Starbucks—but it’s presented itself as a tech firm to imply Google-like prospects. Looking at its investor relations material, Luckin’s company overview mentions technology four times in three paragraphs, and coffee just twice.  

The last year has been tough on workhorses in unicorn’s clothing. WeWork’s spectacular flame-out is the most famous example, but Indian hotel giant Oyo and Chinese rental platform Danke share the essential features of high costs and decidedly finite revenue. Neither reached Luckin’s heights of fraud, but both illustrate that asset-heavy pseudo-tech firms tempt executives to cut corners. 

Some companies, to be sure, are going to see bets like these pay off. But it’s clearly long past time for investors to ask hard questions about profit, as well as growth.

…information asymmetry,…: For some US commentators, the moral of Luckin is that you can’t trust overseas-listed Chinese stock. As Josh Rogin writes in the Washington Post:  

According to the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission’s 2017 report, China’s opaque financial system makes it impossible to verify Chinese companies’ financial disclosures and auditing reports. Through fraud schemes alone, Chinese issuers have stolen billions from U.S. investors with no fear of punishment inside China.

But China’s securities regulator claims that new laws, effective from March 1, give it the power to police overseas-listed stocks. Luckin executives probably won’t lose any sleep over enforcement, as their scheme likely wound up before this key date, but China’s US-listed blue chips would be well advised to push for real enforcement to protect their own reputations.

…or just dumb money? We can’t get over the suspicion that the real reason Luckin got away with its fuzzy numbers is that a lot of people were willing (or desperate) to buy into the next big thing in China tech. A few years ago, China tech was a dark horse, and betting on it was an easy way to make money. These days, you have to be pretty fast to spot something before everyone knows it—and that means you have to be a lot smarter to make money.

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Luckin Coffee admits to sales fraud https://technode.com/2020/04/03/luckin-coffee-admits-to-sales-fraud/ Fri, 03 Apr 2020 03:10:04 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136183 Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucksLuckin confirms sales fraud, two months after doubts about the disclosure accuracy by the Chinese Starbucks rival.]]> Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucks

Chinese beverage chain Luckin coffee shares plummeted 75.6% on Thursday after it disclosed that several employees including its COO had fabricated transactions for much of 2019, amounting to an estimated RMB 2.2 billion in falsified sales.

Luckin

Why it matters: The disclosure comes two months after doubt about the Chinese Starbucks rival’s operational metrics were first floated in a report made public by short seller Muddy Waters. The scandal marks a stunning fall for the Xiamen-based company that had been touted as the country’s largest coffee chain by store count.

  • Luckin still hasn’t filed its financial report for the fourth quarter of 2019, though the Q4 earnings season is coming to an end. The upcoming report will be closely scrutinized as an indicator of its real performance.
  • In addition to Q4 uncertainties, Luckin’s Q1 2020 financials are expected to have suffered from limited business activity due to the Covid-19 outbreak and the extended Spring Festival holiday, like many of its peers.

Read more: So long, and thanks for all the coffee!

Details: Luckin announced Thursday that a preliminary internal investigation showed that it reported an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million) worth of phony sales to investors, from the second to the fourth quarter of 2019. 

  • Certain costs and expenses were also “substantially” inflated during this period, the company said in the statement.
  • The company said that Liu Jian, Luckin’s chief operating officer and a director of the company along with a number of employees reporting to him had “engaged in misconduct, including fabricating certain transactions.”
  • It pledged it would take appropriate action, including legal measures, against all individuals responsible. The employees have been suspended as recommended by a special committee formed by three independent board directors.
  • Share prices for Car Inc., the Hong Kong-listed firm which shares the same funding network and whose executives went on to found Luckin, dived 45.1% Friday.
  • Meanwhile, stock prices for rival Starbucks closed 3.8% up.

Expert’s take: “There’s a long, painful road ahead [for Luckin],” Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina, told TechNode on Friday.

  • “The company will have to release their latest earnings, provide Covid-19 related guidance, endure forensic accounting, and lawsuits,” he said.
  • However, Norris noted it’s still too early to predict the total downfall of the company. “Even with last night’s sell-off, the company still boasts a [$1.62 billion] market capitalization.”
  • The Thursday press release estimated the revenue fraud at RMB 2.2 billion but also intimated there were inflated costs, Norris added. “We’ll need to see the full extent of the fraud before determining what Luckin’s burn rate looks like.”

Read more: Why it’s time to wake up and smell the coffee on Luckin

Context: In February, short seller Muddy Waters tweeted an anonymous report which accused Luckin of disclosing fraudulent operational figures and that it is a “fundamentally broken business.” The company’s share sank more than 19%. 

  • In response, the company denied all allegations in the report three days later, calling it “misleading, flawed, and meritless.”
  • However, scrutiny over the company increased. A group of US law firms have launched investigations into Luckin on behalf of the company’s investors.
  • Luckin Coffee raised in an additional $865 million in net proceeds in January, just eight months after raising $651 million in May 2019 IPO.

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China consumer demand for online services is recovering https://technode.com/2020/04/02/china-consumer-demand-for-online-services-is-recovering/ Thu, 02 Apr 2020 09:39:10 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136109 Alipay facial payment lifestyle services mobile paymentsA pickup in lifestyle services shows that life is returning to normal as Covid-19 levels off in China, and that it is increasingly digital.]]> Alipay facial payment lifestyle services mobile payments

A pickup in lifestyle services shows that life is returning to normal in China as cases of Covid-19 level off, and that consumption is increasingly digital, according to data from Chinese payment giant Alipay.

Why it matters: China, once the center of the Covid-19 outbreak, is showing signs of recovering from widespread economic fallout from the Covid-19 across sectors including search queries, offline retail, travel, restaurants to manufacturing.

  • Alipay accelerated an expansion into digital lifestyle services this March, renewing its rivalry with Meituan’s all-purpose app. 

Read more: Meituan faces challenge from Alipay on its home turf

Details: An increasing number of businesses are trying to digitalize their operations following the Covid-19 outbreak, pushing Chinese consumers online.

  • Food and entertainment companies, such as groceries, bubble tea shops, and movie theaters, saw different degrees of business recovery.
  • Almost 72% of small-to-medium-sized enterprises have resumed work as of March 24, according to China’s Ministry of Industry and Information
  • Residents in major cities across China have been spending more on health and beauty services after citywide lockdowns were lifted, according to the report. Online sales for dental and cosmetic medical services rocketed 3,000% from March 18 to 27 compared with the previous 10 days, it said.
  • Local governments in eastern Chinese cities including Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Qingdao are distributing coupons via platforms such as Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat in a move to stimulate domestic consumption and help consumers and businesses in need. 

Context: Alipay noted that consumer demand for digitalized services on its platform was expanding rapidly even before the epidemic. In 2019 alone, the number of searches for lifestyle services within the Alipay app increased 300% compared with 2018.

  • Meituan also signaled that business was picking up during a call with analysts for its fourth quarter earnings report.

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Yuanfudao is now one of China’s most valuable ed-tech startups https://technode.com/2020/04/02/yuanfudao-is-now-one-of-chinas-most-valuable-ed-tech-startups/ Thu, 02 Apr 2020 06:43:53 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136045 yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids childrenChinese ed-tech unicorn Yuanfudao raised $1 billion in a Series G as demand for online courses surge during the coronavirus outbreak.]]> yuanfudao edtech tencent online education kids children

Chinese online education unicorn Yuanfudao has raised a $1 billion Series G at a valuation of $7.8 billion, making it one of the most valuable ed-tech companies in China.

Why it matters: The massive deal highlights renewed investor attention to the online education sector, which surged during the Covid-19 outbreak as millions remained sequestered at home.

  • Yuanfudao, focused on the K-12 age group, competes with rivals like Vipkid, Zybang, and 17zuoye. The sector is already crowded in China where parents are more than willing to spend heavily on their children’s education.
  • The financing is a rare deal during the epidemic which has all but frozen venture capital investments, leaving startups struggling for funds. Meanwhile, a G round of financing is also relatively unusual.

Details: Company CEO Li Yong announced the financing in an internal letter made public on Monday. The company did not respond to requests for further comments.

  • Private equity firm Hillhouse Capital led the round with participation from existing investors Tencent and IDG Capital, as well as Boyu Capital.
  • The deal would raise the company’s total funds received to nearly $1.8 billion.
  • Li said the firm’s K-12 online training course has registered more than 1 million long-term users who paid full price for their services. Zebra AI, its English-learning app for kids 2 through 8 years old, claims 500,000 students.

Read more: Tencent leads E-round funding in Chinese online educator Vipkid

Context: Founded in 2012 by former Netease employees, Yuanfudao now says it has more than 400 million users.

  •  The company operates various programs including question database Yuantiku, question search Xiaoyuansouti, and English learning app Zebra AI.
  • The programs are conducted in various forms including livestreaming and video replay.
  • Tech giant Tencent has stacked its chips in the sector though building home-grown ed-tech services and via external investments. Tencent has also invested in Vipkid.
  • Yuanfudao has earned support from other big-name investors including Warburg Pincus, Matrix China, New Horizon Capital, and CMC Capital Group.
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The Chinese startup leading the pack in grocery delivery https://technode.com/2020/04/02/the-chinese-startup-leading-the-pack-in-grocery-delivery/ Thu, 02 Apr 2020 06:30:17 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=136063 dingdong maicaiDingdong Maicai is growing faster than its grocery delivery rivals, but investors are still asking if it can support its asset-heavy business model.]]> dingdong maicai

After a tough 2019, China’s online grocery delivery platforms received an unexpected boost from the Covid-19 pandemic, as hundreds of millions of Chinese were placed under lockdown. While all the players have seen some degree of business spike, Dingdong Maicai emerged as a dark horse, claiming the first spot on Quest Mobile’s top-10 list of fast-growing shopping apps with over 500,000 daily active users.

The backstory: Dingdong Maicai is a fresh produce and grocery e-commerce platform where users can place orders online and then have their purchases delivered to their doorstep. The platform’s most popular product categories include vegetables, fruits, seafood.

  • Dingdong Maicai was born out of Nextdoor-like neighbor social networking platform Dingdong Community, a flash-in-the-pan startup that failed to maintain traction and commercialize its services after a brief vogue in 2014.  
  • The Dingdong team has tried out a raft of O2O sectors from laundry, breakfast delivery, house cleaning to flower delivery to revive the project during the two years following the collapse of Dingdong Community, before landing on grocery delivery in 2017.
  • Liang Changlin, CEO and founder of the company, is a serial entrepreneur. He started a video editing tool startup in 2002 and then in 2003 Mmbang, a pregnancy and parenting experience sharing community that merged with education group TAL Education in 2016.

The landscape: Fresh produce e-commerce platforms nearly doubled DAU to 10.1 million during this Spring Festival holiday from 5.3 million during the holiday a year ago, according to data from a Quest Mobile report published Feb. 12.

  • Dingdong is facing fierce competition from deep-pocketed rivals like Alibaba-backed Hema, Meituan Maicai, Tencent-backed Missfresh, and JD Daojia.
  • Fresh produce e-commerce is reputed to be a difficult business due to the high attrition rate of perishable goods, and significant logistics requirements, which weigh heavily on margins. 
  • The sector first boomed a few years ago and has seen multiple casualties from Amazon-backed Yummy 77 and Xianpinhui to more recent ones like Dailuobo.

Unique selling point: China’s grocery delivery market has flirted with a variety of business models. Dingdong is one of the leaders of the asset-heavy self-operated format, in which the company runs hundreds of self-built “front warehouses,” and its own logistics.

  • Instead of shipping every order from one or a few warehouses around a city, the model increases delivery speed by distributing goods to hundreds of local front warehouses.  
  • Direct shipment from nearby warehouses allows the company to guarantee delivery within 30 minutes to families within one kilometer.
  • Higher delivery efficiency allows the platform to lower delivery costs and thus offering more competitive prices for users. Dingdong does not have a minimum price per order for free delivery or a delivery fee. Also, the platform has achieved a loss rate as low as 1%, well below the industry average of 3-10%, founder Liang said in the 2019 annual meeting of the company.
  • Dingdong is adopting a big data-driven approach, predicting future orders through self-developed data models and multi-dimensional predictions based on historical sales data to reduce the loss rate.

The investors: Dingdong has received lots of attention from venture capitalists over the past two years. It secured a B round in October 2018 and then four follow-up tranches within nine months.

  • Investors in the B round and following tranches include big names like Tiger Fund, Sequoia Capital China, Qiming Venture Partners, Bertelsmann Asia Investments, and Capital Today.
  • After receiving Pre-A round from Gaorong Capital in May 2018, the company secured A from Fortune Capital and Red Star Macalline in July 2018 and an A Plus round from returning investor Gaorong Capital two months later.
  • The company has disclosed neither the size of each round nor a valuation. But local media wrote in March 2019 that the company has exceeded RMB 10 billion valuation.

Present condition: Dingdong nearly doubled its daily active users during the Chinese New Year holiday (Jan. 24 to Feb. 2) compared with regular days in early January  (Jan. 2 to Jan. 8), according to Quest Mobile data.

  • During the first few weeks after the outbreak, the company’s price per order nearly doubled from RMB 60 ($8.45) to over RMB 100, Liang told local media. He added that the app gained over 40,000 new customers every day during the CNY holiday. However, it is not clear whether users have remained as the offline economy re-opens.
  • Dingdong’s annual gross merchandise volume exceeded RMB 5 billion in 2019, founder Liang Changlin revealed on Jan. 6 at the company’s annual meeting. 
  • Dongdong is selling more than 1,800 SKUs through 550 front end warehouses as of December. It processes 500,000 orders per day, which means around 900 orders per day per warehouse.
  • For now, the company has most of its operations in Southern China. Of the total front warehouses, over 250 are located in Shanghai, home of the company, while the rest are scattered around other Yangtze River Delta cities of Hangzhou, Suzhou, Ningbo, Wuxi, and Guangdong’s Shenzhen.

Liftoff? Dingdong’s asset-heavy approach has raised investor concerns for the sustainability of the model; like the WeWorks of the world, it is counting on intense utilization to avoid becoming a money pit. 

  • Dingdong’s grocery delivery model is dependent on scale. The warehouse system would be really efficient if it is really heavily used, but is very expensive to maintain if it’s not used intensively.
  • Haitong Securities suggested in a February 2019 report that the platform is still short of break-even on warehouses. It says the company should process 1,250 orders in order to break even under the condition of RMB 3 rental fee per square meter for 300 square meter warehouse, RMB 50 per order, gross profit rate 30%, and 30 staff per warehouse. 
  • Haitong suggested that Dingdong could also raise revenue by rising price per order and increasing the number of orders.
  • Gross profits for vegetables are low and loss costs are high compared with seafood and fruits. The company was operating under thin margin/ loss previously. Industry experts have estimated a RMB 70 sales per order break-even point for e-commerce platforms using the costly front warehouses approach.

Prospects: After the spike triggered by the coronavirus, Dingdong plans to extend to Northern China markets, with its first stop in Beijing.

  • Sudden demand in grocery delivery as a result of the coronavirus outbreak has eased some investor concerns. But the company may still face the challenge of retaining the new users when the epidemic ends. 
  • At the company’s annual conference held in early January, company founder Liang emphasized the theme for Dingdong in the year is not growth but to increase the number of orders from existing users from an average of four orders per month to 6.5.
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Pinduoduo has raised $1.1 billion from long-term investors https://technode.com/2020/04/01/pinduoduo-has-raised-1-1-billion-from-long-term-investors/ Wed, 01 Apr 2020 05:04:52 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135996 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentThe funds purchased newly issued Class A ordinary shares which represent around 2.8% of total outstanding shares for Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo announced Tuesday that it has secured $1.1 billion in a private share placement from a number of long-term investors.

Why it matters: Earnings misses for two consecutive quarters coupled with throttled business from the Covid-19 outbreak have dented Pinduoduo’s share prices since late last year. The timing of this investment conveys investor confidence about the company’s growth prospects.

Details: Pinduoduo did not disclose the name of the investors, but sources from a Reuters report said private equity firms Hillhouse Capital and Boyu Capital are on the list.

  • With the funds, the investors will purchase the company’s newly issued Class A ordinary shares, which represents approximately 2.8% of Pinduoduo’s total outstanding shares.
  • The proceeds will be used to boost online sales and marketing of agricultural products, push the transformation of the export-oriented enterprises, as well as build out infrastructure for the company’s customer-to-manufacturer (C2M) business.
  • The transaction is expected to close in early April.

Context: The current funding comes just six months after Nasdaq-listed Pinduoduo raised $1 billion in a convertible bond.

  • Rival Alibaba is doubling down on its own C2M selling platform aimed at luring bargain-seeking consumers.

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Meituan faces challenge from Alipay on its home turf https://technode.com/2020/04/01/meituan-faces-challenge-from-alipay-on-its-home-turf/ Wed, 01 Apr 2020 03:23:30 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135534 Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service AmazonMeituan faces a renewed challenge from Alibaba in local lifestyle market as Alipay drives users to in-ecosystem services.]]> Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service Amazon

In 2010, after several failed projects that included Facebook-clone Xiaonei and the Twitter-like Fanfou, serial entrepreneur Wang Xing launched a new startup, Meituan. With his eyes set on e-commerce, Wang focused on online sales of services—a less saturated segment of e-commerce which avoided head-on competition with Alibaba, the undisputed e-commerce giant.

This March, fresh off its 10th anniversary, Meituan has earned itself the title of the “Amazon of services.” Alibaba still dominates China’s online retail market for physical goods, but Meituan is leading the way in services.

This article originally appeared in TechNode’s biweekly “In Focus/Meituan” newsletter, available to members of TechNode Squared. We’re making it free as a sample of our premium content—join now and get every issue!

However, Alibaba never lost sight of its goal to build an empire spanning all e-commerce sectors. The subsidy-fueled food delivery war between Meituan and Alibaba-backed Ele.me has only recently leveled off. Alibaba has reinvigorated its bet by expanding its offensive to the broader local lifestyle services market, with popular payment app Alipay at the center.

Alipay: from payment tool to lifestyle multi-purpose app

In what Alipay CEO Simon Hu dubbed the “most important development in Alipay’s 15-year history,” the payment app has upgraded local lifestyle services such as food and grocery delivery, featuring the channels more prominently in an app update released on March 10.

With its slogan changed from “Pay with Alipay” to “Live @ Alipay,” the app is transforming from a fintech and payment tool to a Meituan-like all-services app featuring third-party service providers that offer all kinds of lifestyle conveniences for its users.

Alongside the update, the company announced a three-year plan to support the digital transformation of 40 million service providers across China. Alipay says it is responding to rising demand for local lifestyle services on its platform, which has seen the number of searches for lifestyle services jump 300% in 2019 compared with 2018.

Although both Ele.me and Koubei have their own apps, they rely heavily on Alipay—which has 1.2 billion users globally—to acquire new customers. Eleme acquired 48% of its new customers from Alipay in the quarter ending Dec. 31, according to the company.

On March 16, Alibaba’s local lifestyle arm (a unit that merged Ele.me and Koubei in 2018) set a series of goals to support the transition. Through the Alipay tie-up, the unit pledged to:

  • Bring more than 100 million visitors to merchants every day.
  • Offer a commission fee 3% to 5% lower than other platforms for food delivery services. (Meituan has been criticized by regional catering associations for raising commission fees to more than 20% during the Covid-19 outbreak.)
  • Help 5,000 local lifestyle service providers open flagship stores on its business-to-customer marketplace, Tmall.
  • Provide free services for mini-program operators who use the catering management solutions Keruyun, a platform Alibaba acquired in 2019.
  • Help 1 million merchants to upgrade their operational and management platforms.
  • Establish Alibaba Local Lifestyle Service University, offering 1,000 online courses within three years to train 10 million people in catering, logistics, and retail.

The company has been gearing up for the transformation since November with the launch of its “New Services” strategy (link in Chinese), an initiative designed to increase services merchant efficiencies by digitizing their operations. In addition, the firm has rolled out operating systems for merchants and supermarkets.

Meanwhile, personnel changes were made to prepare for the shift. Alibaba’s local lifestyle services have reportedly been taken over by Ant Financial CEO Simon Hu, who helms Alipay’s offerings—including its lifestyle services. Instead of just attracting users with food-delivery services, a combination of the two businesses could help Alibaba increase and retain users by directing them to Alipay, a place that offers all kinds of convenience, e-commerce industry watcher Li Chendong told local media.

Coronavirus accelerates local lifestyle services boom

China’s local lifestyle service market is expected to reach the RMB 1 trillion mark soon, according to a report released by Iimedia Research in September 2019. Some segments of the market have grown faster than others. Food delivery—mainly restaurant takeout and delivery—is the biggest chunk, with a market size of RMB 284.5 billion in 2019, Iimedia’s data showed. The fresh produce e-commerce market is expected to be worth RMB 162 billion; the community services market, ranging from housekeeping to laundry, will reach RMB 231.61 billion in 2019.

Image credit: TechNode

Although food-delivery growth is slowing, user demand for fresh produce, groceries, medicines, and others surged during the Covid-19 epidemic as millions remained isolated at home.

Meituan has been riding the wave with its sales from fresh produce—vegetables, seafood, and meats—jumping more than 200% year-on-year between Feb. 1 and Feb. 20.

“Amid the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, we have also seen how digital technology can be used to help service providers become more agile and respond effectively to the fast-changing market environment,” the Ant Financial CEO said in a statement. 

According to the company, more than 1,200 developers answered its call to create mini-programs aimed at providing support during the outbreak for grocery delivery, legal and medical advice, and other public services.

The ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing also introduced home delivery options to its app in two major cities during the Covid-19 outbreak. Previously, Didi had changed lanes by entering the food-delivery market to counter Meituan’s expansion into ride-hailing in 2018, but that business quickly failed.

What it means for Meituan

Screenshots of Meituan (left), and Ele.me (right) app landing pages. (Image credit: TechNode)

With the prominent positioning of the food delivery, restaurant reviews, and travel and ticketing channels, the app landing pages for Meituan and Alipay look increasingly similar.

This head-to-head competition is reminiscent of China’s recent food-delivery war. With most users in major metropoles well-acquainted with on-demand delivery, lower tier-cities are where service platforms are fighting most fiercely for users.

In this regard, Meituan has been taking the lead; 73.7% of users rated Meituan as their first choice for food delivery, while Ele.me and Koubei accounted for 24%, according to a report from mobile data service provider Jiguang.

Meanwhile, Alibaba is also shifting focus to the lower-tier markets. The company said the gross merchandise volume from local lifestyle businesses in less-developed areas grew about 40% year-on-year in the last three months of 2019.

User acquisition is just one part of the story, however. The push for the digitalization of offline services is in large part a competition to attract merchants to join their platform. Here, Alipay has an edge—because  Alibaba launched a series of support measures for small- and medium-sized enterprises in its 2B shift.

The practice of subsidizing discounts for users may still happen, but there are indications that neither of the companies, nor the investors backing them, have much appetite to offer irrational cash-burning rebates after seeing unimpressive results from spending millions of RMB. Ele.me CEO Wang Lei, who pledged to offer RMB 1 billion subsidies in July and August 2018, said a year later that the food-delivery market isn’t “healthy” and that there will be no more crazy subsidy wars.

In the meantime, Meituan is also testing an expansion into the selling of physical goods online. Since 2018, the company has listed Hailan Home, a menswear fashion brand, on its platform. It recently entered an agreement with 72 physical bookstores, allowing users within 10 kilometers to place orders and have books delivered within 30 minutes.

With both platforms expanding beyond their core businesses, the competition between China’s largest and third-largest tech firms is escalating to another level.

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Meituan says Covid-19 effects may linger after upbeat Q4 https://technode.com/2020/03/31/meituan-says-covid-19-effects-may-linger-after-upbeat-q4/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 08:09:57 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135839 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OMeituan Dianping reported strong fourth quarter revenue, exceeding analyst consensus expectations, and booked profits for a third consecutive quarter but warned that adverse effects from the Covid-19 outbreak could last the entire year. Why it matters: Impact to the Chinese local services super app from the Covid-19 outbreak will be “significant” because of the heavily offline nature […]]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

Meituan Dianping reported strong fourth quarter revenue, exceeding analyst consensus expectations, and booked profits for a third consecutive quarter but warned that adverse effects from the Covid-19 outbreak could last the entire year.

Why it matters: Impact to the Chinese local services super app from the Covid-19 outbreak will be “significant” because of the heavily offline nature of most of its business units.

  • Like other Chinese tech companies including Alibaba and Tencent, Meituan categorized the Covid-19 hit as “short-term” and expects “long-term” growth as Chinese consumers increasingly shift to online transactions for the service industry.
  • Grocery delivery remained one of the bright spots for Meituan during the outbreak.
  • The Chinese O2O giant is facing intense competition from rival Alibaba which is reshaping its local lifestyle business around its popular payment app Alipay.

“We welcome the other players to join us to accelerate the digitization and development of this industry which will benefit all participants in the ecosystem.”

—Chen Shaohui, Meituan’s chief financial officer

Details: Meituan’s revenue for Q4 2019 reached RMB 28.2 billion ($3.9 billion), up 42.2% from the same period a year ago, beating the average estimate of RMB 26.7 billion for 12 analysts in a Refinitiv I/B/E/S poll, according to data cited by Reuters. The company reported profits of RMB 1.46 billion in Q4, its third consecutive quarter.

  • The company warned that it was expecting negative year-over-year revenue growth and operating losses for the first quarter of 2020 as a result of the pandemic.
  • The cost of revenues increased by 20.3% year over year to RMB 18.4 billion for Q4 from RMB15.3 billion in the same period of 2018, primarily due to an increase in food delivery rider costs resulted from rising orders.
  • Share prices traded up 6.7% at HK$93.85 as of publication thanks to strong Q4 results and signs of a gradual food delivery recovery in March as indicated by the company in the earnings call.
  • The company’s annual transacting user base reached 450.5 million as of end-2019, while the number of annual active merchants increased to 6.2 million. 
  • Despite a gradual recovery for its food delivery unit, Meituan’s in-store, hotel, and travel businesses, which together accounted for 22.6% of the company’s revenue in Q4, has been harder hit. Active merchants for in-store services, nearly all of which were shut down in February, are still at a “very low” level as of late March and the company expects consumers will take more time to return to normal, said Chen Shaohui, Meituan’s chief financial officer, during the earnings call.
  • When commenting on Alipay’s recent expansion to the local lifestyle market, Chen said the local service digitization market is big and still at a very early stage.
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New Taobao ‘C2M’ app takes aim at Pinduoduo https://technode.com/2020/03/27/new-taobao-c2m-app-takes-aim-at-pinduoduo/ Fri, 27 Mar 2020 06:56:29 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135640 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAlibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao is aggressively expanding its direct-to-customer selling platform for bargain-seeking consumers, further escalating its already contentious competition with rival Pinduoduo. Why it matters: The business model known as customer-to-manufacturer (C2M) powered Pinduoduo’s meteoric rise and has been adopted by rivals like JD.com and Netease’s Yanxuan. Alibaba’s move will further fan the inferno that China’s e-commerce […]]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao is aggressively expanding its direct-to-customer selling platform for bargain-seeking consumers, further escalating its already contentious competition with rival Pinduoduo.

Why it matters: The business model known as customer-to-manufacturer (C2M) powered Pinduoduo’s meteoric rise and has been adopted by rivals like JD.com and Netease’s Yanxuan. Alibaba’s move will further fan the inferno that China’s e-commerce industry has become.

  • The defining feature of a C2M model is highly competitive pricing brought about by connecting factories with consumer insights, such as preferences, location, and behaviors. The model has become popular in China, particularly in lower-tier cities, where buyers tend to be more price sensitive.
  • Lower-tier cities are winning attention from e-commerce giants, in seek of growth as higher-tier urban markets grow increasingly saturated.

“Stepping up our made-to-order strategy is an ongoing Taobao initiative to diversify product supplies across its ecosystem to meet demand from our consumers and help manufacturers lagging in the digital race use technology to transform their processes. 

—Wang Hai, general manager of Taobao’s C2M Business Unit, in an emailed statement

Details: Alibaba plans over the next three years to transform 1,000 manufacturers into “Super Factories” to reach annual output exceeding RMB 100 million ($14 million) each. It also plans to drive productivity at 10 factory clusters in China to reach at least RMB 10 billion each per year within the same time period.

  • To support the sales channel, Taobao formally launched its Taobao Special Offer Edition app. The app, which the company soft-launched in 2018, topped the rankings for the most-downloaded free app on Apple’s China App Store as of publication on Friday.
  • Buyers can purchase directly from manufacturers unbranded items from TVs to cookware which are produced to fit consumer preference.
  • The C2M model passes consumer data, collected from existing purchases, to upstream manufacturers in real-time, thus accelerating the product development timeline and boosting efficiency.
  • In addition to improving flexibility and adaptability in conventional manufacturing, the initiative helps manufacturers to digitize as part of the process, according to Alibaba.
  • The initiative will bring 10 billion new orders to factories across China over the three-year time period, according to the statement.
  • Alibaba’s financial units will provide capital and liquidity to manufacturers.

Context: Alibaba has implemented a series of structural changes in December in preparation for the ramp-up of the C2M initiative. 

  • Taobao‘s C2M initiative spans the entire industrial chain from offering consumer insights and research and development suggestions for product development, coordinating raw materials and product inventory management based on precise consumer distribution and preferences, to product marketing.
  • JD.com rolled out its C2M unit Jingzao in 2018. The platform now offers products including custom shirts, luggage, towels, and bedding.
  • Pinduoduo accused Alibaba of blocking employees’ personal Taobao accounts as competitions between the two e-commerce giants escalate.

Read more: China’s data-based C2M model to drive e-commerce forward

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Pinduoduo accuses Alibaba of blocking employees’ personal accounts https://technode.com/2020/03/26/pinduoduo-accuses-alibaba-of-blocking-employees-personal-accounts/ Thu, 26 Mar 2020 06:42:49 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135520 pinduoduo ecommerce social alibaba taobaoPinduoduo staff say Alibaba has blocked their personal Taobao accounts, while workers from office neighbor AI firm Yitu say the same.]]> pinduoduo ecommerce social alibaba taobao

Employees of social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo have accused Alibaba of blocking their personal Taobao accounts as well as those belonging to family members in an open letter posted on Chinese microblogging site Weibo on Wednesday. 

Why it matters: Relations between Chinese e-commerce apps are growing more contentious as growth slows and competition intensifies. The issue of “forced exclusivity,” a practice where platforms force sellers or users to use only their platform or services, has been a common complaint among industry players.

  • China’s market regulators in November reminded more than 20 e-commerce players that forcing sellers into an exclusive agreement with one marketplace is illegal.  

Details: Weibo user “PDD Lefu,” a self-identified customer service manager at Pinduoduo, said in a public letter that several Pinduoduo employees received alerts from their personal Taobao accounts on Wednesday, warning them that the app they are using are not accessible until March 28.

  • PDD Lefu said in the letter that this was an extension of Alibaba’s “forced exclusivity,” targeting Pinduoduo employees individually.
  • She points out that the block was also affecting employees of Chinese artificial intelligence startup Yitu, which shares IP addresses with Pinduoduo since the two companies are both located in the Jinhongqiao International office building in Shanghai. 
  • ‘You wouldn’t know until you try. IPs at my company Tenga were also blocked. Is it because we are located in the same building?” (our translation) another Weibo user, “Malanshandeshan,” said in a comment on PDD Lefu’s post. 
  • Users on Zhihu, a Quora-like query platform, said in a post that Pinduoduo staff, current and former, have been blocked from certain services on another Alibaba platform, Juhuasuan, including promotional discounts and coupons.
  • Juhuasuan responded in a post on Weibo that the platform is open to all users, but “says no” to all kinds of unruly practices. It confirmed that it blocked certain users to curb unscrupulous and disruptive practices on the platform.
  • Juhuasuan said in the post that it had spotted a group of web crawlers and discount scams under the disguise of regular users two years ago. They usually feature unclear identification and a similar registration location.
  • Alibaba did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Context: Pinduoduo and its rival Alibaba have been in a years-long public spat over the subject of “forced exclusivity.”

  • “Intensified” forced exclusivity efforts from rivals has weighed on Pinduoduo’s performance, according to the company.

Read more: New law brings structure, discipline to the willful world of Chinese e-commerce

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China’s Craigslist is buying a car auction platform https://technode.com/2020/03/25/chinas-craigslist-is-buying-a-car-auction-platform/ Wed, 25 Mar 2020 07:50:18 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135442 Uxin 58.com used car selling salesOnline classifieds site 58.com is purchasing the enterprise car auction unit of troubled second-hand car selling platform Uxin for $105 million in cash. Why it matters: The purchase marks the sale of another major asset from used car seller Uxin in its year-long struggle to stay afloat, complicated by slowing car sales from the Covid-19 […]]]> Uxin 58.com used car selling sales

Online classifieds site 58.com is purchasing the enterprise car auction unit of troubled second-hand car selling platform Uxin for $105 million in cash.

Why it matters: The purchase marks the sale of another major asset from used car seller Uxin in its year-long struggle to stay afloat, complicated by slowing car sales from the Covid-19 outbreak.

  • After announcing pay cuts in February, Uxin has suspended an unknown number of its employees from working beginning in March due to “operational difficulties.”
  • China Passenger Car Association said that the country’s passenger car sales fell 79.1% year on year in February, when the Covid-19 outbreak peaked in the country.

Details: NYSE-listed 58.com, known as China’s Craigslist, has entered into a definitive agreement with Nasdaq-listed used car dealer Uxin to purchase its business-to-business online used car auction business for $105 million cash, the company announced on Tuesday.

  • The transactions are expected to close by the first half of 2020 subject to customary closing conditions.
  • The purchase of Uxin’s B2B used car auction platform “directly complements” 58.com’s used car business, Michael Yao, chairman and CEO of 58.com, said in the statement. The deal will expand the number of options offered to dealers, he added.
  • Beginning as a B2B business, Uxin gradually shifted its strategic focus to its consumer-facing business. The company’s revenue from its enterprise-facing unit dropped 62.5% year on year to RMB 71.7 million ($10.1 million).
  • In response to the news, Uxin shares traded up nearly 14% to close at $1.4 per share on Tuesday.

Context: 58.com led a $230 million purchase of convertible notes from Uxin in May last year. Tuesday’s announcement follows Uxin’s move to divest its loan facilitation business in July to Golden Pacer, another of 58.com’s portfolio companies in which it holds a 32.6% stake.

  • Uxin raised $225 million in a downsized initial public offering on Nasdaq in June 2018. The company’s shares have traded under its offering price of $9 since its debut.

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Tea is the new coffee: Bubble tea chain gets $2.3 billion valuation https://technode.com/2020/03/24/tea-is-the-new-coffee-bubble-tea-chain-gets-2-3-billion-valuation/ Tue, 24 Mar 2020 04:43:10 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135268 Heytea bubble investment series hillhouse valuationHeytea started out in southern China's Guangdong province in 2012 and later expanded to most tier-one and tier-two cities in China.]]> Heytea bubble investment series hillhouse valuation

Heytea, one of China’s largest tea beverage chains, is reportedly closing a new round of financing which will valuate the business north of RMB 16 billion ($2.3 billion), up from its last valuation of RMB 9 billion in July.

Why it matters: Beverage categories are blurring in China with bubble tea chains Heytea and Naixue’s Tea competing head-on with coffee giants like Starbucks and Luckin Coffee.

  • Heytea rival Naixue’s Tea is reportedly gearing up for a $400 million initial public offering in the US.
  • Heytea pioneered the digitization of Chinese beverage chains by leveraging social apps like WeChat.
  • Beverage chains are feeling the pinch as a result of a significant drop in business due to the Covid-19 outbreak, and venture capitalists are assessing top players better positioned to weather the epidemic thanks to business scale.

Details: Heytea’s new funding round was led by global Asia-focused private equity firm Hillhouse Capital and Coatue Management, the US fund behind mobility titans including Didi, Lyft, and Grab, local media reported. The size of the investment was not disclosed.

  • Heytea is now operating 450 stores in upwards of 35 cities in China and four stores in Singapore.
  • The company has amassed 21.5 million users on its WeChat mini-app as of 2019. Of the total, 15.8 million were newly added during the year.
  • Heytea could not immediately be reached for comment.

Context: Heytea started out in southern China’s Guangdong province in 2012 and later expanded to most tier-one and tier-two cities in China.

  • With the goal to integrate online and offline experiences, the company set up in June a subsidiary spanning software and hardware design, technical searches, toy and animation development, and others.
  • The company closed its Series A in 2016 and Series B in 2018 for a total of RMB 500 million. Tencent and Sequoia Capital reportedly led the company’s Series B+ for an undisclosed amount in July at a RMB 9 billion valuation.
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Meituan is shuttering its cloud business https://technode.com/2020/03/23/meituan-is-shuttering-its-cloud-business/ Mon, 23 Mar 2020 06:59:07 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=135167 Meituan, deliveryChinese food delivery and services platform Meituan Dianping is shutting down its public cloud service in order to retain focus on its core businesses. Why it matters: Halting its cloud computing services is a major pullback in Meituan’s expansion into enterprise tech, a trend which has formed the basis of many recent moves by competitors including […]]]> Meituan, delivery

Chinese food delivery and services platform Meituan Dianping is shutting down its public cloud service in order to retain focus on its core businesses.

Why it matters: Halting its cloud computing services is a major pullback in Meituan’s expansion into enterprise tech, a trend which has formed the basis of many recent moves by competitors including Alibaba and Tencent. 

  • The draw-down comes as Meituan braces for accelerated competition in its core business. Earlier this month, Alibaba-backed payment tool Alipay beefed up its push onto Meituan’s turf in local life services with plans to support millions of other service providers.
  • The news follows just three months after the company drastically increased  registered capital for its cloud computing subsidiary in December to RMB 870 million (around $123 million) from RMB 10 million, which prompted local media reports that the local lifestyle giant was ramping up its enterprise tech push.
  • The company has been criticized in the past for over-expansion into a number of business fronts such as ride-hailing, bike rentals from its Mobike acquisition, new retail, and others. After its share prices plunged in 2018, Meituan tightened up its operations and posted profits for two consecutive quarters in the second and third quarters of 2019.

Details: Meituan Open Services (MOS), the company’s public cloud platform, announced on March 12 that it will halt its services and user support starting May 31. 

  • The company warned that all the data hosted by the platform will be purged and not recoverable after that date. MOS recommended that users either back up data themselves or transfer it to other platforms.
  • MOS will continue to operate the service for internal use and for business partners such as merchants on its service platform, but will cease running the unit as a for-profit business, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
  • Users can apply for a refund by providing an order number, according to the statement.
  • A Meituan spokeswoman did not disclose the number of users that would be affected by the shutdown when contacted by TechNode on Monday.

Context: First launched in 2013 a unit for internal support, MOS opened up to startup and enterprise customers in 2015 to deliver cloud and big data solutions.

  • It has been supporting Meituan’s daily business operations, serving users across industries including food and dining, travel, O2O, mobility, and others. 
  • China’s public cloud services market hit $5.42 billion in the first half of 2019, driven by non-internet sectors which are increasingly adopting cloud services as part of a mass push toward digital transformation, according to a report from IDC. 
  • The report points out that the market is highly consolidated among the industry’s top 10 vendors, including Alibaba, Tencent, and Huawei which now claim more than 90% of the market, leaving little room for small players. MOS was not among the top 10.

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Trip.com Q1 revenues to plunge by half on suspended travel https://technode.com/2020/03/19/trip-com-q1-revenues-to-plunge-by-half-on-suspended-travel/ Thu, 19 Mar 2020 08:00:25 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=134922 trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19Chinese online travel giant Trip.com warned in its fourth quarter results that Q1 revenue will fall by half due to negative effects brought by Covid-19.]]> trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19

Chinese online travel giant Trip.com warned that its first-quarter revenue could fall by as much as half as a result of travel suspensions brought on by Covid-19 in its fourth quarter financial earnings release.

Why it matters: Trip.com is the latest of a series of technology companies around the globe which have issued stark performance warnings as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

  • While the outbreak has weighed on the financial performance for all Chinese tech majors from Alibaba to Baidu, travel-oriented platforms were among the worst-hit.
  • Work resumption since Feb. 10 has driven business travel demand up while leisure travelers remain cautious about trips, though pent-up demand is high.
  • China Tourism Academy expects full-year 2020 revenue from tourism to drop by RMB 1.18 trillion (around $167.72 billion)—a 21% decline.

During the recent novel coronavirus outbreak, we took immediate actions to take care of our customers and partners, while taking on necessary financial impact in the near term. We firmly believe it was the right thing to do for us as the industry leader, and look forward to coming back even stronger after the outbreak is contained.”

—James Liang, Trip.com executive chairman

Details: As a result of the coronavirus outbreak, the company said that it expects net revenue to decrease by approximately 45% to 50% year over year in Q1.

  • Trip.com, formerly known as Ctrip, recorded solid Q4 results prior to the warning, with net revenue rising 10% year on year to RMB 8.3 billion to the average analyst estimate of RMB 8.27 billion compiled by Yahoo Finance.
  • The company’s business in international markets and China’s lower-tier cities drove growth, the company said, amid fierce competition from rivals like service platform Meituan and Alibaba’s Fliggy online travel platform.
  • The company’s shares traded 6.4% lower to close at $21.63 each on Wednesday, falling 43.7% from a six-month peak in mid-January.

Context: Arriving ahead of China’s busiest travel season before the Chinese New Year Festival, the Covid-19 lockdown forced China’s major travel booking platforms, including Trip.com, Qunar, Fliggy, and Mafengwo, to revise policies, offering free rescheduling and cancellation services to users who booked their services before the holiday.

  • To help offset revenue losses, Trip.com chairman James Liang and chief executive officer Jane Sun stopped receiving salaries beginning in March to last until the travel industry recovers, while members of senior management will take pay cuts of up to half.
  • Trip.com is reportedly looking to raise $1.2 billion loan from domestic and international banks to refinance and fund working capital, according to Bloomberg.
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JD.com is spending $2 billion on share buyback https://technode.com/2020/03/18/jd-com-is-spending-2-billion-on-share-buyback/ Wed, 18 Mar 2020 04:08:33 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=134750 digital yuan JD.com JD Jingdong ecommerce While its share prices have been relatively resilient, JD.com will spend $2 billion on a stock buyback as Covid-19 roils global financial markets.]]> digital yuan JD.com JD Jingdong ecommerce

Shares of Chinese online retailer JD.com surged nearly 9% on Tuesday after the company announced a $2 billion stock buyback plan.

Why it matters: JD.com’s repurchase plan comes amid a tumultuous week for global markets as a result of the panic surrounding Covid-19, which has claimed more than 7,400 lives around the world. 

  • JD.com shares fell 11% over the past months, showing some resilience compared with the 29% plunge for the Standard & Poor’s 500 index over the same period.

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, JD.com has leveraged its strengths in supply chain, logistics and technology to ensure the normal operation of its various businesses. JD.com’s management team has always maintained firm confidence in the sustainable and long term development of the company.

JD.com spokesperson in an emailed statement

 Details: JD.com’s board of directors has authorized a share buyback program under which the company may repurchase up to $2 billion of its shares over the next 24 months, according to a company statement

  • The buyback will be made on the open market at prevailing market prices, in privately negotiated transactions, in block trades, and others. 
  • The firm will fund the plan with its own cash balance, and it will not impact the company’s operations, the spokesperson said.
  • JD posted strong growth for the fourth quarter, pushing shares up 12% on the same day. However, intensifying Covid-19 outbreak concerns ended the rally, with share prices falling to a low of $34.7 on March 16 from $44.9 apiece on March 5.

Context: The e-commerce giant is reportedly planning a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock market as early as mid-2020, following the lead of rival Alibaba’s November listing.

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MEITUAN IN FOCUS | A matter of timing https://technode.com/2020/03/18/a-matter-of-timing/ Wed, 18 Mar 2020 02:27:32 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=134633 virus outbreak 2019-nCov coronavirus epidemic China travel platform refund cancel Bejing Wuhan Ctrip Qunar tourismHow will online travel fare in China in 2020? It doesn't help that the virus forced mass cancelations at the busiest time of the year.]]> virus outbreak 2019-nCov coronavirus epidemic China travel platform refund cancel Bejing Wuhan Ctrip Qunar tourism

In 2018, Chinese tourists made 150 million international trips, and four years later, China became the world’s largest outbound travel market. Within China, billions of domestic trips are made each year. But in 2020, those figures will look a lot different.

(Image credit: TechNode/Nicole Jao)

The coronavirus outbreak began spreading across the country during Chunyun, the Spring Festival rush, when hundreds of millions of people travel home or abroad for family reunions. Recognizing that the peak travel season was the perfect storm for a rapidly spreading infection, the government quickly locked down a number of cities and implemented strict travel restrictions, paralyzing most of the country.

Since then, China’s online travel agency platforms, along with airlines and railways, have scrambled to accommodate millions of ticket and reservation cancellation requests by drastically expanding favorable cancellation policies and offering full refunds to frustrated customers.

Meituan’s core on-demand delivery service unit, which accounts for nearly 60% of total revenue, was one of the few spared by the epidemic. However, Meituan’s “in-store, hotel, and travel” segment, which accounts for a quarter of its revenue, has seen great disruption.

Coping with Covid-19

In January, China’s aviation and railway authorities requested that online ticketing agents grant free cancellations and ticket changes to passengers who needed to alter their travel plans. The policy applied to train, plane, and bus tickets purchased before Jan. 24.

Most of the major travel booking platforms revised cancellation policies for air, rail, hotel, and attraction bookings in compliance with the request. For example, according to Meituan’s revised policy, tickets for visits before Feb. 8 to domestic scenic spots and attractions could be fully refunded. Plane and train tickets purchased before Jan. 24 were also eligible for a full refund. The company said it would help customers negotiate with hotels for free cancellation or reservation changes. 

Other travel booking platforms, including Ctrip, Qunar, Mafengwo, and Fliggy, took similar measures.

Naturally, paying out all these refunds to travelers has strained the cash flow of these online travel platforms. Trip.com, the owner of Meituan’s online travel booking rival Ctrip, is reportedly planning to take out a $1.2 billion loan for refinancing and working capital. In the days following the epidemic’s peak in China, Ctrip processed (link in Chinese) millions of bookings, including countless canceled orders and requests for date changes.

Fliggy, the ticket-booking site owned by Alibaba, estimated that domestic bookings had dropped by 70% to 80%, and international bookings had declined by 40% to 50%.

The impact goes beyond the financial. Deploying the manpower capable of processing millions of cancellations and change requests in a matter of days proved to be another challenge for the travel platforms. Many disgruntled customers went online to vent their dissatisfaction about the cancellation process.

Many online booking platforms have attempted to alleviate the situation by providing special funds for partners in the travel industry who have struggled with the tidal wave of cancellations.

Meituan launched a RMB 100 million (about $14 million) fund to support businesses in the travel and hotel industry. Airbnb China established a $1 million fund to help respond to the crisis. Ctrip has set aside RMB 1 billion to stimulate tourism-related consumption and RMB 1 billion financial support for partners.

Far-reaching, long-lasting impact

China Tourism Academy expects revenue from tourism in 2020 to drop by RMB 1.18 trillion (around $167.72 billion)—a 21% decline.

A downturn of one-fifth for the world’s largest outbound tourism market does not bode well for the global tourism industry. In 2002, before the SARS outbreak, China’s contribution to the global travel industry was 5%. It has since grown to around 18%.

The impact of the Covid-19 outbreak is by no means limited to China’s domestic travel. Many international carriers suspended or restricted routes to Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak, as well as to major cities including Beijing, Hong Kong, and Shanghai.

Chinese and foreign airlines have processed more than 20 million refund requests, totaling over RMB 20 billion, according to Chinese media reports.

According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the industry stands to lose around $29 billion in global passenger revenues this year.

The demand for travel is plummeting and will likely remain low as the viral epidemic continues to spread to other countries.

Still, the Chinese authorities are putting on a brave face, urging tourism businesses in China to reopen.

More than 300 scenic spots and tourist attractions in the provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Anhui, Henan, Guangxi, and Hainan have reopened.

The Ministry of Culture and Tourism issued a set of guidelines for the reopening of tourist attractions, including requiring tourists to register with real names, contact, and transportation information. Online booking platforms including Meituan and Ctrip have implemented the real-name ticketing system.

“Based on our estimation, we’re relatively optimistic about China’s tourism economy for 2020. It’s highly likely that tourism consumption in China will rebound. Many subjects of our recent surveys said when the epidemic ends, they will take a tour,” said Dai Bin, the head of China Tourism Academy.

Chinese consumers seem eager to step out for some fresh air. According to the Blue Book of China’s Tourism Economy 2020, 71.5% of Chinese said they would travel after the epidemic but planned to wait until the situation settles, while 20.7% said they would travel as soon as the outbreak is over.

Optimistic experts in China expect the tourism market to rebound in a “retaliatory” manner about three to six months after the outbreak is eliminated, according to the state-owned CGTN media outlet.

However, this optimism is not shared by experts outside of China. Some believe the global travel industry may not recover for years.

What it means for Meituan

Meituan started offering hotel booking services as early as 2013, and began to consolidate its travel unit in 2015 with the launch of air ticketing and the acquisition of Kuxun from TripAdvisor.

In 2018, Meituan Hotels was ranked first in China by volume and nights booked, exceeding the combined room nights booked on Ctrip, Qunar, and Tongcheng-Elong, according to market research firm Trustdata. Meituan continued to lead hotel bookings in terms of room nights reserved, accounting for more than 47% of the market.

Compared to other online booking platforms that are solely travel-oriented, Meituan has a much more diversified business portfolio.

Citibank estimates that Meituan’s total annual net income will drop 21% due to the impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on its travel and delivery businesses; nevertheless, their overall forecast of the company’s 2020 outlook was optimistic.

Ticket-booking giant Ctrip, on the other hand, seems to have taken a harder hit. On Monday, CEO Sun Jie announced in an internal email that he and co-founder Liang Jianzhan will stop drawing a salary from March onwards. Some management-level staff have also agreed to slash their salary by as much as half.

Whether the impact of the Covid-19 outbreak lasts for months or years, Meituan will likely survive it. The epidemic certainly presents the biggest hurdles that Meituan’s travel arm has faced to date. However, compared with other online ticket booking platforms, Meituan is positioned more strategically with its diversified businesses that range from on-demand delivery to travel booking to bike rental. The negative impact on its travel and hotel booking business can be offset by its other services—such as online grocery delivery, which has seen growing demand during the outbreak.

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Chinese tech firms eye the work collaboration app market https://technode.com/2020/03/17/chinese-tech-firms-eye-the-work-collaboration-app-market/ Tue, 17 Mar 2020 10:22:08 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=134585 work collaboration productivity pinduoduo knock appPinduoduo is the latest Chinese tech firm to test the work productivity waters by opening up its homegrown IM app for public use.]]> work collaboration productivity pinduoduo knock app

Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo opened its internal team collaboration app to the public in an update released on Monday, prompting widespread local media reports that the online retailer was readying its entry into the booming enterprise productivity industry.

Knock, developed by Pinduoduo’s parent company, is a work productivity app designed to increase enterprise communication and management efficiency. Unlike Dingtalk, which offers a number of powerful—if controversial—features, the app has very basic communication functions, allowing users to create group chats, share files, and hold video conferences. 

First launched in late January, the app completed internal and public testing in February. It has seen little traction so far, with only an average 2.4 star rating from 25 reviews on Apple’s China App Store.

Pinduoduo employees have been using Knock for daily communications since the fourth quarter of 2019, a Chinese media report said.

A privacy term updated on Jan. 8 indicates that Knock is open to enterprise users only, but tests by a TechNode reporter show that it allows individual users to register as well. 

A Pinduoduo spokeswoman confirmed that the company developed the app but said that it is designed for internal use only. It was made publicly available for download to facilitate communication between merchants and Pinduoduo’s platform’s managers, according to the company.

Tech titans dipping their toes in work productivity 

The move opens up possibilities for the company to retain both enterprise and individual users who come to the platform for purposes other than e-commerce.

Company claims about Knock being an app only for internal use is reminiscent of Bytedance’s enterprise messaging tool Feishu, or Lark as it is known in overseas markets, which was also developed as an internal tool before the tech upstart began marketing the platform as a business in 2019. 

It is a common practice among large Chinese tech firms to develop homegrown communication apps to facilitate workflows as well as keep their data secure. Tech giants like Meituan, JD.com, Baidu, and Qihoo 360 all have their own instant messaging apps.

In response to the recent work collaboration boom driven by millions stuck at home during the Covid-19 outbreak, Chinese tech giants are eyeing the sector and opening their internal work apps, developed and tested within the company, to mark territory in the growing market. 

In addition to Pinduoduo, Baidu is reportedly (in Chinese) going to open up Baidu Hi, an app mainly used by the search engine and its partners, for public use.

However, team collaboration isn’t an easy market to succeed in. It will require significant effort for newcomers to convert the products into a solid business, or even to compete with incumbents. 

“The market is already quite crowded and it will be difficult for new entrants to step in,” Thomas Graziani, founder of the WalktheChat agency, told TechNode.

The sector’s biggest players have put in years toward building out their businesses. Alibaba’s Dingtalk has been up and running for six years and as of June said it had 200 million users. Tencent’s WeChat Work has been in operation for four years and said in January that it has 60 million active users.

Dingtalk is popular with small- to medium-sized companies, according to a Chinese media report, whereas WeChat Work is more popular with large corporations. Accordingly, WeChat Works said that 80% of China’s top-500 companies use its service.

Bytedance’s Feishu, a relative latecomer, is also growing in popularity. Bytedance’s tools stand as rivals to Dingtalk and WeChat Work because it is one of the few companies which is accustomed to working both inside and outside of mainland China, thanks to the popularity of TikTok, according to Graziani.

Covid-19 triggers work collaboration boom in China

Users for work collaboration apps surged over the past month as a result of the coronavirus outbreak, which forced millions in self-quarantine to work remotely. 

Dingtalk and WeChat Work saw an unprecedented surge in traffic on Feb. 10, the first day back to work after the extended Spring Festival holiday. More than 200 million employees of tens of millions of Chinese businesses worked remotely that day, according to Dingtalk.

In addition to workplace clients, the epidemic also delivered a younger user segment to the apps. Although unpopular with Chinese students, Chinese apps like Dingtalk and Lark are recognized by Unesco and included in its list of apps recommended for distance learning.

The strategic importance of team collaboration services has increased for Chinese tech giants over the past two years because it forms a key link in the shift to enterprise-facing tech.

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JD.com may list in Hong Kong as soon as mid-year: report https://technode.com/2020/03/16/jd-com-may-list-in-hong-kong-as-soon-as-mid-year-report/ https://technode.com/2020/03/16/jd-com-may-list-in-hong-kong-as-soon-as-mid-year-report/#respond Mon, 16 Mar 2020 04:23:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128713 JDA possible secondary listing in Hong Kong for e-commerce firm JD.com follows rival Alibaba's $13 billion offering in November.]]> JD

Chinese online retailer JD.com is reportedly eyeing a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock market as early as mid-2020, following rival Alibaba’s blockbuster $13 billion listing in November.

Why it matters: JD.com could be the latest addition to a group of Chinese tech firms that are gearing up for a dual listing in Hong Kong.

  • A successful listing would be a vote of confidence for China’s e-commerce market as well as the broader economy, which is struggling to return to full capacity following country-wide lockdowns. However, the economic effects from the pandemic as well as the protests in the city adds uncertainty to a potential Hong Kong debut.
  • Chinese search engine Baidu, online travel platform Trip.com, and Netease, China’s second-biggest gaming firm, are reportedly planning to dual list in Hong Kong.
  • The possible listing would further boost Hong Kong’s status as a major capital markets hub.

Details: JD.com is in discussions with investment banks including UBS and Bank of America on details about a secondary listing, Hong Kong Economic Journal reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  •  A spokesman for JD.com declined to comment on the news.
  • The two banks underwrote the company’s 2014 initial public offering (IPO) on Nasdaq, and have a long history of working with the company.

Context: In January 2018, founder and CEO Richard Liu indicated that the company was considering a dual listing either in Hong Kong or mainland China.

  • JD announced in January a $1 billion note offering to refinance and fund general operations.
  • The e-commerce giant beat market expectations of its Q4 2019 earnings, though it said the crisis around the Covid-19 outbreak will cost the company about 10% of its net revenue growth in Q1.
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Pinduoduo shares drop after Q4 earning miss https://technode.com/2020/03/12/pinduoduo-shares-drop-after-q4-earning-miss/ https://technode.com/2020/03/12/pinduoduo-shares-drop-after-q4-earning-miss/#respond Thu, 12 Mar 2020 02:23:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128572 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentPinduoduo nearly doubled its revenue and user base expansion remained robust, but growth for the e-commerce startup missed average consensus estimates.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoudo posted on Wednesday weaker-than-expected revenue for the fourth quarter of 2019, sending the company’s shares 7.0% lower on Wednesday.

Why it matters: This is the second consecutive quarter that the Chinese e-commerce upstart has fallen short of expectations, and fallout from the Covid-19 outbreak is expected to further weigh on first quarter results.

“The disruption caused by the outbreak will have negative impact on our results for the first quarter of 2020, but our expectations for the long run remain unchanged and even more positive.”

Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang during the Q4 earnings call

Details: The company’s total revenues nearly doubled to RMB 10.79 billion ($1 billion) in Q4 last year from RMB 5.65 billion the same quarter a year earlier. However, it fell short of average consensus estimates of RMB 10.93 billion compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • The company’s annual gross merchandise volume for the first time exceeded the one trillion RMB mark in 2019, an annual increase of 113%.
  • Total cost of revenues for 2019 more than doubled from a year ago to RMB 6.34 billion, which the company attributed to higher costs for cloud services, call center, and merchant support services.
  • Net loss narrowed 38% to RMB 1.75 billion in Q4 compared with RMB 2.42 billion in the same quarter of 2018.
  • Buyer growth is still robust. Monthly active users (MAU) jumped 76.6% year on year to 481.5 million in Q4, though it falls well short of Alibaba’s 824 million total MAU as of the end of the quarter. 
  • The company attributed growth to a better understanding of user needs based on its interactive business model, which constantly adapts to user preferences.
  • The platform’s merchant operation and logistics have resumed and are gradually returning to normal.
  • CEO Colin Huang was upbeat about the company’s prospects, citing broader adoption of digital services by consumers during the outbreak, which bodes well for the future of e-commerce in China. 

Context: Pinduoduo added a new social shopping feature in February to combat counterfeit protective products such as face masks during the coronavirus outbreak.

  • Along with local peers, Pinduoduo rolled out support plans to help merchants get through the economically challenging time.
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Livestream selling a boon during outbreak: report https://technode.com/2020/03/11/livestream-selling-a-boon-during-outbreak-report/ https://technode.com/2020/03/11/livestream-selling-a-boon-during-outbreak-report/#respond Wed, 11 Mar 2020 07:42:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128509 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoShoppers who purchased during livestream sessions spent more per order and were more likely to buy than conventional e-commerce consumers.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo

Chinese online shoppers watching livestream e-commerce sessions purchased more expensive items compared with conventional e-commerce buyers, according to a recent report which assessed data during the Covid-19 outbreak. 

Why it matters: Livestream online buying is becoming an obsession for the quarantined millions in China, where sellers are finding real-time engagement an efficient, effective tool to push products.

  • China’s online live-streaming industry boasted a user base of 504 million in 2019, a 10.6% year-on-year increase from a year earlier. It is estimated that the figure will reach 526 million in 2020, data (in Chinese) from Iimedia Research showed.
  • For big-ticket purchases like real estate and cars, the offline experience is still essential. However, livestreams may prove useful as a channel to maintain ties with potential buyers.
Taobao user spending in RMB through livestream (yellow) and conventional (gray) e-commerce. (Image credit: Quest Mobile)

Details: Buyers who purchase via livestreams on online marketplaces like Taobao and video platforms like Douyin are more likely to purchase higher-ticket items, particularly those priced higher than RMB 1,000, according to a Quest Mobile report published on Tuesday.

  • A substantial 60% to 80% of the purchases made through livestreams on video platforms Douyin, Kuaishou, and Bilibili exceeded RMB 200 ($28) during the week of Feb. 17 to 23. More than 40% of these orders fell between RMB 200 to RMB 1,000 and an average between platforms of more than 20% exceeded RMB 1,000 in the same period, the report showed.
  • Nearly 50% of orders through Alibaba’s livestreaming unit Taobao Live during the same time period fell between RMB 200 to RMB 1,000, while 37% of the orders exceeded RMB 1,000.
  • The conversion rate for Taobao Live users was around 56% during the same week, higher than the 50% seen with regular buyers.
  • Livestream business accounted for 28% of Douyin’s total traffic during the same week, up from 24% during the week of Jan. 6 to 12. Meanwhile, the proportion of livestream traffic on Kuaishou has remained stable at around 50% since the beginning of this year.
  • Livestream user time spent on major platforms Douyin, Kuaishou, and Bilibili ranged from 120 to 190 minutes per day during the week of Feb. 17 to 23, far longer than 52 to 109 minutes for viewers of other video content.
  • Unsurprisingly, Chinese netizens spent far more time in cyberspace while sequestered indoors. The average time spend online per day surged to 446 minutes during the week of Feb 17 to 23 from 367 minutes during Jan. 6 to 12, a 21.5% jump.

Context: Driven by the outbreak, livestreaming is rapidly expanding from standard categories such as cosmetics to new areas like cars, real estate, and more.

  • Alibaba doubled down on livestream e-commerce in 2019 when it launched support plans for merchants and livestreamers.

Updated: added chart.

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WeChat adding dark mode to iOS https://technode.com/2020/03/10/wechat-adding-dark-mode-to-ios/ https://technode.com/2020/03/10/wechat-adding-dark-mode-to-ios/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2020 06:48:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128389 Wechat ban apps facebook wechat yoNews that the mega app is finally adding dark mode on iOS spurred discussion among netizens, many of whom saw the move as relenting to Apple's pressure.]]> Wechat ban apps facebook wechat yo

Chinese super app WeChat is adding a dark mode option to its iOS version, finally bringing the the long-anticipated feature to iPhone users. 

Why it matters: The news drew widespread public attention online in China with many social media users speculating that the App Store’s importance to the mega chatting app pushed its decision to acquiesce on a feature it had avoided in the past.

Details: The development of dark mode on WeChat is complete and will launch in the next update, the company said in a post on its Weibo account on Monday, but did not specify a date.

  • “In order to optimize the user experience, WeChat has reached a cooperation with Apple to jointly explore the dark mode experience of WeChat in the iOS system,” the company said in the post.
  • Apple recently updated the App Store’s review regulations, asking all developers to use the iOS 13 SDK to fully adapt to the iOS 13 system before April 30. The update requires a series of changes including support for dark mode, sign in with Apple, and other features. Apps which fail to comply with the rules will be removed from the store.
  • Public discussion (in Chinese) about a possible removal from the App Store for Tencent’s WeChat, which boasts more than 1.15 billion monthly active users, began to catch on as netizens noticed the app’s lack of dark mode on iOS.
  • A Weibo user using the handle “Yelaiyuesezhanyi” commented on the announcement post that Tencent “wussed out” under pressure from the App Store. The WeChat responded that they indeed “wussed out” but to user demands.
  • WeChat’s pledge to add the new feature was reported by Chinese media as a sign that Tencent succumbed to App Store’s regulations.
  • Tencent spokesman Zhang Jun responded in a Weibo post, saying that Apple’s policy addressed all app developers and was not specifically calling WeChat out.

“My eyes are saved.”

— Weibo user “Its2h0u” commented under WeChat’s announcement

Context: WeChat rolled out dark mode for Android version in a December beta update.

  • Apple has been ceding ground to Chinese competitors including Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi.
  • The US company shipped 27.5 million smartphones in China in 2019, accounting for 7.5% of the market in 2019 compared with 8.7% market share in 2018, according to research agency Canalys.
  • WeChat has also been losing its share of user attention to intense competition from short video platforms, particularly Bytedance’s Douyin and Tencent-invested Kuaishou.

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Meituan leads $87 million Series B in foodservice giant https://technode.com/2020/03/09/meituan-leads-87-million-series-b-in-foodservice-giant/ https://technode.com/2020/03/09/meituan-leads-87-million-series-b-in-foodservice-giant/#respond Mon, 09 Mar 2020 06:15:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128285 Meituan Dianping is beefing up its investments to build up a business empire surrounding its core food delivery business.]]>
Coronavirus, Meituan, delivery
A Meituan delivery driver picks up vegetables at the local market on Feb. 4, 2020. (Image credit: TechNode/ Shi Jiayi) Credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi

China’s lifestyle super app Meituan Dianping has made a sizable investment to move up the value chain, leading a RMB 600 million ($87 million) Series B into a food service distribution giant, Wangjiahuan.

Why it matters: Meituan, now the third-largest internet firm in China, is beefing up its investments in an attempt to build a business empire surrounding its core food delivery business.

  • China’s food industry earned revenue of RMB 4.67 trillion (around $672.65 billion) in 2019, growing 9.4% year on year, data (in Chinese) from China Hospitality Association showed. Foodservice for noncommercial businesses such as school and company canteens accounted for RMB 1.2 trillion of the total.
  • A supplier to restaurants and produce stores, Wangjiahuan competes with several enterprise-facing food service apps including Meicai, Songxiaocai, and FarmLink.
  • Meituan’s expansion to B2B food suppliers comes amid a surge in China’s consumer grocery delivery service driven by the Covid-19 outbreak.

Details: Shenzhen-based agricultural product distribution group Wangjiahuan has secured RMB 600 million Series B led by Meituan and followed by existing investor Hidden Hill Capital, Chinese media reported.

  • Meituan confirmed the investment to TechNode but declined to specify its investment total.
  • “The non-commercial food supply chain is one of the few sectors that characterize market scale, growth potential, and profitability,” (our translation) a Meituan spokeswoman said in an emailed statement. Meituan expects Wangjiahuan has a wider presence countrywide thanks to its “first-mover advantages in bidding, supply chain, and funding,” she said.
  • The proceeds will be used for the implementation of its partnership system, construction of distribution centers, and agriculture product traceability solution, according to the report.
  • Gao Jun, board chairman of Wangjiahuan, said that the partnership will facilitate cooperation through shared resources in clients, delivery centers, and delivery fleets, among others.

Context: Founded in 1995, Wangjiahuan focuses on distribution of food products to restaurants, hotels, and other hospitality businesses.

  • In January, Meituan invested tens of millions of dollars in the first funding round for Guangdong Meat Union Fresh Holdings Co. Ltd, a food retail chain with about 500 locations in southern and eastern China.
  • Meituan operates its own B2B food distribution arm, Kuailv Jinhuo, which delivers fresh food to restaurants.
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INSIGHTS | Brands turn to livestreaming as China stays home https://technode.com/2020/03/09/insights-brands-turn-to-livestreaming-as-china-stays-home/ https://technode.com/2020/03/09/insights-brands-turn-to-livestreaming-as-china-stays-home/#respond Mon, 09 Mar 2020 03:19:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128277 With livestreaming one of the few bright spots in the digital economy of virus-hit China, even real estate agents are trying to sell through online video. ]]>
If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.

With millions of Chinese confined to their homes since late January, the Covid-19 outbreak has given an unexpected boost to China’s livestreaming industry, already the largest in the world. As the country is experiencing a strong move from offline to online activities, livestreaming, like grocery deliveries and online healthcare, is one of the few bright spots in the country’s digital economy. 

Editor’s note: This post on tech and the coronavirus crisis originally appeared in our members’ only weekly newsletter. Sign up so you don’t miss the next one. Read more on how Covid-19 is affecting China’s tech.

Bottom line: Livestreaming was interesting to marketers before the epidemic. Now it’s an obsession: merchants and brands trying to reach customers have very few other options, and many are hoping the emerging medium will save their sales during the crisis. While the whole industry faces a challenge in turning windfall users to recurring users, livestream e-commerce have a better chance in retaining them compared to entertainment livestreaming.

What’s new: Livestreaming was already hot. Data (in Chinese) from iiMedia Research shows that the number of users for China’s online live streaming industry has increased 10.6% year on year to 504 million in 2019, more than half of China’s total 854 million (in Chinese) netizens. It is estimated that the figure will reach 526 million in 2020. The virus is expected to accelerate the trend.

Meanwhile, merchants and marketers are looking for new ways to reach consumers who aren’t leaving their homes. The medium appears to have found its moment.

How big is the Covid-19 spike? It’s hard to say. Stuck-at-home audiences are looking for novel means of entertainment, and it makes sense that they’d turned to livestreams. Companies like Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and Kuaishou are boasting of large audience numbers for certain livestream sessions here and there, but so far no one has published overall user numbers for the period.

Content

Livestreaming businesses come in two very different flavors, each with its own idea of success:

The attention merchants: Entertainment and gaming live streaming contents are generally making money off interactions between host and audience and virtual gifts—meaning that eyeballs are an end in themselves. 

Entertainment: Entertainment is the granddaddy of livestreaming, but still a force to be reckoned with. One of the first successes was “e-stages,” where the hosts sing or dance. But unconventional livestreams sprung up over the past month: “Cloud clubbing,” live streaming sessions launched by music labels and clubs on video platforms like Douyin, Kuaishou and Bilibili, went viral over February. Recognizing the appeal, the platforms further rolled out livestream concerts and music festivals where the artists perform from their homes. The trend also brought change to the TV program production, where live audiences are replaced by online hosts and audiences in what are essentially video conferences for fun.

Gaming: China’s video game streaming rise continued as major platforms like Douyu saw spikes in daily active users and user engagement time, according to local media (in Chinese) reports.

The advertisers: E-commerce livestreaming is about pushing product, often through online stores linked directly to the stream. For this field, purchasing conversion rates are what matter. 

Agricultural products: Major e-commerce sites like Alibaba and Pinduoduo are boosting their efforts to facilitate online sales of fresh produce with livestreaming is an important part of their plan. Farmers, mostly living in remote areas, can use video to engage consumers face-to-face and introduce their products. Platforms claim that this model allows them a better margin for goods by cutting out the middleman.

Catering: Restaurants, which are on the front line in dealing with commercial impacts of the virus, are leveraging livestreaming to boost delivery orders. A total of 31 well-known catering companies, including Xibei and hot pot chain Xiaolongkan reached out to sign up for livestreaming on Alibaba’s livestreaming unit Taobao Live, on Feb. 10. Restaurants streams have gained momentum quickly. Consumers also tend to watch livestreaming late at night during the virus period, data from e-commerce market research agency Coresight shows. A livestreaming session of hotpot chain Xiaolongkan on Feb. 17 midnight sold tens of thousands of single-use self-heating hot pot pats within 10 minutes, boosting single day sales 1,200% compared with one month before.

Bookstores: Over 200 bookstore chains joined Taobao Live over the past month. The total number of bookstores giving livestream sessions on Taobao Live has grown more than five-fold, the company says.

Big tickets

The non-traditional, big-ticket sales: With showrooms closed, some surprising industries turned to livestreaming: real estate, cars, and even travel. While consumers are not likely to buy a house or an SUV sight unseen, salespeople are hoping they can maintain brand relationships and perhaps identify leads who will complete purchases after the epidemic is over. Early figures show they have eyeballs—but the question is how many will convert to sales in these uncharted waters.

Real estate: Taobao Live has attracted over 5,000 estate agents from over 500 brokers, across nearly 100 cities in China. During Feb. 12-17, some 2 million users watched real estate livestream events on Taobao Live. Beijing, Jiangsu, and Shandong were the top three areas for the sell side, as counted by the number of livestream hosts.

Cars: Over 1,500 automobile sales services shops have livestreamed through Taobao Live as of Wednesday, hosting an average of 300 livestream events everyday. China Passenger Car Association expects the country’s passenger car sales to drop 80% year on year in February. In response to the gloomy market, over 80% of the car brands opened livestream sessions in an attempt to offset the drop from offline sales.

Travel: Travel-oriented platforms have been among the worst-hit during the outbreak and spread of the current novel coronavirus. Top travel platforms like Fliggy, Ctrip and Mafengwo opened livestreaming services to allow online sight-seeing for users. Travel industry is gradually recovering as the epidemic shows signs of leveling up.

Already on the rise: Livestream e-commerce has been on the rise since 2016, year one for China’s livestreaming market. Alibaba’s Taobao, the pioneer, generated more than RMB 100 billion (about $14 billion) in gross merchandise volume through livestreaming sessions in 2018, an increase of nearly 400% year on year. Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of e-commerce giant Alibaba, recorded sales of RMB 20 billion during the Singles Day shopping event held on Nov. 11, accounting for around 7.5% of the group’s overall RMB 268.4 billion in sales.

E-commerce platforms including Xiaohongshu and Pinduoduo, and short video apps such as Douyin and Kuaishou are all jumping on the bandwagon.

Carpe Covid: Online platforms are selling livestreaming to merchants as a means to fend off growth slowdown by the virus. On Feb. 10, Alibaba announced that it will waive normal requirements for offline store operators across the country to join Taobao Live , and made operational tools free of charge.  

In February, the platforms says, growth in new streamers was eight times higher than the previous month. Orders surged by an average of 20% each week, the company—meaning that they about doubled over the month—while by value February sales were double those of the same period last year, suggesting that consumers are making a lot more, but smaller, purchases. 

Some brands that never tried out the new marketing channel are experiencing beginner’s luck, enjoying sales even higher than before the epidemic.

  • Shanghai-based skin care brand Lin Qingxuan saw performance fall by 90% as 157 were forced to close, creating a crisis in which the company feared bankruptcy within two months. After starting livestreaming sessions on Taobao Live, its performance rebounded, an increase of 45% over the same period last year within 15 days.
  • Huang Honglin, a farmer in Jiangxi province, sold over 25,000 kilograms of fruit after starting livestreaming sessions on Pinduoduo.

Will it last? What happens to livestreaming as life goes back to normal, and people leave their houses? Some experts believe the trend will sustain:

The epidemic will reinforce the use of livestreaming as an effective selling channel. We will see more merchants across various sectors/industries use livestreaming to sell and reach consumers. Consumers will just rely more on livestreaming to buy things and form a habit of doing so. When the epidemic ends, buying through livestreaming will offer different alternatives for consumers to shop.

—Coresight analyst Eliam Huang.

But it will also have to overcome growing regulatory challenges. Livestream e-commerce may face lesser pressure compared with entertainment livestreamers, but challenges remain.

  • Public scrutiny over livestream e-commerce has increased recently. The National Radio and Television Administration issued a notice in November warning audio-visual e-commerce live-streams and marketing campaigns about false advertising, vulgar content, and misleading exaggerations. 
  • The government intervention was a response to public outcry over dishonest sales pitches prompted by Lipstick King Li Jiaqi. Li had an “emperor’s new clothes” moment before an audience of 400,000 while pitching a nonstick frying pan—to which an egg quite conspicuously stuck as he was promising that “It won’t stick, it can’t stick.”
  • Live streamed e-commerce is expanding from the promotion of regular products like garments and cosmetics to more sophisticated products like automobiles. Livestreaming hosts in these new categories are expected to have professional knowledge of the products they introduce, and often don’t.
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Luckin may face shareholder fraud lawsuit https://technode.com/2020/03/06/luckin-may-face-shareholder-fraud-lawsuit/ https://technode.com/2020/03/06/luckin-may-face-shareholder-fraud-lawsuit/#respond Fri, 06 Mar 2020 08:43:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128201 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsLuckin is being investigated in the US for defrauding investors amid pressing concerns to recoup a dropoff in sales as a result of Covid-19.]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps

At least 10 US law firms have announced investigations into Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee on behalf of the company’s investors as of Friday.

Why it matters: Luckin may soon find itself under US regulator scrutiny amid a dramatic downturn for most of the broader food and beverage industry as a result of the coronavirus outbreak.

Details: US shareholder rights litigation firms announced an investigation into whether the company had fabricated several operational and financial numbers, including per-store per-day sales, net selling price per item, advertising expenses, and others.

  • The law firms include Gross Law Firm, Pomerantz LLP, Schall Law Firm, Levi & Korsinsky LLP, Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, LLC, The Law Office of Vincent Wong, The Klein Law Firm, Bragar Eagel & Squire, and P.C. Law Offices of Howard G. Smith.
  • Luckin did not respond to TechNode’s inquiries about the impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on its first quarter performance.
  • US rival Starbucks’ outlook may shed some light on the impact of the epidemic on the broader industry. The US coffee chain, which closed half of its 4,300 stores in China since January, expects China sales in stores opened for at least a year to drop by about 50% in the quarter ended March. Revenue loss resulted from the epidemic would amount to $400 million to $430 million during the period.

Context:  The allegations in the investigations may sound eerily familiar to the coffee chain. In late January, short seller Muddy Waters Research tweeted an 89-page, anonymous report alleging several instances of fraud.

  • The report claimed Luckin’s number of items per store per day was inflated by at least 69% in Q3 2019 and 88% in Q4, and that items per order declined sequentially in Q4 to 1.14 from 1.38.
  • Luckin’s share price fell $3.91 per share, or 10.74%, to close at $32.49 per share on Jan. 31, 2020 as a result of the report.
  • The company responded on Feb. 4 to the fraud allegations, denying all accusations laid out in the report, calling it misleading, flawed, and meritless.
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Softbank leads $2.4 billion round in Chinese housing platform Beike https://technode.com/2020/03/05/softbank-leads-2-4-billion-round-in-chinese-housing-platform-beike/ https://technode.com/2020/03/05/softbank-leads-2-4-billion-round-in-chinese-housing-platform-beike/#respond Thu, 05 Mar 2020 05:54:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=128125 BeikeDespite heightened scrutiny of the industry, online housing platforms such as Beike and Ziroom continue to draw interest from investors and tech companies.]]> Beike

Beijing-based online housing platform Beike has secured $2.4 billion in a Series D Plus from a consortium led by SoftBank’s Vision Fund which is reportedly doubling down on investments in the Chinese real estate market.

Why it matters: Chinese online housing platforms are drawing increasing interest from tech giants and venture capital firms despite the high-risk model that many operate under.

  • China’s online apartment-rental platforms such as US-listed Danke and Ziroom are being scrutinized by the government for predatory practices and risky financial dealings.
  • SoftBank’s $100 billion Vision Fund itself is facing challenges due to a series of missteps including backing WeWork.

Details: Beike’s investment deal closed in November, according to reports from local media on Wednesday. Other investors participating in the round include Tencent, Hillhouse Capital, and Sequoia Capital.

  • The new proceeds will be used for research and development, expanding application scenarios for its products, and team construction, according to the report.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported the news on Tuesday that SoftBank has invested $500 million in Beike and another $1 billion in Chinese apartment-rental firm Ziroom.
  • Beike did not immediately respond to TechNode’s inquiries on Thursday.

Context: Beike, an offshoot of Chinese real estate brokerage Lianjia, is an online listing platform that helps users find properties.

  • The parent company Lianjia, or Homelink, saw a shareholding reshuffle (in Chinese) in March 2019. Investments from 22 Lianjia investors were transferred to Beike.
  • Born out of a Lianjia business unit, Chinese apartment rental platform Ziroom is also an offshoot of the former real estate brokerage giant.
  • Ziroom has faced a series of PR crises in recent years for a number of scandals.
  • Beike announced in July that it received $1.2 billion in a Series D led by Tencent at a valuation exceeding $10 billion.
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Oyo is cutting 60% of its China staff https://technode.com/2020/03/03/softbank-backed-hotel-chain-oyo-cutting-60-of-china-staff/ https://technode.com/2020/03/03/softbank-backed-hotel-chain-oyo-cutting-60-of-china-staff/#respond Tue, 03 Mar 2020 07:42:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127930 OYOIndian hotel chain Oyo is laying off the majority of its China staff after experiencing a number of setbacks followed by the Covid-19 crisis.]]> OYO

Indian hotel chain Oyo is planning to lay off 60% of its workforce in China as it struggles to contend with a number of setbacks, the most recent being the deadly Covid-19 virus which has immobilized the country for weeks.

Why it matters: The current novel coronavirus outbreak has weighed on the troubled hotel chain, which has seen widening losses as well as an increasing number of partner hotels exit and rising user complaints over the past year.

  • Oyo, one of the $100 billion SoftBank Vision Fund’s flagship investments, is often compared to WeWork because of its charismatic CEO, aggressive expansion plans, and profitability struggles.

Details: The budget hotel chain is planning to cut around 60% of its employees in China, according to a former employee of the company who asked to stay anonymous due to the sensitivity of the topic.

  • The layoff scale will vary by business division, from 70% to 80% of the tech team to 60% to 70% for business development teams, the source told TechNode. The employee in question had worked for more than a year at the company’s business development unit in the Shanghai headquarters.
  • Oyo claimed (in Chinese) more than 10,000 employees in China as of Sept. 22, and said then that it expected to expand the size of its team to 20,000. The former employee told TechNode that Oyo China had around 8,000 employees as of late February.
  • The source said that the company began discussions with staff on Monday and will finish layoffs by the end of this week.
  • A verified Oyo employee relayed similar figures for Oyo’s job cuts in a post on social networking app Maimai.
  • Oyo did not immediately respond to TechNode’s requests for comment.
  • The company’s losses increased more than six-fold to $335 million in 2019. Losses from China operations reached $197 million, or 64% of the total, according to a Bloomberg report.
  • The company’s operational problems in China, one of its largest markets, made it particularly vulnerable during the crisis.
  • “Oyo’s troubles in China stem from its decision to retrospectively revise revenue sharing and marketing support terms with its hotel partners,” said Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina in reference to a series of new initiatives the company included in its 2.0 strategy in June.
  • “Incensed hotel owners left the platform in droves, destroying the platform’s proposition for independent hoteliers and dramatically reducing consumer choice,”  he added.
  • Oyo’s struggles add to the Vision Fund’s problems, Norris said, and present a challenge to the likelihood of a second Vision Fund.

Context: Founded in 2013, the six-year old company’s strategy was to find budget hotels with little visibility or online presence, then renovate them to operate under the Oyo brand.

  • Entering China in late 2017, it operates a network to 10,000 hotels and more than 500,000 rooms across 337 cities in China, according to the company.
  • Oyo has been widely publicized in recent months to be laying off across markets in India, China, and the US.

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JD.com shares surge 12% on strong Q4 earnings beat https://technode.com/2020/03/03/jd-com-shares-surge-12-on-strong-q4-earnings-beat/ https://technode.com/2020/03/03/jd-com-shares-surge-12-on-strong-q4-earnings-beat/#respond Tue, 03 Mar 2020 05:00:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127950 JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.comChinese online retailer JD.com revealed robust top-line growth for the fourth quarter of 2019 as it recovers from a series of blows beginning in late 2018.]]> JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.com
jd jd.com jd logistics
The exterior of online retailer JD’s Beijing headquarters, pictured here in November 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald) Credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald

Chinese online retailer JD.com posted on Monday robust top-line growth for the fourth quarter of 2019, sending shares up 12% by market close.

Why it matters: The Chinese e-commerce giant has gradually been winning back investor confidence. The company’s shares hit a historical low in late 2018 after founder Richard Liu faced rape allegations in the US, compounded by other factors including intensifying competition from rivals like Alibaba and Pinduoduo and a management reshuffle.

  • JD.com’s share price more than doubled in 2019, up from a low point of around $20 in the beginning of 2019 to the $43.30 per share value as of market close on Monday.

Details: JD.com’s total net revenue rose 26.6% year on year to RMB 170.7 billion ($24.51 billion) in the December quarter from RMB 134.8 billion the same period a year earlier, the company said in a statement on Monday. The revenue beat the high end of analyst estimates compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • The company’s net income attributable to ordinary shareholders was RMB 3.6 billion in the quarter ended December compared with net losses of RMB 4.8 billion for the same period a year earlier.
  • Cost of revenues rose in line with revenue growth, increasing 26.8% year on year to RMB 146.7 billion in Q4, driven by the company’s online direct sales business and third party logistics services.
  • Liu attributed strong customer growth to ongoing penetration of lower-tier cities. Annual active customer accounts increased 18.6% to 362.0 million in 2019, while monthly active users on mobile soared 41% compared with December 2018.
  • The company expects to record at least a 10% annual growth in net revenue for the first quarter of 2020, down from a 20.9% growth in the same period of last year.
  • JD warned that the 2020 Q1 estimate is subject to change in light of uncertainties related to Covid-19.
  • Separately, the company’s chief financial officer Sidney Huang will retire in September. JD Retail’s finance chief  Sandy Xu will take over Huang’s role.

Context: Chinese tech firms like JD.com and Alibaba have been contributing to efforts to battle the epidemic by making donations and offering support to small and medium-sized companies.

  • JD.com founder Richard Liu began handing over his management roles at a number of JD subsidiaries in 2019.

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Used car seller Uxin suspends staff after slashing salaries https://technode.com/2020/03/02/used-car-seller-uxin-suspends-staff-after-slashing-salaries/ https://technode.com/2020/03/02/used-car-seller-uxin-suspends-staff-after-slashing-salaries/#respond Mon, 02 Mar 2020 06:45:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127872 Uxin 58.com used car selling salesStruggling used car selling platform Uxin is cutting salaries and suspending employees to cut costs amid the Covid-19 outbreak.]]> Uxin 58.com used car selling sales

Chinese online second-hand car selling platform Uxin has suspended an unknown number of its employees from work beginning March 1 due to “operational difficulties,” shortly after announcing pay cuts last week.

Why it matters: The novel coronavirus outbreak is yet another blow for the troubled Uxin, which has seen depressed share prices since its Nasdaq debut, particularly after allegations of fraud in its operations surfaced last year. Along with other online-to-offline verticals, China’s online used car sector is among the worst-hit sectors since the Covid-19 crisis took hold in mid-January.

  • Uxin rivals including Guazi and Souche are also reportedly (in Chinese) implementing pay cuts and layoffs due to slow sales as a result of the epidemic.

Details: The Beijing-based company is temporarily suspending employees that it “can’t arrange work for” due to “operational difficulties,” according to Chinese media reports, citing a letter to employees made public on Monday.

  • During the suspension, the company will continue to pay suspended staff the minimum salary required by local governments as well as make payments to social insurance and housing funds, according to the letter.
  • The number of employees affected by the suspensions is unclear, and the company did not immediately respond to TechNode’s inquiries on Monday.
  • Uxin says normal workload and salaries for the suspended employees will resume once its operations are back to normal.
  • The news comes on the heels of the firm’s Feb. 28 announcement that it was slashing 20% to 40% of salaries for employees ranging from entry-level to management by May.
  • The company has seen several key management resignations over the past year. Chief technology officer Qiu Hui, who has worked at the company since 2016, resigned on Feb. 28, the fifth high-level executive to depart since May. Others that have jumped ship include chief marketing officer Wang Xin, chief operating officer Peng Weilian, chief strategy officer Jing Wenbing, and Jing Yuan, a finance manager.

Context: Uxin raised $225 million in a downsized initial public offering on Nasdaq in June 2018. The company’s shares, now priced at $1.7 apiece, has traded under its offering price of $9 since its debut.

  • Uxin’s share prices weakened throughout in 2019, particularly after a short-seller issued a report in April calling the company a “cheat.”
  • During the outbreak, second-hand car sellers as well as car manufacturers are increasingly leveraging livestreams to prop up sales.
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Travel in China creeps back as Covid-19 cases ease https://technode.com/2020/02/28/travel-in-china-creeps-back-as-covid-19-cases-ease/ https://technode.com/2020/02/28/travel-in-china-creeps-back-as-covid-19-cases-ease/#respond Fri, 28 Feb 2020 09:57:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127824 Covid-19 TravelChina’s online travel platforms have seen transportation and hotel reservations rise as the Covid-19 epidemic shows signs of leveling off.]]> Covid-19 Travel

China’s online travel platforms have seen an uptick in transportation and hotel reservations as the Covid-19 epidemic shows signs of leveling off in the country.

Why it matters: Travel-oriented platforms have been among the worst-hit during the outbreak and spread of the current novel coronavirus. But with a significant drop in the number of new cases over the past week, there are signs that people are looking to return to normal after the month-long lockdown. 

  • A return to normal was also reflected in consumption preferences for Chinese online shoppers, who are shifting spending back to bestselling categories like snacks and cosmetics instead of protective gear.
  • However, experts believe over-optimism could be dangerous.
  • During last year’s Spring Festival holiday, China recorded a total of 415 million tourist trips and grossed RMB 513.9 billion ($76 billion) in tourism revenue, an increase of 7.6% and 8.2% year on year, respectively.

Details: Data from top online travel platforms saw orders for hotel and transportation tickets start to rebound last week after hitting a bottom in mid-February. 

  • Around 80% of hotels have reopened in most provinces, according to online travel site Trip.com. The hotel reopening rate in eastern Anhui and Zhejiang provinces, southern Guangxi region as well as central Hunan and northern Shanxi provinces reached 95%.
  • Data from Alibaba’s travel app Feizhu, also known as Fliggy, showed that air tickets jumped 70% and train ticket orders surged 40% as of Tuesday compared with a week ago period.
  • Fliggy said that travel demand is on the rise because the people are resuming work and returning from their hometowns.
  • Tourists remain cautious in making travel plans, however. Online searches for tourist site tickets rose slightly, but order growth remained flat, the data showed.
  • Pent-up travel demand is high among Chinese travelers. Searches on online travel platform Elong on Feb. 23 for tickets during China’s Tomb-Sweeping Day on April 4 soared 138% while for Labor Day on May 1, queries jumped 84% compared with a week ago.

Context: Along with domestic tech giants, Chinese online travel platforms have ramped up their efforts in battling the epidemic.

  • Chinese online travel platforms including Trip.com, Fliggy, Qunar, and Mafengwo have waived cancellation fees for trips to the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
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Covid-19, an opportunity for e-commerce https://technode.com/2020/02/27/covid-19-an-opportunity-for-e-commerce/ https://technode.com/2020/02/27/covid-19-an-opportunity-for-e-commerce/#respond Thu, 27 Feb 2020 09:52:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127744 grocery, buyChina's grocery e-commerce is evolving during the virus crisis from a convenient service to a lifeline, and has spawned new selling models.]]> grocery, buy

In recent weeks, our WeChat Moment newsfeeds have been heavy with posts about home-cooked meals. With much of China under lockdown, people have started devoting their free time to whipping up meals—prompted by boredom as much as necessity. Cookies, steamed buns, and pancakes have replaced restaurant takeout on Chinese tables. As a recent meme goes: After the quarantine began, everybody has suddenly become a great cook.

In Focus | Meituan #6

This article first appeared in In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s premium biweekly newsletter on the rising tech giant. We’ve made it free as a sample of our premium content.

TechNode members get access to the most detailed coverage of the new tech giant available anywhere in English—sign up here to join.

The newsletter ran from Nov. 20, 2019 to April 29, 2020.

Meituan, the country’s food-delivery giant, has been front and center for this development. The company’s data show that its sales from fresh produce—vegetables, seafood, and meats—jumped more than 200% year-on-year this month (as of February 20). Seafood sales topped the chart with a nearly fourfold surge. Meanwhile, the average order size has spiked 70% during this period.

Meituan is a relative latecomer to the sector, having entered it three years ago. In an effort to broaden its revenues beyond its core business of restaurant order delivery, the company expanded its on-demand delivery service to groceries and non-food delivery in 2017. The service, which allows customers to order merchandise from partner retailers on the platform—such as supermarkets, bakeries, and flower shops—leverages Meituan’s delivery fleet, which now boasts 700,000 active couriers on a daily basis.

In addition, the company also operates a grocery store chain, Ella Supermarket, a rival to Alibaba’s grocery chain Freshippo, as well as the self-operated grocery shopping business Meituan Maicai.

Meituan has suffered some heavy blows from the Covid-19 outbreak since its staple businesses—restaurant food delivery, and online travel and ticketing—all have an offline business core. The company’s share prices dropped 15% to $12.60 on February 25 after reaching a historical high of $14.50 on January 17.

Daily active users for the core takeout delivery business declined 4.2% year-on-year during the 2020 Spring Festival holiday, according to a report from data intelligence firm Quest Mobile.

However, demand for groceries is opening up new opportunities for the company, which it began ramping up in January. Meituan has registered several produce and grocery trademarks since January, according to data from corporate intelligence platform Tianyancha.

Online grocery delivery

Meituan is not the only tech firm seeing a surge in demand for groceries. Compared with the period of January 2 to 8 (prior to the Lunar New Year holiday, which is when the outbreak began to spread in earnest), average daily usage for major grocery and fresh produce apps surged 56.2% during Spring Festival and 96.4% in the two weeks after the holiday (February 3 to 16), according to data from Quest Mobile. Over the past month, the self-isolation adopted by millions of Chinese citizens across the country has spawned innovation in the burgeoning sector of grocery delivery platforms, which had already been operating under various business models:

  • Self-operated platforms use an asset-heavy approach, running self-built warehouses and logistics, enabling the platforms to offer a better customer experience. Meituan Maicai, which operates in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai, is a self-operated platform. Dingdong Maicai, a top player in the vertical, nearly doubled its daily active users during the holiday, according to Quest Mobile data.
  • Platforms such as Alibaba’s Freshippo (known as Hema), Meituan’s Ella Supermarket, JD’s 7Fresh, and Tencent-backed Super Species all employ the online + offline model. Part of China’s new retail push, this model focuses on offline experiences as well as speedy delivery to customers within a three- to four-mile radius.
  • Grocery retailer marketplace platforms, including Meituan and rival Ele.me, operate a marketplace for offline vendors and offer delivery support. JD Daojia is another marketplace platform, a joint venture between JD.com and Dada Group. This model offers a wide range of offline options, and thus more flexibility for users; however, controlling product quality and standardizing prices can be a challenge. Ele.me claimed that its fresh produce delivery grew ninefold (in Chinese) compared with last year.
  • Community-based group purchasing offers lower prices and only serves users within a certain geographical range. Usually managing their customers through WeChat groups, group-buying platforms like MMchong enjoy higher user stickiness resulting from the social element of group purchasing and users who may live in close proximity or are friends in real life.
  • During the epidemic, offline seller WeChat groups have emerged. Many merchants housed in local wet markets are using group chats on WeChat to sell produce and meat. Instead of using grocery platforms which set the delivery price, such as Alibaba’s Ele.me and Meituan, they rely on independent drivers who charge by distance. Customers also score cheaper prices if they purchase in groups with these small sellers, who are usually located in their community.

From convenient service to lifeline

Vegetables delivered to resident in Yichang of Hubei province (Image credit: Wu Chuan)

With an entire country reluctant to go outdoors for fear of being infected, grocery deliveries are not just booming, they are overloaded.

With her 4-year old son’s return to kindergarten postponed due to the epidemic, Shanghai housewife Deng Shuang would prefer to sleep in, but her top priority is making sure she can get groceries on time for meals. “It’s like Singles’ Day all over again. Instead of discounted products, I’m snapping up daily groceries,” she said.

At midnight, the grocery platforms start accepting orders for the next day. Deng has to wake early to place her orders before all of the delivery slots are taken. “I have to check several platforms to buy popular products like pork since they can sell out very quickly.”

According to Meituan data, during the Spring Festival holiday, 60% of its users placed grocery orders before noon. Their Shanghai users are one of the most active consumer segments, with some 30% placing orders between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m.

Yan Li, a Shandong native who now lives in Shanghai, became a regular user of several grocery apps after the outbreak. She sees herself continuing to buy groceries online once the Covid-19 crisis eases, but mainly as a complement to offline purchases.

For Ding Ge, who lives in Qiqihar in northeast China’s Heilongjiang province, buying groceries online is just a temporary thing. Grocery delivery platforms haven’t yet expanded to lower-tier cities, and fresh produce deliveries are a recent development. For users and merchants in smaller cities, online grocery purchases are more of a coping mechanism during the virus outbreak, with WeChat groups being the most popular channel.

“I feel people here will switch back to offline wet markets as soon as the quarantine ends. For a RMB 139 vegetable combo delivered to the community gate, I have to pay an extra RMB 25 for the delivery cost and packing materials. That’s a large sum of extra spending, especially for small-town residents who are very price-sensitive,” Ding said.

TechNode’s visual reporter Shi Jiayi, who has been restricted to her hometown of Zhangjiagang in east China’s Jiangsu province, has also spotted similar WeChat-based grocery delivery services in that city.

Ups-and-downs of a “difficult industry”

China’s grocery and fresh produce e-commerce industry has had a tumultuous past decade. It’s seen as a difficult sector due to the perishability of the goods and the significant logistical requirements, which weigh heavily on margins. However, the huge market and rising user demand continues to attract new players.

The sector boomed in the early 2010s, culminating in multiple firms bowing out, including Amazon-backed Yummy77 and Xianpinhui. Starting in 2017, the onset of “new retail,” along with improved supply chain management and more savvy users, triggered another surge in fresh produce and grocery e-commerce. Major players in all sectors related to the business hopped on the trend, including tech giants like Alibaba, Meituan, JD.com, and Tencent, the courier service SF Express, and supermarket chains like Yonghui.

However, many have stumbled in their efforts to gain traction in the offline fresh produce segment, which has proved an expensive endeavor due to logistics and traffic acquisition costs. In 2019, Meituan downsize its Ella Supermarket operations, although it ramped up investment in self-operating Meituan Maicai. Last year, SF Express shuttered its high-end grocery stores that operated under the SF Best brand in a number of major cities, including Shanghai and Xi’an. The most recent casualty of the sector is Dailuobo, which collapsed in December after burning through hundreds of millions of yuan.

The countrywide lockdown has opened up an opportunity for e-commerce and social platforms, but keeping users in the long term may prove the bigger challenge.

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Luckin tea rival brewing $400 million US IPO: report https://technode.com/2020/02/27/luckin-tea-rival-brewing-400-million-us-ipo-report/ https://technode.com/2020/02/27/luckin-tea-rival-brewing-400-million-us-ipo-report/#respond Thu, 27 Feb 2020 05:59:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127689 Naixue's TeaNaixue’s Tea, one of China’s largest tea beverage chains, is reportedly looking to raise $400 million in a US IPO as early as this year.]]> Naixue's Tea

Naixue’s Tea, one of China’s largest tea beverage chains, is seeking to raise $400 million through a US public offering, according to a Bloomberg report.

Why it matters: Up-and-coming Chinese tea beverage brands like Naixue’s Tea and Hey Tea have attracted viral followings from younger consumers over the past two years. The tea beverage market is attracting big name coffee chains including Starbucks and Luckin as they look to diversify business lines and seek new growth points.

  • Data from food delivery platform Meituan show (in Chinese) that milk tea and tea beverage orders reached 210 million in 2018, “far higher” than that of coffee.
  • Beverage chains from Starbucks and Luckin to Naixue’s Tea are suffering from a major downturn as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak, which has immobilized China since January.

Details: Naixue’s Tea, also known as Nayuki, has filed confidentially for a US listing and is working with advisers for a share sale that could take place as soon as this year, according to the Bloomberg report citing people with knowledge of the matter.

  • The source said that the firm is looking raise $50 million to $100 million in a pre-IPO funding.
  • The company denied the news to local media, saying that it is focusing on recovering its operations amid the epidemic.
  • The company did not respond to TechNode’s requests on Thursday for further details.

Context: Founded by entrepreneur couple Peng Xin and Zhao Lin in 2015, the Shenzhen-headquartered company is now operating more than 349 stores in upwards of 50 cities across the country, selling fresh-fruit tea and coffee drinks as well as baked goods. 

  • Similar to Luckin, the company is leveraging online channels for marketing and sales such as delivery platforms and WeChat.
  • The company raised its last funding round, a Series A Plus worth hundreds of millions of yuan, in March 2018 from Tiantu Capital at a valuation of RMB 6 billion ($855 million), according to corporate intelligence platform Tianyancha.
  • After launching the “Fawn Tea” brand in July, Luckin split off the product line as an independent operation two months later in a bid to focus on the tea beverage market.
  • Starbucks launched eight fruit-flavored tea drinks in mid-April in an effort to capture more sales from Chinese consumers.
  • In response, tea brands like Naixue’s Tea and Hey Tea have rolled out their own coffee drinks to fend off competition.
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Fashion e-commerce platform Jumei to go private https://technode.com/2020/02/26/fashion-e-commerce-platform-jumei-to-go-private/ https://technode.com/2020/02/26/fashion-e-commerce-platform-jumei-to-go-private/#respond Wed, 26 Feb 2020 07:13:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127632 JumeiJumei CEO Chen Ou is taking the New York-listed firm private in an offer of $20 per ADS, ending the e-commerce platform's years-long struggles to compete.]]> Jumei

New York-listed fashion and lifestyle e-commerce platform Jumei said Monday that it had entered in agreement which would take the Chinese company private, ending its struggles to remain competitive in the cutthroat sector.

Why it matters: Once a popular online retailer for cosmetics and luxury products, Jumei’s downfall reflects the fierce competition in China’s fast-evolving e-commerce sector. It has tried and failed in two attempts to privatize which began in 2016.

  • The company owns power bank rental company Ankerbox, known as Jiedian, which holds 40% of China’s power bank market. The sector had 305 million users in 2019.
  • Jumei’s efforts to expand into other emerging tech trends such as livestreaming, offline stores, TV drama series production, and hardware has seen little success.

Details: In response to Monday’s announcement, the company’s shares soared 26% to $19.52 per share on Tuesday.

  • Under the agreement, Jumei said it will carry out a merger with Super ROI Global Holding Ltd. and Jumei Investment Holding Ltd., two entities that are held by the company’s founder and chairman Chen Ou.
  • If the takeover is completed, the company will stay remain under Chen, who currently holds 44.6% of Jumei’s outstanding shares and 88.9% of the total voting power, according to the statement.
  • The buyer group will fund the merger with debt financing, cash, and credit lines.
  • The merger is currently expected to close in the second quarter.
  • The company received on Jan. 12 a proposal from Chen to acquire all outstanding shares he does not already own for $20 per ADS in cash.

Context: Jumei raised $245 million in its 2014 IPO, with shares priced at $22 apiece.

  • Chen made his first proposal to privatize the company as early as Feb. 2016 at a buyback price of $7 per ADS. He scrapped the privatization offer in November 2017 after other shareholders protested the buyback.
  • Similar to many e-commerce peers, Jumei has been blighted by counterfeit product scandals.
  • In 2017, investors called the company out for acquiring power bank rental startup Ankerbox, an unrelated segment then seen as a risky endeavor.
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China’s bike rental sector recovering as workforce returns https://technode.com/2020/02/24/chinas-bike-rental-sector-recovering-as-workforce-returns/ https://technode.com/2020/02/24/chinas-bike-rental-sector-recovering-as-workforce-returns/#respond Mon, 24 Feb 2020 08:22:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127463 China's bike rental industry is rebounding after the Spring Festival holiday as riders see it as the safest transportation option during the outbreak.]]>

The bike rental sector in China is making a comeback after a steep decline as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak as city dwellers returning to work are opting for hiring bikes over other transportation.

Why it matters: The number of daily active users for short-distance transportation apps including ride-hailing and map navigation fell an average of 36% year on year during the Spring Festival holiday as a result of the epidemic after the state imposed lockdowns across much of China, according to data from Quest Mobile. Bike rentals have been rebounding since work resumed after the holiday.

  • Rental bikes were ranked (in Chinese) the safest means of public transportation during the epidemic by a popular health information app, Dingxiang Doctor. Bus, subway, ride-hailing, and bikes were ranked in descending order by infection risk, according to the report.

Details: The number of rides on Didi’s bike rental app Qingju surged beginning Feb. 10, the first day back to work after the holiday, compared with rides during the holiday, according to the company. In southern Guangdong province for example, the company’s bike rides on Monday were 30% higher than those on Feb 10. Rides in key areas, including bus stops, metro stations, and supermarkets were higher by around half.

  • Rides peaked on Feb. 10 for Hello Global, which surged 63% to 104% day on day in top-tier cities Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen.
  • On Feb. 17, China Urban Public Transport Association announced it is drafting a new hygiene standard for bike rental industry. Co-authored by some of the industry’s largest companies including Meituan—formerly Mobike, Hello Global, and Didi’s Qingju, the industry guideline is expected to be released by the end of March.
  • The sector’s biggest players are teaming up on bike disinfection efforts. Operations and maintenance teams for different companies will sanitize bikes belonging to all companies across more than 100 cities nationwide.
  • Meituan Bike launched on Feb. 14 a new “contactless biking” initiative, urging riders to don protective gear and bring disinfectant to sanitize bikes for “safe and healthy.”
  • The surge in rides is noteworthy particularly in winter, usually a low season for the bike rental industry which is highly influenced by weather.

Context: Like its tech peers, Chinese bike-rental firms are contributing to the fight against the virus by donating relief supplies, offering free rides to users, and opening up hiring.

  • Chinese bike-rental firms began hiking fees late last year to bolster profitability following a prolonged period of major losses and severe cash flow constraints in the industry.
  • Hello Global claims it is the largest two-wheel transportation app in China with more than 300 million registered users, according its 2019 annual report released in early January.
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China’s WeWork for houses reveals rental loan risks https://technode.com/2020/02/21/housing-chinas-wework-retals-loan-risks/ https://technode.com/2020/02/21/housing-chinas-wework-retals-loan-risks/#respond Fri, 21 Feb 2020 08:49:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127430 Danke WeBank China tech renting loan rentalDanke has been accused of raising housing rates on its tenants during the recent Covid-19 epidemic while delaying payments on its own leases.]]> Danke WeBank China tech renting loan rental

Attention from regulators spells more trouble for a highly leveraged, loss-making company that’s applied the WeWork model to China’s housing market.

Shenzhen’s finance and insurance regulatory watchdogs announced a joint investigation into the rental loan practices of apartment-hunting platform Danke on Tuesday. The investigation will examine allegations that the company has exploited tenants and landlords during the Covid-19 epidemic, as well as broader concerns about financial risk in the online rental industry.

The action is a response to groups of angry users who gathered in the city to demand for rentals, according to a statement from Shenzhen authorities.

The company is accused of raising rates on its tenants during the recent Covid-19 epidemic while using the crisis as an excuse to delay payments on its own leases.

The regulators say their preliminary talks with users reveal broader risks in rental loans from Danke and other residential rental platforms in China. The situation echoes the story of peer-to-peer lending, a once-hot sector built on high-risk financial practices. Peer-to-peer lending was eventually banned after high-profile cases of fraud drew regulators’ attention.

Danke’s business model looks a lot like WeWork: The company rents apartments from owners on long-term leases, redecorates, and then rents them out to individuals on shorter-time, higher-priced contracts. Like WeWork, the company divides properties to increase revenue per square foot, removing living rooms to turn apartments into dormitory-style clusters of bedrooms with a shared kitchen and bathroom.

WeWork was forced to withdraw its IPO in September last year after investors raised concerns that this model amounts to a high-stakes gamble: if rents go down, the company’s portfolio of long-term leases at current market rates will turn into an albatross. Over 40 home rental platforms built on similar business models collapsed in 2019 after their capital chain broke.

Danke is going to cooperate with the government for the investigation, the company told TechNode via a statement. The firm added that they have “strict requirements and standards” for the application of rental loans and will record videos of users to make sure they are fully informed and voluntary. Partnered financial institutions also have strict risk control and management protocols to ensure safe capital transfer, according to the company.

High-risk loans

Branded residential apartment rentals are increasingly popular in China, especially among urban youth, thanks to rapid urbanization, rising housing prices, openness toward the rental economy concept, and supportive government policies. Instead of buying the apartments, residential home rental platforms like Danke sign long-term leases with landlords and then sublet them to tenants after renovation. This practice is widely known as the “second landlord” business.

Like rivals such as Ziroom and Qingke, Danke is scrambling to expand their physical presence in a sector where offline availability is the key. Fierce competition forced the platforms to ramp-up costs in pre-opening spending such as leases, design and renovation, and marketing. The platforms themselves have also been accused of driving up housing prices, by bidding up limited housing resources on the market, especially in much-coveted downtown areas.

The company, which raised $130 million in its New York debut this January, is operating at an operating loss of $324 million during the first three quarters in 2019, a threefold increase on the $100 million loss recorded in the same period of 2018.

With 391,000 units of apartments under its management in 13 cities in China, Danke has been exploring various ways to finance its fast-scaling business through venture capital and asset securitization. However, the most adopted and controversial funding model for Danke as well as its local peers is debt financing or rental loans.

Rental loans are a financial two-step through which companies like Danke effectively borrow against future rent payments. The companies encourage customers to pay a year’s worth of rent in advance in return for reduced service fees, and then arrange for the customers to borrow the money from a financial institution partner with Danke as guarantor. The lender then collects monthly payments from the tenant. While paying its landlords quarterly, the time gap grants home rental companies chances to control a huge amount of cash to maintain daily operation and expansion.

If tenants decide to move out early, they remain on the hook to the lender for monthly payments. It is possible to obtain a refund for the advance rent, but the process is reportedly (in Chinese) long and difficult. If the tenant defaults, Danke must repay the lender, company representatives told TechNode. A tenant who fails to pay their loan can also be evicted from their apartment.

Since Danke is ultimately responsible for the loan, while tenants pay monthly and can be evicted for non-payment, it appears that while the loans are in name made to tenants to finance advance rent, they amount to the company’s borrowing against future rent payments. However, this model puts the users as well as the platform at risk. The rental loans add leverage to residential apartment rental platforms, saysWang Shan, analyst and operating director at online stockbroker Tiger Brokers.

“Under the disguise of “releasing rental fee pressure for tenants”, the rental loan practice can be translated as the platform-benefiting measure to increase cash flow to support their expansion,” Wang told TechNode.

The bike-sharing company Ofo likewise funded operations using advance payments, relying on deposits paid by riders. When the company collapsed, millions of Chinese consumers lost their deposits.

The company’s prospectus shows that 68% of Danke’s residents signed debt financing agreements with the platform as of September 30, 2019, with loan size hitting RMB 3.16 billion.

Additionally, over-expansion bolstered by rental loans leave the platform, which has a weak balance sheet, vulnerable when they can’t maintain a healthy occupancy rate. Lower occupancy rate means that the platform has to cover with its own expenses the leasing costs for vacant apartments, Wang explained, adding that “the capital chain will break if the situation continues.”

Coronavirus outbreak triggers domino effect

Covid-19 outbreak acts as the trigger for the recent struggles of Danke and China’s residential house renting platforms.

Many platforms have increased their housing inventories to prepare for the apartment rental market boom typical after the Chinese New year. The unexpected epidemic forced much of China to a standstill, leaving the prepared houses untaken, Wang said.

Some of the explosive business practices Danke adopted during the Covid-19 outbreak reflects the company’s cash pressure. The firm released a new policy in early February, demanding that a 30-day rent-free period from landlords because national policies regarding the outbreak. However, it is still collecting rent from tenants and increasing rents on quarantined people.

Angered users seek social media platforms to express their discontent. In a post on Sina’s consumer complaint resolution platform Black Cat, an anonymous Shanghai user said Danke staff called on Feb. 8, asking for a one-month rent suspension on an apartment in Pudong District.

“I rejected the proposition immediately over the phone, but the staff told me to wait for further notice from the company. I believe the landlords are on equal legal footings with the platform. How can they just “notify” us about the rental suspension, even though I said “no”?? Furthermore, my apartment has been rented out to tenants by the platform, so there’s no legitimate reason to not to pay me the rent,” the user said.

Dissatisfied owners who encountered rental payment delays are forcing tenants to leave their apartments. A Weibo user with the handle Qianxiaoruo says she has no home to return to, since the owner of her apartment will force her to leave the apartment if Danke can’t pay before Feb. 22.

The company released a public letter on Monday, apologizing to its users and saying that it never intended to take advantage of the epidemic. The company also declared that it would offer special deals to lower the pressure for users.

Danke confirmed on Weibo that it’s helping some landlords to claim their apartments on Tuesday. On Feb. 3, the company announced it would return one month’s rent to tenants in Wuhan, as well as offer rent cuts to tenants in other cities.

Ziroom, another apartment rental major in the country, suffered a similar PR crisis after releasing similar exploitative policies during the epidemic.

Wang characterized these moves as an attempt by the platforms to “pass the crisis to homeowners.” The moves especially hurt owners who purchase their real estate with bank loans, she added: “Banks are not making cuts on mortgage payments.”

Struggles in China’s housing rental industry

In addition to Danke, excessive leverage threatens peers like Ziroom, Qingke, and smaller companies. Dozens have already collapsed after under the pressure of loans.

Regulators are seeking to deleverage and de-risk the economy. State authorities have released in December guidelines to control the home rental market, specifying that rental loans should be no more than 30% of the company’s rental incomes. Those with higher proportions have to meet the requirement before the end of 2020.

“Shenzhen’s investigation of rent loans is actually helping China’s residential apartment rental platforms to deleverage. While also weathering the repercussions of the epidemic, long-term apartment rentals, which have been under ‘barbaric growth’ so far, should return to a more rational development path.” said Wang.

Negative news coverage since late January and the regulators’ intervention has brought down Danke’s share prices. The newly listed company was already suffering from a knock from the epidemic in late January. Danke shares tumbled $13.5 to its lowest point of $11.8 on Feb. 18, the day the investigation was announced. Troubled circumstances are expected to weigh on its first-ever quarterly report, although shares are recording an uptick as the epidemic stabilizes.

The company itself is attempting to deleverage from within. Although the 68% of rental loan users are still high and more than twice the 30% government guideline, it is down from 91.3% in 2017 and 75.8% in 2018.

It’s likely that regulators will order the company to increase its de-leverage process as China pushes control over financial risks across industries. More importantly, they would probably have to do so in a manner and timetable approved by the regulators.

Danke isn’t the only Chinese rental company that adopts these risky practices. With Danke’s case, the government is sending a clear signal that it has its eyes on rental loans. Danke peers like Ziroom and Nasdaq-listed Qingke should beware.

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E-commerce livestreams see outbreak-driven boost https://technode.com/2020/02/20/e-commerce-livestreams-see-outbreak-driven-boost/ https://technode.com/2020/02/20/e-commerce-livestreams-see-outbreak-driven-boost/#respond Thu, 20 Feb 2020 04:53:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127319 Taobao LiveThe epidemic has accelerated livestreams on Taobao Live and other platforms from standard categories to include cars, real estate, and more.]]> Taobao Live

E-commerce behemoth Alibaba’s livestreaming unit, Taobao Live, has seen rapid growth in February as offline businesses increasingly seek out online marketing and sales channels during the Covid-19 epidemic, which has forced much of China to a standstill.

Why it matters: Livestreams, grocery delivery, and online healthcare are surging in popularity, some of the few bright spots in the digital economy during a health crisis which has immobilized the country.

  • Livestreamed e-commerce has been gaining momentum since last year thanks to the rise of content-driven e-commerce. The epidemic has further accelerated its expansion from standard categories such as cosmetics and apparel to cars, real estate, and more.
  • Livestreams spiked for short video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou.

Details: As of Feb. 18, the number of live broadcast rooms on Taobao Live has doubled and livestream events surged 110% year on year during the month, according to data from the company. Hosts from more than 100 different occupations and sectors livestreamed on the platform in February, the company said.

  • A total of 31 well-known food and beverage companies including northwest Chinese restaurant chain Xibei and hotpot chain Xiaolongkan signed up for livestreaming on Feb. 10, the day Taobao Live removed prerequisites for offline store operators to join and began offering operational tools free of charge.
  •  Taobao Live has attracted more than 5,000 real estate agents from over 500 brokers from nearly 100 cities in China, data from the company showed. From Feb. 12 to 17, there were some 2 million users watching livestreamed real estate events on Taobao Live. Beijing, and Jiangsu and Shandong provinces were the top three areas in terms of the number of livestream hosts in this sector.
  • More than 20 global car brands including BMW and Audi are also leveraging livestreaming to sell cars. Taobao Live currently hosts around 100 livestreamed auto events every day. It is unclear how many brands and events were newly added during the virus lockdown period.
  • The entertainment sector is also tapping livestreams to engage audience and fans. “Cloud clubbing,” live streaming sessions launched by music labels and clubs on video platforms like Douyin, Kuaishou and Bilibili, went viral over the past week. Meanwhile, 21 celebrities and singers held an online concert on Taobao Live from their homes on Valentine’s Day, attracting around 4 million fans.
  • Museums and bookstore chains are using livesteams to attract audiences now that visitors have dropped significantly.
  • Tens of millions of people around China watched the livestreamed construction of two specialized hospitals built to battle Covid-19 in Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak.

Context: First gaining popularity with gaming and entertainment content, China’s livestreaming boom is extending into the e-commerce industry.

  • Alibaba’s Taobao generated more than RMB 100 billion in gross merchandise volume from livestreaming sessions throughout 2018, an increase of nearly 400% year on year.
  • Taobao Live recorded sales of RMB 20 billion ($2.85 billion) during the Singles Day shopping event held on Nov. 11, accounting for around 7.5% of the group’s overall RMB 268.4 billion in sales.
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Short video, gaming app usage surged during holiday: report https://technode.com/2020/02/18/short-video-gaming-app-usage-surged-during-holiday-report/ https://technode.com/2020/02/18/short-video-gaming-app-usage-surged-during-holiday-report/#respond Tue, 18 Feb 2020 08:35:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=127162 KuaishouChinese short video apps added nearly 150 million new users during the holiday as netizens struggled to keep themselves entertained amid the outbreak.]]> Kuaishou

Chinese short video apps added nearly 150 million new daily active users (DAU) during the extended Spring Festival holiday compared with a year ago as residents search for ways to stay entertained during the Covid-19 outbreak, according to a recent data analytics report. 

Why it matters: The Covid-19 outbreak is pushing China’s already tech-savvy population further online for entertainment, daily necessities, and even health care. Consumption habits formed during the crisis may be helping to reshape a new normal for Chinese consumers. 

  • The impact has varied across industries. Verticals with an offline business core such as online travel and mobility has cratered, while online entertainment and online sales of daily necessities saw a spike. 
  • Social media growth is still robust, but was outpaced by short video.

Details: DAU for Chinese short video apps combined reached 574 million during this year’s extended Spring Festival, which ran 10 days from Jan. 24 to Feb. 2. Short video apps had a combined DAU of 426 million during last year’s week-long holiday, and prior to the holiday on Jan. 2 to Jan. 8 this year, the DAU count was 492 million, according to a Quest Mobile report published on Feb 12.

  • Douyin led the pack, with DAU surging 39% year on year to 318 million during the holiday, while Kuaishou followed in second place with 227 million DAU, up 35% from the holiday period a year ago. Both of the apps recorded a peak in DAU peak on Jan. 24, the eve of the Spring Festival day, largely driven by red packet cash prizes for various holiday galas.
  • The percentage of total time users spent online jumped to 17.3% for short video apps during the 2020 holiday from 11.8% during the holiday last year, a 47% increase.
  • Users spent 139 minutes on social media apps during the 2020 holiday period compared with 121 minutes in the holiday period a year earlier, growing 14.9%. Users spent 105 minutes on short video apps during the 2020 holiday compared with 78 minutes during the 2019 holiday period, a 34.6% surge.
  • Fresh produce e-commerce platforms nearly doubled DAU to 10.1 million in during this Spring Festival holiday from 5.3 million during the holiday a year ago.
  • The gaming sector has seen a surge of engagement with average time spent on mobile games increasing to 159 minutes during this year’s holiday from 113 minutes during Spring Festival 2019.
  • Covid-19 concerns sparked user growth of online healthcare apps led by Ping’an Good Doctor and DXY.
  • Online travel platforms were hit the hardest, recording a 40% drop in traffic during the holiday.

Context: The shift in user attention to short videos is reflected in the migration of brand ad budgets, a major source of revenue for tech firms.

  • Kuaishou handed out RMB 1.1 billion (about $143 million) worth of cash giveaways to users during the Spring Festival Gala, an annual event held by the state-backed China Central Television.
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Alibaba beats consensus for December quarter but Covid-19 risks loom https://technode.com/2020/02/14/alibaba-beats-expectation-in-dec-quarter-but-covid-19-concern/ https://technode.com/2020/02/14/alibaba-beats-expectation-in-dec-quarter-but-covid-19-concern/#respond Fri, 14 Feb 2020 02:36:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126982 alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shoppingDespite beating market expectations for the December quarter, Alibaba shares dropped 2% on Thursday on near-term risks brought by the Covid-19 outbreak.]]> alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shopping

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba posted a robust 38% annual growth in revenue for the quarter ended Dec. 31 but issued a warning about the near-term impact of the Covid-19 crisis for the current reporting period.

Why it matters: Alibaba’s December quarter was an eventful one during which it debuted a $13 billion secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange and closed another record-breaking Singles’ Day shopping extravaganza, followed by notching a historical high for share prices in January.

  • However, concerns over the the Covid-19 outbreak clouded prospects for the company as well as the broader e-commerce industry in China for the current quarter and beyond.

“In response to the coronavirus, we mobilized Alibaba ecosystem’s powerful forces of commerce and technology to fully support the fight against the outbreak, ensure supply of daily necessities for our communities and introduced practical relief measures for our merchants.”

—Alibaba chairman and CEO Daniel Zhang said in a statement

Details: Alibaba recorded strong top-line growth with revenue rising 38% year-on-year to RMB 161 billion ($23.2 billion) in the December quarter, beating an average analyst consensus of $22.46 billion compiled by Yahoo Finance. However, share prices weakened nearly 2% by market close on Thursday on Covid-19 concerns.

  • Chief Financial Officer Maggie Wu warned during the earnings call that the company’s overall revenue growth rate will be “negatively impacted” for the March quarter as a result of the business disruptions. She did not disclose a financial outlook for the quarter that is nearly halfway over.
  • Management also alluded to a silver lining brought by the Covid-19 outbreak, potentially prompting long-term behavioral changes from Chinese consumers and businesses similar to the effect that the SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrom) epidemic had on China’s e-commerce sector.
  • Zhang said that the Covid-19 crisis has spurred higher average basket size for grocery unit Freshippo, also known as Hema, and “explosive” user growth to enterprise software Dingtalk. However, labor shortages for package deliveries were crimping near-term benefits.
  • The company’s core retail business and cloud computing continued to drive growth. Revenue from core commerce rose 38% year on year to RMB 141.5 billion during the reporting period. Annual active consumers on China retail marketplaces reached 711 million, an additional 18 million buyers from the same year-ago period.
  • Revenue from Alibaba’s cloud computing business jumped 62% year on year in the quarter ended Dec. 31 to RMB 10.7 million from RMB 6.6 billion in the same quarter of 2018, primarily driven by increased revenue contribution from both public cloud and hybrid cloud businesses.
  • Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders during the quarter increased 58% to RMB 52 billion.
  • Cost of revenue in the reporting quarter as a percentage of revenue remained flat to the same quarter a year ago at 52% or RMB 84.3 billion compared with RMB 60.8 billion, or 52% of revenue, in the same quarter of 2018.

Context: Along with a number of other Chinese tech companies, Alibaba has launched a series of efforts to support those hardest hit during the outbreak, including establishing a RMB 1 billion public health fund, extending support to merchants, among others.

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E-commerce marketplaces boost aid to farmers during crisis https://technode.com/2020/02/13/e-commerce-marketplaces-boost-aid-to-farmers-during-crisis/ https://technode.com/2020/02/13/e-commerce-marketplaces-boost-aid-to-farmers-during-crisis/#respond Thu, 13 Feb 2020 07:04:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126934 During the Covid-19 outbreak and subsequent municipal lockdowns, e-commerce has became a crucial sales and distribution channel for farmers.]]>

Chinese e-commerce platforms are redoubling efforts to help farmers hit hard by the Covid-19 outbreak to sell their overstock agricultural products online.

Why it matters: Connecting farmers with e-commerce as a method of poverty alleviation has part of the government’s agenda in recent years. During the Covid-19 outbreak and subsequent locality lockdowns, e-commerce has became a crucial sales and distribution channel for farmers.

  • Shuttered brick-and-mortar produce markets, logistical interruptions, and labor shortages caused by the Covid-19 outbreak quashed the seasonal sales spike normally seen during the Spring Festival holiday week.
  •  Farmers are facing huge losses resulting from China’s paralyzed economy as wholesalers aren’t purchasing as normal during the outbreak. The Covid-19 effect on China’s agricultural sector may be felt over the longer term due to the time needed for crop growing cycles.

Details: Major e-commerce sites like Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo have launched special campaigns and subsidy funds to facilitate online sales of fresh produce.

  • Pinduoduo unveiled on Feb. 10 a special campaign for direct-from-farm produce, listing fruits and vegetables from nearly 400 agricultural areas countrywide. Of the total, 230 are officially recognized poverty-stricken counties.
  • The Shanghai-based firm also allocated RMB 500 million ($71 million) in subsidies in the form of coupons or discounts for buyers to apply to purchases of applicable produce.
  • The company said that in addition to the subsidy fund, it also allocates RMB 2 per order to farmers to assist with logistical costs.
  • The company has not responded to requests for specifics about the subsidies. Pinduoduo does not hold inventory and users purchase the produce directly from farmers listed on the platform.
  • Alibaba’s Taobao is setting up a RMB 1 billion fund for the initiative. The company is maximizing advertising reach for the produce by linking customers with a dedicated landing page on Taobao’s home page.
  • JD launched on Feb. 11 a dedicated sales channel for farmers affected by the crisis to sell their produce.

Context: E-commerce has become an important sales channel for farmers, especially those in remote areas.

  • Thanks to the rise of content-driven e-commerce, tech companies from e-commerce giant Alibaba to short video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou are leveraging livestreams and videos to boost online sales.
  • Pinduoduo earned sales revenue of more than RMB 65 billion in 2018 from a special program that sells farm produce from poverty-stricken regions.
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Food delivery disrupted as China stays home https://technode.com/2020/02/13/food-delivery-disrupted-as-china-stays-home/ https://technode.com/2020/02/13/food-delivery-disrupted-as-china-stays-home/#respond Thu, 13 Feb 2020 05:12:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126931 grocery, buyEven with consumers staying home, O2O companies Meituan and Eleme face challenges selling and delivering meals to them.]]> grocery, buy

This article was co-authored by Emma Lee.

Over the past month, China has been battling the spread of a lethal strain of novel Covid-19. As of this writing, the outbreak has claimed more than 1,000 lives in China and infected over 37,000 individuals—rendering it more deadly than the 2003 SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) outbreak, according to the latest figures released by Chinese officials.

The epidemic has severely affected almost all businesses in China, and the food delivery sector is no exception.

Now Meituan and Ele.me, the two food-delivery platforms that hold more than 90% combined share of the market in China, are scrambling to address the many concerns spurred by the outbreak and to minimize the impact on their operations.

The rising death toll has put everyone in China on high alert, as people have become increasingly wary of coming into close contact with strangers. Because food delivery couriers necessarily are required to interact with restaurant staff and customers, these workers are struggling with the dilemma of trying to limit their own risk of exposure to the virus. 

A Beijing-based delivery driver who requested to be identified only as Liu told TechNode he has not been taking delivery orders and has mostly stayed indoors over the past month. There are confirmed Covid-19 cases in popular residential areas located in the heart of the Chinese capital, he added. 

Earlier this week, Chinese authorities escalated measures against the spread of Covid-19 as millions of workers returned from an extended Spring Festival holiday. Officials announced the implementation of “closed community management” to restrict access for outside visitors, such as delivery couriers.

Some delivery drivers did remain at their posts over the holiday, hoping to earn extra cash. However, others noted that during the extended holiday, the number of delivery orders declined as many restaurants remained closed and customers shifted toward cooking at home instead of ordering takeout. 

Instead of going back to his hometown as he usually does, Ele.me deliveryman Xiaoyue had stayed in Beijing, planning to earn extra income over the Spring Festival holiday, which began on January 24. However, his plan was interrupted by the covid-19 outbreak. “There are fewer orders and my daily income now just covers my basic living costs in Beijing,” he told TechNode.

The restaurant and dining sector has been among the hardest-hit by the drop in consumer spending. Some major restaurant chains have temporarily closed their locations across China. Beijing News reported (in Chinese) that only 13% of the city’s 87,000 restaurants kept their doors open during the holiday.

Many consumers have become hesitant about ordering takeout because they are afraid of coming into contact with delivery drivers. Some turned to preparing home-cooked meals because they had extra free time during the holiday and did not want to worry about food safety.

Although meal delivery orders seem to have dropped in the wake of the epidemic, people are still relying on delivery services for buying daily necessities and groceries. Ele.me claimed that Beijing fresh produce delivery grew ninefold (in Chinese) compared with last year. The number of orders received by grocery stores doubled over the holiday.

To reassure consumers, Meituan rolled out a “contactless delivery” service in 184 cities nationwide, which allows drivers and customers to avoid meeting face-to-face.

The company updated its app, allowing users to request that the courier to drop off the meal at an agreed-upon location. Ele.me and other delivery apps have launched a similar feature.

Despite these protective measures, Xiaoyue is still concerned about the risks of becoming infected. Making his living from food delivery has made him feel pretty helpless about the current situation. “Who cares about the safety of those who live at the bottom of the society?” he asked.

Beijing native Li Sen is another Ele.me deliveryman who noticed a decline in orders during the Spring Festival holiday. The virus also affected the return of his coworkers; Li says that his delivery fleet is currently only half its usual size.

Nevertheless, the food delivery industry is seeing one of the highest return-to-work rates after the Spring Festival holiday. A survey (in Chinese) from 58.com published on February 5 showed that 84% of China’s workforce had not returned to their posts after the official start date, though it did not specify whether employees working remotely had been taken into account. In comparison, around half of the food-delivery workforce was already back to work—the highest of all categories, along with drivers and house cleaners.

There are additional challenges. Many Chinese cities are currently under lockdown. Traffic restrictions make delivering meals increasingly difficult. In urban areas, many gated apartment complexes are forbidding delivery couriers to enter, requiring residents to pick up their orders at the front gate of the complex.

Both Meituan and Ele.me declined to comment on questions regarding the outbreak.

Offering support and resources

An outpouring of support and donations have flooded into coronavirus-ravaged regions. Many tech companies have stepped up their efforts to help those in need.

During this crisis, Meituan has been handing out free meals every day to medical staff in Wuhan. Its business-to-business arm Kuailv, which normally delivers fresh food to restaurants, is now delivering fresh produce to hospitals. The company has installed lockers at hospitals around Wuhan where delivery drivers can deposit food for medical staff. Some delivery drivers are helping out with essentials like facemasks in lockdown areas.

Meituan has also donated RMB 200 million to help supply food for medical staff in Hubei.

Alibaba, Ele.me’s parent company, is donating RMB 1 billion for hospitals in Wuhan and Hubei province to buy medical supplies. Ele.me is also helping with food deliveries for hospital staff as well as offering financial support to delivery workers. The company said it has arranged a special health relief fund of up to RMB 300,000 yuan ($43,250) for its delivery workers. 

Both Meituan and Ele.me have also said that they are cracking down on all products considered wild game, which is said to be the source of the Covid-19 outbreak. Wild animals like civet cats and badgers have reportedly been removed from popular Chinese e-commerce and food delivery platforms. In a statement last month, Meituan said it would respond to the government’s crackdown efforts by removing listings for all wild game products from its platform.

Although the Covid-19 epidemic has caused major disruption in Meituan’s food delivery as well as its travel and hotel booking businesses, there may be a possible upside. Even though the extended holiday has come to an end, many companies are encouraging employees to work remotely; meanwhile, many schools remain closed. The continued confinement of consumers could potentially spur a spike in demand for delivery services in China.

Correction: A previous version of this article, appearing in the In focus/Meituan newsletter, wrote that “Ele.me claimed that its fresh produce delivery grew ninefold (in Chinese) compared with last year.” In fact, Ele.me claimed only that its Beijing fresh produce delivery grew ninefold.

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Bytedance eroding ad revenue share from BAT: report https://technode.com/2020/02/12/bytedance-eroding-ad-revenue-share-from-bat-report/ https://technode.com/2020/02/12/bytedance-eroding-ad-revenue-share-from-bat-report/#respond Wed, 12 Feb 2020 09:11:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126849 harmony OS merchants e-commerce brushing tax authorities regulatorAlibaba and Tencent are targeting e-commerce revenues while Bytedance is much more focused on ad revenue and holding audience interest.]]> harmony OS merchants e-commerce brushing tax authorities regulator

Bytedance, creator of viral short video apps Douyin and TikTok as well as news aggregation app Toutiao, is continuing to take ad revenue share from China’s top tech firms Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, according to a report from Chinese social media agency Totem Media.

Why it matters: Chinese tech giants hold a significant chunk of online traffic in China as well as its marketing landscape, which has become increasingly digital in recent years, particularly social media. The shift in user attention to short videos is reflected in the migration of ad budgets from brands, a major source of revenue for tech firms.

  • Digital ad spending in China is expected to rise 22% year on year in 2019 to $79.82 billion and continue to expand at a double digit growth rate until 2022, according to data from eMarketer.
  • China is overwhelmingly biased toward digital ad spending. Depending on the source and structure of calculations, eMarketer estimates digital represents 60% to 70% of all advertising spend in China, as of 2019 to 2020. The global average was around 50% in 2019.
(Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)

Details: Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, and Bytedance (BATB) are among China’s most valuable tech companies and account for a combined 86% of all digital advertising revenue in the country, according to Totem Media.

  • The wide range of assets means that BATB’s dominance in China’s online marketing industry to continue for some time. “There is [no] next big player looming on the horizon to unseat these big four players,” the report said.
  • Alibaba, with its dominance in e-commerce in China, remains a clear leader in overall share of advertising spend for China, but its hold continues to narrow.
  • Bytedance has seen phenomenal growth with its share of ad spend nearly doubling from 2018 to 2019 (estimated) after more than doubling from 2017 to 2018. It is taking share from all of its BATB peers.
  • Alibaba and Tencent are targeting e-commerce revenues as the primary long-term goal. By contrast, Bytedance is much more focused on ad revenue and holding audience interest with entertainment, news, and content.
  • Tencent’s ubiquitous messaging app, WeChat, may be hitting a ceiling as some data show a decline in user base and user time spent statistics. Official brand accounts are making little headway in gaining users and attention, cannibalized by WeChat’s own mini app offerings and short video platforms.
  • Concentrated traffic is pushing costs up. Brands looking to reduce costs and improve audience targeting are increasingly “defecting” to smaller, more niche, vertical channels such as entertainment platform Bilibili and audio streaming platform Ximalaya FM. This dynamic opens up opportunities for services on these platforms.

Context: Tech giants like Tencent and Alibaba have been launching new products and features in an effort to fend off competition from Bytedance.

  • ByteDance has overtaken search giant Baidu to hold the second-largest share of China’s digital ad market during the first half of 2019, according to CNBC.
  • Tencent invested $1.5 billion to Douyin rival Kuaishou in August 2019.
  • Tencent’s low-profile CEO and chairman, Pony Ma, was involved in a spat with Bytedance founder Zhang Yiming in 2018 after Zhang posted news that Douyin topped the most-downloaded chat app rankings.

Bytedance overtakes Baidu, Tencent in H1 digital ad revenue

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Alibaba joins peers in offering small business support https://technode.com/2020/02/11/alibaba-joins-peers-in-offering-small-business-support/ https://technode.com/2020/02/11/alibaba-joins-peers-in-offering-small-business-support/#respond Tue, 11 Feb 2020 07:35:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126760 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAlibaba follows Meituan and Pinduoduo in releasing a slew of supportive measures for small businesses as the economic impact of the coronavirus takes hold.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Chinese tech behemoth Alibaba has unveiled a number of measures to support smaller sellers in its ecosystem as the economic impact from the novel coronavirus outbreak begins to set in, including offering service fees waivers or reductions and financial assistance.

Why it matters: The coronavirus epidemic that has immobilized China is hitting the country’s already-slowing economy, the growth rate of which has inched down to a multi-decade low (in Chinese) in 2019. Business interruption, rising costs, and consumer panic caused by the outbreak are pressuring small business owners.

  • Alibaba’s efforts to support small- to medium-sized sellers may help it to retain merchants in a battle to fend off competition from rivals like Pinduoduo.

“Now, the second battle is upon us: Economic development must continue, lives must go on and small-and-medium sized enterprises must survive.”

—Alibaba statement

Pinduoduo boosts support for smaller merchants during crisis

Details: The support program covers every major business segment in its ecosystem from its core online marketplaces, logistics, financial offerings to local life services. Merchants can apply for support as soon as their operations resume, according to the company announcement on Monday.

  • With the goal to minimize merchant operational costs, the company is waiving the platform service fee, rental fees, and commission for merchants on online marketplace Tmall, logistics arm Cainiao, and lifestyle unit Koubei for a period ranging from two to six months.
  • Low-interest loans will be provided through Mybank. The Ant Financial-backed online bank will provide 12-month free or low-interest loans totaling RMB 10 billion ($1.4 billion) to Taobao and Tmall merchants from central Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak. Another RMB 10 billion in loans are allocated to merchants located outside of Hubei.
  • Taobao, Tmall and Cainao have co-launched a RMB 1 billion fund for online sellers to offset rising supply chain and logistics service costs.
  • Flexible job opportunities at the company’s operations like Hema and a number of other sectors including dining, hospitality, movie theaters, and department stores are on offer to help shore up incomes.
  • All offline store operators can join Taobao Livestream without prerequisites and can use its operational tools free of charge.
  • Enterprise software Dingtalk is offering its “Work from Home” function free of charge.

Context: Other Chinese tech companies like Meituan and Pinduoduo had already announcement supportive small business measures amid the crisis.

  • Alibaba rolled out the “A100” program to help companies embrace digital transformation in January last year.
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Pinduoduo boosts support for smaller merchants during crisis https://technode.com/2020/02/10/pinduoduo-boosts-support-for-smaller-merchants-during-crisis/ https://technode.com/2020/02/10/pinduoduo-boosts-support-for-smaller-merchants-during-crisis/#respond Mon, 10 Feb 2020 05:59:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126694 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentE-commerce firm Pinduoduo is extending financial help and more flexibility to smaller sellers, which may help attract and retain merchants to the platform.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo has rolled out a series of measures to help smaller merchants during the economic slowdown caused by the current novel coronavirus outbreak.

Why it matters: Small- to medium-sized businesses are among those businesses hit the hardest by the panic surrounding the viral outbreak crisis sweeping China. Helping online sellers during this economically challenging time either through subsidies or more flexible platform policies could help the Shanghai-based company to attract and retain these merchants, important components for its ecosystem.

  • Pinduoduo and its rival Alibaba had a public spat last year when Pinduoduo’s CEO accused the e-commerce giant of compelling merchants to choose between the platforms through its forced exclusivity policy.

Forcing sellers into exclusivity deals on marketplaces is illegal: regulator

Details: For the majority of orders placed during the period from Jan. 17 to Feb. 10, Pinduoduo has extended the delivery time to Feb. 12, according to an emailed statement from the company. Meanwhile, parcel pick-up time from the sellers after order confirmation was widened from 24 hours to 96 hours.

  • Taking the effects of the virus outbreak into consideration, the company made the adjustments accordingly to “ease pressure on merchants” (our translation), the statement said.
  • Pinduoduo says it has allocated RMB 1 billion ($140 million) toward subsidies for the initiative, adding that it is “not setting upper limits on the support.”
  • The company is offering a RMB 2 to RMB 3 per order subsidy to merchants that are fulfilling their orders during the virus outbreak to mitigate rising logistical and operational costs.
  • Likewise, tech giant Meituan also unveiled supportive plans for smaller businesses including setting up a RMB 350 million (around $50 million) fund for merchants, providing no less than RMB 10 billion in low-interest loans to sellers, and lowering commission fees for merchants in Wuhan.

Context: Alibaba invested RMB 30 billion worth of resources to support the growth of small- and medium-sized merchants in 2019.

  • Alibaba’s Hema grocery store unit is temporarily hiring employees from restaurant chains in an attempt to ease labor cost pressures on a sector hit hard by the outbreak while addressing a workforce shortage caused by rising grocery delivery orders.
  • In June 2019, home electronics manufacturer Galanz accused Alibaba’s online marketplace Tmall of hiding its products from search results after it refused to remove its listings from Pinduoduo’s platform in May.
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JD completes first unmanned delivery for coronavirus aid in Wuhan https://technode.com/2020/02/07/jd-completes-first-unmanned-delivery-for-coronavirus-aid-in-wuhan/ https://technode.com/2020/02/07/jd-completes-first-unmanned-delivery-for-coronavirus-aid-in-wuhan/#respond Fri, 07 Feb 2020 07:10:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126643 The coronavirus outbreak may be a turning point for unmanned delivery applications in China, which have remained limited despite widespread attention.]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com has completed its first delivery of medical aid via autonomous vehicle in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicenter of the current novel coronavirus outbreak.

Why it matters: The coronavirus epidemic may drastically accelerate real-life applications for deliveries via unmanned vehicles and drones in China, which has remained limited despite widespread attention.

  • Apart from parcel delivery, unmanned driving technologies applications in food delivery and street sweeping may surge as human-to-human contact is discouraged across the country to reduce the risk of infection.

Details: JD’s unmanned vehicle delivered medical supplies to Wuhan Ninth Hospital from its Renhe delivery station 600 meters away, according to a company statement (in Chinese).

  • A video of the delivery shows that users can collect their orders by inputting a pickup code.
  • In addition to delivery vehicles, JD Logistics will open up its Level-4 autonomous driving solutions, allowing more autonomous delivery robot manufacturers to update and benefit from the technology, according to the company. Level 4 automation refers to vehicles which can operate in self-driving mode within a limited area.
  • JD Logistics will also use drones for delivery to remotes areas in Hebei, Shaanxi, and Jiangsu provinces which have also been hit by the virus.
  • Shenzhen municipality in southern China has started to adopt autonomous robots for street sweeping and public area disinfection, according to Chinese media reports.
  • Regional governments are pushing (in Chinese) for unmanned delivery solutions to prevent spreading the virus.

Context: The noval virus has claimed 637 lives after sickening more than 31,200 individuals on the Chinese mainland as of Friday.

  • In 2018, Meituan Dianping launched the Meituan Autonomous Delivery Platform featuring driverless delivery vehicles that shuttle meals from restaurants to consumers.
  • McKinsey estimated that autonomous vehicles will deliver 80% of all goods in less than a decade.
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E-commerce firms cracking down on sellers of fake protective masks https://technode.com/2020/02/06/e-commerce-firms-cracking-down-on-sellers-of-fake-protective-masks/ https://technode.com/2020/02/06/e-commerce-firms-cracking-down-on-sellers-of-fake-protective-masks/#respond Thu, 06 Feb 2020 07:00:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126591 Chinese e-commerce companies are stepping up efforts to monitor the quality of protective products sold on their platforms, particularly face masks.]]>

Chinese e-commerce platforms are cracking down on fake or substandard protective masks, potentially the most visible symbol of the novel coronavirus outbreak that has rocked the country.

If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.

Why it matters: The coronavirus outbreak has triggered a rise in global demand for protective masks. Online retailers are tightening monitoring efforts to fight unethical sellers looking to benefit during a country-wide crisis by offering substandard products.

  • Face mask production capacity in China is around 20 million per day, a representative of the Ministry of Information and Technology told local media.
  • Daily demand for masks in China with its population of 1.4 billion surged to the hundreds of millions within a few days according to estimations from e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, according the company’s head of anti-epidemic team Fu Zheng in an emailed statement.

Chinese tech firms ramp up support to battle outbreak

Details: Alibaba has permanently barred 15 stores from operating on its shopping platforms for selling “problematic” masks, the company announced Tuesday through its official account on microblogging platform Weibo.

  • The company has removed 570,000 questionable mask listings and has referred five of the banned stores to authorities for further investigation, Alibaba said in the statement.
  • Alibaba’s marketplace regulatory unit reiterated its “zero tolerance” stance towards such behaviors in the statement released Wednesday. The firm suggested that the government should add such sellers to a country’s credit blacklist.
  • Alibaba did not respond to requests for comment.
  • Pinduoduo has removed 500,715 items and has closed more than 40 stores as of Feb. 4, the company said. Pinduoduo’s anti-epidemic group will run spot checks on protective gear listed on the platform, Fu Zheng added, to assess whether masks are up to national standards for particle filtering.
  • Sellers found to be selling problematic products will be removed from the platform, have their cash accounts frozen, and will be reported to the police, the company said, and the platform will reimburse the buyers.
  • JD has removed seven merchants from its platform, local media reported.

Context: Counterfeit goods have long plagued Chinese e-commerce platforms. To fight the issue, e-commerce platforms have rolled out anti-counterfeit initiatives by forming industry alliances, and implementing new technologies like artificial intelligence and big data, among others.

  • The platforms are assessing protective product quality by analyzing in real-time merchants and product listings using data points such as product specification and user reviews. In addition, they are pulling random samples to examine and test the products.
  • On Feb. 2, China’s Ministry of Public Security ordered a clampdown on sales of counterfeit and inferior protective products, the stockpiling such items, and inflating prices during the virus outbreak.

Updated: added the Ministry of Public Security statement.

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Hema to hire idle restaurant staff as delivery demand surges https://technode.com/2020/02/05/hema-to-hire-idle-restaurant-staff-as-delivery-demand-surges/ https://technode.com/2020/02/05/hema-to-hire-idle-restaurant-staff-as-delivery-demand-surges/#respond Wed, 05 Feb 2020 06:41:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126549 Alibaba's grocery unit Hema is hiring employees from 30 restaurant chains to meet rising delivery demand as residents remain indoors amid the outbreak.]]>

Alibaba’s Hema grocery store unit is in talks with more than 30 restaurant chains in China to temporarily hire their employees to help meet surging demand for deliveries.

Why it matters: The current novel coronavirus outbreak is spurring staffing shortages in China’s food delivery industry as demand climbs from residents sequestered indoors. Meanwhile, employees at many restaurant chains sit idle.

  • Business interruption caused by the coronavirus outbreak has had an especially devastating impact on offline businesses and small- to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
  • Cooperation helps eliminate inefficiencies typical to normal workforce fluctuations.

Chinese tech firms ramp up support to battle outbreak

Details: Hema is hiring nearly 2,000 employees from more than 30 restaurant chains including Mystic South Yunnan Ethnic Cuisine and Youth Restaurant, Xibei Restaurant, South Memory, and Shudaxia Hotpot.

  • The cooperation will be applicable to employees in major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Xi’an, Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Kunming.
  • Hema will interview and train the potential new hires, and have them go through medical checkups.
  • The new temporary staff will work from Hema’s stores across the country for in-store jobs such as product packing, sorting, food preparation, and others. In-store jobs require less complicated training than delivery roles, Hu Qiugen, Hema’s managing director, told Chinese media.
  • There were 170 self-operated Hema stores in China as of Sept. 30, primarily in top-tier cities.
  • Human labor is a major cost for restaurant chains. For example, Xibei Restaurant chain operates more than 400 branches in 60 cities. Jia Guolong, its founder, told local media that nearly all of its restaurants have halted operations except for 100 locations that offer delivery services. The company’s workforce of more than 20,000 costs around RMB 150 million ($21 million) per month to employ. If the impact from the coronavirus epidemic continues, the company’s cash will only last three months, he added.

Context: Alibaba and other large Chinese tech firms been boosting their social responsibility efforts as they look to expand globally. Many of the measures are aimed toward supporting SMEs.

  • Meituan plans to offer no less than RMB 10 billion in low-interest loans to small- to mid-sized lifestyle merchants.
  • Separately, Ant Financial’s online commercial lender Mybank reduced interest rates for business loans by 10% for 1.8 million small business owners in Hubei province, where the outbreak was first reported and widely considered its epicenter.
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Luckin shares dip further despite refuting fraud claims https://technode.com/2020/02/04/luckin-shares-dip-further-despite-refuting-fraud-claims/ https://technode.com/2020/02/04/luckin-shares-dip-further-despite-refuting-fraud-claims/#respond Tue, 04 Feb 2020 06:55:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126492 Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucksLuckin responded Monday to fraud allegations from an anonymous report publicized by short seller Muddy Waters on Friday.]]> Luckin coffee fraud falsified starbucks

A slide in share price for Chinese beverage chain Luckin Coffee continued on Monday despite hitting back against fraud allegations from an anonymous report publicized on Friday by short seller Muddy Waters Research.

Why it matters: The swooning share price underscores investor concern over the sustainability of the Starbucks rival’s business model. Since its establishment in 2017, the Xiamen-based company has invited controversy over its cash-burning expansion strategy, its top management, and more.

  • The fraud allegations come amid an outbreak of a deadly respiratory flu epidemic that has immobilized China, weighing on offline businesses as well as the broader market.
  • Luckin claims to be the largest coffee chain in China with 4,507 stores as of the end of 2019. Its rival Starbucks has 3,600 outlets in the country.
  • That the author of the report has remained anonymous casts a shadow over its credibility. Another short seller, Citron Research, which said it received the same report shared by Muddy Waters, continues to hold a long position on Luckin.

Luckin Coffee firmly stands by its business model and is confident in benefiting from the strong growth of China’s coffee market in the future. Luckin Coffee’s pioneering business model has enabled the company to become the leading and fastest growing player driving coffee consumption in China.

—Luckin Coffee statement

China Tech Investor 23: Is Luckin Coffee a real business?

Details: Muddy Waters Research tweeted a link on Friday to an anonymous report which claimed the coffee chain is defrauding investors by fabricating operational and financial numbers, after which Luckin shares sank more than 19%. The report was a result of mobilizing 92 full-time and 1,418 part-time staff to document 11,260 hours of store traffic surveillance video for 620 Luckin stores across the country.

  • The report claimed Luckin’s number of items per store per day was inflated by at least 69% in Q3 2019 and 88% in Q4, and that items per order declined sequentially in Q4 to 1.14 from 1.38.
  • Luckin released on Monday a statement in response to the fraud allegations, denying all allegations in the report, calling it misleading, flawed, and meritless.
  • The company specifically refuted claims over figure inflation on metrics including the number of per items per store per day, effective selling price, revenue, and net revenue primarily during Q3 and Q4 2019.
  • Luckin shares closed 3.51% down on Monday after a short intra-day spike triggered by its response.

Context: The share price tumble follows a steady climb that began in November, when its price more than doubled to historical high of $50 apiece in mid-January from around $19.

  • Amid the surge, Luckin Coffee raked in an additional $865 million in net proceeds, only eight months after its debut on Nasdaq.
  • Muddy Waters is a equity research firm specializing in US-listed Chinese companies. The company gained prominence with reports about paper product manufacturer Orient Paper and educational service platform New Oriental Education & Technology Group.
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Chinese tech firms ramp up support to battle outbreak https://technode.com/2020/02/03/chinese-tech-firms-ramp-up-support-to-battle-outbreak/ https://technode.com/2020/02/03/chinese-tech-firms-ramp-up-support-to-battle-outbreak/#respond Mon, 03 Feb 2020 08:20:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126392 virus tracking app coronavirusAs Chinese tech giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu begin to compete globally, they are looking to align with international CSR standards.]]> virus tracking app coronavirus

China’s largest technology companies are contributing to efforts to battle the deadly coronavirus which has immobilized the country, donating millions in the form of cash, relief supplies, logistical support, and medical research.

Why it matters: Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a relatively recent concept in China, where the country’s corporate law first included mention of social responsibility in 2006. As Chinese tech giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu look to compete globally, they are embracing social and environmental practices in alignment with international CSR standards.

Chinese tech firms brace for impact from coronavirus

Details: As of Feb. 1, nearly 150 Chinese tech firms have donated a combined total of more than RMB 4 billion ($570 million) for efforts to treat those affected by the outbreak, according to Chinese media reports. The funds were raised in addition to other forms of support from medical goods to telecommunications and logistics.

  • Alibaba established an RMB 1 billion public health fund to purchase medical products and ensure hospital food supplies. Baidu and Tencent set up RMB 300 million funds each, while Meituan and Bytedance offered RMB 200 million each in aid.
  • Alibaba-backed Cainiao Logistics announced on Sunday that it will provide free logistical support to relief materials delivered from more than 38 countries and regions.
  • Starting Feb. 2, Ant Financial’s online commercial lender Mybank reduced interest rates for business loans by 10% for 1.8 million small business owners in Hubei, where the outbreak was first reported, including 1.5 million mom-and-pop-type store owners and 300,000 medical supply dealers.
  • As of Jan. 28, JD Logistics had transported nearly 70 tons of medical supplies from cities including Shanghai and Guangzhou to Wuhan via rail.
  • Pinduoduo, which set up a RMB 100 million fund on Jan. 29, shipped on Jan. 31 100 tons of fruits and vegetables to Wuhan hospitals.
  • Bytedance has offered for all the features on its enterprise messaging and productivity app Lark for free to support efforts to work remotely.

Context: The current novel coronavirus has infected 14,557 people as of Feb. 2 , according to the World Health Organization. Infections have been identified in more than 20 countries.

  • The catastrophic Sichuan earthquake of 2008, which claimed 70,000 lives, appeared to be a turning point for Chinese CSR efforts. Donation to the victims of the earthquake reached an unprecedented $1.5 billion.
  • A growing number of Chinese tech billionaires are doubling their philanthropic efforts, similar to their western counterparts such as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder who committed 99% of his company shares to charity initiatives.
  • Alibaba’s Jack Ma pledged RMB 100 million to “support the development of a coronavirus vaccine.” Pony Ma, the founder and CEO of Tencent, donated 100 million of Tencent’s shares to the firm’s charity foundation in 2016.
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Enterprise tech is shaping the future of Meituan https://technode.com/2020/01/29/enterprise-tech-is-shaping-the-future-of-meituan/ Wed, 29 Jan 2020 13:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158656 Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2OChinese super app Meituan is expanding beyond its core strengths and trying to build a foothold with business customers in a bid to find new sources of growth.]]> Meituan delivery Covid-19 new retail O2O

With core businesses in food delivery, hotel booking, and various ticketing services, Meituan Dianping is predominantly a consumer platform in the eyes of Chinese users. However, the Chinese super app is expanding beyond its core strengths and trying to build a foothold with business customers in a bid to find new sources of growth.

With a massive user base of 435.8 million, the company’s shift to address the needs of vendors in its ecosystem is a logical next step. It is an area that the company has significant expertise in, has thousands of potential customers already within its ecosystem, and completes a business loop for its core revenue stream.

Branching into various fronts quickly to test out emerging business opportunities, or what Meituan refers to as “borderless competition,” has long been an expansion tactic. This approach has helped the firm to grow beyond just a Groupon and Yelp copycat over the past decade. 

Meituan’s early enterprise tech forays

Starting off in 2010 as China’s Groupon, Meituan gained momentum after expanding to on-demand food delivery in 2013, though it faced competition from Ele.me and Baidu Waimai. The app merged with then 12-year-old rival Dianping in 2015 to form the lifestyle mega platform.

In 2016, Wang Xing, Meitan’s founder known for his shrewdness, proposed that the company, the online-to-offline (O2O) industry, and China was entering a new growth stage, or the second-half era, to use Wang’s term.

In Focus | Meituan #5

This article first appeared in In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s premium biweekly newsletter on the rising tech giant.

The newsletter ran from Nov. 20, 2019 to April 29, 2020.

After its 2018 IPO, the company doubled down on the shift to enterprise-facing businesses. As part of its food+platform structural reshuffle in October 2018, the firm upgraded the B2B (business-to-business) unit Kuailv unit it had created in 2016 to a business department. 
In addition to self-developed services, the company has been beefing up its enterprise offerings through investment over the past few years.

  • March 2018: Meituan and its investor Tencent led a $200 million D round in B2B online liquor selling startup Yijiupi.
  • May 2018: Meituan acquired PassionTec, a SaaS solution provider for restaurants after investing in the company in 2016.
  • October 2018: The firm rolled out micro-loan services for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

Company co-founder and vice president Wang Huiwen told Chinese media in September 2018 that it would focus on high-yield businesses—for example, IT solutions for merchants and supply chain solutions for enterprises—after the 2018 IPO.

Wang said in 2018 that China’s internet had reached the end of growth driven by demographic dividend, but the benefits brought by improving efficiency using the internet as a tool was just beginning.

To aid the transition, Meituan pledged in January 2019 to invest RMB 11 billion to help merchants upgrade their operations and drive the growth of China’s “delivery economy,” a term referring to the country’s on-demand services boom.

Core enterprise tech business lines

China’s business-to-business market is expected to worth RMB 2.59 trillion (around $375.13 billion) in 2019, up from RMB 2.14 trillion in 2018, according to data from iResearch.
Thanks to its robust consumer-facing business, Meituan is in a good position to make the shift with annual active merchants of 5.9 million as of Sep. 30.

Meituan’s cloud-based ERP systems include software solutions that integrate table booking, digital menus, order placement, customer wait time management, takeout and delivery orders, multiple payment methods, as well as inventory, payroll, and customer relationship management into one system. 

To complement its software, a variety of hardware with its ERP systems pre-installed are on offer, including touch screen monitors, cash drawers, cash registers, barcode scanners, and others.

While market domination may help the food delivery giant to with first-time clients, the key will be to retain customers by adding value. We talked to a number of stores and restaurants, most of which listed a number of complaints when using services either Meituan or its rival Ele.me.
April Gourmet is a Beijing-based convenience store and supermarket chain that sells imported goods, groceries, and fresh produce. The business uses both Ele.me and Meituan’s food delivery service, but a larger percentage of its orders come from Ele.me, according to the operator.

“We received a complaint from a customer that chocolate popsicles arrived damaged. It was clear to us that it happened on the way to the customer. We called the platform afterward but received no assistance from them whatsoever,” the store manager told TechNode, recalling one incident. “Whenever there’s an issue, platforms like Ele.me and Meituan are often very slow to respond.”

Cai, 28, operator of a Shanghai branch of fruit chain Fresh Fruit, echoed April Gourmet’s complaint. “Compared with offline buyers who could choose the products before they buy, online buyers, who usually place orders through delivery platforms, have more complaints. The platforms are responding slowly to addressing disputes.” he said.

In addition, Cai says the store makes very little money from orders processed by the online platforms due to rising commission. “For us, online orders are a means to boost turnover rather than generating profits.”

In Beijing, another fruit store chain, Lehuo Fruit, stopped using Meituan’s delivery service because it wasn’t worth the money, according to the store owner. “If a customer is dissatisfied with the product and would like to return it, the delivery platform doesn’t handle the process for us,” the owner added. This further complicates the return process and might cause more damage to the products, he said. “That’s why we don’t use it anymore.”

Meituan is nevertheless pressing ahead with constructing its infrastructure for merchant digitalization. It significantly increased registered capital for cloud computing subsidiaries from RMB 10 million to RMB 87 million last year.In an effort to move up the supply chain, Meituan is providing business-to-business services to the restaurant industry through its app Kuailv. The app allows restaurants to order raw materials, food ingredients, and disposable restaurant supplies from a large variety of vendors, and provides delivery services. The service is now operates in 42 cities and more than 300 districts and counties, Chinese media has reported.

In order to address loan unavailability common to SMEs, Meituan obtained a micro-loan license in November 2016 for its credit arm Meituan Xiaodai to provide financing to users and merchants on the platform without the need for collateral. The company evaluates the borrower’s creditworthiness by leveraging big data using user profile and behavioral history.

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Chinese tech firms brace for impact from coronavirus https://technode.com/2020/01/22/chinese-tech-firms-brace-for-spread-of-fatal-wuhan-coronavirus/ https://technode.com/2020/01/22/chinese-tech-firms-brace-for-spread-of-fatal-wuhan-coronavirus/#respond Wed, 22 Jan 2020 05:14:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126264 virus infection coronavirus maskThe new coronavirus outbreak is pressuring share prices for China's biggest tech companies including Alibaba, JD, Baidu, and Ctrip.]]> virus infection coronavirus mask

Chinese technology majors are scrambling to prepare for a public health crisis stemming from a deadly strain of coronavirus that is beginning to spread across the country ahead of a major holiday travel season.

Why it matters: Fears about the outbreak are compounded by its timing just ahead of the Spring Festival holiday, when millions in Asia plan to travel. The impact on consumption levels is another concern, as many are expected to remain home to avoid crowded areas.

  • Spread of the virus has sparked panic for items such as protective masks and hand sanitizer, and driven up prices in brick-and-mortar shops and e-commerce platforms alike.

“While we seek to ensure quality supply at speed, JD is also rigorously regulating our third party platform to forbid unfair price hikes, with penalties to third party sellers if unfair price hikes are discovered.”

—a statement from JD.com on Wednesday

Details: The new coronavirus epidemic is pressuring share prices for major Chinese tech companies including Alibaba, JD, Baidu, and Ctrip, which all traded down on Tuesday. Share prices for Ctrip fell the most sharply, declining 10.3%.

  • In a Wednesday letter addressing merchants on its e-commerce marketplaces like Taobao and lifestyle services platform Ele.me, Alibaba called on vendors to maintain “stable” pricing of virus protective devices such as masks and disinfectant. The company said that it will offer subsidies for merchants in order to keep pricing down and maintain supply.
  • Inventory for virus protection masks were running low on mainstream Chinese e-commerce platforms such as Taobao, JD.com, and Pinduoduo. Some masks, including those rated N95 and recommended by manufacturer 3M, were sold out and are expected to be back in stock in early February, based on a TechNode reporter’s observations on Tuesday.
  • JD.com said that it is actively working to ensure adequate supply of face masks and other health protection products. Its efforts include sourcing, warehousing and delivery, and controlling sales to avoid consumer stockpiling.
  • Online travel platforms may be hit the hardest. Chinese online travel platforms including Trip.com, Alibaba-backed Fliggy, Qunar, and Mafengwo are waiving cancellation fees for trips to the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
  • Travel platforms are offering customers free cancellation on all hotels, car rentals, and tickets for tourist attractions in Wuhan until Jan. 31. The platforms are pledging to cover the cost if the hotels refuse to cancel.
  • The government is leveraging popular social media platforms like microblogging platform Weibo and short video apps Douyin and Kuaishou to educate the public about the new virus and disclosure information.

Context: The fallout from this new virus recalls for many impact from the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic which originated in Asia in 2003 and spread throughout the world. More than 5,327 of the 8,098 global infections were in China, where nearly half the 774 deaths worldwide took place. The epidemic took an economic toll of RMB 93.3 billion ($13.5 billion), according to government data.

  • The current strain of coronavirus originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. There are more than 440 confirmed cases in China in Hubei province, Guangdong province, Beijing, Tianjin, and Shanghai, as well as abroad in Thailand, Japan and more. Nine death cases were recorded as of Wednesday early afternoon.
  • Concerns about the virus reached new heights Tuesday after China confirmed that the disease can be transmitted between humans.
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Meituan co-founder to retire from management duties https://technode.com/2020/01/20/meituan-co-founder-to-retire-from-management-duties/ https://technode.com/2020/01/20/meituan-co-founder-to-retire-from-management-duties/#respond Mon, 20 Jan 2020 10:52:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126189 Meituan is reshuffling management as tech firms across China look to promote younger employees.]]>

Meituan Senior Vice-President and co-founder Wang Huiwen will retire from management duties at the end of 2020, the food delivery giant said in a staff letter shared with TechNode.

Why it matters: The move highlights the ongoing management adjustments among Chinese tech heavyweights towards younger leaders to keep up with the consumption patterns among youthful generations.

  • As one of Meituan’s three co-founders, Wang set up the early structure for marketing and branding strategies and was integral to the planning and launching of food delivery services in 2013. 

“Over the past few years, Wang [Huiwen] and I have talked about his retirement plan, and the company has been preparing for when the day comes. Today, I’m officially announcing his decision to you [the staff]. I understand his reasons but am also reluctant to let him go. Even more so, however, are my gratitude and blessings for him.” (our translation)

—Wang Xing, chief executive of Meituan in the internal letter

Details: Meituan CEO Wang Xing (no relation) said in a letter to staff that the company is launching a new program to foster the next generation of managers, and the shift starts from the company’s senior team referred to as the “S-Team.”

  • Wang Huiwen, a senior team member, will retire from his management duties in December but will retain his role as executive director. Meituan named Wang as a lifetime honorary consultant and he will continue his involvement in strategic planning and talent development. 
  • Vice-Presidents Guo Qing and Li Shubing will receive promotions to the senior team. Guo joined Meituan in 2014 and is responsible for hotel and ticketing services as well as short-term rentals. Li joined at the end of last year and will take charge of Meituan’s platforms division.
  • Elaine Liu, another S-Team member, will leave her position as senior vice president to take on a senior consultant role focused on human resource development.

Context: Meituan made important external hirings in December to boost future growth. Li Shubin, the former CEO of Chinese e-commerce site OkBuy, was named vice president for app Meituan. Other giants in the space are also making adjustments.

  • JD has promoted over 6,720 employees born after 1990 in its latest changes. Many will be gradually be selected for management positions, said company founder and CEO Richard Liu in an open letter released today. 
  • Tencent announced a series of upheavals to its existing employee ranking system last June to promote younger workers as it courts more youthful users. 
  • Alibaba promoted several young executives in the months leading up to Jack Ma’s retirement.

Meituan shares hit historical high after Golden Week surge

With additional reporting from Emma Lee

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Luckin raises $865 million in post-IPO offering https://technode.com/2020/01/20/luckin-raises-865-million-in-post-ipo-offering/ https://technode.com/2020/01/20/luckin-raises-865-million-in-post-ipo-offering/#respond Mon, 20 Jan 2020 05:46:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126162 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsLuckin looks to fund its aggressive growth tactics including a vending machine initiative, and expansion into other consumables and overseas markets.]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps
Luckin Coffee Starbucks vending machine offering expansion
A Luckin Coffee store in Beijing on Sept. 28, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Coco Gao)

Chinese coffee chain upstart Luckin Coffee has raked in an additional $865 million in net proceeds through two separate fundraising moves announced earlier in January, the company said on Friday, as it seeks to fund its rapid expansion throughout the country.

Why it matters: Momentum for the Chinese Starbucks challenger is on the upswing, undeterred by the timing of the new fundraise—just eight months after its US initial public offering (IPO)—highlighting risks posed by its cash-burning strategic initiatives.

  • The additional $865 million tops the company’s $651 million IPO in May 2019.
  • The company says it is the largest coffee chain in China with 4,507 stores as of end-2019, more than Starbucks’s 3,600 outlets in the country.
  • Investors have responded to Luckin’s aggressive tactics including its newly launched “smart unmanned retail” vending machines in typically compact store footprints, expansion into other consumables, and market-leading store count.

Details: The company’s share prices have shot up 42% from Jan. 8, when the cash-raising offerings and vending machine initiative were announced, closing at $50.02 on Jan. 17 at nearly triple its IPO price of $17.

  • The company received net proceeds of approximately $418.3 million from the offering which included 1.35 million American Depositary Shares offered from Luckin and 720,000 million ADS offered by a selling shareholder, sold at $42 per unit.
  • The company did not receive any proceeds from the sale of ADS by the selling shareholder, according to the statement.
  • Luckin also received approximately $446.7 million through its convertible senior notes offering, due in 2025.

Context: In addition to consolidating its foothold in coffee chain market, the Xiamen-based firm is expanding aggressively across the beverage industry by spinning off a tea brand, and striking a deal to produce fresh juices in partnership with European food processing company Louis Dreyfus.

  • The startup posted narrowed losses for the third quarter of 2019, showing an improved cost strategy.

Luckin joins Starbucks in blurring boundaries between coffee and tea

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Xiaohongshu shutters offline shops in Shanghai https://technode.com/2020/01/16/xiaohongshu-steps-back-from-offline-expansion/ https://technode.com/2020/01/16/xiaohongshu-steps-back-from-offline-expansion/#respond Thu, 16 Jan 2020 05:54:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=126001 Social e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu is drawing back on its new retail initiative as adjusts its business following a tumultuous 2019.]]>

China’s social e-commerce app Xiaohongshu, also known as RED, has shut both of its brick-and-mortar experience stores in Shanghai, local media reported on Thursday.

Why it matters: Shanghai-based Xiaohongshu is drawing back on its the new retail initiative as it refocuses on its online operations after a tumultuous 2019, when it was suspended from app stores for three months.

  • Chinese online retailers such as Kaola and Vipshop have been building an offline presence over the past two years, adopting a “new retail” trend where online and offline shops are connected for a more holistic customer experience.

Xiaohongshu – the death of a dream

Details: The company confirmed the offline store closures when contacted by TechNode on Thursday.

  • The offline store was only an experimental, new retail project, a company spokeswoman said in a written response, adding that most of the company’s offline stores were profitable after operating for a year.
  • “The goal for the new retail push was not store number and revenue size. With the aim to build more shopping scenarios to facilitate efficient and in-depth integration between users and brands, we will continue to adjust our strategy,” (our translation) the spokeswoman said.
  • She declined to comment on the plan for offline stores in other cities.
  • Xiaohongshu rolled out on Wednesday a new analytics tool for quality content contributors to better manage and interact with their audiences. Content generators with a following exceeding 5,000 fans and more than 2,000 views each for at least 10 posts during the past six months can apply for the feature, provided that they have a good history record in complying with the app’s rules.

Context: Xiaohongshu opened its first RedHome physical store at Shanghai’s Joy City mall in June 2018 and gradually expanded to cities in the Yangtze River Delta region such as Suzhou, Hangzhou, and Ningbo.

  • The number of offline stores it has opened is unknown.
  • One day earlier, the company announced its plan to open up to more merchants by broadening its restrictive vendor account parameters to include sellers of all sizes rather than just trademarked brands.
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Xiaohongshu opens to more sellers to speed up monetization https://technode.com/2020/01/15/xiaohongshu-lowers-merchant-entry-commercialization/ https://technode.com/2020/01/15/xiaohongshu-lowers-merchant-entry-commercialization/#respond Wed, 15 Jan 2020 06:48:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125954 xiaohongshu taobao social tiktok e-commerceXiaohongshu is pushing its commercialization initiative forward as it struggles to land on a successful and scaleable monetization model.]]> xiaohongshu taobao social tiktok e-commerce
xiaohongshu seller account merchant fake reviews brand
The exterior of a Xiaohongshu offline store in Shanghai on Nov. 24, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Social e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu on Tuesday said that it is opening up to more merchants by broadening its restrictive vendor account parameters to include sellers of all sizes rather than just trademarked brands, Chinese media reported.

Why it matters: Xiaohongshu, also known as RED, is pushing its commercialization initiative forward as it looks to improve monetization of its users and traffic. The app is one of a number of content-driven apps which have struggled to land on a successful and scaleable monetization model.

  • China’s social e-commerce users were expected to hit 713 million by 2019, up 17.3% year on year from 608 million in 2018, according to data from research institute Iimedia.
  • In addition to traditional e-commerce rivals like Alibaba and JD.com, Xiaohongshu is competing with short video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou, as well as WeChat, which saw a spike in e-commerce transactions via its mini program feature.

Xiaohongshu battles to regain user trust amid KOL purge

Details: Xiaohongshu’s official brand accounts had previously only been open to trademarked brands. Now, the platform has broadened the category to “enterprise accounts” and allows merchants of different sizes to sell on the platform as long as they have a valid business operating license in China or overseas.

  • Users of the enterprise account will have access to several free features such as data intelligence, custom mobile-friendly web pages, operating tools, and fan base integration capabilities.
  • In addition, the account also includes a location-based recommendation feature to allow sellers to connect with buyers both online and offline.

Context: Xiaohongshu had a tough 2019, during which it faced growing criticism from the public on the number of fraudulent reviews on the platform, censure from the government for unauthorized user data collection, and tried to commercialize at the cost of its partners.

  • The official brand account feature, rolled out at the beginning of 2019, has registered 29,000 brands from 23 industries.
  • Xiaohongshu was pulled from major Chinese Android app stores in July and then from the iOS store in August last year before it returned to the stores more than three months later.
  • The company said it had a total of 250 million users and more than 85 million monthly active users as of June.
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Weibo pushes into social commerce with Ymatou investment https://technode.com/2020/01/14/weibo-pushes-into-social-commerce-with-ymatou-investment/ https://technode.com/2020/01/14/weibo-pushes-into-social-commerce-with-ymatou-investment/#respond Tue, 14 Jan 2020 08:26:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125890 Weibo sina twitterDeeper integration with e-commerce sites will provide a boost for Weibo, a content platform launched in 2009, to compete with social commerce players.]]> Weibo sina twitter

Chinese cross-border e-commerce site Ymatou announced on Monday that it has closed a Series D worth tens of millions of dollars from China’s microblogging platform Weibo, local media reported.

Why it matters: Content-driven e-commerce is big business in China. Deeper integration with e-commerce sites will provide a boost for Weibo, launched in 2009, to compete with other platforms including those in the social commerce segment.

  • Weibo in September rolled out Oasis, a Xiaohongshu challenger, in an effort to fend off competition from the lifestyle and cross-border e-commerce app.
  • The new funding puts Ymatou at a stronger financial position to compete with larger players like Alibaba-backed Kaola, JD’s cross-border e-commerce unit, Vipshop, and others.

Weibo testing new social lifestyle app, Oasis

Details: In addition to Weibo, online celebrity Niurouge, or Beef Brother, invested RMB 100 million into Ymatou to become a partner of the company. Beef Brother has 5.78 million followers on Douyin and has helped to sell a total of RMB 1 billion worth of goods through his more than 17,000 short videos.

  • The new proceeds will be used to explore short video and live-streaming initiatives. Expansion to these two features is increasingly becoming standard practice for e-commerce platforms, especially considering sales numbers from the past Singles Day.
  • Ymatou was profitable in 2019, company founder and CEO Zeng Bibo said at an announcement ceremony for the funding held in Shanghai on Monday.
  • Under the partnership, Weibo is going to help boost the traffic and build the Ymatou brand by opening up resources including marketing and access to influencers, known as Key Opinion Leaders (KOL).
  • The company’s homegrown logistics arm Xlobo International covers 15 countries and regions and its known for its commitment to ship cross-border parcels within five days. The firm cooperates with courier SF Logistics for domestic deliveries.

Context: Founded in 2009, Ymatou is a consumer-to-consumer and manufacturer-to-consumer e-commerce marketplace which focuses on cross-border commerce and special sales for well-known overseas brands.

  • The Shanghai-based company received its most recent funding of $100 million in 2017 from China Merchants Global.
  • In late 2018, Weibo announced plans to invest RMB 2 billion over the next two years to support content-driven e-commerce, KOLs, actors, and agencies.
  • Alibaba acquired Netease’s cross-border e-commerce unit Kaola for approximately $2 billion in September, creating a dominant player in China’s rising cross-border e-commerce sector. Alibaba and Kaola jointly held more than half of the country’s cross-border e-commerce market, according to data from research firm Analysys.
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Alibaba to send red packets worth RMB 2 billion during Spring Festival gala https://technode.com/2020/01/13/alibaba-rmb-2-billion-spring-festival-hongbao/ https://technode.com/2020/01/13/alibaba-rmb-2-billion-spring-festival-hongbao/#respond Mon, 13 Jan 2020 06:08:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125803 Taobao 6.18 Alibaba e-commerceAlibaba is using one of the biggest televised events of the year to fend off competition from e-commerce rival Pinduoduo, now second only to Taobao in size.]]> Taobao 6.18 Alibaba e-commerce

Alibaba-owned e-commerce marketplace Taobao will send out RMB 2 billion (around $289.3 million) in cash via red packets during the Spring Festival holiday, according to Chinese media reports, half of which will be handed out during the annual televised Spring Festival Gala put on by state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV).

Why it matters: In cooperating with one of the most viewed shows in China for its red packet promotion, parent company Alibaba is trying to fend off competition from e-commerce rival Pinduoduo, which now has 536 million total users, second only to Alibaba’s 693 million in China.

  • Partnership with CCTV will help Alibaba to promote its new RMB 10 billion subsidy program offered through Juhuasuan, a flash sales platform available through the Taobao app.
  • The new initiative was launched in December to counter Pinduoduo’s own RMB 10 billion subsidy program, which the company has touted as helping the Shanghai-based social e-commerce maintain robust user growth over the past year.

Pinduoduo’s growth, by the numbers

Details: Taobao announced on Jan. 11 that it is CCTV’s exclusive e-commerce partner for the Spring Festival Gala, a show which has run every year for the past three decades. This is the second year of cooperation between Alibaba and CCTV.

  • As part of the RMB 1 billion gala promotion, Taobao will pay for all items in the shopping charts for 50,000 people watching the Spring Festival Gala, a jump from last year when it paid for items in 1,000 shopping carts.
  • The gala will be held on the eve of the festival, which falls on Jan. 24.

Context: Chinese tech giants clamor to sponsor the CCTV event, which was viewed by 1.17 billion people last year, with red packets a common gimmick used to promote e-commerce, internet payments, or social networks.

  • Using red envelopes as a tactic to gain followers began in 2015 when Tencent’s WeChat, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Sina Weibo all used the marketing strategy. WeChat won the battle that year, thanks to its partnership with the Spring Festival Gala when it sent out RMB 500 million worth of cash and e-coupons to a public that was then largely unfamiliar with platform.
  • The red packet promotion during the gala spurred a spike in users who connected their bank accounts to the app.
  • Short video platform Kuaishou is also planning to reward viewers with cash totaling RMB 1 billion as another gala sponsor this year.
  • Spring Festival has become an increasingly important event for Chinese consumption and triggered a rise in Taobao “Family Accounts” since December.
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Meituan rolls out new credit payment feature https://technode.com/2020/01/10/meituan-credit-payment-tool/ https://technode.com/2020/01/10/meituan-credit-payment-tool/#respond Fri, 10 Jan 2020 06:17:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125663 MeituanWith Maidan, Meituan is competing head-on with Alipay, JD.com, and Tencent, which also have their own virtual credit payment tools.]]> Meituan
Meituan
Screenshots of Meituan’s credit payment feature. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese services platform Meituan Dianping has unveiled a credit payment feature named Maidan, following its technology peers which have launched similar services.

Why it matters: Meituan is deepening its fintech offerings, an important component for platform’s core service businesses which require payment transactions.

  • With this push, the Chinese food delivery giant is competing head-on with Alipay, JD.com, and Tencent, which also have their own virtual credit payment tools.
  • The new feature will bring additional revenue through fees charged for installment payment services and late payments.

Meituan shares hit historical high after Golden Week surge

Details: The new financial service offers users credit to delay payments by a month, and interest-free loans for up to 38 days.

  • The credit payment option now supports all the major apps within the company’s ecosystem including Dianping, ride hailing service Meituan Dache, and grocery delivery service Meituan Maicai.
  • Meituan users qualify for credit lines from RMB 300 (around $43) to RMB 1,500 according to credit and spending histories on the app.
  • A select group of merchants and users have been testing the credit payment feature since September.

Context: The Hong Kong-listed firm reported RMB 1.33 billion ($191 million) in profits in the third quarter of 2019, a second consecutive quarterly profit since its September 2018 listing.

  • Companies that run online payment services in China must obtain a license, which the firm nabbed through its acquisition of a third-party payment startup Qiandai in 2016.
  • In addition to the company’s homegrown payment channel Meituan Pay, the app also supports popular payment tools Alipay, WeChat Pay, and Apple Pay.
  • The app works with local banks such as Bank of Shanghai, Bank of Guangzhou and Bank of Qingdao to issue joint co-branded credit cards. It also offers loan services through its micro-credit subsidiary Meituan Sankuai Micro-loan.
  • Which Tencent only launched its Fenfu credit payment service in late 2019, JD.com launched Baitiao in 2014 and Alipay debuted Huabei in 2015.
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Spring Festival spurs a surge in Taobao ‘Family Accounts’ https://technode.com/2020/01/09/spring-festival-spurs-a-surge-in-taobao-family-accounts/ https://technode.com/2020/01/09/spring-festival-spurs-a-surge-in-taobao-family-accounts/#respond Thu, 09 Jan 2020 07:37:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125600 Taobao 6.18 Alibaba e-commerceThe Taobao 'Family Account' feature allows relatives to help with account set-up, pay for each others' items, and send product links to one another.]]> Taobao 6.18 Alibaba e-commerce

The number of users on Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao who have linked their accounts with those of their relatives spiked in December, the company said, as Spring Festival becomes an increasingly important event for Chinese consumption.

Why it matters: The surges presents an array of opportunities, allowing the company to expand penetration among older user segments to tap into China’s “silver economy” and gain insights from household spending data.

  • The account bonding is usually initiated by adult children to help less tech-savvy parents or grandparents with account set-up and mobile payment.

Details: The number of Taobao users who bind their accounts to those of their relatives surged 42% year on year beginning late December, according to the company.

  • Along with account linkage, the company said conversations through in-app family chat windows became very active as well.
  • Spring Festival couplet banners, traditional Tang-era costumes, and robotic vacuum cleaners are replacing snacks and nuts, healthcare products, and down jackets as the most popular products on the shopping platform.
  • The report also included payment statistics about the app’s “pay-for-me” feature: 48% of the feature’s users pay for goods selected by their wives’ parents compared with 33% of the feature’s users who pay for goods for their husband’s parents. A total of 65% of the feature’s users pay for goods selected through their wives’ accounts, while 31% pay for products selected by their parents.

Context: Taobao launched the “Family Accounts” feature in in February 2018, allowing users to bind their accounts to those of their relatives.

  • Once accounts are linked, family members can help with account set-up, pay for each others’ items, and send product links to one another through the chat feature.
  • Taobao reported that a total of 12 million users had bound their spouse’s account to their own as of Valentines Day 2019. Around half of couples were born post-1990.
  • Consumption during the week-long holiday is expected to reach RMB 1.10 trillion in 2020, making Spring Festival China’s largest consumption event, according to Iimedia Research.
  • The number of individuals over 60 years old is expected to exceed 255 million by 2020 in China—up from 230 million in 2016, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
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The Chinese startup using chatbots to revolutionize hotel bookings https://technode.com/2020/01/08/the-chinese-startup-using-chatbots-to-revolutionize-hotel-booking/ https://technode.com/2020/01/08/the-chinese-startup-using-chatbots-to-revolutionize-hotel-booking/#respond Wed, 08 Jan 2020 08:35:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125568 TravelFlan runs an artificial intelligence-enabled travel marketplace platform that uses chatbots. The firm is now valued at $27 million.]]>

Hong Kong-based TravelFlan is using chatbots to help corporates integrate online travel solutions into their existing products and services.

Backstory: TravelFlan runs an artificial intelligence-enabled travel marketplace platform. It has created chatbot technology to help companies sell travel to their existing user base.

  • The startup has secured more than $10 million in funding since its establishment in 2015.
  • Chief Executive and co-founder Abel Zhao is responsible for the firm’s growth strategy and sales. Zhao formerly led travel technology providers Travelport and Amadeus after helping Air Canada to build high-margin travel routes.
  • Managing Partner Wang Wenbin previously worked for Amadeus and Renault. He is responsible for overseas partnerships.

Unique selling point: TravelFlan utilizes a personalized chatbot engine to drive revenue creation from flight, air, hotel, and local experience bookings. They work with big corporate clients like Samsung and China Mobile. The solution allows them to engage existing users without developing their own travel systems.

  • The firm started as a consumer-facing service. Due to high user acquisition costs, the original model was unsustainable.
  • The company shifted focus to business-facing services in 2018.
  • Operation costs have since dropped by nearly three-quarters. User acquisition fees fell to zero. Other platforms typically spend millions of dollars on marketing, Managing Partner Wang Wenbin said.

“Many compare us with online travel agency platforms like Ctrip and Alibaba’s Fliggy. But we see them as partners rather than competitors because we are serving clients like Samsung and China Mobile who are important distribution channels for their online travel services. Through our chatbot service, they can reach a broader user base for our enterprise clients.” 

—Wang Wenbin, managing partner of TravelFlan

The investors: In December, TravelFlan received a $7 million A round from SPK AI Travel Tech Fund founded by Lazard Korea at a valuation of $27 million. Other investors in the round include Artesian Capital, Linear Venture, Construction-Radiant Tech Ventures Fund, Hong Kong Government ITVFC Fund, Artesian Capital, SOSV and its accelerator Chinaccelerator.

  • In 2017, the firm secured a $3 million Pre-A Series from Linear Venture and Cyberport Macro Fund.
  • Prior than that, TravelFlan has raised a $125,000 seed round from 500 Startups and GWC Innovator Fund in May 2016
Image credit: TechNode

Present condition: The company has developed two core technology solutions. The first is a text and voice-enabled AI personal concierge. The second is a one-stop management system. The system integrates supplier resources to cover inventory and data management, as well as distribution and customer analysis services.

  • Headquartered in Hong Kong, the company has offices in South Korea and Shanghai. They serve corporate clients like smartphone makers Samsung, China Mobile, Hong Kong Airlines, and SITA, an IT and telecommunication services provider for the air transport industry, among others.
  • About 70% of its current business comes from China, while 20% is from South Korea, and 10% from Southeast Asia.
  • TravelFlan’s product comes preinstalled on every Samsung Galaxy phone in Korea, according to the company. “Samsung gets a fee from every purchase of travel services and we get a 15% margin,” said Wang.
  • The platform has signed deals with 25 partners while 120 more are in the pipeline, according to Wang. It also works with more than 100 travel content and product suppliers including Asian booking platform Klook, Chinese platform Tuniu, and hotel chain Marriott.
  • TravelFlan generates revenues from research and development projects, monthly usage fees, sales profit-sharing, and advertising.
  • TravelFlan operates both business and consumer-oriented lines. Corporate services account for 85% of the overall business and the rest is from the consumer-facing segment— mainly on social networks like WeChat, Facebook and WhatsApp.

The landscape: The global travel market was worth $8.8 trillion in 2018 and the market is still growing.

  • The company is competing with other chatbot companies that focus on providing customer service solutions for the banking and financial industry, according to Wang.
  • In the meantime, chatbots are helping in increasing efficiency in the travel sector, in areas like customer service and bringing down human resources costs for airlines and OTAs.
  • Beijing-based AI chatbot Laiye, which also targets at online travel sector, merged with robotic process automation startup Uibot and closed a $35 million Series B round in 2019.

Prospects: With the December financing, TravelFlan plans to build the team and update the back-end system for its supply chain and ordering system.

  • After launching the first enterprise-facing project in July 2018, the company records a stable income of around HK$ 10 million monthly income. With the launch of new projects, the company’s revenue is expected to double or triple this year.
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JD.com to issue $1 billion debt offering https://technode.com/2020/01/08/jd-issues-1-billion-notes/ https://technode.com/2020/01/08/jd-issues-1-billion-notes/#respond Wed, 08 Jan 2020 06:50:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125527 JD is joining other Chinese tech companies in seeking out cheaper debt as the country's economic slowdown continues.]]>

JD.com is planning a $1 billion note offering to refinance and fund general operations, according to a filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday.

Why it matters: The Beijing-based e-commerce company is joining other domestic tech firms in seeking out cheaper capital as China’s economic slowdown continues. Alibaba’s blockbuster $13 billion secondary IPO in Hong Kong set a precedent for its peers.

  • JD raised $1 billion in its 2016 debut on the global bond market. The first five-year $500 million tranche offered at a 3.125% rate will be due in around a year.
  • US-listed Chinese tech firms including search engine Baidu, online travel booking platform Trip.com, and gaming firm Netease are reportedly proceeding with secondary listings in Hong Kong.
  • In addition to Alibaba, rival e-commerce platform Pinduoduo raised new capital with its $1 billion convertible debt offering in September.

CHINA VOICES | JD’s vision of the future

Details: The public offering consists of $700 million of 3.375% notes due in 2030 and $300 million of 4.125% notes due in 2050, according to the filing.

  • The notes are expected to be listed on the Singapore exchange.
  • The company expects to receive net proceeds from the offering of approximately $988.3 million, after deducting underwriting discounts, commission, and expenses.
  • Bofa Securities and UBS are joint book runners for the deal.

“As Alibaba and Tencent have been actively expanding their ecosystems, issuing $1 billion notes gives JD more financial flexibilities and lowers its cost of capital; It puts the company at a stronger financial position to acquire new businesses.”

—Deborah Weinswig, analyst at research institute Coresight Research, in written response to TechNode

Context: JD recorded net revenue of RMB 134.8 billion ($18.9 billion) in the third quarter of 2019, an increase of 28.7% year on year and the highest quarterly growth for the past five quarters.

  • The company is reportedly in early discussions with banks for an overseas listing of its logistics affiliate, JD Logistics.
  • Founder and CEO Richard Liu last year stepped down from a series of top management roles at the company’s subsidiaries last year.

Updated: included additional information about the company’s 2016 bond offering and analyst comment.

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Bike rental firm Hello Global exceeds 300 million users https://technode.com/2020/01/07/hello-bike-300-million-users/ https://technode.com/2020/01/07/hello-bike-300-million-users/#respond Tue, 07 Jan 2020 08:58:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125487 Hello bike-rental bike sharing MobikeHello Global, a relative latecomer to the sector, has outrun rivals Mobike and Ofo thanks to its focus on lower-tier cities.]]> Hello bike-rental bike sharing Mobike

Ant Financial-backed bicycle rental platform Hello Global has said that it is the largest two-wheel transportation app in China with more than 300 million registered users, according to its 2019 annual report released on Monday.

Why it matters: As China’s bike rental boom cools, the relative latecomer to the sector has outrun rivals Mobike and Ofo thanks to its focus on lower-tier cities, business expansion beyond bike rentals, and backing from Alibaba’s fintech arm, Ant Financial.

  • Hello Global ranked first in June 2019 with 21.9 million monthly active users (MAU) on its app and 41.6 million MAU on the Alipay mini program, according to figures from data intelligence platform Quest Mobile. Mobike followed with 13.18 million MAU on app and 35.80 million on Alipay mini program during the same period.
  • China’s top bike rental firms including Hello Global and Mobike are raising bike rental rates in an effort to shift to sustainable business models.

Details: The company operates its bike rental business in 360 domestic cities while its electric bike rental service is available in 260 cities across the country. Hello Global’s carpooling service, which launched in January 2019, operates in more than 300 Chinese cities.

  • Around 70% of the platform’s use base is comprised of the internet-savvy segment born post-1980 and post-1990, though users in other age groups are rising, according to the report. The proportion of users born post-1960 and post-1970 rose to more than 20%, while the post-2000 user segment nears 10%.
  • The company said it has registered a total of 475 patents as of 2019, of which more than 170 are patents for inventions and more than 130 are patents for applications.
  • The firm has created more than 30,000 operation and maintenance positions since its launch, and 15% of this employee segment are between 40 to 50 years old.
  • Also known as Hello Bike and Hello Transtech, the company began using the Hello Global name in 2019 as it expands across the mobility industry, a company spokesman told TechNode.

Context: Launched in 2016, two years after Mobike and Ofo, Hello Global gained traction quickly as the first bike-sharing operator to focus its business within China’s smaller cities.

  • Hello Global, then Hello Bike, merged with Shanghai-listed competitor Youon Bike in October 2017.
  • Ant Financial has participated in four of the company’s seven funding rounds, which have raised a combined total of $1.8 billion.
  • China’s bike rental market was worth RMB 10.8 billion (around $155 million) in 2018, up 73% year on year driven by growth in lower-tier cities and standardization of bike rental services, according to data from research institute Analysys. Sector growth is expected to fall to 33% year on year with market size hitting RMB 14.4 billion in 2019, according to the report.
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Baidu eyeing secondary Hong Kong listing: report https://technode.com/2020/01/06/baidu-hong-kong-listing/ https://technode.com/2020/01/06/baidu-hong-kong-listing/#respond Mon, 06 Jan 2020 05:23:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125425 baidu quantum machine learning computingChina's largest search engine may be considering a listing on the Hong Kong exchange, following Alibaba's November blockbuster offering.]]> baidu quantum machine learning computing

US-listed Chinese search engine Baidu has reportedly completed an internal assessment for a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange, according to a Chinese media report published Monday.

Why it matters: A decision to proceed with the potential listing could expand the market capitalization for China’s largest search engine—currently $46 billion—and help shore up funds after a rough 2019.

  • Baidu in the first quarter of last year posted its first loss since its 2005 US initial public offering. The company faces increased competition for advertising revenue from rivals including Bytedance and Tencent.
  • Chinese online travel platform Trip.com and Netease, China’s second-biggest gaming firm, are reportedly in talks with the Hong Kong Exchange & Clearing Ltd. for secondary listings.
  • An offering in Hong Kong would help Chinese tech companies hedge risks as tensions between China and US intensify.

Details: Following Alibaba’s blockbuster secondary Hong Kong listing in November, reports that Baidu is looking to follow suit are circulating widely in Chinese media.

  • A spokeswoman from Baidu declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode on Monday.

Context: After raising HK$315.5 billion ($40.6 billion) through 184 IPOs in 2019, the Hong Kong exchange is expected to raise a total of between HK$230 billion and HK$260 billion in 2020, according to a report by PWC.

  • In 2005, Baidu raised a total of $109 million at a valuation of $117 million on Nasdaq.
  • Companies with at least two years of listing status on the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, or as a premium listing on the London Stock Exchange are qualified for a secondary listing in Hong Kong, according to the bourse’s listing regime.
  • Companies are required to have a minimum market capitalization of $10 billion and revenue of at least HK$1 billion in the most recent financial year, if market cap is less than HK$40 billion.
  • Around 30 of the more than 200 US-listed Chinese companies meet the standards, including online retailer JD, dating app Momo, anime video platform Bilibili, and online recruitment site 51job, according to Chinese financial news outlet IPO Zaozhidao.
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Trip.com, Netease in talks for secondary Hong Kong listings https://technode.com/2020/01/03/trip-com-netease-in-talks-for-secondary-hong-kong-listings/ https://technode.com/2020/01/03/trip-com-netease-in-talks-for-secondary-hong-kong-listings/#respond Fri, 03 Jan 2020 06:58:35 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125351 trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19The filings from Trip.com and Netease may signal an influx of US-listed Chinese tech companies looking to jump on the dual-listing bandwagon.]]> trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19

US-listed Chinese tech giants Trip.com and Netease are gearing up for potential secondary listings on the Hong Kong stock exchange, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Why it matters: Coming on the heels of Alibaba’s blockbuster $13 billion secondary listing in Hong Kong in November, the move may signal an influx of US-listed Chinese tech companies jumping on the dual-listing trend at a time when US authorities are heightening scrutiny of Chinese companies.

  • Hong Kong’s stock exchange has been hit hard by the city’s months-long pro-democracy protests. With more Chinese tech giants eyeing the market, the listings are seen as a vote of confidence and may boost the status of Hong Kong as a major capital hub.
  • Both Trip.com, China’s top online travel platform also known as Ctrip, and Netease, China’s second-biggest gaming firm, are among the biggest tech names in the country with a combined market value of about $60 billion, according to the report.

Details: Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. is in follow-up talks with Trip and Netease for their secondary listings on the bourse, according to Bloomberg.

  • The discussions are preliminary and subject to change, the report said.
  • Shares for the Hong Kong Exchanges rose 2.9% Thursday, their biggest gain in nearly four months, according to Bloomberg. Share prices rose as much as 3.7% by Friday afternoon.
  • Trip.com shares surged 10.2% and Netease stock price jumped 7.2% on Thursday.
  • A Netease spokesperson said the company would not comment on market rumors when contacted by TechNode on Friday. A Trip.com representative also declined to comment.

Context: Hong Kong removed the restriction on the dual-class structure in April 2018 to open the door for firms that sought to have share classes with different voting rights.

  • Trip.com made its debut on Nasdaq in 2003, raising $75.6 million at a valuation of $547 million. It now has a market cap of around $20.07 billion, according to figures from Yahoo Finance.
  • As one of the earliest Chinese tech firms to go public in the US, Netease went public in 2000 to raise $69.8 million. The company’s education unit Youdao made its debut in the US in October. The firm is planning to separately list its music-streaming service, Netease Cloud Music.
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Alibaba’s DAMO Academy expects large-scale blockchain in 2020 https://technode.com/2020/01/02/alibaba-damo-tech-trends-2020/ https://technode.com/2020/01/02/alibaba-damo-tech-trends-2020/#respond Thu, 02 Jan 2020 06:47:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125269 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mWhile beefing up its R&D investment, Alibaba is trying to monetizing its technology capabilities.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Large-scale blockchain applications with more than 10 million daily active items could gain mass adoption in 2020, according to a report from Alibaba global research program DAMO (Discovery, Adventure, Momentum, and Outlook) Academy on Wednesday.

Why it matters: China’s tech mainstays are piling in on the global drive toward deep-technology innovations with increasing focus and investment in research and development (R&D) capabilities.

  • This year’s report is the second time that Alibaba’s in-house R&D division has weighed in on major tech trends. DAMO predicted that real-time simulation of smart cities, commercialized blockchain technology, and applied 5G application would move forward in 2019.

Details: This year’s predictions cover multiple deep-tech sectors, from artificial intelligence and blockchain to the industrial internet of things.

  • Large-scale production-grade blockchain applications will gain mass adoption, the report states. The blockchain-as-a-service model will further reduce barriers of entry for enterprise applications.
  • AI will evolve from perceptual intelligence to cognitive intelligence, drawing inspiration from cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and human social history, the report continued.
  • The report predicts that processing-in-memory (PIM) innovations will spur on next-generation AI. PIM architecture involves the fusing of memory and processor together. Computations take place where data is stored with minimal data movement, allowing improved computation parallelism and efficiency.
  • DAMO expects the onset of 5G, the rapid development of IoT devices, as well as cloud and edge computing, to accelerate the fusion of information, communications, and industrial control systems in 2020.
  • Large-scale collaboration between machines will also become possible thanks to collaborations involving IoT and 5G, the report states.
  • The report also expects modular design to ease chip manufacturing and new materials to revolutionize semiconductor devices.

Context: Alibaba Group launched DAMO Academy in October 2017 to boost technical collaboration worldwide.

  • The $15 billion high tech unit has offices in Beijing, Hangzhou, Singapore, Seattle, Sunnyvale, Tel-Aviv, and New York.
  • DAMO has become an R&D engine for the tech giant, backing a series of projects from its neural network chip to cloud computing.
  • In addition to DAMO Academy, Alibaba leverages Luohan Academy to boost open-research.

Alibaba’s Luohan Academy celebrates first anniversary

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Meituan Dianping doubles down on cloud business https://technode.com/2019/12/31/meituan-cloud/ https://technode.com/2019/12/31/meituan-cloud/#respond Tue, 31 Dec 2019 04:07:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125213 Meituan announced in January that it would invest $1.7 billion to digitize its offline partners.]]>

Chinese food delivery-to-ticketing platform Meituan Dianping increased the registered capital of its cloud computing subsidiary by 8,600% on December 25, according to corporate intelligence information platform Tianyancha.com (in Chinese).

Why it matters: The change underlines Meituan’s push into the cloud computing market. Chinese tech giants previously focused on consumer-facing businesses are moving quickly to enterprise-facing services. Cloud computing is a major component of this.

  • Meituan’s push to cloud computing business is reminiscent of Alibaba and Tencent’s shift to enterprise-faced services.
  • The lifestyle services unicorn announced in January that it would invest RMB 11 billion (around $1.7 billion) this year to help merchants upgrade their operations and drive the growth of China’s “Delivery Economy,” a term that refers to the country’s on-demand services boom.

Easy digital growth drying up as China market matures

Details: The company’s commercial and business registration change shows that its registered capital increased 8,600% to RMB 870 million from RMB 10 million.

  • Meituan founder Wang Xing was replaced by Liu Minjuan as supervisor of the subsidiary.
  • Mu Rongjun, Meituan’s co-founder who owns 2.5% of the parent company, remains as executive chairman and manager of the cloud arm.
  • Mu Rongjun holds a dominating 95% stake in the subsidiary, while Wang Xing, who holds a minority 5% stake, is the ultimate beneficial owner of the firm.
  • A Meituan spokeswoman declined to comment on the change.

Meituan to invest $1.7 billion in push to digitize merchant partners

Context: Founded in June 2015, Meituan’s Beijing-based cloud computing arm is mainly engaged in data processing, technology consulting, infrastructure software services, application software services, software and equipment sales, and telecommunication.

  • The Hong Kong-listed parent group recorded a huge turnaround in 2019. It recorded a second quarterly profit with revenues increasing by 44.1% to RMB 27.5 billion from RMB 19.1 billion for the same period of 2018.
  • Alibaba rolled out in January the “A100” program. The program is designed to help companies embrace digital transformation as more tech giants are shifting to enterprise-facing services.
  • Tencent upgraded its organizational structure to focus on enterprise services and cloud computing last year.
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Didi called out for monopolistic practices in suicide note https://technode.com/2019/12/30/didi-blamed-suicide-note/ https://technode.com/2019/12/30/didi-blamed-suicide-note/#respond Mon, 30 Dec 2019 09:01:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125144 didi ride hailing carpooling serviceDidi is being accused of favoring unqualified cars over the qualified ones on its platform in a death note of Yan Baocai, whose car leasing company was forced out of business due to the ride-hailing giant's monopoly.]]> didi ride hailing carpooling service
The outside of one of Didi’s buildings on Oct 30, 2019 in Beijing. (Image credit: TechNode/Coco Gao) Credit: TechNode/Coco Gao

On Thursday, Yan Baocai, the owner of a car fleet company, attempted to commit suicide (in Chinese). In his suicide note, he blamed Didi for putting his company out of business. The note called Didi out for their monopolistic practices and especially their use of unlicensed cars.

Why it matters: After Uber China was bought by Didi, the ride-hailing company controls more than 80% of the market. As with other giants, Didi has become a target for both user and regulatory complaints. Over the past two years, Didi has been shadowed by the murders perpetrated during its rides. Now, this attempted suicide has once again thrust them into public scrutiny.

Details:  Yan tried to end his life on December 26 by taking medicine and liquor at home, hoping his death would raise social and governmental awareness of Didi’s problems.

  • Based out of Taiyuan of northern China’s Shanxi province, Yan’s company is mainly engaged in car leasing, vehicle and auto parts sales, and used car trading. Yan holds a 49% in the company, according to enterprise intelligence database Tianyancha.
  • Yan claimed that even though his firm met Didi’s and regulatory requirements, his cars were not allowed to operate on the Didi platform. According to his note, this was a huge blow since Didi owns almost the entire market.
  • The note also accused Didi of knowingly accepting unlicensed cars and drivers as well as covering the government fines incurred.
  • Yan was sent to a nearby hospital after his family discovered him. According to reports, his life is no longer in danger but has lost his will to live.
  • Didi responded with an open letter today, pledging to help Yan to solve his problem and improve the company’s services.
  • Didi represents over 82% of the 16,843 illegal cars on ride-hailing platforms in Shanghai, while Meituan accounts for 15%, according to the transportation authority of the city.
  • Tensions between Didi and local regulators has been escalating. Although the firm is quick to pay fines it’s been slow in removing the problematic vehicles.

Ride-hailers may face app store delisting over illegal drivers in Shanghai

Context: This is not the first entrepreneur suicide of recent note.

  • In 2017, the maker of WePhone committed suicide after being blackmailed for  RMB 10 million (roughly $1.5 million). His blackmailer was an ex-wife he met on Jiayuan.com.
  • More recently, a merchant on platform Taojiji committed suicide (in Chinese) after he was unable to get his money back from the bankrupt company.
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Kuaishou removes Taobao referrals https://technode.com/2019/12/30/kuaishou-suspends-taobao/ https://technode.com/2019/12/30/kuaishou-suspends-taobao/#respond Mon, 30 Dec 2019 04:06:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125104 KuaishouKuaishou suspended e-commerce referral features for products listed on Taobao stores.]]> Kuaishou

Kuaishou has suspended an e-commerce referral feature for Taobao products. The feature previously allowed listings from the e-commerce marketplace to be displayed in the short video app, local media reported.

Why it matters: The short video app has been doubling down on e-commerce features in the hope of commercializing its huge user base. Amid the company’s push into the e-commerce market, its potential cut of external partnerships with Alibaba’s Taobao might be a signal that the firm wants to foster its own e-commerce capability.

  • Content-driven e-commerce is a growing trend in China. More and more sellers use short video apps like Kuaishou and Douyin as effective ways to promote products. They are competing head-on with traditional e-commerce marketplaces like Taobao.
  • Tencent is reportedly going to invest $2 billion in the short video app’s $3 billion pre-IPO round at a valuation of $28.6 billion.

Details: Merchants on Kuaishou found that the can’t add product listings from Taobao stores since 23rd December.

  • A Kuaishou spokeswoman told TechNode that the feature suspension is caused by a system update, but she didn’t specify when the update will be finished and whether the feature will be restored after the update.
  • Product referals to other third-part platforms like JD, Youzan and Kuaishou-backed Mockuai are still available.

Kuaishou announces plans for 2020 Spring Festival Gala

Context: The company claims more than 200 million active users who spend an average of 60 minutes on the app per day. Of the total users, over 80% are post-90 generation youth. At present, the number of users who get income on the app reaches 19 million, according to the firm.

  • China’s new e-commerce law, which came into effect at the beginning of this year, broadens the definition of e-commerce operators to include players who do business through various online channels such as messaging apps like WeChat and video apps.
  • Douyin is also boosting its e-commerce features.
  • Similar to other e-commerce platforms, the Chinese short video app looks to tighten up its e-commerce offering.
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Perfect Diary plans to open 600 offline stores over next 3 years https://technode.com/2019/12/27/cosmetics-upstart-perfect-diary-offline/ https://technode.com/2019/12/27/cosmetics-upstart-perfect-diary-offline/#respond Fri, 27 Dec 2019 04:50:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=125032 Perfect DiaryPerfect Diary is among a rising group of homegrown brands that are finding increased popularity among younger demographics.]]> Perfect Diary

Perfect Diary is building up its offline presence with plans to launch 600 bricks-and-mortar stores countrywide within the next hree years, Chinese media reported. The company is well-known for creating new customer growth models.

Why it matters: Perfect Diary is among a rising group of homegrown brands, known as guohuo in Chinese, that are finding increased popularity among younger demographics.

  • The brand capitalized on China’s mature e-commerce environment to create brand awareness.
  • They used online-focused marketing strategies that include WeChat-based CRM as well as content marketing across platforms like Xiaohongshu, Weibo, and Bilibili.
  • They’ve also worked on co-branded products with KOLs, idols, and the British Museum and Chinese National Geography.

Alibaba eyes lower-tier, overseas markets to power Singles Day growth

Details: Yatsen E-commerce, the parent company of Perfect Diary created a new retail division at Fengxian District of Shanghai this Thursday.

  • The company already has offline stores in Shanghai, Hangzhou, Suzhou, and Nanjing. They will be launching new stores in eastern China’s Changzhou and Ningbo soon.
  • The Guangzhou-based company plans to speed up its offline expansion over the next three years by opening 600 stores countrywide. 200 will be located in eastern China, a more developed region in the country.
  • Targeting at the lower-tier market, the company’s retail head Feng Qiyao told local media they are aiming to have 80 stores in China’s third- or fourth-tier cities by 2020, up from three so far this year.
  • To fuel the offline expansion, the firm plans to hire 3,000 beauty consultants for the new stores.

Context: Founded in 2016, Perfect Diary is an e-commerce-based cosmetic brand targeting young Asian female users.

  • The company reportedly completed a new financing round from Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia Capital and Chinese Culture Group at a valuation of over $1 billion this September.
  • As part of Alibaba’s new brand and product-boosting initiative, Taobao and Tmall president Jiang Fan pledged to help launch 100 million new products as well as incubate another 100 new brands with the goal of generating RMB 1 billion ($149 million) in sales each over the future three years.
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Tencent releases Zoom-like video conferencing app https://technode.com/2019/12/26/tencent-releases-zoom-like-video-conferencing-app/ https://technode.com/2019/12/26/tencent-releases-zoom-like-video-conferencing-app/#respond Thu, 26 Dec 2019 04:10:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124892 Tencent MeetingAlong with other giants, Tencent is moving more and more into enterprise services, an undeveloped sector for the Chinese tech industry.]]> Tencent Meeting

Tencent rolled out on Wednesday a Zoom-like video conferencing app dubbed Tencent Meeting amid its push to enterprise-facing services.

Why it matters: Expansion out of traditional consumer-facing gaming and social businesses to enterprise-facing services underlines the company’s efforts to seek a new growth narrative and build a new moat against rising upstarts.

  • Tencent is making the transition along with rival Alibaba. The e-commerce company is also moving into business-facing services since the beginning of this year.
  • The size of China’s video conferencing market surged 36.2% year on year to RMB 3.1 billion ($439 million) in 2018, according to data from research institute CCW Research.
  • Tencent Meeting was launched a few months after Zoom was blocked in the country. Chinese users of the US video-conferencing tool were forced to switch to a local version after the blockage.
  • In addition to Zoom, the app is competing with local rivals like Shenzhen-listed BizConf Telecom and XYlink, among others.

China’s Zoom users switch to local version after blockage

Details: Launched by Tencent Cloud, Tencent Meeting is a communications software that combines video conferencing, online meetings, chat, and mobile collaboration by leveraging cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and online security technologies.

  • Currently, the free version allows individual users to invite up to 25 participants for 45 minutes.
  • The professional version, which can invite up to 100 participants, is priced at RMB99 ($14) per month. The enterprise version supports meetings with over 300 callers.
  • Users can log in via their mobile number, or through WeChat account login, a common sight on new Tencent apps.
  • The conferences created are shareable through WeChat, WeChat Work and QQ. Meeting participants who haven’t download the app can join through WeChat mini program, or WeChat Work.
  • The company claims to maintain ultra-low latency of 80 ms while maintaining high picture quality. Other notable localized features of the app includes video filters and background blurring.

Context: The Chinese tech firm launched an organizational overhaul last September to fuel the enterprise-faced transition.

  • As part of the refocusing, the Chinese internet giant aims to invest billions of dollars to spur the company’s push into cloud computing aimed at business clients.
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Meituan Dianping hires outside leadership to boost growth https://technode.com/2019/12/25/meituan-dianping-hires-outside-leadership-to-boost-growth/ https://technode.com/2019/12/25/meituan-dianping-hires-outside-leadership-to-boost-growth/#respond Wed, 25 Dec 2019 04:17:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124731 Li Shubin will become head of the Meituan app division, a key position for driving growth for the parent company.]]>
Meituan, food delivery,
A Meituan delivery person on his bike in Shanghai on March 23, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

Meituan Dianping, China’s all-encompassing platform for local services, has appointed Li Shubin as vice president to oversee its giant app Meituan, Sina Finance is reporting

Why it matters: The appointment of Li, the former CEO of Chinese e-commerce site OkBuy, marks a rare case for the Chinese tech giant to hire externally to head its core business unit. The move sends a signal that the company is seeking for new changes to boost future growth.

  • While the food delivery industry is entering the “second-half era”, the sector is quickly saturating with “over 80% of the targeted users have used the services”, according to Wang Puzhong, senior vice president of Meituan Dianping.
  • Transaction volume for China’s online food delivery market in 2019 is set to expand at its lowest rate in four years, according to a report from mobile intelligence platform Trustdata.
  • Meanwhile, competition from Alibaba’s local life unit, Ele.me and Koubei, remains fierce.

Announcing our newest in-focus premium newsletter: Meituan-Dianping

Details: Li will be the head for the Meituan app division, a unit that responsible R&D, product, and operation of the super app. The new role puts Li as the key person for driving the parent company’s growth.

  • Li Shubin will report directly to Wang Huiwen, leader of the firm’s user platform.
  • Li Ming, former head of the app, will be the executive chairman of the company’s product committee to focus on the construction of the product committee. He will continue to report to Wang Huiwen, chairman of the product committee.

Context: The Chinese O2O giant rolled out a structural reshuffle in October 2018, building its user platform, which covers the Meituan platform, the Dianping platform, and the service experience platform; as well as the LBS (location-based service) platform, which covers its bike rental and ride-hailing services.

  • The firm has launched a series of adjustments since the beginning this year to maintain robust user growth, such as integrating Meituan Bike, former Mobike, and weather tool features into the app.
  • The group’s annual transacting users grew by 14.0% to 435.8 million in the twelve months ended September 30, 2019, from 382.3 million in the same period a year ago.
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JD Logistics reportedly preparing for $10 billion IPO https://technode.com/2019/12/24/jd-logistics-reportedly-preparing-for-10-billion-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/12/24/jd-logistics-reportedly-preparing-for-10-billion-ipo/#respond Tue, 24 Dec 2019 05:53:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124599 JDJD Logistics, with its assets in supply chain, logistics, and warehouses, is one of the most valuable properties of the Chinese e-commerce giant. ]]> JD

JD Logistics, the logistics arm of Chinese online retailer JD.com, is in early discussions with banks about raising $8 billion to $10 billion through an overseas initial public offering (IPO), Reuters reported on Monday.

Why it matters: JD Logistics, with its assets in supply chain, logistics, and warehouses, is one of the most valuable properties of the Chinese e-commerce giant. The possible IPO could come as the company continues to open its delivery and warehousing services to third-party companies in a bid to commercialize its delivery capacities.

  • The once-loss making unit saw growing momentum this year. The logistics company expanded its third-party businesses with external revenues accounted for nearly 40% of its total revenues in the third quarter.
  • JD founder and CEO Richard Liu stepped down as manager of a Xi’an-based unit that wholly owns JD Logistics on December 5th. He still holds a substantial 45% indirect stake in the subsidiary.

JD readies for life after Richard Liu

Details: The possible IPO is expected to value the company at $30 billion at least, Reuters reported, citing a source who declined to be named.

  • The company is expected to select banks for the IPO in the second quarter of next year. The final debut could take place in the second half of 2020, the source added.
  • The listing destination hasn’t been decided yet. Hong Kong and New York are possible choices, the source told Reuters.
  • The funds will be used for warehouse expansion and potential acquisitions.
  • A representative of the firm declined to comment on the matter when asked by TechNode.

Context: The Chinese e-commerce tycoon spun off its logistics arm into a standalone business in April 2017, pivoting from an internal department into an express delivery company servicing both consumers and enterprises.

  • The unit raised $2.5 billion in February 2018 from a range of backers including investment firm Hillhouse Capital, China Development Bank Capital, as well as Tencent.
  • The transaction, which was JD Logistics’ first outside funding event, valued the company at around $13.5 billion.
  • JD Logistics raised $218 million in an RMB-dominated industrial fund this June to invest in startups.
  • As of June 30, 2019, the online retailer operated approximately 600 warehouses.
  • The total warehouses covered an aggregate gross floor area of over 15 million square meters, including approximately 2.5 million square meters managed under the JD Logistics Open Warehouse Platform.
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Meituan driver stabbing revives working conditions debate https://technode.com/2019/12/23/meituan-driver-stabbing-revives-working-conditions-debate/ https://technode.com/2019/12/23/meituan-driver-stabbing-revives-working-conditions-debate/#respond Mon, 23 Dec 2019 09:57:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124548 retail e-commerce MeituanPoor working conditions for the 6 million delivery drivers powering Meituan Dianping and Alibaba’s Ele.me have been a topic of controversy in the past.]]> retail e-commerce Meituan

A deliveryman for food delivery platform Meituan stabbed a Miniso store employee to death on Sunday following an argument about an order, the police for the central Chinese city of Wuhan said, highlighting issues around increasingly popular lifestyle delivery services in the country.

Why it matters: The incident has sparked heated discussion on Chinese social media over the working conditions for the millions of food delivery drivers powering the rise of major internet lifestyle platforms.

Food delivery: Drivers take the risks. Platforms reap the rewards.

Details: Local police received an alert around 2 a.m. on Dec. 22 when witnesses reported that 32-year-old deliveryman, surnamed Chen, was attacking a store employee in a shopping mall in the Hongshan District of Wuhan, according to a post from its official account on microblogging platform Weibo.

  • Chen had a dispute with the employee, surnamed Zhou, when picking up orders from the chain store where he worked, although additional details were unclear.
  • Following the incident, the deliveryman was put into criminal detention after struggling to escape (in Chinese).
  • Miniso, a Chinese low-cost chain retailer, confirmed that the victim was one of its employees at its Wuhan outlet.
  • Local media reports speculated that Chen was angry after Zhou wrote him a bad review on the Meituan platform. A Meituan announcement refuted the rumor, saying that Chen did not get a bad review for the order and the platform did not receive a complaint call about him.
  • Meituan added that they have set up an investigation group for the case and pledged to improve their services.
  • Comments on Weibo, or China’s version of Twitter, were mixed. Some sympathized with Chen, whom they speculated was working under intense pressure.
  • “It’s easy for people to go extremes when fined after days of hard work for only one bad review,” (our translation) a Weibo user going by the handle “Zhaoxiaopi Mulinsen” said, referring to delivery platform policy to dock pay for poor user feedback.
  • Others argued that no excuse should justify murder. “I only see a murder in this case,” another Weibo user nicknamed “Heibaihui Guduhuanzhe” commented.

Context: Delivery drivers are frequently migrant workers from remote areas who send money home to support family, and lack protections that come with an employee contract such as social and health insurance.

  • China’s food delivery market is now dominated by two top players—Meituan Dianping and Alibaba’s Ele.me—which employ a total of 6 million registered couriers.
  • Such market domination can translate into to low wages, leading to labor strikes.
  • Transaction volume for China’s online food delivery market in 2019 is set to expand at its lowest rate in four years, according a report from mobile intelligence platform Trustdata.
  • In addition to couriers, small restaurant owners that initially benefited from online platforms when they began to catch hold now face pressured margins by cooperating with food delivery platforms.
  • The news dealt a blow to the Chinese food delivery giant after it recorded a second quarter of profit in the third quarter.
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Idle Fish used goods platform adds LBS to boost social buying https://technode.com/2019/12/19/idle-fish-used-goods-platform-adds-lbs-to-boost-social-buying/ https://technode.com/2019/12/19/idle-fish-used-goods-platform-adds-lbs-to-boost-social-buying/#respond Thu, 19 Dec 2019 08:41:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124394 Alibaba-owned second-hand goods marketplace Idle Fish boasts 1.3 million interest-based communities, a key sales driver.]]>

Alibaba’s second-hand goods marketplace Idle Fish has added a location-based-service (LBS) feature in its latest update released Wednesday, as it redoubles efforts to support a rising e-commerce segment.

Why it matters: The company’s new initiative will help drive consumption through community engagement, linking people that are geographically close to each other or who share similar interests.

  • Launched by Taobao in 2014, Idle Fish, known in China as Xianyu, is now the country’s largest used goods selling platform with 24.4 million monthly active users (MAU) as of March, based on figures from analytics firm Big Data-Research. Its users tend to be young, with more than half born after 1990, the company has said.
  • China’s resale goods market reached RMB 694 billion ($99 billion) in 2018, up 22% year on year from RMB 567 billion in 2017, according to data from iiMedia Research.

Four cornerstones for China’s 2nd-hand goods exchange unicorn

Details: The new feature allows users to filter product listings according to seller location in a bid to boost transactions on the platform, which drives sales through its 1.3 million interest-based communities, according to its September 2019 quarterly earnings filing.

  • Additionally, the update signals greater focus on key features such as livestreams and content from key opinion leaders (KOLs), which are featured prominently on the home page.
  • The app update is only available for Android at present.
  • The company has also been expanding offline since the beginning of this year by setting up brick-and-mortar stores in eight, mainly top-tier, cities including Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.

Context: Different from Taobao where sales are king, Idle Fish is a used-goods C2C marketplace that emphasizes community engagement. There are many interest-based communities for kids and baby goods, for example, where parents can exchange tips. Location is an important feature for the community element.

  • As part of Taobao’s ecosystem, the used goods marketplace generated upwards of RMB 100 billion in annual gross merchandise volume (GMV) in fiscal year 2019, according to the company, a negligible portion of the RMB 5.73 trillion total GMV the company’s retail marketplaces earned during the same time period.
  • Reselling “idle” items is on the rise as China’s consumers grow wealthier. The rental economy has also primed Chinese consumers for second-hand good sales.
  • Idle Fish had 1.3 million interest-based communities and 60 million active sellers of long-tail products including second-hand, recycled, refurbished and for-rent products, as of fiscal year 2019.
  • Mirroring Taobao’s efforts to create quality content, Idle Fish announced its plans to foster 100,000 key opinion leaders (KOLs) in April this year.
  • Competitors include Tencent-backed Zhuanzhuan, JD-backed Aihuishou, and classifieds platform 58.com.
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Tencent boosts its stake in discount retailer Vipshop to 9.6% https://technode.com/2019/12/18/tencent-boosts-its-stake-in-discount-retailer-vipshop-to-9-6/ https://technode.com/2019/12/18/tencent-boosts-its-stake-in-discount-retailer-vipshop-to-9-6/#respond Wed, 18 Dec 2019 05:53:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124261 vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduoThe gaming giant has been incrementally growing its stake in the discount retailer for two years.]]> vipshop alibaba e-commerce discount pinduoduo

Chinese tech giant Tencent has increased its stake in Chinese online retailer site Vipshop to 9.6% from 8.7%, upping its push into the country’s crowded e-commerce industry.

Why it matters: The bigger stake grants Tencent increased control over the discount retailer, something it has sought for the past two years. The gaming and social conglomerate is pushing further onto Alibaba’s turf by leveraging its messaging service WeChat and its online payment systems to drive shopping demand.

  • Support from Tencent is expected to fuel the US-listed firm’s expansion, which has seen growth slow as competition intensifies from Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and Xiaohongshu.
  • Vipshop’s core base of young, female shoppers complements Tencent’s businesses.

Content emerges as new driver of Chinese e-commerce

Details: Shenzhen-based Tencent purchased an aggregate of 6.47 million American depositary shares (ADS) in Vipshop for a combined $84.19 million in the open market through a series of transactions from Nov. 25 to Dec. 13, according to a Vipshop filing on Tuesday.

  • Tencent acquired the shares through a wholly owned subsidiary at an average trading price of $13.01 per ADS.
  • After the transaction, Tencent remains the company’s second-largest shareholder after company CEO Shen Ya, who holds 12.7%.
  • Vipshop’s shares on Tuesday climbed 3.5% to a fresh high for 2019 at $14.34 each, boosting its market capitalization to $9.6 billion, but share price remains only half of its historical high of $30.0 apiece from April 2015.

Context: Tencent and JD.com stuck a deal with Vipshop in 2017 to jointly invest $863 million in the online discount retail platform for 7% and 5.5% stake in the company, respectively. Tencent and JD.com’s two-year Vipshop share lockups expire Wednesday.

  • Tencent bought 5.8 million Vipshop shares to grow its stake to 7.8% late last year, then further boosted its stake in March this year to 8.7%, according to the company.
  • In addition to Tencent, company filings show that JD.com has also boosted its stake in Vipshop to 7.6% in August.
  • The company’s total net revenue grew 10% to 19.6 billion yuan ($2.7 billion) in the third quarter, slowing from 16.4% for the same year-ago period.
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China’s food delivery growth slows to four-year low: report https://technode.com/2019/12/17/chinas-food-delivery-growth-slows-to-four-year-low-report/ https://technode.com/2019/12/17/chinas-food-delivery-growth-slows-to-four-year-low-report/#respond Tue, 17 Dec 2019 08:39:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124203 Expansion in the food delivery sector has decelerated sharply from 2017 and 2018.]]>

The transaction volume of China’s online food delivery market for 2019 is set to expand at its lowest rate in four years, according a report from mobile intelligence platform Trustdata.

Why it matters: After booming in 2015, China’s food delivery market has experienced rapid growth with the rise of tech giants Meituan and Ele.me. As the market matures, however, growth is gradually slowing.

  • The annual expansion rate of around 30% for this year is still healthy but much slower than 55.4% in 2018 and 65.7% in 2017.
  • As food delivery continues to grow, calls are increasing for the industry to focus on food safety as well as environmental issues arising from the use of disposable packaging materials.

Food delivery: Drivers take the risks. Platforms reap the rewards.

Details: The sector’s transaction volume is expected to expand 30.8% year on year to hit RMB 603.5 billion ($86.2 billion) in 2019, according to the report.

  • The sector’s transaction volume reached RMB 120 billion in Q1, RMB 143 billion in Q2, and RMB 179 billion in Q3 this year.
  • The penetration rate of online food delivery services is forecast to reach 14.2% in 2019, up from 10.8% in 2018, according to the report citing research from mobile data intelligence service Trustdata.
  • China’s online food delivery users are overwhelmingly young with nearly two-thirds coming from the post-80s and post-90s generations.
  • Food still accounts for most online deliveries, followed by desserts and drinks, a segment which rose 88% year on year in Q3.
  • Male users tend to order more meals, while female users order across different categories, the report said.

Context: After years of cash-burning to gain market share, China’s online food delivery market has two clear winners.

  • Meituan dominates with 65.1% share of the market, and Ele.me has 32.8% share while the others combined account for 2.1%, according to report from research institute Analysys.

Correction: an earlier version of this story cited Meituan as the author of the report, not Trustdata.

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Lazada alumni’s Intrepid Group closes Series A, to bring Chinese brands to SEA https://technode.com/2019/12/16/lazada-alumnis-intrepid-group-closes-series-a-to-bring-chinese-brands-to-sea/ https://technode.com/2019/12/16/lazada-alumnis-intrepid-group-closes-series-a-to-bring-chinese-brands-to-sea/#respond Mon, 16 Dec 2019 04:49:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124115 e-commerceSoutheast Asia boasts a rising middle class and increasingly tech-savvy consumers.]]> e-commerce

Intrepid Group, a Southeast Asian e-commerce consultancy, announced that it has closed its Series A for an undisclosed amount to help Chinese brands tap the rapidly growing Southeast Asian e-commerce industry.

Why it matters: Similar to China a few years ago, countries in Southeast Asia (SEA) have a rapidly rising middle class and increasingly tech-savvy consumers, and is a popular destination for Chinese brands and e-commerce platforms looking to expand in search of growth.

  • E-commerce in SEA is forecasted to be worth $40 billion in 2019, and is expected to rise to $150 billion by 2025, according to a Bain & Company report.
  • Export cross-border commerce is rising as Chinese e-commerce marketplaces like Alibaba and JD.com, as well as smaller players such as Club Factory, are jumping on board.

“E-commerce environment in South East Asia is very different from China. There are many local platforms to sell on, Lazada, Shopee, Tokopedia, Facebook, Instagram. Advertising is done via Google and Facebook. South East Asia is also very fragmented, there are 6 markets with very different consumers, different cultures, different languages, different regulations.”

Charles Debonneuil, Intrepid Group CEO and co-founder of Lazada Group, in a statement

Overcoming market fragmentation is key to success in SEA: Lazada founder

Details: Singapore-based Intrepid Group was founded in 2017 and is run by co-founders and former executives of Alibaba-backed Lazada. It offers management services on e-commerce platforms.

  • The round was lead by SEA venture capital firm Kairous Capital, and followed by Sun SEA Capital, a venture capital firm backed by Malaysian conglomerates Sunway Group as well as early stage-investment firm 500 Startups Vietnam.
  • The company has already set up core e-commerce operations across Southeast Asia, and tested the services with well-known local brands.
  • The funding will be put toward the company’s second stage of growth: helping Chinese brands enter the Southeast Asian market. Chinese-speaking local teams in each SEA market will help Chinese clients to understand the regional e-commerce industry.
  • The company already has offices in Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, and Vietnam, and is starting operations in Thailand and Malaysia.

Context: In April 2019, Intrepid raised $2 million in funding from several Swedish family offices at a post-money valuation of $9 million.

  • Lazada is an important component of Alibaba’s overseas expansion. The e-commerce giant gained control of Lazada in 2016 by acquired 51% stake with an investment of $1 billion. Alibaba further increased its stake to 83% with another $1 billion investment in June 2017 and then an additional $2 billion in 2018.
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China’s social travel platform Mafengwo to lay off 40% of staff https://technode.com/2019/12/13/chinas-social-travel-platform-mafengwo-to-lay-off-40-of-staff/ https://technode.com/2019/12/13/chinas-social-travel-platform-mafengwo-to-lay-off-40-of-staff/#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2019 08:43:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124071 The company was summoned by authorities in March for failing to comply with content regulations.]]>

Chinese travel platform Mafengwo may be laying off 40% of its employees, our sister site TechNode Chinese reported on Friday.

Why it matters: Tencent-backed Mafengwo, once a top travel site in China known for its user-generated reviews and other travel-based content, is losing out to larger rivals after a number of scandals this year battered its reputation among China’s consumers.

  • China’s online travel market was worth $44.7 billion in 2018, the world’s second-biggest after the US. However, data for this year’s week-long National Day holiday, peak holiday travel season beginning Oct.1, signaled that Chinese consumers are tightening their belts and spending less on travel.
  • The company faces stiff competition for its travel booking services from bigger rivals like Alibaba’s Fliggy and Ctrip.

Details: Discussion about Mafengwo’s layoffs have been circulating on the Chinese professional networking platform Maimai since the beginning of this week.

  • The company is going to fire around 40% of its employees, said a verified Mafengwo employee in a Maimai post on Wednesday, adding that the firm will begin discussions with staff on Thursday.
  • The cuts will affect departments throughout the company, the person said, but the deal-making division will suffer the most. The fired employees will be compensated based on the “N+2” model, meaning monthly salary equivalent to the number of years at the company plus two additional months.
  • Another Maimai user who identified himself as a Mafengwo employee confirmed the layoffs on Wednesday, with a number of other users who said they were employees confirming the job cuts in comments below his post.
  • Mafengwo did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Mafengwo accused of faking 85% of all user-generated content

Context: Once a top player in China’s online travel agency industry, Mafengwo raised $503 million in five financing rounds, according to startup database Crunchbase.

  • The company’s image has taken a beating over the past year after it was accused in October 2018 of faking 85% of all user-generated content.
  • The company was then summoned by authorities in March for failing to comply with content regulations.
  • In August, the firm was accused of allowing sellers to fake orders and post fictional reviews to drive traffic.
  • The company in May received a $250 million investment led by Chinese tech giant Tencent with participation from a consortium consisting of General Atlantic, Qiming Ventures, and others.
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The China-based CRM startup bringing transparency to packaged goods https://technode.com/2019/12/13/the-china-based-crm-startup-bringing-transparency-to-packaged-goods/ https://technode.com/2019/12/13/the-china-based-crm-startup-bringing-transparency-to-packaged-goods/#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2019 08:07:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124067 Kehu, formerly known as Madeforgoods, provides B2B brands with one-stop digital marketing solutions using unique QR codes, WeChat mini programs, and big data analytics.]]>

As China’s tech majors are quickly pivoting from consumer-facing services to a business-to-business approach, the country’s startups are expanding to more niche verticals. Among them is Shanghai-based marketer Kehu that stands out by providing comprehensive customer relationship management (CRM) solutions for the vast packaged goods market.

The backstory: Founded in 2016, Kehu, which translates as “customer lake,” provides B2B brands with one-stop digital marketing solutions using unique QR codes, WeChat mini programs, and big data analytics. The company helps brands manage their B2B customers when launching promotions, increasing retention, and deepening market penetration.

  • A core team of expat entrepreneurs Thomas Morisset and Toni Hilti, and Chinese partners Chris Ge and Vince Yang, set up the firm.
  • The company recently rebranded from Madeforgoods to Kehu to make the brand more easy to remember, a representative told TechNode. “Ke” means “customer” and represents the millions of B2B customers that brands serve in China. “Hu” means “lake”. Together, “Kehu” expresses the convergence of B2B customers in a single place. 

Unique selling point: The B2B CRM market in China is enormous, but the company is focused squarely on solutions for packaged goods, providing industry-specific data and insights.

  • Starting from alcoholic beverages brands, the company has gradually expanded to many other industries, such as the automotive aftermarket, professional food solutions, and industrial and building materials. These sectors that have similar demands for managing customers, company co-founder and chief executive Thomas Morisset, told TechNode.
  • Kehu connects brands with their end-users, who are usually bakers, chefs, bar operators, furnishing workers, and auto mechanics. By doing so, the brands gain insights such as market share and customer profiles, which helps in creating more effective marketing strategies.
  • By scanning unique QR codes on product items, end-users are taken to the company’s WeChat mini program, where they could check product catalogs, training courses, after-sales services, and market surveys. 
  • To incentivize engagement, the platform encourages users to gain credits by scanning the QR codes on packaged products. The credits are traded for all kinds of gifts on e-commerce platforms.
  • Companies adopting Kehu’s solutions would see an average 30% sales jump, according to the CEO.

“Through on WeChat mini program, we are expanding to a lot of new functions, such as customer services, a hotline, anti-fake measures, training, and promotions.”

—Kehu Chief Executive Thomas Morisset 

The investors: The company kicked off with millions of yuan in angel funding from its founding team.

  • In February 2019, Kehu closed a $3 million Pre-Series A from Chinese venture capital Fengqiao Capital and investment institution French Partner. 
  • The company has raised over $5 million to date.
  • Kehu Chief Executive Thomas Morisset told TechNode the business is generating “good money” so far.

Present condition: Kehu has helped various brands to keep up with customer data accrued in all channels and connect them to retail point of sale terminals and their consumers. 

  • Kehu works with more than 60 brands, including liquor brands like Pernod Ricard, Remey Cointreau, auto parts maker Hella and Wolf, food ingredient makers Cargill, Lesaffre, and industrial goods makers such as ThermoFisher Scientific and Saint-Gobain.
  • The team has over 60 staff, of which 70% are in research and development and maintenance—the rest work on marketing and operations. 
  • The company business is growing fast, posting multifold growth rates annually, according to Morisset.
  • At its rebranding event in November, Morisset has announced three new features for 2020— the “360 Customer Club,” “Mini Contracts,” and “Verified by Kehu.”
  • The “360 Customer Club” enables full lifecycle customer engagement and education, including registration, incentivization, training, and service. “Mini Contracts” provide brands with a more flexible incentive program to further deepen the relationship between brands and large customers. “Verified by Kehu” gives brands verified, high-quality customer data.

The landscape: The gross merchandising volume for B2B in China’s fast-moving consumer goods sector was RMB 150.7 billion in 2017 and is expected to hit reach RMB 391.6 billion in 2020, according to data from iResearch.

  • Each of Kehu’s four core sectors is comprised of diversified sub-markets, according to Vince Yang, business director at the firm. For example, the alcohol market is divided into white wine, red wine, spirits, beer, and each vertical market consists of lots of players.

Prospects: The Shanghai-based company is currently targeting global brands operating in China. But it is also looking to opportunities to expand globally in the future. 

  • China has become a pioneer for developing and applying the latest digital technologies. Global brands want to replicate successful models in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, or the European market, according to Yang.
  • The company has established a strategic cooperation agreement with blockchain technology application group VeChain to apply blockchain technology in supply chain management to provide better product services and anti-counterfeiting tracing.
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Chinese co-working giant Ucommune files for US IPO https://technode.com/2019/12/12/chinese-co-working-giant-ucommune-files-for-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/12/12/chinese-co-working-giant-ucommune-files-for-us-ipo/#respond Thu, 12 Dec 2019 04:18:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=124004 The filing follows WeWork’s IPO debacle which triggered widespread scrutiny of the co-working model.]]>

Ucommune, China’s largest co-working space operator, filed with the US securities regulator on Wednesday for a listing on the New York Stock Exchange.

Why it matters: Ucommune’s filing follows months after US-based WeWork’s failed plans for an initial public offering (IPO) triggered widespread investor concern over profitability prospects of the co-working model.

  • With the lion’s share of its operations in China, Ucommune faces competition from WeWork, which has expanded aggressively since first entering the market in 2017.
  • Local players like Kr Space and MyDreamPlus add to the crowded playing field in China’s co-working industry.

Details: Haitong International and China Renaissance are lead underwriters for the IPO, but the preliminary filing did not offer details on the size of the offering.

  • The company plans to list under the ticker symbol “UK.”
  • Ucommune runs 197 spaces across 42 cities in greater China—which includes Hong Kong—and Singapore as of September 2019, according to its prospectus. In contrast, WeWork operates 120 spaces across 12 cities in greater China, around 15% of its global total.
  • Ucommune said it has 584,600 individual members and 25,000 business members as of September this year.
  • In addition to its “self-operated” model where the firm serves as a secondary landlord, Ucommune also runs an asset-light model, including space design, building, and management services.
  • The asset-light business operates 39 spaces, and the unit has turned an operating profit in both 2018 and the nine months ended September 2019, according to Ucommune.
  • Revenue rose 209.9% to RMB 874.6 million ($122.4 million) for the nine months ended September 2019 from RMB 282.2 million the same period a year earlier.
  • The company’s net loss reached RMB 573 million (around $80 million) in the first nine months of this year, up from RMB 445 million in 2018 and RMB 373 million in 2017.
  • To compare, WeWork generated a $900 million net loss in the six months ended June 30, on revenue of $1.54 billion earned during the same period.
  • Ucommune is an investor in TechNode.

Context: Riding high on China’s shared space boom, Ucommune has been an investor darling since its inception. The firm has closed a total of 11 funding rounds, raising a combined $704.4 million investment, according to startup database Crunchbase.

  • Founded in 2015 by Chinese real estate veteran Mao Daqing, Ucommune fared well during widespread market consolidation in China’s co-working space which began in 2017.
  • The firm acquired a group of smaller co-working spaces in 2018 including Fountown, Wedo, Woo Space, New Space, and Workingdom.
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JD readies for life after Richard Liu https://technode.com/2019/12/11/jd-readies-for-life-after-richard-liu/ https://technode.com/2019/12/11/jd-readies-for-life-after-richard-liu/#respond Wed, 11 Dec 2019 11:32:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123993 Recent changes at JD indicate that tech billionaire Richard Liu may be ready to step back from operations at the Chinese e-commerce giant he founded over two decades ago. ]]>

With contributions from Wei Sheng

A series of recent changes to JD.com’s management team indicates that tech billionaire Richard Liu may be ready to take a step back from operations at the Chinese e-commerce giant he founded over two decades ago. 

JD is different from Chinese tech majors like Alibaba, which is based on a partnership system: JD doesn’t have an official co-founding team. Liu’s absolute rule has typified the company since its beginning. 

Liu stepped down on Dec. 5 as manager of a Xi’an-based unit that wholly owns JD Logistics, the firm’s delivery arm. Liu holds an indirect 45% stake in the subsidiary, according to corporate data platform Tianyancha. The development is the latest example of Liu withdrawing from the company’s ongoing operations:

  • In May, Liu walked away from his role as the manager of the Jade Palace Hotel in Beijing, an iconic building in the capital that JD acquired for $400 million in February.
  • He resigned as the legal representative for a subsidiary in Suqian of eastern Jiangsu province in July. The unit is a shareholder in JD Digital.
  • In November, Liu stepped down as manager of two cloud computing units that the company registered in February.
  • In the past month, he has given up top roles at four healthcare subsidiaries registered in Beijing, Yinchuan in Ningxia Autonomous Region, as well as Huizhou in Guangdong province. 

The moves echo remarks made at a November 2018 earnings call when Liu announced plans to start handing over some responsibilities to other top executives in order to “focus on new business lines.”

That announcement came amid a very public investigation by local attorneys in Minnesota over his possible prosecution over suspected “criminal sexual misconduct.” The allegations had led to Liu’s one-night arrest in Minneapolis on August 31.

The case, involving a 21-year-old female Chinese student at the University of Minnesota, was ultimately dropped by local prosecutors in late December due to “insufficient evidence.” However, the student, Liu Jingyao, filed a civil lawsuit against him and JD in April, seeking damages in excess of $50,000.

Key-man risk

Shares tumbled by one-third between September and December 2018 as analysts voiced concerns that the incident could harm the company’s access to Chinese government officials. They said the issue highlighted JD’s key-man risk, where an organization’s success depends to a great extent on one individual.

“Mr. Liu’s personal issues affect brand image. It also affects the authority of JD’s management team—you may no longer get invited to government meetings,” Li Chengdong, chief executive of a Beijing-based tech consultancy, told the Financial Times in an interview in November 2018.

Liu was not included in a list of China’s “100 outstanding private sector entrepreneurs” issued by the country’s top union and the ruling Communist Party’s Central Committee in December 2018. Rivals like Alibaba founder Jack Ma and Suning’s Zhang Jindong were included.

Liu, a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the advisory panel for China’s parliament, was notably absent at the country’s largest political event in March. He resigned from the CPPCC advisory panel in November, citing “personal reasons.”

“As the CEO and face of the company, anything that happens to him would pose a key-man risk, where the company’s operations would go into dire state of affairs where decisions made might not be valid,” Derrick Chin, a Singapore-based analyst at Swiss financial services company UBS, wrote in an investment note published on December 3.

Firmly in control

Despite Liu’s moves away from power, he is still firmly in control of the company. He remains the CEO and chairman of the board of directors at JD.

Liu, with a 15.5% stake in the company, holds 79.5% of JD’s voting rights thanks to the company’s “dual-class” share structure where founders own a special class of shares with more voting rights. The company’s five-member board is inquorate without Liu, according to company statutes.

With his tight grip over the company, Liu’s departure brings more uncertainties after a slow recovery from a troubled start to 2019. On top of that, succession is still up in the air after severe brain-drain. During April, three top executives stepped down, including Chief Technology Officer Zhang Chen. General Counsel Rain Long Yu and Chief Public Affairs Officer Lan Ye.

A JD representative declined to comment when contacted by TechNode on Wednesday.

Breathing new life into the brand

Liu is trying to revive JD’s image again, an analyst who asked not to be identified due to the sensitivity of the topic told TechNode.

Many top-ranking executives have left the company and it has not made any merger and acquisition moves since last June, the analyst added. The company’s share price bounced back to $33.26 on Tuesday on the Nasdaq, a similar level to August 2018 when the sexual assault scandal was initially made public.

The rally is partially due to the strong financial performance of the company with revenues in the first three quarters of the year up 20.9%, 22.9%, and 28.7%, respectively. 

The company posted net earnings of RMB 134.8 billion ($18.9 billion) in the third quarter of this year, an increase of 28.7% year on year, the largest expansion in the last five quarters.

“I think the best way for Liu is to leave JD and remain as [an] honorary advisor,” said the analyst.

“He would still be able to have some impacts [on the company], which would be focused on what he wishes—the company’s vision and strategy.”

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E-commerce startup Taojiji may file for bankruptcy https://technode.com/2019/12/09/e-commerce-startup-taojiji-may-file-for-bankruptcy/ https://technode.com/2019/12/09/e-commerce-startup-taojiji-may-file-for-bankruptcy/#respond Mon, 09 Dec 2019 07:38:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123748 Taijiji's troubles highlight the controversy around using steep discounts to fund growth.]]>

Cash-strapped Chinese e-commerce startup Taojiji is slated to declare bankruptcy after failing to attract badly needed investment, the company announced Monday in a post on its official Weibo account.

Why it matters: Taojiji’s troubles highlight the risks of its business model—adopted by many Chinese tech firms—in which cash is burned at an unsustainable rate through consumer discounts in order to grab market share.

  • Data from startup database ITjuzi shows China’s highly competitive e-commerce market has shed 38 companies this year, making it the second-ranked sector in terms of bankrupted companies after the finance industry, which has squeezed out 62 firms.
  • China’s tech industry has lost a total of 327 companies this year, down from the annual figure of 458 in 2018, ITjuzi data showed.

Details: Following protests in September by sellers who hadn’t been paid and reportedly being rejected for investment by top tech firms including Alibaba and Meituan, the announcement is another signal of the company’s troubles.

  • In the notice, Taojiji proposes two options to its debtors. One involves a debt-to-equity restructuring plan, in which the ownership of the company will be transferred to debtors of the company.
  • Otherwise, the company would apply for bankruptcy, and the founding team will try to repay the debts.
  • Company founder Zhang Zhengping detailed in the statement the failed funding deal, featuring two potential investors.
  • Zhang said one investor, a conglomerate, withdrew from the deal for fear of negative backlash brought by debts owed. The other potential investor, the funding arm of a pre-IPO firm, signed an investment agreement with Taojiji, but didn’t transfer the funding as promised.
  • Zhang also refuted reports that he had transferred money to overseas accounts.

Context: Taojiji, an e-commerce platform targeting lower-tier cities and rural consumers, was seen as an upstart with more than 130 million users at its peak. It gained moderate notoriety early this year through its use of steep discounts to attract buyers, similar to the model Pinduoduo uses.

  • After funds from early investors dried up, Taojiji began raiding the pockets of its merchants, requiring them to wait at least a month for access to money earned by selling products on the platform.
  • The company’s extensive subsidies lead to losses of RMB 1.2 billion ($170 million) as of October, according to Chinese media.
  • Since September, hundreds of merchants have been gathering outside of the company’s Shanghai offices to protest unpaid debts and demand a repayment plan.
  • In October 2018, Taojiji announced a $42 million Series A from investors including Tiger Global and DST Global.

Correction: an earlier version of this story incorrectly identified DST Global as based in Russia.

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Pinduoduo says it is not joining the fray with livestreams, just helping sellers https://technode.com/2019/12/06/pinduoduo-says-it-is-not-joining-the-fray-with-livestreams-just-helping-sellers/ https://technode.com/2019/12/06/pinduoduo-says-it-is-not-joining-the-fray-with-livestreams-just-helping-sellers/#respond Fri, 06 Dec 2019 08:43:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123660 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaThe company said it isn't going to clone existing business models.]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

Chinese social e-commerce site Pinduoduo said that the new livestream feature on its platform is a mere plug-in added as a concession for its sellers, according to a statement on Thursday.

Why it matters: The company recently began testing livestream and ticket-booking features on its platform, triggering widespread media attention, particularly because of the number of domestic competitors that already use the tools.

  • E-commerce livestreams have become a major revenue driver on Chinese online marketplaces. Gross merchandise volume (GMV) earned through Alibaba’s livestreaming unit Taobao Live jumped 400% year on year to RMB 100 billion ($14 billion) in 2018.
  • In addition, e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu rolled out livestreams this week after six months of testing.

Details: Pinduoduo said in its statement that it added the livestream and ticket-booking plug-ins in response to merchant and consumer demand.

  • Sun Jing, a key opinion leader (KOL) using the nickname “Xiaoxiaobao Mama,” kicked off livestreams on the platform with a session on Nov. 27, engaging with more than 50,0000 shoppers during peak viewership.
  • While rivals use livestreams to drive growth, Pinduoduo is testing livestreams to help merchants better manage their private traffic, the company said.
  • Pinduoduo introduced a train ticket-booking plug-in on its app two months ago.
  • However, the company said that there are no plans to launch fully integrated livestream and train ticket-booking channels.

“As a new consumer e-commerce platform, Pinduoduo is not going to clone or copy the existing business scenarios and models, but will satisfy the diversified demands of consumers.” 

—Pinduoduo in a statement on Thursday

Context: As of the third quarter of this year, Pinduoduo has 536 million total users, a massive base for new business expansion.

Pinduoduo may soon add livestreams to boost growth

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Charity crowdfund platform Shuidichou criticized for outreach tactics https://technode.com/2019/12/05/charity-crowdfund-platform-shuidichou-criticized-for-outreach-tactics/ https://technode.com/2019/12/05/charity-crowdfund-platform-shuidichou-criticized-for-outreach-tactics/#respond Thu, 05 Dec 2019 11:22:58 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123573 China's online charity segment is shadowed by multiple reports of scandals.]]>

Chinese medical treatment crowdfunding platform Shuidichou is under fire on Chinese social media after a viral video surfaced revealing the company’s aggressive tactics to promote its charity crowdfunding services in hospitals.

Why it matters: This is the second time this year for Shuidichou, a crowdfunding platform that focuses on donations for low-income patients seeking medical treatment, has sparked public criticism.

  • Shuidi first drew public ire in May for allowing Wu Shuai, a cross-talk celebrity performer, to launch a charity campaign after a brain hemorrhage.
  • China gave a total of RMB 112.8 billion (around $16 billion) in charitable donations in 2018, according to a report complied by the Institute of Society under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Details: An interview with an employees of Shuidichou’s offline promotion team posted anonymously on Pear Video quickly went viral this week.

  • An interviewee said in the video that the company dispatches employees to hospitals in more than 40 cities including Beijing, Wuhan, Changchun, and Nanjing, searching hospital wards for patients willing to open crowdfunding campaigns on the platform.
  • Another interviewee, who identified himself as a Shuidichou employee, says in the video that the firm will pay RMB 60 to RMB 100 for each campaign, adding that he earned RMB 14,000 in one month.
  • The same employee mentioned that they have to achieve a minimum of 35 deals per month. Those at the bottom of the performance list will be laid off.
  • The video invoked public outcry. “This is a hospital, not a place to make deals,” a hospital security guard says in the video.
  • The company founder and CEO Shen Peng extended an apology in a public letter posted on microblogging platform Weibo on Tuesday.
  • In another post on the company’s official account, the firm said that a preliminary investigation revealed that certain employees in specific regions had engaged in unethical behavior, and that the company is working to fix the problem by removing the performance-based bonus model and strengthening its monitoring system.
  • The company added that it formed an offline promotion team to reach senior citizens, and that it runs several rounds of checks on credentials for campaign applications.

“Too many deceptive donations will hurt goodwill. Don’t hurt the interests of people who really need help for your own sake” (our translation).

—Weibo user “Qiyuhongdou” on a comment under CCTV post about the news

Context: Established in 2016 by Shen who co-founded Meituan-Dianping’s food delivery business before starting his own project, Shuidi operates three platforms: mutual assistance platform Shuidihuzhu, crowdfunding app Shuidichou, and medical insurance platform Shuidibao.

  • The company raised nearly RMB 500 million in its Series B round from Tencent, Banyan Capital, and others in March.
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From Groupon clone to China’s largest lifestyle services provider https://technode.com/2019/12/04/meituan-used-to-be-a-groupon-clone-now-its-a-lot-more/ Wed, 04 Dec 2019 13:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158661 Meituan, deliveryMeituan forays into ride-hailing and bike-rental services have been expensive gambits that haven’t yet paid off, but it has seen success in other efforts.]]> Meituan, delivery

Meituan Dianping was originally two companies—Meituan and Dianping—competing in the same lifestyle app space. However, Meituan was primarily focused on group-buying and food delivery, while Dianping emphasized restaurant reviews.

In 2015, a merger ended the bitter rivalry between the two and marked the inception of Meituan Dianping, a super-app that has expanded to encompass a wide range of lifestyle and entertainment categories.

Although the company’s forays into ride-hailing and bike-rental services have been expensive gambits that haven’t yet paid off, it has seen success in other efforts, particularly its expansion into the online travel sector and the movie ticketing space.

Maoyan Entertainment, a movie ticketing platform that was founded within Meituan as a business unit in 2012 and spun off from the company in 2016, went public in Hong Kong earlier this year. Together, Maoyan and Alibaba’s Taopiaopiao dominate China’s movie ticketing sector with around 90% market share. Meituan currently owns around 8% of Maoyan, having sold most of its shares in the company in 2016.

In Focus | Meituan #2

This article first appeared in In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s premium biweekly newsletter on the rising tech giant.

The newsletter ran from Nov. 20, 2019 to April 29, 2020.

Meituan has also made significant strides in online travel booking. Its hotel booking unit Meituan Hotels dominates the market, surpassing domestic rivals like online travel giant Ctrip. The company has expanded into flight ticketing services in a bid to become a one-stop shop for travel booking.

The Meituan food delivery empire

Although Meituan now offers a wide range of services, food delivery is still its core business and its main source of revenue. In recent quarters, Meituan has been able to improve profitability of its on-demand delivery business, even in an increasingly saturated market.

The road to conquering China’s $37 billion online food-delivery services market was not without its challenges. Meituan faces fierce competition from Alibaba, one of China’s most valuable tech companies, which owns the food-delivery platform Ele.me.

The rivalry goes way back. Before the merger, Alibaba was a major backer of Meituan while Tencent backed Dianping. After the two companies consolidated into Meituan Dianping, Tencent remained a main backer. Alibaba, on the other hand, sold nearly all of its shares in Meituan and invested in Ele.me, then a new entrant in the space.

After a cash-burning food-delivery war with Ele.me that lasted a few years, Meituan finally came out on top. Meituan currently operates China’s largest food-delivery platform, which accounts for over 64% of the market in China, according to third-party research company Data Center of China Internet (DCCI) report (in Chinese). The company boasts of having served around 400 million customers and processed 6.4 billion food orders in 2018.

In the third quarter of 2019, Meituan’s food-delivery business made up 56.7% of its total revenue. The business was still seeing strong momentum, an increase of 39.4% to RMB 15.6 billion compared to the same period in 2018. The growth was primarily driven by higher average purchase frequency and an increase in average spend per order.

Holding off competitors and maintaining strong growth, however, requires resources.The cost of food delivery in the fourth quarter of last year increased by 53.6% year-on-year to RMB 9.5 billion, which the company attributed to mounting labor costs for its delivery fleet.

In recent years, Meituan has been investing in self-driving technology and high-definition mapping services, aiming to reduce reliance on delivery drivers—of whom the company employed 2.7 million last year.

Forays into travel booking, hotel, home rentals

Another fast-growing business segment for Meituan Dianping is travel operations, ranging from flight and hotel booking to home rentals.

The growth of Meituan’s online travel-booking growth has mainly been driven by an increasingly younger and geographically diverse user base. According to the company, post-’80s consumers made up the bulk of their 20 million new users last year, while users from lower-tier cities contributed to around half of their online hotel bookings.

For the third quarter of 2019, the company’s Gross Transaction Volume of in-store, hotel and travel businesses increased 29.4% from the same period in 2018.

Meituan’s travel arm is well-established. The company was offering hotel booking services as early as 2013, and started to consolidate its travel services in 2015 after the acquisition of Kuxun.com from Expedia’s TripAdvisor.

In October in the same year, Meituan ventured into air ticketing. Thanks to Meituan’s growing user base and the recent acquisitions and investments, the air ticket-booking business also took off.

In the second quarter of 2018, Meituan Hotels was ranked first in China by volume and nights booked, according to the data monitoring firm Trustdata, overtaking Ctrip, Qunar and

Tongcheng-eLong combined. Well into the first half of 2019, Meituan continued to lead the industry in terms of room nights reserved, accounting for 47.3% of the market.

Cash-burning businesses

After years of rapid expansion, the company has pledged to be more prudent this year when investing in non-core businesses such as mobility and new retail, as certain past investment efforts have come with hefty costs.

The company’s cost of revenues for “new initiatives and other business” was RMB 5.2 billion in the last quarter, a drastic increase from RMB 0.5 billion in the same period of 2017. In its 2018 annual report, the company attributed the increase to their acquisition of Mobike, with the increase in car-hailing driver-related costs and other outsourcing labor costs resulting from the expansion of non-food delivery service.

In April 2018, Meituan acquired the troubled bike-rental startup Mobike for RMB 18.1 billion ($2.7 billion), rebranding it as Meituan Bike. Despite some growth in the past two years, Mobike continues to be a drag on Meituan’s profit margin. Last year, the bike-rental unit contributed RMB 4.6 billion—over half—of the company’s adjusted net losses.

Meituan’s bike-sharing unit will continue to be loss-making through 2021, according to a recent research report from equity firm China Tonghai Securities.

Another of Meituan’s new initiatives, Ella Supermarket, has also weighed down the company’s profitability. Earlier this year, seeing how its offline grocery stores had stumbled in gaining traction as well as the continued burden of logistics and traffic acquisition costs, the company decided to downsize the unit.

Like other tech companies such as Baidu, Hellobike, and Didi, Meituan has made a move into the ride-booking services. The company saw its ride-hailing aggregator service Meituan Dache as an opportunity to open up wider user-acquisition channels.

Last year, after expanding its services to include ride-hailing and bike-sharing, Meituan saw a boost in annual active users by 29.3% to more than 400 million in 2018 compared with the year prior.

Teaming up with smaller car rental companies—Shouqi, Shenzhou and the like—allowed Meituan to take on the ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing, which was in crisis mode last year after the murders of two passengers.

However, shortly before its Hong Kong IPO in September 2018, Meituan suspended its ride-hailing unit’s expansion plans, citing a reevaluation of current market dynamics.
In May of this year, the company announced the expansion of its ride-hailing operation into 15 more cities, including Hangzhou, Shenzhen, Wuhan, and Chengdu.

Striking the right balance between operating costs and expansion efforts has been a challenge for Meituan Dianping, but its strategy of blanketing the services sector within the broader lifestyle category has indeed been paying off. Its non-core businesses, such as the travel and hotel segment, have benefited from increased traffic from users of its well-established food-delivery platform. Meituan has also been able to cross-sell many products within its ecosystem.

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Alibaba sharpens focus on C2M business with Taobao, Tmall restructure https://technode.com/2019/12/04/alibaba-sharpens-focus-on-c2m-business-with-taobao-tmall-restructure/ https://technode.com/2019/12/04/alibaba-sharpens-focus-on-c2m-business-with-taobao-tmall-restructure/#respond Wed, 04 Dec 2019 08:18:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123448 Jiang Fan AlibabaAlibaba looks to shore up growth for its core e-commerce business. ]]> Jiang Fan Alibaba

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has implemented structural changes to its business, according to an internal letter from Tmall and Taobao President Jiang Fan, which will in part strengthen focus on its growing customer-to-manufacturer (C2M) business.

Why it matters: The restructuring highlights the importance of the new C2M business model as the company strives to maintain growth for its core e-commerce business.

  • Alibaba rivals like Pinduoduo and JD.com also launched their own C2M product lines. 

China’s data-based C2M model to drive e-commerce forward

Details: Taobao and Tmall President Jiang Fan announced the changes effective Dec. 2 in an internal letter, according to a Chinese media report. Alibaba did not respond to a TechNode request for comment on Wednesday.

  • Taobao has launched a business division focused on the new C2M model.
  • Tmall has set up two new business divisions. One is comprised of the consumer electronics, home furnishings, and auto parts categories to be headed by Yang Guang, former manager of Tmall’s consumer electronics department.
  • The second is dedicated to fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) and apparel, headed by Hu Weixiong, former manager of Tmall’s consumption department.
  • The new heads of these two Tmall divisions report directly to Jiang Fan.
  • Alibaba called the reshuffle a structural upgrade in a response to Chinese media. “The only constant is change itself,” the firm said.

Context: Alibaba debuted on the Hong Kong stock exchange for its long-awaited secondary listing on on Nov. 26, raising $12.9 billion from its offering of 575 million new shares.

  • Alibaba reported in early November a better-than-expected 40% annual rise in revenue for the e-commerce giant’s second fiscal quarter ended September 2019, driven by its core e-commerce and cloud businesses.
  • Juhuasuan, the company’s group-buying and flash-sale platform, rolled out in October Changxiaotong, a digital solution for manufacturers to better adapt to the C2M model.
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Grocery startup Dailuobo may have burned $92 million in 5 months https://technode.com/2019/12/02/grocery-startup-dailuobo-may-have-burned-92-million-in-5-months/ https://technode.com/2019/12/02/grocery-startup-dailuobo-may-have-burned-92-million-in-5-months/#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2019 08:32:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123205 The startup may be the latest fresh grocery player to exit the subsidy-fueled industry,]]>

Dailuobo, the Chinese online-to-offline grocery startup is in a cash crunch after burning through hundreds of millions of yuan to fuel expansion, Chinese media reported.

Why it matters: Dailuobo, once an up-and-coming player in China’s fresh produce e-commerce sector, may join a long list of casualties that have bowed out of the highly competitive market.

  • The liquidity crisis follows a RMB 634 million ($92 million) Series A which closed in June.
  • China’s fresh produce e-commerce market saw multiple players—including Amazon-backed Yummy77 and Xianpinhui—exit by 2017 following a boom in the industry from 2014 to 2015.

Details: Multiple signs of a cash crunch have emerged in recent weeks. In an apology dated Nov. 23, the company confirmed it was struggling to pay off debts to its suppliers and employee salaries due to a cash shortage. However, it said it was still trying to fix the problem.

  • Dailuobo said on Nov. 24 that it had support from its suppliers and planned to revive its operations on Nov. 25.
  • A TechNode reporter observed many inventories managed by the platform remained unavailable on Monday.
  • On Nov. 28, Dailuobo partner Liu Feng said on his Moments newsfeed on messaging platform WeChat that the Hefei-based firm had closed its Hangzhou research center, home to more than 300 employees in product development.
  • Liu said that the company had “settled up” with the laid-off employees, indicating it had paid salaries and compensation. However, dissatisfied employees told Chinese media that the company owes a combined RMB 30 million to employees on the Hangzhou and Hefei teams.
  • Meanwhile, users complained about difficulties withdrawing funds they had pre-paid to the platform.
  • The company founder and CEO acknowledged to local media that the team had “underestimated” the speed with which it spent cash competing in the fresh grocery e-commerce segment. However, he said that the company was not considering bankruptcy.
  • The company operated more than 1,000 offline stores as of the beginning of the year, expanding by more than 10-fold in five months after reaching the 100 benchmark in August 2018. It had set a goal of 10,000 storefronts.

Context: Using its own warehousing and logistics network, Dailuobo offers next-day grocery delivery to Chinese residential communities.

  • The app led the market as of June with an 89% app open rate and 48% user retention rate, followed by competitors like Tencent-backed Missfresh and Alibaba-baced Freshippo, according to data from research firm MobResearch.
  • The company received $10 million in an angel round in August 2018.
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INSIGHTS | Will co-working survive WeWork? https://technode.com/2019/12/02/insights-will-co-working-survive-wework/ https://technode.com/2019/12/02/insights-will-co-working-survive-wework/#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2019 03:52:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123172 With WeWork on the rocks, investors ask if Chinese co-working companies are any different.]]>

This article was co-authored by Emma Lee.

When WeWork started in 2010, it was one of the first players in co-working spaces. It helped to define the industry, becoming nearly synonymous with it. 

The co-working office model exploded not only in the west, but soon took over China as well. Office spaces popped up everywhere in China’s first-tier cities. When WeWork officially entered China in 2017, it faced fierce competition from its China counterparts including Ucommune (UCommune is an investor in TechNode), Kr Space, and MyDreamPlus.

However, WeWork faced an essential problem: it isn’t a tech company. Real estate is a traditional business, in which high adoption rates aren’t a substitute for viable per-unit costs. Nearly a decade later, WeWork finds itself on the brink of bankruptcy after its initial public offering failed miserably.

WeWork’s quick rise and fall serves as a cautionary tale for investors and for co-working companies in China as they prepare for the public markets. As Chinese shared office company Ucommune reportedly moves toward an IPO, investors are asking a simple question: is it any different to WeWork?

Bottom Line: The original WeWork model may not have much of a future in China. China’s WeWork peers’ core co-working businesses don’t look that different from their American forerunner: they’re committed heavy lease payments, struggling with revenue, and facing scrutiny from investors. 

But companies like UCommune and Kr Space are attempting a pivot to a more viable, asset-light model focused on enterprise services. If they can make it around the bend before burning through their funds, viable companies could emerge from the co-working debacle.

A (commercial zoned) land war in Asia: Eager to expand its footprint in China, WeWork didn’t hesitate to burn cash, even as it struggled to keep its other operations afloat. However, the company appears to be reconsidering its China operations after the recent debacle. Nonetheless, there are still believers in the co-working model. 

  • China’s co-working space market was worth around RMB 23.4 billion (about $3 billion) in 2017, according to a 2018 report by Chinese research firm iiMedia Research. The same report estimated, perhaps over-optimistically, the market size would surpass RMB 227 billion in 2020.
  • While capital inflow to the co-working industry in China is drying up, another key driver of the boom persists: the rise of the millennial workforce. Co-working spaces better cater to many of the attributes that define the millennial generation: entrepreneurial, tech-savvy, flexible, collaborative, and nomadic.

A brief timeline: 

  • June 2016: WeWork opens its first China office in Shanghai.
  • July 2017: WeWork sets up joint venture ChinaCo after raising $500 million from investors, including SoftBank and Chinese private equity firm Hony Capital.
  • December 2017: WeWork and Ucommune, formerly known as URwork, settles trademark dispute with the latter changed to its current English name,
  • April 2018: WeWork China acquires local rival Naked Hub, which had 46 working spaces across Asia at the time, around half in Shanghai and Beijing. 
  • June 2018: Ucommune steps up competition with a RMB 300 million acquisition of Shanghai-based co-working space operator Workingdom.
  • July 2018: WeWork China secures $500 million in an investment led by Trustbridge Partners with participation from investors including SoftBank, SoftBank’s Vision Fund, Temasek Holdings Pte., and Hony Capital. The funding bumped WeWork China’s valuation to $5 billion.
  • August 2018: MyDreamPlus completes $120 million Series C funding round, led by Hillhouse Capital and General Atlantic. 
  • October 2018: Ucommunue acquires co-working space Fountown Fountown, marking the 7th acquisition of the company in the year. The company has been actively acquiring smaller competitors including Wedo, Woo Space, New Space, and Workingdom. 
  • May 2019: Kr Space announces that it has completed a RMB 1 billion round of funding, jointly led by IDG Capital, Gopher Asset Management and Hubei Yixing Capital.
  • Aug 14, 2019: After its IPO filing, WeWork faces intense scrutiny of its finances and leadership from investors and the media. Concerns about WeWork’s profitability and about CEO and co-founder Adam Neumann begin to surface. WeWork delays its listing the following month, and ultimately cancels the listing.
  • Oct 22: SoftBank, WeWork’s main investor, strikes a $9.5 billion bailout deal to take control of the company.
  • Nov 21: WeWork confirms plan to lay off 2,400 employees, almost 20% of its workforce.

WeWork in China: Before the IPO fail, China was an important market for WeWork. But the China market exposed the company to a huge amount of economic and political risk as well as regulatory challenges. China represents far more of its facilities than its revenue.

  • WeWork figures revealed that its China operation weighed down on an already loss-making business. The company lost nearly $1 billion in the first half of 2019. Excluding the China Region, the company said its profitability measure, dubbed “contribution margin”, for the first half of the year was approximately three percentage points higher, according to its prospectus.
  • Even though continuous China expansion over the past three years pushed the WeWork’s Greater China revenue from $2.88 million in 2016 to $99.53 million in 2018, it still represents only around 5% of the company’s total $1.81 billion in revenue—scant compared to the revenue generated from the company’s US and UK operations.
  • For the first half of 2019, revenue from Greater China hit $93.56 million, a slight increase to 6% of its total revenue. 
  • According to its website, WeWork currently has 120 buildings across 12 cities in Greater China; around 15% of its global facilities. These office spaces, however, have a high vacancy rate, the Financial Times reported in October.
Co-working leaders, by the numbers.

Chinese WeWorks? Although co-working has been seen in China as early as 2010 with the likes of Shanghai-based space People Squared, the concept only truly exploded after 2016. Chinese co-working companies, at the core, aren’t that different to WeWork. They have been grappling with similar challenges like high vacancy rates and have struggled to turn a profit after aggressively buying properties and expanding.

  • In the initial boom, most of these Chinese players followed WeWorks’s model to cater to the “mass entrepreneurial” trend, acting as an incubator at times.
  • Similar to WeWork—which got over 83% of its revenues from space leasing services—Ucommune also depends heavily on space rental fees, which represent around 75% of its total revenue. Ucommune is trying to diversify its revenue sources with value-added services, franchising, and investment.
  • Ucommune filed a prospectus with the US securities regulator in late September and is now preparing to go public by the end of the year. People with knowledge of the matter told TechNode earlier this week that founder Mao Daqing is in New York preparing for the roadshow.

Pivot to services: Having started as a workplace model for startups, co-working has become an alternative to traditional office space for corporates, especially those in tech, banking, and finance, and professional services to lower real estate operational and maintenance costs. At the same time, mixing with startups and entrepreneurs is an add-on benefit for corporates to gain access to new business ideas. 

  • In May, Ucommune announced a change in strategy: it will no longer rely on expanding its self-owned spaces, but instead focus on “management output projects” and “customized services for enterprises.”
  • The pivot to services isn’t a novelty. WeWork launched Powered by We, an office-management arm, in 2017.

China’s co-working market is undergoing a shakeout: After a few years of astounding growth, co-working operators in China are beginning to face headwinds as the space becomes crowded and financing slows.

  • China’s co-working market saw a market consolidation wave in 2018. Top players like WeWork and Ucommune continued to get capital support to fuel their expansion and acquisition of smaller players. But smaller ones began to disappear at a very fast speed.
  • According to industry association China Real Estate Chamber of Commerce, co-working space in first-tier cities surged two years ago, but by October 2019, 40% of shared office space was more than half empty.
  • According to a report from a Chinese third-party research institute, co-working operators have to maintain an occupancy rate of 85% in order to reach the break-even point.
  • Cody Simms, partner at TechStars, said at TechCrunch Shenzhen earlier this month that main issues with WeWork-type companies is these “tech-enabled” businesses that still have a lot of physical infrastructures are valued like software companies. Some of these companies have now gone public, the market is starting to realize that these businesses are different from pure software firms in terms of operating margins and capital expenses.

Will WeWork China go the way of Uber? WeWork is reportedly in talks to sell off China business to KR Space, the co-working space spin-off of newly-listed Chinese tech media 36kr, Tech in Asia reported on Tuesday. In October, the media reported that the company was mulling over the decision to shelve its China expansion plans for 2020. 

  • Acquisition is a possible future for WeWork China, if a big step down from the company’s former dreams of world domination. 
  • Uber likewise exited China in 2016, selling its China operations to local rival Didi.
  • In a statement to TechNode, the company said that it has a “strong commitment” for the Chinese market.
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Tencent is testing another new social app, Youji https://technode.com/2019/11/29/tencent-is-testing-another-new-social-app-youji/ https://technode.com/2019/11/29/tencent-is-testing-another-new-social-app-youji/#respond Fri, 29 Nov 2019 09:36:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123125 TencentTencent unveils a third social app in November. ]]> Tencent
Screenshot of the Youji app. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese tech giant Tencent unveiled on Wednesday a new social networking app, Youji, that combines social media and forum features, reported our sister site, TechNode Chinese.

Why it matters: Youji is the third social networking app Tencent has launched in November, an acceleration which highlights the company’s efforts to retain user attention amid tapering WeChat growth and tougher competition from rivals.

  • Chinese internet giants including Alibaba, Sina, Bytedance, and JD.com have all been expanding into the social network sector since the beginning of this year, challenging Tencent’s dominance in the sector.
  • The percentage of time Chinese netizens spend on Tencent-backed apps dropped 4.2% to 42% in September 2019 from 46.2% in September last year, according to report from Chinese data analytics firm Quest Mobile.
  • In addition to Youji, Tencent unveiled video networking app Maohu and dating app Qingliao earlier this month.

Details: Youji’s slogan is “record your real life,” and allows users to post about their daily happenings or browse content based on interests.

  • In addition, the product combines a Weibo-like microblogging function with a unique “daily topics” feature, allowing users to follow trending topics, according to tech news site Pandaily.
  • The app is available for download on Apple’s China App Store and is now being tested by users on an invite-only basis.
  • Users can log in via their mobile number or WeChat account. Notably absent is a QQ account login feature, a common sight on new Tencent apps, possibly to avoid competition with the networking app.

Context: Competition in China’s social media space has been climbing since the beginning of this year. Three social apps launched on Jan 15. including Bytedance’s Duoshan; an updated Bullet Messenger from Kuairu Technology-owned, Smartisan-backed Liaotianbao; and Matong, an anonymous social media app developed by Shenzhen-based Ringo.AI.

  • WeChat banned the three social networking rivals within a day of the launches.
  • Weibo launched Instagram-clone Oasis in September, followed by Alibaba’s debut of its social networking app, Real.

Alibaba is testing a new social networking app, Real

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Pinduoduo may soon add livestreams to boost growth https://technode.com/2019/11/28/pinduoduo-may-soon-add-livestreams-to-boost-growth/ https://technode.com/2019/11/28/pinduoduo-may-soon-add-livestreams-to-boost-growth/#respond Thu, 28 Nov 2019 06:25:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=123045 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentShopping platforms are converging livestreaming and e-commerce in their fight for user attention.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Chinese e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo debuted its first livestreaming session on the platform on Wednesday night, signaling that it is looking to add the feature to revive growth after disappointing third quarter results.

Why it matters: Pinduoduo is stepping up efforts to capitalize on growing adoption of content-driven e-commerce after integrating a short-video feature earlier this year. 

  • Pinduoduo rival Alibaba, which has 4,000 livestream hosts, saw gross merchandise volume (GMV) generated through its livestreaming unit Taobao Live jump 400% year on year to RMB 100 billion ($14 billion) in 2018.
  • In addition to Alibaba, e-commerce platforms like Xiaohongshu as well as short video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou are trying to converge livestreaming and e-commerce in their fight for user attention.
  • However, problems that dog mainstream e-commerce such as false advertising also shadow e-commerce livestreams. Chinese regulators have stepped in to regulate the flourishing sector.

Details: Sun Jing, a key opinion leader (KOL) using the nickname “Xiaoxiaobao Mama,” kicked off a livestream session at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, engaging with more than 50,0000 shoppers during peak viewership.

  • Sun, a Forbes-certified expert on mother and baby care, introduced 16 products during the livestream ranging from cosmetics to health care products.
  • Before the Wednesday livestream, Pinduoduo promoted the livestream on the platform beginning a few days ahead of the event, asking users to engage by making an appointment.
  • Similar to its group purchase concept, users who made an appointment for the livestream can invite their friends to join by sharing a link or creating a poster to promote on mega chatting app WeChat’s social feed feature, Moments. Users and two friends who join the session using the invitation are given a 50% discount.
  • Users can also join the livestream and complete purchases through Goods Purchase, a Pinduoduo-backed WeChat mini-program that it is testing.
  • Pinduoduo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Context: China’s live-streaming e-commerce market is expected to be worth RMB 440 billion in 2019, according to report from securities brokerage Everbright Securities (in Chinese).

  • Alibaba’s Singles Day data shows live-streaming is becoming an increasingly important means to boost sales.
  • Xiaohongshu started testing a live-streaming feature in June this year to drive user engagement and boost e-commerce business.

Livestreams on Taobao Live earn RMB 20 billion in sales on Singles Day

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Alibaba shares surge 7% in Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2019/11/26/alibaba-shares-surge-7-in-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/11/26/alibaba-shares-surge-7-in-hong-kong-ipo/#respond Tue, 26 Nov 2019 05:49:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122833 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentThe $12.9 billion Hong Kong IPO is the world’s largest listing so far this year.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment

Shares of Chinese tech behemoth Alibaba have surged around 7% following the company’s debut on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday in its long-awaited secondary listing.

Why it matters: Alibaba’s Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO), the world’s largest listing to date in 2019, is spurring optimism for investors in Chinese tech firms and is a vote of confidence in the Hong Kong market amid months-long pro-democracy protests throughout the city.

  • The company’s momentum in November is on the rise, including its better-then-expected 40% revenue growth for the September quarter disclosed on Nov. 2, followed by another record-breaking Singles Day during which it sold RMB 268.4 billion ($38.4 billion) in gross merchandise volume (GMV).
  • Alibaba’s listing comes amid an IPO boom among Chinese tech firms which seek funding from the public markets domestically and abroad.

Details: Shares for the company were trading at HK$188.1 each as of 1:00 p.m., 6.8% over the HK$176 issuance price and exceeding the top end of an indicated range of HK$188 apiece.

  • The shares hit an earlier high of HK$189.5 each before stabilizing at around HK$188.
  • Alibaba issued 500 million new ordinary shares plus 75 million in an over-allotment option in the IPO.
  • Ahead of the Hong Kong IPO, Alibaba’s US-listed shares climbed around 2% to close at $190.45 apiece on Monday.
  • The company plans to use the proceeds to implement strategies to drive user growth and engagement, empower businesses to facilitate digital transformation, and continue to innovate and invest for the long term, the company said in a statement.

Context: Alibaba chose New York over Hong Kong as the destination for its $25 billion primary listing in September 2014 primarily because the bourse did not allow a dual-class share structure.

  • Hong Kong removed the restriction on the dual-class structure in April 2018 to open the door for tech firms that have share classes with different voting rights.
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Amazon’s Pinduoduo store is a holiday pop-up https://technode.com/2019/11/25/amazons-pinduoduo-store-is-a-holiday-pop-up/ https://technode.com/2019/11/25/amazons-pinduoduo-store-is-a-holiday-pop-up/#respond Mon, 25 Nov 2019 06:44:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122729 The temporary store is planned to run through the end of the year.]]>

Amazon has opened a pop-up store on Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo that will run until the end of December, the company said on Monday.

Why it matters: The move, which TechNode reported on Sunday, will help Amazon boost its existing cross-border e-commerce business in China after shutting its third-party e-commerce marketplace business in April.

  • Partnership with Pinduoduo, which says it has 536 million total users, will facilitate Amazon’s lower-tier market penetration in China.
  • As Pinduoduo pushes further into higher-tier cities, the Amazon tie-up brings Pinduoduo much-needed support in repositioning itself as a reliable marketplace for finding high-quality, authentic products.
  • Shares for Nasdaq-listed Pinduoduo, which sank more than 20% after it reported a wider-than-expected loss in Q3, is facing an uphill battle in its competition with rivals including Alibaba and JD.com.

Details: The new storefront, which went live on the Chinese social e-commerce platform at midnight on Monday, offers customers a curated selection of about 1,000 products imported from overseas, Amazon said in a statement sent to TechNode.

  • Items offered include some of the most popular imported product categories from cosmetics to baby goods. Brand names such as Champion, Waterpik, and Enfagrow are among the offerings coming from countries including Australia, Japan, the US, and Germany.
  • In its statement, Amazon reiterated its “strong” commitment to China and pledged to continue to invest and grow the Amazon Global Store business in China.
  • “We will focus our efforts on cross-border sales in China and to keep improving the experience for Chinese customers,” the company said.

Context: Amazon’s cross-border e-commerce business in China, which sells “tens of millions products,” is accessible through its Chinese website Amazon.cn, the Amazon mobile app, and its WeChat mini program.

  • In April, Amazon announced it would be shutting down its China third-party seller e-commerce marketplace to sharpen focus on its cross-border selling and cloud computing service businesses in the country.

Amazon marketplace resurfaces in China with store on Pinduoduo

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Amazon marketplace resurfaces in China with store on Pinduoduo https://technode.com/2019/11/24/amazon-marketplace-resurfaces-in-china-with-store-on-pinduoduo/ https://technode.com/2019/11/24/amazon-marketplace-resurfaces-in-china-with-store-on-pinduoduo/#respond Sun, 24 Nov 2019 13:18:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122680 The US e-commerce giant is making a bid to retain a foothold in China.]]>

Amazon will launch a storefront on Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, people familiar with the matter told TechNode on Sunday.

Why it matters: While Amazon appeared to have drawn down its business in China earlier this year amid fierce competition with rivals such as Alibaba and JD.com, a partnership with e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo could help the US e-commerce giant to retain a presence in one of the world’s biggest consumer markets.

  • The deal grants Amazon access to Pinduoduo’s 429.6 million monthly active users.
  • A tie-up with Amazon, meanwhile, would be important for Pinduoduo to build a relationship with overseas retailers as well as expand its product categories. This could be particularly critical for the Tencent-backed social e-commerce app, which is feeling the squeeze from “forced exclusivity” in competition with other marketplaces for sellers.
  • The Amazon brand helps boost Pinduoduo’s reputation as a platform for bargain-hunters as it moves to expand its presence in higher-tier markets.
  • Pinduoduo’s users from first-tier cities spend well over RMB 5,000 ($710) per year, based on annualized figures for the third quarter of 2019, company founder and CEO Colin Huang has said.

Details: The new storefront will launch Sunday evening at midnight, according to the source.

Context: Amazon announced in April that the company would be shutting down its China e-commerce marketplace to sharpen focus on its cross-border selling and cloud computing service businesses in the country.

  • Amazon China held less than 1% share of China’s total e-commerce market as of June 2018, according to market research institute eMarketer (in Chinese).
  • “Amazon’s commitment to China remains strong,” the company said in a statement in response to the withdrawal in April.
  • Pinduoduo posted weaker-than-expected third quarter earnings on Wednesday due to slowed revenue growth and wider losses, specifically citing heightened forced exclusivity practices in the industry.

Outpaced by local rivals, Amazon struggles to remain relevant in China

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Major layoffs at online tutoring platform Vipkid in preparation for growth https://technode.com/2019/11/22/tencent-backed-online-educator-vipkid-to-lay-off-30-of-employees/ https://technode.com/2019/11/22/tencent-backed-online-educator-vipkid-to-lay-off-30-of-employees/#respond Fri, 22 Nov 2019 09:00:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122614 The company said it would be hiring 'thousands' in the coming months and years.]]>
Vipkid founder Mi Wenjuan. (Image credit: TechNode / Zhao Runhua)

Vipkid, the online teaching platform that connects English teachers to Chinese students, may be slashing a sizable portion of its employees across business departments, according to people familiar with the matter.

Why it matters: News of the layoffs follow shortly after the company announced that it had closed a Series E for an undisclosed amount led by Tencent. Despite the fresh funding, the Beijing-based company continues to grapple with high user acquisition costs and fierce competition in the sector.

  • Vipkid competes against a host of Chinese rivals such as 51Talk, Hitalkkids, and Dada ABC to attract English speakers to power their live tutoring programs.

Details: The company is laying off around 30% of its employee in the sales, operations, and research and development (R & D) units, a person close to the matter told TechNode on Friday.

  • The online education platform will be shutting down one of their main product lines and restructuring in December, according to the person.
  • “Lots of people in the R&D department got their notice on Thursday and Nov. 30 will be their last day,” the person said.
  • A Maimai user who is a verified Vipkid employee in the R & D department commented on a Nov. 20 post, confirming the layoffs on the professional networking platform.
  • Another Vipkid employee verified on Maimai said that in addition to the layoffs, the company is also slashing employee benefits while switching from a base salary structure to a performance-based pay mechanism.
  • News of the cuts began circulating on Chinese media beginning last week, and the company refuted the rumor to Chinese media.
  • A Maimai user going by “Xiyangyang” said in September that the company would cut its costs by 18% as a condition of its latest funding round, and predicted that around 10% of total headcount would be laid off after the October national holiday.
  • In a response late Saturday, the company told TechNode that the “limited staffing corrections in some divisions” were a result of optimizing to create greater efficiency.
  • “We are actively growing in [other divisions] and will be hiring thousands of new employees in the months and years ahead,” a spokeswoman said to TechNode.

Context: Vipkid founder Mi Wenjuan announced in an internal letter that the platform had 712,00 currently enrolled students as of September, up from 500,000 in June 2018.

Tencent leads E-round funding in Chinese online educator Vipkid

Update: added a statement from the company, which had initially denied any layoffs.

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Meituan bests estimates in Q3 with a second quarterly profit in a row https://technode.com/2019/11/22/meituan-bests-estimates-in-q3-with-a-second-quarterly-profit-in-a-row/ https://technode.com/2019/11/22/meituan-bests-estimates-in-q3-with-a-second-quarterly-profit-in-a-row/#respond Fri, 22 Nov 2019 05:36:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122571 Food delivery continues to drive the company's top line, accounting for more than half of revenue.]]>

Shares of Meituan Dianping, the Chinese food delivery and lifestyle platform, surged more than 8% on Friday after the company posted a second consecutive quarterly profit on Thursday.

Why it matters: The profits further boosted market confidence in the Chinese super app, which has unseated Baidu as the third-largest publicly held Chinese internet company after Alibaba and Tencent.

“With our ‘Food + Platform’ strategy, we will continue to leverage our insights on the consumers and merchants to further boost innovation and improve efficiency. As always, we will keep investing in our long-term growth and focusing on business opportunities that will generate value for both consumers and merchants in the long run.”

–Xing Wang, Meituan chairman and CEO, in a statement

Details: The company’s total revenues increased 44.1% year over year to RMB 27.5 billion (around $3.91 billion) in Q3 this year from RMB 19.1 billion for the same period of 2018. Revenues increased across all business segments, according to the company.

  • Revenue from food delivery, which accounts for 56.7% of the total, increased 39.4% to RMB 15.6 billion in Q3 from RMB 11.2 billion for the same period in 2018, primarily driven by higher average purchase frequency and increase in average value per order.
  • The company reported RMB 1.33 billion in profit during the period against analyst estimates of RMB 502 million in losses, according to data cited by Bloomberg.
  • Selling and marketing expenses as a percentage of total revenues decreased to 20.4% from 24.2% for the same period of 2018, and increased from 18.3% for Q2 2019.
  • Revenue contribution from newer businesses such as bike rental and on-demand grocery delivery service Meituan Instashopping increased to 20.8% in Q3 from 18.1% in the same period a year ago.

Context: Meituan went public on the Hong Kong stock exchange in September 2018, raising $4.2 billion.

  • The company’s market cap hit a historical high in October of HK$500 billion ($71 billion), boosted by consumption demands during the seven-day national holiday.

Meituan shares hit historical high after Golden Week surge

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Pinduoduo shares drop on Q3 earnings miss as growth slows https://technode.com/2019/11/20/pinduoduo-shares-drop-on-q3-earnings-miss-as-growth-slows/ https://technode.com/2019/11/20/pinduoduo-shares-drop-on-q3-earnings-miss-as-growth-slows/#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2019 13:14:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122472 pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer TencentForced exclusivity pressure from rivals has had a 'material impact' on the company.]]> pinduoduo C2M ecommerce online retail shopping consumer Tencent

Shares of Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoudo sank more than 20% in pre-market trading after the company posted weaker-than-expected third quarter earnings on Wednesday.

Why it matters: After a strong Q2, the social e-commerce upstart’s rapid growth is slowing in the face of intensifying competition from rivals which are pushing aggressively into China’s lower-tier markets, Pinduoduo’s core customer base.

  • While both Alibaba and JD consider lower-tier regions the driver for revenue growth, Pinduoduo is also trying to expand its presence in higher-tier cities.

“Contrary to what most people’s misconception is of our platform, our users from first-tier cities are spending well over RMB 5,000 ($710), based on annualized 2019 Q3 spending.” 

–Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang during the third-quarter earnings call

Details: The company’s total revenues increased 123% year on year to RMB 7.51 billion ($1.05 billion) in Q3 this year from RMB 3.37 billion in the same quarter of 2018, missing the analyst consensus estimate of $1.06 billion compiled by Yahoo Finance.

  • Buyer growth is still robust. Pinduoduo’s monthly active users (MAU) jumped 85% year on year to 429.6 million in Q3 and rose 17.3% on a sequential basis from 366.0 million in Q2. It outpaced Alibaba’s 17.9% year-on-year jump in MAU but still falls well short of Alibaba’s 785 million total MAU as of the end of the quarter.
  • Total cost of revenues were RMB 1.83 billion ($256.5 million), an increase of 137% from RMB 774.7 million in the same quarter of 2018. The increase was mainly due to higher costs for cloud services, and call center and merchant support services.
  • Net losses more than doubled in Q3 to RMB 2.34 billion from RMB 1.10 billion in the same year-ago period.
  • “Intensified” forced exclusivity efforts from rivals has had a “material impact” on the company, it said in a statement sent to TechNode, referring to pressure from shopping marketplaces on sellers to have stores on only one platform. More than 1,000 brand flagship stores were “affected,” and more than 10,000 small and micro merchants were forced to choose sides, it said.
  • Monopolistic behavior makes sellers dependent on one platform’s traffic, and expose them to any unfair practices like commission rate hikes, resulting in higher prices for consumers, the company said.
  • There were 220 million daily active users (DAU) on Pinduoduo’s platform during this year’s Singles Day shopping festival, second only to Taobao’s 460 million DAU, according to data intelligence firm QuestMobile.

Context: China’s market regulator addressed more than 20 e-commerce players earlier this month at a forum in Hangzhou, saying that forcing businesses into exclusive agreements with one marketplace is illegal.

Forcing sellers into exclusivity deals on marketplaces is illegal: regulator

Update: This story has been updated with net losses as stated in the company’s filing.

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Meituan in focus | Meituan’s turnaround year https://technode.com/2019/11/20/meituan-in-focus-meituans-turnaround-year/ Wed, 20 Nov 2019 13:00:00 +0000 https://technode.com/?p=158522 Meituan, deliveryIn May, Meituan Dianping unseated search engine Baidu as China's third-largest listed internet company by market cap, behind only Alibaba and Tencent. ]]> Meituan, delivery

Although it has earned its spot on a list of China’s tech titans, Meituan only recently joined those ranks. And 2019 is starting to look like the year the company managed to turn itself around.

In May, Meituan Dianping unseated search engine Baidu as China’s third-largest listed internet company by market cap, behind only Alibaba and Tencent. China’s top three tech giants—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent—had long been referred to with the acronym “BAT.” With the market cap ranking reshuffle came a new acronym: “ATM,” short for Alibaba, Tencent, and Meituan.

Over the past year, the firm made strides in becoming the go-to platform for the search and discovery of lifestyle services. As of September, they were serving 422.6 million transacting users and connecting 5.9 million merchants.

Things hadn’t looked so rosy for Meituan at the beginning of this year, when its shares were below the IPO price. Over the next several months, Meituan managed to win back investor trust, with its share price surging more than 120% year-to-date, while its market valuation reached an eye-popping HK$570 billion (around $72 billion) by mid-November.

In Focus | Meituan #1

This article first appeared in In Focus: Meituan, TechNode’s premium biweekly newsletter on the rising tech giant.

The newsletter ran from Nov. 20, 2019 to April 29, 2020.

Meituan is disproving the naysayers that looked askance at the massive debt it had shouldered by acquiring cash-burning businesses such as Mobike. The narrative surrounding the business has started to change.

In this issue, we will take a closer look at Meituan’s moves over the past year, and what the company has done to regain its footing in China’s cutthroat tech scene.

Lackluster IPO and post-IPO struggle

Meituan’s roller coaster ride began with its Hong Kong IPO in September last year.
Already one of China’s most valuable internet firms, Meituan’s decision to go public was not a surprise. However, it underperformed expectations. Media reports suggested that the company was originally shooting for a valuation of $55 billion—or even $60 billion—for the listing. But the market considered the valuation “overconfident.” Meituan had to settle for a more modest $51 billion after raising $4.2 billion from the IPO.

Despite a short-lived spike at the debut, Meituan shares remained in the doldrums for the first few months, sliding below its HK$69 IPO price and bottoming out in January at just above HK$40 apiece.

Though the firm is based in China, it had made a lot of sense for Meituan to go public in Hong Kong, a market within the country and with a good understanding of its business model. This rationale underpins the Hong Kong listing of many a Chinese tech firm, but it was particularly important for Meituan as there is no exact counterpart for the company in overseas markets.

Though it describes itself as the “Amazon of Services,” there is no clear analogue for their range and scope. Singapore’s Grab, for instance, is evolving from a ride-hailing to delivery platform, but lacks Meituan’s scale.

However, its IPO timing was not ideal. After the 2018 IPO frenzy, Hong Kong reclaimed its crown as the top global IPO market. The city saw 125 companies raise $36.5 billion in 2018, the highest since 2010. Of the total, technology, media, and telecommunications (TMT) firms accounted for 39% of all funds raised, according to Refinitiv Data. The IPO craze overshadowed Meituan, especially considering the underwhelming Hong Kong market debuts by Xiaomi and China Tower.

Demand for capital increased along with the list of IPOs during the year. China’s macroeconomic headwinds, fierce competition within the sector, and profitability pressures as a result of user subsidies contributed to a downturn in Meituan’s share price through the end of the year.

In its core food-delivery business, Meituan was facing the rise of a formidable competitor, Alibaba, which runs the rival food-delivery platform Ele.me as well as the lifestyle service platform Koubei. Alibaba merged the two units into one local services platform in October 2018, just a month after Meituan’s IPO.

Additionally, in July of last year, Ele.me CEO Wang Lei had committed RMB 1 billion in subsidies for a “summer battle,” with the express aim of growing Ele.me’s market share and disrupting Meituan’s IPO. Capital is a key element in gaining supremacy in China’s food-delivery market, where players burn a lot of cash to lure customers and crush rivals.

Meituan also devoted considerable resources to expand into multiple crowded industries such as new retail, ride-hailing, and bike rentals. Mobike, the bike rental firm that Meituan acquired for $2.7 billion in August 2018, weighed down its profit margin. Research from equity firm China Tonghai Securities has forecast that Mobike will continue to be a drag on overall profitability until 2021.

Financial pressures forced the company to redouble their money-making efforts by increasing the commissions they charge from merchants and by reducing pay to their delivery fleets. Both moves were poorly received, fueling concerns about the company’s operational leadership and profitability prospects.

2019 uptick

After operating losses rocketed to RMB 3.7 billion in Q4 2018, more than double the amount of the same period a year ago, the company shifted its growth strategy, promising improved cost controls in 2019.

To wind down its cash-burning non-core businesses, Meituan closed lower-tier city locations for its Ella supermarkets (a rival to Alibaba’s new retail platform Hema), downsized Mobike’s overseas operations, increased bike rental fees, and cut back subsidies for its ride-hailing business.

Meanwhile, the competitive pressure from Ele.me’s massive subsidy battle had ended after the summer of 2018, when the company CEO pledged an end to subsidy wars. Additionally, industry analysts found that results from the Ele.me and Koubei merger—including improvements to order volume, take rate, and cost efficiency—were disappointingly “soft.”

With a sharpened focus, Meituan widened its lead over Ele.me. Its market share rose to 65.1% in Q2 2019 from 54.4% in Q1 2018, taking share from Ele.me, which fell to 27.4% of the market in Q2 from 35% in Q1, according to data analysis platform Trustdata.

Revenue from Meituan’s food delivery and online travel businesses helped the company swing into profit in Q2, compared with RMB 7.7 billion (around $1.1 billion) in losses accrued in the same period a year earlier.

Meituan CFO Chen Shaohui stressed that the Q2 profitability was due to seasonality, and that the company would continue to prioritize scale over profit for its food-delivery business.
Industry watchers agree that the company’s newfound profitability may stay relatively modest as it matures. “The company is probably not going to push too much further here and will just operate around the break-even line for a long time to come, so that they can keep growing and expanding their boundaries,” the private investor ZQ Ong told TechNode.

Rising consumption demand from food delivery, travel, and ticketing during the October Golden Week pushed the company’s share price to new heights, reaching HK$89 on October 8, the conclusion of the holiday.

Meituan’s comeback this year has restored investor confidence in its management’s ability to execute as well as in the company’s new strategy. Adopting a more disciplined approach to its development, the company that had been known for its aggressiveness is gradually making compromises and finding a balance.

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Amid B2B shift, Singles Day is also a showcase for Alibaba’s tech https://technode.com/2019/11/20/amid-b2b-shift-singles-day-is-also-a-showcase-for-alibabas-tech/ https://technode.com/2019/11/20/amid-b2b-shift-singles-day-is-also-a-showcase-for-alibabas-tech/#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2019 05:02:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122433 Jiang Fan AlibabaAlibaba began focusing on its enterprise-facing business at the beginning of the year.]]> Jiang Fan Alibaba
(Image credit: Alibaba)

Alibaba Cloud disclosed details of core technologies that underpinned its Nov. 11 Singles Day shopping event, developments that it is offering to third parties as it pushes further into enterprise-facing services to boost growth.

Why it matters: Supporting consumer demand from the world’s second-largest economy has helped catalyze new technology development and applications, which China’s e-commerce platforms are selling as a service to third parties, particularly small- and medium-sized businesses.

  • Alibaba began shifting focus to its enterprise-facing business at the beginning of the year, monetizing technology developed for its own business units through service offerings such as cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), and logistics support.
  • E-commerce rival JD is also opening up its technologies to more partners with the launch of a digitization solution for financial institutions.

Details: Powered by its third-generation X-Dragon architecture, Alibaba Cloud processed orders totaling $38.4 billion in 24 hours with zero downtime, according to a statement sent to TechNode.

  • Alibaba Cloud’s POLARDB database supported sales activity including a peak of 87 million requests processed per second.
  • Alime Shop Assistant, a customer-service chatbot available in 11 languages, handled 97% of online customer inquiries on Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms Taobao and Tmall during 11.11.
  • Alibaba DAMO Academy provided machine translation for cross-border e- commerce platform AliExpress, translating store and product pages into 21 languages including Russian, Spanish, Turkish, French, and Arabic for buyers in Europe, Asia, the Americas, and the Middle East.
  • Livestreams on Taobao Live earned RMB 20 billion in sales on Singles Day, enabled by a newly launched real-time communications framework for audio and video on Alibaba Cloud.
  • During the sales event, more than one million orders were placed and processed through voice commands using Tmall Genie, A.I. Labs’ smart speaker.

Context: Cloud computing is the foundation for Alibaba’s growth.

  • The firm’s cloud computing revenue grew 64% year on year to RMB 9.29 billion during the quarter ended Sept. 30.

Alibaba doubles down on enterprise transformation with A100 program

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Chinese bike-rental company Mobike raises fares https://technode.com/2019/11/19/chinese-bike-rental-company-mobike-raises-fares/ https://technode.com/2019/11/19/chinese-bike-rental-company-mobike-raises-fares/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2019 07:17:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122314 A row of Mobikes (now known as Meituan Bikes) sits along the pavement in Pudong, Shanghai on April 4, 2019. (Image Credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)The rate increase is part of parent company Meituan's broader profitability push.]]> A row of Mobikes (now known as Meituan Bikes) sits along the pavement in Pudong, Shanghai on April 4, 2019. (Image Credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)

Mobike raised its rates for bike rentals in a number of cities across the country on Monday, expanding fare increases that had been implemented in Shanghai and Beijing earlier this year, the company said.

Why it matters: Chinese bike-rental firms are hiking rental fees to bolster profitability following a prolonged period of huge losses and major cash flow constraints in the industry.

  • Mobike’s efforts to shore up monetization started at the beginning of the year as part of a broader profitability push for parent company Meituan, which also struggled with profitability prior to the second quarter this year.
  • Apart from Mobike, Alibaba-backed Hellobike and Didi’s bike-sharing arm Qingju also raised their fares this year. In June, Hellobike doubled the rates for bike rentals in Beijing from RMB 2 (around $0.28) to RMB 4 an hour, priced in 15-minute intervals.

Details: Mobike riders will be charged RMB 1.5 the first 15 minutes, up from RMB 1, and RMB 0.5 for every additional 15-minute increment, according to a Chinese media report.

  • Under the new rule, the fare for a one-hour ride adds up to RMB 3, drawing complaints from riders who said they would consider alternative transportation like the bus or subway, which charge similar fares.
  • One Weibo user using the handle “Likeavirgin” hasn’t ridden a bike since fares rose earlier this year and is now considering purchasing a bike.
  • Another Weibo user, “Yigongchang,” said the fare hike ahead of winter was badly timed for the low season when rider numbers will dip.
  • The price increase will not apply to users who bought into its discount program, which charges flat rates for unlimited rides on a monthly, quarterly, or annual basis. These users will continue qualify for two-hour rides free of charge but will need to pay RMB 0.5 for every additional 15-minute increment.

Context: Meituan, China’s food delivery and local services giant, acquired Mobike for RMB 18.1 billion in April 2018.

  • Following the acquisition, Mobike shuttered many of its international offices in March to focus on the China market.
  • Meituan is gradually phasing out Mobike bikes on the street and replacing them with new units under the Meituan Bike brand.
  • The bike rental subsidiary contributed RMB 4.6 billion ($655 million), or over half of Meituan’s adjusted net losses in 2018. A March report from equity firm China Tonghai Securities said that Mobike will continue to be loss-making until 2021.

Mobike will scrap some but not all of its Asia-Pacific businesses

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JD.com’s revenue jumps in Q3 on lower-tier market push https://technode.com/2019/11/18/jd-coms-revenue-jumps-in-q3-on-lower-tier-market-push/ https://technode.com/2019/11/18/jd-coms-revenue-jumps-in-q3-on-lower-tier-market-push/#respond Mon, 18 Nov 2019 06:24:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122196 JDFocus on lower-tier cities pits the company in an extended competition with Alibaba Group and Pinduoduo.]]> JD

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com’s net revenue surged in the third quarter, powered by stronger e-commerce sales from lower-tier markets and easily beating analyst estimates.

Why it matters: Lower-tier cities are a key segment for Chinese e-commerce platforms as top-tier markets reach saturation. JD had a firm foothold in higher-tier cities, and is seeking growth by tapping rising consumer demand from the lower-tier regions.

  • Pushing into lower-tier cities positions JD for an extended competition with rivals like Alibaba Group and Pinduoduo.

“JD’s commitment to providing consumers with the best possible online shopping experience drove another strong quarter of growth. In particular, more and more consumers in China’s fast-growing lower-tier cities are turning to JD for our superior value and service. We will continue to invest in technology and innovation to meet the growing needs of Chinese consumers and businesses for fast and reliable e-commerce and supply chain solutions.”

Richard Liu, JD.com chairman and CEO, in a statement

Details: JD recorded net revenue of RMB 134.8 billion ($18.9 billion) in the third quarter of this year, an increase of 28.7% year on year, the highest growth rate in the last five quarters. It surpassed by a significant margin analyst expectations of RMB 128.6 million, according to Reuters citing IBES.

  • Net revenue growth was driven by consumers in lower-tier cities, or cities within the third to sixth tiers, as well as continued demand for highly competitive pricing on products, the company said. JD’s customer-to-manufacturing (C2M) program—a direct-shipping model using data to inform manufacturers of consumer preference—is a major component of its lower-tier market push.
  • The cost of revenues increased 29.4% year on year to RMB 114.7 billion in Q3, primarily due to the growth of the company’s online direct sales business and the logistics services provided to third parties.
  • The company’s annual active customer accounts increased to 334.4 million in Q3 from 321.3 million in Q2. Customers in lower-tier cities accounted for more than 70% of new customer growth during Q3.

Context: JD launched its re-brand of Pinduoduo lookalike app JD Pingou to Jingxi in October as part of its strategy to push further into lower-tier cities.

  • Similar to Pinduoduo, Jingxi aggressively leverages Tencent WeChat’s viral marketing capabilities using the mini-program feature and favorable “first-level” positioning on WeChat’s third-party listings.

JD takes aim at lower-tier markets with re-brand of Pinduoduo clone

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Alibaba offers glimpse of plans for long-awaited Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2019/11/15/alibaba-offers-glimpse-of-plans-for-long-awaited-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/11/15/alibaba-offers-glimpse-of-plans-for-long-awaited-hong-kong-ipo/#respond Fri, 15 Nov 2019 03:53:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=122043 alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shoppingThe company will use the "9988" ticker on the exchange.]]> alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shopping
Alibaba’s booth at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference on August 30, 2019 in Shanghai. (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

Alibaba is planning to offer 500 million new ordinary shares as a part of its global offering on the Hong Kong stock exchange, and will use the ticker, “9988.”

Why it matters: The company’s 2014 debut on the New York Stock Exchange was the largest global initial public offering (IPO) yet. Alibaba’s secondary listing on the Hong Kong exchange will open the opportunity for users and stakeholders within its ecosystem across Asia to invest and participate in its growth.

  • Alibaba is aiming to raise $13 billion through the listing, people with knowledge of the matter told TechNode.
  • The offering will help the company to tap into capital pools in Asia and create a nearly round-the-clock market for global investors to trade Alibaba shares.

“As we celebrated Alibaba’s 20th anniversary in September, we shared our strategic goals for the next five years: serve global consumers, of which more than 1 billion will be Chinese consumers, and facilitate more than RMB 10 trillion of consumption on our platforms. Our longer-term goals by the year 2036 are to serve 2 billion consumers globally, create 100 million jobs, and provide the necessary infrastructure to support 10 million small businesses to become profitable on our platforms.”

—Daniel Zhang, Alibaba Group Chairman and Chief Executive Officer in a letter to investors

Details: Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed shares will be fully fungible with its New York-traded American Depositary Shares (ADS) which carry a ratio of one to eight ordinary shares, the company said in a statement emailed to TechNode.

  • Of the total new shares to be issued in Hong Kong, 12.5 million will be offered publicly for retail investors. The total number of such shares can increased to a maximum of 50 million or 10.0% of total shares under the offering.
  • In addition, 487.5 million shares will be available for global subscription. An over-allotment option will be granted to international underwriters to purchase up to an additional 75 million new shares.
  • The offer price for the public retail offering will be no more than HK$188 ($24) per share, while the international tranche may be issued at a price higher than HK$188.
  • Alibaba will set the international offer price by Nov. 20, 2019, Hong Kong time.
  • The proceeds will be put toward boosting user growth and engagement, digital improvements, and continuing long-term innovation and investments.
  • The company has not yet disclosed the date for its IPO debut. Sources from global media outlets expect the IPO at the end of this month.

Context: After missing out listing on the Hong Kong stock market “with regret” in 2014, new reforms opened opportunities for Alibaba’s return, Zhang has said.

Alibaba readies $13 billion Hong Kong IPO

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Luckin Coffee shares jump 13% on narrowed Q3 losses, revenue beat https://technode.com/2019/11/14/luckin-coffee-shares-jump-13-on-narrowed-q3-losses-revenue-beat/ https://technode.com/2019/11/14/luckin-coffee-shares-jump-13-on-narrowed-q3-losses-revenue-beat/#respond Thu, 14 Nov 2019 05:47:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121982 luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy appsThe results reflect an improved cost control strategy.]]> luckin coffee starbucks vending machine fraud privacy apps

Shares for Chinese coffee chain startup Luckin Coffee surged 13.1% Wednesday after reporting better-than-expected Q3 results.

Why it matters: The results reassured investors concerned with the company’s subsidy-fueled expansion. The company’s net losses slowed during the period, reflecting an improved cost control strategy.

Details: Luckin’s net loss per American Depositary Share (ADS) was RMB 2.24 ($0.32), beating consensus analyst estimates of $0.37, and compared with a loss of RMB 3.60 in same year-ago period.

  • Luckin’s total net revenues were RMB 1.54 billion ($215.7 million), up 540.2% year on year from RMB 240.8 million in Q3 2018, topping analyst expectations of $211.88 million.
  • Net revenue uptick was driven by growth in its core beverage business, for which the number of transacting customers, effective selling price, and number of products sold per transacting customer increased.
  • Total operating expenses were RMB 2.13 billion ($298.3 million), representing an increase of 193.6% from the same period a year ago and driven by business expansion. Operating expenses as a percentage of net revenues decreased to 138.3% from 301.7% in Q3 2018, mainly driven by increased economies of scale and technology-driven operations.
  • The company had 3,680 stores as of the end of the quarter, quickly closing the gap with Starbucks, which now operates 4,000-plus stores in China.

“We exceeded the high-end of our guidance range, achieved a store level profit margin of 12.5% and experienced continuous growth across all key operating metrics. These achievements follow a clear trend: an increase in volumes, efficiency and, as a result, profitability.”

—Jenny Zhiya Qian, Luckin Coffee CEO

Context: Luckin Coffee, which has built a customer base based on smaller store footprints and affordable prices, forms a formidable challenger in China to global coffee chain Starbucks.

  • In addition to its core coffee business, the Startucks rival is expanding to tea-based beverages, a popular beverage category among Chinese consumers.

Luckin joins Starbucks in blurring boundaries between coffee and tea

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Alibaba readies $13 billion Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2019/11/13/alibaba-readies-13-billion-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/11/13/alibaba-readies-13-billion-hong-kong-ipo/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2019 11:10:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121927 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe company gained approval from the listing committee on Tuesday.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is looking to raise around $13 billion through a secondary listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange, people with knowledge of the matter told TechNode on Wednesday.

Why it matters: The company’s long-expected secondary listing could be the world’s largest issuance this year and the largest one for the Hong Kong market since 2010.

  • The potential listing would make Alibaba shares available to Chinese investors who are also users of the e-commerce platform.
  • A dual listing in New York and Hong Kong would allow the shares to be traded on a full-day cycle, reflecting investor sentiment in real time.

Details: The company will offer 500 million newly issued shares through the Hong Kong listing, according to its prospectus filed with the SEC.

  • The offering includes a greenshoe option, allowing underwriters to buy an extra 15% of shares from the issuer at the offer price good for a few days after the initial offering, the source said. If the greenshoe option is exercised, the offering will dilute the interest of existing ordinary shares by 2.8%.
  • At Alibaba’s current share price of around $186 apiece, the initial public offering (IPO) could raise around $13 billion.
  • Alibaba hopes to set the IPO price on Nov. 20, the people said.
  • Alibaba gained approval from the Hong Kong stock exchange’s listing committee on Tuesday and is kicking off a week-long roadshow on Wednesday, according to the South China Morning Post.

Context: Alibaba’s business-to-business entity went public on the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange in 2007, but delisted in 2012.

  • When preparing for a relisting in 2013, Alibaba choose the New York Stock Exchange over Hong Kong so it could offer a dual-class share structure, although founder Jack Ma has commented publicly on multiple occasions that company remains open to a Hong Kong listing.
  • The Hong Kong stock exchange began allowing companies to list with dual-class shares in April 2018, opening the door for tech firms to have share classes with different voting rights.
  • The company had earlier received shareholders approval to split its ordinary shares on a one-to-eight basis, increasing its capital base to 32 billion shares from 4 billion.

Correction: includes a correction about the interest dilution from greenshoe option, which would be 2.8% of existing ordinary shares, not a total of 2.8 million additional shares.

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Livestreams on Taobao Live earn RMB 20 billion in sales on Singles Day https://technode.com/2019/11/13/livestreams-on-taobao-live-earn-rmb-20-billion-in-sales-on-singles-day/ https://technode.com/2019/11/13/livestreams-on-taobao-live-earn-rmb-20-billion-in-sales-on-singles-day/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2019 03:56:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121877 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoLivestreams are becoming a go-to option for Chinese consumers seeking new products and discounts.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo
(Image credit: TechNode)

Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of e-commerce giant Alibaba, recorded sales of RMB 20 billion ($2.85 billion) during the Singles Day shopping event held on Nov. 11, accounting for around 7.5% of the group’s overall RMB 268.4 billion in sales.

Why it matters: The spike in sales from livestream e-commerce during China’s biggest online shopping festival highlights the rise of content-driven e-commerce in the country.

  • Alibaba’s Taobao generated more than RMB 100 billion in gross merchandise volume (GMV) through livestreaming sessions throughout 2018, an increase of nearly 400% year on year.
  • However, problems that dog mainstream e-commerce such as false advertising also shadow e-commerce livestreams. Chinese regulators have stepped in to regulate the flourishing sector.

Content emerges as new driver of Chinese e-commerce

Details: Alibaba data shows that GMV from Taobao Live exceeded last year’s total sales from live feeds about an hour after the shopping festival kicked off at midnight.

  • The number of sellers on new sales channel have doubled from last year’s number, signaling growing interest. The number of livestreaming sessions during the event also doubled from last year, the company said.
  • More than 10 livestreamers sold RMB 1 billion-worth of goods on Nov. 11, according to the company.
  • In addition to Alibaba, e-commerce platforms like Vip.com and short video apps such as ByteDance’s Douyin and Kuaishou are also leveraging live-streaming to power their e-commerce businesses.
  • More than 17,000 brands started livestreaming during the festival, from popular products including fashion apparel, cosmetics, consumer electronics, to new categories including cars.
  • For example, Taobao’s top livestreamer, Viya, livestreamed for eight hours engaging a total of 43.15 million buyers. The “Lipstick King” Li Jiaqi livestreamed for more than 6 hours, drawing 36.83 million users. In another livestreaming session that offered discount on cars, 55 cars were sold in just 1 second.
  • From celebrities to top brand executives to farmers, livestreamers themselves are becoming more diverse.

Context: While most livestreaming platforms in the West are focused on gaming and entertainment, livestreaming is becoming a go-to option for Chinese consumers seeking new products and discounts.

  • Taobao is home to more than 4,000 livestream hosts who generate 150,000 hours of content offering upwards of 600,000 products on a daily basis.
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New tech could bring big changes for entertainment content: Maoyan CTO https://technode.com/2019/11/13/new-tech-could-bring-big-changes-for-entertainment-content-maoyan-cto/ https://technode.com/2019/11/13/new-tech-could-bring-big-changes-for-entertainment-content-maoyan-cto/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2019 02:40:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121823 New technological advancements like 5G, AI and blockchain are going to have a major impact on the entertainment industry.]]>

Advances in technology are expected to bring fundamental changes to the pan-entertainment industry, as they have in other sectors. The changes will range from how content is produced to how material is distributed among audiences. 

Coined in 2011 by Cheng Wu, chief executive of Tencent’s filmmaking arm, pan-entertainment refers to multi-level products developed from intellectual property, such as games, anime, drama, films, and fiction.

Burgeoning tech such as 5G, AI, and blockchain are going to have a significant impact on the entertainment industry, according to Chen Qingyang, chief technology officer of Tencent-backed online ticketing platform Maoyan Entertainment.

Chen highlighted virtual idols, digital avatars that feature their own voices and personalities. Taking hologram form, they perform live shows for thousands of adoring fans. Enabled by big data and AI, virtual idols like Luo Tianyi, have gained great popularity among younger generations over the past two years, Chen noted.

“With the rise of 5G and AI, the capability to generate a complete and whole visual scene on stage is going to bring fundamental changes to entertainment production and consumption,” he said at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Tuesday. VR is another key area for entertainment. While the technology can provide an immersive experience, Chen expects adopters to face obstacles in updating devices, improving display resolutions, and enriching content.

Different from countries such as the US, Chinese movie-goers typically secure their seats by buying tickets online from dealers. China’s box office boom over the past decade has given rise to online ticketing platforms like Maoyan and Alibaba-backed Taopiaopiao.

As the market leader with a share of more than 60%, Maoyan has pioneered some of the sector’s most popular features in recent years, from online seat selection, snack purchases, ticket refunds, and ticket changes.

Expanding beyond its core ticketing business, the Hong Kong-listed firm refocused its strategy in July to beef up crucial business areas, including operational efficiency, big data, marketing, and funding. At the same time, the move highlights its determination to enter the pan-entertainment market, especially at a time when China’s box office revenue is experiencing a downturn.

In line with the strategic shift, Maoyan entered a new partnership with Tencent, through which Maoyan gains access to resources from Tencent’s entertainment empire that includes Tencent Pictures, Tencent Video, Tencent Holdings, and Tencent Music Entertainment Group.

“Maoyan is quite a big player in online ticketing, but we are small when looking at the pan-entertainment market, which is expected to be worth RMB2.3 trillion by 2020,” said Chen.

China is the second-largest entertainment market in the world, according to data from iResearch, which brought in RMB 1.7 trillion (around $247 billion) in revenue in 2018. This figure is projected to hit RMB 3.2 trillion in 2022.

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China’s Singles Day sales growth bounces back to 30% https://technode.com/2019/11/12/chinas-singles-day-sales-growth-bounces-back-to-30/ https://technode.com/2019/11/12/chinas-singles-day-sales-growth-bounces-back-to-30/#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2019 07:07:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121704 Jiang Fan AlibabaJD Internet Hospital orders for services like health checkups, vaccines, and cosmetic surgery increased 45 times in the first hour.]]> Jiang Fan Alibaba

China’s Singles Day shopping extravaganza came to a close Monday at midnight having posted 30% year-on-year growth in sales across e-commerce platforms, a modest recovery from last year’s figures which had marked a distinct shift in consumer sentiment.

Why it matters: Singles Day, the “Olympic games for merchants,” has helped catapult China’s retail development over the past decade and is seen as an informal bellwether for economic health.

  • Overall sales growth for major Chinese e-commerce platforms during last year’s event slowed to 23.7% year on year from highs of more than 40% seen in earlier years.
  • Although still far lower than before, this year’s growth figure is a sign that Chinese consumer confidence is relatively healthy given the impact of a slowing local economy amid trade tensions with the US.

Details: China’s overall e-commerce sales during the day increased more than 30% year on year to RMB 410.1 billion ($58.56 billion) across platforms, according to reports citing data from China-based data services company Syntun.

  • Alibaba Group sold RMB 268.4 billion ($38.4 billion) in gross merchandise volume (GMV) on Nov. 11, 2019, an increase of 26% compared with GMV of RMB 213.5 billion in 2018, but slower compared with last year’s 27% year-on-year comparison.
  • JD.com recorded RMB 204.4 billion in GMV over 11 days from Nov. 1 to 11, rising 28% year on year compared with last year’s RMB 159.8 billion GMV figure and faster than last year’s 26% growth rate.
  • Pinduoduo does not reveal its Singles Day sales data, but Syntun data showed that Pinduoduo has overtaken Suning.com as the third-largest online sales platform during the festival, after Alibaba and JD.
  • Suning.com, the omini-channel retailer, announced 76% year-on-year growth in orders. Sales through its newly acquired Carrefour China surged 43% year on year to RMB 312 million.
  • The e-commerce giants have expanded the promotion across their ecosystem to include online travel, local services, and even healthcare.
  • Alibaba’s sales include those from online travel platform Fliggy. JD reported that orders for its JD Internet Hospital for promotions on services such as health and dental checkups, vaccines, and cosmetic surgery, increased 45 times year on year in the first hour of of the event.

Context: Singles Day, a promotional concept first conceived by Alibaba and based on the single person’s version of Valentine’s Day, is heading into the second decade.

  • The event generated more than 1.66 billion parcels this year, exceeding the size of the Chinese population, highlighting the significance of the shopping promotion for the e-commerce industry.
  • Smartphone and consumer electronics, home appliances, and cosmetics were the most popular product categories.

After Singles’ Day’s dazzling first decade, what’s next for global shopping fest?

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China’s data-based C2M model to drive e-commerce forward https://technode.com/2019/11/12/chinas-data-based-c2m-model-to-drive-e-commerce-forward/ https://technode.com/2019/11/12/chinas-data-based-c2m-model-to-drive-e-commerce-forward/#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2019 04:59:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121668 China's consumer-to-manufacturing model is expected to be a new driver in shaping the country’s e-commerce landscape.]]>

China’s consumer-to-manufacturing (C2M) model is expected to become a new driver in shaping the country’s e-commerce landscape, not only bringing new growth points for the retailers and manufacturers but also better addressing user demands.

The model connects manufacturers and consumers for the production of tailored products at lower prices. Through the application of AI-powered data analytics, online retailers, consumer brands, and AI companies are jointly making mass-customization possible in China.

While still new to outsiders, C2M has already garnered lots of attention domestically thanks to the rapid rise of e-commerce platforms such as Pinduoduo and NetEase’s Yanxuan that have already adopted the model.

“C2M is essentially evolving traditional manufacturing from an R&D and marketing-driven process into a consumer-driven process,” explained Victor Tseng, vice-president of corporate development at Pinduoduo, during a TechNode Emerge panel at TechCrunch Shenzhen on Monday.

Importance to manufacturing

China’s manufacturers are in dire need of new approaches and technologies to find new growth points. The sector is experiencing a general decline in demand. The consumer price index grew 3.8% year on year in October, the fastest rate since January 2012, while industrial profits fell 5.3% a month earlier under pressures from US trade tensions.

With China’s 800 million+ e-commerce users making up nearly half of the global online shopping market, e-commerce has become a key channel for Chinese manufacturers to better understand user preferences and predict sales.

Even automakers are engaging with C2M firms amid a prolonged slump in sales. Pinduoduo held a team purchase promotion with car dealers during this year’s Double 11 shopping festival. Some 3,100 cars from five major auto brands were sold in just nine hours.

Manufacturers didn’t just receive a one-time sales boost, according to PDD’s Tseng. More than 20,000 indications of interest were registered for the promotion. Carmakers were able to gain an insight into demand and better predict consumers’ intent to purchase, he said. This could help them optimize manufacturing and save money at multiple stages, and these savings could trickle down to consumers.

Youth-driven

C2M has gained momentum over the last two years due to two major shifts, said Dan Kong, senior investment director at North Summit Capital, during the panel. “The first factor is that users’ demands from different channels are different. Secondly, technological advancements in big data and AI, are enabling change. The key for C2M is to connect consumers and manufacturers through data and computational infrastructure,” he said.

Users’ needs, especially those of younger generations, are diversified, while user channels are greatly segmented. They include a host of online marketplace platforms such as Taobao, Pinduoduo, and Douyin, said Kong.

Customization options for consumers were previously costly and limited to luxury product categories, said Chadwich Xu, CEO and co-founder of Shenzhen Valley Ventures, during the panel. He echoed Kong’s view that the ever-sophisticated demands of younger generations that typically celebrate their individuality, and want more personalized products, have accelerated the rise of C2M.

With contributions from Jill Shen.

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Japan could look to China as it seeks tech innovation revival https://technode.com/2019/11/12/japan-could-look-to-china-as-it-seeks-tech-innovation-revival/ https://technode.com/2019/11/12/japan-could-look-to-china-as-it-seeks-tech-innovation-revival/#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2019 02:16:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121639 Japan could learn from its neighbor as the country pursues greater innovation and digitalization. ]]>

From Sony to Panasonic, Japanese brands dominated the tech world before the mobile internet era. China and India previously looked to Japan when fostering their practices over the past decade. But Japan itself is now seeking a tech innovation revival, and China could become an essential partner in its efforts.

The Japanese economy is still highly focused on the manufacturing industry, with over half of the top 500 local companies coming from the manufacturing sector. In contrast, Japan is home to only three unicorn startups, or private firms with a valuation of $1 billion, according to a long list of 415 such firms globally from CrunchBase Insights.

Unlike in China and the US, where startups mainly drive tech entrepreneurialism, Japanese corporations are taking a more prominent role in pushing tech innovations, according to Shimizu Kenji, director general at the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO).

“There are fewer startups in Japan now, but big corporations are very proactive in pushing innovations,” he said during a panel at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Monday.

Inazuka Tetsu, the senior associated officer of air conditioner maker Daikin Industries, echoed Shimizu Kenji’s sentiments, pointing out that corporate innovation has been picking up momentum gradually, especially in the last few years. Corporate innovation aims to push in-house projects and work with startups, as well as overseas partners.

Governments from both countries are pushing for cooperation in innovation to build stronger innovation links. Shimizu Kenji, head of JETRO’s Guangzhou office, says Japan is known for its manufacturing industry and Shenzhen for its hardware manufacturing capabilities. This scenario leaves much room for cooperation between the pair.

At the same time, Japanese firms, generally considered risk-averse, are joining the global digitalization drive and adopting a more open attitude to tech-enabled solutions.

“Daikin is a company with over one hundred years of history and known for its manufacturing business. With the arrival of the digital era, however, we do feel it’s a pressing problem to digitalize our operations. Closer tie-up with Chinese companies, which are moving ahead in this area, could help us to keep up with the trend more quickly,” said Inazuka Tetsu from Daikin.

Although the global innovation center is shifting to Asia, Kenji and Tetsu agreed that it may still take time for Japan to become part of the movement because there are still lots of barriers to growth for startup innovations in Japan.

Given the circumstances, China, home to a vibrant startup environment, could be a suitable place for Japanese entrepreneurs to nurture their ideas and kick off projects, said Naruse Koichi, vice-president at Samurai Incubate, a Japanse startup hub that has invested in more than 160 small businesses to date.

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Alibaba raises stake in logistics arm Cainiao for additional $3.3 billion https://technode.com/2019/11/08/alibaba-raises-stake-in-logistics-arm-cainiao-for-additional-3-3-billion/ https://technode.com/2019/11/08/alibaba-raises-stake-in-logistics-arm-cainiao-for-additional-3-3-billion/#respond Fri, 08 Nov 2019 10:20:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121518 The investment comes just days before Singles’ Day, a peak time for parcel delivery.]]>
(Image credit: Alibaba)

Alibaba Group announced an additional RMB 23.3 billion ($3.3 billion) investment in its affiliate Cainiao Smart Logistics, boosting its holdings in the logistic unit to approximately 63% from 51%.

Why it matters: The move highlights Alibaba’s ambition in building an efficient delivery logistics network, which is an increasingly important component to its enterprise-faced initiative Alibaba Business Operating System.

  • In addition to Cainiao, the company holds stakes in other large Chinese couriers like STO Express, ZTO Express, YTO Express, and Best.
  • The investment comes just days before China’s Nov. 11 Singles’ Day shopping festival, which usually a peak time for parcel delivery in China.

Logistics is a key pillar of the Alibaba Business Operating System. It allows us to offer the best service to customers and to effectively advance our New Retail strategy. Cainiao strives to enhance service and user experience for merchants and consumers through superior technology and digital solutions, both within China and around the world. We are committed to supporting its ongoing development, to realizing greater synergies throughout the entire Alibaba Economy and accelerating digitization of the logistics industry.”

⁠—Daniel Zhang, Alibaba Group Executive Chairman and CEO in a statement emailed to TechNode

Details: Alibaba will acquire the shares by subscribing for newly issued Cainiao ordinary shares in its latest financing round and purchasing an equity interest from an existing Cainiao shareholder.

  • Other existing shareholders also participated in the fundraising but the company did not disclose the names.
  • The additional investment from Alibaba Group is “a vote of confidence in Cainiao,” according to the firm.
  • The new funding will help Cainiao continue its investment in technologies and logistics infrastructure services.
  • Cainiao’s global fulfillment serive is expected to support Alibaba’s international e-commerce business, including Tmall Global, AliExpress and Lazada.

Context: In 2013, Alibaba co-founded Cainiao alongside eight partners, including five Chinese logistics companies. Previously, Alibaba had only relied on third-party couriers for its e-commerce operations.

  • Alibaba Group raised its stake to a majority 51% in Cainiao from 47% in 2017.
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China’s Trip.com eyes global expansion with TripAdvisor tie-up https://technode.com/2019/11/08/chinas-trip-com-eyes-global-expansion-with-tripadvisor-tie-up/ https://technode.com/2019/11/08/chinas-trip-com-eyes-global-expansion-with-tripadvisor-tie-up/#respond Fri, 08 Nov 2019 02:42:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121426 trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19Trip.com is going global as its core China-based business face growing competition from local rivals like Meituan Dianping, and Alibaba-backed Fliggy.]]> trip.com ctrip qunar skyscanner covid-19

Chinese travel giant Trip.com Group, formerly known as Ctrip.com, has entered into a partnership with TripAdvisor, as part of efforts to expand its presence in the global market.

Why it matters: Trip.com, one of the largest travel agency platforms in China, is pushing for globalization as its core China-based business faces growing competition from local rivals like Tencent-backed Meituan Dianping and Alibaba-backed Fliggy.

  • “The broad strategic partnership pairs Trip.com Group’s market leadership in travel booking capabilities and China travel market expertise with TripAdvisor’s unique brand strength, rich global user-generated content, and points-of-interest database, as well as best-in-class in-destination supply,” the company said in an emailed statement.
  • More than 149 million Chinese took outbound trips in 2018, up 14.7% compared with 2017, according to a report from the China Tourism Academy. Chinese tourists spent more than $130 billion during these trips in 2018, up 13% year on year.

“As we expand our footprint overseas, it is important that we offer not only seamless access to global travel inventory, but also quality reviews, opinions and pictures generated by other fellow travelers. We are very excited about this strategic partnership, which will undoubtedly further enhance the travel experience for our customers worldwide.”

—Jane Sun, CEO of Trip.com Group

Details: The tie-up will pool the companies’ resources together for initiatives including a joint venture, global content agreements, and a governance agreement, said the firm.

  • The new joint venture will be set up through their subsidiaries—Ctrip Investment Holding Ltd. and TripAdvisor Singapore Private Limited.
  • Trip.com will be the majority shareholder of the new JV and will contribute cash and market expertise. TripAdvisor will take a 40% share and provide a long-term exclusive brand and content license, as well as other assets of its China business.
  • The companies have entered into global content agreements for the distribution of selected TripAdvisor content on major Trip.com Group brands, including Trip.com, Ctrip, Skyscanner, and Qunar.
  • As part of the deal, Trip.com will gain a nomination right for one TripAdvisor board seat as long as the Chinese company acquires up to 6.95 million TripAdvisor shares, worth $317.6 million, within one year of regulatory approvals.

Context: Trip.com dropped the previous name Ctrip.com one week ago to help the firm become more memorable for global users, reflecting the company’s ambition to expand internationally.

  • Trip.com’s Q2 earnings show the company’s international business already accounts for more than 35% of total revenue. Company CEO Jane Sun expects to further increase that proportion to between 40% and 50% within three to five years.
  • Baidu, a leading shareholder in Trip.com, announced plans in September to sell $1 billion of its stake as competition for advertising revenue intensifies during the economic downturn.
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E-commerce marketplaces struggle to comply with e-cigarette sales ban https://technode.com/2019/11/07/chinese-marketplaces-struggle-to-comply-with-online-e-cigarette-sales-ban/ https://technode.com/2019/11/07/chinese-marketplaces-struggle-to-comply-with-online-e-cigarette-sales-ban/#respond Thu, 07 Nov 2019 05:52:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121330 Chinese authorities want to accelerate implementation of the ban.]]>

Chinese e-commerce platforms are struggling to comply with the country’s newly released blanket ban on the online sales and marketing of electronic cigarettes as regulators look to ramp up its implementation.

Why it matters: China is taking steps to regulate its blossoming vaping market as health concerns over electronic cigarettes increase. Online sales channels, because of the ease with which underage buyers are able to evade age verification processes, are facing the brunt of regulatory pressure.

  • China’s robust demand for vaping products is attracting new players, especially those from the tech sector. Luo Yonghao, the previous CEO of smartphone brand Smartisan, is now a partner at an e-cigarette startup.
  • More than 95% of the world’s e-cigarettes are designed and made in China, Ou Junxi, president of the Electric Cigarette Industry Committee from the China Electronics Chamber of Commerce told local media.

Details: China’s authorities released a statement on Nov. 1 requiring all e-commerce platforms to remove e-cigarettes and halt related marketing campaigns. The measures are aimed at protecting adolescents from vaping, according to the statement.

  • Nearly a week after the ban, related government authorities on Tuesday summoned executives from major e-commerce platforms, search engines, and social platforms to accelerate implementation of the ban.
  • Only a few e-commerce sites including Suning have fully complied with the ban, while a majority of the platforms are still adjusting their operations.
  • Keywords including “e-cigar” are blacklisted on top online marketplaces like Alibaba’s Taobao, Pinduoduo, and JD. However, it is still possible to locate e-cigarette sellers using alternative phrases for keywords.
  • A JD representative attending the government meeting said the company was willing to keep up with the ban, but complete removal of e-cigarette products may take time due to unfinished orders, ongoing contracts with  manufacturers, and unsold inventories. The company said it is blocking related keywords first and will remove the products gradually.
  • In addition to online sales, relevant authorities are also tightening control over offline e-cigarette sales to teenagers.

Context: China drew up a set of standards for e-cigarettes in May which applies to all products related to e-cigarettes from nicotine levels in the vaping solution, types and amounts of additives, and the design and packaging.

Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that Xiaomi denied plans to launch e-cigarette products.
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Online education site Codemao closes $58 million Series C, planning STAR IPO https://technode.com/2019/11/05/online-education-site-codemao-closes-58-million-series-c-planning-star-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/11/05/online-education-site-codemao-closes-58-million-series-c-planning-star-ipo/#respond Tue, 05 Nov 2019 05:27:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=121023 The funding may help the company compete in China’s online STEM education sector.]]>
(Image credit: Codemao)

Codemao, a Chinese online education platform that teaches programming to children, announced on Monday the completion of a RMB 400 million ($57 million) Series C, raising the company’s total funding to more than RMB 1 billion.

Why it matters: The funding may help the company, one of the sector’s top fundraisers, compete in China’s online science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education segment which has been garnering attention from investors, the government, and consumers.

  • Attention to STEM is on the rise amid government efforts to bolster its pool of high-tech talent in support of China’s ambitions to achieve global leadership in core technologies.
  • K-12 and STEM education is expected to be one of the largest segments in China’s education market, which will reach RMB 2.68 trillion ($381 billion) by the end of 2018, according to Deloitte in August 2018.

Details: Along with its funding news, the firm announced that it is preparing to float shares on the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s science and technology innovation board, known as the STAR Market.

  • The Russia-China Investment Fund (RCIF) led the round with participation from a consortium consisting of Hillhouse Capital Group, SAIF Partners, Everbright New Economy Fund, Technology Financial Group, Southern Publishing, and others. Existing backers including Crystal Stream Capital, Cheetah Mobile, and Green Pine Capital Partners also joined the round.
  • The new proceeds will be used for research and development of its curriculum and technology-driven services as well as the listing.
  • The Shenzhen-based company said it has registered more than 31.47 million users and partnered with 11,500 schools.
  • In addition to the domestic market, Codecat is expanding to overseas markets including Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, US, and UK.

Context: Founded in 2015 by programmers Li Tianchi and Sun Yue, Codemao is a graphic programming tool platform built for kids between four and 16 years old.

  • The company’s top line surged more than ten fold in 2018, bolstered by revenue from the Nov. 11 Singles Day promotion, which brought in more than RMB 10 million, the company’s founder and CEO Li Tianchi said in January.
  • Revenue for H2 2018 neared RMB 1 billion and the company expects to break even in 2019, Li said.
  • The company joined Tsinghua University and the Beijing Institute of Technology to compile a centralized rating system which ranks coding abilities in minors.
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Beijing issues warning about false livestream ads ahead of Singles Day https://technode.com/2019/11/04/beijing-issues-warning-about-false-livestream-ads-ahead-of-singles-day/ https://technode.com/2019/11/04/beijing-issues-warning-about-false-livestream-ads-ahead-of-singles-day/#respond Mon, 04 Nov 2019 08:18:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120910 Influencer e-commerce livestreams may be the next target for regulators.]]>
A livestreamer pitching shoes to her online audience at the Taobao Maker Festival in 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Following a mishap during a popular Taobao seller’s livestream which drew attention to the growing popularity of video content for the purpose of advertising, China’s broadcasting watchdog issued a notice on Nov. 1 urging the country’s e-commerce platforms to tighten content controls in preparation for the massive shopping festival known as Singles Day.

Why it matters: Although issued specifically for Singles Day, the notice is a signal that regulators now have e-commerce-focused livestreamed content in its sights, which many expect will restrict China’s flourishing e-commerce live-streaming businesses.

  • Heightened government control over entertainment and gaming livestreams have forced platforms like Huya and Douyu to tighten their rules accordingly.
  • Increased scrutiny will change how livesteamers—many of which are social media influencers referred to as key opinion leaders (KOLs)—partner with brands and present products to consumers.
  • Content in various forms, from livestreaming to short video, is a major driver of China’s e-commerce sector.

Advertising is scrutinized by authorities for inaccurate, false or misleading claims. Adverts are also outright transparent about its sponsored nature. Paying influencers for their ‘opinion’ is currently a loophole around this integrity that warrants a revisitation of current regulation.

—Nicolas Chan, head of digital APAC at The Hoffman Agency to TechNode on Monday

Details: The National Radio and Television Administration (NRTA) issued a notice Friday ordering audio-visual e-commerce live-streaming programs and marketing campaigns to use “civilized and standardized expressions” and refrain from false advertising, vulgar content, and exaggeration to mislead consumers.

  • The move comes after Li Jiaqi, the livestreaming “Lipstick King” known for having sold more than 15,000 units in five minutes, drew public outcry last week. Li promoted a non-stick frying pan during a Taobao livestream on Oct. 30 to an online audience of more than 400,000. The pan failed to cook an egg as promised, instead sticking to the bottom of the pan and burning during the episode.

New law brings structure, discipline to the willful world of Chinese e-commerce

  • Li’s case highlighted what critics say is the mindless endorsement of products without trialing or fact-checking claims.
  • State-backed media People’s Daily published a story on false, KOL-led advertising citing Li as an example on Monday.
  • “It’s very clear that the KOLs are getting paid to promote the product. But there should be two bottom lines. Don’t endorse products with poor quality or those that you have never used before,” said Weibo user Wu Xiangdong, who identified himself as a lawyer.
  • Rather than pushing product, the notice encourages e-commerce platforms to use livestreams and short video for the goal of poverty alleviation. The varying demands of poverty-stricken areas and populations can be addressed by leveraging new technologies such as big data, artificial intelligence, and blockchain, the notice said.

Context: China has been stepping up the regulation of e-commerce industry this year beginning with the rollout of the Electronic Commerce Law on Jan. 1.

  • Social e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu, or RED, was pulled from Chinese app stores in July after user complaints about misleading content went viral on microblogging site Weibo.
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Alibaba beats expectations in fiscal Q2 with 40% revenue surge https://technode.com/2019/11/02/alibaba-beats-expectations-in-fiscal-q2-with-40-revenue-surge/ https://technode.com/2019/11/02/alibaba-beats-expectations-in-fiscal-q2-with-40-revenue-surge/#respond Sat, 02 Nov 2019 02:36:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120867 alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shoppingThe Earnings report could influence pricing of any potential IPO in Hong Kong.]]> alibaba e-commerce taobao amazon new retail online shopping

Alibaba posted a better-than-expected 40% year-on-year rise in revenue for the e-commerce giant’s second fiscal quarter ended September 2019, thanks to robust expansion in its core e-commerce and cloud businesses.

Why it matters: The Chinese e-commerce behemoth hit the headlines just one day before the earnings call as market speculation swirled again over a possible Hong Kong IPO as early as this November. The timing of this latest report could influence any pricing of a potential listing.

“Our digital economy continues to thrive and prosper. We aim to serve over one billion annual active consumers and help our merchants achieve over RMB 10 trillion in annual gross merchandise volume by the end of fiscal 2024. We will continue to invest in the user experience and innovative technology to create new value for consumers, as well as the millions of enterprises undergoing digital transformation in the new digital economy.”

Daniel Zhang, executive chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group

Details: The company’s revenue jumped 40% to RMB 119 billion ($16.7 billion) in the September quarter, beating an average market estimate of $16.5 billion.

  • Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders soared nearly quadrupled annually to RMB 72.5 billion.
  • Monthly mobile active users on its e-commerce sites increased 30% to 785 million in September, compared with June.
  • Operations income was RMB 20.4 billion during the period, an increase of 51% year on year.
  • Cloud computing revenue grew 64% to RMB 9.3 billion during the September quarter, primarily driven by an increase in average revenue per customer.
  • The company witnessed growing momentum in its international commerce business. Orders from its Southeast Asian unit Lazada more than doubled, reflecting strong consumer demand for apparel, accessories and FMCG categories.
Image credit: Alibaba

Context: Together with a spate of local rivals, Alibaba is gearing up for the annual shopping extravaganza known as Single’s Day on Nov. 11.

  • The company kicked off the promotional efforts for the event on Oct. 21 with special focus on lower-tier cities and overseas markets.
  • Alibaba Group acquired NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce unit Kaola for approximately $2 billion in September.
  • The earnings report also provided updates on details on the takeover, saying there’s relatively low consumer overlap between Kaola and its Tmall Global.
  • The firm plans to run Kaola independently while integrating technology, consumer insights and middle office functions to achieve synergies.
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Indian newborn tracker NemoCare wins Asia Hardware Battle 2019 https://technode.com/2019/10/31/indian-newborn-tracker-nemocare-wins-asia-hardware-battle-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/10/31/indian-newborn-tracker-nemocare-wins-asia-hardware-battle-2019/#respond Thu, 31 Oct 2019 14:55:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120717 An Indian wearables startup that aims to prevent neonatal and maternal deaths in the developing world, has walked away with first prize at Asia Hardware Battle 2019.]]>

NemoCare, an Indian wearables startup that aims to prevent neonatal and maternal deaths in the developing world, has walked away with first prize at Asia Hardware Battle 2019. Organized by TechNode with support from Shanghai Yangpu District People’s Government, the month-long competition has gathered over 300 startups from China, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Thailand, and India, to name a few.

The longlist was narrowed down to 15 finalists who pitched to a professional judge panel that included Peter Riedl, vice president and head of BMW Group Technology Office China, Zhang Peng, chief strategy officer and executive partner of UCommune, Qin Gang, partner at Lighthouse Capital, and Ray Tsang, co-founder and managing partner of Chenhui Venture Partners.

This year’s event marks the second consecutive time that an Indian team has won, indicating building momentum in the country’s hardware sector.

“There’s a popular saying—’Hardware is hard’ [to do]. This is a difficult industry to get involved in because the hardware startups have to manage a long industrial chain that involves design, prototyping, manufacturing, marketing, and final sales,” Ray Tsang from Chenhui Venture told TechNode. “AHB is a good platform for innovative hardware startups to showcase their products and expand in the global tech innovative ecosystem,” he said.

Gold Award: NemoCare Wellness

NemoCare’s co-founder Manoj Sanker accepting the AHB Gold Award (Image Credit: TechNode)

Indian’s NemoCare won the top prize with a wearable device that can be attached to the foot of a newborn baby for continuous monitoring of necessary vital parameters. This data is used to detect apnea, hypothermia and, other distress conditions. The device would send alerts to the caregivers to provide timely intervention.

“Going forward, we are building an AI-enabled platform that works on the data being collected through the hardware. That will target specific diseases of the new borns,” Manoj Sanker, the company co-founder said.

A baby-friendly design and affordability are the product’s two major differentiators, according to the CEO. The product, launching early next year, will be priced at  ₹ 20,000 apiece on the company’s B2B platform. NemoCare is also exploring another model that would give out the hardware for free upfront and charge on the usage of consumables.

The Hyderabad-based health care startup consists of a team of IoT engineers, data scientists, biological engineers, industrial designers.

NemoCare was also the regional winner of the AHB city pitch in Bangalore, India, co-organized by local partner Revvx hardware accelerator.

Silver Award: Xenoma

A model demonstrating e-skin in the form of pajamas for the elderly (Image credit: TechNode)

The runner-up prize goes to Xenoma, the developer of smart apparel “E-skin” which is a washable and stretchy material equipped with various sensors and devices. The product could be used for tracking human movement data for posture correction, danger prevention, athlete performance, and increasing movement efficiency.

The technology has multiple application scenarios for monitoring the health condition of the elderly, tracking a baby’s sleeping conditions and monitoring how tired factory workers are, said company CEO Ichiro Amimori.

The Japanese startup has posted more than $1 million in revenue for this year so far, mainly driven by baby services. “We are monitoring over 1,000 babies every day,” he noted.

Targeting a global market, the company is expanding its business to the US, Germany, and China.

Bronze Award: Aiello Inc

Founder and CEO of
Aiello’s CEO Shen Shuwei accepting the AHB Bronze Award (Image Credit: TechNode)

Aiello’s SPOT is a voice assistant speaker designed for homes or hotels. It can help with room equipment control (lighting, TV, air-conditioning, curtains, etc.), hotel facilities service inquiries, room service, customer complaints, music streaming, VoIP voice calls, alarm clocks, Bluetooth audio, restaurants and recommendations on things to do.

Different from other consumer-facing voice assistants, Aeillo’s voice command model is trained to address the specifics demands and characteristics of the hospitality industry. Instead of processing one command at a time, like the case for most speakers, Aeillo’s system can handle multiple command intentions in one sentence at the same time.

Additionally, it’s also offering hotel and apartment operators with a comprehensive back-end management system for data analysis and business intelligence insights.

Aiello rolled out the product in October and has inked partnerships with six hotels. It plans to expand operations to provide its services in 30,000 to 50,000 rooms in future years.

The speaker is currently available with Chinese and English voice control, and is primarily aimed at the China and the South East Asia markets.

The other 12 finalists (in no particular order) include:

Baymax (Shenzhen, China): Baymax’s Pinpoint is a surgical navigation and positioning device that ensures accurate positioning of a surgical needle.

LuxCreo (Hangzhou, China): LuxCreo’s patented LEAP (light enabled additive production) technology enables printing speeds reaching 120cm/h, 100x faster than traditional 3D printers, with material properties exceeding that of traditional mass manufacturing.

Mamorio (Japan): Mamorio is a smart IoT device that works with a smartphone to prevent the loss of valuables.

SystemStone (Thailand): Vibro is SystemStone’s IoT innovation with an ultra-sensitive vibration sensor and AI capabilities. The design predicts machine failure before it happens and sends a notification to the maintenance engineer’s smartphone.

AC Biode (Japan): AC Biode builds AC batteries by providing an intermediate electrode between the positive electrode and the negative electrode. This results in improved safety, and its size is 30% smaller than DC types. The life cycle is also doubled.

Vicara Tech (India): Vicara’s “KAI” is a wearable gesture recognition platform that allows users to interact with computers, hardware, software applications, and others, using gestures.

Lazy Co (India): Lazy Co. develops AI-powered smart rings called Aina, which connect with phones via Bluetooth 5 and can serve as a remote for smartphones.

Kinexcs (Singapore): Kinexcs is a wearable medical device and analytics platform for orthopedic monitoring, patient recovery and the management of the continuum of care.

Ancsonic (Beijing, China): Ancsonic focuses on spatial ANC technology and product development.

Skinrun (Hangzhou, China): V3 intelligent skin decoder is a three-spectrum image acquisition system (daily light, polarized light, UV light), analyzing the face accurately and producing comprehensive reports.

Tsing Micro (Beijing, China): Tsing Micro’s TX210 is a chip for offline voice wake-up and noun recognition. The chip uses a reconfigurable computing architecture to support flexible and rich voice processing algorithms, rich interface, and power management.

Deocean (Chengdu, China): Deocean is engaged in applying wireless passive technology to system integration solutions.

Last but not the least, we would like to give special thanks to partner Tsinghua SEM X-elerator and Samurai Incubate for their support for holding the city competitions.

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Alibaba reportedly reviving Hong Kong IPO plans, may list in November https://technode.com/2019/10/31/alibaba-reportedly-reviving-hong-kong-ipo-plans-may-list-in-november/ https://technode.com/2019/10/31/alibaba-reportedly-reviving-hong-kong-ipo-plans-may-list-in-november/#respond Thu, 31 Oct 2019 09:41:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120701 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe accelerated timeline is driven by market uncertainties including trade war tensions.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group is planning an initial public offering in Hong Kong as early as this November looking to raise up to $15 billion, Reuters reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Why it matters: There have been multiple rounds of speculation about Alibaba’s dual listing in Hong Kong. This time the fundraise amount is smaller than earlier reports, and the timeframe accelerated, following plans to list in August were suspended due to market uncertainties caused by months-long protests in the city.

  • Alibaba’s listing would boost the status of Hong Kong as a major capital markets hub. Hong Kong’s stock exchange has been hit hard by the unrest, with IPO proceeds plunging nearly 43% year on year as of mid-October.

Details: Alibaba plans to seek listing approval from the Hong Kong stock exchange shortly after the Chinese e-commerce giant’s massive online retail promotion on Nov. 11 called Singles Day. The listing may take place towards the end of November or in early December, the Reuters report said.

  • Media reports say the size of the targeted fundraise ranges from $10 billion to $15 billion, significantly lower than the previous market expectation of up to $20 billion.
  • The accelerated timeline is driven by market uncertainties from US-Chinese tensions and the global macroeconomic outlook, according to a Bloomberg report.
  • Alibaba spokeswoman declined to comment on the news when reached by TechNode on Thursday.

Context: Alibaba’s business-to-business entity went public on the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange in 2007, but then delisted in 2012.

  • Hong Kong was speculated to be a prime destination for Alibaba when the company considers a relisting in 2013. However, the e-commerce giant finally choose New York Stock Exchange for a record $25 billion listing in 2014, favoring a dual-class share structure.
  • The Hong Kong stock exchange shifted to a dual-class share mechanism in April 2018, allowing tech firms to have share classes with different voting rights.
  • The company’s IPO in New York set records as the world’s biggest, raising $25 billion.
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The Chinese cross-border e-commerce startup making inroads in India https://technode.com/2019/10/30/the-chinese-cross-border-e-commerce-startup-making-inroads-in-india/ https://technode.com/2019/10/30/the-chinese-cross-border-e-commerce-startup-making-inroads-in-india/#respond Wed, 30 Oct 2019 09:57:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120565 e-commerceHangzhou's Club Factory runs the third-most-popular online shopping app in India.]]> e-commerce

Cross-border e-commerce has become one of China’s hottest trends. However, it doesn’t only include the import of goods into China—already a trillion-yuan market last year. Firms are increasingly exporting locally manufactured products to the rest of the world. Among these trendsetters is Club Factory, an e-retailer that runs the third-most-popular online shopping app in India.

The backstory: Club Factory is a B2C (business-to-consumer) marketplace that connects consumers with manufacturers, offering price-setting, product recommendations, customer services, and overseas logistics.

  • Founded in 2014, the company is the brainchild of former Facebook employee Vicent Lou and his technical team.
  • Club Factory is based out of Hangzhou, home to Jack Ma’s Alibaba, which has helped foster a positive environment for e-commerce-focused entrepreneurship and innovation in the eastern Chinese city. It is also home to Kaola, the cross-border e-commerce giant that was recently bought by Alibaba.
  • Originally set up as an enterprise-facing data service provider for cross-border e-commerce firms called Baokuanyi.com, the company shifted focus in August 2016 to a consumer-facing model to sell non-standard and affordable goods.

Unique selling point: Similar to Taobao, Club Factory does not stock goods itself, adopting a lighter asset model compared with other platforms like JD. Club Factory requires domestic suppliers to send products to them to quality check before sending them on to buyers.

  • The company is lowering prices for overseas consumers by connecting them with manufacturers, instead of sellers, like on eBay, Wish or Amazon.
  • Club Factory employs an AI-based algorithm to deal with issues like product selection, product recommendation, and price fluctuations.
  • The cross-border e-commerce market is promising in that China has a unique advantage over overseas rivals due to an abundance of suppliers.
  • To attract merchants in the destination market and expand inventory categories, Club Factory does not charge local sellers commission fees in India.

“In India, e-commerce companies like Amazon and Flipkart adopted an operation pattern similar to that of China’s JD.com, which pursues high product quality through a closed chain. Indian customers also need another kind of e-commerce platform—a more open one—which provides more options to customers and more vitality. This is the main reason why Club Factory can rapidly develop in the country,” 

Founder and CEO Vincent Lou, speaking with tech media in October

The investors: Club Factory received $100 million in Series D funding last month led by Qiming Venture Partners, and with support from German investment corporation Bertelsmann Asian Investment, IDG Capital and other Fortune 500 companies from the U.S. and Asia.

  • The new financing round comes eight months after a $100 million Series C from Bertelsmann Asian Investment.

Present condition: The e-commerce upstart, with a focus on the global market, especially India, has been on a steep upward trajectory for the past few years.

  • Club Factory overtook Indian firm Snapdeal in terms of monthly active users on Android in September. This made it the third-largest e-commerce shopping app in India, following Amazon and Flipkart, according to App Annie.
  • Club Factory says it has more than 70 million users, of which about 40 million are from India. The rest come from emerging markets like Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
  • It plans to bring in 10,000 sellers on its platform before the end of this year and expand to more inventory categories.

The landscape: Facing a slowing economy and a saturated local market, Chinese e-commerce giants are expanding aggressively into the global market. The Indian market, which is expected to surpass the US as the second-largest market by 2034, has become a crucial frontier.

  • In addition to global players like Amazon, Club Factory is also going up against Chinese peers like Alibaba’s Ali Express and fashion platform Shein.
  • Russia, Southeast Asia and the Middle East also represent key markets for Chinese e-commerce giants.
  • Alibaba is setting up a joint venture with a series of big-name Russian partners, including media and information technology conglomerate Mail.ru.

Prospects: Despite the rapid growth, the company is facing a greater challenge in the Indian market due to tighter local regulations and consumer complaints.

  • Club Factory was primarily focused on selling imports from China in India. However, growth hit a roadblock when the Indian government started a crackdown in April on Chinese e-commerce platforms that evade customs duty by claiming commercial consignments to the country as gifts.
  • Club Factory said last month that Indian SME business on its platform has expanded more than ten-fold to 5,000 over the past six months, thanks largely to its zero-commission strategy.
  • Club Factory’s Chinese rival Shein shut down partially following the crackdown.
  • User complaints are another challenge. Tech media firm Entrackr reported that the platform has a nearly 50% return rate, which is way above the industry average.
  • The most recent funding comes at a crucial time, indicating that venture capital is still bullish on the company’s prospects.
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China’s Danke Apartment shared housing platform files for US IPO https://technode.com/2019/10/30/chinas-danke-apartment-shared-housing-platform-files-for-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/10/30/chinas-danke-apartment-shared-housing-platform-files-for-us-ipo/#respond Wed, 30 Oct 2019 08:28:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120530 Danke WeBank China tech renting loan rentalDespite trade tensions, a number of Chinese tech companies have filed applications for US IPOs this month.]]> Danke WeBank China tech renting loan rental

Chinese online residential rental marketplace Danke Apartment has filed an application with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for an initial public offering on the New York Stock market on Monday.

Why it matters: Despite tightening trade tensions, there have been a spate of Chinese tech companies filing applications for initial public offerings (IPO) on US markets in recent weeks. Chinese peer Qingke filed on Monday, making Danke the second Chinese apartment rental platform that has filed for an US listing this month.

  • Other Chinese tech firms that have piled on include NetEase education unit Youdao, Chinese audio platform Lizhi, and crypto mining equipment manufacturer Canaan Inc.
  • The IPO filing followed just a day after Danke announced a $190 million Series D led by China Media Capital and Primavera Capital.

Details: The company aims to raise up to $100 million in its IPO, a figure commonly used as a placeholder for IPO filings, and may change.

  • The proceeds will be used for market expansion, housing renovation, technology development, and branding, according to the company.
  • It now manages nearly 407,000 housing units in 13 major Chinese cities including Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou, according to the prospects.
  • The company currently earns revenues primarily from rent and service fees. Its revenue jumped 198.8% to RMB 4.99 billion ($699.5 million) in the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2019 from RMB 1.67 billion in the same period a year earlier.
  • However, the firm is still loss-making, recording RMB 2.52 billion in net losses for the first nine months of 2019 due to high housing rental and marketing costs.
  • Citigroup Global Markets, Credit Suisse Securities, and JPMorgan Securities are the deal underwriters.

Chinese rental platform Qingke aims to raise $100 million in US IPO

Context: Founded in 2015, Danke rents shared houses targeting young professionals.

  • The company has closed six rounds of financing to date, raising nearly $900 million from top investors including Tiger Global management, Ant Financial, and Gaorong Capital, according to data from startup database Crunchbase.
  • Major players in China’s rental housing market have expanded rapidly and a series of scandals have arisen concerning data theft, hidden cameras, and elevated levels of formaldehyde in apartments.
  • Danke, along with other home rental agencies like 5i5j.com, were included in a government crackdown on fake or misleading listings.
  • Danke got a talent boost earlier this year when Gu Guodong, a key figure from Baidu’s core search unit, joined the company in June.
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Meituan rolls out mini programs https://technode.com/2019/10/29/meituan-rolls-out-mini-programs/ https://technode.com/2019/10/29/meituan-rolls-out-mini-programs/#respond Tue, 29 Oct 2019 08:12:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120444 Native mini programs help the lifestyle app keep users on its platform.]]>
A Meituan helmet hangs on the back of an electric bicycle in Shanghai on March 29, 2019. (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

China’s food delivery and lifestyle service giant Meituan has introduced mini programs, allowing users to access various services without leaving the app, Chinese media reported Tuesday.

Why it matters: Meituan’s adoption of mini programs, lightweight applications with a diverse range of functions accessible from within its app, is relatively late in the game. However, mini-programs and similar applications are a key, must-have feature for mainstream apps.

  • Native mini-programs will help Meituan keep its 422 million users and 5.9 million merchants on its platform rather than navigating to other apps, such as WeChat, for certain tasks.
  • First pioneered by WeChat in 2017, mini-programs have been adopted by leading Chinese super apps, including Tencent’s QQ, Baidu, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Taobao, as well as Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin.
  • WeChat mini-programs have become a major source of traffic for many services in China with more than 2.3 million apps servicing upwards of 681 million active users in April this year, QuestMobile data showed.

Details: Meituan is piloting its mini-program feature with popular service categories, including tools like weather service Moji Weather and games.

  • Meituan has placed its mini-programs in a less obvious place in the app, differing from WeChat, which features them prominently.
  • Meituan mini-programs can be shared externally only to WeChat at present.
  • With only a few mini-programs launched, functionality is relatively limited.

Context: Tech companies are attaching more strategic importance to mini-programs as the features become popular among users.

  • Ant Financial fully integrated Alipay’s mini-program feature with microblogging platform Sina Weibo in September.
  • The number of WeChat mini-programs with more than 1 million active users doubled annually to 883 in the first half of this year, according to a report from QuestMobile.
  • The country’s more than 800 million netizens and the move toward digitalization are fueling the rise of mini-programs.
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Chinese rental platform Qingke aims to raise $100 million in US IPO https://technode.com/2019/10/28/chinese-rental-platform-qingke-aims-to-raise-100-million-in-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/10/28/chinese-rental-platform-qingke-aims-to-raise-100-million-in-us-ipo/#respond Mon, 28 Oct 2019 06:35:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120273 The apartment rental sector faces challenges including poor construction quality and tighter regulatory control.]]>
(Image credit: Qingke)

Q&K International Group, the operator of Chinese apartment rental platform Qingke, is planning to raise nearly $100 million in its US initial public offering, the company said in an updated regulatory filing published on Friday.

Why it matters: Growth potential for branded apartment rentals is significant: the market penetration rate in China was only 1.8% in 2018, and is expected to reach 11.2% by 2024, according to figures from China Insights Consultancy cited in the prospectus. Market penetration in developed countries was 46.0% in contrast, according to the data.

  • The company is focused on lower-tier cities and says it is the largest branded long-term apartment rental operator with average monthly rental fees lower than RMB 2,000 (around $291).
  • Qingke is competing against a number of peers including Ziroom, Mofang Appartment, Danke Apartment, and even e-commerce giants like JD.com.
  • China’s apartment rental sector faces a range of challenges including problematic construction quality and tenant security, as well as tighter regulatory control.

Details: The company plans to price its shares at $17 to $19 apiece for its debut on Nasdaq, according to the filing.

  • The company had 96,854 rental units under management as of June 30, 2019, centered around the eastern Chinese city of Shanghai and spread across the eastern Yangtze river region.
  • Qingke stressed in its prospectus that technology forms the core of its business operations from unit sourcing, renovation, and listing, to property management.
  • Its revenues come from home rental services, value-added services, and others which consist primarily of fees for internet connection and utility services.
  • The company’s net revenue climbed to RMB 897.9 million (around $130.8 million) in the nine months ended June 2019, up 51.4% from RMB 593.0 million the same period a year ago.
  • However, the company is still loss making. Net losses widened to RMB 373.2 million ($54.4 million) in the nine months ended 2019 from RMB 323.6 million in the same year-ago period, mainly driven by operational and marketing costs.

Context: A segment of the proptech industry, branded apartment rentals are increasingly popular in China driven by rapid urbanization, rising housing prices, openness toward the rental economy concept, and supportive government policies.

  • Targeting young professionals and university students, seven-year-old Qingke is focused on sourcing apartments in relatively inexpensive yet convenient locations, typically near subway stations.
  • Instead of buying the apartments, the firm signs long-term leases with landlords, as part of a practice widely known as “second landlord” service.
  • The company’s latest round was a more than $100 million Series C led by a fund managed by Morgan Stanley Private Equity Asia and consumer sector-focused PE firm Crescent Point in April 2018.
  • Xiong Lin, CEO of Qingke rival Ziroom, said in mid-October that the company is not “rushing for IPO” in response to IPO rumors.
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Chinese social fitness app Keep to lay off up to 15% of staff https://technode.com/2019/10/25/chinese-social-fitness-app-keep-to-lay-off-up-to-15-of-staff/ https://technode.com/2019/10/25/chinese-social-fitness-app-keep-to-lay-off-up-to-15-of-staff/#respond Fri, 25 Oct 2019 07:00:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120199 Keep joins a list of Chinese tech firms including JD.com and Didi tightening headcount.]]>
Screenshots of the Keep app. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese social fitness app Keep is laying off a sizable portion of its employees after reportedly quadrupling its workforce just last year.

Why it matters: Keep is joining a list of Chinese tech firms including Huawei, Didi, and knowledge-sharing site Zhihu in tightening headcount amid the country’s economic slowdown, compounded by a decline in outside investment referred to as “capital winter.”

  • Fueled by “bubble-like” valuations from private investors, some Chinese tech firms expanded quickly to multiple businesses at a high cost.

Details: Discussions about Keep’s layoffs have been circulating on the Chinese professional networking platform Maimai since Thursday.

  • “I was notified that I was laid off at 2 a.m. on October 24, had a talk at 3 a.m. and asked to leave at 4 a.m.,” said a Maimai user who is a verified Keep employee. “The number of Keep colleagues in our working group dropped from 856 to 797, and this is going to continue tomorrow,” he said in the post.
  • Another Maimai user said the layoffs will affect 300 employees, which the company refuted, saying that it is “optimizing around 10% to 15%” of its more than 800 employees, meaning up to 120 staff members.
  • The job cuts take place after the company’s rapid expansion in 2018, when the headcount jumped from around 200 at the beginning of the year to 800 at year-end, according to another Maimai user.
  • The job cuts were mainly for technical positions, according to Chinese media reports.
  • The company suspended a recruitment livestreaming on the online hiring platform Lagou slated for Friday morning.
  • Cutting jobs on October 24 or “1024,” known as Programmer’s Day in China, also drew ire from netizens.

Capital winter is forcing China’s startup scene to get mature

Context: Keep, founded in 2014, started as a mobile fitness community that provided online fitness training programs. It gradually expanded its offline presence into fitness equipment, wearable hardware, and workout apparel.

  • The company closed a $126 million Series D in July 2018 led by Goldman Sachs with the participation of Tencent, GGV Capital, and Morningside Venture Capital, which increased its fundraise total to nearly $175 million.
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Tencent Video partners with Maoyan to further entertainment push https://technode.com/2019/10/24/tencent-video-partners-with-maoyan-to-further-entertainment-push/ https://technode.com/2019/10/24/tencent-video-partners-with-maoyan-to-further-entertainment-push/#respond Thu, 24 Oct 2019 08:36:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120119 The two companies will integrate their ecosystems and share data.]]>

Chinese tech giant Tencent announced Thursday that it will integrate the services of its video streaming arm Tencent Video with online ticketing platform Maoyan Entertainment to form a single comprehensive entertainment platform.

Why it matters: Tencent is becoming a digital powerhouse with holdings in every facet of entertainment from video and music streaming, movie production to online literature. Its business partnership with Maoyan allows Tencent to improve its user experience by integrating the ticketing platform.

  • Alibaba is also building an entertainment ecosystem that involves video-streaming platform Youku, movie production company Alibaba Pictures, music-streaming site Xiami, and ticketing service Taopiaopiao, among others.
  • Expanding into the broader entertainment industry is of strategic importance for Maoyan, especially at a time when China’s box office revenue is experiencing a downturn.

Details: With this partnership, Maoyan and Tencent Video will integrate their ecosystems by converging traffic, promoting a joint membership program, and sharing data.

  • The two companies will design a joint membership program to launch promotional packages and boost collective membership benefits to offer more value.
  • As the exclusive ticketing partner for Tencent Video, Maoyan’s ticketing platform will be embedded on the Tencent Video platform, creating an online and offline ticketing service.
  • The two companies will integrate their quality content and platform and exchange traffic to reach more users.
  • Data sharing will help the partners better promote entertainment content. Maoyan’s data platform will provide user research and related data support for Tencent Video’s self-produced content.
  • The two companies will also explore opportunities to produce quality live performances and jointly develop related video programs.

“Maoyan is opening up its platform capabilities to its strategic shareholder Tencent and more partners, including Tencent Video and Tencent Pictures, to grow the entertainment market together and drive the industry development.”

⁠—Maoyan CEO Zheng Zhihao

Context: Spun out from Tencent-backed Meituan in 2016, Maoyan Entertainment went public in Hong Kong earlier this year, raising about $250 million.

  • Maoyan accounts for about 60% of China’s movie ticket market, according to data from the Chinese analytics company iResearch cited in the company’s IPO prospectus.
  • Maoyan merged with Tencent-owned rival Weiying in 2017.
  • The Maoyan and Tencent Video tie-up follows an alliance struck in July between the ticketing platform and Tencent Pictures, the company’s film distribution and production unit.
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Chinese SaaS firm Ekuaibao books $50 million in fresh funding https://technode.com/2019/10/23/chinese-saas-firm-ekuaibao-books-50-million-in-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2019/10/23/chinese-saas-firm-ekuaibao-books-50-million-in-fresh-funding/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2019 05:02:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=120037 Companies in China's bookkeeping tech sector are on the rise as accounting processes are increasingly being shifted online.]]>
Screenshot of the Ekuaibao website. (Image credit: TechNode)

Ekuaibao, China’s enterprise expense and reimbursement management software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform, announced on Tuesday that it has secured $50 million in a Series C and an extended C plus round, raising the company’s total fundraising so far this year to $65 million.

Why it matters: Companies in China’s accounting technology sector are on the rise as bookkeeping processes are increasingly being shifted online for transparency and efficiency.

  • The world’s biggest market for business travel, China spent $347 billion on work-related travel in 2017, according to data from the Global Business Travel Association. It is expected to pick up an additional $129 billion in annual business travel spend by 2022.

Details: The combined $50 million Series C consists of two parts: a $30 million Series C round received in September, led by Tiger Global Management and including venture capital firms DCM Ventures and Future Capital, and an extended $20 million C Plus planned for October led by Sequoia Capital China.

  • The proceeds will be used to upgrade the company’s online reimbursement system, business expansion, recruitment, and improve the organizational structure and user experience, according to the company.
  • The Beijing-based firm said it has more than 175,000 corporate clients, including detergent brand Blue Moon, real estate developer Greenland Holdings, securities brokerage company Zheshang Securities, and coffee chain Costa Coffee, among others.
  • The company received $15 million in its Series B led by Mandra Capital in January.

“With the maturity of enterprise management systems and the popularity of electronic invoices, we are very optimistic about the market prospect of SaaS services focused on enterprise expense reimbursement and control sector in China. Ekuaibao has built a good reputation among clients and we also have faith in the company’s team” (our translation).

—Wang Pengfei, China managing director of Tiger Global Management

Context: Ekuaibao, founded in 2015, provides solutions for enterprises to manage procurement and employee reimbursement online.

  • Its services cover travel applications, cash advances for travel and expenses, reimbursement, direct travel payment, bookkeeping, and analytics.
  • Ekuaibao links directly to more than 110 mainstream banks for electronic funds transfer, as well as enterprise resource planning software like Yonyou, Kingdee, and SAP.
  • Through partnerships, Ekuaibao’s system also supports the third-party expense reimbursement and management functions for companies including Alibaba’s DingTalk and Tencent’s WeChat Work.
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Fake data scandal rocks Chinese ads giant https://technode.com/2019/10/22/fake-data-scandal-rocks-chinese-ads-giant/ https://technode.com/2019/10/22/fake-data-scandal-rocks-chinese-ads-giant/#respond Tue, 22 Oct 2019 08:53:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119988 The development has laid bare China’s perennial struggle with data faking in social media marketing and has attracted heated debate.]]>

It’s an open secret in China that marketers, especially those in the key opinion leader (KOL) sector, will inflate user engagement figures to please their bosses and give off a positive aura. With this in mind, Chinese customers, as well as brand operators, are often skeptical when figures appear too good to be true. Yet, we still tend to believe there’s at least some truth when companies release user data. A recent scandal has shone an even brighter spotlight on the legitimacy of these metrics.

An irate brand operator on Taobao took to WeChat last week to post an article accusing Hive Media, a leading domestic multi-channel-network (MCN) agency, of cooking the books after a high-profile ad campaign promotion failed to equate to a boost in sales.

After paying Hive Media handsomely, the agency arranged one of its top influencers, Zhang Yuhan, who boasts over 3.8 million followers on Weibo, to post a vlog ad on her news feed. The post garnered over 3.5 million views, as well as 1,000 comments, with over half stating that they had placed orders, but in fact, not a single order was made.

The Taobao vendor disclosed in the story that a single Weibo post from Hive Media’s leading KOLs would cost hundreds of thousands of yuan.

The MCN responded, stating the brand’s actual payment was RMB 47,500 ($6,713), a lot less than what the company had claimed. The firm further broke the figure down, demanding RMB 28,500 for the vlog itself, and a further RMB3,070 is for buying traffic. 

The firm stressed there was “no guaranteed sales numbers mentioned in the contract,” indicating a lack of responsibility if data was being faked.

Social media platform Weibo has banned Zhang from taking on any more commercial projects for now.

The story took another turn when Chinese netizens rounded on one of the Taobao vendor’s products. The Shenzhen-based firm claims to hold a patent for its product named Eefit, a wearable that supposedly cures menstrual cramps. Some netizens claim the advertised patent was nowhere to be found, while others questioned its effectiveness. 

Elephant in the room

The development has laid bare China’s perennial struggle with data faking in social media and has attracted heated debate.

China commerce and social media sectors have become closely integrated over the last decade thanks to the wide adoption of mobile payment services. The shadowy practice of inflating statistics has accompanied the growth seen in the sectors, eroding consumer trust, especially in the retail and entertainment industry.

The fake data problem has long been a major pain point for Chinese social platforms. Last year, a single post from Chinese singer Cai Xukun was reposted more than 100 million times. The numbers were almost certainly inorganic as the volume equates to roughly one-third of Weibo’s 337 million users. The incident prompted the youth wing of China’s communist party to accuse the celebrity of buying fans. 

Another high-profile case was that of online Chinese travel site Mafengwo, accused of faking 85% of all user-generated content last year.

The Hive Media case has sparked heated discussion because it sets out the impacts of fake data on the retail sector. 

Despite the shock among outsiders, insiders of the industry are less surprised. The experts that TechNode talked to all agreed that web traffic inflation has been an “open secret” across the whole industry, and is not just a problem in China.

“I think this is an open secret for a long time and it’s not unique to China. Of course, as a big country, it’s amplified in China because of the bigger population and bigger numbers,” Nicolas Chan, head of digital APAC at The Hoffman Agency, told TechNode.

Watershed moment

Although moving slowly, a campaign against fake social media accounts is forming in China.

Beijing issued a warning in December last year prohibiting government bodies from “purchasing fans” for their social media accounts. China’s market monitoring watchdog launched a year-long campaign this September to crack down on unscrupulous business practices from user review manipulation to faking orders generated via KOL content.

Social e-commerce platforms are also taking actions to crack down on fake comments and reposts. Weibo issued a new rule in January limiting the count of the total number of interactions such as sharing to one million

Hive Media, the MCN involved in this case, was once a partner of Weibo, has suspended all services for now. Similar KOL platforms are unlikely to attempt a similar scam for the time being out of fear of a media backlash and a possible halt on services. 

This incident might be a turning point, but the change will be very slow, according to industry watcher Steven Yan. 

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Alibaba eyes lower-tier, overseas markets to power Singles Day growth https://technode.com/2019/10/21/alibaba-eyes-lower-tier-overseas-markets-to-power-singles-day-growth/ https://technode.com/2019/10/21/alibaba-eyes-lower-tier-overseas-markets-to-power-singles-day-growth/#respond Mon, 21 Oct 2019 10:34:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119886 More than 500 million users are expected to participate in this year’s promotion.]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba kicked off promotional efforts for its annual shopping extravaganza, the November 11 Global Shopping Festival known as Singles Day, as the massive annual sales event heads into its second decade.

Why it matters: Each year, Chinese e-commerce giants are working on new marketing campaigns and strategies to boost sales to fresh highs.

  • Singles Day growth last year slowed as overall e-commerce sales declined in China and competition from rivals like Pinduoduo and JD heightened.

“Our goal is to stimulate consumption demand and support lifestyle upgrade in China through new brands and products. We will enable merchants in China and around the world to grow their businesses through data-driven product innovation and consumer insights, as well as leverage our recommendation technology and content-driven user engagement to delight consumers in urban coastal cities and less-developed areas of China.”

—Jiang Fan, president of Taobao and Tmall, in an emailed statement

Details: More than 500 million users are expected to participate in this year’s promotion, about 100 million more than last year, according to Jiang at a Singles Day event on Monday in Shanghai.

  • Lower-tier city markets are a new focus, a trend among Chinese e-commerce platforms as they search for growth. During the event, special marketing attention was given to consumers and small businesses in less- developed markets, like China’s northeast region. More than 70% of Alibaba’s new yearly active consumers came from lower-tier cities during the quarter ended June 30.

JD takes aim at lower-tier markets with re-brand of Pinduoduo clone

  • Alibaba will leverage the promotion to extend its global presence through cross-border online marketplace Tmall Global, Alibaba-owned Southeast Asia e-commerce platform Lazada, and AliExpress, and Southeast Asia e-retailer Daraz.
  • Travel will continue to be part of Alibaba’s offerings through its travel platform Fliggy.
  • The company touted greener efforts, offering November 20 as the day Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao will promote cardboard recycling while its second-hand selling platform Idle Fish will launch a trade-in program for used goods. It also is deploying energy-saving efforts such as liquid-cooled servers.
  • Consumer savings from brand and platform promotions and coupons are expected to total around RMB 50 billion ($7 billion), according to Jiang.
  • More than 200,000 brands are participating in the promotion, and 1 million new products are on offer.

Context: For Chinese consumers, Singles Day, a marketing concept first conceived by Alibaba executive chairman and CEO Daniel Zhang in 2009, goes beyond Alibaba with other e-commerce platforms and retailers participating in the gravitational pull of the annual promotion.

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WeChat bans external links asking users to spam contacts https://technode.com/2019/10/21/wechat-bans-external-links-asking-users-to-spam-contacts/ https://technode.com/2019/10/21/wechat-bans-external-links-asking-users-to-spam-contacts/#respond Mon, 21 Oct 2019 05:12:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119812 WeChatUsers applauded the move which may cut many companies off from a major traffic source.]]> WeChat
Image credit: Tencent

WeChat has banned external links that require users to invite clicks from contacts in an update to its external link policies on Friday.

Why it matters: The new rules may prove to be a heavy blow for companies that rely on WeChat for customer acquisition. However, WeChat users responding to a Weibo post about the news overwhelmingly welcomed the change, saying that they are increasingly bombarded by unsolicited spam messages.

  • The high cost for user acquisition is a major pain point for Chinese internet companies. The popularity of similar WeChat-based marketing features highlights the app’s status as a major traffic source.

Details: WeChat has updated four items in its guidelines on external links concerning social sharing features and user avatars. The new adjustments will take effect on October 28, according to the statement.

  • WeChat has banned posts that require users to ask contacts to repost, like, or click to open a link within the post to qualify for a discount or participate in a marketing scheme.
  • Another new rule forbids companies from making unauthorized edits to user avatar and nicknames.
  • Operations that require users to open another app or download a new app in order to obtain monetary rewards, physical prizes, and virtual prizes are also banned.
  • The update also widens its ban on fraudulent activity to include group-buying links, including lotteries or sales of goods with an obvious disparity in price and product value.

“It’s the most annoying thing when a WeChat contact, who I haven’t talked to for a hundred years, [gets in touch] to ask a favor for a discount or to ‘like’ a WeChat Moments post” (our translation).

—Weibo user Love Avril on Monday morning

Context: WeChat, China’s most ubiquitous social media app with more than 1 billion active users, has a number of restrictions on external links, primarily concerning content or the source of the link.

  • WeChat has also long been known for blocking external links to rival platforms such as Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao. Competitors frequently criticize the company for “monopolizing behavior.”
  • WeChat’s extended ban on audiovisual links in May 2018 drew public outcry. The firm removed the policy just three days later.
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Alibaba tech and services to power Universal’s Beijing resort https://technode.com/2019/10/17/alibaba-tech-and-services-to-power-universals-beijing-resort/ https://technode.com/2019/10/17/alibaba-tech-and-services-to-power-universals-beijing-resort/#respond Thu, 17 Oct 2019 07:24:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119704 community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investmentAlibaba Cloud will support the theme park's digitization and technology infrastructure.]]> community group buy Alibaba cloud computing covid-19 investment
Universal Beijing Resort and Alibaba Group strategic partnership announcement ceremony. (Image credit: Alibaba)

Alibaba announced on Thursday a partnership with Universal Beijing Resort to help the American theme park conglomerate’s digital operations for its newest theme park scheduled to open in 2021.

Why it matters: The Chinese tech giant pushing forward its ecosystem that blends online and offline retail channels in order to drive growth.

  • Universal Beijing Resort joins major brands such as Starbucks, Proctor & Gamble, and Nestle in partnering with Alibaba on its “service packages” which provide business support for e-commerce, marketing, travel and lodging, and payments.

“This partnership will also bring to fruition a multi-dimensional data-enabled operations management solution for the industry and create a truly digitized theme park. The future of commerce is driven by technology and big data, and digitization will be the source of brand-new growth opportunities for all businesses.”

Daniel Zhang, Executive Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Alibaba Group

Details: At the core of the deal, Universal Beijing will leverage the Alibaba Business Operating System—a suite of services and digital tool offerings—to digitize the operations and management of the theme park, according to the company.

  • Alibaba Cloud will support the theme park’s digitization and technology infrastructure.
  • Universal Beijing will have a flagship store on Alibaba’s online travel platform Fliggy where visitors can buy tickets and book hotels.
  • Alipay’s facial-recognition payment technology will be enabled across the resort for park entry, storage lockers, and express-lane access for merchandise and food purchases.
  • Alibaba’s local services platform Koubei will provide food and beverage recommendations based on guest preferences, and enable online meal purchases to minimize wait time.
  • Online shopping marketplace Tmall will partner with the resort on co-marketing campaigns.
  • Video streaming platform Youku will include Universal movies in a special Universal-branded zone.

Context: Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang launched the Alibaba commercial operating system in January as part of its A100 program to help enterprises realize digital transformation across the Alibaba ecosystem.

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JD takes aim at lower-tier markets with re-brand of Pinduoduo clone https://technode.com/2019/10/16/jd-takes-aim-at-lower-tier-markets-with-re-brand-of-pinduoduo-clone/ https://technode.com/2019/10/16/jd-takes-aim-at-lower-tier-markets-with-re-brand-of-pinduoduo-clone/#respond Wed, 16 Oct 2019 07:25:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119560 JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.comConsumption levels in China’s lower-tier cities are catching up with those in first-tier hubs.]]> JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.com

JD.com officially launched on Tuesday the re-brand of its Pinduoduo clone app JD Pingou, renamed Jingxi, as China’s e-commerce giants gear up for this year’s Nov. 11 Singles’ Day shopping festival.

Why it matters: Along with rivals Alibaba and Pinduoduo, JD is focusing its efforts on lower-tier markets as its new growth drivers. Consumption levels in China’s lower-tier cities are quickly catching up with those in first-tier hubs like Beijing and Shanghai.

  • The rise of consumers in lower-tier cities became an area of focus during the 618 shopping festival held in June, China’s mid-year shopping extravaganza that serves as an e-commerce barometer. Platforms use insights from 618 sales data to work out their Singles’ Day strategy.
  • JD’s transaction growth during 618 was twice as high in lower-tier cities compared with total sales on JD.com, company data shows.
  • By targeting lower-tier markets, Jingxi is competing with Pinduoduo and Alibaba’s Taobao Tejia.

Details: JD has re-branded group-buying app JD Pingou as Jingxi.

  • Similar to Pinduoduo, Jingxi aggressively leverages the viral marketing capabilities of Tencent’s WeChat and QQ platforms for customer acquisition.
  • The app is expected to connect 1,000 industrial and manufacturing hubs in the next three years and provide services to one million merchants within five years.
  • JD also disclosed that it had laid aside tens of billions of yuan in merchant subsidies for Singles’ Day promotions.

Context: JD has been facing a slew of negative news since the turn of the year, but the firm is gradually regaining confidence from investors after posting better-than-expected earnings in the second quarter of this year.

  • Subsidizing steeper discounts during promotional periods is an effective move when entering lower-tier markets, where users are more price-sensitive.
  • Pinduoduo launched a joint “RMB 10 billion” subsidy plan with brands and merchants for promotions during this year’s 618 festival. It saw gross merchandise volume more than quadruple compared with the same 18-day period a year earlier. The company said it received more than 1.1 billion orders, 70% of which came from lower-tier cities.
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Xiaohongshu returns to Chinese Android stores after 3 month ban https://technode.com/2019/10/15/xiaohongshu-returns-to-chinese-android-stores-after-3-month-ban/ https://technode.com/2019/10/15/xiaohongshu-returns-to-chinese-android-stores-after-3-month-ban/#respond Tue, 15 Oct 2019 07:50:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119466 A user opens the Xiaohongshu app. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)The platform's missteps began catching up with it early this year.]]> A user opens the Xiaohongshu app. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)

Chinese social e-commerce site Xiaohongshu returned to some Android stores in China on Monday night, nearly three months after the app was pulled in July.

Why it matters: Xiaohongshu, a top social e-commerce site, joined a growing number of popular Chinese apps including NetEase Cloud Music and short video platform Kuaishou which had been yanked from app stores for hosting content deemed offensive or politically sensitive as China’s internet authorities grow increasingly stringent.

  • Xiaohongshu’s ban served as a warning for peers such as Weibo, Meitu, and Meipai.
  • Chinese content creation apps for product reviews and videos are common targets of the country’s internet watchdogs, which crack down on pornography, fake reviews, or politically sensitive topics.

Details: Xiaohongshu is back on the virtual shelves of a few Chinese Android app stores, including those of Huawei, OPPO, Tencent, and Meizu.

  • The app is still unavailable on Apple’s China App Store. The social e-commerce company declined to provide detail on when it may return when contacted by TechNode on Tuesday.
  • User content had only been reviewed in part before the ban, Chinese media reported citing a company employee. But now the content review team is expected to review all user-generated content before it is allowed to go up on the platform, requiring the company to use machine learning as well as manpower to monitor content, the source added.

Xiaohongshu – the death of a dream

Context: Xiaohongshu’s missteps—including allowing false product reviews and reviews of regulated goods such as cigarettes, as well as collecting user data without permission—began catching up with the former e-commerce darling early this year.

  • The company boasts an 250 million-strong user base as of May—mainly made up of young, female urbanites willing to spend on high-quality products.
  • Around 85 million of these users are active each day on average, providing ample opportunity for commercialization via ads and e-commerce, the firm said in May.
  • As a leading lifestyle and community e-commerce platform in China, Xiaohongshu’s latest funding was a $300 million B round with a valuation of $3 billion last year.
  • A few lookalike apps appeared on Chinese app stores during the ban.
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Fosun ups stake in Chinese parenting site Babytree for $5.8 million https://technode.com/2019/10/14/chinese-parenting-site-babytree-pulls-further-backing-from-fosun-international/ https://technode.com/2019/10/14/chinese-parenting-site-babytree-pulls-further-backing-from-fosun-international/#respond Mon, 14 Oct 2019 07:32:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119339 The pregnancy and parenting platform faces growing concern about its profitability and leadership.]]>

Fosun International became Chinese parenting site Babytree Group’s largest shareholder after the Hong Kong-based conglomerate increased its stake with a follow-up investment of around $5.8 million, the online parenting community announced on Friday.

Why it matters: Fosun International’s backing is a vote of confidence in the Beijing-based pregnancy and parenting platform, which is facing growing concern about its profitability and leadership.

  • Babytree’s Hong Kong initial public offering in November 2018 was a debacle. The company went public in at a $1.5 billion valuation, lower than the $2 billion valuation the previous May when Alibaba invested $214 million.
  • The size of China’s baby and parenting retail industry nearly tripled to around RMB 3 trillion in 2018 from RMB 1 trillion in 2010, according to data from research institute iiMedia, and is expected to maintain its fast growth for the next decade.

Details: Parent company Tenzing Holdings transferred 20 million Babytree shares, or 1.18% of the company’s total shares, to Fosun International’s subsidiary Startree (BVI) for HK$45.6 million, the company said in the statement.

  • After the transfer, Fosun International replaces founder and CEO Wang Huainan as the largest shareholder of the company with a 24.67% stake.
  • Wang still owns 24.27% of the firm. Shares held directly by Wang and his family’s limited partnership remains unchanged at 21.92%.
  • In late September, there were Chinese media reports about layoffs and Wang cashing in his shares and meeting with e-cigarette company Juul about a CEO role, both of which the company denied to TechNode. Wang also refuted the news during a Sept. 26 livestream on microblogging site Weibo.

Context: A former Yahoo and Google executive, Wang founded the online platform for expecting and new parents in 2007, providing pregnancy and parenting education and e-commerce.

  • Babytree Group raised around $200 million in its IPO, at the lower range of its initial offering price of HK$6.8 per share. Its shares have dropped significantly since then to around HK$2 apiece on Monday.
  • Competition from multiple Chinese tech firms going public around the same time as well as a depressed stock market forced Babytree to downsize its IPO by nearly 80%.
  • BabyTree reported operating revenue of RMB 240 million in the first half of this year, significantly lower than the RMB 408 million from the same period a year ago.
  • Babytree’s other investors include online education group TAL Education and Jumei e-commerce platforms.
  • Fosun International led a $450 million investment round in Babytree in late 2016. It has also backed Qinbaboao, a smaller player in the parenting sector.
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Chinese influencer platform Ruhnn facing multiple US lawsuits over IPO https://technode.com/2019/10/12/chinese-influencer-platform-ruhnn-facing-multiple-us-lawsuits-over-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/10/12/chinese-influencer-platform-ruhnn-facing-multiple-us-lawsuits-over-ipo/#respond Sat, 12 Oct 2019 06:40:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119318 Investors accused Ruhnn of securities fraud for failing to disclose key information about the business.]]>

Chinese influence incubator Ruhnn Holdings is facing class action lawsuits filed by more than 10 US law firms for possible violations of disclosure rules related to its initial public offering in April.

Why it matters: Ruhnn joins a growing list of Chinese tech firms including Alibaba, New Oriental, and fintech platform Yirendai that have faced fraud allegations by investors, degrading investor confidence at a time when Chinese capital markets are increasingly tight.

  • China’s key opinion leader (KOL) and blogger industry is very competitive. There are at least 200 platforms that manage KOLs, according to data from marketing platform Parklu.
  • Critics say Ruhnn is over-reliant on a small handful of top KOLs. One particular influencer, Zhang Dayi, has brought in about half of its total sales for nearly three years.

Details: The lawsuits accused Ruhnn of securities fraud for failing to disclose important information about the company, resulting in investor losses.

  • The primary accusation is the company’s failure disclose that the number of Ruhnn’s online stores had declined by nearly 40% and the number of Ruhnn’s full-service KOLs had declined by nearly 44% at the time of its IPO, one of the law firms representing investors, Bernstein Liebhard, said in a statement.
  • These two figures serves as key metrics to measure the performance of the company, which generates its revenue from e-commerce and KOL management services.
  • Ruhnn’s stock priced dropped 16.2% from its Oct. 7 price of $7.03 to $5.89 as of market close Friday, more than halving its IPO share price of $12.50.
  • Ruhnn told Chinese media that all of its disclosures are in compliance with corresponding rules, and that the company’s US lawyer is helping them to handle the issue. “Daily operation of the company is normal and unaffected,” local media reports cited the source as saying.

Briefing: China’s top influencer firm Ruhnn stock drops 37% after US IPO

Context: Much like their US counterparts, Chinese brands are turning to influencers to market products and services. But while US internet personalities draw compensation through social media platforms, Chinese influencers known as key opinion leaders (KOLs) monetize through their own e-commerce businesses. This structure gave rise to KOL management platforms which help with managing each influencer’s e-commerce store, social media marketing, and business decisions.

  • Feng Min, founder of Ruhnn, owns a 29.3% stake while Alibaba-backed Taobao China Holdings has a 8.56% stake in the company, according to the prospectus.
  • Ruhnn listed on China’s OTC desk, the National Equities Exchange and Quotations, in 2016 but delisted because of its continued losses.
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Suning testing coffee, tea offerings in Xiaodian convenience stores https://technode.com/2019/10/11/suning-testing-coffee-tea-offerings-in-xiaodian-convenience-stores/ https://technode.com/2019/10/11/suning-testing-coffee-tea-offerings-in-xiaodian-convenience-stores/#respond Fri, 11 Oct 2019 07:20:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119230 Coffee chains in China like Starbucks and Luckin face growing competition from the likes of the offline retail giant.]]>

Suning Xiaodian, the convenience store unit of Chinese retailer Suning.com, is testing the leisure beverage business with the launch of its first in-store coffee shop as the company looks to double down on its coffee market bet.

Why it matters: Coffee chains in China like Starbucks and Luckin face growing competition from the likes of Suning, which has an extensive offline presence.

  • Convenience stores are increasingly offering coffee-based beverages are entry-level pricing.
  • China’s coffee market size has grown to RMB 56.9 billion (around $8.01 billion) in 2018 from RMB 15.6 billion in 2013. It is expected to grow 26.0% annually to reach RMB 180.6 billion in 2023, according to Frost & Sullivan.
  • In September, China’s state-owned gas and petrochemical conglomerate Sinopec rolled out a new coffee brand called EasyJet to approximately 50,000 convenience stores located in the company’s gas stations across the country.

Details: Targeting white collar consumers, the coffee shop is located on the second floor of a Suning Xiaodian store in Nanjing, the capital of eastern China’s Jiangsu province.

  • The coffee shop’s existing menu lists 27 beverages including popular coffee and tea drinks. Beverage prices range from RMB 12 (around $1.70) to RMB 28.
  • Baked goods like breads and cakes are also on offer.
  • Suning Xiaodian store footprints range between 100 to 200 square meters (around 1,000 to 2,000 square feet) in size, and there are more than 5,000 stores across 71 Chinese cities as of March this year, according to the company. The stores aim to provide services for customers living within a range of three miles.
  • Suning launched in July last year its own coffee brand “Lion Coffee,” offering in-store, as well as 30-minutes coffee delivery services similar to Luckin. The products on sale at the coffee shop pilot are not branded as Lion Coffee products.
  • Suning did not provide details on its expansion plans for the in-store coffee shops.

Context: Suning.com spun off its conveniences-store subsidiary Suning Xiaodian, also known as Suning Stores, in July this year.

  • As a major appliance seller and e-commerce platform, Suning has been pushing its offline expansion to various segments including convenience stores, supermarkets, and department stores.
  • The Chinese online retailer acquired 80% stake in Carrefour China this June.
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Meituan shares hit historical high after Golden Week surge https://technode.com/2019/10/10/meituan-shares-hit-historical-high-after-golden-week-surge/ https://technode.com/2019/10/10/meituan-shares-hit-historical-high-after-golden-week-surge/#respond Thu, 10 Oct 2019 08:13:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118961 Shares in the lifestyle services provider continued to gain during the national holiday, consolidating Meituan's place as the third-largest internet company in China.]]>

Shares in Meituan continued to rise during China’s national holiday last week, consolidating the Tencent-backed lifestyle service platform’s position as the country’s third-largest internet firm.

The company’s market cap hit a historical high of HK$ 516 billion ($72 billion) on Monday with shares trading at HK$ 89 apiece, up from HK$80 per share on September 30. Meituan’s share price has more than doubled this year after trading at a little above HK$ 40 in January.

The personal wealth of Meituan’s billionaire founder and chairman Wang Xing also jumped to a high of more than HK$ 58 billion. He owns around 11% of the company.

Meituan shares remained in the doldrums during the first few months after a $4.2 billion initial public offering in September last year. The firm went public at HK$69 a share and spent most of the following months below that level due to market concerns over intense competition in its core food delivery unit, along with profitability issues and cash-fueled expansion efforts in different businesses such as ride-hailing and bike rental.

Market sentiment has gradually shifted over the past few months. The Hong Kong-listed firm overtook search giant Baidu and e-commerce platform JD in terms of market cap to become the third-largest publicly traded Chinese tech firm in May. Meituan is still behind Alibaba and Tencent, which remain in a different league, with market caps each above $400 billion.

Meituan, together with Bytedance’s news app Toutiao and ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing make up a new group known by the acronym TMD. They are seen as the new generation of tech contenders to challenge China’s BAT, short for Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent. Toutiao and Didi are still private companies.

Maintaining scale over profit

There are multiple reasons for the change in investor sentiment. Firstly, Meituan is gaining market confidence after it posted its first profit of RMB 875.8 million in the second quarter.

Although the company claims the profit is seasonal and emphasized that it will continue to prioritize scale for its highly subsidized food delivery business, Meituan showed investors its potential to make money.

“They are probably not going to push too much further here and going to just operate around the breakeven line for a long time to come so that they can keep growing and expanding their boundaries, while keeping investors not-so-concerned,” private investor ZQ Ong told TechNode. “This is important since Meituan needs capital to grow and keeping investors happy means a higher stock price and thus a lower cost of capital,” Ong added. 

Meanwhile, market analysts believe that changing competition dynamics between Meituan and its rivals in food delivery as well as in the online travel sector are key drivers of Meituan’s holiday share rise.

“What I think has driven the most recent share spike was Alibaba’s Investor Day (held on September 24th),” said Michael Norris, research and strategy manager at marketing and sales firm AgencyChina.  “One of the presentations showed the Ele.me and Koubei tie-up perhaps wasn’t as strong as the investors suspected. Improvements to order volume, take rate, and cost efficiency were soft.”

“This, in turn, highlights how strong Meituan is in the food delivery space,” he added.

Overtaking Ctrip

Meituan’s travel business, an important revenue driver, is also gaining momentum. The company has supplanted Ctrip to become the largest platform for hotel reservations in terms of nights booked and this has “dented” Ctrip’s position and its stock price, Norris pointed out. A stronger hold on hotel bookings, a very high margin business, is excellent news for Meituan and its shareholders, according to Norris.

Baidu announced in late September plans to offload around one-third of its stake in Ctrip, equivalent to about $1 billion, as the company as it looks to tap new revenue streams.

China’s “Golden Week” break, which spans from National Day on October 1 to October 7, is another driver of Meituan’s share rise. China’s holiday consumer spending mainly goes into tourism, entertainment, and food, which are Meituan’s core service areas. Overall revenue from retail and dining during the period hit RMB 1.52 trillion this year. During the period, Meituan took bookings equivalent to more than three million one-night stays in domestic hotels on October 1 and sold 3.6 million tickets to tourist attractions on October 3, company data showed.

All segments performed strongly for Meituan, with the volume of food delivery orders rise 43% year on year. Orders on Meituan Instashopping, an on-demand grocery delivery service, grew by close to two-thirds on the year, and its hotel bookings reached a historical high. “From a fund flow perspective, investors are investing in domestic consumption names and avoiding names exposed to trade tensions and political uncertainties,” said Esme Pau, an analyst from Tonghai Securities.

Pau believes Meituan will likely continue to consolidate its leading market share and improve its financial results. “On the back of its turnaround in Q2 2019, the market is expecting Meituan to be a success story in achieving breakeven after listing, ramp-up of a sticky local services ecosystem, successful execution of its new initiatives and sensible capital allocation for its product and service portfolio,” she noted.

Of course, Meituan is not the only online platform that benefits from the Golden Week economy. Recorded holiday traffic was reported on online travel platforms like Ctrip and Alibaba’s Fliggy, as well as Airbnb-style platforms such as Tujia, Xiaozhu, and mobile payment tools like Alipay and WeChat. These services are increasingly driven by the country’s younger generations. China’s post-80s and post-90s generations represented a combined 87% of Meituan consumers during the holiday, according to the company.

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Chinese proptech firm Fangdd files for US IPO targeting $150 million https://technode.com/2019/10/10/chinese-proptech-firm-fangdd-files-for-us-ipo-targeting-150-million/ https://technode.com/2019/10/10/chinese-proptech-firm-fangdd-files-for-us-ipo-targeting-150-million/#respond Thu, 10 Oct 2019 04:28:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119118 The White House is considering a possible ban on Chinese companies listed on US stock markets.]]>
Screenshot of Fangdd website. (Image credit: TechNode)
Screenshot of Fangdd website. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese online real estate marketplace Fangdd on Wednesday filed an initial public offering (IPO) with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, with plans to raise up to $150 million.

Why it matters: Fangdd’s IPO filing highlights the shifting Chinese tech landscape to business-facing from consumer-facing services in an effort to offset slowing rates of domestic consumption.

  • The White House is considering a possible ban on Chinese companies going public on US stock markets.
  • China’s residential property market is forecasted to be worth RMB 33.4 trillion (around $469.6 billion) in 2023, rising at a compound annual growth rate of 9.2% from 2018, according to market research institute Frost & Sullivan.
  • Technology is increasingly an important part of China’s massive residential property market with the rise of a series of proptech companies including Lianjia, Fang Holdings Limited, and 58.com.

Details: Fangdd expects to use the proceeds to enhance research and development capabilities, to invest in technology and sales, marketing, and branding, as well as for working capital and other general corporate purposes.

  • The company employs more than 911,000 registered real estate agents out of the approximately 2 million agents in China as of December 31, 2018, according to Frost & Sullivan.
  • The firm’s main revenue sources are commission-based transaction fees, revenue from innovation initiatives, and other value-added services, primarily in relation to transactions facilitated through its marketplace, according to its prospectus.
  • Fangdd’s revenue rose 55.4% year on year to RMB 1.6 billion in the second quarter of this year.

Context: Founded in 2011, the Shenzhen company provides SaaS-based solutions to real estate agents in China for managing customers, property listings, capital, and transaction data to solve the inefficiencies of traditional offline property agent services market.

  • Fangdd incorporated its variable interest entity (VIE) in March 2014—a measure that enables Chinese domestic entities to list offshore on international capital markets.
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Fresh produce e-commerce platform Benlai inks $200 million funding deal https://technode.com/2019/10/09/fresh-produce-e-commerce-platform-benlai-inks-200-million-funding-deal/ https://technode.com/2019/10/09/fresh-produce-e-commerce-platform-benlai-inks-200-million-funding-deal/#respond Wed, 09 Oct 2019 10:07:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=119084 Investor interest signals that China's fresh produce sector may be warming up again.]]>

Benlai, a Chinese fresh produce e-commerce platform, has secured $200 million in Series D1 funding, the company’s founder Yu Huafeng announced in an internal letter made public on Monday.

Why it matters: Interest in Benlai from venture capital funds indicates that China’s fresh produce sector may be warming up again. Benlai was an early entrant and is among a handful of survivors in the industry.

  • Fresh produce e-commerce is a difficult sector due to the high attrition rate of perishable goods and the significant logistics requirements, which weigh heavily on margins.
  • The sector boomed a few years ago, culminating in multiple firms bowing out. These included Amazon-backed Yummy77 and Xianpinhui.
  • Chinese tech firms have improved their supply chains management and customers are better acquainted with grocery delivery services. Fresh produce e-commerce has regained the attention of tech giants including Tencent, JD, and Alibaba, to Meituan this year.

Details: Mingde Holdings, a shareholder in delivery giant SF Express, led the round, joined by state-backed Beishang Capital as well as returning investors CDH Investments and Gaorong Capital.

  • Benlai expects the new tie-up with SF Express to bring more support in logistics and the supply chain, a crucial factor for fresh produce platforms.
  • The firm will use the proceeds to further boost the development of the group’s online-to-offline (O2O) and business-to-consumer (B2C) businesses.
  • The company’s B2C site Benlai.com has posted revenue of RMB 100 million ($14 million) for 2019 to date, while the produce-to-business (P2B) wholesaler unit Benlai Guofang has also earned a profit during the same period. It is aiming for profitability for the overall group in the 2019 fiscal year.
  • In the letter, Benlai’s founder cited Morgan Stanley’s comments on the need for tech companies like WeWork to turn a profit. “WeWork’s failure to go public is a critical turning point for markets that signals the end of “the days of endless capital for unprofitable businesses,” he said in the statement.

Context: Benlai secured its last funding round, a $117 million Series C, in 2016 led by China Urban Realty Association and ChinaEquity Group.

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Tencent leads E-round funding in Chinese online educator Vipkid https://technode.com/2019/10/08/tencent-leads-e-round-funding-in-vipkid/ https://technode.com/2019/10/08/tencent-leads-e-round-funding-in-vipkid/#respond Tue, 08 Oct 2019 04:35:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118916 The Beijing-based platform had been struggling to raise fundraise against a challenging backdrop of stricter regulations in the industry.]]>

Tencent has led E-round funding in Vipkid, one of China’s largest online English-language tutoring platforms, according to a statement on WeChat.

Why it matters: The Beijing-based platform has struggled to fundraise against a challenging backdrop of stricter regulations in the industry, as well as growing concerns over the high costs of acquiring and retaining users.

  • Since July, Beijing has required all foreign teachers to hold valid teaching credentials and companies must make public all related information such as certificates and work experience details. The regulation came out shortly after local police reported a drug bust involving foreign English teachers in Xuzhou, Jiangsu province.
  • Once an investor darling, Vipkid has faced challenges during this funding round as investors turned cold on China’s online education sector.
  • Vipkid competes against a host of local rivals like 51Talk, Hitalkkids, and Dada ABC to attract English speakers to power their live tutoring programs.

Details: The company did not specify the size of this round, but local media reported in September that Tencent would invest $150 million in the company at a valuation of $4.5 billion.

  • Tencent declined to comment on previous reports about the funding size and valuation.
  • Vipkid had initially aimed to raise $500 million but later lowered this goal to around $150 million, Reuters cited a source as saying.
  • The company will use the new proceeds to generate quality content, recruit talent, develop technology, as well as boost its operating efficiency and organizational capabilities, according to a statement.
  • Vipkid claims to provide services for more than 700,000 students and at least 90,000 teachers from North America as of August this year.

Context: Revenue in China’s online education market grew by over one-quarter to hit RMB 251.8 billion ($35.3 billion) in 2018. A growth rate of 16% to 24% is expected over the next three to five years, according to data from market research and consulting firm iResearch.

  • The K12 education segment (kindergarten to 12 years of age) is expected to expand to account for 28% of the market by 2022, up from only 9% in 2012, thanks to improved education concepts among younger generations and higher internet penetration, according to iResearch.
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Tencent’s approach to smart retail as an enabler https://technode.com/2019/10/01/tencents-approach-to-smart-retail-as-an-enabler/ https://technode.com/2019/10/01/tencents-approach-to-smart-retail-as-an-enabler/#respond Tue, 01 Oct 2019 02:00:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118532 The smart retail initiative is a "CEO project" that requires a top-down revolution of traditional retail businesses.]]>

China’s tech giants are moving rapidly to take advantage of opportunities created by the evolving e-commerce sector. No matter whether they call it new retail, smart retail, or boundless retail, the underlying driver is the same—the merging of online and offline commerce via new technologies.

Tencent is a major advocate of the trend. They first ventured into the realm of retail in late 2017, then set up the dedicated Tencent Smart Retail unit in March of last year to lead the company’s charge and focus resources.

After a year and a half of development, Tencent Smart Retail now offers services to around 100 clients spanning department stores and supermarket chains, as well as partners selling apparel, cosmetics, mom-and-baby products, and commercial property. In all, the services have contributed to sales growth of up to 10%, Tencent Smart Retail director Houfer Chen told TechNode in an interview.

“Out of the total, we conduct in-depth cooperation with over 20 clients, most of which are Top 10 players in their areas,” he said. The other partners cooperating with Tencent are part of a booster program launched in May. The program provides consulting services to more than 200 enterprises, while offering training to 1,000 smart retail professionals.

Tencent dubbed the smart retail initiative a “CEO project” to emphasize that most fundamental changes must be made on the part of offline retailers and brands to effect a real transformation.

“Although most companies we talked to are very positive about the prospect of smart retail, one challenge we’ve faced over the past year is that smart retail can’t be achieved by the involvement of a single unit or several executives. It requires cross-department cooperation or even structural adjustments,” said Chen.

Tencent’s smart retail business forms an intrinsic part of a recent expansion beyond its traditional strengths in customer-facing services, such as social networking and gaming, to more business and industry-focused customers.

In Tencent’s shift to B2B services, priority will be given to clients with significant consumer-focused elements, such as retail. This means those that could gain greater business benefits from existing Tencent products such as mini-programs and WeChat, said Dowson Tong, head of Tencent’s Cloud & Smart Industries Business Group (CSIG) and the company’s senior vice president, in a previous interview with TechNode.

Launched last year in September as part of the company’s reorganization, the CSIG unit integrates the company’s cloud business and enterprise-facing services. Shifting to business-facing services is a common theme underlying recent moves among China’s tech giants. For example, Alibaba launched a commercial operating system in January this year, as part of its A100 Strategic Partnership program to help enterprises realize digital transformation across the Alibaba ecosystem.

The process of connecting different resources within companies might be slow due to various uncertainties, while some related problems are unable to be solved with technical solutions, Houfer Chen noted.

Tencent’s smart retail service remains in its early stages of commercialization, according to Chen. “Most of our current solutions are customized. As we cooperate with more partners and gain a better understanding of their demands, we plan to launch standardized solutions very soon either in the form of SAAS or infrastructure services,” he said.

WeChat-centric strategy

Tencent’s smart retail concept is very much integrated with the company’s ubiquitous app WeChat, which serves as the starting point for enterprise clients to interact with individual consumers.

Clients from different industries have to contend with different pain points when addressing the digitalization of their existing businesses. For example, supermarkets such as Walmart want to make life easier for their in-store shoppers by reducing wait times at the checkout. Tencent’s solutions allow Walmart customers to use WeChat mini-programs to scan the barcode on items in store and to complete purchases on their phone using WeChat Pay.

In addition to improving in-store experiences, apparel brands also need to build their community and engage with customers. WeChat mini-program flagship stores bring the online and offline shopping experiences together by offering offline pick-up and various after-sales services.

Tencent’s smart retail encourages consumers to explore new modes of shopping. Store associates can connect with regular customers via WeChat to promote new products.

“By using WeChat mini programs, brands can create shareable fashion tips for their shopping guides to share with their regular customers,” said Chen. Brands like Jack & Jones and Vero Moda sell a large portion of products outside of the shops’ business hours, he explained. Chen oversees Tencent’s cooperation with these brands, as well as the cosmetics chain Sephora and baby products retailer Kidswant.

Around one-fifth of the RMB 45 million in monthly sales of the apparel brands Jack & Jones, Selected, and Bestseller Outlets is generated via WeMall, the official mini-program, according to Tencent.

Leveraging the social nature of WeChat, the company also uses social media campaigns and games to increase customer engagement and brand recognition.

“Mini-programs are not only an ecosystem for sales, but also for different types of engagement,” Chen said. “It’s hard to navigate the customer decision-making journey, but what you need to do is spread out to different touch points that you can engage with consumers and collect all the information back to one aggregated point, which can be one WeChat mini-program.”

Enabling smart retail

For its smart retail business, Tencent is taking a hands-off approach and limiting its role to that of an “enabler and infrastructure provider” for companies using its services.

Company founder Pony Ma once explained that Tencent’s goal is to enable digital versions of existing physical stores and improve customer experience by upgrading technological capabilities via partnerships. “For us, there is no conflict of interest. We are just like a provider of utilities, such as water or electricity,” Ma told local media.

Chen echoed Ma’s idea, saying, “We are eager to work with more retailers. We know retailing is a difficult business to do and it is not what we are good at. So we decided to adopt a more open business model to assist the development of different enterprises and industries.”

Tencent’s hands-off approach to retail is quite different from its multifaceted rival Alibaba, which owns retail prototypes like Freshippo and has inked a flurry of stake-controlling deals in offline stores like Intime Retail and RT-Mart.

It’s interesting to note that the different approaches taken by Tencent and Alibaba for smart retail mirror their investment approaches. While Alibaba tends to take large or controlling shares and get deeply involved in the operations of these companies, Tencent takes a milder approach by only buying up minor stakes.

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Luckin launching juice business in China with European partner, LDC https://technode.com/2019/09/26/luckin-launching-juice-business-in-china-with-european-partner-ldc/ https://technode.com/2019/09/26/luckin-launching-juice-business-in-china-with-european-partner-ldc/#respond Thu, 26 Sep 2019 09:38:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118493 The coffee upstart is expanding aggressively across product categories and markets.]]>
Luckin and LDC executives attending the signing ceremony. (Image credit: Luckin Coffee)

Chinese coffee chain upstart Luckin Coffee has signed an agreement with Louis Dreyfus Company (LDC), a European food processing company, to sell Luckin Juice in China through a joint venture (JV).

Why it matters: Known as China’s Starbucks challenger, Luckin is expanding aggressively across product categories and overseas markets.

  • After adding snacks and fruit-based beverages, the Xiamen-based company announced plans this month to spin off its tea-based beverage line known as Xiaolu Tea, or “Fawn Tea” in English, as an independent operation.
  • The company has been growing at a breathless pace and is still loss-making. Expansion to more product categories will add to financial pressures on the US-listed company.
  • The deal appears to have been in discussions for months. Luckin’s SEC registration statement lays out a plan to build a roastery JV with Louis Dreyfus Company Asia. As part of that agreement, Louis Dreyfus will purchase Class A shares equal to $50 million at the initial public offering price.

“Through the joint venture with LDC, Luckin is extending upstream toward production, giving greater product quality control along the whole process and the ability to offer better products, a better experience and services to consumers, to further meet their diverse product needs. In the future, Luckin Coffee will further reduce costs to meet the needs of broader consumers and increase their consumption frequency.”

—Jinyi Guo, Luckin Coffee senior vice president and co-founder, in a statement

Details: The new joint venture will focus on a co-branded, not-from-concentrate orange, lemon, and apple juices, with plans to build its own bottling plant.

  • The firm also plans to bottle and brand other fruit and vegetable juices, according to the company.
  • Luckin Coffee stores will play an important role as sales outlets, while the business also plans to market its juices via other channels.
  • No financial details about the joint venture are disclosed.

Context: Founded in 1851, Rotterdam-based LDC has been active for more than 40 years in China, where it operates across commodities including grains, oilseeds, cotton, sugar, rice, and juice, in nearly every province in the country.

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Pinduoduo looking to raise $1 billion in convertible note offering https://technode.com/2019/09/25/pinduoduo-looking-to-raise-1-billion-in-convertible-note-offering/ https://technode.com/2019/09/25/pinduoduo-looking-to-raise-1-billion-in-convertible-note-offering/#respond Wed, 25 Sep 2019 09:56:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118389 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaThe company is looking to fund its expansion to buyers in higher-tier cities.]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba
Screenshot from iQiyi platform of Pinduoduo’s sponsorship ad during the third season of the variety show, Go Fighting, in 2017 when the number of users was around 100 million. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese social e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo announced on Wednesday it is planning to offer convertible debt up to $1 billion as it seeks to fund a rapid expansion into higher-tier domestic markets.

Why it matters: The fast-growing e-commerce platform is looking to raise more cash to cover rising expenditures amid intensifying competition, China’s slowing economy, and trade tensions with the US.

  • Pinduoduo had 366 million average monthly active users in the second quarter, an increase of 88% from 195 million in the same quarter of 2018 and faster than Alibaba’s 19% year-on-year growth seen in the same period.
  • To maintain growth, Pinduoduo spends heavily on marketing and discounts. During this year’s 618 shopping festival in June, Pinduoduo launched a joint “RMB 10 billion” subsidy plan with partners including premium brands like Dyson, Boss, Apple, and Sony.
  • The company quickly gained traction in lower-tier cities with its budget-conscious products, but is expanding to tier one and two cities, which rose to 48% of Pinduoduo’s total GMV in June from 37% in January. While the higher tier city markets present significant opportunities, the landscape is much more competitive.

“The Company plans to use the net proceeds from the Notes Offering to enhance and expand its business operations, for research and development, to continue to invest in and develop its technology infrastructure, and for working capital and other general corporate purposes.”

⁠—Pinduoduo in a statement filed to the SEC

Details: The company is offering $875 million in convertible senior notes, with the option for initial buyers to purchase an additional $125 million bond within 13 days, bringing the total offering potentially as high as $1 billion.

  • The company did not disclose a conversion price.

Context: The company made a secondary share offering in February with the goal of raising $1 billion, after a $1.6 billion initial public offering last summer.

  • The company more than doubled it operating losses to RMB 1.49 billion compared with RMB 6.64 million in the same quarter in 2018.
  • Pinduoduo shares dropped 8.4% to $30.99 apiece as of publication.
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Alibaba is testing a new social networking app, Real https://technode.com/2019/09/25/alibaba-is-testing-a-new-social-networking-app-real/ https://technode.com/2019/09/25/alibaba-is-testing-a-new-social-networking-app-real/#respond Wed, 25 Sep 2019 04:50:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118333 The e-commerce giant is trying again to breach social networking, a sector it hasn't yet cracked. ]]>

Chinese tech giant Alibaba has been testing a campus social networking app named Real since November, according to Chinese media reports on Tuesday.

Why it matters: The Real app is Alibaba’s latest move into social networking, historically the domain of its arch-rival Tencent and one where the e-commerce giant has repeatedly failed to gain traction.

  • Alibaba launched a messaging service called Laiwang in 2013 to compete with WeChat. Although it engaged in large-scale promotion both internally and externally, the app failed to take hold.
  • College campus-based social networking has recently drawn some big-name players. JD Finance began testing social networking app Liwowo in early September, and Bytedance’s acquisition of Biu Campus made headlines mid-month.

Details: Real, or “Ruwo” in Chinese, targets university students using the slogan, “Real Life, Real You.” The app supports facial recognition for login and features a variety of filters and stickers for photo and video editing.

  • The new app was developed by the Laiwang team. Chen Hang, Laiwang’s former product manager and now CEO of Dingtalk, oversees the project, Chinese media reported.
  • The app is now being tested by users who are invited to trial, mainly students attending the several universities located in Alibaba’s home city of Hangzhou.
  • A spokeswoman for Alibaba did not immediately respond with comments when reached by TechNode on Wednesday.

Context: Though it has struggled with individual social networking products, Alibaba has scored some successes in the enterprise-facing networking segment.

  • Alibaba’s enterprise efficiency app DingTalk says it has 200 million individual users and more than 10 million enterprise users as of August.
  • In addition to standalone social apps, Alibaba is also trying to integrate social networking features into its e-commerce apps including Taobao and Tmall.
  • Alibaba-backed payment tool Alipay also hit some bumps in its social networking efforts.
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The role of RFID in new retail supply chains https://technode.com/2019/09/24/the-role-of-rfid-in-new-retail-supply-chains/ https://technode.com/2019/09/24/the-role-of-rfid-in-new-retail-supply-chains/#respond Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:22:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118005 Retail continues to drive the rapid growth of the RFID industry.]]>

The onset of new retail trends in China and globally continues to gather pace. While the sector is driving the development of cutting-edge technologies as e-commerce players look to expand offline, it is also helping with more innovative applications of matured technologies like RFID tags.

RFID, or radio-frequency identification, refers to a technology whereby digital data is encoded in RFID tags or smart labels. The data is captured by a reader via radio waves. RFID, which has been around in its current form for the past two decades, didn’t start to make serious inroads into retail initially due to cost concerns, a lack of global standards for adoption, and risk aversion at management level.

But the identification methods and technical characteristics of RFID is making it a better fit for the demands of the new retail sector as the accuracy of data and inventory planning are increasingly important in omnichannel retailing and the improvement of customer experiences.

“Retail is a powerful engine driving the rapid growth of the RFID industry in the past few years, representing around 10% of the 15 billion ultra-high frequency RFID tags globally last year,” said Anna Liu, CTO of RFID manufacturer and solution provider Laxcen Technology, last week at an event celebrating the establishment of The Retail Lab in Shanghai. The lab is co-created by RFID maker Avery Dennison and Explorium (full disclosure: TechNode is strategic partners with Exlporium), the research arm of Hong Kong-based supply chain and logistics conglomerate Fung Group.

By simulating an in-store experience, the newly established lab demonstrates an interactive digital product showcase using RFID technology. After taking the products from shelves, users can get details of the item and enjoy automated checkout. By using RFID and big data analysis tools, the solution can also optimize distribution and sales procedures.

While users are shopping online, e-commerce sites analyze their purchasing preferences and then generate meaningful insights for new products or give targeted shopping recommendations. However, such data is often absent during offline purchases.

“With each item uniquely tagged, the technology is merging the physical reality of the store with digital functionality and capability of the online and doing it all in-store,” said Francisco Melo, vice president and general manager of Global RFID at Avery Dennison.

A machine checking the inventory automatically (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

The increasing diversity of ways to shop raises requirements for supply chains. Some of the challenges we see in the retail supply chain are linked to visibility and accuracy. Efficiency and accuracy are the fundamental backbones that help supply chain automation, according to Melo.

At the same time, providing detailed and trackable information addresses the needs of millennials and the younger generations who value knowing where their products come from. “RFID is one of the key technologies that can tell you exactly where the product has been, the full provenance and everything else, which are increasingly important for the younger demographic,” Melo added.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

QR codes and other forms of visual ID are often seen as alternatives to RFID technology. These have their place, but they require line of sight, meaning you need to see the code one by one no matter whether it’s inside a box or stacked on a shelf.

However, the two technologies are not exclusive. “QR codes are now ubiquitous in China where users are accustomed to it,” Melo said. “So you can have the RFID for supply chain optimization, and then you can have QR to interact with the consumers, who can actually connect the unique item that’s on the RFID with a QR code.”

“For AI to work, you to feed AI with right and accurate data,” said Dominic Gates, president of LF Logistics Group. “Then you can have fancy algorithms that tell you what people are likely to buy based on different factors. But if you don’t have the right data, then you start from the wrong place. And I think that’s that mindset about accurate data to allow me to have predictive analytics and use AI algorithms to help me with my strategies.”

The cost of RFID tags is still the foremost concern for brands and retailers when adopting the technology. But the price is dropping with its wider application to a level that’s acceptable to the users, says Anna Liu. The cost of RFID tags attached to items displayed at The Retail Lab is between RMB0.4 ($0.06) and 0.5 per item, an employee from Avery Dennison told TechNode. Staff training and data privacy are also issues to be tapped to help wider application of the technology.

In addition to retail, the technology is also finding applications in the smart home industry, hospitals, and even education (where parents track school attendance of their kids) as an extension of the Internet of Things trend.

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JD.com aims to slash delivery times with offline partner program https://technode.com/2019/09/24/jd-com-aims-to-slash-delivery-times-with-offline-partner-program/ https://technode.com/2019/09/24/jd-com-aims-to-slash-delivery-times-with-offline-partner-program/#respond Tue, 24 Sep 2019 03:30:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=118118 JDThe e-commerce giant has partnered with the likes of Walmart, Nongfu Springs, Nestlé, and other major brands.]]> JD
JD.com staff at a company distribution center in Gu’an located in northeast China. (Image credit: Bigstock/XiXinXing)

JD.com has launched a new supply chain program integrating offline channels and multiple retail partners in an effort to boost delivery efficiency.

Why it matters: As China’s new retail industry further blurs lines between online and offline shopping, related sectors like logistics and supply chain are pushed to innovate.

  • The initiative is based on an inventory integration program between JD and Walmart. The duo inked a strategic alliance to explore new opportunities combining e-commerce and retail in 2016.
  • Offline stores are seeking out alternatives as orders and traffic slow amid a shift in Chinese consumer preference in favor of online platforms, which deliver to customer doorsteps.

“The fact is a lot of products, especially ones that we need and those we use every day, are already in nearby stores, but they are delayed by going through the many links of the traditional supply chain. This program cuts out unnecessary steps, improving efficiency for retailers, maximizing resources, reducing costs, and improving the customer experiences.”

—Carol Fung, president of JD FMCG in an emailed statement

Details: The new program integrates multiple offline channels for JD and its partners including supermarkets, convenience stores, and some branded offline stores, as well as Dada-JD Daojia, its online grocer. It covers 20,000 offline stores spanning 54 cities, including 175 Walmart hypermarkets, 198 Nongfu Spring offline water stations in Beijing, and 166 9bianli liquor stores throughout the country.

  • Under the partnership, when customers use JD’s first-party platform to buy a product that is also available from an offline partner, they may receive it from there if delivery is faster.
  • Instead of routing every product through an inflexible system of traditional warehouses, distribution centers, and delivery stations before reaching the customer, offline channels can now directly fulfill orders from JD.
  • The average delivery time through the program is two hours, but the company said that some customers receive orders within 30 minutes.
  • The program has been in testing for six months so far, a JD spokeswoman told TechNode
  • Brands participating in the program are likely to see increased offline store traffic and a higher number of orders, the company said.
  • The program currently covers items such as non-alcoholic beverages, beer, wine, rice, and flour, which are typically bulky and heavy, and hard to store and ship.
  • Other partners have joined the program include supermarket chain Better Life, Nestlé, Coca-Cola, Tsingtao Beer, and liquor retailer 9bianli.

Context: JD.com and Walmart invested $500 million in Dada-JD Daojia in 2018.

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Powered by JD.com’s tech, Rakuten launches autonomous deliveries in Japan https://technode.com/2019/09/20/powered-by-jd-coms-tech-rakuten-launches-autonomous-deliveries-in-japan/ https://technode.com/2019/09/20/powered-by-jd-coms-tech-rakuten-launches-autonomous-deliveries-in-japan/#respond Fri, 20 Sep 2019 07:12:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117966 Automated deliveries are part of a wider effort to increase efficiency and accuracy in the logistics industry.]]>

JD.com is providing its unmanned delivery solutions to Japanese off- and online retailers including Rakuten and Walmart’s Japanese supermarket unit, Seiyu GK, in the debut of one of Japan’s first commercial autonomous vehicle delivery services.

Why it matters: JD.com’s automated delivery push using vehicles and aerial drones is part of a wider push to improve efficiency and accuracy within the logistics industry. Other Chinese tech giants, like Alibaba and Meituan, are also investing heavily in the area.

  • The deal is an extension of the partnership in unmanned technologies that JD.com and Rakuten began earlier this year.
  • In addition to Japan, the company is also testing drone delivery in Indonesia.
  • The Japanese government is planning to set up public and private sector councils and establish standards for carrying out trials on public roads in 2019.

“By offering users the opportunity to experience the convenience of UGVs (unmanned ground vehicles), and by building its own real-world expertise in the operation of UGV-based delivery services, Rakuten aims to promote the adoption of UGV delivery services across a variety of locations, including public roads.

⁠—Mai Futamura, Rakuten spokesperson to TechNode

Details: During its trial program, Rakuten’s autonomous delivery service will be available within Umikaze Park in the central Japanese city of Yokosuko during weekends between September 21 to October 27, mainly targeting tourists visiting during the holiday season.

  • The program now operates one autonomous vehicle, which has a maximum payload weight of 5 kilograms (11 pounds), according to Rakuten.
  • The delivery range in Umikaze Park is about 600 meters per lap, with a maximum of 12 deliveries per day.
  • Visitors to Umikaze Park who download the Rakuten Drone app onto their smartphone can place orders through the app to select from around 400 products on offer at the Seiyu LIVIN Yokosuka Store located near the park. The categories will range from food and beverages for barbecues to first aid supplies.
  • Users can specify the location and time for the delivery and pay online with Rakuten Pay.
  •  Users can collect their orders by inputting a code received via push message.
  • The delivery service costs JPY 300 (around $2.8) per order.

Context: Rakuten recently announced a local drone delivery program to an island in Tokyo Bay, which uses JD drones to deliver to visitors to the island via the Rakuten Drone app.

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China’s Zoom users switch to local version after blockage https://technode.com/2019/09/19/chinas-zoom-users-switch-to-local-version-after-blockage/ https://technode.com/2019/09/19/chinas-zoom-users-switch-to-local-version-after-blockage/#respond Thu, 19 Sep 2019 05:16:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117851 Zoom has been added to a lengthy list of US internet firms that are blocked in China.]]>

Chinese users of Zoom are gradually migrating to a Chinese version of the video-conferencing service after the country blocked the global version last week.

Why it matters: Amid an intensifying battle over technology and trade between China and the US, Zoom has been added to a lengthy list of US internet service firms blocked in China. Blocking access to Zoom may improve growth opportunities for Chinese companies in the sector.

  • The size of China’s video conferencing market surged 36.2% year on year to RMB 3.1 billion ($439 million) in 2018, according to data from research institute CCW Research.
  • Chinese companies in the sector include Shenzhen-listed BizConf Telecom and XYlink, among others.
  • Mainland Chinese users began complaining that Zoom was no longer available in the country on September 8.
  • Although Zoom has said that international expansion is a major opportunity, its revenue from the rest of world only represented 20% of its earnings for the six months ended July 31, 2019.

Read more: Is Zoom crazy to count on Chinese R&D?

“Zoom’s website, meetings, and webinars are currently inaccessible in China. Our investigation remains ongoing, but we have determined that the cause is an inability to connect to the local China DNS (domain name system).”

—Priscilla Barolo, Zoom communications manager to TechNode

Details: Zoom users in the country are moving to the localized version, run by partner Huawan Telecom.

  • Local media reported that Huawan received a heads-up before the block, and required employees to switch to the local version to ensure normal workplace communication.
  • Intensifying international tensions and the country’s upcoming 70th anniversary are cited as reasons for the block, according to Chinese media.
  • Other third-party apps using Zoom as a communication tool are also recommending that users switch to the local version to ensure a stable connection.
  • An industry insider told Chinese media that failure to comply with local laws may have also contributed to the block. China requires communication tools for local enterprises to run services on domestic servers. The government could not locate Zoom’s server, according to the source.

Context: Founded in 2013, Huawan Telecom is a video-conferencing service provider based in Shanghai.

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Starbucks aligns further with Alibaba in Tmall Genie voice ordering feature https://technode.com/2019/09/18/starbucks-aligns-further-with-alibaba-in-tmall-genie-voice-ordering-feature/ https://technode.com/2019/09/18/starbucks-aligns-further-with-alibaba-in-tmall-genie-voice-ordering-feature/#respond Wed, 18 Sep 2019 05:44:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117741 A closer partnership with Alibaba may help Starbucks in its competition with Luckin.]]>

Coffee giant Starbucks is deepening its partnership with Alibaba with the launch of voice-activated delivery on smart speaker Tmall Genie as it fends off competition from Chinese coffee chain, Luckin.

Why it matters: Closer alignment with Alibaba may help Starbucks in its competition with Luckin as the rivalry expands beyond coffee. Starbucks is not only leveraging Alibaba’s lifestyle services, but also the benefits of its broader ecosystem, from the AI assistant to the music streaming business.

  • The feature connects membership accounts for Tmall Genie, food delivery platform Ele.me, e-commerce giant Taobao, and Starbucks.
  • Luckin said in May that it was seeking a tie-up with Alibaba-owned Ele.me, Starbuck’s exclusive delivery partner.
  • China is one of the fastest-growing markets in the world for coffee consumption. The country’s total consumption grew at an average annual rate of 16% in the last decade, significantly outpacing the world average of 2%, according to figures from the International Coffee Organization.

“The Starbucks feature through Alibaba’s Tmall Genie ushers in a new era of digital customer engagement for Starbucks, leveraging ground-breaking digital technology to create an unprecedented experience that elevates our connection with customers to new heights.”

—Molly Liu, vice president and general manager of Digital Ventures at Starbucks China

Details: Customers can now use voice commands to order Starbucks beverages and food for delivery within 30 minutes. Payment can also be made using voiceprint payment technology.

  • After placing the orders, customers can track their orders in real-time through Tmall Genie.
  • Starbucks members also can earn membership points and receive membership updates via the Tmall Genie.
  • The smart speaker will soon be able to recommend items based on order history and seasonal menus during voice orders.
  • Music playlists from Starbucks stores are also available through Alibaba’s music streaming app, Xiami Music.
  • Customers can also purchase an exclusive Starbucks-themed Tmall Genie for RMB 199 ($28) through the Starbucks virtual store on Alibaba’s mobile apps, including Taobao, Alipay, and Tmall.
  • The launch of the new service marks the one-year anniversary of the Starbucks and Alibaba partnership.

Starbucks, Freshippo ‘Star Kitchen’ tie-up opens in Beijing as delivery catches on

Context: The announcement builds on several collaborations between the two companies, including the delivery-only Star Kitchens within Alibaba’s Freshippo supermarkets in China.

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Suning.com to open more than 200 stores within Carrefour locations https://technode.com/2019/09/17/suning-com-to-open-more-than-200-stores-within-carrefour-locations/ https://technode.com/2019/09/17/suning-com-to-open-more-than-200-stores-within-carrefour-locations/#respond Tue, 17 Sep 2019 05:17:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117644 Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailerSuning.com is beginning to integrate Carrefour into its ecosystem.]]> Suning suning.com alibaba taobao omnichannel retailer

Chinese retailer Suning.com, owner of an 80% stake in Carrefour’s Chinese business, is planning to open more than 200 Suning stores in the grocery retailer locations across China on September 28.

Why it matters: Suning is making its first major strategic push integrating the French supermarket chain into its ecosystem, a challenge considering Carrefour China’s massive size and loss-making financials.

  • Suning has signed an agreement with Carrefour to buy an 80% equity interest in the French retailer’s China business in June. The deal received a green light from the government in August.
  • Suning’s acquisition of Carrefour effectively ended the supermarket’s partnership with rival electronics retailer Gome. Carrefour and Gome had announced in April that the duo would open 200 in-store Gome shops by July.
  • Carrefour China operates 210 hypermarkets and 24 convenience stores across the country.

“Suning’s in-Carrefour stores will be tailor-made based on each store’s location and consumer profiles.”

—a Suning.com executive to Chinese media

Details: The in-store Suning shops will sell 3C products, which range from home appliances to smartphones.

  • Customers who buy products from in-store Suning shops will enjoy the same customer service as those who purchase from Suning’s own stores, the company said.
  • TechNode’s visit to a Shanghai Carrefour location revealed an electronics and home appliance zone still under construction, though posters featuring Suning and Carrefour logos were up throughout the store. The space for the new in-store Suning shop was previously a Gome shop.

Context: Suning has been pushing its offline expansion to various segments including convenience stores, supermarkets, and department stores.

  • Opening in-supermarket stores is a popular strategy for online platforms to build their offline presence. In addition to Carrefour, Suning also operates such outlets in Alibaba-backed supermarket chain RT-Mart.
  • The store-in-store’s smaller footprint mean that the product assortment and marketing initiatives are more flexible that Suning’s full-sized locations, and must run in partnership with each individual supermarket.
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Tech firms light up Taobao Maker festival https://technode.com/2019/09/12/tech-firms-light-up-taobao-maker-festival/ https://technode.com/2019/09/12/tech-firms-light-up-taobao-maker-festival/#respond Thu, 12 Sep 2019 06:22:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117347 Cinese youth, mainly consisted of the millennials and the younger "Gen Z", is rising as powerful buyers and creative sellers.]]>

As China’s millennials and generation Z emerge as powerful buyers and creative sellers in the country’s retail market, tech giant Alibaba has made efforts to provide a platform for them to avoid missing out on the opportunities that they bring.

Taobao Maker Festival 2019 kicked off in the eastern city of Hangzhou on Thursday, shining a spotlight on the “maker spirit” of China’s young merchants and designers. More than 400 handpicked sellers from tech, fashion and lifestyle are taking part, nearly double the number of year’s event. Approximately 1,000 new products will debut at the 14-day festival.

“We see a great trend on Taobao in China that a lot of young entrepreneurs want to build their own brands and career by combining the creativity and ingenuity with the products they made,”  Chris Tung, Alibaba’s chief marketing officer, and the festival’s architect, told TechNode. “This is something we really want to celebrate and encourage.”

While Tung and his team are amazed by the concepts and the stories behind the products, they admit that it’s difficult for consumers to comprehend what the makers want to do and express if their products only appear on webpages as items to buy.

“There are beautiful stories to be told and great dreams behind the product they are making,” he added. “That’s why we decided to launch the Taobao Maker Festival four years ago to let the makers showcase the products and tell the stories.”

China’s maker culture has largely flown under the public’s radar over the past few years. Taobao invited 200 sellers from 2,000 makers to showcase their products offline in the first year.  This year they are selecting 400 from 100,000, Tung said.

Alibaba’s encouragement of the growth of young makers and sellers comes as the demographic rises as a powerful consumer group. China’s millennials account for nearly three-quarters of Taobao users, according to Tung. Alibaba’s retail platforms, of which Taobao is a major part, has 755 million users as of June.

Technology and innovation underpin the maker culture. The festival, therefore, has also become an event for many Chinese techies and inventors to present their latest inventions.

C-Exoskeleton Robot showcases their products at Taobao Maker Festival 2019 (Image credit: TechNode/ Shijiayi)

Post-90 entrepreneur Wang Chao is a typical example. The Elon Musk fan became fascinated by armor suits in junior school after watching Hollywood blockbuster Iron Man. He dropped out of college to pursue his dreams and founded C-Exoskeleton Robot with his friends in 2017.

As one of the earliest Chinese startups focused on the sector, the Beijing-based company creates soft robotic exoskeleton system and devices that have unique applications in logistics, industry, and military.

A man tries on the C-Exoskeleton Robot at Taobao Maker Festival on Sept 12, 2019 in Hangzhou. (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

In one demonstration at the event, Wang used a robotic exoskeleton to lift a car off of the ground. He added that the product could lift up to 1.2 tons.

“As the name intends, it’s a festival for makers,” Wang said. “We were very excited when we got the invitation because that’s who we are.”

LuxCero-3D Printing (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

LuxCreo, a startup dedicated to software, hardware, and materials for large-scale 3D-printing manufacturing, is also participating in the event. The company has partnered with shoe retailers to launch custom 3D-printed sneakers soles. “For the business application of 3D printing technology, the items we made have to be functional to be relevant to customers’ everyday lives,” said Marketing Manager Ye Yina.

Foods made with Omn!Pork (Image credit: TechNode/Shi Jiayi)

Another merchant in attendance is GreenMonday. The firm had drummed up a lot of hype online even before the event, thanks to its position as a pioneer of vegan meat in China.

“Millennials and Gen Z, and more broadly people under the age of 35, are the groups where we saw the most rapid increase in vegetarians or flexitarians numbers,” founder David Yeung told TechNode. “There’s an increased awareness in these groups to eat healthier and environmental-friendly goods.”

GreenMonday intends to use Taobao as a gateway to the mainland Chinese market. At the same time, the company is also entering partnerships with mainland restaurants to offer foods made of their vegan meat brand Omn!Pork.

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Alibaba refreshes core values on 20th anniversary, adds work-life balance https://technode.com/2019/09/11/alibaba-refreshes-core-values-on-20th-anniversary-adds-work-life-balance/ https://technode.com/2019/09/11/alibaba-refreshes-core-values-on-20th-anniversary-adds-work-life-balance/#respond Wed, 11 Sep 2019 04:01:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117247 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe updated values reflect the rapid pace of change in the digital era.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m
Alibaba’s new core values released Tuesday. (Image credit: Alibaba)

Included in internet conglomerate Alibaba’s six new corporate values introduced Tuesday at its 20th anniversary event was a nod to work-life balance, a notable addition following founder Jack Ma’s comments earlier this year in support of the demanding “996” work schedule.

Why it matters: The revision of the company’s core values—which the company views as business principles that have helped guide the company’s growth—on the same day of Ma’s retirement may be a signal that the company is looking to refresh its image.

  • The updated values are expected to help the company keep pace with the rapid changes in the digital era as Alibaba continues to expand globally, entering new markets and new businesses—and attracting new employees.
  • This is the second refresh of company values in the past 20 years.

“Because of the values we have succeeded over the last 20 years. But today the world is changing very, very fast. So, looking ahead, if we want to continue our success, we need something different. We need something new which can empower us to continue our success on the next journey.”

—Daniel Zhang, Alibaba chairman and CEO, in a statement

Details: The new values call for collective confidence, and more sharply define responsibility and a continued upward trajectory.

  • Last on the list, “Live seriously, work happily” is an acknowledgement that employees lives and work are separate and recognizes the importance of contentment in the workplace.
  • The company plans to serve 2 billion customers, create 100 million jobs, and help 10 million SMEs achieve profitability by 2036.

Context: The shift in core values follows widely publicized complaints from Alibaba employees about its demanding work environment, a facet of company culture that Ma appeared to support with his comments in April about 996, the grueling work schedule of 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week, that is commonly practiced at Chinese tech companies.

  • The values are dubbed the “Six Vein Spirit Sword,” taken from the work of novelist Jin Yong in which each “vein” represents a company value.
  • The company’s previous core values were: customer first, teamwork, embrace change, integrity, passion, and commitment.
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Sneakerheads are China’s latest set of unlikely blockchain users https://technode.com/2019/09/10/sneakerheads-are-chinas-latest-set-of-unlikely-blockchain-users/ https://technode.com/2019/09/10/sneakerheads-are-chinas-latest-set-of-unlikely-blockchain-users/#respond Tue, 10 Sep 2019 07:00:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117004 Sneaker trading platforms are increasingly adopting new technologies like blockchain to keep their users happy.]]>

Collecting sneakers has evolved from a niche hobby into a multi-million-dollar business. Sports shoe enthusiasts, known as sneakerheads, are demanding more from the trading platforms they frequent. Service providers are increasingly adopting new technologies like blockchain to keep them happy.

28-year-old Shan Jichao became a budding sneakerhead as a high school student over a decade ago when sports shoe collecting was just a subculture popular among a small group of hardcore basketball fans. The phenomenon is now going mainstream. Snapping up the latest pair of Air Jordans or Yeezys is no longer just a concern for high-schoolers or sports fans. The sector is also garnering attention from celebrities, cryptocurrency traders, and even China’s older generation, who are more accustomed to trading in stocks than shoes.

“I was surprised one day when a discussion started in one of my WeChat groups, mainly made up of middle-aged doctors, about how they liked a particular sneaker after someone sent out a photo,” Shan told TechNode.

“That’s when it really hit me: sneaker culture has expanded outside of the circle (出圈 in Chinese),” he recalled, using an internet slang term to describe a trend or interest is no longer confined to its original niche community.

With boxes neatly piled up in his apartment, Shan has amassed over 70 pairs to date, and he has traded more than 200 pairs since his high school days.

“My love for sneakers is rooted in my pure passion for basketball, and also streetwear culture later on,” he said.

Interest in the footwear is no longer the only driver behind the sector’s growing popularity. Sports brands and trading platforms have jumped on board and it has become a big-money business.

Shan’s sneaker collection (Image credit: Shan Jichao)

Online platforms

China’s sports shoe market is worth $10 billion, second only to the US globally. While the secondhand trading market is already worth $1 billion, rapid growth is expected as China’s younger generations grow as a powerful force in the consumer market. The rising popularity of streetwear, as well as the country’s robust e-commerce infrastructure, are expected to boost expansion.

Like other retail verticals, the sneaker sector once relied heavily on offline sales, but its online presence is also growing.

Shan recalled that he would typically get up early on weekends during his college days to line up at sportswear stores for the latest limited-edition kicks. There are now plenty of online channels for customers to use, including Alibaba’s Tmall, in addition to the brands’ official websites.

The chances of picking up a pair from the primary market that is directly buying from brands or via official channels remain relatively slim as they use a lottery system coupled with artificially limited supply to push up demand.

The scarcity has led to the rise of third-party reselling platforms that act as middlemen for sellers and buyers.

Sneaker services

Startups are forging out new areas to add value within the sneaker ecosystem. Leading the charge is Shanghai-based Poizon, which started life as a sneakerhead channel on China’s sports news and community website Hupu. It went independent in 2015, providing sneaker authentication services free of charge.

The firm’s app uses a consumer-to-business-to-consumer model, which basically means that instead of selling directly to each other, users complete their transactions by working with the platform, which in turn, acts as both broker and appraiser. Sellers pay commission fees that typically range between 7.5% and 9.5%.

Positioned as a trustworthy middleman, Poizon quickly built up a loyal user base in a market where credibility is paramount. Monthly active users reached 1.4 million as of March this year, while annual gross merchandise volume is slated to hit $1.5 billion for 2019, according to data from Analysys Qianfan.

The sudden influx of startups into the sector has been primarily attributed to the emergence of the “He economy” as the sneakerhead community is still male-dominated in contrast to other e-commerce platforms that typically cater to female buyers. There is even talk of a male version of social shopping app Xiaohongshu arising for this growing segment.

Despite the imbalance, Liang Chao, founder and CEO of streetwear retailer Yoho!, known as the China mainland version of Hong Kong’s Hypebeast, casts aside the old stereotypes that the sneaker market is mainly for men. “Street fashion crosses genders, our goal is to address the different and personalized demands of each and every user,” he told TechNode.

He agreed that compared with two decades ago Chinese men, especially the younger group, are adopting their own ideas and attitudes when choosing what to wear. But he noted that female streetwear customers are also on the rise.

Poizon’s success has drawn a slew of followers and investors to the sector. The company reportedly received A-round funding from Russian venture capitalist DST Global in April bringing its valuation to more than $1 billion. This deal came just two months after a US$50m pre-A round.

A steady stream of sneaker-focused startups have secured financing of late. Nice, originally a photo app, has expanded into the space and picked up tens of millions of dollars in D-round funds in June.

Tech heavyweights have also taken notice of the market’s potential. Zhihu, the Q&A platform, has rolled out a male-focused platform called Chao, while Alibaba is also present thanks to its Xianyu second-hand retail platform. US startup GOAT has also just announced plans to enter the market in China.

Sneakers are the new crypto

From the dozens of interviews conducted by TechNode, there are clear generational differences in the types of money-making activities that gain traction in China. It is said that those from the post-70s generation prefer flipping stocks to strike it rich while the post-80s generation flip houses. In contrast, the post-90s are flipping bitcoins, and the post-00s are flipping sneakers.

Sneaker trading is a lucrative yet volatile business, so much so that in China it is being referred to as the new cryptocurrency. A few weeks ago, local media reported that a pair of Air Jordans had shot up nine-fold in value in just four days (in Chinese). According to data from Poizon, the hottest sneakers on the market trade above market price on the platform on average.

However, the sudden commercialization of sneaker-collecting has received some pushback from sneaker enthusiasts like Shan. “The influx of people looking to make a quick buck out of sneaker trading is pushing prices to irrational highs. And this is preventing real lovers of sneaker culture from buying the shoes.

College student Dareen Qi explicitly expresses his disapproval. “It’s quite similar to reselling tickets or flipping houses… The government should regulate such behavior,” he said.

Fighting fakes with blockchain

As is the case when buying almost anything online in China, the risk of rogue sellers peddling fake products is high and this rings true for the sneaker market. Counterfeit kicks are one of the biggest pain points in the high-value market and the lack of a comprehensive appraisal system is stunting growth.

Online marketplaces are increasingly turning to blockchain to better protect shoppers from fake products. For the sneakerhead business, the technology is being used to bolster traceability. Yoho! rolled out a blockchain-based traceability solution for its sneaker trading platform UFO earlier this year.

With a registered user base of 20 million, there is a lot on the line for the Nanjing-based company. Revenue derived from sneaker trading makes up more than one-fifth of Yoho!’s turnover. Ensuring that only authentic products are on the platform is crucial for maintaining a strong reputation.

The company works with Ultrain, a domestic public blockchain startup that develops solutions for retail and e-commerce verticals.

“The core issue now is counterfeit products,”  Ultrain cofounder Emma Liao told TechNode. “For platforms that don’t have the layer of protection enabled by technology, it is extremely difficult to spot fakes and be responsibly in the interests of customers.”

Ultrain’s blockchain-based solution for sneaker trading. (Image credit: Emma Liao)

The company is working with Yoho! to use blockchain to track each pair traded at each stage—from order to appraisal to delivery.

In the appraisal stage, each pair is sent for authentication. Footage of the process is uploaded and stored on the Ultrain’s blockchain along with other information such as origin, authenticity certificate, and the paper trail of the sneakers’ ownership. Parties can scan the anti-counterfeiting NFC tag attached to the shoe to view the details.

While Liao is mostly focused on using blockchain to track authenticity, as well as store merchandise data for now, she envisions that other applications will emerge, including social e-commerce.

“Imagine in the future, sneakerheads with the NFC chips are able to spot each other in the crowd. This could be a new way of social networking,” said Liao. The thinking behind this is connecting people through things, she added.

With contributions from Nicole Jao.

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Jack Ma steps down in final departure from Alibaba https://technode.com/2019/09/10/jack-ma-retirement/ https://technode.com/2019/09/10/jack-ma-retirement/#respond Tue, 10 Sep 2019 05:58:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117156 Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retailCEO Daniel Zhang takes the helm amid a shift to business-facing services as well as an intensifying globalization push.]]> Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retail
A volunteer introducing a replica of Taobao’s first office  at the Taobao Museum during the Taobao Maker Festival 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Jack Ma, the legendary Chinese entrepreneur behind Alibaba Group, is handing his board chairman title over to CEO Daniel Zhang on Tuesday as he retires from the company he founded 20 years ago.

Why it matters: Responsible for leading Alibaba’s growth from an ambitious idea to a business empire with a market cap of nearly half a trillion dollars, Ma has left his indelible mark on the company’s culture, values, ethics, and goals, influencing the wider technology industry.

  • Zhang takes the helm amid a strategic shift to business-facing services as well as an intensifying globalization push.
  • As the engineer for some of the company’s best-known achievements and a key proponent of Alibaba’s “New Retail” model, 47 year-old Zhang has been more visible since Ma’s retirement plan was announced.
  • The company has been restructuring over the past year with appointments of new top executives across major positions from its core- e-commerce unit to strategic investment.

Details: The retirement of Alibaba’s charismatic and high-profile founder is uncharacteristically low-key.

  • The self-made billionaire announced his retirement plans in September 2018, leaving the company a year to adjust its leadership.
  • Ma, once an English teacher in Hangzhou, will devote himself to education after retirement.
  • Sept. 10, or National Teacher’s Day, is a special day for Ma, who is commonly known as “Ma Lao Shi,” or “Teacher Ma” in China’s tech world. It is also his birthday.
  • There will be no public events to mark Ma’s departure. Instead, the company will host an internal party to celebrate its 20th anniversary, which also falls on Sept. 10.
  • To commemorate the anniversary, Alibaba has posted a poem to its home city of Hangzhou, which the company said was the among “first cities in China to welcome and embrace digital transformation.”

Context: Alibaba was established in a small Hangzhou apartment by a group of 18 founders led by Ma in 1999.

  • Alibaba went public on the New York Stock exchange in what was the biggest IPO in history.
  • Originally an e-commerce platform, Alibaba’s ecosystem now consists of a range of services that include Taobao and Tmall marketplaces, financial unit Ant Financial, Alibaba Cloud, Cainiao Logistics, and food delivery platform Ele.me.
  • The financial markets reflected investor sentiment about Ma’s leadership following his retirement announcement a year ago, with Alibaba shares falling nearly 4% on September 10, 2018.
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China blocks US video-conferencing tool Zoom https://technode.com/2019/09/09/china-blocks-us-video-conferencing-tool-zoom/ https://technode.com/2019/09/09/china-blocks-us-video-conferencing-tool-zoom/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2019 10:31:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=117097 The ban comes as China and the US are locked in protracted battle over technology and trade.]]>
In this image provided by Zoom, there is an empty conference room with the company's video conferencing tools on display. (Image credit: Zoom)
A booth displaying an empty conference room with Zoom’s video conferencing tools. (Image credit: Career Employer)

Video-conferencing service Zoom was blocked in China starting Monday morning, joining a list of inaccessible internet services in the country.

Why it matters: Against a backdrop of increasingly restrictive internet in China, the ban of US-based Zoom comes as the countries continue a protracted battle over technology and trade.

  • Domestic apps with video conferencing and productivity features are on the rise, including Alibaba’s DingTalk and Tencent’s WeChat Work.
  • In the lead-up to China’s 70th anniversary in October, retaining social and economic stability is a high priority for Beijing.

Read more: Is Zoom crazy to count on Chinese R&D?

Details: Mainland Chinese users first began complaining that Zoom was no longer available from within the country starting Sunday.

  • Attempts to access the app in China resulted in connection problems.
  • Zoom confirmed the problem, adding that it was still investigating the issue.
  • Zoom engineers identified the issue was caused by corrupting local DNS, referring to a common method of blocking websites in China.

Context:  Zoom raised $751 million in its initial public offering on Nasdaq in April.

  • The company recorded total revenue of $145.8 million for the quarter ended July 31, a 96% year-over-year increase over the same period a year earlier.
  • Security expert Jonathan Leitschuh publicized in July a vulnerability that could affect the four million Zoom users who use Macs.
  • Founder Eric Yuan was born in China and is widely admired in China as a role model for entrepreneurs.
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Alibaba acquires NetEase Kaola for $2 billion https://technode.com/2019/09/06/alibaba-acquires-netease-kaola-for-2-billion/ https://technode.com/2019/09/06/alibaba-acquires-netease-kaola-for-2-billion/#respond Fri, 06 Sep 2019 02:53:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=116906 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba's Tmall Global and NetEase Kaola now jointly hold over half of China's cross-border e-commerce market.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m
(Image credit: NetEase Kaola)

Alibaba Group announced today that it has acquired NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce unit Kaola for approximately $2 billion, and along with Yunfeng Capital will take a minority stake in NetEase Cloud Music for $700 million.

Why it’s important: The acquisition merges the two largest platforms in the landscape, forming a principal player in the cross-border market. The two platforms jointly hold more than half of the country’s cross-border e-commerce market, according to data from research firm Analysys.

  • The deal forms a formidable competitor to other platforms in the field, including JD’s cross-border e-commerce unit, VIP.com, and Suning Global.
  • China’s cross-border e-commerce market value was RMB 90.83 billion (around $12.70 billion) in the first quarter, according Analysys.

“Alibaba is confident about the future of China’s import e-commerce market, which we believe remains in its infancy with great growth potential. We welcome Kaola to the Alibaba family and value NetEase’s contributions in incubating an e-commerce platform with strong import capabilities. With Kaola, we will further elevate import service and experience for Chinese consumers through synergies across the Alibaba ecosystem.”

—Daniel Zhang, Chief Executive Officer of Alibaba Group, in an emailed statement.

Details: Alibaba said that Kaola will continue to operate independently under its current brand.

  • Tmall Import and Export General Manager Alvin Liu will serve as Kaola’s new CEO.
  • Yunfeng Capital, the private equity firm co-founded by Chinese billionaire Jack Ma, will invest along with Alibaba approximately $700 million in NetEase Cloud Music in its latest round of financing.
  • NetEase will remain the controlling shareholder of NetEase Cloud Music.

Context: Cross-border commerce has continued to grow in market value as Chinese consumers increasingly seek imported quality goods.

  • The impact of the months-long US-China trade war could result in an uptick in demand of goods from non-US trade partners, Michael Norris, research and strategy manager at AgencyChina, told TechNode on Friday. “Historically, political disputes with countries like South Korea and Japan haven’t translated into a decrease in online demand for goods from those countries” on the consumer side, but an increase in prices for US imports could result in demand “spillover to other countries outside the trade war.”
  • Alibaba pledged at last year’s China Import Expo in November that it would import $200 billion worth of foreign goods countries over the next five years. NetEase Kaola said it would import RMB 20 billion ($2.8 billion) worth of goods during the event.

This story has been updated to include comments from Michael Norris.

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Alibaba and NetEase Kaola reportedly settling $2 billion deal this week https://technode.com/2019/09/04/alibaba-and-netease-kaola-reportedly-settling-2-billion-deal-this-week/ https://technode.com/2019/09/04/alibaba-and-netease-kaola-reportedly-settling-2-billion-deal-this-week/#respond Wed, 04 Sep 2019 06:59:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=116747 Alibaba is also investing in NetEase Cloud Music.]]>
A screenshot of the NetEase Kaola homepage. (Image credit: TechNode)

Alibaba’s rumored acquisition of Kaola, NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce business, took another surprising turn on Wednesday with reports that the two companies are finalizing the transaction this week.

Why it matters: A merger between Alibaba’s Tmall Global and Kaola, the two largest cross-border platforms in China’s e-commerce sector, would form an industry giant of near-insurmountable scale.

  • Numerous reports of the various ups and downs in the deal-making process have been circulating widely in the Chinese media, with the last development consisting of news that the deal had reportedly fallen through in late August after the two firms failed to agree on details.
  • Alongside the NetEase Kaola acquisition, Alibaba is also investing in the company’s music-streaming business, NetEase Cloud Music.

Alibaba reportedly eyes $2 billion acquisition of e-commerce rival NetEase Kaola

Details: The acquisition is priced at $2 billion and the transaction will include a mix of cash and shares. The options held by Kaola employees could be converted to Alibaba shares, according to media reports.

  • Upon completion of the deal, NetEase Kaola will be integrated into the Tmall Import and Export Business Department, but the Kaola brand will remain separate and will be run independently in the foreseeable future.
  • Current NetEase Kaola employees still stay on, promised NetEase CEO Ding Lei in an internal meeting held in August, according to Chinese media reports.

Alibaba declined to comment on “market rumors” when reached by TechNode on Wednesday.

Context: Alibaba’s Tmall Global accounted for 32.3% of China’s cross-border e-commerce market in the first quarter this year, followed by NetEase Kaola with 24.8%, according to data from research institute Analysys.

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Weibo testing new social lifestyle app, Oasis https://technode.com/2019/09/03/weibo-testing-new-social-lifestyle-app-oasis/ https://technode.com/2019/09/03/weibo-testing-new-social-lifestyle-app-oasis/#respond Tue, 03 Sep 2019 04:32:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=116621 The launch comes during rival Xiaohongshu's suspension from major app stores amid user backlash.]]>
Screenshots of Weibo’s new Oasis app. (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese microblogging platform Weibo on Monday launched a new lifestyle platform, Oasis, that combines social media and forum functionalities.

Why it matters: The launch of the new app may help microblogging platform Weibo fend off competition from Xiaohongshu, which has been facing criticism over misleading content in recent months.

  • Xiaohongshu, also known as RED in overseas markets, was pulled from major Chinese Android stores in July and later from Apple’s China App Store in August. It is unclear when the app will be made available again for download.

“Weibo itself is only for broadcast and does not have an e-commerce function, making them lag behind in terms of the current social commerce rise… I would assume Oasis would have a e-commerce function that allows a user to look at influencers on their page, and click on “buy” button, much like what Pinterest/Instagram is doing overseas. Hence, I believe it’s Weibo intention to create a different tool to have a different image and also ride on the social commerce rise.”

—Justin Teo, chief experience officer of Geometry China, an end-to-end commerce agency

Details: Lvzhou, or Oasis in English, is a hybrid of Instagram and Xiaohongshu in layout and major features.

  • Users can browse content based on interests and find like-minded friends in various fields such as fashion, food, travel, and beauty.
  • The app does not have e-commerce functionality at this stage, but its social sharing features are similar to Xiaohongshu, for which e-commerce is a core business function.
  • They can also share and edit their photos and videos with a variety of filters, as well as add featured tags to their content.
  • The app is now being tested by users that are invited to trial. Users can log in via their mobile number, Weibo, WeChat, or QQ account.
  • User reviews on Apple’s China App Store praised the app for its uncluttered layout and ad-free content.

Context: Weibo went public in the US in 2014 after spinning off from Chinese tech firm Sina in the same year.

  • Both Weibo and Xiaohongshu have strong tie-ups with Alibaba, which is an investor and major client for both of the platforms.
  • Alibaba invested $585.8 million in Weibo through Ali WB, its wholly owned subsidiary, for an approximately 18% stake in 2013. In June last year, Xiaohongshu has completed its Alibaba-led Series D worth $300 million which led to a valuation of $3 billion.
  • After being pulled from the stores, Xiaohongshu has started a “comprehensive round of self-review and self-reform” to cooperate with regulators.

This story was updated to include comments from Justin Teo and to correct the spelling of his name.

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China’s gay dating app Blued reportedly eyeing $200 million US IPO https://technode.com/2019/09/02/chinas-gay-dating-app-blued-reportedly-eyeing-200-million-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/09/02/chinas-gay-dating-app-blued-reportedly-eyeing-200-million-us-ipo/#respond Mon, 02 Sep 2019 05:00:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=116489 Blued’s global expansion may pose a challenge to US apps, Grindr and Hornet. ]]>

Chinese gay dating app Blued is planning a US initial public offering (IPO) that could raise around $200 million, Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Why it matters: Blued, which boasts 40 million users, is the largest social dating app for China’s LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community. The funding could help the company to expand its foothold both locally and in the global market.

  • Despite the developments, the LGBT community is still a controversial and highly regulated group in China. Depictions of same-sex relationships are banned from TV dramas and related content has been purged from Weibo, China’s version of Twitter.
  • Blued’s global expansion may challenge US counterparts, Grindr and Hornet. Grindr, the world’s largest gay dating app, sold a majority stake to Chinese game developer Beijing Kunlun Tech Co. in 2016.  Blued invested an undisclosed sum in Hornet the same year.
  • Besides its core dating feature, the app also earns revenue through its livestream content and surrogacy matchmaking services. Blued may earn as much as 80% of its revenue from its livestream business, according to Sina Finance.

Details: The IPO will likely take place next year and could value the company at around $1 billion, according to Bloomberg citing people familiar with the mater.

Context: Launched in 2012, Blued has received a total of RMB 130 million of venture capital in seven financing rounds.

  • Investors include CDH Investments, UG Capital, Xiaomi chairman Lei Jun-backed Shunwei Capital, DCM Ventures, Vision Knight Capital, and state-run media The Beijing News.
  • Blued was accused early this year of not adequately enforcing its ban on underage users, putting teenagers at risk of online exploitation.
  • Rival Grindr resumed last month preparations for its IPO, after the process was suspended in September 2018 due to concerns that the data it collects from its three million daily users could be used by Kunlun to blackmail Americans, according to the Financial Times.
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Costco opens first physical store in China, integrates mobile payment into experience https://technode.com/2019/08/27/costco-opens-first-physical-store-in-china-integrates-mobile-payment-into-experience/ https://technode.com/2019/08/27/costco-opens-first-physical-store-in-china-integrates-mobile-payment-into-experience/#respond Tue, 27 Aug 2019 10:01:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115806 Establishing an offline store puts Costco in direct competition with its former e-commerce partners.]]>

Costco, the US warehouse club, opened its first store in China today, adding localized services including mobile payments via Alipay and WeChat Pay, as well as online promotions via WeChat’s official accounts function.

Why it matters: The US bulk-seller is building a brick-and-mortar presence in China even though other international retailers have struggled to succeed in the country.

  • Costco’s offline expansion in China comes as a lengthening list of Western retailers retreat from the market due to rising competition from domestic pure-play retailers and internet giants.
  • Suning.com acquired 80% equity interest in Carrefour’s China business in June. Tesco and Walmart have sold stakes to domestic partners, and German wholesaler Metro is reportedly looking to sell its China unit.
  • Along with supermarket chains like Sam’s Club, Australia’s Woolworths, and South Korea’s E-mart, Costco has already built an online presence by setting up flagship stores on Alibaba’s Tmall.
  • However, an offline store will put the brand in direct competition with its former e-commerce partners that are also looking to expand offline.

Details: Hoards of enthusiastic consumers in search of opening-day bargains descended on the new Costco store, located in suburban Shanghai’s Minhang District.

  • The store was forced to close as the crowd paralyzed local traffic and created public safety risks inside.
  • Costco’s stuttering start is yet another incident that highlights how easy Chinese consumers can get caught up in new things, following the hype surrounding Starbucks’s cat claw cup and Uniqlo & KAWS t-shirts. Several stores and wet markets are within walking distance of the new Costco.
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Meituan may revive rental power bank business https://technode.com/2019/08/27/meituan-may-revive-rental-power-bank-business/ https://technode.com/2019/08/27/meituan-may-revive-rental-power-bank-business/#respond Tue, 27 Aug 2019 07:09:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115768 New business expansion may be a signal that the company's prudence has paid off.]]>
Power bank charging a smartphone. (Image credit: Bigstock/Eremin)

Chinese online-to-offline mega app Meituan Dianping is reviving its power bank rental business two years after discontinuing a pilot launch in 2017, according to a report by Chinese media LatePost.

Why it matters: The potential business expansion signals a shift in strategy for Meituan. The company had pledged a more conservative approach to new businesses at the beginning of the year due to financial pressures.

  • Power bank rentals first boomed in 2017 and was expected to be the next rental economy super sector after bike rentals. While the hype surrounding bike rentals quickly faded, rental power banks—now a common sight in restaurants and bars—have managed to survive market fluctuations.
  • He Shun, chief operating officer of power bank rental firm Ankerbox, told Chinese media in March that all the major players in the sector are booking profits.
  • Meituan will challenge market leaders Ankerbox and Xiaodian. However, the food delivery and restaurant recommendation app is thought to stand a good chance at solid market penetration.

Details: Meituan first trialed the power bank rental market in August 2017 by placing a few devices for testing in Qingdao and Shijiazhuang, but it soon called off the project due to “unsatisfactory” testing results, the LatePost report said.

  • Power bank rentals were a lower priority for the company, which was juggling multiple other projects at the time.

Context: China’s power bank rental users numbered 196 million in 2018 and is expected to exceed 300 million in 2019, according to data from research institute iiMedia Research.

  • Shenzhen-based Ankerbox amassed 107 million users, representing 40.5% of the market share in the first half of this year. Xiaodian and Energy Monster took the second and third place with 23.6% and 20.9% market share in the industry, according to the iiMedia report.
  • The rental power bank sector will be worth RMB 330 million in 2020, according to an estimate from research firm Qianzhan Industry Research Institute.
  • Meituan Dianping swung into the black during the second quarter, recording RMB 875.8 million ($123.7 million) in profits boosted by the summer high season for food delivery.
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Meituan Dianping posts Q2 profit bolstered by food delivery high season https://technode.com/2019/08/26/meituan-dianping-posts-q2-profits-bolstered-by-food-delivery-high-season/ https://technode.com/2019/08/26/meituan-dianping-posts-q2-profits-bolstered-by-food-delivery-high-season/#respond Mon, 26 Aug 2019 06:59:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115663 Company CFO said that the company profitability was a seasonal phenomenon.]]>

Share prices for China’s food delivery super platform Meituan Dianping jumped on surprise second quarter profits of RMB 875.8 million ($123.7 million) boosted by the summer high season for food delivery during its first profitable quarter since it listed in September 2018. The company booked RMB 7.7 billion in losses the same period a year ago.

Why it matters: Despite its massive scale, the Chinese services platform has been facing scrutiny for its subsidy-fueled growth which has resulted in heavy losses, and its acquisition of bike rental platform Mobike for $2.8 billion in April 2018 which has weighed on profits.

  • CFO Chen Shaohui said during a call with analysts that he expects that quarter’s profitability was due to seasonality, and that the company will continue to prioritize scale over profit for its food delivery business.
  • Meituan’s revenue from food deliveries reached RMB 12.84 million during the quarter, roughly double rival Ele.me’s RMB 6.18 million during the same period.

“Going forward, we will continue to execute our ‘Food + Platform’ strategy and explore new initiatives to drive long-term growth and create value for both consumers and merchants.”

—Xing Wang, Meituan chairman and CEO

Details: Meituan’s total revenues increased 50.6% year over year to RMB 22.7 billion from RMB 15.1 billion in the same period a year ago, beating analyst forecasts of RMB 21.87 billion. The company attributed the growth to surging revenue across sectors driven by its food delivery and travel businesses.

  • Meituan’s selling and marketing expenses rose to RMB4.1 billion in the three months ended June 30 from RMB3.9 billion in the same period of 2018.
  • Overall monetization rate increased to 14.3% during the quarter from 12.2% in the same period of 2018.

Context: Though its core business is food delivery, Meituan is evolving into a one-stop “super app” offering consumers more than 30 types of services such as movie ticket purchasing, hotel and travel bookings, and payments.

  • Meituan’s bike rental unit Mobike will continue to be a drag on overall company profitability, a research report from equity firm China Tonghai Securities said.
  • Meituan’s hotel booking unit overtook Ctrip to rank first in China  in order volume and nights booked in Q2, 2018 according to data from by monitoring firm Trustdata.
  • Venture capitalist Mary Meeker singled the company out as a leader in China’s “super app” trend in her latest report.
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Alibaba and NetEase Kaola deal off the table: report https://technode.com/2019/08/23/alibaba-and-netease-kaola-deal-off-the-table-report/ https://technode.com/2019/08/23/alibaba-and-netease-kaola-deal-off-the-table-report/#respond Fri, 23 Aug 2019 07:43:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115572 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe talks collapsed after NetEase founder and CEO vetoed Alibaba’s offer.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba’s rumored acquisition of Kaola, NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce business, has reportedly fallen through after the two companies failed to agree on details, Chinese media reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Why it’s important: A merger of Tmall Global and Kaola, China’s two largest cross-border platforms, would have resulted in a clear-cut leader of the fragmented cross-border segment and consolidated Alibaba’s dominance in the country’s e-commerce industry.

  • The failure opens possibilities for Alibaba rival Pinduoduo, which is trying to tap higher-tier city markets.

Details: The talks collapsed after NetEase founder and CEO Ding Lei vetoed Alibaba’s offer, according to Tencent News.

  • The talks broke down because NetEase was not satisfied with the price, an unnamed source said.
  • In addition to Kaola, the deal was said to also include NetEase Music and NetEase’s research and development unit.
  • NetEase is reshuffling its e-commerce business including Kaola and own-label platform Yanxuan as growth has slowed.

Alibaba declined to comment on the matter when reached by TechNode on Friday. NetEase also declined to comment to Chinese media outlets.

Context: NetEase previously held talks with Amazon to acquire its China operations over several months, but the deal fell through after the two companies failed to agree on final terms.

  • Pinduoduo’s gross merchandise volume from Tier One and Two cities as a percentage of total GMV has risen to 48% in June from 37% in January this year, the company’s CEO said during its second quarter earnings call on Wednesday.
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WeChat moves closer to becoming an OS with new Samsung partnership https://technode.com/2019/08/23/wechat-moves-closer-to-becoming-an-os-with-new-samsung-partnership/ https://technode.com/2019/08/23/wechat-moves-closer-to-becoming-an-os-with-new-samsung-partnership/#respond Fri, 23 Aug 2019 04:17:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115530 WeChatUsers can directly access WeChat mini-apps from the home page on Samsung smartphones.]]> WeChat
WeChat mini program on a Samsung smartphone home page. (Image credit: Tencent)

WeChat and Samsung announced a new partnership which allows users to directly access WeChat mini-programs on Samsung smartphone home screens without the need to open the main messaging app.

Why it matters: WeChat has recently been unveiling features so it resembles more of a mobile operating system (OS) for Chinese netizens, which, until now, have been only within its own app. The Samsung partnership grants users a gateway to directly access WeChat’s ecosystem and move it a step closer to becoming a mobile OS.

  • WeChat mini-programs, lightweight apps that run from within WeChat on any operating system without the need to download, positions parent company Tencent in competition with companies like Apple which earn revenue from app downloads.
  • The super messaging app rolled out an update earlier this year allowing users to search for and use mini-programs within the app more easily in an interface similar to an operating system.
  • The partnership with a smartphone maker in creating a direct gateway for mini-apps is a first for the messaging platform.

Details: Without opening the main app, users can swipe right on the phone’s home screen to find their five most recently used mini-programs, or swipe left from the edge of the screen to see up to 10 favorite mini-programs.

  • Samsung pre-installed the features in S8, S9, and S10 models that are sold in China as well as the Note8 and Note9. Future models will also include the function.

Context: Launched in January 2017, Tencent says WeChat mini-apps boast 840 million users.

  • Other apps including Alipay, Douyin, Taobao, and Baidu have all launched their own mini program ecosystems.
  • In March 2018, a group of Chinese smartphone makers jointly launched a unified standard, Quick App, in a bid to lessen WeChat’s grip on mobile traffic. The partners in the alliance include major smartphone makers such as Xiaomi, ZTE, Huawei, Gionee, Lenovo, Meizu, Nubia, OPPO, Vivo, and OnePlus.
  • Already operating 900 Quick Apps, Huawei said in August that it will officially launch its “Quick App” in September.
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JD moves into C2M model with made-to-measure shirts https://technode.com/2019/08/22/jd-moves-into-c2m-model-with-made-to-measure-shirts/ https://technode.com/2019/08/22/jd-moves-into-c2m-model-with-made-to-measure-shirts/#respond Thu, 22 Aug 2019 03:27:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115438 JDA number of industry players including JD, Pinduoduo, and Alibaba are eyeing the C2M model.]]> JD
Screenshots from JD Jing Zao (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

JD.com’s private label brand Jing Zao, which translates to “made by JD”, rolled out a new service on Monday to create custom-made shirts to the precise fit and specifications of the customers.

Why it matters: China is facing a rising trend of customer-to-manufacturer (C2M), a model that connects the manufacturers and consumers for the production of tailored products at lower prices. E-commerce platforms are applying user preference data analytics from consumers to inform manufacturing.

  • A number of industry players are riding the technology wave. Pinduoduo, a top player in the sector, doubled down on the model last December to support around 1,000 Chinese original equipment manufacturers.
  • Other e-commerce giants are also having their eyes on the sector with each operating their own C2M units, such as NetEase’s YEATION and Taobao’s Xinxuan.
  • Amazon.com was awarded a patent in 2017 for an on-demand apparel manufacturing system for making tailor-made garments, a change that’s expected to shake up the fashion industry.
  • E-commerce platforms that are building up their home brands are entering the competition with manufacturers that sell their products through the platforms.

Details: A basic service allows JD users to custom-made their shirts online by selecting from different sizes, fabrics, colors, as well as patterns for the collar, pockets, and cuffs. For a premium service, on-demand tailors will be sent to the customers for offline measurement.

  • The shirts, priced at RMB 399 ($56) and RMB 699, will be delivered within seven to ten days after placing the order.
  • In addition to shirt manufacturing, the firm is offering tailor-made suits, T-shirts and sweaters for individual and business clients.

Context: Introduced in 2018, Jingzao now offers 2,000 products with a style reminiscent of Japan’s Muji, selling household goods like luggage, towels, and beddings.

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Pinduoduo posts robust user gain in Q2 2019 https://technode.com/2019/08/21/pinduoduo-posts-robust-user-gain-in-q2-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/08/21/pinduoduo-posts-robust-user-gain-in-q2-2019/#respond Wed, 21 Aug 2019 11:42:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115414 pinduoduo colin huang e-commercePinduoduo posted strong earnings for the second quarter of 2019.]]> pinduoduo colin huang e-commerce

Chinese social e-commerce Pinduoudo reported its total revenue surged 169% on year in the second quarter of this year, paired with robust user gains over the past year.

Why it matters: Pinduoduo is the last of China’s top-three e-commerce sites to post earnings for this quarter. Strong growth for major e-commerce players show that e-commerce remains a bright spot for the country despite a slowing economy and trade tension with the US.

  • Alibaba’s net profit more than doubled in the fiscal quarter ended June 2019 driven by the healthy expansion of its core e-commerce business and growing cloud services.
  • JD’s Q2 earnings beat market estimations with net revenue surged 22.9% on the year to RMB 150.3 billion ($21.9 billion)
  • Pinduoduo has shaken up China’s e-commerce duopoly between Alibaba and JD.com in recent years to become the second-largest shopping site for Chinese consumers in terms of daily active users, next only to Alibaba.

How Pinduoduo did in three years what took Taobao five

Details: The company’s total revenues in the quarter were RMB 7.29 billion ($1.06 billion), an increase of 169% from RMB 2.71 billion in the same quarter of 2018.

  • Average monthly active users in the quarter were 366 million, an increase of 88% from 195.0 million in the same quarter of 2018, a QoQ net add of 76.3 million. That’s higher than Alibaba’s 19% year on year growth and 34 million quarterly user gains.
  • The growth is driven by the company’s users-first strategy and the push from the 6.18 shopping festival campaign, according to the company.
  • Gross merchandise volume in the twelve-month period ended June 30, 2019 was RMB709.1 billion, an increase of 171% from RMB262.1 billion from a year before.
  • However, the operating loss was more than doubled to RMB1.49 billion compared with RMB6.64 million in the same quarter of 2018.
  • First and second-tier city markets becoming a major driver for the company’s growth.

“Our GMV from Tier 1 and 2 cities as a percentage of total GMV has gone from 37% in January this year to 48% in June.”

–Pinduoduo founder and CEO Colin Huang in the second-quarter earnings call.

Context: Competition between Pinduoduo, a relative latecomer, and e-commerce giants is escalating, went from pure business rivalry to public spat in some cases.

  • Company founder and CEO Colin Huang accused Alibaba of unfair competition in an open letter this April.
  • Pinduoduo and Alibaba confrontation made headlines during this year’s 618 shopping festival. Home electronics manufacturer Galanz, which just inked a long-term partnership with Pinduoduo in June, accused Alibaba’s online marketplace Tmall of hiding its products from search results.
  • JD.com is also doubling on social e-commerce by spinning off its Pingou group-buying business as a separate division this July.
  • Pinduoduo reported surging losses on significantly higher promotional expenses in the first quarter of this year.
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Bytedance revamps Smartisan online store in e-commerce push https://technode.com/2019/08/21/bytedance-smartisan/ https://technode.com/2019/08/21/bytedance-smartisan/#respond Wed, 21 Aug 2019 05:18:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115340 ByteDance, ShanghaiByteDance is boosting is e-commerce capabilities in an attempt to diversify revenue sources.]]> ByteDance, Shanghai

Bytedance is revamping Smartisan’s online store after purchasing the embattled smartphone maker’s education hardware patents and e-commerce operations earlier this year.

Why it matters: Spurred by the increasing use of content in e-commerce, Bytedance, the parent of content creation hubs Douyin and Toutiao, is boosting its e-commerce capabilities in an attempt to diversify revenue sources.

  • Bytedance-backed Toutiao rolled out a factory-to-store e-commerce platform Zhidian last year, while a separate e-commerce project dubbed Xincao underway.
  • Bytedance’s e-commerce program will likely remain in the experimental phase for the next few years.
  • The company’s approach to e-commerce will put it in competition with incumbents like Alibaba and Pinduoduo, which are also trying to boost their growth through content.

“We don’t have plans to develop a new e-commerce app. The e-commerce product in question is the existing Smartisan official website, which has always been a platform selling Smartisan phones and accessories.”

– Bytedance spokesperson

Details: Chinese media Tech Xingqiu reported that Bytedance is working on a new incubation project that takes the model of NetEase’s private-label e-commerce platform NetEase Yanxuan.

  • Smartisan’s online store now includes new product categories such as t-shirts, sneakers, backpacks, and even genetic testing kits.
  • The site ran out of most products after Smartisan’s cash crunch last year.

Is NetEase’s Yanxuan the new trendsetter for China’s e-commerce industry?

Context: Bytedance is taking over some of Smartisan’s most valuable assets as the niche smartphone maker faces a series of crises.

  • Bytedance acquired some of Smartisan’s tech-related patents to develop hardware for the education sector.
  • Some employees of Smartisan were transferred to Bytedance as part of what the latter company called a “normal flow of talent.”
  • Bytedance said earlier this year it was developing a smartphone through a partnership with Smartisan.
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Controversial social commerce app Peanut Diary secures $42 million for A plus round https://technode.com/2019/08/20/peanut-diary-funding/ https://technode.com/2019/08/20/peanut-diary-funding/#respond Tue, 20 Aug 2019 04:06:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115261 Chinese social commerce apps adapting a decentralized membership network are facing regulatory risks linked to its business model.]]>

Chinese social commerce portal Peanut Diary (花生日记) completed an RMB 300 million ($42 million) A plus round of strategic investment, the company announced on Monday without disclosing specifics of the investors.

Why it matters: The financing comes just five months after Guangzhou’s Administration of Industry and Commerce handed the company the second and the largest fine in the history of China’s online retail sector for operating a pyramid sales scheme.

  • Chinese social e-commerce sites that adopt a decentralized network of members to sell products are under increased scrutiny from Chinese authorities who are wary of potential pyramid schemes, which is illegal in the country.
  • The watchdog fined Peanut Diary RMB 1.5 million and confiscated RMB 73.1 million worth of illegal income in March.
  • The country’s first RMB 9.6 million fine for pyramid selling was handed to NASDAQ-listed Yunji Weidian in 2017.

Details: The two-year-old company encourages users to become a member by paying a fee of RMB 99. The more new referrals the members made the higher commission they will get.

  • With the new funding, the company announced plans to expand to online travel and online education businesses.
  • The company’s gross merchandise volume more than ten folded year-over-year to RMB 300 million in the first seven months of this year.

If our business model were found to be in violation of applicable laws and regulations, our business, financial condition and results of operations would be materially and adversely affected.

—Yunji IPO filing documents

Context: Operating under a similar model, Peanut Diary is smaller than Yunji Weidian in terms of GMV.

  • Yunji’s GMV increased by 134.4% from RMB9.6 billion in 2017 to RMB22.7 billion in 2018, according to the company’s prospectus released in March this year.
  • Both of the companies are facing regulatory risks linked to their business models.
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Luckin launches limited-edition cup to replicate Starbuck’s cat paw mug craze https://technode.com/2019/08/19/luckin-launches-limited-edition-cup-to-replicate-startucks-cat-paw-mug-craze/ https://technode.com/2019/08/19/luckin-launches-limited-edition-cup-to-replicate-startucks-cat-paw-mug-craze/#respond Mon, 19 Aug 2019 09:04:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115191 This is the first time Luckin has sold branded merchandise as it evolves its marketing and branding strategy.]]>

Starbucks rival Luckin Coffee has rolled out a lineup of branded merchandise, including celebrity figurines and a limited edition cup with fawn antlers, on Monday.

Why it matters: This is the first time Luckin has sold such merchandise as it evolves its marketing and branding strategy.

  • The company aims to duplicate the success of its US rival Starbucks whose drinkware and other accessories are popular in China.
  • Starbuck’s cat paw cup caused in-store brawls earlier this year.
  • The company’s latest industrial and commercial update has added clothing, clocks, glasses, and shoes to its business scope.

Detail: The company also launched its store on both JD.com and Tmall. Demand for the cup with a fawn antler-shaped straw caused the ordering app to become unresponsive for many users.

  • The firm posted on microblogging platform Weibo asking customers to use alternative channels such as JD.com and Tmall for placing the orders.
  • The cup, based on the theme of  Luckin’s tea-drink brand Fawn Tea, isn’t cheap: RMB 139 (around $20).
  • Other items include black and white coffee mugs.
  • Virtual gift cards are slated for release next week.
  • Buyers of the cups or gift cards will also receive figurines of Liu Haoran, a Chinese celebrity and poster boy for Fawn Tea.

Context: The Chinese coffee chain upstart reported widening losses in the second quarter despite beating revenue expectations.

  • The company’s sales and marketing expenses were RMB 390.1 million, representing an increase of 119.1% from a year ago. The rise is mainly due to increases in advertising expenses and delivery expenses as the company launched new marketing initiatives and entered new cities.
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JD Daojia in talks for $500 million US IPO next May https://technode.com/2019/08/19/jd-daojia-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/08/19/jd-daojia-ipo/#respond Mon, 19 Aug 2019 04:51:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=115116 A deal for underwriting the JD Daojia IPO would mark a major step for JD.com to get its affiliated business listed.]]>

Dada-JD Daojia is reportedly in talks with bankers for a $500 million US IPO in May next year, The Information reports, citing sources familiar with the matter. The company is a grocery delivery joint venture between JD.com and crowdsourced logistics platform Dada.

Why it matters: The potential IPO means that the company is seeking more ammunition to maintain its foothold in an increasingly competitive online grocery delivery market that includes rivals like Ele.me and Meituan.

  • In addition, the listing of JD Daojia also points to the rise of online grocery delivery market in China.
  • Parent company JD.com posted better-than-expected second-quarter earnings last week.
  • Fu Bing, an executive of JD Logistics, revealed earlier this year that the company is planning a separate IPO for the logistics arm.
  • Meituan is tapping its existing infrastructure to expand to grocery delivery industry, for example, by requiring its food delivery drivers to deliver groceries during peak demand times.
  • Smaller players such as FreshMarket and Dingdong are also eyeing the market.

JD shares jump as Q2 earnings beat expectations

Details: A lot still remains unclear.

  • The firm still hasn’t made a final decision on which US exchange to go public nor for how much to list.
  • JD Daojia declined to comment when reached by TechNode on Monday.

Context: JD Daojia raised $500 million from Walmart Inc and JD last year.

  • The joint venture currently has more than 100,000 offline retail stores, providing Chinese consumers in more than 100 cities with one-hour delivery services for fresh, groceries, flowers, medicine, beauty, household items, and other products.
  • The venture now claims more than 74 million users and partners with more than 5,00 retailers including Walmart, Carrefour, Vanguard, Yonghui, and Watsons.
  • During this year’s 618 festival, the platform doubled sales compared with the same period last year.
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Alibaba doubles quarterly net profit thanks to e-commerce and cloud https://technode.com/2019/08/16/alibaba-q2-2019-earning/ https://technode.com/2019/08/16/alibaba-q2-2019-earning/#respond Fri, 16 Aug 2019 05:06:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114962 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba revenue surges 42% on the year in the quarter ended June 30. ]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

E-commerce giant Alibaba posted a robust rise in revenue for the first fiscal quarter ended in June as net profit more than doubled, driven by the healthy expansion of its core e-commerce business and growing cloud services.

Why it matters: Strong quarterly results at Alibaba and JD, the country’s top two e-commerce players, show that Chinese consumers are “still spending” despite a slowing domestic economy and the ongoing trade war with the US.

  • Alibaba rival JD.com also posted solid sales growth earlier this week with revenue jumping 22.9% on the year to RMB 150.3 billion ($21.9 billion) in the second calendar quarter.
  • The results bring more confidence to investors who have been increasingly skeptical about growth prospects for Chinese e-commerce companies.

“Geopolitical uncertainties have placed additional pressure on global growth. This is both a challenge and an opportunity for the Chinese economy.”

—Daniel Zhang, Alibaba CEO, on the earnings call.

Details: The company’s revenue grew 42% on the year to hit RMB 114.9 billion in the reporting period while net profit more than doubled to RMB 21.2 billion.

  • Core commerce and cloud computing are two significant drivers of growth, representing 87% and 7% of the company’s total earnings for the quarter.
  • Digital media and entertainment and other innovation initiatives account for 5% and 1%, respectively.
  • Revenue from e-commerce services including Taobao, Tmall as well as food delivery platform Ele.me surged 44% year on year to RMB 99.5 billion.
  • Annual active consumers on these core marketplaces reached 674 million, an increase of 20 million from the 12 months ended March 31, 2019.
  • Cloud computing sales grew two-thirds to RMB7.8 billion during the quarter, primarily driven by an increase in average revenue per customer.
  • This will be Alibaba’s last earnings report before Jack Ma hands over the reins to CEO Daniel Zhang in September.

Context: Alibaba is reportedly seeking a separate listing in Hong Kong for as much as $20 billion in the third quarter of this year.

  • The e-commerce giant is also in talks with NetEase to acquire its cross-border e-commerce arm Kaola and may merge the unit with its Tmall International platform, local media reported.
  • Demand in lower-tier cities is driving the growth momentum in China’s e-commerce market.
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How luxury brands engage customers through WeChat https://technode.com/2019/08/15/how-luxury-brands-engage-customers-through-wechat/ https://technode.com/2019/08/15/how-luxury-brands-engage-customers-through-wechat/#respond Thu, 15 Aug 2019 10:04:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114826 WeChatChina is a unique market. For luxury brands, a WeChat-focused strategy is a crucial step to gaining a foothold.]]> WeChat

China is a unique market. For luxury brands, a WeChat-focused strategy is a crucial step to gaining a foothold.

While China’s social landscape is complex and highly segmented, WeChat remains the go-to place for brands to acquire, communicate with, and maintain customers. The superapp has gained a reputation as being a center for brand marketing (luxury or not) thanks to its more than one billion users and plethora of services.

While the luxury market is centered on offline sales, online marketing, and digital communication with users significantly influences purchasing intent among customers. By using WeChat features, brands can engage with users and send content to followers while also giving access to loyalty schemes and promotions.

Digital Luxury Group (DLG) and marketing automation specialist JINGdigital have jointly released their WeChat Luxury Index 2019 report. Shedding light on how brands can leverage the platform to build lasting relationships with clients, the study looks at 24 brands with community sizes ranging from 3,000 to 3 million.

Inactivity is expected

Despite the lengths brands go to tap WeChat users, less than half of followers actually interact directly. In fact, a mere 8.2% of a brand’s community interact with them every month.

Engagement Rate of WeChat Official Account Followers (Image credit: DLG and JINGdigital)

“They are not necessarily fake fans, but they are definitely inactive fans,” Aaron Chang, founder and CEO of JINGdigital, told TechNode. “This is not necessarily a bad thing because the function of WeChat is to interact with people when they are ready to interact,” he added.

Followers will often engage via WeChat official accounts to access brands’ loyalty programs, seek out answers to specific questions, or if they plan to make a purchase, the report noted.

Scheduling articles, events, and promotions around seasons and special occasions like Valentine’s Day, Spring Festival, and Mother’s Day is a common tactic to boost user engagement. For instance, Louis Vuitton chose a pig motif in its campaign for this year’s Spring Festival—the Year of the Pig. Many luxury brands like Burberry, Channel, and Balenciaga launched special campaigns for Qixi, China’s version of Valentine’s Day earlier this month.

Making use of chatbots for authentic and conversational message replies or live customer chats is also an efficient way of boosting engagement. Brands, however, have a lot of room to improve in this area as two-thirds of inquiries sent via WeChat chat windows are not answered, the study found.

Shareable forms and interactive quizzes with prizes or free trials help brands to collect more detailed data from customers, in turn, helping them create tailored content.

“Personalized content is the future for the WeChat experience, but unfortunately one size does not fit all,” said Kun Hsu, Partner at JINGdigital. “Only when followers get content tailored to them will the brands receive a sustained boost in engagement.”

WeChat Official Account Followers Engagement Over Time (Image credit: DLG and JINGdigital)

The 48-hour window after a user initially follows a brand is the most crucial stage for engagement and inspiring return visits, the report said. A user will be the most active within the first six weeks of following. Activity peaks in the first week and sharply drops off by the second week, before gradually declining over the next month.

Besides offering general brand information, Swarovski includes clear calls to action in its welcome journey, directing users to its loyalty program, gift ideas, and store locations.

Room for growth on WeChat

Official accounts on WeChat remain most effective as customer relations management (CRM) tools for luxury brands, although Tencent has been trying to bolster e-commerce functionality.

The report shows that a little over half of all actions carried out by users are CRM-related, including retrieving membership information and contacting customer services. Some 30% of engagements were focused on seeking out information about the company, events, or products.

Engagement Type of WeChat Official Account Followers (Image credit: DLG and JINGdigital)

E-commerce represents only 17% of these actions, indicating that most brands still struggle to gain traction with WeChat e-commerce strategies. Most sales that happen on WeChat are campaign-driven at present, and it is a challenge for brands to create a steady and sustainable stream of business from the platform.

WeChat is also a major tool for offline stores to maintain customers. Stores and salespeople send out messages to consumers to drive purchasing decisions. Over one-fifth of respondents in the McKinsey Luxury China Report 2019 considered WeChat messages an impactful offline channel for their decision-making, after suggestions from in-store assistants and trying products on-site.

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Luckin’s net losses doubled in Q2 as cash-burning continues https://technode.com/2019/08/15/luckins-net-losses-doubled-in-q2-as-cash-burning-continues/ https://technode.com/2019/08/15/luckins-net-losses-doubled-in-q2-as-cash-burning-continues/#respond Thu, 15 Aug 2019 04:56:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114836 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksShares slid overnight after losses hit nearly $100 million in the quarter.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Shares in Luckin Coffee tumbled in the US overnight after the Chinese coffee chain upstart reported widening losses in the second quarter despite beating revenue expectations.

Why it matters: Widely considered as a challenger to Starbucks’ crown in China, Luckin Coffee burst onto the scene in 2018 and soon became the country’s number two chain despite burning through cash to fuel its rapid expansion.

  • The Xiamen-based firm raised $561 million in a US IPO in April this year.

China’s thirst for coffee underlies the rapid rise of Luckin Coffee

Details: Luckin Coffee shares closed 16.7% lower in US trading overnight after it reported that net losses doubled to RMB681.3 million ($99.2 million) in the quarter.

  • Revenue rose sevenfold to RMB 909.1 million ($132.4 million) in Q2, beating Refinitv’s analyst estimate of $130.2 million.
  • The firm’s per-share loss was 48 cents, missing Refinitiv’s estimate of 43 cents and Zacks Investment Research’s 44 cents.
  • Total operating expenses rose 244% to RMB 1.6 billion from RMB 465.0 million in the second quarter of 2018.
  • The company had 2,963 stores as of the end of the quarter, nearly five times as many as the 624 locations from a year ago.
  • Store level operating losses dropped to RMB 55.8 million from RMB 81.7 million in a year ago. The company expects to reach a store-level break-even point in Q3.

“We are pleased with the performance of our business as we continue to execute against our long-term growth plan,”

—Jenny Qian, Chief Executive Officer at Luckin Coffee.

Context: Despite the surging losses, the coffee chain is showing no signs of slowing down.

  • In July, the firm inked a deal to expand into the Middle East and India through a joint venture with Kuwaiti food company Americana Group.
  • Luckin rolled out a range of tea-based beverages, including cheese tea and more traditional styles across its 3,000 stores spanning 40 cities earlier this year.

Luckin joins Starbucks in blurring boundaries between coffee and tea

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JD shares jump as Q2 earnings beat expectations https://technode.com/2019/08/14/jd-shares-jump-as-q2-earnings-beat-expectations/ https://technode.com/2019/08/14/jd-shares-jump-as-q2-earnings-beat-expectations/#respond Wed, 14 Aug 2019 10:08:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114773 China’s consumer market is still showing signs of life despite a slowing economy.]]>

Shares in JD.com closed 12.9% higher in US trading overnight after the e-commerce player posted better-than-expected earnings for the second quarter of the year.

Why it matters: The results provide investors with renewed confidence in not only JD but also China’s overall e-commerce sector.

  • There have been concerns at JD due to a slew of negative news over the past year including mass layoffs and sexual assault allegations leveled at its founder.
  • Investors had also lowered expectations of the online shopping sector as a whole, due to slowing economic growth in the country and trade tensions with the US.

“In light of the accelerated growth momentum in the second quarter and July, we expect net revenue to grow between 20% and 24% on a year-over-year basis (in Q3). We remain optimistic about the Chinese consumer market and JD.com’s competitive market position despite uncertainties with the macro environment.”

—Sidney Huang, chief financial officer at JD, during the Q2 earnings call.

Details:  JD posted Q2 net revenue of RMB150.3 billion ($21.9 billion), up 22.9% on the year and topping the $20.9 billion consensus from financial data and service firm FactSet.

  • Net service revenues for the second quarter grew 40% to RMB16.8 billion (US$2.4 billion), while annual active user accounts increased to 321.3 million for the twelve months ended June 30, from 310.5 million before.
  • Costs of revenue increased more than one-fifth to RMB128.2 billion in the reporting period from RMB105.8 billion in the year-ago period. The rise was driven by direct online sales and the logistics provided to third parties.

Context: China’s consumer market is still showing signs of life despite a slowing economy.

  • In this year’s 618 shopping promotion falling within the most recent reporting period, JD racked up a record RMB 201.5 billion in sales from in less than three weeks, up 26.6% on last year’s RMB 159.2 billion. Alibaba’s sales grew 38.5%, and those of Pinduoduo increased by 300%.
  • Demand in lower-tier cities is driving the growth momentum in China’s e-commerce market.
  • JD.com narrowly beats estimates in its Q1 earnings, reporting net revenue of RMB121.1 billion.
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Alibaba reportedly eyes $2 billion acquisition of e-commerce rival NetEase Kaola https://technode.com/2019/08/14/alibaba-reportedly-eyes-2-billion-acquisition-of-e-commerce-rival-netease-kaola/ https://technode.com/2019/08/14/alibaba-reportedly-eyes-2-billion-acquisition-of-e-commerce-rival-netease-kaola/#respond Wed, 14 Aug 2019 04:39:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114726 A merger between Kaola and Tmall International would create a single market behemoth.]]>

Alibaba is in talks with NetEase to acquire its cross-border e-commerce arm Kaola and may merge the unit with its Tmall International platform, financial blog IPO Zaozhidao cited people with knowledge of the matter as saying on Wednesday.

Why it matters: The deal would represent a step toward market consolidation in China’s e-commerce sector. A merger between the country’s top cross-border players would create a single market behemoth. Alibaba could also use the deal to fend off rival Pinduoduo, which has also taken an interest in Kaola to expand its cross-border presence.

  • Alibaba-backed Tmall International made up 32.3% of China’s cross-border e-commerce market in the first quarter this year, followed by NetEase Kaola with 24.8%, according to report from research institute Analysys.
  • Growth at NetEase’s e-commerce businesses, comprising the Yanxuan and Kaola platforms, cooled to 64% on the year in 2018, after surges of 275% and 160% in 2016 and 2017, respectively. The expansion eased again to 20.2% in the second quarter of this year, according to the company’s financial earnings.

“NetEase has always been open-minded in seeking business development opportunities and strategic business partners to bring more vitality to NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce and other business units.”

—Yang Zhaoxuan, chief financial officer at NetEase, during the company’s Q1 earnings call.

NetEase’s cross-border e-commerce site Kaola reportedly discussing merger with Amazon

Details: Both Alibaba and Kaola have declined to comment on the report that the Hangzhou-based pair have agreed upon general terms on a deal and are now ironing out the details.

  • Alibaba could pay as much as $2 billion to complete the takeover, Sina Finance reported.
  • Other media sources have suggested that NetEase would be interested in talks with companies like Alibaba and Pinduoduo.

Context: NetEase Kaola previously held talks with Amazon to acquire the latter’s China operations over several months, but the deal fell through as the pair failed to agree on final terms.

  • Amid slowing-e-commerce growth, NetEase restructured its business in February this year, laying off up 50% of workforces across several business units, including e-commerce arm Yanxuan and its educational product unit.
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Alibaba rolls out operating system for stores and supermarkets https://technode.com/2019/08/13/alibaba-rolls-out-operating-system-for-stores-and-supermarkets/ https://technode.com/2019/08/13/alibaba-rolls-out-operating-system-for-stores-and-supermarkets/#respond Tue, 13 Aug 2019 04:16:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114649 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe system will help the company to bring leading retailers into the Alibaba ecosystem.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Ele.me and Koubei, Alibaba’s two key consumer services units, have jointly rolled out an open operating system for brick-and-mortar stores and supermarket chains in an effort to improve their efficiency, the company said on Monday.

Why it matters: The launch of the system marks another step forward in the e-commerce giant’s pivot towards enterprise-facing businesses. Offering an operating system will help the company to bring leading retailers into the Alibaba ecosystem.

  • The platform allows retail players to streamline online membership engagement, payments, marketing, and on-demand deliveries, as well as the management of supply chains and stock levels.
  • Xiong Bin, vice president of Ele.me, said the system has been rolled out for some major retail chains, according to local media.

Alibaba pushes further into new retail with expanded merchant tools

Details: More than 10,000 supermarkets and at least 200,000 retail chain outlets across 676 cities countrywide are already using the platform.

  • The system will further leverage services and technology capabilities from the broader Alibaba ecosystem, including e-commerce from Taobao and Tmall, fintech from Ant Financial, logistics from Fengniao, and digital marketing from Alimama.
  • Alibaba cooperates with supermarket chains such as RT-Mart, Carrefour, Vanguard, Watsons, CenturyMart and Metro, among others.
  • Vanguard’s orders via on-demand home delivery platform Ele.me jumped 73% month on month after it started using the system, while that of CenturyMart tripled, according to Alibaba.

Context: Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang previously announced the launch of the Alibaba commercial operating system in January as part of its A100 Strategic Partnership program to help firms realize digital transformation.

  • Last month, Alibaba made its system available to merchants and launched an upgraded version of its Fulfillment by Tmall 2.0 (FBT) service platform.
  • After completing its acquisition of Ele.me in April 2018, Alibaba merged the platform with in-house food delivery unit Koubei into the Alibaba Local Services Company in October the same year.
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Cooling of Chinese e-commerce sector continues as slowdown takes hold https://technode.com/2019/08/12/cooling-of-chinese-e-commerce-sector-continues-as-slowdown-takes-hold/ https://technode.com/2019/08/12/cooling-of-chinese-e-commerce-sector-continues-as-slowdown-takes-hold/#respond Mon, 12 Aug 2019 04:51:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114526 The year-on-year growth rate of China’s e-retail market has stabilized at around 20% after falling from consistent figures above 30%. ]]>

China’s online retail sales increased 17.8% year on year to RMB 4.8 trillion ($684 billion) in the first half of this year, according to official data.

Why it matters: The annual growth rate of China’s e-retail market has stabilized at around 20% after falling from consistent figures above 30%. The slowing expansion comes as a broader economic slowdown takes a grip, and the US trade war intensifies.

  • China’s online retail sales increased 17.8% year on year in the first four months of 2019, down from a 32.4% jump for the same period last year, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

“As Chinese economic growth shifts from high-speed to high-quality, and the growth dividends of Chinese internet users fade away, the gradual slowdown in online retail spending fits into the pattern of economic development.”

—Gao Feng, China Ministry of Commerce Spokesperson

Details: Of the total, online retail sales of physical goods came to RMB 3.82 trillion for the first six months, up 21.6% from a year ago and accounting for 19.6% of the total retail sales in the country.

  • Business-to-customer (B2C) sales account for a little over three-quarters of total retail sales, up by 4.1 percentage points from last year.
  • Eastern, central, western, and northeastern China represent 83.2%, 9.6%, 5.9% and 1.3% of the country’s total online sales, respectively. The growth rates of each region stood at 17.8%, 35.4%, 13.9%, and 20.6%.
  • Fresh food, cosmetics, and pet goods are the most popular categories for online buyers in big cities, while apparel, automobile accessories, and home appliances are favored in rural markets.
  • Rural e-commerce and cross-border e-commerce continue to be the main drivers of sales.
  • Online retail is moving toward individualization and customization.

Context: China’s online retail market has expanded rapidly for more than a decade. In 2018, China’s online retail spending exceeded RMB 9 trillion, and it has ranked first globally for six consecutive years.

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Baidu aims to accelerate mini-programs with Youzan tie-up https://technode.com/2019/08/08/baidu-aims-to-accelerate-mini-programs-with-youzan-tie-up/ https://technode.com/2019/08/08/baidu-aims-to-accelerate-mini-programs-with-youzan-tie-up/#respond Thu, 08 Aug 2019 13:32:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114279 baidu debt offering notesBaidu is investing $30 million in a joint company with the e-commerce service provider.]]> baidu debt offering notes

Baidu is allocating $30 million for a joint company with Youzan, one of China’s largest third-party providers of in-app retail services, as the search giant looks to accelerate the development of its mini-program ecosystem.

Why it matters: Mini-programs, lightweight alternative to apps, are fast becoming a key channel for merchants to engage with users. First introduced on Tencent’s WeChat, most of China’s tech players, including Alibaba and ByteDance, are aggressively exploring their potential.

  • The market for software-as-a-service (SaaS) vendors that help companies to set up and maintain mini-programs is also booming.
  • Monthly active users (MAU) of Baidu mini-programs hit 250 million in July this year, just one year after their introduction on its search app. In comparison, WeChat mini-programs boasted 400 million MAU as of April last year.
  • The number of WeChat mini-programs with more than 1 million MAU doubled year on year to 883, and those with more than 5 million increased by more than one-third to 180, according to a QuestMobile report covering the first half.

“We are open to a partnership covering various channels that could bring traffic or boost the next-stage growth for merchants on Youzan’s platform. Helping merchants to manage the mini-programs more efficiently and at a lower cost is the core motivation behind our cooperation with mini-program ecosystems on WeChat, Alipay, or Baidu.”

—Cui Yusong, CTO of Youzan

Details: The pair will inject funds into Qima, a non-wholly-owned unit of Youzan, the company said in a filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on Thursday.

  • Upon completion, Youzan will hold a little over half of all Qima shares through an investment of $45 million.
  • Baidu will act as a minority shareholder through a combined investment of $30 million via two of its subsidiaries.
  • The pair will leverage Baidu’s platform to expand Youzan’s merchant base, according to the filing.

Context: Youzan went public in Hong Kong in April last year and now serves over 442,000 merchants from the retail, catering, beauty, education, and hospitality industries.

  • Baidu launched an RMB 1 billion (around $140 million) fund in December last year to help the development of mini-program startups and developers.
  • Tencent purchased more than one billion Youzan shares at HKD 0.53 each, which translates to a 7% stake in the SaaS vendor.
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Kuaishou to get tough on shady e-commerce operators https://technode.com/2019/08/07/kuaishou-to-get-tough-on-shady-e-commerce-operators/ https://technode.com/2019/08/07/kuaishou-to-get-tough-on-shady-e-commerce-operators/#respond Wed, 07 Aug 2019 06:43:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114140 kuaishou tiktok douyin IPO livestream video appContent-driven e-commerce players face challenges in bringing order to their new-yet-flourishing ecosystems.]]> kuaishou tiktok douyin IPO livestream video app
Image credit: Kuaishou

Kuaishou has launched a new campaign to prevent shop owners on the platform from redirecting users to external channels. Shop owners do this to avoid incurring charges when completing transactions. The Chinese short video app looks to tighten up its e-commerce offering.

Why it matters: Content-driven e-commerce is a growing trend in China as more and more sellers use short video apps like Kuaishou and Douyin as effective ways to promote products. Some merchants encourage shoppers to pay privately via WeChat or Alipay to avoid extra fees and also to reduce their responsibility for after-sales service.

  • Chinese short video apps are doubling down on e-commerce features in the hope of commercializing their user base, but these new channels are facing increasing challenges to bring order to their new-yet-flourishing ecosystem.

Details: Kuaishou’s new guideline specifies that users or promoters who sell outside of official payment channels like Kuaishou’s in-house feature, as well as e-commerce partners like Taobao, Youzan, and Pinduoduo, will be subject to tighter restrictions.

  • The short video app, a rumored investment target of Tencent, has shut down 1,038 online stores in the app and delisted more than 30,000 products so far.
  • The company claimed the user satisfaction index has increased by 50% after the campaign.
  • From September, the company will block private trading covering eight product categories, including jewelry, skincare products, foods, medicine, pesticides, and antiques, among others.

Context: China’s new e-commerce law, which came into effect at the beginning of this year, broadens the definition of e-commerce operators to include players who do business through various online channels such as messaging apps like WeChat and video apps.

  • Kuaishou adjusted its commission system for stores in July to boost its e-commerce offering and set up a bonus pool for stores offering quality services.
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Suning’s convenience store arm buys Circle K outlets in Guangzhou https://technode.com/2019/08/06/sunings-convenience-store-arm-buys-circle-k-outlets-in-guangzhou/ https://technode.com/2019/08/06/sunings-convenience-store-arm-buys-circle-k-outlets-in-guangzhou/#respond Tue, 06 Aug 2019 05:26:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=114054 The acquisition will help the Alibaba-backed retailer shore up its presence in southern China. ]]>

Suning Xiaodian, the convenience store arm of online retailer Suning.com, has acquired 61 Circle K outlets in Guangzhou from Hong Kong giant Feng Group, consolidating its foothold in southern China.

Why it matters: Under its online-to-offline strategy, Suning has been pushing to increase the number of its retail stores, including department stores, supermarkets, and convenience stores. In addition to setting up new outlets, the omnichannel retailer is also acquiring existing locations from chain store operators.

  • The Alibaba-backed firm acquired Spanish multinational Dia Group’s China retail operations in April last year, taking over more than 300 Dia Tiantian outlets in Shanghai. In late-2018, Suning bought 31 stores in the central Chinese city of Xi’an from Grea Convenience.
  • Suning acquired 37 department stores from the Chinese conglomerate Wanda Group at the beginning of the year and then paid RMB 4.8 billion ($695.7 million) for an 80% stake in hypermarket operator Carrefour China last month.

“Suning expects the resources and experiences of Circle K management team to facilitate our foray into Guangzhou and the broader South China market in merchandizing, supply chain and regional network.”

—Bian Nong, president of Suning’s consumer goods business group

Details: Circle K operates 61 convenience stores in Guangzhou and more than 300 stores in Hong Kong, Macao, and nearby Zhuhai.

  • Having first entered Guangzhou in 2002, Circle K stores offer snacks, drinks, fresh food, fast food, and daily necessities, featuring an in-house food brand Hot & In.
  • The business has posted significant losses over the years due to intense competition, slowing economic growth, rising labor costs, among other factors, according to the company.

Context: Suning runs more than 7,500 self-operated and franchised stores, as well as almost 5,400 Suning Xiaodian neighborhood stores and discount chain Dia Tiantian outlets as of the first half of this year.

  • Despite a 26.6% rise in operating income, Suning’s net profit fell by 64.4% year on year to RMB 2.1 billion in the first half.
  • In addition to building up an offline presence, Suning has also upped investment in logistics, finance, technology, and other core capacities in the first six months to lay a foundation for future growth.
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SEA tech startups cannot simply copy Chinese models https://technode.com/2019/08/01/copy-from-china-model-cant-address-southeast-asia-market/ https://technode.com/2019/08/01/copy-from-china-model-cant-address-southeast-asia-market/#respond Thu, 01 Aug 2019 07:00:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=113451 Chinese companies in the eyes of Southeast Asia entrepreneurs.]]>

Sitting in a trendy open-plan office in downtown Kuala Lumpur, Anson Wang oversees around 100 employees as CEO and co-founder of Jobstore, a Malaysian AI-powered recruitment platform. Coming from a rare breed of first-generation Chinese immigrant entrepreneurs into the country, it has been a long journey for Wang to get to where he is now.

Born in Hangzhou in eastern China’s Zhejiang province, 39-year-old Wang struck gold when he sold off his ad agency back in his home country. Filled with aspirations of an exotic new market ripe for the picking, he uprooted to Malaysia. His experience in China’s internet industry held him in good stead and his expertise allowed him to make wiser decisions. However, it didn’t translate into instant results in a country geographically close but infinitely different.

Years on and Wang’s thick-accented mandarin is indistinguishable from that of Chinese Malaysians. He bears all the hallmarks of someone who has become immersed deep into a foreign culture. This mindset is key to achieving success in a culture as diversified and a market as fragmented as South East Asia.

In many ways, Wang, now a serial entrepreneur in Malaysia with Jobstore his third project, represents a case in point for Chinese businessmen and companies sitting at the crossroads between China and SEA.

Push and pull

The past three decades have witnessed changing dynamics between China and SEA in terms of economic forces. China’s exponential growth has allowed it to eclipse the neighboring region.

“When our relatives went to China in the 1980s, they’d always come back and say China is like twenty years behind Malaysia,” recalled Honwai Sim, COO of Malaysian IoT firm MDT Innovations and a third-generation Chinese Malaysian whose ancestors moved to SEA in the 1920s. The government’s early efforts to boost high-tech industries helped the country to become one of the world’s largest producers of electric appliances for a period in the 1990s. “But now China is way ahead of Malaysia,” he said.

In recent years, Malaysia and the broader Southeast Asian market are again becoming a focal point, and Chinese investors are circling for new opportunities. The region’s GDP will grow at an average of 5.2% between 2018 and 2022, according to OECD projections. The SEA internet sector is set to be worth $200 billion by 2025.

Nearly all of China’s big tech players from heavyweights like Alibaba and Tencent, to vertical unicorns such as SenseTime, are setting up shop in the region. Chinese venture capital firms are also doubling their bets in the region. Total venture funds across SEA hit $3.4 billion in the first half, more than quadruple that of the year-ago period.

The influx of Chinese companies into the region boils down to push-and-pull factors. A slowing domestic e-economy, saturated local market, aging population, rising workforce costs in China are a powerful set of push factors. These are only exacerbated by China’s recent turbulent relations with the US.

For SEA, the younger population and rising GDP per capita are the key pull factors. Rising internet penetration, in particular, has brought the attention of Chinese internet firms. The region’s internet users are outpacing those in China in their embracing of the mobile economy. A higher percentage in several SEA countries use smartphones to do their banking, shopping and ride-hailing, according to Global Digital Report 2019 from social media management platform Hootsuite and digital marketing agency We Are Social. China’s high-profile Belt and Road Initiative has also boosted the regional expansion of Chinese companies especially in building digital infrastructure.

In addition to the huge potential, the market is also attractive to Chinese entrepreneurs and VCs because they believe the region is similar to China a few years ago. They expect easier market entry by leveraging experiences learned from China. For them, the country represents a key point of reference for SEA expansion.

Caution in copying China

While Chinese voices tend to stress the similarities behind the two ecosystems, the differences between China and SEA are equally huge, if not bigger.

Using the term SEA unconsciously refers to the region as a whole, neglecting its huge diversity covering 11 countries. The region’s population of more than 655 million speak different languages, practice different religions and live under the administration of different governments.

“Even though we look at trends in China, it doesn’t mean things can be 100% replicated here,” Jamaludin Bujang, managing director for Gobi Venture’s Malaysian operations, told TechNode in a recent interview.

Andy Sitt, the co-founder of Inmagine Group, parent of Malaysian stock image site 123RF.com, breaks down the differences by countries. “Singapore is an aging developed country. Malaysia and Thailand are aging and mid-developed, while Laos and Myanmar are young and upcoming,” he said. Some key markets like Indonesia and Vietnam get a lot of attention and it can often be forgotten that the other countries differ greatly in culture, consumer purchasing power and stages of development stages, he added.

“Having 11 countries working together is almost impossible, you can’t have a standardized e-wallet nor the same data-sharing platform among different countries,” Sitt maintained.

MDT Innovations’ Sim echoed Sitt’s pointed out the industry differences in a separate interview. Singapore, with its focus on fintech, is quite advanced because it’s one city and easy to manage, he said, adding that Malaysia is a very small market centered on high-tech, IT, biotech. Compared with the rest of SEA, Indonesia and Thailand are bigger markets while Cambodia and Vietnam are quite far behind.

The tech ecosystem in SEA is also developing at a slower pace compared with that of China. “When coming to a smaller market, you really have to adjust expectations as well, you have to adjust to slower growth,” Bujang said.

Jobstore’s Wang has first-hand experience in adjusting to slower growth. His company grew from two people to a 100-strong team in less than three years. This is already a quick growth trajectory for a Malaysian startup, but nothing compared with Chinese companies, he admitted.

Local workers maintain a more laid-back lifestyle and value a work-life balance, Wang said. While it’s common for Chinese tech employees to work on 996 schedules, it’s unimaginable for locals to work to such an extreme. “Even though I want to push the project forward, I can’t do it singlehandedly without support from the team,” he added.

To cope with this, Wang clarifies with new-hires that his company doesn’t require overtime, but needs their 100% attention during working hours. “Also, we don’t hire people that smoke to avoid distractions during working hours,” he added.

Sitt expects the influx of Chinese firms in the region to press local players to catch up.

Although Chinese venture capitalists are increasingly taking notice of the region, SEA does not have the funds that Chinese companies have, Sitt said. His firm has grown without securing external funding.

“Malaysia hasn’t been attracting lots of investors,” Sim said. “We talk about a Series A in Malaysia as probably about 1 million ringgit ($250,000). Series A in the US is $5 million and Series A size in China s not too far from the US standard at $3 million to 5 million,” he detailed.

SEA as a ‘launchpad’

More and more Chinese companies are aggressively looking for global expansion in the eyes of SEA entrepreneurs.

“Growth in China is slowing down, they are looking at an alternative for what they can do especially in SEA and hopefully to build a greater Asia,” Sitt said. For Sim, Chinese firms are very open to business opportunities in far-flung markets.

The overall region is of strategic importance for expansive Chinese companies, thanks to cheap labor and the diversity of people and culture.

SEA startups have their own criteria for finding Chinese partners. Malaysian AI and IoT company G3 Global inked a deal with SenseTime to set up an AI park earlier this year. “Some companies are here only to find a reseller or partner to distribute their products. We choose to work with  SenseTime because the deal is more about having an experience of using AI in real application scenarios by which we can build an ecosystem and educate the market together,” G3 Global Executive Director Mohammad Radzi told TechNode.

“China might be scary for lots of companies, but for us China is friendly,” said Sim. He maintains that Alibaba isn’t in the region to take away opportunities but to find new ones. “They may have acquired Lazada in e-commerce, but they are also open new opportunities to other e-commerce enablers,” he explained.

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Alibaba opens its B2B e-commerce platform to US sellers https://technode.com/2019/07/24/alibaba-opens-its-b2b-e-commerce-platform-to-us-sellers/ https://technode.com/2019/07/24/alibaba-opens-its-b2b-e-commerce-platform-to-us-sellers/#respond Wed, 24 Jul 2019 04:26:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=113086 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe company is pushing its presence in B2B e-commerce to global markets.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba.com, Alibaba’s business-to-business (B2B) marketplace that connects Chinese suppliers with overseas buyers, is now opening its platform to small- and medium-sized sellers in the US in an effort to expand its global presence in the B2B e-commerce sector, the company announced on Tuesday.

Why it matters: The move falls in line with two of the company’s major strategic themes: globalization and a shift to business-facing services. It is also a defensive move to fend off fierce competition from global rivals like Amazon.

“Alibaba aims to empower entrepreneurs and help them succeed on their own terms. With 10 million active business buyers in over 190 countries and regions, we are reshaping B2B commerce by providing the tools and services needed for US SMB companies to compete and succeed in today’s global marketplace.”

—John Caplan, head of North America B2B at Alibaba Group on cooperate blog Alizila

Details: Alibaba.com has launched a series of new features to help new US suppliers with onboarding and marketing.

  • Sellers will get a dedicated interface for building and managing a digital store on the platform, CRM and communications tools for customer relationship management, and digital marketing tools to target likely customers, as well as online payment solutions.
  • A local customer service team was set up in the US to support sellers.
  • US firms Office Depot and Robinson Fresh launched stores on Alibaba.com on Tuesday.
  • The move will open up markets in China, as well as India, Brazil and Canada for US sellers.

Context: Currently, the platform is still focused on exporting Chinese products to the rest of the world. Around 95% of the sellers come from China, while roughly one-third of its buyers are US-based. Adding more sellers will boost the platform’s overall value proposition while also attracting and benefiting more SMBs globally, according to Alibaba.com.  Meanwhile Alibaba’s shift to provide services to enterprises is reflected in various business units within its ecosystem.

  • To build up its global presence in the business-to-consumer service (B2C) sector, the company launched an English-language website last month for its B2C Tmall Global marketplace.
  • Alibaba seeks to digitize local businesses with a service package of 11 different elements under its A100 program.
  • Chinese tech giants like Tencent and JD are following suit in the shift to focus on enterprise services.
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Luckin Coffee eyes markets in Middle East and India with Americana partnership https://technode.com/2019/07/23/luckin-coffee-eyes-markets-in-middle-east-and-india-with-americana-partnership/ https://technode.com/2019/07/23/luckin-coffee-eyes-markets-in-middle-east-and-india-with-americana-partnership/#respond Tue, 23 Jul 2019 08:45:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=113029 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksLuckin’s expansion to the Middle East and India extend its competition with Starbucks to more markets.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks
Luckin Coffee founder and CEO, Jenny Qian Zhiya (second from left), Americana Group CEO Kesri Kapur (second from right). (Image credit: Luckin Coffee)

Chinese coffee chain announced on Monday that it has signed a memorandum of understanding with Kuwaiti food company Americana Group for a joint venture to expand its coffee chain business in the Middle East and India.

Why it matters: This is the first time the Chinese coffee chain has announced plans to expand its operations overseas. Luckin’s expansion to the new region will extend its competition with Starbucks to more international markets.

  • Despite its stunning rate of growth, the company is still loss-making. Expansion to more markets will add to financial pressures on the US-listed company.
  • The agreement was signed in Beijing with government officials from both sides in attendance, underscoring government support of the deal, which aligns with Beijing’s Belt and Road infrastructure development initiative.

“This collaboration represents Luckin Coffee’s first step toward bringing its leading products from China to the world. We look forward to further expanding the freshly brewed coffee market internationally as we realize the incredible growth opportunities available to us through our innovative business model.”

—Jenny Qian Zhiya, Luckin Coffee’s Founder and CEO, in an emailed statement

The company declined to provide further details about the partnership when contacted by TechNode on Tuesday.

Context: Facing a slowing local economy and saturating market, Chinese tech giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and more recently Didi are taking notice of the emerging regions in the Middle East and Southeast Asia as key markets to boost the next stage of growth.

  • Founded in 2017, Luckin operates more than 3,000 stores across 40 cities in China and plans to open more than 4,500 stores by the end of 2019, according to the company.
  • Americana Group operates food products throughout the Middle East and North Africa region with capabilities spanning manufacturing, distribution, and restaurant operations. It runs regional franchises for KFC, Pizza Hut, Friday’s, Costa Coffee, and others.
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Alibaba’s Juhuasuan opens farmer access to user data, tech tools https://technode.com/2019/07/23/alibabas-juhuasuan-opens-farmer-access-to-user-data-tech-tools/ https://technode.com/2019/07/23/alibabas-juhuasuan-opens-farmer-access-to-user-data-tech-tools/#respond Tue, 23 Jul 2019 06:52:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=112950 Technological innovations are improving efficiency in the agricultural industry in China.]]>

Alibaba’s flash sale and marketing platform Juhuasuan said on Monday that it has updated its virtual farming feature “Jutudi” allowing farmers access to consumer sales data so that they can more accurately plan crops based on current consumer trends.

Why it’s important: Technological innovations are increasing efficiency in China’s agricultural industry. Traditionally, farmers plan their crop based on sales of the previous season. By gaining insights into user demand, crops can be planned more efficiently and costs brought by the disconnection between consumer demand and supply are lowered.

  • In addition to Alibaba, Chinese e-commerce platforms like Pinduoduo and JD are also speeding up their digital farming initiatives.
  • Consumer insight is particularly critical for farmers who raise specialty crops for niche markets.

“Supported by the entire Alibaba ecosystem, Jutudi leverages the algorithm from Alibaba Cloud to help farmers plan their crops and harvest. Our smart logistics network, Cainiao, offers expedited delivery services to ensure freshness. Moreover, consumers can take advantage of flash sales on Juhuasuan to get the best bargains.”

—Liu Bo, general manager of Tmall and Taobao Marketing

Details: Based on Juhuasuan’s flash sale and collective buying model, Jutudi lets consumers pre-order agricultural products before the harvest. In addition, the new Jutudi offers farmers and cooperatives analytics insights to improve their crop and supply chain management.

  • The platform works directly with the cooperatives or the farmers to bypass middlemen such as wholesalers and distributors. Consumers enjoy discounts of 30% to 50% lower than regular prices, according to a statement from Alibaba.
  • Around 20 different cooperatives from provinces including Heilongjiang, Henan, Jiangxi, and Gansu have joined the initiative. Many of the farms are in poverty-stricken regions.
  • The plan is to widen the reach to at least 1,000 farming cooperatives in two years.
  • Farmers costs decreased by 10% by leveraging technology-based tools, such as using artificial intelligence (AI) to standardize crop management, according to Alibaba.

Context: Launched in 2014, Jutudi was originally a gamified virtual farming project where lands leased to Alibaba by farmers were then divided into plots and leased to online subscribers. The plots were managed by farm cooperatives, and subscribers would “tend” to the plots online by performing tasks such as plowing, weeding, and watering. Once the crop was ready, farmers deliver the produce to consumers.

  • Pinduoduo is running a similar virtual farming feature called “Duo Duo Orchard.” Introduced in May 2018 as an incentive feature for customers to browse and purchase, the company now says it has more than 11 million daily active users (DAU) who log on to the game to water their trees.
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Gobi Partners leads China VC charge into Southeast Asia https://technode.com/2019/07/22/gobi-partners-leads-china-vc-charge-into-southeast-asia/ https://technode.com/2019/07/22/gobi-partners-leads-china-vc-charge-into-southeast-asia/#respond Mon, 22 Jul 2019 04:30:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=112650 Southeast Asia may be the next frontier for Chinese venture capitals.]]>

Editor’s note: This article is produced in cooperation with AirAsia and Gobi Partners. We believe in transparency in our publishing and monetization model. Read more here.

China-based venture capital Gobi Partners and AirAsia’s cargo and logistics arm Teleport –previously known as RedCargo– announced on July 16 plans to co-invest $10.6 million in the B round of Malaysian e-commerce and parcel delivery platform EasyParcel.

The funding will be used to expand the startup’s offering for small-and-medium-sized enterprise customers in existing markets like Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand.

While the deal, announced at Gobi Partner’s Malaysian headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, may seem run-of-the-mill, it highlights a recent change in sentiment among Chinese venture capitals, which are attaching greater importance to the SEA market.

Gobi Partners is one of the first Chinese venture capitals to set its sights on SEA. The Shanghai-based investor first set foot in the region in 2008. Growing with a global vision, Gobi Partners manages over $1.1 billion assets and is gradually expanding its scope of investments outside of China to include countries such as Australia, the UK, Britain, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the US, and Thailand.

It’s no secret that Chinese tech companies are pivoting to the SEA market amid a slowing domestic e-economy, a saturated local market, and more recently, tougher relations with the US. A preference for the market is gaining momentum among Chinese VCs as well. They are following the footsteps of their portfolios in doubling down on SEA expansion.

The shift has become increasingly obvious since the turn of the year. Chinese startups are caught up in a capital shortage with the amount raised plunging by 52% annually to $23.2 billion in the first half of 2019, according to data from consulting firm ChinaVenture. However, their investments in SEA hit $3.4 billion in the first half. Although the overall size is still relatively small when compared with that in China, that’s a nearly four-fold increase from the same period a year ago.

From China to SEA and beyond

With a young population, increasing GDP per capita and rising internet penetration, the ecosystem in SEA is expected to achieve exponential growth, much like what China was experiencing a few years ago. In addition to its huge potential, the market is also attractive to Chinese firms because they expect easier entry to the market by leveraging expertise and know-how learned from China.

“Gobi Partners has been about for 17 years. That in itself is a whole wealth of experience. We operated in China in the first ten years and then expanded to SEA. We are still growing, but with the good and bad things we have gone through in China, we are making wiser investment decisions when investing in SEA,” said Jamaludin Bujang, managing director for Gobi’s Malaysian operations.

In addition, Gobi is spreading to more areas by drawing upon the experiences gathered through SEA expansion. “We are setting up funds in the Middle East as we see the fact that places like Pakistan are perhaps two to four years behind SEA. We are repeating the pattern all over again in other parts of the world,” said Khairul Khairi, partner at Gobi Malaysia,

“We apply the data collected in China to SEA and now we are implementing the evolved data in Pakistan as well. In that sense, hopefully, our pattern recognition is better,” Khairi added.

SEA accelerates

To some extent, SEA is playing catchup by following the development tracks of China — the rise of e-commerce, and associated enablers like payments, supply chain, as well as a series of other infrastructure services like cloud computing. However, an advance look into China’s current situation allows the SEA to fast-forward and possibly leapfrog it, much like the way in which China’s ecosystem has gone when it significantly lagged behind the US.

“Two or three years back in SEA, every investment went into e-commence marketplaces, but now VC 2.0 in SEA is moving towards more e-commerce enablers in the supply chain, mobile payment, etc,” said Khairi.

Some of the most recent tech trends in China are also gaining traction here. Much like the social e-commerce boom led by Taobao merchants, SEA individual and part-time sellers on Facebook, Facebook Live and Instagram, are contributing to half of the total e-commerce volume in the region, Clarence Leong, CEO of EasyParcel points out.

Leong believes the social e-commerce boom put EasyParcel at the right juncture to cash in on the opportunity to empower small merchants by bringing more transparency in pricing, parcel tracking abilities, and different service levels.

“The social commerce merchants are at a disadvantage because they are small in the transaction as an individual business, but as a group, they already take a big chunk of the e-commerce transaction. But they don’t have the bargaining power with the couriers,” said Khairi.

China’s recent shift from consumer-faced to enterprise-targeted services is also already visible in SEA companies, according to Khairi. “We are seeing more SAAS and enterprise-startups coming. For example, fintech is more B2B than B2C now. When we started two years back it was always P2P lending for consumers. Now it is B2C and eventually it will be B2B,” he added.

Localizing with adjustments expected

Even though we look at trends in China, it doesn’t mean things can be 100% replicated here,” Bujang warned. Khairi echoed his point. “It will always require a certain level of customization, and fine-tuning,” he added.

While setting up a local office and hiring a local team are the first steps to building a SEA presence, localization also requires a change in mentality, according to Bujang. “Chinese startups are so used to having a big scale and big market. When coming to a smaller market, you really have to adjust the expectations as well. You have to adjust to slower growth,” he said.

The same applies to VCs. “Chinese VC is used to high valuations. You have to be really careful when entering a smaller market,” Bujang points out.

China’s on-going capital winter is a good lesson for the SEA region. In a strange way, it has helped the SEA VC and startup ecosystem to be realistic and adjust expectations to make more sustainable plans in the long-term, according to Khairi.

SEA is a more complex and fragmented region compared with China and comprises different cultures, traditions, and languages. Unlike China where the market is divided into camps led by tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent, the market has yet to form market dominators that control the whole value chain, thus providing different competition dynamics for startups.

“The market is so fragmented; we are all frenemies. Your so-called competitor in Malaysia might be your friend in Singapore or Indonesia, you just have to be flexible to be able to work with everybody instead of one,” said Khairi.

Chinese companies usually adopt a cash-burning marketing strategy to grab market share, but in SEA, subsidies are very selective, only happening on a small scale in few sectors like ride-hailing, Bujang noted. “The companies are mainly competing through market forces,” he added.

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JD.com appoints leadership for healthcare spinoff https://technode.com/2019/07/18/jd-health/ https://technode.com/2019/07/18/jd-health/#respond Thu, 18 Jul 2019 09:06:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=112708 JDJD Health is the company's third subsidiary that has reached unicorn status after closing a $1 billion funding round in May.]]> JD

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com has named Xin Lijun, president of JD’s local lifestyle service group, the chief executive officer of its healthcare subsidiary JD Health, and JD Retail CEO Xu Lei was appointed chairman of the business unit.

Why it’s important: As economic headwinds persist amid decelerating growth, JD.com is diversifying beyond its core e-commerce business. JD Health is its third subsidiary with unicorn status after closing a May funding round totaling $1 billion, in addition to its digital technology and logistics arms.

  • The market size of China’s online healthcare industry is forecasted to reach RMB 20.4 billion (around $3 billion) in 2019 according to data from data analytics firm iResearch. Retail online pharmacy sales, a sector which is one of JD Health’s core businesses, makes up the lion’s share of the total market, 89.2% in 2017, the iResearch data showed.
  • Many Chinese tech giants are doubling down on their healthcare investments. Alibaba has its smart hospital plan and Tencent has invested in multiple healthcare startups and is building up offline services.

Details: Xin will be fully responsible for the subsidiary’s strategy, management, and business development.

  • He joined JD in October 2012 and has been responsible for business operations in many divisions within the company.

Context: JD Health began as an e-commerce platform for pharmaceutical products such as vitamins and supplements, medical supplies, and Chinese traditional medicine.

  • JD Health was spun off from the parent company in May when the unit secured funding from investors including CPEChna Fund, CICC Capital, and Baring Private Equity Asia. JD remains the majority shareholder.
  • JD Health’s main business lines are online-to-offline pharmacy, a third-party platform for wholesale drugs, and web-based hospitals.
  • The company says that its pharmaceutical wholesalers number in excess of 100,000 in 47 cities at present.
  • Its online hospitals offer online-to-offline (O2O) treatment through a partnership with medical institutions. The doctors on the platform come from 327 cities in 32 provincial-level administrative regions.
  • JD Health is also working with a number of well-known medical institutions to explore medical information and intelligent solutions.
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China debuts search engine aimed at teens which blocks ‘harmful’ content https://technode.com/2019/07/12/china-debuts-search-engine-aimed-at-teens-which-blocks-harmful-content/ https://technode.com/2019/07/12/china-debuts-search-engine-aimed-at-teens-which-blocks-harmful-content/#respond Fri, 12 Jul 2019 05:39:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111299 "Young" mobile search app is one of several initiatives authorities are taking to create a 'healthy cyberspace' for juveniles.]]>

State-owned Xinhua News Agency announced at a Thursday press conference the official launch of a mobile search app created for China’s 200 million internet users under the age of 18.

Why it’s important: “Young” mobile search app is one of several initiatives authorities are taking to create a “healthy cyberspace” for juveniles. Authorities have blocked “harmful information” including content containing violence, pornography, and gambling, according to executives from Chinaso Inc., Xinhua News Agency-backed developer behind the app.

  • The app will also be an online channel through which the state promotes its core socialist values, according to Xinhua.

“The app has recorded more than 10 million downloads since we launched the trial in June.”

Wang Yanbo, Young mobile app’s chief operating officer

Details: After registering an account including disclosing age and gender, the ad-free app recommends personalized content for teenagers, such as animation and online English courses. The app uses artificial intelligence (AI) technology, big data, and deep learning-based algorithms for its content recommendations.

  • The app provides users access to a content pool including self-developed and external sources. Content includes English studies, educational videos, sports, and cartoons.
  • Parents are allowed set screen time restrictions and access their child’s browsing history.
  • Several other major Chinese state media outlets including People’s Daily and China Central Television (CCTV) are also backing the project.
  • Xinhua is partnering with Tencent’s youth-targeted unit DN.A (Digital Natives Action) to create high-quality content, some of which is already up on the platform.

Context: The search engine is an extension of the country’s efforts to clean up its internet.

  • The move comes after authorities in May launched campaigns against online addiction on a slew of popular video platforms to restrict teenage user time spent.
  • An online cleanup campaign launched at the beginning of January led to the shut down of more than 700 websites and 9,300 apps over the course of the month, according to the Cyber Administration of China.
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Farmer-focused B2B app eyes $500 million in new funding https://technode.com/2019/07/11/farmer-focused-b2b-app-eyes-500-million-in-new-funding/ https://technode.com/2019/07/11/farmer-focused-b2b-app-eyes-500-million-in-new-funding/#respond Thu, 11 Jul 2019 11:01:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111279 Meicai is reportedly raising new funds to fuel its expansion in China’s costly fresh-foods market.]]>

Meicai, the Chinese app that allows farmers to sell their produce directly to restaurants, aims to raise at least $500 million in new funding to fuel expansion in China’s costly fresh-foods market, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday. The report comes a week after the company was accused of faking sales data.

Why it’s important: While tech giants Alibaba, JD, and Meituan are changing the household fresh grocery shopping experience, fresh food platforms like Meicai are trying to bring similar changes to the country’s 10 million small and medium-sized restaurants and produce shops.

  • E-commerce leaders Alibaba and JD.Com have already added groceries to their main sites, while Tencent-backed Meituan launched a similar platform Meituan Maicai in Beijing and Shanghai this year.
  • In addition to the core business-facing model used to offer fresher, lower-priced ingredients to restaurants and produce shops, Meicai is also serving individual customers, thereby competing directly with the above platforms.

Details: Bloomberg source says the potential deal would raise its valuation to between $10 billion and $12 billion, up from $7 billion last September. The figures are still subject to change based on market conditions, the report added.

  • The vegetable vending app has come under fire this week after a user who claimed to be a regional partner criticized the site on Weibo for faking sales data.
  • Meicai told local media that the accusation was groundless. The user has deleted since deleted the claim.
  • The B2B app claims to have reached daily sales of RMB 130 million in September 2018.
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China expands credit blacklist to include unscrupulous online sellers https://technode.com/2019/07/11/china-expands-credit-blacklist-to-include-unscrupulous-online-sellers/ https://technode.com/2019/07/11/china-expands-credit-blacklist-to-include-unscrupulous-online-sellers/#respond Thu, 11 Jul 2019 08:03:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111217 Authorities are taking another step in regulating its flourishing yet flawed e-commerce industry.]]>

China’s online store operators and e-commerce platforms that engage in unfair practices against competitors will be added to the country’s official credit blacklist, according to a new draft rule issued by China’s State Administration of Market Regulations on Wednesday.

Why it’s important: Despite exponential growth, China’s e-commerce market has long been plagued by unscrupulous business practices from user review manipulation to “brushing,” or faking orders.

  • The list is part of the country’s broader effort to boost “trustworthiness” in Chinese society and is an extension of the country’s social credit system.

Details: Unfair business practices which qualify an e-commerce business for the credit blacklist include activities such as creating fake orders, deleting negative user reviews, posting fake positive reviews, and spreading rumors against rivals.

  • Online sales platforms will be blacklisted for not effectively regulating merchant activity on their platforms, failing to protect the rights of consumers, or hindering market monitoring by regulatory authorities.
  • Once blacklisted, sellers are barred from qualifying for preferential policies from the state such as tax cuts, are subject to closer monitoring from the government watchdog, and will be given stricter punishment for the same misconduct, among others.
  • In addition, blacklisted online business operators will be required to show on their sites a notice to warn consumers.
  • The draft regulation is open for public comment until August 10.

Context: China has been ramping up its efforts to regulate its flourishing yet flawed e-commerce industry. China’s Electronic Commerce Law, which seeks to hold both seller and platform accountable, came to effect at the beginning of this year and was a major regulatory milestone for the sector.

More than 3.59 million Chinese enterprises and 2.61 million individuals were added to the official credit blacklist last year.

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Xiaohongshu battles to regain user trust amid KOL purge https://technode.com/2019/07/11/xiaohongshu-battles-to-regain-user-trust/ https://technode.com/2019/07/11/xiaohongshu-battles-to-regain-user-trust/#respond Thu, 11 Jul 2019 05:59:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111164 The social media-e-commerce hybrid faces challenges after reports that fakes are rife on the platform]]>

“It’s true—when you buy on Xiaohongshu, there’s just no telling if you’re getting the real stuff or a fake,” Ms Fang wrote.

The social media-e-commerce hybrid is supposed to feel like your personal stylist. But to a growing number of users, it feels more like a pushy used car salesman.

The platform is part shopping guide, part shop—users can see what their friends, or favorite KOLs, are wearing, touring, or slathering on their face, and buy imported goods without leaving the app. The model has made the company a force to be reckoned with, but in social media, the price of success is scams and bots.

Ms Fang used Xiaohongshu to shop for The Ordinary-brand skin cream after receiving a recommendation from a friend overseas, according to an unhappy review (in Chinese) from last November. When the bottle arrived, it seemed a little off—the liquid looked a bit yellow, the cap wasn’t quite the same shape, and even the font on the label was not completely right. But the differences seemed trivial enough—until the cream caused her face to flare up. Since the cream in her friend’s bottle performed as advertised, Ms. Fang concluded she’d been sold a fake.

“I would recommend the real product,” she wrote. “But I’m angry, how can you sell fakes of something that people will put on their face?”

Xiaohongshu, also called Little Red Book or RED, is scrambling to respond to a crisis of trust. Many users believe that the platform is rife with fake reviews. However, its efforts to police the site have, in turn, angered content creators, some of whom have left over rule changes.

Controversy around the sales of counterfeit goods in China is nothing new. Nearly all major e-commerce platforms including Alibaba’s Taobao and JD, have been called out over the years for selling questionable products. However, the country’s consumers have wised up considerably compared with a decade ago, and product authenticity is now a key concern. This especially rings true when they shop on platforms such as Xiaohongshu where overseas products are offered and they expect to receive higher quality goods.

Credibility gap

Although the app had been accused of peddling fake content before, a new wave of negative coverage spread in March when local media reported details of a shady industrial chain in which an alleged an army of fake reviewers are getting paid to post fraudulent views and to boost fan counts.

Weibo users have engaged in heated discussions on the underhand tactics reported. One post revealed a price list for professional ghost-writers, who generate fabricated contents according to clients’ demands. Others profit from distributing these fake contents, charging different sums based on their number of followers. Users who get paid to spread fake contents have around 10,000 users, according to the posts, and the price for circulating a single article ranges from RMB 500 to RMB 2000.

“There are more and more promotional contents and some of them are blatant exaggeration,” says Wang Jia, a Shanghai-based Xiaohongshu user.

The impact of the user backlash has been compounded by a state crackdown on the platform. The app has been criticized for promoting tobacco ads, potentially putting its youthful users at more risk of targeted advertising. Local authorities found that the site contained 90,000 references to tobacco, some of which referred to specific products or was of purchasing.

Crackdown on hype

Under fire, the company is trying to clampdown on fraud, employing machine learning and humans to detect rule-breaking.

“We have been cracking down on cheating, forming a professional anti-cheating team, and using technical measures to prevent such behaviors,” Xiaohongshu told TechNode, emphasizing their “zero tolerance” on such activity.

Fake content and traffic brushing have long haunted China’s e-commerce industry. The country’s E-commerce Law that came into effect the turn of at the year includes articles aimed at protecting consumers from untrustworthy reviews.

In addition to behind-the-scenes countermeasures, co-founder Miranda Qu made major changes to the app in May. Although she claimed they had been in the works since last year and are not a direct response to the current crisis of trust, they could lead to a transformation in terms of dynamics within the content ecosystem.

KOL Purge

Well on its way to becoming a place for brands and KOLs to cross paths, Xiaohongshu launched a new tool in January to help the two groups find each other more easily. However, the new system brought more rigorous requirements for partners, an effort to reduce malpractices on the platform. The move drew the ire of the KOLs, or to be more specific, KOLs harboring commercial ambitions.

The number of validated KOLs has since fallen from 17,000 to a mere 4,700, according to Elijah Whaley, chief marketing officer at KOL marketing platform Parklu.

Whaley was blunt in expressing his dissatisfaction about the change in standards. “I think Xiaohongshu’s move was anti-creator which is ultimately anti-content consumer.” he told TechNode.

Higher entrance requirements for KOLs could result in an exodus of micro-influencers to smaller and fragmented platforms like Meitu and Keep, he noted. “If creators are penalized instead of rewarded, for making valuable educational and or entertaining content then they will leave and eventually so will their followers.”

“This type of disregard for the value of creators is what led to the collapse of Meipai and the UGC communities on video platforms like Youku, QQ Video, and Baidu video,” he noted.

His concerns were echoed on Weibo by a fashion designer and KOL known as CKJK, who said “KOL content is the cornerstone for Xiaohongshu. As a lifestyle platform, the app has to think clearly about how to drive traffic and how to create a complete circle between content and e-commerce after eliminating KOLs.”

For luxury brands, however, an ecosystem of higher content quality could be a propeller for luxury brands to join. “Xiaohongshu is already cooperating with Louis Vuitton. The move might help to bring more luxury brand partners. Xiaohongshu’s current reviews are very personal. They might cater to the taste of their young user base, but it’s not how luxury brands do their marketing,” according to a digital supervisor at a luxury brand who preferred to remain anonymous.

For platform’s founder has since clarified that although Xiaohongshu would develop in step with bloggers and content creators, it is paramount that the site’s posts are ultimately of value for its users.

Power to the users

In a move to give users more power, the app launched the new XHS Ecosystem Manager feature, which will accredit certain users as managers after passing rule-compliance tests. The ecosystem mangers will have voting rights on whether content violates rules. The mechanism aims to improve the app’s trustworthiness by giving users more power in the community.

Xiaohongshu rolled out a new review system called Xiaohongxin, or Little Red Heart in English, allowing 500,000 experienced users to give ratings to more than 3,000 products. The move was seen as a way to downplay the role of KOLs.

Voting through the system contributed to the creation of a shopping list of recommendations, comprising more than 650 goods covering 93 product categories.

Two users checking skin care products recommended by Xiaohongxin (Image credit: Xiaohongshu)

Domestic media reported that the feature was a crucial step in the app’s battle to regain its position as a trusted fashion review platform. However, co-founder Qu maintains it purely marked a return to Xiaohongxin’s roots.

User-generated content represents 97% of the content on Xiaohongshu, and daily views have hit 3 billion, according to data shared by the company.

“We are fully aware of the fact that KOLs are contributing large amounts of quality content to our community, but we want to be mindful of our core positioning. Data speaks for everything.” Qu said.

The six-year-old company has reached a critical stage of its development and faces obvious opportunities and challenges. It boasts an enviable 250 million-strong userbase – mainly made up of post-90s urban females who are willing to part with their money for high-quality products. Around 85 million of these users are active each day on average, which could provide ample opportunities for commercialization via ads and e-commerce, the firm said in May.

However, convincing all of these users that Xiaohongshu is still the place to go for product recommendations represents the key challenge.

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Maoyan, Tencent move further into entertainment as movie-goers wane https://technode.com/2019/07/10/maoyan-tencent-move-further-into-entertainment-as-movie-goers-wane/ https://technode.com/2019/07/10/maoyan-tencent-move-further-into-entertainment-as-movie-goers-wane/#respond Wed, 10 Jul 2019 08:44:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111088 China's burgeoning entertainment market is attracting attention from tech giants.]]>

China’s movie-ticketing platform Maoyan Entertainment has deepened a tie-up with tech giant Tencent as part of its strategy to become a “comprehensive culture and entertainment platform,” the company announced at a Tuesday press conference in Beijing.

Why it’s important: The partnership highlights Maoyan’s determination to expand beyond its core movie ticketing business. This decision is of strategic importance for the Hong-Kong listed company, especially at a time when China’s box office revenue is experiencing a downturn.

  • Box office revenue slumped 2.7% year on year in the first half of 2019, while the number of movie-goers fell 10% year on year, showed data from Maoyan.
  • Tencent is already a major shareholder in Maoyan, which bought Tencent-backed ticketing competitor Weying in 2017.
  •  The current partnership expands the tie-up beyond capital to business operations. Other Maoyan backers include restaurant review platform Meituan Dianping and Shenzhen-listed film producer Beijing Enlight Media.
  • Maoyan was originally part of Tencent-backed Meituan but was spun off as a separate company in 2016.

“Investing in Maoyan was only the first step for Tencent. With Maoyan’s growth and upgraded strategy, Tencent will cooperate with Maoyan across the entire entertainment industry to better meet consumers’ entertainment demand.”

— Zhan Weibiao, managing director of Tencent Holdings

Details: By entering a new strategic partnership with Tencent, Maoyan gains access to resources from Tencent’s entertainment units such as Tencent Pictures, Tencent Video, Tencent Holdings, and Tencent Music Entertainment Group.

  • Maoyan rolled out at the Tuesday event a refocused strategy to beef up key business areas, including operational efficiency, big data, marketing, and funding.

Context:  In addition to Tencent, Alibaba Group is also poised to expand further into China’s entertainment industry with its line-up of entertainment-related platforms such as video-streaming site Youku, music app Xiami, and film production unit Alibaba Pictures.

  • China is the second-largest entertainment market in the world, according to data from iResearch, which earned RMB 1.7 trillion (around $247 billion) in revenue in 2018. It is forecasted to grow to RMB 2.2 trillion in 2020 and RMB 3.2 trillion in 2022.
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Online job site Boss Zhipin is profitable and ready for IPO, CEO says https://technode.com/2019/07/10/online-job-site-boss-zhipin-is-profitable-and-ready-for-ipo-ceo-says/ https://technode.com/2019/07/10/online-job-site-boss-zhipin-is-profitable-and-ready-for-ipo-ceo-says/#respond Wed, 10 Jul 2019 05:19:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=111014 Demand for more efficiency in the job searching process and younger users are driving online recruitment adoption.]]>

Chinese online job listing site Boss Zhipin, also known as Zhipin.com, is well-positioned to go public after recording profits for more than a year, says founder and CEO Zhao Peng at the company’s 5th anniversary celebration event held on Tuesday in Beijing.

Why it’s important: In China, nearly 200 million people looked for jobs online in 2018, up 15.0% from a year earlier, according to a report from research institute iiMedia Research.

  • Of the total, around 80% of job seekers prefer to use multiple online recruitment platforms to broaden the recruitment channels, according to the report.
  • Factors including industry reforms, technology upgrades requiring more efficient hiring processes, policy support, and the rise of users born post-1990s have driven the adoption of online job recruitment.

“China’s 200 million white-collar workers change their jobs every 24 months and each job change takes two months. The country’s 400 million blue-collar workers change their jobs every six months and it takes them an average of two weeks to find a new job. If we can increase the matching efficiency by 20%, the time and manpower saved are equivalent to a whole year of work hours for 10 million people.”

Zhao Peng, Boss Zhiping CEO

Details: Zhao disclosed that Boss Zhipin had broken even in late 2017 and began earning a modest profit in 2018 with annual revenue for the year in the billions of RMB. The company said the platform had 63.7 million registered users as of September.

  • Data from iiMedia shows more than 56.7% of Boss Zhipin’s users are “green-hand,” or inexperienced, workers under the age of 24. The app has slightly more male users (51.63%) than female (48.37%).
  • It is ranked China’s third-largest recruitment platform with 3.71 million monthly active users in January this year, following 51job with 10. 61 million and Zhaopin.com’s 6.85 million, iiMedia report shows.
  • A company spokeswoman declined to offer details on a timeline for its initial public offering when contacted by TechNode on Wednesday.

Context: A relative latecomer to China’s online recruitment market, the five-year-old Boss Zhiping is a new upstart in the vertical which uses artificial intelligence and data analysis technologies, while rivals 51job and Zhaopin are known as more traditional job search platforms.

  • The company was criticized in 2017 for failing to screen job positions posted by a pyramid scammer under the guise of a regular company, which reportedly lead to the death of a Li Wenxing, a 21-year-old university graduate.

Updated to include a company spokeswoman’s response about a potential IPO.

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Luckin joins Starbucks in blurring boundaries between coffee and tea https://technode.com/2019/07/09/luckin-joins-starbucks-in-blurring-boundaries-between-coffee-and-tea/ https://technode.com/2019/07/09/luckin-joins-starbucks-in-blurring-boundaries-between-coffee-and-tea/#respond Tue, 09 Jul 2019 08:06:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110936 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksDelivery giants Meituan and Ele.me stand to benefit from the coffee giants' latest battle]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks
Yang Fei, co-founder and CMO of Luckin (Image credit: Luckin)

Luckin Coffee has taken the wraps off a new tea drink brand dubbed Xiaolu Tea, meaning “Fawn Tea” in Chinese, joining Starbucks in expanding into country’s already crowded bubble tea market.

The company will gradually roll out a range of tea-based beverages, including cheese tea and more traditional styles across its 3,000 stores spanning 40 cities from Thursday, Luckin said at a press conference on Monday in Beijing.

Co-founder and Senior Vice President Guo Jinyi pointed out that coffee and tea drinks are the two most popular types of drinks among China’s young office worker segment and the move represents “a sound strategy for Luckin.”

As always, the Xiamen-based coffee upstart plans to give out generous freebies and discounts to attract quick adopters for the brand. They can enjoy a “buy 10 get 10 free” promtion for the first two weeks following the launch, disclosed Yang Fei, co-founder and chief marketing officer.

It’s worth noting that Yang’s Monday speech marked a rare public appearance for the controversial marketing figure who has been absent from the company’s corporate filings and press conferences after coming under scrutiny early this year over his previous imprisonment.

Obviously, Luckin’s tea ambitions have been brewing for months since it already rolled out four fruity summer drinks, also named “Fawn Tea” in April.

“We’ve entered summer and a piping hot coffee isn’t necessarily what consumers are looking for,” Michael Norris, research and strategy manager at AgencyChina, told TechNode

Norris points out that this is part of Luckin’s efforts to diversify consumption occasions by offering juices and tea-based beverages. “As early as its IPO filings, a chunk of Luckin’s revenue came from outside of selling coffee. If you look closely at where Luckin is spending its ad dollars and giving discounts, it’s trying to drive consumers towards ordering cool drinks and light meals, creating further revenue diversification and more deeply embedding itself in white-collar professionals’ consumption habits,” he added.

Similarly, Luckin’s rival Starbucks is also expanding to tea drinks in search of new growth points. In mid-April, Starbucks launched eight such drinks, including the triple circus and peach shrub, ahead of the summer season.

Starbucks’ summer drinks line-up (Image credit: Starbucks)

The coffee chains’ expansion comes after local milk tea brands HeyTea and Nayuki brought out coffee drinks in March.

Although more and more Chinese consumers are drinking coffee, tea remains popular. However, younger generations crave a variety of convenient yet trendy options compared with the oolong and traditional types enjoyed by the generations before them.

Modern Tearooms

Up-and-coming local tea brands like HeyTea have drummed up a lot of interest from younger consumer over the past two years. The on-going milk tea craze is driven by two elements: the added values of premium spaces, learned from foreign coffee chains like Starbucks, as well as the improved flavors.

By offering “tea room” spaces usually found at Starbucks, the new breed of tea shop operators offer a comfortable space usually in premium locations near shopping centers or office buildings where customers can relax. Branded in line with culture prevalent among China’s wenyi qingnian, often defined as China’s hipsters, local tea startups are now tapping white-collar workers or middle-income consumers seeking novel experiences. Flavors are improved by introducing varied ingredients including fresh fruits, cereals, and cheese.

HeyTea also plans to incorporate social media aspects into its WeChat-based ordering platform to attract more younger consumers, CTO Chen Peilin disclosed in May.

China’s tea drink market was worth RMB 90 billion (around $13 billion) in 2018, according to data from iMedia Research. The country had over 450,000 fresh produce beverage locations as of last year.

Despite the opportunities, industry watchers are concerned that the move might dilute the pair’s branding somewhat. “Starbucks sells an experience; the brand and focused menu with few items matters,” private investor ZQ Ong told TechNode. “Launching new and seasonal items just to keep up probably harms the brand if taken to excess,” he added.

Consumers also expressed their concerns over the flavors. One Weibo user named Toyomixa says she still prefers fruit tea drinks from HeyTea and Nayuki after testing Luckin’s new range. “Luckin’s fruit-taste drink is brewed out instead of being made fresh from fruit, there’s no pulp in it.” Others would choose Luckin because there are more outlets, more discounts and shorter queues.

Despite the implications for the beverage market, Ong believes food delivery giants like Meituan and Alibaba’s Ele.me will be the “biggest winner” from the changes. “Beverage deliveries, including milk tea, are fairly high volume and frequency. This helps in increasing order density per deliveryman. This goes a long way in improving margins for Meituan and Ele.me and lowering the unit cost for new retail deliveries (groceries/pharma) for Alibaba, he added.

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Briefing: Shanghai road accidents increase along with delivery demand https://technode.com/2019/07/08/shanghai-delivery-couriers-facing-higher-road-safety-risks/ https://technode.com/2019/07/08/shanghai-delivery-couriers-facing-higher-road-safety-risks/#respond Mon, 08 Jul 2019 08:51:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110783 food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courierCouriers working for food delivery companies are responsible for more than 80% of these accidents.]]> food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courier

上半年上海快递、外卖行业交通事故325起 饿了么占34.2% – Sina Finance

What happened: Shanghai authorities announced on Saturday that there has been total of 325 traffic accidents involving parcel and food delivery drivers in the first half of 2019 resulting in five deaths and 324 injured. Couriers working for food delivery companies like Ele.me, Meituan, grocery chain Freshippo, and SF Express are responsible for more than 80% of these accidents, according to data released by the Shanghai police. The number of accidents has increased significantly from 117 for all of 2017.

Why it’s important: China’s home delivery boom has triggered a surge in road accidents as deliverymen rush to meet time limits. Major platforms like Ele.me and Meituan usually promise consumers 30-minute delivery times. On-time deliveries and good customer reviews translate into higher pay for each order. The road safety of delivery drivers, most of whom ride electric scooters, attracted the attention of Shanghai’s municipal authorities beginning in 2017 when the country’s internet giants were warned to obey the traffic laws.

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Briefing: WeChat Pay adds offline mobile account top-ups https://technode.com/2019/07/08/briefing-wechat-pay-adds-offline-mobile-account-top-ups/ https://technode.com/2019/07/08/briefing-wechat-pay-adds-offline-mobile-account-top-ups/#respond Mon, 08 Jul 2019 05:37:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110720 Staying connected online is becoming essential in China with 4G and soon 5G service.]]>

停机断网也能充话费 微信:预计年底上线超20家运营商 – Ifeng

What happened: Tencent-backed WeChat Pay has partnered with China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom, the three major telecom carriers in China for a service that allows subscribers to top up mobile phone accounts through WeChat Pay even when service is cut off and wifi is unavailable. Multiple regional operators under the three telecom carriers in southern Guangdong, central Hunan, and western Qinghai Provinces are currently offering the service, which spans more than 100 towns and cities. The number of operators providing the service is expected to exceed 20, covering hundreds of millions of users.

Why it’s important: Staying connected online is becoming essential in China with 4G and soon 5G service. However, an overdue phone bill means that the telecom operators will cut off service completely, leaving users unable to top up their accounts. The solution may prove especially significant for rural dwellers, where mobile is the primary means of internet access.

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Briefing: JD launches services for enterprises seeking help with trash https://technode.com/2019/07/05/jd-rolls-out-custom-procurement-solutions-for-enterprise-waste-sorting/ https://technode.com/2019/07/05/jd-rolls-out-custom-procurement-solutions-for-enterprise-waste-sorting/#respond Fri, 05 Jul 2019 03:53:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110503 The new trash-sorting rules present opportunities for Chinese tech companies.]]>

京东为企业市场垃圾分类提供定制化服务 – Sina Tech

What happened: JD Business, an arm of the retail giant which provides enterprise procurement services, is rolling out customized solutions for companies of all sizes in adapting to the trash-sorting program, newly mandatory in Shanghai as of July 1. The enterprise procurement channel offers trash-sorting supplies including garbage bins and bags, as well as custom services such as labels or tags to assist with trash sorting.

Why it’s important: The new trash-sorting rules present opportunities for Chinese tech companies. The waste management program has inspired services from connecting consumers with trash-sorting facilities to creating fun ways to spread garbage-sorting know-how. Households and companies across the municipality are scrambling to comply with the new policies, and businesses face higher recycling standards and stricter punishments. Individuals who flout garbage sorting rules can be fined up to RMB 200 (around $29), while businesses face fines of up to RMB 50,000 (around $7,200). First launched in Shanghai, the government is expanding the recycling system to 46 key cities before 2020.

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Briefing: Youku inks deal with Youtube, Amazon for Chinese detective series https://technode.com/2019/07/04/youtube-amazon-ink-deal-with-youku-for-chinese-language-detective-series/ https://technode.com/2019/07/04/youtube-amazon-ink-deal-with-youku-for-chinese-language-detective-series/#respond Thu, 04 Jul 2019 04:12:20 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110357 The company is setting its sights on global audiences.]]>

Youtube, Amazon to offer Youku’s “longest Day” Series – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba’s video-streaming platform Youku’s detective thriller series “The Longest Day in Chang’an” will be available overseas via Youtube, Amazon Prime and Rakuten Viki. First debuting on Youku on June 27, the series is available in Chinese, English, and Vietnamese. It will go live in Singapore, Japan, Malaysia, Vietnam, and Brunei on partnering streaming platforms and TV networks throughout the month. Youtube, Amazon, and Rakuten Viki will also offer the program to their paid-subscriber base in the US, Canada, and South America. One could also get views based on payment basis to gain that initial traction.

Why it’s important: Youku has been producing its own high-quality, original content in an effort to differentiate and attract subscribers. The company is setting its sights on global audiences. Youku has distributed more than 50 original productions overseas over the past two years, such as the romantic comedy, “I Hear You,” and detective series “Day and Night,” according to the company. The company has tapped resources across Alibaba’s ecosystem to promote the series, including full-screen advertisements on e-commerce platform Taobao.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s Freshippo opens breakfast service Pick’n Go in Shanghai https://technode.com/2019/07/03/alibabas-freshippo-opens-breakfast-pickup-service-pickn-go-in-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2019/07/03/alibabas-freshippo-opens-breakfast-pickup-service-pickn-go-in-shanghai/#respond Wed, 03 Jul 2019 07:58:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110245 Freshippo's launch of Pick'n Go diversifies its operation by targeting the breakfast market.]]>

盒马鲜生全新业态Pick’n Go便利店全国首店亮相上海 – Sohu Tech

What happened: Alibaba’s grocery chain Freshippo, known as Hema, opened on Monday a breakfast pick-up store in central Shanghai’s Huangpu District. Pick’n Go offers more than 20 breakfast items including pancakes, bread, pizza, steamed buns, soybean milk, and coffee. Orders can be placed via Freshippo app for pick-up from a self-service locker to avoid morning rush hour lines. The ingredients for all items are sourced from Freshippo’s supply chain.

Why it’s important: Alibaba has high hopes for Freshippo, which is considered as a successful new retail business model with 135 outlets in China. The tech giant’s recent restructuring placed the grocery business as a standalone unit. There are five store footprints including 4,000 square meter (around 43,000 square feet) full-service stores, smaller Fast & Fresh stores for business districts, Freshippo Wet Markets, Freshippo Mini markets, and delivery-only Freshippo Xiaozhan. The launch of Pick’n Go diversifies Freshippo’s operations by targeting the breakfast market in the morning and offering snacks throughout the day.

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Briefing: Tmall updates flagship store format to support growth initiatives https://technode.com/2019/07/03/tmall-upgrades-flagship-store-looks-to-offer-custom-shopping-experience/ https://technode.com/2019/07/03/tmall-upgrades-flagship-store-looks-to-offer-custom-shopping-experience/#respond Wed, 03 Jul 2019 06:59:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110224 e-commerce cross-border Tmall GlobalTmall's improved store interface should help support ambitious growth plans set out by its president.]]> e-commerce cross-border Tmall Global

Tmall ups shopping experience with new flagship stores – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba’s business-to-customer market place Tmall will introduce a new format for flagship stores on the platform. Dubbed Flagship Store 2.0, the updated format places likely purchases, recommendations on the best discounts, and custom content offerings in a more prominent way. The company plans to launch the reformatted look ahead of the Singles’ Day shopping festival on November 11 but offered no further specifics.

Why it’s important: The upgraded flagship store interface is expected to improve user experience in order to drive growth in support of Tmall President Jiang Fan’s ambitious goals. Jiang has stated plans to double Tmall’s transaction volume over the next three years. Since its launch, Tmall has grown quickly on the back of growing consumer demand for authentic goods. Its gross merchandise volume (GMV) for physical goods accelerated to 33% year over year in the quarter ended March 31, 2019, from 29% in the previous quarter.

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Briefing: Baidu appoints tech investor to board, AI expert Lu Qi steps down https://technode.com/2019/07/03/baidu-appoints-new-board-director-as-ai-expert-lu-qi-leaves/ https://technode.com/2019/07/03/baidu-appoints-new-board-director-as-ai-expert-lu-qi-leaves/#respond Wed, 03 Jul 2019 03:38:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110158 Over the past two years, Baidu has lost key AI executives such as Andrew Ng, Zhang Tong, and Adam Coates.]]>

百度委任符绩勋出任公司董事 陆奇将离任 – Tencent Tech

What happened: Baidu announced changes to its board composition late Tuesday, appointing Jixun Foo as a director following the departure of former COO Lu Qi. Foo has served as managing partner at GGV Capital since 2006 and currently serves on the boards of a number of private companies, including XPeng Motors, Hello, Boss Zhipin, Zuiyou, and Tujia. Separately, the company disclosed that the average daily active users for Baidu App, or the number of unique mobile devices that have accessed Baidu App at least once a day, reached 188 million in June 2019, up from 148 million in the same period of last year.

Why it’s important: Baidu’s appointment of Foo, an investor with experience in travel, transportation, social media, e-commerce, and enterprise services sectors, marks the final departure of AI expert Lu from the Chinese search engine. Lu resigned as chief operating officer of the company in May last year and had been serving as a board director since then. In August 2018, Y Combinator announced Lu had joined its ranks as the founding chief executive officer of YC China and the head of YC Research. Over the past two years, Baidu has lost key AI executives such as Andrew Ng, Zhang Tong, and Adam Coates.

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Briefing: Xiaomi’s logistics trademark hints at potential new business unit https://technode.com/2019/07/02/xiaomis-trademarked-logistics-unit/ https://technode.com/2019/07/02/xiaomis-trademarked-logistics-unit/#respond Tue, 02 Jul 2019 03:50:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=110041 xiaomi airstar virtual bank iot JV hong kongXiaomi’s latest move is widely seen as an effort to expand into logistics.]]> xiaomi airstar virtual bank iot JV hong kong

小米成功注册“小米快递”商标,要自建物流? – Beijing news

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has registered a new trademark for “Xiaomi Logistics” under which the company will offer courier and express delivery services in China, according to the Trademark Office of China’s National Intellectual Property Administration. The trademark was approved on June 21 and spans ten years to June 20, 2029. Xiaomi responded to local media that the move was only for brand protection purposes.

Why it’s important: Xiaomi’s move to register a logistics trademark is widely seen as an effort to expand into logistics. Courier service is an important component for Xiaomi, a brand that initially sold online only. The company has been partnering with third-party couriers services like SF Express and YTO Express for delivery. In addition to the trademark, Xiaomi still has to obtain an operating license from the State Post Bureau if it wants to run an in-house logistics business, Zhao Xiaomin, a logistics expert, told Beijing News.

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Briefing: Suning, Japanese retail giant Rakuten ink deal on cross-border sales https://technode.com/2019/07/01/suning-global-reaches-partnership-with-rakuten/ https://technode.com/2019/07/01/suning-global-reaches-partnership-with-rakuten/#respond Mon, 01 Jul 2019 09:03:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109978 Suning.com, a Chinese omnichannel retailer backed by Alibaba, is speeding up its foray into the cross-border e-commerce industry.]]>

苏宁国际与日本电商乐天达成战略合作 – Sina Tech

What happened: Suning Global, the cross-border e-commerce unit of Chinese retailer Suning.com, has partered with Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten to sell Japanese goods on its self-operated platform. Under the deal, Rakuten will set up a flagship store on Suning Global to peddle Japanese products to consumers. The two parties are also planning to expand their cooperation to offline businesses such as supermarkets and convenience stores.

Why it’s important: Japanese products are popular with Chinese consumers, particularly categories like cosmetics and household goods. According to data from the Japanese government, Japan to China e-commerce will grow around 20% annually until 2021. Suning.com, a Chinese omnichannel retailer backed by Alibaba, has announced a series of recent news, including the acquisition of an 80% stake in China operations of French retailer Carrefour.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s e-auction unit sales exceeded RMB 500 billion in 2018 https://technode.com/2019/07/01/alibabas-e-auction-turnover-2018/ https://technode.com/2019/07/01/alibabas-e-auction-turnover-2018/#respond Mon, 01 Jul 2019 04:43:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109887 E-commerce players and specialized verticals such as used car platforms are operating their own auction platforms.]]>

布局线下奢侈品拍卖 阿里拍卖2018年交易额超5000亿 – Sina Finance

What happened: Alibaba’s e-auction sales turnover exceeded RMB 500 billion ($73 billion) in 2018, up from RMB 200 billion in 2017 and RMB 100 billion in 2016, according to the company. Assets was the most popular category on the online platform, representing more 90% of the turnover, with luxury products such as handbags and watches coming in second. The e-auction unit is negotiating a partnership with Furui Tongyuan, a used luxury product auction house, to open offline outlets.

Why it’s important: Online auctions for assets and jewelry and gems are taking off in China as the newly wealthy look for diverse investment ideas. In addition to traditional auction houses which operate online auctions on their websites, major e-commerce players such as Alibaba, JD, and Suning are operating their own online auction businesses. Auction platforms for specific vertical industries like artwork and second-hand cars are also flourishing. Goods selling on online auctions vary from Boeing jets to yachts, stakes in listed companies, and bad debts.

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Briefing: Didi reportedly holds fleet JV talks with Nissan and Dongfeng https://technode.com/2019/06/28/briefing-didi-nissan-dongfeng-jv/ https://technode.com/2019/06/28/briefing-didi-nissan-dongfeng-jv/#respond Fri, 28 Jun 2019 07:06:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109773 The lines between mobility tech and carmaking are blurring as leading players consider joining forces ]]>

Nissan, Dongfeng in talks to form fleet-management venture with Didi – sources-Reuters

What happened: Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is in talks with carmaker Nissan and its Chinese partner Dongfeng to form a joint venture for managing ride-hailing and car-sharing, Reuters cited people familiar with the matter as saying. The companies are reportedly exploring joint design and manufacture of specially tailored vehicles, both gas and electric, for Didi’s ride-hailing business. Nissan‘s China unit would help Didi manage its fleets across multiple cities, while Dongfeng Group would supply vehicles.

Why it’s important: The lines between mobility tech giants and automakers are blurring. The growing popularity of ride-hailing in China is showing the early signs of reducing private car ownership. To tap the trend, the Beijing-based firm could expand to auto design and manufacturing through joining hands with carmakers. Tailored models would likely feature smaller engines and wheels given their typically lower average speeds. Didi has formed broad alliances with 31 automakers and parts suppliers last year. Auto players are also tapping ride-hailing as part of rebranding efforts. Geely, SAIC, Dongfeng, Chang’an, FAW, Volkswagen China, and Mercedez Benz have made forays into car-sharing or ride-hailing so far.

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Briefing: Nonprofit buys abandoned rental bikes for school kids in Myanmar https://technode.com/2019/06/28/nonprofit-brings-disused-rental-bikes-to-mynmar-kids/ https://technode.com/2019/06/28/nonprofit-brings-disused-rental-bikes-to-mynmar-kids/#respond Fri, 28 Jun 2019 04:28:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109716 mobike ofo bike-rental chinaDiscarded bikes are languishing after the rental-bike boom went bust due to high retrieval costs.]]> mobike ofo bike-rental china

Myanmar entrepreneur buys unused bicycles for poor children – Bangkok Post

What happened: Lesswalk, a nonprofit initiative launched by Myanmar-based tech entrepreneur Mike Than Tun Win, has bought 10,000 unused rental bikes left over from shuttered bike rental businesses including Obike, Ofo, and Mobike from Singapore and Malaysia. Lesswalk donates the bikes to school kids in Myanmar, many of whom lack transportation to and from school. Sponsors of the initiative paid for around half of the estimated $400,000 needed to buy, ship, and refurbish the bikes. Lesswalk covered the balance of the cost.

Why it’s important: As China’s bike rental boom cools, vast piles of abandoned bikes have become a familiar sight in many big cities in China and overseas. Bike rental operators, once hailed as environment-friendly businesses, face increasing criticism for wastefulness. The discarded bikes, some of which are unused, have been languishing due to high retrieval costs. Many bike rental firms are too cash strapped to solve the issue themselves.

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WeChat bolsters offering for B2B mini-program providers https://technode.com/2019/06/27/wechat-mini-program-b2b/ https://technode.com/2019/06/27/wechat-mini-program-b2b/#respond Thu, 27 Jun 2019 10:08:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109631 Tencent looks to expand beyond customer-facing services with new program to support mini-app providers.]]>

Tencent today unveiled a raft of new initiatives for third-party vendors of WeChat mini-programs to help more businesses establish an online presence on the Chinese lifestyle platform.

The company will accelerate approvals for mini-programs going forward as part of the plan, Tencent announced at the WeChat Open Course event in Shanghai. The firm will also partner with third-party service providers of mini-apps to hold training courses centered on the public transportation, catering and fashion sectors.

“WeChat will help service providers to upgrade from technical supporters to become comprehensive solution providers,” WeChat executive Kero Zheng told TechNode. “Customization, specialization, and collaboration are going to be the label of professional services providers in the future,” he added.

First launched in 2017 as stripped-down versions of apps that run within WeChat, mini-programs have become a major source of traffic for many services in China with over 2.3 million such apps serving more than 681 million active users per month, according to QuestMobile data.

WeChat’s maturing mini-program ecosystem is increasingly attracting attention from third-party companies providing services including mini-program development, logistics, payments, customer relationship management and digital marketing.

The number of WeChat mini-program service providers has jumped to 8,200 from 5,000 over the past year, according to data released at the event. Mini-apps provided by third-party firms account for almost one-third of the platform’s 630,000 mini-apps added this year. Local services, catering and tools are three of the most popular fields among more than 150 industries covered by such vendors.

On top of that, the daily volume of payments made via WeChat mini-programs has more than tripled over the past year, Tencent said.

Enterprise tech is picking up pace on platforms run by China’s tech giants. Tencent’s new programe is part of the Shenzhen-based company’s efforts to expand beyond custumer-facing services to the B2B business. Rival Alibaba has taken similar steps over the past year to support small and medium-sized enterprises.

WeChat may be the most prominent platform for mini-programs but it is far from being the only one. Monthly active users on such apps on WeChat, Alibaba’s Alipay, and Baidu are in excess of 1 billion, according to QuestMobile.

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Briefing: China’s new logistics rules ban data withholding https://technode.com/2019/06/27/china-rules-logistics-data-war/ https://technode.com/2019/06/27/china-rules-logistics-data-war/#respond Thu, 27 Jun 2019 04:43:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109575 singles day logistics alibabaCompetition between logistics units backed by e-commerce platforms and pure play couriers is intensifying and data is a key area of conflict.]]> singles day logistics alibaba

电商与快递数据共享有新规 顺丰菜鸟互怼案例难再现 – 21jingji

What happened: China’s State Post Bureau and Ministry of Commerce jointly issued on Wednesday a set of new rules on data management to encourage data sharing between e-commerce platforms and logistics service providers. The rules bar companies from blocking competitor data, thus preventing users from freely choosing services. The rules also reinforce real-name registration for e-commerce orders, a requirement which came into effect last year.

Why it’s important: Competition between logistics units backed by e-commerce platforms and pure play couriers is intensifying and data is a key area of conflict. A data war between courier giant SF Express and Alibaba Group-backed Cainiao Smart Logistics Network erupted in June 2017 after they each cut the other out from accessing delivery data and began forcing partners to choose sides. The current rule aims to prevent such conflict from happening again.

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Starbucks, Freshippo ‘Star Kitchen’ tie-up opens in Beijing as delivery catches on https://technode.com/2019/06/26/starbucks-freshippo-star-kitchen-tie-up-opens-in-beijing-as-delivery-catches-on/ https://technode.com/2019/06/26/starbucks-freshippo-star-kitchen-tie-up-opens-in-beijing-as-delivery-catches-on/#respond Wed, 26 Jun 2019 07:14:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109381 Freshippo's logistical capabilities complement Starbucks' core business to attract consumers who are increasingly turning to delivery.]]>

Starbucks and Alibaba’s tech-powered grocery chain Freshippo are expanding a delivery kitchen concept to the capital city of Beijing as food delivery service grows in importance in one of the world’s largest consumer markets.

As part of the overall Starbucks-Alibaba collaboration announced in August, the “Star Kitchen” is a dedicated delivery kitchen in Hema stores. Orders can be placed via Alibaba’s Freshippo app for delivery or self-pickup.

A kitchen created especially for the fulfillment of delivery orders speeds up delivery times. Alibaba’s food delivery unit Ele.me handles the deliveries, which can reach customers in 30 minutes.

The Beijing expansion follows two “Star Kitchen” openings in Shanghai and Hangzhou in October. The expansion timetable for the partnership is still unclear. Alibaba and Starbucks declined to comment when reached by TechNode on Wednesday.

Freshippo’s fulfillment and delivery capabilities complement Starbucks’ core competence: in-store experiences featuring comfortable spaces with plenty of seating. It offers quick delivery of drinks for consumers that are increasingly turning to delivery orders for staple items such as fresh grocery. The move may prove especially critical at a time when Starbucks’ main rival in China, Luckin Coffee, shifts to an asset-light strategy focused on pick-up order stores.

Pickup stores account for 91% of Luckin Coffee’s total store count. Such stores are typically smaller and have limited seating, so rent and fit-out costs are lower.

Freshippo, which was just relegated to a standalone business unit in an Alibaba reorganization last week, operates a network of 135 self-operated stores in China, primarily located in tier-one and tier-two cities.

“Star Kitchens” are equipped with Starbucks self-serve kiosks where customers can place orders through the Freshippo app and pick up drinks within 15 minutes. Similarly, Luckin is reportedly experimenting with a self-service coffee machine project to fuel its offline expansion.

Facing intensifying competition from China rival Luckin, Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson said in a recent interview with Bloomberg that the company is well-positioned for long-term growth in China, its second-largest and fastest-growing market.

Luckin is seeking partnerships with on-demand delivery platforms such as Alibaba’s Ele.me and Tencent-backed Meituan to expand its reach.

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Briefing: Baidu offers more news search options after bias accusation https://technode.com/2019/06/25/baidu-allows-users-select-content-source-after-bias-accusation/ https://technode.com/2019/06/25/baidu-allows-users-select-content-source-after-bias-accusation/#respond Tue, 25 Jun 2019 06:02:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109273 The Chinese search giant has been facing mounting credibility problems in recent years.]]>

Baidu Offers More News Search Options After Journalist Accuses It of Bias – Caixin Global

What happened: China’s biggest search engine Baidu updated its news search services on Monday, offering users more options in selecting sources for content they want to browse. The change allows users to choose either from all media outlets or from Baidu’s Baijiahao. Launched in September 2016, Baijiahao is a news aggregation platform which publishes content from other sites.

Why it’s important: Baidu’s adjustment is widely translated as a response to a January censure involving former journalist Fang Kechen, who accused Baidu of promoting its own results and low-quality articles on Baijiahao over news from other channels. “Baidu no longer plans on being a good search engine. It only wants to be a marketing platform,” Fang wrote in an article. Baidu responded that Baijiahao articles account for less than 10% of its total search results, but promised to improve the service. The Chinese search giant has been facing mounting credibility problems in recent years, especially after a scandal involving a 21-year-old cancer patient who died after unsuccessful treatments at a hospital which had been ranked at the top of Baidu’s search results.

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Briefing: JD Logistics raises $218 million to invest in startups https://technode.com/2019/06/25/jd-logistics-fund/ https://technode.com/2019/06/25/jd-logistics-fund/#respond Tue, 25 Jun 2019 03:23:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109237 JDChinese tech giants commonly use investment to expand their business empires.]]> JD

Logistics unit of JD raises 1.5 billion yuan investment fund – The Guardian

What happened: JD Logistics, the logistics arm of Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com, announced Monday it had raised $218 million in a RMB-dominated industrial fund. JD Logistics and parent company JD.com will be limited partners of the fund with participation from several listed companies, government-led funds, reputable Fund of Funds, and asset management platforms, according to the company. It said that it will focus on investment in early and growth-stage startups in the supply chain, asset management, finance, technology, and intelligent manufacturing sectors.

Why it’s important: Logistics is a core business initiative for JD.com, but its logistics unit is still loss-making. The new fund will complement JD.com’s other fund established in February, which is focused on warehousing facilities. JD.com and GIC, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, invested RMB 4.8 billion in the warehouse fund. Chinese tech giants commonly use investment to expand their business empires. Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, or BAT as they are commonly referred to, are all assiduous dealmakers. More than half of China’s unicorns are either founded or invested by BAT, and more than 90% of Chinese companies with a market cap of $5 billion or more are linked to at least one company in the trio, according to data from investment information site Ctoutiao.

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Suning.com acquires 80% stake in Carrefour China https://technode.com/2019/06/24/suning-com-acquires-80-stake-in-carrefour-china/ https://technode.com/2019/06/24/suning-com-acquires-80-stake-in-carrefour-china/#respond Mon, 24 Jun 2019 10:20:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109210 Scale and differing corporate cultures and business model may prove obstacles for Suning to integrate Carrefour China, says one expert.]]>

Chinese retailer Suning.com has signed an agreement with Carrefour Group to buy an 80% equity interest in the French retailer’s China business as a slew of international retailers adjust their strategies in the country.

Suning will pay RMB 4.8 billion (around $699 million) for the deal which values Carrefour China at RMB 6.0 billion, according to a company statement released on Sunday. Carrefour Group will retain a 20% stake in the business and two seats out of seven on Carrefour China’s supervisory board. The transaction is pending approval from the Chinese regulators and is expected to close by the end of this year, the statement said.

As a major appliance seller and e-commerce platform, Suning has been pushing its offline expansion to various segments including convenience stores, supermarkets, and department stores. The omnichannel retailer, which operates a network containing upwards of 8,881 stores in more than 700 cities, aims for 15,000 offline stores this year.

The current acquisition helps the company diversify into supermarkets while tapping to new areas like consumer goods and fresh produce. The move follows Suning’s February acquisition of 37 Wanda department stores from Chinese conglomerate Wanda Group.

However, integrating Carrefour China, which operates 210 hypermarkets and 24 convenience stores, into Suning’s existing businesses could pose a challenge due to both the massive size and scale of the business, and the fact that it is still loss-making, Zhuang Shuai, founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian, told TechNode.

Carrefour China’s revenue declined 7.67% year-on-year to RMB 29.96 billion in 2018. Its net loss is RMB 578 million, down from RMB 1.09 billion 2017.

Zhuang added that differing company cultures and operating models may make the integration more difficult.

Facing rising competition from domestic pure play retailers and internet giants’ offline expansion, Carrefour is the latest entry to a lengthening list of Western retailers that are retreating from the Chinese market. Tesco and Walmart have sold stakes to domestic partners, and German wholesaler Metro is reportedly looking to sell its China unit.

Carrefour China has been seeking to partner with Tencent to integrate WeChat mini-programs and scan-and-pay services in an effort to lift profits and sales. In January 2018, it has entered a preliminary talk with Tencent and Yonghui, a Tencent-backed retailer specializing in fresh food and small stores, for a minority stake in the China operation.

Following Suning’s acquisition, Yonghui announced the termination of the deal on Monday. Tencent declined to comment on the matter, but The New York Times reported that Carrefour China’s strategic business partnership with Tencent remains in place.

Zhuang said that the challenges of size and profitability were likely obstacles that barred Tencent and Yonghui from moving ahead with the deal. The acquisition from Suning, an Alibaba-backed company, will bring Carrefour closer to Alibaba’s ecosystem, he added.

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What this year’s 618 shopping craze says about China’s cutthroat e-commerce sector https://technode.com/2019/06/24/what-this-years-618-shopping-craze-says-about-chinas-cutthroat-e-commerce-sector/ https://technode.com/2019/06/24/what-this-years-618-shopping-craze-says-about-chinas-cutthroat-e-commerce-sector/#respond Mon, 24 Jun 2019 08:05:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109039 Consumption in China’s lower-tier regions, including third, fourth, and fifth-tier cities, is quickly catching up with that in Beijing and Shanghai.]]>

This year’s mid-year shopping festival, commonly known as “618” in China, came to a close on Tuesday. Since the launch of the event in 2010, Chinese e-commerce companies have raked in billions of Chinese yuan during the buying frenzy.

For e-commerce players, 618, which ran from June 1 through June 18,  isn’t only about winning Chinese consumers’ hearts and money. Perhaps more importantly, platforms aim to spot the latest trends that could be valuable in molding their strategies in the second half of the year. The high-profile e-commerce event, and others like it, are showdown moments for Chinese companies and those at the helm.

But this year was different: It was the first time the next generation of young leaders shaping China’s largest e-commerce platforms went head-to head-during a major online shopping event. 

JD’s efforts were led by Xu Lei, the rumored creator of the 618 festival who became the new chief executive of JD Retail just months before CEO Richard Liu’s arrest in the US last year. At the same time, 34-year-old Jiang Fan—who, ahead of Jack Ma’s expected departure in September, has headed Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao since March—led the e-commerce giant in the shopping festival. 

Meanwhile, Huang Zheng, founder and CEO of social e-commerce firm Pinduoduo, became the leader of a publicly listed company last July when Pinduoduo debuted in the US.

Statistics from this year’s 618 shopping festival highlight some changes that might shape future strategies for the industry, with China’s hinterlands driving consumption while e-commerce upstarts accused more establish players of “unfair competition.” 

Emerging growth in lower-tier cities

Consumption in China’s lower-tier regions, including third, fourth, and fifth-tier cities, is quickly catching up with that in Beijing and Shanghai. The trend points to a changing dynamic in the country’s gargantuan e-commerce sector, in which the country’s interior, and particularly the youth that live there, drive consumption.

While these mostly inland provinces are home to more than 600 million mobile internet users, e-commerce penetration is below the national average. E-commerce platforms see these areas as untapped markets as consumers have more access to disposable income and demand for high-quality goods is increasing.

The growing demand from lower-tier cities was evident across platforms during the 18-day event. Alibaba’s gross merchandise volume (GMV) from third- to fifth-tier cities grew by 100% year-on-year during the period. Beitun and Tumxuk, county-level and prefectural-level cities from China’s northwestern Xinjiang autonomous region, topped the of the 10 fastest growing areas during Alibaba’s 618 festival this year. Nonetheless, GMV in cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzen was still unmatched by other areas.

Similarly, transaction volume growth was twice as high in lower-tier cities than the overall growth of transaction volumes on JD.com. Meanwhile, sales of 3C products, which include computers, communication devices, and consumer electronics, in lower-tier cities overtook those in their first- and second-tier counterparts. More than 70% of Pinduoduo’s physical goods during 618 were sold in lower-tier regions.

Behind the spike in sales is an expanding e-commerce userbase from lower-tier cities. Alibaba recorded a 100% year-on-year jump in the number of users from lower-tier regions on its platforms during the festival. Furthermore, the e-commerce giant recorded 654 million annual active consumers for the fiscal year ending March 2019, representing an annual increase of 102 million users. More than 70% of these were from lower-tier regions and below, the company has said.

These consumers are also “trading up,” showing greater interest in luxury brands and shopping experiences. According to Tmall, half of the newly launched products on the platform during the event were purchased by customers outside first- and second-tier cities.

“One of the interesting trends we’ve seen is premiumization–Chinese consumers’ preference for premium products, Carol Fung, president of JD’s fast-moving consumer goods unit, told TechNode. “This is particularly true in the lower-tier cities, where Chinese consumers are trading up for higher quality and valued goods.”

As a result, e-commerce platforms are adjusting their strategies. Pinduoduo has launched a joint “RMB 10 billion” subsidy plan with partners that include premium brands like Dyson, Boss, Apple, and Sony, shifting focus to where budget or even counterfeit commodities once prevailed.

Meanwhile, JD-Daojia, the on-demand delivery arm of JD, has brought its one-hour delivery system to more than 50 lower-tier since the second half of last year, bringing the total number of cities that offers this service to 91 during the 618 festival.

Interest in branded products is especially strong among younger generations from lower-tier cities, who have gained a newly coined moniker: “small-town youth.” The term refers to young residents living in China’s third-tier and lower cities, or prefectural and county-level urban centers, who benefit from China’s urbanization process. They are quickly adapting to premium urban lifestyles to fuel China’s next stage of consumption growth.

Sales of Tmall’s Luxury Pavilion, Alibaba Group’s dedicated site for high-end brands, more than doubled from last year, boosted by customers in emerging cities and shoppers born after 1995, according to Alibaba. Nearly 80% of Pinduoduo’s sales during the 618 campaign came from users born in the 1980s and 1990s.

“We believe this group of customers will continue to grow into a strong and sustainable force for brands who are looking at further developing the Chinese market,” said Jiang Fan, president of Taobao and Tmall, in an emailed statement.

“Forced exclusivity” practice persists

The fight for China’s upwardly mobile online population reached a fever pitch during 618. On June 17, home electronics manufacturer Galanz accused Tmall, Alibaba’s online marketplace, of hiding its products—200,000 home appliances—from search results, which Galanz claimed began on Monday afternoon.

Galanz said in a statement on Wednesday that Tmall requested the company to remove its listings from Pinduoduo in May, but it didn’t comply. During the same month, Galanz signed a long-term partnership with Alibaba rival Pinduoduo. Galanz said it was blocked from Tmall’s 520 shopping promotions in May soon after denying the company’s request.

The “forced exclusivity” tactic, also known as the “choose one of two” rule in China, is an unspoken edict that pressures merchants to choose a single platform on which to sell their products. 

In e-commerce, the practice dates back to 2012 when Alibaba registered trademarks for its “Double 11” shopping event. JD and other e-commerce companies also started launching sales promotions during the Alibaba shopping event. The resulting fallout left merchants in the middle of a battle between platforms, in which they were asked to “take sides,” and forced to sign exclusive partnerships during the shopping craze.

JD and Alibaba have quarreled over unfair competitive practices several times, but the competition in China’s e-commerce space worsened when Pinduoduo went public last year.

Pinduoduo’s Huang previously condemned the monopolistic practice, saying that the company’s strategy has never been to “disrupt a monopoly in order to create a new one.” Over the 618 shopping festival, Victor Tseng, vice president of International Corporate Affairs at Pinduoduo, said in a press release that the company had a successful 618 campaign, despite “unfair competition and circumstances.”

According to Tseng, these arrangements “ultimately hurt merchants, brands, and consumers and should be put to an end.” Many of those who participate in exclusive partnerships are young, fast-growing companies.

China passed a new e-commerce law last August, which officially came into effect this January, to prohibit e-commerce platforms from engaging in monopolistic practices to undermine competitors.

Forced exclusivity practices also plague other sectors. Food delivery platforms like Meituan and Ele.me would offer lower commission rates for restaurant owners that are willing to list exclusively on their platforms. Similarly, drivers on ride-hailing platforms would get a lower commission rate if they only work on through one app.

With contributions from Nicole Jao.

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Briefing: JD.com inks deal to handle cross-border logistics for Carrefour https://technode.com/2019/06/21/jd-is-providing-cross-border-logistics-service-to-carrefour/ https://technode.com/2019/06/21/jd-is-providing-cross-border-logistics-service-to-carrefour/#respond Fri, 21 Jun 2019 08:38:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=109058 JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.comThe partnership is a further tie-up between JD and Carrefour.]]> JD JD.com e-commerce alibaba tencent livestream Trip.com

Carrefour to Open JD.Com International Store – Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com has reached a partnership with the Chinese unit of French retailer Carrefour to offer cross-border logistics services. As part of the deal, Carrefour has set up a store on JD’s international marketplace to sell imported goods, following last year’s opening of a store which sells the retailer’s domestic goods on the platform. JD will import the goods and arrange customs clearance, sorting, and distribution for Carrefour. The company’s cross-border import logistics network has established more than 10 trade ports in China, as well as three direct ports in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.

Why it’s important: The partnership is a further tie-up between the two companies. Carrefour is already working with Dada-JD Daojia, JD’s joint venture which offers on-demand logistics services to users who grocery shop online. Dada-JD Daojia received $500 million from Walmart and JD.com last year as online grocery shopping rises in popularity. Tencent, a JD investor, had been in talks about an investment in Carrefour China alongside Shanghai-listed supermarket chain Yonghui Superstores according to an announcement from January 2018.

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Briefing: Alibaba to build digital trading hub in China’s commodities capital Yiwu https://technode.com/2019/06/20/briefing-alibaba-to-build-digital-trading-hub-in-chinas-commodities-capital-yiwu/ https://technode.com/2019/06/20/briefing-alibaba-to-build-digital-trading-hub-in-chinas-commodities-capital-yiwu/#respond Thu, 20 Jun 2019 06:20:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108924 Small- and medium-sized businesses will gain access to digital services and e-commerce platforms.]]>

Alibaba to Build Digital Trading Platform for China’s Commodities Capital Yiwu – Yicai Global

What happened: Alibaba Group has entered into a strategic collaboration with the municipal government of Yiwu to launch an Electronic World Trade Platform (eWTP) hub in the city, which is hailed as China’s small commodities capital. Located in the eastern province of Zhejiang, Yiwu exports goods to more than 200 countries and regions. Yiwu’s small sellers will gain access to overseas buyers and digital services and infrastructure.

Why it’s important: The eWTP concept was first proposed by Alibaba founder Jack Ma as an initiative to offer small- and medium-sized enterprises easier access to new markets via simple regulations, logistics, financing, and cloud computing and payment services. In the new Yiwu eWTP Pilot Area, the company will help to promote innovation in trade finance, establish a smart logistics hub, as well as other infrastructure services. A majority of the 450,000 merchants in Yiwu are micro-, small- or medium-sized enterprises. Alibaba has established five eWTP hubs around the world in Malaysia, the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, Rwanda, Belgium, and now Yiwu.

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Lower-tier cities, upgraded goods power JD’s 618 shopping promotion https://technode.com/2019/06/19/lower-tier-cities-upgraded-goods-power-jds-618-shopping-promotion/ https://technode.com/2019/06/19/lower-tier-cities-upgraded-goods-power-jds-618-shopping-promotion/#respond Wed, 19 Jun 2019 10:16:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108832 618 JDThe retail giant racked up a record RMB 201.5 billion in sales during the 18-day shopping festival.]]> 618 JD

As this year’s 618 mid-year shopping festival indicates, China’s consumer market is still showing signs of life despite a slowing economy.

Chinese retail giant JD, which started the 618 shopping promotion in 2010, racked up a record RMB 201.5 billion (around $29.2 billion) in sales from June 1 to 18. The figure was a 26.6% increase from last year’s RMB 159.2 billion, and was driven by growth in various categories from consumer goods, electronics, fresh food, fashion, and lifestyle items, according to the company. JD said that it served around 750 million customers around the world during the festival.

This year’s mid-year shopping festival featured upgrade trends in China’s consumer market, Xu Lei, CEO of JD retail noted in an internal letter (in Chinese) to employees on Tuesday. High-quality brands and pricier imported goods were especially popular among consumers, he said.

Another highlight was the rise of consumers in lower-tier cities. Liu Hui, director of JD Big Data Research Institute, said yesterday at JD’s 618 press conference that consumers in lower-tier cities were driving sales growth during the promotion. Sales contributed by sixth-tier cities are growing the most rapidly, Liu said. Consumers in third- and fourth-tier cities seem are showing interest in brands and products similar to their counterparts in top tier cities, the company data show.

Combining online and offline shopping for a “boundary-less retail” (JD’s term for new retail) experience, the company is partnering up with millions of stores and experience centers around China. During the 618 festival, Dada JD-Daojia, JD’s online-to-offline (O2O) e-commerce platform, doubled sales compared with the same period last year.

JD rival Alibaba also offered promotions for the festival, but revealed fewer details on its sales. Within the first hour, from midnight to 1:00 a.m. June 1, GMV surpassed that of the first 10 hours last year, the e-commerce giant said. Alibaba engaged Tmall users with new features such as Taobao Livestreaming, and “Flash Sales” and “Daily Deals” channels.

Annual shopping events like JD’s 618 and Alibaba’s November 11 Singles’ Day are showdown moments for e-commerce players, where they compete for consumer attention with promotional campaigns and special discounts.

China’s e-commerce space, long dominated by JD and Alibaba, has become increasingly competitive with newcomers like Pinduoduo entering the space. The Shanghai-based social e-commerce upstart, which launched a joint “RMB 10 billion” subsidy plan with brands and merchants for the promotion, saw GMV exceed 300% year-on-year during the same 18-day sales period. The company said it received more than 1.1 billion orders, 70% of which came from lower-tier cities.

However, JD’s mid-year shopping gala, along with a series of shopping festivals such as Alibaba’s Double 12, are on a smaller scale than Singles’ Day, during which Alibaba recorded GMV of a whopping RMB 213.5 billion in one day in 2018.

JD shifted its direction from brick-and-mortar to e-commerce in 2004. The same year, the company started rolling out online promotional campaigns and discounts to celebrate its anniversary. The 618 mid-year shopping festival was officially launched in 2010 and has since become a nationwide shopping promotion for large and small e-commerce players across the country.

With contributions from Emma Lee.

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Alibaba shifting focus to young executives in reorganization https://technode.com/2019/06/19/alibaba-young-execs-structure-reshuffle/ https://technode.com/2019/06/19/alibaba-young-execs-structure-reshuffle/#respond Wed, 19 Jun 2019 04:53:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108685 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba's restructuring echoes efforts from other internet giants to promote younger employees.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese technology behemoth Alibaba released plans for further internal restructuring with a major reshuffle of top executives and business units, according to an internal letter from company CEO Daniel Zhang circulated on Tuesday.

Maggie Wu, the company’s CFO since 2007, was named the new head of the strategic investment unit, reporting directly to CEO Daniel Zhang. Joe Tsai, executive vice-chairman who now oversees mergers and acquisitions, will support 45-year-old Wu in her new role.

Meanwhile, 41-year-old Fan Luyuan will take the helm of the company’s digital media and entertainment unit as president, responsible for video-streaming platform Youku, film production arm Alibaba Pictures, and ticketing platform Damai.

Zhu Shunyan, 48, was named head of the innovation initiatives unit, adding to his responsibilities over literature, music, and Tmall Genie, the smart AI assistant.

The announcement is another significant reshuffle following company co-founder and chairman Jack Ma’s announcement last year that he will be stepping down in September. A March announcement named Jiang Fan, Taobao’s 34-year-old president, to oversee Tmall, the core business-to-consumer (B2C) online marketplace.

The move comes as tech companies across China are implementing internal changes to promote younger employees. Alibaba rival Tencent announced a series of major changes to its existing employee ranking system in an effort to promote younger workers and better attract younger users. Xiaomi has undergone similar structural adjustments to help develop younger talent.

As part of the reorganization, Alibaba’s supermarket division, Freshippo or Hema, will become a standalone business. Despite the company’s high hopes for Freshippo, there have been setbacks. It closed a store in Suzhou’s Kunshan plaza in May, sparking wider discussion on the sustainability of the new-retail-plus-fresh-produce model. Meituan meanwhile has shut down some of its stores for Freshippo rival Ella supermarket brand.

Alibaba has said Freshippo’s expansion is on a solid trajectory with 135 self-operated stores in China, primarily located in tier-one and tier-two cities.

The US-listed tech giant is reportedly preparing for a $20 billion secondary listing in Hong Kong stock exchange.

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Meituan developing fully automated warehouse to power ‘flash delivery’ https://technode.com/2019/06/18/meituan-developing-fully-automated-warehouse-to-power-flash-delivery/ https://technode.com/2019/06/18/meituan-developing-fully-automated-warehouse-to-power-flash-delivery/#respond Tue, 18 Jun 2019 11:54:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108617 Meituan’s foray into intelligent warehousing further intensifies its battle with e-commerce leaders like Alibaba and JD.com to control the logistics sector. ]]>

Meituan, the Tencent-backed food delivery and lifestyle services platform, is testing a fully automated warehouse for order fulfillment service, it said on Monday.

The initiative will help the company optimize delivery times as retailers push forward into smart warehousing, an area of technological development poised for growth in the world’s second-largest economy. Backed by big data, the system optimizes inventory according to consumer preference in a certain region, prioritizes order packing, and assigns tasks to deliverymen.

A company spokesman told TechNode that Meituan is planning to connect the unmanned warehouse with autonomous delivery vehicles which will send the parcels directly to the users for a fully automated system, but the technologies had not yet reached maturity.

Meituan joined China’s grocery delivery vertical with Meituan Maicai in March. Its foray into intelligent warehousing further intensifies competition with e-commerce giants Alibaba and JD.com to control the logistics sector.  Both of Alibaba and JD have already launched their smart warehouse solutions which feature autonomous guided vehicles (AGV) and various internet of things (IoT) technologies.

The company plans to roll out the service to sellers on Meituan Instashopping, an on-demand grocery delivery service that promises 30-minute delivery. A company spokesman said that the project will be tested in Meituan’s headquarters “very soon” but declined to offer further details about when it will be open for merchants. No price or cost of the services was disclosed.

The initiative is being tested in a simulated environment. The test space is 40 square meters which accommodates 400 product categories with up to 10 items in each, the spokesman told TechNode. The warehouse can handle around 150 orders at peak.

For Meituan’s Instashopping, automatic arms will pick up items from inventory shelves after receiving the orders, and then hand the commodities to AGVs for automatic packing. The automated picking and packing process, which can run 24 hours a day, is seven times more efficient compared with the traditional process that uses manpower, according to the company. Unmanned operations also means that space is used four times more efficiently thanks to higher shelves which can be positioned more closely together.

AGV in Meituan’s unmanned warehouse (Image credit: Meituan)

China’s booming e-commerce industry has spawned lightening-fast express deliveries and, consequently, customers with high expectations. Many Chinese online consumers dislike deliveries that take longer than overnight, even if it involves crossing the country.

As Chinese tech giants expand into groceries, consumers expect speedy deliveries for categories such as fresh produce, which can arrive in a matter of minutes. One user in southern China’s Foshan City received his package 13 minutes after placing the order.

Meituan’s investment in the smart warehouse project will mainly focus on research and development, and the company says it will consider cooperating with the traditional retailers in the future.

E-commerce companies are ramping up efforts to automate the supply chain and logistics sector. Meituan rolled out an autonomous delivery platform for its core food delivery service in 2018.

Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics showcased its first Cainiao Future Park, featuring a warehouse system designed for a large number of robots to work collaboratively, and sensors automate water, electricity, temperature, and humidity monitoring.

JD built last year a new Shanghai fulfillment center that can organize, pack, and ship 200,000 orders a day with only four employees to assist robots.

Meituan says that its autonomous warehouse solution differs from those of competitors like JD, where orders are picked and processed by a human, while Meituan’s service is fully automated from picking up to packing, according to the company.

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Briefing: Meituan CEO reportedly investing $300 million into EV firm https://technode.com/2019/06/17/meituan-300-ev/ https://technode.com/2019/06/17/meituan-300-ev/#respond Mon, 17 Jun 2019 06:41:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108464 Meituan may be linked to another hot, capital-intensive industry.]]>

王兴欲向理想汽车投资3亿美元 – LatePost

What happened: Meituan’s billionaire co-founder and CEO Wang Xing is planning to invest $300 million in Chinese electric vehicle (EV) maker Chehejia, also known as CHJ. The company is known for its smart electric car brand Leading Ideal. Wang will lead Chehejia’s more than $500 million round which values the company at nearly $2.9 billion. Company founder Li Xiang will contribute around $100 million and existing investors including Matrix Partners, Shougang Fund, and Bluerun Ventures will also participate in the round. A Meituan spokesman declined to comment when contacted by TechNode on Monday.

Why it’s important: News of a potential entry by mega-app Meituan into another hot and capital-fueled industry was a popular topic on Monday, first reported by respected former Caixin reporter Song Wei on her self-published news account on WeChat. Founded in July 2015 as one of the many startups joining China’s EV boom, Chehejia has received lots of industry attention thanks to its legendary founder Li Xiang, a seasoned entrepreneur who has two successful startups, Pcpop.com, and US-listed auto site Autohome.com. Li also co-founded NextEV, the electric car maker looking to take on Tesla. China’s electric car makers are now facing a critical maturity period with more pressure to mass produce and a reduction in government subsidies.

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Luckin Coffee testing self-service coffee machines https://technode.com/2019/06/14/luckin-self-service-coffee-machine-project/ https://technode.com/2019/06/14/luckin-self-service-coffee-machine-project/#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2019 10:07:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108328 Luckni Coffee China offline-to-online e-commerce Starbucks tech appUsers can locate the nearest coffee machine and place an order through the Luckin app.]]> Luckni Coffee China offline-to-online e-commerce Starbucks tech app

Chinese coffee startup Luckin is planning on a new project focused on self-service coffee machines, which is expected to be a central part of the company’s expansion strategy, Chinese media reported.

Branded as Luckin Coffee Express, the self-service machine is designed for public spaces like schools and office buildings. Users can locate the nearest coffee machine and place an order through the Luckin app. Drinks are ready 30 seconds after scanning the pick-up code.

The company will launch a pilot program to test the project soon, according to media reports.

Luckin declined to comment on the news when contacted by TechNode.

The Chinese brand of Luckin Coffee Express, “瑞即购,” was trademarked by a Beijing subsidiary of the coffee upstart in May, according to Trademark Office of China’s National Intellectual Property Administration.

Screenshot of “瑞即购“ trademark at National Intellectual Property Administration (Image credit: TechNode)

Luckin’s aggressive expansion has positioned the coffee startup as a challenger to Starbucks in China. The company said in January that it plans to have 4,500 stores in China by the end of the year, up from around 2,370 as of March. That’s on par with Starbucks, which has around 3,800 in China and plans to add 600 more by the end of September.

Luckin recorded $79 million in losses in the first quarter of the year, according to its prospectus, and raised around $571.2 million in its May IPO. It is focusing on an asset-light strategy for its expansion, including pick-up stores with limited seating and typically located in areas with a high demand for coffee, such as office buildings. Such stores, usually have lower rent and fit-out costs, account for 91.3% of the company’s total stores. Shifting to the self-service coffee machine market is a move further down along the asset-light track.

Luckin’s move into the self-service segment of the coffee industry poses challenges to existing players including Wing Cafe, Xiaoka Coffee, and Yee Coffee.

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Alibaba files for Hong Kong IPO: reports https://technode.com/2019/06/13/alibaba-files-for-an-hong-kong-ipo-reports/ https://technode.com/2019/06/13/alibaba-files-for-an-hong-kong-ipo-reports/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2019 10:59:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108203 Hong Kong is increasingly becoming a destination for tech IPOs.]]>
(Image credit: Alibaba Group)

E-commerce giant Alibaba has filed confidentially for a Hong Kong listing and could go public in the city as soon as the third quarter of this year, Reuters and Bloomberg report.

Sources cited by both outlets expect the company to raise as much as $20 billion. According to Bloomberg, China International Capital Corp. and Credit Suisse Group AG will serve as lead banks. The listing could be the biggest Hong Kong has seen since 2010.

Alibaba said it doesn’t comment on market rumors when reached by TechNode.

The move could mark a Hong Kong comeback for Alibaba after it delisted in 2012. The company’s business-to-business entity went public on the main board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 2007.

When Alibaba was considering a relisting in 2013, Hong Kong was speculated to be a prime destination for the tech giant. However, the company snubbed the former British colony in favor of a record $25 billion float on the New York Stock Exchange in 2014, primarily because of the absence a dual-class share structure in Hong Kong.

Missing out on Alibaba was considered a big loss to the Hong Kong market, not only because of the sheer size of the company but also because it would have made the city a more attractive destination for tech companies that might follow.

The Hong Kong Stock Exchange since shifted to a dual-class share mechanism in April 2018, allowing tech firms to have share classes with different voting rights.

Since the change, the city has increasingly become a destination for tech IPOs and has seen the listings of tech giants including super lifestyle platform Meituan and smartphone maker Xiaomi.

During a 2018 interview with Bloomberg, Alibaba founder Jack Ma said the company would consider floating some of its business units in Hong Kong.

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Mary Meeker’s Internet Trends Report 2019: China’s innovative online business models https://technode.com/2019/06/13/mary-meekers-internet-trends-report-2019-chinas-innovative-online-business-models/ https://technode.com/2019/06/13/mary-meekers-internet-trends-report-2019-chinas-innovative-online-business-models/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2019 09:02:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108140 Games have driven transformation in payment, e-commerce, retail, and education.]]>

China’s internet companies are spurring growth by transforming online business models, said this year’s internet trends report by venture capitalist Mary Meeker.

China has solidified its position as the world’s largest online population, at 21% of the global internet users, though it lags the US and other Western countries in internet penetration rates. India is catching up, accounting for 12% of global internet users. It is also a promising market for growth, since internet penetration rates are lower.

Alibaba and Tencent are among the top 10 most-valued public tech companies in the world, and Meituan Dianping, Baidu, JD.com, NetEase, and Xiaomi are in the top 30. But the market capitalization rates of Chinese companies have seen less year-on-year growth than other leaders on the list. Alibaba grew the most, jumping 106% but still falling short of Netflix at 366% and Microsoft at 146%.

However, online business models in China continue to evolve. US banking behemoth Citibank said Wednesday that it was looking to Asia, particularly Ant Financial, to build a digital strategy for the future.

“Super apps” consolidate online consumption

Screenshot of Meituan analysis in the Bond 2019 Internet Trends slide deck by Mary Meeker. (Image credit: TechNode)

Internet business models are transforming consumption in China. Platforms that began as single function are evolving into one-stop “super apps,” including life services platform Meituan. Its offerings include more than 30 types of services such as food delivery, movie tickets, hotel and travel bookings, and payments, the equivalent of combining US peers like Yelp, OpenTable, Fandango, Booking.com, and Airbnb.

Ant Financial’s Alipay evolved from a payment app to a life services platform with more than 200,000 mini-programs offering food delivery, healthcare, public transportation fares, and utility bills. Alipay’s transition to a super app is facilitated by the broader Alibaba ecosystem, which covers virtually every emerging internet sector in China.

Entertainment elements boost growth

Screenshot of Pinduoduo analysis in the Bond 2019 Internet Trends slide deck by Mary Meeker. (Image credit: TechNode)

China is a pioneer in adding entertainment elements to e-commerce, messaging, payment services, and online education platforms.

E-commerce platforms drive growth with gamified shopping features or more interactive in-app live-streaming functions. Pinduoduo is as an example of how gamification can play a role in driving online sales. Users earn discounts on a price by sharing with friends, who can then play a game to nab discounts. Also, users can grow virtual fruit trees in the app and real fruit is delivered to their homes at “harvest time.” This combination of social shopping and gamified discounts helped the company achieve rapid growth in the past two years.

Livestreaming is another main driver for the e-commerce sector in China. Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of the mega marketplace, sold $14 billion in livestreaming gross merchandise volume (GMV) in 2018. Similarly, short video apps such as Kuaishou and Douyin are also adding e-commerce features.

WeChat’s mini-program game, “Jump Jump,” has helped build the mini-program ecosystem in WeChat, allowing brands to better engage users. Alipay meanwhile is using gamified experiences to boost consumer engagement. Alipay Ant Forest packaged philanthropy into a game-like system, where users can accumulate green energy points by completing tasks that reduce carbon emission such as walking and using public transit. Users can collect energy points from friends and donate them to plant real trees.

Screenshot of WeChat’s “Jump Jump” analysis in the Bond 2019 Internet Trends slide deck by Mary Meeker. (Image credit: TechNode)

Games have also made their way into education. A number of education apps have incorporated games and competition with classmates to motivate students to learn math and coding.

Short videos driving surge in internet usage

Screenshot of short video analysis in the Bond 2019 Internet Trends slide deck by Mary Meeker. (Image credit: TechNode)

In 2018, China’s cellular internet data usage grew 189% year-on-year and total daily time spent doubled to 600 million hours in April 2019 from 300 million hours in April 2018. The two biggest short video platforms, Douyin and Kuaishou, are both approaching 250 million daily active users, with Douyin ahead.

With contributions from Tony Xu and Eliza Grkitsi.

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Briefing: JD.com partners with Yandex Market to sell goods in Russia https://technode.com/2019/06/13/jd-yandex-russia/ https://technode.com/2019/06/13/jd-yandex-russia/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2019 03:23:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108097 JDRussian and its neighboring countries are becoming new frontiers for the competition between Chinese e-commerce giants.]]> JD

俄平台Yandex.Market 6月起将销售京东商品 – Ebrun

What happened: Chinese online retailer JD.com has reached a partnership with Yandex.Market, an e-commerce joint venture between Russian search engine Yandex and the country’s bank Sberbank, to increase cross-border trade from China to Russia. Yandex Market will start selling JD.com goods in Russia through its online marketplace starting in June.

Why it’s important: Russian and its neighboring Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries are new frontiers for competition between Chinese e-commerce giants seeking new markets to boost their growth. Alibaba announced last week a joint venture plan between AliExpress and Russian partners including Mail.ru Group, a media and information technology conglomerate. Yandex set up an office in Shanghai in 2015 to oversee partnerships with Chinese businesses selling to Russian consumers. In addition to JD.com, Yandex has already helped several Chinese companies enter the Russian market, including Chinese B2C e-commerce site Lightinthebox and biological technology company ZKTeco.

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Hello TransTech to set up e-bike battery joint venture https://technode.com/2019/06/12/hello-transtech-jv/ https://technode.com/2019/06/12/hello-transtech-jv/#respond Wed, 12 Jun 2019 12:02:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=108025 Hello bike-rental bike sharing MobikeElectric bikes and scooters are widely used in China. However, they have raised growing public concern over potential fire hazards of some rechargeable batteries.]]> Hello bike-rental bike sharing Mobike

Bike-rental firm Hello TransTech, along with mobile payment platform Alipay and battery manufacturer Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL), will invest RMB 1 billion (around $145 million) to form a joint venture (JV) focused on electric bicycle batteries.

Hello TransTech announced the new venture on Wednesday at an event in Shanghai. The new company will set up a battery exchange and charging network for electric bikes and scooters countrywide. Terms of the deal have not been made public.

The proceeds will primarily be used to build the company’s workforce, and construct charging and swapping infrastructure, Hello TransTech founder and CEO Yang Lei, said at the event. Yang will also lead the JV as the company’s CEO.

The service is expected to launch later this year. Yang said the company has not yet decided where its battery swapping and charging platform will first be rolled out. Users will be able to scan QR codes in order to open self-service cabinets, allowing them to replace their depleted batteries.

Hello TransTech, which already provides battery exchange services to 2 million e-bikes in its network, will be the main operator of the services. Meanwhile, Alipay will include the service in its app once it is launched. CATL is developing custom lithium-ion batteries as well as battery management systems for electric bikes.

Electric bikes and scooters are widely used in China. However, they have raised growing public concern over potential fire hazards of some rechargeable batteries. The country recently implemented national standards for electric bikes, which specifies stricter technical requirements for fireproofing, charger protection, and tamper proofing.

Battery exchange services could potentially address issues related to improper charging, such as using substandard adapters. Hello TransTech claims the service could also help the more than 500 million riders, as well as over 10 million food and parcel deliverymen. Hello TransTech is already discussing the service’s use by with food delivery platforms like Ele.me, Yang said.

Formerly known as Hellobike, Alibaba-backed Hello TransTech expanded its offering in October to include ride-hailing services. Yang stressed that two-wheel mobility is still the company’s core business, despite moves to diversify into ride hailing.

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Xiaohongshu testing a livestreaming feature to drive user engagement https://technode.com/2019/06/12/xiaohongshu-livestreaming/ https://technode.com/2019/06/12/xiaohongshu-livestreaming/#respond Wed, 12 Jun 2019 04:27:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107953 Xiaohongshu's new livestreaming function signals an accelerating monetization initiative.]]>

Chinese social media and e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu, also called RED or Little Red Book, is testing a live-streaming feature to drive user engagement and boost its e-commerce business.

The app, which specializes in fashion and beauty products, has enabled the feature for a select group of bloggers. These are chosen based on their ability to produce “valuable content,” the number of their followers, and the frequency with which they release new content, the company said.

The number of testing livestreamers and their audiences is still low, a Xiaohongshu spokeswoman told TechNode. The feature is still under development and will be gradually available to more users, she added without giving a specific timetable for the public rollout.

The company said that this feature will increase user engagement and interaction by allowing livestreamers to have real-time communication with their fans. The move is in line with its self-positioning as a content community, adopting some of the rhetoric of social media platforms.

But the integration of the live-streaming function has been widely interpreted by Chinese media as a sign that the company is stepping up its monetization efforts.

Content and online shopping are well integrated in China. This trend, led by China’s largest e-commerce firms, uses livestreaming as a means to engage consumers on e-commerce platforms. A typical example is Li Jiaqi, a 27-year-old video blogger who is referred to as the “Lipstick King” of China. He is known for selling over 15,000 lipsticks in five minutes through his livestream.

Xiahongshu will face fierce competition in the fight for user attention. In 2019, Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao, has been drastically expanding its live-streaming operations in order to drive e-commerce growth. Meanwhile, video apps such as Douyin and Kuaishou are also claiming a piece of the pie with their own e-commerce marketplaces.

Like other live-streaming platforms in China, Xiaohongshu requires content creators to frame their content around topics that are “positive” and “motivating,” such as travel, reading, parenting, and others. The platform will review topics selected by livestreamers before they are uploaded to ensure compliance with this principle.

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Tencent promotes younger talent to keep up with users https://technode.com/2019/06/11/tencent-restructures-managerial-ranking/ https://technode.com/2019/06/11/tencent-restructures-managerial-ranking/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 10:31:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107908 Chinese tech giants are promoting younger employees in pursuit of growing its base of younger consumers.]]>

Chinese tech giant Tencent announced a series of major changes to its existing employee ranking system in an effort to promote younger workers as it courts younger users.

In an internal letter made public on Monday, the company replaced its previous structure which grouped employees into six main categories and 18 sub-categories according to their professional expertise by a system consisting of 14 levels, according to a Chinese media report.

Tencent’s new move helps rationalize its goal of facilitating the promotion of younger junior staff to senior positions and trimming the mid-level management team.

The company celebrated its 20th-anniversary last year. Facing slowing business growth, the company has launched a series of efforts to maintain internal momentum. Following a major structural adjustment in September, it launched a young talent plan, pledging that at least one in five promotions each year goes to younger talent. It is also trimming around 10% of the mid-level managers, putting them on notice for job cuts or demotion.

For tech research and development talent, for example, an employee would have fallen into one of the 18 sub-categories as assistant engineer, engineer, senior engineer, expert engineer, senior expert engineer, or authority expert under the previous system. With the new structure, such employees will all have the engineer title and skill level is distinguished by ranking, which ranges from Level 4 to 17.

Junior staff  that had been Level 4 or lower in the previous system have less stringent requirements for promotion under the new system. Tencent eliminated compulsory interviews and lowered performance requirements.

Tencent declined to comment on the changes when reached by TechNode.

Chinese tech giants are pushing management transitions to younger generations to make sure they are keeping pace with young consumers. Tencent’s adjustment comes as partner  JD.com and competitor Alibaba have adopted similar initiatives in revamping their managerial structures. Xiaomi is also putting younger executives in leadership positions.

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Briefing: Ele.me widens logistics offerings, to build out infrastructure https://technode.com/2019/06/11/ele-me-fn-logistics/ https://technode.com/2019/06/11/ele-me-fn-logistics/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 07:20:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107870 food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courierEle.me's service expansion follows on the heels of rival Meituan's widened logistics services.]]> food delivery meituan eleme alibaba courier

即时配送市场新变革来临 饿了么蜂鸟即配全面开放 – Xinhua.net

What happened: Alibaba-backed Ele.me is opening up its short-distance logistics capabilities to more customers and industries. The company rebranded its Fengniao Delivery logistics arm to Fengniao Logistics and added a number of new service offerings, including inter-city express deliveries for groceries, flowers, and medication. More than 20,000 digital “instant delivery” warehousing and delivery centers will be established across the country in three years, according to Wang Lei, president of the life services platform. It will also establish an intelligent delivery system using artificial intelligence and big data technologies, he added.

Why it’s important: Ele.me’s delivery network expansion followed shortly after its major rival Meituan extended its logistics service beyond its core food delivery sector in May. Mounting salary costs for delivery fleets imposed a huge financial burden for the restaurant delivery giants which are entangled in an escalating rivalry. Diversifying businesses adds a revenue stream and makes better use of delivery driver downtime. In a similar move to improve the efficiency of its logistics capabilities, Chinese online retailer JD.com also widened its logistics services to more customers and industries in April.

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Alibaba partners with automakers to add Tmall Genie tech to cars https://technode.com/2019/06/11/alibaba-partners-with-automakers-to-add-tmall-genie-tech-to-cars/ https://technode.com/2019/06/11/alibaba-partners-with-automakers-to-add-tmall-genie-tech-to-cars/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 03:58:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107766 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mChinese consumers are increasingly emphasizing in-car technology when it comes to buying cars.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba AI Labs, Alibaba Group’s AI research division, is partnering with automakers including Audi, Renault, and Honda to integrate its Tmall Genie Auto into certain models sold in China, the company announced at CES Asia in Shanghai on Tuesday.

Tmall Genie Auto, an artificial intelligence solution developed by Alibaba AI Labs, will offer a variety of voice-controlled information and services. The in-vehicle assistant will help drivers to identify nearby attractions and restaurants, book movie tickets, check the status of package deliveries, read children’s books, and order items on Alibaba’s retail platform.

In addition, car owners with a Tmall Genie-compatible devices, such as the Tmall Genie speaker and Tmall Genie mirror, will be able to monitor and control smart-home devices from their cars in the near future, according to the company. Drivers will be able to check on the temperature and lights, or turn on the heater and air conditioning at home from their vehicles.

“By providing AI technologies, including speech-recognition and Natural Language Processing, Tmall Genie Auto enables car users to access an extensive in-car infotainment portfolio by tapping into Alibaba’s rich content and service ecosystem,” said Miffy Chen, General Manager at Alibaba A.I. Labs said in an emailed statement.

Partnership with Alibaba will help Audi to offer more localized in-car voice assistant services to their Chinese customers, according to H.W. Vassen, senior director of Digitalization and NEV Development at Audi China.

The current deals are just the latest involving of Tmall Genie’s integration with automobiles. Since the launch of Tmall Genie Auto solution last April, Alibaba A.I. Labs has also partnered with auto brands including BMW and Volvo Cars.

Connected car technology uptake is expanding rapidly in China, with market growth expected to reach double digits from 2018 to 2023, according to data from market intelligence firm Netscribes. Compared with price or engine performance, Chinese consumers are increasingly emphasizing in-car technology when it comes to buying cars, and 40% are willing to change brands for better connectivity, according to the report.

Tech giants are quickly adapting to the changes in customer preferences. In addition to Alibaba, Baidu has its in-car operating system DuerOS and Tencent launched its TAI Smart Car System last year. In line with the trend, Tencent and Alibaba are developing in-vehicle versions for their respective WeChat and DingTalk platforms, popular instant massaging tools for personal and professional communications in China.

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Briefing: Sohu joins China’s social networking resurgence with Huyou https://technode.com/2019/06/10/sohu-social-networking/ https://technode.com/2019/06/10/sohu-social-networking/#respond Mon, 10 Jun 2019 09:31:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107685 Sohu is joining a number of other internet companies that have recently taken aim at WeChat.]]>

搜狐社交产品“狐友”正式版上线 张朝阳称其为搜狐的未来 – Bianews

What happened: Chinese internet portal Sohu has formally launched a new social networking app named Huyou to target China’s younger users. An offshoot of its news aggregation app’s social networking feature, Huyou offers typical tools such as blogs, photo-sharing features, and online games. The service has been undergoing testing as an independent app since May 2018 and now has around 2.5 million users.

Why it’s important: As one of the earliest tech giants in China, Sohu offers a variety of services including a search engine, advertising, news, online multiplayer gaming, and video streaming. The company had a fair share of China’s pre-mobile social networking market with products like Facebook-like ChinaRen and Bai Shehui, which targeted white-collar users. Left behind in the transition to mobile internet, Sohu’s social networking services were overtaken by the likes of WeChat and QQ. With the launch of Huyou, Sohu is joining a number of other internet companies that have recently taken aim at WeChat’s ongoing dominance with new products. Three new social media apps were launched on January 15 to challenge WeChat: Bytedance’s video-messaging app Duoshan; Smartisan parent company Kuairu Technology’s Liaotianbao, an updated version of the once-popular messaging service Bullet Messenger; and Shenzhen-based Ringo.AI’s Matong, an anonymous social media app. However, these initiatives could be short lived: Liaotianbao is reportedly facing the axe after Smartisan’s sale to Bytedance, and Matong was taken down from app stores because of regulatory noncompliance.

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Briefing: Sinovation Ventures opens new Greater Bay Area HQ https://technode.com/2019/06/06/lee-kaifus-sinovation-ventures-funding/ https://technode.com/2019/06/06/lee-kaifus-sinovation-ventures-funding/#respond Thu, 06 Jun 2019 07:43:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107538 The VC fund is positioning itself strategically for opportunities in the region.]]>

Lee Kai-fu’s Sinovation Ventures Opens Greater Bay HQ After Raising USD362 Million – Yicai Global

What happened: Sinovation Ventures, a Chinese venture capital fund co-founded by former Google China head Kaifu Lee, has opened on Tuesday a new headquarters for the Greater Bay Area, a network of major metropolises in southern China including Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hong Kong, and Macau. The new base will focus on industrial investment and research into artificial intelligence (AI) research and its applications. At the opening ceremony, the company announced it had received RMB 2.5 billion ($362 million) in new funding, raising the total capital managed by Sinovation Ventures to around RMB 15 billion. The current funding comes follows a $500 million AI fund received in 2018.

Why it’s important: Sinovation Ventures, formerly known as Innovation Works, is one of the leading venture capital funds in China and an early investor which helped drive China’s mass entrepreneurial boom. Its portfolio companies include tech giants like selfie app Meitu,  cryptocurrency mining giant Bitmain, and AI firm Megvii. The Greater Bay Area is becoming a new tech and innovation hub in China as Beijing speeds up development plans for southern China. Sinovation Ventures is positioning itself strategically for new opportunities in the region.

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Alibaba speeds up Russian expansion with Mail.ru JV https://technode.com/2019/06/06/alibaba-mail-ru-russia/ https://technode.com/2019/06/06/alibaba-mail-ru-russia/#respond Thu, 06 Jun 2019 05:52:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107479 Russia is an important region for Alibaba's globalization push thanks to its market size and growing number of internet users.]]>

Alibaba’s global expansion initiative widened further Wednesday when it announced a joint venture with a series of big-name Russian partners had finally received approval from the Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS) in Russia, around nine months after the plan was first announced in September 2018.

Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), along with pan-Russian operator of digital services MegaFon and Mail.ru Group, a wide-reaching media and information technology conglomerate in the country, are partners in the new AliExpress Russia JV which aims at consumer internet and e-commerce markets in Russian and neighboring countries.

Involvement of multiple partners makes for a complicated share exchange and holding structure between companies. Alibaba and RDIF will each invest $100 million and Mail.ru will invest $182 million in the joint venture, according to a RFID announcement. While Alibaba holds 55.7% of the economic rights, the new firm will be majority-controlled by the Russian companies, which hold a combined 50.1% stake.

The joint venture will build on existing e-commerce businesses for both Mail.ru Group’s Pandao and Alibaba’s AliExpress Russia, operator of Alibaba’s Russian-based domestic and cross-border operations.

Although Russia might not appear to be a key target market, it is an increasingly important piece in Alibaba’s globalization map thanks to market size and a rising number of internet users in the region, as well as obvious geographic advantages.

Teaming up with a domestic partners like Mail.ru allows Alibaba to take advantage of the infrastructure its partners have already established, to access resources such as their user bases and marketing channels.

“This partnership will enable the AliExpress Russia JV to accelerate the development of the digital consumer economy of Russia and CIS countries in ways that no one party could accomplish alone. Together, we are uniquely positioned to offer consumers in Russia and neighboring countries an innovative shopping experience by combining social platforms with commerce, as well as enabling regional brands and SMEs to sell their products locally and globally,” Daniel Zhang, CEO of Alibaba Group, said in the statement.

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Briefing: LinkedIn to shut down its localized China app, Chitu, in July https://technode.com/2019/06/05/linkedin-chitu-china/ https://technode.com/2019/06/05/linkedin-chitu-china/#respond Wed, 05 Jun 2019 03:47:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107263 Chitu was no match for rivals including Maimai. ]]>

Chitu, LinkedIn’s localized app for China, to go offline by end of July – KrAsia

What happened: LinkedIn is going to shut down Chitu, its professional social networking app specifically aimed at Chinese market, on July 31. “Chitu was an innovative trial in the Chinese market by LinkedIn, but starting a new business is never easy … It’s regretful that Chitu can no longer accompany you,” the app said in an open letter addressed to users.

Why it’s important: LinkedIn’s China team, headed by then-president of the China business Derek Shen, launched Chitu in July 2015 as fully localized platform for the Chinese market. It was the company’s first attempt at a dual brand strategy, signaling its aspirations for the market. However, it flopped in head-on competition from Chinese professional platforms like Maimai. Shen, who once said Chitu would be the last project he was willing to go all-in for in his career, left the company in 2017. In March, he criticized Linkedin for lagging “way behind” a list of new social networking services such as WeChat in a widely read post.

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JD.com merges used goods platform Paipai with Aihuishou in recycling push https://technode.com/2019/06/04/jd-com-merges-used-goods-platform-paipai-with-aihuishou-in-recycling-push/ https://technode.com/2019/06/04/jd-com-merges-used-goods-platform-paipai-with-aihuishou-in-recycling-push/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2019 08:14:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=107075 JDThe new entity will expand into used book and home appliance sales.]]> JD
Workers stroll through the lobby at online retailer JD’s Beijing headquarters, pictured here in November 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald)

JD.com announced today a merger between its secondhand-selling platform Paipai and online electronics recycling platform Aihuishou. The Chinese e-commerce giant lead a RMB 500 million ($72 million) funding round in the new entity.

After the merger, JD will be the new entity’s largest shareholder. Wang Yongliang, Paipai’s general manager, was named co-president of the new company alongside Zheng Pujiang. Other investors include Morningside Venture Capital, Tiger Fund, Tiantu Capital, Genbridge Capital, and Fresh Capital.

A customer-to-business (C2B) platform, Aihuishou buys second-hand electronic items such as mobile phones and laptops from users and resells them to users or to recycling companies. It already has a close relationship with JD and had partnered with Paipai on consumer electronics recycling. JD has also participated in its three most recent investment rounds. Aihuishou’s most recent $150 million round in July last year valued the company at $1.5 billion.

The deal is expected to bring more “synergy” between the two companies in a bid to further standardize the electronics recycling process and improve efficiency by leveraging on JD’s retail, logistics, and insurance technologies, Liao Jianwen, JD’s chief strategy officer said.

Starting from electronic items, the new entity will expand its focus to other categories such as books and home appliances, among others, JD spokesman Brad Burgess told TechNode.

JD.com acquired C2C marketplace Paipai in 2014 as part of a sweeping $215 million deal with Tencent to align the two companies against Alibaba. After a brief shutdown in 2016, the service was relaunched in 2017 to focus on secondhand sales.

China’s secondhand goods market, which hit a trading volume of RMB 202.54 billion in the first quarter of this year, is in a duopoly featuring Alibaba’s Xianyu, or Idle Fish, and Zhuanzhuan of classified listings site, 58.com.

Xianyu leads the market with 24.4 million monthly active users (MAU) as of March, with Zhuanzhuan trailing with 11.4 million MAU Aihuishou and Paipai ranked a respective sixth and seventh, according to a report commonly cited in Chinese media from BigData-Research.

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Briefing: Plastic surgery app So-Young posts strong Q1 earnings, rising costs https://technode.com/2019/05/31/so-young-earning-q1/ https://technode.com/2019/05/31/so-young-earning-q1/#respond Fri, 31 May 2019 04:57:58 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106864 China's huge medical aesthetic industry is intensifying competition between online plastic surgery platforms.]]>

新氧科技上市首秀:一季度净赚4590万元,较去年同期涨50% – Sina Tech

What happened: Chinese plastic surgery app So-Young announced total revenue in the first quarter of RMB 206.1 million ($30.7 million), representing an 81% increase from the same period in 2018. Growth was mainly driven by a rise in its core information and reservation services provided to cosmetic surgery and beauty service providers. Net income rose 50% to RMB 45.9 million compared with RMB 30.6 million in Q1 2018. Users surged, with average monthly active users (MAU) rising 79% year on year to 1.92 million and purchasing users increasing 85% year on year to 127,000. However, cost of revenues also jumped, rising 146% year on year to RMB 36.4 million on expanding operational staff headcount. CEO Jin Xin said the company will continue to invest in content offerings, AI applications, value-added services, diversification of user acquisition channels, and expansion into relevant consumption healthcare verticals.

Why it’s important: China’s cosmetic medicine services industry is growing rapidly, especially with younger generations. The segment is expected to be worth RMB 360 billion by 2023 according to figures from research firm Frost & Sullivan. The huge market is intensifying competition between online plastic surgery platforms, hospitals, and suppliers to woo users. Rivals to So-Young, which made its debut on the US stock market in May, include well-funded Gengmei and Tencent-backed medical platform DXY.

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WeWork, Alibaba Cloud partner on initiative to attract global companies https://technode.com/2019/05/30/wework-albiaba-cloud-china-entry/ https://technode.com/2019/05/30/wework-albiaba-cloud-china-entry/#respond Thu, 30 May 2019 09:44:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106737 The two companies have been working together to accelerate their respective globalization initiatives.]]>

Chinese cloud computing giant Alibaba Cloud, US-based shared workspace operator WeWork, and enterprise consultancy firm Softbank Telecom China announced a strategic partnership on Thursday to launch a service platform to help foreign companies scale in China.

“China Gateway” provides its clients access cloud and data intelligence technologies, cross-border information technology infrastructure, as well as enterprise solutions from Alibaba Cloud. Clients will have access to WeWork’s co-working spaces and networking events in the greater China region.

Softbank Telecom China will provide information technology consulting services. The three partners will also offer go-to-market support, access to Chinese tech communities, and other business services, according to an emailed statement from e-commerce giant Alibaba, which owns Alibaba Cloud.

Christian Lee, vice chairman of WeWork Asia said WeWork was uniquely positioned to assist, having entered the market in 2016 itself. The service is open to all companies with global headquarters outside of mainland China.

For WeWork, which is gearing up for a US IPO, better integration and closer ties with local tech giants like Alibaba may help attract global clients. The service could also aid Alibaba in introducing users to its massive ecosystem that includes e-commerce, entertainment, and fintech.

In April, Alibaba Cloud and WeWork’s accelerator program WeWork Labs set up an incubation program for startups in China. The current partnership could be seen as a continuation of the April program in helping foreign companies to enter China, an Alibaba spokeswoman told TechNode.

The partnership, with participation from SoftBank Telecom China, points to closer ties between WeWork and Alibaba, which both received funding from the Japanese tech investor.

Alibaba and WeWork have been working closely as partners to speed up one another’s globalization initiatives. In 2018, the US company began waiving deposit requirements for customers with scores higher than 1,350 on Sesame Credit, the credit rating system of Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial.

However, the partnership is not driven by an investor, said the spokeswoman. “There’s no capital operations or joint venture involved in the program. Alibaba Cloud is the largest cloud service in China and WeWork a reputable brand in the co-working industry. It’s a natural step for cooperation between two companies,” (our translation) she said.

Discounts are available for other Alibaba Cloud and WeWork services, such as technology workshops, marketing opportunities with Alibaba Cloud, business travel bookings via WeWork Services Store, as well as training programs and events.

“Together we are committed to supporting global enterprises to connect with digitally savvy Chinese customers,” said Lancelot Guo, vice president of Alibaba Group and general manager of Strategy and Marketing for Alibaba Cloud Intelligence, in the emailed statement.

Clarification: This is to clarify that TechNode is one of the eight partners in supporting Alibaba Cloud’s China Gateway Program. TechNode Singapore, which shares the same parent company of TechNode Media, and Alibaba Cloud are cooperating under the program.  

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Briefing: German supermarket Aldi crowds into offline with Shanghai store https://technode.com/2019/05/30/aldi-china-store/ https://technode.com/2019/05/30/aldi-china-store/#respond Thu, 30 May 2019 08:29:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106763 E-commerce giants like Alibaba and NetEase Kaola are also looking to expand offline.]]>

German food discounter Aldi to open first store in China – Deutsche Welle

What happened: German supermarket chain Aldi is set to open its first flagship store in downtown Shanghai this week and a second offline store is expected to follow. The German discounter is reportedly aiming for a more affluent customer base in China by selling sought-after products from Europe. Aldi initially plans to open at least 10 stores in China, with 50 to 100 additional outlets to follow in the coming years, according to business publication Manager Magazin.

Why it’s important: Following the footsteps of supermarket chains like American Costco and Sam’s Club, Australia’s Woolworths, and South Korea’s E-mart, Aldi launched its flagship store on Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace in 2017 looking to attract shoppers from China’s affluent middle class. After building brand awareness through online operations in the country, establishing a brick-and-mortar presence is a logical next step as the retail brand expands beyond its core market in Europe. However, an offline store will put it in direct competition with its former partners in the country, like e-commerce giants of Alibaba and NetEase Kaola, which are also looking to expand offline.

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Briefing: Uxin to receive $230 million through private convertible note deal https://technode.com/2019/05/29/uxin-private-placement-230-million/ https://technode.com/2019/05/29/uxin-private-placement-230-million/#respond Wed, 29 May 2019 04:40:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106554 Uxin 58.com used car selling salesChina's second-hand car trading market has witnessed the rise of several top players include Uxin, Renrenche, Guazi, and Souche. ]]> Uxin 58.com used car selling sales

优信宣布新一轮融资2.3亿美元 58同城领投 – Sina Tech

What happened: Chinese second-hand car selling platform Uxin today announced that it has entered into a convertible note purchase agreement with affiliates of Chinese classifieds site 58.com, private equity firm Warburg Pincus, investment firm TPG and other investors. Under the deal, the Nasdaq-listed company will issue and sell $230 million worth of convertible notes to the backers through a private placement that is expected to close by June. The company will enter a strategic cooperation with 58.com in the areas including traffic and inventory acquisition, used-car inspections, big data analysis, and software-as-a-service (SaaS). The company will use the funds to “enhance our ability to carry out cross-regional used car transactions,” CEO Dai Kun said in a statement sent to TechNode.

Why it’s important: Automobile sales in China for the past several years have been driven by new car sales, as most customers were first-time buyers who sought out new vehicles. But as car ownership increases, the used-car market is expanding as more owners are in the market for replacements. In 2018, China’s second-hand car transaction volume exceeded RMB 1 trillion (around $15 billion) with a growth rate of 27.6% year on year, according to data released at the 2018 National Business Conference. Several players have risen to the top of the sector, including Uxin, Renrenche, Guazi, and Souche. Intensifying competition has become ugly at times. Uxin accused its rival Guazi of data fraud in February, igniting a spat between the two companies. In April, Uxin was similarly accused of overstated transaction volume, undisclosed debt, and faked inventory values by J Capital Research analyst Anne Stevenson-Yang. Uxin refuted the allegations as “false” and “misleading.”

Updated with comments from Uxin.

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Briefing: Alibaba reportedly among 8 bidders for Metro’s China operations https://technode.com/2019/05/28/alibaba-metro/ https://technode.com/2019/05/28/alibaba-metro/#respond Tue, 28 May 2019 08:29:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106369 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mTeaming up with a wholesaler like Metro brings synergy to Alibaba’s existing new retail operations.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Germany’s Metro to expect at least eight second-round bids for China unit: sources – Reuters

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is among the eight second-round bidders for a majority stake in China operations of German wholesaler Metro, which is valued at $1.5 billion to $2 billion, Reuters reported. Other bidders include the consortia of private equity firm Boyu Capital with property developer China Vanke Co Ltd, Hopu Investments with fresh food delivery firm Meicai, and Hillhouse Capital Group with supermarket chain operator Yonghui Superstores Co Ltd, Reuters sources added. Alibaba declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode.

Why it’s important: Interest in Metro comes alongside the rise of new retail in China, referring to a new shopping experience that combines the best of online and offline commerce by integrating the e-commerce market and big-data capabilities to transform the traditional wholesale and retail sectors. Technology majors such as Alibaba, JD, and Meituan are aggressively expanding offline, either by establishing in-house brick-and-mortar stores or by partnerships with existing retail chains. Alibaba has its own supermarket chain Hema and holds stakes in Taiwan’s RT-Mart International Ltd and retail group Auchan. Teaming up with a wholesaler like Metro could also bring synergy to Alibaba’s existing new retail operations.

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Briefing: Tencent leads $250 million investment in social travel site Mafengwo https://technode.com/2019/05/28/briefing-tencent-leads-250-million-investment-in-social-travel-site-mafengwo/ https://technode.com/2019/05/28/briefing-tencent-leads-250-million-investment-in-social-travel-site-mafengwo/#respond Tue, 28 May 2019 06:17:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106329 Mafengwo was accused in October of faking 85% of all user-generated content and summoned by the authorities in March.]]>

Mafengwo Raises $250 Million in New Funding Round Led by Tencent – PRnewswire

What happened: Chinese travel service and experience sharing platform Mafengwo announced that it has raised $250 million funding led by Tencent. Other backers of the round include General Atlantic, Qiming Venture Partners, Yuantai Evergreen Investment Partners, NM Strategic Focus Fund, and eGarden Ventures. Chen Gang, co-founder and CEO of Mafengwo, says that the company will continue focusing on its goal to build a one-stop travel service platform driven by artificial intelligence (AI) and algorithms.

Why it’s important: As a top player in China’s online travel agency industry, Mafengwo has been an investor favorite. The current round boosted its total funds raised to around $500 million. The round tightens the link between Tencent and Mafengwo, which partnered this month with Hong Kong-listed Tongcheng-Elong Holdings, another Tencent-backed online travel site. However, the timing of the investment bears notice following rounds of negative press beginning last year. Mafengwo was accused in October of faking 85% of all user-generated content, and the company was summoned by authorities in March for failing to comply with content regulations.

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Briefing: NetEase reportedly seeking to list edtech business Youdao https://technode.com/2019/05/28/netease-youdao-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/05/28/netease-youdao-ipo/#respond Tue, 28 May 2019 02:54:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106271 NetEase President Ding Lei named education as a strategic focus of the company along with gaming, e-commerce, and music.]]>

「网易有道」启动赴美IPO,“网易教育”的上市故事会怎么讲? – 36KR

What happened: Chinese tech giant NetEase is seeking to spin off its education unit for an independent initial public offering (IPO) in the US, Chinese media reported citing people familiar with the matter. The company is in discussions with two well-known underwriters for the listing. NetEase declined to comment on the matter when contacted by TechNode.

Why it’s important: NetEase, more widely known as a game developer, was one of the first Chinese tech giants to enter the online education market. NetEase Youdao, launched in 2007, started as a dictionary and translation app and branched out to different services that include search, language learning, and cloud. The company gained unicorn status after gaining a $1.1 billion valuation in April last year after receiving an undisclosed investment led by MOOC-CN Investment with participation from Legend Capital. The Nasdaq-listed parent company upgraded the edtech unit earlier this year by merging all of its education-related portfolios including the company’s massive open online course (MOOC) platforms to the current NetEase Youdao. Ding Lei, the president of NetEase, included education as a strategic focus for the first time at the beginning of this year, along with gaming, e-commerce, and music. If the listing succeeds, the education sector will be the first separate listing in the company’s portfolio.

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Gambling sites may use Pinduoduo to process Alipay, WeChat Pay transactions https://technode.com/2019/05/27/gambling-sites-may-use-pinduoduo-to-process-alipay-wechat-pay-transactions/ https://technode.com/2019/05/27/gambling-sites-may-use-pinduoduo-to-process-alipay-wechat-pay-transactions/#respond Mon, 27 May 2019 08:42:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106158 pinduoduo colin huang e-commerceAll forms of gambling apart from lotteries are illegal in mainland China.]]> pinduoduo colin huang e-commerce

Pinduoduo is in the spotlight after a controversy erupted Monday involving the company and an equally controversial WeChat media account, which accused the social e-commerce upstart of facilitating illicit gambling transactions.

Chaping, literally Bad Reviews, posted an article Sunday night saying Pinduoduo’s lack of enforcement has allowed gambling payment channels, in the form of regular e-commerce stores, to develop on its platform by offering means to transmit gambling transactions.

The Shanghai-based company denounced the “downright groundless” accusations in an emailed announcement sent to TechNode, saying it will file a defamation lawsuit against Chaping seeking RMB 10 million (around $1.5 million) in damages.

Chaping said that multiple stores on Pinduoduo are actually payment fronts for gamblers who choose WeChat Pay for payment. After scanning a QR code from casino apps, they are redirected to a Pinduoduo store to complete the transaction via WeChat Pay. There are also websites like Slotsformoney.com/casinos/roulette/ that can help with gambling online.

Using online dummy stores to disguise gambling transactions are not a new phenomenon in the $40 billion global online gambling industry, which is illegal in many countries. Similar transaction practices from European e-commerce sites have posed challenges to policing e-commerce worldwide.

The strategy was adopted by gambling operators to incorporate local payment services. Alipay and WeChat Pay are the two largest online payment providers in China, and are strictly regulated by the state in order to avoid illicit payment transactions.

Pinduoduo told Technode that all the stores Chaping mentioned had been closed prior to the article’s publication, and that it has been working very closely with Alipay and WeChat Pay to block alleged illicit activities.

In addition to its size, Pinduoduo’s relatively lax requirements for setting up a store on the platform attracted gambling sites to its platform, Chaping points out. “Only an ID number is required for store registration and the same ID can be used to apply for multiple stores,” Chaping said in the post.

The social e-commerce site countered the claims, saying in its statement, “We have real name registration for the stores and any suspected illegal behavior can be traced.”

TechNode reporter tested the store setup process on Monday afternoon. The platform has two kinds of stores, those opened by individuals and those opened by companies, the latter of which requires a business license and enjoys more marketing features. Individuals can register a store with Pinduoduo with just an ID, though a company spokeswoman confirmed that the company has a verification process in place.

All forms of gambling apart from lotteries are illegal in mainland China. Even for the lotteries, the regulation is strict, especially for online sales. Government authorities in 2015 suspended online sales for China’s two official lotteries—the welfare lottery and the sports lottery. But underground online sports lottery is growing , especially during large sports events such as the World Cup.

Updated with details about setting up a store on Pinduoduo and to include comments from a company spokeswoman.

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Meituan pared losses in Q1 as cost controls gain traction https://technode.com/2019/05/24/meituan-pared-losses-in-q1-as-cost-controls-gain-traction/ https://technode.com/2019/05/24/meituan-pared-losses-in-q1-as-cost-controls-gain-traction/#respond Fri, 24 May 2019 10:21:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=106076 Meituan's Q1 results show that its more disciplined expansion strategy is paying off.]]>

A more “disciplined” Chinese food delivery and services platform Meituan is seeing the effects of its belt-tightening pay off as shown in its first quarter earnings results released Thursday.

Meituan’s adjusted net loss narrowed to RMB 1.04 billion (around $150.5 million) in Q1 compared with RMB 1.86 billion in the quarter ended December 31, 2018.

Improvement in the operating margin of core businesses and ongoing efforts to streamline new initiative operations were primary drivers for the smaller loss, the company said.

The company’s Q1 revenue surged 70.1% year over year to RMB 19.2 billion from RMB 11.3 billion the same period a year earlier, benefiting from strong revenue growth in major business segments like food delivery and hotel and travel services.

In an aggressive expansion initiative, Meituan entered multiple crowded industries like new retail, ride-hailing, and bike rentals last year. But new businesses weighted on profits, most notably the Mobike acquisition which contributed RMB 4.6 billion in losses for 2018 from the April transaction. The surging operating losses, which surged around six-fold in Q4 last year, sparked investor concern.

The company stated that bike rental Mobike weighed on its Q1 profit margin without disclosing specific financials. Research from equity firm China Tonghai Securities predicted that Mobike will continue to be a drag on overall profitability until 2021.

Meituan said following the release of its full year 2018 earnings that its significant investment in new initiatives in 2018 tempered its growth, and it promised that it would exercise more prudence in business strategy for businesses such as new retail and non-food delivery in 2019.

In a series of moves to wind down its expansion to non-core services, Meituan closed its Ella supermarkets, a rival to Alibaba’s new retail store Hema, in lower-tier cities, downsized Mobike’s overseas operations, and cut back subsidies for its ride-hailing business.

Meituan’s food delivery service comprises 64.6% of China’s online food delivery market, while Alibaba’s Ele.me and Star.Ele, formerly Baidu Waimai which Ele.me acquired in 2017, has 25.5% and 8.4% respective share in Q1 this year, according to data from research institute Data Center of China Internet.

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User intention is key to untangling China’s crowded social-media landscape https://technode.com/2019/05/23/user-intention-is-key-to-untangling-chinas-crowded-social-media-landscape/ https://technode.com/2019/05/23/user-intention-is-key-to-untangling-chinas-crowded-social-media-landscape/#respond Thu, 23 May 2019 11:23:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105995 Speaking at Emerge by TechNode in Shanghai, marketing expert Elijah Whaley says platform-specific content is crucial. ]]>

With a population of around 1.4 billion people, everyone wants a piece of the Chinese market.

And as Chinese consumers become increasingly connected in cyberspace, digital marketing provides a shortcut for businesses and brands to that opportunity, provided, that is, marketers select online channels wisely.

Speaking at the Emerge by TechNode conference in Shanghai on Thursday, chief marketing officer of key opinion leader (KOL) marketing platform Parklu Elijah Whaley told delegates that while Chinese social, content and commerce platforms offer similar functionalities, there is a key differentiating factor—user purpose or intent.

The question, according to Whaley is, “Why am I walking into this app or what am I explicitly getting out of from interacting with the ecosystem?”

The seamless ubiquity of WeChat makes it the go-to place for online marketing, but the platform is particularly good for CRM, and as a place for conversation given its core function in messaging friends, families, and coworkers.

“We see a lot of partners really wanted WeChat to be a marketing platform,” he said. “But it’s more of a place to interact with your customers.”

Taobao’s embedded WeChat-like CRM service Weitao is a great place to conduct KOL marketing, according to Whaley, because consumers log on to the platform with the intention of buying stuff. He said that users are willing to engage with content on the platform because they are trying to learn if the item is the one they want to buy.

Whaley believes location-based content represents the next-generation for search. Apps like Douyin and Xiaohongshu have “nearby me” button. This feature could be a huge advantage for travel brands, restaurants or as a way for offline businesses to influence and attract consumers.

Given that, marketers should never use the same strategy, KOLs, or content across different platforms, Whaley said.

He added that content—in the form of product reviews, short videos or live-streaming—and generated by a new breed of online influencers, or KOLs, is a crucial feature to China’s digital marketing dynamics, or even a greater role than their counterparts would play in the Western countries.

While gifting in the business world may be considered as a form of graft in the West, it is an important part in the physiological development of relationships in China, where reciprocity, or the idea of gift exchange, is one of the most important aspects in building relationships.

“Content is a form of gift,” said Whaley, explaining that among the Chinese KOL communities, there’s a sense of indebtedness that comes from having received the gift of information from someone over time and that builds trust and reciprocity. “That’s why we see conversion rates that we don’t see in the West,” he added.

In addition to ease of e-commerce integration and payment tools, such deeper, psychological elements at work in Chinese society provide an additional reason that helps explain why KOL marketing is gathering force in China, Whaley added.

A 2018 analysis from marketing company MarketingToChina showed that Chinese consumers download an average of 44 mobile apps each, far higher than the global average of 26 applications per smartphone user.

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Briefing: Tencent’s Pony Ma calls for self-reliance during trade war https://technode.com/2019/05/22/tencents-pony-ma-trade-war/ https://technode.com/2019/05/22/tencents-pony-ma-trade-war/#respond Wed, 22 May 2019 09:25:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105882 'There is less and less room for taking the best from outside and improving on them,' Ma said.]]>

Tencent CEO warns companies must keep innovating to survive amid US-China tensions – TechCrunch

What happened: Pony Ma, founder and CEO of Chinese tech giant Tencent, said at a Tencent event Tuesday that he is keeping a close eye on whether the escalating trade dispute between China and US will turn to a tech war. The tech tycoon also stressed the importance of investing in fundamental research and key technologies. Without innovation in these key aspects, China’s digital economy will be a “high-rise built on sand” and “hard to sustain.”

“China has come to the forefront of development. There is less and less room for taking the best from outside and improving on them,” Ma said.

Why it’s important: The trade tensions between China and the US intensified this month with both countries raising tariffs on goods imported from one another. A number of big names in tech, both Chinese and US, have been entangled in the dispute. The US Commerce Department has banned American companies from selling components and other technology to Huawei, cutting it off from certain Google services, chips made by Qualcomm and Intel, and potentially banning Windows. Wider impact of the trade war on the tech world is taking effect too. Tech stocks tumble as China retaliates in equal measure to raise US tariffs. China has already moved to the frontier in areas such as mobile phones, 5G networks, supercomputers, e-commerce, and mobile payments, but it is still lags in semiconductors, robots, manufacturing technology, and aviation. The trade war pressures are pushing Chinese companies to improve on these industries in a bid to stay competitive.

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Briefing: Tencent partnered with 17,000 companies for WeChat Work ecosystem https://technode.com/2019/05/22/tencent-claims-17000-cooperate-partners-in-wechat-work-ecosystem/ https://technode.com/2019/05/22/tencent-claims-17000-cooperate-partners-in-wechat-work-ecosystem/#respond Wed, 22 May 2019 06:16:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105824 WeChat Work is playing catch up with Alibaba’s mobile workplace tool Dingtalk, which had 400 million users as of September.]]>

腾讯黄铁鸣:已有1.7万家合作伙伴加入企业微信 – 36Kr

What happened: WeChat Work, the productivity version of social networking app WeChat, has more than 17,000 third-party partners in its ecosystem, vice president of Tencent’s WeChat business group Huang Tieming revealed on Tuesday at Tencent Global Digital Ecosystem Summit held in Kunming of southern China’s Yunnan province. The partnering entities offer services including staff training, survey platforms, online contract signing, and more. To support these services, more than 4.5 million application systems have been integrated into the app, which now offers 231 application programming interfaces (APIs).

Why it’s important: Tencent’s WeChat is known for offering a unified social networking experience. WeChat was a fusion of everything that mattered, blurring the boundary between the work and personal lives of its users. To address the issue, Tencent rolled out a standalone version of the app for business entities in China three years ago. The app had 1.5 million corporate entities registered on its platform and 30 million active users as of May 2018. Despite the huge success of WeChat, WeChat Work is playing catch up with Alibaba’s mobile workplace tool Dingtalk, which had 400 million users as of September. Competition in the productivity services market is heating up as Chinese tech companies shift their business focus to enterprise-facing services.

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Pinduoduo user growth and engagement efforts weigh as Q1 losses deepen https://technode.com/2019/05/21/pinduoduo-q1-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/05/21/pinduoduo-q1-2019/#respond Tue, 21 May 2019 06:09:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105708 pinduoduo colin huang e-commercePromotional activities including sponsoring the annual CCTV Spring Festival Gala weighed on profits.]]> pinduoduo colin huang e-commerce

Pinduoduo share prices slid 8.5% to $20.78 on Monday after the Chinese social e-commerce platform reported surging losses for the first quarter of the year on significantly higher promotional expenses, while user engagement efforts gained traction.

The company recorded total revenue for the quarter of RMB 4.6 billion (around $677.3 million), an increase of 228% from RMB 1.4 billion in the same quarter of 2018, driven by growth in online marketing revenues earned from the platform’s merchants. Annual spending per active user surged 87% compared with Q1 2018, and monthly active users (MAU) jumped 74% year on year to 289.7 million, according to the statement.

However, heavy spending weighed, particularly sales and marketing expenses, which quadrupled from the same period a year earlier to RMB 4.9 billion (around $728.5 million) on promotional activities driven by on- and offline advertisements and promotions, according to the company. Pinduoduo sponsored the CCTV Spring Festival Gala, China’s biggest annual TV event boasting 1.2 billion viewers in 2019, and a series of online promotions leading up to the TV event.

The company booked net losses of RMB 1.88 billion, more than six times the RMB 281.5 losses in Q1 2018.

Pinduoduo’s total cost of revenues were RMB 873.3 million, an increase of 174% from RMB 318.7 million in Q1 2018. The increase was mainly due to higher costs for cloud services, and call center and merchant support services, partially offset by a payment rebate of RMB 339.2 million from Tencent.

Meanwhile, its gross merchandise volume (GMV) in the 12-month period ended March 31, 2019 was RMB 557.4 billion ($83.1 billion), an 181% year-on-year increase from Q1 2018, mainly driven by “the rapid growth in annual active buyer base and annual spending per active buyer,” according to Huang Zheng, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Pinduoduo. “These metrics reflect our success in increasing user engagement and improving user experience,” he added.

Similar to rivals Alibaba and JD the four-year-old e-commerce upstart known for its breakneck expansion is also facing slowing growth. Its Q1 total revenue growth signals a marked slowdown from the triple and quadruple growth figures seen last year.

In comparison, Alibaba and JD posted 51% and 20.9% year-on-year growth in Q1 2019, respectively.

“We are very confident of our long-term earning power. So I think at this stage, the best way to use the revenue proceeds is probably to investing R&D, investing in infrastructure,” company CEO Huang Zheng said during the earnings call.

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Briefing: Alibaba launching AI-based acne-testing service https://technode.com/2019/05/20/alibaba-ai-beauty/ https://technode.com/2019/05/20/alibaba-ai-beauty/#respond Mon, 20 May 2019 09:51:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105628 Despite a cooling economy, China’s beauty industry is showing no sign of slowing.]]>

L’Oréal, Alibaba introduce new AI Skin-testing Tech for Acne – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba and L’Oréal said at the Viva Technology Paris 2019 tech expo on Friday that they are offering an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered acne analysis application dubbed Effaclar Spotscan. Based on 6,000 scientific images of acne skin collected by L’Oréal, Alibaba’s AI scientists used deep learning to create a neural network model for acne testing that detects the link between visual information from a user’s selfie and the type of acne. Based on this analysis, the app provides personalized advice and skin care recommendations to treat acne lesions. The service will debut on the Tmall and Taobao mobile apps in June 2019. Alibaba told TechNode that it is providing the technology for the partnership, developed by the DAMO Academy, Alibaba’s AI and machine-learning lab.

Why it’s important: Despite a cooling economy, there’s no sign of slowing down in China’s beauty industry thanks to the rise of the millennial generation as well as the rapid expansion of the middle class. To tap the trend, Chinese tech firms are applying cutting-edge technologies to address beauty issues either through the development of software or smart hardware. In a similar initiative, Chinese beautifying filter app Meitu is developing skin condition-analyzing services based on photos from the users. For smart hardware, Meitu has launched professional-grade home skin analysis and cleansing devices. Meanwhile, Alibaba rolled out a voice-activated mirror for China’s tech-savvy female customers this March.

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Briefing: Starbucks China rival Luckin upsizes US IPO to raise $561 million https://technode.com/2019/05/17/starbucks-china-challenger-luckin-raises-561-in-us-ipo-reuters/ https://technode.com/2019/05/17/starbucks-china-challenger-luckin-raises-561-in-us-ipo-reuters/#respond Fri, 17 May 2019 06:53:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105478 Its rapid, capital-fueled growth and widening losses leave the question of sustainability open for debate.]]>

Starbucks’ China challenger Luckin raises $561 million in U.S. IPO: sources – Reuters

What happened: Chinese coffee chain Luckin Coffee raised $561 million in its US initial public offering (IPO) on Nasdaq, pricing its share at $17 apiece at the top end of an indicative range of $15 to $17 per share, Reuters reported citing people familiar with the matter. The source added that the company sold 33 million American depositary shares in the IPO, more than the 30 million it originally planned. The pricing values the coffee chain at about $4.2 billion. A spokeswoman of the company declined to comment when contacted by TechNode on Friday.

Why it’s important: Luckin Coffee, which has built a customer base with smaller locations and more affordable prices, has made lots of headlines since it filing its IPO application last month. Characterized by breakneck expansion, Luckin is trying to overtake Starbucks as the biggest coffee chain in China with 2,370 stores open at the end of the first quarter with plans to add 2,500 this year. The company’s sustainability has been a topic of some debate because of its rapid, capital-fueled growth and widening losses. In 2018, the chain reported net sales of $125.3 million and a net loss of $241.3 million. Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson has said the company’s rivals in China are focused on short-term gains, while Starbucks well-positioned for long-term growth.

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Briefing: Viral ‘Dad Sharing’ WeChat mini program may violate advertising law https://technode.com/2019/05/16/dad-sharing-wechat-mini-program-law-violation/ https://technode.com/2019/05/16/dad-sharing-wechat-mini-program-law-violation/#respond Thu, 16 May 2019 10:24:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105409 Viral ‘Dad Sharing’ WeChat mini-program is challenging ad law and modern morality.]]>

欧派营销竟推“共享爸爸” 律师:既违法还挑战公序良俗 – Eastday

What happened: A WeChat mini program named “Dad Sharing” has gone viral on the mega chatting app after its release on Tuesday. An accompanying five-minute video advertises a service that allows busy users to rent another, more “professional,” father figure when the actual parent can’t be there for important family moments. Key moments shown in the video include childbirth and parent-teacher meetings. Chinese furniture maker Oppein, the company behind the mini-program, clarified later that this is only a “well-intended” marketing tactic aimed at promoting family values. It sparked online controversy and at present the mini-program cannot be accessed.

Why it’s important: The ride-sharing boom in China has triggered a “sharing economy” craze in the country where nearly everything became shareable from bikes to basketballs, washing machines, umbrellas, and even beds. The dad-sharing model received mixed reactions online. While some netizens sympathized with the parenting dilemma reflected in the video, others felt cheated that the company wasn’t actually offering a dad-sharing service.  A lawyer from Chengdu, Sichuan province told local media that the advertisement likely violates relevant provisions of the advertising law for promoting a service that it’s not offering. At the same time, the concept also challenges public morals.

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Didi partners with State Grid on electric vehicle services https://technode.com/2019/05/16/didi-state-grid-ev/ https://technode.com/2019/05/16/didi-state-grid-ev/#respond Thu, 16 May 2019 09:13:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105391 China accounts for more than 55% of global new energy vehicle sales and is racing to build the infrastructure needed.]]>

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi’s finalized a strategic partnership agreement with State Grid EV Service for its electric vehicle (EV) initiative today.

State Grid EV Service is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the State Grid of China, the country’s largest state-owned electric utility entity.

Under the partnership, State Grid’s nationwide network of charging stations will be connected to Didi’s open auto-solutions platform, Xiaoju Automobile Solutions, to provide integrated mobility, recharging, and energy-related services, according to an emailed statement from the company. The two parties will also look to cooperate in developing new car service models.

The cooperation will roll out first in key central and southeast provinces including Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangsu, Shandong, Shaanxi, Hunan, and Jiangxi.

Didi has been attaching more strategic importance to auto-related services as it tries to move beyond its core ride-hailing business. In April 2018, the company invested $1 billion in Xiaoju Automobile Solutions. Through the platform, the company works with automakers, fleet operators, and energy partners to provide integrated automobile solutions to users, such as locating nearby charging stations.

Drivers can find nearby charging stations in Didi’s driver app. (image credit: Didi)

While electric vehicles are going mainstream as an eco-friendly alternative for drivers, Didi is moving on the trend. The company recently set up a joint venture with a unit of state-owned BAIC to work on new energy vehicles and artificial intelligence.

As part of its auto-related services, Didi has explored electronic vehicle charging services in the past. In late 2017, it announced plans for its own electric vehicle charging network. The company now has more than 400,000 electric vehicles operating on its platform.

According to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, China accounts for more than 55% of global new energy vehicle sales thanks to government subsidies in support of the technology.

Meanwhile, the nation is racing to build the infrastructure needed to support those vehicles. China now boasts 808,000 electric vehicle chargers, well ahead of the roughly half a million in the US, according to a report released by Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. At the same time, global carmakers including BMW AG, Tesla, Volkswagen AG, Ford have launched their own charging ventures with local partners.

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Briefing: Apple, Samsung renew focus on India in US-China trade war fallout https://technode.com/2019/05/16/apple-and-samsung-smartphone-india/ https://technode.com/2019/05/16/apple-and-samsung-smartphone-india/#respond Thu, 16 May 2019 06:57:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105336 Apple is planning to expand local manufacturing to avoid a 20% tariff on iPhones.]]>

US-China trade war pushes Apple and Samsung deeper into India – Nikkei Asian Review

What happened: Apple and Samsung, two of the world’s largest smartphone makers, are deepening their dives into the Indian market as the escalating trade war puts pressure on their operations in the US and China. Nikkei cites a source who says that Apple is close to choosing a site for its first retail store in India. In addition, the company is planning to expand local manufacturing, which would allow the iPhone to avoid the 20% tariff. In a similar move, rivals such as Samsung and Xiaomi are also strengthening production capabilities and sales channels in the country.

Why it’s important: India, with its population of 1.3 billion and relatively low smartphone market penetration of 36% in 2018, presents an opportunity for smartphone makers looking to expand beyond slowing markets such as the US and China. As one of the first movers to tap the emerging market, Chinese smartphone makers like Xiaomi, Vivo, Oppo, and Transsion have established a foothold in the country, representing a record 66% of the Indian smartphone market in Q1 2019 with compelling budget devices. While Apple hasn’t really cracked the Indian market due to its relatively higher price points, a result of premium positioning and high tariffs, the company was pushed to make the shift in seek of a new growth market, especially to fend off uncertainties brought by the intensifying US and China trade tensions. Samsung, which has 22% market share and is the second-largest phone brand in India following Xiaomi, is beefing up its manufacturing capacity for high-value components in the country with the launch of two component manufacturing units to produce display panels and batteries.

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Alibaba bolsters home improvement push with $635 million investment in RSM https://technode.com/2019/05/16/alibaba-bolsters-home-improvement-push-with-635-million-investment-in-rsm/ https://technode.com/2019/05/16/alibaba-bolsters-home-improvement-push-with-635-million-investment-in-rsm/#respond Thu, 16 May 2019 04:06:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105303 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mHome improvement and furnishings is an important segment for Alibaba’s “new retail” strategy.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese tech giant Alibaba Group has invested RMB 4.36 billion (around $635 million) in home furnishings retailer Red Star Macalline (RSM) in an exchangeable bond subscription for 10% of common shares.

Under the deal, the two companies will cooperate in the areas of home improvement and furniture shopping malls, shopping centers, and other business areas. The e-commerce company also acquired 3.7% of the furniture retailer’s Hong Kong-traded shares.

One of the largest home improvement and furnishings shopping mall operators in China, Red Star Macalline operates more than 300 shopping malls across the country as of end-March. In addition, the company also operates a total of 364 home improvement centers through franchises.

“The investment in Red Star Macalline, China’s leading home improvement and home furnishing shopping malls, underscores Alibaba’s commitment to providing Chinese consumers the highest quality experience when shopping for home-related products and services,” an Alibaba spokeswoman told TechNode on Thursday.

Home improvement and furnishings is an important segment for Alibaba’s “new retail” strategy. The e-commerce giant has been seeking out traditional offline retailers to digitize their operations by offering technology supporting online consumer reviews, inventory tracking, supply chain management, and mobile payment solutions.

As of the end of 2018, the size of China’s online home improvement market reached RMB 418.54 billion, a 34.9% year-on-year increase, according to a report (in Chinese) from Qianzhan Industry Research Institute. The report predicted that the figure will surpass RMB 500 billion in 2019.

In addition to operating an in-house home decoration platform Jiyoujia, the Hangzhou-based company owns stakes in a series of leading furniture chains in the country, such as Easyhome, and online home decoration service platforms like Many Craftsmen and Shengong 007.

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Alibaba shoulders past macro, trade war headwinds with robust earnings growth https://technode.com/2019/05/15/alibaba-2019-q1/ https://technode.com/2019/05/15/alibaba-2019-q1/#respond Wed, 15 May 2019 15:11:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105250 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba beats expectations on robust growth in its core e-commerce and cloud computing businesses.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba reported revenue of RMB 93.49 billion ($13.93 billion) for the fiscal quarter ended March 31, 2019, marking 51% growth from the same period a year earlier.

Revenue beat analyst estimates of $13.42 billion for the quarter as growth momentum maintained compared with 58% year-on-year growth during the same period last year. Revenue for the 2019 fiscal year ended March 31 totaled RMB 376.84 billion, an increase of 51% year on year, lower than the company’s forecast of more than 60%.

Alibaba’s net income in the quarter ended March 31 was RMB 23.38 billion, an increase of 252% compared with RMB 6.64 billion in the same quarter of 2018.

Meanwhile, the percentage of revenue cost compared with total revenue in the quarter increased to 60%, or RMB 55.61 billion, from 53% of revenue or RMB 32.50 billion, in the same quarter of 2018.

“The increase in revenue cost was primarily due to our consolidation of Ele.me, as well as an increase of the cost of inventory and logistics from New Retail and direct sale businesses,” the company said in its announcement.

The company forecasted in its 2020 fiscal year outlook revenue of more than RMB 500 billion. Its fiscal year began April 1, 2019 and ends on March 31, 2020.

“More and more, Alibaba is becoming synonymous with everyday consumption in China, growing our base to 654 million annual active consumers and extending our penetration in less-developed cities,” said CEO Daniel Zhang. “Our cloud and data technology and tremendous traction in New Retail have enabled us to continuously transform the way businesses operate in China and other emerging markets, which will contribute to our long-term growth.”

The company’s core e-commerce business drove growth thanks to lower-tier city penetration, better purchase conversion, and expansion to local consumer services and new retail businesses.

Jiang Fan, who oversees the company’s two core marketplaces Tmall and Taobao, announced in April that the company plans to double transaction volume on business-to-consumer marketplace Tmall over the next three years.

However, slowing economy and US-China trade tension remains a long-term uncertainty for the e-commerce giant. The growth rate of China’s online retail sales dropped significantly from 17.8% year on year in the first four months of 2019 from 32.4% in the same period last year.

Revenue from Alibaba’s cloud computing unit rose 76% from last year to RMB 7.72 billion, passing the $1 billion benchmark. Although the growth rate is still impressive, it slowed significantly compared with the 103% year-over-year jump in the same period last year.

Aside from e-commerce and cloud, Alibaba has its hand in a number of other businesses, such as logistics company Cainiao, and digital and entertainment arms including video streaming site Youku and Alibaba Pictures.

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China’s online retail growth in April falls to a new low of 17.8%: report https://technode.com/2019/05/15/chinas-online-retail-growth-in-april-falls-to-a-new-low-of-17-8-report/ https://technode.com/2019/05/15/chinas-online-retail-growth-in-april-falls-to-a-new-low-of-17-8-report/#respond Wed, 15 May 2019 08:05:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105178 Chinese e-commerce companies face significantly slower sales as middle-class consumers tighten their purse strings. ]]>

China’s online retail sales increased 17.8% year on year in the first four months of 2019, a significant deceleration compared with the 32.4% year-on-year jump in the same period last year, according to data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

China’s online retail sales totaled RMB 3.04 trillion (around $422 billion) in the first four months of this year, RMB 2.93 trillion of which were physical goods, which increased 22.2% year on year, the report said.

Online sales for top product categories pointed to significant slowing compared with the same period a year ago: growth in food sales fell to 26.7% compared with 44.9% in 2018, apparel weakened to 23.7% from 28.0% in 2018, and daily product sales rose 21.2% year on year compared with 31.1% year on year in 2018.

Slowing growth for online sales comes against the backdrop of a sluggish retail market. Growth in China’s overall retail sales, which include spending by the government, businesses, and households, slumped to the lowest seen since May 2003: 7.2% year on year in April from 9% the same period a year ago. Meanwhile, China posted an economic growth reading of 6.6% for 2018 earlier this year, the slowest growth in nearly 30 years.

The sluggish economy and slowing retail sales growth, coupled with the intensifying trade war, are sapping momentum from Chinese e-commerce companies as middle-class consumers tighten their purse strings. Purchase of big-ticket items such as home appliances and autos, as well as consumer electronics have fallen. Drop in smartphone sales is particularly visible, and the slowing economy is one of the major reasons.

On the bright side, more and more Chinese consumers are shifting online to make their purchases. The report shows that online retail sales for physical goods account for 18.6% of total retail consumer goods sales in the four months ended April 30, up from 16.4% during the same period last year.

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Content emerges as new driver of Chinese e-commerce https://technode.com/2019/05/14/content-emerges-as-new-driver-of-chinese-e-commerce/ https://technode.com/2019/05/14/content-emerges-as-new-driver-of-chinese-e-commerce/#respond Tue, 14 May 2019 07:08:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=105011 Perhaps the most significant development that pushed traditional e-commerce to content creation was Xiaohongshu.]]>

Li Jiaqi, a 27-year-old video blogger, is known as the “Lipstick King” in China.

He rose to fame for selling over 15,000 of the essential cosmetic item in five minutes, a striking number compared with few hundreds the former L’Oréal makeup artist could achieve per day at brick-and-mortar outlets of the French cosmetics brand.

Li is among a growing number of online content creators who are contributing to and cashing in on the integration of content production and e-commerce industry in China.

Chinese consumers’ shopping preferences and brand awareness are influenced by content from digital influencers, or key opinion leaders (KOLs), who spread their views in WeChat articles, usually with the function to direct users to the shopping site, to social media livestreams, photos and videos.

“Quality contents from KOLs and web celebrities have a huge influence on my purchasing decisions,” Qu Lijie, a 27-year-old student from Changchun from northeastern China’s Jilin province told TechNode. “The more I like a certain blogger, the more I want to dress like her.”

Although the idea of using quality content as a marketing tool for the promotion of commodities is not completely new, the current trend brings the two sectors closer, opening more possibilities for both sectors.

It’s neither about e-commerce nor content alone, it’s about the combination.

Getting in on the action

“Content is the king and it always is,” Deborah Weinswig, an analyst at research institute Coresight Research told TechNode. “Chinese tech giants are betting on content to further develop their [ecommerce] businesses.”

Alibaba has been exploring the possibilities of boost its ecommerce business by leveraging the power of quality content since its early days.

One of the first attempts by the e-commerce giant to use content to drive sales dates to the early 2010s when it entered into partnerships with fashion platforms such as Mogujie and Meilishuo, a Pinterest-style social sharing sites where users can share their shopping experience along with URL link to Taobao shops.

Although partnership with these shopping guide sites turned sour as the latter began to eat into Taobao’s traffic and hurt its advertising revenues, the examples nonetheless showed the value of quality content.

Since then, Alibaba has been building its own content ecosystem that include Taobao’s built-in social commerce platform Weitao, and fashion and shopping news aggregation Taobao Toutiao.

But perhaps the most significant development that pushed traditional e-commerce startups to content creation was the emergence of Xiaohongshu, also known as Little Red Book, a fashion community and e-commerce platform which claims over 200 million users.

At the same time, the entry of hugely popular video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou, weighed in on the trend.

Bytedance’s Douyin rolled out a shopping cart feature earlier in December last year. In the same month, its rival Kuaishou upgraded its e-commerce services, giving preference to domestically produced goods and partnering with Chinese e-commerce giants in the hope of commercializing its 150 million daily active users.

To fend off competition from tech upstarts, Alibaba’s doubling down on content initiatives since late last year. After inking a partnership with Bilibili in December, Alibaba took a step further to acquire an 8% stake or 24 million shares in the Chinese online video platform in February. The Bilibili deal is seen as a move to leverage the power of KOLs and content creators to allure the attention of younger audiences who are voracious consumers of digital content.

In addition to external investment, Alibaba has upgraded its internet content activities by drastically expanding the operations of Taobao’s live streaming unit Taobao Live.

Integration between online content and e-commerce is now quite streamlined and friendly, Weinswig explained. For example, users watching Taobao Live is just two clicks away from the shopping site.

Weibo, China’s microblogging services which Alibaba has a stake in, will invest RMB 2 billion (around $291 million) in the next two years to support content-driven e-commerce, key opinion leaders, actors, and agencies.

Although late to the game, JD.com launched a new program on its WeChat mini program, enrolling influencers in an attempt to build up a KOL-driven shopping guide community.

Why now?

Chinese e-commerce giants are in need of a new driver while facing saturating markets and the plateauing of new user numbers. The year-over-year sales growth rate for Alibaba’s Singles’s Day last year dropped from 36% a year earlier to 27%.

Underlying this is changing consumer behavior. Different from two decades ago when shoppers use e-commerce platform to find cheaper prices for the products they had already decided to buy, browsing through various platforms has now become an essential part to the shopping journey as well as an “entertainment” experience.

“It’s all about shopping experience and storytelling. Content gives the products a background story that we want to be part of. I just purchased two lipsticks introduced by Li Jiaqi, even though I’ve already got more lipstick than I can use,” says Li Weilin, mom of 9-year-old from Harbin in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang.

Chinese e-commerce giants pioneered the “shoppertainment” concept to combine the purchasing and entertaining experience. Further, e-commerce is a good means for content platforms to commercialize their user base.

“The e-commerce platforms have all the data, they know 100% what’s working. It is obvious that targeted content to niche audiences that offers educational or entertainment value is what establishes trust, builds affinity, and ultimately converts to sales.” says Elijah Whaley, CMO of KOL marketing platform PARKLU.

Despite the boosting effect for e-commerce, some say that contents with promotion goals are ruining contents. At times, fake or overly exaggerated reviews have tarnished the credibility of some platforms. Xiaohongshu has removed more than 1.38 million paid posters and 1.21 million biased reviews from its platform.

E-commerce and contents are going hand in hand in China, but this is just “one example of a larger global trend,” according to Eytan Avigdor, CEO & founder of influencer marketing platform Klear.

“China’s ability to integrate payments across social networks is more sophisticated than any other market. With users able to shop directly in platforms like WeChat, influencers in China play an extremely important role in direct sales,” he added.

“Comparatively, platforms like Instagram make direct purchases very difficult for brands looking to integrate,” says Avigdor. “As China continues to lead this market I believe we’ll continue to see influencers playing an extremely important role in the Chinese e-commerce industry.”

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Briefing: Car platform Guazi beefs up anti-corruption policy after worker scam https://technode.com/2019/05/14/car-guazi-anti-corruption/ https://technode.com/2019/05/14/car-guazi-anti-corruption/#respond Tue, 14 May 2019 06:22:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104994 Corruption was a trademark of China’s economic boom years, and now the attitude towards such practices is changing.]]>

瓜子二手车推行大安全计划 将反腐及扼制犯罪提升至战略级 – TechWeb

What happened: Chinese used-car trading platform Guazi is strengthening its anti-corruption efforts with the launch of a new plan to upgrade its management and organizational structure, and to improve the information security system. Guazi revealed on Monday a corruption case involving a Beijing sales representative, who swindled millions of RMB from the platform’s users. The company reiterates its “zero tolerance” policy against corruption, upgrading its anti-graft department and restructuring so that it reports directly to the chief executive officer. Founded in 2017, the company disclosed that the department has handled 57 corruption cases and recovered RMB 3.48 million (around $509,000) so far.

Why it’s important: In line with the country’s broader anti-graft campaign led by the state, Chinese tech companies have been stepping up efforts to fight corruption, a move that has expanded at a rapid pace in recent years. Ride-hailing giant Didi dismissed more than 80 employees last year for internal corruption. Meanwhile, food delivery and services platform Meituan Dianping reported 89 suspects to the police last year amid heightened scrutiny of corruption and other unethical practices. Yang Weidong, the president of Alibaba-backed video streaming platform Youku was investigated for alleged corruption last December. Gatekeeping and corruption was a trademark of China’s economic boom years, and now the attitude towards such practices is beginning to change.

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Briefing: JD.com ups alliance with $54 million investment in Xinning Logistics https://technode.com/2019/05/14/jd-invest-in-xinning-logistics/ https://technode.com/2019/05/14/jd-invest-in-xinning-logistics/#respond Tue, 14 May 2019 04:03:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104954 The Chinese e-commerce giant remains committed to its logistics business despite mounting losses.]]>

京东物流3.76亿投新宁物流 计划管控超200万车 – Sina Tech

What happened: JD Logistics, the logistics arm of Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com, has invested RMB 376 million (around $54 million) in Xinning Logistics, a supply chain logistics service provider listed on China’s A-stock market that it inked a strategic partnership with in October. The two companies plan to include more than 2 million vehicles in their smart logistics system, including the internet of cars, internet of cargo, and smart warehousing technologies.

Why it’s important: The partners have been working on integrating their supply chains and implementing intelligent logistics and unmanned delivery technologies. JD.com remains focused on growing its logistics business, although its logistics arm is still loss-making. JD.com logged RMB 121.1 billion in net revenue in the first quarter this year, but its costs surged 19.7% year on year to RMB 102.9 billion as it increases spending on highly automated warehouses and other technology.

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Briefing: Fashion platform Mogu connects livestreamers and brands https://technode.com/2019/05/13/mogu-launches-platform-to-connect-livestreamers-and-brands/ https://technode.com/2019/05/13/mogu-launches-platform-to-connect-livestreamers-and-brands/#respond Mon, 13 May 2019 08:44:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104886 Mogu's new platform aims to standardize the process.]]>

蘑菇街上线全球美妆供应链池 目标今年“蓄水”1000个品牌 – TechWeb

What happened: Mogu Inc., the fashion and lifestyle e-commerce platform backed by Tencent, rolled out on Friday a platform to connect livestreamers and cosmetics brands. Mogu Global Cosmetics Supply Chain Pool (our translation) helps livestreamers gain access to various brands and select cosmetics by offering product details, price fluctuations, delivery time, and historical sales. Brands and suppliers can meanwhile view the recent sales and areas of expertise for each livestreamer. The company aims to include 1,000 brands this year and add clothing brands to the platform in the future.

Why it’s important: Although the live-streaming boom is cooling down in China, it is becoming a larger part of the country’s e-commerce industry. More traditional e-commerce platforms like Taobao are leveraging the technology to offer a more interactive, immersive shopping experience. Alibaba’s Taobao is drastically expanding its live-streaming operations this year as a new driver for e-commerce growth. Mogu’s new platform aims to standardize the process of matching livestreamers and brands, driving efficiency and results.

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JD.com narrowly beats estimates, renews Tencent deal in Q1 2019 https://technode.com/2019/05/10/jd-com-q1-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/05/10/jd-com-q1-2019/#respond Fri, 10 May 2019 14:12:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104778 The company’s logistics arm, which lost RMB 2.8 billion in 2018, weighed on e-commerce giant. ]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant JD released on Friday stronger-than-expected earnings for the first quarter this year thanks to strong performance from its core e-commerce business and renewed strategic agreement with Tencent.

The company reported net revenues of RMB121.1 billion ($18.0 billion) in the first quarter of 2019, an increase of 20.9% from the first quarter of 2018, beating the Refinitiv’s forecast of 120.1 billion. Net service revenues for the period were RMB 12.4 billion, an increase of 44.0% from the first quarter of 2018.

The company’s core business JD Retail, formerly known as JD Mall, grew its operating margin for the reporting period by 0.6% compared with the same period last year, driven by growth in advertising revenue and economies of scale.

The company also renewed its three-year tie-up with Tencent. Under the agreement, Tencent will offer JD level one and two access points on its WeChat to provide traffic support, and cooperate on a number of areas including communications and social services, advertising, and membership services, among others.

The company’s logistics arm, which lost RMB 2.8 billion in 2018, weighed on the e-commerce giant. JD’s revenue for logistics and other services during the reporting period reached RMB 4.3 billion, up from RMB 2.2 billion year on year. Logistics represents a small portion of the overall net revenue, but it was a major driver in the increased cost of revenues, which surged 19.7% to RMB 102.9 billion in the first quarter of 2019 from RMB 86.0 billion in the first quarter of 2018.

“The core KPI of JD logistics will still center around improving user experience and efficiency by leveraging technologies. We expect gross margin from external orders to increase in the coming quarters,” says president of JD Logistics Wang Zhenhui during the earnings call on Friday.

Over the past month, JD has launched a series of efforts for commercializing its logistics arm by opening up its logistics operations to merchants and other partners. In April, it launched 30-minute delivery service within a three-mile range for Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Changsha and expanded to one-day intra-city deliveries.

JD this year has substantially reshuffled its team amid layoff rumors, executive departures, and pay cuts for its delivery team. The company claimed 179,000 full-time employees as of March 31, 2019. Company founder Richard Liu says during the call with analysts that talent investment will form an important part of the company’s plan for this year.

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Briefing: JD.com shuts down Australian office https://technode.com/2019/05/09/briefing-jd-com-shuts-down-australian-office/ https://technode.com/2019/05/09/briefing-jd-com-shuts-down-australian-office/#respond Thu, 09 May 2019 08:49:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104621 JDJD is shuffling its organization to stay focused on businesses that are more profitable.]]> JD

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com exits Australia – Financial Review

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com has quietly closed its Australian office fewer than 15 months after opening the location with great fanfare in February last year. The head of its Australian operations, Patrick Nestrel, has departed. However, the company will continue to conduct business in Australia and New Zealand and its partnerships with exporters from the region are unchanged. Staff in China will take over Australian operations.

Why it’s important: Globalization and cross-border e-commerce has been an important theme among Chinese e-commerce giants for the past few years. To keep up with the trend, JD.com had singled out Australia, New Zealand, and Europe for the first phase of its global expansion plans. Facing a slowing macro economy, a scandal involving its founder, internal turmoil, and financial pressure, the online retailer has been struggling since late last year to keep up its growth momentum. JD is pulling the plug on its Australian office in a reshuffle to retain focus on businesses that are more profitable.. The restructuring is also affecting JD’s expansion to Europe. Company founderd Richar Liu announced last July that JD will enter the region to compete with Amazon and Alibaba. An office in Germany and a logistics hub in France were on the program, but now these plans may be on hold.

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Briefing: Alibaba launches its own China brands revival, with a global emphasis https://technode.com/2019/05/09/alibaba-boost-globalization-chinese-brands/ https://technode.com/2019/05/09/alibaba-boost-globalization-chinese-brands/#respond Thu, 09 May 2019 04:45:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104565 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba to Help 700,000 Chinese Shops Sell Abroad – Yicai Global What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba announced Wednesday an initiative to promote domestic brands globally by enlisting its cross-border and international-facing platforms. The e-commerce giant said its plan it will help 200 heritage Chinese brands realize an annual sales goal of more than RMB […]]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba to Help 700,000 Chinese Shops Sell Abroad – Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba announced Wednesday an initiative to promote domestic brands globally by enlisting its cross-border and international-facing platforms. The e-commerce giant said its plan it will help 200 heritage Chinese brands realize an annual sales goal of more than RMB 100 million ($14.8 million) each. The company will also throw its weight behind another 200 domestic brands by selecting 200,000 large Taobao shop owners through which to sell their goods with a goal of RMB 1 billion in annual sales. Domestic businesses were 71% of total brands on Alibaba’s platforms last year. A total of 46 official time-honored Chinese brands brought in more than RMB 100 million sales last year, according to the company.

Why it’s important: In line with the company’s globalization initiative, Alibaba is among the first Chinese tech giants to push cross-border e-commerce in both directions. Alibaba has been selling Chinese brands internationally mainly through Tmall World, AliExpress, and Lazada. The announcement follows a statement made in late April by the Tmall president about plans to double transaction volumes on the platform over the next three years. In March, Alibaba’s import unit Tmall Global unveiled how it would bring $200 billion worth of international goods into China over the next five years, a commitment it made in November at the state-backed China International Import Expo. Alibaba’s announcement also follows closely on the heels of rival Pinduoduo’s announcement about efforts to promote heritage Shanghai brands on its platform in response to a municipal government initiative to revive domestic consumer goods manufacturing.

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Briefing: Seeking profit, Meituan Dianping crowds into express deliveries https://technode.com/2019/05/07/meituan-dianping-logistics/ https://technode.com/2019/05/07/meituan-dianping-logistics/#respond Tue, 07 May 2019 06:19:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104325 The short-distance delivery business will help the company's more than 600,000 active couriers make better use of downtime.]]>

China’s Meituan Dianping pushes its short delivery service to more customers in search for profit – South China Morning Post

What happened: Meituan Dianping, China’s leading food delivery and services platform, is offering short-distance deliveries to more customers and industries as a new service, Meituan Delivery (our translation). The services can be accessed on Meituan’s main app which now serves over 3.6 million merchants and 400 million users in China.

Why it’s important: With the launch of this service, Meituan aims to reduce its logistics costs and improve operating efficiency. In the fourth quarter of last year, the company recorded RMB 3.7 billion in operating losses, while food delivery costs increased 53.6% year on year to RMB 9.5 billion, mainly due to mounting salary costs for its delivery fleet. The short-distance delivery business will help the company’s more than 600,000 active couriers make better use of downtime, before and after peak lunch time, for example. Similarly, Chinese online retailer JD. com also opened up its logistics capacities to more customers recently in a bid to further monetize its in-house logistics capacity. The entry of two tech giants into the express delivery industry heats up competition in a sector already crowded with players like SF Express and Shansong Express. In addition to increasing the efficiency of existing manpower delivery fleet, both of the companies are engaged in developing autonomous delivery vehicles.

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Briefing: Starbucks China challenger Luckin aiming for $586.5 million IPO https://technode.com/2019/05/07/luckin-prices-its-ipo-at-586-5-million/ https://technode.com/2019/05/07/luckin-prices-its-ipo-at-586-5-million/#respond Tue, 07 May 2019 03:45:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104292 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksThe IPO filing comes a week after the company’s $150 million Series B+ that is raised at a valuation of $2.9 billion.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Starbucks’ China rival Luckin seeks to raise up to $586.5 million in IPO – Reuters

What happened: Chinese coffee chain Luckin is planning to raise up to $586.5 million in its US IPO according to its latest filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Monday. The company expects to offer 34.5 million shares priced between $15 and $17 apiece, giving it a valuation of between $3.48 billion and $3.95 billion. It had set a placeholder amount of $100 million in a filing submitted last month.

Why it’s important: Luckin Coffee is touted as a Starbucks competitor, but its business model differs from the coffee giant in many aspects, from user acquisition to marketing strategies. Adopting a growth path similar to many of China’s internet startups, Luckin’s strategy is to expand at a blinding pace, powered by a highly subsidized marketing model and a tech-forward purchasing experience. Its approach is largely influenced by its founders, formerly of Chinese car e-commerce platform UXIN Limited. As a result, the company is recording significant losses to the tune of nearly $79 million in the quarter ended March 31. The huge financial strain from such an aggressive expansion plan is showing: Luckin filed for its IPO just one week after a $150 million Series B+ in April that lifted its valuation to $2.9 billion. Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson meanwhile told Bloomberg that the company is well-positioned for long-term growth in China, a reminder than the Seattle-based behemoth has deep pockets to fund its China stores, which have expanded at a rapid clip for the past 20 years.

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Briefing: JD.com recruiting to staff new business initiatives https://technode.com/2019/05/06/jd-recruiting-for-emerging-positions-to-fuel-diversified-businesses/ https://technode.com/2019/05/06/jd-recruiting-for-emerging-positions-to-fuel-diversified-businesses/#respond Mon, 06 May 2019 10:06:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104221 The new positions underline JD’s efforts to diversify operations beyond its core e-commerce business.]]>

京东校招新职位:百万薪酬电竞高手、全球美食寻鲜者 – Tencent Tech

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com announced on May 5 that the first batch of new graduate recruits are joining the company as the company kicks off the plan to increase its workforce by 15,000 this year. As part of the recruiting plan, more than 2,000 position categories were created. Some of the newly created positions include e-sports players, drone service manager, global fresh produce buyer, and AI assistant trainer.

Why it’s important: The troubled Chinese online retailer has been under intensified public scrutiny since the end of last year. As news about departing executives and pay cuts for its delivery fleet circulate, the company is undergoing major structural and business shifts to maintain growth momentum. The company disclosed in February that the 15,000 new headcount will mainly go toward filling lower-level positions from customer service to logistics management. The rest will be assigned to jobs for enhancing user experience in technology and retail businesses. The addition of new positions in emerging sectors underscore JD’s efforts to diversify operations beyond its core e-commerce business.

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Crowdfunding site Shuidichou criticized for celebrity’s donation campaign https://technode.com/2019/05/06/shuidi-draw-social-outcry-cross-talk-performer/ https://technode.com/2019/05/06/shuidi-draw-social-outcry-cross-talk-performer/#respond Mon, 06 May 2019 09:30:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104186 Verifying a family's finances and assets such as cars and real estate is difficult, the platform said in a public letter.]]>

A crowdfunding company that focuses on donations for low-income patients seeking medical treatment is facing scrutiny from netizens after hosting a crowdfunding campaign for Wu Shuai, a popular crosstalk performer more commonly known by his stage name, Wu Hechen.

Zhang Hongyi, Wu’s wife, launched a crowdfunding campaign on Shuidichou on May 1 after Wu suffered a brain hemorrhage in April. The fundraising goal was RMB 1 million ($148,000) to fund his medical treatments and recovery. Wu is a performer with Deyun She, a well-known school and performance group for Chinese crosstalk performance, known as xiangsheng, which are generally comedic acts involving monologue or a dialogue between two performers.

While some netizens sympathized with Wu, more expressed doubt about how the crosstalk celebrity, who is likely to have substantial assets of his own, could qualify for charitable donations on Shuidichou.

It was discovered that Wu is covered by medical insurance and is in possession of two properties and one car. Zhang responded to local media that the two properties are public-assistance apartments that Wu’s grandparents and parents are renting. In addition, they can’t cash in on the car, valued at RMB 130,000, because it’s critical for the transportation between the hospital and their home during Wu’s recovery.

Following the public outcry, the platform suspended the campaign on May 3. A total of RMB 147,959 was raised from 5,269 donors.

Verifying a family’s finances and assets such as cars and real estate is difficult, Shuidichou said in a public letter. “We ask the candidates to reveal their health condition, spending, and economic standing (mainly property and cars), medical insurance and commercial insurance to the fullest extent,” (our translation) said the company, adding that Wu’s family hadn’t yet claimed the funds.

“Why didn’t you mention the apartment that is worth RMB 6 million?” one netizen posted on the crowdfunding site, which only identifies users by a portion of their mobile numbers.

State-owned media weighed in on the issue. “The event sounds the alarm for the charity crowdfunding platforms. It’s critical to protect public goodwill from misuse. Generosity to strangers is valuable and we should take good care of it,” (our translation) an editorial published in People’s Daily said.

Founded in 2016 by Shen Peng, co-founder of Meituan Waimai, Shuidi runs Shuidichou and a medical insurance platform, Shuidibao. The company received $74 million in a Series B from Tencent in March.

The online charity has been gaining momentum in China in various forms in the form of online charity stores and donation platforms, among others. The government has increased medical insurance coverage for some critical illnesses, but its effect on reducing financial burden on families is somewhat limited. Crowdfunding platforms, like Shuidi, Qingsongchou, and Kangai Gongshe have been founded to bridge the payment gap. However, the sector is facing roadblocks as more cases of abuse surface.

In one widely publicized case, Luo Er, the father of a six-year-old girl who was diagnosed with leukemia, raised more than RMB 2.6 million on WeChat in 2016. It was later revealed that the family was quite well-off, was responsible for only a small portion of medical costs, and Luo’s friend was accused of taking advantage of public sympathy to promote his company.

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Briefing: Tencent-backed health care giant DXY expands to cosmetic medicine https://technode.com/2019/05/06/dxy-expands-to-medical-aesthetic-industry/ https://technode.com/2019/05/06/dxy-expands-to-medical-aesthetic-industry/#respond Mon, 06 May 2019 03:42:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104159 DXY is looking to benefit from the booming cosmetic medicine segment, which is expected to be worth RMB 360 billion by 2023.]]>

丁香诊所正式试水轻医美项目 提供光子嫩肤等服务 – Tencent Tech

What happened: DX Clinics, the chain of offline clinics operated by Chinese online medical giant DXY.com, is planning to expand into beauty offerings with the launch of “light” cosmetic medicine services, which refers to non-invasive aesthetic procedures. The clinic will mainly concentrate on skin care solutions including facial skin assessments, whitening and rejuvenation solutions, and acne treatment services with prices ranging from RMB 500 (around $74) )to RMB 4,980, according to Chinese media. The company is licensed to for cosmetic medicine services for its outlet in Hangzhou, the capital of China’s eastern Zhejiang province.

Why it’s important: Founded in July 2000, DXY.com started as an online social networking service for China’s physicians and medical professionals. The Tencent-backed medical platform grew rapidly along with the rise of online healthcare in China, operating a series of businesses such as a SaaS management system for medical institutions. The expansion points to DXY’s efforts to capture growth from the booming cosmetic medicine segment, which is expected to be worth RMB 360 billion by 2023, according to figures from research firm Frost & Sullivan. Chinese cosmetic surgery services platform So-Young went public on Nasdaq on May 2 seeking to fund improvements to its offerings for the burgeoning industry.

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Briefing: Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang steps into spotlight prior to succession https://technode.com/2019/05/05/briefing-alibaba-ceo-daniel-zhang-steps-into-spotlight-prior-to-succession/ https://technode.com/2019/05/05/briefing-alibaba-ceo-daniel-zhang-steps-into-spotlight-prior-to-succession/#respond Sun, 05 May 2019 04:28:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=104048 The speech offers an opportunity to assess what to expect for the company after Ma's retirement.]]>

Zhang: Empower Young Innovators to shape the future – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang shared his views on innovation and Alibaba’s evolution at a conference in Beijing on April 27. In his reflections on Alibaba’s 20-year history, Zhang said that innovation comes from looking for opportunities for society in the future. “A real entrepreneur, they may identify some opportunities not only for today but also for tomorrow,” he said. Zhang also stated that start-ups should focus on value creation, not valuation, to retain customers.

Why it’s important: As the engineer for some of the company’s best-known achievements and a key proponent of Alibaba’s “New Retail” model, the 47-year-old CEO is shifting into a more visible role following the news in September that Zhang will replace company founder Jack Ma as chairman of the board in a year. The speech was a rare glimpse into Zhang’s views on key values in the industry and offers an opportunity to assess what to expect for the company after Ma’s retirement.

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Briefing: Alibaba settles lawsuit over pre-IPO disclosure for $250 million https://technode.com/2019/04/30/alibaba-250-million-settle-pre-ipo-counterfeiting/ https://technode.com/2019/04/30/alibaba-250-million-settle-pre-ipo-counterfeiting/#respond Tue, 30 Apr 2019 06:48:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103852 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAlibaba has long grappled with concerns over counterfeit merchandise sold on its e-commerce platforms.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba Agrees to Pay $250 Million to Resolve Complaints Over Pre-IPO Counterfeit Claims – The Wall Street Journal

What happened: Alibaba announced on Monday that it will pay out $250 million to settle a lawsuit which charged the e-commerce giant with securities fraud. Investors in a class action lawsuit sued Alibaba for failing to disclose a regulatory warning from China’s State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC) regarding its counterfeit prevention capacities before its $25 billion IPO in 2014. The company’s share dropped 12.8% on Jan. 28 to 29, 2015 after the SAIC issued a white paper based on the warning. Alibaba has denied any wrongdoing and stated that the settlement draws to a close any and all pending securities lawsuits against the company, its chief officers, and company directors.

Why it’s important: Alibaba has long grappled with concerns over counterfeit merchandise sold on its e-commerce platforms. The e-commerce giant has become increasingly conscious of the problem over the past four years as it pushes a globalization strategy. In 2018, it launched an anti-counterfeiting alliance that included Microsoft, Louis Vuitton, and Microsoft. Alibaba has been included on the US Trade Representative’s black list for its lax treatment of brand IP for three years running. Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo also made the list this year. Both of the companies have stated that they are taking steps to address the issue. In addition to conventional e-commerce platforms, knock-off products are finding new methods for distribution as sellers conduct business through various online channels, such as social network app WeChat and short video app Douyin. Short video apps like Douyin and Kuaishou have also been accused of allowing content that shows viewers how to make and sell counterfeit products.

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Briefing: Taobao testing social e-commerce platform Taoxiaopu https://technode.com/2019/04/29/briefing-taobao-testing-social-e-commerce-platform-taoxiaopu/ https://technode.com/2019/04/29/briefing-taobao-testing-social-e-commerce-platform-taoxiaopu/#respond Mon, 29 Apr 2019 09:16:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103736 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mTaoxiaopu underscores the Chinese tech giant's ongoing efforts to keep up with new trends in China’s ever-changing e-commerce landscape.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

淘小铺即将面世 阿里:要帮助普通人创业 – Ebrun

What happened: Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao announced a set of new operating rules for its yet-to-launch social e-commerce platform named “Taoxiaopu.” The platform is now being tested internally for market trend research and merchant feedback, and will be launched “soon.” Positioned as a socialized marketplace for everyone, Taoxiaopu improves upon conventional retail models with its S2B2C (supply to business to customer model) in which a data-driven supply chain platform is closely linked to the businesses that serve customers, offering features such as real-time feedback and customization for small businesses, for example. Suppliers include brands, distributors, factories, and offline merchants, while businesses are online storekeepers that could be content experts, sellers, and new consumers.

Why it’s important: The S2B2C concept was first proposed by Alibaba’s chief strategy officer Zeng Ming in 2017. The upcoming launch of Taoxiaopu underscores the Chinese tech giant’s ongoing efforts to keep up with new trends in China’s ever-changing e-commerce industry. With core businesses in C2C (customer-to-customer) marketplace Taobao and B2C (business-to-customer) site Tmall, Alibaba is exploring new business models to meet the demands introduced by new retail. Alibaba’s entry to this segment poses competition to existing players in the sector such as Yunji Weidian.

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Ctrip increases stake in India travel site MakeMyTrip in Naspers deal https://technode.com/2019/04/28/ctrip-india-makemytrip-napers/ https://technode.com/2019/04/28/ctrip-india-makemytrip-napers/#respond Sun, 28 Apr 2019 09:59:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103576 The deal may open an opportunity for Ctrip to tap an emerging China-India travel market. ]]>

Chinese online travel company Ctrip is doubling its bet on the Indian travel market by increasing its share in the online travel site MakeMyTrip through an exchange with technology investor Naspers, according to a statement from the company released Friday.

Ctrip already held a stake in the Gurugram-based company through a $180 million investment in 2016. The company increased its ownership by entering a share swap deal with Naspers, the South African tech and internet conglomerate, which will exchange its stake in MakeMyTrip for newly issued shares in Ctrip. Following the transaction, Naspers will own approximately 5.6% of Ctrip’s outstanding ordinary shares and Ctrip will hold 49% voting power in the Nasdaq-listed company, which has a market cap of $2.69 billion.

“Through this investment, we can gain more exposure to the fast-growing India travel market and benefit from the growth of the company,” Michelle Qi, Ctrip’s senior investor relations director, told TechNode. Ctrip’s insights on consumer purchasing behavior in China will help MakeMyTrip to offer better product and services for Indian travelers, she added.

The investment comes as the Chinese travel giant speeds up its global expansion in seek of new growth as competition intensifies from domestic rivals like Meituan and Alibaba’s Fliggy.

Since embarking on a globalization strategy over the past few years, Ctrip has inked several overseas deals within its core business, including a $1.74 billion acquisition of Skyscanner and purchase of Trip.com, and in other industries related to travel, like the investment in jet startup Boom Supersonic. It also plans to boost expansion in the European market. After the past five years, revenue from international businesses now represents around half of the company’s total revenue, according to Chinese media reports citing Ctrip CEO Jane Sun.

Investment in MakeMyTrip shows a deepened commitment to the expansion drive, in India as well as the broader Southeast Asia market. Compared with its neighbors, India is a latecomer to China’s outbound tourism boom.

To address that, the Indian government is committed to increasing Chinese visitors by 6,000% by 2023. The combination of the growing tourism market and government support could open an opportunity for online travel companies to tap into India, a significant market based on its size alone. Notably, Ctrip was reportedly planning to invest $100 million in Indian online food delivery and restaurant search platform Zamato in September.

In addition, the deal brings Nasper, an early Tencent investor, to Ctrip’s shareholder roster. “Naspers is one of the most well-known global internet and entertainment group and one of the largest technology investors in the world. We are glad to have Naspers as one of our top shareholders. We look forward to work closely with Naspers to build a mutually supportive relationship in the future,” Qi said.

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Briefing: Starbucks is well-positioned for long-term growth in China – CEO https://technode.com/2019/04/28/starbucks-is-well-positioned-for-long-term-growth-in-china-with-differentiated-experience/ https://technode.com/2019/04/28/starbucks-is-well-positioned-for-long-term-growth-in-china-with-differentiated-experience/#respond Sun, 28 Apr 2019 06:05:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103539 Starbucks has always had lots of competitors and China is no exception.]]>

Starbucks is well-positioned for long-term growth in China, CEO says -Bloomberg

What happened: In response to competition from China rival Luckin, Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson said in a recent interview with Bloomberg that the company is well-positioned for long-term growth in China, the second-largest and the fastest-growing market for the coffee chain. Over the company’s 48-year history, Starbucks has always had lots of competitors and China is no exception, Johnson said. “We really understand what makes a differentiated experience” especially after 20 years of operation in the country, he added. The combination of premium spaces, quality coffee, personalized service, and extensive digital reach through a partnership with Alibaba are the differentiators for Starbucks in China, Jones explained.

Why it’s important: By giving out generous discounts and building expansive store networks across the country, Chinese coffee chain up-and-comer Luckin is aggressively challenging Starbucks in China, a country of increasing strategic importance. However, Luckin’s capital-scorching growth has also drawn concern about its sustainability, given the company’s huge losses. China is increasingly a coffee-drinking nation. The country’s total coffee consumption grew at an average annual rate of 16% in the last decade, significantly outpacing the world average of 2%, according to figures from the International Coffee Organization.

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Briefing: Head of Alibaba’s Tmall aims to double sales in 3 years https://technode.com/2019/04/26/alibabas-tmall-double-sales/ https://technode.com/2019/04/26/alibabas-tmall-double-sales/#respond Fri, 26 Apr 2019 08:22:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103464 e-commerce cross-border Tmall GlobalBased on Tmall's current stats, Jiang Fan's targets are challenging but achievable.]]> e-commerce cross-border Tmall Global

Alibaba’s Online Mall Chief Wants to Double Sales in 3 Years – Bloomberg

What happened: Jiang Fan, president of Alibaba’s business-to-consumer marketplace Tmall, plans to double transaction volumes on the platform over the next three years. As part of its new brand and product-boosting initiative, the platform aims to help launch 100 million new products as well as incubate another 100 new brands with the goal of generating RMB 1 billion ($149 million) in sales each over the same time period. Tmall has drawn more than 100 million new buyers in the past year alone, a pace that will be sustained, Jiang added.

Why it’s important: Formerly founder of Umeng, a Chinese mobile app data analytics provider that was acquired by Alibaba in 2013, the 34-year-old Jiang Fan is a leading figure in Alibaba’s younger generation of senior executives who are playing bigger roles in the day-to-day operations of the e-commerce giant. Jiang, previously president of Alibaba’s customer-to-customer e-commerce platform Taobao, took the helm at Tmall in March this year after an internal reorganization extended his power to oversee operations of both businesses. A close lieutenant of Jack Ma’s, Jiang shares Ma’s aggressiveness in scaling the businesses. Based on Tmall’s currents stats, Jiang’s targets are challenging but achievable. Although Alibaba doesn’t currently disclose total GMV figures, the company revealed in its most recent earnings call that Tmall’s GMV was up 29% year-on-year for the quarter ended Dec. 31. Data from AliResearch shows that Tmall launched an excess of 50 million new products in 2018. Cross-border e-commerce will be an important driver for its growth. The platform’s imports-focused segment, Tmall Global, just unveiled two initiatives to further Alibaba’s plan to bring $20 billion worth of international goods to China over the next five years.

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Briefing: JD.com planning underground logistics network in Xiong’an https://technode.com/2019/04/26/jd-undergroud-logistics/ https://technode.com/2019/04/26/jd-undergroud-logistics/#respond Fri, 26 Apr 2019 06:31:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103432 Chinese tech companies have been engaged in increasing delivery efficiency by leveraging cutting-edge technologies such as autonomous driving, computer vision, and AI. ]]>

京东:雄安地下物流系统已开始架构规划– Tencent Tech

What happened: JD Logistics, the logistics unit of Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com, disclosed on Thursday that its underground logistics project in Xiong’an New Area is in the structure planning stage. The program was commissioned by the government of Xiong’an, a state-level new economic zone in China’s northern Hebei province. The system as planned will connect buildings and underground pipelines in order to deliver parcels to pick-up centers, which are assigned to customers. In real application scenarios, express parcels may be sent directly from the underground logistics channel to user doorsteps.

Why it’s important: China’s express delivery market has grown rapidly over the past few years, bolstered by various drivers such as a growing e-commerce market and increasing demand for service quality. However, the sector remains heavily dependent on human labor. Chinese tech companies have been engaged in increasing delivery efficiency by leveraging cutting-edge technologies such as autonomous driving, computer vision, and artificial intelligence (AI). The likes of JD.com, Alibaba, and Meituan-Dianping have rolled out their autonomous delivery vehicles and delivery drones. However, the underground logistics system is still in a very early stage of the application although it has its unique advantages in a higher degree of automation and proposes a solution to urban traffic problems.

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Briefing: Meituan Dache partners with ride-hailing peers to expand its services https://technode.com/2019/04/26/meituan-dache-ride-hailing/ https://technode.com/2019/04/26/meituan-dache-ride-hailing/#respond Fri, 26 Apr 2019 03:43:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103400 The partnerships help the company offer an expanded range of ride services to choose from for users in Beijing and Shanghai.]]>

美团打车在上海、南京上线聚合模式 将试点更多城市 – Sina Tech

What happened: Meituan Dache, the ride-hailing arm of Chinese lifestyle services platform Meituan-Dianping, expanded its service offerings Friday using partnerships with a number of ride-hailing peers including Shoqi Limousine & Chauffeur, Caocao Chuxing, and Car Inc. in Shanghai and Nanjing. Under the deal, Meituan Dache users in these two cities are offered an extended range of ride services to choose from, either from Meituan Dache’s own fleet of drivers or those of its partners. The current partnership focuses on improving user experience and won’t involve any subsidy campaigns, according to Chinese media.

Why it’s important: Following a 57% jump in operating losses in the fourth quarter of 2018, the Chinese food delivery giant is exercising more prudence for business areas beyond its core food delivery service this year. The push into transportation, an area that Meituan bet on heavily last year with its Mobike acquisition and ride-hailing services, has slowed. Following the murders of two passengers by Didi drivers last year, Meituan Dache suspended its expansion in September, then Mobike shut down some of its Asia businesses in March. Building an alliance with smaller industry players is a way for Meituan Dache to better position itself against Didi’s dominance. The strategy is nothing new, though. Didi used a similar tactic when it built an “anti-Uber” alliance with Lyft, Singapore-based Grab Taxi, and India’s Ola during its heated battle with Uber.

Correction: This article has been corrected to reflect that the service was first launched in Shanghai and Nanjing instead of Shanghai and Beijing.

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Briefing: JD.com expands one-day intra-city deliveries https://technode.com/2019/04/25/jd-express-dada/ https://technode.com/2019/04/25/jd-express-dada/#respond Thu, 25 Apr 2019 04:23:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=103277 JDLaunching an express service presents an opportunity for JD.com to further monetize its in-house logistics capacity.]]> JD

JD.Com, Dada-JD Daojia to Launch One-Day Intracity Logistics Service in China – Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese online retailer JD.com has rolled out intra-city logistics services targeting individual consumers in a partnership with Dada-JD Daojia, the company’s grocery delivery joint venture in which it holds a 47% stake. Mainly targeted at the delivery of food, medicine, consumer electronics, apparel, and groceries, the express logistics service will operate in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Tianjin. A package sent at 6 p.m. from Beijing will reach Shanghai at 10 p.m. the next day, the firm told local media.

Why it’s important: Thanks to the booming e-commerce industry, Chinese city-to-city logistics has expanded with names such as SF Express. As a company with fast and reliable delivery networks, it makes sense for JD to enter the emerging area. What’s more, launching an express service presents an opportunity for the embattled company to further monetize its in-house logistics capacity. Just a few days earlier, JD launched 30-minute delivery service within a three mile range for Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Changsha. JD’s logistics arm faces increasing financial pressure after 12 years of losses. JD founder and CEO Richard Liu said in an internal letter earlier this month that the e-commerce firm’s logistics arm recorded net losses exceeding RMB 2.3 billion ($343 million) in 2018. Liu adds that the money the firmed has raised so far will only last two years if nothing changes.

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Starbucks rival Luckin Coffee files for US IPO https://technode.com/2019/04/23/luckin-coffee-files-for-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/04/23/luckin-coffee-files-for-us-ipo/#respond Tue, 23 Apr 2019 04:14:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102947 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksThe IPO filing comes less a week after the company’s $150 million Series B+ that raised its valuation to $2.9 billion.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Chinese coffee chain upstart Luckin Coffee on Monday filed an initial public offering (IPO) with the US Securities and Exchange Commission in an effort to fund its escalating battle with rival Starbucks.

The Xiamen-based coffee chain, which will list on Nasdaq using the symbol, “LK,” set a placeholder amount of $100 million in the filing. Bloomberg News reported in February the company is targeting around $300 million.

The company declined to offer further details when contacted by TechNode citing the quiet period.

The IPO filing comes less a week after the company’s $150 million Series B+ that raised its valuation to $2.9 billion. BlackRock, which is also a major investor in Starbucks, led the round with its $125 million investment. The company has raised more than $550 million.

Luckin generated $71.3 million in revenue in the quarter ended March 31 and its losses totaled nearly $79 million, according to the filing.

Different from Starbucks which is known for in-store experiences, Luckin says in the prospectus that they are strategically focused on pick-up stores with limited seating and typically located in areas with a high demand for coffee, such as office buildings. Began as delivery-focused service, the company has been shifting its focus in 2018 to pick-up stores, which account for 91.3% of the company’s total stores as of March 31, 2019. This approach enables the company to stay close to target customers and expand rapidly with low rental and decoration costs.

Luckin states that its business model features three kinds of stores: “relax” stores offering a premium in-store experience for brand image; “pick-up” stores, which are generally small-sized stores for pick-up and delivery orders; and “delivery-only kitchens” for broader customer coverage.

Luckin is the second-largest coffee chain in China behind Starbucks, according to research firm Frost & Sullivan. The filing shows that the coffee startup has 2,370 self-owned stores as of March 31, 2019, falling short of Starbucks’ 3,600 in China. It aims to overtake its US rival this year with the goal to increase store count to 4,500 this year.

Correction: This article has been corrected to reflect that Luckin focus on pick-up stores strategically to allow fast expansion at low costs.

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Outpaced by local rivals, Amazon struggles to remain relevant in China https://technode.com/2019/04/18/amazon-retail-china-kindle/ https://technode.com/2019/04/18/amazon-retail-china-kindle/#respond Thu, 18 Apr 2019 14:05:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102519 The company maintains that the move is not a complete pull-back from the China market, but is “a transitional period.”]]>

Amazon is shrinking its e-commerce offerings in China, where market share for the US mega e-tailer is barely negligible amid fierce competition from countless rivals including giants such as Alibaba and JD.

“We will cease support for third-party merchants on Amazon China’s website starting Jul. 18, 2019,” (our translation) the company said in a statement to TechNode on Thursday. Amazon provides its merchants with tools to boost selling, including fulfillment and advertising services, according to its website.

Its withdrawal from the domestic marketplace will allow the company to sharpen focus on its cross-border e-commerce business, which mainly sells overseas products to Chinese customers, and its cloud computing service, it said in the statement.

The global e-commerce giant had struggled to gain share since it strode into China’s booming e-commerce industry in August 2004 through the acquisition of online book seller Joyo for $75 million from Xiaomi founder Lei Jun, the largest shareholder of the company at the time.

Yet according to market research institute eMarketer, Amazon China held less than 1% share of the total e-commerce market as of June 2018, eclipsed by Alibaba, which holds a share of more than half the market, and JD.com with less than a fifth. Social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, local retailer Suning, and Tencent-backed Vip.com round out the top five.

Long time coming

To some, the news is just a formal acknowledgement of Amazon’s reality in China.

“Honestly, I didn’t even know they still had a domestic business left,” Ker Zheng, marketing specialist at a Shenzhen-based e-commerce solution provider Azoya, told TechNode.

“They should have done away with the domestic business a long time ago. There’s no point to compete with Alibaba, JD, and JD isn’t even that profitable,” he added.

Netizens on social media appear to agree. “Amazon shut their in-house inventory business several years ago. Third-party merchants business is also not doing well. For me, Amazon has quit the game for a long time,” (our translation) one  Weibo user using the handle Summer wrote in a post dated Thursday.

The company’s strategic decision to retain key segments is a reflection of its platform’s polarity in China. “Not a big deal for me as long as Kindle and the cross-border operation is around. Amazon offers smaller discounts than Taobao and JD,” a Weibo user going by Shanika said.

China’s e-commerce market requires deep commitment that not all companies are prepared for.

“Basically all platforms provide a commodity service, since everyone sells the same products. To differentiate you have to either provide a lower price or a better customer experience, which means wider product selection, faster shipping. All of that requires a ton of investment and not making money for a long time. JD is willing to do it but not Amazon,” Zheng said.

Commitment can also mean evolving with consumers. Cao Lei, director of the China E-Commerce Research Center, attributes the company’s failure to gain a solid foothold to its lack of innovation. “The e-commerce platforms in China, both old and new, have developed lots of localized business models, such as Pinduoduo’s “group purchase” model and multi-echelon distribution model, to acclimatize themselves to the local market. But Amazon has missed many chances to make innovations, and lost a large number of users,” said Cao.

Regardless of its missteps, Amazon maintains that the move is not a complete pull-back from the China market, but is “a transitional period” (our translation).

However, the US giant also lags the competition in the cross-border e-commerce segment.

China’s leading e-commerce platforms, including Alibaba and JD, announced commitments to assist with importing a combined $250 billion worth of foreign goods at the first-ever China Import Expo held in Shanghai in November.

Rivals Tmall Global, NetEase Kaola, JD Worldwide, and Xiaohongshu lead the market, leaving Amazon China with a 6% share of the vertical as of the fourth quarter of 2018, according to data from research institute Analysys.

“[It] makes much more sense to focus on cross border imports since they have an advantage in sourcing foreign goods,” Zheng of Azoya told TechNode.

Cloudy Skies

The company’s other remaining business in China faces hurdles of its own. Amazon Web Services (AWS), the empire’s cloud computing platform, is a slow mover in the burgeoning cloud computing market.

Figures from Synergy Research Group showed that it held the leading share of the Asia-Pacific region with 24.1% share in revenue in the fourth quarter of 2018. However, in China, domestic tech giants hold the lion’s share with AliCloud comprising 40.5%, Tencent coming in a distant second with 16.5%, and AWS with around 9.7% share.

AWS made its China debut in August 2016, when it licensed the rights to Chinese telecommunication and data service provider Sinnet to offer local cloud services. China’s cyberspace watchdog requires foreign enterprises partner with local companies in order to run cloud infrastructure services in China for data security reasons.

Stay or go?

Early reports about the company’s shrinking China business were fractured, signaling internal confusion about the move.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that Amazon was preparing to close its China marketplace by withdrawing support for third-party merchants over the next 90 days. Chinese media also reported the closure of its main domestic retail business in China, citing a source as saying some employees are now hunting for new jobs.

However, according to China Business Journal, Amazon China announced the decision to close its e-commerce business including the proprietary retail segment in an internal meeting that took place Thursday morning.

Amazon China’s president, Zhang Wenyi, who took the post in April 2016, will reportedly leave, according to an unnamed executive. Around 2,000 people work for the company in China, and will learn more about the company’s layoff plans next week, said the source.

Amazon is not the first international retailer to fail in China.  The platform’s refusal to adapt to Chinese consumer preferences may have also taken a toll.

“If Amazon continues its cross-border e-commerce into China, it is highly suggested that they adapt and provide Chinese consumers the entertaining shopping experience that Chinese consumers like, instead of a global interface and rigid structure pushed to the consumer,” said Ron Wardle, CEO of e-commerce solutions firm, Export Now (Shanghai) Inc.

Cao of the E-Commerce Research Center agreed that Amazon China’s special “foreign-company style” corporate culture led to its weak execution of innovative ideas. “Decisions such as changing festival logos and launching new projects have to be approved by the company’s US headquarters, which results in its inefficiency and lack of indigenization,” he said.

JD.com founder and CEO Richard Liu—a leading figure in China’s e-commerce landscape whose own company and management has recently come under close scrutiny—uses a battle metaphor to describe the dynamic in a March 2018 video interview.

“It’s like soldiers who are told that they only have 10,000 bullets and before shooting each of the bullets, they have to check with the general whether more ammunition is coming. How can you expect the soldiers to win a war like this?” Liu said.

Additional reporting by Emma Lee and Wei Sheng. With contributions from Colum Murphy.

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Coffee upstart Luckin raises $150 million in Series B+, valuation now $2.9 billion https://technode.com/2019/04/18/luckin-coffee-raises-150-million-at-2-9-billion-valuation/ https://technode.com/2019/04/18/luckin-coffee-raises-150-million-at-2-9-billion-valuation/#respond Thu, 18 Apr 2019 05:19:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102464 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksThe funding is raised at a valuation of $2.9 billion, up from $2.2 billion in December.]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Chinese coffee chain upstart Luckin Coffee has raised $150 million in a Series B+, following a $200 million Series B in December, according to an announcement from the company. The funding was raised at a valuation of $2.9 billion, up from $2.2 billion valuation in December.

Of the total amount, a private equity arm of US investment and management cooperation BlackRock contributed $125 million. The investor behind the remaining sum was unspecified.

The two-year-old Starbucks challenger has been an investor darling since its inception. The current $350 million round follows a $200 million Series A that closed in June.

A Luckin representative declined to comment to TechNode on details about how the new funding will be used. The sum received in December was allocated to assist the company with further lowering delivery times, which are already within half an hour of customer orders.

Luckin’s access to capital has been an important driver for the company which has achieved breakneck growth through a model relying heavily on giving out freebies, building an expansive network of stores, and launching high-profile marketing campaigns against rivals that include Starbucks.

Despite the growth, the Chinese coffee firm is not on solid financial footing. It was RMB 857 million ($128 million) in the red for the first nine months of 2018, according to a business plan reportedly written for the company’s Series B and obtained by Chinese media outlet QDaily.

However, Luckin says its strategy of offering deep discounts will continue in the near future. Yang Fei, the company co-founder and CMO told Chinese media that a net loss of around RMB 800 million is within their expectation and the company will continue to offer discounts for the next three to five years.

The company’s massive losses cast a shadow over its sustainability, coupled with new signs signaling potential cash flow pressures and rumors about the company chairman tapping banks for a personal loan in exchange for IPO mandates.

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As JD CEO and founder faces public criticism, what’s next for China’s largest retailer? https://technode.com/2019/04/17/as-jd-ceo-and-founder-faces-public-criticism-whats-next-for-chinas-largest-retailer/ https://technode.com/2019/04/17/as-jd-ceo-and-founder-faces-public-criticism-whats-next-for-chinas-largest-retailer/#respond Wed, 17 Apr 2019 15:06:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102390 Layoffs, steep pay cuts, and constant comings and goings in JD’s C-suite place Alibaba’s nearest competitor in a bind. ]]>
A doorman keeps watch at JD’s Beijing headquarters, pictured here in November 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald)

Renewed rape allegations against Richard Liu, the founder and CEO of JD.com, China’s largest retailer and second-largest e-commerce operator, represent only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the Chinese tech behemoth’s problems.

In 2018, Liu was arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on suspicion of rape. He was not criminally charged, but the fallout of the highly publicized case contributed to a downward slide in the company’s share price.

On Tuesday, Liu faced renewed allegations as the alleged victim decided to pursue a lawsuit seeking damages of more than $50,000. The suit names JD as a defendant.

Reports of massive layoffs, steep pay cuts, and constant comings and goings in JD’s C-suite have Alibaba’s nearest competitor in an uneasy position, prompting many to ask what’s next for JD and to question whether Liu is fit to stay on as leader.

The company has an excellent track record in terms of providing high-quality e-commerce services and logistics. However, the recent unwanted attention has brought closer scrutiny to JD’s business in general, including the company’s efforts to move into new areas such as cloud computing, finance, and new retail.

JD declined to comment for this story.

The turmoil has been reflected in the company’s stock price performance, which hit a historic low in November 2018 at $19.27, less than five months after notching a high of around $43. The company’s shares have more or less bounced back. At market close on April 16, the stock price was $29.91.

JD is at a turning point. The question is whether the company can develop existing lines of business in logistics, its core strength, while succeeding in new ones, such as cloud computing. Many recent announcements indicate that the company is restructuring, shedding staff, and trying to adapt quickly to new business models and opportunities.

E-commerce wars

JD’s reported year-on-year growth of net revenue in 2018 was 27.5%, though exact gross revenue figures are undisclosed. By contrast, Alibaba witnessed a 40% year-on-year growth for its core e-commerce business. In 2014, JD went public on Nasdaq, raising $1.78 billion. Four months later, Alibaba made history with the largest IPO on the NYSE at $25 billion.

JD might come in second from a numbers perspective, but it has amassed valuable assets in supply chain and logistics. As far back as 2007, JD began to build out its own logistics network. Dissatisfied with China’s existing delivery infrastructure, it established delivery hubs of its own, starting in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.

While its competitors mainly relied on third-party couriers to deliver their goods, JD’s in-house logistics arm allowed it to control the quality of its service. In 2010, it became one of the first e-commerce companies to launch same-day and next-day delivery service.

However, building logistics infrastructure across a country as expansive as China is not cheap. It is believed that more than 70% of the $1.78 billion proceeds JD raised in the 2014 IPO was spent on logistics construction, according to a paper from a Shanghai-based consultancy that was reviewed by TechNode.

In 2017, JD founded a separate logistics business group, raising $2.5 billion during its first financing round in 2018. After the deal, Jingdong Group, as JD is also known, still held an 81.4% stake in JD Logistics, which is currently valued at over $10 billion. The remainder was held by a consortium that includes Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia China, and Tencent.

But JD’s asset-heavy approach to logistics is gradually losing traction in a massive market where rivals like Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics are also raising the bar in terms of service quality, while enjoying greater nimbleness by creating a network with courier companies outside of the Alibaba group.

Despite its physical assets, JD Logistics recorded a $343 million loss in 2018. In a leaked internal memo, Liu said that if the trend continues, the subsidiary’s funding would last only two years.

What is more, efficient delivery has proved insufficient to boost growth in the current landscape of e-commerce. “JD has not kept up with the new trends in the Chinese market: drawing online traffic and entertaining younger users. Its e-marketplace simply looks like an online shopping mall, which makes people feel bored,” said a longtime observer of JD who goes by the name Youkaku and who claims to have insider knowledge.

Top-down turmoil

Employees work at JD’s Beijing headquarters, pictured here in November 2018. (Image credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald)

As one of the rare tech companies in China without an official co-founding team, JD has been characterized by Liu’s absolute rule. Unlike companies like Alibaba, JD’s operations are not safeguarded by partnerships or succession planning.

Fang Hao, former editor-in-chief of Chinese media Cyzone, wrote that JD’s management team is considered “barely nothing” compared to Tencent, known for its president Martin Lau and WeChat head Allen Zhang, or Alibaba, where Jack Ma has laid out a succession plan featuring Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang.

For a decade, Liu almost singlehandedly led JD’s employees in the charge for market share. This situation did not change even after 2011, when, in preparation for their IPO, the company welcomed a long line of executives for the first time.

Leading the charge once again, Liu vowed in a Tencent Tech report in February 2017 that JD’s strategy over the next 12 years would be highly driven by technology. He hoped that people would recognize JD as “a successful technology company.”

This year, within the course of a month, three top JD executives have stepped down, including CTO Zhang Chen. The former Yahoo vice president had been expected to lead a fundamental technology revolution in the company.

General counsel Rain Long Yu and chief public affairs officer Lan Ye also recently quit JD. Experiencing this many high-profile exits in such a tight timeframe is considered highly unusual for China’s tech industry.

Youkaku told TechNode Zhang’s leaving reflected that JD’s long-entrenched political culture complete with “fiefdoms and cliques,” which was criticized by Liu himself recently in an internal meeting, according to Chinese media. This makes the integration of new hires difficult. Youkaku believes the executives’ departures will not have a large impact on the organization, since “only one person is the leader.”

According to a JD employee who asked to remain anonymous because of company policy, the organization is overly centralized with inefficient layers of accounting, reporting, and resource allocation.

“Goals and purposes are barely conveyed to each staff member in an accurate and effective way,” this employee told TechNode. JD is run more like a traditional Chinese state-owned enterprise than an agile tech company, she said.

To be sure, JD has made attempts to boost the vitality of certain parts of the organization. In January, the company upgraded its main segments—retail, logistics, and digital technology—into three independent units, with Xu Lei, Wang Zhenhui, and Chen Shengqiang named as chief executives, respectively.

The restructuring was later highlighted by Richard Liu as part of a decentralization push. In an internal New Year’s memo obtained by Tencent Tech, Liu announced that the company headquarters would relinquish some management control and give greater autonomy to the units. “Each business group will fight battles with its own will,” the memo stated.

Old brothers, new markets

Liu was raised in a family that worked in the coal shipping business. He refers to the nearly 100,000 (predominantly male) delivery personnel as his “brothers” and has often expressed pride in their employment conditions, which gives them higher compensation and better treatment than JD’s competitors.

Those employed at the company for five years or more enjoy unemployment insurance, medical insurance, accommodation, and full medical expenses. Such benefits are unusual for the industry.

“JD will never fire any one of our brothers,” Liu said in a trade conference in May 2018, as cited by Leiphone.

Yet less than a year later, the layoffs began. In February 2019, the e-commerce giant unveiled plans to cut the 10% lowest-performing executives. It later claimed to be eliminating three types of employees, including those who “could not work hard” for any reason, be it health or family.

Last Friday, a report revealed that Liu took a tough tone in his WeChat Moments, saying, “Those who mess around without achieving anything are not my brothers any more.”

“Mass layoffs are happening right now, and everyone is anxious,” said the JD employee. She told TechNode that many of her colleagues are planning to jump ship for other jobs.

For its part, JD disputes the job cut claims, preferring to point towards its plan to create 15,000 new positions this year as part of its organizational overhaul.

One relatively new business area for the company is cloud computing. In April 2016, JD entered China’s fast-growing cloud market by establishing a dedicated subsidiary, JD Cloud.

IDC Consulting expects China’s cloud market to become the largest in the world by 2023, accounting for a quarter of global spending on cloud infrastructure.

In 2015, Alibaba invested $1 billion in its cloud computing arm Aliyun, which it had launched in 2009. The investment proved wise. Since then, Aliyun’s revenue has boasted double—and often triple—digit growth, carrying Alibaba’s growth despite a slowing economy.

“In e-commerce, everybody knows the cloud is important. If you don’t offer it, your clients will look at your competitors,” said Chris Dong, research director at IDC China. “They want to retain their relevance.”

Much like Amazon internationally, Alibaba’s early mover advantage crowned it the king of the Chinese cloud services, holding 43% of the market, according to IDC figures for the first quarter of 2018. The same report indicates that it is followed by Tencent at 11%, China Unicom at 8%, and Amazon at 6%.

“Everyone is looking at powerhouses,” Dong said, referring to companies which dominate the market, like Alibaba and Amazon. However, he added, with plenty of potential customers who are not serviced by their cloud offerings, there’s still room for new arrivals. Still, Dong does not foresee JD Cloud aggressively competing with Alibaba, as that would require major investment.

Tough road ahead

For a long time, people have compared JD with Alibaba, but it appears that comparison is no longer apt. While Alibaba has found success and profit expanding to new areas such as the cloud, finance, and entertainment, JD is still essentially an e-commerce company. The company has been slow to adapt to emerging trends in its core business.

Its unyielding organizational structure, alongside its “macho” and rigid company culture, have also slowed its response to market needs. Meanwhile, Alibaba’s Taobao launched a live-streaming tool in April 2016. Pinduoduo has established a market presence by offering social tools for group-buying models to consumers seeking lower prices.

One possible option for JD to catch up with the e-commerce trends driven by China’s rising millennials could be a merger with Pinduoduo. JD’s presence is strong in higher-tier cities where Pinduoduo is weak, and vice versa. They are also both Tencent-backed and individually outmatched by Alibaba. But this scenario seems far-fetched, given that they are similar-sized entities that appear to lack the financial muscle to make the deal work.

JD’s plan to seek growth in the cloud market, however, takes advantage of its superior logistics network to deliver digital services to areas not yet saturated by the top cloud providers.

JD holds the strongest logistics chain in the countryside, so it is well-positioned to deliver digital services in these areas. “This is where JD Cloud could step in—to build a cloud foundation to help rural governments establish e-commerce capabilities for locally produced goods, so that they can be sold more broadly and effectively on the JD platform,” Dong said.

If it can develop an inclusive and agile corporate culture, and attract a more dynamic team of executives who can implement necessary changes, JD could do a better job of keeping up with or even anticipating technological and internet trends.

A key factor is whether Richard Liu—assuming he holds on to the leadership role—can navigate the changes essential for the company’s long-term survival. Because he has been JD’s indisputable leader, much depends on his standing within the company, as well as his public image.

In March, Liu requested leave from the Two Sessions, China’s biggest annual political event, for unspecified reasons. In contrast, senior executives from China’s other tech giants—Baidu, Tencent, Huawei, and Xiaomi—were all present.

Additional reporting by Jill Shen and Eliza Gkritsi. With contributions from Elliott Zaagman. 

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Briefing: Amazon reportedly withdrawing from China https://technode.com/2019/04/17/amazon-china-exit/ https://technode.com/2019/04/17/amazon-china-exit/#respond Wed, 17 Apr 2019 10:06:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102302 Amazon’s withdrawal is another to add to the long list of multinational companies that failed to tap the Chinese market.]]>

Update: Amazon will cease support for third-party merchants on Amazon China’s website.

爆料:亚马逊将宣布退出中国 – 媒体训练营

What happened: Global e-commerce giant Amazon will exit from China, leaving only two businesses—Kindle and the cross-border selling unit—reported a Chinese media outlet citing people with knowledge of the matter. That means Amazon’s logistics unit and cloud service AWS may also be affected. An official statement on the matter will be released later this week, the source said, though a specific date is unknown.

Why it’s important: Through its acquisition of Chinese e-commerce site Joyo for $75 million in 2004, Amazon joined a group of rivals to tap China’s booming e-commerce industry. As a relatively early entrant, Amazon China had a good start with market share peaking at around 15% in 2008, but the site quickly lost ground to e-commerce giants such as Alibaba and JD.com. The cross-border e-commerce trend that surfaced around 2014 could have facilitated a comeback given its advantages in global selling and supply chain. But the company failed to rise to the challenge and was quickly surpassed not only by Alibaba and JD, but also to cross-border e-commerce upstarts like Xiaohongshu, NetEase Kaola, and Ymatou. Rumors about a potential merger between Amazon China and NetEase Kaola circulated earlier this year, but were never confirmed. Amazon China held a minuscule 0.6% of the market last year, according to research institute Analysys International. Amazon’s withdrawal is another to add to the long list of multinational companies such as Google, Uber, and eBay that have failed to tap the Chinese market. Reasons vary from localization issues to government interference.

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In wake of fresh rape claims, scrutiny of JD founder Richard Liu intensifies https://technode.com/2019/04/17/jd-richard-liu-rape-charge/ https://technode.com/2019/04/17/jd-richard-liu-rape-charge/#respond Wed, 17 Apr 2019 07:45:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102205 Questions about Liu’s fitness to head JD.com are resurfacing.]]>
The exterior of online retailer JD’s Beijing headquarters, pictured here in November 2018. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode). Credit: TechNode/Cassidy McDonald

Troubled Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com faced a fresh setback as the student who accused JD.com founder Richard Liu of rape in August filed a civil lawsuit against the billionaire on Tuesday.

The lawsuit comes nearly four months after Minnesota prosecutors declined to pursue criminal charges. JD.com is also named as a defendant.

JD did not provide comment on the new lawsuit but referred TechNode to a statement from its lawyers.

“We are not in a position to comment at this time, but we will vigorously defend these meritless claims against the company,” Peter Walsh from Hogan Lovells, counsel for JD.com, told TechNode.

Just as the dust stirred up by August accusations against Liu had started to settle, the lawsuit sparked another round of discussion on Chinese social media—only this time with a slight shift in focus.

Before Liu’s arrest, the market was relatively bullish on JD.com, with Nasdaq-listed share reaching a high point of $43 in June.

Netizen reactions when the rape allegations originally emerged reflected the public’s empathy for Liu’s wife Zhang Zetian, an internet celebrity, as well as criticism for Liu. He later admitted to cheating on his wife.

This time around, Chinese netizens’ concerns seem primarily aimed at the company. Recently JD has been featuring prominently in the news as rumors of layoffs, pay cuts, and management reshuffles proliferate against a backdrop of an uncertain economic climate in China.

Questions about Liu’s fitness to head JD.com have also resurfaced.

Dongge for the success, Dongge for the failure, Dongge can consider resigning from JD,” said a netizen using the handle, Anne, on microblogging site Weibo, referring to a nickname that translates into “Brother Dong,” shorthand for Liu’s first name, Qiangdong.

Liu’s alleged victim, University of Minnesota student Liu Jingyao, is seeking damages of more than $50,000. This is the first time the student’s name has been revealed.

Some Weibo object to the release of the identity of the alleged victim. “It’s not cool to reveal the girl’s name, no matter what,” says Weibo user with the handle, YimiaoS.

Others saw significance in the amount of damages sought. “The girl is not claiming a big sum, this might reflect her stance in the case—it is going to be settled with money. It will take a long time for Liu and JD to settle the matter,” said Weibo user Bao Manman.

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Briefing: Tencent’s auto intelligence arm teams up with weather data site https://technode.com/2019/04/16/tencent-weather-forecast/ https://technode.com/2019/04/16/tencent-weather-forecast/#respond Tue, 16 Apr 2019 05:05:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=102081 The connected car trend is creating new opportunities for tech companies in road safety and passenger entertainment.]]>

腾讯车联与中国天气网达成战略合作 推动精细化气象数据进车 – Tencent Tech

What happened: Tencent Auto Intelligence, the tech giant’s smart vehicle unit, has entered a strategic partnership with weather.com.cn, a website run by the state-backed China Meteorological Administration to provide location-based weather forecasts to drivers. By providing minute-by-minute and mile-by-mile weather forecasts, the partnership could help car owners to adjust travel plans and make the best travel decisions, according to the company. In addition, the two companies will collaborate on a series of maps that provide information such as flooded areas in cities and popular travel destinations, among others.

Why it’s important: The connected car trend is creating new opportunities for tech companies, data providers, and car manufacturers to provide informational and entertainment services for passengers, as well as assist with road safety. Tencent has been making inroads into the smart mobility domain with a matrix of business that covers all car–related areas from smart car solutions, autonomous driving, and a WeChat-based auto payment system for parking. The tech giant is also working on an in-vehicle version of its messaging app WeChat. Tencent is competing with a series of domestic rivals that are increasing their bets on the sector, such as Baidu and Alibaba.

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Briefing: Alibaba-backed used goods platform Idle Fish investing in content https://technode.com/2019/04/12/alibaba-idle-fish-social/ https://technode.com/2019/04/12/alibaba-idle-fish-social/#respond Fri, 12 Apr 2019 04:31:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101806 The used goods resale sector has had its share of problems including counterfeit goods, merchandise quality, and even legal issues concerning the sale of endangered animals.]]>

闲鱼计划三年培育10万玩家 打造有趣的社区 – Sina

What happened: China’s top second-hand goods selling platform Idle Fish, known by its Chinese name Xianyu, plans to foster 100,000 key opinion leaders (KOLs), or “players” as the company refers to them, on the platform in the future over the next three years, the company said Thursday. More than one million users post over two million “idle” items on the app per day, according to the company. The average income of Idle Fish users was RMB 4,000 (around $600) in 2018, up 16% year-on-year.

Why it’s important: Born out of Alibaba’s massive e-commerce ecosystem, Idle Fish started as an online platform allowing China’s consumers to cash in on used goods that “idle” at home. The company’s new initiative highlights a strategic turn in its positioning, mirroring efforts on Taobao to create quality content and build an active community. Used goods selling platforms have gained momentum in China as consumer spending power has increased. In addition, Chinese consumers have become more open towards purchasing second-hand goods thanks to the popularity of rental economy businesses. However, the used goods resale sector has had its share of problems including counterfeit goods, merchandise quality, and even legal issues (in Chinese) concerning the sale of endangered animals. Idle Fish competitors include Tencent-backed Zhuanzhuan and classifieds platform 58.com.

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WeWork Labs and Alibaba Cloud join hands to give startups a push https://technode.com/2019/04/11/wework-labs-and-alibaba-cloud-join-hands-to-give-startups-a-push/ https://technode.com/2019/04/11/wework-labs-and-alibaba-cloud-join-hands-to-give-startups-a-push/#respond Thu, 11 Apr 2019 14:58:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101728 The companies said they aim to help 20 foreign startups to enter China, and assist 30 Chinese companies expand overseas.]]>

The China unit of WeWork’s accelerator-type program WeWork Labs and Alibaba’s cloud computing arm Alibaba Cloud have inked a partnership to support entrepreneurs grow their businesses both in Greater China and overseas.

Under the new arrangement, the two parties will introduce eight co-branded labs spaces across the country in 2019 in cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Shenzhen.

Li Zhongyu, manager of Alibaba Cloud Innovation Incubation Department said Alibaba Cloud will provide technology and entrepreneurial support to WeWork Labs across e-commerce, fintech, logistics, healthcare, entertainment, and more.

The companies said they aim to help 20 foreign startups to enter China, and assist 30 Chinese companies to expand overseas.

“We believe Alibaba and WeWork have different parts of the puzzle and we can complete a wider picture of entrepreneurship,” said Roee Adler, global head of WeWork Labs.

The US community and space operator also announced the official rollout of WeWork Labs in Greater China, around one year after a pilot period that started in June last year.

WeWork Labs, which launched internationally in 2018, is an accelerator-type program under the WeWork umbrella. The program now has over 50 locations in 32 cities and 15 countries around the globe.

WeWork Labs Greater China now has three physical spaces in Shanghai and plans to expand to around 10 cities in the country this year, according to Dylan Huang, the head of the company for Greater China.

Alibaba is no stranger to accelerator-type programs. Heeding the Chinese government’s call for advancement, creation, and promotion of entrepreneurship that was launched in 2015, Alibaba has opened 54 innovation centers, Alibaba’s Li said.

“We have incubated around 18,000 projects and these projects have received a combined RMB 20 billion (around $2.9 billion),” he added.

WeWork Labs’ Adler, who is himself a serial entrepreneur, said that the customer-focused mindset and mass manufacturing capabilities are two major advantages that could help Chinese startups outrun their global rivals.

Another advantage is the low cost of manufacturing in China, he added. “The infrastructure and platforms have been built in the country, allowing certain kinds of ideas to move a lot faster than other places in the world,” Adler said.

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Pinduoduo’s reputation as fake seller endures as Apple seeks to halt sales https://technode.com/2019/04/10/pinduoduo-denies-iphone-supply-proble/ https://technode.com/2019/04/10/pinduoduo-denies-iphone-supply-proble/#respond Wed, 10 Apr 2019 08:12:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101155 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaPinduoduo has been trying to shake off its negative image as platform that sells fakes.]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

Chinese social e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo can’t rid itself of its reputation as a counterfeit seller. The social e-commerce site has denied that Apple is seeking to cut off distributors from supplying its products to the platform due to concern over counterfeit products in response to media reports about the dispute.

The Alibaba rival maintained “all the latest iPhones models and other Apple products available on Pinduoduo are authentic and sold at the lowest price across all platforms,” (our translation) according to a statement from the company shared to TechNode late Monday. Every iPhone delivered to customers comes with its official invoice from the resellers, the company said.

Pinduoduo, which is not on Apple’s authorized online reseller list that include JD, Tmall, and Suning, sources inventory from the company’s authorized offline distributors, according to the company. Chinese media reported on Monday that Apple asked several such distributors to suspend their partnership with Pinduoduo, or risk losing coveted distributor status. Apple declined to comment on the matter.

Pinduoduo did not respond to TechNode inquiries about its Apple distributors.

More than 1.1 million iPhones have been sold through Pinduoduo since the Nov. 11 Singles’ Day promotion in 2018 at prices featuring discounts ranging from RMB 500 (around $75) to RMB 1,000 lower than the average market price, according to the social e-commerce platform.

As the latest e-commerce sensation in China, Pinduoduo has recorded remarkable growth since its establishment in 2015, forming a formidable challenge to market incumbents like Alibaba and JD. However, its exponential growth has been tempered by ongoing scrutiny for offering poor quality and counterfeit goods.

As a listed company, Pinduoduo has been trying to shake off its poor image in seek of longer-term, sustainable growth, as well as pressure from the government. Chinese regulators launched a probe in August following media reports of third-party vendors selling counterfeit goods on its group-discount marketplace.

Pinduoduo shut down 1,128 stores and removed 4.3 million listings in a week beginning Aug. 2. In a similar effort, the company increased merchant oversight in December to further address the issue.

The social e-commerce firm is facing another, more pressing, problem: free cash flow. Spending on sales and marketing, which include discount promotions, significantly outpaced revenue growth in 2018 as it invested in cultivating greater user recognition through online and offline advertising campaigns and promotions, according to the company’s 2018 financial report.

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Briefing: JD.com reportedly planning to lay off as many as 12,000 https://technode.com/2019/04/10/jd-faces-new-job-cut-rumor/ https://technode.com/2019/04/10/jd-faces-new-job-cut-rumor/#respond Wed, 10 Apr 2019 03:33:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101262 The so-called job cuts are a result of normal workforce fluctuations, said the company.]]>

Deep Cuts Planned at China’s JD.com – The Information

What happened: JD.com is working on a new round of layoffs that could affect up to 8% of its 150,000 employees, or more than 12,000 positions across various business units, The Information reported citing investors in the Nasdaq-listed company. However, the company denied the report to TechNode on Wednesday.

“We don’t know the source of that figure, but it’s inaccurate. There have been some adjustments as a normal part of our business. In fact, JD.com plans to make 15,000 new hires, and hire 1,300 new college graduates,” JD.com spokeswoman told TechNode.

Why it’s important: So far 2019 has proved a tough year for JD.com, which is facing the pressures of a slowing macro economy, competition from Alibaba, internal reshuffling, and the aftermath of sexual assault allegations against founder Richard Liu. Rumors swirled on social media that JD.com laid off 10% to 15% of its workforce in November, although the company refuted the story. However, reports of significant personnel turnover at the executive level have been confirmed. JD.com had announced in February plans to cut the bottom-performing 10% of its management; the departure of its chief human resources officer, chief technology officer, and chief public affairs officer quickly followed. JD.com’s net losses in the fourth quarter of 2018 widened to RMB 4.8 billion (around $715 million) from RMB 900 million a year earlier, while revenue in the same period rose 22% year-on-year.

Update: story was updated on Apr. 10 to include a response from JD. com.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s Cainiao to raise delivery fleet wages 20% within 3 years https://technode.com/2019/04/09/alibabas-cainiao-promises-20-pay-raise-to-delivery-fleet-within-future-3-years/ https://technode.com/2019/04/09/alibabas-cainiao-promises-20-pay-raise-to-delivery-fleet-within-future-3-years/#respond Tue, 09 Apr 2019 10:40:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101212 The competition between Alibaba and JD is expanding beyond e-commerce business to logistics, a sector that overlaps with their core business.]]>

菜鸟裹裹:未来三年让快递小哥人均增收 20% – TechNode Chinese

What happened: Alibaba’s courier app Cainiao Guoguo announced today on China’s microblogging service Weibo that the company will recruit 100,000 more deliverymen within the next three years. The company added that it aims to increase the average income of its delivery fleet by more than 20% during the same period. Launched in 2016, Cainiao Guoguo is a one-stop package tracking and order-placing platform.

Why it’s important: The competition between Alibaba and JD.com is expanding beyond e-commerce business to logistics, a sector with significant overlap with their core business. Cainiao Guoguo’s announcement comes two days after news began circulating widely about JD.com replacing fixed salaries with commission-based wages for its more than 100,000 deliverymen, likely resulting in lowered compensation. China’s express delivery market has recorded sharp growth over the past few years, however, the logistics sector still depends heavily on manpower. Chinese tech giants including Alibaba, JD.com, and Meituan are working on their own autonomous delivery solutions to reduce labor costs.

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Tencent-backed plastic surgery app So-Young files for $150 million US IPO https://technode.com/2019/04/09/so-young-150-million-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/04/09/so-young-150-million-us-ipo/#respond Tue, 09 Apr 2019 05:32:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=101106 China is now the second largest market for medical aesthetics services with a market size of RMB121.7 billion in 2018.]]>
Image credit: Pexels

Tencent-backed plastic surgery app So-Young on Monday filed for a Nasdaq listing. The company expects to raise up to $150 million, according to its prospectus. No pricing terms were disclosed.

So-Young, founded in 2013, is a platform allowing prospective patients to discover and evaluate plastic surgery services for treatment offline. The company’s namesake app So-Young offers a wide range of facilities including professional beauty content, community management, and e-commerce services to users.

The company’s revenue surged 138% year-on-year to more than RMB 617 million (around $90 million) with a net income of RMB 55 million in 2018. Information service fees and reservation service fees charged to medical aesthetic service providers for the likes of plastic surgery and beauty services are the main sources of the company’s revenue.

China’s medical aesthetic service industry, a fusion of healthcare and beauty services, is growing rapidly and has gained traction among the country’s younger generations.

China is now the second largest market for medical aesthetic services after the US. In 2018, the market reached almost RMB 122 billion, representing a compound annual growth rate of over 23% from 2014, according to data from research institute Frost & Sullivan. The total revenue of the industry in China is expected to reach RMB360 billion by 2023, the institute noted.

The growing market has given rise to an increasing number of cosmetic surgery hospitals, along with platforms to promote them. So-Young has received a combined $230 million in funding, according to CrunchBase. The company competes with well-funded rival  Gengmei.

Distribution of professional content through social media and the adoption of innovative new technologies are at the core of the company’s strategies. So-Young claims to account for 84% of the time daily users spent using online medical aesthetic service mobile apps in 2018. In terms of technology application, the company uses artificial intelligence in analyzing facial features for evaluating virtual medical aesthetic needs and predicting treatment effects online.

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Briefing: New Weibo feature lets users hide posts older than 6 months https://technode.com/2019/04/08/weibo-hide-posts-older-than-six-months/ https://technode.com/2019/04/08/weibo-hide-posts-older-than-six-months/#respond Mon, 08 Apr 2019 03:44:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100944 Users criticize Weibo for blindly imitating WeChat in making content less permanent. ]]>

Weibo now lets you hide posts older than six months – Abacus

What happened: Weibo, China’s answer to Twitter, added a new feature on Friday that allows users to hide posts older than six months. Weibo’s official account stated that the new feature is aimed at “giving users more initiative and managerial power.” By launching the new feature, Weibo is following the footsteps of rival WeChat in making social media content less permanent or even momentary. WeChat launched a similar control in 2017 for its Moments newsfeed feature, giving users options to hide posts older than three days or six months.

Why it’s important: Setting time limits for social media content is proving to be a controversial function in China. While some embrace it for the privacy aspect, others are critical of limiting access to friends’ posts. Weibo’s introduction of the feature is drawing scrutiny from users about whether it is a good option for the microblogging platform, which embraces openness as one of its core values. Some users criticized Weibo of blindly imitating WeChat, a private messaging app for which a hiding function may be more suitable, especially because the newsfeed feature is peripheral to its core service.

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Briefing: More China tech firms join top-employer list despite dwindling upside https://technode.com/2019/04/04/tech-giants-china-best-employer/ https://technode.com/2019/04/04/tech-giants-china-best-employer/#respond Thu, 04 Apr 2019 03:21:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100758 Chinese tech giants are increasingly popular employers, highlighting the country’s quickly evolving tech scene.]]>

2019 年领英顶尖公司排行榜:中国职场人最向往的企业 – LinkedIn

What happened: Domestic tech firms made up 15 of LinkedIn China’s Top-25 Companies list in 2019, compiled based on feedback from the site’s 40 million users in China, an increase from the eight seen in 2018. Alibaba was again crowned as the most sought-after employer, with Baidu and Bytedance replacing Amazon and Apple for second and third place, respectively. Other tech companies that made it to the top include Nio, Didi, Huawei, and Meituan Dianping. New to the list this year include Tencent, JD, Didi, Ant Financial, Kwai, and Xiaohongshu.

Why it’s important: Chinese tech giants are increasingly popular employers, highlighting the country’s quickly evolving tech scene. The internet and technology industry, widely known in China for its high salaries, paid some of the highest bonuses with an average year-end additional compensation of RMB 8,801 (around $1,311) in 2017. In the past, tech companies attracted headlines by luring top talent with massive bonuses (in Chinese) equivalent to 50 or 100 months’ salary. However, this practice is history now as growth for China’s tech and startup companies is cooling compared with two or three years ago. Tech giants are now slashing employee bonuses and encouraging employees to adhere to the grueling “996” work week, shorthand for a workday schedule from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. A viral Github post about the phenomenon named e-commerce platforms JD and Youzan as two companies that embrace “996.”

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Briefing: Alibaba’s second-largest shareholder announces liquidation plan https://technode.com/2019/04/03/alibaba-altaba-liquidation-plan/ https://technode.com/2019/04/03/alibaba-altaba-liquidation-plan/#respond Wed, 03 Apr 2019 07:37:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100670 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe investment fund first cashed out its holdings in Alibaba in August, reducing its stake to 11% from nearly 15%.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Altaba Announces Board Approval of Plan of Complete Liquidation and Dissolution – Business Newswire

What happened: Alibaba’s second-largest shareholder Altaba, formerly Yahoo! Inc., announced its board had approved the liquidation and dissolution plan. The investment company, which owns 11% of the Chinese e-commerce giant, intends to sell no more than approximately 50% of the shares it holds in Alibaba before they gain shareholder approval of the plan and to sell its remaining Alibaba shares after getting shareholder approval, the company announced in a public statement.

“Stocks are for trading. Any shareholder has the right to deal stock anytime on the market, for any purpose. We’re happy to have had Yahoo! invest in Alibaba in the past and to see it now collecting a strong return on its investment,” an Alibaba Group representative told TechNode.

Why it’s important: Altaba was created from Yahoo! after the former tech giant sold its core internet business to Verizon in 2017. Since then, Altaba has been a proxy for investors seeking exposure to Alibaba. The investment fund, which once kept 72% of its assets in Alibaba, cashed out its holdings in Alibaba for the first time in August, reducing its shares in Alibaba from nearly 15% to its current 11%. Amid an overall cooling in the retail market and China-US trade tensions, Alibaba has reported its slowest revenue growth since 2016, despite exceeding expectations and posting net income growth of more than 30% for the quarter ending December 31, 2018 compared with the same period a year earlier.

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Briefing: Tencent, Novartis further partnership to fight chronic disease https://technode.com/2019/04/03/tencent-teams-up-novartis/ https://technode.com/2019/04/03/tencent-teams-up-novartis/#respond Wed, 03 Apr 2019 04:54:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100629 China is fertile ground for online healthcare thanks to its tech-savvy and legacy-free environment.]]>

Tencent, Novartis expand teamwork on chronic disease – China Daily

What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent has signed a memorandum with Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis to extend their partnership to cover heart failure and other chronic diseases. The cooperation will initially start in China to explore the possibility of leveraging artificial intelligence to boost integrated management for patients with chronic diseases, with the potential to expand to other countries.

Why it’s important: China is fertile ground for online healthcare thanks to its tech-savvy and legacy-free environment. Tencent has made in-roads into the medical industry with an appointment platform for hospitals and even its own clinics. At the same time, rival Alibaba has an AI diagnostic system and offers medical bill payment on Alipay. Other major players in the vertical include Hong Kong-listed Ping An Good Doctor, DXY, Medlinker, among others. Technologies including advanced analytics, machine learning, the internet of things, online sales technologies, distributed ledgers, and virtual reality is increasingly applicable in healthcare and are expected to become ubiquitous around the world, according to consulting firm Bain & Company.

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Luckin offers $6.7 million in assets as lease collateral, signaling money woes https://technode.com/2019/04/03/mortgage-luckin-financial-pressure/ https://technode.com/2019/04/03/mortgage-luckin-financial-pressure/#respond Wed, 03 Apr 2019 04:24:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100588 Luckin Coffee fraud starbucksLuckin is under financial pressures as the startup coffee chain is showing signs of overheating. ]]> Luckin Coffee fraud starbucks

Luckin Coffee, the loss-making Chinese coffee startup, registered RMB 45 million ($6.7 million) worth of movable assets as collateral to Zhongguancun Technology Lease Co., Ltd. (our translation), according to Chinese enterprise intelligence platform Qichacha.com.

Although it concerns relatively small sum, the move signals financial pressures, Zhuang Shuai, the founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian, told TechNode. The startup aims to surpass US rival Starbucks in China store count this year. Starbucks has 3,600 outlets in China, according to the company.

Blitzscaling has worked for software companies but it remains to be seen whether it can work for physical assets, according to Michael Norris, strategy and research manager at AgencyChina in Shanghai. He cites examples in bike rental and co-working sectors to illustrate the level of investment required to build enormous scale very quickly across physical assets. “In a large number of cases, it’s more money than most investors can handle,” Norris told TechNode in a written response on Tuesday.

“It’s trite to say that 2019 is a critical year for Luckin. But rumors of Luckin Coffee’s chairman tapping up banks for a personal loan in exchange for IPO mandates and assets being pledged as collateral, there is an emerging set of evidence which suggests Luckin’s model is close to overheating,” Norris added.

Luckin was unavailable for comment when contacted by TechNode on Wednesday.

The loan period runs from March 27, 2019 to March 31, 2020. Collateral items registered include around 100 coffee machines and storage furniture from Luckin’s outlets across all major Chinese cities such as Beijing, Shenzhen, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, according to the site.

Founded by the team behind Chinese mobility company CAR Inc., Luckin grown exponentially since its establishment in October 2017. The company had more than 2,000 outlets across the country as of end-2018. The Starbucks rival plans to add about 2,500 new outlets this year.

Luckin’s access to capital has been an important driver for its growth. It raised $200 million in a Series B for a total valuation of $2.2 billion in December 2018, only six months after it raised $200 million in a Series A in June.

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Briefing: Alibaba rolls out AI-powered rumor buster on April Fool’s Day https://technode.com/2019/04/01/briefing-alibaba-rolls-out-ai-powered-rumor-buster-on-april-fools-day/ https://technode.com/2019/04/01/briefing-alibaba-rolls-out-ai-powered-rumor-buster-on-april-fools-day/#respond Mon, 01 Apr 2019 10:23:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100405 More seniors in China are accessing the internet than ever before, and are particularly susceptible to viral rumors.]]>

阿里巴巴发布“AI谣言粉碎机” 让父母不再每天过愚人节 – iHeima

What happened: Alibaba’s research and development unit DAMO (Discovery, Adventure, Momentum, and Outlook) Academy rolled out on April Fool’s Day a rumor verification service that could help Chinese netizens, especially seniors, to identify rumors and false news.

“By bringing it to the public on April Fool’s Day, we want to raise public awareness of the existence of such a technology,” a company spokeswoman told TechNode.

By leveraging new technologies like artificial intelligence, deep learning, and neural networks, the rumor buster has an accuracy rate as high as 81%, according to the company. It has been working on the technology for quite some time and its business applications are in the pipeline, the spokeswoman said, including law, finance, and entertainment.

Why it’s important: Rumors escalating to viral heights is a known phenomenon in the internet age, and China is no exception. Outrageous rumors in the past include plastic seaweed sweeping the country and mung bean soup as a cure (in Chinese) for diseases from cancer to diabetes. With the rising adoption of smartphones, more seniors in China are accessing the internet than ever before, and are particularly susceptible to viral rumors. More than 60% of interviewees have been affected by internet rumors, according to a survey of middle-aged to elderly internet users conducted by People’s Daily, the central government’s official news agency. However, the service may find it difficult to discern real from rumor by government standards. In 2018, China launched “Piyao“, an AI-powered rumor-refuting platform that operates under the guidance of 27 government departments.

TechNode confirmed with Alibaba that the fact-checking tool is indeed an actual product. Chinese culture and arts publication RADII reported the launch as part of its April Fools Day coverage, suggesting news of the product launch was a prank.

Update: This article was updated to reflect additional comment from Alibaba in response to media reports that the product was fake and part of an April Fools’ joke.

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Taobao doubles down on livestreaming with ambitious Taobao Live plan https://technode.com/2019/04/01/taobao-live-ambitious-boost-plan/ https://technode.com/2019/04/01/taobao-live-ambitious-boost-plan/#respond Mon, 01 Apr 2019 09:03:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100365 e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduoAlthough livestreaming is slowing in China, there has been increasing uptake for the technology as a new marketing channel for e-commerce.]]> e-commerce laws livestream taobao alibaba jd.com pinduoduo

Chinese online marketplace Taobao will drastically expand its live-streaming operations this year as a new driver for e-commerce growth.

Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of its consumer-to-consumer (C2C) platform, is aiming to expand its business in 2019 to 10 product categories with annual sales volume of more than RMB 100 million (around $15 million) each and 200 Taobao live-stream virtual shopping rooms with an annual transaction value of RMB 100 million each, Wen Zhong, director of Taobao’s content e-commerce department, announced at the Taobao Live Gala held on Saturday in Hangzhou.

The company also introduced a series of goals in line with the broader initiative at the event. To create a talent pool, Taobao Live launched a live-streamer program to provide professional training for up to 1,000 livestreamers across multiple platforms and areas. The goal for the program in 2019 is to produce 10 content creators with their own shows that generate annual sales volume of RMB 100 million each in partnership with 100 regional television stations, according to the company.

“Taobao Live could be an important tool to connect new retail and new manufacturing. Livestream-enabled e-commerce… helps to integrate traditional offline shopping malls to Taobao ecosystem,” (our translation) said Zhao Yuanyuan, operating head of Taobao Live, to media at the event.

Although livestreaming is slowing in China, there has been increasing uptake for the technology as a new marketing channel for e-commerce. On Taobao, a leader in the trend, e-commerce livestreaming generated sales volume of RMB 100 billion in 2018, growing nearly 400% year-on-year. Livestreaming is accelerating the e-commerce effect on traditional retail, bringing products from factories, farms, and brick-and-mortar stores online to Chinese consumers.

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Briefing: Taobao doubles down on used car sales with Guazi and Souche https://technode.com/2019/03/29/taobao-used-car-trading-guazi-souche/ https://technode.com/2019/03/29/taobao-used-car-trading-guazi-souche/#respond Fri, 29 Mar 2019 04:03:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=100091 A traffic jam during rush hour in the downtown area of Beijing in August, 2011. (Image credit: Bigstock/Checco)China's used car sales are growing rapidly with nearly 14 million cars sold in 2018, up 11.5% year-on-year.]]> A traffic jam during rush hour in the downtown area of Beijing in August, 2011. (Image credit: Bigstock/Checco)

淘宝二手车分别与大搜车、瓜子二手车达成合作 – 36Kr

What happened: Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao announced on Thursday that it is partnering with Guazi and Souche, two major online used car marketplaces, in separate statements. Guazi will add to its existing store on Alibaba’s auction platform paimai.taobao.com, by opening a Taobao store. With the Souche tie-up, the two parties will join resources for the launch of an online used car shopping mall.

Why it’s important: China’s used car trading is growing rapidly with nearly 14 million cars sold in 2018, up 11.5% year-on-year, according to a report released by China Automobile Dealers Association. The removal of restrictions on used car re-sale locations in 2018 ramped up demand across regions. Taobao began moving toward its goal to create a one-stop destination for online used car selling beginning last year. The company inked a similar partnership with Uxin, another leading online used car market, in December. Alibaba is a Souche investor, while Alibaba and Guazi have a common investor following its $1.5 billion funding from Softbank in February.

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WeChat’s new mini-program logistics linkup raises e-commerce stakes https://technode.com/2019/03/28/wechat-logistics-mini-programs/ https://technode.com/2019/03/28/wechat-logistics-mini-programs/#respond Thu, 28 Mar 2019 09:08:55 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99881 mini programs wechat alipay meituan bytedanceTencent’s WeChat launched a logistics interface for its popular mini-program feature.]]> mini programs wechat alipay meituan bytedance

On Monday, Tencent’s WeChat app launched a logistics interface for its popular mini-program feature that it says could save time and money for online retailers.

Given its competition with established e-commerce titan Alibaba, which has spent years strengthening its own logistics network, Tencent’s update may appear to be too little, too late. Outside of strategic investments in platforms such as Pinduoduo and JD.com, its homegrown businesses have largely failed to rival those of Alibaba.

However, according to at least one expert we spoke with, WeChat’s goal isn’t necessarily to surpass Taobao. Instead, the social platform is pushing forward innovation more in line with its strengths, which include a 1 million-strong ecosystem of mini-apps, lightweight programs that run within WeChat.

Lowering the barrier

With the new add-on, WeChat mini-program developers can directly connect to logistics companies such as SF, ZTO Express, and YTO Express. In addition, customers who purchase items will be able to receive notifications and track their packages directly through a centralized “WeChat logistics assistant.” Previously, users had to enter the mini-program for each online store to check on their shipments.

The process of linking a mini-program to the logistics option requires developers one week on average, according to WeChat (in Chinese). In its official release it cites two major sellers, including American skincare brand Kiehl’s, who have saved on costs and improved customer experience using the new feature.

However, one marketing professional expressed doubt that the change will help all retailers equally. The update could lead to a marked improvement for “really well-developed companies” with an established customer base, says Jason Blondeau, director of marketing and sales at Shanghai-based web agency QPSOFTWARE. Relative newcomers to mini-program e-commerce, however, may not benefit much from a logistics upgrade until sales pick up.

Still, Blondeau told TechNode, mini-programs in general can be “very useful” for brands when combined with a “proper marketing plan.”

Screen shot of the WeChat logistics assistant (Image credit: WeChat).

In addition, the latest update seems to fit with Tencent’s aim to make mini-programs easy to use. It’s “very much in line with what they said they would do,” says Matthew Brennan, co-founder of China Channel.

“The whole mini-program initiative is about helping startups, helping more businesses,” Brennan told TechNode. That applies to e-commerce as well. Just a few years ago, WeChat “wasn’t a very natural environment” for online shoppers, said Brennan. Now the whole in-app retail experience has become much smoother thanks to pushes from Tencent.

Brennan doesn’t see the company’s e-commerce initiative as a direct competitor to Alibaba. Instead, like the “runaway hit” platform Pinduoduo, WeChat is finding new models “to let social e-commerce flourish.”

And fast-growing mini-programs, launched in January 2017, happen to be a convenient tool for alternative means for growth. As of the second quarter of 2018, Tencent reported that WeChat hosted over 1 million mini-programs on its platform, a 72% jump from the same period in 2017. Total users reached 600 million, with close to one half accessing them four to six times a day.

In its fourth quarter report for 2018, Tencent said that mini-program user daily visits have grown 54% year-on-year. Daily active users have also increased “rapidly,” although the company did not release a specific figure.

Their popularity has caused such ripple effects as small food and drink sellers using mini-programs to improve in-store experiences, rather than remain in an increasingly crowded online food delivery market. The feature’s success has also led multiple other companies, from Baidu to Bytedance, to emulate Tencent’s formula of driving in-app “stickiness.”

Logistical battle

While WeChat may be taking a different tack towards e-commerce, recent years have seen Tencent and online retail titan Alibaba expand aggressively into each other’s home turf. The Chinese social and gaming giant saw some progress with investments in Alibaba competitors like Pinduoduo, Vipshop, and JD.com, of which Tencent is the largest shareholder. However, its own e-commerce businesses, including the likes of C2C marketplace Paipai or Yixun, have achieved little success in a crowded market.

As a result logistics, a primary driver for the e-commerce boom in China, has never been a key focus for Tencent as it has been for Alibaba or JD.com.

Alibaba began tapping into the sector as early as 2013 with the establishment of Cainiao Logistics, which has pledged to support same-day delivery in China and 72-hour delivery around the world. Cainiao now stands at the heart of a broader logistics network that leverages the capacities and capabilities of several large, high-profile partners. The e-commerce giant already holds minority stakes in three of the country’s top logistics companies: ZTO Express, YTO Express, and STO Express.

In comparison, Tencent’s integration of logistics features into its WeChat mini-program ecosystem might be viewed as a necessity in a world where online shoppers are accustomed to same-day—or in some cities, 30 minute—deliveries.

In addition, while the field of e-commerce is already highly developed, it’s still expanding. China’s express delivery market has recorded sharp growth over the past few years, handling 50 billion parcels in 2018, up 26% year-on-year, according to data from the State Post Bureau.

With additional reporting by Emma Lee.

Correction: This article previously incorrectly stated Jason Blondeau’s title. He is director of marketing and sales at QPSOFTWARE, not marketing and sales manager.

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Briefing: Alibaba acquires Chinese productivity app Teambition https://technode.com/2019/03/28/alibaba-fully-acquires-teambition/ https://technode.com/2019/03/28/alibaba-fully-acquires-teambition/#respond Thu, 28 Mar 2019 07:26:35 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99992 One of the earliest productivity tools in the Chinese market, Teambition was founded in 2011 and has more than seven million users.]]>

阿里巴巴全资收购企业协作软件Teambition – Sina Tech

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has fully acquired Shanghai-based productivity tool Teambition on Tuesday through its investment arm, according to Chinese enterprise intelligence platform Qichacha.com. Teambition consists of cloud-based project management tools, with functions similar to a mixture of Trello and Dropbox. Users can collaborate on projects and share or edit documents in real time across departments, locations, and business units. It has more than seven million users across 38 industries with clients including Huawei, Xiaomi, TCL, and Ximalaya.

Why it’s important: As one of the earliest productivity tools in the Chinese market, Teambition was founded in 2011, well before tech giants Alibaba and Tencent made their forays into the team collaboration vertical with DingTalk and WeChat Work, respectively. The move falls in line with Alibaba’s strategic shift to enterprise-facing services. Alibaba rival Tencent also backed the software-as-a-service (SAAS) platform in 2016. Teambition founder Qi Junyuan garners lots of media attention as a successful “post-90” entrepreneur, a term used for those born after 1990. The deal follows an earlier acquisition rumor that circulated in November.

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Briefing: Consumer group accuses Fliggy, Ctrip of price optimization https://technode.com/2019/03/28/beijing-consumers-association-price-discrimination/ https://technode.com/2019/03/28/beijing-consumers-association-price-discrimination/#respond Thu, 28 Mar 2019 04:20:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99936 Prevailing big data technology has substantially increased the ability of online retailers to apply selective pricing with more precision than ever before. ]]>

北京消协点名飞猪和去哪网涉嫌大数据杀熟 去哪网:不存在的 – iFeng

What happened: Some 88% of the Chinese consumers believe that online shopping platforms, including those for travel bookings and ride-hailing, leverage user data they collect for personalized pricing to make users pay as much as possible, according to a survey released by the Beijing Consumers Association on Wednesday. Around 57% of consumers interviewed say that they have experienced this phenomenon. Ctrip and Alibaba-backed Fliggy, two popular Chinese online travel aggregators, were among those suspected of this sort of price discrimination according to the survey. Both companies denied the allegations.

Why it’s important: Prevailing big data technology has substantially increased the ability of online retailers to apply selective pricing with more precision than ever before. In China, personal data is freely traded on the black market for meager sums. Prior to the current survey, tech giant Didi was also under attack for the same issue. A way to reduce unfair price boosting is to compare prices on multiple platforms and pay closer attention to personal data security, according to the survey.

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Appetite for food-delivery apps wanes among small restaurant owners https://technode.com/2019/03/28/appetite-for-food-delivery-apps-wanes-among-small-restaurant-owners/ https://technode.com/2019/03/28/appetite-for-food-delivery-apps-wanes-among-small-restaurant-owners/#respond Thu, 28 Mar 2019 01:30:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99256 Rising commission fees are eroding profitability at small restaurants. Many owners say they've had enough. ]]>

For the past six years, the lives of Chi Hongwei and her husband have revolved around their 30-square-meter franchise restaurant that sells wontons, a type of traditional soup dumpling.

Located in Songjiang University Town, a suburban district of Shanghai that is home to tens of thousands of university students, they know their business model works: feeding hungry tech-savvy students, who usually use food-takeout apps to order the meals delivered to their dorms. In peak months such as December, the small restaurant is filled with the nonstop sound of notification messages emanating from the cash register, reminding Chi and her husband of incoming orders.

“Sometimes it turns out to be a little too overwhelming for us to handle,” Chi recalls, adding that the restaurant could receive as many as 500 orders in a single day.

The past five years could be considered a golden age for many such small restaurants. Many managed to amass a small fortune by piggybacking on the enormous popularity of the food-delivery apps. Not only did these digital platforms offer a new and more efficient channel to market meals, but their operators were also willing to provide them bonuses in the form of promotional subsidies.

Now it seems those days may be numbered. As Tencent-backed Meituan and Alibaba-backed Ele.me have snatched up most of the market, the idea of partnering with online delivery platforms is not as attractive as it used to be. Some small restaurant owners are turning their backs on food-delivery apps, creating their own WeChat mini-programs to take orders or reverting to distributing paper menus to gain customers.

By abandoning online channels, they can shift their focus back to higher-yield in-store guests, they say.

When Chi and her husband opened a small sushi restaurant in September, just 50 meters away from their wonton shop, they decided not to list it on Meituan or Ele.me. That decision appears to have paid off. “So far, the offline traffic is not bad,” says Chi.

Power shift

In the past, China’s food-delivery market involved several players, but it has since undergone major consolidation. It’s now effectively a duopoly made up of Meituan and Ele.me—combined, the two hold 90% of the market share, according to a report from China Tonghai Securities citing data from research firm Analysys. Meituan led the sector with a market share of around 60%, followed by Ele.me, which had around 35%, according to the report.

Market share changes in China’s food-delivery sector (Image credit: TechNode/Yu Dingzhang)

With the rise of smartphone penetration in China, ordering food online became popular in the early 2010s as a string of startup platforms like Ele.me, Dianwoba, and Waimai Chaoren raced into the emerging sector. Access to almost unlimited capital played a big role in helping those firms to gain early supremacy in the food-delivery market. Hefty subsidies were distributed to entice both merchants and consumers.

Early on, the merchants had leverage. To gain an edge on their competitors, food-delivery apps spent freely to enlist more restaurants, which was a crucial baseline for luring more customers. Merchants enjoyed the freedom to choose among platforms, opting for whichever service offered the most preferential policies or largest subsidies. Moreover, shops that were reluctant to adopt new technologies did not feel they were losing out because app usage rates were low.

That’s no longer the case. Usage rates are through the roof and nearly everyone in the food and beverage industry now offers a delivery option.

The dynamics between platforms and merchants took a gradual turn as market consolidation allowed the tech giants to dominate the booming sector. As subsidy-powered competition weeded out smaller competitors, the battle soon became a proxy war between Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent.

Between 2015 to 2017, Alibaba-backed Ele.me, Tencent-backed Meituan and Baidu Waimai emerged as the largest players in the sector. The three-way battle ended when Baidu walked away from food delivery to focus on artificial intelligence. Ele.me acquired Baidu Waimai in 2017.

In 2018, a series of events solidified the dominance of Meituan and Ele.me. Alibaba took over Ele.me and merged it with the company’s local services unit Koubei in October. Tencent-backed Meituan raised $4.2 billion in its Hong Kong IPO last September.

With the landscape settling into a duopoly, the food-delivery platforms became the rule-setters, leaving merchants in a weaker bargaining position.

At the same time, the proliferation of subsidies worked to cement new food-ordering practices among consumers, offering discounts to reward them for ordering via apps.

The effect on China’s dining scene has been profound, especially on smaller venues. Restaurants now rely so heavily on takeout orders that many have effectively pivoted from sit-in dining rooms to delivery-only kitchens, or restaurants with little or no seating. Sometimes waitstaff run around filling large orders for delivery, paying scant attention to or even ignoring on-site guests.

“Food delivery is a ‘winner takes most’ market, which is why these companies invest so much in subsidies to buy market share,” said Lucas Englehardt, founder and CEO of the now-defunct food-delivery platform Waimai Chaoren. “Being the dominant player allows them to charge restaurants more, with fees that get passed along to customers.”

Such an arrangement isn’t healthy for the market, says Shanghai-based Englehardt, who is now CEO of Xixilab, a teeth whitening and aligning kits developer. He expects the trend to continue, now that the two leading platforms have gone public. “I don’t see the battle finishing anytime soon, as both have money to spend and different strengths to leverage,” he told TechNode in a recent interview.

Englehardt said that in other countries, it’s less common for companies to rely on subsidies to push out smaller players. But because neither Ele.me nor Meituan is profitable yet and neither player fully dominates the market, the government won’t limit their aggressive behavior, he added.

Commission hikes hit merchants

Chi, the wonton shop owner, said that as recently as 2018, merchants could still find a way to collaborate profitably with the food-delivery platforms. However, the last straw came this January when Meituan and Ele.me hiked the fees they charge restaurants by three percentage points, pushing commission rates to more than 20% in some cases. This means that for every RMB 100 ($15) that a restaurant brings in per order, they may pay up to RMB 20 in commission to the platforms.

For owners of small restaurants in Shanghai, commission rates in mid-February have risen from 16% to 18%—and that applies to vendors who are willing to list their restaurant exclusively on one delivery platform. If they opt to be listed on multiple platforms, it’s common practice for them to be charged higher commissions, usually around 20%.

An Ele.me spokesperson denied that the company is raising commissions, although she acknowledged that the commissions for some restaurants in Songjiang University Town might rise when certain preferential policies expire this year.

“We aren’t raising our commissions,” said the Ele.me spokesperson. “We’re actually reducing them materially in many regions in China, like Guangdong, Chongqing, Jiangxi, Sichuan and Fujian, to support merchants.”

Meituan declined to comment.

From an international perspective, 20% is quite high, according to Englehardt. Overseas commissions range from 5% to around 15%, he said. The platforms in China often provide the delivery as opposed to those abroad where typically the restaurant does its own deliveries, he noted.

Commission fees vary depending on the size and location of the business. Larger restaurants have more bargaining power when dealing with the delivery platforms, according to Zhu Congyang, a hot pot chain restaurant operator in Shanghai.

In Chi’s experience, those commission fees can make the difference between profit and loss. A bowl of wontons sells for RMB 20, but around 45% of that revenue goes into the pocket of the wonton-chain parent company for franchise fees and food supplies, while 15% goes to the online food-ordering platforms as commission. Out of the remaining 40%, they must account for other overhead costs: utilities, the salaries of their three employees, and shop rental of more than RMB 6,000 a month.

Cost breakdown for a bowl of wontons priced RMB 20 (Image credit: TechNode/Yu Dingzhang)

Another burden for restaurant owners is the expense associated with discounts. In order to attract customers, online platforms ask merchants to offer discounts to consumers. For instance, if the customer’s total order exceeds RMB 20, they qualify for a discount of RMB 3.5. Those discounts are subsidized by the merchants.

After all costs have been deducted, the final profit from that RMB 20 bowl of wontons is less than RMB 1.5 for Chi and her husband.

On top of that, some merchants choose to pay the delivery platforms more than RMB 10,000 per month to secure an attention-grabbing placement on the delivery app. If the customer’s home or office is far from the restaurant, Chi must pay an additional RMB 2 per order to cover the distance beyond the standard delivery range. Often, this can wipe out any potential profit from the food order.

“Who would have thought that we might end up losing money because of online orders?” Chi said. “Many of us don’t want to provide discounts, and maybe don’t want to take online orders at all, but we have no other choice.”

Franchisees like Chi are urged to participate in the discount programs; otherwise, they will be punished for not fulfilling sales targets. Even restaurant owners not bound by franchise arrangements say they’re not willing to take the risk of losing customers to competitors. This is especially true for restaurants with an out-of-the-way location.

Zhan Chufeng, founder of the Let’s Soup Party restaurant chain, which operates over 70 outlets in southern China’s Guangdong province, said online orders are an important part of his company’s operations, representing around 70% of total orders.

The commission rates they pay to Meituan and Ele.me vary between 15% and 18%, which is much lower than what the majority of merchants pay. “We got lower fees because we are a premium brand,” said Zhan. “With subsidies provided, the commission fee is still bearable for us. But the ideal rate is around 13%,” he added.

Back to basics

Given the circumstances, merchants who find themselves dependent on delivery orders are left with few options. The simplest way to maintain their current margin is to pass the cost increases on to consumers, either by raising the price or lowering the quality of food. But such tactics can jeopardize the long-term success of the business.

Some shop owners are turning their attention back to the customers who show up in person to the restaurant to consume food on the premises. “We prefer the in-house orders where possible,” says Xiao Hua, owner of a dumpling restaurant in suburban Shanghai. For an order priced RMB 16, dine-in guests pay the full price. However, if that order were being delivered as takeout, he would only get around RMB 12 after the deduction of current commission fees, he said.

Xiao Hua is taking a break at his dumpling restaurant (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

Zhuang Shuai, the founder of Beijing-based consulting firm Bailian, said that boosting offline store operations to increase the proportion of in-store consumption, and strengthening the development of new dishes and new brands, could also help small- and medium-sized merchants achieve higher returns.

To be sure, while some smaller merchants are feeling the heat as a result of commission hikes, other factors are also weighing down restaurant owners. Increasing competition or rising market costs could also be at play, said Michael Norris, strategy and research manager at AgencyChina in Shanghai.

And it’s not as if the platforms are rolling in cash as a result of their commission income. Meituan’s operating losses surged 57% year-on-year to RMB 3.7 billion in the fourth quarter of 2018. Revenues from the food-delivery segment increased by 66.1% to RMB 11 billion in the same period from RMB 6.6 billion a year earlier. Meanwhile, the company’s food-delivery costs increased 53.6% year-on-year during the reporting period, which management attributed to mounting salary costs for its delivery fleet.

Ele.me’s revenue, which primarily represents income from platform commissions, provision of food-delivery services and other services, totaled RMB 5.15 billion, according to Alibaba’s fourth quarter 2018 financial report.

Friction between on-demand platforms and delivery workers has also been on the rise. Meituan, Ele.me, and Didi—which is scaling back its food-delivery service after launching last year—have all faced disputes with their delivery fleet workers. “In contrast to parcel delivery, food delivery is more time-sensitive and order demand varies hugely during peak and valley hours,” said Zhan of Let’s Soup Party.

The subsidy-fueled growth “spoiled” both users and merchants, according to Esme Pau, an analyst from Tonghai Securities. But ultimately, the core issue facing the industry is its hotly contested nature. “The only way to overcome competition is for Meituan and Ele.me to reach a consensus in setting prices,” she says. “However, we do not expect this to happen in the near term,” adds Pau.

For Chi, mixing technology with food preparation has been a frustrating experience. “The platforms failed to make it easier to do business,” she says. “Instead, I feel more stressed out than ever before.”

Additional reporting by Yu Dingzhang. 

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Briefing: Alibaba travel platform Fliggy launches duty-free online shopping https://technode.com/2019/03/27/alibabas-fliggy-buy/ https://technode.com/2019/03/27/alibabas-fliggy-buy/#respond Wed, 27 Mar 2019 04:20:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99769 As outbound travel becomes more accessible, priorities for Chinese tourists shift from shopping sprees and toward local experiences. ]]>

Fliggy brings duty-free shopping online for China’s consumers – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba’s travel services platform Fliggy has added a new duty-free shopping feature named Fliggy Buy, which provides consumers detailed product information including buyer reviews prior to international voyages. Chinese travelers can purchase a range of products, including cosmetics, suitcases, bags, and alcohol, and retrieve the goods after arriving at their destination. Roman Zhu, head of Fliggy Buy, said that duty-free and tax-free stores were the priority during the first phase of Fliggy Buy’s launch, and that it will include more high-end luxury brands and household electrics among future offerings.

Why it’s important: Chinese tourists are big spenders, accounting for $115 billion in spending on international trips in 2017, according to a report jointly released by China Tourism Academy and online travel agency Ctrip. Average spend for Chinese travelers going overseas grew 9% year-on-year in 2018. This new feature points to a behavioral shift: As outbound travel becomes more accessible, priorities for Chinese tourists are evolving from shopping sprees and toward local experiences.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s entertainment division to add 1,800 jobs in new fiscal year https://technode.com/2019/03/27/alibabas-entertainment-new-jobs/ https://technode.com/2019/03/27/alibabas-entertainment-new-jobs/#respond Wed, 27 Mar 2019 03:14:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99761 Alibaba’s current recruitment plan is part of its commitment to create more jobs in the slowing economy.]]>

阿里巴巴发布招聘微博:新财年新增超过1800岗位需求 – TechWeb

What happened: Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba announced Tuesday that its digital media and entertainment arm will hire 1,800 new employees for various business units such as film company Alibaba Pictures, video-streaming site Youku, web browser UC, ticketing site Damai, and online reading service Alibaba Literature. The new positions opening include film producers, algorithm experts, data specialists, and product operation experts. The recruitment period applies to its new fiscal year beginning April 2019 to March 2020, according to the company.

Why it’s important: Against the backdrop of a broader economic slowdown, Chinese tech companies including giants like JD and Didi have been tightening headcount since the beginning of this year. Alibaba’s current recruitment plan is part of its commitment to create more jobs in the slowing economy. Prior to this hiring announcement, CEO of Alibaba’s Ele.me, Wang Lei, said that the food delivery platform plans to hire more than 5,000 new employees in 2019.

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JD sends staff on prison tour in anti-corruption initiative https://technode.com/2019/03/26/jd-anti-corruption-prison-tour/ https://technode.com/2019/03/26/jd-anti-corruption-prison-tour/#respond Tue, 26 Mar 2019 10:09:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99682 Prison tours are a common anti-corruption tactic in China, though it is used more often by state or financial institutions, not tech companies.]]>

Chinese online retailer JD sent a group of employees to visit a Beijing prison on March 20, the company announced through its anti-corruption WeChat account in a post that bears a straightforward title, “Freedom is life’s greatest fortune” (our translation).

A group of JD employees from its public affairs department paid a visit to No.1 Beijing Detention Center to witness in-person the cost of corruption, according to the post.

Prison tours are a common anti-corruption tactic in China, though it is used more often by state or financial institutions, not tech companies. However, this is not JD’s first use of unconventional anti-corruption measures. JD employees were asked to report to the company the details of their spouses, direct relatives, extended relatives by blood within three generations and their spouses, and schoolmates, according to a leaked email that has gone viral on Chinese microblogging platform, Weibo. Though it was billed as a move for transparency in workplace promotions, it was aimed at curbing internal corruption, according to Chinese media.

However, JD’s prison tour holds a difficult irony at its core as the company’s CEO Richard Liu was nearly sent to prison himself following an accusation of rape last year. The charges were later dropped on lack of evidence.

JD did not respond to TechNode’s inquiry on the matter.

One of China’s tech giants, JD has seen its fair share of internal corruption cases. The company revealed 16 corruption cases in August, involving departments ranging from the company’s retail division to finance.

JD is stepping up efforts to boost vitality within the organization amid fierce competition from Alibaba and slowing growth. The company announced that it would be slashing the bottom-performing 10% of its executives by year-end to push internal competition. Two key leaders, CTO Zhang Chen and legal head Long Yu, have left the company within the past two weeks.

Other Chinese tech companies are also speeding up internal investigations to curb corruption. Ride-hailing giant Didi dismissed more than 80 employees last year after its compliance staff found more than 60 cases of internal corruption. Drone maker DJI placed 45 of its employees under investigation for a case that could result in losses totaling as much as RMB 100 billion (around $150 million).

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Livestream app Inke’s 2018 profits fall on lack of innovation as segment weakens https://technode.com/2019/03/26/live-streamer-inke-2018-earning/ https://technode.com/2019/03/26/live-streamer-inke-2018-earning/#respond Tue, 26 Mar 2019 09:08:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99633 Inke's weak performance comes as users abandon livestreaming apps for short videos.]]>

Profits for Chinese mobile live-streaming platform Inke plummeted in 2018 according to its first financial report since going public on the Hong Kong stock exchange in July.

The company’s total revenue dipped 2.1% year-on-year to RMB 3.9 billion (around $575.4 million) in 2018, while adjusted net profit plunged 24.7% year-on-year to RMB 596.3 million in the same period. Revenue from its live-streaming business, which comprised 96.6% of the company’s revenue, declined 4.9% year-on-year to RMB 37.3 million in 2018.

Esme Pau, an analyst at China Tonghai Securities, said the results signal intensifying competition in China’s live-streaming industry and Inke’s lack of a differentiating feature. Inke has to compete with other platforms for performers and the increase in revenue sharing with streamers squeezed margins, she added. The company’s gross margin declined to 33.8% in 2018 from 35.4% in 2017.

Inke recouped some of its monthly active users (MAU), which rose 12.3% year-on-year to 25.5 million in 2018, though it fell well short of the 30 million peak seen in the last quarter of 2016.

“We expect further industry consolidation in livestreaming in 2019 and smaller players to exit, following the footsteps of Panda TV and Quanmin TV,” Pau told TechNode.

In addition to intensifying competition among peers, livestreaming has been losing steam since 2018 as short video apps take share of user time spent among Chinese netizens thanks to its segmented content and easily shareable format. So far 2019 has seen the collapse of Panda TV, once a leading player in livestreaming, while layoff rumors circulate about another live-streaming platform, Douyu.

The user base for short video apps in China has surged to 356 million in 2018 from 153 million in 2016, as upstart platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou take hold, according to data from research institute AskCI Consulting. The boom is expected to continue with total users projected to reach 667 million by 2020, the report said.

To tap the shift, Inke has launched its own standalone short video app, Zhongzi Video, and plans to further its market penetration into lower-tier cities by developing additional features and functions, the company said in the report.

Inke’s net profits were corrected to RMB 596.3 million, not RMB 5.9 billion as originally reported.

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Briefing: Meituan adds grocery delivery to its ‘everything’ app https://technode.com/2019/03/26/meituan-beijing-grocery-shopping/ https://technode.com/2019/03/26/meituan-beijing-grocery-shopping/#respond Tue, 26 Mar 2019 06:22:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99659 Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service AmazonLike food delivery, grocery delivery is yet another subsidy-fueled battle for Meituan.]]> Meituan Dianping Alibaba O2O service Amazon

美团买菜在京推测试服务站 定位“手机菜篮子 – Huanqiu

What happened: Chinese on-demand service Meituan-Dianping is testing a new grocery delivery feature in Beijing. Two service centers were set up in residential districts of the capital city, providing 30-minute delivery times to residents living within 1.5 miles of the station. Around 1,500 items in the categories of vegetables, seafood, meat, dairy, and snacks are available through the Meituan app.

Why it’s important: Restaurant delivery is still Meituan’s core business, but the Tencent-backed tech giant aims to become an all-encompassing platform for local life services, of which grocery shopping is an important part. Entry to the new business would put the company in direct competition with incumbents in the fresh food e-commerce segment like JD’s online grocery and delivery platform JD Daojia and smaller players such as FreshMarket and Dingdong. Like restaurant delivery, grocery delivery is yet another subsidy-fueled battle for the company which posted operating losses of RMB 3.7 billion (around $557 million) in the fourth quarter of 2018 due to rising costs in its delivery and bike-rental businesses.

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Mobike to weigh on profitability at Meituan until 2021: Report https://technode.com/2019/03/25/meituan-is-not-a-near-term-turnaround-story/ https://technode.com/2019/03/25/meituan-is-not-a-near-term-turnaround-story/#respond Mon, 25 Mar 2019 09:58:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99446 Company's best short-term strategy is to direct users to its profitable services such as travel. ]]>

Mobike, the bike-rental arm of Chinese food delivery and services platform Meituan-Dianping, will continue to be loss-making through to 2021 and be a drag on overall company profitability, a recent research report from equity firm China Tonghai Securities said.

The bike rental-subsidiary, which the company acquired for RMB 18.1 billion ($2.7 billion) in April 2018, contributed RMB 4.6 billion, or over half of the company’s adjusted net losses in 2018.

In addition to these persistent bike-rental related losses, mounting competitive pressures in its core food delivery segment, as well as tightening margins caused by cost overruns, mean it will take longer for Meituan to turn its fortunes around, the report added.

Fiercer competition from Ele.me is going to worsen Meituan’s position, analyst Esme Pau, who co-authored the report, told TechNode in an emailed interview. Ele.me CEO Wang Lei announced in 2018 the company’s strategy to raise its market share to 50% from 35% in 2018.

Meituan is essentially a price-taker in its core food delivery business, given that merchants and users are price-sensitive, the March 19 report said.

Meituan relies on subsidies and incentives to retain users and merchants. The turning point would be when Meituan acquires price-setting power in a monopoly or duopoly market, which in Pau’s view, would not occur this year given Ele.me’s determination to grab market share.

Around 85% of food delivery users have a habit of comparing price on different platforms before placing an order, according to a 2018 survey by consultancy ZPartners.

In its 2018 financial report, Meituan promised to take a more prudent approach in the exploration of new opportunities in 2019.

Given the circumstances, Pau said Meituan’s best short-term strategy would be to direct the user traffic on the company’s apps to other profit-making business such as its online hotel and travel-booking services in order to break even at the company level.

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Luckin sets up QQ-themed store with Tencent to tap nostalgic Chinese millennials https://technode.com/2019/03/25/luckin-qq-themed-store-tencent/ https://technode.com/2019/03/25/luckin-qq-themed-store-tencent/#respond Mon, 25 Mar 2019 09:57:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99524 Luckin Coffee and Tencent have been partners since Sept. 2018.]]>
Replica of Pony Ma’s office desk in 1999 (Image credit: Luckin Coffee)

Coffee startup Luckin Coffee has partnered with Tencent’s instant messaging platform QQ to open its first QQ-themed outlet in Shenzhen, the home city of the Chinese gaming giant, the company announced today through its WeChat account.

Dubbed 1999 beta, the store is decorated with QQ’s theme and imagery dating back to the beginning of this century to evoke nostalgic feelings from Chinese millennials, who have been using the decades-old instant messaging tool since they first went online. To create that warm feeling, a replica of the working desk of Tencent’s founder Pony Ma in 1999 was placed in the store along with the first version of QQ’s signature penguin mascot.

Luckin’s challenge to Starbucks has been focused primarily on brick-and-mortar expansion. The delivery startup said in January this year that it aims to overtake Starbucks as the largest coffee chain operator in the country by increasing the total number of outlets to 4,500, adding 2,500 new stores in the coming year.

Marketing veteran Starbucks, on the other hand, has been quite successful with their  WeChat gifting feature. The most recent frenzy over Starbucks’ limited edition of Cat Paw Cup, a cute double-walled cut that takes the shape of cat paw when it’s filled with coffee or milk, has become viral since the beginning of this March. Demand for the cup has become violent at times with costumer fighting over it.

Luckin’s partnership with Tencent links the new company to the decade-long brand in China. In addition to the nostalgic millennial, the WeChat sibling retains popularity among China’s Generation Z with its new positioning as a one-stop entertainment portal for Chinese youth.

The themed-outlet comes as a part of Luckin’s strategic agreement with Tencent announced in September last year. Alibaba sided with Starbucks in August 2018, offering delivery services to the coffee giant through its food delivery platform Ele.me. Tencent-backed Ele.me rival Meituan paired with Luckin Coffee on delivery services in December of the same year.

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Briefing: Alibaba acquires Israeli startup InfinityAR https://technode.com/2019/03/25/alibaba-israeli-ar-startup/ https://technode.com/2019/03/25/alibaba-israeli-ar-startup/#respond Mon, 25 Mar 2019 03:32:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99392 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mAcquisition in InfinityAR is in line with the company's efforts to drive the concept of "shoppertainment" in China. ]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba Buys Israeli AR Startup Amid China Investment Scrutiny – Bloomberg

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has acquired Israel augmented reality company InfinityAR, the companies announced on Sunday. Neither disclosed financial details of the deal, but Alibaba could pay more than $10 million, according to an estimate from the market source cited by Globes. In 2016, Alibaba together with Japanese company Sun has invested $15 million and $3 million respectively for a combined 22% share of the startup.

Why it’s important: Alibaba has been picking up the augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) boom since 2016, when the rise of AR and VR was in full swing. In addition to InfinityAR, Alibaba led $800 million investment in Magic Leap that year. Alibaba’s acquisition of InfinityAR is in line with the company’s efforts to drive the concept of “shoppertainment” in China, a trend which providing users with a fun, interactive and entertaining experience. It also takes place during a time of heightened scrutiny over the role of Chinese investment in Israel.

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Briefing: Tencent doubles down on customized cloud computing services https://technode.com/2019/03/22/tencent-cloud-computing/ https://technode.com/2019/03/22/tencent-cloud-computing/#respond Fri, 22 Mar 2019 11:27:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99300 tencentThe rivalry between Tencent and its long-term competitor Alibaba in the cloud computing industry is heating up. ]]> tencent

Tencent plays catch-up in cloud computing services as video gaming business slows – SCMP

What happened: Chinese tech tycoon Tencent announced it would increase investment in its cloud computing business at a press conference held Thursday. Retail, financial services, transport, healthcare, and education are among the primary industries to which Tencent will provide its customized cloud computing service. Tencent expects the cloud computing operations to be a new revenue source for the company, as well as a point to connect the consumer and industrial internet, according to its founder Pony Ma.

Why it’s important: The rivalry between Tencent and its long-term competitor Alibaba in the cloud computing industry is heating up as both companies are seeking new growth narratives in enterprise-facing businesses. Tencent launched an organizational overhaul in late September 2018 to send a strong signal that it was taking enterprise seriously, and cloud is the most important part of this shift. Tencent’s announcement comes while Alibaba Cloud celebrated its 10-year anniversary in Beijing on Thursday. At the event, president of Alibaba Cloud Zhang Jianfeng claimed the “All-in-Cloud” era is coming.

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Briefing: Controversial social e-commerce platform Yunji files for $200 million US IPO https://technode.com/2019/03/22/social-e-commerce-platform-yunji-ipo/ https://technode.com/2019/03/22/social-e-commerce-platform-yunji-ipo/#respond Fri, 22 Mar 2019 07:34:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99269 The company was previously fined almost RMB 10 million in 2017 over allegations of using pyramid schemes to grow.]]>

Chinese social e-commerce platform Yunji files for a $200 million US IPO– Nasdaq

What happened: Chinese social e-commerce platform Yunji on Thursday filed for a $200 million US initial public offering. Founded in 2015, the services achieved rapid growth by leveraging the huge user base of social platforms like WeChat as a source for potential buyers. The company claimed to have 7.4 million members as of December 2018 and a gross merchandise volume of almost RMB 23 billion (around $3.5 billion) in 2018. The retail app covers a variety of Chinese and international brands and includes products like groceries, cosmetics, and electronics.

Why it’s important: China’s social e-commerce industry has experienced robust growth and commanded an increasing share of the overall online retail industry over the past few years. The social e-commerce market grew from RMB 38.3 billion in 2015 to RMB 217.3 billion in 2017, according to research institute China Insights Consultancy. The sector has seen the rise of upstarts like Pinduoduo. Yunji, together with competitors like Beidian and Global Scanner, are among a series of social e-commerce platforms that operate on the Supply to Business to Customer (S2B2C) business model. However, the companies have drawn concerns from the public, with worries that the marketing part of the model is a multilevel revenue sharing scheme. The industrial and commercial authority of Hangzhou fined Yunji almost RMB 10 million in 2017 over allegations of using pyramid schemes to grow.

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Briefing: Tmall Global unveils new initiatives to boost China’s imports https://technode.com/2019/03/22/tmall-global-boost-chinas-imports/ https://technode.com/2019/03/22/tmall-global-boost-chinas-imports/#respond Fri, 22 Mar 2019 03:03:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99202 Demand for imported goods is gaining traction across age groups and regions in China.]]>

天猫国际发布三大战略,“2000亿美元进口额”将如何实现? – iyiou.com

What happened: Tmall Global has unveiled two initiatives that further Alibaba’s plans to bring $200 billion worth of international goods into China over the next five years, a commitment the Chinese e-commerce giant made in November at the state-backed China International Import Expo. The company will achieve this goal with its Centralized Import Procurement program, which sources imported goods for all online and offline outlets within the Alibaba ecosystem. The company will also use its Tmall Overseas Fulfillment (TOF) system,  a consignment solution that allows brands to place a small batch of products at one of the TOF centers to be sold on the Tmall Global platform.

Why it’s important: Demand for imported goods is gaining traction across age groups and regions in China. Those born after 2000, or “Generation Z”, are part of the fastest-growing consumer group for overseas goods. China’s cross-border e-commerce market has grown remarkably, with the proportion of imports to total e-commerce sales growing from 1.6% in 2014 to 10.2% in 2017, according to a joint report by Deloitte China, the China Chamber of International Commerce, and AliResearch. In addition to Alibaba, all major e-commerce platforms, like JD, Suning.com, NetEase Kaola, and Yangmatou have committed to answering Beijing’s call to boost the nation’s imports. These companies pledged to bring a combined total of over $250 billion worth of foreign goods to China.

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Alibaba brings a Chinese twist to Lazada’s Southeast Asia expansion https://technode.com/2019/03/21/alibaba-lazada-sea/ https://technode.com/2019/03/21/alibaba-lazada-sea/#respond Thu, 21 Mar 2019 09:45:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99055 Alibaba hopes to replicate its China success in Southeast Asia.]]>

Lazada, the Alibaba-owned e-commerce platform in Southeast Asia, today announced that it is rolling out a package of products and services that would help brands and sellers tap the e-commerce boom in the region.

The offerings, dubbed super-solutions, are aimed at bringing more efficiency and convenience for retailers on the platform. These new features target to transform the sellers into what the company calls “Super eBusinesses” by providing them tailored solutions for branding, marketing, and sales.

Alibaba has been making decisive expansions to the Southeast Asia e-commerce space, which is expected to top around $178 billion by 2025. As a major step to the goal, the Chinese e-commerce platform pumped a total of $4 billion into Lazada since 2016, and is now the controlling shareholder of the Singapore-headquarter retail giant.

To be sure, there are plenty of challenges for Alibaba to help Lazada capitalize on the e-commerce boom. Consumer behavior patterns are different in Southeast Asia compared to China. Even though Alibaba’s experience could provide insights, much localization is also required. Logistics also pose a challenge given that the region is much more fragmented market in terms of geographic distribution. Lazada says it will continue to invest to build the region’s most extensive warehousing, fulfillment, and delivery network.

In addition, Lazada is not the only company in this space and faces stiff competition from Shopee, Amazon, and other industry rivals.

Lazada’s newly appointed CEO Pierre Poignant, who took the helm of the firm in March after Lucy Peng’s nine-month stint, is working on to align the business and administrative models between Lazada and the parent company.

A closer tie-up between the two companies is reflected in their strategic priorities. The current retailer-targeted feature launch comes in line with Alibaba’s broader initiative to boost the digital transformation of companies of all sizes and across different industries. In January, the Chinese e-commerce giant rolled out Alibaba Business Operating System to offer its amalgamations of technology services.

Lazada will launch a series of “super campaigns” to brands and sellers on LazMall, Lazada’s Tmall-like authorized brand marketplace, to boost their brand image and better engage with customers. Likewise, Alibaba’s e-commerce sites like Taobao and Tmall have been known for pushing hundreds of marketing campaigns all-year-round under different themes from home decoration to Valentine’s Day.

For sales management, a new and improved Marketing Solutions Package and Business Advisor Dashboard were launched to deliver traffic to storefronts, and  provide brands and sellers with information needed for decision making.

Following China’s livestreaming boom, Lazada’s new tech tools integrated in-app live streaming feature. Newsfeed and in-app consumer games functions were also to push higher consumer engagement. Content and entertainment-driven e-commerce is in full swing in China. Alibaba itself has acquired stakes in Chinese video streaming site Bilibili along the same trend.

Over the past year, Lazada has been able to launch industry-leading tech innovations like search-image function, consumer engagement games and in-app live streaming to become the region’s only “shoppertainment” platform on which people can watch, shop and play, Poignant, the company’s CEO said at a Lazada event earlier this month in Shenzhen.

With additional reporting from Bailey Hu.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s AI Labs to invest $15 million in Chinese dialect project https://technode.com/2019/03/21/alibabas-ai-labs-smart-speaker/ https://technode.com/2019/03/21/alibabas-ai-labs-smart-speaker/#respond Thu, 21 Mar 2019 07:42:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=99093 Chinese dialects are quite different, posing a challenge for smart devices based on voice control.]]>

阿里 AI Labs 将投入 1 亿元进行方言保护 – TechNode Chinese

What happened: Alibaba’s AI Labs announced on Wednesday that it’s going to invest RMB 100 million ($15 million) in research and development projects around Chinese dialects. The unit will create a Chinese dialect database through dialogue-based sample collection from a dedicated app and smart speakers. The company’s smart speaker Tmall Genie will learn to recognize the dialect common in the southwestern Sichuan province first, and then cover all major dialects in the future. To achieve the goal, the company is partnering up with government institutions, linguistic experts, and universities.

Why it’s important: China has around one hundred dialects that vary according to region. While most share similar written elements, spoken elements can be quite different, posing challenges for smart devices based on voice control. Voice-based smart speakers, including Alibaba’s Tmall Genie and Xiaomi’s Xiaoai are becoming immensely popular among China’s tech-savvy customers.

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Briefing: Chinese student receives 10-year sentence for scamming JD.com https://technode.com/2019/03/19/student-scammer-jd/ https://technode.com/2019/03/19/student-scammer-jd/#respond Tue, 19 Mar 2019 10:14:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=98758 Chinese tech giants have launched online lending services to target young consumers in China, but the burgeoning industry is plagued by security missteps.]]>

Chinese Student Receives 10-Year Jail Term for JD.Com Fraud – Yicai Global

What happened: A court in the central China province of Hunan has sentenced a college student with the surname Wang to more than 10 years of imprisonment and fined him RMB 80,000 (around $11,900) for scamming Chinese online retailer JD.com out of RMB 1.1 million in 2017. Wang, along with accomplices, exploited an identification loophole in JD Finance’s credit payment service, Baitiao, and created multiple fake Baitiao accounts in order to buy electronic devices on credit and resell them online. JD fixed the issue in 2017.

Why it’s important: China has lower credit card market penetration relative to many other economies, but demand for micro-lending has surged in the past five years, especially among younger consumers. Chinese tech giants have launched online lending services to target these segments. JD has its Baitiao service, while Tencent-backed WeBank offers a similar online consumer loan product called Weilidai. Alibaba’s Ant Financial offers a micro-credit service, Huabei, in addition to holding a stake in Qudian, a micro-lending company. However, the booming industry suffers from security issues. More than 200 people have been convicted and sentenced for fraud in cases similar to Wang’s, according to data from the China Supreme Court website.

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Mobike will scrap some but not all of its Asia-Pacific businesses https://technode.com/2019/03/11/mobike-international-staff-asia/ https://technode.com/2019/03/11/mobike-international-staff-asia/#respond Mon, 11 Mar 2019 10:07:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97977 Mobike Australia helmetMeituan-owned Mobike also denied that layoffs in Asia are part of a larger exit strategy.]]> Mobike Australia helmet

Bike-rental startup Mobike owned by lifestyle services company Meituan confirmed Monday that it is shutting down some of its Asia businesses, but denied that the closures are part of a larger exit strategy.

On Saturday, TechCrunch reported that Mobike had given notice to 15 full-time operations staff employed across Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, India, and Australia, citing numerous sources. The move was also said to affect “many more” contract and third-party workers employed by Mobike’s businesses across the Asia-Pacific region. Two TechCrunch sources said the layoffs were part of a company plan to eventually shut down all of its foreign operations.

However, a Mobike representative told TechNode on Monday that the company currently has no plans to “adjust” businesses outside of Asia.

The company released a statement Monday that it would close only “some” of its Asia businesses while exploring other opportunities. It also stated that an effort to “optimize” its foreign operations would affect “over 10 local employees” in Asian countries. “At the same time we will continue to evaluate businesses in other countries and regions. Those that don’t meet operational efficiency standards will be shut down or operated through strategic partnerships.”

A Meituan spokesperson declined to comment for this article. The company acquired Mobike in April for $2.7 billion, and reportedly shouldered an additional $700 million in debt. The internet giant announced in January that it would rebrand Mobike as Meituan Bike and completely replace its standalone app with an in-platform service.

Mobike’s expansion into international markets began in 2017 during a red-hot rivalry with Alibaba-backed Ofo that contributed to cash flow problems for both. Meituan, by contrast, has mostly focused its efforts on China. In December, speculation also arose over Mobike potentially selling off its $100 million operations in Europe as it faced inquiries over breaching data laws there.

A source told the Financial Times that at the time, “Meituan has no international division of any shape or form and probably doesn’t want one, and when it acquired Mobike, it acquired the international arm.”

Additional reporting by Emma Lee.

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Alibaba furthers logistics push, invests $693 million for 14.65% of STO Express https://technode.com/2019/03/11/alibaba-furthers-logistics-push-invests-693-million-for-14-65-of-sto-express/ https://technode.com/2019/03/11/alibaba-furthers-logistics-push-invests-693-million-for-14-65-of-sto-express/#respond Mon, 11 Mar 2019 08:13:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97997 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThis investment would be a continuation of Alibaba’s initiative to tighten its ties with Chinese courier service giants through cross-shareholding.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese tech giant Alibaba is continuing its push into the logistics industry with plans to scoop up a 14.65% stake in Shenzhen-listed logistics company STO Express.

The company’s controlling shareholder, Shanghai Deyin Investment Holdings Co. Ltd., will set up a joint venture with Alibaba, according to a securities filing dated Monday. Deyin Investment will hold a 51% stake in the new company by investing 29.90% of its STO Express shares. Alibaba will invest RMB 4.66 billion ($693.44 million) for 49% of the joint venture.

Deyin Investment is also setting up a second new subsidiary, which will hold a 16.0% stake in STO Express. The transactions will bring the parent company’s stake in STO Express down to 7.6%. The new subsidiaries haven’t been set up yet.

“This investment is a step forward in our pursuit of the goal of 24-hour delivery anywhere in China and 72 hours globally,” an Alibaba spokeswoman told TechNode.

“Alibaba aims to push logistics costs, which currently comprise about 15% of China’s gross domestic product, down to under 5%, and enhance the efficiency of this sector,” she said. The company will meanwhile “share technological know-how and new logistics solutions to help [our partners] improve services to merchants and consumers.”

This investment would be a continuation of Alibaba’s initiative to tighten its ties with Chinese courier service giants through cross-shareholding. The e-commerce giant already holds minority stakes in three of the country’s top logistics companies: ZTO Express, YTO Express, and Best.

“We will deepen our existing collaboration with Alibaba in logistics technology, last-mile delivery, and new retail logistics,” STO Express said in a statement.

Chinese courier companies including YTO Express, STO Express, ZTO Express, and SF Express also own stakes in logistics company Cainiao, co-founded with Alibaba and more than a dozen other Chinese companies in 2013.

China’s express delivery market has recorded sharp growth over the past few years thanks to a booming e-commerce industry. The country’s delivery sector handled 50 billion parcels in 2018, up 26% year-on-year according to data from the State Post Bureau.

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Alibaba shuffle pushes Taobao and Tmall closer, strengthens enterprise focus https://technode.com/2019/03/07/alibaba-reorg-pushes-tmall-and-taobao-closer/ https://technode.com/2019/03/07/alibaba-reorg-pushes-tmall-and-taobao-closer/#respond Thu, 07 Mar 2019 09:46:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97736 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe moves send a much stronger signal that Alibaba is committed to its enterprise-focused endeavors. ]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese tech behemoth Alibaba announced Wednesday another organizational reshuffle aimed at upgrading its customer-facing services and enterprise-focused business lines.

The reorganization grants Taobao President Jiang Fan oversight over Tmall operations.

Meanwhile, Tmall President Jing Jie (aka Jet Jing) will become special assistant to Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang. Jing will also serve as secretary-general of Alibaba’s enterprise-facing product offerings, which includes the recently launched Alibaba Business Operating System.

The two sister sites will continue to develop independently. Although Taobao and Tmall are serving different needs of consumers, they are targeting “the same group of customers,” so Alibaba expects the realignment to create more “synergies” between the two, according to a company spokeswoman.

Michael Norris, strategy and research manager of AgencyChina told TechNode that it appeared Alibaba wanted Taobao and Tmall platform to develop independently and serve different consumers and merchants. But it seemed that Alibaba found that having CEO roles for each platform not the most efficient way to achieve this.

Norris added that it’s been about one year since Jiang and Jing were named CEOs of Taobao and Tmall, respectively. This relatively short period of time probably suggests there was some difficulty around the allocation and coordination of resources between the different platforms, Norris said.

The reshuffle underlines Alibaba’s commitment to enterprise services. This is the first time the company has placed enterprise services and solutions so high in its organization chart, Norris pointed out.

“Tencent’s September reshuffle sent a much stronger signal that it was taking enterprise seriously and Alibaba’s found its own way to match that,” said Norris.

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Briefing: JD expands storefront to US via Google Express https://technode.com/2019/03/07/jd-expands-us-google/ https://technode.com/2019/03/07/jd-expands-us-google/#respond Thu, 07 Mar 2019 03:29:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97657 JD Joy dog Solana BeijingFacing heavy competition from the likes of Alibaba and Pinduoduo at home, JD is making strides abroad in an attempt to spur new growth.]]> JD Joy dog Solana Beijing

Chinese e-commerce company JD.Com launches store on Google shopping site – Reuters

What happened: Chinese online retailer JD has started selling goods in the US via a partnership with Google Express. Some 500 items in categories including electronics, home appliances, automotive, and pet supplies are available through Google’s e-commerce site. Most of the products are priced under $100 and come from little-known brands. The shop will likely add more products in the future. The large proportion of consumer electronics in the offerings highlight JD’s reputation as an online marketplace for computer, communications, and consumer electronics (3C) products. Bloomberg reported in October that JD will handle the logistics and Google will take charge of processing orders and payments for the store.

Why it’s important: Facing heavy competition from the likes of Alibaba and Pinduoduo at home, JD is making strides abroad in an attempt to spur new growth. With this goal, the company has been building tie-ups with global giants to push its global expansion. JD received $550 million in cash from Google as part of a strategic partnership last year; JD’s biggest shareholder, Tencent, has a close relationship with Google. Retail giant Walmart co-led a $500 million fundraising round in August for JD’s grocery delivery unit Dada-JD Daojia. The partnership with the Chinese online giant could bolster Google’s e-commerce push in its competition against long-time rival Amazon.

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China’s small-town youth offer big time potential for online sales of cosmetics https://technode.com/2019/03/06/small-town-youth-big-time-beauty/ https://technode.com/2019/03/06/small-town-youth-big-time-beauty/#respond Wed, 06 Mar 2019 10:52:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97603 China's small-town youth represents an increasingly alluring market for China's online beauty marketers. ]]>

In China’s e-commerce battle for beauty, youngsters in the country’s smaller cities and towns represent an increasingly alluring market. China’s e-commerce boom plays a major role in this transition by delivering products and lifestyle, previously out of reach to many in remote areas, through online channels.

That’s according to a report released Monday by Alibaba’s Tmall and retail market research company Kantar Worldpanel, which highlighted that demographic as one of four appealing segments.

For businesses wanting to stay ahead of industry change and develop products for tomorrow, it’s crucial to capture the interests and attention of consumer groups that promise the highest and longest term growth. Success stories in locking China’s booming post-80 and post-90 groups were abundant over the past few years from video streaming giant Bilibili to e-commerce and social networking platform Little Red Book, also known as Xiaohongshu.

But now new trends are emerging that also require beauty marketers’—and those trying to sell other consumer products and services—attention.

 Youngsters living in prefecture-level cities and counties are shaping the future of China’s consumption, according to the report. The total spend of China’s 220 billion youth population—aged between 20 to 35 years old—on beauty products, including cosmetics and skin care products, is more than RMB 518 billion ($77 billion).

Small-town youngsters form a new growth point for the industry with a 7.8% growth in spending during 2018 when compared to 2017. That’s higher than a 5.4% increase shown by their counterparts who live in China’s bigger cities.

Online sales of beauty products, including cosmetics and personal care in small towns, soared 38.0% in 2018, double the growth rates in big cities.

Social e-commerce—the use of social networks like WeChat and Weibo to boost e-commerce transactions—is popular in small-town China with a 27% penetration rate in 2018. That figure was 22.7% in the country’s larger cities during the same period.

Still, small-town youth’s average spending is still 18% lower than young people who live in big cities. The contrast represents a huge growth potential for marketers, according to Jason Yu, general manager of Kantar Worldpanel China. Yu presented the report’s main findings at Alibaba’s annual beauty summit held Monday in Shanghai.  

The report also highlights three other promising markets, including Generation Z; mature female consumers; and families with babies.

The investment and return timeline for these group varies. While the small-town youth boom is ongoing and ripe for monetization, the cultivation of Generation Z will take around three to five years. The investment timeline for mature female consumers and families with babies could take between five to 15 years, according to Yu.

Gen Z: Early beauty adopters

The report also highlighted untapped potential in Generation Z, a valuable group that’s been dwindling due to the one-child policy and dropping birth rates in the country. Early signs indicate that this group forms a significant spending force that consumer brands must pivot toward. Aged between 15 to 19 years old, Generation Z female consumers are newcomers to the beauty market and are willing to spend more on high-end lipsticks than women in other age groups, representing an opportunity for cosmetics companies.

Different from their mothers, China’s Generation Z developed beauty awareness early on. Around 80% of female users in the group use facial masks and 96% use makeup. Budget brands remain popular among this group given that most of Generation Z are students and are not earning yet. This suggests great opportunities for emerging brands to lock the group, says Yu.

What makes this group truly valuable is its long-term value for high-speed growth in the near future when such consumers gain economic independence in three to five years, he added.

In the case of more mature consumers, women aged between 35 to 40 years old purchase beauty products less frequent, around 11% lower than that for all females. But they have higher loyalty, especially for premium brands.

Around 55% of the customers in this group made purchases both online and offline. To target them, brands should build their marketing strategies by leveraging new retail concepts and combing the online and offline experience, Yu said.

The rise of small-town youth is visible also in a string of popular apps like Pinduoduo, and  Kuaishou. Maternal care and child education segments have fostered a raft of tech startups such as parenting app BabyTree, and online education platform Vipkid.

By tapping into these emerging groups, Tmall announced that its sales of beauty products jumped over 60% last year, surpassing the industry’s average growth rate. Online sales of cosmetics and personal care products grew by 37% and 36% in China in 2018, respectively. This was also ahead of the fast-moving consumer goods sector average of 32%, according to the report.

“As China continues its consumption upgrade, more and more people from different age groups and geographic locations are willing to spend on high-quality beauty products,” Jet Jing, president of Tmall, said in an emailed statement. “We are looking forward to working with more brands to address the opportunity.”

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Alibaba’s AI-powered smart mirror grants beauty wishes on command https://technode.com/2019/03/05/alibaba-smart-mirror-beauty-on-command/ https://technode.com/2019/03/05/alibaba-smart-mirror-beauty-on-command/#respond Tue, 05 Mar 2019 09:04:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97444 The device also offers various information services such as weather forecasts and beauty tips. ]]>
(Image credit: Alibaba)

Chinese tech giant Alibaba took the wraps off a voice-activated mirror, dubbed Tmall Genie Queen, at its annual beauty summit held Monday in Shanghai. The responsive mirror aims to tap into the growing beauty demand from China’s increasingly tech-savvy female consumers.

Consisting of a smart speaker base and an eight-inch smart mirror, the new gadget is powered by Alibaba’s AliGenie voice assistant, which also powers its hugely popular AI speaker Tmall Genie. The e-commerce giant has shipped around 10 million of the Genie devices since product launch in July 2017.

For the voice-activated mirror, users can adjust different light settings through voice command to ensure they can see their faces perfectly, whether in a bright coffee shop or a dark bar.

Tmall Genie Queen is now open for public testing, but no details regarding its shipment date or price were disclosed at the event.

As a concept, smart mirrors aren’t new though. Plenty of companies such as CareOS and H&M have built voice-activated mirrors, but most of them are body length or upper body length mirrors that are sold for hundreds of dollars. Such products have yet to gain a foothold in the Chinese market.

Further, like the Tmall Genie, the mirror can order items from Alibaba’s shopping site Tmall.

The device also offers various information services such as weather forecasts, beauty tips, and allows users to control other devices such as air conditioning units with voice commands.

Voiceprint recognition technology ensures that only authorized users can place orders, according to Alibaba.

“The proportion of women purchasing electronic products is basically on par with that of men,” said Chen Lijuan, head of Alibaba’s AI Labs, the group behind the product. “Women’s purchase rate of household appliances has exceeded 60%.”

Sales of smart beauty devices, such as smart skin detector, more than doubled in 2018, Chen added.

At the same event, Tmall presented its Alibaba Business Operating System again, this time focusing on how it can help beauty brands. The system, which was launched in January, is positioned by Alibaba as a “one-stop solution” that helps brands digitally transform across a range of functions such as sales, logistics and supply chain management.

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Briefing: Alibaba aims for small US businesses with Office Depot deal https://technode.com/2019/03/05/alibaba-office-depot-small-businesses/ https://technode.com/2019/03/05/alibaba-office-depot-small-businesses/#respond Tue, 05 Mar 2019 05:00:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97376 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mThe new partnership marks another step for Alibaba o expand its enterprise-faced business beyond its home country.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Alibaba Eyes U.S. Small Businesses in New Tie-Up With Office Depot – Fortune

What happened: Alibaba’s business-to-business trading platform has entered into a partnership with US office supply retailer, Office Depot. Under the deal, small US businesses will be able to access 150,000 suppliers that offer next-day delivery in Alibaba’s global network. The Chinese online retailer will be granted access to 10 million business customers and 1,800 sales agents through the American retailer. The collaboration aims to create a one-stop shop for small to mid-sized companies.

Why it’s important: The new partnership marks another step for the Chinese e-commerce giant’s enterprise-facing business expansion beyond its home market. In its initiative to connect with small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) from around the world, Alibaba has inked MOUs with a number of countries in East Asia, Latin America, and Europe to bring products and services, especially from Chinese SMEs, to global markets. Alibaba has been doubling down on digital transformation for enterprises, riding the wave as business-to-business tech picks up pace in China.

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Briefing: JD.com to accelerate expansion to lower-tier cities in 2019 https://technode.com/2019/03/04/jd-com-eyes-lower-tier-cities-in-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/03/04/jd-com-eyes-lower-tier-cities-in-2019/#respond Mon, 04 Mar 2019 09:20:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97281 Lower-tier cities represent a new opportunity for Chinese e-commerce giants like JD.com and Alibaba.]]>

JD.com sets strategy to expand into China’s smaller cities, offline businesses – SCMP

What happened: JD.com founder Richard Liu late last week said that the online retailer is planning to accelerate its expansion into smaller cities this year. JD’s Pigou service, a Pinduoduo rival, will develop its own app and add more products to attract customers from lesser-developed cities, as well as female users.

Why it’s important: As the competition in China’s first- and second-tier cities grows more fierce, lower-tier cities represent a new opportunity for Chinese e-commerce giants like JD.com and Alibaba. The rise of social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo exemplifies the potential of the lower-income market, which, in the past, went largely ignored. In addition to JD, Alibaba is also eyeing the market with the launch of similar services. On the other hand, Pinduoduo is trying to tap the higher-tier market through grocery delivery and cross-border e-commence.

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Briefing: Alibaba Cloud outage hits North China https://technode.com/2019/03/04/alibaba-cloud-outrage/ https://technode.com/2019/03/04/alibaba-cloud-outrage/#respond Mon, 04 Mar 2019 02:51:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97191 Alibaba Cloud is facing competition from rivals like Tencent Cloud and Huawei Cloud as Chinese tech giants shift focus to enterprise-facing services.]]>

阿里云凌晨疑似宕机故障 华北互联网公司炸锅了 – NetEase

What happened: A massive Alibaba Cloud service outage took down websites and apps, large and small, in North China on Sunday. The total number of affected users is unknown at this time. The company responded that the breakdown was caused by an error in the Elastic Container Service (ECS) in North China-2 region. Service is being restored gradually and Alibaba Cloud will compensate user losses, according to the service-level agreement (SLA) protocol.

Why it’s important: The lapse in service for users of Alibaba Cloud, which sells computing and data storage services, drew massive criticism online. The Alibaba-backed service is the largest player in China’s cloud computing sector, comprising 47.6% of the market during the first half of 2018, according to a report by research firm IDC. A similar outage in June knocked service out for roughly half an hour. Alibaba is facing competition from new rivals like Tencent Cloud and Huawei Cloud as Chinese tech giants shift focus to enterprise-facing services.

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Briefing: JD.com shares climb on Q4 earnings surprise https://technode.com/2019/03/01/jd-q4-2018-earnings/ https://technode.com/2019/03/01/jd-q4-2018-earnings/#respond Fri, 01 Mar 2019 03:49:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=97025 JD Joy dog Solana BeijingJD has been shoring up its non-core revenue streams and tightening its belt to weather the pressures from a slowing economy.]]> JD Joy dog Solana Beijing

JD.com shares take off despite slowing revenue growth – TechCrunch

What happened: Shares of JD.com surged after the Chinese online retailer recorded better-than-expected fourth quarter and annual earnings. Fourth quarter net revenue rose 22.4% to RMB 134.8 billion ($19.6 billion) compared with the same period a year earlier, beating analyst expectations of $19.2 billion but posting the slowest quarterly growth since the company’s 2014 IPO. Net revenues for the full year were RMB 462.0 billion ($69.0 billion), a 27.5% year-on-year increase. Fourth quarter operating margin swung back into profit at 0.2% compared with operating losses of 0.5% the same period a year ago.

Why it’s important: JD has been shoring up revenue streams other than e-commerce, including offering its logistics services to other retailers like Rakuten and boosting ads on its marketplace platform. It is also refocusing internally with plans to hire 15,000 more front line workers while cutting high-level executives. Against the backdrop, beating expectations and improve margin was enough to trigger investor interest.

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Briefing: Luckin rival Coffee Box closes up to 40% of stores https://technode.com/2019/02/28/coffee-box-close-store/ https://technode.com/2019/02/28/coffee-box-close-store/#respond Thu, 28 Feb 2019 03:23:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96816 Coffee Box seeks to regain profitability amidst heightened competition and a cooling capital market.]]>

连咖啡关店过冬、瑞幸持续亏损,连锁咖啡行业怎么了?– 36Kr

What happened: Coffee Box, a local rival to “new retail” coffee brand Luckin, has shuttered 30% to 40% of its more than 400 stores nationwide in a pullback that began around the Spring Festival holiday. There are now 70 outlets in Shanghai compared with 120, and around 40 in Beijing vs. more than 60. Coffee Box stated that it targeted unprofitable storefronts and those that failed to meet certain brand requirements as it seeks to regain profitability amidst a cooling capital market. The company expects to return to profitability in the second quarter and a new financing round will be announced in April.

Why it’s important: One of the early players in the sector, Coffee Box was founded in 2014 as a WeChat-based third-party delivery platform for Starbucks and Costa before it launched its own brand. The company began profiting from its more than 100 stores at the end of 2017, but the arrival of well-funded Luckin Coffee in 2018 ramped up the competition. Luckin, while still loss-making, announced in early January its goal to open more than 2,500 new shops, pushing the total number of storefronts to 4,500 by the end of this year.

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Briefing: JD to hire 15,000 lower-tier staff in 2019 https://technode.com/2019/02/27/jd-hire-frontline-staff/ https://technode.com/2019/02/27/jd-hire-frontline-staff/#respond Wed, 27 Feb 2019 04:14:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96668 The current recruitment plan comes just a week after the company announced a 10% job cut among executives.]]>

JD.Com’s HR Strategy 2019 Says Yes to 15,000 New Frontline Staff But No to Top Execs – Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese online retailer JD is planning to recruit 15,000 more employees, or around 9% of its current workforce, in 2019. New headcount will mainly go to fill lower-level positions from customer service to logistics management. The rest will be assigned to jobs for enhancing user experience in technology and retail businesses.

Why it’s important: The current recruitment plan comes just a week after the company announced a 10% job cut among executives. The hires support an enhanced user experience with faster and more reliable delivery, known to be part of JD’s core values. Unlike Taobao’s customer-to-customer (C2C) marketplace, which partners with third-party couriers, JD is a business-to-customer (B2C) platform that holds its inventories and uses its own logistics network to fulfill orders. The company is also integrating autonomous solutions to its logistics network, though it remains heavily dependent on human labor.

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Meituan denies link between money woes and labor strikes https://technode.com/2019/02/27/meituan-denies-link-between-money-woes-and-labor-strikes/ https://technode.com/2019/02/27/meituan-denies-link-between-money-woes-and-labor-strikes/#respond Wed, 27 Feb 2019 03:09:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96657 Meituan denies link between money woes and labor strikes]]>

Meituan responded to TechNode’s Monday story about delivery fleet strikes, saying that the reduction in pay was a normal cyclical event for part-time staff that enjoy incentivizing seasonal subsidies during peak periods. The pay reduction was not connected to the company’s financials and Meituan’s delivery service is operating normally after the company communicated the wage fluctuation to the striking workers, said a company spokesman on Tuesday.

However, when TechNode contacted the company Monday for comment, the company spokesman stated that he was not aware of any labor strikes.

The company’s financial pressures, however, are unambiguous after recording a net loss of RMB 4.2 billion ($626 million) during the first half of 2018. Margin pressures are a common thread across delivery platforms that have used cash-burning discounts and coupons in the ongoing market share battle, resulting in increased commission rates as recently as mid-January.

Meituan’s monetization rate for its food delivery business remained about flat at 13% in the first half of 2018 vs. 13.4% for the same period a year earlier, according to company financial statements. Monetization rates are commission the platform charges sellers for each transaction.

The company declined to comment on its monetization strategy, citing the quiet period before earnings season.

Delivery workers for rival Ele.me’s courier network, Fengniao Delivery, also protested lower wages in Shenzhen on Friday. In a public letter addressing the delivery team dated the same day, the company asked for employees to remain rational about the adjustment.

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Briefing: Alibaba Cloud renews push into global markets with new releases https://technode.com/2019/02/26/alibaba-cloud-international/ https://technode.com/2019/02/26/alibaba-cloud-international/#respond Tue, 26 Feb 2019 05:03:09 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96514 Globalization and enterprise-facing services are two new paths for Chinese tech giants to drive next-stage growth.]]>

Alibaba Cloud Releases New Products to International markets – Alizila

What happened: Alibaba Cloud, the cloud computing arm of Alibaba Group, launched a group of new products during the annual Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain on Monday. The move brings services previously only available in mainland China to the international market. The new services range from server-less computing, data analytics, global networking, high-performance storage, and an enterprise database that let customers derive actionable business insights. Alibaba Cloud started its globalization initiative four years ago and now operates in multiple countries and regions including Hong Kong, Singapore, India, Japan, Australia, and the US.

Why it’s important: Globalization and enterprise-facing services are two new paths for Chinese tech giants to drive next-stage growth, though pushing into international markets has yielded mixed results. The efforts of Alibaba’s well-established cloud services business in expanding overseas is worth watching as major Chinese tech companies seek growth in new markets.

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Meituan labor strikes underscore profitability pressures https://technode.com/2019/02/25/meituan-deliveryman-strike/ https://technode.com/2019/02/25/meituan-deliveryman-strike/#respond Mon, 25 Feb 2019 10:26:55 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96414 Friction between on-demand platforms and delivery workers have been a recurring issue in the industry.]]>

Chinese food delivery giant Meituan Dianping faces pushback as its delivery fleet staged a series of strikes in several major cities across the country this past week in protest of recently lowered wages.

A picture featuring a row of scooters bearing signs reading “Stop taking orders” parked on a university campus in Jinan, the capital of eastern Shandong province, was posted Sunday by Weibo user, Zhenhua Youshiceping. At least two other strikes by delivery fleets contracted to Meituan have taken place since last week – one in Linyi, a city in the southern part of Shandong province, and another in Dongguan, a manufacturing hub in southern Guangdong province, according to CLB’s Strike Map.

The conflict has become physical at times, according to local media, with confrontations breaking out between striking workers and merchants who continue to use the platform as well as striking workers sabotaging deliveries for peers that continue to take orders from the platform.

Meituan Dianping deliverymen complain that rates for single journeys have been lowered and delivery times are shorter than transit times calculated on popular map apps. These differences leave little profit once overhead costs like gas, scooter repairs, and phone bills are accounted for.

Financial pressures have been mounting for Meituan Dianping to turn a profit after recording a net loss of RMB 4.2 billion ($626 million) during the first half of 2018, and the company appears to be redoubling money-making efforts. In addition to lowering pay for its delivery fleet, the company hiked its commission fees earlier this year, resulting in complaints from many small and mid-sized merchants in particular.

Rising commission rates add pressure on smaller merchants that are already struggling amid a cooling economy, said Zhu Congyang, a manager of a hotpot restaurant in Shanghai.

Friction between on-demand platforms and delivery workers have been a recurring issue in the industry. The majority of the protests have been directed against Meituan Dianping, which has seen the majority of delivery fleet protests beginning last year. However, competitors Ele.me and Didi, which is scaling back its food delivery service after launching last year, are not immune to the problem.

Help may be on the way, however, as the government begins introducing regulations to protect working conditions for deliverymen. Beijing’s municipal government released a set of policies on Wednesday prodding companies to provide formal employment contracts for gig employees that include health insurance, housing, and better job security.

Following rumors of a restructuring at the end of October in which Dianping, which merged with Meituan in 2015, was portrayed as losing a power struggle between the two, the company  stated that the restructuring was merely an “internal upgrade of its User Platform,” not a sign of internal discord or financial woes.

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US unicorn Branch moves into China, looks to fill B2B solutions gap https://technode.com/2019/02/22/branch-unicorn-china-b2b/ https://technode.com/2019/02/22/branch-unicorn-china-b2b/#respond Fri, 22 Feb 2019 11:57:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96239 China’s enterprises are 'way behind' their Western counterparts in terms of business management and operations.]]>
Jason Li, China director of Branch (Image credit: Branch)

China’s citizens are fully connected, but its enterprises are still in the early stages of digitization.

E-commerce and mobile payments are major drivers of the tech industry, but, increasingly, Chinese startups and tech giants are shifting their focus to business-to-business (B2B) products. The sector shift is attracting prominent startups from abroad, including US unicorn Branch.

Founded in 2014 by four Stanford graduates, Branch is a mobile marketing company that uses a deep linking solution to seamlessly integrate core marketing channels such as email, social media, and ads. It enables businesses to drive organic growth by connecting users to relevant app content.

Deep links are internet links that point to specific content inside an app rather than just the homepage. Without a deep link, locating a certain product involves multiple steps from finding the app in the App Store or Play Store, opening the homepage, locating the search function, before finally searching for the desired product.

Instead of directing users to a homepage, Branch redirects them from a website, promotion email, or a friend referral in messaging apps to a specific page of product or service. This B2B product helps businesses achieve higher user conversion and retention by providing a seamless redirecting experience.

Deep linking is a complex landscape for developers because it involves many different standards, which work differently across platforms. Branch combines every standard into a single package, thus deferred deep links can effectively route users even if the app is not installed. 

Branch was one of the first movers during the industry transition from web to apps, and now powers over 50,000 applications. These include Airbnb, Pinterest, Slack, Amazon, and Tinder. “Over half of the top 200 apps are using Branch links, Jason Li, Branch’s China country director, told TechNode.

The Silicon Valley startup reached unicorn status in late 2018 after receiving more than $100 million in its Series D funding round, led by the venture capital firm founded by Android co-founder Andy Rubin. Its total funding is now $242 million, according to Crunchbase.

While deep linking is a useful tool, it’s not a novel technology. The market is riddled with competition, so Branch is expanding into mobile measurement, using its deep link infrastructure and data. By providing a service to help advertisers track their customers and to optimize their campaigns, it hopes to stay ahead in the B2B game. 

Crossing the Pacific

What is more, Li described how the startup is planning to launch in China at the end of March. The unicorn is a stark example of where Chinese tech is underdeveloped, and why its San Francisco counterparts are moving in. 

“China’s B2C mobile internet market is probably leading the game global wise, but China’s enterprises are way behind the Western counterparts in terms of business management and operation,” said Li.

The rising marginal cost for attracting individual users and fierce competition in business-to-consumer (B2C) verticals are the main reasons driving China’s tech industry towards B2B services, he continued. There is great opportunity in the sectors of CRM, recruitment, stock exchange solutions, and others, he added.

In 2018, B2B comprised almost 40% of Chinese startups, overtaking e-commerce as the most popular sector, according to a national business report by NetEase Cloud and startup database IT Juzi.

Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

Even before officially launching, Branch has locked in several Chinese clients. These are transnational e-commerce platform Global Egrow, B2B e-commerce operator DHgate.com, Android developer APUS, fitness and workout trainer Keep, and airline Cathay Pacific.

“Chinese companies are seeking growth through ‘rough’ methods. They rely heavily on the advertisement for overseas expansion, while US firms strive for organic growth through omnichannel coverage from mobile web, email, word-of-mouth, etc.,” Li says. These require specialized solutions, which have birthed a developed B2B industry in the US.

Services and team are the two major differentiators of Branch in facing competition from global and Chinese rivals, according to Li. “We will provide premium services to clients, responding within 2 hours when they have inquiries. On top of that, we got an experienced team coming to form Salesforce, LinkedIn, Gartner, etc.,” he added.

“In China, we going have an entirely different product portfolio for Chinese market specifically. We also consider to build a local R&D team, local product manager in China in the future,” he added.

Branch’s first targets are Chinese companies looking to expand overseas. The firm is planning to tap China’s local market toward the end of 2019 or early 2020.

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Briefing: Urban courier Lalamove raises $300 million, joins unicorn rankings https://technode.com/2019/02/22/lalamove-300-million-d-round-unicorn/ https://technode.com/2019/02/22/lalamove-300-million-d-round-unicorn/#respond Fri, 22 Feb 2019 09:41:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96274 The funding comes at a time when capital shortage in China's tech world is leading to layoffs.]]>

On-demand logistics startup Lalamove raises $300M for Asia growth and becomes a unicorn -TechCrunch

What happened: Chinese on-demand logistics platform Lalamove has secured $300 million in a Series D led by Hillhouse Capital Group and Sequoia Capital China to support further expansion into Southeast Asia and entry to India. This latest round of fund-raising raises the Hong Kong startup to unicorn status. Other investors include new backers Eastern Bell Venture Capital and PV Capital and returning investors Shunwei Capital, Xiang He Capital, and MindWorks Ventures.

Why it’s important: The funding comes at a time when capital shortage in China’s tech world is leading to layoffs and other belt-tightening measures. Lalamove, known as Uber for logistics, provides intra-city delivery services for business and corporate customers. A major player in the vertical, the platform boasts some 28 million users and 3 million drivers as of last month, and operates in more than 100 Chinese cities. The company is expanding beyond its anchor market in mainland China and already does business in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Taiwan. Rival GoGoVan merged in 2017 with 58 Suyun, the logistics arm of Chinese classifieds giant 58.com.

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Briefing: Alibaba to increase talent investment amid China tech layoffs https://technode.com/2019/02/22/alibaba-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/02/22/alibaba-2019/#respond Fri, 22 Feb 2019 05:30:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96191 A reassuring signal from the benchmark company as China tech giants tighten headcount amid concerns of a widespread economic slowdown.]]>

阿里巴巴CEO张勇:阿里不会裁员 将继续开放招聘 – NetEase

What happened: Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang affirmed the company’s commitment to talent investment in a bid to support consumer spending on a Thursday meeting with management, pledging support for recruitment, training programs and platform resources. “The biggest value of having a platform-based economy like Alibaba is to create more job opportunities especially when the economy is challenging,” said Zhang.

Why it’s important: Alibaba’s resolution comes at a time when headcount is tightening across China’s tech sector against a backdrop of a broader economic slowdown. Ride-hailing giant Didi will lay off 15% of its employees this year while JD announced plans earlier in the week to cut the bottom-performing 10% of executives at vice president-level or higher in 2019. Layoff rumors meanwhile have circulated about other top tech firms including Huawei, Meituan, knowledge-sharing platform Zhihu, and game-streaming site Douyu.

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Briefing: JD partners with Rakuten to take its drones to Japan https://technode.com/2019/02/21/jd-rakuten-drone-solution-japan/ https://technode.com/2019/02/21/jd-rakuten-drone-solution-japan/#respond Thu, 21 Feb 2019 10:17:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96126 JD is looking to expand its drone solutions beyond China.]]>

JD.com’s drones take flight to Japan in partnership with Rakuten – TechCrunch

What happened: Chinese online retailer JD.com has announced a partnership with Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten, which will deploy the Chinese e-commerce giant’s drone delivery and unmanned vehicle service in Japan. Rakuten has over 20 years of experience with commerce and IT in Japan and launched a drone delivery service in 2016. JD.com started trialing drone flights in the same year. It is currently operating or testing drones for delivery in Beijing, as well as the Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Shaanxi, and Jiangsu.

Why it’s important: JD.com began developing its drone program in 2015, in its JDX innovation lab. It is the only company in its native country with a regional license to deploy drones for logistics. Lately, the company has been trying to expand its drone solutions beyond China. In January 2019, JD.com announced the success of its first government-approved drone test flight in Indonesia, opening the door for future commercial drone use in the region. JD’s push for unmanned aerial vehicles is part of a wider trend. Chinese tech giants, like Alibaba and Meituan, are pushing for automated delivery. McKinsey estimates that autonomous vehicles, such as drones, will deliver 80% of all goods in less than a decade.

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Briefing: Co-founder of China’s once touted Amazon announces his departure https://technode.com/2019/02/21/co-founder-of-chinas-amazon-announced-his-departure/ https://technode.com/2019/02/21/co-founder-of-chinas-amazon-announced-his-departure/#respond Thu, 21 Feb 2019 02:47:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=96012 Dangdang founder Li GuoqingDespite Dangdang’s early rise to prominence, the online bookseller is gradually losing the battle with younger competitors. ]]> Dangdang founder Li Guoqing

Co-Founder Exits China’s Biggest E-Book Retailer– Yicai Global

What happened: Li Guoqing, co-founder of Chinese online bookseller Dangdang, announced in an open letter that he has left the company, which he founded with his wife Peggy Yu in 1999. After Li’s departure, Yu will serve as CEO of the company going forward. Li now plans to explore the knowledge-sharing sector by setting up a book club.

Why it’s important: Li Guoqing is a prominent figure in China’s internet industry as the co-founder of Dangdang, a prominent e-book retailer that’s often likened to Amazon. There are early signs showing that Li has been taking a back seat in the company’s operations. Through its official account on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo, Dangdang announced that since late last year Li has been on indefinite leave after he made a controversial remark about extramarital sex regarding the outcome of a legal case involving JD CEO Liu Qiangdong. Despite Dangdang’s early rise to prominence, the online bookseller is gradually losing the battle with younger competitors like JD.

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Briefing: Alibaba opens applications for $10 million African Netpreneur Prize in March https://technode.com/2019/02/20/alibaba-netpreneur-prize-applications-march/ https://technode.com/2019/02/20/alibaba-netpreneur-prize-applications-march/#respond Wed, 20 Feb 2019 03:38:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95863 Africa’s budding e-commerce market is becoming the new playground for China's tech giants.]]>

Applications for Jack Ma’s Africa Netpreneur Prize to open in March-Ventureburn

What happened: The Africa Netpreneur Prize Initiative (ANPI) officially announced a call for its inaugural round of applications. The process will start on Mar. 27, rescheduled from the initial plan of Jan. 15. It remains unclear why the date was changed. The $10 million competition for African entrepreneurs was founded by the Jack Ma Foundation to provide African entrepreneurs a platform where they can scale up their work. The Prize is open to innovators from African countries across all industries, who can nominate themselves until Jun. 30.

Why it’s important: Africa’s budding e-commerce market is the new playground for Chinese tech giants, like Alibaba. McKinsey’s Global Institute projected that annual e-commerce sales in Africa’s largest economies will reach a total $75 billion by 2025, a prospect which has excited tech companies around the world. The Africa Netpreneur Prize is the second initiative launched by Alibaba’s Jack Ma to support African entrepreneurs. In 2017, Alibaba Business School and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) announced the eFounders Fellowship, a program that will train 1,000 entrepreneurs from emerging markets; 200 of those come from Africa.

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Briefing: JD to cut 10% of executives in 2019 https://technode.com/2019/02/19/jd-to-cut-10-executives-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/02/19/jd-to-cut-10-executives-2019/#respond Tue, 19 Feb 2019 07:19:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95766 The news comes as many other Chinese tech companies control headcounts. ]]>

消息称京东2019年将末位淘汰10%的高管 – Tencent Tech

What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant JD announced plans to cut 10% of its vice president or higher level executives who come at the bottom of the company’s performance evaluation mechanism in 2019. With a total employee of over 180,000, the company now has around 100 such executives, according to the report.

Why it’s important: Rumors about JD’s workforce cuts have been circulating since the end of last year. In November last year, JD was reported to be cutting between 10% to 15% of its workers, but the firm refuted the news. The current news is significant because it would be a rare case for the e-commerce site to launch a round of job cuts targeting high-level executives. The decision was made to solve various organizational problems existing in the US-listed company as well as to regain the entrepreneurial spirit, the source noted. The news comes as Chinese tech companies generally are controlling headcount.

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Alibaba’s ties with Chinese Communist Party app draw scrutiny https://technode.com/2019/02/19/alibaba-chinese-communist-party-app/ https://technode.com/2019/02/19/alibaba-chinese-communist-party-app/#respond Tue, 19 Feb 2019 06:20:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95666 The news comes as Chinese tech firms face increased scrutiny over their ties to the government.]]>
Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

Alibaba is reportedly the developer of Chinese government propaganda app Xuexi Qiangguo, which translates to “Study to make China strong,” putting the tech giant under scrutiny over its ties with the government.

The app was developed by a special project team of the company known as the “Y Projects Business Unit”, which takes on development projects outside the company, Reuters reported citing people familiar with the matter. Through the app, users can read government news, browse short videos on Party theories, and even take a quiz on major aspects of Communist Party ideology. The recently launched app has overtaken China’s hit services like WeChat and TikTok’s China version Douyin as the most popular app in Apple’s China app store.

Although the news still hasn’t been confirmed, there’s evidence pointing to the close relationship between the tech giant and the app. Users with Alibaba’s productivity tool DingTalk can use their accounts to log into Xuexi Qiangguo, which will sync the users’ dialogues on DingTalk to the app’s chat feature directly.

In a response to inquiries from TechNode on the issue, the company stresses the “open” nature of the platform and explains that Xuexi Qiangguo is among a large number of partners.

“DingTalk is an open technology platform and committed to providing stable, safe and efficient technical support to fulfill the needs of our customers. Tens of thousands of companies and organizations have developed and are developing applications based on the DingTalk platform. That is a testament to its strong, reliable infrastructure and ease-of-use,” a DingTalk spokesperson told TechNode.

Not long ago, the tech giant was questioned for its ties with the government in November when the state media People’s Daily identified company’s legendary founder Jack Ma as a Party member among a list of extraordinary contributors to the country’s development over the last 40 years.

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Briefing: Tencent suspends smart speaker project Tingting https://technode.com/2019/02/18/tencent-cancels-smart-speaker-project/ https://technode.com/2019/02/18/tencent-cancels-smart-speaker-project/#respond Mon, 18 Feb 2019 08:22:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95532 The company's team-centric tradition may result in problems during times of business adjustments. ]]>

腾讯首款智能音箱项目叫停,或与组织架构调整有关 – 36Kr

What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent has reportedly suspended the research and development of its smart speaker Tingting, the company’s first effort to tap the vertical. Tencent suspended the production of the gadget, but its sales and after-sales service will not be affected. Launched in April last year, Tencent Tingting is a voice-based smart speaker, allowing users to access WeChat accounts and send or receive voice messages.

Why it’s important: The suspension of Tingting reveals the internal pains of the Chinese tech giant. In a related business line, Tencent rolled out Alexa-like AI assistant service Jingle in 2017. The relationship between Tingting and Jingle was like that of Echo and Alexa, as well as HomePod and Siri. However, the balance was broken when Jingle released its hardware device in December last year. Putting several teams on similar projects is a tradition in the company, as it aims to drive innovation. Under the mechanism, project leaders develop their teams, which may run several product lines. This team-centric tradition may result in problems during times of business adjustments, as leaders could be reluctant to merge projects given the amount of time they have given to developing their teams.

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Briefing: Bike rental cool down prompts calls for policy change https://technode.com/2019/02/15/bike-rental-cool-down-demands-policy-change/ https://technode.com/2019/02/15/bike-rental-cool-down-demands-policy-change/#respond Fri, 15 Feb 2019 06:18:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95406 Hello BikeAs the bike rental cools down, industry insiders start to ask how well the bike ban fits current circumstances. ]]> Hello Bike

街头共享单车数量明显少了 “禁投令”该不该放松 – Tencent Tech

What happened: Alibaba-backed bike rental company Hello Transtech was summoned by the Shanghai government in January for illegally placing new bikes in downtown areas like Jingansi District of the city while the ban to place more bikes in the city is still in place. The company has been ordered to suspend the move and withdraw the illegally placed bikes. Hello Transtech said the reason for the “misplacement” of the bikes was the company’s unfamiliarity with the locations in question by the company’s operations and maintenance staff. The company said it will cooperate with government departments in the future.

Why it’s important: To curb the negative side effects of rental bikes on local transportation management, Shanghai placed a halt on new bikes in the city in August 2017. But as the bike rental boom cools down, industry insiders are starting to ask how well this yearlong ban fits with current circumstances. Back around the time the rules were introduced there were more than 1.7 million shared bikes in the city. But the figure dropped significantly to around a quarter of that as financial challenges at bike rental giants such as ofo and Mobike grew, the Tencent Tech story noted. Like Shanghai, all major Chinese cities like Beijing, Shenzhen halted bike placement at the prime time of China’s bike rental boom. It could be the need for a policy adjustment is a countrywide thing.

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Alibaba acquires 8% stake in Bilibili to double down on content-driven e-commerce https://technode.com/2019/02/15/alibaba-acquires-8-stake-in-bilibili/ https://technode.com/2019/02/15/alibaba-acquires-8-stake-in-bilibili/#respond Fri, 15 Feb 2019 03:43:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95372 The deal forges closer ties between the two companies as Content-driven e-commerce takes off in China.]]>

Chinese tech giant Alibaba announced through an SEC filing on Thursday that its Taobao marketplace has acquired around 24 million shares in Bilibili, representing roughly an 8% stake in the Chinese video and entertainment platform.

The deal brings closer ties between the two companies—they are already in partnership since December. Under that agreement, Taobao and Bilibili said they would bring creators together, and promote commercialization of both platforms.

China’s recent rise of content-driven e-commerce is another testimony to the saying that content is king. Chinese microblogging platform Weibo is planning to invest RMB 2 billion ($295,000) in the next year to support the key opinions leaders, actors, and agencies. Short video apps like Kuaishou and Douyin also tap on the tide.

Bilibili boasts an extra advantage in that its millennial-faced content is particularly attractive for tech giants who are trying to keep up with the changing tastes of China’s digital natives who are gaining economic independence. More than 80% of Bilibili’s users were born after the 1990s.

In addition to the core e-commerce business, Alibaba’s partnership with Bilibili expands to other areas. Alibaba-backed food delivery giant Ele.me has launched a membership promotion program with Bilibili to target at China’s young anime fans. Tencent, the second largest shareholder of Bilibili, entered a partnership with the company on “sharing and operating” anime and games on the platform. In China, it is a rare case for a tech startup to be co-invested by the two tech giants.

To reinforce its status as the home of China’s ACG (anime, comics, and games) fans, the company acquired the comic assets from its rival NetEase in December.

Despite its popularity, Bilibili is still facing profitability problems. The US-listed firm recorded a net loss of RMB 202.7 million in the third quarter of last year, significantly higher than the RMB 2.9 million loss recorded in the same period in 2017. Increasing financial pressure may form another driver for its commercialization moves.

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Briefing: Alibaba’s Taobao raised RMB 440 million in 2018 for philanthropic efforts https://technode.com/2019/02/14/taobao-philanthropic-efforts-2018/ https://technode.com/2019/02/14/taobao-philanthropic-efforts-2018/#respond Thu, 14 Feb 2019 04:06:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95223 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mChina’s promising digital payment environment has shifted the country’s donation and charity event participation. ]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Banner Year for Alibaba’s Taobao Philanthropy Efforts – PR Newswire

What happened: Alibaba Group’s Taobao marketplace raised RMB 440 million ($65 million) from two million merchants and nearly 430 million shoppers to help an estimated 8.7 million people. The move makes Taobao China’s largest online philanthropy platform, in terms of total participation, according to the company. In addition, the money and other resources raised via Taobao are used to help the poor and disadvantaged in Ethiopia and Myanmar. The platform supports causes ranging from poverty alleviation, education and environmental protection, to childcare and animal protection, as well as illness and disaster relief.

Why it’s important: China’s promising digital payment environment has shifted the country’s donation and charity event participation. Thanks to the push from tech giants, Chinese donors are familiar with “donation” buttons within mobile payment apps to make digital transfers. Alibaba rival Tencent also leads the trend with a dedicated arm Tencent Gongyi, which has more than 210 million users and has initiated over 50,000 programs since its launch in 2007.

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Briefing: Luckin Coffee to expand to additional 18 tier-2 cities by April https://technode.com/2019/02/13/luckin-coffee-18-new-cities/ https://technode.com/2019/02/13/luckin-coffee-18-new-cities/#respond Wed, 13 Feb 2019 05:57:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95114 Coffee competition expands to second-and third-tier cities in China. ]]>

Chinese Starbucks rival Luckin Coffee expands in 18 more cities by April-Pingwest

What happened: Chinese coffee chain startup Luckin has announced that it’s going to enter 18 more cities by the end of April this year, aiming for a total number 40 operating cities since its launch in January last year. The company just kicked off operations in Changzhou, Foshan, and Yangzhou in January. There are 15 more cities to open, most of which are second-tier cities.

Why it’s important: The one-year-old coffee chain startup is speeding up its store expansion this year in an ambitious goal to overtake Starbucks in China. Counting 22 cities in which Luckin opened outlets over last year, the Xiamen-based company expects to fulfill a majority of last year’s goal within only four months in 2019. Already taken first-tier cities, the competition among the two coffee chain rivals is expanding to second-and third-tier cities in China. The firm announced in early January the goal to open more than 2,500 new shops, thus pushing the total number of coffee shops of 4,500 by the end of the year. It’s important to note, however, that Luckin operates a variety of store types, including dark stores and pick-up only stores with smaller footprints than traditional coffee shops.

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Vivo aims at premium handset market with new smartphone brand iQOO https://technode.com/2019/02/12/vivo-launches-premium-brand-iqoo/ https://technode.com/2019/02/12/vivo-launches-premium-brand-iqoo/#respond Tue, 12 Feb 2019 09:09:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=95017 Vivo's entry to the premium market challenges foreign counterparts like Apple and Samsung. ]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Vivo has rolled out today a premium smartphone brand iQOO, marking another effort for Chinese phone makers to shake off their budget image.

A newly built Weibo account dubbed “iQOO mobile phone” greets the public today with its first-ever microblog that reads, “Hello, this is iQOO.” The registration details of the account show it shares the same owner of Vivo, which later reposted the blog with a comment saying “Welcome new friends in the new year.”

Little details other than the name were disclosed as of present. However, a poster that comes in the microblog suggests that the new brand will feature futuristic and technologically advanced devices.

Local media pointed out that this new brand would target at flagship models costing more than RMB5,000 ($737), aiming at the higher range of the smartphone market. Vivo’s entry to the premium market represents a trend among Chinese phone makers to challenge a segment that’s traditionally dominated by their foreign counterparts like Apple and Samsung.

In line with the trend, an interesting shift is taking place in China where having a Huawei phone may underline a higher social status than holding an iPhone.

At present, Vivo’s latest NEX Series represents the higher-range of the company’s models. NEX series is priced at RMB4,998 for the premium edition. Company Vice President Hu Baishan disclosed Vivo NEX series has shipped over 2 million sets in the second half of 2018.

It’s a common practice for Chinese smartphone manufacturers to adopt a sub-brands strategy in a bid to target at different customers bases in various markets. For example, Huawei established the Honor sub-brand to grab the online channel. Xiaomi introduced Redmi to focus on budget phones. Redmi Note 7, the first smartphone the company launched as an independent brand, shipped over 1 million units after its launch on Jan. 15, the company announced today. Similarly, the Realme brand was born out of Oppo last year.

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Briefing: JD to turn Beijing hotel into a research and commercial center https://technode.com/2019/02/12/jd-acquires-beijing-hotel/ https://technode.com/2019/02/12/jd-acquires-beijing-hotel/#respond Tue, 12 Feb 2019 06:17:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94981 JD’s move in Beijing bucks the trend among Chinese tech companies, many of which are trying to escape from prominent tech hubs.]]>

Why is JD.com spending US$400 million to buy this hotel in Beijing? – SCMP

What happened: China’s e-commerce giant JD.com has acquired 100% ownership of the Jade Palace Hotel in Beijing for $400 million. The Nasdaq-listed company is planning to transform the building into a space for technology innovation and commercial businesses. The hotel, which started operation in 1998, posted a net loss of RMB 47 million ($6.93 million) for the nine months from January to September 2018.

Why it’s important: JD’s purchase of the iconic building comes as a surprise given that it already has very large headquarters in the southeastern suburbs of the capital. The hotel’s convenient location at the center of Beijing’s Haidian District, where it enjoys proximity to top universities and the high-tech area of Zhongguancun, could be a big factor in the deal. JD’s move to strengthen its foothold in downtown Beijing bucks the trend among Chinese tech firms who are escaping tech hubs and shifting their R&D centers and headquarters to second-tier cities where they can access more affordable space, avail of lower salaries and tap preferential policies offered by local governments.

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Suning acquires 37 Wanda stores to speed up new retail expansion https://technode.com/2019/02/12/suning-acquires-wanda-stores-new-retail/ https://technode.com/2019/02/12/suning-acquires-wanda-stores-new-retail/#respond Tue, 12 Feb 2019 06:07:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94949 Suning.com plans to revamp department store supply chains by tapping the power of big data and AI.]]>

Chinese online retailer Suning.com has acquired 37 outlets of Wanda Department Store, the department store unit of Chinese conglomerate Wanda Group, chairman Zhang Jindong announced at the company’s Lunar New Year meeting held Tuesday. The company didn’t reveal the value of the deal.

The 37 stores are mainly located in central business districts or central areas of China’s first- and second-tier cities and have combined store “memberships” of 4 million, and annual customer traffic of nearly 3.2 billion, according to the company.

Though the acquisition, Suning.com plans to revamp the offline shopping experience and department store supply chain operations by leveraging the power of new technologies like big data and artificial intelligence.

“The prosperity of the physical retail industry can’t rely on the traditional models. It needs improvement in efficiency and experience by using internet technologies so that users can feel the service quality and happiness,” said Zhang.

As a major player in China’s new retail market, Suning.com has been pushing its offline expansions in an effort to promote its smart retail solutions. The company aims to open 15,000 offline stores this year. The Wanda outlet acquisitions allow diversification into department stores.

The deal isn’t surprising given the history between Suning and Wanda Group. Together with Tencent, JD.com and Sunac China Holdings, Suning.com, formerly Suning Commerce, purchased a 14% stake in Wanda Commercial Properties, Wanda’s property arm, for RMB 34 billion ($5.4 billion) in 2018.

Like many of the offline retailers, Wanda Department Store, once a pillar business of the Chinese conglomerate, has been facing an uphill battle due to the competition from online retailers.

In addition, Suning is also speeding up its new retail initiative with the launch of big data-driven unmanned store and autonomous heavy truck to improve logistics efficiency.

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Tencent invests in Reddit as global battle with Bytedance escalates https://technode.com/2019/02/11/tencent-reddit-bytedance/ https://technode.com/2019/02/11/tencent-reddit-bytedance/#respond Mon, 11 Feb 2019 09:31:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94853 tencentInvesting in Reddit is a savvy move for Tencent to consolidate its foothold globally. ]]> tencent

Chinese tech giant Tencent is rumored to have contributed $150 million to US social news and discussion platform Reddit’s $300 million Series D, leading to heated discussions over the possibility of future censorship on the platform.

Although still unconfirmed, the news has sparked a backlash from Redditors who have expressed concerns that the site, which is famously known as a home for free speech and many niche communities, could face a purge after receiving investment from Tencent. Users responded to the rumors by reposting content that would be censored in mainland China, including photos of Tank Man.

But some are less worried as the $150 million investment would give Tencent a minor stake. “Someone with a 5% stake in a company isn’t ‘switching people out’. They have ZERO control,” a Reddit user posted.

Tencent declined to comment on the investment when contacted by TechNode.

Others argue that the Chinese government has no incentive to censor Reddit as it is blocked in China. Users claimed that the platform wasn’t popular in the country before the ban given that most of its content is in English.

The rumored investment comes as Tencent faces mounting challenges from its rival Bytedance, both at home and abroad. Bytedance has seen booming growth thanks to its news aggregation app Toutiao and short video app TikTok—known as Douyin in China—over the past few years. The company has quickly become a thorn in the side of the WeChat operator in China.

Fierce, cross-vertical competition in the Chinese market is pushing tech companies to seek opportunities abroad. Investing in Reddit could be a savvy move for Tencent to consolidate its foothold globally, especially since its core business is social networking and media services. The popular American news board platform is much-coveted among Chinese tech giants. Bytedance’s content aggregator Toutiao reportedly tried to buy Reddit last year in line with its goal to become a global media juggernaut.

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Briefing: Tencent and GAC Group set up $150 million automotive joint venture https://technode.com/2019/02/01/tencent-gac-joint-venture/ https://technode.com/2019/02/01/tencent-gac-joint-venture/#respond Fri, 01 Feb 2019 02:36:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94667 tencentChinese tech giants are accelerating their forays into the automotive industry. ]]> tencent

Tencent moves into automotive with $150M joint venture  – TechCrunch

What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent is establishing a mobility joint venture with GAC Group, a carmaker owned by the municipal government of Guangzhou—a province in southern China—and the Guangzhou Public Transport Group, among others. The new firm will receive a total capital of RMB 1 billion ($149 million). GAC will own a 35% stake in the venture, while Tencent and the Guangzhou Public Transport Group will hold 25% and 10%, respectively.

Why it’s important: Chinese tech giants are accelerating their forays into the automotive industry, marketing their digital and machine learning capabilities to traditional automakers. Giant state-backed car manufacturers are the first group of partners for the tech companies to target. Tencent’s announcement comes hot on the heels of Didi Chuxing’s agreement with state-owned BAIC on a new energy vehicle and artificial intelligence joint venture. Baidu has chosen state-owned Hongqi to test out its autonomous driving solutions, while Alibaba has partnered with state-owned SAIC.

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Alibaba sales slow amid profit growth https://technode.com/2019/01/31/alibaba-december-2018-fiscal-report/ https://technode.com/2019/01/31/alibaba-december-2018-fiscal-report/#respond Thu, 31 Jan 2019 06:21:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94484 alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&mCompared to the same period in 2017, the company saw slowing growth across the board.]]> alibaba jack ma ant group alipay h&m

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has reported its slowest revenue growth since 2016, despite exceeding expectations and posting net income growth of more than 30% for the quarter ending Dec. 31.

The company’s quarterly revenue grew by 41% year-on-year, down from 56% in December 2017. Nevertheless, revenue increased to RMB 117.3 billion ($17 billion) during the reporting period, up from RMB 53.2 billion in 2016 and RMB 83 billion in 2017.

Quarterly sales from its core commerce business increased 40% year-on-year to RMB 102.8 billion, thanks in no small part to the Double11 shopping festival, which netted RMB 213.5 billion in gross merchandise value on Nov. 11.

Cloud computing revenue jumped 84% year-on-year to RMB6.6 billion, while that from digital media and entertainment increased by 20% to RMB 6.5 billion.

Compared to the same period in 2017, the company saw slowing growth across the board. In December 2017, revenue growth for its e-commerce business was 57%, 17 percentage points higher than its latest results. At the same time, cloud computing reached 104% growth, 20 percentage points higher than December 2018.

The slowdown comes amid an overall retail market cool in China. Year-over-year retail growth in May and October 2018, reached 8.5% and 8.6%, respectively, the slowest since June 2003, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics. The case is worsened due to the complication of national deleveraging to ease debts and threats from the US-China trade tensions.

Slowing consumer growth has led Alibaba to increase its focus on enterprise clients, launching a platform, dubbed A100, to help companies embrace digital transformation by using its various technology services.

The company saw its highest revenue growth from innovation initiatives, which increased 73% year-on-year to RMB 1.3 billion, compared to a 9% decrease in 2017. The increase is mainly due to sales of the company’s Tmall Genie, a smart voice assistant, and mapping service Amap.

“Our growth is … driven by the power of Alibaba’s cloud and data technology that helps expedite the digital transformation of millions of enterprises,” Daniel Zhang, chief executive officer of Alibaba, said in a statement.

Alibaba’s shares jumped around 6% to just under $167 on Wednesday.

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Briefing: Tencent to power Hong Kong startups amid its shift to enterprise https://technode.com/2019/01/30/tencent-hong-kong-startups/ https://technode.com/2019/01/30/tencent-hong-kong-startups/#respond Wed, 30 Jan 2019 02:40:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94337 Once known as the “startup killer,” the company is increasingly willing to help young companies succeed.]]>

Tencent works with Hong Kong’s science park to spur local fintech development – SCMP

What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent signed a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday with the Hong Kong Science and Technology Park to share its technological capabilities with startups in the tech hub. The agreement gives tenants in the science park access to Tencent’s AI, blockchain, data security, payment, and cloud computing technologies in their development and application of fintech, AI, healthcare, and smart city services.

Why it’s important: Tencent, once known as the “startup killer,” is increasingly willing to help young companies succeed by strategically investing in them. In addition to funding, the current partnership underlines that the tech giant is adopting a more open attitude in sharing its tech capabilities in powering startups. The move comes as Tencent is shifting focus to enterprise-faced services. The company restructured to focus on enterprise services and cloud last year.

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Briefing: China’s startup working hours prompt online debate https://technode.com/2019/01/29/youzan-working-hours/ https://technode.com/2019/01/29/youzan-working-hours/#respond Tue, 29 Jan 2019 03:08:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94217 E-commerce platform Youzan will adopt the “996” schedule—working from around 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. ]]>

有赞年会996引发热议,工作与生活究竟能不能平衡?– Zero2IPO

What happened: Youzan, a Hangzhou-based mobile e-commerce platform, announced at its annual meeting on Jan. 17 that the company would adopt the “996” working schedule, in which workdays start at around 9 a.m., finish at 9 p.m., and extend into the weekend. When asked how employees are supposed to balance family and work under such a tight schedule, a company executive said they could refer to Huawei, which reportedly told its employees that divorce might be an optional solution. Youzan founder Zhu Ning responded in an open letter on the media outrage, saying that the incident could be a good thing because it gives the public a chance to learn about the company before joining.

Why it’s important: 996 is the new norm for Chinese internet companies, which are competing to move fast and stay ahead in the market. Companies like 58.com, Xiaomi, and a handful of others have adopted this new practice. The changes in policy at many of these companies have angered staff members, especially millennials. There are also concerns about whether the work regime is against China’s laws, which prescribes eight-hour workdays and more importantly, whether working extended hours means improved efficiency.

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Briefing: China looks to build ‘smart courts’ with AI https://technode.com/2019/01/28/china-smart-courts-ai/ https://technode.com/2019/01/28/china-smart-courts-ai/#respond Mon, 28 Jan 2019 03:24:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=94112 Chinese tech firms and judicial institutions have been pushing to bring technology into courtrooms.]]>

Shanghai Court Adopts New AI Assistant – Sixth Tone

What happened: A Shanghai court has adopted an artificial intelligence-enabled assistant to help improve courtroom efficiency and accuracy. The city’s No. 2 Immediate People’s Court is the first in the country to utilize the system, dubbed System 206, developed by Chinese tech firm iFlytech and the country’s judicial and public security organs. The platform can recognize verbal commands to display relevant information. It can also transcribe speech while identifying speakers.

Why it’s important: Chinese tech firms and judicial institutions have been pushing to bring technology into courtrooms. A court in Beijing trialed a VR visualization of a crime scene in March 2018. China’s Supreme Court has ordered newly-formed internet-related courts to recognize digital data as evidence if it has been verified by methods including blockchains. Some courts have also begun accepting evidence from popular messaging platforms, including WeChat and QQ.  China filed 34% of all legaltech patents globally in 2016, second only to the US.

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Briefing: Tencent and NetEase finally granted much-needed game licenses https://technode.com/2019/01/25/tencent-netease-gaming-licenses/ https://technode.com/2019/01/25/tencent-netease-gaming-licenses/#respond Fri, 25 Jan 2019 03:51:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93948 Industry experts warn that the approval process is slower than before, as regulators look more closely at game content.]]>

China finally grants a game license to Tencent-TechCrunch

What happened: Tencent and NetEase have finally been issued licenses for new game titles. Two games developed by Tencent and one by NetEase have been included on a list of nearly 200 titles that were assigned licenses in January by China’s State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film, and Television.

Why it’s important: Chinese regulators restarted the approval process in December following a nine month moratorium on granting licenses. Tencent and NetEase, two of China’s most prominent game developers, were excluded from the first three batches of the approvals. The licenses are typically granted on a first-come, first-served basis, and titles are reviewed in order according to their application dates. However, industry experts warn that the approval process is slower than before, as regulators look more closely at game content. Nearly 260 games have been approved this month, much slower than an average monthly approval rate of around 700 in 2017. Overall almost 9,400 games were approved in 2017.

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Meituan to invest $1.7 billion in push to digitize merchant partners https://technode.com/2019/01/24/meituan-1-7-billion-in-digitalization-merchants/ https://technode.com/2019/01/24/meituan-1-7-billion-in-digitalization-merchants/#respond Thu, 24 Jan 2019 11:34:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93889 The move is reminiscent of Alibaba’s recently launched 'A100' program, which aims to help companies' digital transformation. ]]>

Chinese lifestyle services giant Meituan announced this week that it would invest RMB 11 billion (around $1.7 billion) this year to help merchants upgrade their operations and drive the growth of China’s “Delivery Economy,” a term that refers to the country’s on-demand services boom.

The proceeds will be used to support merchants in their marketing efforts, digital upgrades, and supply chain services. The company will also provide awards and incentives for innovation, according to a statement provided to TechNode on Thursday.

“Ecosystem development is more important than market competition. As a delivery service platform, Meituan is willing to invest more resources to support the ecosystem growth, especially the merchants,” Wang Puzhong, senior vice president of Meituan, said in the statement.

The move is reminiscent of Alibaba’s recently launched “A100” program, which aims to help companies embrace digital transformation as more tech giants are shifting to enterprise-faced services. Alibaba rival Tencent upgraded its organizational structure to focus on enterprise services and cloud computing last year.

Meituan said it would provide comprehensive services for merchants, including marketing, delivery, IT, supply chain, operations, and finance, to meet merchants’ business upgrade needs, and to help improve the efficiency of its delivery ecosystem.

Similarly, Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang is also looking to digitalize the industrial chain. Recently, he named 11 key elements for enterprises to realize transformation in the digital era, including product development, sales, marketing, channel management, manufacturing, customer services, finance, logistics, and supply chain.

The projects could be seen as an extension of the race among tech giants to lock business partners in their ecosystems. However, each of the companies is starting from their core business and want to pioneer by leveraging their current resources—Alibaba from e-commerce and new retail by powering their retail partners and Meituan from food delivery by supporting their online-to-offline merchants.

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Latest WeChat update hints at its ‘operating system’ ambitions https://technode.com/2019/01/24/wechat-update-shows-its-ambition-to-become-an-operating-system/ https://technode.com/2019/01/24/wechat-update-shows-its-ambition-to-become-an-operating-system/#respond Thu, 24 Jan 2019 08:47:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93878 WeChat rolled out a new update that allows users to find and move around its download-free mini-programs more easily. ]]>
Left: WeChat’s previous swipe-down mini-program menu. Middle and right: The same feature after the update. (Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee)

China’s super messaging app WeChat rolled out an update earlier this week allowing users to find and use its download-free mini-programs more easily in an experience like that offered in an operating system.

The new version gives more prominence to mini-programs, which are hidden by default in the messaging app. To view the mini-programs, users need to swipe down from the top of the app’s “Chats” window. Previously, this would have opened a half-screen menu displaying a list of recently used and liked mini-programs with little additional functionality.

With the update, a window resembling a smartphone’s home screen is displayed when swiping down from within the app. The embedded applications also have been made directly searchable from the window, with WeChat adding a mini-program search bar.

Mini-programs are lightweight alternatives to apps that run inside existing applications on a smartphone. WeChat appears to want to be a  “new home screen” for Chinese netizens, providing them with an operating system within its messaging app. With their increased popularity, Tencent is moving to optimize the mini-program ecosystem and help app developers retain users.

The new swipe-down interface features a clearer design centered around the mini-programs, providing them with a more accessible home. If pressed firmly, the icons of the mini-programs jiggle, allowing users to move the mini-apps around to categorize or delete them.

By mid-November, more than 1.5 million developers had created in excess of 1 million mini-programs since the feature was introduced at the beginning of 2017, the company said in a report last year, adding that over 200 million users open mini-programs every day.

Zhang Xiaolong, WeChat founder and president of Weixin Group, the business unit at Tencent that runs WeChat, said earlier this month that the company’s priority for mini-program growth in 2019 includes improving the search function to better connect users.

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Bing outage in China prompts censorship speculation among netizens https://technode.com/2019/01/24/bing-went-down-in-china/ https://technode.com/2019/01/24/bing-went-down-in-china/#respond Thu, 24 Jan 2019 06:09:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93844 One theory also circulating on the Chinese internet explains Bing's outage as a consequence of an incident relating to rival search engine Baidu.]]>

Microsoft’s search engine Bing has been inaccessible in mainland China since Wednesday afternoon, sparking heated public discussions about the fate of the last major Western search platform in China.

Reports from Chinese netizens about the inaccessibility of cn.bing.com—the company’s domestic domain—began flooding Chinese social media platforms, including WeChat and Weibo, on the same day.

The search engine was still inaccessible to TechNode as of 2 p.m. on Thursday, though intermittent availability has been reported by some Twitter users.

Microsoft confirmed to TechNode that Bing’s services are currently unavailable in China and that it is investigating the matter, but declined to give further details.

One theory circulating on the Chinese internet explains Bing’s outage as a consequence of an incident relating to rival search engine Baidu. Chinese reports claim that Bing’s servers may have been overloaded as disgruntled Baidu users flocked to Bing after Baidu was accused in a viral article by Chinese journalist Fang Kecheng of promoting low-quality articles on its content aggregator Baijiahao and other platforms.

Internet users have also linked the outage to possible censorship, claiming that the US search engine has become the latest victim of the Great Firewall, China’s mechanism for regulating the Chinese internet by blocking access to foreign websites.

“Bing has been blocked since yesterday. I thought it was a problem with my network connection, but it seems true now—even the cooperative Microsoft can’t escape doom,” a netizen posted microblogging platform Weibo. “What did Bing do to be blocked?” asked another.

A search for cn.bing.com on GreatFire Analyzer, which shows the accessibility of websites within China. (Image credit: Greatfire.org)

First launched in 2009, Bing’s China search engine filters results relating to controversial subjects in order to operate in the country. The service controls a negligible share of the market as it faces tough competition from Chinese players including Baidu, Sogou, Shenma, and 360 Search.

Google has reportedly been looking to relaunch its search engine in China. Last year, the company confirmed it was developing a prototype for the Chinese market, dubbed Project Dragonfly. The project has since been shelved due to internal complaints.

Beijing has attempted to “clean up” the Chinese internet, a move which has accelerated recently. More than 700 websites and 9,300 apps have been shut down since the beginning of January, according to internet regulator the Cyber Administration of China.

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Briefing: Mobile payments overtake cash for China’s overseas travelers https://technode.com/2019/01/23/mobile-payment-overtakes-cash-china-overseas-travelers/ https://technode.com/2019/01/23/mobile-payment-overtakes-cash-china-overseas-travelers/#respond Wed, 23 Jan 2019 02:29:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93707 When Chinese tourists take vacations overseas, their preferences for the emerging payment method accompanies them.]]>

More outbound Chinese tourists adopt mobile payment: Nielsen – Xinhuanet

What happened: Mobile payments have overtaken cash for the first time among Chinese outbound travelers, according to a joint report released by global data analytics company Nielsen and mobile payments platform Alipay. Chinese outbound travelers paid for 32% of their transactions with mobile phones, overtaking cash—which was used only 30% of the time. The researchers surveyed around 2,800 Chinese travelers and over 1,200 overseas merchants.

Why it’s important: Mobile payments are ubiquitous in China. When Chinese tourists take vacations overseas, their preferences for the emerging payment method accompanies them. This makes a great entry point for Chinese tech giants like Alipay and WeChat Pay to expand to overseas markets. In addition to serving Chinese tourists, Chinese mobile payment methods also help to boost the operations of overseas merchants with nearly 60% of the overseas merchants surveyed recording growth after adopting Alipay, the report added.

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Cross-border e-commerce platform NetEase Kaola extends offline presence https://technode.com/2019/01/22/netease-koala-new-retail/ https://technode.com/2019/01/22/netease-koala-new-retail/#respond Tue, 22 Jan 2019 11:12:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93636 New retail is creating a more favorable third option that combines both in-shop and online experiences. ]]>

Cross-border e-commerce platform NetEase Kaola plans to open 15 new brick-and-mortar stores during 2019 in a bid to keep up with the new retail boom in China.

The company made the announcement at the opening ceremony of its flagship offline store in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou. The store’s opening marks a continuation of NetEase’s plans to tap the ongoing new retail boom, which aims to connect the online and offline worlds.

Netease Kaola CEO Zhang Lei said the company will strengthen its offline expansion during the year to create more interactive shopping experiences.

Online versus offline was an “either-or” retail equation not long ago. The popularity of new retail is creating a more favorable third option that combines both in-shop and online experiences. All major Chinese tech giants including Alibaba, Tencent, JD, Xiaomi, and Meituan have made similar moves.

The newly launched shop selected over 3,000 stock keeping units (SKUs) based on big data analysis of consumer preferences and behavior. The SKUs covers a variety of categories including cosmetics, maternal care, and child products, luxury products, electronics, and sportswear, among others.

The store will feature interactive screens, which allow for browsing products and viewing popular items, and testing areas for cosmetics. The company hopes the feature will decrease customers’ decision-making times.

Last year, NetEase Kaola, which targets white-collar consumers, opened two offline shops in Hangzhou and Zhengzhou, the capital of the central Henan province. Similarly, NetEase’s cost-conscious e-commerce site Yanxuan, also opened offline stores last year. NetEase partnered with CenturyMart in 2017 to make its products available to the supermarket chain’s Jingxuan Store, a rival to Alibaba’s Hema grocery store chain.

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Briefing: DJI places 45 employees under investigation for corruption https://technode.com/2019/01/21/briefing-dji-places-45-employees-under-investigation-for-corruption/ https://technode.com/2019/01/21/briefing-dji-places-45-employees-under-investigation-for-corruption/#respond Mon, 21 Jan 2019 01:19:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93484 Tech giants including Tencent, Baidu, Huawei, JD, and Meituan-Dianping have all launched similar initiatives. ]]>

Drone company DJI loses $150 million to corruption – Venture Beat

What happened: Chinese drone-maker DJI has published an anti-graft announcement that places 45 former or current employees under investigation for allegations of fraudulently elevating product prices. Of the total, 16 have been sent to the police and 29 have been dismissed by the company. DJI said it expects losses to exceed RMB 1 billion ($150 million) as a result of the incidents.

Why it’s important: While facing rising external competition, China’s tech companies are confronted with more and more internal pressure from corruption. DJI’s news is not a single case. Tech giants including Tencent, Baidu, Huawei, JD, and Meituan-Dianping have all launched similar initiatives in an effort to stamp out corruption. In a recent case, ride hailing-giant Didi dismissed more than 80 employees last year for fraud, bribery, and information breaches.

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Alibaba doubles down on enterprise transformation with A100 program https://technode.com/2019/01/18/alibaba-doubles-down-on-enterprise-transformation-with-a100-program/ https://technode.com/2019/01/18/alibaba-doubles-down-on-enterprise-transformation-with-a100-program/#respond Fri, 18 Jan 2019 08:06:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93226 The idea is to allow companies to pick and choose from the broad lineup of tools that Alibaba provides.]]>

Alibaba recently launched an initiative that it says will help companies of all sizes, across a wide array of industries, embrace digital transformation.

The program, dubbed A100, marks another step by Hangzhou-based Alibaba Group to expand its footprint beyond new retail, and represents the latest shift to enterprise-facing tech, which recently has been gaining momentum in China.

A100 will be powered by Alibaba Business Operating System, a term used by the company to refer to its amalgamation of technology services, including online marketplaces like Taobao and Tmall, payment tool Alipay, logistics Cainiao, cloud computing Alibaba Cloud, and productivity tool DingTalk.

“This is a continuation of a race to snap up leading retailers and lock them into Alibaba or Tencent’s service ecosystems,” says Michael Norris, strategy and research manager of AgencyChina, referring to the program and similar enterprise-focused initiatives by Chinese tech giants.

Deborah Weinswig, CEO and founder of Coresight Research, says she expects A100 to help Alibaba foster its relationship with brands and retailers even more closely.

“Since Alibaba already is dominating the online retail space, it is trying to leverage on this strength, to get an even tighter bonding with the brands and retailers,” says Weinswig.

A100 debuted late last week at the Alibaba One Business Conference, which took place in the hometown of the e-commerce giant.

At the event, Daniel Zhang, chief executive officer of Alibaba Group named 11 key elements for enterprises to realize transformation in the digital era, namely: branding, product development, sales, marketing, channel management, manufacturing, customer services, finance, logistics and supply chain, organizational structure, and communication management.

Toby Xu, vice president of Alibaba Group and head of the A100 program said that while many of customer-facing companies in China have already embraced digitalization, for corporate-facing companies the process is more difficult given the complexity of enterprise environments.

(Image credit: Alibaba)

“The name, A100, symbolizes Alibaba’s goal of providing digitized solutions to a large number of companies,” says Xu. The plan is initially to take a focused, step-by-step approach targeting a defined number of industries, before later expanding the scope of A100’s application to a broader array of industries.

Xu says Alibaba has developed a strong set of technological capacities in running various services under its brand. “We want to share these capacities to with our partners, helping them to improve work efficiency and generate value,” he says.

Norris says that when we look at the 11 different areas where Alibaba is proposing to offer digital transformation services, it can be seen that the group is looking to help brands digitize their entire supply and value chain.

Enterprise gains momentum

The enterprise tech is picking up pace in China. Alibaba rival Tencent, which has its core services in consumer-faced gaming and social networking, upgraded its organizational structure to focus on enterprise services and cloud last year. Early stage startups are catching up too with their innovative ideas.

One of the major reasons that driving the shift is a changing mindset of small- and medium-sized businesses operators, according to Kuantai Yeh, partner at Qiming Venture Partners, said at a recent demo day of Shanghai-based startup accelerator Chinaccelerator.

They are more “willing” to pay for software as a service (SaaS) experiences primarily because these new SaaS companies were leveraging new technologies of AI and cloud computing to “add more value.”

The transition also comes as more Chinese tech companies expand overseas, especially to Southeast Asian markets. Alibaba Cloud now has 49 availability zones across 18 economic centers globally, while Tencent Cloud zones in on Asian markets with a second center in India. This means Chinese tech companies offering enterprise-focused services will increasingly come into direct competition with international brands such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft (Azure), IBM, and Google. Intensified competition from Chinese companies could also impact productivity tools such as Slack and Salesforce.

At the Hangzhou event, special attention was paid to Alibaba’s brand-oriented e-commerce platform Tmall and productivity tool DingTalk.

By digging into big data, Tmall’s innovation center is helping over 600 brands to develop nearly 400 products, of which around half become top sellers three months after launch, according to Jet Jing, President of Tmall.

Meanwhile, DingTalk streamlines internal communication and organizational structures for companies. “If Alibaba’s ecosystem gets bigger, then that should bring benefits for DingTalk, especially in the sphere of retail,” says Weinswig of Coresight Research. “But that doesn’t mean DingTalk will be the winner in the battle between it and WeChat Work in the enterprise environment, because there are many types of enterprise businesses other than retail.”

Industries that are not directly related to new retail such as hotel, and food and beverage, will continue to use WeChat Work for their businesses, she says. “So it will be a very delineated market and Alibaba is poised to dominate in retail space,” Weinswig adds.

New retail and beyond

Dustin Jones, a managing director with Fung Retailing Group, a retailing enterprise that represents over 30 foreign brands in the Chinese market, says its partnership with Alibaba Group will help Fung Retailing to gain deeper marketing insights. Jones cites the geo-targeting of consumers and brands, and marrying them together, as an example.

“We do not only say ‘We know these consumers will like these brands.’ It’s deeper and more powerful than that,” says Jones. “We know these consumers will like this brand, and will like this product from this brand, and will like this color, this size in this location at this time.”

To be sure, the trend is not confined just to Alibaba. JD is pursuing a similar strategy under the banner of “unbounded retail,” while Meituan-Dianping also joined the battle to offer its own offline concept stores.

Alibaba’s A100 pits its new retail ecosystem against what Tencent and JD have been building through acquisitions and partnerships. Combined, Tencent and Alibaba spent $12 billion on retail-focused merger and acquisition activity between 2017 and 2018, according to Norris at AgencyChina.

The first batch of customers for A100’s rollout includes global brands like Starbucks, Nestlé as well as Chinese snack brand, Bestore. 

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Briefing: Chinese AI unicorn Megvii bets $300 million on smart logistics https://technode.com/2019/01/18/megvii-smart-logistics/ https://technode.com/2019/01/18/megvii-smart-logistics/#respond Fri, 18 Jan 2019 03:08:55 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93294 Shifting focus to the smart logistics sector may help the company to differentiate from domestic peers, including Sensetime and Yitu. ]]>

AI Unicorn Wades Into Smart Logistics With 2 Billion Yuan ‘River Map’ – Caixin Global

What happened: Chinese AI unicorn Megvii Technology is planning to invest RMB 2 billion (around $300 million) to develop supply chain systems enabled by big data. Through its new program dubbed “Hetu,” or “River Map” in English, the company plans to apply AI technology in a new area of smart logistics.

Why it’s important: Primarily known as a facial recognition service company, the Alibaba-backed firm is one of the most valuable AI upstarts in China’s tech industry. The company is reportedly seeking $500 million funding at a $3.5 billion valuation. Shifting focus to the smart logistics sector may help the company to differentiate from domestic peers like Sensetime, the most valuable AI company in the world, and Yitu. To prepare for its entry, Megvii fully acquired Aers Robot in April 2018. China’s supply chain market was worth an estimated RMB 280 trillion in 2018, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Science.

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Briefing: ZhongAn ties up with Grab to tap Southeast Asian insurance market https://technode.com/2019/01/17/zhongan-grab-tie-up/ https://technode.com/2019/01/17/zhongan-grab-tie-up/#respond Thu, 17 Jan 2019 08:17:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93199 The partnership comes as more and more Chinese tech companies try to build their presence beyond the domestic market.]]>

ZhongAn and Grab clutch at SE Asia’s digital insurance market – Banking Tech

What happened: Chinese online insurer ZhongAn has created a joint venture with Singapore-based mobile platform Grab to enter the digital insurance distribution business in Southeast Asia. The joint venture will offer insurance products in a range of categories directly to users through the Grab mobile app. The service will be launched in Singapore in the first half of 2019, before being rolled out in other markets.

Why it’s important: ZhongAn’s partnership with Grab, a leading online-to-offline mobile platform in Southeast Asia, comes as more and more Chinese tech companies are trying to build their presence beyond the domestic market. At the same time, it also fits into Grab’s plan to cover more services from food delivery to parcel delivery, grocery delivery, and financial services. This year, Grab will expand into cross-border remittance and online healthcare.

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Sale of WeChat accounts prompts concern over fraud https://technode.com/2019/01/16/wechat-accounts-sale-online-fraud/ https://technode.com/2019/01/16/wechat-accounts-sale-online-fraud/#respond Wed, 16 Jan 2019 06:25:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92995 Unverified accounts can set up group chats and in some cases have been used to conduct fraud.]]>
wechat qq momo renren weibo

WeChat accounts are readily available for sale via several online channels, with black market accounts being used to defraud unsuspecting victims.

According to an investigation by the Beijing Youth Daily, the accounts on offer vary regarding their authentication levels, from newly registered profiles to old accounts which have undergone real-name verification, and those that have been bound to payment tools. Prices range between RMB 58 (around $8.50) to RMB 500.

Typically, when signing up for a WeChat account, a username, phone number, and password are required. Real-name verification is achieved in the registration process by binding a user’s phone number—which is linked to their ID—to their WeChat account. Accounts are also verified by registering a bank card within the app.

Black market unverified accounts are the cheapest, as their payment and transfer abilities are limited. However, those which have gone through the verification process are more expensive as they have few transfer limits.

Unverified accounts can set up group chats and in some cases have been used to conduct fraud.

WeChat was not immediately available for comment.

According to the report, a Wuhan resident surnamed He was invited to one such group containing 300 people. The group was purported to contain financial analysts and experts who offered investment advice on financial products.

Following their advice, he increased his stake after gaining nearly RMB 2,000 return in his first investment through the group. He eventually lost more than RMB 80,000 and was kicked out of the group.

He reported his experience to police in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. They found that nearly all of the 300 accounts in the group were “shill” profiles. The police reportedly recovered He’s money from the fraudsters and dissolved the 300-person WeChat group. He was the only victim of the case.

This is not the first time WeChat has been used as a tool to commit fraud. In August, Zhejiang’s Consumer Protection Committee said it had received complaints of fraudsters copying the name and profile picture of an individual’s friend, then asking to borrow money. When requested to repay the loan, the lender was blocked by the scammer. The money was never recovered.

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Briefing: Alipay now supported in Beijing prisons https://technode.com/2019/01/16/alipay-supported-prisons/ https://technode.com/2019/01/16/alipay-supported-prisons/#respond Wed, 16 Jan 2019 03:09:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=93034 Beijing is the only city in the country that allows money transfers to incarcerated family members. ]]>

Alipay Brings Cashless Payments to Beijing Prisons – SixthTone

What happened: Alibaba-backed mobile payment tool Alipay has added a new feature that allows the families of prisoners to transfer a monthly sum of RMB 1,000 ($150) to each inmate. Previously, people looking to deposit cash for their family members in prison had to do so in person at the facility. Beijing is the only city in the country that allows money transfers to incarcerated family members.

Why it’s important: Mobile payments have gradually found their way to civil services as the government attempts to keep up with the country’s changing spending behavior. Both Alipay and WeChat, which support utility bill and public transportation payments, have been driving this trend. Alipay already allows users in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangsu to apply for electronic marriages licenses within its app. The company has also trialed digital IDs in Zhejiang’s Hangzhou and Quzhou, and Fuzhou in the southeastern province of Fujian. Meanwhile, Tencent has been working with Beijing authorities to create health cards for residents.

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Meituan hires game developers, downplays foray into gamification https://technode.com/2019/01/15/meituan-hires-game-developers/ https://technode.com/2019/01/15/meituan-hires-game-developers/#respond Tue, 15 Jan 2019 10:39:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92951 Gamification of online experiences could increase the user stickiness of Meituan's services.]]>

Chinese O2O giant Meituan-Dianping has begun posting job listings for game developers, prompting speculation that it is looking to integrate gaming into its existing services.

The food-delivery titan posted the ads on China’s top online recruitment platforms. It seeks to employ Beijing-based personnel for a variety of positions including game engineers, game planners, visual designers, and test engineers, according to listings on recruitment platform Lagou.

Differing from its high-profile entry into the ride-hailing market, Meituan has attempted to downplay its foray into gaming. Wang Huiwen, senior vice president of Meituan, responded to queries from a Chinese tech reporter on WeChat’s News Feed-like feature, Moments, saying he just wants to give the gaming industry a try. “Don’t overthink it,” he added.

Meituan declined TechNode’s request for comment.

Development and maintenance of game servers for Meituan app are listed as a major responsibility for several positions. The firm is building a team that includes both senior and junior positions, with salaries ranging from RMB 15, 000 (around $2,200) to RMB 60,000 per month.

Listings on recruitment platform Lagou showing the available positions. (Image credit: Lagou)

Meituan’s recruiting plan, which bucks the on-going lay-off trend in China’s tech circles, has raised questions about how the company will use gaming to enhance its products and services.

Gamification of online experiences could increase the user stickiness of Meituan’s services. More importantly, however, integration of gaming elements could increase the revenue of the Hong Kong-listed firm, which reported a net loss of around RMB 2.5 billion in the third quarter of 2018. China’s gaming revenue jumped 5% year-on-year to RMB 214 billion in 2018, accounting for nearly 35% of the global market, according to data from the 2018 China Gaming Industry Report.

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Documentary featuring Ofo CEO Dai Wei flops at the box office https://technode.com/2019/01/15/startup-ofo-smartisan-moive-flop/ https://technode.com/2019/01/15/startup-ofo-smartisan-moive-flop/#respond Tue, 15 Jan 2019 05:31:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92901 The disappointing results coincide with the recent downfall of two leads in the film. ]]>

A film documenting the experiences of Chinese tech founders including Ofo’s Dai Wei and Smartisan’s Luo Yonghao has turned out to be a box office flop.

Titled “Startups” in English and “Ignition Point” in Chinese (our translation), the movie premiered on Jan. 11, making just RMB 530,000 (around $80,000) on its first day. The film recorded RMB 2.8 million in ticket sales as of Tuesday afternoon. Male moviegoers made up more than 60% of the audience, while around 30% of all views were between the ages of 20 and 24 years old.

“White Snake,” an animated film also released on Jan. 11, made in excess of RMB 57 million by 1 p.m. on Tuesday.

Box office revenue as of Jan. 15. “Ignition Point” is at 7th place. (Image credit: CBO)

The disappointing results coincide with the recent fall from grace of two leads in the film. Both Ofo’s Dai and Smartisan’s Luo were in the prime of their entrepreneurial journeys when the documentary was filmed in 2017. However, their situations changed dramatically last year.

With the bike-rental at its peak, Ofo was an investment darling in 2017. The company received huge amounts of funding, raking in more than $700 million in its Series E led by Alibaba in July 2017. Since then, Ofo has experienced a dramatic turn due to a cash crunch.

The company retreated from international markets last year and received millions of deposit refund requests as reports of its cash crunch intensify. Dai was put on a government blacklist in December for not fulfilling his payment obligations, banning him from the purchase of higher-end goods and services.

Smartphone manufacturer Smartisan suffered a similar fate. In November, the company confirmed it was having cash flow issues, leading to layoffs and trouble paying employees’ salaries. Last month, the company stripped 10 top executives of their directorships and had its bank account frozen by Beijing court.

The documentary also features other prominent figures, including Fu Sheng, founder of mobile internet giant Cheetah Mobile; Xu Xiaoping, founder of Zhen Fund; Papi, a Chinese viral video blogger; and Tang Yan, founder of social dating app Momo.

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Briefing: Personal data from 200 million Chinese jobseekers exposed https://technode.com/2019/01/14/chinese-jobseekers-data-leak/ https://technode.com/2019/01/14/chinese-jobseekers-data-leak/#respond Mon, 14 Jan 2019 05:01:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92767 The leak is the latest in a series for high-profile data breaches in China. ]]>

200 million resumes of Chinese jobseekers leaked, cybersecurity researcher says-SCMP

What happened: Resumes of 200 million job seekers, including names, mobile numbers, and political affiliations, have reportedly been leaked in what could be one of the most significant Chinese data breaches ever, according to European bug bounty platform HackenProof. The 845 GB data set was most likely extracted from Chinese job portals, including 58.com, according to researchers.

Why it’s important: Personal data leaks and the illegal sales of personal information are rampant in China. In August 2018, detailed information from 130 million clients of hotel chain operator Huazhu was found to be up for sale online. Hong Kong flag carrier airline Cathay Pacific and a regional subsidiary disclosed last year that more than 9 million of their passengers had their personal data compromised in March last year. Chinese laws ban illegal sales or publication of personal information, but with the proliferation of online services in China, personal information is easy to come by.

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Briefing: Tencent bets on AI assistant to boost WeChat growth https://technode.com/2019/01/10/tencent-wechat-ai-assistant/ https://technode.com/2019/01/10/tencent-wechat-ai-assistant/#respond Thu, 10 Jan 2019 02:25:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92421 The company has been casting its eye to enterprise and emerging smart connected devices.]]>

Tencent Unveils a Siri-Like Digital Assistant for WeChat – Bloomberg

What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent is planning to introduce a Siri-like smart voice assistant, dubbed “Xiaowei,” for WeChat. The virtual assistant system, which works on devices from smart speakers to cars, will link Tencent’s services such as QQ Music as well as mini-programs run by third-party services such as Meituan Dianping, Didi Chuxing, and Mobike.

Why it’s important: Facing increasing competition from old rivals like Alibaba and upstarts like ByteDance, Tencent has been casting its eye to enterprise and emerging smart connected devices. The Siri-like voice assistant, which can be deployed by businesses, allows WeChat partners to tap into the app’s over 1 billion monthly active users easily. The service also opens up more potential applications, including the emerging connected devices industry that ranges from smart speakers to connected cars. In a speech last year, Tencent’s Pony Ma said the company wants to transform WeChat into an intelligent interaction medium, allowing users to interact with service software and vehicle hardware.

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For food delivery, machines won’t replace humans any time soon https://technode.com/2019/01/09/meal-delivery-machines-need-humans/ https://technode.com/2019/01/09/meal-delivery-machines-need-humans/#respond Wed, 09 Jan 2019 13:14:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92303 Rather than replace humans, food-delivery robots offer a much-needed helping hand, says super app Meituan. ]]>
Image credit: Meituan

Robots won’t replace the millions of delivery workers who crisscross Chinese cities every day, carrying food and groceries to consumers in all sorts of weather. Instead, humans and machines will collaborate, making sure tasty meals make it to hungry mouths in a timely manner.

At least this is the kind of scenario that China’s food review and delivery giant Meituan Dianping envisions. “Human-machine collaboration will be the model for autonomous food delivery for a very long period of time,” says Xia Huaxia, the company’s chief scientist, and general manager of the autonomous delivery department.

That’s good news for Meituan’s delivery workers. The company had more than half a million average daily active deliver persons in the fourth quarter of 2017. These people—mainly young men—dart around the streets of the country’s cities and towns, decked out in the company’s signature yellow uniforms. Meituan rival Ele.me had around 3 million registered delivery workers as of late 2018.

Xia cites two examples that illustrate why collaboration will be key. In the case of doorways, sometimes to enter a building or a room, one needs to push. Other times, one must pull the door. For a robot, knowing the difference is a challenge. But for a human delivery worker, it’s a piece of cake.

On the other hand, machines can help human delivery workers by sparing them from those tough duties, such as working the night shift or having to deliver goods in extreme weather conditions, he explains.

 Meituan’s autonomous food delivery vehicle. (Image credit: Meituan) 

The Meituan Autonomous Delivery Platform, or MAD, was launched in July. Trials that begun in March last year, ahead of the launch, explored three main areas around how humans and machines can interact when it comes food delivery.

For delivery in shopping centers, meals were delivered from restaurants inside the mall to delivery workers waiting at assigned collection points outside, saving drivers the time and effort of going into the mall to pick up an order.

Customer trials at office-building compounds entailed delivery in the “opposite” direction—driverless delivery vehicles collected orders from delivery people outside, and brought them to customers inside the building.

The third trial at less-populated areas such as university towns featured a closed-loop operation, with delivery direct from merchant partners to consumers.

In all three situations, MAD incorporates an ordering platform, a dispatch system, and road-network logistics all optimized through big data.

After months of testing, Meituan is planning to gradually roll the system into larger-scale application in 2019, when the delivery robots will work in an area of  with a range of “a few miles,” Xia says, without giving further details about a timeframe.

Happy (working) together

China’s online food delivery market offers “huge opportunities,” says Xia. It surpassed RMB 200 billion ($29 billion) in 2017 and was expected to hit RMB 243 billion in 2018 according to data from research institute iMedia (in Chinese). The report, which was issued early last year, predicted that the number of users ordering food online would reach 355 million by the end of 2018.

Xia Huaxia, chief scientist of Meituan (Image credit: Meituan)

“China’s working-age population has plunged by millions after hitting a peak in 2010,” Xia says. Autonomous delivery robots will fill the labor force gap by improving the efficiency of an existing delivery person and also create new jobs for vehicle maintenance, repair and operation, which underlies an upgrading of the workforce, he says.

Meituan’s plan sounds promising so far. But achieving the goal requires joint efforts of various parties involved in the ecosystem, including delivery workers as well as consumers.

Delivery robots don’t represent competition for one 23-year-old man surnamed Zhang, who has been working as a delivery worker for Meituan for six months. He doesn’t think autonomous delivery will come to large-scale application “in the near future.”

At the same time, Chinese consumers, who are accustomed to seamless online meal delivery services, see autonomous delivery as a futuristic concept that is not without potential drawbacks.

Wang Jia, a saleswoman and mother of one 3-year-old girl, came into contact with autonomous delivery while on a trip away. “My daughter was thrilled when we had our meal delivered by an autonomous robot in a hotel,” says Wang. “But having these autonomous vehicles lingering streets is still unimaginable [thing] for me at present.”

The catering industry must catch up with regulation compliance before driverless food delivery can really take off. Although many companies are in the sector, China has yet to come up with regulation covering the industry. While still at an early stage, various parties in the industry are moving towards the formation of a regulation to guide the application of driverless technologies.

In partnership with China Academy of Information and Communication Technology and Beijing Innovation Center for Mobility Intelligence, Meituan has launched a group standard in October 2018 to specify the technical requirements for autonomous vehicles for cargo and food delivery, road cleaning and patrolling (in Chinese).

Last mile, longest mile

Still, fully autonomous delivery remains the Holy Grail of the catering industry, and the connection between automated food delivery and autonomous vehicle is a close one—albeit with important distinctions.

Chinese tech giants in package and food deliveries are the most avid advocates of autonomous driving technology application. In addition to a driverless logistics van that went road test in April 2018, Alibaba’s Cainiao launched its L4-class self-driving logistics vehicle in September of the same year. JD just put its autonomous delivery center in Inner Mongolia into use in last December.

In the case of autonomous meal delivery, the demand for speed and security is obviously lower when compared with that for autonomous driving cars that carry human drivers. Sill, Xia notes that: “Autonomous food delivery shares all the technical problems with autonomous driving.”

Food delivery is a good place for business application of self-driving, Xia argues. It covers a large range of scenarios in different traffic, road and weather conditions. The “application slope” is flat, he said. That means the technology application is easier to get started with lower requirements.

Drones are another means for tackling last-mile delivery challenges for China’s catering industry. (Image credit: Ele.me) 

Delivery drones are another popular solution for the last-mile delivery dilemma. Meituan rival Ele.me deepened its involvement into the area but with a different approach by launching commercial delivery drones in Shanghai in May 2018. Chinese e-commerce platform JD won the first national pilot for unmanned aerial vehicle UAV delivery logistics and will be allowed to build tens of thousands of UAV landing platforms or drone pods across China.

Meituan also has been working on its delivery drone for more than one year. It plans to showcase its new product this month.

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Briefing: China clamps down on two education apps for ‘inappropriate’ content https://technode.com/2019/01/09/china-takes-down-education-app/ https://technode.com/2019/01/09/china-takes-down-education-app/#respond Wed, 09 Jan 2019 07:25:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92342 GSX TALThe stricter monitoring comes as new technologies play a more significant role in China’s education system.]]> GSX TAL

Chinese authorities shut education app and issue fines as part of ongoing ‘clean up’ of vulgar and pornographic content – SCMP

What happened: Chinese authorities have clamped down on two education apps that contain “inappropriate” content. The Office of Combating Pornography and Illegal Publications ordered HDzuoye, an afterschool tutoring platform, to close its mobile app and pay a fine of RMB 50,000 (around $7,300) for redirecting student users to online games. Similarly, Namibox has received a RMB 80,000 fine and was ordered to remove problematic parts of its app, which allegedly contains “immoral” and “unethical” content.

Why it’s important: In line with a national cyberspace cleanup campaign initiated by the central government, Chinese authorities at various levels are pushing to remove what they consider to be inappropriate from the internet, including some mobile games and “vulgar” or immoral content. Last week, the Chinese Ministry of Education banned 28 “harmful” educational apps in schools. The tighter monitoring of online education services comes as new technologies such as live-streaming and online classes are playing a more significant role in China’s education system.

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Briefing: Chinese VPN user fined $150 for accessing banned websites https://technode.com/2019/01/08/chinese-vpn-user-fine/ https://technode.com/2019/01/08/chinese-vpn-user-fine/#respond Mon, 07 Jan 2019 23:29:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92144 The current crackdown comes alongside a “clean up” in domestic cyberspace, in which authorities are working to remove "vulgar" content. ]]>

Chinese VPN user fined for accessing overseas websites as part of Beijing’s ongoing ‘clean up’ of internet – SCMP

What happened: A Chinese internet user surnamed Zhu received an RMB 1,000 (around $150) fine from the government of southern China’s Guangdong province for accessing banned websites by using virtual private network services without their permission, allowing him to jump over state-imposed firewalls. Zhu was punished for breaching the Provisional Regulations of China’s Administration of International Networking of Computer Information, which prescribes that individuals and organizations can only connect to international networks through channels provided by the government.

Why it’s important: The fine is by no means large, but it is a warning to China’s VPN users. The move shows the government’s stance in tightening control over the online behaviors of Chinese netizens. VPN crackdowns have held a reoccurring presence in China, where some of the world’s most popular services like Google, Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter are blocked. The current crackdown comes alongside a “clean up” in domestic cyberspace, in which authorities are working to remove “vulgar” or inappropriate content.

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Briefing: Struggling smartphone maker Meizu to raise $14.5 million in funding https://technode.com/2019/01/07/meizu-to-receive-14-5-million/ https://technode.com/2019/01/07/meizu-to-receive-14-5-million/#respond Mon, 07 Jan 2019 07:48:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=92029 The firm has been struggling to keep up with intensifying competition from its Chinese peers. ]]>

Ailing Chinese Phone Maker Meizu to Get Over USD14.5 Million Bailout – Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker Meizu will raise more than RMB 100 million ($14.5 million) from the municipal government of Zhuhai in the southern Chinese province of  Guangdong, where the company has its headquarters. The investment comes amid moves by the Zhuhai government to spur growth in the development of novel technologies.

Why it’s important: Started as an MP3 and MP4 device maker in 2003, Meizu shifted focus to smartphones in 2006. However, the firm has since been struggling to keep up with intensifying competition from its Chinese peers like Xiaomi, Oppo and Huawei. Due to financial difficulties, Meizu has resorted to mass layoffs over the past two years. The company’s downfall is reminiscent of embattled Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan. Smartisan also received help from a city government. In 2017, it moved its headquarters to the southwestern city of Chengdu after receiving RMB 1 billion funding from the city’s local municipality.

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Lightspeed China raises $560 million, eyes enterprise and deep tech opportunities https://technode.com/2019/01/04/lightseed-china-560-m-funding/ https://technode.com/2019/01/04/lightseed-china-560-m-funding/#respond Fri, 04 Jan 2019 12:20:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91962 Of the proceeds, $360 million will be directed to early-stage startups at Series A and Series B.]]>

Early-stage venture firm Lightspeed China Partners (LCP) announced on January 3 the closure of its fourth and largest-ever fund for China, with a combined committed capital of $560 million. The funding brings the firm’s total capital under management to $1.5 billion.

Lightspeed China’s current funding comes as China’s venture capital party begins to quiet after an exuberant 2018. Around 70 China-focused venture funds raised just over $15 billion in first 11 months of 2018, according to a study released by data provider Preqin and Insead business school, a significant drop as compared with $40 billion raised by 330 funds in all of 2016.

James Mi, founding partner of Lightspeed China, said he didn’t consider the cooling capital markets as bad news for investors and entrepreneurs. With less of a “bubble,” Mi said the chances for startups with good products and strong teams to succeed were higher.

“It will be more difficult for “me-too” companies to raise funds, and thus promotes healthier development of the industry,” Mi told TechNode. “This would divert the companies from an unhealthy growth path that’s heavily reliant on cash-burning wars.”

Of the proceeds, $360 million will be directed to early-stage startups at Series A and Series B, while the remaining $200 million will be focused on follow-on investment for top portfolio companies in the early stage fund and other high growth companies, according to LCP.

The current round more than doubles the firm’s previous $260 million funding it received in 2016. It was raised in three months with institution investor demand reaching close to $1 billion, according to the company.

In the past 18 months, five of Lightspeed China’s portfolio companies the firm invested in from their early stages have completed successful IPOs. These include super lifestyle app Meituan Dianping, social-e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, fintech firms PPDai and Rong360, and high-speed optical transceiver supplier InnoLight.

The company’s investment portfolio also includes proptech site Fangdd, trucking service Full Truck Alliance, Airbnb-like Tujia and electric vehicle maker XPeng Auto.

As an early-stage investment institution, Lightspeed China has focused on China’s consumer internet, Internet+, as well as enterprise and deep tech sectors.

In addition, the company is betting on new emerging areas. “China’s enterprise service and deep tech innovation are in the early innings of development,” said Lightspeed China’s Mi.

“Given China’s vast market, deep talent pool, and increasing demand for home-grown deep technologies across various industries, we are seeing accelerated growth and significant investment opportunities,” he added.

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Briefing: Luckin Coffee to add 2,500 shops and more subsidies in 2019 https://technode.com/2019/01/04/luckin-expansion-2019/ https://technode.com/2019/01/04/luckin-expansion-2019/#respond Fri, 04 Jan 2019 06:48:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91880 Luckin's announcement comes amid its escalating battle with Starbuck for China's caffeinated drink lovers.]]>

China’s loss-making start-up Luckin Coffee doubles down on subsidies to win customers from Starbucks – SCMP

What happened: Chinese coffee startup Luckin Coffee said on Thursday that it aims to be the largest coffee chain in China by the number of cups sold and outlets by 2019. To achieve the goal, Luckin plans to increase the total number of outlets to 4,500, adding 2,500 new stores in the coming year. At the same time, subsidies will remain as one of the company’s core strategies, at least in the next three to five years, according to a company executive.

Why it’s important: Luckin’s announcement comes amid its escalating battle with Starbucks for China’s coffee drinkers. The company’s projected plan would overtake Starbuck’s more than 3,600 shops.  Similar to many of China’s internet startups, Luckin’s lightspeed expansion is powered by its highly subsidized marketing and tech-centric purchasing experience. Despite the quick expansion, the company is still loss-making, which highlights the crucial role of capital in its development. Luckin completed its $200 million Series A round at a $1 billion valuation in July 2018.

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Briefing: Nearly half of India’s top-100 Android apps come from China https://technode.com/2019/01/03/china-app-india-top-100-android/ https://technode.com/2019/01/03/china-app-india-top-100-android/#respond Thu, 03 Jan 2019 03:35:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91750 Home to an online population of  500 million people, India is becoming a new battleground for Chinese tech firms.]]>

中国应用席卷印度:前100大安卓应用占44款 – ITHome

What happened: Forty-four Chinese apps made it onto a list of India’s top-100 Android apps in 2018, up from last year’s figure of 18, according to data from research institute Sensor Tower. ByteDance’s video app TikTok, Alibaba’s UC Browser, and language service Helo are some of the top-ranking apps. Five apps on the top-10 list come from China.

Why it’s important: The combined effects of a highly competitive market and an aging society at home are pushing Chinese tech giants overseas in search of new markets. India, home to an online population of  500 million people, is becoming a new battleground for Chinese tech firms. Chinese smartphone manufacturers like Xiaomi, Oppo, and OnePlus have established a foothold in the country. However, China’s software developers are still catching up as they look to leverage the country’s booming app market. India’s total downloads on iOS and Android app stores surpassed those in the US in the first half of 2018.

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Briefing: China’s gaming giants excluded from first batch of new license approvals https://technode.com/2019/01/02/tencent-netease-gaming-approvals/ https://technode.com/2019/01/02/tencent-netease-gaming-approvals/#respond Wed, 02 Jan 2019 02:58:09 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91666 Although the Chinese gaming regulator is restarting the approval process, the thawing process is gradual and subject to tighter controls.]]>

Tencent left out as China approves the release of 80 new video games – TechCrunch

What happened: Tencent and NetEase, two of the largest gaming firms in China, have missed out on the first batch of video game licenses to be issued after a nine-month halt. Tencent said it has 15 games awaiting monetization approval in the pipeline. The approvals come nine months after the state suspended issuing new video gaming licenses in March 2018 due to regulatory restructuring.

Why it’s important: Although the Chinese gaming regulator is restarting the approval process, the thawing process is gradual and subject to tighter controls. To set standards for approval, the state administration rolled out regulation in August last year to limit the number of new online game titles as well as a plan to work on a content rating system. Only 3,000 out of 7,000 titles on the waiting list may receive official licenses in 2019, China’s 21st Century Business Herald reported, citing experts. The country’s gaming industry this year witnessed its slowest revenue growth in at least a decade.

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Briefing: Ele.me teams up with Bilibili to target China’s indoorsy crowd https://technode.com/2018/12/29/ele-me-bilibili-indoorsy-crowd/ https://technode.com/2018/12/29/ele-me-bilibili-indoorsy-crowd/#respond Sat, 29 Dec 2018 01:43:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91555 Joint membership is an increasingly popular means for Chinese tech giants to tap into a wider or more niche user base. ]]>

Alibaba just gave Chinese youth another reason to never leave their desk-TechCrunch

What happened: Alibaba-backed food delivery giant Ele.me and ACG (anime, comics, and games) video streaming service Bilibili have jointly launched a membership promotion program that targets China’s young anime fans who adopt a sedentary lifestyle. The joint membership is priced at RMB 25 ($3.63), RMB 15 lower than subscribing for the services separately.

Why it’s important: Joint membership is an increasingly popular means for Chinese tech giants to tap into a wider or more niche user base. Similar to Ele.me and Bilibili’s tie-up, Alibaba announced its all-in-one 88VIP paid membership plan to include all of its major platforms—Tmall, Youku, Ele.me, Xiami Music, and ticket service Taopiaopiao. Bilibili has been making headlines in 2018. In addition to its IPO in March, the video streaming announced plans to buy the comic assets of Netease, one of its major rivals in the ACG vertical. A series of partnerships were inked with Tencent, Taobao, and Ele.me to integrate more services in its ecosystem.

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System error: How online learning is failing to fill China’s tech-skill gap https://technode.com/2018/12/28/online-learning-fails-to-fill-china-tech-skill-gap/ https://technode.com/2018/12/28/online-learning-fails-to-fill-china-tech-skill-gap/#respond Fri, 28 Dec 2018 12:57:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91082 The nation's young people can’t afford to wait around for the education system to change. ]]>

GUIZHOU, Southwest China—Dressed in a casual black bomber jacket with her smartphone in hand, 22-year-old college student Li Manhong seems like a textbook example of a tech-savvy millennial. She uses all the most popular online platforms like WeChat and Weibo, and even those blocked in China such as YouTube and Instagram.

Li, a marketing major at Guizhou Normal University, in the provincial capital of Guiyang, is eyeing a master’s degree in psychology. To prepare, she’s taking a MOOC—massive online open course—in the subject, offered by Chinese internet giant NetEase. She’s also taking online classes to get ready for the College English Test (CET), which is a prerequisite for a bachelor’s degree in China. And, as an avid K-pop fan, Li is teaching herself Korean with the help of online language training platforms.

In many ways, Li is typical of China’s post-’90s generation: proud of their country’s breakneck economic and technological development as well as confident about their and their nation’s future. Yet while China is raising a generation of digital natives, beneath the surface many are woefully underprepared to staff the technological revolution that the government has promised. Unemployment among college graduates is high, largely because of a mismatch in skills, but also because of graduating students’ unrealistic expectations.

(Can’t load YouTube? Try watching here instead.)

Technology is also at the heart of China’s ambition to shift its economy away from traditional manufacturing to more high-value industries. So, perhaps even more importantly, it’s an area of skills and learning that is key to realizing the nation’s ambitious economic goals.

China hopes to foster innovation in artificial intelligence and autonomous driving, new energy vehicles, chipmaking, and robotics through its “Made in China 2025” initiative. The State Council, China’s cabinet, also wants the country to become a world leader in AI by 2030.

But the nation faces a serious skills shortage precisely in the sectors where its future needs it most. By 2020, there are expected to be 24 million fewer high-skilled workers—those with tertiary-level or vocational training—than the country requires, according to consultancy firm McKinsey. The opportunity cost could reach $250 billion should China not bridge the skills gap by that year, the consultancy added.

When it comes to emerging technologies, the country could face a shortfall of 4.5 million robotics engineers by 2022, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT). The dearth also extends to AI talent, where China may have to deal with a shortage of 5 million AI professionals, a ministry official said.

The same is true of the country’s chipmaking sector. In 2017, China had fewer than 300,000 employees working in its integrated circuits industry. According to the MIIT, the country needs at least 400,000 more to reach its 2030 chipmaking industry growth goals.

[infogram id=”talent-supply-and-demand-1h706erxox3725y?live”]

Technology also offers the means to bridge the country’s skills gap by addressing persistent social and economic inequality through online education that includes MOOCs. Yet while the government has invested heavily in vocational training, the state education system is married to old methods.

The government hasn’t made the most of the game changer that is online education, remaining reliant on brick-and-mortar vocational colleges that are more accustomed to teaching traditional blue-collar trades than, for example, robotics, machine learning, or coding. Meanwhile, universities are criticized for prioritizing rote learning over innovation and focusing on theory rather than practical skills that could enhance their graduates’ employability.

A 2016 report produced by JPMorgan Chase put it bluntly, stating that in China, “labor costs are rising, supply and demand are dangerously skewed, and vocational training is unable to fill the breach fast enough.”

The paper made several policy recommendations, including establishing closer ties between educational institutions and businesses—so that schools could better grasp industries’ needs—and joint training whereby universities and enterprises could work together to identify and develop talent. It also called for similar collaboration between private enterprise and the country’s vocational schools.

In November, during a “deepening reform” conference led by President Xi Jinping, the government announced that it would support the involvement of private enterprise in vocational education to ensure a more skilled talent pool for China to stay competitive. But while policymakers have pledged to invest in remote learning, most funding still prioritizes vocational schools.

There’s evidence to suggest that the government is beginning to take the MOOC opportunity more seriously. In addition to the plan to launch 3,000 national-level quality MOOC courses by 2020, the government expects to add an additional 7,000 such courses over time. Simultaneously, it aims to build 10,000 quality MOOC courses at the provincial level.

In January, China’s education ministry said there were around 3,200 courses with more than 55 million “viewers” in the country. Wu Yan, a senior official with the education ministry, said that China “leads the world in MOOC construction,” with the largest number of online courses in the world.

However, China’s young people can’t afford to wait around for the education system to change. Many of them are looking instead to private providers of online courses in an effort to fill the gap left by public tertiary and vocational institutions.

A shot at the middle class

Students prepare for finals at the Guizhou Normal University library. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

To be sure, online learning is opening opportunities for some people in China. Thirty-four-year-old Beijing resident Li You says studying through MOOCs has helped him improve his skills and boost his earning potential. In August 2017, he started taking online courses in deep learning and AI through Udacity, a U.S.-based for-profit course provider, and eventually completed a “nanodegree.”

Li hails from northern China’s Heilongjiang province but moved to the northwestern province of Shaanxi to study engineering at a university in Xi’an. After graduation, he worked as a data analyst with global logistics company DHL. Four years later, his annual salary was RMB 300,000 (close to $44,000)—a handsome sum in a province where the average annual salary was only 13% of that in 2017.

Still, Li felt something was missing. “The data analyst job became less fulfilling for me,” Li tells TechNode. “More importantly, it offered little potential for future development.” He signed up for the Udacity courses with the belief that there was high market demand for advanced tech skills.

“Basic courses on calculus and programming were part of my college education, but my memory of these knowledge areas had become rusty,” Li says. “So, I began taking some basic courses though MOOC platforms, where courses from the world’s most reputable universities are shared online.”

Through online learning, Li was able to refresh and improve his professional skills, finally landing a job in Beijing as a data algorithm engineer for SoYoung, an online platform focused on cosmetic surgery. At RMB 400,000 per year, his new salary is a hike of 33% over his previous income.

But Li was unusually well-positioned to take advantage of MOOCs. His salary at DHL made the RMB 3,600 course affordable. (A three-month program offered by Chinese IT-focused open course platform iMOOC costs around RMB 2,200.)

Li’s command of English and the head start afforded him by his undergraduate studies in engineering meant he could select advanced offerings. Some of the courses had Chinese subtitles, but most were in English, so language skills are important, he says.

Li Xuanlin waits for a high-speed train in Tianjin. Li previously manufactured engine parts. Now, he works for a technology company. (Photo credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

Similarly, taking courses online offers a vital lifeline to some young people, offering them a way out of desperate situations. Just one year ago, Li Xuanlin—who is not related to Li You—was working grueling 13-hour shifts in an engine factory in rural Shandong province. On the factory floor, flecks of iron covered every surface, and when Li Xuanlin would stop to take a lunch break, he could taste iron in every bite. When he fell ill from exposure to that environment, he says he knew something had to change.

Li Xuanlin began taking online classes through Sanjieke, a Chinese internet-skills platform. Fortunately for Li, the investment was worthwhile. Through a classmate’s referral, he landed a job in the Tianjin office of Maimai, a Chinese platform like LinkedIn, and now leads an urban, white-collar lifestyle that he says feels a world away from a childhood spent in a farming town.

Thirst for digital knowledge

Online learning has become hugely popular in China in recent years. With gaps in the public system, the private sector has taken up the mantle of tech education, offering a growing range of choices from both Chinese and foreign players. China’s market for online learning, which includes MOOCs, is expected to be worth over RMB 540 billion by 2022, according to consulting firm iResearch—more than triple the market size in 2016.

[infogram id=”online-education-users-1h9j6qd9mkjy4gz?live”]

The potentially lucrative industry is also attracting some of China’s biggest internet giants. Baidu boasts an online education arm Baidu Jiaoyu and student Q&A app Zuoyebang, and has also invested in online language learning company Hujiang Education Technologies. Alibaba offers courses on e-commerce and entrepreneurship via Taobao University and live-broadcasts lectures through Taobao Education. It is also a prominent backer of language learning unicorn VIPKID. Tencent launched professional online education platforms including Tencent Classroom and Tencent University and has invested in several online education platforms such as Yuantiku.

Homegrown options abound as well. NetEase was one of the first major internet companies in China to dabble in online education when it launched NetEase Open Courses in 2010. In May of 2014, NetEase and Chinese higher-education textbook publisher Higher Education Press jointly launched the China College MOOC, which provides the public with more than 6,000 MOOCs from over 700 Chinese universities and institutions. Other prominent MOOC platforms include Tsinghua University’s XuetangX and programs from institutions such as Peking University.

Udacity, which developed out of offerings at Stanford University, entered the Chinese market roughly two years ago and started offering courses and programs in Chinese. It is also working with Chinese companies to build customized courses for the market. Other international MOOC platforms such as Coursera, edX, and Khan Academy have expanded their footprint in China by partnering with local universities to disseminate their educational content, and working with local platforms. For example, NetEase Open Courses has translated a significant portion of Khan Academy’s content into Chinese and helped promote it on its platform. Similarly, Coursera teamed up with Guokr, an online tech and science education site, to localize content.

Fresh forms of online education are also flourishing. The year 2016 saw new pay-for-knowledge models take off, particularly paid audio-streaming platforms like Ximalaya FM, iGet, and Qingting FM. These platforms feature wide-ranging topics from finance and business management to technical skills development, art history, and psychology. Some platforms like Qianliao and Lizhi Weike use popular messaging app WeChat as the main channel of distribution. By 2020, the market size for pay-for-knowledge platforms is expected to reach RMB 23.5 billion. While MOOCs by major providers can run to hundreds or thousands of yuan, an audio course often only costs around RMB 10 to 20.

Wang Xiaowei, author of the forthcoming book Tech Goes Down to the Country, which explores technology and its impact in rural China, is not surprised that Chinese companies are ahead of education authorities when it comes to online learning. “The private sector is always going to move faster than government,” she says, adding that many companies might consider a shortage of skilled workers in tech a potential “pipeline” issue. To make sure that they’ll have enough future applicants with the right skills, enterprises are “probably saying, ‘Let’s go out and do this ourselves.’”

But Wang believes the government must lead the development of MOOCs in China. “It’s important to have government in there in order to have standards,” says Wang. To her it’s an issue of specific software skills versus broader tech skills. “You can teach people how to operate a piece of software, but they’ll only know how to use that specific software. If they want to develop their skills, they’ll have to pay again.”

If those abilities are taught at universities or vocational schools, educators can give learners a broader foundation in tech skills. “Leaving such training up to the private sector worries me in the context of China, as well as in the U.S.,” she says.

Many Guizhou college students believe online classes can propel them into better opportunities, including Li Manhong, in pink, a junior marketing student, and Zhang Youyou, in black, who studies landscape design. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

Some also have questioned online course quality, particularly in cutting-edge areas like deep learning. Providers in pursuit of profit are more likely to offer courses in high-demand fields, those which can offer students quick career results rather than a foundation for lifelong learning or innovation.

Tsinghua University’s XuetangX, for example, provides MOOCs to some 10 million registered users, mostly from first- and second-tier cities. Most are seeking instant gratification in the form of a pay raise, promotion, or better job opportunities, CEO Li Chao tells TechNode, so the platform offers courses on subjects like accounting and programming.

The proliferation of platforms and lack of a solid regulatory framework for the sector leaves customers vulnerable to scams or disappointment. Disgruntled students have accused online education companies of overstating the benefits of their courses. In one story reported by Shanghai-based Chinese media outlet The Paper, a former customer of Nasdaq-listed TEDU accused the company of failing to deliver on its alleged promise of numerous job opportunities and an annual earning potential of around RMB 200,000.

The student, who was not identified by his real name in the article, said he went into debt to the tune of thousands of yuan after paying tuition, while still being unable to find a job. Aptech, one of China’s oldest IT training schools, has faced similar criticisms, with former students alleging false advertising—to which the school has countered that students expected too much and didn’t work hard enough.

A student watches a video at the Guizhou Normal University library. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

Tackling the digital divide

In theory, online education should provide a much-needed solution to the much-cited digital divide, which appears alive and well in China. Getting the right skills to the right people in time will allow China to reach its goals for economic development and equity. Failure to do so could see obvious repercussions for the country’s economy and stability. The challenge, observers say, is how to stem the emergence of a new type of “left behinds”—people who have been overtaken by the relentless onslaught of technology and development.

The reality, however, is that those who already have strong educational and professional foundations, including English skills, stand to benefit the most from these new learning opportunities. For example, Udacity currently has close to 10 million users worldwide, including around 400,000 from China. But according to head of marketing and partnership Zoe Zhou, close to half of their Chinese users come from the top four metropolises of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen. People with such skills and who live in more developed cities also have a greater chance of knowing where to look for new skill enhancing options in the first place.

However, even when individuals are aware of online learning opportunities, language can remain a barrier. Nancy Xu, former IDEO China designer turned founder of education consulting company Cevolution, says that there is a “big gap” between the quality of Chinese-language offerings and international ones. “It’s not systematic,” she says of most Chinese-language courses. “It’s not like Coursera where if you want to learn AI, if you want to learn machine learning, then the top scientists in the world teach you that.”

The lingua franca among software developers has long been English. Most programming languages are based in English, so it’s natural that many technology education resources are in English as well, though Chinese developers are beginning to change that.

Recently, software developers have been making more resources available in Chinese. For example, when TechNode checked the popular software development platform Github earlier this month, six of the site’s 25 weekly trending repositories were written mainly in Chinese, while the rest used English.

And in 2014, China-born developer Evan You released the popular Javascript framework Vue. The U.S.-based company has found traction in markets worldwide, including in China, as much of the framework’s documentation is written in Chinese.

Last year, NetEase launched an initiative to bring its MOOC platform to learners in living in remote mountainous areas in China. Jiang Zhongbo, general manager of NetEase’s education business unit, described the initiative as part of the company’s “Internet+” approach aimed at pushing for inclusive education.

XuetangX’s Li said the company has attempted to bring the online learning platform to rural parts of China but realized that it is difficult to pique people’s interest there. So they modified their approach by partnering with high schools and universities in central and western China, providing teachers with resources through their platform—bringing benefits of online learning back into the brick-and-mortar classroom.

[kopoverlay id=”23″ type=”image” caption=”Students eat near a food stand at Guizhou Normal University, a teacher’s school located in one of China’s poorest provinces.”]

[kopoverlay id=”24″ type=”image” side=”right” caption=”Zhang Youyou, a Guizhou Normal University junior, takes online classes but says that lectures sometimes fail to keep her attention.”]

China could look to India for inspiration for making access more equitable. There, two public institutes partnered to create The National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NEPTEL), which offers learners courses from eight Indian science and technology universities. First conceived in 1999, as of the Spring 2019 semester NEPTEL had 290 free classes in engineering, hard sciences, and other fields. Another initiative launched two years ago via a technical partnership with Microsoft connects Indian residents with 300 free college-level courses, much of which cover professional topics. Called the SWAYAM MOOC platform, its official website states the platform’s objective is “to take the best teaching learning resources to all, including the most disadvantaged.”

Anant Agarwal, CEO of worldwide non-profit MOOC provider edX, tells TechNode that online education is key, especially with increasing penetration of mobile devices in developing countries.

“I think everyone worries that with online education, it will increase the [urban-rural] digital divide,” he says. “I think it’s very important to work hard to make sure that everybody has access to education.” Agarwal adds that, due to money and time constraints, “for a lot of people in rural areas, online might be the only way to do that.”

Elsewhere in the world, Singapore’s SkillsFuture initiative forms another notable public-private partnership. As of January 2016, all citizens aged 25 and above receive a SGD500 (around $365) credit with “periodic top-ups” in order to take pre-approved online courses from local universities as well as MOOC platforms. Singapore also offers between 50% to 90% subsidies for employers who sponsor their workers’ training.

Upskilling the heartland

Apartments in Guiyang’s city center, a 30-minute drive from the city’s college district. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

With mountainous terrain resulting in many remote villages lacking infrastructure, Guizhou province is one of China’s poorest. However, the region is rebranding itself as China’s big data capital. Guiyang now hosts China’s annual Big Data Expo and boasts partnerships with Apple’s iCloud operations.

But low-income areas are, predictably, the least developed in terms of technological infrastructure, and have the least access to educational opportunities.

Li Manhong, the Guizhou Normal University marketing major, hails from Xingyi City in the southwest corner of Guizhou. While mobile payments have become ubiquitous in the country’s bigger cities, according to Li, cash still dominates in Xingyi. Many people have mixed feelings about the role of technology in their lives.

“The internet offers people in remote or impoverished areas access to information and knowledge they may not have had in the past,” Li says. Her parents didn’t have the opportunity to undertake tertiary education, and even now only students from a few top high schools in Xingyi can get into university. Yet many are also wary of recent developments. “People of my parents’ generation see new technology more as a challenge to their old lifestyles, and more importantly, as taking jobs away from their children,” she says.

In Guiyang, tall buildings have shot up like new teeth crowning between the region’s characteristically steep and sudden peaks. The city has become a symbol of China’s tech-powered solutions to rural poverty. On certain blocks of Guiyang’s gleaming hi-tech zone, a four-year-old district located north of the city, white-collar tech employees are outnumbered by laborers at work constructing skyscrapers. Locals frequently comment on how quickly the city has developed.

Yet there are reminders that some dreams have yet to be realized, and that the path toward achieving them is not so smooth. In April, Guiyang opened the doors to “Oriental Science Fiction Valley,” China’s first virtual-reality theme park. Everything about the park is tremendous: a towering, 50-meter metallic-blue robot, a mall-sized spaceship complete with multi-story propellers, and a life-size blue airplane perched atop shining front offices. It takes nearly one hour to walk the entire circumference of the park.

On a recent morning, however, the gates are closed and the park is empty aside from a lone security guard reclining in a folding chair, staring at a video on his phone. A meter at the massive parking garage displays 8,888 open parking spots on each of the structure’s two floors.

With three metallic robot sculptures standing at ease behind him, the guard says that the park closed for renovations over a month ago. When asked when the park will reopen, he smiles and says, “unclear.”

The view from a shopping center near Guiyang’s “Oriental Science Fiction Valley,” China’s first virtual-reality theme park, which was closed for repairs. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

Despite the city’s tech push, many of the students TechNode spoke to in Guiyang had their sights set on becoming local teachers, joining the civil service, or enrolling in further study.

Unlike many of her peers, who say they would prefer to stay closer to home, Wang Qianyi wants to move to Shenzhen or maybe even Shanghai. Anywhere bigger than her childhood home of rural Bijie, Guizhou province, would be fine. When she was young, she dreamed of being a police officer. But at 1.55 meters tall, she says she’s too short for the job and so decided to switch paths. Now a third-year student at Guizhou Normal University, Wang is majoring in electronic and information engineering.

Wang Qianyi, 23, studies electronic and information engineering at Guizhou Normal University. (Image credit: Cassidy McDonald/TechNode)

It sounds impressive, but according to Wang it won’t mean anything unless she can truly understand the dense subject matter. She says she’s struggled. Already 23, she transferred to the university from a junior college and aims to graduate from her bachelor’s program after another two years.

There’s a big difference in education quality, Wang says, between rural and urban colleges, and she’s not sure her education will be enough to propel her to a big city job.

Yet while Wang is aware of online learning opportunities, she feels they are not for her. She doesn’t believe that they would seriously enhance her employability, and right now she’s focused on finishing her degree, even though she feels her studies are too theoretical—a view that many other students echoed. She knows she will face a tough job market.

“At school what we study is ultimately not enough to prepare us for outside experience,” says Wang. “Chinese universities are all like this.”

Additional reporting by Cassidy McDonald and Nicole Jao. With contributions from Zhao Runhua, Bailey Hu, Colum Murphy, and Christopher Udemans.

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Chinese children are driving wearable tech in China https://technode.com/2018/12/28/kids-smartwatch-china/ https://technode.com/2018/12/28/kids-smartwatch-china/#respond Fri, 28 Dec 2018 11:39:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91493 In addition to smart device manufacturers, chipmakers have also set sights on the burgeoning market. ]]>

Chinese children, who are going online at an increasingly younger age, are becoming a new pillar of growth in China’s smart wearable industry.

According to a third-quarter report by market intelligence firm the International Data Corporation (IDC), China’s smart wearables shipments reached 14.5 million in the third quarter, up 13% year-on-year.

Xiaomi topped the list with more than 4 million shipments and a 30% share of the market. The Chinese consumer electronics giant was followed by Huawei, BBK Electronic, Qihoo 360, and Continental Wireless.

While Xiaomi held the lion’s share of the smart wearable market, consumer electronics manufacturer BKK Electronics saw the highest growth rates in smartwatch shipments, jumping 64% year-on-year.

More commonly known as the company behind rising domestic smartphone brands like Vivo and Oppo, BBK Electronics tapped the kid’s smartwatch market in 2015 with the launch of Little Genius Y1, a watch featuring video calling, geo-fencing, and GPS tracking functions.

A series of competitors, including Sogou, Huawei, Xiaomi, Qihoo 360, and Continental Wireless, have entered the vertical since then. The overall shipment volume of children’s smartwatches maintained a high growth rate from the third quarter of 2017 to the second quarter of 2018, according to a report by Sino Market Research.

In addition to smart device manufacturers, chipmakers have also set their sights on the burgeoning market. In June this year, Qualcomm launched a chip tailored for children’s smartwatches.

However, the market is only gaining traction in China. “It is a growing market segment, but not a growing worldwide segment. The majority of the kid-watch volume is taking place in China,” SCMP cites IDC analyst Ramon Llamas as saying earlier this year.

A number of factors could explain this phenomenon, including China’s increasingly tech-savvy population, particular parenting styles, and rising child-trafficking concerns.

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E-commerce giants remove healthcare firm Quanjian’s products following false marketing claims https://technode.com/2018/12/28/quanjian-scandal-product-removal/ https://technode.com/2018/12/28/quanjian-scandal-product-removal/#respond Fri, 28 Dec 2018 07:55:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91434 Zhou’s father stopped his daughter’s treatment at a Beijing hospital in 2013, instead opting for the company's cancer-killing herbal medicine. ]]>

China’s biggest e-commerce platforms have removed healthcare product manufacturer Quanjian Group’s listings following false marketing claims that allegedly caused the death of a four-year-old girl in 2015, The Paper reports.

Quanjian’s products, ranging from herbal medicines and shoe insoles to anion sanitary napkins, have been removed from e-commerce marketplaces including Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, JD.com, Suning Yigou, and Pinduoduo.

The removals come after an article posted by healthcare website Dingxiang Yisheng linked Quanjian to the death of Zhou Yang, a four-year-old girl who used the company’s products. Believing the company’s marketing material, Zhou’s father stopped his daughter’s treatment at a Beijing hospital in 2013, instead opting for the company’s cancer-killing herbal medicine.

She died two years later in 2015.

Facing an outpouring online vitriol, Quanjian issued a statement on Tuesday, dismissing the article as inaccurate. The company asked Dingxiang Yisheng to withdraw the post and apologize.

“Quanjian reserves the right to protect our rights through legal measures,” the company said on Weibo.

Authorities in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin have set up an investigation team to look into the incident. The case is of “great importance” to both the city’s Communist Party committee and its municipal government, according to Tianjin government.

Founded in 2004, Quanjian has businesses across multiple industries, including healthcare, cosmetics, finance, sports, and real estate, with annual sales of around RMB 20 billion ($2.9 billion).

With increased income comes a rising awareness of the importance of personal health among China’s population. Health products, ranging from vitamins to dietary supplements, were the most popular imported product category during this year’s Double 11 shopping festival.

But the booming market has yet to be effectively regulated. A string of scandals has hit China’s healthcare and medicine industry over the past few years. In July, China’s drug regulator in the country’s northern province of Jilin found Changchun Changsheng Biotechnology had sold some 250,000 substandard diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus (DPT) vaccines. The company was fined RMB 3.5 million over the issue. The firm also recalled its rabies vaccines earlier this year.

The country’s internet regulator launched an investigation into search giant Baidu following the death of a 21-year-old college student, who died of cancer due to misleading treatment information he had found through ads he was served in the company’s search results. The event caused outrage online over poorly-vetted medical ads on the company’s platform.

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Apple includes Android devices in Tmall trade-in program https://technode.com/2018/12/28/apple-trade-in-android/ https://technode.com/2018/12/28/apple-trade-in-android/#respond Fri, 28 Dec 2018 04:05:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91383 apple china US data governmentAlthough trade-in programs are not new, the latest Apple push is notable for its scale and range of products covered. ]]> apple china US data government

Apple has launched a large-scale trade-in program on Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace to boost its sales in China, allowing Android users to jump ship and buy into the US tech giant’s ecosystem.

Previously, Apple’s Giveback program was only available through the company’s retail stores. Its Tmall trade-ins make the initiative more accessible for users and all major product categories, from iPhone to Mac, are included.

The trade-in program is not only restricted to Apple products. It covers nearly all of the mainstream Android phones manufactured by major smartphone makers, including Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi, OPPO, Vivo, HTC, OnePlus and Lenovo.

After entering Apple’s flagship store on Tmall, a user’s device will be automatically identified and given a valuation accordingly. The service will also offer a free pickup and delivery service.

Although Apple conducts trade-in initiatives every year, it’s rare for the Cupertino firm to push it at such a scale, including various promotion channels and products covered.

The company is under growing pressure to maintain its dominance in the global smartphone industry. Competition in China is especially fierce given the rise of domestic rivals.

China’s homegrown smartphone brands like Huawei and Oppo continue to overshadow their international peers on domestic turf. Also, the trade-in program comes shortly after a court in the eastern Chinese city of Fuzhou banned the sale of some iPhone models following accusations the company infringed on disputed Qualcomm patents.

Despite the ban, Apple continues to sell its smartphones in the Chinese market. It attempted to resolve the dispute by updating its software. Qualcomm said it would take further action if Apple continued to disobey the court’s injunction.

Over the last few weeks, Apple has unveiled new marketing offers for iPhone XS and iPhone XR in a number of key markets, including the US and Japan.

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Briefing: Airbnb rival Xiaozhu to test facial recognition-enabled smart lock https://technode.com/2018/12/27/xiaozhou-smart-lock-facial-recognition/ https://technode.com/2018/12/27/xiaozhou-smart-lock-facial-recognition/#respond Thu, 27 Dec 2018 06:12:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=91246 China's home rental market is expected to be worth RMB 50 billion ($7.2 billion) by 2020. ]]>

Chinese home sharing site Xiaozhu to roll out facial recognition-enabled smart locks in Chengdu pilot scheme-SCMP

What happened: Chinese Airbnb rival Xiaozhu is planning to introduce facial recognition-enabled smart locks in 80% of its listings in the southwest Chinese city of Chengdu, aiming to improve the security of users. Xiaozhu is equipping more apartments with smoke detectors, gas alarms, and burglar alarms. It is also setting up a blacklist of tenants who misbehave during their stays at hosts’ homes.

Why it’s important: Xiaozhu, which has over 500,000 active listings in China, is one of the leading Airbnb rivals in the country. As one of the most well-funded short-term rental companies in China, the firm recently received nearly $300 million in a funding round led by Jack Ma’s Yunfeng Capital. China’s home rental market is expected to be worth RMB 50 billion ($7.2 billion) by 2020 with over 6 million shared homes listed and over 100 million tenants. Xiaozhu’s adoption of smart devices in its listed apartments aims to address safety concerns, a major obstacle in the development of the short-term rental industry.

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Briefing: Online tutor Yuanfudao raises $300 million in Tencent-led funding round https://technode.com/2018/12/26/tencent-invest-in-yuanfudao/ https://technode.com/2018/12/26/tencent-invest-in-yuanfudao/#respond Wed, 26 Dec 2018 04:44:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90965 GSX TALOnline education services, especially those focused on K12 education, have become widely accepted in China. ]]> GSX TAL

猿辅导完成新一轮3亿美元融资 腾讯领投-Sina Tech

What happened: Chinese online tutoring company Yuanfudao announced that it has received $300 million in a funding round led by Tencent, with the participation of existing investors Warburg Pincus, Matrix China Partners, and IDG Capital. The financing now values the company at over $3 billion. The proceeds will be used to improve its online learning experience by leveraging AI and other new technologies, according to the company.

Why it’s important: Online education services, especially those focused on K-12 education, have become widely adopted in China. Founded in 2012, Yuanfudao now claims to have over 200 million users. Given the market boom, there’s plenty of competition in China’s K-12 online education space, as Chinese internet giants begin to stack their chips in the sector. The Beijing-based Yuanfudao is competing with rivals like Zuoyebang, Entstudy, and Songshu AI.

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Briefing: Tencent bets on smart speakers with screens https://technode.com/2018/12/25/tencent-smart-speaker/ https://technode.com/2018/12/25/tencent-smart-speaker/#respond Tue, 25 Dec 2018 03:48:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90850 China’s smart speaker industry is experiencing explosive growth despite its relatively late start. ]]>

Tencent Enters Cut-Throat Market for Smart Speakers With Screens-Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese internet giant Tencent debuted its first screened smart speaker to strengthen its foray into the voice assistant industry. Featuring an 8 inch high-definition screen and 2500mAh battery, the speaker is priced at RMB899 ($130). Tencent Video, QQ Music, Tencent News, and other Tencent content resources are accessible on the device. The speaker went on sale on Monday.

Why it’s important: China’s smart speaker industry is experiencing explosive growth despite its relatively late start compared to overseas markets. Internet vendors including Xiaomi, Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent all entered the market to seize a new entry point for the internet of things, which is expected to bring huge traffic to the smart home market. There are around 50 smart speaker manufacturers in China, according to data from integrated circuit news portal Jiwei.com. After releasing a screenless speaker in April, Tencent is keeping up with the latest trend in the industry to release a screened version, facilitating more complicated functions such as travel route checking, watching videos, and playing games.

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Short video app Douyin launches mini-program feature https://technode.com/2018/12/24/douyin-launches-mini-program/ https://technode.com/2018/12/24/douyin-launches-mini-program/#respond Mon, 24 Dec 2018 11:02:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90821 bytedance Douyin tiktokShort video app Douyin launches mini-program feature]]> bytedance Douyin tiktok

ByteDance-backed short video app Douyin, known as TikTok internationally, has rolled out a long-awaited mini-program feature, allowing users to access various services without leaving the app. The feature is currently only available in its Android app and not yet on iOS.

Mini-programs, initially created for Wechat, are lightweight alternatives to apps that run inside existing applications on a user’s mobile phone.

In October, users found a “mini-program” section in the app’s settings. However, mini-programs only became functional on Dec. 13.

The feature is currently being used by several popular accounts on Douyin. For example, by tapping a small green icon in a promotional video posted by Universal Studios, users are redirected to a mini-program for China’s popular ticketing platform Maoyan to purchase tickets for The Grinch. Payment can be made through Alipay.

A mini-program within Douyin’s app. (Image credit: Jisuyingyong)

Douyin mini-programs can also be shared externally to WeChat in the form of QR codes. WeChat users activate a Douyin mini-program by scanning the codes.

Tencent’s WeChat first launched the mini-program feature in 2017. After a slow start, the feature’s popularity has ballooned, with 1.5 million developers having created more than 1 million mini-programs as of November this year.

Chinese tech giants have attempted to catch up to capitalize on the rise of the easy-to-use feature. In 2018, both Alibaba’s Alipay and Baidu included mini-programs into their ecosystem. Douyin’s sister app Toutiao is also testing its own mini-programs.

Integration of mini-program could boost Douyin’s social e-commerce functions in providing users with better shopping experiences and creating an all-in-one entertainment and shopping platform. This comes in line with the boom of content-driven e-commerce in China. Douyin rival Kuaishou doubled on e-commerce features this week through the launch of updated e-commerce features. At the same time, Alibaba’s Taobao buddied up with video streaming site Bilibili to boost commercialization of content-driven e-commerce.

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Tencent Cloud doubles presence in India to consolidate South Asia expansion https://technode.com/2018/12/24/tencent-cloud-india/ https://technode.com/2018/12/24/tencent-cloud-india/#respond Mon, 24 Dec 2018 09:41:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90769 Tencent isn't the only company that is putting an emphasis on its cloud business.]]>

Tencent Cloud, the cloud computing arm of Chinese tech giant Tencent, has completed the construction of a new data center in India, highlighting its efforts to shift to enterprises and increase its presence in South Asia.

The India center will be the company’s second in the country. Like the first, which was  launched in March this year, the new Indian data center is located in the country’s financial capital of Mumbai, serving as a hub for Tencent’s cloud services throughout South Asia.

The company aims to service both international companies as well as Chinese firms that are interested in reaching the Indian market. Tencent Cloud India has been working with short video app Kuaishou, online multiplayer game Freefire and Karaoke app Sing! since they began operations in the country earlier this year. The company aims to strengthen its foothold in the country with a second center.

The news comes as Tencent shifts to business customers, driven by regulatory trouble with its domestic consumer-facing businesses, including gaming. In line with the adjustment, the firm set up the Cloud and Smart Industries Group (CSIG) in a restructuring process that was rolled out in September. CSIG will emphasize Tencent Cloud, smart retail, education, healthcare, security and location-based services for industry solutions, according to the company.

Tencent isn’t the only company that is putting an emphasis on its cloud business. Both e-commerce firm Alibaba and search giant Baidu have recently announced restructuring plans to make similar moves.

As a relatively latecomer, Tencent is playing catch-up with industry titans Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and long-time rival Alibaba Cloud. With the support of its parent company, Tencent Cloud is expanding rapidly. This year, the company has opened data centers in Hong Kong, Thailand, the United States, India, and Moscow. It now operates 51 centers in 25 regions around the world.

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WeChat launches Instagram Stories-like ‘Time Capsule’ feature https://technode.com/2018/12/24/wechat-update-time-capsule/ https://technode.com/2018/12/24/wechat-update-time-capsule/#respond Mon, 24 Dec 2018 06:57:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90730 The update comes at a time when Tencent is pushing into the short video market.]]>
The messaging app also got an interface update (Image credit: TechNode Chinese)

China’s “super app” WeChat has undergone its most significant overhaul in four years, making further moves into the short video market.

The most conspicuous change in the new version is the addition of a new video feature called “Time Capsule.” Similar to Instagram, it allows users to post videos of up to 15-seconds to an individual users’ feed instead of WeChat Moments, the app’s equivalent of Facebook’s News Feed. The video will self-destruct 24 hours after its publication.

After uploading either from existing newly recorded videos, users will be able to add descriptions, emojis, music, and locations. It will recommend background music based on the video content. After shooting a video containing buildings, TechNode found that the app suggested a song with the lyrics: “Go up, so high on the sixth floor.”

Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

The update comes at a time when Tencent is pushing into the short video market, which puts itself in direct competition with ByteDance, parent company of popular short video app Douyin, known as TikTok internationally.

Tencent has over 10 video apps targeting different user groups, including Weishi, Shanka, DOV, MOKA. Integrating a short video feature to WeChat may boost the company’s efforts by capitalizing on the app’s significant user base.

Despite the efforts, industry experts aren’t so optimistic, especially from a marketing perspective.

“I think anything that makes WeChat a richer experience for key opinion leaders to communicate with their super fans is fabulous,” said Elijah Whaley, CMO of PARKLU, a platform focusing on Chinese influencer marketing.

For him, the way for WeChat users to interact with shot video is “not very convenient.”

“You have to click into people’s accounts and click a little button [to view videos]. Also, you have to go into your account when checking comments from others.”

At the same time, WeChat networks are private, connecting to friends and family, while platforms like Douyin and community e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu are more about the connection with content creators, people sharing information you are interested in, he pointed out.

Apart from the new video function, the app’s interface has been completely overhauled. The previous darker design has been replaced with a lighter palette, while icons within the app have been simplified.

The major redesign of WeChat, which claims over 1.08 billion daily active users, sparked heated discussions in China’s online community. The hashtag  WeChat Upgrade attracted 620 million readers on Weibo as of 3 p.m. on Monday.

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Baidu Maps tests traffic alarm for emergency services https://technode.com/2018/12/21/baidu-map-emergency-alarm/ https://technode.com/2018/12/21/baidu-map-emergency-alarm/#respond Fri, 21 Dec 2018 12:11:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90655 Chinese tech giants have been trying to empower city management with technology.]]>

Chinese navigation service Baidu Maps is rolling out a traffic alarm feature aimed at warning surrounding cars when an ambulance is approaching, a project that includes 500 emergency vehicles in Beijing.

Baidu has partnered with the Beijing Emergency Medical Center, Beijing Red Cross 999 Emergency Call Center, and Beijing Yizhong Charity Foundation to test the feature. Testing is also underway in the city of Jiujiang in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangxi. The feature is expected to be implemented nationwide though no time frame has been given.

The feature will send emergency alerts to nearby cars when an ambulance is approaching, requesting they move aside for the emergency vehicle. The data from emergency call centers will be integrated into Baidu Map’s Hawkeye system to enable real-time tracking of the traffic and improve the accuracy of the broadcast range.

“Through the partnership with the relevant authorities, we believe emergency alert will have a huge social impact by delivering information to car owners near the ambulance in real time,” said Liu Yuting, deputy general manager of Baidu Maps Business Department.

Liu said the feature has undergone optimization and notifications to surrounding cars could be sent out in less than a second.

Chinese tech giants have been trying to empower city management with technology. Baidu Maps rival AutoNavi has a similar emergency alarm feature. Alibaba introduced its City Brain to Chinese cities, including Hangzhou, Suzhou, and Guangzhou, as well as in Malaysia for traffic management. Alibaba’s City Brain program is also available to the city’s rescue and firefighting emergencies.

The country’s police force has also employed consumer-facing technologies for emergency response. In Shaanxi, law enforcement allows people to report crimes and emergencies through WeChat. Smartphone users can also share their whereabouts directly with the police.

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Short video app Kuaishou doubles down on domestic e-commerce https://technode.com/2018/12/21/kuaishou-ecommerce-upgrade/ https://technode.com/2018/12/21/kuaishou-ecommerce-upgrade/#respond Fri, 21 Dec 2018 05:48:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90590 The company's new plan gives priority to the development of 'Made in China' goods.]]>

Chinese short video app Kuaishou has upgraded its e-commerce services, giving preference to domestically produced goods and partnering with Chinese e-commerce giants in the hope of commercializing its 150 million daily active users.

The company’s new plan gives priority to the development of “Made in China” goods, agricultural e-commerce, public welfare, entertainment, craftsmen, and skill training.

“Users can buy daily necessities and electronic products elsewhere,” Bai Jiale, Kuaishou’s head of operations, said in a statement. “Kuaishou is the best place for some unique products, such as gourmet [food] hidden in mountains and seas and cultural handcrafted products.”

Content-driven e-commerce is a growing trend in China. Rival short video platform Douyin rolled out a shopping cart feature earlier this month. Similarly, large e-commerce platforms are seeking partnerships with content creators to drive their sales. Alibaba’s Taobao buddied up with video streaming site Bilibili to boost commercialization of content-driven e-commerce.

In addition to partnerships with third-party e-commerce services like Alibaba-owned Taobao and Tmall, as well as mobile e-commerce platform Youzan, the Tencent-backed firm has launched an upgraded Kuaishou Store. Products will be displayed with more prominence and order tracking and management features are integrated within the app.

Screenshots of the Kuaishou Store (Image credit: Kuaishou)

Kuaishou also brings in influencer agencies like Ruhnn Holdings and Wanghongmao to help livestreamers who don’t have e-commerce experience. Given previous counterfeit product scandals on Kuaishou and Douyin, the company also plans to establish a system for quality and risk control.

Kuaishou has become popular among small retailers and farmers in rural areas. Over 10 million users have made money on the platform over the past year, said company CEO Su Hua at the World Internet Conference held in Wuzhen earlier this year.

In response to the shift, China’s new e-commerce law, which will come into effect next year, broadens the definition of e-commerce operators to include players who do business through various online channels, from social networking to short video apps. The inclusion of non-traditional e-commerce channels effectively brings the small-sized yet flourishing e-commerce players under regulation.

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Briefing: WeChat rolls out auto payment system for car parking https://technode.com/2018/12/20/wechat-parking-china/ https://technode.com/2018/12/20/wechat-parking-china/#respond Thu, 20 Dec 2018 02:46:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90428 Chinese tech giants are trying to transform transportation services with technology.]]>

WeChat Pay launches auto scan-and-pay for parking in China’s shopping malls – SCMP

What happened: Tencent has launched an automated payment system under its WeChat Pay operation for car parks across China. The system has been implemented in more than 1,000 parking lots nationwide in major shopping malls, railway stations, and airports. A company executive says the system will be expanded to parking sites in schools and popular tourist destinations. Users are required to register their plate numbers under their WeChat accounts. Their plates are then scanned at the exit of parking lots and matched with the company’s database of WeChat Pay users.

Why it’s important: The launch of the automated payment system for cars parks comes as Chinese tech giants try to transform transportation services with technology. Alipay and WeChat Pay have already split China’s mobile payments for metro transportation into a duopoly. The next frontier is car parking. In August, Alipay rolled out a shared parking service in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou that allows users to find, reserve, and pay for parking via the Alipay app.

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Briefing: Ctrip partners with Plug and Play for travel innovation https://technode.com/2018/12/18/ctrip-plug-and-play-ravel-innovation/ https://technode.com/2018/12/18/ctrip-plug-and-play-ravel-innovation/#respond Tue, 18 Dec 2018 03:35:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=90092 China’s rapidly expanding tourism sector poses opportunities for innovation.]]>

Ctrip Group’s Oasis Lab and Plug and Play Forge Strategic Partnership – Globe Newswire

What happened: Chinese online travel services provider Ctrip’s innovation center Oasis Lab signed a strategic partnership with Plug and Play, a Silicon Valley-based global innovation platform for startups, corporations, and investors. The two parties will work together to support innovation in the travel industry by leveraging new technologies including artificial intelligence, machine learning, big data, natural language processing, augmented reality, virtual reality, and the internet of things.

Why it’s important: China’s rapidly expanding tourism sector poses opportunities for innovation and product differentiation as more Chinese national travel at home and abroad. The country’s total tourism revenue is expected to hit RMB 5.98 trillion ($867 billion) in 2018, up 13% year-on-year. Integration of new technologies in the travel industry will improve user experience from pre-trip inspiration to post-trip reflection. Ctrip is Plug and Play’s first global partner in the travel vertical.

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Briefing: Chinese Tesla rival NIO launches second electric SUV https://technode.com/2018/12/17/nio-es6-launch/ https://technode.com/2018/12/17/nio-es6-launch/#respond Mon, 17 Dec 2018 03:13:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89949 The company will begin delivering in in June 2019.]]>

NIO Officially Launches NIO ES8 Battery At NIO Day 2018 –  CleanTechnica

What happened: Chinese electric carmaker NIO launched its second vehicle, the ES6, over the weekend. Resembling the previously launched ES8, the more affordable ES6 is now available to order for Chinese buyers. The company will begin delivering in June 2019. The vehicle will be priced from RMB 358,000 (around $52,000) to RMB 448,000 before government subsidies.

Why it’s important: The Chinese Tesla rival has been selling its only model, the ES8, since June and has delivered more than 9,700 vehicles in China so far.  NIO is one of the few Chinese electric car makers that has delivered cars to customers. NIO has extended its battery swapping program to ES6 owners, previously reducing the upfront price of the ES8 by RMB 100,000. The company recently went public in the US, selling 160 million shares at a price of $6.26. The IPO brought in roughly $1.2 billion for the company, lower than the $1.3 billion expectation.

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Briefing: Chinese gaming giant NetEase sells comic assets to rival https://technode.com/2018/12/14/netease-comics-bilibili/ https://technode.com/2018/12/14/netease-comics-bilibili/#respond Fri, 14 Dec 2018 02:35:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89798 The company reached a partnership with Marvel in May to help introduce the first batch of Chinese superheroes. ]]>

China’s second-largest gaming company to sell comics assets to rival – TechCrunch

What happened: China’s second-largest gaming company NetEase has agreed to sell its comics business to anime-streaming site Bilibili, a rival of the company. Bilibili says its acquisition includes NetEase Comics’ mobile app, website, and copyrights for a large number of stories on the platform. The two parties will work together to create original comics in the future.

Why it’s important: The move marks a change of track for NetEase, which has sought to expand beyond its core gaming business to the related animation and comics sector. The company reached a partnership with Marvel in May to help introduce the first batch of Chinese superheroes. Bilibili raised $483 million from a U.S. initial public offering in March. Collectively known as ACG fans, the users of anime, comics, and gaming services form a vibrant community in China’s cyberspace. iResearch estimated that the community includes as many as 219 million people.

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As the home front cools, Chinese tech looks to Asia https://technode.com/2018/12/13/china-tech-looks-to-asia/ https://technode.com/2018/12/13/china-tech-looks-to-asia/#respond Thu, 13 Dec 2018 02:28:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89098 Attractive demographics and enabling regulatory frameworks make Southeast Asia attractive for Chinese tech companies. ]]>

Chinese tech companies are on an Asian roll. Around half of Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi’s shipment comes from overseas markets, primarily India. Alibaba counts Southeast Asia market as one of the primary destinations of its globalization drive. As China tightens control on the online gaming sector, Tencent is also looking at the region to boost revenue.

At the recently concluded TechCrunch Shenzhen 2018, several panel discussions tackled the questions: What are the underlying factors pushing Chinese companies to Southeast Asia? What are the benefits and potential pitfalls that await them there? 

Many of the driving forces relate to macro factors at home, and apply across a wide array of industries in China and not just tech. Panelist Chris Tran, executive director of North Ridge Partners, explained that China is no longer a low-cost manufacturing hub. Nor is it, demographically speaking, a young place anymore.

By contrast, Southeast Asia population of under 30s was booming, especially across markets such as Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines, he said, giving rise to a growing middle class. “We’re just waiting for that demographic dividend,” said Tran. “That’s going to be a massive benefit.”

Conditions specific to the tech market in China also are pushing companies to other Asian countries. Take internet. China is quickly reaching saturation where the growth trajectory of new netizens is flattening. Data from research company Quest Mobile showed that China’s monthly active mobile users grow by roughly 20 million to 1.1 billion from around 1.09 billion in the first half of this year—a 0.4% year-on-year increase.

Overseas first

Meanwhile, the rivalry among players in China’s tech market continues to rise. Michael Wang, CEO and founder of keyboard developer CooTek, told conference participants that, five years ago, in the internet space, competition meant going head to head with other internet companies to win over new users.

“But now, as rivalry reaches a feverish pitch, competition can come from rivals a completely different sector,” said Wang adding that the key metric these days is hours of user engagement. 

Wang cited the example of where social networking app WeChat is fighting against livestreaming platform Douyin, and the prize is user engagement as measured in hours.

Chris Tran, North Ridge Partners.

Tran of North Ridge Partners said one reason Southeast Asia appealed to Chinese investors included complementary or similar cultures and thinking.

But it was the “enabling regulatory frameworks” in place in many countries that made for lower barriers of entry that underscored the region’s appeal to Chinese investors, he said.

“These markets are open because they have a very pragmatic view of innovation,” said Tran. “Privacy and data are, of course, a very important topics, but there are fewer concerns around that and more concerns about being the ‘cash economy’ to ‘cashless online’ first.”

In the early years of this decade, a first group Chinese tech startups were beginning to look to overseas markets, including to Southeast Asia. Cheetah Mobile is among a series of utility app developers that pioneered the trend. The company earns more than two-thirds of its revenue coming from overseas users.

When looking back, company founder and CEO Fu Sheng told the Financial Times that Chinese users have “more alternatives” and the core of the decision was that “the competition was less intense (abroad).”

Another leader in the trend is mobile software company APUS. Its products had acquired more than one billion users globally in more than 200 countries by 2017. Nearly half of the users come from South Asia or Southeast Asian markets.

Content giant ByteDance is also gaining momentum with short video app Tik Tok in the global market. Known in China as Douyin, Tik Tok climbed the app store rankings around the world, especially in Southeast Asian countries—taking top spots on Google apps store in Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia since the beginning of this year.

Chinese tech giants are also targeting expansion through partnerships with local affiliates. Alibaba and Lazada, the e-commerce firm Alibaba owns and operates out of Southeast Asia, held joint Singles’ Day promotions across the region. Lazada’s gross merchandise volume in Singapore spiked seven-fold compared to the year prior.

No need to go it alone

It’s not just the big players that are entering Southeast Asia. Tran of Northridge points a wave of smaller, often little heard of players, from the hardware and software industry. Some examples include sleep monitoring device maker Sleepace and fintech company PINTEC.

Nor do Chinese players have to go it alone into Southeast Asia. Toa Charm, chief public mission officer for Hong Kong innovation and digital tech hub Cyberport, said that the special administrative region could help enhance Chinese brands chances of success because it offers a solid regulatory framework for emerging industries, including fintech.

Chinese companies that passed Hong Kong’s regulatory regime would also benefit when they expanded in Southeast Asia because Hong Kong’s standards were well-respected throughout the region, he said.

Alan Kuan Hsu, co-founder and general partner of KK Fund, said Chinese companies were increasingly realizing that they need to seek partners if they are to be truly successful in the region. “If you don’t have local context, you don’t know what you’re doing,” he said.

Additional reporting by Colum Murphy. 

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Briefing: Luckin Coffee raises $200 million at $2.2 billion valuation https://technode.com/2018/12/13/chinas-luckin-coffee-b-round/ https://technode.com/2018/12/13/chinas-luckin-coffee-b-round/#respond Thu, 13 Dec 2018 01:57:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89643 Luckin CoffeeChinese upstart Luckin Coffee raised $200 million Series B as it targets even faster delivery time for its brew. ]]> Luckin Coffee

China startup Luckin Coffee raises $200 mln in latest funding round-Reuters

What happened: China’s coffee startup Luckin Coffee has completed $200 million Series B at a valuation of $2.2 billion. Joy Capital, Tai Chung Capital, Singapore Government Investment Corporation (GIC), CICC and other companies participated in the funding. With the new funding, Luckin aims to further cut its delivery time, which is already within half an hour.

Why it’s important: The fundraising comes as Luckin Coffee expands at breakneck speed across China. The firm’s supercharged growth is propelled by capital. In July, Luckin raised a $200 million Series A bringing its valuation to $1 billion. While its rival Starbucks is entering a partnership with Alibaba’s Ele.me to boost its delivery and other online capabilities, Luckin Coffee tied up with Tencent as part of the latter’s smart retail strategy.

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Briefing: Bike-rental firm Mobike to spin off European arm https://technode.com/2018/12/12/mobike-spin-off-european-arm/ https://technode.com/2018/12/12/mobike-spin-off-european-arm/#respond Wed, 12 Dec 2018 03:55:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89523 As the bike-rental craze cools down, so do Chinese firms' ambitious globalization plans.]]>

Mobike prepares to spin off European arm – Financial Times

What happened: Chinese bike rental company Mobike is reportedly preparing to sell off its $100 million European operations. Chinese tech giant Meituan, whose business is almost entirely focused on the Chinese market, acquired Mobike earlier this year. A source told the Financial Times that Meituan that this focus may be the reason behind such a move. The company plans to maintain a minority stake in the European business.

Why it’s important: Mobike and ofo pedaled into the international market at the beginning of 2017. But as the bike-rental craze cools down, so do their ambitious globalization plans. Mobike withdrew from locations in the US and UK earlier this year. The company is under investigation by data regulators in Germany over suspicions it may have breached EU data laws. Its competitor, cash-strapped ofo, has pulled back from a series of overseas cities in South Korea, Germany, Australia, and India, while both struggle to maintain momentum in the Chinese market.

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Briefing: Chinese AI companies raised $31.7 billion in the first half of 2018 https://technode.com/2018/12/11/chinese-ai-investment-2018-h1/ https://technode.com/2018/12/11/chinese-ai-investment-2018-h1/#respond Tue, 11 Dec 2018 02:54:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89370 The country is still playing catch up with international AI powerhouses]]>

2018上半年中国人工智能领域融资317亿美元 – ChinaNews

What happened: Chinese artificial intelligence companies raised a combined $31.7 billion in the first six months of this year, representing almost three-quarters of the worldwide total of $43.5 billion, Zhang Xueli, deputy director of China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, said at a conference in the eastern city of Suzhou. The Chinese mainland had 1,122 AI companies as of September, accounting for the second-largest share of the world’s 5,159, she said.

Why it’s important: China’s AI sector had seen explosive growth in recent years with the rise of a string of AI unicorns like SenseTime, Megvii and Yitu. Along with the trend, venture capital in China’s AI industry has ballooned. However, the country is still playing catch up with international AI powerhouses, Zhang pointed out. “The country has more application-oriented companies, but fewer that focus on research and development—especially in the field of AI chips,” she said. The investment falls in line with China’s plan to become a world leader in AI by 2030.

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Ctrip accused of faking hotel reservations by Japanese hotel https://technode.com/2018/12/10/ctrip-fake-reservation/ https://technode.com/2018/12/10/ctrip-fake-reservation/#respond Mon, 10 Dec 2018 11:37:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89228 The issue resulted in the hotel dealing with orders for which their were no rooms.]]>

China’s largest online travel retailer Ctrip has been accused by an unnamed hotel operator of faking reservations on the Japanese version of its overseas travel platform Trip.com. The operator of the spa hotel said it found that the platform showed the property was still available for reservations while its rooms were fully booked.

The issue reportedly resulted in the hotel dealing with orders for which there were no rooms. It speculated that Ctrip intentionally overbooked the property in a bid to charge extra fees for cancellations. TechNode could not verify the claim.

In a statement issued to TechNode, Ctrip apologized for the incident, saying it was a result “misaligned information” with its accommodation partners. It said it had reconfirmed 80% of the affected bookings, adding that those which had not been confirmed by Dec. 12 would be eligible for refunds or the company would provide alternatives.

In 2016, the company was called out after it issued a ticket to a Chinese passenger that was illegally exchanged for airlines’ mileage. In 2017, the Shanghai Insurance Regulatory Bureau issued a RMB 400,000  ($58,000) fine to Ctrip Insurance Agency for not giving any information about the companies underwriting insurance policies, while also not explicitly explaining the products’ details.

Japan is the second largest overseas destination for Chinese tourists, according to a report from Ctrip. Over 4 million Chinese nationals took trips to Japan in the first half of this year, with the total expected to reach 8 million by the end of the year. Ctrip has been strengthening its position in the Japanese market with the launch of its first credit card, as well as setting up a call center in Tokyo.

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ByteDance to compete with WeChat by launching messaging app https://technode.com/2018/12/10/bytedance-wechat-clone/ https://technode.com/2018/12/10/bytedance-wechat-clone/#comments Mon, 10 Dec 2018 11:03:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89329 bytedance jinri toutiao tiktok topbuzzFlipchat could be ByteDance’s effort to tap the home turf of Tencent in social networking.]]> bytedance jinri toutiao tiktok topbuzz

Jinri Toutiao parent company ByteDance is reportedly planning to launch a messaging app as the firm sets its sights on WeChat and escalates its rivalry with tech giant Tencent.

The service, dubbed Flipchat, is going to take the form of an independent app, people close to the matter told Chinese media, adding that ByteDance has approached several senior staff members on WeChat’s team. ByteDance declined to comment on the news.

The company acquired the English domain name flipchat.cn on October 22 through a Chengdu-based subsidiary, according to domain name and IP lookup service whois.  The same company also registered a series of domain names such as fl5.co, flipchatapp.com.

Tencent has taken on ByteDance’s short video business with the launch of more than 10 video apps. Flipchat could be ByteDance’s effort to tap the home turf of Tencent in social networking.

ByteDance and Tencent have fallen foul of each other as they fight for the attention of China’s netizens. A public spat between the founders of the two companies—Pony Ma and Zhang Yiming—resulted in accusations of defamation.

ByteDance’s Zhang accused Tencent-owned WeChat of making excuses to block Douyin videos from being shared on the platform. He also accused  Tencent’s short video app Weishi (微视) of plagiarism, adding that it could not stop Douyin’s growth.

ByteDance’s products are not the only ones that have been banned from WeChat. Kuaishou, Baidu-backed video apps including Haokan, and audio streaming platforms all have their complaints about WeChat’s content sharing policies.

China’s social media world is dominated by Tencent, which claims 1.08 billion and 800 million monthly active users for WeChat and QQ respectively. Several Chinese tech powerhouses like Alibaba, NetEase, and Bullet Messanger have failed to compete with the messaging giant.

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Baidu-backed Haokan Video blocked from WeChat Moments https://technode.com/2018/12/10/wechat-blocked-tencent-market-grab/ https://technode.com/2018/12/10/wechat-blocked-tencent-market-grab/#respond Mon, 10 Dec 2018 09:20:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89311 China’s booming short video services are quickly eating up the time netizens spend on WeChat.]]>

Baidu-backed video platform Haokan has accused tech giant Tencent of anti-competitive behavior after its video content was blocked on WeChat Moments, the platform’s equivalent of Facebook’s News Feed.

Haokan took to microblogging platform Weibo to voice its grievances, saying that content being shared from Haokan to WeChat’s popular feed feature was only visible to the sharer, rather than to his or her contacts.

“Sorry for all Haokan pals, we won’t be able to meet on WeChat,” the company said to its users. “We offer our deepest apologies to our users. The blame is all on us because we are not “Weishi (the video app backed by Tencent).”

Tencent responded by saying that WeChat banned Haokan content because it breached the messaging platform’s external link principles as a result of its “online earning behavior.” No further details were given. Tencent suggests Haokan perform a “self-inspection” and submit an email appeal.

The competition between Chinese tech giants is reaching a feverish pitch. China’s booming short video services are quickly eating up the time netizens spend on WeChat. Tencent is trying to keep up with the video trend after launching more than 10 video apps targeting different user groups. At the same time, it is defending its position in the market by limiting access to rival platforms on WeChat, China’s dominant entry point for online services.

WeChat rolled out tightened restrictions on sharing external video links in its Moments feed in May. The move affected all the mainstream video and music platforms in China, including short video platforms Douyin and Kuaishou. It quickly reversed its decision as it came under public pressure.

Although external sharing is not totally banned, sharing content from non-Tencent related platforms does involve more effort. Kuaishou users have to copy an auto-generated link for the video and then paste it in WeChat before sharing. Douyin users have to save the short videos locally before reloading and share it to WeChat.

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Briefing: Tencent-backed fashion retailer Mogu debuts in New York https://technode.com/2018/12/07/tencent-mogu-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/12/07/tencent-mogu-ipo/#respond Fri, 07 Dec 2018 03:46:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=89032 Mogu is the latest Tencent-backed company to go public, following Meituan Dianping, NIO and Tencent Music.]]>

Tencent-Backed Fashion Retailer Mogu Ends Trading Debut Flat – Bloomberg

What happened: Mogu Inc., the fashion and lifestyle e-commerce platform backed by Tencent, made its debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Dec. 6, joining a string of Chinese tech companies pressing for a US IPOs. The company’s shares closed at $14, the lower range of its IPO price range. Mogu’s shares give the company a market valuation of about $1.3 billion, much lower than the $4 billion it expected earlier this year.

Why it’s important: As an early entrant to China’s fashion and cosmetics vertical, Mogu has managed to carve out a niche in China’s e-commerce market that’s dominated by tech giants like Alibaba and JD. Despite its close ties to Tencent, its troubled relationship with Alibaba, the source of its product referrals in the early days, and rising competition from local peers like Vip.com and Jumei have slowed down the firm’s development. Mogu is the latest Tencent-backed company to go public, following Meituan Dianping, NIO and Tencent Music.

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Briefing: Didi restructures amid safety and monopoly concerns https://technode.com/2018/12/06/didi-reorganization-safety-monopoly/ https://technode.com/2018/12/06/didi-reorganization-safety-monopoly/#respond Thu, 06 Dec 2018 03:11:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88906 The murder of two passengers has exposed Didi and China’s ride-hailing industry to increased scrutiny.]]>

China’s Didi restructures key units to improve safety following passenger deaths – TechCrunch

What happened: Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi announced on Dec. 5 a series of structural reorganizations to improve safety following the murder of two users. The company will merge Didi Express, Premier and Luxe, its car-hailing offerings into a single business unit. Its bike rental, designated driver, and public transport units are moved to a single entity. Two senior positions, a chief safety officer and a chief security officer, will be added to oversee its emergency management.

Why it’s important: The murder of two passengers in May and September has exposed Didi and China’s ride-hailing industry to increased scrutiny, both from regulatory authorities and the public. Didi Hitch, the carpool service the victims used will “remain suspended indefinitely” as the company revamps security measures. The reshuffle also allows the company to explore retail opportunities including car sales, maintenance, and loans to provide its drivers with extra services and support.

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Briefing: P2P lender Lufax reportedly raises $1.3 billion https://technode.com/2018/12/05/lufax-funding-p2p/ https://technode.com/2018/12/05/lufax-funding-p2p/#respond Wed, 05 Dec 2018 03:16:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88772 The company's IPO was postponed earlier this year due to trouble in the online lending sector. ]]>

Ping An-backed Lufax raises $1.3 billion at lower valuation: sources – Reuters

What happened: Lufax, one of China’s largest peer-to-peer lenders and online wealth managers, has reportedly raised $1.33 billion from a consortium led by Chinese private equity firm Primavera Capital. Other participants in the round include the Qatar Investment Authority, Hong Kong-based All-Stars Investment, and Japanese financial firm SBI Holdings. The funding values the company at $38 billion, lower than the anticipated $40 billion the company aimed for in June.

Why it’s important: Following the IPO rush of Chinese fintech companies in late 2017, Lufax planned to go public in Hong Kong to raise up to $5 billion in the first half of 2018. The IPO was postponed as authorities sought to change regulations and launched a national rectification campaign targetting online consumer lending, a core business of the company. Following a sudden surge of P2P defaults in mid-2018, 163 platforms were categorized as “troubled.” These companies had difficulty paying investors, were under investigation by the national economic crime investigation department, or had their owners run away with investors’ money.

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Briefing: Weibo plans expansion to global ‘Chinese-speaking world’ https://technode.com/2018/12/04/weibo-chinese-speaking-world/ https://technode.com/2018/12/04/weibo-chinese-speaking-world/#respond Tue, 04 Dec 2018 02:49:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88636 The company could face scrutiny amid increasing international exposure.]]>

Twitter of China Weibo eyes expansion to overseas ‘Chinese-speaking world’ – SCMP

What happened: Chinese social media platform Weibo is planning to expand beyond China’s borders to target at audiences in the whole Chinese-speaking world, according to Weibo Sports Senior Operations Director Zhang Zhe. In addition, the company is also considering launching new, more niche products in different languages.

Why it’s important: More and more Chinese internet giants are expanding into overseas markets in a bid to maintain long-term sustainable growth. China’s global-trotting consumers are serving as an entry point for mobile payment apps like Alipay and WeChat Pay to tap overseas markets. Similarly, the international “Chinese-speaking world” is the most accessible path for the global expansion of content and social media platforms thanks to the similar needs and habits of customers. However, increased exposure has its disadvantages. Expanding overseas might put Weibo under more scrutiny for its censorship and fake news issues.

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Updated: Thirty million users of Chinese dating app Momo reportedly had their data exposed https://technode.com/2018/12/03/momo-data-lekage/ https://technode.com/2018/12/03/momo-data-lekage/#comments Mon, 03 Dec 2018 12:53:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88584 The fact that the data is from three years ago may be the reason it's so cheap.]]>

Personal data from 30 million users of China’s top dating app Momo is reportedly being sold for as little as RMB 200 (around $30).

Weibo user lxghost posted a series of screenshots from the Chinese dark web entitled “database of 30 million Momo users” today (December 3), with a comment saying: “Momo’s database is quite cheap.”

TechNode was unable to verify the claims made by the Weibo user.

According to the screenshots, data on offer includes phone numbers and passwords. Peddlers claim that the data was obtained on July 17, 2015. They said the data was stolen through a method known as credential stuffing, where stolen account credentials, usually usernames and passwords, are used to gain unauthorized access to user accounts. This is achieved through malicious login requests directed against another platform.

In a statement, Momo said the matching rate for data is “quite low.” Even if the phone number and the password in the package do match, it’s impossible for others to log in with the leaked data because any such attempt on a different device would trigger a verification message via text, the company told TechNode.

Cybersecurity experts told the Southern Metropolis Daily that users who use identical accounts and passwords for every platform are highly vulnerable to such attacks.

The fact that the data is from three years ago may be the reason it’s so cheap. At the same time, the peddler has added a disclaimer, saying that they can’t guarantee the validity of the data and they will not support a refund once the information is sold. The photos show the data package has been purchased three times.

It’s no secret that personal information leaks are rampant in China, with the details of millions of citizens being stolen, shared, and sold online. In August this year, a data leak at Huazhu Hotels Group was thought to affect 130 million customers in what was believed to be the largest data breach in China in five years.

Additionally, a recent report by the China Consumer Association (CCA) found that 85.2% of app users in China have experienced data leaks.  The same organization found that Meitu, along with nearly 100 other apps, had violated user privacy by “excessively collecting recognizable bio data.”

Update: Included a response from Momo detailing its security measures. 

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ofo partners with nine online lenders amid cash strain https://technode.com/2018/12/03/ofo-nine-micro-loan-platforms/ https://technode.com/2018/12/03/ofo-nine-micro-loan-platforms/#respond Mon, 03 Dec 2018 09:16:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88561 The company reportedly inked the deals at 10% to 20% below the going price for acquiring new users. ]]>

In a bid to ease its cash strain, Chinese bike rental firm ofo has entered into partnerships with nine online loan platforms, allowing them to acquire more users by listing their services within its app.

The company has been setting ups deals with lenders including Wanda Puhui, Xiaoheiyu, Daishangqian, and Xiaobai Laihua since the summer. As part of its agreements, the bike rental firm has granted these platforms access to its users by displaying promotional content within the app’s “Wallet.”

Partnerships with online loan platforms are a double-edged sword for the firm. While they bring in much-needed cash, the tie-ups also bring trouble for endorsing players in the country’s online lending sector, which has a tainted reputation for scams and fraud.

Last month, the company drew criticism for urging its users to transfer their existing deposits to P2P platform PPmoney. The pair then removed the promotional offer, adding that it was a typical market activity and that there was no obligation for users to invest.

ofo reportedly inked the recent deals at 10% to 20% below the going price for acquiring new users, according to industry insiders.

In its early days, ofo was cautious about monetization moves that could hurt user experience. However, it was forced to make compromises as its cash pressure intensified in its fight for independent development.

Its first monetization attempts came in May 2018, when it started selling ads on its bikes and in apps. It then launched a news aggregation channel for future monetization possibilities in June, adding five-second short video ads to its main app in August.

ofo’s image has itself been tainted since the beginning of the year. The company has been taken to court by suppliers for unpaid debts, pulled out of international markets, and moved its headquarters in Beijing amid rumors of an acquisition by ride-hailing firm Didi.

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Beijing financial authority warns against ‘illegal’ STO fundraising https://technode.com/2018/12/03/sto-illegal-fundraising/ https://technode.com/2018/12/03/sto-illegal-fundraising/#respond Mon, 03 Dec 2018 05:02:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88517 A government official said they should only be engaged in when legalized. ]]>

Beijing has issued a warning about illegal activities associated with Security Token Offerings (STO), a move that underscores the Chinese government’s resolve in controlling cryptocurrency fundraising in the country.

At 2018 the Global Wealth Management Forum held on December 1, Huo Xuewen, head of the Beijing Financial Supervision Authority, said the government would crack down on STOs until it had approved the process, saying that they would be seen as illegal financial activities in the interim.

“I will issue a risk warning to those who promote and issue STO tokens in Beijing. My advice is to only engage in such offerings when the government has legalized them,” he said.

Huos comments show that Beijing’s financial authority is cautious of  STOs, which are still in the early stage of development and have few successful cases around the world.

An STO is a form of fundraising that shares the profits or pays interest to the token holder based on an underlying asset. While initial coin offerings (ICOs) have been fraught with claims of fraud from users, an STO is often portrayed as a safer form of raising funds.  STO tokens must be supported or backed by something tangible, including the assets, profits, or revenue of a firm.

China has been tightening its grips on cryptocurrencies over the past two years. After issuing a complete ban on ICOs last year, the country has begun enforcing a series of increasingly strict regulations. Following demands from internet regulators, WeChat permanently shut down a dozen widely followed blockchain-related official accounts in August. The National Internet Finance Association of China regulates 124 cryptocurrency trading platforms whose servers are all overseas. It has also inspected and shut down domestic initial coin offering or trading platforms, WeChat accounts, and limited their access to payments.

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Briefing: Weibo acquires top live streaming platform Yizhibo https://technode.com/2018/11/29/weibo-acquires-yizhibo/ https://technode.com/2018/11/29/weibo-acquires-yizhibo/#respond Thu, 29 Nov 2018 03:00:35 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88262 In-depth integration of Weibo and Yizhibo will occur in the first half of 2019. ]]>

确认收购一直播发力视频业务 微博Q3月活用户达4.46亿-21st Century Business Herald

What happened: Weibo CEO Wang Gaofei disclosed in a conference call that the Chinese Twitter-like platform has acquired its live streaming partner Yizhibo, formerly a unit of China’s leading video app developer Yixia Technology. The company will try to integrate and optimize the two services in the following one to two quarters, he added. In its 2018 Q3 financial report, Weibo claims a monthly active user base of 446 million in September, up 70 million year on year. Of the total, 93% are mobile users.

Why it’s important: Rumors about Weibo’s acquisition of Yizhibo have been circulating for months, but this is the first time the social-networking platform confirmed the news. The acquisition will help create a stronger social-interaction based business model for both parties where Yizhibo could further leverage Weibo’s huge traffic and massive social influence, and Weibo can continue to gain traction with quality video content. The move also comes against the backdrop of a cooling live streaming market where Yizhibo is suffering from sluggish growth.

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Briefing: iFlytek removes politically sensitive terms on Android translation app https://technode.com/2018/11/28/iflytek-censors-sensitive-term-translation-app/ https://technode.com/2018/11/28/iflytek-censors-sensitive-term-translation-app/#respond Wed, 28 Nov 2018 03:03:55 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88119 iFlyteck is a rare case of tool app to self-sensor translation results.]]>

Chinese AI champion iFlytek censors politically sensitive terms on its translation app-SCMP

What happened: Chinese artificial intelligence company iFlytek has removed political sensitive terms such as “Tiananmen” and “independence” from showing up as results in the Android version of its popular translation app. The results on iOS version of the iFlyTranslate app were not affected.

Why it’s important: The news comes amid the government’s broader campaign to clean up online contents. The campaign mainly targets at social media and livestreaming apps so far. Top services in these areas such as WeChat, Weibo and Douyin have been subject to strict content censorship. But iFlyteck is a rare case of translation tool app to launch self-censorship initiative given that there’s no government regulation on blocking politically sensitive phrases on translations services in China. The reasons behind the company’s voluntary move might be attributed to the fact that iFlytek’s digital translation service is used in many high-profile events in China. Also, the Shenzhen-listed company was under skepticism for receiving too much government fund. Report by the Changjiang Times claims iFlytek allegedly received RMB 6.53 billion ($950m) in government subsidies over the last five years.

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Briefing: Alibaba-backed parenting firm Babytree raises $200 million in Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2018/11/27/alibaba-babytree-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/11/27/alibaba-babytree-hong-kong-ipo/#respond Tue, 27 Nov 2018 06:33:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=88066 Babytree was forced to downsize its IPO by nearly 80%.]]>

母婴社区宝宝树今日在港挂牌上市 每股6.8港元 -NetEase

What happened: China’s leading online parenting firm Babytree Group, has raised around $200 million in Hong Kong IPO at the lower range of its initial offering price of HK$6.8 per share. The company’s share started trading at HK$6.91 apiece, up 1.62%, bringing the company’s market cap to HK11.53 billion ($1.47 billion).

Why it’s important: Suffering from the huge amount of new offerings and a depressed stock market, Babytree was forced to downsize its IPO by nearly 80%, from the initial target of $1 billion to around $200 million. Babytree’s investors include conglomerate Fosun International, TAL Education Group, e-commerce platforms of Jumei and Alibaba Group. In the company’s pre-IPO round, Alibaba acquired a 9.9% stake in the company for $214 million at a valuation of $2.16 billion.

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Alibaba restructures to focus on cloud computing and new retail https://technode.com/2018/11/26/alibaba-restructuring/ https://technode.com/2018/11/26/alibaba-restructuring/#respond Mon, 26 Nov 2018 09:12:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87987 Alibaba restructures business structure two months after Tencent.]]>

Chinese internet giant Alibaba Group announced on Monday (November 26) a business structure reorganization that will sharpen its focus on cloud computing and new retail businesses. The reshuffle may be the last business restructuring before Jack Ma’s projected retirement in September next year.

Daniel Zhang, Alibaba’s Chief Executive Officer, said in an internal letter that its cloud-computing arm Alibaba Cloud business group will be upgraded to Alibaba Cloud Intelligence business group. Alibaba Group CTO Zhang Jianfeng is appointed as head of the unit, reporting directly to Daniel Zhang.

Alibaba has taken a lead in China’s cloud computing market thanks to an early layout. Alibaba Cloud represents 45.5% of the market in the country’s public cloud industry, according to China’s public cloud market report for H1 2018 conducted by research report firm IDC. Alibaba’s reinforcement on strategic importance of cloud computing sector is taking place against a backdrop of Tencent’s recent restructuring towards cloud-based data offerings for corporate clients. After the upgrade, Alibaba’s smart service capabilities such as data computing platform, advanced algorithms, database systems, infrastructure technology platform, and scheduling systems will be fully integrated with Alibaba Cloud and made available to the society, according to Zhang.

In addition, the company set up a new retail technology business group led by the former executive of Tmall’s technology unit Wu Zeming. The new group will integrate technological support from Alibaba’s enterprise-facing units as well as Taobao and Tmall.

This reorganization highlights the company’s efforts to transform its core e-commerce business with digital technology. Tmall Business Group is upgraded to “Greater Tmall”, which consists of Tmall, Tmall Supermarket, and Tmall Import/Export business unit. Although Alibaba is expanding into lots of sectors, finance, logistics, entertainment, and e-commerce still forms a huge chunk (86%) of the company’s revenue, according to the company’s Q3 financial report.

Driven by the AI trend, Alibaba puts AI on a higher priority. The company’s AI Lab has been integrated into Alibaba Group Innovation Initiatives business group, with the head of the lab reporting directly to the CEO.

In addition, Zhang also announced a series of new appointments for its logistics arm Cainiao, Alibaba Digital Media & Entertainment Group and big data marketing platform Alimama.

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WeChat removes over 3,000 official accounts and mini programs for misleading names https://technode.com/2018/11/26/wechat-misleading-names/ https://technode.com/2018/11/26/wechat-misleading-names/#respond Mon, 26 Nov 2018 07:04:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87972 WeChat official accounts and mini programs are now subject to stricter regulation both from Tencent and the state.]]>

WeChat is pushing further in its efforts to regulate third-party services on the platform. The social media giant announced that it has removed the misleading names of 3,312 official accounts and mini-programs. At the same time, the relevant features of 3,326 WeChat official accounts and mini-programs were suspended, according to the company.

A search for popular mini game Tiantian Kupao reveals the extent of copycat names (Screenshot from WeChat)

Misrepresentation is common for Wechat official accounts and mini-programs to attract more followers and page views on the platform. By misrepresenting oneself as services provided by a more reputable operator, the official account or mini program developers may easily gain bigger visibility in WeChat’s search engine and trick users into using their services.

“WeChat will close or remove the contents of the official accounts or mini-programs with misleading names, logos, and introductions, or any other behavior that involves misguiding the users’ judgments. Any misrepresentation in a batch would consider a move going against WeChat operation rules. The platform will suspend the accounts permanently and reserve rights to offer services to such parties,” according to an official statement from the company.

Several malpractices that go against the rule were listed, from adding meaningless letters or icons in the title to pilling several popular keywords together.

Official account and mini-program have become an important part of WeChat ecosystem, which now provides services to over 1.08 billion users. According to the company’s latest report, there are over 20 million official accounts and more than 1 million mini-programs on the platform.

Due to its popularity, WeChat official accounts are subject to stricter regulation both from the company as well as the state. WeChat announced earlier this year that it will regulate user’s information dissemination behavior and those trying to conduct marketing activities by distorting China and CCP history.

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Xiaomi moving to Wuhan as Chinese tech giants get away from tech hubs https://technode.com/2018/11/26/xiaomi-moving-to-wuhan-as-chinese-tech-giants-get-away-from-tech-hubs/ https://technode.com/2018/11/26/xiaomi-moving-to-wuhan-as-chinese-tech-giants-get-away-from-tech-hubs/#respond Mon, 26 Nov 2018 04:18:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87929 The new Xiaomi Wuhan headquarters will be an R&D center.]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has started the construction of a new headquarter building located in Wuhan of central China’s Hubei Province. The new Xiaomi Wuhan headquarters will be an R&D center for artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and big data, according to the company. Construction of the new headquarter will be completed in two to three years with plans to accommodate 2,500 employees.

“Wuhan is perfect for an R&D center because it’s conveniently located at central China and has rich talent pool thanks to reputable universities located in the region. With plans to construct a headquarter with up to 10,000 staff, Xiaomi wants to build Wuhan as the new hub in the AI era,” said Xiaomi founder Lei Jun, who is a Wuhan native himself.

The new project comes as part of Xiaomi strategic partnership with Wuhan municipality. In June 2017, Xiaomi, Kingsoft, and Shunwei Capital, two other companies backed by Lei Jun, have reached an agreement for construction of headquarters for the three companies. The companies have moved to Optics Valley, a high tech zone in the city, in November 2017.

After one year of operation, a total of 800 employees from the three companies are working from Wuhan, up from 30 in late 2017, introduced Liu Guojun, executive of Xiaomi Wuhan.

The now Beijing-based Xiaomi has been trying hard to push its current employees to the new headquarter. In an aggressive incentive plan, the company promised that those who make the move can keep their Beijing-level salary – likely significantly higher than average for a second-tier city  – and receive an RMB 30,000 relocation bonus, as well as get help in buying a local home. In return, workers must stay at their new office for at least two years.

At the same time, the company is trying to build a solid team by leveraging on the local talent pool from universities in the city, such as Wuhan University and Huazhong University of Science and Technology.

Xiaomi is among a group of Chinese tech giants that try to escape the crowded tech hubs like Beijing and Shanghai in a bid to reduce operational costs as well as enjoy various perks from second-tier cities. Huawei began relocating staff of several departments from Shenzhen to the Guangdong factory town of Dongguan. Hangzhou-based Alibaba is also establishing regional headquarters in Xi’ an and Nanjing.

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Briefing: Tesla slashes price in China to a counter trade war impacts https://technode.com/2018/11/23/tesla-slashes-price-china-trade-bite/ https://technode.com/2018/11/23/tesla-slashes-price-china-trade-bite/#respond Fri, 23 Nov 2018 03:09:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87761 Automobiles is one of the industries that suffered most from the China-US trade tension.]]>

Tesla cuts China car prices to absorb hit from trade war tariffs-Reuters

What happened: Tesla is cutting the price of its Model S and Model X cars in China by 12 to 26% respectively to absorb the impact of the US-China trade war on Chinese consumers. In response to the trade tensions from the United States, China imposed extra tariffs on U.S. imports into the country. The move hurts Tesla’s China business, which imports all the cars it currently sells in the market.

Why it’s important: Automobile is one of the industries that suffered the most from the China-US trade tension. Tesla has adjusted its pricing strategy in China several times this year. Lowering price at the cost of the company underlines intensifying competition in China, the world’s largest car market where electronic vehicles are rising fast. But local experts believe that the company has more space for lowing the price of its Model 3, which is going to be manufactured by its Shanghai-based Gigafactory by 2020.

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Briefing: BMW rides into China’s crowded car-hailing industry https://technode.com/2018/11/22/bmw-ride-hailing-china/ https://technode.com/2018/11/22/bmw-ride-hailing-china/#respond Thu, 22 Nov 2018 02:56:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87641 More companies are entering the market, seeing room for growth in China’s ride-hailing industry. ]]>

BMW to offer ride hailing services in China from December-Reuters

What happened: Germany’s BMW has obtained a ride-hailing license in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province, through its wholly owned subsidiary in China. This makes BMW the first global automaker to launch ride-hailing services in the country. The company plans to push out the service in December.

Why it’s important: After the fierce competition witnessed by China’s ride-hailing industry since 2013, Didi has established itself as the largest player in the battlefield, holding between 90-95% of the market. However, Didi has never been short of new challengers, such as Meituan and BMW. More companies are entering the market in the belief that there’s room for growth in China’s ride-hailing industry. Consulting firm Roland Berger estimates that 40% of China’s taxi demand is unmet.

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Briefing: Chinese facial recognition takes top spots in US vendor test https://technode.com/2018/11/21/chinese-ai-startups-win-frvt/ https://technode.com/2018/11/21/chinese-ai-startups-win-frvt/#respond Wed, 21 Nov 2018 03:00:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87497 Market leaders like YITU, SenseTime and Megvii have been raised to unicorn status thanks to the market boom.]]>

全球权威人脸识别竞赛成绩公布,中国人工智能算法继续领跑世界-Leiphone.com

What happened: The facial recognition algorithm solutions offered by Chinese AI startups took the top five spots in the leaderboard for Facial Recognition Vendor Test (FRVT) organized by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). YITU Technology’s algorithm is ranked first place by achieving over 99% accuracy rate, followed by another algorithm submitted by the company in June. SenseTime took the 3rd and 4th place. Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology and Megvii took the 5th and 8th spot in the leaderboard.

Why it’s important: The benchmark results of FRVT are recognized as the golden standards of the global security industry in practice and serve as the official guideline for U.S. government purchases. The news shows that Chinese startups are taking a leading role in the AI-powered facial recognition industry. The technology has been applied in a variety of areas such as security, payment, and entertainment. Market leaders like YITU, SenseTime, and Megvii have been raised to unicorn status thanks to the market boom.

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China’s young academics embrace entrepreneurial mindset https://technode.com/2018/11/20/chinas-young-academics-embrace-entrepreneurial-mindset/ https://technode.com/2018/11/20/chinas-young-academics-embrace-entrepreneurial-mindset/#respond Tue, 20 Nov 2018 15:52:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87424 More academics are willing to leave their comfort zones and set up their own businesses. ]]>

Chinese internet industry first boomed from consumer-based services: Alibaba had e-commerce, an instant messaging tool for Tencent, while Baidu had its search engine.

All Chinese tech giants start from relatively straightforward services that people easily can understand. The consumer-focused approach to tech innovation in the early days meant that entrepreneurs with interesting ideas could start their own business if they had a general understanding of their market. Coding skills or a tech background were not essential.

However, as China’s startup scene evolves, companies and investors are shifting quickly to deep tech, a set of cutting-edge technologies based on scientific discoveries, medicine, mathematics, and engineering. This change brings more new professional possibilities for academics in transforming their academic results to real products.

In tandem, China’s younger generation of academics is adopting a more open mindset and willing to embrace these opportunities. The trend is best demonstrated at the healthtech stage of TechCrunch 2018 Startup Competition.

A total of 12 projects demoed at the event, which is sponsored by Merck, a leading science and technology company in healthcare, life science, and performance materials.

The winner of the competition will be shortlisted as a candidate for Merck China Accelerator, a program that focuses on collaboration between startups and Merck’s innovation ecosystem.

Xu Fei, a professor of Shanghai Jiaotong University and a doctor from the university’s affiliated hospital Shanghai Renji Hospital, won the first place with his patent, which combines genomic and proteomic discovery models, called OncoBinder, to identify potential tumor regulators PD-L1.

The first runner-up went to Shenzhen Xingdong Biotech, the developer of Sunscell Bioreactor, which provides efficient production of cell drugs for biotech companies, clinical hospitals, and research institutes. Fertility solution provider Seein Health walked away with the second runner-up award.

Different from what one usually sees at demo events, Xu Fei’s project is still in the early stage of commercialization. It’s more of a research result than a company that’s supposed to have products and business plans.

But commercialization degree of the projects are not the most important thing for the judging panel, consisting of Merck management and VCs.

“We are not looking for fully developed companies that are ready in the market. The pharma and chemistry industry is very deep tech, so it’s not easy to find good startups. Usually, the good teams are coming from academia and one huge benefit of our accelerator program is that it connects the projects with our internal colleagues, who can help them to validate and scale their product,” Hong Wa Poon, Manager of Merck Accelerator Germany, told TechNode.

“The winner is picked because there are huge commercial application potentials for the technology. It targets at the pain point of users. Also, the project is very relevant to Merck’s core business because they are targeting at the field of oncology and drug targeting.” says Guo Mingfei, head of Diagnostics Business in China, Merck Chemicals Shanghai.

Compared with 10 or 20 years ago, Chinese researchers involved in fundamental studies are taking a more open attitude toward commercialization of their research results.

“The transition from academia is going much smoother as more researchers decided to come out of their comfort zone to build a business,” Hong added.

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Briefing: JD becomes first company to operate logistics drones on province level https://technode.com/2018/11/20/jd-logistics-drone/ https://technode.com/2018/11/20/jd-logistics-drone/#respond Tue, 20 Nov 2018 02:57:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87359 The news is a major step for the country to boost the commercial application of logistics drones.]]>

JD Secures China’s First Provincial Drone License for Logistics-Yicai Global

What happened: The Xi’an-based drone delivery unit of JD.com has received a license from CAAC Northwest Regional Administration, becoming the country’s first company to operate drones for logistics on a provincial level. The company has been piloting in the region since February this year.

Why it’s important: Delivery drones have felt like they’re on the cusp of arriving for years, but despite a lot of companies engaged in the sector, we have yet to see a wider application of the device. The news marks a major step for the country to boost the further development of the industry in terms of standards and scale. In addition to JD, several companies like Alibaba’s Cainiao and SF Express are also trying to explore the sector.

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Possibilities of flexible display expand beyond smartphone: Royole CEO Bill Liu https://technode.com/2018/11/20/flexible-display-flexphone/ https://technode.com/2018/11/20/flexible-display-flexphone/#respond Mon, 19 Nov 2018 16:15:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87293 The once low-profile Chinese flexible display company Royole grabbed headlines over the past two weeks, becoming the first company to launch a foldable smartphone. While the smartphone-tablet hybrid stoked much anticipation among flexphone aficionados, for Royole CEO Bill Liu, this is just the beginning. For him, the potential of flexible display technology is great and […]]]>

The once low-profile Chinese flexible display company Royole grabbed headlines over the past two weeks, becoming the first company to launch a foldable smartphone.

While the smartphone-tablet hybrid stoked much anticipation among flexphone aficionados, for Royole CEO Bill Liu, this is just the beginning. For him, the potential of flexible display technology is great and expands far beyond the world  of smartphones.

FlexPai, Royole’s 7.8-inch device, which was launched last month, can fold 180 degrees without breaking—although it doesn’t fold completely flat and is still a bit “chunky” when packed away into a pocket.

The prices range from RMB 8,999 ($1,296) to RMB 12,999. The smartphone became available for preorder on October 31, with shipment fulfilment in December. According to Liu, the company already has received “a lot of orders.”

Founded in 2012, the Shanghai-based startup’s best-known product was the 0.01 mm thin full-color flexible display, which was released in 2014. Over the past four years, the company has been working on tackling two major problems, according to Liu, who shared his experiences at TechCrunch Shenzhen on November 19.

First was how to mass-produce the screen; and second was defining what applications would be best suited to this technology.

The company resolved the manufacturing question by building a production line in Shenzhen, where it has more than 6,000 employees. The line went into mass-production in June this year, Liu said.

Many have questioned Royole’s ability to develop a smartphone given the company’s origins as a flexible display maker. Others say the company is hyping up the flexphone concept.

“Foldable display technology can find wider application in lots of areas other than smartphone, such as education, advertisement, construction material, smart transportation, to name a few. “For most of the time, partners in different areas would come up with more interesting application possibilities for the technology,” Liu said.

In addition to consumer-facing business, Royole also has business-facing services by licensing the technology to industrial applications like automotive or media. The company recently signed B2B sales contracts worth RMB 4 billion for its flexible screen technology, Liu said.

With contributions from Colum Murphy. 

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WeChat claims 1.08 billion users in latest “one minute” data report https://technode.com/2018/11/19/wechat-1-minute-statistics-report/ https://technode.com/2018/11/19/wechat-1-minute-statistics-report/#respond Mon, 19 Nov 2018 06:50:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87189 WeChat has released a report of its user data, providing a bunch of fascinating facts about Chinese netizen’s lives as well as the magnitude of the app. The giant app claims over 1.08 billion monthly active users as of the third quarter of this year, up 10.5% year-over-year. Over 800 million users use WeChat Pay when […]]]>
Image credit: WeChat

WeChat has released a report of its user data, providing a bunch of fascinating facts about Chinese netizen’s lives as well as the magnitude of the app.

The giant app claims over 1.08 billion monthly active users as of the third quarter of this year, up 10.5% year-over-year. Over 800 million users use WeChat Pay when they are traveling, shopping or dining out. North of 20 million WeChat accounts publish stories and news on various topics. 1.5 million developers developed over 1 million mini-programs. In one minute during the morning rush hours, mobile traffic consumed via WeChat amounted to 46 TB.

Over the past year, the mobile social network has been focusing heavily on integrating its technology with public transportation networks across the country. By scanning WeChat QR code, over 250,000 commuters access metro or buses per minute during the morning rush hours. A total of 3.75 million citizens travel during the 2.5 hours rush time, that’s on par with the population of Puerto Rico. The company’s QR code payment service for public transportation has reached more than 50 million users across 100 cities as of October this year.

In another mark for the company’s effort to deepen its public services initiative, WeChat is connecting 680 hospitals around the country in one minute. Residents from 362 cities can solve over 10,000 public services administrative problems via WeChat, according to the report. WeChat’s e-administrative services range from electric pass for Hong Kong and mainland travelers to tracking traffic records.

Tencent Gongyi (腾讯公益), the “public welfare” arm of the internet giant behind the social messaging app, is taking a bigger role in the system. Over 49,000 Tencent public welfare projects got sponsored in one minute. The paintings by young artists that with mental disabilities and spectrum disorders such as autism got RMB 13,000 worth of donation in one minute. WeChat.7.5 million steps were donated by users of  WeChat’s fitness tracker WeRun.

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Tencent rolls out a clone of ByteDance’s joke app https://technode.com/2018/11/19/tencent-bytedance-joke-app/ https://technode.com/2018/11/19/tencent-bytedance-joke-app/#respond Mon, 19 Nov 2018 03:20:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=87167 TencentChinese tech giant Tencent launched Hapi, a clone of ByteDance’s popular joke app Pipixia, in an attempt to win attention from the grassroots users.]]> Tencent
Image credit: Tencent

Chinese tech giant Tencent has launched “哈皮” or Hapi (which means happy in English), a clone of ByteDance’s popular joke app Pipixia, in an attempt to win attention from the country’s grassroots users. The app allows users to upload and share a collection of short videos, photos, jokes, and memes.

Apps featuring funny short videos are hugely popular among Chinese netizens. Hapi targets directly at the massive group, but such joke apps may be subject to stricter scrutiny from the country’s cyberspace regulators. ByteDance’s joke app Pipixia, which was launched in August this year, looks suspiciously like Neihan Duanzi, the company’s previous joke app that was shut down permanently for vulgar contents in April. The Chinese government has been making big moves to clean up some of China’s most popular sites and apps.

Built by the team behind Tencent’s QQ browser, Hapi is the latest addition to Tencent’s efforts to explore the booming short video market. The tech giant now has over ten video apps targeting at different user groups, including Weishi, Shanka, DOV, MOKA.

The aggressive foray into short video market puts itself in direct competition with ByteDance, which already has an upper hand in the sector with its AI-powered media empire that includes Douyin, known internationally as Tik Tok, Xigua Video (Watermelon Video) and Vigo Video (Huoshan Video).

The size of China’s short video market jumped 183% year-on-year to RMB 5.73 billion ($825 million) in 2017. The market is expected to reach RMB 35.58 billion by 2020, according to Chinese research institute iResearch.

In addition to gaining supremacy in an emerging market, entering the short video market is of more importance for Tencent to capture and keep the attention of existing users. Conflicts between the two companies were best shown in the public spat between Tencent’s CEO and chairman, Pony Ma and ByteDance CEO Zhang Yiming earlier this year, a move rarely seen among tech moguls.

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Briefing: Peer-to-peer lending platform Weidai raises $45 million in US IPO https://technode.com/2018/11/16/weidian-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/11/16/weidian-ipo/#respond Fri, 16 Nov 2018 01:57:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86990 The firm operates an online marketplace that connects Chinese borrowers—who use their car as collateral—with peer and institutional lenders]]>

Weidai prices IPO at $10 midpoint-Nasdaq

What happened: Chinese peer-to-peer lending platform Weidai debuted on the New York Stock Exchange on November 15, raising $45 million by offering 4.5 million shares at $10. Founded in 2011, the firm operates an online marketplace that connects Chinese borrowers—who use their car as collateral—with peer and institutional lenders. The company has recorded net profits of RMB 291 million in 2016  and RMB 474 million in 2017 and RMB 307 in the first six months of 2018.

Why it’s important: Weidai’s IPO is one of the latest after China has decided to strictly manage non-qualified peer-to-peer lending finance businesses to stabilize national financial environment since June. As China’s economic growth slows down and domestic sales of vehicles drop compared to those of last year, Weidai might find it hard to sustain the business by improving substantial operation in the near future. An IPO is then a must to inject capital to improve liquidity and defend systematics risks.

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Briefing: Xiaomi apologize for misleading phone sale in UK https://technode.com/2018/11/15/xiaomi-apologize-uk-flash-sale/ https://technode.com/2018/11/15/xiaomi-apologize-uk-flash-sale/#respond Thu, 15 Nov 2018 03:57:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86873 The company will have to work extra hard to overcome their negative first impression in the UK. ]]>

Xiaomi apologizes for misleading “Flash sale” ad when only 10 units were up for grabs – Gizmo China

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi’s expansion to the UK market hit a roadblock as its first promotional activity got really messed up. To celebrate its entry to the new market, the company launched a flash sale where its flagship models were offered for £1. Thousands of potential buyers were disappointed when the website told them it has “sold out” soon after it has opened. Enraged users called Xiaomi for an explanation on social media. Things got worse when one user find Xiaomi had programmed its website to “sold out” in its website code as soon as the flash sale kicked off. The company Tweeted out an apology via its official apology for the misleading terms.

Why it’s important: The European market is an important part of the globalization plan of Xiaomi, which is trying to expand beyond the market in China and Southeast Asia, where it has built a solid presence. Xiaomi has been expanding in Europe for quite some time now, the company had announced a number of retail stores in Europe this year, including stores in Italy and France, amongst other. The company may need extra efforts to remove the negative first impression in UK consumers.

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Briefing: Alibaba expands to home furnishing with $25 million investment in Shengong007 https://technode.com/2018/11/14/alibaba-home-furnishing/ https://technode.com/2018/11/14/alibaba-home-furnishing/#respond Wed, 14 Nov 2018 02:19:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86703 Alibaba previously purchased a 15% stake in Easyhome, a home improvement and furnishing chain b]]>

阿里巴巴宣布2500万美元战略投资家装后市场服务平台“神工007”-Donews

What happened: Alibaba has invested $25 million in the C round financing of home decoration service platform Shengong007. Specializing in providing offline services for installing, maintaining, and refurbishing furniture, the platform claims to have 50,00 registered workers who offer services in 307 cities and 28,000 towns.

Why it’s important: Alibaba is in an quest to build their new retail empire. Through partnerships with offline stores, the e-commerce giant is bringing the model to more industries. Home furnishing is one of the industries where new retail finds its latest application. In an earlier effort to tap the sector, Alibaba acquired a 15% stake in Easyhome, China’s leading home improvement suppliers and furniture chain operator.

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Weibo’s raffle algorithm under scrutiny for bias against men and Android users https://technode.com/2018/11/13/weibo-raffle-bias-against-men/ https://technode.com/2018/11/13/weibo-raffle-bias-against-men/#respond Tue, 13 Nov 2018 10:51:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86685 Chinese social media Weibo comes under fire for the loopholes in lottery drawing algorism.]]>

Social media platform Weibo has come under fire for issues with its raffle algorithm after only 1 male (out of 113 winners) was chosen.

A few weeks ago, Chinese e-sports club Invictus Gaming (iG) claimed Chinese mainland’s first world championship in League of Legends (LOL). To celebrate the event, Wang Sicong, investor and former player, held a raffle for Weibo users who reposted the news.

The outspoken son of multinational Wanda Group’s Wang Jianlin pledged to give RMB 10,000 (around $1,438) apiece to a total of 113 winners to commemorate November 3 (11/3), the date that iG won the championship.

The raffle soon went viral not only among the country’s e-sports fans but among the more general users looking to get a piece of the action. The new has been re-posted over 22.74 million times as of November 13.

But the story took a different turn when the lottery winners were announced on November 11. Out of the 113 winners, only one winner is identified as male. What’s more, a predominating 78% of the winners were iPhone users. Netizens demanded an explanation, especially since the iPhone holds less than 10% of smartphone market in China.

Weibo CEO Wang Gaofei responded through his personal Weibo saying that, “the top principle for our raffle algorithm is to avoid giving the prize to Weibo accounts run by bots. Any user account that features activity of water army [水军, a group of internet ghostwriters paid to post online comments with particular content] would get a lesser chance to win the raffle.”

Water army accounts would typically only re-post news and are less active in generating original content or posting photos. Male users are at a disadvantage since they are not as active as female users in terms of content creation on Weibo, the logic goes.

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New law brings structure, discipline to the willful world of Chinese e-commerce https://technode.com/2018/11/13/china-e-commerce-law-2/ https://technode.com/2018/11/13/china-e-commerce-law-2/#respond Tue, 13 Nov 2018 10:37:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86635 Online sellers, big and small, will be subject to closer scrutiny under new law. ]]>

Ding Lu is a “hand-chopper,” internet slang meaning an online shopping addict. The boutique store operator from northeastern Heilongjiang Province made her first online purchase in 2004—when she was still a vocational school student.

Since then she has graduated, started her own career and become a mom. Ding also runs her own shop on Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao, where she sells fashion items and garments. It’s a channel that also helps boost sales of her bricks-and-mortar store. “As an online buyer and seller at the same time, e-commerce is in every aspect of my life,” she says.

Ding, now 30, is typical for those born in the 1980s: she’s a first-hand witness to China’s e-commerce boom. That sector has grown from a budding concept to a trillion-dollar industry in less than a decade.

Much like its first group of users, who have gone from teenagers to grown-ups during the period, China’s e-commerce industry is also facing growing pains. From January 2019, it will also be subject to a new set of rules with which it must navigate its path to adulthood.

China’s became the world’s largest online retail market in 2013, when total sales reached $314 billion, surpassing the US, which tallied $255 billion in the same year. China’s e-commerce retail sales jumped to RMB 7.18 trillion (around $1.15 trillion) in 2017 from RMB 5.43 trillion in 2016, a 32% year on year surge. This marked the first time it broke the $1 trillion mark, according to China’s Ministry of Commerce.

Alibaba’s Singles’ Day shopping extravaganza hit a record-breaking gross merchandise volume of RMB 213.5 billion this year with the figure surpassing last year’s RMB 168.2 billion in less than 16 hours. The event also is a good indicator of the staggering growth of China’s online sales.

Despite the exponential growth, the industry’s development has long been plagued by shady business practices from selling counterfeits to “brushing” of orders, the unruly business practice aimed at crippling competitors by creating fake orders.

Responding to the sector’s flourishing-yet-troubled development, China’s legislative body passed the Electronic Commerce Law on August 31 this year, stepping up to regulate the country’s e-commerce operators for the first time. The law will take effect on January 1, 2019.

The emergence of newer forms of e-commerce—which bring buyers and sellers together—is a major factor contributing to the government’s current shift in attitude toward tougher regulation of e-commerce, according to Ron Wardle, CEO of Export Now (Shanghai) Inc. and industry expert.

Wardle, who is from the US, said that, in the past, sellers and buyers essentially were limited to a Tmall or JD platform, and it was up to the platforms to help regulate and ensure safe transactions between the buyer and seller. “Nowadays, with so many channels and platforms that one can sell or buy on, the government wants to ensure or provide seller and buyer protection,” he added. “This provides a good commercial environment and is healthier for the economy.”

Small players in the spotlight

Most people would envision e-commerce platforms like Taobao or JD when talking about e-commerce regulation. But in China, e-commerce is far more ubiquitous. A major provision under the new law broadens the definition of e-commerce operators, to not only include e-commerce platforms like Taobao and third-party retailers that sell goods on e-commerce platforms (for example, Taobao vendors) but also players who do business through various online channels, such as WeChat and short video app Douyin.

The inclusion of non-traditional e-commerce channels effectively brings the small-sized yet flourishing e-commerce players under regulation. Over the past three years, the number of users who run what they call “micro-shops” as a part-time job, increased manifold. The market size of micro-stores hit RMB 522.6 billion in 2017, up around 45% year on year, according to research institute Zhiyan.

They sell a range of goods from regional food specialties to cosmetics. Since most of the micro-businesses have neither physical store nor business license, it puts users at a disadvantage when they have problems with the product they purchased.

“I tried to complain to a micro-store operator about dubious diapers and asked for a reimbursement last year,” said Deng Shuang, a 32-year-old mother of one. “After a short talk, they removed me from their WeChat contact list. There’s little one can do in cases like this.”

Now, the regulations will require most online vendors to get approval from the regulatory authorities before selling.

One form of micro-business will be dealt a tough blow is daigou (代购), or personal shoppers, who mainly use WeChat and other social media as their means of marketing. Daigou range from groups with large sophisticated operations to individual Chinese who travel or live overseas. They earn extra money by selling quality overseas products to their compatriots.

Customers choose daigou because their products tend to be less expensive and more likely to be authentic when it comes to overseas branded merchandise. However, complicated industrial and commercial registration procedures prescribed by the law could wipe out easy-come, easy-go students and travelers who want to make extra money from the industry, while import taxes would reduce margins.

“I think about 70% to 80% of the shopping agents will stop running their daigou businesses,” one daigou surnamed Ren told local media. “But I think it’s the trend. Daigou has finished its historical mission as a ‘grey industry’,” he said, referring to parallel importing.

Wardle believes the new regulations will push the daigou agents to use “official” cross-border channels that are subject to regulation and involve registration and taxation. For those who still prefer existing channels on WeChat or Weibo, they too must follow the new regulations in order to participate in the new e-commerce economy, he added.

China is clearly getting serious about regulating the daigou business. In July, a Taobao shop operator who runs daigou business was sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined RMB 5.5 million for smuggling and tax evasion.

Platforms under scrutiny

Compared with small retailers who must suffer a painful transition under the new legislation, the more established e-commerce platforms are in a better position to cope with the risks in operating their businesses.

The impact of the new e-commerce law on large players like Alibaba and JD.com is small because many of the requirements set down by the law have already been put in place by these major platforms, according to a report by local media that cited Paul Haswell, a partner at international law firm Pinsent Masons.

Lawmaker Yin Zhongqing told Xinhua that the law puts more emphasis on the obligations and responsibilities on the e-commerce platform operators. Previously, only individual merchants were responsible when caught selling counterfeits. But the new law requires the e-commerce sites to share a jointly liability for selling fake goods on their site. Platform operators that fail to do so could face penalties of up to $30 million.

Alibaba said it has been closely following the progress of the formation of the e-commerce law in China. “We hope the introducing of the new law will bring positive development to the industry,” the company said in a statement without elaborating. JD.com declined to comment on the regulation.

With the goal of bringing more structure and credibility to online e-commerce transactions, the new law put forward a series of customer-rights protection measures to improve the online shopping experience. For example, the new legislation will protect consumers against untrustworthy reviews. Order “brushing,” and getting positive reviews written by customers in exchange for monetary rewards will be illegal. Deleting review, especially negative ones, could result in a fine of up to RMB 500,000.

It also states that an e-commerce business shall deliver commodities or services to a consumer according to its commitment or in the manner and period stipulated with the consumer. This means platforms would be held accountable for the timely delivery of their products, including during peak periods such as around Singles’ Day.

Wardle says both sellers and buyers should live by the same motto: “Doing the right thing, is always the right thing,” he said.

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WeChat promises to clean up content as Beijing tightens crackdown https://technode.com/2018/11/13/wechat-content-crackdown/ https://technode.com/2018/11/13/wechat-content-crackdown/#respond Tue, 13 Nov 2018 08:38:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86648 Self-media has long been questioned for spreading misinformation as well as pornographic and vulgar content.]]>
Image credit: 123RF

Chinese social media giant WeChat has pledged to strengthen its self-censorship over sensitive, pornographic, vulgar, and clickbaity content as well as rumors and plagiarism on WeChat self-media account amid the ongoing “eliminating porn and fighting illegal publications” campaign.

The ongoing campaign, spearheaded by the National Office Against Pornographic and Illegal Publications since April this year, is part of the country’s efforts to fight against illicit cultural content and to foster a “positive” and “healthy” cultural environment.

Pornographic content on mobile applications, cultural content for children and media and publication wrongdoings are the main targets of the campaign, which lasts to November this year.

As opposed to traditional journalism, self-media, or “自媒体” in Chinese, are usually run by individuals who post through social media accounts on WeChat, Weibo or other smaller ones. Diversified opinions and varied reporting styles have soon made the form popular among Chinese readers. On WeChat alone, there were 3.5 million self-media accounts in 2017.

However, self-media has long been questioned for spreading misinformation as well as pornographic and vulgar contents due to their less-than-rigorous editorial process and the pursuit of page views.

The relevant authority has cracked down on over 9,800 self-media accounts since October 20. The administration has summoned senior executives of China’s top social media platforms including WeChat and Weibo for a face-to-face meeting and ordered the companies to take responsibilities in monitoring illicit contents.

A spokesperson from the administration said to local media that they want the stricter approach would become the new norm for self-media publications regulations.

Chilled by China’s tightening crackdown on online content, China’s tech companies are taking a more proactive approach by volunteering to clean up their content before the country’s regulators turn their sights on them.

In addition to social media platforms, content aggregators and video apps are also facing tightening regulation. This Monday (November 2), two content aggregators, Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Doubao Kuxun, received a temporary suspension of certain services, as well as an unspecified “maximum administrative penalty” for holding vulgar contents.

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Cash-starved Faraday Future to get $900 million from blockchain company https://technode.com/2018/11/13/faraday-future-funding-blockchain/ https://technode.com/2018/11/13/faraday-future-funding-blockchain/#respond Tue, 13 Nov 2018 04:43:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86614 The funding will be invested over three years via indirect STO (security token offering).]]>

Electric cars and blockchain, two of the hottest concepts in the tech world, have been brought together. Faraday Future, the electric car startup aiming to challenge Tesla, may secure a $900 million funding package from EVAIO Blockchain, releasing the company from exacerbating cash pressure.

The funding will be invested over three years via indirect STO (security token offering), according to Patrick De Potter, CEO of EVAIO Blockchain, who first broke the news on LinkedIn. “FF and EVIAO will now start up the discussion for details of the plan,” he noted.

EVAIO said they were aiming to build a blockchain for electric vehicles and successfully completed EVA token private sale earlier this year. Most of the team members of EVAIO are ex-Tesla managers combined with specialists in crypto and blockchain.

De Potter, a former Tesla EMEA leader, says his team has been following Faraday Future and finds FF91 “one of their favorite EVs.” He further expounded: “If this cooperation is successful, Faraday Future may be able to obtain support from the crypto world in the next few years.”

The funding comes at a time when it’s most needed. Faraday Future’s weeks-long dispute with its main investor Evergrande Health is pushing the company to it the edge of bankruptcy. More than 60 Chinese employees of Faraday Future say they have not received salaries in October. Meanwhile, the company is reportedly planning for layoffs and 20% pay cuts. Nick Sampson, Faraday Future (FF) co-founder and senior vice president of product strategy, has resigned amid layoffs.

The company finally obtained an emergency relief from the Hong Kong International Arbitration Center against Evergrand Health in late October. Faraday Future considered itself winning the battle because the relief allowed it to proceed with financing, although under stringent conditions. But Evergrande Health thinks otherwise.

The funding would gain the troubled company more time in mass-producing and commercializing its electric cars. Faraday Future has signed a contract earlier this month with US investment banking firm Stifel, Nicolaus & Co as it explores strategic options, including debt and equity financing.

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Briefing: Tencent-backed fashion platform Mogujie files for $200 million US IPO https://technode.com/2018/11/12/briefing-tencent-backed-fashion-platform-mogujie-files-for-200-million-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/11/12/briefing-tencent-backed-fashion-platform-mogujie-files-for-200-million-us-ipo/#respond Mon, 12 Nov 2018 03:19:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86490 Tencent is the largest shareholder with an 18% stake.]]>

蘑菇街赴美IPO,最高募资2亿美元,腾讯占股比例最大– Sina Tech

What happened: Fashion and lifestyle e-commerce platform Mogu Inc. has filed for a $200 million IPO on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol of MOGU. Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, and China Renaissance are the underwriters on the deal. Tencent is the largest shareholder in the company with an 18% stake, followed by Company CEO Chen Qi (11.9%), Hillhouse Capital (10.2%) and Trustbridge Partners (8.2%).

Why it’s important: Founded by Alibaba alumni in 2011, Mogu Inc. (more commonly known under the Mogujie brand) started as a Pinterest-style social sharing site where users can share their shopping experience along with URL linking to the shops, most Taobao stores, in the company’s early stages. Despite the traffic-boosting effects for Alibaba, the rise of social e-commerce platforms like Mogujie also form direct competition with the e-commerce giant for it lured users away from Taobao and Tmall marketplaces where those users used to browse and search for goods. Such behavior is a major source for advertising revenues for the company. After a few rumors about a possible acquisition of Mogujie, Alibaba blocked external linking from the platform to Taobao stores. Mogujie then started to develop its in-house e-commerce business and acquired its major rival Meilishuo in 2016. Tencent, a former investor of Meilishuo, become a major shareholder of the merged company through additional investment, moving a step further in its attempt to encroach on Alibaba’s home turf in the e-commerce business.

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Chinese consumers spend more than $30 billion on Singles’ Day https://technode.com/2018/11/12/china-spending-singles-day/ https://technode.com/2018/11/12/china-spending-singles-day/#respond Sun, 11 Nov 2018 16:20:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86451 Yuan depreciation did not have dramatic effect on sales, as China's post-90s generations lead the shopping charge. ]]>
Image credit: Alibaba

Alibaba Singles’ Day for 2018 was yet another record breaker. The gross merchandise value totaled RMB 213.5 billion (around $30.8 billion) this year.

GMV surpassed last year’s RMB 168.2 billion ($25.3 billion) in less than 16 hours.

GMV hit RMB 50 billion in 26 minutes and 2 seconds, almost 15 minutes faster compared with 2017.

Alibaba’s executive vice chairman, Joseph Tsai, said the depreciation of the yuan by almost 10 percent had made things “a little expensive” but didn’t have a “dramatic effect.”

“It’s really been offset by the cyclical growth of Chinese middle-class consumers, who are looking for new ways to upgrade their lifestyle,” said Tsai. “That will offset a lot of the short-term cyclical effects.”

In terms of demographic distribution of consumers, those born in the 1990s were the most active, then those from the 80s, followed by the 70s.

“People born after the 1990s become the main consumption power,” Daniel Zhang, director and chief executive officer of Alibaba. “They have very different lifestyles as the generation born on internet and they are on the mobile internet today,” he said.

“How they select products and recognize a brand are totally different from elder generations,” Zhang added.

Data generated by Alibaba covers a wide range of areas and offers broad insight into Chinese people’s consumption patterns—including Taobao, Tmall, online travel platform Fliggy, online-to-offline services such as Koubei and Ele.me, as well as Taobao’s rural channel, which offers a window on spending in the countryside.

In terms of geographic spend by province or city, Guangdong led the way followed by Beijing, Jiangsu, Shandong, Sichuan, Henan, Hubei, and Fujian.

Health products, ranging from vitamins to dietary supplements, were the most popular imported product category for the locations, underscoring an increased awareness of the importance of personal health. Milk powder, cosmetics, and diapers were among other top-selling imported products.

Offline services offered in China, such as entertainment, karaoke, family activities, and manicure services were the most popular with consumers.

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Briefing: Over 10 million users make extra income on Kuaishou https://technode.com/2018/11/09/kuaishou-10-million-rural/ https://technode.com/2018/11/09/kuaishou-10-million-rural/#respond Fri, 09 Nov 2018 03:05:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86262 Kuaishou is increasingly a means for users in poverty-stricken areas to gain extra income.]]>

快手CEO宿华:超过1000万人在快手获得了收入-Tencent Tech

What happened: Over 10 million users have made money on China’s top short video site Kuaishou over the past year, said company CEO Su Hua at the World Internet Conference held in Wuzhen. He added that over 130 million users are recording and sharing interesting moments of their lives on Kuaishou every day.

Why it’s important: Bite-sized videos are flourishing in China. While Douyin finds its users coming mostly from higher-tier cities, its rival Kuaishou established a more solid foothold in lower-tier cities and rural areas. More than just bringing fun, Kuaishou is increasingly a means for users in poverty-stricken areas to gain the extra income for the improvement of their well-being. There are lots of poverty-alleviating stories on Kuaishou with farmers earning more by selling fresh farm products or through ecotourism. The company has launched an entrepreneurship course for the initiative.

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Briefing: Chinese e-commerce giants to import $250 billion worth of international goods https://technode.com/2018/11/08/china-e-commerce-import/ https://technode.com/2018/11/08/china-e-commerce-import/#respond Thu, 08 Nov 2018 03:59:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=86171 Four of China’s leading e-commerce platforms pledged to help import a combined nearly $240 billion worth of foreign goods.]]>

Alibaba, JD.com Throw Weight Behind Beijing Import Drive– Caixin Global

What happened: Heeded Beijing’s call to boost the nation’s imports, China’s leading e-commerce platforms announced commitments to help import a combined $250 billion worth of foreign goods at the first ever China Import Expo in Shanghai. Alibaba leads the group with a $200 billion pledge to import goods from more than 120 countries over the next five years and JD plans to purchase nearly RMB 100 billion. Suning.com (euro 15 billion), NetEase Kaola (RMB 20 billion), VIP.com (RMB 10 billion) and Yangmatou (RMB 100 million) also joined the initiative.

Why it’s important: China is undergoing a dramatic consumption upgrade thanks to the robust economic growth in recent years. The country’s middle-to-high income consumers are fueling the demand for imported, quality goods. China’s cross-border e-commerce market has grown remarkably, with the proportion of imports to total e-commerce sales growing from 1.6% in 2014 to 10.2% in 2017, according to a joint report by Deloitte China, the China Chamber of International Commerce, and AliResearch. The surge has given rise to the cross-border e-commerce businesses in a series of traditional e-commerce tycoons like Alibaba’s Tmall Global, JD Worldwide, as well as vertical platforms focused on the sector, such as Xiaohongshu and Yangmatou.

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Briefing: Luckin Coffee seeks funds at up to $2 billion valuation https://technode.com/2018/11/07/luckin-coffee-fresh-funding-round/ https://technode.com/2018/11/07/luckin-coffee-fresh-funding-round/#respond Wed, 07 Nov 2018 04:02:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85985 Hot Chinese coffee company's new fundraising comes just months after last round. ]]>

Chinese upstart Luckin Coffee seeks funds to double valuation to $2 billion – Reuters

What happened: Chinese coffee chain Luckin Coffee is seeking new funding at a valuation of $1.5 billion to $2 billion, Reuters reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter. The size of the new round is between $100 million to $300 million, according to the sources. The report added that the upstart company is in early-stage discussions with investment banks regarding an overseas IPO.

Why it’s important: Launched in January this year, Luckin Coffee has already opened more than 1,400 cafes in 21 cities. Its quick growth is largely attributed to its highly subsidized marketing and tech-centric purchasing experience. Although involved in the coffee industry, the Starbucks rival is commonly recognized is an internet company because its breakneck growth model and marketing strategies that largely resemble Chinese internet startups. Capital plays a crucial role in fueling its land-grabbing battle against Starbucks and other players. Luckin has completed its $200 million Series A round at a $1 billion valuation in July.

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Lenovo catching up new retail trend with launch of a cashier-less store https://technode.com/2018/11/06/lenovo-unmanned-strore/ https://technode.com/2018/11/06/lenovo-unmanned-strore/#respond Tue, 06 Nov 2018 09:51:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85936 Lenovo is the latest entrant to the cashier-less convenience store frenzy, following Alibaba, JD, and Suning.com.]]>

Lenovo has launched its first-ever AI-powered cashier-less store, the Lecoo Unmanned Store, in Beijing after four months of pilot operation, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

After a quick registration through WeChat, users can enter the store through facial recognition. No smartphone operations will be needed at the cashier because the charges will be deducted from their accounts automatically. The 80-square meter unmanned convenience store sells daily groceries including juice boxes and other small snacks. The good damage rate is controlled at around 1% during the pilot period, lower than regular retail stores and supermarkets, Lenovo explained.

Best known for making computers, phones, and smart home devices, Lenovo is trying to catch up with China’s burgeoning new retail trend. The company rolled out its first offline smart gadget store at the beginning of this year and plans to launch 5,000 smart automated sales machines in the future five years.

The revenue of Lenovo’s new retail and internet-of-things unit Lecoo is expected to hit RMB 1 billion ($144 million) in the future two years and $1 billion by 2020, according to Zhou Ming, CEO of Lecoo.

Largely inspired by Amazon Go, the staffless store boom started in China in mid-2017 when a host of startups like BingoBox, Xingbianli, and Bianlifeng emerged. Although most of the staffless stores still need users to scan each item at the checkout point and pay with Alipay or WeChat Pay by scanning QR codes, it was fascinating enough to attract lots media coverage as well as funding.

Although the heat surrounding unmanned stores has cooled off as competition tightened, tech giants still find it a promising sector to focus on, especially as the technology matures with the support of AI. Lenovo is the latest entrant to the cashier-less convenience store frenzy, following AlibabaJD, Suning.com, and Amazon.

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Alibaba’s DingTalk to build voice-driven version for cars https://technode.com/2018/11/06/alibaba-dingtalk-cars/ https://technode.com/2018/11/06/alibaba-dingtalk-cars/#respond Tue, 06 Nov 2018 08:32:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85919 Chinese internet giants have been expanding aggressively to car-related technologies.]]>

Alibaba is developing a voice-driven version of its enterprise communication and collaboration app DingTalk for vehicle use, local media is reporting, citing people familiar with the matter.

The service is expected to be integrated into Banma System, the AliOS-enabled operating system for connected cars which Alibaba developed with its strategic partners Banma Network Technology—a joint venture between Alibaba Group and SAIC Motor Crop. The system is installed in over 600,000 cars so far, and thus may facilitate the adoption of the new DingTalk version when it’s being released.

“Making sure that drivers can keep their eyes on the road and hands on the wheel are the bottom line for in-vehicle interaction, but the challenge is huge,” the source added.

It’s interesting to note that Pony Ma announced earlier this month that Tencent is also planning to bring its social networking app WeChat to cars by leveraging voice-control technologies.

As the world’s fastest-growing automotive market, China is experiencing an increase in connected in-vehicle infotainment roll-outs. Developing plans for in-vehicle versions for both WeChat and DingTalk, the default instant massaging tools for personal and professional communications in China, is in line with the trend.

Chinese internet giants have been expanding aggressively to car-related technologies from electric cars to autonomous driving, and connected cars are one of the sectors that’s become highly competitive. In addition to Alibaba, Baidu has its DuerOS and Tecent just launched TAI Smart Car System this week.

Apart from in-house development, Alibaba also partnered with the world’s top automaker like BMW, Honda and Ford, helping them leverage new technologies of artificial intelligence, big data, cloud computing, the Internet of Things.

Most of the smart-car service providers only do a re-developing of the mobile apps in an attempt to duplicate the smartphone ecosystem for the automotive industry. But the car-targeted services need a custom design due to the huge interaction differences for smartphones and cars.

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Prices of China’s third-party payment licenses plunge by half https://technode.com/2018/11/06/payment-licenses/ https://technode.com/2018/11/06/payment-licenses/#respond Tue, 06 Nov 2018 04:24:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85873 Chinese internet company’s craze to enter the mobile payment market is cooling.]]>

The price bubble surround China’s third-party payment license has burst as the trading price of the once coveted resource slumped by half over the past few months, Chinese local media is reporting.

“The market demand for third-party payment licenses is cooling down while its prices plunged from RMB 800 million (around $115 million) – RMB 1 billion to RMB 300 million to RMB 400 million. Despite the price drop, buyers are scarce,” the report said, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

For companies that run online payment service in China, it’s mandatory to obtain a license in order to conduct transactions legally. China’s central bank has issued a total of 271 online payment licenses from 2011 to 2015 and suspended issuing new licenses since 2016. Currently, there are 238 such licenses in the market. 33 licenses have been revoked by the bank due to malpractice by the agencies.

China’s booming online payment industry has drawn an increasing number of companies to the online payment business, which is a prerequisite for all services to create a comprehensive business circle. Rising demand and scarcity of resources has pushed the price of third-party payment licenses as high as RMB 3 billion at the beginning of this year, local media points out.

Although online payment is still on the rise with market size hitting RMB 40.36 trillion in the first quarter of this year, internet company’s craze to enter the market is cooling down due to a highly consolidated market.

Two of China’s largest online payment service Alipay and Tencent’s financial unit, the operator of WeChat Pay, take a combined 92.71% in the country’s mobile payment market with 53.76% and 38.95% share respectively. It leaves little space for other competitors who have to fight for a meager 7% share with over 200 companies who hold the same license.

In addition, the price drop is also the result of tightening regulation on third-party payment service providers. China’s central bank has written over 60 fines to payment services operators for breaching financial regulations. The cost for such violations is skyrocketing. In August this year, four companies including Alipay were fined a combined RMB 100 million by the Shanghai branch of the Chinese central bank.

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Briefing: Invictus Gaming wins first League of Legends Worlds title for China https://technode.com/2018/11/05/ig-wins-first-league-of-legends-china/ https://technode.com/2018/11/05/ig-wins-first-league-of-legends-china/#respond Mon, 05 Nov 2018 04:01:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85767 Chinese public attitude towards gaming no longer sees it as a waste of time.]]>

iG wins first League of Legends Worlds title for China-China Daily

What happened: Chinese eSports club Invictus Gaming (iG) claimed Chinese mainland’s first world championship in League of Legends (LOL) after beating European team Fnatic 3-0 in Incheon, South Korea on November 3.

Why it’s important: Chinese public attitude toward video games, which was considered as a meaningless pastime that could do harm to academic achievements of juveniles, is changing in recent years with the popularity of competitive video gaming or esports. China won a gold medal in the first-ever Asian Games early this year. The news also draws wide attention because the team is backed by Wang Sicong, the outspoken son of multinational Wanda Group’s Wang Jianlin. Wang Sicong also builds his reputation as an e-sports player and investor of several Chinese tech startups such as PandaTV.

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Briefing: Baidu partners with Shanghai’s Baoshan District to build a smart city https://technode.com/2018/11/02/baidu-smart-city-baoshan/ https://technode.com/2018/11/02/baidu-smart-city-baoshan/#respond Fri, 02 Nov 2018 01:44:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85627 Baidu is moving fast to apply its AI and autonomous driving researches for pilot testing and commercial uses. ]]>

百度与上海宝山共建超前智能城市,打造人工智能产业集聚高地– The Paper

What happened: Chinese internet giant Baidu and Shanghai’s Baoshan District will team up to construct a smart city that integrates artificial intelligence, big data, blockchain, and cloud computing technologies. The project aims to smarten up homes, transportation, education, security, medical care, and city management in the demonstration zone which covers an area of 300 square kilometers.

Why it’s important: After engaging in the R&D of AI and autonomous driving technologies for several years, Baidu is moving fast to apply its research results for pilot testing or commercial uses. This is the third partnership Baidu has announced within this week. The company launched a partnership with Ford to test self-driving cars on roads in China on November 1, only two days after launching a self-driving taxi and bus service in Changsha City. In addition, the company has formed cooperation deals with more than 10 provinces and cities such as Beijing, Changchun, Hefei, Ningbo, Xiong’an, Qingdao and Chongqing.

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Briefing: Pinduoduo launches medicine channel, tapping pharmaceutical e-commerce market https://technode.com/2018/11/01/pinduoduo-pharmaceutical-e-commerce/ https://technode.com/2018/11/01/pinduoduo-pharmaceutical-e-commerce/#respond Thu, 01 Nov 2018 02:30:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85480 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaPinduoduo will now have birth control, TCM, and contact lenses available for sale. ]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

拼多多试水医药电商 上线“医药健康馆”-SinaTech

What happened: Chinese social e-commerce giant Pinduoduo has launched a health channel to sell medication on the platform. The channel now sells products under three categories: birth control, Chinese traditional medicine, and contact lenses. Local media also pointed out the company is actively recruiting for the business.

Why it’s important: Despite the huge market demand, Pinduoduo’s expansion into the online pharmaceutical sector is subject to several uncertainties. Different from the “one size fits all” approach that finds popularity among daily groceries and garments, medication needs more personalized service. So it might not be a perfect fit for Pinduoduo’s group-purchasing model. Chinese netizens expressed concern over purchasing medicine from Pinduoduo, which has got a controversial reputation for selling fake goods. What’s more, pharmaceutical e-commerce is already a crowded market where incumbents like Alibaba and JD have laid out in the sector for several years.

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Briefing: Finance ministry accuses Xiaomi, Suning of tax evasion https://technode.com/2018/10/31/xiaomi-suning-tax-china/ https://technode.com/2018/10/31/xiaomi-suning-tax-china/#respond Wed, 31 Oct 2018 04:16:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85348 MOF highlights accounting problems among internet companies, pointing to a possible a tightening taxation policy.]]>

China Fingers Xiaomi, Suning.Com for Tax Dodges – Yicai Global

What happened: China’s Ministry of Finance (MOF) has flagged a group of listed companies for accounting errors, including smartphone maker Xiaomi, retailing giant Suning.com and online video portal Le.com. The regulator’s audit, which covered calendar year 2017, also highlighted key features of the internet sector, including its asset-light business model, the prevalence of interwoven equity and bond investments, separation of management structures from legal entities, and the lack of geographical limits of operations. As a result, several internet firms are funneling profits overseas and thereby evading taxes, the ministry claimed in a statement. In response, Xiaomi said it had already rectified the errors outlined in the report, and denied the allegation that it was transferring profits. Suning blamed poor company practices for the accounting errors.

Why it’s important: China’s internet is on the rise, becoming a major driver for the country’s economy. In the first eight months of this year, internet and related businesses have generated RMB 595.5 billion in revenue, up 20.7% year on year. Opinions are mixed as to how the sector should be treated in terms of tax policy, according to reports in local media citing expert Li Xuhong. Some think looser taxation policies should be adopted for the internet industry, while it is still in the take-off phase, Li said. Others believe the same standards should be applied across sectors to guarantee taxation equality, Li added. MOF’s move to point out some common problems in internet companies may indicate a tightening of taxation policy aimed at the industry.

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Briefing: Youon continues overseas expansion through parntership with UK Cycle.land https://technode.com/2018/10/30/youon-bike-rental-overseas-expansion/ https://technode.com/2018/10/30/youon-bike-rental-overseas-expansion/#respond Tue, 30 Oct 2018 04:57:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85237 Youon is one of the few Chinese bike rental companies still expanding overseas. ]]>

China’s Youon, UK’s Cycle.land to Start Bike-Sharing in Tandem in London-Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese bike rental company Youon Technology signed a cooperative framework agreement with UK-based counterpart Cycle.land. Under the deal, the two parties will set up a UK-based joint venture to target at the European market. The first batch of 1,000 Youon dockless bikes will be deployed in London in March next year. On the other hand, Cycle.land will take charge of distribution and maintenance of Youon’s bikes.

Why it’s important: As China’s bike rental boom cools off, Youon is one of the few companies that are still expanding overseas. Cycle.land is Youon’s fourth overseas partner after those in Russia, India and Malaysia. Cash-strapped ofo has pulled back from a series of overseas cities in South Korea, German, Australia, and India. Mobike withdrew from of Washington DC and Dallas in the US earlier this year.

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Qihoo-backed 360 Finance files for a $200 million US IPO https://technode.com/2018/10/29/360-finance-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/10/29/360-finance-ipo/#respond Mon, 29 Oct 2018 09:28:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85208 The filing comes as global markets are cooling on Chinese stocks. ]]>

360 Finance, a fintech startup backed by the country’s security products provider Qihoo Technology, has filed with US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for an up to $200 million IPO this year.

Founded in July 2016 and spun off from the parent company in September 2018, 360 Finance is a digital consumer finance platform, which provides consumer finance products to prime and underserved borrowers.

A total of 22.5 million individual loans have originated through the platform as of the end of September 2018, representing RMB94.4 billion ($13.57 billion) in funds.

The compound quarter growth rate for accumulative users with an approved credit line and loan origination hit 90.5% and 80.4% respectively over the same period of time. The company had recorded its outstanding loan balance at RMB34.7 billion ($4.99 billion), according to its prospectus.

According to its current plan, 40% of the proceeds will be used in brand promotions to facilitate our long-term brand building and marketing efforts, 30% will be used in research and development as well as cultivating talents of our team, and the remaining 30% will be used in other general corporate purposes such as administrative expenses and potential acquisitions and strategic investments.

It’s interesting to note that Zhou Hongyi, CEO of 360 Group and chairman of 360 Finance, holds a 14.1% stake in indirectly through Aerovane Company Limited, a 360 subsidiary which is owned by his children.

The IPO filing comes two years after Qihoo 360 launched a $9.3 billion privatization plan in 2015 to delist from the US after trading on the market for over 5 years. The company was among a group of Chinese tech giants that have exited the U.S. stock exchanges in the hope for better valuations back home. The company returns to China’s A-share via a backdoor listing in November 2017.

360 Finance’s IPO comes at a time when China’s tech IPO craze is slowing down upon a cooling market.

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BGI Genomics faces criticism for working with overseas institution https://technode.com/2018/10/29/bgi-denies-risk-concerning-dna-sequencing-data-leakage/ https://technode.com/2018/10/29/bgi-denies-risk-concerning-dna-sequencing-data-leakage/#respond Mon, 29 Oct 2018 08:44:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85188 Chinese gene tech giant denies that any domestic genomic data was transmitted overseas.]]>

China’s Ministry of Science and Technology has recently made public that it issued a fine to Chinese gene giant BGI in 2015 for cooperating with UK University of Oxford on a genomics research project targeting Chinese people. The project allegedly involved delivering gene data of Chinese residents abroad over the internet.

BGI responded to inquiries in a filing on October 28 by saying that the Chinese DNA sequencing project, which involved genomic data of 140,000 female Chinese citizens, was conducted by a Chinese research and development team within the country, and therefore did not risk any data going overseas.

The company added that the gene data was collected under the consent of residents who have agreed to contribute the sample and data for scientific research. Only group analysis results were published. The resident identity and data are kept confidential, according to the announcement.

The authority ordered BGI to stop the research, destroy the genetic materials and research data that are not transported overseas and suspend all Chinese human genetic research that involves a foreign partner. A series of rectifications were conducted in line with the order since 2015.

The company claims that administrative punishment did not have any substantial impact on the company’s operations, because the business affected only accounts for a small part of their revenue and it has been resumed after rectification.

As China’s largest genomics company, BGI Genomics made a splashy debut when shares surged 8 fold on its trading on July 14 last year. The company’s rise is contributed to China’s growing genetics testing market, which is expected to more than triple to RMB 42 billion ($6.04 billion) by 2021, according to China Investment Consulting Corp.

While the market booms, the concerns about data safety also surfaced. In addition to BGI, five other companies including WuXi AppTech, AstraZeneca and AmoyDx have received fines over 2016 to 2018 for violating China’s Interim Measures for the Administration of Human Genetic Resources.

BGI’s market cap slumped to a historical low of around RMB 50 apiece after the 2015 fine was made public.

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Evergrande Health considers suing Faraday Future for “misleading” the public https://technode.com/2018/10/29/evergrande-faraday-future/ https://technode.com/2018/10/29/evergrande-faraday-future/#respond Mon, 29 Oct 2018 04:25:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=85134 Instead of solving the dispute, last week's emergency arbitration between has fanned the flames between Faraday Future and Evergrande Health.]]>

China’s Evergrande Health is considering a suit against electric vehicle start-up Faraday Future for “misleading” the public after the latter claimed a “decisive victory” against its investor through arbitration, local media is reporting.

Instead of dissolving the weeks-long dispute between Faraday Future and Evergrande Health as expected, the emergency arbitration result released by Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre last week only adds another conflict point between the two parties as both claim to have “won” the case.

The arbitrator rejected Faraday Future’s request to deprive Evergrande Health its right to withhold its consent to FF’s future financing, but allowed the EV startup to proceed with financing under stringent conditions: the valuation of any equity financing shall not be lower than post-money valuation; Season Smart (Evergrande Health affiliate which owns 45% of the joint venture that controls FF) continues to enjoy pre-emptive rights and, pending the outcome of the final arbitration, Faraday Future can obtain financing at a capped amount of $500 million, according to a statement made by Evergrande Health on Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Faraday Future later contradicted this in a Weibo post, accusing Evergrande of misleading the public. Withholding Evergrande’s right to consent of Faraday Future’s financing has never been the company’s goal for the arbitration. But its application to seek $500 million in financing is supported by the arbitrator, the firm claimed.

In response to Faraday Future’s announcement, Evergrande subsequently counterattacked that Faraday Future will be legally responsible for their announcements as a listed company. “In view of the fact that Faraday Future founder Jia Yueting has confused and misled the public in the statement, Evergrande is currently working with a team of lawyers and considering suing Faraday Future and Jia Yueting,” according to the company.

The electric vehicle startup announced earlier this week that it plans to cut salaries by 20% for all staff as well as a round of layoffs to reduce its operational cost.

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Briefing: OnePlus tops India premium smartphone market in Q3 2018 https://technode.com/2018/10/26/oneplus-india-premium-smartphone/ https://technode.com/2018/10/26/oneplus-india-premium-smartphone/#respond Fri, 26 Oct 2018 03:03:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84981 Xiaomi leads India’s overall smartphone shipment with a 27% market share.]]>

OnePlus Tops India Premium Smartphone Market in Q3 2018, OnePlus 6 Remains Highest Seller: Counterpoint-Gadgets360

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus has topped the Indian premium smartphone market for a second successive quarter with a 30% share in shipment, the latest data from research institute Counterpoint shows. This success owed mostly due to the sales of the company’s OnePlus 6 smartphone, which is sold at INR34,999 (around RMB 3,000). OnePlus was followed narrowly by Apple and Samsung, which recorded 28% and 25% share respectively.

Why it’s important: India is becoming one of the most important overseas markets for Chinese smartphone makers, which are trying to expand beyond a slowing domestic market. The entry of new players like Vivo, Oppo, Huawei, Asus, and LG put Indian’s premium market to a peak in Q3 2018. During the same reporting period, Xiaomi leads India’s overall smartphone shipment with a 27% market share.

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Briefing: Chinese tech giants reportedly suspend social hiring ahead of “internet winter” https://technode.com/2018/10/25/chinese-tech-giants-recruitment/ https://technode.com/2018/10/25/chinese-tech-giants-recruitment/#respond Thu, 25 Oct 2018 03:55:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84851 China fast internetChinese internet tycoons including Alibaba, Baidu, Huawei and JD are reportedly either suspending or cutting off their social recruitment plans due to the unstable market]]> China fast internet

华为 , 阿里 , 京东 3 巨头被曝 ” 全面停止社招 “,真相到底如何 – Sohu Tech

What happened: Chinese internet tycoons including Alibaba, Baidu, Huawei, and JD are reportedly either suspending or downsizing their society recruitment plans due to the unstable market. Although the companies have denied the rumors, claiming they are still open for talents, insiders reveal that they are cutting off recruitments for junior positions while that for senior positions remain relatively unchanged.

Why it’s important: China’s booming internet market, marked by continuous IPOs over the first part of this year, was hit by a sudden downfall where even some of the largest players are seeking to contain financial risks. Tencent’s stock price drop to the lowest point in 15 months earlier this month, while shares of Alibaba, Xiaomi, Meituan experienced steep plunge over the past few weeks. Cutting off recruitment plans might be one of the measures to cope with a sluggish market. Social hiring refers to the recruitment of staff who have work experiences, as opposed to recruiting recent graduates. Recent graduates don’t demand high salaries due to lack of experience. Data from e-recruitment site Liepin shows that hiring in internet-related industries has slowed since October.

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Live blog: Highlights from GeekPwn Shanghai 2018 https://technode.com/2018/10/24/live-blog-highlights-from-geekpwn-shanghai-2018/ https://technode.com/2018/10/24/live-blog-highlights-from-geekpwn-shanghai-2018/#respond Wed, 24 Oct 2018 07:06:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84728 Live from Pudong, where GeekPwn, world’s leading platforms for cybersecurity researchers, just kicked off Shanghai leg of its annual event to bring together security researchers and geeks around the world. Our reporter will be live blogging onsite. Check back for regular updates!]]>

Live from Pudong, where GeekPwn, world’s leading platforms for cybersecurity researchers, just kicked off Shanghai leg of its annual event to bring together security researchers and geeks around the world. Our reporter will be live blogging onsite. Check back for regular updates!

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Briefing: Chinese bike rental firms reduce bike placements in major cities https://technode.com/2018/10/24/bike-rental-reduce-placement/ https://technode.com/2018/10/24/bike-rental-reduce-placement/#respond Wed, 24 Oct 2018 02:58:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84679 mobike ofo bike-rental chinaThe current reduction in bike placement is also a result of a cooling market.]]> mobike ofo bike-rental china

共享单车“退烧”!全国多地共享单车投放量下降—Tencent Tech

What happened: Chinese bike rental firms are reducing bike placements in major cities including Beijing, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Xiamen, and Kunming, local media is reporting. The cities are following Beijing’s example. The capital city now has 1.91 million bikes operated by nine companies, down nearly 20% compared to the peak number.

Why it’s important: Although proposed as a greener option for transportation, the sizzling development of the bike rental industry over the past two years has been shadowed by environmental concerns. Since 2017, Chinese major cities have issued bans that prevent companies from cramming new bikes onto the already crowded sidewalks. In addition to external government pressure, the current reduction in bike placement is also a result of a cooling market in which it is increasingly difficult for bike rental firms to get funding to support team operation and expansion.

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Upcoming Single’s Day sends Chinese delivery price up https://technode.com/2018/10/23/singles-day-deliver-price/ https://technode.com/2018/10/23/singles-day-deliver-price/#respond Tue, 23 Oct 2018 10:13:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84647 China's courier services only operate backbone delivery networks. Customer-facing parcel pickup and delivery are run by their franchise partners.]]>

Single’s Day is still weeks away, but the heat surrounding the shopping frenzy is starting to rise. China’s four major courier services YTO Express, ZTO Express, STO Express, and Yunda Express announced that they are raising prices, local media is reporting.

ZTO Express posted an announcement which suggests that the company is adjusting the delivery fees due to the arrival of the peak season. Three other leading courier services in the country, YTO Express, STO Express, Yunda Express all raised their fee for packages delivered to Shanghai from any other cities in the country by RMB 0.5.

It’s worth noting that China’s courier services only operate backbone delivery networks, while customer-facing parcel pickup and delivery are run by their franchise partners. Therefore, courier companies raising delivery fees is more of a price surge for franchise partners and does not necessarily suggest a higher price for individual users.

A Beijing employee of STO Express confirmed to local media that the courier has raised the delivery fee for franchise partners. He added that they didn’t receive the announcement for price adjustment targeting individual users, although he didn’t exclude such a possibility.

On the other hand, use of self-service parcel delivery machine, a popular alternative to the human delivery, are already feeling the pressure. A Fujian resident told local media that he has to pay for using parcel cabinets while they are free previously.

Chinese e-commerce-related industry has come up with a full coping mechanism for the peak online shopping hours brought by China’s Double Eleven Single’s Day shopping spree, which is entering its tenth anniversary this year. Price surge in delivery services serves as a prelude to China’s equivalent to Black Friday. China’s major courier services posted similar price adjustment announcements over the same period of last year.

Single’s Day might be the most direct trigger for price adjustment, it’s not the only reason. Both stagnating market growth and lower profit contributed to the shift. China has delivered 40.1 billion parcels in 2017. Although the number is still impressive, the YoY growth rate slowed to 28%, down from around something around 50% YoY growth from 2012 to 2016.

What’s more, the profit rate is dropping too. The average profit rate for the delivery industry dropped from around 30% in 2007 to 5-10% now, according to statistics from CICC.

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Beijing’s traffic authority now accepts Alipay and WeChat Pay to pay for traffic fines https://technode.com/2018/10/23/mobile-payment-transport-fine/ https://technode.com/2018/10/23/mobile-payment-transport-fine/#respond Tue, 23 Oct 2018 08:03:35 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84618 Traffic offenders finally get the convenience of mobile payments.]]>

Beijing Traffic Management Bureau announced on October 22 that it will add Alipay and WeChat Pay, two of China’s most popular mobile payment tools, to its online traffic security management platform, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

Since October 22, Beijing citizens in seven districts including Mentougou, Daxing, Shunyi, Huairou and Miyun will be able to pay their public transportation fines by scanning QR codes on the new fine bill through either Alipay or WeChat Pay.

Paying for traffic fine in China usually involves long queues at traffic departments or bank outlets or complicated payment through online banks. Over 68.2% of the traffic fines are being paid through offline channels, local media reported.

Image credit: Beijing Traffic Management Bureau

Automobile drivers can pay by scanning QR code on the fine bill within four hours after the bill is issued. The QR code will be disenabled once the payment is achieved. Those who failed to meet the time limit have to go back to the traditional payment methods. Instead of scrambling with cash, pedestrians or non-motor vehicles also can pay by scanning QR code generated on a mobile device.

While QR code-based mobile payment is ubiquitous in China’s offline retailing industry, it’s gradually finding ways to civil services as the government tries to keep up citizen’s changing spending behavior. Similar payment channels are already been supported in hospitals and for train tickets purchase.

Mobile payment for civil services is part of China’s initiatives to help local government digitalize their services and both Alipay and WeChat have been working on the trend. Alipay just begins issuing electronic marriages license and trialing digital IDs in Hangzhou and Quzhou in Zhejiang Province and Fuzhou in Fujian Province. Meanwhile, Tencent has been working with Beijing authority to create health cards for residents as well as a WeChat-based e-pass that would facilitate travels between Hong Kong and the mainland.

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Apple bets over 65% of iPhone XR inventory on Chinese market https://technode.com/2018/10/23/apple-iphone-xr-china/ https://technode.com/2018/10/23/apple-iphone-xr-china/#respond Tue, 23 Oct 2018 04:14:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84562 The iPhone XR is almost half the cost of the XS Max.]]>

Weeks after opening pre-orders for its more expensive iPhone models, Apple finally began to take preorders for its latest midrange phone iPhone XR on October 20. To meet potential strong demand from Chinese users, the US smartphone giant has bet over 2 million (or 65%) of its first batch of 3 million iPhone XR handsets inventory on the Chinese market, local media reported citing people familiar with the matter.

Compared with iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max whose price is up to RMB 12,799, lots of analysts predict the iPhone XR will become the bestseller for the future two quarters with its more affordable price tag where users can start at RMB 6499. iPhone XR’s lower price range will bring down iPhone’s average pricing, but it may achieve high shipments by attracting users who want to seek replacements for their iPhone 6, iPhone 6s and iPhone 7, Robert Cihraf, an analyst from Guggenheim told local media. He expects iPhone XR shipment to account for 40% of iPhone shipments by Q4 this year, and 50% by Q1 next year.

Extra attention to the Chinese market in inventory arrangement, especially for the inexpensive iPhone XR, speaks to Apple’s plan to appeal to customers in China. The country is Apple’s most important emerging market but where the company has seen continuous declines.

Apple is smart in setting a mid-priced for iPhone XR, according to Bloomberg writer Tim Culpan. He explained that the RMB 7,000-ish price range would be attractive for Chinese users because it’s obviously a cheaper alternative. But more importantly, the price tag would also grant a decent spec phone so it would “give face” to the users, which is an important part for the argument to purchase an iPhone in China. The company is also catering to the need of Chinese users feature-wise with its long-overdue move into dual SIMs.

However, initial sales of iPhone XR, which recorded approximately 2 million units in the first three days, are weaker than expected. The US smartphone maker is facing increasing competition amid rising local competitors and a stagnating Chinese market.

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Briefing: Hello TransTech going all in on ride-hailing through partnership with Didi rival https://technode.com/2018/10/22/hello-transtech-dida-chuxing/ https://technode.com/2018/10/22/hello-transtech-dida-chuxing/#respond Mon, 22 Oct 2018 03:55:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84389 Hello BikeChina’s transportation industry is experiencing a swift change of powers for both two-wheel and four-wheel mobility services ]]> Hello Bike

哈啰出行打车业务81城同步上线 接入嘀嗒打造多元出行平台-Sina Tech

What happened: Hello TransTech, formerly known as Hello Bike, has entered partnership with Dida Chuxing, an up-and-coming competitor of Didi Chuxing, to speed up its foray into the ride-hailing industry. The tie-up would allow Hello TransTech users to hail taxis in 81 cities countrywide, including Shanghai, Nanjing and Chengdu, the three cities where the company start piloting taxi-hailing service on October 11.

Why it’s important: China’s transportation industry is experiencing a swift change of power in both two-wheeled and four-wheeled mobility services. As Mobike being acquired by Meituan and ofo stuck in cash strains, Alibaba-backed Hello TransTech rise quickly to gain market shares through deposit-free services and integration with Alibaba’s online food delivery service Ele.me. The bike rental startup now tries to pivot into four-wheeled mobility through a partnership with Dida Chuxing. As the second-largest ride-hailing company in China, Dida’s daily active users ballooned to 10.2 million while Didi is suffering from scandals about rider safety and industry monopoly.

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Cute or cult? Inside Alibaba’s curious nickname culture https://technode.com/2018/10/19/alibabas-nickname-culture/ https://technode.com/2018/10/19/alibabas-nickname-culture/#respond Fri, 19 Oct 2018 05:21:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84187 Alibaba's Jack Ma in November 2015.Mythical monikers among employees add a dash of fun to Alibaba culture, but some see a darker side. ]]> Alibaba's Jack Ma in November 2015.

Harry Potter from accounting calls with a question about Gollum’s expense report. Spiderman works late through the night putting the final touches to a slide deck he’ll present to Gandalf the next day. Imagine if employees at Western tech firms went by names of fictional characters from the world of fantasy. Awkward!

But at Chinese internet giant Alibaba, this is common practice.  Workers frequently trade their real names in favor of ones from the realm of fiction and use them in their daily interactions with executives, colleagues, and even suppliers. But instead of superheroes or medieval wizards, they look to the kung fu canon and other aspects of traditional Chinese culture for inspiration.

Jack Ma and the image of the fictional character Feng Qingyang (风清扬 ) from a TV drama adapted from Jin Yong’s novel (Image credit: Alibaba)

The practice—which has now become a tradition—has its origins in founder Jack Ma’s whimsical style and his love of martial arts. The use of such monikers has become so ingrained, that some employees struggle to remember their colleagues’ real names.

While many see the use of nicknames as a light-hearted way to build a common corporate culture, some see them as encouraging a cult-like business style and question their appropriateness given the company’s quest to go global and Ma’s plans to step down. (Alibaba did not respond immediately to requests for comment for this article.)

Alibaba employees are asked to come up with nicknames for themselves, usually drawn from characters in the martial art novels by Jin Yong, the pen name of Louis Cha Leung-Yung, a best-selling wuxia novelist. The term wuxia (literally “martial heroes”) refers to Chinese martial arts-related fiction. In the imagined world of jianghu—the community for martial art masters – the captivating heroes adhere to a strict code of ethics and use signature lethal blows in the pursuit of justice during medieval China.

Alibaba employees, on the other hand, leverage their technological and professional skills for the same goal in modern China and the world, and adhere to the company’s values of integrity, commitment, and passion, as set forth on their corporate website.

“Picking a nickname gives one the opportunity to redefine one’s self—to be the person you want to be,” said Richard Xu, an engineer with Cainiao, an Alibaba affiliate. Twenty-nine-year-old Xu, who lives in Alibaba’s hometown of Hangzhou, goes by the name “Jiangdu (江渡),” which translates as “River Crossing.”

“According to Chinese fengshui, my life lacks the element water,” said Xu, referring to an approach to creating an optimal lifestyle by taking various environmental considerations and traditional beliefs into account. “Taking a water-related nickname can bring balance,” Xu added.

“There’s a Chinese legend about the Zen Buddhist master Dharma’s miraculous crossing of the Yangtze River over a reed after an unsuccessful audience with a Chinese emperor,” Xu explained. “The name finds its roots in Chinese traditional philosophy and wisdom, and gives a sense of elegance because both of the characters appear often in Chinese poems.”

Originally, characters from the works of Jin Yong were among the most popular, which explains why the team of founding executives got some of the more intriguing ones. Ma frequently goes by the name Feng Qingyang (风清扬), which means “wind blows light and brisk.” Ma’s love of wuxia was on full display when he teamed up for a duet with Chinese pop music icon Faye Wong to record the title track of his 2017 taichi mini-movie “Gong Shou Dao,” in which Ma starred alongside almost a dozen martial arts icons.

Shao Xiaofe, Alibaba’s chief risk officer, goes by the nickname of “Guo Jing.” Embodying the virtues of honesty, loyalty, and patriotism, Guo Jing, the protagonist of Jin Yong’s “Legends of the Condor Heroes,” grows to be a perfect hero who fights for justice and defends his nation. In real life, Shao served his country when he worked as a police officer for more than two decades before joining Alibaba. During that period, Shao staked out a forest for more than eight months as part of efforts to capture those responsible for the murder of a family.

Antidote to hierarchy

Alibaba’s nickname system can be traced back to the early days of the company’s founding and was first popularized by employees of Taobao, the company’s e-commerce marketplace. Managers in the customer service department there are dubbed as xiaoer (小二), a term often used in wuxia to depict those who serve food. The adoption of nicknames spread to other units and soon emerged as an important part of Alibaba’s corporate culture.

It wasn’t long before Alibaba’s sprawling expansion dried up the pool of names from kung-fu novels. Alibaba employees began to draw from a wider range of sources such as fiction, animation, movies, popular dramas, internet slang… just about anything. But there was one important proviso—the names shouldn’t have negative connotations.

Getting a nickname is part of the on-boarding ritual for new Alibaba employees. Although meant to be a lighthearted exercise, most would choose carefully because they will go by their “new identity” even if they leave the company. Xu, the engineer, said he conducted an online poll to in which more than 300 people participated before he finally settled on River Crossing.

Some of Xu’s colleagues have gone for more playful nicknames such as “tuhao (土豪)” a cheeky dig at China’s nouveau riche, or “exes” (前任), a humorous reference to people who have been ditched romantically. Others, such as Java developers at the company have named themselves “Jiawa (甲娃)” or “Jiawa (加瓦),” both of which sound similar to the pronunciation of “Java” in Chinese. Others would simply name themselves after Alibaba’s hit terms, such as “Cainiao (菜鸟),” which is the name of Alibaba’s logistics arm, or Huabei, (花呗) Alipay’s micro-credit service, or “Wuxin (五新),” a reference to Alibaba’s five-pronged strategy.

Underpinned by the influence of thousands of years of Confucian teaching, China’s business world is traditionally governed by a hierarchical structure, which results typically in slow flows of information, and a monopoly on power. Using nicknames creates a flatter management system since even those at the top are referred to by their pet names, said Xu.

Communication is further facilitated in a sense that the nicknames can serve as a form of shorthand about a person’s character. The fictional character may suggest certain traits that are shared by the person who assumes that nickname, as one user of China’s Quora Zhihu pointed out.

Duncan Clark, the author of “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built,” also said the practice helped “engender a sense of community and informality in the company.”

“It’s unique given that it was formed back in 1999-2000 when the weight of the state-owned enterprises was much heavier,” said Clark. “Those employers typically gave employees numbers.”

Enter the Confucian gentleman

Still, not all employees are fans of the nickname system, with some choosing not to create one.

Hans Steinmüller, an anthropology professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science who has conducted extensive fieldwork, says the nicknames and the “Alibaba cult” are ways of strengthening workers’ identification with the company.

“This can be for good or bad,” Steinmüller wrote in an email in response to questions from TechNode. “And while some might feel it helps to realize some hidden potential, others might find it oppressive.”

Steinmüller said that, aside from drawing on elements of traditional culture in their management style, Chinese firms and bureaucracies also combine various institutional styles, including Maoist organization and international management practices. Without a doubt, some influential entrepreneurs, such as Ma, frequently invoke ideas of Chinese tradition.

“In particular, the idea of being a ‘Confucian gentleman,’ the relationships between teacher and student (or master and apprentice), and of ‘sworn brothers,’ are ideas that might be very attractive to many Chinese,” said Steinmüller. “But they are certainly adapted to new contexts and times,” he added.

For Steinmüller, the “cultish” element in Alibaba is the result of a combination of factors: “Aside from Chinese tradition, probably, it has as much to do with a hundred years of experimenting with new forms of organization and bureaucracy in China,” he said. “I’m skeptical whether using nicknames, in itself, ‘forms identities’ within Alibaba,” Steinmüller noted, “but I suppose it strengthens people’s sense of commitment and belonging.”

It will be challenging for a company of Alibaba’s size to maintain its original corporate culture, especially as it builds a larger global presence. It’s also not clear if the nickname system will outlive Ma.

Xu, who comes from Alibaba’s domestic business told TechNode that while nicknames prevail in his office, that’s not the case for the company’s international market departments. In such divisions, it’s common to address others either by their real names or by the English names they have chosen for themselves.

As for the impact of the departure of Ma, author Clark is optimistic, saying: “Jack [Ma] has a much more personal impact than other Chinese founders, but also he has strived to create a culture that can thrive without him.”

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Briefing: China’s AI firm iFlytek accused of cashing in on real estate investment https://technode.com/2018/10/18/iflytek-accused-of-cashing-in-on-real-estate-investment/ https://technode.com/2018/10/18/iflytek-accused-of-cashing-in-on-real-estate-investment/#respond Thu, 18 Oct 2018 05:07:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=84104 Instead of using cheap land for its core business, IFlyTek is being accused of pursuing an easier monetization model.]]>

Chinese AI firm iFlytek shuts down R&D center after scandal-Global Times

What happened: Chinese artificial intelligence company iFlytek Co has shut down operations at one of its research and development centers in East China’s Anhui Province after state media CCTV claimed that the location of the center violates nature reserve regulations.

Why it’s important: In order to achieve an industrial upgrade, China has been giving lots of support to high-tech startups. Obtaining the high-tech status can give companies financial benefits that include tax cuts and government investment as well as policy supports such as an advantage in getting land from the government for industrial parks or research centers. Some online articles claim that iFlytek takes advantage of the preferential policies in obtaining land. Instead of using the cheap land for its core business, IFlyTek is being accused of pursuing real estate development, which is a much easier way to monetize. The company rebuked the accusations shortly after the scandal. iFlytek senior vice president Jiang says “Not a penny of our revenue comes from real estate investment.” This news comes shortly after another scandal about iFlytek’s faking of AI translations results.

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Briefing: Smartisan denies rumor about dissolving Chengdu headquarter https://technode.com/2018/10/17/smartisan-denies-chengdu/ https://technode.com/2018/10/17/smartisan-denies-chengdu/#respond Wed, 17 Oct 2018 08:55:35 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83987 Smartisan has built a lot of hype around itself but critics say the company has struggled to expand.]]>

锤子科技回应成都总部解散传言,实为北京、深圳、成都技术人员整合—TechNode Chinese

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan is reportedly dissolving its business operations in Chengdu of China’s Sichuan Province. In response to the rumor, the company announced an official statement saying that its Chengdu office is running normally as the headquarter. Local reporters, however, found that Smartisan’s 2000-square-meter office had only a few workers that day and that the company has indeed laid off around 100 workers without the knowledge of Chengdu state-owned enterprise which is their stakeholder.

Why it’s important: Although the Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan has built up a lot of hype surround the company and its celebrity founder Luo Yonghao, the company has never achieved in expanding beyond its hardcore user base. Smartisan moved its headquarter to Chengdu after the local government led an RMB 1 billion funding in the cash-strained company in 2017. Bullet Message, a WeChat rival backed by Smartisan, built up new anticipations for the company, but it seems to be a flash-in-the-pan while its download suffered steep drop weeks after its initial boom.

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Briefing: Baidu leads new funding in NetEase Music https://technode.com/2018/10/16/briefing-baidu-leads-new-funding-in-netease-music/ https://technode.com/2018/10/16/briefing-baidu-leads-new-funding-in-netease-music/#respond Tue, 16 Oct 2018 04:10:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83902 Netease Cloud MusicBaidu will be able to integrate content and services from NetEase Music to its smart device operating system DuerOS.]]> Netease Cloud Music

Baidu Takes Stake in NetEase Music-Caixin Global

What happened: NetEase Music, the online music-streaming unit of gaming giant NetEase, announced on Friday, October 12, that it has closed an undisclosed amount of funding led by Baidu. Other investors include General Atlantic and Boyu Capital. NetEase will remain the controlling shareholder of NetEase Music after the deal and Baidu will become the strategic partner of NetEase Music.

Why it’s important: Through the partnership, Baidu will be able to integrate content and services from NetEase Music to its smart device operating system DuerOS, which supports over 100 million smart devices. Although Baidu has its own music unit Baidu Music, the service keeps a relatively small share of the market as compared the top players in the field such as Tencent Music, Ali Music Group and NetEase Music. While China’s money-burning music copyright war is making the growing industry a field for big players, strategic investment becomes a good means to get access to the rich music contents, which is an increasingly crucial component for smart devices, instead of investing heavily for copyrights. Compared with Tencent and Alibaba, who are Baidu’s competitor in a lot of areas, NetEase seems to be a more neutral choice.

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China’s smartphone shipment plunges by nearly 11.5% in September https://technode.com/2018/10/15/china-smartphone-decline-september/ https://technode.com/2018/10/15/china-smartphone-decline-september/#respond Mon, 15 Oct 2018 10:46:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83855 The dip in China's smartphone shipments continues a downward trend in the industry.]]>
smartphones

China’s smartphone shipment plummeted 11.5% YoY to 36.75 million handsets in September this year, data from China Academy of Information and Communications Technology shows. The dip continues a downward trend in the industry, which recorded a 17% drop in the first nine months of the year.

The first nine months of this year have recorded a consecutive two-digit decline in smartphone shipment as compared with the same period of 2017, with an exception of May, which witnessed a 1.2% jump, the report pointed out. This February was hit by a striking 38.7% YoY decline.

Local smartphone companies take a lion’s share in the market with 34.45 million handsets sold in September, representing 88.3% of the total shipments. Android phones are still dominating China, accounting for 89% of total smartphones shipped.

China’s smartphone industry is increasingly a battlefield for the incumbents. CAICT reports show that the combined shipment of the top-10 smartphone manufacturers accounts for a dominating 92% of the total shipments in the reporting period, an 8% just over the same period of last year.

Saturating market and rising average selling price of the devices are the major reasons for the decline, a local report says, citing IDC research analyst Anthony Scarsella. But he thinks customers are still willing to pay for quality devices even it’s for a higher price. This means there are still opportunities for companies that can come up with innovations either in the product or in marketing model.

Despite a sluggish domestic market, there’s a silver lining in the smartphone market while local smartphone makers are finding increasing presence in emergent markets. Southeastern markets, like India, have been a top priority for Chinese smartphone makers over the years. Meanwhile, they are also gaining momentums in Russia, middle east and Latin America.

Although Chinese companies are finding their way globally, they still playing catchup to the world’s top phone makers. Samsung and Apple topped the global smartphone shipment list in September with 27 million and 19.19 million and 18.28 million, data from research institute Sunrise Big Data shows.

Chinese smartphone makers took four out of the top-6 smartphone maker list where Huawei, Oppo, Xiaomi and Vivo followed closely with 18.28 million, 11 million, 10.33 million and 10.28 million respectively.

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Xiaomi staff in uproar over Mi Store management issues https://technode.com/2018/10/15/xiaomi-staff-in-uproar/ https://technode.com/2018/10/15/xiaomi-staff-in-uproar/#respond Mon, 15 Oct 2018 08:22:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83845 A disgruntled worker posted scathing criticism on Mi Store Nanjing’s official Weibo. ]]>

Chinese smart devices maker Xiaomi is facing internal turmoil when on October 11 the official Weibo of its Nanjing flagship store posted a disturbing post that channels staff dissatisfaction over its management, local media is reporting.

Screenshot of the Weibo blog (Image credit: Weibo)

“From today, there will be no Nanjing flagship Mi Store any longer. You [probably referring to Mi Store management] are trampling on the bodies our brothers who work for their meager incomes. Xiaomi is no longer the coolest company in my mind,” says the blog (our translation), which also referred to company’s top management such as founder Lei Jun and company president Lin Bin. The post was removed shortly on the same day.

“We found that the microblog is posted by the employee who operates our Weibo account to vent personal resentment. But the reason behind this incident is still under investigation,” the company told local media.

Under increasing competition from local rivals such as Oppo and Vivo, Xiaomi, which first boomed for its online-only sales model, was forced to set up brick-and-mortar stores to keep up with a changing market, which puts a priority on offline experiences.

At Xiaomi’s annual meeting held in February this year, Lei Jun says the company plans to set up 700 Mi Stores by the end of this year and the company is already halfway to the goal with 500 stores as of present.

Despite the impressive numbers, Xiaomi’s sprawling offline expansion has been shadowed by some organizational problems, which results in internal strains.

Actually, this is not the first time for Xiaomi to face negative coverage for its Mi Store operations. The owner of a Xiaomi franchise store, who was a hardcore fan of Xiaomi, sued the company for not fulfilling the promise of inviting him to a dinner with Lei Jun after he met the sales target.

To some extent, organizational problems aren’t specific to the company’s offline unit. In a previous statement, the smartphone maker announced plans to place younger executives in leadership positions, a step which may help to remove organizational obstacles.

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Baidu Waimai rebrands as Star.Ele to target at higher-end food delivery market https://technode.com/2018/10/15/baidu-waimai-rebrands-ele-me/ https://technode.com/2018/10/15/baidu-waimai-rebrands-ele-me/#respond Mon, 15 Oct 2018 06:30:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83819 Baidu Waimai’s rebranding represents a footnote for the changing landscape of China’s online food delivery industry.]]>
Screenshot of the new app (Image credit: Star.Ele)

Baidu Waimai, China’s third-largest takeaway service, announced today that it’s rebranded as Star.Ele, more than one year after being acquired by its major rival Ele.me, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

Retaining a former red color scheme for its new logo, Star.Ele will run as a sub-brand of Ele.me to offer premium food and local services from selected vendors. Wang Jingfeng, vice president of Ele.me, will be appointed as CEO of the new unit.

For over a year after the acquisition, Baidu Waimai has been operating under its old brand. But rumors about its rebranding prevails while Ele.me promised to continue operating the two brands separately during the takeover.

The merger between Baidu Waimai and Ele.me, two of China’s top food delivery platforms, wasn’t a smooth one with the former has seen both internal and external turmoil during the transitional period.

The rebrand comes among a series of structural adjustment of Ele.me, which itself has been taken over by Alibaba which bought the remaining shares in the company in April this year. Following the new retail trend, Alibaba announced that it has merged two of its food delivery services Ele.me and Koubei to a newly consolidated unit of Alibaba Local Service Company. In August, the company announced it has raised $3 billion for the unit alongside SoftBank.

Baidu Waimai’s rebranding represents a footnote for the changing landscape of China’s online food delivery industry, which shifts from tripartite confrontation among Tencent-backed Meituan, Alibaba-backed Ele.me and Baidu Waimai to head-on battle between the first two.

In terms of positioning, going after a higher-end market to diversify user base is a wise strategy in China, where food safety is a rising concern. As a leading player in the market, Ele.me has come under scrutiny in 2016 for allowing unqualified works to delivery potentially unsanitary food to customers. Meituan faces similar problems. In May this year, the three online food delivery platforms have launched their own investigation against unqualified food vendors, blacklisting thousands of vendors each.

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Top player Yizhibo sold to Weibo as China’s live streaming frenzy cools down https://technode.com/2018/10/15/yizhibo-weibo-live-streaming/ https://technode.com/2018/10/15/yizhibo-weibo-live-streaming/#respond Mon, 15 Oct 2018 03:18:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83776 The acquisition will help create a stronger social-interaction based business model for both parties.]]>

The rumor of Weibo’s acquisition of its live streaming partner Yizhibo recorded further verification as sources close to the matter told local media that Yizhibo’s business has been integrated into the Chinese Twitter-like platform. While the teams of the two businesses will still run independently, Yizhibo has moved into Sina’s office and it’s expected to enter an in-depth cooperation with Weibo in the future, the source added.

The acquisition will help create a stronger social-interaction based business model for both parties where Yizhibo could further leverage Weibo’s huge traffic and massive social influence and Weibo keep traction with quality video content.

Founded in 2011, Yixia Technology, the parent company of Yizhibo, is one of the leading video app developers to have ridden China’s video and live-streaming boom. In addition to Yizhibo, Yixia Technology is also known for other two flagship products of Miaopai, a leading video clip editing and sharing app, and video-dubbing app Xiaokaxiu.

In addition to China’s live streaming and video boom, Yixia Technology’s growth has been fueled by its integration into its strategic investor Weibo for content creation as well as circulation. It’s been a win-win deal for the two companies so far, where increasing quality content helped the social networking giant to regain momentum over the past two years.

But as the heat surrounding the once red-hot live streaming industry cools down, market consolidation starts and it leaves little time for companies that fail to keep up the pace. Yizhibo has suffered from sluggish growth over the past year. Data from Quest Mobile shows that Yizhibo topped China’s live streaming app list with 59.7 million monthly active users in September last year, but data from Jiguang shows it has disappeared from the top 7 list in June 2018.

While market leaders such as Huya and Douyu may still stand a chance with followup investment and IPOs, smaller players are seeking for acquisitions or mergers. Live streaming platform Huajiao merged with 6.cn June this year.

The troubled market has received further blows from tightening content purge from the state. Yixia Technology’s Miaopai and Yizhibo are among the apps that are been admonished by the government for vulgar contents.

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Briefing: Tencent Music reportedly postpones IPO due to market rout https://technode.com/2018/10/12/tencent-music-delay-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/10/12/tencent-music-delay-ipo/#respond Fri, 12 Oct 2018 03:20:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83610 Tencent Music IPO comes in wake of Tencent’s efforts to list its affiliates separately.]]>

Tencent Music Pauses IPO Amid Market Turmoil – The Wall Street Journal

What happened: Tencent Music, Tencent’s music streaming unit which reportedly planned a mid-October IPO, is postponing its initial public offering until at least November because of the selloff in global markets, The Wall Street Journal reported citing people familiar with the matter.

Why it’s important: After the IPO frenzy of Chinese tech companies since the beginning of this year, a recent market turmoil is going to put a pause on what would be one of the largest IPOs in the U.S. this year. But it sounds a reasonable decision to make. Chinese stocks suffered steep drop over the past week in the face of growing tensions with the US. Tencent Music filed for a US listing in early September, reportedly seeking to raise about $2 billion. Tencent Music IPO comes in wake of Tencent’s efforts to list its affiliates separately.

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Briefing: Weibo blocks underage users and plans for a kid version https://technode.com/2018/10/11/weibo-blocks-underage-users/ https://technode.com/2018/10/11/weibo-blocks-underage-users/#respond Thu, 11 Oct 2018 02:30:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83484 Sina Weibo will suspend the registration for users less than 14 years old in the upcoming version.]]>

Weibo Deregisters Users Under 14 – Yicai Global

What happened: China’s Twitter-like microblogging site Sina Weibo will suspend the registration of users less than 14 years old in the new version it’s going to launch on November 1. Users under 18 made up around 19% of the company’s total of 376 million monthly active users, according to data released by the company. The firm is planning to develop a kid’s version for the social media platform.

Why it’s important: Protecting children from inappropriate contents online present many challenges for parents. A lot of Chinese tech giant companies have been criticized for their failures to manage teen contents. ByteDance’s popular short video apps have seen teen problems, while other video streaming sites such as Youku, iQiyi, and Tencent Video Weibo draw criticisms earlier this year for rampant violent or racy contents target at kids. Weibo is one of the first companies to make moves.

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Briefing: Google’s China search engine is coming within nine months? https://technode.com/2018/10/10/google-china-search-engine/ https://technode.com/2018/10/10/google-china-search-engine/#respond Wed, 10 Oct 2018 03:42:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83374 A leaked transcript of Google executives meeting shows a different picture from Google's official statements. ]]>

Leaked Transcript of Private Meeting Contradicts Google’s Official Story of China—The Intercept

What happened: The leaked transcript of a Google executives meeting shows that the company is expected to launch its restricted search engine for the Chinese market within six to nine months or sooner. This contradicts a response the company was forced to give after facing increasing criticism from the public. “All we’ve done is some exploration,” Ben Gomes, Google’s search engine chief told the media previously. The secretive project has been underway since spring 2017.

Why it’s important: In the transcript, Gomes reveals that China is the most interesting market in the world today with 1 billion potential users. Google has been speeding up its China plans with the launch of its Translate app, AI research lab in Beijing during 2017, and more recently an AI-powered mini-app game on WeChat’s platform. However, Google’s China foray won’t be easy. It not only faces criticism from the public and its own employees over ethical issues but also competition in a highly consolidated market that’s dominated by incumbents like Baidu and Sogou.

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Briefing: Tencent dips its toes in Brazil with $200 million fintech investment https://technode.com/2018/10/09/tencent-brazil-fintech-nubank/ https://technode.com/2018/10/09/tencent-brazil-fintech-nubank/#respond Tue, 09 Oct 2018 05:19:22 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83228 tencentChinese tech giants are seeking new opportunities in major emerging markets.]]> tencent

Tencent to Invest in Brazilian Fintech Startup at $4 Billion Valuation– The Information

What happened: Chinese internet giant Tencent has agreed to invest about $200 million in Brazilian fintech startup Nubank in a deal that values the startup at around $4 billion, The Information reported citing a person familiar with the matter. Nubank was valued at $2 billion in March, according to startup tracker CB Insights. That means the company’s valuation doubled over the past six months. Tencent will take a 5% stake in Nubank.

Why it’s important: Chinese tech giants are seeking new opportunities in major emerging markets such as Southeast Asia, India and Latin America. Fintech is rapidly becoming a key investment focus for Chinese tech giants that aspire to push globally. Tencent’s Brazilian investment comes on the heels of another investment in Philippine fintech startup Voyager. News of the deal comes just over a week after Tencent announced plans for a re-organization in its home market of China amid pressure on earnings brought about in part by closer scrutiny of its online gaming business by authorities there.

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Bitcoin miner jailed for 3.5 years for stealing electricity from train network https://technode.com/2018/10/08/bitcoin-mining-power-theft/ https://technode.com/2018/10/08/bitcoin-mining-power-theft/#respond Mon, 08 Oct 2018 10:45:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83196 Bitcoin price drops and increasing difficulty in mining have made it a less profitable business.]]>

A Chinese man has been sentenced to three and a half years in prison and fined RMB 100,000 (around $14,500) after pleading guilty to stealing electricity from the country’s train network to power his bitcoin mining activities, according to a report by local media.

From November to December last year, Xu Xinghu, from Datong, a city in northwestern China’s Shanxi province, stole RMB 104,000 worth of electricity from train network power lines, using it to run 50 bitcoin miners and three cooling fans he operated in a rented house nearby.

By April of this year, Xu had mined 3.2 bitcoins, worth around RMB 120,000. His mining equipment was confiscated following his sentencing, which took place in September but was reported on October 8.

Despite China’s crackdown on cryptocurrency trading and initial coin offerings, bitcoin mining is not banned in the country. That means it’s legal for anyone to mine the bitcoins as long as they have the suitable hardware and internet access needed to carry out the computationally intensive work.

Heavy investment and related costs, especially pricey power charges, make bitcoin mining almost impossible for the average citizen. Mining a single bitcoin consumes an average of 18,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of power, pushing some people to seek illegal means to secure power supply.

Xu is not the first person to get nabbed for illicit electricity tapping. As early as 2016, authorities in Daqing, a city in northern China’s Heilongjiang province, cracked down on a group of bitcoin miners who stole electricity from oil refineries there.

In April, a family in southern China was discovered to have been stealing electricity from the state-owned electricity grid, also for the purpose of bitcoin mining.

As the price of Bitcoin drops, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to mine profitably. According to blockchain website Walian, miners cannot generate profit when the bitcoin price is lower than RMB 44,000. Bitcoin price currently stands at around RMB 45,680.

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McDonald’s starts delivering McCafé in Shanghai https://technode.com/2018/10/08/mcdonalds-delivering-mccafe-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2018/10/08/mcdonalds-delivering-mccafe-shanghai/#respond Mon, 08 Oct 2018 07:59:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83176 Global fast food giant McDonald’s has launched an online delivery service for McCafé, its coffee-house-style food and beverage chain.]]>

Yet another mega player is entering China’s caffeine war. Global fast food giant McDonald’s has launched an online delivery service for McCafé, its coffee-house-style food and beverage chain, local media is reporting.

Image credit:McCafé

Starting from today (October 8), Chinese users will be able to order from McCafé online through the company’s “iMcCafé Delivery” WeChat mini program, as well as Ele.me and Meituan apps. The services are currently only available in Shanghai, but the company plans to expand to more cities in the future.

McDonald’s has specially designed a new type of patented lid to avoid spilled beverages during delivery. A professional delivery team will guarantee the order could be finished within 28 minutes, according to the company, two minutes shorter than the 30-minutes delivery of its major rivals Luckin Coffee and Starbucks.

The combined force of China’s warming coffee market and the boom of the “new retail” trend have given rise to the country’s online coffee delivery market. Luckin Coffee marketed meteoric boom since the beginning of this year by leveraging popular market acquisition tactics from China’s internet companies.

For example, the Chinese firm offers large-scale subsidies to attract its first group of users.McCafé is adopting a similar approach for its online launch. Users will get a free drink upon first payment and more coupons will be offered when sharing promotions through social networking platforms.

Like its internet peers, Luckin Coffee managed speedy growth backed by heavy capital. It managed to reach unicorn status in less than a year after securing $200 million in Series A funding round in July. The coffee startup is growing at an astonishing pace and has plans to open 2,000 outlets by this year. Online delivery plus pickups model offer more flexibility for users. It’s also acting extremely aggressive in talent acquisition and marketing plans.

Facing increasing challenges, coffee giant Starbucks decided to a partnership with Alibaba-backed delivery service Ele.me. Shortly after, Luckin Coffee entered a similar strategic agreement with Tencent for the marketing side of their business. McDonald’s entry would further intensify competition in the sector.

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WeChat report shows many Chinese chose to stay indoors over the October Golden Week https://technode.com/2018/10/08/homestays-wechat-golden-holiday/ https://technode.com/2018/10/08/homestays-wechat-golden-holiday/#respond Mon, 08 Oct 2018 04:53:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=83144 Over 21 million WeChat users took less than 100 steps on any single day from September 30 to October 6. ]]>

As always, China’s National Day Golden Week, which came to a close yesterday (October 7th) gave Chinese internet giants a good opportunity to look into Chinese people’s habits and preferences in how they spend their leisure times.

While we are accustomed to crowded tourist spots and congested traffic on highways during the holiday, an increasing number of people opt to enjoy some indoorsy “alone time”. Over 21 million WeChat users took less than 100 steps on any single day from September 30 to October 6, according to a report released by the social media platform. Of the total, 56% are post-80 or post-90 users.

Image credit: WeChat

The finding is fairly unsurprising given the travel rush. A total of 726 million Chinese tourists traveled in the country during the holiday, up 9.43% year-on-year, according to data from China Tourism Academy. The railway traveler numbers jump to a level on par with the peak figures for the Spring Festival rush, local media reported.

In addition, the result also comes in line with the rise of otaku culture in China, especially among China’s younger generations. Originated in Japan, the word ‘otaku’ (that means something similar to the word ‘nerd’ or ‘geek’) has become a modern colloquialism as a part of the 2D culture, which is becoming increasingly mainstream in China.

China’s southern Guangdong Province, eastern Jiangsu, Shandong, Jiangsu Zhejiang Province and northeastern Liaoning Province topped the five spots that recorded most shut-in WeChat users, according to the report.

The ranking reasonably coincides with that for online food delivery orders. Guangdong, Jiangsu and Zhejiang Province, with the most recorded most indoorsy WeChat users, witnessed the most online food orders, followed by Fujian and Sichuan Province.

Reading is obviously the most popular past time. WeChat Read users spend a combined 19.87 million hours during the holiday. Historical novel Those Ming Dynasty Stuff, Hugo-award winning science fiction The Three-body Problem, and martial art novel by Gu Long were the most popular books during the holiday.

While some are enjoying their vacations, others kept themselves busy with works. Users of WeChat Work, the enterprise-grade office management platform by Tencent, are most active in Shenzhen, Shanghai and Beijing. Retailing, manufacturing and IT industry spend the most time at work during the period.

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Briefing: China’s leading online credit card loan facilitator Samoyed files for US IPO https://technode.com/2018/09/30/samoyed-ipo-online-loan/ https://technode.com/2018/09/30/samoyed-ipo-online-loan/#respond Sun, 30 Sep 2018 04:05:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82991 China's tech IPO boom of this year has triggered the listing of several online credit card loan services, such as V Credit, 51Credit Card,  and X Financial.]]>

萨摩耶金服拟赴美上市:用户粘性增长,上半年净利2560万元扭亏-Lanjinger

What happened: Samoyed, a leading online loan facilitator focused on operating in China’s credit card repayment market, filed for an $80 million IPO in the New York Stock Exchange. Its registered users reached 17 million by the end of 2017 and further increased to 24.4 million as of June 30, 2018. The company has turned to profit with a net profit of RMB 24.6 million in the first half of this year.

Why it’s important: Samoyed targets credit-proven millennials in China, especially individuals born in the 1980s and 1990s who already have credit cards. The company facilitates three credit services for credit-proven millennials: credit card balance transfer, cash advance and credit loans.  China’s personal debt-to-income ratio increased from 5.9% in 2011 to 18.1% in 2017. However, this ratio is still far behind that of the United States, which reflects a significant growth opportunity for China’s personal lending market, according to Oliver Wyman. China’s tech IPO boom of this year has triggered the listing of several online credit card loan services, such as V Credit, 51 Credit CardX Financial.

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Briefing: Average interest of online money market funds plunges to two-year low https://technode.com/2018/09/29/yuebao-like-fund-yield-drop/ https://technode.com/2018/09/29/yuebao-like-fund-yield-drop/#respond Sat, 29 Sep 2018 03:55:47 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82907 The growth of these services stagnated as China's more sophisticated investors pursued higher-returns from other online investment channels/]]>

互联网“宝宝类”理财平均预期收益率逼近3%-NetEase

What happened: The average 7-day annualized yield of 74 Yu’ebao-like online mutual funds dropped for twelve straight weeks to a two-year low of 3.07% in the week between September 21 to 27, according to data from Rong360. The yield of similar products has dropped from the highs of around 9% at their prime time to around 3% or even lower now.

Why it’s important: Alipay launched its mutual fund platform Yuebao back in 2013 along with the rise of fintech trend. The feature soon went viral among Chinese users by lowing the entry barrier that bars most small investors from getting returns higher than bank deposits. A wealth of similar services mushroomed to duplicate Yuebao’s success over years. But the growth of these services stagnated as China’s more sophisticated investors pursued higher-returns from other online investment channels like P2P and cryptocurrencies.

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Baidu’s autonomous driving technology finds new application in urban cleaning https://technode.com/2018/09/28/baidu-autonomous-driving/ https://technode.com/2018/09/28/baidu-autonomous-driving/#respond Fri, 28 Sep 2018 11:30:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82826 Joining hands with Chinese tech giant Baidu, Beijing Environmental Equipment Company, a subsidiary of Beijing Environmental Hygiene Group, launched seven autonomous driving vehicles for urban environment cleaning, local media is reporting. Based on Baidu’s open-source autonomous driving platform Apollo, the seven autonomous driving vehicles launched on September 28 are designed to fulfill various tasks in urban city […]]]>
(Image credit: BEE)

Joining hands with Chinese tech giant Baidu, Beijing Environmental Equipment Company, a subsidiary of Beijing Environmental Hygiene Group, launched seven autonomous driving vehicles for urban environment cleaning, local media is reporting.

Based on Baidu’s open-source autonomous driving platform Apollo, the seven autonomous driving vehicles launched on September 28 are designed to fulfill various tasks in urban city maintenance, such as swiping and washing the ground, collecting and transporting garbages, etc.

In addition, the cars are tailored to the tasks in different public spaces in shopping malls, industrial parks, pedestrian roads, and communities. The products are powered by various technologies including computer vision, precise positioning and cloud computing to increase cleaning efficiencies and lower labor work, according to the company.

This marks another step of Baidu to apply its autonomous driving technologies in solving the real-life problems. Before the tie-up, the Chinese tech company has entered strategic cooperation agreements with Xiamen King Long United Automotive Industry on work on commercial driverless vehicles and Neolix for L4-class driverless logistics service. Both of the partnerships have entered mass-production.

Since launching the Apollo project in April 2017, Baidu has been ramping up partnerships in China and abroad. Apollo has attracted over 70 partners, including Hyundai Motor, ROS, esd electronics, Neousys Technology, and autonomous driving startups such as Momenta and iDriver+ Technologies. Baidu is also working with LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) sensor manufacturer Velodyne and education platform Udacity which offer courses and competitions in autonomous technology.

China’s autonomous driving craze is gaining momentum while the government is adopting a more open attitude towards the new technology. Shanghai government, for instance, has begun the second phase of road testing for autonomous vehicles, allowing them to be tested on 12 public roads in Shanghai. A series of top players in the field, such as Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, NIO and SAIC, Pony.ai has reached partnerships with different cities to road test their driverless cars.

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Court orders Baozou Comics to apologize and compensate for humiliating war hero https://technode.com/2018/09/28/baozou-comics-war-hero/ https://technode.com/2018/09/28/baozou-comics-war-hero/#respond Fri, 28 Sep 2018 07:19:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82803 President Xi Jinping is asking companies to “firm its stand in the right values so that there won’t be any fatal errors in where the company is heading.”]]>

A court in Xi’an of China’s central Shaanxi Province has ordered Baozou Comics, or Rage Comics, to extend a formal apology on state-level media and pay RMB 100,000 ($14,528) of compensation to the family of Ye Ting, a communist hero during China’s national war, Chinese media is reporting.

In May this year, Baozou Comic, a popular satirical comic in China, posted a 58-second long short video which depicted someone wearing its iconic “rage face” mask mocking Ye and Dong Cunrui, another war-time hero who blew himself up to destroy a Nationalist bunker during the Chinese Civil War.

This soon incurred the wrath of the public as well as the content monitors. The company’s site and official accounts on different China’s social platforms were forced to close down in mid-May for rectification. To ease public anger, the company Chief Executive Officer Ren Jian has led his team to apologize in front of the hero’s memorial monument and promised to improve patriotic training for the young team.

China has been tightening its grip on cyberspace as President Xi Jinping is asking companies to “firm its stand in the right values so that there won’t be any fatal errors in where the company is heading.” Douyin, China’s trending short video platform owned by Bytedance, also received a blow over ads involving disrespectful content about Communist heroes.

China’s National People’s Congress passed and enacted on May 1 a new law to protect authorized heroes and martyrs who have made contributions to the nation. Under the provision, the names, portraits, reputations of the heroes and rewards they received are protected by the law and people are forbidden to deny, distort or slander and they can’t be used for commercial purposes.

China’s culture and tourism authorities have launched a new campaign to clear up negative portrayal of martyrs in May, removing over 60,000 video clips and shutting down over 8,030 social media accounts, according to data revealed by the country’s state-media People’s Daily.

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Bullet Messenger is getting more attention from local media for lax security and racy content https://technode.com/2018/09/28/wechat-bullet-messenger/ https://technode.com/2018/09/28/wechat-bullet-messenger/#respond Fri, 28 Sep 2018 04:04:56 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82748 China’s craze for Bullet Messenger (子弹短信) is quickly cooling down. Lambasted for numerous problems including salacious contents and lax security settings, the once red-hot WeChat rival is losing traction among Chinese users as the excitement in trying out the latest viral app quickly wanes. Bullet Messenger’s problem of rampant racy content was pointed out shortly […]]]>

China’s craze for Bullet Messenger (子弹短信) is quickly cooling down. Lambasted for numerous problems including salacious contents and lax security settings, the once red-hot WeChat rival is losing traction among Chinese users as the excitement in trying out the latest viral app quickly wanes.

(Image credit: Legal Daily)

Bullet Messenger’s problem of rampant racy content was pointed out shortly after its product launch on August 20, but it seems that the company hasn’t been able to address the issue properly, only letting it grow bigger. It’s common to get sexual greetings from strangers with attractive-looking female avatars, local media reported. Failure to manage content not only hurts user experiences. It is also a concern of greater importance in China, where keeping aligned with the government’s crackdown on “vulgar” content is critical for tech firms.

The lax security setting of the app is one cause for the content issue. Similar to WeChat, Bullet Messenger is positioned as an IM tool among friends, but it allows users to send messages to everyone, even if the other party is not a friend. Criminals have used this loophole to send pornographic messages and other spams to Bullet Messenger users. To make the matter worse, users have to add the stranger as a friend before they can block the spam source.

To some extent, Bullet Messenger’s dilemma reveals the long-term pain point of the industry. Online sources that are most eager for traffic, usually promoting pornography, gambling, and drug-related contents, are prone to take advantage of user-generated content apps, which is naturally a source of online traffic, according to Yang Miao, founder of Chong Tech. Bullet Messenger needs to improve content control and features if it wants to survive, he pointed out.

Made by Smartisan-backed startup Kuairu, Bullet Messenger is a black horse challenging WeChat’s dominance in China’s social networking industry. The app has amassed 4 million active users in just 9 days since its launch, beating WeChat and Douyin to become the most downloaded social app in Chinese app store on August 28. Along with the momentum, it lured RMB150 million funding ten days after launch. Due to various problems, however, its popularity wanes as quickly as it rose. The app has seen a precipitous drop since the beginning of September.

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Briefing: SF Express suspends on-demand freight delivery service after partner use its brand without consent https://technode.com/2018/09/27/sf-express-suspends-on-demand-freight/ https://technode.com/2018/09/27/sf-express-suspends-on-demand-freight/#respond Thu, 27 Sep 2018 03:13:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82596 The partnership between SF Expres and Banyunbang was once highly anticipated with the pair creating great synergies in a market with promising potential.]]>

合作伙伴上线”顺丰打车” 顺丰:未经允许 解除合作-NetEase Tech

What happened: SF Express’ intra-city on-demand freight delivery service that is believed to be provided through local logistics partner Banyunbang was suspended one week after its launch. SF Express says the service was removed because Banyunbang has been using its brand without the company’s consent. The express delivery and logistics giant has reached preliminary cooperation intention with Banyunbang previously, but the later used SF Express’s brand to promote its business before they could reach any final agreement.

Why it’s important: Along with the rise of China’s passenger ride-hailing service, the on-demand delivery business for cargos is also gaining momentum over the past few years. One year after the merger with Hong Kong startup GOGOVAN, 58 Suyun rebranded as Fast Dog (快够) in August in an effort to speed up business expansion. Lalamove launched enterprise-faced business to further explore the intra-city delivery market. As one of the top players in the sector, Banyunbang is eager to move ahead in a crowded market. Its partnership with SF Express was once highly anticipated where the two companies could create great synergies in a market with great potentials.

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Briefing: iFlytek accused of faking AI translations https://technode.com/2018/09/25/iflytek-fake-ai-translations/ https://technode.com/2018/09/25/iflytek-fake-ai-translations/#respond Tue, 25 Sep 2018 03:37:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82318 The company claims they are adopting an “human-machine coupling” approach.]]>

iFlytek Accused of Giving Its AI Program Credit for Translations Done by Humans– Caixin Global

What happened: iFlytek, one of China’s top AI company known for voice recognition and translation services, has been accused of claiming to have used its language software for simultaneous translation at a conference while a great part of the work is done by a human interpreter. An interpreter working at the event told local media that iFlytek misled the audience to believe that the speech transcriptions were done by the company’s translation software, while in fact, it’s just reading the transcripts done by a human interpreter. The company rebuked the claim later, emphasizing that they are adopting an “human-machine coupling” approach.

Why it’s important: Translation is one of the most popular areas where AI technology is being applied. It is reasonable for iFlytek to combine people with machines to provide better services given the technology is still in a preliminary stage and there’s a lot of technical problems to solve. But what angered the local media is the way iFlytek promotes its product. The company has been relatively inexplicitly about human factors in their services, and most of their promotions are on the high accuracy rates of the service.

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Meet the new Ant Financial, a technology services company https://technode.com/2018/09/21/ant-financial-technology/ https://technode.com/2018/09/21/ant-financial-technology/#respond Fri, 21 Sep 2018 10:07:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82211 Open technology capabilities are expected to become the core monetization model of Ant Financial.]]>

Until recently, Ant Financial is most commonly known as the parent of China’s default payment app Alipay, and therefore, a financial service in the eyes of most. However, the Alibaba affiliate is gradually finding a new position as a technology services company. By outsourcing all of its technical capabilities that have been mastered by running Alipay, the company is turning traditional financial service providers from competitive rivals to cooperative clients.

Ant Financial is opening up its technology capabilities to financial service institutions for them to solve problems in financial security, massive financial transactions, and blockchain applications announced Hu Xi, Deputy CTO of Ant Financial and Partner of Alibaba Group, at The Computing Conference. Open technology capabilities are expected to become the core monetization model of Ant Financial, according to the firm.

Ant Financial is more than just a financial tool

Started out as Alipay, Ant Financial tries to solve all the basic technical problems since its inception in 2004. After opening up its payments services to a wide range of online and offline businesses, Ant Financial announced an “Internet Booster” plan in 2015 to support the digital transformation of traditional financial institutions by sharing Ant Financial’s technological capabilities. The new announcement marked the company’s effort to speed up the initiative in providing standardized and comprehensive technical solutions to all the financial services.

Ant Financial’s technology-based solutions allow financial institutions to deliver services, from payments to risk management efficiently, all at scale. In payments, for instance, Alipay was able to process a record-breaking 256,000 transactions per second at the peak of the 2017 Single’s Day Shopping Festival.

The company has already partnered with over 200 financial institutions around the world, including over 100 banks such as Commercial Bank of China, China Merchant Bank, MyBank— China’s 1st commercial bank with core system running on a distributed architecture—over 60 insurers and north than 40 funds and securities.

For Ant Financial, the change also underlines a shift in the nature of its clients, from individual customers, where it already takes a grip through Alipay, to financial enterprises clients. Hu explained that a transition from customer-faced (2C) to business-faced (2B) business comes in line in a changing landscape in China.

“The past two decades, relatively the span of China’s internet history, was a period when customer-faced services experience a quick boom. Back then, there’s no digital infrastructure in China, so 2C service is a good place to start. But today’s China is under urgent need to increase efficiency, no matter it takes the form of a push to increase production capacity, upgrading traditional manufacturing industry or consumption upgrading. Digitalization of enterprises is a possible solution for it,” says Hu.

At the same time, Alibaba’s established foothold in the 2C market is expected to benefit a 2B foray thanks to deep industry insight and vast business connections.

Looking forward, Hu also touched on some of the technical explorations and challenges in the future, suhc as real-time secure computing on top of a large volume of IoT data, giving AI financial grade capabilities, pursuing continuous availability with zero data loss, making the digital world secure and trustworthy, and giving everyone a reliable digital identity.

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Briefing: Scalpers lose their shirts as price of latest iPhone models drop below official price https://technode.com/2018/09/21/iphone-price-drop/ https://technode.com/2018/09/21/iphone-price-drop/#respond Fri, 21 Sep 2018 03:41:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82127 In China, iPhone is no longer considered a luxury product that shows one’s social status, or even the coolest gadget.]]>

黄牛亏惨了?iPhone XS黄牛价暴跌 卖得比官网还便宜 – Tencent Tech

What happened: The prices of iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max dropped below official prices as the US smartphone maker start to ship its largest product in mainland China this week. Price drop not only happened on the grey market but also in Apple’s reseller networks.

Why it’s important: Unlike previous iPhone manias, China’s once lucrative grey market for the latest iPhone models has cooled down over the past few years. It’s a combined effect of Apple’s shipping policies as well as a changing Chinese smartphone market landscape. On the one hand, Apple has been trying to solve the problem by getting better prepared with abundant stock and tightened sales policies for Hong Kong, the source market for most scalpers to purchase the phones. At the same time, iPhone is no longer considered a luxury product that shows one’s social status, or even the coolest gadget, when a raft of Chinese smartphone makers like Huawei, Xiaomi, Vivo, and Oppo are elbowing into the premium smartphone market.

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AI is still several years away from commercialization: Yitu Research Scientist Wu Shuang https://technode.com/2018/09/21/ai-commercialization-yitu/ https://technode.com/2018/09/21/ai-commercialization-yitu/#respond Fri, 21 Sep 2018 03:39:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=82096 The application of AI will be a gradual and case-by-case process, says Wu Shuang, Research Scientist at Yitu Technology.]]>

Artificial intelligence (AI) technology is on the cusp of going mainstream as a new engine for the growth of human civilization. Despite sitting at the center of discussions and witnessing rapid integration with various industries, the emerging technology is still premature for commercialization, according to Wu Shuang, Research Scientist at Chinese AI company Yitu Technology.

“Most of the efforts will still be focused on technology R&D and product definition in the next five years. It’s obvious that AI can integrate with different industries. But because of this industry practitioners will be at loss about the actual forms of products unless it’s being proved valid by the users. Take face recognition as an example, everyone doubted the feasibility of the idea before the industry came up with algorithms and solid products to prove its validity for users. It will be a gradual case-by-case process because of each application need the concerted efforts of lots of engineers. Revolution won’t happen overnight,” Wu told TechNode at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC).

What real-world problems can AI really solve? An interview with YITU Technology

For the time being, the most successful AI applications are business-facing, which is in line with the market predictions. Wu attributes this to the fact that the commercial value of business-facing applications is clear from the very beginning. “It may demand a deeper understanding of a particular industry. But once you passed that entry point, the company’s development thereafter is relatively predictable. For customer-facing applications, the value provided by each user are fewer and the development is relatively unpredictable due to a ton of non-technical factors,” he explained.

Currently, Yitu Technology is mainly engaged in AI applications in medical diagnosis and clinical research as well as public security, all of which are business-faced. But the company is open-minded to customer-faced services. “Strategically, we will invest in projects that currently appear to be most likely to generate immediate benefits. Of course, Yitu will continue to maintain a focus on the entire industry, technology, and business to see new potential directions. We are open for it but will make moves at a proper timing,” says Wu.

As one of China’s foremost computer vision companies, Yitu Technology has become an investment darling over the past year. The company received their latest $100 million round in July, shortly after a $200 million Series C+ funding round in June.

Yitu was granted the Super AI Leader Award for its smart face recognition solution at WAIC. At the same event, it also signed a strategic partnership with a United Nations agency to empower developing countries with the aid of AI.

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Alibaba AI Labs launches L4 autonomous logistics vehicle https://technode.com/2018/09/20/alibaba-autonomous-logistics-vehicle/ https://technode.com/2018/09/20/alibaba-autonomous-logistics-vehicle/#respond Thu, 20 Sep 2018 10:47:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81995 The vehicle was developed by Alibaba AI Labs and can carry several tons.]]>
Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

Chinese internet giant Alibaba is speeding up its autonomous driving efforts with the launch of its first-ever L4-class self-driving logistics vehicle at The Computing Conference in Hangzhou. The company disclosed that the car is still under testing.

Developed by Alibaba AI Labs, the new driverless van eliminates the driving cabinet but two displays are embedded in each side of the car, informing other vehicles or pedestrians of its next move. Designed for urban logistics delivery, the car can travel at a speed of 30 to 40 kilometers per hour (19-25 mph) with a carrying capacity of several tons.

Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

Velodyne’s 16-line laser radar is used on the front and rear and sides of the vehicle. The roof is equipped with a Velodyne 32-line laser radar, a binocular camera, and 5 monocular cameras. Other sensors such as RTK (real-time kinematic) and ultrasonic radar are hidden in the body.

High accuracy localization is achieved through multi-sensor fusion positioning based on Lidar, camera, RTK, and other sensors, says Chen Lijuan, head of Alibaba AI Labs. The accuracy error is controlled within 20 cm, she noted.

With the help of Alibaba’s cooperative vehicle-infrastructure system (CVIS), the new van will be able to detect all traffic participants in real-time and therefore guarantee better on-road safety. Leveraging the abilities of roadside perception stations, the reliability of the autonomous driving technology can be highly improved and the cost will be significantly reduced, Chen pointed out.

During the event, Hangzhou authorities have issued a license for Alibaba to road-test its autonomous vehicles. With this Hangzhou joined a series of Chinese cities that are open to autonomous driving technologies, such as Shanghai, Beijing, and Chongqing.

In addition to AI Labs, Alibaba’s logistics unit Cainiao also tapped the self-driving sector with a driverless van for logistics delivery.

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Briefing: Shares of Chinese P2P platform X Financial surge 62% on IPO https://technode.com/2018/09/20/x-financial-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/09/20/x-financial-ipo/#respond Thu, 20 Sep 2018 04:48:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81919 While many Chinese P2P platforms have failed, the strongest remain and are growing their positions.]]>

赴美上市的小赢科技,开盘价上涨62.95%为15.48美元–36Kr

What happened: Shares of Chinese P2P lending platform X Financial have surged 62.95% upon its New York Stock Exchange IPO on September 19. Trading under the ticker symbol of “XYF”, X Financial shares opened at $15.48 per share, higher than its IPO price of $9.50 apiece. The company’s market cap was bumped to $2.33 billion when calculating at the opening price.

Why it’s important: Started by the founder of the Chinese online travel site eLong, X Financial focuses on serving underserved prime borrowers and affluent investors in China. They specialize in offering short-term financing for credit card balance transfers, mainly because banks provide extremely low credit limits. X Financial will be the first P2P lender from China to IPO since a number of regulatory changes caused a fairly large shakeout in the sector. While many platforms have failed, the strongest remain and may be able to consolidate and grow their positions.

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AI will drive next wave of development in human civilization: SenseTime CEO Xu Li https://technode.com/2018/09/20/sensetime-ai-xu-li/ https://technode.com/2018/09/20/sensetime-ai-xu-li/#respond Thu, 20 Sep 2018 03:49:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81743 Sensetime funding Hong Kong Xu LiAI visual recognition could help transform unstructured information into data that can be processed by machines.]]> Sensetime funding Hong Kong Xu Li

As traditional economies gradually lose growth momentum, artificial intelligence (AI) is going to become the new engine to drive the next-wave growth of human civilization, said Xu Li, co-founder and CEO of Chinese AI unicorn SenseTime, at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference. Xu further expounded that AI will have a similar role the steam engine has played for the industrial revolution a hundred years ago.

Over the past ten years, a wealth of signs have shown that we are heading for a new revolutionary era. The production of CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor), a crucial electronic component for visual input, surged since 2014 thanks to the popularity of smartphones and internet-of-things (IoT) devices. The world’s top GPU maker Nvidia has recorded skyrocketing growth since 2017. The short video industry has boomed since late last year with the support of new technologies. The fast growth of these industries can find their roots in the wider application of AI technology, Xu argues.

“But before AI could turn to a powerful engine and change the world in a fundamental way, it has to realize large-scale application and integration with different industries,” said Xu.

Looking ahead, one of the changes AI will bring is turning everything into data.

SenseTime is more just than a face recognition company, says co-founder

“Most people consider Didi Chuxing a platform where cars are shared but it is more of a data sharing platform. From trip destinations to travel routes, users share their data when taking a ride on Didi. However, all the data companies like Didi have collected so far are structured with people submitting them in a uniformed format. AI-enabled visual recognition technology could help to transform unstructured information into data that can be processed by machines,” said Xu.

As the world’s highest-valued AI company with a valuation of over $4.5 billion, SenseTime has more than 700 customers across a range of verticals including fintech, smartphones, smart city development, and autonomous driving. Its clients include some of the world’s top companies such as car manufacturer Honda,  Nvidia, China’s bank card solution UnionPay, local Twitter-like platform Weibo, China Merchants Bank, and smartphone makers Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi.

SenseTime is among a series of AI upstarts that have boomed in line with China’s “top-down” commitment to the emerging technology. Since July 2017, China has raised AI development to one of its priorities offering abundant support in funding and policy.

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Jack Ma on the challenges and opportunities in “New Manufacturing” https://technode.com/2018/09/19/jack-ma-new-manufacturing/ https://technode.com/2018/09/19/jack-ma-new-manufacturing/#respond Wed, 19 Sep 2018 10:35:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81677 Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retailAlibaba’s charismatic leader Jack Ma today (September 19) called for Chinese traditional manufacturers to fully embrace what he called the “New Manufacturing” model at The Cloud Computing Conference held in Hangzhou. Ma first put forward the concept at The Computing Conference in 2016, along with four other new trends of New Retail, New Finance, New […]]]> Alibaba Jack Ma taobao ecommerce online retail
Image credit: Alibaba

Alibaba’s charismatic leader Jack Ma today (September 19) called for Chinese traditional manufacturers to fully embrace what he called the “New Manufacturing” model at The Cloud Computing Conference held in Hangzhou.

Ma first put forward the concept at The Computing Conference in 2016, along with four other new trends of New Retail, New Finance, New Technology, and New Energy. The following market development has proved him right as the new retail trend gradually taken China by storm ever since, not only boosting the growth of Alibaba but also fostering a burgeoning ecosystem surrounding the new concept. Given Jack Ma’s leading position in China’s internet industry, his new proposal is expected to trigger a trend.

Similar to new retail, New Manufacturing involves a transformation of traditional manufacturing industry by integrating technology capabilities in the internet, data, AI, cloud computing and IOT.

“New Manufacturing will bring swiping challenges and opportunities to manufacturing companies in China and around the world. In the future 10 to 15 years, all the pain points of the manufacturing industry will be far more serious than those for today and we should get prepared,” said Ma.

With the rise of the internet industry, some warn that the manufacturing industry is disappearing. Ma argues that manufacturing that will not disappear. “It will be an innovation for both technology and mindset,” he added.

The trade war is a fight for the old manufacturing industry, according to Ma. “Proposing the New Manufacturing model is not because Alibaba plans to enter the manufacturing industry, but rather to help manufacturing companies to innovate and upgrade,” he said. “During this shift, the current manufacturer-oriented industry will transition to a new era led by customers, where small- and medium-sized enterprises can benefit the most.”

Ma reiterated that the trade war is a perfectly normal consequence of technology development. He projects a more open future where traditional trade war will be eliminated in the new “Made In Internet” era. “Trade will take the form of parcels instead of containers in the future and the driver of trade progress won’t be certain factories or enterprises, but millions of individual customers. When country boundary no longer exits in trading and every individual becomes a participant, rules have to be redefined and traditional trade wall won’t be a problem then,” Ma explained.

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Alibaba Cloud launches City Brain 2.0 https://technode.com/2018/09/19/alibaba-city-brain/ https://technode.com/2018/09/19/alibaba-city-brain/#respond Wed, 19 Sep 2018 07:04:18 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81623 Hangzhou, the first city to embrace the system, dropped from the 5th to the 57th spot on the list for China’s most congested cities.]]>
Image credit: Alibaba

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud-computing unit of Alibaba, rolled out today version 2.0 of its urban traffic-management system City Brain in its home city Hangzhou at The Computing Conference, which welcomed 120k visitors this year. Started as a service to solve suffocating traffic, the company expects the program to tackle more problems for modern cities.

First launched in September 2016, City Brain is mainly used to improve traffic flows, make live traffic predictions, and detect traffic incidents using data from video footage, traffic bureaus, and public transportation systems. After two years, Hangzhou, the first city to embrace the system, dropped from the 5th to the 57th spot on the list for China’s most congested cities, according to the company.

The latest version is expected to monitor and control the city’s traffic at a larger scale and with more accuracy. Hangzhou City Brain 2.0 now covers a core area of 42 square kilometers in downtown Hangzhou, while the traffic violations are reported with 95% accuracy. The system has over 110 autonomous alert capabilities and 1300 traffic signals that are controlled by AI, according to Jing Zhi, deputy chief of the Zhejiang Provincial Public Security Department. Over 200 traffic policemen are available through the platform to attend to traffic emergencies.

In a live demonstration at the event, a local police officer reported the real-time traffic conditions of the city. “Enabled by City Brain, we can monitor the vehicles in real time, whether it’s in motion or stationary. It’s an amazing thing for a city to have knowledge of specific numbers about on-road vehicles in real time,” said Simon Hu, President of Alibaba Cloud.

In addition to traffic management, the program is also available for the city’s rescue and firefighting team to identify and monitor fire emergencies timely. The system will help to clear out firefighters’ path and prepare them for on-site situations of the emergency spot. In a high-risk scenario like this, advanced technology support not only increases efficiencies but also save lives.

Alibaba has introduced City Brain to Chinese cities like Hangzhou, Suzhou, and Guangzhou, as well as overseas cities in Malaysia. But the tech giant is taking a step further from powering existing cities to shaping our cities for the future. Based on previous experiences, Alibaba has set up a city planning lab with the municipality of XiongAn, is another new area of “national significance” for China, to help its transformation to a digital city. Yang Baojun, President of the China Academy of Urban Planning and Design, says that every level of change in the city will be reflected upon big data and AI.

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Briefing: Xiaomi users complain about increasing ads in English MIUI https://technode.com/2018/09/19/xiaomi-miui-ad/ https://technode.com/2018/09/19/xiaomi-miui-ad/#respond Wed, 19 Sep 2018 02:07:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81568 Putting ads in apps is a common practice in China.]]>

用户发现小米在英文版 MIUI 的系统设置里植入广告 – TechNode Chinese

What happened: Xiaomi’s popular Android ROM MIUI is drawing complaints from overseas users who found increasing advertisements in the system after updating to the latest 8.9.13 version. A Reddit user says that ad could be found everywhere in MIUI music player, apps and system setting interface.

Why it’s important: The ROM has been praised for its simple design and features, however, it also gets its fair share of criticisms, especially about the advertising policy of the company inside MIUI. Due to the abundance of ads, MIUI is jokingly referred to as “ADUI” by some Chinese users. Although most of the ads can be turned off in settings, it would inevitably harm user experience due to the extra time and attention. Putting ads in apps is a common practice in China, its impact on overseas users, who are not accustomed to the experience, might be greater.

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Alibaba Cloud President Simon Hu’s tips for successful globalization https://technode.com/2018/09/19/alibaba-cloud-globalization/ https://technode.com/2018/09/19/alibaba-cloud-globalization/#respond Wed, 19 Sep 2018 02:00:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81548 Alibaba Cloud sped up its expansion to overseas markets three years ago.]]>

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud-computing arm of Alibaba, is one of the internet giant’s most successful business units. Maintaining robust growth momentum, the nine-year-old unit recorded a revenue of RMB 4.7 billion ($710 million) in June quarter of 2018, a 93% YoY jump driven by higher value-added products and services and robust growth in paying customers.

In line with Alibaba’s globalization strategy, Alibaba Cloud sped up its expansion to overseas markets three years ago and what the company has achieved so far is quite impressive. The service now has 49 availability zones across 18 economic centers globally, with coverage extending across mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, India, Japan, Australia, the Middle East, the European Union, and the US.

But the company has bigger plans for the global market. Simon Hu, President of Alibaba Cloud, projects their local and overseas businesses to make up half their total business each. “We haven’t reached that yet, but it’s a goal we are fast approaching,” Hu told TechNode at The Computing Conference held in Hangzhou.

Building the overseas arm from scratch three years ago, Alibaba Cloud has encountered lots of challenges. Language is obviously the first barrier, but the most critical challenge lies in creating trust with clients. Compared with payment and e-commerce, the globalization of cloud computing services is a more daunting task because it’s not about one technology, but rather a place to hold application system and data for clients. For most of the time, it needs not only a trust in Alibaba, but a trust in Chinese firms, or ultimately a trust in China as a country, according to Hu.

“In the first three years of Alibaba Cloud globalization efforts, we have invested a lot of energy in complying with local laws, integrating into the local community, and supporting local infrastructure constructions. I believe we have basically solved the trust issues among users,” he added. “I give a score of 80 points to our performance in the globalization process.”

As a fundamental infrastructure for the flourishing of other online services, the globalization of Alibaba Cloud has paved the road for overseas expansion of other services under the Alibaba Group, such as its e-commerce businesses and Alipay, as well as Chinese companies that aspire to go beyond the domestic market.

For fellow Chinese firms embarking on their globalization journeys, “. . .[i]t’s important to keep in mind that respect for local laws, local employees and local community are the priorities, while technology and capital support come after that. We attach great value to the conversational mechanism between our company and the market we are operating in,” said Hu.

“Alibaba Cloud in Japan is operated in partnership with SoftBank because Japanese companies want more localized services offered by Japanese companies. Meanwhile, the service in India is offered directly by the Alibaba Cloud team. In a more crowded market like the US, we focus on medium- and small-sized clients, Chinese companies going abroad and overseas coming to China. We adopt different strategies for a different market, but the underlining principle is the same respect for the local market,” Hu explained.

In addition to being China’s largest provider of public cloud services, Alibaba Cloud is also the number four player globally in the IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) market by revenue in 2017, according to IDC. It among the world’s top 3 IaaS providers according to Gartner.

Despite its growth, however, the company is still playing catch-up when compared with foreign counterparts, like Amazon and Microsoft. Hu holds a confident but modest attitude when talking about the rivalry with existing cloud computing giants.

“US companies have pioneered in the cloud computing industry and made great contributions to the world. As China’s tech scene grows, it’s our great honor to join the league and take corresponding responsibilities to drive the development of the human race. China’s cloud computing capacity will take 20% or even more of the global market in the future five years,” said Hu.

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Briefing: Xiaomi puts younger executives in leadership positions https://technode.com/2018/09/18/xiaomi-executive/ https://technode.com/2018/09/18/xiaomi-executive/#respond Tue, 18 Sep 2018 03:06:08 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81402 For Chinese tech firms, the company culture has been more about the personal identity of the CEO. ]]>

In Wake of Alibaba Succession News, Xiaomi Puts Younger Executives in Leadership Spots– Caixin Global

What happened: Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi announced plans to put younger executives in leadership positions. In a dozen new appointments made by the company, a group of post-80 executives with an average age of 38.5 years old were named as head of various departments of the company to handle day-to-day operations.

Why it’s important: Xiaomi’s management shift comes on the heel of Alibaba’s management succession plan, which was announced last week. While China’s millennials are becoming its major consumer base, enterprises need to have young decision makers to keep pace with their customers. But for Chinese companies, especially those started around the beginning of this century, their culture is more about the personal identity and culture of the CEO. The tech giants have some serious work ahead for management transitions.

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Live blog: China’s AI future at World Artificial Intelligence Conference https://technode.com/2018/09/17/china-ai/ https://technode.com/2018/09/17/china-ai/#respond Mon, 17 Sep 2018 01:13:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81227 World Artifical Intelligence Conference is going to kick off in Shanghai with some of the leaders in China’s tech space sharing their insights on the industry. TechNode is going to be live blogging from the event to bring the latest trends. Check back for regular updates!]]>

World Artifical Intelligence Conference is going to kick off in Shanghai with some of the leaders in China’s tech space sharing their insights on the industry. TechNode is going to be live blogging from the event to bring the latest trends. Check back for regular updates!

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What Taobao makers tell us about today’s China https://technode.com/2018/09/14/taobao-makers-china-today/ https://technode.com/2018/09/14/taobao-makers-china-today/#respond Fri, 14 Sep 2018 10:29:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81064 Their stories allow us to take a glimpse into the ongoing trends in Chinese society.]]>

From a budding idea in a Hangzhou apartment to the largest e-commerce marketplace in the Middle Kingdom; over the past 15 years, Taobao has grown side-by-side with the phenomenal rise of China’s economy.  For Chinese users, it’s increasingly part of people’s daily lives, not only as the most popular shopping destination but also a platform where millions of small retailers make a living.

A volunteer introducing the replica of Taobao’s first office, a small apartment in Hangzhou, at Taobao Museum that’s set up for Taobao Maker Festival.(Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee)

The C2C e-commerce site is often referred to by its patrons as “Almighty Taobao” for selling everything you could possibly imagine. This could be attributed to the quick minds of Taobao retailers, who are known for their agility in adjusting marketing efforts and tailoring products to fit a shifting landscape.

USB disks and Nokia feature phones were beyond a doubt among the bestsellers at the beginning of this century in a world that pre-dates the smartphone era. Meanwhile, the sales of thermometers and masks jumped when SARS hit China in 2003. When looking back, it’s fairly obvious that the trends on the Taobao marketplace speak for China’s social changes over its historical timeline. Every major social development in the country has materialized in the form of Taobao goods over the past 15 years, a period when Chinese people experienced fundamental changes in their lives.

This week, Taobao launched its third Taobao Maker Festival, also the largest event in Taobao’s history, in Hangzhou, with over 200 young Taobao vendors and entrepreneurs. Here are some of the most interesting Taobao retailers we found at the event. Like always, their stories allow us to take a glimpse into the ongoing trends in Chinese society.

Crazy for “black technology”

China wasn’t always a country known for the maker spirit. For a long time, it was more of a fad among a small group of geek engineers in Shenzhen labs, but the spirit is quickly gaining momentum among Chinese grassroots users, from tech-lovers with no professional background to teenage students.

Celebrating China’s young tech talent was a major reason why Taobao Maker Festival was created, according to the company. The four-day gala, therefore, has also become an event for many Chinese techies and inventors to present their latest inventions. This year, visitors got a chance to experience and play with an array of cool and fun gadgets.

Unitree Robotics is a manufacturer of robot dogs. Resembling those made by Boston Dynamics, the company’s 24KG hydraulic robot can walk, trot and climb steps. Their products are available on Taobao at a price tag of RMB 200k to 300k. Its customer base ranges from schools to developers, who would enable the robot with computer vision capacities designed for high-risk rescue or patrol.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

As China seeks to advance its technological prowess, the country’s reality TV programming is being taken over by robots and AI. TechNode spotted the booth of a popular robot combat show named This is Bots at the festival. Their official Taobao store sells miniatures of the combat robots that are demoed in the show, as well as other related products for their fans to get a hands-on experience.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

AstroReality, founded by a group of tech enthusiasts, combines precisely 3D printed and crafted star models with augmented reality.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

Creativity and originality from the youth

Growing with Taobao is the aspiration of Chinese consumers seeking better quality and stronger personality in the things they buy. In the fourth quarter of 2017, “original design” appeared 170 million times in keyword searches on Taobao. According to the latest CBNData report, 77% of the independent designers on Taobao were aged 33 years or younger. Taobao is the perfect state for these young creators to experiment and commercialize their original ideas.

During this year’s event, Taobao has invited 20 top designers in China, including Ye Qian, Christine Lau, and Away Lee, to show their original works at the Fashion Show on West Lake’s Snow-covered Bridge. The Show is live-streamed on the Taobao App and Youku, while audience members can buy what they see in the show.

Image credit: Taobao

Chinese traditional culture has increasingly become a source of inspiration for designers searching for original ideas. Along with China’s recent surge in craftsmanship, the Taobao marketplace also witnessed a period of cultural renewal and heightened appreciation for the arts.

Filigree inlaid metal art (花丝镶嵌) is a traditional art that can be dated back to the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476BC). As most filigree-inlaid items are made from gold, only members of China’s royal family could enjoy works of filigree inlaid art. The Henan-based family behind a Taobao filigree inlaid headwear store has been engaged in the practice for generations. Their family workshop now has a dozen craftsmen and hopes that online channels could help to revive this old skill.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

China has a long history of traditional crafts such as pottery, lacquerware, dyeing and weaving, woodcarving and architecture. Taobao is increasingly a place for creators and craftsmen of these old skills to reach a wider audience.

Girls demonstrating the process of making China’s new year paintings (l). Craftsmen making bamboo artworks (r) (Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee)

2D culture on the rise

China’s mainstream culture is embracing a more open attitude towards content generated by 2D fans, once an underground group who develop a strong attachment to 2D characters in cartoons, comics, and games.

“When I was all dressed up in a costume and headed toward a cosplay competition ten years ago, people on the street would stare and point fingers at me for wearing the ‘weird attire.’ But now, the masses are more open-minded when they see cosplayers on the street, at least they know what this is about,” says Li Ang, a cosplayer who now runs his own cosplay costume shop on Taobao.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee

Instead of cosplaying characters from foreign publications, Chinese cosplayers are looking back into Chinese culture. The latest design from Li’s company features a dress inspired by “A Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains,” a famous Chinese traditional ink and wash painting by Wang Ximeng from China’s Northern Song Dynasty.

In addition to costumes, all kinds of related products such as toys, cushions, notebooks, flourished on Taobao’s marketplace along with the rise of 2D culture.

Image credit: TechNode/ Emma Lee
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Briefing: Huawei denies buyout by state-owned firm https://technode.com/2018/09/14/huawei-denies-buyout/ https://technode.com/2018/09/14/huawei-denies-buyout/#respond Fri, 14 Sep 2018 06:30:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=81130 Huawei's relationship with the government, especially in terms of ownership, could have a direct influence on the company's overseas business.]]>

Huawei Denies Buyout by State-Owned Firm-Yicai Global

What happened: China’s top smartphone and telecom equipment maker Huawei Technologies denied a rumor that it’s in the process of being acquired by a state-owned entity. The Shenzhen-based firm also rebutted reports about a business spinoff and about divesting some of its subsidiaries.

 Why it’s important: Founded in 1987, Huawei is known as a private enterprise whose 180,000 employees hold all the stakes. The status of being an employee-owned company is one of the arguments that the company emphasizes to distance itself from allegations of government control. Due to the military background of its founder Ren Zhengfei, however, the company is cautiously warded off in the overseas market for security reasons. After failed efforts to expand to the US smartphone market, Huawei receives another blow in its core telecos equipment business as Australia banned the firm from selling 5G tech in the country. Huawei’s relationship with the government, especially in terms of ownership, could have a direct influence on the company’s overseas business.

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Briefing: ZhongAn Tech sets up China’s first blockchain-based diamond traceability alliance https://technode.com/2018/09/13/zhongan-blockchain-diamond-traceability/ https://technode.com/2018/09/13/zhongan-blockchain-diamond-traceability/#respond Thu, 13 Sep 2018 03:21:33 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80941 Diamond traceability is the latest addition to a host of applications such as evidence verification for courts, carbon credits, and project fund management.]]>

众安科技以区块链重塑钻石产业链 全球首个钻石防伪溯源联盟成立-Xinhua

What happened: ZhongAn Technology, the technology arm of China’s online insurer ZhongAn Online, has founded an alliance with its partners for a traceability initiative build on a blockchain-based platform for the diamond jewelry industry. The company has placed more than 1.3 million diamonds on blockchain as of September 10.

Why it’s important: While China is fully embracing blockchain technology, Chinese tech firms are trying to find diversified application scenarios for the emerging technology to enhance security or create efficiencies in business. Diamond traceability is the latest addition to a host of applications such as evidence verification for courts, carbon credits, and project fund management.

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Briefing: Partnership with NetEase Yanxuan sends Pinduoduo shares up 19% https://technode.com/2018/09/12/pinduoduo-netease-yanxuan/ https://technode.com/2018/09/12/pinduoduo-netease-yanxuan/#respond Wed, 12 Sep 2018 03:15:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80738 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaNetEase Yanxuan set up its flagship store on Pinduoduo in the second half of 2017, but it has only recently gained attention. ]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba

与网易严选合作浮出水面 拼多多周二股价大涨19%– Sina Tech

What happened: The share price of Chinese social e-commerce company Pinduoduo surged 19.4% on September 11 after a recent app update that brings its former low-profile partnership with NetEase Yanxuan to the spotlight. NetEase Yanxuan set up its flagship store on Pinduoduo in the second half of 2017, but it only gained attention now after Pinduoduo rolled out pavilions for individual brands.

Why it’s important: Operated by NetEase, which is generally known as a video game publisher, NetEase Yanxuan sells unbranded “private label” products that are purported to be identical to their branded counterparts. NetEase Yanxuan and Pinduoduo share a similarity in their business model in sourcing directly from the makers of premium goods and selling to customers so as to lower the costs. But different from Pinduoduo, Yanxuan managed to build up a more solid reputation for providing cost-effective, quality products. Pinduoduo’s share jumped on prospects that the partnership could bring more quality products to Pinduoduo. Given the counterfeit claims surround Pinduoduo, NetEase Yanxuan, which may be affected by the problem as well, is not proactive in promoting the partnership. A company spokesperson told local media that the cooperation is just testing the waters and the company hasn’t put much effort into it. As a friend of Pinduoduo’s founder Huang Zheng, NetEase CEO William Lei is an early state investor of Pinduoduo.

Is NetEase’s Yanxuan the new trendsetter for China’s e-commerce industry?

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Briefing: Toutiao called out for illegally running financial services https://technode.com/2018/09/11/toutiao-illegal-financial-services/ https://technode.com/2018/09/11/toutiao-illegal-financial-services/#respond Tue, 11 Sep 2018 04:13:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80624 The Chinese news aggregator rolled out a low-interest loan service Fangxinjie in July.]]>

Content Aggregator’s Finance Venture Sparks Concerns-The SixthTone

What happened: In a public letter addressed to the China Banking Regulatory Commission, journalist Li Jianping, who runs a WeChat public account specializing in banking-related news, publicly called out news aggregator Jinri Toutiao for offering financial services without a proper license. The Chinese news aggregator rolled out a low-interest loan service Fangxinjie in July.

Why it’s important: Stricter government regulations have led to a meltdown of China’s online lending platforms since the beginning of this year. In order to survive the tough market, some existing online lending companies seek new opportunities by partnering with non-financial outlets, including media companies, to offer online loans. Both Sina Weibo and MeituPic have rolled out similar service through partnerships with existing lending platforms. “Popular media outlets should be cautious about advertising for lending platforms because of ‘credibility-related issues’,” an expert in the industry warned.

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Ctrip in talks to invest in Indian food delivery service Zomato https://technode.com/2018/09/10/ctrip-zomato-india/ https://technode.com/2018/09/10/ctrip-zomato-india/#respond Mon, 10 Sep 2018 10:22:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80590 The tie-up may help both companies to explore international markets.]]>

China’s online travel services provider Ctrip is reportedly planning to invest around $100 million in Indian online food delivery and restaurant search platform Zomato in a deal that values the company at $1.8 billion to 2 billion, The Times of India is reporting, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

The total amount of this funding could go up to $400 million with the participation of Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial and several unnamed investors, the report added. Another source, speaks on anonymity, adds that the transaction should close in two weeks.

The spokesperson for Ctrip did not comment to TechNode’s inquiries.

Ranked among the world’s top four online travel agencies along with Expedia, TripAdvisor and the Priceline Group, Ctrip is China’s largest online travel site with a market cap of $20 billion. If true, this investment would be one of the first steps for Ctrip to invest outside of travel services.

But given the close relationship between travel and food, such a bet wouldn’t be surprising. Outbound travel, especially to Southeast Asian destinations, is creating incredible opportunities for Chinese tech companies. Chinese tourists are shifting from a shopping spree to in-depth travel in its overseas consumption pattern, which involves better experiences in every sector from accommodation, shopping to local cuisine.

Actually, the company already tried to establish a presence in the cuisine-related sector by launching a Michelin guide-like gourmet list around the world.

Although not as active as other Chinese tech giants like Tencent and Alibaba, Ctrip has gradually established a solid portfolio surround its core business. The company acquired Scottish travel site Skyscanner for $1.7 billion two years ago and owns Tours4Fun, travel research site Trip.com and Trip by Skyscanner. In recent years, the company is taking bolder steps and looks into all kinds of investments under the concept of smart transportation. Ctrip made a strategic investment in US supersonic jet startup Boom Supersonic this April.

After a $200 million round led by Ant Financial in February this year, Zomato has entered an acquisition spree. While the investment is purely financial, the tie-up may help both of the companies in exploring international markets.

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Two years after student death, search ranking and ad placement is still a problem for Baidu https://technode.com/2018/09/10/two-years-after-student-death-search-ranking-and-ad-placement-is-still-a-problem-for-baidu/ https://technode.com/2018/09/10/two-years-after-student-death-search-ranking-and-ad-placement-is-still-a-problem-for-baidu/#respond Mon, 10 Sep 2018 07:03:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80562 The current scandal comes two years after the death of Wei Zexi, who died after being treated at an unvetted hospital recommended by Baidu.]]>

Chinese search engine Baidu has sparked public outcry again after the Chinese state-owned media network CCTV revealed another user complaint regarding the company’s unethical practice in search ranking and advertisement placement for hospitals, local media is reporting.

CCTV aired a program on September 7, in which a Ms. Zhou from Ningbo, Zhejiang Province shared her disturbing experience in searching for a hospital on Baidu. Zhou wanted to seek treatment for her nose disease in an affiliated hospital of the reputable Shanghai Fudan University.

Although she searched the exact keywords of “eye, otolaryngology hospital affiliated to Shanghai Fudan University”, Baidu shows her Shanghai Fuda Hospital, which was actually a misleading ad given that “Fuda” is common shortening for Fudan University in Chinese.

The doctor told Zhou that she had hypertrophic turbinates and needed an operation. The operation, medical treatment, medical expenses and so on have cost her tens of thousands of yuan. By the time she visited the real Fudan University hospital, Zhou found that she could be cured with nose drops and medications which cost her only around RMB 200.

In response to the scandal, Baidu released an apology, saying that it’s making an effort to remedy these problems. According to the company, it has launched a project to protect the brands of public hospitals with more than 57,639 keywords being protected from ad search results. Baidu also launched a separate named “Search Craft” where the company promised ad-free search results.

It’s not the first time Baidu has faced harsh public criticism from the national TV network. As one of the most powerful information gateways in China, Baidu has long received public accusations of “acting evil” in putting profits ahead of citizens’ health. The current scandal comes two years after the death of Wei Zexi, a computer science major who died of synovial sarcoma after being treated at an unvetted hospital recommended by Baidu.

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Lending Club CEO: US’s and China’s P2P lending need clearer regulation and communication https://technode.com/2018/09/10/p2p-china-lending-club/ https://technode.com/2018/09/10/p2p-china-lending-club/#respond Mon, 10 Sep 2018 06:30:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80374 The fast growth of Chinese P2P platforms is not the only thing that is different from their US counterparts.]]>

The concept behind P2P (peer-to-peer) lending or online lending is very compelling—to connect borrowers, whether they are individuals or companies, with lenders, saving the profits that have been harvested by big banks and credit card companies. It seems a win-win deal for all parties involved: the loan borrowers get lower interests, the investors have a higher return and the platform enjoys a service fee.

The idea became popular when it was first proposed around a decade ago. The then fast-growing sector fostered a series of unicorns. US P2P pioneer Lending Club was valued at $5.4 billion in its 2014 IPO and its peer Prosper was valued by private investors as worth $1.9 billion in its prime. Although a few years later than its foreign counterparts, Chinese P2P platforms have grown rapidly with leaders in the sector such as Hexindai who has gone public, and the likes of Lufax and Dianrong poised for an IPO.

The rise and fall of China’s online P2P lending

But running the appealing concept in the real world is a whole lot more complicated when facing rising default risks and profitability problems. The P2P industry soon hit that point where doubt and genuine concern outweigh whatever goodwill its novelty once attracted. Large chunks of the once-up-comers were wiped off the map and some of them went bankrupt.

Government regulation is among the most discussed topics in the sector. At a leading fintech event LendIt Fintech held on September 6 at Shanghai’s Pudong District, Chief Executive Officer of Lending Club, Scott Sanborn, highlighted the difference between Chinese and US regulatory framework and his view of China’s P2P industry.

The regulatory environment in China and the US is dramatically different, Sanborn pointed out.

“In the US, there’s not a specific regulatory framework for our business model. We are fitting into the existing regulations, which existed to protect the lending side as well as the investment side. It’s not a perfect fit,” he said. “As a result, there are not many platforms like us in the US. But in China, things were essentially open, which brings an incredible number of up to 6,000 online platforms. That’s two pretty different approaches.”

China’s online lending industry has seen rapid growth since 2007 which hasn’t been very much regulated. The government stepped in to harness the hot market with rigid rectifications plans in June, but the move has propelled a break-out of compliance issues resulting in the collapse of P2P platforms. The number of defaulted platforms surged from 13 in May to 163 in July. The situation in the US is different.

“Some of the things were taken quite seriously in Washington, such as what price you charge, who are you lending to, race, age and gender of the users,” said Sanborn. “All of these questions will be asked at the very beginning of a business. Some platforms that are just getting started could get a penalty so the government is sending a very clear message that you need to take it seriously when doing P2P business.”

To some extent, the increase of P2P complaints in China can also be contributed to the weaker risk awareness among Chinese individual investors as compared with their US counterparts.

“In the US, the investors are very aware of the fact that loans, like any other investments, have risks,” Sanborn explained. “The interest of the loan goes to the investors, so in turn, they could face the risks involved. When we just launched, it was very difficult to convince people to invest in loans they have no track of and that sounds pretty scary. What we did was to offer a large amount of data list for investors to assess these risks.”

“China has a stronger ‘Want-It-All’ mentality to money, relative to retail investors elsewhere,” a research published in 2016 by Bernstein pointed out. “Our respondents appear to want risk-free yet high yields on WMP, equity, and bond investments.”

Sanborn believes the prospects of China’s P2P market are still quite exciting, but clear regulation is definitely the most fundamental part for the industry.

“What I see here in China is a pretty exciting picture because the county hasn’t been burdened by many of the legacy products,” Sanborn said. “The business system that we have in the US was predominantly built over credit cards. The challenge has been clearly the validation of the P2P model. Clear regulations or clear communication is vital for services institutions, banks, and investors.”

When asked about China expansion plans, Scott responded briefly that they “have no plans to expand to China in the short term.” The answer is no surprise given Lending Club’s current problems and the dramatically different market situation.

On its path to combine technology and financial services, China has witnessed many debates on high-sounding terms such as Fintech, TechFin, and Web Tech since 2016. Even experts in the sector find it difficult to draw the line between these terms. But for Sanborn, Lending Club is clear about how the company identifies itself.

“We are a tech company providing financial service. We use this vision from the beginning of our business,” he noted.

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Bilibili debuts on Steam with two new games https://technode.com/2018/09/10/bilibili-debuts-steam-gaming/ https://technode.com/2018/09/10/bilibili-debuts-steam-gaming/#respond Mon, 10 Sep 2018 04:02:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80497 Bilibili, the Chinese video sharing and ACG (animation, comic and game) community, has made its debut on the world’s top video game distribution platform, Steam, as the publisher for two new titles of The Con Simulator and Invaxion, expanding to the PC gaming sector. Neither are available for purchase, but are listed on the Steam […]]]>
The Con Simulator (Image credit: Bilibili)

Bilibili, the Chinese video sharing and ACG (animation, comic and game) community, has made its debut on the world’s top video game distribution platform, Steam, as the publisher for two new titles of The Con Simulator and Invaxion, expanding to the PC gaming sector. Neither are available for purchase, but are listed on the Steam platform.

Developed by DGSpitzer, The Con Simulator is a simulation game for players who are dreaming about organizing their own comic con. Invaxion is a music-themed casual game developed by Nanjing based-developer Aquatrax. The two games will be launched in the fourth quarter of this year.

Started as a video streaming site, Blibili quickly grows to be the hub for China’s 2D culture, which is characterized by fans that develop a strong attachment to 2D characters in cartoons, table cards, comics, games, and novels. As an important part of the sub-culture as well as a highly lucrative business, gaming has become a core business and major revenue source for the company.

Revenue from mobile games, where the company has been focused so far, surged 61% year-on-year to $119.5 million, accounting for 77% of the total $155.1 million revenues booked in the quarter ended June 30. Expanding into PC video sector would further brace up the company’s gaming business.

But tapping into China’s highly crowded gaming sector isn’t an easy task when facing competition from industry giants like Tencent and NetEase. What’s more, the whole industry has felt the chill wind of a halt in game approvals during a countrywide content crackdown. Tencent reported profit a decline in the second quarter.

Stricter government control is also exerting pressure on the company’s core business. Along with 19 video apps, the company’s ACG-focused video app was ordered on a month-long suspension by the state for inappropriate content. The company, however, claimed that this wouldn’t have an overall negative effect on their business.

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Briefing: Mobike suspends operation in Manchester due to thefts and vandalism https://technode.com/2018/09/07/mobike-pulls-out-manchester/ https://technode.com/2018/09/07/mobike-pulls-out-manchester/#respond Fri, 07 Sep 2018 04:15:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80307 This is the first time for Mobike to pull out of a city because of antisocial behavior.]]>

Chinese cycle-hire firm Mobike pulls out of Manchester after losing one-in-10 rental bikes to theft or vandalism– Daily Mail

What happened: Bike rental operator Mobike has withdrawn bikes in Manchester after one in ten of their bikes were stolen or vandalized. The customers in the city will have their deposits and credit refunded in the next few days. The bikes will be transported to other cities the company is operating in, such as London, Oxford, Cambridge, and Newcastle.

Why it’s important: Chinese bike rental giants Mobike and ofo have launched aggressive global expansion plans since the beginning of last year. But as the market cools, both of the companies choose to retrench their overseas operation. Cash-strapped ofo has pulled back from a series of overseas cities in South Korea, German, Australia, and India. Mobike withdrew from of Washington DC and Dallas in the US earlier this year. In most cases, the pull-outs were the result of the company’s operational problems. But Manchester, Mobike’s first operation outside Asia, is the first withdrawal due to exterior reasons of antisocial behavior. Other dockless bike rental firms like ofo and oBike encountered similar problems in the city.

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Briefing: Chinese e-commerce portal Yunji Weidian heading for an IPO https://technode.com/2018/09/06/yunji-weidian-ipo-us/ https://technode.com/2018/09/06/yunji-weidian-ipo-us/#respond Thu, 06 Sep 2018 03:15:11 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=80184 The industrial and commercial authority of Hangzhou fined the company last year over allegations of using pyramid schemes to grow.]]>

Exclusive: Chinese e-commerce portal Yunji Weidian taps banks for U.S. IPO – source– Reuters

What happened: Chinese e-commerce portal Yunji Weidian has hired investment banks for a US IPO in early next week, Reuters reported. Yunji hopes to fetch a valuation of between $7 billion and $10 billion in the IPO, and has enlisted Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse Group AG, and JPMorgan Chase & Co to lead the listing on the Nasdaq stock exchange, the report says, citing an anonymous source

Why it’s important: Yunji Weidian is a rising e-commerce portal that claims more than 35 million active users, the source noted. Similar to Pinduoduo, Yunji Weidian achieved rapid growth by channeling the huge user base of Tencent’s giant social media app WeChat as a source for potential buyers. In addition, the two companies share another similarity in their controversial status. The industrial and commercial authority of Hangzhou fined the company for RMB 9.58 million fine last year over allegations of using pyramid schemes to grow.

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Briefing: Online home leasing platform Ziroom caught in scandal after death of tenant https://technode.com/2018/09/05/ziroom-apartment-safety-scandal/ https://technode.com/2018/09/05/ziroom-apartment-safety-scandal/#respond Wed, 05 Sep 2018 02:15:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79961 Chinese tech giants are under backlash over missteps in speeding up monetization by sacrificing public goodwill.]]>

Woman Sues Housing Platform Ziroom Over Deadly Chemical– SixthTone

What happened: The widow of an Alibaba employee has filed a lawsuit against Chinese online apartment leasing giant Ziroom for causing the death of her husband. The Ziroom user surnamed Wang died of leukemia in July after living in Ziroom’s house that was found to have unsafe formaldehyde levels.

Why it’s important: Chinese proptech giant Ziroom backed by Tencent has been under fire recently. The current scandal comes shortly after the company was being accused of ramping up prices for housing in Beijing. Ziroom is not the only Chinese tech firm that’s losing trust from users. Didi’s recent passenger murder scandal has sparked social outrage against the ride-hailing tycoon. Chinese tech giants are under backlash over missteps in speeding up monetization moves at the sacrifice of public goodwill.

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Explainer: China’s tech ecosystems and the barriers between them https://technode.com/2018/09/04/explainer-china-ecosystems/ https://technode.com/2018/09/04/explainer-china-ecosystems/#respond Tue, 04 Sep 2018 07:37:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79684 As competition tightens, China’s tech behemoths are raising their ecosystem walls.]]>

Deng Shuang, a 34-year-old mother of one, wants to share baby shoes she found on Taobao to a mom friend via WeChat. Instead of sharing it directly from Taobao to Wechat, Deng has to go through a very clumsy process: she has to copy an auto-generated Taobao link for the item and then paste it in WeChat before she can send it.

A small sharing barrier between two of China’s giant apps is no small deal, especially when millions of users go through this every day. But this is more than a technical loophole that can be fixed easily with updates: This is just one part of the walls China’s internet giants construct to guard their self-sustained gardens.

Most people believe the Chinese internet is one world unto itself, but few realize there are multiple separate, loosely connected ecosystems in China’s cyberspace. Competition in China’s internet world is not about individual tech companies anymore, it’s increasingly a contest among ecosystems.  

Superapps and ecosystems

“US and European internet companies usually focus on one sector and try to be the best at it. Chinese companies, however, start by focusing and solving one problem, but over time they start to attack all the problems,” William Bao Bean, managing director of Chinaccelerator, told TechNode in a previous interview.

Chinese tech firms, especially early tech incumbents like BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent), started from a vertical but with a vision to grow very big. This approach gradually developed into the “super app + ecosystem” model, where Chinese tech firms try to create expanded online platforms by leveraging the dominant status of their super apps.

Super apps, usually where the giants first started, serve as anchors to drive user engagement. Tencent, the parent of China’s former default messaging app QQ, continues its dominance in social networking with WeChat. Alibaba has its old turf in e-commerce with Taobao and Baidu in its search engine app.

The ecosystem surrounding a tech firm takes shape as its businesses grow; whenever a new trendy area develops, the ecosystem takes hold. Of course, the expansions still begin from the related business. Alibaba, for example, established Alipay to solve the payment problem of Taobao marketplace and Cainiao to tackle logistics issues.

Since each of the tech giants got their own areas in the early days, they were more or less out of each other’s way. Yet, as they’ve grown, their business inevitably started overlapping in a grab for new emerging markets until finally what we see is comprehensive competition on each others’ home turf.

When ride-hailing first boomed in 2013, Alibaba and Tencent invested in Kuaidi and Didi, two fastest growing companies in the area, respectively to set their food into the emerging market. Baidu entered the battlefield by investing in Uber. The head-on competition gradually shifted from markets like ride-hailing—which at the time was more about getting users onboard their payment platforms—to their cornerstone businesses in social networking, payment, gaming, and mobile e-commerce. While the tech powerhouses are turning competition in China’s tech world to their proxy wars, they also build an ecosystem to lock-in users.

Behind the Great Firewall, China has its own equivalents of services that are blocked in the country. Similarly, Chinese tech firms have gathered complete sets of proprietary apps and services under their wings to cover every aspect of users’ daily lives so that they can have their demands met without leaving the ecosystem: e-commerce, content, payment, social networking, gaming, education.

Empire formation

The expansion of ecosystems is either achieved by investment, acquisition, or inside the company. Chinese tech tycoons have earned a bad reputation in the early days for copying ideas from startups and crushing them with their vast amounts of resources, experience, and users. Tencent bears the brunt of this criticism and casts the shadow among China’s entrepreneurs who face the “what if Tencent copies me” dilemma.

Given the fast growth of China’s internet space where trends come and go almost overnight, it is an increasingly daunting task for a single company to catch up with every emerging “whirlwind”, even for the BAT trio. On top of that, diving deep with a homegrown project may leave the company vulnerable to the instabilities of market trends. Thus acquiring or investing in upcoming verticals or startups with a ready team and product has become a more favorable choice with the extra benefit of shaking off the copycat image.

Alibaba and Tencent are two of the most assiduous dealmakers in recent years, even more active than most of the angel investors, venture capitalists, and private equity. Data from ITJuzi shows that Tencent topped the venture capital list with 125 deals in 2017, while Alibaba took the fourth spot with 77 deals. Compared with Alibaba and Tencent, Baidu is conservative.

Image credit: MBAChina; Data from ITJuzi. Tencent in blue, Alibaba in yellow.

The effect of these large-scale land-grabs effectively split China’s tech world into different camps. Over half of China’s unicorns are either founded or invested by BAT, and north of 90% of the companies with a market cap of $5 billion or more are related to the trio, according to data from Ctoutiao.

But companies may have their own investment styles. Alibaba tends to take large or controlling shares and get deeply involved in the operations of these companies. Tencent takes a hands-off approach, only investing a minor stake. This explains why Tencent has more deals. But the approach also puts the social and gaming titan land in trouble. A WeChat post went viral earlier this year, criticizing Tencent for “losing its dream” and spending its time seeking investment-worthy apps instead of working on its own products.

The benefits for startups

The power of a super app and the importance of being a member of the ecosystem is best exemplified in the case of the incredible rise of Pinduoduo, which achieved RMB 100 billion gross merchandise volume milestone less than 3 years after its inception, a benchmark that took Taobao five years and JD ten years to achieve. Pinduoduo’s viral growth is deeply ingrained in the WeChat ecosystem, which offers a whole set of resources for user engagement, cloud service, as well as payment solutions for buyers to complete the purchase circle.

“If services provided by Tencent to us become limited, compromised, restricted, curtailed or less effective or become more expensive or unavailable to us for any reason, including the availability of our mini-program within Weixin (the Chinese version of WeChat), our business may be materially and adversely affected. Failure to maintain our relationship with Tencent could materially and adversely affect our business and results of operations,” the company admitted in its prospectus.

The loss of a giant backer could be detrimental. Shares of Chinese micro-lender Qudian plunged to their lowest price since its listing over concerns that Ant Financial will not renew its strategic partnership with the cash lender when their deal ends by August.

Higher walls

As competition tightens, China’s tech behemoths are raising the ecosystem wall by blocking services from outsiders or offering more benefits to guarantee user fidelity. In May, WeChat rolled out tightened restrictions on sharing external audiovisual links in its Moment feed, which practically banned links from all the popular streaming sites like Douyin, Kuaishou, Ximalaya, with the exception of those backed or developed by Tencent. Although the ban was removed three days later, the underlying principle for granting access to its most valuable traffic source is pretty clear—Tencent allies only.

Alibaba announced its all-in-one 88VIP paid membership plan in August. Alibaba users with a Taoqi Value—a scoring system calculating purchasing history and individual credit— higher than 1,000 can purchase an RMB 88 annual membership for Tmall Supermarket, Tmall Global, Youku, Ele.me, Xiami Music, and Taopiaopiao. Users with a Taoqi Value lower than 1,000 have to pay RMB 888 for the membership. The over 1,000% difference between the 2 membership fees implies that the key is to have those top buyers and frequent lifestyle services users locked in.

Alibaba’s mission makes it impossible for us to become an empire-like business. We believe that only by creating an open, collaborative and prosperous ecosystem that enables its constituents to fully participate can we truly help our small business and consumer customers. As stewards of this ecosystem, we spend our focus, effort, time and energy on initiatives that will benefit the greater good of the ecosystem and its various participants,” said Alibaba chairman Jack Ma in an open letter before the company’s 2014 IPO.

Ma’s philosophy speaks of how all of the tech giants navigate their businesses. Tencent and Alibaba’s ecosystems are still the most developed, with Baidu’s following closely behind. Upcoming tech firms like Xiaomi, Didi Chuxing, ByteDance, Meituan are forging their own ecosystems in respective fields of smart hardware, mobility, content, and O2O. But still, they are playing catch-up. Didi and Meituan, although already unicorns by themselves, are related to Alibaba and Tencent through investments.

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Briefing: Tencent-backed Tesla rival Nio sets up ride-hailing firm https://technode.com/2018/09/04/nio-ride-hailing/ https://technode.com/2018/09/04/nio-ride-hailing/#respond Tue, 04 Sep 2018 03:34:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79837 Nio’s newly founded subsidiary is part of China’s ride-hailing resurgence.]]>

Tencent-Backed Tesla Rival Forms NEV Ride-Hailing Firm– Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer Nio has set up a new car-rental and ride-hailing subsidiary in the country’s southern island province of Hainan. The report points out that the new firm could be related to the company’s partnership with China Automobile Technology and Research Center and several other companies inked on August 21.

Why it’s important: Nio’s newly founded subsidiary is obviously part of China’s ride-hailing resurgence. Apart from Nio, the burgeoning sector witnessed the entrance of several big name players over the past year, including Meituan, state-owned SAIC Motor, mapping company AutoNavi, and more. New players in the field could pose a series threat to Didi Chuxing’s current dominance, especially at a time when the ride-sharing giant is under public backlash due to passenger murder scandals. NIO has filed to list on the New York Stock Exchange this August.

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China takes 57 of 100 spots in global top 100 blockchain patent ranking https://technode.com/2018/09/03/blockchain-patent-china-tech/ https://technode.com/2018/09/03/blockchain-patent-china-tech/#respond Mon, 03 Sep 2018 10:30:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79801 Alibaba, together with its affiliate company Ant Financial, tops the ranking with 90 related public patent applications.]]>

China’s blockchain crazy is in full swing and a recent report from IPRdaily sheds more light on the trend. Chinese firms took 57 spots in a newly compiled “Top-100 Blockchain Enterprise Patent Rankings” list, according to the global intellectual property information media outlet. Chinese and American companies feature prominently on the list. Thirty-six companies around the world have over 20 public patent applications related to blockchain.

Chinese tech companies took half of the top 10. Alibaba, together with its affiliate company Ant Financial, tops the ranking with 90 related public patent applications. People’s Bank of China, China’s central bank, holds the fifth spot with 44 patents, followed by Tencent (40 patents), Fuzamei (39 patents) and VeChain (38 patents).

Virtually every major Chinese tech company has placed bets in the emerging technology. But holding patents is more of a strategic layout than an all-out push for some tech giants as compared with those who are focused squarely on the sector. Baidu, Huawei, Qihoo 360, Xiaomi all touch slightly on the trend with less than 20 patents.

China’s government is harnessing its data to make blockchain-based identity a reality

The force of government endorsement for the technology could be seen from the number of state-backed enterprises on the list. In addition to the People’s Bank of China, several state-backed enterprises have made to roster, including China Unicom, China Mobile State Grid Cooperation of China, Bank of China, China UnionPay, and China Merchants Bank.

Rising numbers of patents in an emerging technllogy also reflects a wakening IP awareness among China’s tech firms, which is the result of decade-long efforts.

China’s tech firms are adapting to an increasingly IP sensitive environment

2018 marks the first year that the application of blockchain technologies has become more widespread and an industry-wide ecosystem has been created. This can be seen in the fact that the number of patent applications related to blockchain technologies has grown rapidly over the past two years.

According to IPRdaily, applications related to underlying technologies such as access control, public key decryption, block construction and data processing accounted for about 50% of the total. The other half of the applications are mainly related to the application of blockchain technologies in various industries, such as identity authentication, drug tagging, food tracking, audit registration, financial institution information coordination, personal credit reporting and tax filing, and some other industrial applications.

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WeWork’s China rival Ucommune acquires interior design firm Daga https://technode.com/2018/09/03/ucommune-acquires-daga-wework/ https://technode.com/2018/09/03/ucommune-acquires-daga-wework/#respond Mon, 03 Sep 2018 07:17:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79778 Daga Architects has been a long-term partner of Ucommune and teamed up with the firm for the design of its spaces.]]>

Chinese co-working space operator Ucommune, formerly known as UrWork, just announced the acquisition of Daga Architects, a Beijing-based interior design firm, to bring state-of-art designs to its co-working space networks, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

Co-founded by four experienced designers including Shen Jianghai, formerly at the renowned Zaha Hadid Architects, Daga Architects has been a long-term partner of Ucommune and teamed up with the firm for the design of its spaces in Hangzhou, Singapore, Kunming, and 5L Meet in Beijing, part of another space operator project co-founded by Ucommune founder Mao Daqing.

As an early entrant, Ucommnue gradually rose to dominance in China’s co-working space market in line with a swift market consolidation of the sector. It has acquired a series of smaller but strategic competitors, such as Wedo, Woo Space, New Space, Workingdom. Thanks to these partnerships, the company claims to operate 60 offices in Beijing, over 20 in Shanghai and a significant presence in China’s Great Bay Area.

The Chinese co-working giant is competing with its US counterpart WeWork both in China and globally. WeWork, which is seeing great potential in China, has sped up its China push since the beginning of this year. In addition to land grabbing in the local market, Ucommune is fighting back with a large-scale global expansion plan.

While gradually establishing physical footholds across the world, the company expands its ecosystem by tapping related businesses. It’s no surprise that interior design to become first areas that Ucommune looks at given the close-related nature of the two industries. Top executives from both WeWork and Ucommnune have attributed great importance to design as a differentiating factor.

But nothing short for a solid funding could support the company’s quick growth. The firm’s latest $43.5 million round was received in this August at a valuation of $1.8 billion and it’s reportedly heading for a Hong Kong IPO in the next year.

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JD’s FMCG B2B unit partners with China Mobile on convenience store project https://technode.com/2018/09/03/jd-fmcg-b2b-china-mobile/ https://technode.com/2018/09/03/jd-fmcg-b2b-china-mobile/#respond Mon, 03 Sep 2018 04:18:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79712 JD Joy dog Solana BeijingFMCG B2B market is a booming sector as a new force to create a unified channel for brand owners and suppliers to reach China’s segmented offline retailers.]]> JD Joy dog Solana Beijing
JD Joy dog Solana Beijing
Image credit: JD.com

JD Xintonglu (新通路), the FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) online B2B arm of Chinese e-commerce giant JD, has reached a partnership with China’s top telecom carrier China Mobile, local media is reporting.

Under the deal, China Mobile will support JD franchise convenience stores and retailers that are using JD’s B2B ordering platform Zhangguibao with premium traffic packages and broadband services. At the same time, China Mobile will roll out custom services for JD convenience store customers and launch joint marketing campaigns with the e-commerce tycoon.

The second-ranking e-commerce company is expanding aggressively in line with China’s new retail boom. Company founder and CEO Liu Qiangdong said earlier this year that the company plans to add JD 1,000 stores every day by the year-end.

JD’s current partnership comes shortly after a similar tie-up with China Unicom, another state-backed telco giant in the country.

The FMCG B2B market is a booming sector in China’s tech space as a new force to create a unified channel for brand owners and suppliers to reach China’s segmented offline retailers. JD have ventured into this business with Xintonglu and Alibaba with LST (零售通). Targeting traditional trade retail stores, this sector will grow to RMB 330 billion (US$48 billion) in 2018 from RMB 40 billion in 2016, according to Kantar Retail.

As China moves into a mobile-first or even mobile-only era, Chinese tech firms are speeding up their cooperation with telecom carriers to enhance user experience. Last year, Tencent has released with China Unicom King Card, which gives unlimited data usage on Tencent’s ecosystem of apps encompassing everything one needs in daily life—from messaging, payments and news to music, video streaming, and gaming.

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Chinese tech giants burn cash and users are paying for it https://technode.com/2018/08/31/chinese-tech-cash-users/ https://technode.com/2018/08/31/chinese-tech-cash-users/#respond Fri, 31 Aug 2018 07:55:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79546 Two recent tech scandals serve as cautionary tales for why we need to balance profitability and public goodwill.]]>

The speed at which Chinese tech companies are burning cash is disturbing. In order to maintain its dominating position, China’s massive service platform Meituan has spent over $4 billion in the past seven years. But O2O is not the only field that witnessed a fierce land-grabbing battle. Similar subsidy-fueled wars are going on in virtually every emerging market from ride-hailing to bike rental.

The prevailing model for a startup to prosper in the Middle Kingdom is to snap up market shares as fast as possible, often luring customer by providing massive subsidies and extensive marketing campaigns. Once they build their brand and clear up major competitors, they will have a final say in monetizing its users.

Before reaching a critical mass, in Didi’s case over 95% of China’s ride-hailing market, these companies are largely funded by venture capital and private equity firms, along with larger internet companies like Tencent and Alibaba. The rise of a raft of emerging tech verticals draw capital in and billion dollars investments are constantly hitting the headlines of local media.

Spoiled by abundant capital, the entire marketing strategies of some companies are formed around losing money. “2VC model” was jokingly coined in the craziest days of China’s fundraising extravaganza. Like customer-targeted business is shorted as 2C or ToC business, 2VC is  a term created for cash-burning startups that survive only by raise funding from venture capitalists instead of a sustainable profitability model.

However, two recent scandals surround China’s tech tycoons show that “VC welfare” is coming to an end in some of the more mature fields. Ultimately, users are going to pay for the tech unicorn’s sprawling growth.

Renting a home in China’s megacities like Beijing and Shanghai are becoming increasingly costly. The possible roles Chinese online real estate brokerage platforms have played in driving up the skyrocketing home prices sparked national outrage recently.

A Beijing landlord surnamed Cheng recounted his experience on a Chinese bulletin board about how Ziroom and Danke, another operator, had engaged in a bidding war for leasing out his apartment in the Beijing suburbs. While Chen had planned to rent out a 120-square-meter apartment for RMB 7,500 ($1,098) per month, the price was eventually raised to RMB 10,800 after the competitive bidding.

As one of the proptech unicorns in China, Ziroom takes out long-term leases of existing homes from individual landlords. The houses are then sublet to tenants, coupled with weekly cleaning, wifi, and other services. The company raised a whopping RMB 4 billion ($622 million) in January at an RMB 20 billion valuation. Its parent Lianjia, a residential brokerage, reportedly received RMB 2.6 billion in January 2017.

With abundant capital, Ziroom easily got a larger budget in striking deals with landowners in a bid to gain a larger market share. As the company gradually gain supremacy in the sector, however, they are under increasing pressure to show its profitability capacity. That means raising rents, but this will put the costs on the shoulders of their users.

Hu Jinghui, the former vice chief executive officer of another real estate agency Woaiwojia criticized competitors like Ziroom for acquiring apartments at above-market-value prices and then renting them out at even higher prices, Sixth Tone reported.

Ziroom denied its role in rising home prices in Beijing, claiming that the rental apartments only account for less than 5% of the rental market. It promised to put an additional 120,000 apartments on the market in an effort to stabilize prices.

In more extreme cases, the VC-backed fast growth and hasty monetization approach not only cost money but also lives. China’s ride-hailing giant Didi comes under fire recently after a second female user was being raped and murdered within four months. To worsen the case, a local report shows that there are at least 50 sexual harassment and assault incidents by Didi drivers over the past four years. The public backlash against Didi peaks when angry users called for the mass to delete Didi’s app.

“We raced non-stop, riding on the force of breathless expansion and capital through these few years, but this has no meaning in such a tragic loss of life. Throughout the company, we start to question if we are doing the right thing; or even whether we have the right values. There is an enormous amount of self-doubt, guilt, and soul-searching,” said Didi CEO and founder Cheng Wei and president Liu Qing in an apology released four days after the incident, admitting the company’s misstep in pursuing fast expansion and return while partially sacrificing user benefits.

Controversies about Didi’s measures to achieve profitability are nothing new. Earlier this year, the company was accused of charging higher prices to customers who it thinks will be willing to pay more, a kind of personalized pricing, or price discrimination, targeting at premium members.

But the company refutes price discrimination claim, saying that “Didi has never used its big data capabilities to disadvantage or bully regular passengers and will never allow price discrimination.”

While lots of China’s emerging markets are quickly maturing and vertical dominators are reaching the critical point to monetize. The experiences of Ziroom and Didi serve as cautionary tales for why we need to balance profitability and public goodwill.

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Briefing: NIO IPO hits roadblock as SoftBank backs out in investment https://technode.com/2018/08/31/ipo-nio-softbank/ https://technode.com/2018/08/31/ipo-nio-softbank/#respond Fri, 31 Aug 2018 01:14:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79543 NIO is among a horde of Chinese EV companies who are seeking capital to fund aggressive research and development efforts.]]>

SoftBank Pulls Plug on Plans to Invest in Chinese Tesla Rival – The Wall Street Journal

What happened: SoftBank has decided not to invest in the initial public offering of Chinese electric-vehicle maker NIO after months of talks over a possible investment. The report didn’t specify for the reasons why the Japanese tech giant walked away from the investment.

Why it’s important: Electric cars are more expensive than their oil-fueled counterparts and making electric vehicles is even more costly. NIO is among a horde of Chinese EV companies who are seeking capital to fund aggressive research and development efforts as the industry rapidly expands. The company filed for a $1.8 billion US IPO on August 14, but the move raises concerns about its early IPO. Local media expressed concerns whether the amount would be enough to cover NIO’s spending. The company further lowered its IPO goal to $1.51 billion on August 28.

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Briefing: China wins gold in first-ever Asian Games e-sports match https://technode.com/2018/08/30/esports-china-asian-games/ https://technode.com/2018/08/30/esports-china-asian-games/#respond Thu, 30 Aug 2018 02:12:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79412 This is the first time for a video game to be included in a major multi-sport event.]]>

Games-China crowned Arena of Valor champion as esports makes “historical” Asian Games debut- Reuters

What happened: Team China won the first-ever gold medals in the first of six e-sports demonstration events taking place at the 18th Asian Games in Indonesia. The six-person team defeated Chinese Taipei 2-0 in the final of Arena of Valor, an international adaptation of the highly popular Chinese game “Honour of Kings”, which was developed by Chinese internet giant Tencent Games.

Why it’s important: Video games have always been a controversial topic in China, where parents are pushing hard for their children to pursue academic achievement. It is largely considered as a waste of time and a meaningless pastime. The public attitudes are gradually changing in recent years with the popularity of competitive video gaming or esports. This is the first time for a video game to be included in a major multi-sport event. With this official endorsement, the whole game industry will benefit.

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Briefing: Xiaomi invests in Indian lending startup ZestMoney https://technode.com/2018/08/29/xiaomi-zestmoney-investment/ https://technode.com/2018/08/29/xiaomi-zestmoney-investment/#respond Wed, 29 Aug 2018 03:19:09 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79258 Xiaomi is planning to invest $1 billion in 100 Indian startups by 2022.]]>

Xiaomi backs Indian consumer lending startup ZestMoney in $13.4M deal—TechCrunch

What happened: Chinese smart hardware maker Xiaomi led a $13.4 million round in Indian consumer lending startup ZestMoney. The new capital is an extension to ZestMoney’s recently closed $6.5 million Series A and it takes the company to $22 million raised to date.

Why it’s important: In wake of a globalization initiative, Xiaomi is poised for deep-dive in India where the smartphone maker has recorded impressive growth so far. The investment comes after Xiaomi announced its plan to invest $1 billion in 100 Indian startups by 2022. Fintech is an important area for Xiaomi. The company has invested in several fintech startups including Chinese P2P lending site Jimu Box, online brokerage startup Tiger Brokers, online financial service Caogentouzi, as well as another Indian lending platform KrazyBee.

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Briefing: Qudian shares plummet as Ant Financial to end partnership by August https://technode.com/2018/08/28/qudian-ant-financial-partnership/ https://technode.com/2018/08/28/qudian-ant-financial-partnership/#respond Tue, 28 Aug 2018 03:52:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79124 Qudian fintech microloanQudian CFO said that the termination of the partnership is not expected to hurt the company's business.]]> Qudian fintech microloan

Qudian Shares Slides to All-Time Low as Investors Sweat on Alipay Partnership-Yicai Global

What happened: Shares of Chinese micro-lender Qudian plunged to their lowest price since its listing over concerns that Ant Financial will not renew its strategic partnership with the cash loan lender when their deal ends this week. Qudian’s CFO said in an earnings call that the termination of the partnership is not expected to hurt the company’s business, but the market seemed unconvinced.

Why it’s important: The previous partnership with Ant Financial’s Alipay allows Qudian access to potential borrowers through the country’s largest third-party payment app. After the splashy IPO in October last year, the company soon come under fire as local media begun questioning the sustainability, validity and morality of their business. These scandals may contribute to Ant Financial’s decision to stop further partnership with Qudian. In response of the market fluctuations, the company defends that over 30% of its new browsers in the past eight months are acquired through Ant Financial partnership, but it only contributed a mere 2% of Qudian’s total transaction volume. The rest of more than 60% come from the platform.

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Tencent Music reportedly pins its US IPO date on October 18 https://technode.com/2018/08/27/tencent-music-ipo-us/ https://technode.com/2018/08/27/tencent-music-ipo-us/#respond Mon, 27 Aug 2018 10:37:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79112 tencentTencent Music controlled 78% of China’s music streaming market in 2017.]]> tencent

Tencent Music is expected to submit an IPO filing to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on September 7th and the final IPO date is slated for October 18th, one of the most cited WeChat accounts “IPO Zaozhidao” is reporting.

The listing is being underwritten by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. The IPO could value the company between $29 billion to $31 billion, on par with the Swedish online music juggernaut Spotify’s market value of $31 billion.

Tencent Music is the operator QQ Music, Kugou, and Kuwo. The three music streaming businesses claimed 254 million, 227 million and 111 million mobile users respectively in the first quarter of 2018, data from iResearch shows. Tencent Music controlled 78% of China’s music streaming market in 2017.

As of September 2017, the company inked a partnership with the world’s top record companies like Universal, Warner, Sony and YG Entertainment (South Korea) for streaming their catalogs. Together with NetEase Music and Ali Music Group, three of China’s top music streaming players entered cross-licensing agreements last year to end the years-long battle for copyrights.

Tencent Music IPO comes in wake of Tencent’s efforts to list its affiliates separately. Its online reading unit China Literature raised $1.1 billion after pricing its Hong Kong IPO at the top of its range early last November. China’s first online-only insurance company Zhong An, in which Tencent holds a stake, raised $1.5 billion in another Hong Kong IPO. In addition, the internet giant is also planning for an IPO of its online healthcare unit WeDoctor.

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Updated: 50 cases in four years: Didi’s latest scandal is just tip of the iceberg https://technode.com/2018/08/27/didi-safety-murder/ https://technode.com/2018/08/27/didi-safety-murder/#respond Mon, 27 Aug 2018 09:38:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79095 Of the 50 drivers, at least 3 of them have a criminal record.]]>

Updated 10:45 am 29 August 2018: Didi CEO Cheng Wei and president Liu Qing have issued an official apology to the public on August 28. The post is updated to include the information.

Didi’s latest scandal involving the death of a 21-year old girl murdered by her Didi Hitch driver put the China ride-sharing giant under severe public scrutiny. An investigation by local media shows deeper problems.

Over the past four years, at least 50 sexual harassment and assault incidents by Didi drivers were reported by local media and relevant authorities, according to a report by local media Southern Weekly. Of the 50 drivers, at least 3 of them have previous criminal records, but they managed to pass Didi’s driver identity check procedure. All of the 53 victims are female and seven of them were drunk at the time of the incident, the report added. Beijing, Jiangsu, Guangdong, and Zhejiang are the areas that recorded the most cases.

TechNode has reached out to Didi for comment and will update accordingly.

Geographical distribution of Didi’s assault cases (Image credit: Southern Weekly)

Although Didi’s safety problem first drew widespread public outrage when a 21-year-old flight attendant was raped and murdered in May this year, a former fatality that involves the death of a 30-year-old passenger could be dated back one year earlier to May 2017.

Regardless of its efforts, Didi’s security risks still run deep. Company CEO and Funder Chen Wei said in Didi’s annual meeting held on February this year that safety is Didi’s top priority and the rates of security incidents have dropped 21%. Cheng’s exclamation is controverted shortly as Didi investor Zhang Huan calls for stricter regulation after a Didi driver assaulted him.

In addition to public ire, local authorities have joined to push the Chinese ride sharing giant to react in a more responsible way. China’s Ministry of Transportation published a commentary article, lambasting Didi for its failure to offer effective preventive measures as well as urgent help during the incident, and only try to solve the problem with pricy settlements. The article further pointed out it’s important to discuss whether Didi’s executives should take legal responsibility in cases like this. Xinhua News also suggested Didi should face legal repercussions if it doesn’t improve its safety record.

Following last week’s murder, Didi fired two executives: the general manager for Hitch and the company’s vice president of customer services. But neither CEO Cheng Wei nor president Liu Qing has extended a personal apology to the public after the repeated tragedies.

[Update] “We see clearly this is because our vanity overtook our original beliefs. We raced non stop riding on the force of breathless expansion and capital through these few years, but this has no meaning in such a tragic loss of life. Throughout the company, we start to question if we are doing the right thing; or even whether we have the right values. There is an enormous amount of self-doubt, guilt and soul-searching.” said Cheng and Liu in an apology released on August 28.

The incidents may put a dent in the valuation of the company, which is rumored to head for an IPO in the second half of 2018. The tech giant recieved $4 billion funding at $50 billion valuation in December last year.

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Driver for on-demand van service Lalamove accused of sexual harassment https://technode.com/2018/08/27/lalamove-sexual-harassment/ https://technode.com/2018/08/27/lalamove-sexual-harassment/#respond Mon, 27 Aug 2018 07:49:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=79076 In a recorded phone call, the driver said, “We Lalamove drivers are all flirting with women in this way and it’s none of your business.”]]>

China’s on-demand vehicle industry was hit by yet another blow over security problems this week when a driver of on-demand van service Lalamove (货拉拉) was accused of sexually harassing a female passenger.

The incident first broke out with a post on a popular local forum. A girl surnamed Wang ordered a van on Lalamove on August 5. After she loaded her stuff in the van, the driver asked her to cancel the deal on Lalamove and pay him via WeChat in order to avoid being charged a commission fee of the platform. Although going behind the back of the platform and striking deals privately goes against the terms of service, it’s common for drivers on a lot of platforms.

But things went from bad to worse after they finished the delivery. The driver, who got the victim’s account after receiving payment through her WeChat, send her sexually suggestive messages and threatened to confront her in-person by showing up at her new home or office after Wang reported his misconduct to the platform.

In a recorded phone call between the driver and Wang’s friend, the suspect brazenly alleged that “We Lalamove drivers are all flirting with women in this way and it’s none of your business.”

Lalamove’s response on Weibo

These bold claims triggered online outrage, but the public is also concerned about Lalamove’s failure to follow through on user complaints. Wang says in the post that she reached out to Lalamove and want to support her accusations by providing the recorded talk, but the company refused to receive the evidence.

The logistics company responded today (August 27th) saying it will suspend the driver’s account permanently and promised to improve their service. But it runs a somewhat different story in communication with Wang, claiming that they couldn’t reach her after trying various means.

Lalamove, also known as EasyVan or Huolala, began with a focus on Hong Kong and Southeast Asia and gradually expanded to mainland China. The company just raised to unicorn status after receiving a $100 million round from Xiaomi-backed Shunwei Capital.

The news drew public attention as safety problems in China’s on-demand mobility services raise eyebrows of passengers. Didi has suspended its carpooling service after a second passenger murder case in four months.

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Autonavi suspends carpooling service as Didi Hitch murder chills China https://technode.com/2018/08/27/autonavi-suspends-carpooling-didi/ https://technode.com/2018/08/27/autonavi-suspends-carpooling-didi/#respond Mon, 27 Aug 2018 04:05:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78933 Didi’s case set its local counterparts on alert for the security risks of their carpooling services.]]>
Image credit: AutoNavi

Mapping company AutoNavi (高德地图) has suspended its carpooling service across China following the rape and murder of a female passenger by Didi Hitch driver.

Didi’s case set its local counterparts on alert for the security risks of their carpooling services. As part of China’s ride-hailing resurgence, AutoNavi launched a carpooling option in March this year, presenting it as a public service aimed at reducing traffic. Four months later, the Alibaba-backed company rolled out a mobility aggregation platform to further tap into the sector. The hitchhiking service on Dida (嘀嗒), another popular Didi rival, operates normally now, but the company removed its social networking feature after Didi’s passenger murder case happened in May.

A 21-year-old female passenger was murdered by her driver when using Didi’s carpooling service on August 24th in the eastern city of Wenzhou. The incident sparked on an online backlash against the company over its safety problems. In response to the incident, the ride-hailing giant suspended its carpooling service and promised to address “many deficiencies” with its customer service.

But the raging public seems to have lost patience with the company as the current drama comes barely three months after a similar one in May. Didi suspended its carpooling services upon the May incident, but they soon resumed it after security enhancement. Limiting late-night rides, same-sex drivers and audio-recording every single ride are some of the solutions the tech giant proposed.

However, the effectiveness of these measures is questioned since sexual offenses by Didi drivers never ceased to catch public attention. It’s not clear how long Didi’s current suspension will last, but nothing short of sweeping improvements could win back the increasingly dubious customers. Other ride-hailing services are suffering from similar safety problems with carpooling services. They chose to suspend the service before coming up with effective solutions.

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Alibaba’s newly-minted local service unit secures $3 billion before rival IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/24/alibaba-ele-me-koubei-merger-funding/ https://technode.com/2018/08/24/alibaba-ele-me-koubei-merger-funding/#respond Fri, 24 Aug 2018 03:13:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78743 The funding comes before rival Meituan Dianping goes public.]]>

Alibaba confirms it raised $3B for its newly consolidated local services business– TechCrunch

What happened: Alibaba’s food delivery service Ele.me and O2O unit Koubei have been merged to a new holding company under the e-commerce giant. The new affiliate received $3 billion in funding from Alibaba and SoftBank, the parent company announced in its financial report.

Why it’s important: Chinese tech giants are fighting to gain supremacy in the online-to-offline (O2O) space where local businesses and food delivery, in particular, are brought online. Alibaba reconstructed Koubei in 2015 to tap into the O2O sector. It invested and then fully acquired Ele.me earlier this year. Combining the two businesses could create more synergies and put the firm in a better position to dominate China’s fiercely competitive O2O market. In addition, it is widely reported that Alibaba is considering to integrate another local service Hema Store in the new business unit. The Alibaba and SoftBank funding comes at a time when Ele.me is battling its rival Meituan-Dianping in the food delivery space. Meituan Dianping, which Tencent holds a stake in, is heading for a Hong Kong IPO. China’s ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing has also joined food delivery war.

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Ofo rolls out 5-second video ad in main app https://technode.com/2018/08/23/ofo-video-app/ https://technode.com/2018/08/23/ofo-video-app/#respond Thu, 23 Aug 2018 02:31:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78643 ofoThe video ads will be displayed after users scan the QR code to unlock the bike.]]> ofo

ofo上线5秒短视频广告业务 合作伙伴包括可口可乐等– Tencent Tech

What happened: Troubled Chinese bike rental giant ofo just added 5-second short video ads to its main app. Nicknamed “视听风暴,” the video ads will be displayed after users scan a QR code and before they can get a code to unlock the bike. Coca-Cola and Chips Ahoy! are among the first group of brands that are using the service.

Why it’s important: In order to keep its independent status, the cash-strained bike rental giant has been exploring various means to increase its revenue. The current video ad business comes shortly after they launched bike-body ads (Shanghai, however, has banned the ads on ofo bikes) and banner ads in the main app. Different from the previous businesses, the short-video ad appears in the process for riders to use a bike, thus taping into the core business of bike rental giant. It’s clear that the ad service will sacrifice part of the user experiences. It has also drawn ire from users since they have to use their own mobile data to load the ad.

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Updated: Toutiao and Intel set up joint AI lab https://technode.com/2018/08/22/bytedance-intel-ai-lab/ https://technode.com/2018/08/22/bytedance-intel-ai-lab/#respond Wed, 22 Aug 2018 10:14:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78604 Intel is hoping to feed ByteDance's popular platforms with more processing power.]]>

Updated 27 August 2018, 2:53 pm: This post has been updated to clearify that the partnership is between Intel and Toutiao, rather than the later’s parent company ByteDance.

Chinese tech upstart Toutiao and US chipmaker giant Intel announced plans today to set up a joint innovation lab. The laboratory will support AI technology R&D, application of key technologies as well as talent training, local media is reporting. The joint innovation lab will be located at Toutiao’s new data center.

The partnership between the two companies can be dated back to 2013 through cooperations in a variety of fields from big data to AI technology development, according to the report. The two parties have entered a deeper partnership in 2018 with the establishment of an innovation fund earlier this year, the current joint innovation lab, and by signing a strategic MOU.

The company uses several AI technologies in its services such as content recommendation algorithms, natural language processing, computer vision, and voice recognition. Toutiao is an AI-powered news aggregation platform that delivers personalized content recommendations based on readers’ interests. Its parent ByteDance also operates massively popular video platforms Douyin (Tik Tok), and Huoshan (Vulcano Video). The company is in need of huge processing power for its massive data.

“We receive over 100 million comments and have to process requests from over 10,000 users per second,” the company’s vice president Yang Zhenyuan explained. The partnership and research lab aim to provide solutions for this problem.

Bytedance has been betting on its AI research capabilities in line with plans to develop its own AI chips. In addition to the current partnership, the Chinese tech giant also teams up with Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research Lab to foster future AI innovators and entrepreneurs.

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China’s audio giant Ximalaya FM rumored to prepare for IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/22/ximalaya-fm-ipo-rumor/ https://technode.com/2018/08/22/ximalaya-fm-ipo-rumor/#respond Wed, 22 Aug 2018 07:54:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78560 The podcasting giant with 40 million users is reportedly raising funds from investors like Tencent and Goldman Sachs.]]>

Chinese biggest audio sharing platform Ximalaya FM is rumored to have restored its VIE structure in a move that is widely translated as a step towards an overseas listing, according to media outlet IPO Zaozhidao.

According to the news, the podcaster received a combined investment of $460 million at a $3.4 billion valuation from investors like Primavera Capital Group, Tencent, General Atlantic, Huatai Securities, Goldman Sachs, and New Horizon Capital.

Ximalaya responded to local media by denying IPO plans. However, the firm did not deny that fundraising in progress—it only emphasized that the funding size is inaccurate. Reports prior to new funding news put Ximalaya’s valuation at $2.94 billion.

“Building an ecosystem to better serve the users is still our top priority and IPO is not our current focus“, local media quotes the firm.

The variable interest entity (VIE) structure is common among Chinese companies seeking foreign investment as it allows them to circumvent restrictions on foreign investment placed on certain “sensitive” or “strategic” business sectors. Ximalaya abandoned its VIE structure in 2015 as it attempted to get listed on the then projected Chinese strategic emerging industries board. The program was canceled in 2016, leaving the company’s IPO plan adrift.

The audio giant has made constant headlines in recent months while local media is brimming with rumors about its new funding and return to the VIE structure. While the overseas listing craze of local tech firms is gathering wind, it is not surprising that the IPO of China’s largest online audio platform and pioneer in the knowledge sharing model is capturing public attention.

Ximalaya launched its own smart speaker Xiaoya in 2017 at a price of RMB 899. (Image credit: Ximalaya)

Founded in 2012, Ximalaya FM is one of the earliest entrants to China’s online audio vertical. The site has 40 million registered users and 6 million daily active users (DAU) who are attracted by the 10,000 daily uploaded items of professionally generated content (PGC). The company has now completed six founds of funding with support from top investors such as Tencent and Goldman Sacks.

Like many Chinese online content platforms, Ximalaya FM has been bothered by copyright issues and bore the heavy burden of IP investment while offering free content to users in the early days. Things changed in 2016 when a raft of knowledge sharing platforms like Zhihu and Fenda emerged to educate China’s paid content market.

Ximalaya FM set up its paid-content column in June 2016 to encourage professionals to sell their knowledge online. A recent update from Ximalaya FM reveals its ARPU (average revenue per user) was over RMB 90 in the first three quarters of 2017. Ads, community, and hardware are the company’s main revenue sources before turning to the paid content model. Since the second half of 2016, the firm’s paid content income has surpassed the combined sum of these three businesses, according to Zhang Yongchang, vice president of the firm.

Ximalaya launched an AI smart speaker Xiaoya in June 2017 and has been making wearables and audio equipment.

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LinkedIn’s China rival Maimai raises $200 million ahead of US IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/22/linkedin-rival-maimai-d-round-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/08/22/linkedin-rival-maimai-d-round-ipo/#respond Wed, 22 Aug 2018 04:38:19 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78520 Maimai claims this is the largest funding ever in the professional networking market and is planning to go global.]]>
maimai

Maimai, China’s biggest rival to LinkedIn, announced that the company received a $200 million D Series investment this April in what the company claims to be the largest funding ever in the professional networking market. With a valuation of at least $1 billion company has been raised to unicorn status.

Global venture capital DST led the funding with the participation of existing investors of IDG, Morningside Venture Capital, and DCM.

In addition, the firm says it plans to invest RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) over the next three years in a career planning program it launched in partnership with over 1000 companies including global top-500 firm Cisco and Chinese renowned firms like Fashion Group and Focus Media.

With the new funding, the company is gearing up for a US IPO and overseas expansion in the second half of 2019, according to the company founder and CEO Lin Fan.

Launched in the fall of 2013, Maimai aims particularly at business people as a platform to connect professional workers and offer employment opportunities. The site now claims over 50 million users. As a Chinese counterpart of LinkedIn, Maimai has been competing head-on with Chinese arm of the US professional networking giant since its establishment and gradually gaining an upper hand with features tailored for local tastes.

Chinese market research firm iResearch ranked Maimai ahead of LinkedIn for the first time in the rankings of China’s most popular social networking apps in April last year. The firm further gains ground this year as its user penetration rate reaching 83.8% in June, far higher than LinkedIn China’s 11.8%, according to data from research institute Analysys.

As a China-born company, Maimai gained momentum over the past two years with localized features, such as the anonymous chatting, mobile-first, real-name registration, and partnerships with Chinese emerging tech giants. But like many of Chinese tech services, the company is subject to the state’s tight online regulation. The government watchdog has ordered Maimai to remove the anonymous posting section on its platform last month.

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China crackdowns on cryptocurrency again by removing content from WeChat https://technode.com/2018/08/22/china-cryptocurrency-wechat-official-accounts/ https://technode.com/2018/08/22/china-cryptocurrency-wechat-official-accounts/#respond Wed, 22 Aug 2018 03:05:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78472 china bitcoin blockchainWeChat sealed official accounts that published news and rumors about ICOs and cryptocurrency trading.]]> china bitcoin blockchain

WeChat, the giant social networking app that also serves as a hub for producing original content, has permanently shut down a dozen of widely followed blockchain-related official accounts after demands from internet regulators, local media is reporting.

Tencent, the operator of WeChat, was asked to seal the accounts on suspicion of publishing and spreading news and rumors about ICOs and cryptocurrency trading violating the “Interim Provisions on the Development of Public Information Services for Instant Messaging Tools”.

Among the closed accounts are Golden Finance (金色财经), Huobi News (火币资讯), Coin World (币世界), DeepChain Finance (深链财经). The first three accounts are related to Huobi, the world’s third-largest cryptocurrency exchange by daily trading volume.

China has adopted a strict stance towards cryptocurrencies since September 2017, when the country’s central bank banned all ICOs. Under the regulation, several of the country’s top cryptocurrency trading platforms moved their operations abroad. Huobi moved its headquarters from Beijing to Singapore last October. OKEx, the world second largest cryptocurrency exchange by daily trading volume, plans to move its headquarters from Hong Kong to Europe.

While Beijing stands firm in its regulation on cryptocurrencies, it is trying to embrace blockchain, the technology that’s fundamental to virtual currencies. The initiative has been pushed on various levels across the country. In 2017 alone, China applied for 225 blockchain patents, almost two and a half times more than the US which applied for 91. At the same time, the central government began establishing national standards for blockchain technology with numerous local governments following the lead either by establishing their blockchain venture funds or setting up blockchain industrial parks.

The different government attitude divides the legality of the two closely related sectors and also the practitioners in the two fields. Those in the blockchain community, or “lianquan” (链圈) as dubbed by insiders, enjoy government provincial policies and investments, and those in cryptocurrency community or “biquan” (币圈) are operating in a grey market.

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TouchPal keyboard developer CooTek files for a $100 million IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/21/touchpal-ipo-cootek/ https://technode.com/2018/08/21/touchpal-ipo-cootek/#respond Tue, 21 Aug 2018 02:59:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78361 95% of TouchPal's users are outside China. ]]>

TouchPal keyboard developer CooTek files for a $100 million IPO – Nasdaq

What happened: CooTek, the company behind virtual keyboard TouchPal, has filed to raise $100 million IPO in the NYSE market. The keyboard supports 85 different languages and operates in more than 200 countries with more than 132 million daily active users. The Shanghai-based company booked $78 million in sales for the 12 months ended June 30, 2018.

Why it’s important: Founded in 2008, TouchPal was among the first Chinese tech startups that pioneered towards the overseas market. 95% of the company’s users are outside China. Keyboard app is a traditional business, but it’s a basic for every user. To catch up with the technological developments, the company launched Talia, an AI-powered virtual personal assistant that understands everyday conversations and delivers relevant content to users in multiple scenarios.

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Jinri Toutiao rival Qutoutiao files for US IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/20/qutoutiao-ipo-us/ https://technode.com/2018/08/20/qutoutiao-ipo-us/#respond Mon, 20 Aug 2018 03:21:57 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78178 Tencent sees Qutoutiao as a strategic defense against ByteDance.]]>

Tencent-backed Qutoutiao files for US IPO– Reuters

What happened: Tencent-backed Chinese content aggregator Qutoutiao filed for an initial public offering of up to $300 million with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on 17th August. The proceeds will be used in a variety of areas, including expanding and enhancing content offerings, according to the company.

Why it’s important: Qutoutiao is the closest rival to Jinri Toutiao, the country’s top new aggregator app. In its latest financing deal finalized in March, Qutoutiao raised to the status of a unicorn with a more than $1.6 billion valuation. As a major investor, Tencent sees Qutoutiao as a strategic portfolio firm for the Chinese tech giant to fend off competition from ByteDance, parent of Jinri Toutiao and short video platform Douyin. ByteDance is reportedly considering an IPO next year.

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China’s console and TV-based game market will hit $736 million in 2018 https://technode.com/2018/08/17/china-console-game-2018/ https://technode.com/2018/08/17/china-console-game-2018/#respond Fri, 17 Aug 2018 03:36:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=78007 Despite slow growth and high entry barrier, success in China's game console industry is profitable.]]>

China’s console and TV-based game market will hit $736 million in 2018-Venture Beat

What happened: The total revenue for sales of game consoles, console game software and TV-based game software in China is projected to reach $736 million in 2018, up nearly 14.6% YoY, according to a report from Niko Partners. Of the total revenue, Niko projects 2018 console and TV-based games software revenue to reach $471 million, up 32% YoY. But the hardware revenue is projected to down 7% YoY to $265 million.

Why it’s important: When China lifted its decade-long ban on game consoles in 2014, the country expected the industry to experience a rapid boom. However, console makers and game developers are still stumbling in the contest for relevance in one of the world’s largest gaming markets due to the late arrival of consoles and users’ increasing favor for mobile devices. Compared with key segments of PC and mobile gaming, the game consoles sector is often overlooked. “Sony, Microsoft, domestic competitors, and possibly even Nintendo are active in China and sales have surpassed [three-quarters] of a billion dollars — so despite the barriers to entry, success is profitable,” according to Lisa Cosmas Hanson, managing partner and founder of Niko Partners.

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Xiaomi’s AI assistant Xiaoai reaches 30 million monthly active devices https://technode.com/2018/08/16/xiaomi-ai-assistant-xiaoai/ https://technode.com/2018/08/16/xiaomi-ai-assistant-xiaoai/#respond Thu, 16 Aug 2018 04:07:54 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77870 Local tech giants like Xiaomi, Alibaba and Huawei flood in the virtual assistant industry.]]>

小爱同学月活跃设备破3千万 累计唤醒超50亿次– NetEase

What happened: Xiaomi announced that its voice AI assistant Xiaoai provides service through 30 million monthly smart devices, up over 500% in over the past six months. Xiaoai was “summoned” over 1 billion times this July with the total summoned times over 5 billion.

Why it’s important: Xiaoai was first introduced by way of Xiaomi’s smart speaker last year. But it’s now included on various Xiaomi hardware including Xiaomi’s smartphone, smart speaker, robot cleaner, etc., serving as a connection point for the company’s smartphone solutions. China’s AI assistant sector is relatively untapped while Google is still finding its way back to China and Amazon’s Alexa and Apple’s Siri only provide tarnished service in the country due to language and cultural barriers and lack of integrating hardware. Local tech giants flood in to grab the market. Alibaba rolled out AliGenie voice assistant last year; Baidu launched Raven H and mid-range smart speaker Xiaodu Zaijia; Huawei is developing its own voice assistant for China.

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How much do Chinese netizens care about data privacy? https://technode.com/2018/08/15/china-netizens-data-privacy/ https://technode.com/2018/08/15/china-netizens-data-privacy/#respond Wed, 15 Aug 2018 10:10:58 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77841 Overall 14% of Chinese netizens use the same password on every site or service they access. ]]>

China has long been considered as a place where online privacy is nearly nonexistent but various signs show that Chinese netizens’ awareness of privacy-related issues is increasing. Most talks on user privacy so far look at the concept broadly, however, with delving into specifics on how Chinese people approach the problem in practice and attitude.

Tencent’s research arm Penguin Intelligence released a report (in Chinese) to shed light on this complicated issue. Here is how Chinese netizens responded to the issue of data leaks:

  • 35% of the 1,285 interviewed users show constant concerns over data leakage
  • a majority of 60.6% worries about the problem occasionally
  • 4% don’t care about it at all

Data leaks by various sites and platforms proved to be the top source of users’ concerns, followed by malpractice of employees and hacker attacks.

To some extent, users’ concerns are not groundless given the past practices of Chinese tech giants. Baidu CEO Robin Li landed himself in hot water earlier this year for claims that Chinese internet users would trade privacy for convenience and efficiency. Other popular apps like Alipay and WeChat were also hit by similar public outcries for accessing user data without consent.

Chinese care more about data privacy than you think, but they still need better protection

Password complexity is another example that shows how much people care about their privacy. The report shows around half (50.8%) of the interviewed netizens use a few passwords for most of their accounts. Overall 14% of them go with the extreme practice of using the same password on every site or service they access.

Around 58.9% of the users would change their password if they discover that a platform is leaking data but only 41.1% would consider changing the password for platforms that use the same or a similar password.

China’s younger generations tend to have more trust in online platforms for hosting personal data. But a hard copy file is still the most trusted way of saving such data according to over 40% interviewees. The finding is not surprising considering that one Tencent Cloud user recently sued the company for $1.6 million for damage on file metadata caused by bugs in the firmware.

During mandatory site and app registrations, Chinese netizens tend to be cautious about giving out their real identity and information such as bank account, ID card, and address. They feel more secure in giving their birthday, gender, and the name of the province they live in.

If the option is provided, 88.1% of Chinese online users choose to log in via third-party accounts such as QQ, WeChat, and Weibo because of the extra layer of security protection. In other cases, they prefer mobile phone over email registration for a faster and more convenient service.

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Hexindai invests in Musketeer seeking new opportunities beyond P2P fraud spooked China https://technode.com/2018/08/15/hexindai-invests-musketeer-global-p2p-fraud-china/ https://technode.com/2018/08/15/hexindai-invests-musketeer-global-p2p-fraud-china/#respond Wed, 15 Aug 2018 06:52:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77807 Given China’s worsening online lending environment, Hexindai plans to seek more opportunities in the global market.]]>
Image credit: 123RF

Chinas leading peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platform Hexindai announced today it will acquire a 20% equity stake worth approximately $1.6 million in Indonesian Musketeer Group Inc., an online lending platform that offers consumer loans.

This acquisition marks Hexindai’s first cross-border investment as well as its first step to explore overseas opportunities in new high-growth markets. It also comes at extremely turbulent times for China’s P2P industry.

Founded in 2014, Hexindai is a P2P lending platform that introduces borrowers to investors. It was part of a wave of Chinese online lending platforms that have experienced a boom in recent years as local commercial banks are reluctant to supply loans to middle-class individuals. The company went public last year in the US along with a raft of microlenders such as Qudian, Lexin, PPDAI, and others.

Hexindai’s acquisition is one of the rare good news in China’s P2P lending market. The RMB 1.3 trillion-worth sector was hit by a series of blows recently as hundreds of platforms imploded. The life savings of thousands of mom-and-pop investors were wiped out with protests erupting in Beijing over the online lending crisis.

The rise and fall of China’s online P2P lending

The crisis sent the share prices of Chinese online lending companies down sharply. Hexindai’s price dropped from its IPO price of $12.66 to $8.22 per share on August 14, while Qudian’s shares plummeted far below its IPO price of $29.18 to $6.77 on the same day.

Due to the high risks, online P2P lending has become one of the most regulated sectors in China. Since last year, Chinese financial watchdogs have stepped up efforts with the government requesting from provincial regulators to suspend issuing licenses to any new online microlending firms last November.

Despite issues, some P2P lending platforms seem to be doing well.  Last week, Dianrong announced that it has raised $40 million of funding from Dalian Financial Investment Group Co. Ltd. The current round will increase the company’s total funds raised to date to over $500 million.

Given China’s worsening online lending environment, it’s no surprise that Hexindai plans to seek more opportunities in the global market.

“Indonesia’s youth demographics and economic development create a significant opportunity for us to benefit from the online lending boom in Indonesia. Musketeer’s corporate values and strategy are closely aligned with ours, which I believe will facilitate a close relationship that will allow us to share our experience and support them as they grow,” said Xinming Zhou, Chief Executive Officer of Hexindai.

Indonesia’s solid internet infrastructure and growing mobile penetration rate will support the long-term sustainable growth of the online lending industry. In addition, the Indonesian government has introduced clear and definitive regulations that govern the industry and welcomes both foreign and domestic investors, according to the firm.

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Alibaba launches nine cloud products, paving way for new retail global expansion https://technode.com/2018/08/15/alibaba-cloud-new-rtail/ https://technode.com/2018/08/15/alibaba-cloud-new-rtail/#respond Wed, 15 Aug 2018 05:30:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77704 Alibaba’s move could be translated as its first step in bringing the "New Retail" concept to the world.]]>
Image credit: 123RF

Alibaba’s cloud computing arm Alibaba Cloud today launched a new suite of nine product offerings for the global market in a number of inter-related industries of cloud architecture, machine learning, Internet of Things (IoT) and security.

“These products will meet the needs of the retail industry in the region who are looking to digitize their operations under the New Retail concept that marks the seamless integration of online and offline,” said the company in an official announcement.

Alibaba Cloud also rolled out an ASEAN Partner Alliance Programme, which aspires to develop a sustainable ecosystem to empower more technology vendors, service providers, system integrators, independent software vendors and start-ups to accelerate their digital transformation initiatives. The program aims to recruit 150 solution partners and to train 600 sales and technology personnel in the next 12 months.

The cloud services launched today are now primarily focused on the Asia Pacific, a launchpad market for most Chinese services that aspire to go global. “These products all have specific features that meet an identified need within the flourishing retail market in Asia Pacific region. Using these products will help merchants deploy their resources more effectively, and gain deeper consumer insights,” said Derek Wang, Chief Solution Architect, Alibaba Cloud International.

In a parallel effort to tap the region, the company launched the second Availability Zone and the first cloud-based Anti-DDoS Scrubbing Center in Malaysia last month.

The New Retail model has emerged across China in ways that promise big gains for consumer product companies. But like many other internet-related trends, it wouldn’t record such a quick boom without the support of matured infrastructures in the country. Alibaba’s move could be translated as its first step in bringing the New Retail concept to the world.

In relation to data technology and AI, Alibaba Cloud is launching two key products – Data Lake Analytics is a serverless service for customers to turn their cloud storage data into insights; PAI is a proprietary machine learning platform that enables customers with limited AI background easy access to Alibaba Cloud’s AI capabilities. With the support of these two services, retailers can analyze historical inventory and sales data, and recommend the most suitable recommendations based on user preferences. IoT Platform links all the software and hardware in the shop for a smooth shopping experience.

To prevent retailers from data loss, Alibaba Cloud launched Anti-Bot Service, which is a software solution that protects users from online scalpers and crawlers. Hybrid Backup Recovery is an online backup service to protect critical business data while Dedicated Host provides tailored hosting service either due to regulatory requirements or a higher demand for stability.

In partnership with China Unicom Global, Alibaba Cloud is launching Smart Access Gateway that supports a multiple location enterprise network. Others are Apsara Stack, the next generation hybrid cloud solutions, delivered in collaboration with HPE, and Elasticsearch, which is an open source tool developed by Elastic and available on Alibaba Cloud.

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WeChat mini programs are luxury brands’ new trick for cashing in on Chinese Valentine’s Day https://technode.com/2018/08/15/wechat-mini-program-valentines-day/ https://technode.com/2018/08/15/wechat-mini-program-valentines-day/#respond Wed, 15 Aug 2018 04:14:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77742 Luxury brands have a new marketing trick up their sleeves for Chinese Valentine's Day–WeChat mini programs.]]>

It’s no secret that WeChat is becoming a prominent channel for luxury brands to reach out to the Chinese population by creating online campaigns. For this year’s Qixi Festival—China’s version of Valentine’s Day—brands have a new trick up their sleeves for online marketing: WeChat mini programs.

As Chinese Valentine’s Day approaches, over twenty brands, including names like Dior, Prada, Louis Vuitton, Burberry, and Gucci launched their mini programs for limited-time and special-edition sales during the festival, according to local media. On July 25, Dior led the race by offering a special Qixi edition of Dioramour handbag on its official WeChat account. It then offered a limited number of Lady Dior handbags through its mini program on July 31. The campaign gained popularity among Dior fans with the handbag currently sold out.

The Qixi or Double Seventh Festival, which falls this year on 17th August, is celebrated on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month as China’s Valentine Day by the younger generation. Unsurprisingly, the gift-giving tradition turns the Festival into a retail extravaganza where luxury brands thrive.

For last year’s Qixi Festival, Dior and Bulgari both became early adopters of WeChat mini program marketing. One year later, more brands are now eager to join the club on this special day. Burberry launched a gamified mini program last week, where the couples have to answer seven questions about each other before being shown the Burberry’s Qixi handbag.

China’s mobile payment platforms are transforming online marketing

WeChat-based marketing is part of the brands’ efforts to localize and tap into China, the world’s largest market for luxury products. Moving towards mini program grants them a more robust channel for accessing customers.

WeChat now has more than one million mini programs, serving over 600 million users as of June this year, according to data released by mini program maker Jisu App.

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Bitcoin mining giant Bitmain reportedly raises $560 million in pre-IPO funding https://technode.com/2018/08/14/bitmain-funding/ https://technode.com/2018/08/14/bitmain-funding/#respond Tue, 14 Aug 2018 04:22:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77608 bitmain cryptocurrency mining rig cryptoThe current funding comes shortly after a $1 billion round led by China International Capital Corporation]]> bitmain cryptocurrency mining rig crypto

比特大陆完成5.6亿美元融资 或9月向港交所递交招股书-LeiNews

What happened: Bitmain, the dominant force in bitcoin mining, has reportedly secured $560 million in funding. Local media reported that the company has geared up for an $18 billion IPO on Hong Kong stock market around the beginning of next year. Bitmain has not yet confirmed the funding and IPO details publicly.

Why it’s important: If true, the current funding comes shortly after a $1 billion round led by China International Capital Corporation. As the largest crypto mining equipment maker, Bitmain is accelerating its IPO schedule, while two of its largest competitors Canaan Creative and Ebang have been moving ahead in going public.

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Chinese loan platform Weidai files for a $100 million US IPO https://technode.com/2018/08/13/weidai-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/08/13/weidai-ipo/#respond Mon, 13 Aug 2018 03:01:44 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77451 Weidai is an early-stage personal credit system based in China.]]>

Chinese loan platform Weidai files for a $100 million US IPO-Nasdaq

What happened: Chinese peer-to-peer lender Weidai Hangzhou Financial Information Service Co. has filed for an initial public offering to raise up to $100 million. Weidai, which means “microlending” in Chinese, is an early-stage personal credit system based in China. Users can borrow from the platform with their automobiles as collateral. The site also provides unsecured cash lending and financing for car purchases.

Why it’s important: IPO timing has been mostly associated with a varying number of factors. For Weidai, the current situation is a bit complicated. On the bright side, the IPO comes at a time when the overseas listing of Chinese tech companies is heating up and there hasn’t been a major listing of a Chinese financial technology company in the U.S. or Hong Kong since Lexin Fintech got listed in last December. However, China is now hit by an increasing number of P2P defaults and the government is poised to tighten regulation of the online lending industry.

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Deaths of two entrepreneurs reveal China’s intense work culture https://technode.com/2018/08/10/china-entrepreneur/ https://technode.com/2018/08/10/china-entrepreneur/#respond Fri, 10 Aug 2018 03:45:39 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77292 The sudden deaths of two entrepreneurs have sparked heated discussions about China's work culture.]]>

22楼跳下、猝然离世!又有两位创业者离开了我们-Sina Tech

What happened: Gan Lai, the founder and CEO of Falan Gaming, ended his life on August 8 by jumping from the 22nd floor after his third startup went bankrupt earlier this year. Meanwhile, Li Hua, founder of GooAnn and Aqniu, passed away on the same day. The sudden deaths of two entrepreneurs have sparked heated discussions about China’s work culture.

Why it’s important: The rise of China’s startup culture has attracted millions of visionaries to the start their own businesses. But being an entrepreneur isn’t easy. While trying to keep up with the intensely fast pace in China’s tech world, they are forced to work under extreme productivity practices like 996. The death of two entrepreneurs reveals the dark side of being entrepreneurs, who usually work in a high-pressure environment and literally working themselves to death. Sadly, Gan and Li aren’t the first of entrepreneurs to suffer a business-related death. Post-80’s entrepreneur Mao Kankan committed suicide in January this year. The CEO of well-known mobile healthcare startup Chunyu Doctor died of a heart attack on October 5th.

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What China’s history of overseas tech IPOs says about the current wave https://technode.com/2018/08/09/ipo-china/ https://technode.com/2018/08/09/ipo-china/#respond Thu, 09 Aug 2018 06:42:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76400 Ever since last year, an increasing number of Chinese tech companies can be seen joining the IPO craze.]]>
Image credit:36Kr

China’s tech IPO craze is reaching a fever pitch. On July 12, the executives of a whopping eight Chinese companies that went public on the same day were forced to share their time of glory at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange due to a bell shortage. Compared with their foreign counterparts, this is even a bigger compromise for Chinese execs given their love for stage props. The US is seeing something similarthree Chinese tech firms including Pinduoduo went public in the US on July 26.

China’s IPO wave

Ever since last year, an increasing number of Chinese tech companies can be seen joining the IPO craze. A PwC China report shows that 23 Chinese companies, including China Reading, raised a total of $4.65 billion in H2 2017, making the country the largest global tech community in terms of the number and total value of IPOs. The tendency continues this year with a roster of big-name companies such as Xiaomi, iQiyi and Pinduoduo, and unicorns from various verticals such as Liepin, Inke, Baby Tree and 51 Credit Card.

Image credit: Tiger Brokers

As a part of this trend, Chinese companies are turning to stock markets in Hong Kong and the US over the mainland market, marking the fifth overseas listing rush.

In 2000, internet tycoons like Sohu, NetEase, and Sina forged their way into the US stock market. With respectable performance that bucked disappointing IPO offerings in the US market, the three news portals soon gained the attention of global investors. The term “China Concepts Stock” was popularized to refer to Chinese companies—or in a more narrow sense, Chinese tech companies listed abroad.

Chinese tech firms’ love for the overseas stock markets has gone through hot and cold periods since then depending on the tech trends of the time. Baidu and Ctrip went public in the US and Tencent in Hong Kong between 2003 and 2005, a period when China witnessed some of its tech powerhouses establishing their dominance.  As the market grew, so did the number of unicorns from various verticals. Companies who listed from 2010 to 2012 include Youku (video streaming), YY (video streaming), and Qihoo (online security). 

The blockbuster IPOs of Alibaba and JD made 2014 a year of e-commerce. Social is another theme of the year with the IPOs of Weibo and Momo, currently two of the country’s largest social networking platforms.

Appetites for overseas listing started to cool off at the beginning of 2015. Since then, nearly thirty US-listed tech stocks initiated privatization plans in search for a domestic re-listing, with big names among them such as Qihoo 360, Momo, Perfect World and Shanda Games. But the enthusiasm for privatization soon wore off as the government suspended the launch of both a register-based regulation system and the Strategic Emerging Board, a market dedicated for science and technology innovation enterprises. The two moves were expected to facilitate IPO of tech firms.

Overseas listing started to warm up again at the end of 2017. Similar to previous trends, the current IPOs reflect the keywords in China’s tech world – the “new economy” and consumption upgrading. China’s “new economy”, also known as the digital economy, totaled RMB 26 trillion ($4.28 trillion), representing around 32% of the national GDP in 2017.

“Each IPO wave consisted of companies with mixed qualities. Some companies went public for the funding they needed for long-term and sustainable development, but some are just following the trend to cash out,” according to Wang Shan, an analyst at online brokerage service Tiger Brokers.

Destination decisions

Chinese tech companies seeking to go public have a few options to choose from – China, Hong Kong and the US.

Most Chinese tech firms are under the VIE (variable interest entity), a structure that’s adopted by many tech startups to lure foreign investment. For them, this rules out the option of a local listing since China’s stock market only receives companies that are registered in the country. Of course, they still can go for a local IPO by removing the VIE structure, but the process is often costly and time-consuming.

What’s more, the threshold for domestic listing is high. For example, Chinese mainboards require listed companies to record sustained profitability, a condition most internet companies can’t meet in the first few years of operation.

In addition, China’s merit-based IPO regulation system is subject to strict rationing and control, with protracted periods before actually getting listed. This is a huge concern for tech firms, which would prefer quicker funding to adapt to the changing market. China’s market is also subjected to tight government regulation. The state has suspended IPO process nine times in history with suspension time varying from 3 to 14 months.

The Hong Kong Stock Exchange is a popular listing destination for Chinese tech startups thanks to similar culture, geographical adjacency, and a mature system. Thanks to a registration-based system, the listing time is shortened to around three months. But its market size is relatively small compared with the mainland and the US: only 1/30 of New York Exchange and 1/4 of NASDAQ, resulting in lower fundraising capacity and valuation. Over the past decade, traditional financing companies have been dominating Hong Kong, while internet and technology companies account for only 3% of its total size. The figure for Nasdaq and New York is 60% and 47%, respectively.

Chinese tech firms’ enthusiasm for Hong Kong rallied as the Hong Kong Stock Exchange shifted to a dual-class shares mechanism in April 2018, which allowed tech firms to have share classes with different voting rights. The absence of this system is one of the major reasons that barred the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. from considering the former British colony. Missing out on Alibaba was a big loss to Hong Kong market, not only because of the sheer size of the company but also because it would have made Hong Kong a more attractive destination for tech companies that might follow. Five years later, businesses are finally able to apply for listing under the dual-class share regime.

The US has the most mature stock market in the world, but for Chinese companies, it’s difficult to explain their product and business model to investors who have a different culture, and therefore make it hard to get the valuation they expected. The market has a higher entering requirement for Chinese tech firms in terms of language, information disclosure, investor relationship, and costs.

Big boy pipeline

Since Alibaba, not many China tech companies have made it to IPO but now, many are ready to take the leap.

A string of tech tycoons has raised an average of four to five rounds of financings by now. Companies like Xiaomi and Meituan have been basically backed by nearly every prominent private equity and it’s difficult for them to get funding in the primary market at their hefty valuations. An IPO could be the only channel for them for further funding. The massive IPO wave has, in turn, sparked rumors about the long-anticipated IPO of Ant Finance, Didi, and ByteDance.

Number of Chin’s unicorns by scale (Image credit: E-commerce Research Center)

China’s tech boom has been fostering a lengthening list of IPO candidates including super big titles as well as vertical unicorns. Three are 94 unicorns in China’s e-commerce-related industry with a combined valuation of $479.92 billion, according to a report from the E-commerce Research Center. Ant Financial tops the list with a $150 billion valuation, followed by Didi Chuxing ($56 billion), Meituan Dianping ($30 billion), JD Finance ($20 billion), Cainiao ($20 billion), Lufax ($18.5 billion).

The market morale is still high. More companies will flock to the Hong Kong market after August, followed by an IPO peak around September to November, Charles Li, executive director of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, told local media.

CITIC Vice President of Large and Medium Corporation Simon Tseung echoed Li’s prediction. He told TechNode that the IPO craze is going to continue in the near future for both Hong Kong and the US in line with the rise Chinese tech unicorns.

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Ele.me partners with HelloBike amid escalating battle with Meituan https://technode.com/2018/08/09/ele-me-partners-with-hellobike/ https://technode.com/2018/08/09/ele-me-partners-with-hellobike/#respond Thu, 09 Aug 2018 01:28:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=77153 Ele.me and HelloBike have moved into a new partnership for sharing users base with each other.]]>

饿了么宣布与哈罗单车完成入口对接,与美团的外卖之战进一步升级-Tencent Tech

What happened: Ele.me and HelloBike have moved into a new partnership for sharing the users base of each other. Users who have paid for HelloBike’s monthly service will become an Ele.me member and enjoy free food delivery service for example. Meanwhile, Ele.me service will be added to HelloBike’s main app. The partnership is on trial in five cities in Wuhan, Qingdao, Wuxi, Tianjin and Shenzhen. Ele.me disclosed that the partnership would be expanded to the whole country by mid-September.

Why it’s important: The tie-up is part of Alibaba’s efforts to integrate Ele.me into its business ecosystem since it took over the online food delivery service earlier this year. Since then, Ele.me’s business is gradually cooperating with Tmall Shop, Hema Store and Ali Health, etc. Instead of business integration, the current partnership is mainly a measure to facilitate user acquisition for Ele.me and HelloBike, helping both parties to fend off competition from their respective rivals in Meituan and Mobike/ofo.

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Dianrong pockets $40 million funding amid mounting P2P defaults in China https://technode.com/2018/08/08/dianrong-40-million-funding/ https://technode.com/2018/08/08/dianrong-40-million-funding/#respond Wed, 08 Aug 2018 06:54:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76762 Dianrong announced that it has raised $40 million of funding from Dalian Financial Investment Group.]]>

P2P平台点融宣布获4000万美元融资Tencent Tech

What happened: Chinese P2P lending platform Dianrong announced that it has raised $40 million of funding from Dalian Financial Investment Group Co. Ltd. The current round will increase the company’s total funds raised to date to over $500 million. Its previous investors include big titles such as Standard Chartered, GIC Private Limited, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, CMIG Leasing, Simone Investment Managers, etc.

Why it’s important: Dianrong is an online P2P lending platform founded by Soul Htite, co-founder and former CTO of Lending Club. The company has become an investor darling since its establishment in 2012. The funding comes at a time when China is experiencing an increasing number of P2P defaults. The financing is even more significant for gaining trust and confidence from investors.

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Toutiao rolls out a clone of its suspended joke app https://technode.com/2018/08/07/toutiao-rolls-out-a-clone-of-its-suspended-joke-app/ https://technode.com/2018/08/07/toutiao-rolls-out-a-clone-of-its-suspended-joke-app/#respond Tue, 07 Aug 2018 02:52:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76361 Toutiao launched a new joke app named Pipixia, where users can upload and share a collection of short videos, photos, jokes, and memes.]]>

今日头条悄悄复活“内涵段子” 回应称将重新定位这款产品—Tencent Tech

What happened: Toutiao launched a new joke app named Pipixia, where users can upload and share a collection of short videos, photos, jokes, and memes.

Why it’s important: The app reminds us of Toutiao’s previous joke app Neihan Duanzi in every sense. In a national content purge earlier this year, the state’s cyberspace watchdog has ordered the permanent closure of Neihan Duanzi for vulgar contents. It’s interesting to note that Pipixia users not only can bound their Toutiao accounts but also to sync their account of Neihan Duanzi. In response to the concerns, the company claims Pipixia has been repositioned in product design, content and target users.

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The failed “Facebook of China” leaves its future in the hand of users https://technode.com/2018/08/06/renren-future/ https://technode.com/2018/08/06/renren-future/#respond Mon, 06 Aug 2018 10:32:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76346 The founding team of Renren has finally decided to let go of their efforts to restore the platform to its former glory, leaving the fate of the site in the hands of users and partners instead.]]>

After years of struggle, the founding team of Renren, China’s forgotten social network, has finally decided to let go of their efforts to restore the platform to its former glory, leaving the fate of the site in the hands of users and partners instead.

Joseph Chen, chairman and CEO of Renren announced in an open letter that his team would hand Renren’s operation to partners. “Renren is a public platform and we are not the only owner of it,” he said. “The operating candidates and their business plans will be posted on Renren’s bulletin board. We will start an online poll where every user can give their votes.”

“We want to hear the opinions of old users, for example, what’s missing by WeChat, Weibo, QQ, Momo, Tantan, etc and where are our opportunities,” he said. On the bright side, Chen disclosed that Renren.com is expected to turn to profit in Q4 this year or Q1 next year and the profits will be invested in product development.

Monthly active users of Renren in March of 2015 to 2018 (Image credit: 36Kr)

Chen made the announcement in response to a viral post that remembers China’s post-80 and post-90 generations about their college days and youth when they share their lives actively on Renren.

Renren was born out of Xiaonei.com, a pixel-to-pixel Facebook clone by current CEO and founder of Meituan Wang Xing. Joseph Chen acquired the company in October 2006 and rebranded it as Renren. As part of China’s first generation of social networks, the site became immensely popular among Chinese students.

The company went public in the US a year ahead of Facebook at a valuation more than double of its US counterpart then traded on private markets. But the site started to lose traction when hit by the failure to expand beyond college user base. In a battle for supremacy in the mobile age, Renren spent at least $300 million in the war against Sina Weibo and WeChat from 2011 to 2014, according to Chen.

Although the firm tried to catch up with nearly every trend with layouts in short video, fintech, student loan, second-hand car trading and cryptocurrency, it never managed to achieve former popularity. Its monthly active users slumped from 46 million in March 2015 to 31 million in March 2018.

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Didi invests $1 billion in car service and solutions platform Xiaoju https://technode.com/2018/08/06/didi-xiaoju/ https://technode.com/2018/08/06/didi-xiaoju/#respond Mon, 06 Aug 2018 07:38:42 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76329 didi mobility ride hailing chuxing uberIncubated in 2015 and put in trial operation in April 2018, Xiaoju provides various auto-related services.]]> didi mobility ride hailing chuxing uber

Chinese ride-hailing behemoth Didi Chuxing announced today it invested $1 billion into its auto solutions platform Xiaoju. Along with the investment, Didi is upgrading the auto solutions platform to Xiaoju Automobile Solutions Co.

Kevin Chen, general manager of the auto solution platform, will become the general manager of the new entity, reporting to Jean Liu, President of Didi Chuxing.

Incubated in 2015 and put in trial operation in April 2018, Xiaoju provides various auto-related services, including leasing and trading, refueling, maintenance and repair, and car-sharing. The creation of Xiaoju Automobile Solutions also brings into operation new family brands, including:

  • Xiaoju Auto Leasing & Retail brings vehicle supplies and auto-financing resources to offer auto sale, resale and leasing services through integrated online-offline channels;
  • Xiaoju Gas Refueling offers gas services through scale- and expertise-based partnerships with gas stations;
  • Xiaoju Auto Care, now available in 7 cities in eastern and southern China, provides authentic components and parts services, as well as maintenance and repair services;
  • Didi Car Sharing provides short-term car rental services leveraging use scenarios, user traffic, brand and vehicle solutions.

Currently, Xiaoju Automobile Solutions, with an annualized GMV exceeding RMB 60 billion, is now available in 257 cities in a network of over 7,500 partners and distributors, according to the firm.

“The creation of Xiaoju Automobile Solutions is not only a key step towards achieving Didi’s automobile alliance strategy but also a milestone in organizational innovation as we continue to expand our business horizon. Dii believes that only by serving drivers better, will we be able to serve passengers better.” —Cheng Wei, founder, chairman and CEO of Didi Chuxing

From bike rental to food delivery, Didi spends much of 2018 entering seemingly every sector, but car related business remains its most promising field. As a most valuable tech unicorn in China, the company is reportedly gearing up for a Hong Kong IPO at up to $80 billion valuations in the second half of this year.

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Tencent Cloud user claims $1.6 million compensation for data loss https://technode.com/2018/08/06/tencent-cloud-user-claims-1-6-million-compensation-for-data-loss/ https://technode.com/2018/08/06/tencent-cloud-user-claims-1-6-million-compensation-for-data-loss/#respond Mon, 06 Aug 2018 07:30:59 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76299 Tencent Cloud sought help from a group of tech experts to restore the data, but they failed to fully recover the files, according to an official announcement from the company. ]]>

The reputation of Tecent’s cloud computing service Tencent Cloud has taken a serious knock on Monday. A Tencent Cloud user under the name of “前沿数据 (qianyan shuju, literally ‘cutting edge data’) claims an indemnity of RMB 11,016,000 ($1.6 million) for metadata damage to files hosted by Tencent Cloud due to bugs in the firmware.

After informing the user as soon as they spotted the problem, Tencent Cloud sought help from a group of tech experts to restore the data, but they failed to fully recover the files, according to an official announcement from the company. Unfortunately, the user doesn’t have backup on other platforms.

The cloud computing firm has vowed to compensate the user a total of RMB 136,469 for settlement of the case, around 37 times of the user’s payment for service on Tencent Cloud. While compensation will be welcome, it falls short of the user’s expectations.

“Due to the errors occurred on Tencent Cloud platform, our data worth of tens of million RMB was lost on July 20, including user profile data and various contents we have accumulated over a long period of time. This is a disaster for a startup,” Beijing Qingbo Data Control Technology, the startup behind the account, said in an announcement.

Tencent Cloud has been in hot water over the past month. The current data loss case comes after a system collapse in late July, which caused system failure in parts of its cloud in Guangzhou.

Chinese cloud computing industry has been gaining momentum over the past few years. The country’s public cloud is expected to worth RMB 34 billion by 2018, data from ASKIC Consulting shows. AliCloud (45.5%), Tencent Cloud (10.3%), China Telecom(7.6%), Kingsoft (6.5%) and AWS (5.4%) took the top five spots in China’s public cloud industry in 2017, according to report by IDC.

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Alibaba renews foray into Tencent turf with Taobao mini game platform https://technode.com/2018/08/06/alibaba-gaming/ https://technode.com/2018/08/06/alibaba-gaming/#respond Mon, 06 Aug 2018 03:56:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76259 The renewed initiative started this April when Alibaba acquired the exclusive distribution rights for Travel Frog in mainland China.]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has been quietly bolstering its gaming business over the past two months, renewing its efforts into a field that’s historically the domain of arch-rival Tencent. The company has added a total of 16 mini games to its online marketplace Taobao to date.

The renewed initiative started this April when Alibaba acquired the exclusive distribution rights for Travel Frog in mainland China. The Chinese-language and localized version of the Japanese hit was then added to China’s top e-commerce site Taobao. The sale of Travel Frog’s official products from t-shirts, plush toys, key-chains to cushions surpassed RMB 100 million (around $14 million) around one month after the launch of the game. Other mini-games available on Taobao platform are casual games with simple gameplay, such as Gomoku and matching games.

Alibaba is hasn’t been very active in gaming, but it has long been a field the giant has been eyeing, just like what e-commerce is for Tencent. One of Alibaba’s earliest gaming endeavors can be dated back to 2014 when it integrated a gaming center in Taobao. Gaming feature was also added to Laiwang, Alibaba’s WeChat counterpart to take on Tencent back then. But both of the gaming and social efforts fell flat.

Alibaba’s renewed gaming push comes as a part of its strategy to attract users with premium contents through live streaming, short video, etc. At the beginning of this year, Alibaba invested RMB 1 billion in mobile gaming distribution through gaming unit Ali Gaming.

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Xpeng secures $588 Million to boost production and sales https://technode.com/2018/08/03/xpeng-funding/ https://technode.com/2018/08/03/xpeng-funding/#respond Fri, 03 Aug 2018 03:56:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76126 Xpeng Raises USD588 Million to Start EV Production, Build Charging Network -Yicai Global What happened: Chinese electric carmaker Xpeng Motor has secured RMB 4 billion ($588 million) in B Plus round from Primavera Capital Group, Morningside Venture Capital and Chairman He Xiaopeng at an RMB 25 billion valuation. The latest round follows an RMB 2.2 billion […]]]>

Xpeng Raises USD588 Million to Start EV Production, Build Charging Network -Yicai Global

What happened: Chinese electric carmaker Xpeng Motor has secured RMB 4 billion ($588 million) in B Plus round from Primavera Capital Group, Morningside Venture Capital and Chairman He Xiaopeng at an RMB 25 billion valuation. The latest round follows an RMB 2.2 billion round received earlier this year, bring the company’s total fund raised to over RMB 10 billion.

Why it’s important: China’s booming electric vehicle industry has attracted attention not only from entrepreneurs but also the investors. Top internet giants and venture capitals all bet on the trend. Other leading players in the field such NIO and WM Motor all passed the RMB 10 billion funding milestone. With abundant funding, the next goal for these companies is to ship products at scale. Xpeng’s new funding is going to be invested for production and sales of the G3, which is scheduled for first deliveries at the end of this year.

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Pinduoduo share tumbles amid counterfeit probe https://technode.com/2018/08/02/pinduoduo-share-tumbled-over-16/ https://technode.com/2018/08/02/pinduoduo-share-tumbled-over-16/#respond Thu, 02 Aug 2018 05:23:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76072 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaShares of Pinduoduo slumped more than 16 percent on August 1 amid the rising concerns about counterfeit goods.]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

Pinduoduo Tumbles Below IPO Price Amid Fake Goods Probe– Caixin Global

What happened: In less than one week after its strong debut on Nasdaq, shares of Pinduoduo slumped more than 16 percent on August 1 to 18.68 apiece, falling below the offering price at $19 amid the rising concerns about counterfeit goods.

 Why it’s important: The heat surround Chinese online bazaar Pinduoduo is taking a negative turn shortly after its blockbuster IPO and strong debut on Nasdaq last week. The company is in a whirlwind for selling fake goods on the platform which cater to the need of low-income users in rural China. Talks about the quick rise of IPO has sparked deeper thoughts on the widening inequality of wealth distribution in China.

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Starbucks enters strategic partnership with Alibaba to fend off Luckin rivalry https://technode.com/2018/08/02/starbucks-alibaba/ https://technode.com/2018/08/02/starbucks-alibaba/#respond Thu, 02 Aug 2018 04:19:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=76049 The rumor about a possible tie-up between Starbucks and Alibaba-backed delivery service Ele.me has been around for a while. But it turns out that the partnership is much larger in scale than previously thought. The partnership will cover nearly every key business within the Alibaba ecosystem, including Ele.me, Hema, Tmall, Taobao, and Alipay.]]>

China’s caffeine war is percolating. Starbucks announced today that it has entered a strategic “New Retail” partnership with Chinese tech giant Alibaba in a move to strengthen foothold in its second-largest market.

The rumor about a possible tie-up between Starbucks and Alibaba-backed delivery service Ele.me has been around for a while. But it turns out that the partnership is much larger in scale than previously thought. The partnership will cover nearly every key business within the Alibaba ecosystem, including Ele.me, Hema, Tmall, Taobao, and Alipay.

Under the deal, Starbucks plans to leverage Ele.me’s on-demand platform to pilot delivery services in Beijing and Shanghai in September 2018. The delivery program is expected to expand across 30 cities to more than 2,000 stores by end of 2018, the company disclosed.

Lack of reliable delivery service has long been a pain for Starbucks, especially in China where it’s so ubiquitous thanks to the boom of the food delivery industry. Previously, coffee delivery from Starbucks was only enabled through third-party firms. A recent government crackdown on this service has suspended the service and therefore put a dent in Starbucks’s sales in China.

On the other hand, homegrown coffee startup Luckin is using the feature as a big selling point against the Seattle-based coffee chain store. The current partnership with Ele.me, China’s leading on-demand food delivery platform with 3 million registered delivery riders, would guarantee reliable delivery service. The users will receive their coffee within 30 minutes after placing the order, according to Ele.me CEO Wang Lei.

How Luckin Coffee is reforming China’s coffee culture

The tie-up also expands to Alibaba’s flagship new retail business Hema Supermarket. “Starbucks Delivery Kitchens” will be established inside Hema stores and use the supermarket’s delivery system to fulfill Starbucks delivery orders.

“Thanks to the elevated customer experience delivered by our over 45,000 partners, Starbucks is growing and innovating faster in China than anywhere else in the world,” said Kevin Johnson, president and chief executive officer, Starbucks Coffee Company.

This digital partnership will see Alibaba develop a centralized online management hub, with the capabilities to integrate and deliver Starbucks Experience across multiple digital platforms from Starbucks app to Alibaba’s customer-facing mobile apps, including Taobao, Alipay, Tmall, and Koubei.

The tie-up comes at a time when the world’s top coffee chain store is facing increasing competition from Chinese competitor Luckin, which offers American-style coffee and snacks at a lower price. Over the past few months, we have seen tightening rivalry between the two companies in talents, commercial property and in marketing.

But now the competition is escalating and it’s not only about coffee anymore. Luckin announced on August 1 that it’s expanding business in light meals and snacks. Given the partnership with Ele.me, Starbucks may as well take a further step to add the service sometime in the future.

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Medlinker becomes China’s latest healthcare unicorn https://technode.com/2018/08/01/medlinker-unicorn/ https://technode.com/2018/08/01/medlinker-unicorn/#respond Wed, 01 Aug 2018 02:54:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75873 医联完成10亿元D轮融资接下来推进投资和并购 —Sohu What happened: Chinese online healthcare company Medlinker has raised an RMB 1 billion ($147 million) D round led by China’s sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp and followed by returning investors like Sequoia Capital and China Renaissance. The new funding valued the four-year-old company at more than $ 1 billion, raising it to […]]]>

医联完成10亿元D轮融资接下来推进投资和并购 —Sohu

What happened: Chinese online healthcare company Medlinker has raised an RMB 1 billion ($147 million) D round led by China’s sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp and followed by returning investors like Sequoia Capital and China Renaissance. The new funding valued the four-year-old company at more than $ 1 billion, raising it to unicorn status.

Why it’s important: China’s existing health care system is under huge strain due to the under-usage of primary care services. As technology is penetrating nearly every aspect of people lives, more tech startups are poised to solve the problems in China’s chaotic medical and healthcare system. Several companies that are pushing this trend include Chunyu Doctor, DXY, and iHealthcare.

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Dianping apologizes for copying content from Xiaohongshu users without permission https://technode.com/2018/07/31/dianping-xiaohongshu/ https://technode.com/2018/07/31/dianping-xiaohongshu/#respond Tue, 31 Jul 2018 03:34:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75798 大众点评:侵权小红书内容已全部下线– Sina Tech What happened: Dianping apologized on Monday after Alibaba-backed lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu accused the company of stealing some one million posts of content from the latter. The posts shared on Xiaohongshu were synced to Dianping without users’ permission.  The platform removed the content and has come up with technical tools to stop plagiarism. Why it’s […]]]>

大众点评:侵权小红书内容已全部下线– Sina Tech

What happened: Dianping apologized on Monday after Alibaba-backed lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu accused the company of stealing some one million posts of content from the latter. The posts shared on Xiaohongshu were synced to Dianping without users’ permission.  The platform removed the content and has come up with technical tools to stop plagiarism.

Why it’s important: Chinese netizens are increasingly concerned about their privacy being breached by internet giants. Several widely-discussed data sharing gaffes involve big titles like Tencent, Tencent and Alipay. Baidu CEO Robin Li said this March that Chinese consumers are willing to trade privacy for convenience and efficiency. The mindset, which may be shared by lots of tech giants, enraged Chinese users. Increasing data security consciousness among netizens force tech companies to trade the problem more seriously.

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Alipay finally rolling out mini program this week after year-long public testing https://technode.com/2018/07/30/alipay-finally-rolling-out-mini-program-this-week-after-year-long-public-testing/ https://technode.com/2018/07/30/alipay-finally-rolling-out-mini-program-this-week-after-year-long-public-testing/#respond Mon, 30 Jul 2018 11:03:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75760 Alipay digital ID Ruiwo Smart hotelChina’s ubiquitous payment tool Alipay just added a separate access point for mini-programs at a prominent position on the homepage of its mobile app. The move underlines an imminent official launch of the feature, local media is reporting. Alipay responded to the news shortly with a confirmation, adding that the launch is slated as early as […]]]> Alipay digital ID Ruiwo Smart hotel

China’s ubiquitous payment tool Alipay just added a separate access point for mini-programs at a prominent position on the homepage of its mobile app. The move underlines an imminent official launch of the feature, local media is reporting. Alipay responded to the news shortly with a confirmation, adding that the launch is slated as early as this week.

Image credit: Sina

With WeChat’s launch of mini-programs at the beginning of last year, Chinese tech giants have been engaged in an initiative to kill off native apps. Alibaba’s spin-off Ant Financial is in no place to fall behind with the launch of mini-programs for Alipay. The app opened its own mini-programs for beta testing among regular users in September 2017, one month later opening up to developers. But the company has been moving slowly with the project since then.

Putting mini-program in a more prominent position could be translated as an increasing focus on the feature. Alipay homepage is a much-coveted place, which could generate billions of traffic for services. Data from third-party research institute Analysys shows that Alipay now claims more than 486 million monthly active users as of the end of June 2018. Its app center is the most visited page.

In addition to Alipay, Baidu also rolled out smart mini-programs last month.

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Cosmetic surgery app GengMei raises $50 million led by Meitu https://technode.com/2018/07/30/gengmei-d1-round/ https://technode.com/2018/07/30/gengmei-d1-round/#respond Mon, 30 Jul 2018 10:48:24 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75754 Gengmei, a social networking app that connects up people with an interest in plastic surgery, announced that it secured $50 million D1 round led by photo editing app Meitu. Founded in 2013, Gengmei (更美, or More Beautiful in Chinese) is a medical beauty social and service platform for beauty seekers to ask questions from plastic surgeons […]]]>

Gengmei, a social networking app that connects up people with an interest in plastic surgery, announced that it secured $50 million D1 round led by photo editing app Meitu.

Founded in 2013, Gengmei (更美, or More Beautiful in Chinese) is a medical beauty social and service platform for beauty seekers to ask questions from plastic surgeons and acquire quality cosmetic surgery advice. The app now offers a wide range of services from community management, e-commerce and financing support for users with an interest in plastic surgery, cosmetic dental procedure, eyelid surgery, and more.

The new funds will be invested in research and development of AI technology, recuitment as well as market and expansion, according to a company statement.

In addition to the cash, Meitu’s investment would create synergy between the two companies, which are focusing on a similar youth and female dominated user base. Based on Meitu’s image technologies and big data, Gengmei is planning to establish a platform which can give recommendations on aesthetic tips as well as the best clinics and surgeons for plastic surgery procedures.

The special obsession with appearances among China’s post-90 and post-00 generation contributed greatly to the success of selfie apps like Meitu. As the growing youth group becomes a major force in the consumer market, they want to be physically attractive not only in the virtual world but also the real world, through plastic surgeries.

The cosmetics surgery industry will face a rapid growth over the next ten years. Gengmei aims to serve as a bridge to connect the online and offline world of plastic surgery industry, according to company founder Liu Di.

Deloitte’s 2017 report shows that the size of China’s cosmetic surgery industry is going to jump from RMB 87 billion in 2015 to RMB 176 billion in 2017. The figure is expected to reach RMB 464 billion by 2020 with an annual growth rate of 40%.

In recent years, cosmetic surgery hospitals in China have mushroomed, along with platforms to promote these hospitals. As a top player in the field, Gengmei has attracted lots of funding from prominent investors such as Sequoia Capital, Tencent, Fosun, CITIC Construction and CHJ Group. Another cosmetic surgery app, Beijing-based SoYoung, received Series C funding from Tencent.

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Ofo’s “darkest hour” becomes gloomier as Didi acquisition rumors swirl again https://technode.com/2018/07/30/ofo-didi-rumor/ https://technode.com/2018/07/30/ofo-didi-rumor/#respond Mon, 30 Jul 2018 04:52:38 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75715 Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is reportedly closing an acquisition deal of ofo, the last remaining major independent player in China’s bike-rental industry, local media reported citing people familiar with the matter. The source disclosed that Didi already sent due diligence team to ofo over the past two to three weeks. The two parties are […]]]>

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is reportedly closing an acquisition deal of ofo, the last remaining major independent player in China’s bike-rental industry, local media reported citing people familiar with the matter. The source disclosed that Didi already sent due diligence team to ofo over the past two to three weeks.

Image credit: ofo

The two parties are still bargaining on ofo’s valuation, the report added. Local media once reported Didi’s offer for ofo is only around $1.5 billion, that’s around half of Mobike’s valuation and far lower than the company’s expectations. As ofo’s cash strain becomes worse, Didi is gradually lowering the price, said the source to local media, adding that price offered by Alibaba is even lower.

Ofo denied the rumor in an official statement, adding, “As a top and the only major independent bike-rental company, ofo pioneered the growth of the bike-rental industry. We will continue to serve the users and contribute our efforts to solve traffic congestion and air pollution problems in cities.”

Rumors about a possible takeover of ofo have been around for a while since Meituan acquired ofo’s largest rival Mobike, or even before that. But ofo’s founding team led by co-founder and CEO Dai Wei has been fighting tenaciously for the company’s independent status.

After rebuffing an offer from Didi this May, Dai Wei once likened ofo’s status to the film “Darkest Hour” at an internal meeting and called for the employees to fight till the end of the war.

As bike rentals cool, ofo chooses to stand alone

But now, ofo’s “Darkest Hour” seems getting even gloomier. The troubled company has been under a series of negative attention over the past two months.

Its attempts to monetize through selling ads on bikes and apps hit roadblocks as several regional municipalities, such as Shanghai, put bans on placing commercial ads on bikes. The company is drawing back from several overseas markets, such as Australia, the US, Spain, Germany, India.

Competition from rivals is fiercer than ever. Old rival Mobike removed deposits for all users in China in an effort to standardize its deposit system. Alibaba-backed Hellobike is quickly catching up with focus on lower-tier cities.

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Tencent eyes to secure China’s drug safety through new partnership https://technode.com/2018/07/27/tencent-eyes-to-secure-chinas-drug-safety-through-new-partnership/ https://technode.com/2018/07/27/tencent-eyes-to-secure-chinas-drug-safety-through-new-partnership/#respond Fri, 27 Jul 2018 03:21:41 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75595 Tencent Joins Hands With Mediway, Jiontown to Make Drug Monitoring Platform – Yicai Global

What happened: Tencent’s cloud unit will team up with medical information service Mediway and drug retailer Jiontown Pharmaceutical to make an online platform that could verify medicines’ supply chains. The three companies will develop an information-sharing platform with which patients can review details of their prescriptions.

Why it’s important: The news comes in just a few days after a fake vaccine scandal hit China. An estimated 250,000 substandard DPT vaccines from one of the country’s largest vaccine maker Changsheng Bio-tech have been administrated to children in Shandong Province. Tech giants are trying to solve problems in China’s healthcare and medical system by applying emerging technologies such as cloud computing, big data, AI and blockchain.

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The incredible rise of Pinduoduo, Tencent’s most powerful Taobao rival https://technode.com/2018/07/27/the-incredible-rise-of-pinduoduo-tencents-most-powerful-taobao-rival/ https://technode.com/2018/07/27/the-incredible-rise-of-pinduoduo-tencents-most-powerful-taobao-rival/#respond Fri, 27 Jul 2018 01:44:06 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75464 pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibabaFrom Alibaba to JD, China is not short of e-commerce powerhouses. Although the country’s e-commerce market is highly consolidated, it’s not impossible for startup teams to crack this market as long as they are solving the right problems for the right group of customers. Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo just proved this. The Shanghai-based company […]]]> pinduoduo colin huang ecommerce alibaba

From Alibaba to JD, China is not short of e-commerce powerhouses. Although the country’s e-commerce market is highly consolidated, it’s not impossible for startup teams to crack this market as long as they are solving the right problems for the right group of customers.

Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo just proved this. The Shanghai-based company filed for a massive $1.6 billion IPO on the US stock market on July 16th, making it one of the largest deals of the year. Excitement is quickly intensifying surround the company, which managed to boost its sizeable success in China’s highly competitive e-commerce market within three years.

What is Pinduoduo and what has it done right?

Like Taobao and JD, Pinduoduo is an e-commerce platform that offers a wide range of products from daily groceries to home appliances. Pinduoduo’s twist lies in its integration of social components into the traditional online shopping process, which the company describes as the “team purchase” model.

By sharing Pinduoduo’s product information on social networks such as WeChat and QQ, users can invite their contacts to form a shopping team to get a lower price for the commodity. The mechanism keeps the users motivated and better hooked for a more interactive and dynamic shopping experience. Coupled with other incentives such as cash, coupon, lottery and free products, Pinduoduo managed to acquire users at a very low cost. Together with the extra satisfaction of scoring a good deal with your friends as a team, Pinduoduo soon went viral in China.

Extremely low prices are another compelling attraction of Pinduoduo. The discount is usually up to 90%, including everything from RMB 10 bed sheets to RMB 1000 PCs. But the bestsellers are daily groceries at unbelievable low prices. More than 6.4 million units of tissue paper were sold at RMB 12.9 for 10 boxes and 4.8 million umbrellas were purchased at RMB 10.3 apiece.

The company’s bulk-selling model easily creates huge orders for the sellers and leaves them more room to cut prices. At the same time, Pinduoduo’s app is designed to facilitate this, an expert explained to local media: “Taobao’s interface is search-based and centered on multiple product displays, while Pinduoduo’s is more similar to a news feed and thus gives more exposure to a single product and easy to create “爆款” [baokuan, meaning viral items]. Taobao has more products listed, but Pinduoduo put its focus on fewer bestsellers that attract more buyers.”

Pinduoduo (l) and Taobao (r) interfaces

Pinduoduo’s C2B model allows it to ship directly from the manufacturers eliminates layers of distributors, not only reduces the price tag for buyers but also raises the profit of manufacturers. This approach is particularly effective for the sales of perishable agricultural and fresh products, where the speed for matching supply and demand is critical.

Lesser-known brands were chosen over famous brands to erase any premium that comes from branding. Additionally, the costs for advertising and marketing are also lowered through user sharing to social media. The approach is both cost-saving and effective. Through social sharing, users are sending the product information precisely to friends and groups that may have similar income and consumption preferences. Viral marketing is a more clever way to build the identity of all the lesser-known brands on its platform. Financially, the platform could even out part of discounts with less marketing budgets.

China Tech Talk 43: The e-commerce platform becoming a threat to Alibaba with Thomas Graziani

Price and social features are not only the only paths to Pinduoduo’s meteoric rise—spotting the right user profile is the last piece to the puzzle. Operation director of Chinese mobile e-commerce platform Chuchujie, Yang Lin shot to the core of the problem in an interview with local media: “Taobao has over 500 million users while WeChat has over 1 billion, the gigantic missing group between two of China’s giant apps is distributed in third- or lower-tier cities, mostly senior citizens. This group, which only recently came online and depends on the ubiquitous WeChat as the chief source of information, is the target users of Pinduoduo.”

Data from research institute Jiguang shows that users from third- and lower-tier cities account for around 65% of Pinduoduo’s total user base, while JD’s users in first plus second-tier cities and the rest of China were half-and-half.  Additionally, females account for 70% of Pinduoduo’s user base. They are responsible for family purchases and more price sensitive. This guarantees more active sharing and purchases.

User demographics and average order value of JD, Taobao, and PDD (Image credit: GGV)

Consumption upgrade, a trend in which affluent Chinese customers are increasingly willing to pay for quality, has dominated China’s e-commerce industry in the past few years. Taobao and JD’s globalization initiatives to bring overseas quality products, the boom of cross-border e-commerce sites like Red and NetEase Yanxuan and Kaola are all based on the consumption-upgrading backdrop.

But the growth of Pinduoduo has sparked an argument focusing on whether the platform represents consumption downgrading. Maybe consumption upgrading or degrading isn’t the key problem. It is just one more piece of evidence for how big and segmented the Chinese market can be. Rising income may give part of Chinese urban citizens the freedom to vote for quality, but RMB 1 difference in price tag may still be a big concern for their countryside counterparts, who have been neglected so far.

Cost performance is still the most important factor to consider for consumers. A higher price tag does not necessarily represent the better quality or vice versa. The huge potential in this often-overlooked market is luring more competitors. Taobao launched Taobao Tejia, a dedicated app for China’s low-end users.

Pinduoduo didn’t invent the social e-commerce model. Groupon pioneered the group-buying concept years ago. But it is succeeding thanks to a new ecosystem consisting of super app WeChat, mobile payment infrastructure, and mobile-first users.

Can China’s fastest growing e-commerce startup find similar success in Southeast Asia?

Pinduoduo’s history and major milestones

Founded in September 2015, Pinduoduo is the fourth startup of Colin Huang, an ex-Googler who once worked on early search algorithms for e-commerce. His previous startups include consumer electronics e-commerce site Ouku.com, Leqi, e-commerce platform marketing agent service and a WeChat-based role-playing game company.

With experiences in both e-commerce and gaming, Huang founded Pinduoduo with a vision to combine the secret success recipe of both Alibaba and Tencent, the two Chinese internet giants known for their e-commerce and gaming /social dominance respectively. “They don’t really understand how the other makes money,” Huang said to Bloomberg.

Huang seems to be right about how the two industries can work together. Pinduoduo’s annual GMV (gross merchandise volume) surpassed RMB100 billion in 2017, that’s around two years since its inception. To hit the same milestone, Taobao took five years, VIP.com took eight years and JD ten years. Pinduoduo now claims more than 343.6 million active buyers with an annual GMV of RMB 262.1 billion.

Image credit: Pinduoduo

A huge turning point occurred in the third quarter of 2017 when the weekly active rate, penetration rate, and open rate of the Pinduoduo app all surpassed those of JD. Compared to the previous year, it reaches up to 1000% year on year growth according to Jiguang’s data.

Image credit: GGV Capital

Steep growth trajectory lured financial backings. In 2015, Huang launched Pinhaohuo, a social commerce platform for fruits, with the team from his second startup Leqi. His gaming startup incubated Pinduoduo.

Four months after Pinduoduo received undisclosed A round from IDG and Lightspeed China in March 2016, the company secured over $110 million in Series B financing four months later from Baoyan Partners, New Horizon Capital, Tencent, and others. In April 2018, Pinduoduo completed a new round of financing raising $3 billion at a valuation of nearly $15 billion. Given Pinduoduo’s WeChat-based ecosystem, Tencent joined the round as a returning investor.

Given the history between Pinduoduo and Pinhaohuo, then of the two largest players in the social e-commerce sector, the two companies merged to form one dominator.

Another counterfeit heaven in China?

“If you close your eyes and visualize the next stage for Pinduoduo, it would be a combination of ‘Costco’ and ‘Disneyland’, driven by a distributed network of intelligence agents,” Huang said in his letter to shareholders. Huang’s comparison was thus interpreted as a combination of “value for money” and entertainment, but many are questioning whether or to what degree Pinduoduo can live up to the founder’s expectation.

Although Pinduoduo claims to have several channels to lower product prices, increasing product quality and counterfeit complaints still raise concerns for a possible low-cost and low-quality association. The percentage of complains on Pinduoduo is 17.87%, and the user satisfaction rating is only 1 star, according to the 2017 National User Satisfaction Survey of Major E-commerce Platforms released by the China E-Commerce Research Center. Complaints mainly target at the problems of poor quality, slow delivery, misleading ads, etc.

In addition to mounting domestic complaints, the Chinese shopping app was hit by a trademark infringement lawsuit in the US, shortly after filing for a US IPO. Alongside Alibaba and JD’s efforts to remove fake goods on their platforms, fake goods are flooding to emerging e-commerce platforms like Pinduoduo and Weishang, according to Alibaba.

As Pinduoduo prepares for a listing, the firm is following the e-commerce giants in cleaning up the platform. According to the company’s annual consumer rights protection report for 2017, it has taken down 10.7 million problematic listings, blocked 40 million suspicious external links, representing 95% of the fake good sellers from the platform. The company set up an RMB 150 million fund to deal with after-sales disputes.

But tightening regulation is causing more friction between Pinduoduo and its merchants on the platform. In June, fourteen store owners who sell products on Pinduoduo protested under the company’s office building claiming that Pinduoduo conducted improper product-quality checks which damaged the owners’ rights. Company founder Huang insisted Pinduoduo’s decision and punishment of the owners is just and fair.

Many also questioned the validity of entertaining features in Pinduoduo’s value proposition. “We have observed that a few users find shopping on Pinduoduo to be very entertaining, which is attributable to its extremely low pricing and interaction among Weixin users,” according to research institute 86 Research.

IPO and beyond

Pinduoduo went public on NASDAQ market on July 26 and raised more than $1.6 billion with a valuation of $60 billion. However, shareholders should still be concerned about the company’s fundamentals

Financially, the company is still in the red. Pinduoduo suffered a net loss of RMB 292 million and RMB 525.1 million in 2016 and 2017, respectively. Its net losses reached RMB 201.0 million in the first quarter of this year. The net loss is expected to be widened, mainly attributable to investments in branding and ads. Over 88.4% of Pinduoduo’s RMB 1.2 billion Q1 revenue was spent on marketing. This could be translated as a sign of difficult traffic acquisition.

The most typical Pinduoduo users are price sensitive women that reside in low tier cities. Merchants are selling at a low price to appeal to this group. But how to maintain these users and its growth momentum is a big challenge for Pinduoduo now given rising product quality complaints.

“The retention rate is a big challenge of Pinduoduo, implying potential GMV slow down. Pinduoduo will have difficulty in upgrading to a marketplace of premium products because of its user demographics and brand image,” according to 86 Research.

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Ele.me enters another round of money-burning https://technode.com/2018/07/26/ele-me-enters-another-round-of-money-burning/ https://technode.com/2018/07/26/ele-me-enters-another-round-of-money-burning/#respond Thu, 26 Jul 2018 08:33:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=75554 Ele.me to Spend More Than $440 Million to Seize Turf– Caixin Global

What happened: Chinese online food delivery giant Ele.me is planning to spend more than $440 million from July to September to expand its market share in the hope to increase its market share to over 50%.

Why it’s important: The subsidy and marketing war between Chinese online food delivery giants is reaching a feverish pitch. The sector has undergone major shakeups last year when Ele.me purchased Baidu’s food delivery service Baidu Waimai, shrinking the market to just two top players. Ele.me’s arch competitor Meituan is planning an IPO in Hong Kong.

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Alibaba doubles down on facial recognition https://technode.com/2018/07/24/alibaba-doubles-down-on-facial-recognition/ https://technode.com/2018/07/24/alibaba-doubles-down-on-facial-recognition/#respond Tue, 24 Jul 2018 10:44:01 +0000 https://endemo.technode.com/?p=75423 Alibaba Joins $600 Million Round for AI Startup Megvii– Bloomberg

What happened: Megvii Inc., the Chinese developer of facial recognition system Face++, reportedly raising at least $600 million from investors including Alibaba Group and Boyu Capital. Face++ offers face-scanning systems to companies including Lenovo and Ant Financial, etc.

Why it’s important: AI startups become the new darlings of Chinese investors who are ramping up their investments in deep tech companies. Megvii’s massive round comes shortly after a $620 million C round of another Alibaba-backed computer vision startup SenseTime. Its rival Yitu has just secured a $100 million funding. The emerging unicorns are competing in sectors such as retail, finance and smartphone and public security that could utilize facial recognition.

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Tencent in need of new blockbusters as Honour of Kings mania fades https://technode.com/2018/07/23/tencent-in-need-of-new-blockbusters-as-honour-of-kings-mania-fades/ https://technode.com/2018/07/23/tencent-in-need-of-new-blockbusters-as-honour-of-kings-mania-fades/#respond Mon, 23 Jul 2018 11:13:50 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=71223 TencentTencent’s mega-hit mobile game Honour of Kings is no doubt one of most successful games of the Chinese gaming giant. It still is one of the cash cows of Tecent. But as the craze surrounding the three-year-old game fades off, Tencent is in need of more new popular games to maintain its domination in China’s […]]]> Tencent

Tencent’s mega-hit mobile game Honour of Kings is no doubt one of most successful games of the Chinese gaming giant. It still is one of the cash cows of Tecent. But as the craze surrounding the three-year-old game fades off, Tencent is in need of more new popular games to maintain its domination in China’s gaming industry.

App Store marketing service provider AppBi revealed in a recent report that Honour of Kings reached its peak with a profit growth rate of 29 percent in 2016. But its popularity started to drop with policy restrictions and growing competition. The heat surrounds Honour of Kings and the purchase of users declined gradually.

China’s mobile gaming industry is dominated by Tencent and NetEase. Among all games listed on “Top 20 Paid Games” from 2014 to 2018 Q1, Tencent constitutes 50% of the total, while Netease was the second with an 18 percent share.

In Q1 this year, Net Ease is catching up with its new game“决战!平安京” topping the fastest growing category. The best performing game by Tencent is QQ Speed, which recorded a $170 million or 19 percent YOY profit growth in Q1 this year. Compared to previous years where Tencent and Netease carved up most of the profits, several gaming startups become the budding publishers in China’s game arena.

Mobile revenue still relies heavily on the game industry. According to the recent report released by China Culture and Entertainment Industry Association (CCEA), more than 70% of APP income was generated by game players.

Since 2014, China experienced an explosive growth in the gaming market. AppBi research shows the total revenue had jumped almost four times from 2014 to 2017. In 2018 Q1, China mobile game revenue reached $2.3 billion, equivalent to the total in 2014.

AppBi studied every year’s Top 20 Games in Revenue in IOS store and found that most of the top publishers are either invested by Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba, or BAT itself. Small startups are suffering increasing difficulty to survive or go independent.

From 2016-2018Q1, most of the Top 20 profitable games are well-established IP or Chinese fantasy category, which proven to be very popular among Chinese consumers. There was a significant lacking in originality and innovation.

With more players generated by games like the Honour of Kings, China mobile users are expected to exceed 550 million, according to CCEA. However, the game market still requires more originality, talents, and better data-driven marketing strategy, the company pointed.

Image credits:AppBi

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Five years on, China finally issues licenses to first batch of 15 virtual telecom operators https://technode.com/2018/07/23/china-licenses-virtual-telecom-operators/ https://technode.com/2018/07/23/china-licenses-virtual-telecom-operators/#respond Mon, 23 Jul 2018 09:48:29 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=71204 virtual telecomChina’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology finally has issued the official virtual telecom provider licenses to the first-ever batch of fifteen companies today. Some of the big internet names like Xiaomi, Alibaba and JD are included in the list. Aiming to open up the telecom market that’s dominated by state-owned telecom carriers of China Mobile, […]]]> virtual telecom

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology finally has issued the official virtual telecom provider licenses to the first-ever batch of fifteen companies today. Some of the big internet names like Xiaomi, Alibaba and JD are included in the list.

Aiming to open up the telecom market that’s dominated by state-owned telecom carriers of China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom, China allows virtual network operators to lease service capacity like roaming and text messages from conventional operators. The virtual operators do not own network infrastructures themselves and pay traditional carriers a percentage of their revenue as well as fees.

This final announcement comes five years after the authority first introduced the virtual telecoms pilot scheme in May 2013. It issued pilot operation licenses to eleven ‘mobile virtual network operators’, or MVNOs, at the end of 2013 and have gradually increased the number of virtual carriers to 42.

China’s Mobile Virtual Network Operators Suffer As License Deadline Looms

Optimism abounded when the pilot scheme first launched and everyone expects it to be a burgeoning market. But it didn’t happen that way. As of the beginning of this year, virtual telecoms have attracted about 50 million subscribers, take up only 3.5% of the total market.

Some virtual telecom carriers failed to comply with China’s real-name mobile registration system, leaving some virtual telecom services filled with fraudster and scammers. What’s more, it’s still impossible for subscribers to take their number when switching to a virtual telco

Originally, the scheme was expected to be finalized by the end of 2015, but it’s postponed to April this year due to various problems. Given the prolonged pilot scheme and shifting market, the project is gradually losing steam among China’s tech titans.

Here’s a full list of companies that got the license:

  • Suzhou Snail Digital Technology Co., Ltd. (苏州蜗牛数字科技股份有限公司)
  • YuanTel (Beijing) Telecom Technology Co., Ltd. (远特(北京)通信技术有限公司)
  • T.World Telecom Group Co., Ltd. (话机世界通信集团股份有限公司)
  • Shenzhen Youyou Interactive Co., Ltd. (深圳市优友互联有限公司)
  • Beijing Dixintong Telecommunications Services Co., Ltd. (北京迪信通通信服务有限公司)
  • Hongdou Group Co., Ltd. (红豆集团有限公司)
  • Minsheng Telecommunication (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd. (民生通讯(深圳)有限公司)
  • Beijing Funtalk Telecom Technology Co., Ltd. (北京乐语通信科技有限公司)
  • Xiaomi Technology Co., Ltd. (小米科技有限责任公司)
  • Sharing Mobile Group Co., Ltd.(分享通信集团有限公司)
  • Hainan HNA Information Technology Co., Ltd. (海南海航信息技术有限公司)
  • Telling Telecommunication Co., Ltd. (天音通信有限公司)
  • Alibaba Cloud Computing (Beijing) Co., Ltd. (阿里巴巴云计算(北京)有限公司)
  • 263 Telecommunication Co., Ltd. (二六三网络通信股份有限公司)
  • Beijing JD 360 Degree E-commerce Co., Ltd. (北京京东叁佰陆拾度电子商务有限公司)
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Tujia buddies up with SiteMinder to improving homestay management for overseas hosts https://technode.com/2018/07/23/tujia-siteminder/ https://technode.com/2018/07/23/tujia-siteminder/#respond Mon, 23 Jul 2018 08:39:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=71199 Chinese homestay booking provider Tujia has announced that it has signed a strategic agreement with SiteMinder, a global cloud platform for the hotel industry. The new partnership underlines an increasing focus for the company’s global expansion efforts. The function is expected to become available to all hosts who use the service outside of China starting […]]]>

Chinese homestay booking provider Tujia has announced that it has signed a strategic agreement with SiteMinder, a global cloud platform for the hotel industry. The new partnership underlines an increasing focus for the company’s global expansion efforts.

The function is expected to become available to all hosts who use the service outside of China starting in mid-July. After the service goes online, Tujia will have an accurate real-time inventory of no less than 50,000 room-nights each day, according to a company statement.

More Chinese travelers, especially the younger generation, choose Airbnb-like lodging services over traditional hotels. Services like Tujia and Xiaozhu boomed along with the trend. At the same time, Chinese people’s enormous demand for outbound tours is pushing local homestay companies to improve their overseas supports in a bid capitalize on the new trend. Chinese tourists crossed China’s borders 131 million times in 2017, according to the UN’s World Tourism Organization (UNWTO).

The Ctrip-backed company has expanded its lodging-service network to over 345 domestic and 1,037 overseas destinations with over 1,200,000 online residential houses, including apartments, homestays, and villas as well as traveling services that can cater to various accommodation needs.

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Chinese bet on blockchain to counter vaccine scandal cover-up https://technode.com/2018/07/23/vaccine-scandal-blockchain/ https://technode.com/2018/07/23/vaccine-scandal-blockchain/#respond Mon, 23 Jul 2018 08:33:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=71189 The spiraling scandal over faulty vaccines from a major drug maker in China spooked the country over the weekend. While a viral investigative post can no longer be found, some are trying to guarantee its availability by leveraging blockchain technology. A shocking scandal surrounding Shenzhen-listed drug maker Changchun Changsheng Biotechnology broke at the end of last […]]]>

The spiraling scandal over faulty vaccines from a major drug maker in China spooked the country over the weekend. While a viral investigative post can no longer be found, some are trying to guarantee its availability by leveraging blockchain technology.

A shocking scandal surrounding Shenzhen-listed drug maker Changchun Changsheng Biotechnology broke at the end of last week. The Jilin-based company was found to have violated standards in making rabies vaccine for humans. What’s more, some 252,600 substandard DPT (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus) vaccines manufactured by the company were sold to Shandong Province.

The incidents soon enraged the whole country, where it becomes one of the most watched topics on local social media like WeChat and Weibo. Among tons of articles on the topic, “King of Vaccines” written by a blogger under the pen name of “Beast”(兽爷 shouye),” went viral as one of the first to break the story. The article did a thorough investigation of the history of Chuangchun Changsheng and how the company developed to become one of China’s largest vaccine producer by selling defective products.

Unfortunately, the post disappeared just a few hours after its publication. Some internet users began reposting it in the hopes of keeping it in circulation. Even with the concerted efforts of Chinese users, the post didn’t last long on social media. Some users, to make sure it stays available, put it on the Etherum blockchain instead

Transaction records for the cryptoasset show that on July 22, an Ethereum address sent a value of 0.001 Ethereum to itself. The metadata to the transaction contained the text of the post. Since Ethereum transaction records are public, the post can be read by anyone.

This is not the first time for Chinese crypto-enthusiasts to leverage blockchain technology for the similar purpose.  Yue Xin, a student from Peking University, published an open letter describing being pressured by faculty after she called for a deeper investigation on a decades-long sexual harassment case, which caused the death of another student in 1998. Cryptocurrency enthusiasts put Yue’s letter on Ethereum after it was no longer available.

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E-sports video streaming site Douyu planning a US IPO https://technode.com/2018/07/23/douyu-ipo-us/ https://technode.com/2018/07/23/douyu-ipo-us/#respond Mon, 23 Jul 2018 03:56:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=71161 DouyuShortly after widely circulated rumors about a Hong Kong IPO, Tencent-backed Douyu is reported to have turned its favors to the US stock market. The listing is expected to raise $600 million to $700 million by cash, the report added. If true, this is much higher than RFA Reuters’s previous estimation of $300 million to $400 […]]]> Douyu

Shortly after widely circulated rumors about a Hong Kong IPO, Tencent-backed Douyu is reported to have turned its favors to the US stock market. The listing is expected to raise $600 million to $700 million by cash, the report added. If true, this is much higher than RFA Reuters’s previous estimation of $300 million to $400 million.

Originated from AcFun’s live streaming business, the platform features in-game live streaming, where viewers can watch players play live or live recorded videos.

Chinese gaming behemoth Tencent has backed the platform since March 2016 when it led a $100 million Series B along with Sequoia and Nanshan Capital. It also participated in Douyu’s RMB 1.5 billion Series C in August of the same year and led a $630 million strategic investment earlier this year. Douyu completed its Series D of financing led by CMBI International Capital Corporation and Nanshan Capital in 2017.

Can live streaming make money? Takeaways from Huya’s May IPO

The boom in live streaming and e-sports markets have given rise to companies like Douyu, which is sitting at the intersection of the two emerging sectors. Douyu’s major rival Huya, which also has Tencent backing, had its initial public offering on New York Stock Exchange in May, raising $180 million. The stock was priced at $12 per share and it surged to around $36 a piece now.

Douyu’s listing comes in the wake of an IPO crazy among Chinese tech unicorns. In the past a few months, we have witnessed IPO of top players in various verticals from smartphone maker Xiaomi to video streaming giants like iQiyi and Bilibili.

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Chinese underwater drone makers are facing a turning point https://technode.com/2018/07/05/chinese-underwater-drone-makers-are-facing-a-turning-point/ https://technode.com/2018/07/05/chinese-underwater-drone-makers-are-facing-a-turning-point/#respond Thu, 05 Jul 2018 09:00:30 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70308 Aerial drones are big business these days. It’s not only a smart toy for amateur hobbyists but also a problem-solving device for lots of industries from logistics to agriculture. Although a few years later than its now fully grown-up airborne cousin, underwater drones are finally coming of age in 2018. “2016 marked the Year One […]]]>

Aerial drones are big business these days. It’s not only a smart toy for amateur hobbyists but also a problem-solving device for lots of industries from logistics to agriculture. Although a few years later than its now fully grown-up airborne cousin, underwater drones are finally coming of age in 2018.

“2016 marked the Year One for underwater drones when lots of startups spotted the market potential and entered the field. Two years later, their previous efforts in product development and marketing are generating results. This could signal a new surge in a fledgling market,” Yang Yang, COO and co-founder of submersible drone maker Chasing Innovations, told TechNode.

Early signs of underwater drones’ gradual rise

The increase in underwater drones at CES Asia earlier this month echoed Yang’s assertion. Aquatic drone displays at the show and media coverage that followed are considerably bigger than the previous years.

Almost no new aerial consumer drones mainly during the event and the spotlight fell on underwater models such as those from Beijing-based RoboSea and Shanghai-based Youcan Robotics.

“Underwater drone startups are winding through R&D and gradually moving to mass production now. This explains why CES recorded a surge of submersible drone makers that are looking for publicity,” said Yang. On the other hand, the lack of aerial devices is not so surprising, given the monopoly of DJI.

Of course, this round of underwater drone frenzy is propelled by venture capitalists. Chasing Innovations received Pre-A funding in June from Shenzhen Capital Group.

Yang’s startup only represents a part of VCs’ attention to the emerging vertical. RoboSea has secured an eight-digit RMB A round in January this year, while another underwater drone developer Geneinno received RMB 15 million in a Pre-A round.

However, the underwater drone industry is still at an early stage of its development, which is obvious given that most startups in the field are still in A or pre-A stage and their funding size is not big. “For the future one to two years, the industry will see the entrance of more players, testing and educating the market,” he predicted.

Compared with internet-related markets, underwater drones, and hardware devices in general, would have a more progressive growth trajectory, according to Yang. “Heavy capital injection might be able to create a dominator in some internet verticals over a short period, but that’s not the case for the hardware market because the development of technology and solutions for hardware is a gradual process,” he said.

Crucial time in making the right market decisions

At this stage, startups in the field have plenty of important decisions to make, and the choices they make now could determine the future not only of the companies but also the industry. “Most Chinese underwater drone developers choose overseas and consumer markets as their launchpad,” said Yang.

Chasing Innovation has shipped tens of millions of its first product Gladius since it entered mass production last September. 90% of them are delivered to overseas markets including North America, Europe, and Australia. The startup developed an overseas-market first strategy. So do most of the companies in this market, Yang reveals.

Chinese smart hardware device makers have long developed overseas market-first approaches to product launching, largely due to the more matured DIY culture and love for water games in overseas consumers. This is especially true for underwater drones, which is still a new vertical even for overseas users.

But this does not mean there’s no chance for the Chinese market. Yang believes the opportunities in the local underwater drone market mainly lie in enterprise-level products, which can be used for aquatic surveillance, mapping and real-time communications, and education.

“The consumer-level market is going to boom earlier than the business-targeted market in general, because the latter needs a more professional understanding of each vertical in a bid to develop not only the hardware but also comprehensive solutions to support better integration into the original ecosystem of the industries,” said Yang.

By tapping the Chinese market, Chasing Innovations is planning to launch a series of products later this year, including both consumer and business drones, he added.

Although there are not many groundbreaking improvements in terms of technology, the general tendency for underwater drones is towards portability, easy operation, sleek design, and affordability.

“More stable video transmission, diversified track curve, and attaching sonar detectors or robotic hands to drones are some of the directions we are trying to work on,” said Yang.

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TouchPal’s next-generation keyboard app at TechCrunch Hangzhou https://technode.com/2018/07/04/techcrunch-hangzhou-touchpal/ https://technode.com/2018/07/04/techcrunch-hangzhou-touchpal/#respond Wed, 04 Jul 2018 08:02:48 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70245 Globalization has become a mainstream trend among Chinese tech companies over the past year. But if we look back, this trend could be dated back years ago when China’s first group of tool apps found traction overseas. Shanghai-based keyboard app TouchPal is among the Chinese startups that pioneered this trend. As a third-party keyboard service, […]]]>

Globalization has become a mainstream trend among Chinese tech companies over the past year. But if we look back, this trend could be dated back years ago when China’s first group of tool apps found traction overseas. Shanghai-based keyboard app TouchPal is among the Chinese startups that pioneered this trend.

As a third-party keyboard service, TouchPal now claims over 600 million users and a predominating 95% of them are outside China. While the keyboard still the company’s core product, it is now gradually developing other portfolio apps for fitness and content, but their focus is still on the overseas market.

Keyboard app may not sound a sexy business, but it’s a very basic service for every user. “Ten years ago when I left my job at Microsoft and co-founded my new company, we thought that keyboard is not that sexy but it could be a good starting point before we move on to cool projects like Facebook and Google,” TouchPal co-founder Michael Wang said at TechCrunch Hangzhou.

But as the team keeps going, they found that keyboard app turns out to be a very successful business and it is also strategically important. “The more we developed innovative keyboard features, the more we believe it’s related to AI, natural language processing and how the machine can understand and see the world,” Wang added.

TouchPal has developed lots of interesting features from mistyping corrections to slide and gesture input and Michel believes the introduction of new technologies is opening up more potentials of the sector. “In the late development stage, we thought we almost have tapped into all of the new visions of the keyboard, but we were wrong and got to find lots of interesting areas. For example, we have released an AI assistant for keyboard, which is embedded in keyboard and helps users to forecast the weathers, recommend restaurants, etc.”

TouchPal’s user distribution is quite global, not only in the US, Europe but also most part of Asia. The company tries to empower data collected from the users by leveraging deep learning technology.

“We found that the user behaviors in different countries and areas are quite different. Learning those languages through machines, we found something in common. People in certain areas are discussing certain topics more often. For example, World Cup is so popular now. To some extent, we can even forecast the result of political elections. Google catches that statistics from search and TouchPal from the keyboard,” Michel shared.

Of course, data collection would raise privacy concerns among users. “We are very serious about user’s data privacy. A certain amount of language data would be needed to train the language model. If users don’t want to give their data they can disable the option. Similarly, Google and Microsoft all have their corresponding data collection policies and agreements. In addition, we also spend lots of resources in the compliance with GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation),” he said.

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Smart travel in China and beyond: Ctrip VP https://technode.com/2018/07/03/techcrunch-hangzhou-ctrip/ https://technode.com/2018/07/03/techcrunch-hangzhou-ctrip/#respond Tue, 03 Jul 2018 10:33:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70171 “Ctrip is world’s top-three travel platform by gross transaction volume, but still we are only at the tip of the iceberg. China’s travel expenditure is around $800 billion, including various verticals like flight, hotels, in-destination, and more. As for the global market, it’s a massive $5 trillion market – 10% of GDP. We are only […]]]>

“Ctrip is world’s top-three travel platform by gross transaction volume, but still we are only at the tip of the iceberg. China’s travel expenditure is around $800 billion, including various verticals like flight, hotels, in-destination, and more. As for the global market, it’s a massive $5 trillion market – 10% of GDP. We are only a small part of the industry in China and globally,” said Victor Tseng, Vice President of Chinese online travel giant Ctrip, at TechCrunch Hangzhou.

“With more than 180 million active users, Ctrip does have a lot of travel related data that’s accumulated over 20 years. We also cooperate with a lot of partners to see how we can present information and travel to personalize the service to each traveler’s needs.”

People’s rising passion for travel and the complexity in travel itinerary, especially those involve multiple stops and countries, is making online travel an increasingly successful business. With the help of emerging technologies like AI and big data, we are enjoying more convenient and affordable services that past travelers didn’t have.

Tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent are also expanding aggressively to the smart travel industry. Alibaba’s travel service Fliggy, or Feizhu, is growing rapidly. What’s more, the platform launched a short-term home rental channel in partnership with home rental service Xiaozhu, bringing fiercer competition to Tujia, which Ctrip has a stake in.

“We do have certain advantages,” said Victor when commenting on competitions. “Ctrip’s advantage in flights booking has given us an early access to users’ travel demands. Based on a flight reservation, we have a mental advantage to know which kinds of follow-up recommendations are more relevant. Obviously, when it’s book a family flight package we are going to book a kid-friendly place. The service is becoming more and more personalized.”

China’s increasing number of outbound tourists drives the internalization of big tech companies such as Alibaba and Tencent. Unsurprisingly, Ctrip is also capitalizing on the trend.

“We are introducing the infrastructure alongside our globalization efforts to educate more and more local hotel partners, More of the opportunities coming from outbound customers when they are in destination. Ctrip partners with local suppliers, whether be it restaurants, local attraction, shopping centers.”

Inbound travel from Asia-Pacific area is offering a great opportunity for Chinese travel companies “This would take certain efforts from industry players to help educate the users about that China’s is such a dynamic place for the global audience. It’s also about enabling the travel infrastructure, direct flights, VISA applications, etc.”

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Alibaba postpones its CDR offering https://technode.com/2018/07/03/alibaba-postpones-its-cdr-offering/ https://technode.com/2018/07/03/alibaba-postpones-its-cdr-offering/#respond Tue, 03 Jul 2018 03:44:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70160 Chinese tech behemoth Alibaba has postponed its plan to head for a mainland listing via Chinese Depository Receipt (CDR), according to Tencent Tech citing people with knowledge of the matter. The source wasn’t specific about the reasons behind this decision. Previous reports show that Alibaba’s local listing plan was originally scheduled for this month. CITIC […]]]>

Chinese tech behemoth Alibaba has postponed its plan to head for a mainland listing via Chinese Depository Receipt (CDR), according to Tencent Tech citing people with knowledge of the matter. The source wasn’t specific about the reasons behind this decision.

Previous reports show that Alibaba’s local listing plan was originally scheduled for this month. CITIC Securities and China International Capital Corporation would serve as IPO sponsors.

In an official response from the company, Alibaba said “Alibaba is open to issuing shares on the mainland if compliant with Chinese regulations and various circumstances. We have made this clear since the first day of our US listing and have never changed it ever since. We give no comments on the market rumors.”

Due to tight regulation and high volatility, Chinee stock market is losing local tech giants to other listing destinations such as Hong Kong and the US. China wants to open its door to Chinese tech giants with an IPO plan as well as those offshore-listed tech firms like Alibaba, Baidu, Tencent, JD.com, etc.

Despite the heat, the CDR process is not going very smooth. On June 19, Xiaomi, which is expected to be the first company for this program, stated via its official account on Weibo that after serious consideration it will issue its CDR only after completing its initial public offering in Hong Kong.

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Patent suits pile on before Xiaomi IPO https://technode.com/2018/07/03/patent-suits-pile-on-before-xiaomi-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/07/03/patent-suits-pile-on-before-xiaomi-ipo/#respond Tue, 03 Jul 2018 02:36:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70154 Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi hit yet another roadblock ahead of its blockbuster IPO. An individual named Yuan Gongyi (袁弓夷) is suing the company for infringing on his patent, asking for an indemnity of RMB 50 million ($7.5 million), local media is reporting. According to Yuan, the Chinese patent ZL00800381.5, named Common Packet Channel, has been […]]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi hit yet another roadblock ahead of its blockbuster IPO. An individual named Yuan Gongyi (袁弓夷) is suing the company for infringing on his patent, asking for an indemnity of RMB 50 million ($7.5 million), local media is reporting.

According to Yuan, the Chinese patent ZL00800381.5, named Common Packet Channel, has been infringed upon. The original holder of this patent is a US company and it was transferred to Yuan on December 8, 2016.

The lawsuit was filed at the Beijing Intellectual Property Court and would affect up to twelve Xiaomi phones from Xiaomi 5X  all the way through to Xiaomi Note 3. According to the plaintiff, the patent could be applied in several telecommunication standards prescribed by 3GPP (The 3rd Generation Partnership Project), such as WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, HSPA, and LTE.

The lawsuit adds up to a series of blows to Xiaomi’s blockbuster IPO. On May 4, Xiaomi’s long-term rival Coolpad Group filed a patent infringement case against Xiaomi with a court in Shenzhen of Guangdong Province, one day after Xiaomi submitted its IPO prospectus. Coolpad claimed at a news conference on May 11 that they have filed seven patent complaints against Xiaomi.

Xiaomi, which is expected to become the first company to issue a Chinese Depository Receipt, abruptly postponed its plan on Mainland China’s stock exchanges last month. With a handful of existing problems, patent lawsuits, which usually have an effect on a business’s sustainable profitability, would add more uncertainties to Xiaomi’s IPO.

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SenseTime is more just than a face recognition company, says co-founder https://technode.com/2018/07/02/techcrunch-hangzhou-sensetime/ https://technode.com/2018/07/02/techcrunch-hangzhou-sensetime/#respond Mon, 02 Jul 2018 12:35:01 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70106 SenseTime, a four-year-old Chinese startup, became the world’s largest artificial intelligence startup in April this year after scoring a $600 million round from Alibaba. The company’s funding frenzy continues two months later upon the reception of another $620 million round at a $4.5 billion valuation. AI is being applied in a dizzying array of areas, […]]]>

SenseTime, a four-year-old Chinese startup, became the world’s largest artificial intelligence startup in April this year after scoring a $600 million round from Alibaba. The company’s funding frenzy continues two months later upon the reception of another $620 million round at a $4.5 billion valuation.

AI is being applied in a dizzying array of areas, but one of the most successful is face recognition. It is also where SenseTime first boomed by selling its AI-powered face recognition solutions to smartphone makers to improve their cameras, beautify photos for Chinese social media platforms, and to provide identity verification for security systems.

“SenseTime was first known to the public as a face recognition company, but we are aiming at something much bigger than that. Actually, our face recognition team only represents a small part of the company now. A great majority of the staff is dedicated to the construction of our deep learning platform,” said Xu Bing, co-founder and vice president of SenseTime, at TechCrunch Hangzhou.

“In our definition, SenseTime is a technology development platform. Just like in any other factories, we set up production lines to mass-produce our product, which is the technology, at a lower cost. It’s not only about face recognition. We have the capacity to generate the technologies that could recognize any visual or video contents, no matter it’s a cup, a car, or medical imaging,” Xu added.

Coming from a technological research background, Xu believes SesnseTime is very lucky that they are in a new era where the country is open to AI. From the macro level, China is moving fast in terms of business innovation. “Coupled with maturing technology and government support, our team believes the market is going to record a full boom in the near future,” he said.

That’s also the reason why we are open to more funding, even though we are still a young company because more funding will help the company to move even faster and to stay ahead of the industry. “We introduce funding from a certain venture capital not only for the money but also for creating synergy effects with these strategic investors,” he explained. Its investors include big names such as Alibaba, Qualcomm Ventures, and more.

With the new funding, the company plans to expand to more fields such as autonomous driving and augmented reality, covering the growing cost of AI talent and building infrastructure, according to Xu.

SenseTime turned profitable in 2017 and claims it has more than 700 clients and partners. For the past three years, the average revenue growth has been 400%, Xu Li, co-founder and CEO of SenseTime, said previously to Bloomberg.

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Live blog: TechCrunch Hangzhou—Beyond Unicorns https://technode.com/2018/07/02/live-blog-techcrunch-hangzhou-beyond-unicorns/ https://technode.com/2018/07/02/live-blog-techcrunch-hangzhou-beyond-unicorns/#respond Mon, 02 Jul 2018 01:42:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=70040 We’re going to be live blogging from the main stage at TechCrunch Hangzhou with speakers from tech giants to startups.  Keep tuning in for their take on how technology will shape our future.]]>

We’re going to be live blogging from the main stage at TechCrunch Hangzhou with speakers from tech giants to startups.  Keep tuning in for their take on how technology will shape our future.

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Blockchain startups born out of Chinaccelerator Batch 13 https://technode.com/2018/06/19/blockchain-chinaccelerator-batch-13/ https://technode.com/2018/06/19/blockchain-chinaccelerator-batch-13/#respond Tue, 19 Jun 2018 12:49:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=69387 In the fast-paced tech space, it is essential for startups to keep innovating and catching up with the latest trends. While the blockchain frenzy is still in full swing, it is inevitably becoming a new direction where entrepreneurs are turning their focus. In addition to the general tendency to shift towards what’s popular in the […]]]>

In the fast-paced tech space, it is essential for startups to keep innovating and catching up with the latest trends. While the blockchain frenzy is still in full swing, it is inevitably becoming a new direction where entrepreneurs are turning their focus.

In addition to the general tendency to shift towards what’s popular in the market, the blockchain craze is fueled by its distributed nature, find opportunities where trust is a key factor. After years of technical innovation, developers are now looking to scale its application to power a range of different industries.

The idea that shared ledgers can incentivize users to secure digital relationships has triggered wild imagination from something as mundane as finance and rental economy to poultry breeding and dental care. Shanghai-based Chinaccelerator graduated its 13th Batch to offer its distinctive applications of the technology.

Dream – Freelancer Recruitment

With the globalization of talents, more and more startups rely on freelancers. Dream leverages blockchain-based verification of identity, work history and professional networks against real-time data of project outcomes to scope projects and connect the right talents with exciting teams. It learns from the outcomes of past projects to build freelance teams with the right skills and fit.

Company CEO Richard Foster is an entrepreneur who founded a financially regulated payments startup and successfully raised funding for it. He has 10 years’ experience consulting as a network architect in the finance and energy sectors in London and has been following and investing bitcoin, blockchain, and altcoins since 2014.

LiqEase– SME Liquidity

Globally, over 67% of small and medium-sized enterprises have indicated a need for liquidity. LiqEase digitizes assets using blockchain technology with the goal to reduce payment terms for SMEs in B2B trade and provide investors with the opportunity to profit from such a new asset class.

Sellers and buyers can manually or automatically upload their project-related information, such as invoice, contracts, and others. Both parties have to sign a transaction on a blockchain node with their individual private keys. After that, a token is automatically issued and listed on the marketplace. The sellers get the cash liquidity from the investor and transfer his account receivable as a token to the investors. The investor can trade or hold this claim to other investors against the buyer until the maturity date of the token. Upon the maturity date, the buyers are required to settle the payment.

LiqEase CEO and founder Tobias Pfutze worked as a business consultant at mediaman Shanghai. He holds a degree in Business Administration and has a strong expertise in Fintech.

Nusic– Digital Rights

While China’s demand for DJ music is rising, being an DJ requires costly training and sophisticated software that could demand tens of thousands of dollars. Nusic is an app that allows anyone to create original music content and share with friends. Nusic’s mashup technology processes multi-channel audio in real-time for the drum, the melody, etc., giving users the ability to create great-sounding mixes and mashups. The app is under internal testing and will be launched later this year.

“First and foremost, we use blockchain technology to secure the digital rights. I was a student studying media technology. When I first heard of blockchain, I thoughts that it’s a much more sophisticated way to ensure the digital rights could have a record. In addition, we have an in-game economy. We are looking to offer the credits and the currencies inside the game, where users could use and trade outside of the platform as well,” Nusic CEO Adam Place told TechNode.

Aam Place is a serial entrepreneur, musician and talent agent from the UK who has been working at the intersection of music and technology.

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Live blog: Highlights from CES Asia https://technode.com/2018/06/14/live-blog-highlights-from-ces-asia/ https://technode.com/2018/06/14/live-blog-highlights-from-ces-asia/#respond Thu, 14 Jun 2018 03:26:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=69114 CES Asia, one of the world’s largest trade shows, kicked off in Shanghai on June 13. Over 500 companies from around the world are taking part in the three-day show, generating buzzes in artificial intelligence, autonomous driving, electric vehicles, and more. TechNode team is going to be live blogging from the event to bring the […]]]>

CES Asia, one of the world’s largest trade shows, kicked off in Shanghai on June 13. Over 500 companies from around the world are taking part in the three-day show, generating buzzes in artificial intelligence, autonomous driving, electric vehicles, and more.

TechNode team is going to be live blogging from the event to bring the latest trends. Check back for regular updates!

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SCHOTT brings more immersive AR experience to China through high-index glass wafer https://technode.com/2018/06/13/schott-ar-wafer/ https://technode.com/2018/06/13/schott-ar-wafer/#respond Wed, 13 Jun 2018 03:14:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=69053 German specialty glassmaker SCHOTT AG introduced on Tuesday SCHOTT RealView, a high-index glass wafer that allows more immersive augmented reality (AR) applications, to the Chinese market. The new SCHOTT RealView wafers are made from optical glass with a high refractive index of 1.6-2.0, compared to an index of 1.5 typical for the former generation of […]]]>

German specialty glassmaker SCHOTT AG introduced on Tuesday SCHOTT RealView, a high-index glass wafer that allows more immersive augmented reality (AR) applications, to the Chinese market.

The new SCHOTT RealView wafers are made from optical glass with a high refractive index of 1.6-2.0, compared to an index of 1.5 typical for the former generation of glass wafers. Following the rules of optics, the total internal reflection angle responsible for the guiding of the image is doubled in SCHOTT RealView™ wafers, correlating to larger field of view, according to the company.

RealViewTM expands the FOV to almost the limit of human peripheral vision with a refractive index of 1.6-2.0 (Image credit: SCHOTT)

Limited field of view (FOV) in AR devices has always a pain for improving the user experience. SCHOTT claims RealView is greatly expanding the FOV, allowing information to appear nearly everywhere within the limits of human peripheral vision. In addition, the wafer is extra thin at 0.025mm, making it capable of creating a crisp and high contrast image.

These 5 business applications show VR isn’t dying

With a recently established joint venture between SCHOTT and Zhejiang Crystal-Optech, the company is planning to mass produce this glass wafer in its expanding production facilities in China.

Market research companies forecast the emergence of AR consumer market around 2020 with several million devices sold annually. Annual growth will bring the market size – according to studies of famous market research firm IDTechex  – to a size of 50 million devices sold annually by 2025 with growth rates at 64% CAGR during the period of 2020 – 2025.

Thanks to the huge market size and quick adoption of new technologies, China is taking an increasingly great part of the emerging industry with the rise of big names and newcomers alike. Improvement in glass components would further boost the already thriving AR scene in China.

“SCHOTT is acutely aware of the huge potential AR technology presents for our future world, and China is one of our key markets,” said Dr. Frank Heinricht, Chairman of SCHOTT. “We place high importance on this field, and will continue our efforts and investments into bringing these technologies to business and consumers.”

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WeWork joins China’s mass entrepreneurship craze with WeWork Labs https://technode.com/2018/06/12/wework-labs/ https://technode.com/2018/06/12/wework-labs/#respond Tue, 12 Jun 2018 11:30:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68992 wework china co-working neumann failed ipoWeWork, the world’s largest community company, has something big planned out for the Chinese market. As a part of their deeper dive into the country, the office-sharing giant is introducing its startup-focused program WeWork Labs to China to help the growth and global expansion of Chinese up and comers. “WeWork is very committed to China. […]]]> wework china co-working neumann failed ipo

WeWork, the world’s largest community company, has something big planned out for the Chinese market. As a part of their deeper dive into the country, the office-sharing giant is introducing its startup-focused program WeWork Labs to China to help the growth and global expansion of Chinese up and comers.

“WeWork is very committed to China. We think that there are a few things very relevant to China. One is the revamping of mass entrepreneurship innovation policy, the other is the timing of China’s 40th anniversary of opening up combined with the transformation from Made in China to Create in China, which is the biggest story,” Roee Adler, global head of WeWork Labs told TechNode.

WeWork Labs gathers promising early-stage startups and provides them with working space, community and mentorship. Collaborative and flexible in nature, the program will offer a range of courses and training sessions for entrepreneurs from all industries and backgrounds, everything from accounting and marketing to hiring and pitching future investors.

Different from accelerators, WeWork Labs is taking rent instead of taking equity. In addition, entrepreneurship covers something much broader than three-month or six-month programs. That’s what WeWork Labs want to focus on: a community that encompasses both ends of the broader entrepreneur spectrum from first-time entrepreneurs to accelerator grads.

Oftentimes, accelerators have higher standards for enrolling startups, but WeWork Labs is more inclusive to early-stage entrepreneurs even though they are just starting out the journey with passions and commitment. “We want to build a platform where budding innovators are given the chance to fail, before they succeed. At the same time, some of the entrepreneurs are already experienced. They need a different level of a support system,” Adler said.

Given these, it is opting for a more operative rather than a competitive relationship with other supporting institutions in the startup ecosystem. The service aims to partner with organizations to share community, curriculum, and insights among startups.

“We actually celebrate for our members getting accepted by an accelerator and they can come back to us when they graduate.  In order to make a true impact with our platform, we have to be long-term partner and friend to the startups, allowing them to be with us sometimes even before they have the idea,” Adler explained.

Global Head of WeWork Labs, Roee Adler (Image credit: WeWork)

WeWork Labs in China, for China

Given its vision, WeWork is bringing its first WeWork Labs to China at its flagship location in West Nanjing Road, Shanghai on July 1. More locations in Beijing and other Chinese tech hubs will open soon, Adler told us.

The first China WeWork Labs is welcoming a lot of retailer technology startups, due in no small part to China’s new retail boom. But the company says it’s not limiting itself to retail. “With time we will have vertical and specialized spaces, but we are trying to be more inclusive initially,” said Adler.

Startups at various stages and different cultures have various needs. WeWork Labs is building a custom program for different startups coming from different locations. “On the one hand, it’s about hiring the local leaders who are very experienced in the local startup ecosystem and allowing them to structure the local programs. On the corporate level, we take the learnings from all the countries, bring them together and send back to everyone,” he said.

“There is an entire generation of startups, born in China, created in China, and want to impact the world outside of China. We believe that through collaborating with all the local incubators and accelerators,” he added.

Although the company is aiming for a more collaborative model, it is facing a crowded market in China where there’s an unavoidable business overlap between the US company and its local counterparts. In Shanghai alone, there are over 500 mass entrepreneurship centers, be them state-funded incubators, co-working spaces, accelerators. Actually, the government propelled incubator boom has passed its prime time and already recorded its first group of casualties in the past two years.

Compared with local competitors, WeWorks Labs’ chance in China lies in its global network, but that also limits its clientele to those entrepreneurs who have a foreign background or a global vision.

Why now?

Started as a shared space for entrepreneurs and freelancers, WeWork was always about small businesses and startups. Given the history, WeWork Labs was launched in 2011 as a project to boost its startup community. However, the program was a neglected as the company began to focus on other initiatives like its global expansion, and enterprise-focused services like Powered By We.

While WeWork is expanding globally and increasing diversity in clientele, the company has more varied communities of companies of different sizes and cultures. WeWork is now refocusing on where it started, with the relaunch of WeWork Labs in Feb this year.

“We believe it’s the right time for us to go out with a lot of resources behind helping startups all over the world. One of the things we have today that is very exciting and allows us to do this is that we are truly global today. We can really focus on helping startups connect globally, exchange and travel, learn from different cultures, different markets and different customers all over the world, which positions us to collaborate and to partner with everyone from different markets and provide local study,” said Adler in response to our inquiry on what this shift means for the company.

Of course, WeWork Labs is a global initiative. The service is now operating two spaces in New York with a total of 190 members. They have launched one space in Sao Paulo in April, and three more locations in Seoul, Tel Aviv, and Gurugram are opened this May. By the end of the year, the company plans to have at least 25 spaces open in 14 cities. Members come from various industries including finance, fashion, media, marketing and more.

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Ofo’s overseas operations show signs of cash crunch https://technode.com/2018/06/08/ofo-singapore/ https://technode.com/2018/06/08/ofo-singapore/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 10:09:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68898 More signs show that ofo’s cash crunch not only affect its domestic business but also its global expansion plans. The troubled bike hire giant has launched a warehouse sale of its bikes to downsize its operation in Singapore, a source with knowledge of the matter told TechNode. The ofo bikes on sale are sold brand […]]]>

More signs show that ofo’s cash crunch not only affect its domestic business but also its global expansion plans. The troubled bike hire giant has launched a warehouse sale of its bikes to downsize its operation in Singapore, a source with knowledge of the matter told TechNode.

The ofo bikes on sale are sold brand new from a Singaporean warehouse that’s owned by local logistics service provider Bok Seng Group, according to a poster shared by the source. TechNode team visited the venue finding that stacks of unpacked parcels with ofo’s logo on it are stored in the warehouse.

The poster shows that bikes are priced at S$50 or RMB240. If true, the company is selling their stocks at a 30% discount when compared with the original price of RMB 335 per bike. Shanghai Phoenix, a bike maker partner of ofo, has recorded revenue of RMB 596.72 million in 2017 by shipping 1.78 million bikes to ofo, according to Q4 2017 financial report of the company. Based on that, the cost of ofo bikes is RMB 335 per bike.

Read more: As bike rentals cool, ofo chooses to stand alone

The bike rental company responded that the arrangement was made by local freight and logistics partners for ofo’s failure to pay for relevant freight and logistic fees.

“Ofo has an ongoing business arrangement with a freight forward/logistics provider in Singapore and ofo has agreed to pay relevant fees for services. Ofo considers the actions taken by the service provider to be unduly aggressive given ofo’s ongoing dialogue with the relevant service provider. Ofo is considering its legal options but at the same time working in good faith to avoid a sale of ofo property. In ofo’s view, such a sale is being unreasonably pursued to gain leverage in completing ongoing commercial discussions. ofo looks forward to resolving the matter out of court but is reserving all of its rights in the meantime,” said a company spokesperson.

To make matter worse, another source told us that ofo has slashed nearly half of its 60-member team in Singapore. The company did not reply to our inquiries on the matter directly.

The news comes with a series of negative media coverage on the company initiated by a story by local tech blog Huxiu. Although ofo countered the rumors with a lawsuit, the current case shows the company is definitely suffering from a cash shortage.

The Huxiu post claimed the company has dismissed the entire overseas department and supervisor Zhang Yanqi allegedly resigned. The company’s co-founder Yu Xin denied the rumor saying said that the revenue from their Singaporean office alone is higher than rivals combined and it would be unreasonable to dismiss it.

Facing a saturating market, ofo and its competitor Mobike have been expanding aggressively overseas in seek of larger markets since the beginning of 2017.  Ofo is operating in many foreign countries, like the US, UK, Russia, Italy and Netherland, but Singapore is its first and probably the best overseas market.

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Xiaomi becomes China’s first company to file for a CDR https://technode.com/2018/06/08/xiaomi-cdr/ https://technode.com/2018/06/08/xiaomi-cdr/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 08:56:26 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68884 Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi filed an application to issue a CDR (Chinese Depositary Receipt) today, June 8th,  with the China Securities Regulatory Commission, local media is reporting. If permitted, Xiaomi could be the first company to issue a CDR. The Beijing-based smartphone giant filed for a Hong Kong IPO in March this year with a valuation expected to […]]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi filed an application to issue a CDR (Chinese Depositary Receipt) today, June 8th,  with the China Securities Regulatory Commission, local media is reporting. If permitted, Xiaomi could be the first company to issue a CDR.

The Beijing-based smartphone giant filed for a Hong Kong IPO in March this year with a valuation expected to top tens of billion dollars. The implementation of CDR allows domestic investors to hold shares of overseas-listed companies. Xiaomi is expected to be the first company to benefit from the mechanism, which underlines a dual listing of the firm both in Hong Kong and mainland China.

Xiaomi is potentially reserving up to 30% of its new issue for CDR buyers and that would be about $3 billion if the assumptions of the fundraise play out, Reuters citing people with knowledge of the matter.

China has some rigid specifications for companies that want to issue CDRs on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges. First, they must engage in high-tech industries of strategic importance for the country, such as the internet, big data, cloud computing, AI, etc. Secondly, overseas-listed companies must have a market value of no less than RMB200 billion (US$31.3 billion). Unlisted ones must have an operating income of no less than RMB3 billion in the most recent year and a valuation of no less than RMB20 billion.

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WeChat rolls out e-solution for Hong Kong/mainland travellers https://technode.com/2018/06/08/wechat-hong-kong-travel/ https://technode.com/2018/06/08/wechat-hong-kong-travel/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 06:28:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68873 Tencent is working with the Chinese government to create a WeChat-based electric pass system that would facilitate travels between Hong Kong and the mainland, local media is reporting. By linking identity documents to the WeChat app, travelers could cross the border with simple code and face scans based on an E-card scheme powered by biometric […]]]>

Tencent is working with the Chinese government to create a WeChat-based electric pass system that would facilitate travels between Hong Kong and the mainland, local media is reporting.

By linking identity documents to the WeChat app, travelers could cross the border with simple code and face scans based on an E-card scheme powered by biometric data. With the E-card ID system, users someday might be able to check into hotels and set up bank accounts if regulators approve, the company said.

Travelers between Hong Kong and the mainland are required to have special permits, similar to visas, even though being the part of the same country.

Tencent hopes to expand the program to China’s whole “Greater Bay Area”, which encompass southern part of Guangdong Province, Hong Kong, and Macau, a region that has the same border crossing problem like Hong Kong.

The move marked the company’s efforts to deepen e-administrative initiative. WeChat already runs a pilot scheme for Guangdong residents to integrate official documents such as national identity cards, driving licenses and travel documents with WeChat accounts. It smooths the procedures for a wide range of administrative tasks from paying traffic fines and pensions to making an appointment at notary offices.

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Ant Financial raises $14 billion Series C as IPO looms https://technode.com/2018/06/08/ant-financial-c-found/ https://technode.com/2018/06/08/ant-financial-c-found/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 04:30:04 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68856 Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial announced that it has entered into definitive agreements with investors for its Series C equity financing totaling approximately $14 billion, making a new world record for private fundraising. Although the company did not disclose the valuation, a previous report from the  Wall Street Journal report suggested that the round could […]]]>

Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial announced that it has entered into definitive agreements with investors for its Series C equity financing totaling approximately $14 billion, making a new world record for private fundraising.

Although the company did not disclose the valuation, a previous report from the  Wall Street Journal report suggested that the round could be raised at up to $150 billion mark. The current massive funding sparks more speculation about the company’s much-anticipated IPO.

This financing round includes an RMB tranche raised by Ant Financial mainly from existing domestic investors. A separate USD tranche is raised by its wholly owned offshore subsidiary Ant International from a group of leading global institutional investors such as GIC, Khazanah Nasional Berhad, Warburg Pincus, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Silver Lake, Temasek, General Atlantic.

Funds raised will be used to accelerate Alipay’s globalization plans and invest in developing technology. In addition, the capital will be used to cultivate high-tech talent in emerging markets to help communities take advantage of the opportunities arising from the digital transformation, according to an emailed announcement.

Eric Jing, Executive Chairman and CEO of Ant Financial, said, “We are pleased to welcome these investors as partners, who share our vision and mission, to embark on our journey to further promote inclusive finance globally and bring equal opportunities to the world. We are proud of, and inspired by, the transformation we have affected in the lives of ordinary people and small businesses over the past 14 years. Now, with the help of our partners, we are going to accelerate our strategy.”

In addition, will further emerging technologies such as blockchain, AI, security, IoT and computing capabilities.

Ant Financial has been pushing its globalization drive mainly through its core service Alipay, which is quickly finding footholds in India, Thailand, the Republic of Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Pakistan and Bangladesh. In the year ended March 31, 2018, Alipay, together with its global partners, served approximately 870 million annual active users globally and over 15 million small businesses in China.

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China’s online censorship makes its way to e-commerce as Pinduoduo cleans up https://technode.com/2018/06/08/chinas-online-censorship-makes-its-way-to-e-commerce-as-pinduoduo-cleans-up/ https://technode.com/2018/06/08/chinas-online-censorship-makes-its-way-to-e-commerce-as-pinduoduo-cleans-up/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 03:30:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68849 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaChina isn’t limited to just censoring content-generating platforms within the country. Pinduoduo, the social e-commerce upstart, launched a cleanup campaign to remove all the products that are related to violence or pornography, local media is reporting. The purge follows an investigation published by state-backed legal media, which reveals that lots of violent and pornographic products are on […]]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

China isn’t limited to just censoring content-generating platforms within the country. Pinduoduo, the social e-commerce upstart, launched a cleanup campaign to remove all the products that are related to violence or pornography, local media is reporting.

The purge follows an investigation published by state-backed legal media, which reveals that lots of violent and pornographic products are on sale on the platform, such as lethal knives, pseudo base stations, erotic games, and sex dolls.

Before the media coverage, Pinduoduo has been seeking to address this issue, according to the company. As of May this year, the firm screened merchandise from 2180 stores that may sell “illegal” goods and have placed sanctions or shut down the relevant retailers, the company told local media.

“Since our establishment, Pinduoduo has been asking our retailers to comply strictly with the laws. We have launched a 24-hour automatic monitoring system to remove illegal products. The system is coupled with human monitors to guarantee a real-time response.” according to an official announcement from the company.

China’s new and stricter cybersecurity laws come to effect last year, which would pressure private entities to censor content the government deems prohibited. The effect of this law, or the country’s general intention towards a more stringent local regulation, is instant. Upcoming giant ByteDance bares the brunt of this trend with all the dramas in Toutiao, Douyin and Neihan Duanzi. Other top services like Kuaishou, Meipai also suffered from the blow. But most of them are platforms that generate contents or social media apps so far. It seems the censorship is gradually penetrating other areas.

Updated 12:26 am 8th June 2018: The post is updated to clarify that China’s new cybersecurity law was adopted by the NPC in November 2016 and came into effect in June 2017.

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As bike rentals cool, ofo chooses to stand alone https://technode.com/2018/06/07/china-bike-rental-ofo/ https://technode.com/2018/06/07/china-bike-rental-ofo/#respond Thu, 07 Jun 2018 02:21:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68693 ofoChina’s bike rental industry has experienced a roller coaster over the past 3 years. At its height, there were nearly 80 bike rental startups in the market, brightening the streets with a rainbow of bikes. But in the fast-paced tech world, trends come and go quickly. Within a year, over 20 bike startups failed, including […]]]> ofo

China’s bike rental industry has experienced a roller coaster over the past 3 years. At its height, there were nearly 80 bike rental startups in the market, brightening the streets with a rainbow of bikes.

But in the fast-paced tech world, trends come and go quickly. Within a year, over 20 bike startups failed, including once-big names in the field, such as Bluegogo,Coolqi, and Xiaoming. A cooling of the availability of capital, intense competition, uncertain profit models, a saturating market, and tightening regulation all contributed to swift market consolidation.

While the smaller companies were wiped out, prominent players such as Mobike and ofo came to dominate the streets and mindshare. The two bike rental giants together account for 90 percent of the market, according to research firm Cheetah Global Think Tank. For Mobike and ofo, however, this is just the beginning of another battle, only this time they are not only fighting their bike rental peers, but also with investors who once had their backs.

In 2017 alone, both schemes made it onto the top fundraising list in China: Mobike pocketed billion-dollar level funding and ofo secured $1.15 billion. But as the market prospects become clearer, investors who poured millions of dollars into the industry, have grown impatient. This change in investors’ mindset created a rift between investors, dividing those who want a quick exit either through a merger or acquisition, and the founding teams, who prefer independent development.

A merger between Mobike and ofo has been one of the most speculated possibilities for China’s bike rental market since the second half of 2017. Actually, investors from both companies have been pushing for a merger between the two, but founders from both of the companies stood firmly against the choice. Coupled with the complex investor relations, a merger was ruled out.

Investor sentiment change could be best illustrated in the changing attitudes of Zhu Xiaohu, ofo’s early-stage investor from GSR Ventures. In 2016, the out-spoken investor claimed that China’s bike rental war would end within three months with ofo coming out on top. As the market matured, he began to put pressure behind an ofo and Mobike merger in June last year and finally sold his ofo shares to Alibaba in January this year as the possibility of a merger fell through.

Uncertain profit model makes an acquisition inevitable

For both Mobike and ofo, their last largest funding injections were in July 2017. Both suffered from different degrees of cashflow strains resulting from a fierce subsidy war launched upon receiving their respective massive fundings.

Despite the cooling capital market, their dubious monetization model hasn’t proven sustainable. The original pay-by-per-ride approach proved to be difficult given the high maintenance costs resulting from high damage rates. What’s more, the fierce competition, fueled by capital inflow, established subsidy as a new normality in the industry, making it even harder for the companies to generate gains.

China’s largest O2O platform Meituan-Dianping announced its purchase of Mobike for $2.7 billion on April 4th. When commenting on the deal, many local media argued that it’s difficult for bike rental firm to seek independent development given the monetization model, and in-depth integration with existing tech powerhouses is their only way out.

Ofo under mounting pressure to pick a side

Facing a similar, but more complex situation stuck between Alibaba and Didi, ofo’s founder Dai Wei is more tenacious in maintaining the company’s independent status. In an internal speech given in May, the co-founder sought to rally the company by comparing its current status to Winston Churchill and wartime Britain. Ofo’s dark time would seem to refer to acquisition talks held with Didi at the end of April.

However, the bike rental titan seems to be coming under fire, with swirling negative publicity and rumors of their impending demise. In an article published on June 5th, local Chinese tech blog Huxiu cited many sources who disclosed that ofo would launch its largest-ever job cut, with up to 50% losing their jobs. Along with the cut, the sources said several top execs of the company including Nan Nan, SVP of public relations, have left their positions. Shortly after the post, thousands of posts featuring almost identical bearish views on ofo’s prospects appeared across China’s social media.

Ofo told TechNode that the rumors are totally false and the company is running perfectly normally. In response to the speculation, ofo also filed a lawsuit against relevant media, saying “No company has ever failed because of rumors!” in a WeChat post.

Sources in Singapore, however, tell TechNode that they’ve gone from 60 staff to less than half that. They did not specify over what time period the attrition occurred.

Ofo secured $866 million in March this year. While the funding came at a crucial time, the method of the fundraising underlines their cash constraints. Of the total, RMB 1.77 billion ($280 million) was secured from Alibaba by using ofo bikes as collateral, a rare case in the industry.

Given the difficulty in generating revenue from rides, the company has sped up its monetization by selling ads on bikes and apps. But the attempt hit roadblocks as several regional municipalities such as Shanghai have issued bans on putting commercial ads on bikes. In addition, the company has been slowing down their orders from bike makers and even cancelled its deposit-free policy in over 20 cities across the country.

Soured investor relations have also brought more drama. Through investment and embedding ofo’s service in its main app, Didi tightened its tie-up with ofo during the very early days of the hire bike battle. But as Didi has tried to get a bigger voice in ofo, cracks emerged between the two companies. Ofo’s supervisors assigned by Didi were removed shortly after they took positions last November. Didi then launched its own bike rental service in cooperation with Bluegogo, combining with its own manufactured rental bikes while owning about 30% of ofo.

Bike rental proxy war between Tencent and Alibaba

To some extent, the latest bike rental drama reflects how difficult it is for startups to survive the heated proxy battles between Tencent and Alibaba in China.

Since the early days of the Mobike and ofo battle, each of the two companies was backed by a tech giant. Tencent has chosen Mobike as its largest investor. Meituan-Dianping’s acquisition only consolidated Mobike’s status as a Tencent ally since the tech giant is also an investor in Meituan.

Alibaba and its financial affiliate Ant Financial have picked ofo. However, ofo is not Alibaba’s only option. The e-commerce giant increasingly favors Hellobike, which landed RMB2.06 billion ($321 million) from Alibaba’s financial services arm Ant Financial on June 1 at a valuation to $2.3 billion,  on par with Mobike’s $2.7 billion. Ant Financial has joined almost every round of Hellobike’s fundraising spree since the beginning of this year.

“Independent development or being acquired, that’s a decision to be made under different situations. We are now more focused on improving user experience, cost control, and precise operation,” said a spokesperson from Hellobike in response to our inquiry about how the industry is developing.

“Dai Wei could have walked away with huge personal wealth. His persistence is rooted in the belief that the true value of shared bikes lies in itself as an easy and green method to change our transportation, rather than as a payment method or way of gathering data,” an ofo employee told TechNode.

“Entrepreneurs in China never can avoid the forces of local tech giants. Frankly speaking, independent development would bring huge possibilities as well as challenges for Mobike. But there’s nothing I can do now, investment institutions have their own judgments. Rules are rules. I hope people won’t regret making this decision,” Mobike CEO Davis Wang told local media after shareholders voted for the Meituan acquisition.

Wang resigned from his post shortly after the merger.

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Jack Ma goes all-in on smart logistics infrastructure network https://technode.com/2018/06/04/jack-ma-all-in-cainiao/ https://technode.com/2018/06/04/jack-ma-all-in-cainiao/#respond Mon, 04 Jun 2018 07:12:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68450 In a surprise appearance at last week’s Cainiao’s Global Smart Logistics Summit, Chinese tech tycoon Jack Ma announced that Cainiao Network, the logistics affiliate of Alibaba, is going to invest more than RMB 100 billion ($15 billion) to build the technical backbone for a smart logistics network aimed at improving delivery reach and efficiency. (Read […]]]>

In a surprise appearance at last week’s Cainiao’s Global Smart Logistics Summit, Chinese tech tycoon Jack Ma announced that Cainiao Network, the logistics affiliate of Alibaba, is going to invest more than RMB 100 billion ($15 billion) to build the technical backbone for a smart logistics network aimed at improving delivery reach and efficiency. (Read our live blog of the event for a blow-by-blow of the speech).

To emphasize the company’s commitment, the Alibaba chairman added that “We will increase the investment to several hundreds of billions RMB if that’s not enough. Alibaba will bet a vast majority of our resources on it because we believe a better logistics infrastructure network could bring fundamental changes to the manufacturing industry.“

Thanks to the exponential growth of e-commerce industry, China’s logistics landscape has undergone massive changes in recent years. Ma noted that the industry started from zero parcels generated by e-commerce to now delivering 130 million parcels per day, while there are about 5 million people working at courier and food-delivery companies in the country, and seven delivery companies have gone public.

While the growth trajectory of the logistics industry shows no sign of slowing down, it is a no-brainer why the tech giant is taking huge bets on the logistics business.  Cainiao wants to eventually ensure single-day delivery across China and 72-hour delivery worldwide. Here’s how they say they will meet that goal.

A smart network powered by cutting-edge technologies

Despite the surge, the logistics industry is labor-intensive, Ma pointed out. “This growth is rooted in the hands and on the shoulders of millions of deliverymen, but I believe it’s going to be driven by mental labor in the future.” A top exec from China’s top logistics company admitted at the event that their deliverymen don’t really benefit from company growth because their salary is still largely determined by how many parcels they can deliver.

As a technology-driven socialized logistics collaboration platform, Cainiao has been working on the application of cutting-edge technologies in the logistics industry since its establishment five years ago. In 2015, the company founded ET Lab, an R&D unit that focuses on the development of emerging technology and applications in logistics.

At last week’s event, the company showcased the first Cainiao Future Park, featuring intelligent management at a large scale. The Future Park has cutting-edge technologies, such as Long Range (LoRa)-IoT, edge computing and artificial intelligence, introduced the company. Sensors are installed in the Park’s infrastructure system and, through the LoRa network, meters that monitor the water, electricity, temperature and humidity conditions can report in real-time.

Of course, application of technologies goes far beyond large-scale management solutions. By using AI technologies, Cainiao has developed an agile automated warehouse system that enables a large number of robots to work collaboratively in warehouses, creating an efficient end-to-end warehouse automation solution.

Inside the smart warehouses, packages are processed on completely automated assembly lines equipped with robotic arms and over 500 AGV (Automatic Guided Vehicles) robots are on the floor for fast product pickup and delivery. The automation is expected to save warehouse staff some 50,000 steps per person per day.

If you can’t see anything, try QQ video instead.

Cainiao’s ET Lab has been tinkering with its driverless delivery vehicles over the past year. Zhang Chunhui, head of ET Lab told TechNode that the company is applying the technology in two different use cases: the autonomous driving trucks for long-distance delivery and driverless vans for intra-city delivery.

“We are developing highway autonomous driving truck fleet in partnership with FAW Group Corporation, a Chinese state-owned automotive manufacturing company. We call it ‘high-speed railway for trucks’, Zhang introduced.

For last-mile delivery, Cainiao’s ET Lab has two major products– “Little G” and “G Plus”. Equipped with a multi-sensor navigation system that includes 3DLidar, cameras and X-ray sensors, G Plus can achieve high-precision navigation through 3D modeling.

“Instead of laser radar, G Plus it uses MEMS (Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems). It will cut almost two-thirds of the cost as compared with traditional solutions, facilitating the mass production of driverless vans,” he added. G Plus can go at a speed of 15 miles per hour. This speed makes sure it’s more efficient than human but won’t cause any security concerns in city, according to Zhang.

Little G is already being used on Alibaba’s campus. G Plus is currently in road tests and the plan is to come to commercialization end of this year.

While still at an early stage towards its full digitalization, the logistics industry has multiple options and paths to take. Compared with its competitor JD, which put bets on both driverless vans and drones, Alibaba put most of its resources on autonomous vehicles for last-mile delivery.

“We believe heavy unmanned aerial vehicles for large and long-distance cargo delivery will have better application prospects. Small drone for last-mile delivery still faces lots of problems, like security, regulation, and stability. But it’s a matter of choice based on the scenarios and the company’s current resources and research background,” said Zhang.

A connected network empowering partners

“This network was established by Cainiao, but it doesn’t belong to Cainiao. It belongs to all logistics companies. Logistics companies are Cainaio’s most important partners … we need to provide our partners with core technology and core products to make our logistics partners stronger,” Jack Ma noted at the speech.

Alibaba does not operate a self-owned logistics infrastructure but uses Cainiao to build a logistics network of delivery firms. Without direct competition, Cainiao is becoming increasingly integrated with logistics partners.

Last week, Alibaba Group and Cainiao Network joined a $1.38 million funding in China’s top express delivery company ZTO Express in exchange for an approximately 10% equity stake in the company. Under the agreement, Cainiao and ZTO will deepen collaboration from delivery and warehouse management to technology.

In the Future Park project, Cainiao only provides the overall intelligent solution to its warehouse partners, helping existing warehouses to upgrade their management systems and improve efficiencies. On top of that, it’s up to the warehouse operators to determine the scale and timeframe in adapting the solution.

“The openness of Cainiao’s services and solutions is determined by the Taobao ecosystem,” explained a Cainiao spokeswoman. JD operates its own marketplace and logistics infrastructure, so they can predict the growth trajectory and make corresponding warehouse upgrading plans. On the other hand, Alibaba’s marketplaces consist of millions of retailers. Orders could be very diverse and complex, and it is difficult for warehouses to meet the demands of e-commerce business that have peak and slow seasons, so it’s better to provide agile upgrading plans.

A global network links China and the rest of the world

Alibaba’s global vision is one of the key reasons for what the company has achieved so far and the mindset is shaping Cainiao’s future.

This network is not only national but also global. Cainiao’s global network will support 72-hour delivery across the world, starting from countries and regions involved in China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

“World trade will change because of logistics. Global trade will go from containers to packages, from trading between countries to trading between companies. All this change, we should be ready to prepare and fight today,” Jack Ma explained.

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These 5 business applications show VR isn’t dying https://technode.com/2018/05/30/5-vr-business-applications/ https://technode.com/2018/05/30/5-vr-business-applications/#respond Wed, 30 May 2018 10:14:15 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68061 “When I tried to explain my VR startup to outsiders of the industry, either friends or clients, more than one decade ago, their first reaction would usually be ‘What’s that?’ But now, on hearing that I’m engaged in VR business, people would say ‘Wow, that’s cool,’ only that the exclamation is often followed by a […]]]>

“When I tried to explain my VR startup to outsiders of the industry, either friends or clients, more than one decade ago, their first reaction would usually be ‘What’s that?’ But now, on hearing that I’m engaged in VR business, people would say ‘Wow, that’s cool,’ only that the exclamation is often followed by a second award question of ‘But what is it exactly?’,” Meng Weiqi, CEO of VR firm Beijing Longteck, said about the change of attitude towards the emerging technology at Vive New Ecosystem Conference 2018 held last week.

Compared with two years ago, the buzz surrounding VR has gone quiet, raising concerns that the industry is dying. But subtle changes show that despite slowing media coverage, people are becoming more familiar with the concept of VR thanks to more affordable devices, better content, and the popularity of offline VR arcades.

A survey conducted by HTC Vive shows that the familiarity with VR in China increased from 35% to 51% over the last year, up 150%. Yet, there is still a long way to go to make it as popular as smartphone, a situation that’s depicted in Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster movie Ready Player One.

Some may still hold the view that VR is just for video game fans, but they may have already benefited from VR —through the business adoption. Here are five of the most potent business-focused applications of VR that you can experience today.

Online education – HTC VIVEDU

Image credit: HTC VIVEDU

Immersive education VR is transforming the way educational content is delivered. As the online education arm of HTC Vive, VIVEDU has developed a VR education solution, allowing students to simultaneously use VIVE for learning in an innovative classroom setting.

“Our solution includes an interactive and open classroom, a set of connecting devices and massive amount of online education contents,” introduced Lv Yun, SVP of HTC VIVEDU. In addition, the company offers a comprehensive solution for charging and sterilizing VR headsets, he added.

By combining VR experience with traditional education, the students not only can enjoy face-to-face interaction with the teachers but visualize concepts that were confined to the pictures in a textbook.

Lv introduced that over one hundred VR curriculums covering 13 subjects for college and vocational education and K12 were created and stored on the cloud. What’s more, lots of these curriculums are created by teachers using an easy-to-use editing tool offered by the company.

Entertainment – Leke VR

Image credit: Leke VR

While hard-core VR fans would want to buy a device and play at home, more people choose to try VR at stores, arcades or theme parks. Beijing-based Leke VR is engaged in product development, content customization, design planning and customer operation training, which provides VR experience store operators with a one-stop solution.

It offers VR devices, including VR helmets, handheld controllers and treadmills for VR stores. The devices are integrated with its self-developed operating system VRLe, which has more than 400 games, serving more than 3,500 VR arcades and 3 million terminal consumers, according to the company.

Leke VR’s products have been exported to dozens of regions including the United States, Japan, South Korea, Britain and Australia, according to the company.

“With the maturity of VR technology and consistent reduction of manufacturing costs, we expect wide applications of VR in large-scale audience engagement solutions for entertainment. One thing to note is that product stability is of vital importance in application scenarios, like offline experience centers and VR stores,” said He Wenyi, CEO of Leke VR.

Jurisdiction – Beijing Source Technology

Image credit: SupChina

In addition to entertainment, VR technology can be used for something very serious in nature – to advance the practice of law. The VR solution of Beijing Source technology is adopted at a courtroom in Beijing, helping lawyers and judges to get a better idea of how an alleged offense took place. This was also the first time that Beijing’s courts had used such technology.

“After the hearing, where the crime scene was depicted vividly in the VR world, the defendant confessed his offense immediately,” said Wang Zenan, CEO of Beijing Source.

The company also engaged in the development of psychological evaluation system for juveniles, helping them to recover from school or family violence traumas.

“We hope VR will play a greater role in the judicial system by integrating it into every link from police investigation, judicial review, lawsuit filing to the court hearing so that we can get closer to the truth by leveraging comprehensive data,” said Wang.

Public safety training – Tianjin Doopaa

Image credit: TechNode/Emma Lee

Tianjin Doopaa offers comprehensive VR solution that can simulate emergency situations, providing users with information on what to do in a disaster.

The company’s VR experience platform, dubbed VR911, now has over 30 simulation scenarios include earthquake, fire disaster, kitchen emergency, drunk driving and more.

“We have entered partnerships with China’s top authorities like China Meteorological Administration and China Earthquake Administration to improve our VR experience. Our solution is applied in 23 provinces in China,” said Yu Lei, CEO of Doopaa.

Industrial engineering and design – Beijing Longtek

Image credit: Longtek

Founded in 2003, Beijing Longtek provides professional virtual reality systems and solutions among industries of aerospace and aviation, high-speed rail, transportation, research academies and institutes. Its MakeReal3D VSP solution focuses on industrial applications such as Digital Mock-Up (DMU), virtual disassembly and assembly, virtual maintenance and human factors analysis.

“I’ve been in the VR industry for more than a decade now. In the past, 3D demonstrations in engineering manufacturing are costly and are only accessible for big clients and company executives. The popularity of VR helmets made the experience available to every engineer and this change could greatly improve the engineering and design efficiency,” Meng Weiqi, CEO of Longtek.

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Chinese gaming company iDreamSky seeks $300 million Hong Kong relisting https://technode.com/2018/05/28/idreamsky-hong-kong-relisting/ https://technode.com/2018/05/28/idreamsky-hong-kong-relisting/#respond Mon, 28 May 2018 10:54:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68021 iDreamSky, the Shenzhen based mobile game developer notably responsible for the development of popular titles “Temple Run” and “Subway Surfers”, is planning to relist on Hong Kong stock exchange market in a deal that could raise around $300 million. iDreamSky Technology is one of China’s largest independent mobile game publishing and developing platforms in China. […]]]>

iDreamSky, the Shenzhen based mobile game developer notably responsible for the development of popular titles “Temple Run” and “Subway Surfers”, is planning to relist on Hong Kong stock exchange market in a deal that could raise around $300 million.

iDreamSky Technology is one of China’s largest independent mobile game publishing and developing platforms in China. Founded in 2009, company first prospered as a game publisher that helps well-known international mobile game developers to gain access to China market. The company distributes these games through both its proprietary distribution channels and third-party channels, such as app stores and device pre-installations. The company is also moving forward with in-house game development in recent years.

After getting listed on the Nesdaq market in 2014, the company joined the flock of US-listed mainland companies that have been re-listing on the A-share market, which has been recording a bull run since early 2015. After filling in the privatization offer in June 2015, the company got delisted from the US market on September 7th, 2016.

The company has generated a revenue of RMB 1.76 billion ($275 million) with profit hitting RMB 151.9 million in 2017. It’s monthly active users surpassed 1.24 million in Q4 2017, up 20% YOY, according to the company prospectus.

As the largest shareholder in the company, Tencent holds a 20.65% stake through its wholly-owned company Tencent Mobility Limited. In addition, the company has attracted several celebrity investors such as Wang Sicong, the only son of China’s richest man Wang Jianlin, and Leong On-kei, Macau billionaire businesswoman and the fourth “wife” of Macau tycoon Stanley Ho.

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Controversial self-media account returns Tencent’s funding after plagiarism outcry https://technode.com/2018/05/28/tencent-chaping/ https://technode.com/2018/05/28/tencent-chaping/#respond Mon, 28 May 2018 09:30:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=68008 Chaping (差评), literally Bad Reviews, a WeChat self-media account that’s been accused of plagiarism, announced today it is going to return the funding it recently received from Tencent (in Chinese). The two companies have reached a consensus on the matter and going to proceed with the process, local media is reporting. “Given the recent debates […]]]>

Chaping (差评), literally Bad Reviews, a WeChat self-media account that’s been accused of plagiarism, announced today it is going to return the funding it recently received from Tencent (in Chinese). The two companies have reached a consensus on the matter and going to proceed with the process, local media is reporting.

“Given the recent debates surround Chaping, the team has made an in-depth self-examination and introspection. We believe that it’s inappropriate to receive investment from Tencent before straightening out our copyright practices. Chaping will continue our pursuit for independent development. Learning from the past, we will try to take greater responsibilities in copyright and original content protection,” according to a company statement.

The announcement comes days after the Hangzhou-based media outlet announced that it has received RMB 30 million ($4.7 million) investment from investors that include Tencent Topic Fund, a fund for supporting online content creators, Yunqi Partners and Zhonghuan Venture.

Although Tencent’s share of the deal is not clear, its participation in the investment was enough to anger Chinese online readers, bloggers, and media outlets. The funding was translated as a kind of support for Chaping’s product and value, which is in breach with it’s latest efforts to crack down on plagiarism on its own platforms.

Facing the online furor, Tencent admitted a blunder in due diligence and said it’s reviewing the investment and could cut links with Chaping pending the review, according to Zhang Jun, Tencent’s public relations director.

Tencent, whose early state products were widely seen as copycats, has been trying strenuously to shake off the copycat image over the past few years through investing or acquiring startups rather than just copying their products. Its founder Pony Ma called on legislation to tighten enforcement of China’s IP laws.

In addition, the internet giant is facing a tsunami of troubles last month. A WeChat story went viral early May, criticizing Tencent for “losing its dream”, spending its time seeking investment-worthy apps instead of working on its own products.

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Blockchain conference in China gets Mao lookalike on stage and hilarity ensues https://technode.com/2018/05/28/chairman-mao-blockchain/ https://technode.com/2018/05/28/chairman-mao-blockchain/#respond Mon, 28 May 2018 07:54:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67994 It’s no secret that Chinese tech leaders have a thing for stage props, but obviously, some Chinese tech conferences have little sense of what’s in good taste and what’s not. The organizer of blockchain conference Boao Block Chain Forum for Asia stirred a countrywide outcry after inviting an actor playing Chairman Mao to congratulate and […]]]>

It’s no secret that Chinese tech leaders have a thing for stage props, but obviously, some Chinese tech conferences have little sense of what’s in good taste and what’s not.

The organizer of blockchain conference Boao Block Chain Forum for Asia stirred a countrywide outcry after inviting an actor playing Chairman Mao to congratulate and wish the event success at the opening remark, (in Chinese).

In his speech, the typecast actor addressed in Mao’s signature Hunan accent, saying that “I sincerely wish this conference great success… and I want to thank you in the name of Mao Zedong.”

With this move, the organizer may have violated Chinese laws which prohibit the use of the images, calligraphy and any other form of representation of former national leaders in the promotion of commercial products or promotional activities. In a previous crackdown, images of Winnie the Pooh were blocked in China for its likeness with Chairman Xi Jinping,

The consequence of this hype is instant. A widely circulated photo shows that the name of the conference’s VIP dinner was removed from a poster, which could be seen as an urgent move by the sponsor to eliminate negative impact for supporting the conference.

“We are sorry for the negative impact our conference had on the public, and we will continue to execute the conference with high standards,” says the organizer in an official apology.

This is only one in a series of silly incidents that made recent headlines, such as cross-dressing cheerleader marketing their product at blockchain conference held at a Macau casino and attendees meditating at a Buddhism blockchain forum.

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naked Hub and Le Wagon combine co-working with tech training https://technode.com/2018/05/28/naked-hub-le-wagon/ https://technode.com/2018/05/28/naked-hub-le-wagon/#respond Mon, 28 May 2018 07:22:10 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67977 Shortly after WeWork relaunched its startup-focused co-working space WeWork Labs, its Chinese affiliate naked Hub rolled out on May 25 its latest efforts to boost entrepreneurship. The co-working space operator announced a new partnership with Le Wagon, a coding bootcamp for entrepreneurs, to bring the business and tech communities closer. Under the deal, naked Hub will […]]]>

Shortly after WeWork relaunched its startup-focused co-working space WeWork Labs, its Chinese affiliate naked Hub rolled out on May 25 its latest efforts to boost entrepreneurship. The co-working space operator announced a new partnership with Le Wagon, a coding bootcamp for entrepreneurs, to bring the business and tech communities closer.

Under the deal, naked Hub will open the doors of its co-working space to Le Wagon members. In addition to well-designed and comfortable co-working spaces, naked Hub will provide Wagoners access to their online and offline network.

Dominic Penaloza, Chief Innovation Officer of naked Hub, said that community is one of naked Hub’s biggest advantages, and is defined by how it meets their business needs.

As more digital companies joined naked Hub, recruitment and training became a growing challenge. Providing a pipeline of tech talents and skills to members adds great value to their experience.

On the other hand, Le Wagon members will empower the naked Hub community by offering technical training workshops to all naked Hub members. Topics include full stack web development, user interface design, startup tech tools, and WeChat mini-programs.

The partnership program between naked Hub and Le Wagon addresses the need for tech resource and collaboration, according to an official statement. Le Wagon’s alumni will join the naked Hub community for 6-months at a time. While in residence, they conduct monthly workshops to improve Hubbers’ technical skills and help companies find tech talents.

The partnership has started in Shanghai and Beijing, with workshops beginning in May.

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Sugar daddy dating app SeekingArrangement pulled from China’s app stores https://technode.com/2018/05/28/sugar-daddy-seekingarrangement/ https://technode.com/2018/05/28/sugar-daddy-seekingarrangement/#respond Mon, 28 May 2018 04:14:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67952 The Chinese version of US sugar daddy dating app SeekingArrangement, dubbed “Tailored Sweetie in Chinese (甜蜜定制)”, was removed from the country’s iOS app store on May 25th (in Chinese). Meanwhile, the app was unreachable on multiple Android stores such as Tencent MyApp and 360 Mobile Assistant. The controversial dating app, launched in October 2015 in China, […]]]>

The Chinese version of US sugar daddy dating app SeekingArrangement, dubbed “Tailored Sweetie in Chinese (甜蜜定制)”, was removed from the country’s iOS app store on May 25th (in Chinese). Meanwhile, the app was unreachable on multiple Android stores such as Tencent MyApp and 360 Mobile Assistant.

The controversial dating app, launched in October 2015 in China, recorded a quick spike in popularity in China over the past few weeks. It has taken over the top spot for free social networking apps and the fourth place on the general list last week, outperforming some of the country’s most popular networking apps like WeChat and Weibo.

Image credit: Huxiu

Created in 2006 by Singaporean-American Brandon Wade, SeekingArrangement is marketed as a money-for-love dating platform that only pairs rich men with attractive women. It claims to have more than 10 million active users worldwide. The site has been known for its toe-curling values, as shown in claims on its website “Money isn’t an issue (for the Sugar daddies), thus they are generous when it comes to supporting a Sugar Baby,” and “Sugar Babies get to experience a luxurious lifestyle, and meet wealthy people on a regular basis.”

To fit into the Chinese market, the platform uses “successful man” and “charming sweeties” to avoid making it too obvious what occurs on the platform. In addition, it claims the Chinese version has an independent and different positioning. The company aims to build a “high-end marriage and love social platform” for Chinese users, different from the sugar-dating market overseas, a SeekingArrangment spokesperson told online outlet Red Star News (in Chinese).

But the platform does have specific terms for registers. “Successful men” are expected to have a revenue of at least RMB 300,000 ($47,350) and a net asset ranging from RMB 600,000 to hundreds of millions RMB.

Although it tried to re-brand itself to a more neutral image in China, the site, which involves “compensated dating” is hardly acceptable to the country’s tightening censorship system. State-run media Global Times first fired shots on site by publishing a criticism editorial last week, triggering a deep probe into the company’s operations in Shanghai.

In response to the move, WeChat also issued a ban on the dating app, putting a blow on the service’s newly found popularity in China.

The recent buzz surround SeekingArrangement has brought the somewhat shady area to spotlight. Similar Chinese sugar daddy dating apps, though few in number, are facing the same regulation problem. Local startups in this area are adjusting their products to comply with the regulations.

“SeekingArrangement is a hook-up and call girl platform. Maybe it’s not illegal in some countries, it’s definitely immoral. We are strengthening the censoring system of user dialogues to fend against talks involve sex deals,” an industry insider told to TechNode after their SeekingArrangement-like service was taken down from app stores.

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Smartphone integration highlight of new Vive VR ecosystem https://technode.com/2018/05/25/vive-vr-ecosystem-announcements/ https://technode.com/2018/05/25/vive-vr-ecosystem-announcements/#respond Fri, 25 May 2018 09:15:05 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67879 “Since 2016, the ‘Year One’ of virtual reality, a VR ecosystem that encompasses users, hardware manufacturers and content developers has been gradually taking form. Two years later, the year 2018 marks the beginning of a new chapter for Vive Reality, which will integrate the benefits of VR, AR, 5G, and AI technologies,” said Alvin Wang Graylin, […]]]>

“Since 2016, the ‘Year One’ of virtual reality, a VR ecosystem that encompasses users, hardware manufacturers and content developers has been gradually taking form. Two years later, the year 2018 marks the beginning of a new chapter for Vive Reality, which will integrate the benefits of VR, AR, 5G, and AI technologies,” said Alvin Wang Graylin, the China Regional President of HTC, at Vive Ecosystem Conference today.

The whole VR industry was bothered by market cool-down over the past year, but All-In-One (AIO) VR devices are gaining momentum. This change underlines a maturing market, where consumers favor higher-quality content and devices that feature complete and immersive experiences, Alvin explained.

Growth of different VR device categories over the past two years. (Source: 2018 China VR Market Survey)

The ubiquity of smartphones not only makes it a big business on its own, it’s also becoming an increasingly essential factor for the success of other smart hardware devices. The principle has been partially proved in the drone industry, where smartphone’s integration with devices fuels the rise of drone makers like Ehang and DJI.

As a top player in the sector, HTC Vive is testing the trend in VR industry. After selling a huge chunk of smartphone division to Google last year, the former phone giant relaunched smartphone business with the release of flagship smartphone HTC U12+. However, as part of the company’s focus shift, smartphone on its own is no longer the key strategy of HTC’s such move. This time, the phone business is an access point to connect users to HTC’s VR devices.

With the updated Vive Focus, a standalone VR helmet, users are now able to receive messages and social message notifications as well as take calls on the HTC U12+ without taking off their headset. These functions allow users to stay in touch with the outside world when immersed in VR.

At the event, Alvin demonstrated how users can pick up a phone call or receive WeChat messages while wearing a Vive Focus helmet. HTC’s Vive Studios also showcased a fun way to integrate smartphone – the Studios used the phone as a VR controller to strum a virtual guitar.

Image credit: HTC Vive

By updating its built-in Vive companion app, HTC U12+ users will be able to explore the first-hand experience of the integrated features. The Vive’s companion app will be available in both HTC official app store and Tencent app store shortly, according to the company.

To support users’ needs of using the device when moving, a new “Passenger Mode” is part of the system update optimized for seated VR experience or movie watching for up to four hours (originally three) without tracking constraints. Just double-click the power button, users can activate the all new “Surroundings Mode”, to observe environment around them without taking off the headset. In addition, this update enables the service to install applications directly to their microSD card (up to 2TB), so users won’t need to worry about running out of storage for their favorite applications.

In a further move towards mobility, HTC demonstrated multiple applications utilizing its light gesture recognition SDK for the Vive Focus. This will enable developers to activate VR applications by simply moving hands and fingers. Gesture SDK will be released to registered Viveport developers in the coming weeks. And the function is likely to open for general users in the near future.

Alvin also introduced that the company is teasing the possibility of upgrading Vive Focus’ current 3 degrees of freedom (3DoF) controller to function as a 6DoF controller without the need for any additional hardware. The company hopes to do it by leveraging the device’s existing front-facing cameras and its proprietary AI computer vision technology.

In addition, a series of partners were introduced into the ecosystem to bring better VR experiences. At the conference, VIVE WAVE™, VR open platform, launched partnerships with Pico, iQiyi, and Skyworth by embedding the HTV VR function in the parterres’ newly released and upcoming products. To drive mass adoption for VR/AR, HTC also formed new partnerships with Major League Baseball (MLB) and world-famous Formula One (F1) team McLaren.

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Next-gen technologies need a use case to have an impact: JD CTO Zhang Chen https://technode.com/2018/05/23/next-gen-technologies-need-a-use-case-to-have-an-impact-jd-cto-zhang-chen/ https://technode.com/2018/05/23/next-gen-technologies-need-a-use-case-to-have-an-impact-jd-cto-zhang-chen/#respond Wed, 23 May 2018 07:26:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67645 JD is very serious about AI and other emerging technologies. The online retailer wants to lead China’s innovations not only in terms of business models but also in technologies. “Technology underscores many facets of our business. It is a big focus for us, in addition to user experience, logistics, and fintech, among other areas,” Zhang […]]]>

JD is very serious about AI and other emerging technologies. The online retailer wants to lead China’s innovations not only in terms of business models but also in technologies.

“Technology underscores many facets of our business. It is a big focus for us, in addition to user experience, logistics, and fintech, among other areas,” Zhang Chen, JD’s CTO, told TechNode.

Over the past few years, we have seen the e-commerce giant weighing its research and development capabilities. Believing in AI as a key component to better user experience, the company has established a joint laboratory with the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (in Chinese) and has set up an AI center in Guandong Province. A Silicon Valley-based robotics research lab was established in anticipation to bring their expertise back to China. In addition to in-house development, partnerships and acquisitions were also made toward the same goal.

While pushing research and development advancements, JD has fast-tracked applications to test their latest research result in real-life scenarios. Zhang believes the company’s ability to realize quick adoption of these technologies plays an equally important role in realizing the company’s vision.

“Having a specific use case is important. If technology can find a use case, then it has an impact,” said Zhang.

In response to the very latest rumor about JD’s plan to slash half of its staff through automation, the company’s billionaire founder and CEO reiterated the company’s support for AI at World Intelligence Congress held on May 16th. AI will not lead to large-scale unemployment, but only to emancipate human being from labor chores“, said Richard Liu.

JD already applied several cutting-edge technologies to change the e-commerce industry. Enabled by AI technology, JD makes personalized recommendations on the JD app based on machine learning, which is capable of learning when and where customers buy products. AI also helps the firm to make predictions in smart supply chain and smart logistics.

“We are building something to address our own needs. Over two years ago, we started doing drones – we fully own this scenario. Just as Google is working on unmanned cars, we have our own scenarios for unmanned vehicles and delivery robots to solve the last mile delivery challenge. We continue to build the product for our own needs (just as we did with drones in e-commerce). Because we can continue to test this technology in the context of our own business development, we see the improvement in efficiency.” Zhang said. “Right now, these vehicles support JD’s own business, but in the future we can open our resources up so that others can tap into this technology, helping them deliver from A to B. When this technology goes to scale it becomes ‘last mile logistics infrastructure’.”

In addition to AI, JD is adopting blockchain technology to strengthen the product authentication process. “Blockchain technology has a range of potential use cases in the context of product quality. Our blockchain tracing project focuses on products where people really care about authenticity and safety, such as milk products, beef, and top brand alcohol,” Zhang added.

JD launched a new Beijing-based accelerator program for blockchain startups in February this year and set up a blockchain-enabled logistics alliance (in Chinese) last week.

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Beijing metro will soon support facial recognition https://technode.com/2018/05/21/beijing-metroto-face-recognition/ https://technode.com/2018/05/21/beijing-metroto-face-recognition/#respond Mon, 21 May 2018 09:59:40 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67595 One day after Beijing metro realized citywide support for QR-code payment, the city is looking to power its metro system with face recognition. A representative from the Beijing Transportation Committee told local media that the capital is going to test out its face recognition system by the end of this year (in Chinese). Fingerprints, faces […]]]>

One day after Beijing metro realized citywide support for QR-code payment, the city is looking to power its metro system with face recognition.

A representative from the Beijing Transportation Committee told local media that the capital is going to test out its face recognition system by the end of this year (in Chinese).

Image credit: Ynet.com

Fingerprints, faces and voice waves are the unique identifiers for biometric verification. Currently facial recognition is the most suitable technology for the metro, according to the director of Beijing Metro Network Control Center.

In addition to Beijing, Shanghai metro also revealed its plans to introduce facial recognition solutions.

In recent years, facial recognition is widely applied as a major verification method in China. Alibaba is among the earliest companies that are integrating the technology into payment process. In addition, it is being applied in several physical deployments from verifying visitor’s identities in Chinese tourist spot of Wuzhen, facilitating checking in and boarding processes for travelers, and even spotting fugitives.

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WeChat removes short-lived ban on all mainstream video and music platforms https://technode.com/2018/05/21/wechat-removes-external-audiovisual-link-ban/ https://technode.com/2018/05/21/wechat-removes-external-audiovisual-link-ban/#respond Mon, 21 May 2018 08:29:36 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67580 WeChat rolled out tightened restrictions on sharing external audiovisual links in its Moment feed on May 18, which could have affected all the mainstream video and music platforms in China. Lucky for them, the tech giant has decided to remove the policy just three days later (in Chinese). “WeChat would further restrict external links to protect users’ […]]]>

WeChat rolled out tightened restrictions on sharing external audiovisual links in its Moment feed on May 18, which could have affected all the mainstream video and music platforms in China. Lucky for them, the tech giant has decided to remove the policy just three days later (in Chinese).

“WeChat would further restrict external links to protect users’ privacy and optimize customers’ experience,” reads a statement posted on its WeChat official account on May 18. “External links must not spread content containing audiovisual programs in any form without obtaining related government certificates.”

Update: Direct sharing of videos from Douyin is still banned. Users only can download the video and re-upload on WeChat Moment. We tested Kuaishou, Weibo and Ximalaya. Direct sharing through these apps works well.

If implemented, this could practically have banned links from all the popular sites like Douyin, Kuaishou, Huya, Ximalaya, with the exception of those backed or developed by Tencent. A photo shortlisting all the affected platforms dubbed Tencent’s rule as “the strictest-ever external link policy.”

Apps that were to be affected by the ban (Source: Pingwest)

Although the reasons behind Tencent’s quick shift in attitude is still not clear, its reason for initiating the blow is fairly obvious: to fend off increasing competition from thriving platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou, not only in defense for its home-grown video platforms, but also for its killer app WeChat which is losing users to the emerging rivals.

Tencent’s collision with upcoming competitors is best demonstrated in its fraught relationship with Toutiao. Earlier this month, once low-profile Tencent founder Pony Ma got into a spat with Zhang Yiming, CEO of Douyin parent ByteDance, who accused WeChat of making excuses to block Douyin out of the platform and plagiarizing Douyin with its own short video app Weishi (微视).

Also, the friction goes well beyond the public spat. Douyin has filed a lawsuit against Tencent for defamation and requesting RMB 1 million in damages including an apology.

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Google knockoff fuels anticipation for Google comeback https://technode.com/2018/05/21/google-knockoff-fuels-anticipation-for-google-comeback/ https://technode.com/2018/05/21/google-knockoff-fuels-anticipation-for-google-comeback/#respond Mon, 21 May 2018 05:19:45 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67556 Google-ch (www.google-ch.com) went live in China recently, raising public speculations of a possible Google comeback in China. But a closer look into the site shows that it is founded by a group of Google fans and not affiliated to the US company in any way. The site performs simple search functions and offers a directory […]]]>

Google-ch (www.google-ch.com) went live in China recently, raising public speculations of a possible Google comeback in China. But a closer look into the site shows that it is founded by a group of Google fans and not affiliated to the US company in any way.

The site performs simple search functions and offers a directory service that guides people to Chinese websites and chat boards. They claim that search results on the site are filtered to comply with local regulations and no filter keywords are disclosed. But the team pledged that they would not adjust Google’s search results or add floating adds, and the service is open to the users free of charge.

The site was not accessible when TechNode tried to test it, possibly due to the heavy traffic. Our tests were done inside and outside China. An industry insider explains to local media that “running a Google Chinese site needs lots of servers to support and that’s not something that can be managed by a fan team.”

Google-ch is not the first of Google knockoff sites in China. Such sites could be dated years back when Google left China. “Goojje”, a site made in response after Google threatens to pull out of China back then, accumulated over 40,000 visitors in two weeks after it launched in Jan. 2010.

In addition to the hypes, there are possible risks in visiting such knockoff sites. “We are now educated to use all these techniques (OpenDNS, spam filters, extended validation certificate) to prevent people visiting knockoff sites from DNS hijack, links in spam mail and so on. How can you tell the search results is not altered from the original site? What if they hook any malware/coin-mining script to the site? What if they collect your information for any bad purpose?” Wang Boyuan, editor-in-chief of TechCrunch.cn told TechNode.

The news got wide attention since the US search giant has gotten more proactive in pushing its China comeback. Yao Xinyu, a founding partner of Seven Seas Partners and former China Chief Strategy Officer at Microsoft 365, joined Google China last week. Over the past few months, Google got official WeChat account for TensorFlow and started promoting its translation app on WeChat. In addition, mobile apps with map functions based on Google data have come accessible in China.

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Ofo starts selling ads on bikes and in apps https://technode.com/2018/05/21/ofo-starts-selling-ads-on-bikes-and-in-apps/ https://technode.com/2018/05/21/ofo-starts-selling-ads-on-bikes-and-in-apps/#respond Mon, 21 May 2018 03:20:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67531 Chinese bike rental giant ofo has started selling advertisements on its bikes and apps (in Chinese) in an attempt to boost revenues amid increasing cash strain. The company will launch custom-designed bikes and the bike-body ads will appear in bike wheels, saddle and baskets for clients to reach the public with their messages. Rumors of ofo’s failure […]]]>

Chinese bike rental giant ofo has started selling advertisements on its bikes and apps (in Chinese) in an attempt to boost revenues amid increasing cash strain. The company will launch custom-designed bikes and the bike-body ads will appear in bike wheels, saddle and baskets for clients to reach the public with their messages.

Rumors of ofo’s failure to pay bike manufacturers have been around for a while. According to local media reports, insiders say that ofo has now paid only 20% of its RMB 3 billion debts ($470 million). In line with that,  the bike rental company has been slowing down orders from bike makers during the past year.  In an earlier sign of financial distress, ofo has mortgaged its own bicycles in order to receive two loans worth RMB1.77 billion (US$280 million) from Alibaba.

Ofo’s CEO Dai Wei has rebuffed an acquisition offer from Didi, South China Morning Post is reporting. The co-founder sought to rally the company by comparing their current status to Winston Churchill and wartime Britain as portrayed in the drama Darkest Hour, the report added. Facing a similar situation, ofo’s competitor has chosen another path. Mobike was sold to Meituan this April. Three weeks later, company co-founder and CEO Davis Wang, who was against the acquisition, resigned while co-founder Hu Weiwei takes his place.

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Health insurtech startup The CareVoice brings voice-based virtual doctor to China https://technode.com/2018/05/18/the-carevoice-virtual-doctor/ https://technode.com/2018/05/18/the-carevoice-virtual-doctor/#respond Fri, 18 May 2018 01:49:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67415 The CareVoice (康语), a Shanghai-based health and insurance technology startup, announced on May 17 the launch of a voice-based virtual health assistant for insurers and employers in China. The artificial intelligence-based symptom triage feature is integrated into the CareVoice platform, allowing insurance members to check their symptoms, access self-care content and being guided towards relevant […]]]>

The CareVoice (康语), a Shanghai-based health and insurance technology startup, announced on May 17 the launch of a voice-based virtual health assistant for insurers and employers in China.

The artificial intelligence-based symptom triage feature is integrated into the CareVoice platform, allowing insurance members to check their symptoms, access self-care content and being guided towards relevant medical specialties.

The CareVoice has partnered with Sensely, a US-based company, to bring this unique feature to the market, leveraging Sensely’s proprietary technology and extensive collaboration experience with leading international medical institutions, including the UK’s National Health Service and Texas Medical Center.

Sebastien Gaudin, CEO and co-founder of The CareVoice, said that “while our joint product team is completing the localization, we are very glad that we have already partnered with two insurers, AXATianPing and Ping An Health, to launch this consumer-centric innovation to the Chinese market, which will drive a better healthcare experience for their members. We can rely on Sensely’s leading technology and solid evidence in terms of both member satisfaction and payer cost savings in order to fuel our value proposition to insurers and employers.”

The Shanghai-based startup completed a $2 million round earlier this year. Since then, the company has been upgrading its platform and mobile-based solutions with digitized claims, expanding its footprint in private insurance market by partnering with more insurance services companies, as well as employers.

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Tencent makes strategic investment in new retail B2B Huixiadan https://technode.com/2018/05/15/huixiadan-tencent/ https://technode.com/2018/05/15/huixiadan-tencent/#respond Tue, 15 May 2018 09:57:34 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67270 Chinese B2B e-commerce platform Huixiadan (惠下单) has secured an undisclosed amount of strategic investment (in Chinese) from Tencent. Founded in 2015 by a team from world’s top fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) brands, Huixiadan is a mobile app where retailers could order FMCG directly from distributors. The company is now partnered with over 120 retail stores across 24 […]]]>

Chinese B2B e-commerce platform Huixiadan (惠下单) has secured an undisclosed amount of strategic investment (in Chinese) from Tencent.

Founded in 2015 by a team from world’s top fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) brands, Huixiadan is a mobile app where retailers could order FMCG directly from distributors. The company is now partnered with over 120 retail stores across 24 provinces. Its top partnership brands include Coca-Cola and P&G, Mengniu Dairy and Uni-President. The company aims to improve the efficiency of the distribution process by facilitating the communication between retailers and distributors.

Huixiadan’s network in China

The new tie-up would create synergy effects between Huixiadan, its partners and Tencent’s WeChat-based ecosystem, big data and smart retailing system, according to founder and CEO of Huixiadan Cui Zhen.

Hear more: China Tech Talk 41: New retail, new customer experiences with Stephane Monsallier

Report from research institute Kantar shows that China has over 6 million traditional offline stores, which boasts an RMB 2 trillion worth of or around half of China’s FMCG market. Investment in Huixiadan marks Tencent’s efforts to digitalize traditional brands and offline retailers.

Tencent’s competitor Alibaba also launched similar initiatives to revamp China’s retailing landscape. Backed by its merchandise channels, ordering, logistics, and marketing capacities, Alibaba is reaching franchise partnerships with offline grocery stores in residential communities across China since last year.

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Alibaba’s O2O lifestyle app is testing online menu for restaurants https://technode.com/2018/05/15/koubei-online-menu-restaurants/ https://technode.com/2018/05/15/koubei-online-menu-restaurants/#respond Tue, 15 May 2018 08:56:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67265 Alibaba’s lifestyle app Koubei is testing an online restaurant menu function (in Chinese) at a chain tea shop and a fast food store in Wuxi City. The new feature offers two different kinds of services. Customers dining in at the restaurant can place orders on Koubei app when they are waiting in the line or […]]]>

Alibaba’s lifestyle app Koubei is testing an online restaurant menu function (in Chinese) at a chain tea shop and a fast food store in Wuxi City.

The new feature offers two different kinds of services. Customers dining in at the restaurant can place orders on Koubei app when they are waiting in the line or before they arrive at the restaurant. Those who want to take out can place orders online first and claim their food on-site with a pre-order number.

The company says that the service will be available in more cities next month. In addition to tea shops, restaurants will be the main target clients of this function, the firm added.

Koubei has already laid out in the area last year through investment in restaurant booking app Meiwei Buyongdeng (美味不用等). Founded in 2013, the startup provides solutions to restaurants to better manage their booking and customer flow. On May 11, it has just received RMB 400 million ($63.1 million) in series D1 funding from e-commerce firm Alibaba and travel agency Ctrip at a valuation of $4 billion.

The city of Wuxi is turning out to be the frontier of China’s online food ordering and delivering battle thanks to its moderate market size and relatively low consumption level. In the land grab war between Didi and Meituan, both companies were giving munificent subsidies to take over Wuxi market earlier this year. Wuxi municipality called off the money-burning competition before it escalates to a large-scale battle.

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China launches first blockchain-enabled community supervision and correction platform for criminals https://technode.com/2018/05/15/china-blockchain-criminal-supervision/ https://technode.com/2018/05/15/china-blockchain-criminal-supervision/#respond Tue, 15 May 2018 05:04:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67242 Guangzhou’s Chancheng District rolled out on May 11 a new blockchain-enabled project (in Chinese) for community supervision and correction of ex-prisoners, parolees, and probationers. Now, the project has finished its prototyping and the development of a credit evaluation system for ex-offenders will be completed by the end of this year, according to local media reports. […]]]>

Guangzhou’s Chancheng District rolled out on May 11 a new blockchain-enabled project (in Chinese) for community supervision and correction of ex-prisoners, parolees, and probationers.

Now, the project has finished its prototyping and the development of a credit evaluation system for ex-offenders will be completed by the end of this year, according to local media reports.

By combining blockchain and wearables technologies, the platform aims to facilitate the management of ex-offenders by better tracking their whereabouts and giving guidance accordingly. Ex-offenders will be asked to wear smart wristbands that can their trace their location. The platform will receive alerts once the monitored person roams beyond a designated area.

The positioning data will help the platform to analyze the daily behaviors and give credit ratings, according to Liang Zixi, director of Bureau of Justice of Chancheng District.

It’s an important means to realize the reentry of ex-offenders to the society. Upon the completion of the community correction process, those who geta higher credit rating in the system would get a better chance of finding good jobs, applying for loans and accomplishing other tasks once difficult for ex-offenders

China is quickly ramping up its adoption of the blockchain technology. Not only regional governments in Shenzhen and Fujian Province are taking a more open attitude towards the technology, the central state is also moving ahead with the plan to launch national standards for the distributed ledger technology. Furthermore, its application is expanding from the more traditional areas of finance to a diversified range of sectors such as government administration and healthcare.

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Alibaba’s giant monetary fund Yu’e Bao lowers same day withdrawal limit to RMB 10k https://technode.com/2018/05/15/yue-bao-lower-withdrawal-limit/ https://technode.com/2018/05/15/yue-bao-lower-withdrawal-limit/#respond Tue, 15 May 2018 02:34:52 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67219 Alibaba’s Yu’e Bao announced on May 14th that the monetary fund is going to lower its daily T+0 (same day) withdrawal limit (in Chinese) from RMB 50,000 ($7,882) to RMB 10,000 since June 6. This means that depositors who want to transfer money to their bank accounts can only receive up to RMB 10,000 worth of […]]]>

Alibaba’s Yu’e Bao announced on May 14th that the monetary fund is going to lower its daily T+0 (same day) withdrawal limit (in Chinese) from RMB 50,000 ($7,882) to RMB 10,000 since June 6. This means that depositors who want to transfer money to their bank accounts can only receive up to RMB 10,000 worth of assets on the same day.

The T+1 (day after) withdrawal and payment terms will not be affected, the announcement added. Yu’e Bao’s same day withdrawal service is a value-added service that allows users to cash in their assets quickly. A representative from the fund told local media that the current adjustment only affects the speed of cashing in. There is no minimum withdrawal amount, and customers still can withdraw their cash anytime.

The adjustment is a joint decision of the three fund companies on the platform, “It reflects Yu’e Bao’s operation rule, which is small sum and decentralized asset management,” a representative from the company told local media. Yu’e Bao’s average asset amount is around RMB 3,000, so most of the users won’t be affected, the report pointed out.

Alipay began offering Yu’e Bao (余额宝, “leftover treasure”) in June 2013. Managed by Tianhong Asset Management Co., the monetary fund become a quick hit in China by helping individuals who do not have professional financial knowledges to manage their assets wisely. By collecting deposits from a large number of individuals, Yu’e Bao accumulates huge sums of money, and is able to negotiate for a far better interest rate with big banks.

Within five years, Yu’e Bao has become the world’s largest money market fund with assets of some RMB 1.58 trillion (US$233 billion) as of the end of 2017.

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How gaming companies are coping with soured Sino-Korean ties https://technode.com/2018/05/14/china-korea-gaming-playx4/ https://technode.com/2018/05/14/china-korea-gaming-playx4/#respond Mon, 14 May 2018 06:54:28 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=67135 In March last year, South Korea allowed the US to install the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system on its soil. Since then, China has launched a series of retaliatory moves against the neighboring country. The unofficial boycott has affected a group of booming industries that range from pan-entertainment to tourism. As a […]]]>

In March last year, South Korea allowed the US to install the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system on its soil. Since then, China has launched a series of retaliatory moves against the neighboring country. The unofficial boycott has affected a group of booming industries that range from pan-entertainment to tourism.

As a part of the move, Beijing has refused to issue new licenses for games made in South Korea. This practically prevents any new South Korean titles from entering the country, because since 2016 all games must receive the governmental approval before they can be distributed in China.

As of April this year, not a single of China’s 412 authorized foreign online games were developed by a South Korean gaming company. Meanwhile, the Korean government licensed 111 Chinese online games, granting Chinese game developers a combined KW 200 billion (around RMB 1.18 billion) of revenue, up KW 80 billion (RMB 475 million) YoY.

Historically, Chinese and South Korean game developers and publishers have worked together very closely. China has been a top export destination for South Korean games, but the blockage is slowing down the booming industry. In Q1 2017, South Korea’s gaming industry exported a value of $359 million, down 14.2% YOY and 8.2% MoM. The year-long blockage not only affects South Korean gaming companies but also their Chinese counterparts. There are rumors about the withdrawal of THAAD system, but nothing has come of it.

TechNode talked with Chinese and South Korean gaming companies at Playx4, a South Korean game expo to see what insiders have to say about the changing dynamics of the Sino-Korean gaming industry.

As a publisher helping overseas games, especially South Korean games, to enter China, the team behind Miaoju Internet Technology is adopting a wait-and-see attitude.

“Given the circumstance, we can do nothing but wait. No one wants to touch the government’s baseline. In order to get prepared for possible policy shifts, we participated in several gaming events in South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan so as to keep track of the latest trends,” Jin Guang, overseas business director of the Hangzhou-based company told TechNode.

Although there is an imbalance between gaming exports between China and South Korea, Jin doesn’t think it has significant meaning for Chinese developers. “South Korea is relatively small compared with other larger markets like Southeast Asia and North America. Most Chinese gaming companies just take it as a small part of their globalization plan.”

For some Korean companies, they are trying to find a way out by adopting detouring mechanisms. “Even before the blockage, it’s difficult for a Korean game to get a license in China. To facilitate the process, we reached an alliance with local partners and run our titles under their names,” said Park Jong Chae, director of Mobile Gaming Department at Korean gaming company NHNST.

“Now, it’s a path through which South Korean game developers can introduce their products to a Chinese audience. Its a grey area, but it’s the most common way and many companies are doing it. There’s a way around so you don’t have to say it’s impossible. Even when the licensing ban is gone, it’s crucial for Korean companies to find a trustworthy local partner who could help them to better understand the market,” he said.

Different parties in the gaming industry are making their own efforts.

“We have invited gaming companies from all around the world. Lots of them come from China. Although the ban is still in place, we hope this conference can help the cooperation between Chinese and South Korean gaming industries to move towards a positive direction,” a representative from the organizer of Playx4 told TechNode.

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Social e-commerce service Sibu raises $7 million to boost mini-program project https://technode.com/2018/05/07/sibu-raises-b-round/ https://technode.com/2018/05/07/sibu-raises-b-round/#respond Mon, 07 May 2018 10:57:37 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66803 Social e-commerce platform Sibu Group has secured a RMB 50 million ($7 million) B round from China Growth Capital. The fund will be used to boost the R&D and marketing of its mini program project dubbed 77 Seconds (77秒), a service that allows small cosmetic retailers to create mini programs for their WeChat micro stores. “Sibu […]]]>

Social e-commerce platform Sibu Group has secured a RMB 50 million ($7 million) B round from China Growth Capital.

The fund will be used to boost the R&D and marketing of its mini program project dubbed 77 Seconds (77秒), a service that allows small cosmetic retailers to create mini programs for their WeChat micro stores.

“Sibu now has three home-grown traffic platforms, New Weishang (新微商), V Store (V商城) and 77 Seconds to cover online and offline marketing channels. We provide a whole set of customized services to entrepreneurs in terms of capital support, mentorship and technology,” said Wu Zhaoguo, chairman of Sibu.

WeChat’s micro business allows users to sell goods and services to their contacts, advertising them through Moments, the app’s status update function. Cosmetics are among the most popular categories for these WeChat-based retailers. Sibu Group, which started as a Chinese cosmetics company in March 2014, prospered along with the rise of WeChat micro business wave in China. It now claims over 2.1 million dealers and over 50k active dealers worldwide.

After receiving RMB50 million A round from SAIF Partners this January, the Guangzhou-based company has invested over RMB 100 million this year for branding. It plans to launch C round funding this July and head for a Hong Kong IPO within two years, according to Wu.

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Tencent’s photo editing app goes viral, attracts concerns over data privacy https://technode.com/2018/05/07/tiantian-ptu-data-privacy/ https://technode.com/2018/05/07/tiantian-ptu-data-privacy/#respond Mon, 07 May 2018 09:59:43 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66794 A new photo editing feature that lets netizens create selfies looking like they’re in the last century has gone viral in China. Picture of My Past Life in Chinese (前世青年照) has collected over 80 million pictures over the past few days, boosting the app behind it, Tiantian P-Tu (天天P图), to the second most popular app […]]]>

A new photo editing feature that lets netizens create selfies looking like they’re in the last century has gone viral in China. Picture of My Past Life in Chinese (前世青年照) has collected over 80 million pictures over the past few days, boosting the app behind it, Tiantian P-Tu (天天P图), to the second most popular app on China’s app stores.

Despite its popularity, experts quickly warned that users who upload their pictures to the feature might encounter data security issues. Criticism of the company lies mainly on its failure to ask permission from users before accessing their camera and the possible risks in sharing their pictures.

Tiantian P-Tu, a picture editing app made by WeChat’s creator Tencent, responded quickly today saying that they will neither keep users’s personal data such as the time and place they uploaded the photos, nor store the edited picture.

Scanning a QR code and uploading a headshot photo, then a composite self-portrait dressed either in China’s traditional qipao, Sun Yat-Sen suit, or other clothing that mark the fashion at the beginning of last century, is ready for you to attract tens of “likes” from friends. The feature become an instant hit among China’s nostalgic selfie fans who want to “time travel” and meet their past lives from one hundred year ago. The feature was rolled out to celebrate May 4th, the country’s National Youth Day to honor the memory of the May Fourth Movement of 1919.

China’s selfie-obsessed netizens have started a weird tradition of celebrating special occasions with themed photos. In a similar move, WeChat users got excited when they receive a Santa Clause hat on WeChat profile photo and WeChat Moment was flooded with selfies of people dressed in People’s Liberation Army uniforms at the 90th anniversary of the PLA last year.

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WeChat drove nearly $33 billion in consumption in 2017 https://technode.com/2018/05/07/wechat-consumption-33-2017/ https://technode.com/2018/05/07/wechat-consumption-33-2017/#respond Mon, 07 May 2018 07:41:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66768 China’s most popular app WeChat is so much more than just an instant messaging app. It’s also where Chinese people order food, make doctor’s appointments, hail their taxis, and even give to charities. In addition to providing handy services to users, it opens huge opportunities for businesses, big and small. WeChat drove a total of RMB209.7 […]]]>

China’s most popular app WeChat is so much more than just an instant messaging app. It’s also where Chinese people order food, make doctor’s appointments, hail their taxis, and even give to charities. In addition to providing handy services to users, it opens huge opportunities for businesses, big and small.

WeChat drove a total of RMB209.7 billion ($33 billion) in information consumption in 2017, an average annual growth of over 30% from 2014, representing 4.7% of China’s total information consumption, according to a report from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT).

WeChat accounts for 34% of the country’s total data traffic, higher than Facebook’s 14.1% in South America and 23.6% in Latin America. Through partnerships with telecom carriers, the app drives RMB 191.1 billion worth of traffic data consumption, a 2.2-fold growth from the 2014 level, the report added.

Traffic percentage drive WeChat and Facebook in different regions (Image credit: CAICT)

WeChat created employment for 20.3 million people in 2017 (4.96 million directly and 15.34 million indirectly), doubling the 2014 figure. The surge is the result of the popularity of mini-programs and enterprise WeChat accounts, the report pointed out. A total of 580k mini programs went online, attracting 170 million active users.

Employment created by WeChat from 2014-2017 (Image credit: CAICT)

WeChat drove RMB 333.9 billion of traditional consumption, covering travel, food, shopping, hotels, and tourism by integrating internet, artificial intelligence and big data technologies with the real economy to improve efficiency and lower costs.

WeChat’s ambitious globalization plan for its payment unit WeChat Pay is being implemented effectively. The report shows that WeChat Pay’s cross-border business has landed in 20 overseas countries and regions, supporting settlement in 20 foreign currencies for a range of services including shopping, hospitality, and catering.

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Ofo slows down orders from bike makers https://technode.com/2018/05/07/ofo-slows-down-orders/ https://technode.com/2018/05/07/ofo-slows-down-orders/#respond Mon, 07 May 2018 03:59:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66731 Ofo only ordered over 80k bicycles from its manufacturing partner Shanghai Phoenix so far this year. This is far short of the anticipated 5 million bikes per year the two companies have planed one year earlier, local media is reporting. The two companies reached a 5-million-bike deal in May last year, at the peak of […]]]>

Ofo only ordered over 80k bicycles from its manufacturing partner Shanghai Phoenix so far this year. This is far short of the anticipated 5 million bikes per year the two companies have planed one year earlier, local media is reporting.

The two companies reached a 5-million-bike deal in May last year, at the peak of China’s bike rental battle. The purchase order promised to bring a profit of about RMB 40 million ($5.79 million) for Phoenix, but the company’s announcement shows that only 37.23% of the order is completed.

Update: Ofo has responded to our report: “Ofo aims to promote the sustainable development of bike rental as well as the whole supply chain of this industry. Some cities have placed a ban on putting more new bikes and ofo is going to cooperate with these local governments. But as existing bikes are entering the three-year retirement period, there will more demands for bike replacement, which will form a sustainable and long-term growth for the industry.”

Shanghai Phoenix is just one of ofo’s partners. Flying Pigeon, another reputable bike brand in China with over 80 years of history, had also expected to churn out around 5 million bikes per year for ofo, the company told TechNode in May of last year. The Beijing-based startup also inked a strategic partnership with bike producer Fushida for a 10 million bike per year deal earlier this year.

China’s bike manufacturing industry, which has seen a continuous decline in the past two decades, recorded a quick surge thanks to the country’s tough bike rental war. Since the number of bikes on streets is a critical factor in winning the bike-rental battle, companies raced to form partnerships with bike makers. At the heyday of the competition, makers could churn out 10 bikes in 16 minutes.

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Alibaba’s former CTO is building an unconference for China’s youth https://technode.com/2018/05/02/2050-wang-jian/ https://technode.com/2018/05/02/2050-wang-jian/#respond Wed, 02 May 2018 09:54:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66263 2050 aims to equip young people to take action and to become volunteers. Ahead of the event in May, we are taking a look at some the companies and people who are taking part in the massive unconference–an open space event with organization powered by participants. 2050 is a volunteer-only, not-for-profit unconference. TechNode is organizing the Explore Expo, […]]]>

2050 aims to equip young people to take action and to become volunteers. Ahead of the event in May, we are taking a look at some the companies and people who are taking part in the massive unconference–an open space event with organization powered by participants. 2050 is a volunteer-only, not-for-profit unconference. TechNode is organizing the Explore Expo, an exhibition area for young tech startups looking for exposure.

Yunqi, a small town near Hangzhou, made its reputation as the home to Alibaba’s annual tech event, the Yunqi Conference, which usually involves big names in the Chinese tech scene like Jack Ma and Robin Li. Long established as a hotspot for China’s tech industry, this town is going to witness another one-of-a-kind gathering that could make it a tech hub for future generations.

“Most of the conferences in China are held for those who are already successful in their careers, but none targets young people. 2050 wants to fill the gap, giving Chinese youth a stage to make their own voices heard and maximize their energy and talent,” said Wang Jian, founder of the 2050 conference, which will be held in Yunqi Town from May 25 to 27. Wang was CTO at Alibaba from 2012 to 2015 and is now chairman of the Technology Steering Committee at Alibaba Group Holding Limited.

As we all know, it’s hard to be creative and innovative, people can get stuck in a rut, and start offering only one solution for the same problem. But for young people, still to be worn down by life’s twists and turns, there are fewer constraints. Recognizing this, the possibility of seeing the same problem from a different perspective can be seen in 2050’s title.

“We named the event 2050 because it’s neither too far nor too near and it’s easy to remember. But people may have their own interpretations. Some keep asking why not 2048 because it would be much easier for programmers to understand. Governors wonder why not 2049 because it’s the 100th anniversary of the country. Cryptocurrency fans believe 2100 is better because the total amount of bitcoin is 21 million. Another interesting interpretation of the title is that the event is held for people between 20 to 50 years old,” Wang recalls the anecdotes with his good humor.

Dr. Wang Jian speaking at ChinaBang 2018 (Image credit: TechNode)

2050 is an unconference for young people around the world. “Over half of the world’s population are under 30 years old. We want to bring the world’s youth to the spotlight, talking about innovation in their way, observing the world through their eyes and solving challenges using their methods,” said Wang when explaining the reason for founding the event.

“We want to build connections that could foster new ideas and innovations from all around the world. This is the first 2050 event, so we may expect most of the participants to come from China. But for the long-term vision, we expect it to be an international gala where someone from Tokyo could meet peers from Cape Town.”

Unlike most Chinese events, 2050 will be organized through the sole power of volunteers, be it individuals, companies or institutions. The volunteers are not just individuals, but organizations including the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Shanghai, Hangzhou municipality, TechNode, Geekbang, designer platform Tezign, co-working space People Squared, English learning app Liulishuo, AI startup Pony.ai, and more. Volunteers constitute a diversified lineup of speakers covering various topics such as AI, cloud computing, blockchain, and space technologies.

The three-day event plans to welcome more than 20k participants. A variety of sessions will be held, including 100 panels, 100 booths, 100 meetups, spiced up with gatherings like a music show, light show, camping, morning jogging, and even games of Go. “There are still boundaries among different science categories. We want to show that tech could be something universal, like sports and art,” Wang said.

In contrast to his identity as the founder of 2050, Wang Jian is more commonly known as Alibaba’s CTO and founder of Alibaba’s cloud computing arm Aliyun. He is known for his farsightedness and shrewd understanding of China’s internet industry. When Alibaba launched its cloud computing service years ago, Wang—the driving force behind this project—faced a lot of controversies. Even Wang himself admitted that it was a crazy move to venture aggressively far outside the company’s core competency. It turns out that all the efforts are worthwhile as Aliyun is China’s largest public cloud service provider now.

A native of Hangzhou, Wang earned his undergraduate degree from Hangzhou University in psychology and later his PhD in engineering from Zhejiang University. He spent several years teaching at Zhejiang University before landing a job with Microsoft, where he worked for nine years as a researcher and programmer.

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Improving technology is the foundation of online education: Hou Jianbin, CEO of Zuoyebang https://technode.com/2018/04/28/k12-edtech-zuoyebang-2/ https://technode.com/2018/04/28/k12-edtech-zuoyebang-2/#respond Sat, 28 Apr 2018 01:53:13 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66175 Zuoyebang edtech online tutoring tutor livestreamChina’s online education industry has witnessed robust growth over the past few years and shows no signs of slowing down. The sector had attracted a user base of 144 million by June 2017, up 22% year-on-year. This obvious change in learning habits brings about big opportunities for online education companies, especially those focused on the […]]]> Zuoyebang edtech online tutoring tutor livestream

China’s online education industry has witnessed robust growth over the past few years and shows no signs of slowing down. The sector had attracted a user base of 144 million by June 2017, up 22% year-on-year.

This obvious change in learning habits brings about big opportunities for online education companies, especially those focused on the K-12 sector. Compared with traditional offline schools, online classrooms have a broader student base and lower operating costs. This means easier access to high-quality courses given by reputable teachers, flexible tutoring time, and more affordable fees. Given these benefits, it’s no surprise that K-12 recorded such a quick boom among China’s education-obsessed parents and academically stressed teenagers.

Venture capitalists have also made their move to tap this prosperous market. In the first eleven months of 2017, 40 K-12 edtech startups raised a more than RMB 6 billion combined, including investments from top venture capital firms such as Sequoia China, Matrix China, IDG, ZunFund, and more.

“We believe there will be a number of billion dollar companies in the online education sector. We expect the biggest online education company coming from the K-12 sector since it’s the biggest vertical in the online education industry. There will be some big fish in a big pond.” Steven Ji, partner at Sequoia China said.

As one of the earliest and largest players in this field, Zuoyebang (作业帮, literally “homework help”) was launched in January 2014 under Baidu’s Q&A site Baidu Zhidao. The team was spun out in 2015 to build a Q&A platform dedicated to middle school and primary school students. Starting as a tool where users get answers by taking photos of their problems, Zuoyebang expanded to offer one-on-one Q&A sessions, and live streaming tutoring. As one of the most popular apps among Chinese teenagers, Zuoyebang now claims 300 million users, including students, teachers, and parents, and 60 million monthly active users.

Technology is the driving force

Due to the special nature of elementary education, traditional schooling is still the major channel where K-12 students acquire knowledge. Online education, however, is becoming complementary to mainstream school education; new technology developments are automizing the self-learning process outside of school hours. This a lot for Chinese parents who hold high hopes for their children’s academic achievements.  

Hou Jianbin, CEO of Zuoyebang (image credit: Zuoyebang)

“Our core products include home image search, homework database, one-on-one tutoring, and Zuoyebang Yike, a live broadcast of our courses. They all require high technology capabilities,” CEO of Zuoyebang, Hou Jianbin, told TechNode.

Zuoyebang allows users to search for homework answers and one-on-one help by uploading pictures of homework problems. “Every step in image search [converting images into texts, text search, and NLP] is very difficult,” Hou said. The app employs computer vision technology to read the questions from the image and an accurate search engine to help to solve the problem. ”For users, response time is crucial. The app can give users search result within 0.8 seconds,” he explained.

Homework database search is the combination of OCR (Optical Character Recognition) and search technologies. “While OCR is a relatively mature technology, our competitive edge relies on our rich homework database, which requires long and consistent effort,” Hou told us.

Zuoyebang currently has 165 million homework problems in its database; this number increases by 2 million every month.

In addition to gaming and talent shows, the prevailing live streaming found its application in online education to enable educators to reach out to students who would face long commutes. It has already brought about major changes in China’s education system.

“Our live streaming tutoring service Zuoyebang Yike has two major concepts—focus on our users, based on data. We track all the user behaviors on our platform. For example, during the 1.5-hour course, we try to understand when the students are tired and not fully focused on the course, or when the students are excited and focused. We try to feed the students more important points according to their degree of focus. Zuoyebang Yike not only enables the students to better learn, it also equips teachers with statistical tools to better arrange teaching method and pace,” said Hou.

As an edtech company, Zuoyebang holds an open view towards the adoption of new technologies. “We believe all the new technologies, including AI, big data, AR, VR are tools to make the education experience better,” said Hou.

But he thinks the distinctive features of human learning determine that more time is needed to find the best approach to apply AI technology. “AI is based on our current experience. Learning, however, goes from memorization to understanding, and then application. This is not something that AI can master now. As technologies and our experience keep developing, we can see a future in which we would be able to use AI to teach,” Hou added.

Challenges to take

Despite the impressive growth in the size of the market, the online K-12 industry has been plagued by two problems: cheating and monetization.

Like many of the “digital tutor” startups, Zuoyebang’s image search function has been facing public challenges of whether they help the students to learn better or just provide a tool for students to reduce workload and cheat with easily accessible answers.

Hou Jianbin believes that they will bring more value than the negative side effects: “One thing we have to keep in mind that no such tools can be used for exams. Students with the passion to acquire knowledge will use the feature properly, but those who want to cheat will copy homework through other channels.”

“In addition, Zuoyebang is not only a homework image search tool anymore. We are using it as the entry point. More features that address the same homework tutoring problems, such as one-on-one tutoring and live streaming service, were provided as a better replacement. Moreover, the role of parents in choosing the services can’t be neglected. They have a clearer goal and are open to shifting to new means that could help their children learn more efficiently.” he added.

Edtech businesses have succeeded to meaningfully impact the lives of hundreds of millions of people. Hou hopes his company will have more social value and bring education equality to remote areas where teachers and educational resources are scarce.

China’s online K-12 homework help sector has recorded several top players like Zuoyebang, Yuanfudao, and 17zuoye. Despite the market opportunities, even these market leaders have yet to develop a profitable business model against intensifying competition. 

“User acquisition for online education is very difficult. We have seen user acquisition cost to be the biggest cost item in many companies. And as these companies grow bigger, their losses become greater. At the same time, it’s very hard for traditional offline education companies to come online, because the operating system is totally different, and there may be conflicts between the online and offline business lines. We’ve seen this happen to offline retailers trying to start e-commerce businesses,” said Steven Ji.

Now claiming 300 million users, Zuoyebang has certainly gained a leg up, but Hou still considers user acquisition their top focus. “Zuoyebang is still a very new company in its startup phase. Our current focus is on user base growth and expansion. We are trying out monetization models on our one-on-one tutoring and Zuoyebang Yike, the live broadcasting courses products, and have got relatively satisfactory revenues.“

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China’s lesser-known tech hub Fujian Province joins blockchain craze https://technode.com/2018/04/26/fujian-blockchain-craze/ https://technode.com/2018/04/26/fujian-blockchain-craze/#respond Thu, 26 Apr 2018 11:23:32 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66287 China’s southeastern coastal province Fujian has announced a regional policy that encourages local tech companies and startups to adopt blockchain technology, along with a series of cutting-edge technologies like computer vision, AI, virtual reality, and edge computing. The Chinese government still holds a conservative view towards cryptocurrencies as the ban on cryptocurrency exchanges and ICOs […]]]>

China’s southeastern coastal province Fujian has announced a regional policy that encourages local tech companies and startups to adopt blockchain technology, along with a series of cutting-edge technologies like computer vision, AI, virtual reality, and edge computing.

The Chinese government still holds a conservative view towards cryptocurrencies as the ban on cryptocurrency exchanges and ICOs are still in effect. But the country is becoming increasingly committed to blockchain, the technology behind them.

Given the circumstance, the regional governments of some tech hubs are taking the lead in embracing the new technology. Different from Fujian Province, which offered policy supports, lots of cities have taken more substantial step by providing funding supports to blockchain startups.

Shenzhen launched its first venture capital fund of RMB 500 million on April 24 to focus on blockchain firms, about 2 weeks after the Hangzhou government invested in a $1.6 billion blockchain fund. Some local commentators have dubbed this trend as a “government-led mode.”

Fujian Province is also where the country’s lesser-known tech hubs like Xiamen and Fuzhou located. They are the home to Chinese internet giants like gaming firm Net Dragon, photo app Meitu and period tracker MeetYou.

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Ctrip is bringing supersonic travel to speed-obsessed China https://technode.com/2018/04/26/ctrip-invests-boom-supersonic/ https://technode.com/2018/04/26/ctrip-invests-boom-supersonic/#respond Thu, 26 Apr 2018 08:01:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66270 China can’t get enough of high speeds. Already boasting the world’s largest high-speed rail network, the country is poised to speed up its air travel. Chinese online travel company Ctrip announced on April 25 the completion of a strategic investment in US supersonic jet startup Boom Supersonic. No specific details about the size of this investment […]]]>

China can’t get enough of high speeds. Already boasting the world’s largest high-speed rail network, the country is poised to speed up its air travel. Chinese online travel company Ctrip announced on April 25 the completion of a strategic investment in US supersonic jet startup Boom Supersonic. No specific details about the size of this investment were revealed.

The investment comes as a surprise because it’s not directly related to Ctrip’s core business and the project is still premature for business application. But the online travel firm is pretty optimistic about this tie-up.

“Such strategic investment offers a wealth of opportunities for both companies. Ctrip makes investments in the future so that we remain at the forefront of providing top services for our users. The future that the Chinese market holds is positive and we hope that from this investment and collaboration with Boom, they could help us to discuss arranging 10-15 seats in one of the first supersonic flights,” Ctrip spokesperson told TechNode.

Under the deal, Ctrip will help Boom accelerate its ongoing partnership efforts with airlines in China. The two companies are working to make the world more accessible by halving flight times from China to the United States, South Asia, and Oceania.

Boom is applying the proceeds to accelerate the development of the company’s Mach-2.2 airliner, which could travel at 2,335 km/hour or 1,451 miles/hour, more than double the price of regular passenger airplanes at the same cost as today’s business class fares. “San Francisco to Shanghai, for example, could shrink from 11 hours to 6—and a typical round-trip itinerary can be accomplished two whole days faster,” Boom CEO Blake Scholl said in a press statement. The plane will enter service in the mid-2020s.

Ctrip has made an investment into Boom Supersonic, joining other strategic partners like Japan Airlines to accelerate the future of air travel. Previously, Japan Airlines has also pre-ordered 20 Boom aircraft, joining Virgin Group as a Boom launch customer.

The Chinese market, now the world’s second largest and one of the fastest growing, is expected to surpass the US in size by 2022, according to the International Air Transportation Association.

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Xbox China general manager Xie Enwei resigns after 24-year tenure https://technode.com/2018/04/26/xbox-china-head-resigns/ https://technode.com/2018/04/26/xbox-china-head-resigns/#respond Thu, 26 Apr 2018 06:02:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66251 Xie Enwei, the general manager of Xbox China, is stepping down from his position after serving 24 years in Microsoft. Microsoft’s response to media’s inquiries on this matter confirmed Xie’s resignation without giving reasons for his leave. “During the past 24 years, Xie worked with total devotion. We are thankful for all his work and hope […]]]>

Xie Enwei, the general manager of Xbox China, is stepping down from his position after serving 24 years in Microsoft.

Microsoft’s response to media’s inquiries on this matter confirmed Xie’s resignation without giving reasons for his leave. “During the past 24 years, Xie worked with total devotion. We are thankful for all his work and hope he can achieve something even greater in the future,” said the company.

After joining Microsoft in 1994, Xie led the company’s tool and server team and marketing and operations unit. But he is more widely known as the head of Microsoft’s Xbox business in China.

In 2014, China finally dropped the decade-long ban on gaming consoles, where the government citing the “mental wellbeing of China’s youth” as the primary factor. The change opened big opportunities for foreign game console manufacturers to access the Chinese market, where their products were only available on the grey market.

Along with a group competitors from home and abroad, Microsoft is among the first companies to tap on the changing trend. The tech giant has established a joint venture with Shanghai-based media service BesTV New Media by investing $79 million in 2014. Xie Enwei was named as the general manager of Microsoft’s Xbox Department China as well as the head of the joint venture back then. The company’s flagship product Xbox One landed in the country in 2014.

Although Xbox received a lot of interest in the Chinese market, it didn’t do very well, mostly because it’s expensive and lots of games are still region locked. This combination enraged lots of Xbox fans; the company lost lots of customers to its competitor Sony’s PS4, which is region free in China even though it entered the Chinese market half a year later than Xbox.

Image Credit: VGChartz

In addition, Xbox is having a tough time globally. Globally, Xbox One has only sold 37.2 million units as of April 14 this year. The figure for PS4 is 78 million, more than double that for Xbox, according to data from business intelligence and research firm VGChartz.

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Pinduoduo is investing billions of dollars to help marketing agricultural goods https://technode.com/2018/04/26/pinduoduo-agricultural-goods/ https://technode.com/2018/04/26/pinduoduo-agricultural-goods/#respond Thu, 26 Apr 2018 02:37:00 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=66235 pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibabaChinese e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo (aka PDD) has a hefty RMB 10 billion ($1.58 billion) to help the marketing and promotion of agricultural products from 500 production origins within this year. The company will use the funds to create brands for these products and build logistics networks. The move comes after a $3 billion Series C, […]]]> pinduoduo ecommerce colin huang alibaba

Chinese e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo (aka PDD) has a hefty RMB 10 billion ($1.58 billion) to help the marketing and promotion of agricultural products from 500 production origins within this year. The company will use the funds to create brands for these products and build logistics networks.

The move comes after a $3 billion Series C, which valued the social e-commerce site at $15 billion this month. Founded in 2015, Pinduoduo has been gaining momentum quickly, especially among low-income users and lower-tier cities. The platform has accumulated around 300 million users on its app since its release.

Image credit: TechNode

The three-year-old startup is seen as the black horse to upend China’s e-commerce industry. As of April 26, 2018, PDD ranks #3 overall in the Chinese iTunes app store ranking for free apps, after popular apps like Tik Tok (aka Douyin) and hit photo app developed by Meitu, and ahead of other shopping apps like Taobao and JD.

Pinduoduo’s quick rise comes from providing easy access to cheap product sourcing, which enables extra-low prices. This caters to the demand of lower-income users who are usually price-sensitive.

The special user profile means that agriculture goods are among the most popular product categories on the platform, among other daily commodities like food, clothes, and groceries.

Since China’s launch of “Internet Plus” strategy, which has an agriculture component, online trading of agriculture goods surged quickly and it is forming a new trend among local e-commerce platforms. Top e-commerce like Taobao and JD all launch similar features to help farmers sell their products online as a major part of their expansion to rural areas.

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China launches mobile ID authentication chips to rein in personal data theft https://technode.com/2018/04/17/id-authentication-chips-data-theft/ https://technode.com/2018/04/17/id-authentication-chips-data-theft/#respond Tue, 17 Apr 2018 08:45:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65731 China launches ID authentification chip to rein personal data leak]]>

China’s Ministry of Public Security issued the first batch of 50,000 smart chip cards in Gongqing City of Jiangxi Province in an attempt to promote safer and easier identity authentication for smartphone users. The technology is expected to have wide applications in areas such as e-commerce, social media, and administrative services.

Dubbed as SIMeID, the card can store users’ basic personal data such as names, phone numbers, ID card numbers, and other information. The chip is only 0.19 mm wide and can be attached to a SIM card easily.

SIMeID (Image credit: Jiangxi Daily)

During online transactions, the technology automatically provides the pre-stored information for identity authentication. This means users will not have to submit these data every time, lowering the risk of data leakage.

With more and more people preferring online transactions, personal information theft has been running rampant in China. Stealing private data online is not only technically simple, the cost is very low as well. A report by the Internet Society of China released last year show nearly 80% of web users had their personal information leaked.

Data leaks is so ubiquitous in China that some of the country’s top tech firms have started to take users’ privacy for granted. But a series of recent incidents brought data privacy issues to the surface. The state authorities cracked down on numerous members of a syndicate for allegedly buying and selling personal data over the internet. In an attempt to raise people’s awareness about data privacy, a Chinese artist bought personal data of 346,000 Wuhan residents and displayed them at a Wuhan art gallery.

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JD expands its e-commerce empire to Spanish-speaking markets https://technode.com/2018/04/17/jd-spanish/ https://technode.com/2018/04/17/jd-spanish/#respond Tue, 17 Apr 2018 06:16:14 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65723 JD expands its e-commerce empire to Spanish-speaking market ]]>

Richard Liu, the legendary founder and CEO of Chinese online retailer JD Group, made his latest appearance at Madrid, the capital of Spain, on April 16th to introduce the firm’s expansion plans to the Spanish-speaking market which boasts a 400 million population, local media is reporting.

JD has just opened its Spanish website Joybuy.es for beta testing on April 12th to target Spain and Latin America. JD.com will enter the Spanish market through investments in logistics, goods, and services to integrate JD’s capabilities in China’s commodity supply chain and provide quality products to Spanish customers.

For starters, JD will enter the market with 100,000 popular items in partnership with one thousand partners including smartphone maker Nubia, electronics manufacturer Rappo, robotic vacuum cleaner maker iLife, and more. As in China, logistics is the main selling point for JD’s services. The company promises a 2-3 day delivery for premium packages and 7-20 day delivery for economic packages in Spain. The firm is also planning to set up local warehouses within this year.

The Chinese e-commerce giant is serious about taking its services global. The current move comes two months after its launch in Europe. France is the first stop in JD’s ambitious plan in the region, where the company plans to spend at least one billion euros over the next two years.

On the other hand, JD’s aggressive globalization plan reveals how crowded China’s e-commerce market really is. The cutthroat battle in the domestic market is forcing Chinese e-commerce platforms, including top players like JD, to look for new opportunities elsewhere. JD’s rival Alibaba has launched its own globalization plans much earlier than JD.

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Updated: Weibo’s purge of gay-themed content sparks online outrage https://technode.com/2018/04/16/weibo-gay-content-purge/ https://technode.com/2018/04/16/weibo-gay-content-purge/#respond Mon, 16 Apr 2018 03:01:17 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65607 Chinese popular social networking platform Weibo announced last Friday that they would remove gay-themed contents from its platform, prompting a storm of online protests.]]>

Updated 14:17 am 16 April 2018: Weibo has issued a second statement today to exclude gay-themed contents from the three-month purge. Now the “Cleaning Up” campaign only targets vulgar and violent contents.

Chinese popular social networking platform Weibo announced that they would remove gay-themed contents from its platform (in Chinese), prompting a storm of online protests.

A search on Weibo for “I am gay” shows a popular post

To comply with China’s new cybersecurity law, the Twitter-like micro-blogging service said that they will launch a three-month “clean-up” campaign to filter comics, games, and related short videos and picture/text posts that involve pornography, violence or homosexuality. The statement added that the crackdown covers all contents related to “gay” and “danmei (耽美), China’s version of what is often called “slash” fiction. Weibo claims that it has removed over 56,000 posts and closed over a hundred accounts involving “illegal” content.

The move sparked online outcry where Weibo users protest with the hashtag “I am gay”, which was used 170,000 times before Weibo ultimately banned it. In addition to gay people, the country’s liberals who were enraged by the crackdown also made their voices heard.

Chinese society, especially the online space, is adopting a more open attitude towards gay culture, resulting in a vibrant LGBT app scene to serve estimated tens of millions of people in the LGBT community in China. Top players in the field include Blued, LESDO, Ahola, and more.

But the tolerance still have to find its way to the government level. Gay love and LGBT culture have always been sensitive issues and constant censorship topics in the state’s online crackdown.  As recent as 2016, the state issued a ban to portray homosexual relationships on television dramas and web series (in Chinese).

The collision comes at the height of China’s online crackdown that affected a range of popular apps such as new aggregating service Toutiao and short video hubs Douyin and Kuaishou.

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Electric vehicle’s experience will sell itself: Ford Asia Pacific CEO Peter Fleet https://technode.com/2018/04/13/electric-vehicles-premium-experience-is-going-to-sell-itself-ford-asia-pacific-ceo-peter-fleet/ https://technode.com/2018/04/13/electric-vehicles-premium-experience-is-going-to-sell-itself-ford-asia-pacific-ceo-peter-fleet/#respond Fri, 13 Apr 2018 05:39:49 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65489 Why Ford is placing bets on electric vehicles?]]>

We are moving into a new era where technology is radically changing transportation. People not only have more options when traveling from A to B, their journeys are becoming more intelligent and digital. Against this backdrop, traditional carmakers, once the bellwethers in mobility innovations, are busy catching up with new changes in the market.

Global automobile manufacturer Ford took the wraps off five new models this Tuesday in Chongqing, where its joint venture with local partner Changan is located. In addition to a brand new automobile lineup, the company has been laying out in several new initiatives that pave to the way to better days for Ford, including bigger plans for electric vehicles, connected cars and autonomous vehicles.

Image credit: Ford

Why China, why electric vehicles?

It’s no secret that Ford is developing a special focus in China. This week’s event, what the company called its first global launch in China, is part of Ford’s plan to introduce over 50 new or redesigned Ford and Lincoln vehicles in the country by 2025. Of the total amount, 15 will be electric vehicles.

“China is already the largest market in the world for electrified vehicles, even though it’s very young. All the nameplates assembled at Chang’an Ford, for example, will be available for electrified options by 2015. That’s for both Ford and Lincoln brands and we are going to launch a third joint venture in China Zotye-Ford for exclusive engineering, assembly, and marketing of a new range of small electrified vehicles. They will be sold under a new local brand and won’t carry the Ford brand,” Peter Fleet, president of Ford Asia Pacific, told TechNode.

Compelling driving experience

China’s electrified vehicle market grew rapidly over the past decade. Sales of new energy vehicles (NEVs) in China may jump as much as 50 percent to more than 1 million units in 2018, according to China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. Government support plays a significant role in propelling the development of this industry.

As the market evolves, however, the state is planning to raise the barriers for new-energy vehicle makers to access subsidies and will phase out financial support by 2020. This could further raise the price of new energy vehicles (NEV), which are already pricier than traditional cars.

But for Mr. Fleet, this won’t bring as significant an impact to the NEV market as predicted. “As the incentives progressively come off, the cost of technology comes down,” he pointed out.

What’s more important is that the premium driving experience of electrified cars will offer users more possibilities while driving. “The vast majority of customers have zero experience of what an electric vehicle is like to drive, although they may have formed some value about it. I really believe it has nothing to do with these incentives,” he said.

“When I spend a day driving these vehicles, the first thing that strike me is the silence of the vehicle. The customers at the moment are used to that a car would make noise. In the future, they can have a car that is virtually silent. It means that you can have a wonderful quality conversation in your car or listen to high-fidelity audio in you car. You want to have a crystal clear telephone conversation over the hand-free system, you can do that.” Peter added. “Secondly, customers don’t have experience, and have no idea about performance feels of electric cars. If you calibrate the motor and calibrate the regenerative braking in a certain way, you can get a very direct driving experience where you are virtually controlling the car.”

When you can’t do it all, find local partners

In a localization move, Ford has partnered with lots of Chinese tech companies. Some of the cooperation goes beyond the core aspects of a vehicle.

“These are some of the lessons we have learned in China. When Ford started in China maybe it was a little bit of a view that you can do everything by yourself  because we are a global corporate. We increasingly understood that success in China comes through multitude partnerships,” Fleet reflected.

Peter Fleet, group vice president and president, Asia Pacific, chairman & CEO, Ford China (Image credit: Ford)

In addition to joint ventures with Changan and Zotye, Ford has built a strategic partnership with Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba, Baidu’s Apolo Project for autonomous vehicles, and eDaijia for car maintenance.

Ford’s most recent test drive program in Guangzhou is a practical example of partnership with local companies. In the test-drive pilot launched in Guangzhou, Ford puts a thousand customers in three-day test drives in a kind of fun and innovative way. The interesting and dynamic part of the pilot is that they partnered with Alibaba’s big data to qualify the customers to make sure they have the ability and desire to buy cars, according to Fleet.

Building forces in a crowded market

Although Chinese electric vehicle market is quickly growing, it’s crowded with lots of competitors, be it Chinese automakers, or internet giants.

In order to build its strength in the sector, Ford said they are planning to provide a comprehensive range of clean energy solutions in China  – hybrids, plug-in hybrids and full battery powered EVs – this will cover 70 percent of all Ford nameplates sold, including the full range from Changan Ford.

With competition heating up, electric vehicle companies start to get in that game of who will have the biggest range. Lot of startups are talking about 400km, 500km or even more. Fleet believes users’ driving experiences should still be the top priority.

“We announced our first global hybrid electric vehicle, which will be assemble in China.We are talking about a range of 450km and look at driving patterns of Chinese customers, that’s more than enough. Our electric vehicle through Zotye Ford will have a significantly larger range because they are targeting younger urban city dwellers or maybe lower city drivers,” Fleet told us.

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Mobile search engine Shenma sues Sogou for $17m over traffic hijacking https://technode.com/2018/04/13/shenma-and-sogou-lawsuit/ https://technode.com/2018/04/13/shenma-and-sogou-lawsuit/#respond Fri, 13 Apr 2018 03:02:46 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65527 Shenma, the mobile search unit of Alibaba has filed a lawsuit against Sogou for traffic hijacking, local media has reported (in Chinese). ]]>

Shenma, the mobile search unit of Alibaba has filed a lawsuit against Sogou for traffic hijacking, local media has reported (in Chinese).

In the filing, the mobile search company accused Sougou of misleading and reeling in potential Shenma users through Sogou Input Method. Shenma is seeking RMB 100 million ($16 million) in compensation.

The lawsuit marks a collision between two of China’s most popular mobile search services. Shenma and Sogou took the second and third spot in China’s mobile search sector (in Chinese), representing 18.5% and 15.2% of the market respectively. Baidu still topped the list with 64.3%, according to data from third part research institute Big Data Search.

Actually, this is not the first time that Sogou was sued for unfair competition. In 2014, Baidu sued Sogou for similar issues, claiming Sogou’s integration of search functionality in its Chinese character input method editor was effectively hijacking Baidu’s search engine traffic. The court ruled in favor of Baidu and Sogou has paid an damage or RMB 500k.

On another hand, this case reveals the proxy war between China’s internet titans Alibaba and Tencent in yet another vertical. Shenma started in 2014 as a joint venture between Alibaba and mobile internet software service UCWeb, which Alibaba fully acquired later in the same year. Tencent is Sogou’s biggest stakeholder with 43.7% after initially investing $448 million for 40% in 2013. The Chinese search engine went public in the US last year.

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China’s top 6 angel investors https://technode.com/2018/04/10/top-6-chinese-angel-investors/ https://technode.com/2018/04/10/top-6-chinese-angel-investors/#respond Tue, 10 Apr 2018 09:07:27 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65165 Top 6 Chinese angel investors that give wings to startup dreams]]>

With an increasingly tech-savvy population, maturing tech ecosystem and government support, it’s arguably the best timing to start a business in China. The startup craze fosters a growing appetite for venture capital firms in the country. Greater China attracted $65 billion, or 36 % of the total global venture capital in 2017, next only to US’s $76.4 billion, figures from data service Preqin show.

Even combining all these, getting your business from idea to minimum viable product is a daunting task. Getting the initial funds is perhaps the most important step when building a company from scratch. 3F (Friends, Family, and Fools) is usually the best chance for obtaining initial investment. But professional angel investors, who boast better understanding of the industry and entrepreneurship, are a better choice for long-term development.

However, angel investors can be a confusing crowd with different industry focus and style. For entrepreneurs who want to court their own angel, here’s a list of top angel investors in China.

Kaifu Lee

Image Credit: TechNode

As a veteran investor and startup guru, Kaifu Lee is probably one of the most prominent figures in China’s tech world. After getting a PhD in computer science in 1988, Lee worked as top management for Apple, Microsoft, and Google. His solid IT background and work experience with US’s top tech giants have gained him a respectable reputation not only in China but also in Silicon Valley.

He now serves as the founder and CEO of Sinovation Ventures, an accelerator/VC formerly known as Innovation Works. The firm is focused on areas including artificial intelligence (AI) and big data, content and entertainment, consumption upgrade, B2B trade and enterprise services, and education. With a preference for teams with strong technical backgrounds, Sinovation Ventures has recorded lots of successful cases in Wandoujia, Zhihu, and Meitu. The firm is planning to raise $500 million for a fourth fund.

Although bearing a scholarly manner, Lee was quite outspoken in giving his ideas on the latest tech trends and advice for young entrepreneurs. It’s worth noting that Lee is a firm believer in AI technology, so much so that he predicts that AI will be the future and has written a book to explain the benefits and challenges from AI.

Read more: Dr. Kai-fu Lee Talks About How AI Will Change Transportation and Finance Sector

In his personal life, Dr. Lee experienced a tough 2013, when he was struck by lymph cancer and forced to stop working. Luckily, he recovered 17 months later and came back to the limelight with his new book “Living Towards Death” to share his thoughts on life and death.

Xu Xiaoping (Bob Xu)

Image Credit: ZhenFund

Even before finding his identity as an angel investor, Bob Xu made himself a legend as one of the three co- founders of New Oriental Education & Technology Group, the largest provider of private educational services in China. The story of New Oriental has inspired a blockbuster movie called “American Dreams in China”, which pulled in a box office of RMB 537 million.

After stepping down from New Oriental in 2006, Bob Xu founded ZhenFund with his former partner Wang Qiang and Sequoia Capital to focus on investments in gaming, online education, e-commerce, and mobile internet. The fund plans to raise $190 million for a fifth venture fund within the year.

Founded in 2011, ZhenFund’s profile includes a series of successful projects like Jiayuan, Lightinthebox, Jumei, Red, Miya, 51Talk, Ehang, and Chumenwenwen.

Given his churlishness and outspoken temper, Xu’s incisive insights on the industry often made headlines of local media. Xu called fellow investors to fully embrace blockchain technology in an internal WeChat group. The leaked chat sparked heated discussions in the industry. While some agree with his proposition on blockchain technology, some accused him of trying to pump up the blockchain hype  for financial gain.

Cai Wensheng (Mike Cai)

Image Credit: Baidu Image

Although never receiving a higher education, Cai built his reputation as a shrewd investor and industry insider.

Cai made a fortune from internet domain name investment and begin to set up his own startups. One of his most successful endeavors is web directory 265.com, a clone of Hao123.com which was acquired by Chinese search giant Baidu in 2004.

Read more: Tips From China’s Legendary Investor Cai Wensheng

Gradually the young entrepreneur became a renowned angel investor. His portfolio companies include Chinese hit services Meitu (photo-centered startup), Baofeng (video player developer and video content provider), CNZZ (online data service), 58.com (classified site), Feiyu Technology (mobile and web game developer) and Flashget Downloads.

Cai is associated with many Fujian located tech companies and has developed a preference for grassroots entrepreneurs like himself. His investment focuses include entertainment and internet services.

Xue Manzi (Charles Xue)

Image Credit: China.com

Xue Manzi, the Chinese-American billionaire capitalist, is among the earliest and most active angel investors in China’s internet industry. As the co-founder of UT Starcom, Xue once worked as senior management of 8848 Electronic Commerce Network and ChinaEdu.net. His also the investor of PCPOP, auto vehicle portal Autohome and fintech platform Snowball.

Xue is investing through Manzi Fund focusing on areas including mobile internet, healthcare, fintech, education, entertainment. The RMB 500 million fund has invested in over 100 startups, mostly in the angel round. He’s also one of the earliest investors that are placing bets on blockchain technology.

In addition to being a prominent investor, the silver-haired Xue is quite a controversial figure. Born to a senior political family in China, Xue had a tough younger life during the Cultural Revolution and then finished his higher education in the US. Given his personal experience, he is a leading liberal commentator on the social media scene, where he usually posts poignant commentaries about the government. Xue was detained in Beijing for suspected involvement in prostitution in 2013.

Lei Jun

Image Credit: Xiaomi

More commonly known as the founder of smartphone maker Xiaomi, Lei Jun represents a new group of IT billionaires who are hunting for the next unicorns through angel investments.

Before founding Xiaomi, Lei Jun once worked as board chairman of UCWeb, the leading Chinese mobile browser acquired by Alibaba. He is the former executive director of Kingsoft and co-founder of Joyo.com which was sold to Amazon in 2004.

Lei is now investing through Shunwei Capital, an angel investment fund he co-founded with Tuck Lye Koh in 2011. As of November last year, Xiaomi and its Shunwei Capital (顺为资本) have invested $4 billion in 300 companies such as self-balancing scooter Ninebot, 17zuoye, video streaming service provider iQiyi, Renrenche, 51Talk, Aiyibang, Misfit, and Xiaomi’s real-time video call provider Agora.io.

Xiaomi’s phones are achieving huge success in India and Lei is planning to replicate China’s business model in India by investing $1 billion to 100 Indian startups.

Shen Nanpeng (Neil Shen)

Image Credit: Sequoia Capital

As the founding and managing partner of Sequoia Capital China, Shen Nanpeng has topped venture capital investor lists over the past few years. His most recent feat is to hit the top spot at Forbe’s Midas List for 2018.

After becoming a successful entrepreneur as the co-founder of Chinese travel site Ctrip, he is on the founding team of Sequoia Capital China, one the most active and influential VC firms in China. In addition to being an angel investor, Shen is also very active in later-stage investments. His successful investments include Meituan, Momo, Vipshop Holdings, Qihoo 360, AutoNavi Holdings and JD.

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State inspection reveals quality issues in several brands of bike rentals https://technode.com/2018/04/08/bike-rental-quality-inspection/ https://technode.com/2018/04/08/bike-rental-quality-inspection/#respond Sun, 08 Apr 2018 09:26:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65145 Some of the fashionable shared bicycles we ride every day are not as save as we thought.]]>

China’s quality control authority conducted an extensive investigation into the quality of dockless rental bikes and uncovered startling results. Some of the bicycles we rent every day are not as safe as we thought.

Of the total 24 batches of bikes that are sampled in the test, three batches of bikes run by Mobike, Ubike and a smaller startup named Quancheng Qiyou (全城骑游) failed to meet standards. The results show that the overall defect rate is 12.5%, higher than that in previous years, which is 10% and 11.5% in 2016 and 2017 respectively.

Defect rate of rental bikes (2016-2018) (Image credit: Xinhua)

Given the market share, Mobike (37.5%), ofo (25%) and Hellobike (20.8%), the three top bike rental brands account for a combined 83.3% of the sampled bikes. The test was run on 14 items such as brakes and pedals. Distance between pedals and bike reflector are where the companies failed.

The high defect rate of Mobike is particular striking given the company’s high-end positioning which boasts a focus on design and greener lifestyle. Mobike has even won an award from one of the most prestigious design competitions, iF Design Awards

Mobike’s products were sampled in six cities in Tianjin, Wuxi, Wuhan, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Dongguan. The failed batch was collected from Guangzhou.

“Mobike apologizes to all the users and will tighten quality control of our products. The company promptly called back all 1,240 affected bikes after remotely locking them the day we discovered the issue. No incidents were reported from these bikes. We will launch a deeper investigation into all bike models and has submitted rectification report to relevant authorities,” a Mobike spokesperson told TechNode.

The news comes just days after Mobike is being acquired by China’s tech giant Meituan.

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Tencent rolls out credit system for online gamers https://technode.com/2018/04/08/tencent-rolls-out-credit-system-for-online-gamers/ https://technode.com/2018/04/08/tencent-rolls-out-credit-system-for-online-gamers/#respond Sun, 08 Apr 2018 06:38:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65137 TencentTencent just launched a credit rating system for online game players, according to an announcement made on its Weibo.]]> Tencent

While its rival Alibaba is taking a lead in China’s social credit rating industry with Sesame Credit, Tencent is zooming in on the credit structure in a sector it’s dominating: gaming. The world’s largest game developer by revenue just launched a credit rating system for online game players, according to an announcement made on its Weibo.

According to the firm, the scores are evaluated on a monthly basis from several aspects including completeness of account information, activity, gaming assets, security contribution and cheating behaviors. Spending more time in-game, real-name authentication and reporting cheating by others would help elevate the credit score. Cheating, spreading illegal information and using bad language will reduce the score.

The service now assesses gamers logged in with WeChat and QQ accounts. Players with high scores will be able to get chances to join internal tests of new games and get virtual presents. Some of the most popular titles like Honour of Kings, League of Legends, PUBG: Exciting Battlefield and QQ Speed are supported by the system.

It’s clear that credit scoring systems are of increasing importance because they allow companies reduce risks while using the huge amounts of data they collect. Like Alibaba, Tencent is one of the companies that gained the license to run credit-scoring business, but it’s moving relatively slow as compared to its rival. Two years after Alibaba launches its own social credit system, Tencent is gradually testing its own credit system.

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Kuaishou is hiring more people to filter content after crackdown on “vulgar” content https://technode.com/2018/04/08/kuaishou-content-patrols/ https://technode.com/2018/04/08/kuaishou-content-patrols/#respond Sun, 08 Apr 2018 03:43:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=65127 Chinese short video app KuaishouKuaishou hiring thousands of content patrols amid government constrains]]> Chinese short video app Kuaishou

Kuaishou, a leading short video platform in China, is planning to add around 3,000 content checkers (in Chinese) to its existing 2,000-member team in order to help filter content deemed illegal or inappropriate by the authority.

According to the job description, the candidates should hold a bachelor degree or higher, have “high-level of morality and political awareness”, and preferably be members of the Communist Youth League or the Communist Party. Kuaishou already maintains a sizable censor factory that operates in six cities of Beijing, Tianjin, Wuxi, Wuhan, Harbin, and Yancheng.

This new recruitment spree could be translated as a measure to cope with the government crackdown on vulgar content. China’s internet watchdog SAPPRFT (State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television) issued an order to Kuaishou to clean up their contents last week, shortly after the platform was exposed by state media CCTV for its failure to censor videos featuring teenage moms.

Crackdowns like this are being launched with increasing frequency, affecting pretty much every major content-generating platform in China. Toutiao is named in the same SAPPRFT order to purge its contents, while Huoshan̦—the short video platform backed by Toutiao—closed all accounts (in Chinese) of underage users. Weibo was ordered to go with a sanitized version of their trending topics. Given the circumstances, in-house “content patrol” units are becoming a crucial part of all internet companies. Leading tech firms like Tencent and Toutiao are expanding their content checking team.

Meanwhile, the issue also brings back a yearlong debate on whether technology is morally neutral. Both sides of the argument have their advocates. Toutiao CEO Zhang Yiming said to local media “Technology should be neutral. No intervention is the best distribution principle.”

Kuaishou CEO, Su Hua, takes the opposite stance: “People have their own values and they will endow their values to the algorithm,” said Su Hua, Kuaishou CEO.

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Meituan’s ride-hailing service is launching in Shanghai tomorrow https://technode.com/2018/03/20/meituan-landing-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2018/03/20/meituan-landing-shanghai/#respond Tue, 20 Mar 2018 10:40:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=64302 Chinese O2O and e-commerce giant Meituan is going to launch its long-rumored ride hailing service tomorrow in Shanghai,]]>

Chinese O2O and e-commerce giant Meituan is going to launch its long-rumored ride-hailing service tomorrow (21 March 2018) in Shanghai, Chinese media iFeng is reporting. The report says they have confirmed the news with Meituan’s customer service staff.

As a latecomer in a highly consolidated sector, Meituan is diving in with huge subsidy plans. In a previous marketing campaign, Meituan said they would launch ride-hailing service once a city gets 200k votes on its online poll. Under the rule, the first 200k passengers to register can get ride coupons.

The customer service staff confirmed with iFeng that first 20k Meituan drivers in Shanghai can enjoy commission free service. For the rest of drivers who have made their votes, Meituan would collect an 8% commission fee and an information fee of RMB 0.5 for each ride.

Drivers who worked over 10 hours from 6:00 to 24:00 and processed 10 orders or more could get a basic income of RMB 600. If the daily turnover exceeds RMB 600, drivers will get an extra bonus of RMB 200.

Shanghai will be the second city for the company to launch this service after rolling out in Nanjing last year. Other cities that Meituan are launching Beijing, Hangzhou, and Chengdu.

While Meituan is spearheading forays into a sector that’s dominated by Didi, the ride-hailing giant is also working toward the launch of a food delivery service—one of Meituan’s core businesses, with aggressive food delivery rider recruitment plans. It’s a no-brainer that this would be a cash-burning battle between two of China’s most heavily-loaded tech titans. Meituan raised a $4 billion C round last October and Didi just announced its plans to raise $1.5 billion in funding using asset-backed securities (ABS).

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Taobao takes on Pinduoduo with roll out of Taobao Tejia https://technode.com/2018/03/20/taboo-tejia/ https://technode.com/2018/03/20/taboo-tejia/#respond Tue, 20 Mar 2018 08:31:51 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=64295 Shortly after the launch of family account feature to go after the senior citizens’ market, Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao recently launched a dedicated app named Taobao Tejia (淘宝特价meaning Taobao Discounts) to target China’s lower-end users who are more price-sensitive, local media is reporting. The app covers a variety of popular categories that include clothes, baby and […]]]>

Shortly after the launch of family account feature to go after the senior citizens’ market, Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao recently launched a dedicated app named Taobao Tejia (淘宝特价meaning Taobao Discounts) to target China’s lower-end users who are more price-sensitive, local media is reporting.

The app covers a variety of popular categories that include clothes, baby and maternal care, cosmetics, and home appliances. Most of the items are priced between RMB 5 to RMB 30. On top of that, users can collect extra coupons by click on the red envelope button in the app.

With more emphasis on social features and rock-bottom prices, Taobao’s recent moves are widely translated as a measure to fend off the intensifying competition from Pinduoduo, China’s upstart social e-commerce company.

Read More: Can China’s fastest growing e-commerce startup find similar success in Southeast Asia?

Alibaba dismissed the speculations.”The diversification of customer demands leads to the diversification of products. We launched Taobao Tejia because there’s a huge user demand for cost-effective products,” said an Alibaba spokesperson to local media.

With the economic growth, China’s e-commerce market is dominated by the concept of consumption upgrading, where people would like to pay more for quality products. Sometimes, the lower-end market, for which price is still a top concern, is ignored.

Pinduoduo (PDD) has filled in the gap and has recorded exponential growth over the past few years. As of Feb 21, 2018, PDD ranks #3 overall in the Chinese iTunes app store ranking for free apps, after popular apps like Tik Tok (aka Douyin) and WeChat, and ahead of other shopping apps like Taobao. PDD went from 100 million yuan ($16 million) GMV a month in early 2016 to 4 billion yuan ($630 million) GMV a month by 2017, putting it in fourth place behind Alibaba, JD, and Vipshop.

Although Alibaba dismissed the speculations, the two services do share a similar demographics in users from third-to fourth-tier cities and the elderly.

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China issues first license plate for electric vehicle made by a tech company https://technode.com/2018/03/20/china-issues-first-license-plate-for-electric-vehicle-made-by-a-tech-company/ https://technode.com/2018/03/20/china-issues-first-license-plate-for-electric-vehicle-made-by-a-tech-company/#respond Tue, 20 Mar 2018 05:30:07 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=64277 xpengChinese electric car startup Xiaopeng Motors, also known as XPENG, is expected to receive a specialized license plate today for its electric models from the traffic regulator of Guangzhou, local media is reporting. This is the first time for a Chinese municipality to issue an official plate to electric cars made by a tech firm. Chinese internet […]]]> xpeng

Chinese electric car startup Xiaopeng Motors, also known as XPENG, is expected to receive a specialized license plate today for its electric models from the traffic regulator of Guangzhou, local media is reporting. This is the first time for a Chinese municipality to issue an official plate to electric cars made by a tech firm.

Chinese internet firms are racing to the automobile industry that’s been dominated by traditional car makers like GM and VW. But while some of the pioneers in this trend plan to move into mass production, a regulatory gap has put them at an inferior position when competing with traditional competitors because there’s no precedent in the country to issue plates for electric cars made by tech firms. This leads to very practical problems that might hinder these electric cars from hitting the road.

Read More: China to see electric vehicle boom before the rest of the world: Tom Tan, President of BorgWarner China

For all the in-use electric cars that made by XPENG, NIO, and WM Motor, they run with a temporary paper plate, the report cited people with knowledge of the matter. The current news means that Chinese tech companies are finally gaining an equal footing with their traditional competitors in the electric car manufacturing market.

China’s nascent electric sector is booming quickly with the emergence of several unicorns such XPENG, NIO and WM Motor. The government is also quickly adapting to new mobility technologies. NIO, a Chinese electric vehicle startup, and the state-owned automaker SAIC Motor just received the licenses for road tests of driverless vehicles.

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Updated: JD’s O2O service seals partnership with commercial chain store Better Life https://technode.com/2018/03/20/jd-daojia-better-life/ https://technode.com/2018/03/20/jd-daojia-better-life/#respond Tue, 20 Mar 2018 03:06:16 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=64260 JD DaojiaUpdated 11:44 am 21 March 2018: The post has been updated to correct a factual mistake. JD is partnering with commercial chain store Better Life rather not BBK the electronic device maker. They both have the same Chinese name in 步步高. JD is expanding its presence in the O2O field through a new partnership with […]]]> JD Daojia

Updated 11:44 am 21 March 2018: The post has been updated to correct a factual mistake. JD is partnering with commercial chain store Better Life rather not BBK the electronic device maker. They both have the same Chinese name in 步步高.

JD is expanding its presence in the O2O field through a new partnership with Better Life, the commercial chain company that’s principally engaged in wholesale and retail business.

JD’s new cooperation deal means that users will be able to purchase directly from Better Life’s offline stores via JD Daojia, the O2O arm of JD. Items ordered on JD Daojia will be dispatched directly from Better Life’s 200+ brick-and-mortar stores scattered in cities like Changsha, Nanjing, Chengdu, and Chongqing. In addition, the partnership will extend to warehouse, membership system and promotion activities. The first batch of partnership stores will be launched in April.

This deal is part of a partnership between Better Life, Tencent, and JD (in which Tencent has a stake). The three parties signed a strategic partnership at the end of February this year.

JD Daojia started as a one-hour delivery service amid China’s O2O boom and now partners with over 100,000 local merchants and provides on-demand grocery, fresh products, snacks, flowers, baking, and pharmacy shopping in over 30 cities, with more than 50 million registered customers and 20 million monthly active users.

Founded in 1995, Better Life is principally engaged in retailing, e-commerce, real estate, fintech, and logistics. As of present Better Life have over 590 physical stores in southern part of China with a annual revenue of RMB 37 billion in 2017.

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Enjoy being slow: Why Chinese tech companies are embracing a slower culture https://technode.com/2018/03/15/slow-company/ https://technode.com/2018/03/15/slow-company/#respond Thu, 15 Mar 2018 10:16:25 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=64039 In a movie with Chinese kungfu star Jet Li, Alibaba Group co-founder and executive chairman Jack Ma defeats eight celebrity martial artists in just 20 minutes. Not only does the mini-film try to portray Jack Ma’s unbeatable position in China’s tech industry, it also references the most commonly cited similarity between the tech industry and China’s ancient […]]]>

In a movie with Chinese kungfu star Jet Li, Alibaba Group co-founder and executive chairman Jack Ma defeats eight celebrity martial artists in just 20 minutes. Not only does the mini-film try to portray Jack Ma’s unbeatable position in China’s tech industry, it also references the most commonly cited similarity between the tech industry and China’s ancient martial arts: “There is no impregnable defense, only speed defines the winner”.

If you have been tracking the developments in China tech, it’s hard to ignore this trend: the life cycle of emerging industries—an initial boom followed by the multiplication of competitors and finally market consolidation—is dramatically shortened while startups are forced to move faster in a bid to stay ahead. Apart from startups, other parties involved, investors and regulators, for instance, are also forced to keep up with the shift.

Not every company, however, follows these principles. In fact, lots of entrepreneurs believe in something that’s completely the opposite. Instead of aiming for a breakneck development, they prefer a slower—but more deliberate—path.

Such examples can be found in all the hidden tech giants like hipster social network Douban, social video sharing app Kuaishou and smartphone maker OnePlus. They might not be the names you would find in tech headlines every day, but you know they are the brands that influence the lives of a lot of people.

Side effects of moving fast

Of course, being fast has its benefits, but it also brings side effects that are likely to burn you out before the race is over. A “speed for speed’s sake” approach is taking Chinese tech companies to extremes. Sometimes the battle fosters unhealthy practices.

A report from Tencent Tech notes that 80 percent of the country’s startups are exaggerating their funding rounds to create hype, intimidate competitors, or force higher valuations for later rounds. There might be short-term gains, but it will hurt the company by putting it in a position where it is not able to achieve sustainable growth in the long-term.

Endless marketing campaigns and public spats are other trends fueled by the need for speed. Defining how fast a company can go, especially in comparison with their competitors, could be something really serious for Chinese companies. Back in 2016 when Didi and Uber are deeply entangled in the land grabbing battle, both companies were in disagreement about who owns what in the ride-hailing market. This fosters competition that leads to irrational spending in operation and marketing.

Slow companies become a nascent force in China

More and more companies take it as a compliment when people call them slow. Because lots of entrepreneurs have achieved great success by adopting this deliberated approach, sacrificing some speed for a healthier outlook in the long-term does make sense for them.

“We would test our product before launch three times or more, even if it involves only a small feature update,” said Chen Danian, founder and CEO of Wifi Master Key, the Wifi hotspot sharing app that claims over 900 million users globally as of June 2016.

“When users are using Wifi Master Key 3.0 version a while back, our team already had a much more sophisticated 4.0 version ready. We postponed its launch for a small connectivity problem that was discovered in testing because we want to make solid steps in our way forward,” Chen told local media when explaining how slow culture influences the company.

In addition to the dedication to polish products, another characteristic of the slow companies is that they choose to gain users through word-of-mouth rather than excessive marketing campaigns. This strategy might miss the chance to achieve user surge in short-term, it would build a group of dedicated core users with high user stickiness, which many sees as an advantage for future monetization.

For Xiao Yi, founder and CEO of online tourism site Qiongyou, being slow is more about keeping track of your original goal and team culture.While most fast companies take user demands as their No.1 priority, Qiongyou adheres to a core value that emphasizes the demand of employees. Firstly, it’s because all our employees come from our users. Secondly, they are the force that drives the growth of this company. From the beginning of Qiongyou, I tried my best to talk with every employee before they are on board to make sure that we could build a solid team, where every member fully understands the company culture,” he said.

It’s not an easy thing to do

“It’s difficult for tech startups to slow down in China since the market is usually filled with hypes from your competitors,” said Xiao. Apart from fierce competitors, investors are often believed as a major reason that fuels the fast culture.

The Didi and Uber China merger came after reports of mounting pressure from investors who were concerned Uber was wasting money in a market it could not win. The same reasoning is also behind Didi’s merger with Kuaidi, and most recently, the long-rumored merger between ofo and Mobike.

“Backing slow companies is not a common strategy for investors because most of them have return deadlines. This is a practical problem. The growth timeline for slow companies is challenging for most funds,” Ken Xu, managing partner at Gobi Partners, told TechNode.

“But slow companies are still the choice for top or mature funds, who have enough patience to lay out in companies they see long-term potentials. Just as the old saying goes—time is the best friend of good companies. In most cases, moving slowly in early stage does not mean there’s no potential in the long-term. Sometimes, the returns of slow companies are really impressive. … Also, slow companies tend to pay more attention to social issues and user experiences. This perspective may help the investors to better understand the technologies and business models of these companies,” he added.

Fast vs slow: Finding the best pace for you

“There’s a prerequisite in determining which path to take. Startups fall into different types: those want to solve immediate social problems and those to create social values in the long-term, or both,” Andy Li CEO of fintech startup Silot told TechNode. “Moving fast might be a better choice for the first category, and slow would be optimal for the second group, which could take their time in constructing a distinctive style and system.” 

Moving fast is obviously still the mainstream mindset in driving Chinese startups and it’s still going to be for the short-term. We do hope, however, that more companies choose a reasonable pace.

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China’s tech firms are adapting to an increasingly IP sensitive environment https://technode.com/2018/03/14/ip-china/ https://technode.com/2018/03/14/ip-china/#respond Wed, 14 Mar 2018 02:15:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63805 IP change in ChinaOver the past few decades, China has been perceived as a land of copycats where local firms duplicate proven technologies and business models from the West without giving due credit. Counterfeit apparel, blatant technology infringements and pirated movies are still stereotypical portrayals of  the state of intellectual property (IP) protection dynamics in the Middle Kingdom. […]]]> IP change in China

Over the past few decades, China has been perceived as a land of copycats where local firms duplicate proven technologies and business models from the West without giving due credit. Counterfeit apparel, blatant technology infringements and pirated movies are still stereotypical portrayals of  the state of intellectual property (IP) protection dynamics in the Middle Kingdom. Things, however, are starting to change.

The improvements in China’s IP protection environment can be seen on various levels: an increasing number of patents filed by local companiesIP-related lawsuits, as well as the country’s more important position globally as a key venue for patent litigation.

These shifts are of vital importance for Chinese tech firms. While IP is forming a more significant portion of their overall value, Chinese tech companies with long-term vision are adapting to these changes accordingly.

TechNode got a chance to talk with Xiang Wang, China IP Practice Head at international law firm Orrick, on a range of topics on recent development in Chinese patent laws and their implications for Chinese tech firms. As part of the team that helps China form IP policies, Wang has seen the changes since the very beginning.

Wakening IP awareness driven by decade-long government effort

Although these transitions are happening fast, they don’t come overnight and are the results of years of concerted efforts from the whole nation. China’s radical paradigm shift in IP industry is taking a top-down approach. 

“The change really is from the central government of China,” said Wang. “The policy is that China is to become an IP exporting country. Based on that, China has over the years reshaped its laws and regulations to set up all kinds of educational programs, amended trademark law and patent law. Also, the government provides incentives including money for Chinese companies to file patents, especially internationally,” he noted.

Data shows that these supporting policies have incentivized Chinese companies to create and file for IP. Chinese companies filed more than 1 million patent applications in 2015, more than one third of the total number of patents filed globally. Now China is the world’s #1 patent and trademark country, filing more than the US and Japan.

“While Chinese invention patents are substantively examined, people may say many of Chinese utility model and design patents are ‘trash’, because these patents are not substantively examined by the patent office. However, many do not realize such patents can create a huge advantage when asserting them in Chinese courts for alleged infringement. The effort to invalidate such patents is tremendous,” Wang commented.

In addition to a complete legal system, several macro-level measures are boosting the change. The Chinese government has reshaped its judicial system to increase the damages awarded via Chinese courts, which in turn adds an incentive for companies to file lawsuits in China.

“There are some damages awards over 50 million RMB, some maybe even over hundreds of millions of RMB. Basically, litigation is a way to create a monetary reward for plaintiffs. Also, it’s a tool to legally deter competition. People realize it’s great to file patents, trademarks, sue competitors, and hopefully they will get big damages that would actually create a very competitive edge for plaintiffs,” said Wang.

In addition, the IP environment has been improving over the years. The judges are better equipped with IP and technology knowledge, so that helps the IP system as a whole.

IP and globalization

Facing a saturating market, Chinese tech firms—especially electronic device manufacturers—have embarked on the voyage of overseas expansion. While competing on the global level, IP is inevitably very important both as an offensive and defensive tactic.

Companies are increasingly looking at multiple jurisdictions on an international level, a landscape in which China is attaining a higher ranking. They feel they are being treated more fairly and it’s a market they can’t ignore.

“US and China are two key litigation venues when we want to sue a company. China is usually the place where the alleged infringer makes products and the US is usually the market where it sells the products, in addition to selling in China. What I want to do is to stamp out this infringer at its source—China–and also from its market, which is both China and the US, putting Europe aside, where the damage is much less,” said Wang, adding “We are seeing more and more Chinese companies using such strategies when going abroad to protect themselves along the way.”

The US market is still a hard nut to crack, so many Chinese companies use Southeast Asia as a launchpad. It’s not only because they have a huge user base that shares similar habits and cultures, but also because there’s an IP gray area. Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo are performing exceedingly well in theSoutheast Asian market, and Huawei sells in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, where there are very few lawsuits.

“It’s a wise strategy since they can test these markets and make their product stronger. But it is just a matter of time [before they enter the US market]. Chinese companies can cross-license when they have acquired more IP. Now, there are a few options when they are sued in the US court: either to defend very hard to invalidate the patent, defend on non-infringement, or pay license fees. Better yet, if they have patents, they may cross license,” he explained.

More Chinese firms are fighting back rather than always being on the defensive. Chinese tech giants like Huawei, ZTE, and Xiaomi are becoming plaintiffs in litigation against foreign companies. Chinese companies have figured out what IP can do for them.

Many see this as a sign of China’s shift toward an IP powerhouse. Wang warns about being over-optimistic but he also agrees that China is moving in this direction. Although less than 5% of all IP cases filed in China each year involve foreign companies, they are receiving increasing attention from the public, according to Wang.

Local innovation and deep tech also drive the trend

Chinese companies are quickly catching up and even exceeding their foreign counterparts in several industries, like bike rental, mobile payment, and live streaming. They want to build up their unique selling proposition, and IP is an ideal tool for this goal.

Furthermore, the awareness of IP can be tracked to the inception of a company. In the past, IP was often not a top priority for startups, mostly because it would be too expensive a proposition for them to act on. But now deeper tech is gaining momentum.

Read More: Here’s how Chinese VCs are adapting to the ever-changing startup scene

“The strength of a company’s IP has always been a consideration in our pre-investment due diligence,” John Hsin from Huaxing Growth Capital told TechNode. “But it’s taken on greater significance as our investment portfolio has grown to include more companies in cutting-edge areas such as artificial intelligence, big data or biosciences that are commercializing technological innovations. For these companies, we take a harder look at their IP and give it more weight in our investment decisions.”

China’s continued IP challenges

Despite the huge number of IP filings, a large number of them are useless. “Because Chinese patents, especially utility model and design patents, are not substantively examined by the patent office,” Wang pointed out.

Sometimes, people use loopholes to take advantage of supporting policies. China has three patent models: invention patents, utility model patents, and design patents. Only invention patents are substantively examined by the patent office. Some Chinese companies file those patents just to get a patent number.

“We have seen situations where asserted utility model or design patent was a virtual copy of another US patent application. The patent office in China does not substantively examine them so you basically have filed a patent that’s no good. But such a patent would give them ‘patent power’, a significant benefit because they will be able to use the patent to file a lawsuit and/or apply for high-and new- tech company status, from which they will get tax benefits, tax subsidies, and hukou [residence permits for Chinese citizens] for employees,” Wang said. To make it worse, Chinese courts don’t penalize frivolous patents or just levy a small fine.

The more difficult obstacles, however, originate from a more basic level compared with the US litigation system. Whoever makes a claim in China bears the burden to prove, but often it’s difficult to find enough evidence with the single effort of one party.  The United States’ discovery system creates a channel for litigants to see the facts of the case, according to Wang.

The second difference is that if a litigant in the US produces fake evidence, the opponent can file a summary judgment to penalize the litigant for producing falsified evidence. The litigant will likely lose the case by summary judgment. “If I prove you lied one time, then I assume you lie every time. But that’s not the case in China, the penalty against falsifying evidence is so low that people don’t take this seriously,” said Wang.

Through years of efforts, China’s copycat stereotype is vanishing as its IP legal system improves and public awareness of IP rights grows. Top Chinese smartphones makers are using IP more tactfully both as the attack and defense measures in their global expansion. Music streaming services are willing to invest big bucks in copyright, and then being able to seek settlement through more sophisticated measures of copyright swaps. Video streaming sites are building their own IP for self-generated content and reaching external partnerships at the same time. These developments should at least be seen as evidence to prove that the country is on the track to a mature IP environment suitable for the innovation it wants to foster.

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Beijing to set up standard organ for blockchain and distributed ledger technologies https://technode.com/2018/03/13/beijing-blockchain-committee/ https://technode.com/2018/03/13/beijing-blockchain-committee/#respond Tue, 13 Mar 2018 08:23:53 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63946 China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology announced Monday its plans to set up a national committee for the standardization of blockchain and distributed ledger technologies. The move comes against the backdrop of an increasingly standardized industry. International standardization entities, including the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and World Wide Web Consortium […]]]>

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology announced Monday its plans to set up a national committee for the standardization of blockchain and distributed ledger technologies.

The move comes against the backdrop of an increasingly standardized industry. International standardization entities, including the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) have pioneered this initiative. China is a participant in drafting the standards compiled by the blockchain arm of ISO, according to the announcement.

China has witnessed an impressive growth for the sector with a 30-fold increase in the total cryptocurrency market capitalization during the year. The enthusiasm of Chinese tech giants is evident in the increasing number of firms involved in the sector. Baidu, Xiaomi and NetEase all launched their crypto pet project. E-commerce giant JD launched AI Catapult Accelerator to focus on blockchain startups.

But there is always a tricky side of the boom—regulations. Chinese policymakers are eager to fuel wider adoption of blockchain technologies by setting up framework and standards.

But on the other hand, they are taking a very cautious and gradual approach to the goal to protect and educate investors amid the under-unregulated cryptocurrency ecosystem. Despite the rumors for a centralized digital currency, China’s central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said that the country, which still does not recognize Bitcoin as a legitimate payment method, is not in a hurry to issue its own digital currency.

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WeChat’s micro retailers come under scrutiny in run up to World Consumer Rights Day https://technode.com/2018/03/13/weishang-customer-right-weishang/ https://technode.com/2018/03/13/weishang-customer-right-weishang/#respond Tue, 13 Mar 2018 07:08:23 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63932 WeChat’s micro store business Weishang (微商) is challenging Alibaba’s Taobao for e-commerce domination in China. It seems that the service is going through the very same problems that Taobao has experienced previously. Product quality, marketing spam, and after-sales services are three top concerns for Weishang, a report from the Beijing Customer Association shows. As a feature […]]]>

WeChat’s micro store business Weishang (微商) is challenging Alibaba’s Taobao for e-commerce domination in China. It seems that the service is going through the very same problems that Taobao has experienced previously. Product quality, marketing spam, and after-sales services are three top concerns for Weishang, a report from the Beijing Customer Association shows.

As a feature of WeChat, Weishang allows users to sell goods and services to their contacts, advertising them through the app’s status update function, Moment. In addition to the WeChat, a giant traffic source that claims over 1 billion monthly active users, the business is shifting to more diversified means for obtaining traffic, such as live streaming and short videos.

Despite the growth, Weishang is haunted by some of the long-term headaches in China’s e-commerce market. The report shows that around 54% of local reporting concerning Weishang in 2017 was related to product quality problems. Of them, customer complaints on unbranded and dateless products by a nameless factory is the most severe one.

Marketing spam and false marketing are also very common, especially in cosmetics and clothing industry.

Poor after-sales service is another factor against the reputation of Weishang retailers. It’s extremely difficult to return and/or exchange merchandise, according to the report. The case is even worse when it involves the purchase of healthcare products, cosmetics, and clothes. Over 50% of the weishang declined return and exchange requests, the report shows.

Customer right issues are stealing tech headlines this week. We are only days ahead of the World Consumer Rights Day on March 15, when the country’s state broadcaster CCTV will hold an evening gala exposing bad commercial behavior. In recent years, customer right problems involving tech companies have taken center stage. Apple was forced into a rare apology in 2013 after criticism of the show of its after-sales service. Food delivery app Ele.me was accused of listing unlicensed restaurants on its platform.

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ofo announces $866 million funding round led by Alibaba amid cash strain rumors https://technode.com/2018/03/13/ofo-raises-866-million-round/ https://technode.com/2018/03/13/ofo-raises-866-million-round/#respond Tue, 13 Mar 2018 01:49:12 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63921 ofo raises $866 million in latest funding round led by Alibaba]]>

Chinese dockless bike rental titan ofo announced a new $866 million financing led by Alibaba Group, with participation from Haofeng Group, Tianhe Capital, Ant Financial and Junli Captial. The round marked a new funding record in the bike-sharing industry, the company claimed in an official statement.

ofo uses a combination of debt and equity financing for this round, the company noted. Rumors circulate in Chinese media earlier this month that ofo has secured RMB 1.77 billion ($280 million) funding from Alibaba through chattel mortgage financing. ofo declined to comment on the relation between these two pieces of news.

Dai Wei, founder and CEO of ofo said:

As the global leader in the bike-sharing sector, ofo has been transitioning from a phase of rapid growth to a stage of high-quality development. ofo will continue to put our customers first and lead the bike-sharing industry with technological innovation and efficient operations.

The funding comes at a time when it’s most needed while ofo is reportedly scrambling for cash. As a top player in China’s bike rental industry, ofo has been a darling of venture capitalist since its establishment. But its fundraising momentum slowed a bit since last July after receiving a $700 million Series E and that puts huge pressure on the company, which is entangled in cash-driving competition with Mobike.

The most popular theory behind ofo’s financing dilemma is that Didi is standing in the way, but Didi and ofo denied the accusation. Either way, it would be still interesting to know what changes this financing would bring to ofo’s board.

ofo reiterates its determination for independent development in an emailed announcement. “Ofo will drive long-term success independently with the continuing support of leading investors,” said the firm.

While the local market saturates, both ofo and Mobike are accelerating their expansion to overseas markets, which is expected to become a major driver for the industry.

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NetEase and Alibaba copyright swap deal may put an end to China’s music streaming war https://technode.com/2018/03/06/netease-ali-music-copyright-swap/ https://technode.com/2018/03/06/netease-ali-music-copyright-swap/#respond Tue, 06 Mar 2018 08:53:31 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63628 Tencent Music TME quarterly earnings revenueChina’s copyright re-licensing circle is now complete. NetEase Music and Ali Music Group announced today that they have signed an agreement to swap music copyrights in a bid to enlarge the music pool of both platforms. NetEase Music has access to catalogs of leading music producers like EE-Media, Avex Group, Forward Music and HIM International Music […]]]> Tencent Music TME quarterly earnings revenue

China’s copyright re-licensing circle is now complete. NetEase Music and Ali Music Group announced today that they have signed an agreement to swap music copyrights in a bid to enlarge the music pool of both platforms.

NetEase Music has access to catalogs of leading music producers like EE-Media, Avex Group, Forward Music and HIM International Music Inc., who hold the copyrights from a series of hit singers in Taiwan, Japan, and the Chinese mainland.

Read more: Music streaming apps upping the ante in a crowded market

On the other hand, Ali Music Group is reciprocating with a copyright swap for the catalogs of Taiwan’s Rock Records, Korean’s S.M. and BMG. These music production firms have a rich list of highly-coveted titles from Chinese and Korean top musicians such as Jonathan Lee, Wakin Chau, Fish Leong, Super Junior, Girl’s Generation, EXO, etc.

In order to regulate the music market, China issued a ban on unlicensed music streaming in 2015, which thereafter sparked heated competition for exclusive music copyrights. For instance, NetEase’s deal with Taiwan’s leading music production company HIM International Music Inc. for less than 2,000 songs cost them a whopping RMB 150 million ($23 million), local media reported.

The country’s copyright authorities play as important a role in settling the money-burning battle as in starting it. Since last year, China’s copyright office called for major music streaming players to discuss issues confronting the industry.

Through governmental mediation, Tencent Music and Entertainment Group (TME), which owns over 75% share in the country’s music streaming market, collaborated with Ali Music Group last year. TME then reached cross-licensing agreement with NetEase Music in this February after their copyright disputes. In addition to collaboration with local firms, Tencent is also actively seeking partnerships with foreign counterparts like Spotify in preparation for its estimated $10 billion initial public offering.

Read more: How Tencent’s empire is making music pay

China’s music streaming market is becoming a field for big players. Upon completion of the current deal, a copyright alliance among China’s top music streaming players has been formed. The formation of this alliance may ease the competition to some extent, but it leaves little space for smaller players. Smaller digital music streaming app Duomi has terminated its music streaming service this week.

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YY’s esports video streaming arm Huya files for US IPO https://technode.com/2018/03/06/yys-esports-video-streaming-arm-huya-files-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/03/06/yys-esports-video-streaming-arm-huya-files-us-ipo/#respond Tue, 06 Mar 2018 05:18:21 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63613 esports chinaChinese live streaming company YY is planning to spin off its gaming streaming unit Huya for an independent IPO. The company has submitted a draft registration statement on a confidential basis to the US Securities and Exchange Committee for a possible listing in the US market. The parent firm made the news public in its […]]]> esports china

Chinese live streaming company YY is planning to spin off its gaming streaming unit Huya for an independent IPO. The company has submitted a draft registration statement on a confidential basis to the US Securities and Exchange Committee for a possible listing in the US market.

The parent firm made the news public in its annual report without giving further details about the IPO timetable and size. An earlier Bloomberg report put the unit’s valuation at around $200 million.

“In the fourth quarter of 2017, driven by both YY Live and Huya, our mobile live streaming monthly active users increased by 36.6% year over year to 76.5 million, and our total live streaming paying users increased by 25.0% year over year to 6.5 million,” stated David Xueling Li, Chairman and acting Chief Executive Officer of YY.

Huya’s improving financial performance may add appeal to investors. Its total net revenue nearly doubled YoY from RMB 339 million ($53 million) to RMB 741 million in the fourth quarter of 2017.

Read More: The quiet rise of China’s $3 billion e-sports market

China’s live streaming boom spans many verticals from online shopping to education, but gaming is where it first prospered and therefore one of the most crowded areas with several established dominators. In addition to Huya, another Chinese Twitch counterpart Douyu is rumored for an IPO in Hong Kong at $300 million to $400 million valuation (paywall).

A major driver for the quick rise of game streaming is the prospering e-sport industry. Valued at $3 billion in 2016, the e-sports market in China is expected to hit 220 million audiences at the end of 2017, says the CTI e-sports report.

After a lackluster 2017, several long-rumored Chinese IPO candidates are making their moves. Local media is brimmed with details about Xiaomi’s listing. Last week, both video streaming service iQiyi and anime streaming platform Bilibili filed for US IPO.

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China’s Quora Zhihu tightens content control amid 7-day app store delisting https://technode.com/2018/03/06/zhihu-content-control/ https://technode.com/2018/03/06/zhihu-content-control/#respond Tue, 06 Mar 2018 03:01:20 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63600 Zhihu, China’s answer to Quora, announced Monday that the platform has upgraded its community management rules, comment system, and security system, local media is reporting (in Chinese). The platform will maintain the rights to suspend comment functions and open pre-publication review for comments. At the same time, a machine plus human approach was adopted as […]]]>

Zhihu, China’s answer to Quora, announced Monday that the platform has upgraded its community management rules, comment system, and security system, local media is reporting (in Chinese).

The platform will maintain the rights to suspend comment functions and open pre-publication review for comments. At the same time, a machine plus human approach was adopted as well to strengthen content regulation, according to a statement released by the firm.

This announcement can be translated as quick response from the company under pressure from government. On March 2, Beijing cyberspace authorities ordered Zhihu delisted from all app stores due to their inefficiency to purge “illicit information” on the platform. The suspension spans seven days from March 2 to March 9. The app is unavailable during the period, but people who have already installed the app will not be affected.

Launched in December 2010, Zhihu is the go-to place for Chinese internet users who want to seek expert insights into various areas. The firm has become China’s first unicorn in knowledge sharing sector upon the completion of $100 million Series D in Jan. 2017.

Chinese internet giants are getting more restrictive and knowledge sharing service, which may easily involve sensitive topics like politics and human rights, is one of the most closely watched sectors by local authorities.

Fenda, the voice message Q&A app that went viral in June 2016, has gone through something similar. The service was suspended for 47 days in August 2016. The firm claimed the prolonged time out was meant for scheming larger plans. But the more popular theory is that the service is restructuring under the pressure of regulators, because would be weird for a new hit app to suspend over a month only for updating, losing the best timing for obtaining users.

Governmental influence expands well beyond knowledge sharing. Some of China’s most popular apps like Weibo and Toutiao all faced backlash once they touched a nerve with the authorities.

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Meituan rumored to roll out ride-hailing services in 7 cities to take on Didi https://technode.com/2018/03/01/meituan-ride-hailing-rumors/ https://technode.com/2018/03/01/meituan-ride-hailing-rumors/#respond Thu, 01 Mar 2018 08:36:03 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63349 Meituan’s ambition to reignite the ride-hailing war is getting serious. The Chinese O2O and e-commerce giant is rumored to launch on-demand car service in seven cities on 16 March, Chinese media TechWeb is reporting (in Chinese). Major cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, Hangzhou, Wenzhou, Fuzhou and Xiamen are included in the list. After launching ride-hailing […]]]>

Meituan’s ambition to reignite the ride-hailing war is getting serious. The Chinese O2O and e-commerce giant is rumored to launch on-demand car service in seven cities on 16 March, Chinese media TechWeb is reporting (in Chinese). Major cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, Hangzhou, Wenzhou, Fuzhou and Xiamen are included in the list.

After launching ride-hailing service in Nanjing last year, the company announced plans to enter more cities like Beijing and Shanghai. Shortly after its announcement, however, the company was beset with setbacks for its legal status in running ride-hailing services in these cities, where separate permits from different local municipalities are needed.

Meituan Dache announced that it would roll out in Beijing on January 12, but order from Beijing authorities has forced the firm to postpone its launch. The company announced in January that it has obtained local permission in Nanjing and Shanghai.

A company spokesperson denied the rumor without giving any details.

Even though there are still uncertainties, Meituan has been successful in piling up anticipations for the new feature. Last December, the firm has rolled out a registration page where users can vote for their cities. At the time, Meituan said they would launch the service once a city gets 200k votes.

On top of that, Meituan also leveraged subsidies, the most effective way to secure users in a field where Didi Chuxing dominates. Under its rule, the first 200k passenger registers can get ride coupons and first the 50k (Beijing) or 20k (Shanghai) drivers can enjoy commission free service.

Chinese upstart tech firms may boom from a certain vertical, but there’s a general trend for them expand into an all-inclusive platform. This trend inevitably results in business overlap between major companies, especially in red-hot verticals like ride-hailing. Similarly, Didi is reportedly working toward the launch of a food delivery service—one of Meituan’s core businesses.

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Didi deepens partnership with Renrenche for expansion in auto trading business https://technode.com/2018/03/01/didi-deepens-partnership-with-renrenche-for-expansion-in-auto-trading-business/ https://technode.com/2018/03/01/didi-deepens-partnership-with-renrenche-for-expansion-in-auto-trading-business/#respond Thu, 01 Mar 2018 05:11:02 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63339 didiRide-hailing giant Didi Chuxing has inked a strategic partnership with Chinese online used-car trading marketplace Renrenche to offer comprehensive solutions for vehicle supply and maintenance services. The move comes five months after the on-demand car company invested a hefty $200 million in Renrenche, a classified site that allows car owners to sell directly to other […]]]> didi

Ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing has inked a strategic partnership with Chinese online used-car trading marketplace Renrenche to offer comprehensive solutions for vehicle supply and maintenance services.

The move comes five months after the on-demand car company invested a hefty $200 million in Renrenche, a classified site that allows car owners to sell directly to other consumers. The four-year-old company covers over 100 Chinese cities.

In addition to used-car trading, the partnership will also bring the duo to new car trading and after-sales business. This year, Didi’s after-sales unit plans to set up car maintenance stores across the country where Renrenche users will be supported as well.

“Creating a one-stop platform for passengers and drivers is the top priority for Didi,” said Didi CEO Cheng Wei. “Didi looks to build a close long-term partnership with Renrenche,” Didi spokesperson told TechNode.

Didi is well on its way to expand beyond core business in ride hailing to all smart transportation-related services in a bit to create new growth momentums. The partnership with Renrenche reveals its greater auto ambition and the logic behind this tie-up is a no brainer–Renrenche’s auto resources could easily lower the operation costs for Didi drivers by giving easy access to a quality vehicle supply.

Under the same initiative, Didi is partnering with automakers to build a car-sharing platform and has expanded to charging and gas business. Gas business is now profitable, according to a spokesperson from the firm. Other sectors the company is looking at include autonomous driving, bike rental, and auto financing.

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WeChat Pay tries to duplicate domestic success overseas with killer recipe: social networking https://technode.com/2018/03/01/wechat-pay-social-networking/ https://technode.com/2018/03/01/wechat-pay-social-networking/#respond Thu, 01 Mar 2018 02:25:20 +0000 https://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=63324 WeChat Pay tries to duplicate its domestic success overseas with killer recipe: social networking]]>

Though started as a relatively latecomer compared with its arch rival Alipay, WeChat Pay has recorded exponential growth in China since its launch in 2013. Its remarkable domestic success mainly stems from the fact that it’s an extension of social networking and IM tool WeChat, which guarantees high-frequency use from users. Fully noting the power of social networking features, WeChat Pay looks to tap the overseas market with the same recipe amid an increasing robust demand for mobile payment from Chinese outbound tourists.

“As mobile payment is increasingly welcomed by mainland Chinese outbound tourists, WeChat Pay plans to constantly invest in its cross-border business, with the aim of duplicating the domestic WeChat lifestyle overseas,” Grace Yin, WeChat Pay Director for Overseas Operation today commented on the latest white paper issued by Nielsen, which found that over 90% Chinese tourists would use mobile payment overseas given the option.

Read More: Nielsen, Alipay white paper shows overseas merchants cannot ignore Chinese mobile payments

What most overseas merchants lack is not a payment tool, according to the WeChat Pay, who said existing payment methods (credit cards) are enough. “What local merchants really need is social interaction, a lasting communication channel to connect with the shoppers which allows future promotion and communication.”

Instead of serving just as a payment tool, WeChat Pay wants to create a lasting link between overseas merchants and their 800 million users. Chinese tourists can make payment in Chinese yuan and merchants receive the funds in local currency. Even after they leave the shop, shoppers can still get promotion and aftersales service through WeChat.

Through serving Chinese outbound tourists, WeChat Pay has established partnerships with a growing number of overseas merchants with the ability to handle transactions in 13 different currencies in 25 countries and regions. “Over 70% of the mobile internet traffic consumed by Chinese travelers in Korea was consumed on WeChat,” WeChat Pay quoted its Korean partner as saying.

Read More: 688 million people used WeChat hongbao on Chinese New Year’s Eve

While mobile payment is quickly taking over China, Chinese people are experiencing dramatic changes in lifestyle. 74% people stated that they can live for more than a month with only 100 RMB in cash, while 84% people reported that they could accept a totally cashless life, according to the 2017 Mobile Payment Usage In China Report.

The mega app is adding momentum to China’s swift transformation towards a smarter lifestyle. WeChat hongbao is changing China’s tradition of cash-giving on festive occasions, while the cooperation with ride-hailing app DiDi—which the parent company Tencent holds a stake in—revolutionized how people commute in China. Social interaction has always been the driving force behind payments on WeChat, and it is globalizing with WeChat Pay expand overseas.

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Chinese smartphone shipments slump 16.6% in Q1 2018 https://technode.com/2018/02/11/chinese-smartphone-shipments-slump-16-6-q1-2018/ https://technode.com/2018/02/11/chinese-smartphone-shipments-slump-16-6-q1-2018/#respond Sun, 11 Feb 2018 10:21:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62824 China, once the world’s engine for smartphone growth, is on the wane.]]>

After witnessing its first ever annual decline in shipment 2017, the Chinese smartphone market, once the world’s engine for smartphone growth, continues to slow down. The country’s smartphone shipment dwindled by a drastic 16.65% to 39 million handsets (in Chinese) in the first quarter of 2018, according to a report released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

The plunge not only indicates weaker demand from the consumers but also languishing supply form smartphone makers. Only 51 new smartphones made their debut during the period, down 19% compared with a year before.

China’s smartphone shipment (Image credit:MIIT)

Chinese smartphone makers have a grip on the local market with the sales of over 33.49 million handsets or a predominant 85.7%. Of the total newly released devices, 45 were from Chinese smartphone makers, accounting for 88.2% of the total. But the overall drop affected everyone in the field, shipment from Chinese makers dipped 18% year-on-year.

Market share of smartphone between Chinese (85.7%) and overseas makers (14.3%) (Image credit:MIIT)

Android system still dominates China, representing a 92.9% of the smartphones shipped in the period.

As a satuating market slows down the growth, more Chinese smartphone makers are exploring opportunities in the overseas market.  Leading players like Xiaomi, Vivo, and OPPO have seen momentum in South East Asian markets and Huawei in Europe, Latin America and the Middle East.

But these inroads are not without twists and turns. Xiaomi has been entangled in a series of patent litigations ever since its India expansion. Huawei, on the other hand, had their American dream fall apart after the failed deal with US telecom carrier AT&T.

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Didi Chuxing speeds up autonomous driving project as prototype cars hit the road https://technode.com/2018/02/11/didi-chuxing-speeds-autonomous-driving-project-prototype-cars-hit-road/ https://technode.com/2018/02/11/didi-chuxing-speeds-autonomous-driving-project-prototype-cars-hit-road/#respond Sun, 11 Feb 2018 08:52:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62814 Chinese transportation giant Didi Chuxing revealed that they have completed a series of driving tests for its autonomous cars, marking another milestone along its way in keeping up with the global craze towards self-driving vehicles. In a video showcased at the company’s annual meeting, Company CTO Bob Zhang made an introduction from the inside of […]]]>

Chinese transportation giant Didi Chuxing revealed that they have completed a series of driving tests for its autonomous cars, marking another milestone along its way in keeping up with the global craze towards self-driving vehicles.

In a video showcased at the company’s annual meeting, Company CTO Bob Zhang made an introduction from the inside of a self-driving vehicle prototype as it drove around the city, navigating around pedestrians, static obstacles, and moving vehicles. “Self-driving technology will greatly enhance the efficiency of transportation, and will be an effective way for filling in the gaps in the supply of transporation services,“ Zhang said.

Didi Chuxing is actively testing over 10 prototyped vehicles in three cities in China and US since last year, the firm noted.

Didi’s autonomous driving car traveling on road (Image credit: Didi Chuxing)

For now, Didi Chuxing is designing self-driving software while the hardware is manufactured by automaker partners. The firm did not name the partners in this specific project, but this shouldn’t be an obstacle given the firm’s extensive cooperation with automobile manufacturers.

Despite the exhilarating progress, the company still keeps a relative low profile in talking about its autonomous vehicle project. And the reasons seem to be fair enough. There’re still lots of uncertainties in the project because “[a]utonomous driving car is influenced by so many things other than technology,” a spokesperson told TechNode.

For example, the firm emphasized that this is just a preliminary testing, rather than a road test in its fullest sense. No comments were given on its position in Didi Chuxing’s business structure and possible collaboration with other services. “Improving transpiration security is the reason why Didi Chuxing invests in self-driving technologies, which is going to find huge application in ride-hailing services. No matter how technology develops, drivers providing quality services could not be replaced,” the spokesperson said.

Interior of Didi’s autonomous driving car (Image credit: Didi Chuxing)

Despite all the uncertainties, one thing is clear: Didi Chuxing is serious about autonomous driving. Among a of series autonomous vehicle-targeted efforts, the transportation titan launched Didi Labs in Mountain View last March to focus on AI-based security and autonomous driving technologies. After that, it launched a self-driving car challenge with Udacity last year. It’s also actively recruiting for AV talents, and plans to put more effort, human resource and investment in AV this year.

Unsurprisingly, the company is facing fierce competition from a slate of rivals home and abroad, from Baidu to Google as well as its frenemy Uber, who also has visions of launching its own autonomous fleets.

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Alibaba’s offline expansion widens to home furnishing with 15% stake purchase in Easyhome https://technode.com/2018/02/11/alibaba-easyhome/ https://technode.com/2018/02/11/alibaba-easyhome/#respond Sun, 11 Feb 2018 06:19:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62796 Alibaba has taken another step in its quest to build a new retail empire. The Chinese tech titan announced today that it will invest approximately RMB 5.45 billion (around $866 million) for a 15% stake in Easyhome (居然之家), China’s leading home improvement supplies and furniture chain operator. Alibaba will support the digital transformation of Easyhome’s […]]]>

Alibaba has taken another step in its quest to build a new retail empire. The Chinese tech titan announced today that it will invest approximately RMB 5.45 billion (around $866 million) for a 15% stake in Easyhome (居然之家), China’s leading home improvement supplies and furniture chain operator.

Alibaba will support the digital transformation of Easyhome’s 223 stores in 29 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities across China. From home design to refurbishment projects, the two parties will provide customers with end to end home improvement solutions, according to an official statement.

The deal comes after aggressive offline expansion made by Alibaba under Jack Ma’s newly coined term “new retail”. The format has seen initial application in a string of offline sectors, either through homegrown brands like Hema and Tao Cafe, alliance with offline retailers like Auchun, or direct investment in retailers such as Sun Art Retail Group and Intime.

This is not the first time for the company to touch home furnishing sector, which boasts a US $130 billion market valie driven by Chinese people’s increased pursuit of a “great life”. After launching a designer home product store House Selection in late 2016, Alibaba opened an IKEA-styled home furnishing flagship store September, 2017.

Founded in 1999, Beijing-based Easyhome is the second largest home improvement supplies and furniture chain operator in China. It also provides home design and refurbishment service as well as operating building material supermarkets. As of December 2017, stores in its building materials and furniture chain recorded sales of over RMB 60 billion.

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The good, the kind of better, and the ugly: WeChat just announced 3 big updates to the platform https://technode.com/2018/02/11/wechat-updates/ https://technode.com/2018/02/11/wechat-updates/#respond Sun, 11 Feb 2018 03:48:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62784 Latest WeChat updates that are going to make it even more ubiquitous.]]>

Before the heat surrounding its latest viral game Tiao Yi Tiao cools off, WeChat released Saturday an updated version of the game by integrating more social and interactive features.

Despite social components, including scoreboards and rankings, the original game was a standalone experience with no interaction with other players. The new version, however, allows two to ten players to compete directly.

Screenshot of Tiao Yi Tiao (Image credit: WeChat)

After inviting WeChat friends, players take turns making their jumps. Failed jumpers only to get watch others play. The principle is the same, however, from the single player: the more successful hops you make, the higher your name will be on a leaderboard. In addition, more WeChat and Chinese-themed visual graphics ahave integrated.

Since its launch in late December last year, the download-free game has become an instant hit among Chinese users with a daily active user of 100 million. Given what the hongbao feature has achieved during previous Spring Festivals, WeChat has reasons to expect another spike of the game during the upcoming holiday.

In addition to the feature what could spice up our leisure lives, WeChat made an update that overjoyed millions of online marketers by allowing them to edit the typos in postings on WeChat official account, the default tool for making online marketing campaigns in China.

Making edits to WeChat Official Account (Image credit: WeChat)

However, WeChat still won’t allow a free-for-all. Each post can be only edited once for up to five changes, be it Chinese characters, English words, figures, punctuation, or spaces. Edits in feature images and abstracts are still unavailable.

As for why only five changes are allowed, Tencent responded, “We want to make sure that the official account managers are really serious about each and every one of their postings. To be responsible for and provide the best reading experiences to their audiences. Less than five changes could guarantee a consistent reading before and after the edits. We will continue to improve and optimize based on user feedback.”

WeChat’s tightening regulation of contents spread to its official account management policy. In a statement made Saturday, the company downsized the numbers of official accounts each entity could register. Individuals can register up to two accounts, down from five, while organization users recorded a more drastic change from 50 to only five official accounts.

Although the platform does make exceptions for these limits, applicants have to go through a longer process to apply for the approvals from WeChat platform and then from relevant authorities.

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SPIRIT is bringing work-life balance to China’s offices with data-driven wellness https://technode.com/2018/02/08/office-fitness-spirit/ https://technode.com/2018/02/08/office-fitness-spirit/#respond Thu, 08 Feb 2018 07:41:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55029 It’s no secret that Chinese people are hard-workers. On the bright side, this culture contributes greatly to the country’s quick economic rise, but it also results in nationwide health problem given the lengthening working hours. In a country where extreme productivity practice like 996 prevails, however, employers, especially corporates, are paying increasing attention the health […]]]>

It’s no secret that Chinese people are hard-workers. On the bright side, this culture contributes greatly to the country’s quick economic rise, but it also results in nationwide health problem given the lengthening working hours. In a country where extreme productivity practice like 996 prevails, however, employers, especially corporates, are paying increasing attention the health and wellness of their employees. The reasoning behind this is a no-brainer: healthy and happy staff makes for a more productive workforce.

For most people, keeping fit is more of a lifestyle choice. Most of the current startups like social fitness app Keep go after individual customers. But Shanghai-based startup SPIRIT thinks we can find a balance between work and life through employee engagement, sports, platform competition and the adoption of wearable technologies.

And this is not only for the benefit of individual employees but for their employers as well. SPIRIT is currently developing a smart platform that can follow and guide corporate employees through their wellness journey, and, in some cases, intuitively understand what and when they need to work physically in order to be more productive.

“We take the best of a fitness service, team building company, a wellness company, an HR company, and we put them into one online platform,” said Jordan Campbell founder and CEO of the startup.

As one of the first companies to target this fledgling industry in China, SPIRIT is tapping into the China market with two approaches. For in-office engagement packages, the platform sends offline trainers on a once or twice weekly basis. A variety of in-house training courses are offered from body strength & stretch, circuit training, Yoga, Pilates and dance fitness. This is all managed through a unique digital platform that enables corporates to access their employee physical wellbeing and milestone data.

Given that the training mostly takes place in the workplace, the SPIRIT’s overhead isn’t high. “From a cash perspective, we have already become cash positive in a month as a result of the companies paying upfront,” the CEO noted.

Wellness event by Spirit (Image credit: Spirit)

The other model includes team building and Corporate Olympics. The platform creates opportunities for corporates and sponsors to network and compete. “We provide customer sports and team building events for corporates. In addition, our Corporate Olympics in October will welcome all the corporate members for a whole day of fitness and training against each other. They are battling for pride,” Jordan said.

Revenue from sponsors of such tournaments is another major source. The aforementioned online platform will enhance the user experience, allowing corporates to measure their performance against their competition, and also internally, whilst setting internal HR incentive and reward systems based on said data.

Read more: Top 7 fitness apps in China in 2017

The startup is already working with naked Hub, Mercedes Benz, Volkswagen and has reached strategic partnerships with Reebok, Shanghai Wow, ofo and Shanghai Sunrise.

Although the office fitness industry is off to a slow start in China, Jordan is bullish on the market prospects given a rising awareness. “Chinese corporate wellness market is going to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 9.1 percent to 2024 and we are jumping on that bandwagon.”

In the long-term, SPIRIT is also planning to implement wearable technology into its platform, bringing the sports competition among corporates to daily life. The HR directors can monitor their employees give them incentive programs as a result.

“The big vision here isn’t just about fitness and sports, but to connect all these corporates together so they can compete in a friendly and networking way,” said Jordan.

Starting a business in China isn’t easy and the task is even more challenging for expat entrepreneurs, who have to defend local competitors that are better funded and connected.

“In China, we do have our first-mover advantages, but I also realized in China first-mover advantage should actually be called the first-scaler advantage, the first person to scale. With our partnerships, we are ahead of the game already. We want to scale very quickly,” said Jordan, who bootstrapped his first startup Verve, an event agency, after working for Bacardi for six years in Shanghai.

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Blockchain investment 2018: A who’s who of blockchain investors and startups in China https://technode.com/2018/02/07/blockchain/ https://technode.com/2018/02/07/blockchain/#respond Wed, 07 Feb 2018 08:37:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62488 Chinese investors behind blockchain technology.]]>

Editor’s note: A version of this article by Zhang Lincheng originally appeared on our sister site, TechNode Chinese.

Blockchain technology has developed by leaps and bounds. But there’s something weird: primary market investors, those who have the keenest business sense, don’t seem very interested.

An executive at China Renaissance Group, a financial advisory firm, told TechNode that only blockchain-focused funds and some individual investors are betting on the sector now, whereas the majority of mainstream funds are still adopting a wait-and-see attitude.

So who is bucking the trend to become the first advocates of blockchain technology? TechNode tries to shed some light on the issue and here’s what we found.

  1. Mainstream funds
  2. Non-mainstream and individual investors
  3. Notable blockchain startup investments

Mainstream funds

ZhenFund

ZhenFund is among the first mainstream funds to embrace blockchain technology. The direct pronouncement for the blockchain revolution made by ZhenFund founder and angel fund guru Bob Xu went viral and instilled great confidence in blockchain entrepreneurs.

Rather than only making predictions, ZhenFund joined the seven-digit RMB angel round of China’s digital currency trading platform and exchange Huobi as early as November 2013. The fund gradually established a footing in the sector over the past few years: investing in Bitcoin trading platform Maicoin in 2014, Bitcoin miner 21Inc in 2015 (the company rebranded as Earn.com, a social media company), and data trading platform GXS in 2017. The fund has backed three ICO projects: IOST, DATA (DAT), and Hydro so far this year.

It’s interesting to note that ZhenFund seems to underplay the blockchain concept and tries to avoid talking about the blockchain issue. In their year-end media gathering, a ZhenFund representative stated clearly “Don’t mention that word,” referring to blockchain.

China Growth Capital

China Growth Capital participated in the $28 million Series A round of Ripple in May 2015 and then invested in Bitcoin bank Circle, which shifted focus to a social payment business after giving up on Bitcoin business in 2016. The fund moved further into the industry by joining an RMB 28 million Pre-A round of Beijing-based Hoopox in September 2017. It reportedly invested in DATA as well.

Wu Haiyan, a managing partner at the fund, believes blockchain technology will lay the foundation for financial infrastructure in the long-run, but the current technology is far from maturity.

Probably due to the governmental ban on ICOs, China Growth Capital says they have ceased looking at tokens; blockchain technology is their future priority. Technological solutions and application scenarios are two foremost criteria for project selection.

IDG Capital

Along with China Growth Capital, Baidu, Everbright, and CICC, IDG Capital is one of the backers of blockchain financial startup Circle. Its other blockchain portfolios include Ripple, Koinify, and Coinbase.

Bringing blockchain technology to China is one of the initiatives for IDG Capital’s investment in Circle. The company is becoming less active in the sector, but a rumor has circulated that IDG Capital and Sequoia Capital are going to invest in miner maker Bitmain.

Sequoia Capital

In addition to the rumored investment in Bitmain, Sequoia Capital is also behind Huobi, plus US-based data storage solution provider Protocol and Filecoin.

Non-mainstream and individual investors

Compared with mainstream investment institutions, a group of new funds and individual investors are playing an increasingly active role in China’s blockchain funding.

Fenbushi Capital

It may sound new to outsiders, but Fenbushi Capital is already a big name in the blockchain investment sector as a top-10 most active investor in the vertical globally. The fund started to invest in cryptocurrencies in 2014 and then move to the fundamental technologies of blockchain. As of 2017, it invested in a combined 40 blockchain projects, such as ABRA, Circle, Symbiont, Juzhen Financials, and Bubi Chain.

It is the blockchain investment unit of Wanxiang Group, a Chinese multinational automotive components manufacturer, and is fully owned by Wanxiang’s vice board chairman Xiao Feng.

Li Xiaolai

Similar to Bob Xu, Li Xiaolai was first known to the public as an English prep teacher at China’s largest private educational service, New Oriental. He moved into Bitcoin mining and investment as early as 2011. By the end of 2013, Li held a six-figure sum of Bitcoins and was one of the largest Bitcoin holders in China.

After that, Li launched an ICO project named EOS and raised $185 million in five days (although this has been questioned by the public). PressOne, another ICO project Li initiated last July, sparked wider argument because there is only a-few-hundred-word introduction on the official website, not even a white paper.

Li reportedly raised over $82 million through the ICO as of last July, making a new record for China’s ICO industry.

Like many people who have obtained financial freedom, Li started to make inroads into the capital investment sector. He founded Bitcoin-focused fund BitFund and angel fund INBlockchain, both of which are quite active.

Li’s investment returns are very impressive. “We invested in over 30 blockchain projects over the past two years, including Qtum, VeChain, RadarWin, BigONE, BeX, PressONE, and EOS. Three of them achieved hundred times return, 18 recorded over 10 times return, only one booked a loss. The overall return is more than 10 times,” disclosed founding partner at INBlockchain Yi Lihua last July.

Charles Xue

The legendary angel investor entered the blockchain sector in 2014 with a Ripple purchase. He invested in several blockchain startups after attending a summit in August 2017, where he met tens of blockchain tech teams.

In total, Xue has invested more than 20 blockchain companies and his portfolio includes Bytom, Qtum, InkChain, Ripple, BeX, Dochain, Delphy, Primas, MLGB, Ownership, and 168coin

But Xue still warns about the risks of entering the industry because he thinks the current hype surrounding the blockchain industry is more severe than the dotcom bubble of the late-1990s. He’s giving tips on cryptocurrency and blockchain investment: This is not for the risk-averse investor. Don’t go with easy projects that are out of the world’s top-30 list. Don’t invest in teams without successful experience and/or endorsements.

Investors behind recent blockchain technology funding

Blockchain technology startups are becoming the new darling of investors, but it’s easy to find out that mainstream investors have yet to enter the arena. Here’s a list of blockchain startups’ funding status.

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Updated: Bitcoin miner sales at Huaqiangbei stagnate amid price slump https://technode.com/2018/02/06/bitcoin-miner-sales-huaqiangbei-stagnate-amid-price-slump/ https://technode.com/2018/02/06/bitcoin-miner-sales-huaqiangbei-stagnate-amid-price-slump/#respond Tue, 06 Feb 2018 08:29:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62429 Miner sellers in China’s largest maker fair Huaqiangbei are finding themselves in hot water to sell the miners.]]>

Updated 8 Feb. 2017: This post is updated to include more price fluctuation details of miners.

After hitting a record-high of $20,000 last December, the price of bitcoin has plunged below the $6,000 mark today for the first time since October 2017. However, Bitcoin investors are not the only ones who suffer from the tumble, miner sellers at China’s largest maker fair Huaqiangbei also find themselves are having a hard time selling the specialized mining equipment(in Chinese).

Lots of gadget sellers in the market have hoarded Bitcoin miners on bullish prospects of the market last year. But no one expected the cryptocurrency mania to cool off this fast and turn these risk takers into victims of the extremely volatile market.

Bitcoin miner maker Bitmain launched its latest product Antminer A3 at RMB 20,800 ($3,310) apiece in domestic market and $2,300 in global market when it’s first released on January 17, 2018. Just after launch, the device was on sale for RMB 45,000 at Huaqiangbei, but with the price of Bitcoin dropping, the mining device has dropped to RMB 30,000 in the gadget market.

In addition to sellers, the tide also affects bitcoin makers. Bitmain has opened the second batch of Antminer A3 for online ordering with plans to ship the product in mid-March. The two batches are exactly the same in configuration, but the second batch is priced at RMB7,200, roughly a third of its predecessor.

The crash comes amid a continuing global crypto rout. Ethereum has dropped by more than 44% last week to $636 at the time of this writing.

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Guangzhou cracks down on “internet water army”, China’s version of fake followers https://technode.com/2018/02/06/guangzhou-water-army/ https://technode.com/2018/02/06/guangzhou-water-army/#respond Tue, 06 Feb 2018 05:16:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62396 After the Cybersecurity Law that came into effect in June of last year, Chinese authorities are paying more attention to—and publicizing their action against—rumors and fake news online. After three months of planning, the police of Guangzhou have recently cracked down on a “water army” (in Chinese), which involves 77 suspects and a sum of […]]]>

After the Cybersecurity Law that came into effect in June of last year, Chinese authorities are paying more attention to—and publicizing their action against—rumors and fake news online. After three months of planning, the police of Guangzhou have recently cracked down on a “water army” (in Chinese), which involves 77 suspects and a sum of RMB 4 million ($635,000), the Southern Metropolis Daily has reported.

Commonly known as shuijun (水军 or water army), the paid posters are ready to flood blogs, forum, and chat groups for whoever is willing to pay for biased comments, rumors, gossip, and information or disinformation.

There seems to be plenty of demands for their services and an ecosystem surround the tide is forming. Low-end migrants, housewives, even students could constitute the basic level of the industrial chain. They send the paid-for content to various outlets for tens of cents to several RMB per post.

Compared with posting comments, deleting and screening contents that contain negative reviews involves higher-level access. In Guangzhou’s case, one suspect acts as an agent to connect clients and webmasters who have the right to wipe out negative posts. He gained an annual RMB 90,000 worth of commissions through this business.

Guangzhou’s latest move is among a larger scale crackdown launched by China’s public security authority. Since last May, the country has uncovered over 40 cases that involve hundreds of million RMB. Over 200 suspects are arrested and 5,000 spamming social media accounts were shut down.

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Updated: China’s tech giants announce plans for hongbao battle ahead of Spring Festival https://technode.com/2018/02/06/hongbao-war-2018/ https://technode.com/2018/02/06/hongbao-war-2018/#respond Tue, 06 Feb 2018 02:59:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=62375 While China’s Lunar New Year is just two weeks away, Chinese internet tycoons are poised to enter the latest showdown in the recurring red envelop war.]]>

Updated 7 Feb. 2017: This post is updated to include rumors about Alipay’s plan for launching gold Hongbao.

The Lunar New Year (aka Spring Festival or 春节 chunjie) is just two weeks away and Chinese internet tycoons are poised to enter the latest showdown (in Chinese) in the recurring red envelope (红包 hongbao) war.

Tencent’s plan for instant messaging tool QQ combines the cash-giving tradition with fitness tracking, another popular feature. Like WeChat Sports, QQ can read motion-tracking data from your phone and with every 100 steps, users get a chance to draw their share of RMB 200 million (around $32 million) in cash and RMB 4 billion in virtual coupons. The principle is simple: the more you walk, the more benefits you can get.

Screenshots of QQ Hongbao (Image credit: Tencent)

In addition to maintaining the augmented reality hongbao campaign, Tencent’s rival Alibaba announced a partnership between its online marketplace Taobao and CCTV Spring Festival Gala, the largest entertainment show in China, to hand out RMB 600 million red envelopes and gifts to viewers during the gala.

To build up users’ expectations, Alipay is reportedly launching a gold hongbao feature, but it is still unclear how the new feature works. Alipay declined to comment on the issue when TechNode reached out for confirmation.  Tencent has launched a gold hongbao feature on WeChat during last year’s spring festival holiday. It quickly went viral among users not only because many believe gold is a safe asset and but also because it’s part of the monetary gifts giving culture in China.

Screenshot of Alipay AR Hongbao (Image credit: TechNode)

As the first mover and continued winner of this battle, Tencent has managed to boost swift development for WeChat Payment. It is rumored that some 200 million bank accounts were linked to WeChat over the Lunar New Year holidays in 2015. Over 14.2 billion red envelopes were sent out via WeChat on New Year’s Eve last year.

WeChat has been the foremost frontier of Tencent’s hongbao battle so far, but it seems that the company is trying to duplicate WeChat Payment’s success to its older sibling. Given QQ’s increasingly young user base, this new plan could help Tencent to attract more young Chinese and become a part of the consumption behaviors of China’s next generation of consumers.

China has undergone a drastic shift towards mobile payment in recent years. The country now has 531 million online payment users as of December 2017, of which 527 million are mobile payment users.

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Chinese tech giants are cooking up their own China-centric Michelin-like guides https://technode.com/2018/01/30/china-michelin-like/ https://technode.com/2018/01/30/china-michelin-like/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:17:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61760 China enjoys a worldwide reputation as the “kingdom of cuisine.” Thanks to a long history, vast territory and extensive contact with other nations, the country has developed a distinctive culinary culture. In a country that cherishes its deep love for foods, you may be surprised that there’s still no definitive foodie list catering to distinctive […]]]>

China enjoys a worldwide reputation as the “kingdom of cuisine.” Thanks to a long history, vast territory and extensive contact with other nations, the country has developed a distinctive culinary culture. In a country that cherishes its deep love for foods, you may be surprised that there’s still no definitive foodie list catering to distinctive Chinese flavors. But this won’t be long because Chinese tech firms are moving fast to fill the gap.

The time-honored Michelin Guide entered China with its first-ever Shanghai Guide. However, some prominent figures in the Shanghai’s food and beverage community disagreed with many of the choices. Many claimed that Chinese cuisine should not be judged with Western criteria.

In response, Chinese online travel giant Ctrip and local lifestyle service Meituan have each rolled out their own guides. It might sound odd until you remember that the original Michelin Guide was created by the tire company to boost its sales.

Michelin’s results are mainly based on the review from a team of inspectors who visit and review restaurants anonymously. While maintaining the gourmet expert reviews, Chinese tech platforms also integrate big data analysis into their compilations.

Gourmet List: Travel with Chinese characteristics

Chinese tourists are growing in number and are prepared to spend more on food and drinks. According to a recent report by the China Tourism Academy and Ctrip, help with”cuisine” is the top thing Chinese tourists need. At the same time, many Chinese tourists have become gastronomes or even “professional tasters” when traveling abroad. Not only do they explore their new destination but also take the time to explore dining venues and seek local culinary experiences. They want to be able to identify high-quality and consistent venues.

Ctrip Gourmet List

Given these changes, Chinese online travel behemoth Ctrip launched its foodie list on its main app in 2016. Dubbed the Ctrip Gourmet List, the service provides travelers with food and restaurant recommendations and online table booking in major destinations both at home and abroad.

“Given the popularity that cuisine has with Chinese travelers and the huge market, Gourmet List gives dining tips to our Chinese users before, during and after their trip: we aim to be their top gastronomical friend throughout their entire travel journey,” Gourmet List CEO Kimi Liu told TechNode.

In addition to Chinese gourmands, the firm invited local talents to provide their own recommendations for top cuisine and local restaurants to ensure that the food list and recommendations remain as local and as authentic as possible. Every restaurant on the list goes through three rounds of tasting and screening to ensure high quality of each restaurant.

The one-year-old service currently covers approximately 15,000 restaurants in 120 popular destinations both in China and around the world. The service has seen triple-digit growth since its launch and continues to rapidly expand the number of restaurants and destinations on its platform, according to the company.

After inking a partnership last September with Koubei, Alibaba’s search engine that provides information about catering and leisure services, Ctrip Gourmet List just reached an agreement with OpenTable, allowing users to book with tens of thousands of OpenTable’s North America restaurant partners via the Ctrip mobile app. It’s also tied up with Gurunavi, a Japanese online booking platform.

Kimi Liu, Gourmet List CEO (Image credit: Ctrip)

Black Pearl Restaurant Guide: Big data expertise

While Ctrip is taking food and cuisine as a gateway to understanding the culture and story of travelers’ destinations, Meituan-Dianping’s approach is directly related to its core business in restaurant booking, reviews, and food delivery.

After unveiling a preliminary try with their “Must-have List” last year, the O2O and e-commerce giant launched this month the first edition of its China-centric gourmet list—the Black Pearl Restaurant Guide. The inaugural edition highlights a total of 330 restaurants in 22 Chinese cities and five overseas cities, namely, Bangkok, New York, Paris, Singapore, and Tokyo.

Similar to the stars in the Michelin guide, the Black Pearl gives one to three diamonds to the restaurants it lists. Three diamonds mean you “must visit this at least once in your lifetime,” two diamonds means the venue is “perfect for special occasions,” while one diamond establishments are “great for family/friends gathering.”

Restaurants selected by the Black Pearl Restaurant Guide are put through a vigorous critiquing process by a team consisting of master chefs, culinary experts, special advisors with long-standing expertise in China’s dining sector, and gourmands identified by big data analytics from the company’s local dining and lifestyle service platform. The Guide aims to reflect the nation’s unique culinary preferences.

Mr. Xing Wang, CEO of Meituan-Dianping, stated: “In response to Chinese consumers’ evolving taste for traditional and modern cuisines in China and across the world, we are excited to introduce the Black Pearl Restaurant Guide from a unique Chinese perspective, showcasing the dynamic dining scene both in China and globally.

Wang Xing, CEO of Meituan Dianping (Image credit: Meituan Dianping)

For both of the companies, creating such a list would be more of an investment really because profits couldn’t be their goals. Once they start to monetize it, through ad-biding or others, the creditability of the platform would be jeopardized. So why all the efforts? It’s a good channel for marketing, to gain proximity to the users, and associate their brands with travel and dining know-how.

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Cryptocurrency whiz Sunny King joins blockchain database cloud startup VEE https://technode.com/2018/01/29/sunny-king/ https://technode.com/2018/01/29/sunny-king/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2018 07:47:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61888 The mysterious cryptocurrency guru Sunny King is scaling his involvement with the industry to become chief architect of VEE, a new project aims to bring about a next generation platform for blockchain applications.]]>

Editor’s note: A version of this article by Steven Lee originally appeared on our sister site, TechNode Chinese.

The mysterious cryptocurrency guru Sunny King is scaling his involvement within the industry to become the chief architect of VEE, a new project that aims to bring about a next-generation platform for blockchain applications, according to King’s statement on Peercoin’s blog. The VEE team is currently promoting the project in Korea, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and will visit Europe in February.

https://v.qq.com/x/page/m0539uuq39w.html

King hopes Peercoin fans will take it in a positive way, because “my care for the Peercoin and Primecoin projects hasn’t stopped. … The current Peercoin team has been doing great work during the past year while I was mostly unavailable. It is my hope that project VEE can also bring more resources to share with the Peercoin team and community, eventually working into a healthy collaboration between the teams and communities of both projects.”

In a Peercoin blog post, the team says they have confirmed the news with King directly. The two projects are not associated and they have yet to form an understanding of VEE from a technical standpoint, but they are open to a potential partnership once they got the opportunity to evaluate it.

Sunny King: The mysterious person behind PeerCoin and PrimeCoin

Like Satoshi Nakamoto, Sunny King is one of the most mysterious persons in the cryptocurrency industry. Peercoin and Primecoin, the two cryptocurrencies Sunny King has founded, both brought important technical ideas.

Peercoin is the first currency to protect the blockchain with Proof-of-Stake (PoS), as opposed to Proof-of-Work (PoW) adopted by Bitcoin. PoS mechanisms consume less energy for mining.

Unlike Bitcoin, PeerCoin uses a more practical way to make new currencies. Bitcoin is generated by “mining” and people will get Bitcoin through mining, which needs specific software to unlock the computational puzzles. They would receive a certain amount of Bitcoin reward by unlocking a block of data. These computers constantly validate the ongoing Bitcoin transactions everywhere in the world while doing calculations. Nowadays, only those highly configured, custom computers can receive a reward in mining, whereas the miners are still competing to create more powerful gear. The Peercoin generation mechanism is intended to phase out the traditional mining process.

Sunny King believes that the loss of energy will be the biggest challenge that Bitcoin will face when it comes to widespread use. “The concept of designing PeerCoin’s is based on the optimization of long-term energy consumption, not only for resource conservation but also allows us to have a higher cost advantage over similar virtual currencies in the payment process,” according to Sunny King in an internal communication obtained by TechNode.

PeerCoin implements the proof of stake and proof of work system, while PrimeCoin implements proof-of-work and shares most of its source code and technology implementation. Their design is based on a new concept of long-term energy efficiency.

Beside to engage in the invention of cryptocurrencies and technological innovation, Sunny King is also committed to maintaining a stable, fair and free virtual money market. Sunny King said that they embrace the free market principle. It can also be said that they are libertarians but do not advocate direct opposition to the government.

“I think it is better to give people more freedom of choice, rather than forcing them to do something. In economics, we agree more with classical economics and Austrian economics,” said Sunny King in the memo obtained by TechNode.

In addition, they think that the virtual currency also needs some moral considerations. People like to have multiple choices. The biggest challenge would be the ways to get into the public’s field of vision when a new virtual currency and community appear. Sunny King emphasized “Conscience:” This is a free market but in order to win this free war, we should also look at ourselves in the mirror.

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Xloong is trying to make AR sexy… with enterprise applications https://technode.com/2018/01/25/xloong-enterprise-ar/ https://technode.com/2018/01/25/xloong-enterprise-ar/#respond Thu, 25 Jan 2018 10:10:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61282 Xloong AR Boss Smart Glasses Techlens T2The global craze for the semi-immersive augmented reality (AR) experience is on the cusp of breaking out. Even though China has been left out in the whole Pokemon Go extravaganza, Chinese tech firms have managed to bring the AR experience to local users through other means: hongbao wars, Pokemon clones, or even in coffee roasteries. Now they […]]]> Xloong AR Boss Smart Glasses Techlens T2

The global craze for the semi-immersive augmented reality (AR) experience is on the cusp of breaking out. Even though China has been left out in the whole Pokemon Go extravaganza, Chinese tech firms have managed to bring the AR experience to local users through other means: hongbao wars, Pokemon clones, or even in coffee roasteries. Now they are ready to bring the AR experience in eyeglass form.

Of course, there are plenty of incumbents in the sector. It’s been years since the unveiling of the ill-fated Google Glass and Microsoft’s HoloLens, but still, AR glasses are only fancied by a small group of techies and far from large-scale mass adoption.

The argument of customer-faced (2C) vs enterprise-targeted (2B) market, which would boom first has been one of the most-talked topics among VR hardware companies. The same discussion also goes in AR field, and it’s the misjudgment in market direction that doomed Google’s once highly accoladed project, according to Shi Xiaogang, CEO and founder of AR startup Xloong.

“Google Glass is a 2C (“to consumer”) products launched too early, with inadequate experience, high price, and bad market response. However, Google turned to the 2B (“to business” aka enterprise) market and enhanced its investment in AR persistently. It takes time for any new technology to develop, that is why patience is required for both players and investors for them to follow a 10-year strategy to improve the technologies, products and market campaign. Xloong firmly believes in AR, and will make strides as always,” Shi noted.

Entrepreneurship is all about choosing the right directions and timing. Learning from Google’s failure, Xloong decides to focus the on enterprise market in the short term, because they believe the sector will record swift development in the future one to two years. On the other hand, five more years are still needed for consumer market, Shi predicts.

The Beijing-based smart AR glasses maker just released three enterprise-faced AR products at world’s top electronics show CES this year. AR smart glasses Xloong S1. The gadget weighs only 30g, enabled by a split design, titanium alloy frame, and carbon fiber materials. 4G multiple networks support is added for better mobile connectivity.

Xloong S1 Smart Glasses (image credit: Xloong)

Apart from the S1 glasses, they also rolled out an optical model and an AI-enabled solution. The optical model features FOV (field of view) of 40 degrees and 2mm in thickness. Core technologies and algorithm in AI, such as computer vision, binocular SLAM (simultaneous localization and mapping), big data, machine learning all have been applied in Xloong’s AI solution.

“The AR + AI system with display will contribute to a variety of areas. AR makes display and exchange more natural for the output of AI, which is like bringing brighter eyes for a smart brain. Security, logistics, education areas will benefit from it widely,” Shi Xiaogang told TechNode.

Xloong optical models (L), Xloong AI solutions (R) (Image credit: Xloong)

Xloong’s design principles

The VR/AR glasses available on the market now either adopt a standalone or split design. Xloong chose the latter option for better customer experience.

“The standalone design is simple and convenient, but it may lead to bulky, weighty head devices looking bizarre and uncomfortable to wear, let alone the endurance and heat caused. The split design solves all above headaches. So, to ensure a lasting and stable product experience, Xloong chooses the split design for mass production, rather than a prototype for a demo,” Shi Xiaogang pointed out.

In addition, their gadget is specially designed for security and logistics, featuring number plate recognition, ID recognition, facial recognition, object recognition.

Shi Xiaogang, founder and CEO of Xloong (Image credit: Xloong)

But he acknowledged that “current split design is merely temporary, AR glasses will eventually evolve into what normal glasses look like with the development of optics, chips, materials, and battery.”

When talking about the future of new experience technologies, Shi gives his prediction, which would provide guidance for the firm’s future development strategies.

“Due to the different optical principle, it is much easier for VR to create large FOV and immersion than AR, but AR enables a see-thru effect. It will be used more extensively than VR. VR and AR are going to merge, that is, there will be a device with a strong sense of immersion with VR and the features of the real environment that AR can see.” he said.

Hardware + software

In addition to hardware, the team has a bigger plan for its future development, which includes “Optics + Terminal + Cloud”.

For optics, Xloong has established optical joint laboratory with universities strong in optics and scientific research institutes, to enhance Xloong’s upstream optical core technical barriers. With investors’ support, like resources from IoT solution provider BOE Technology Group and electronics manufacturer Luxshare-ICT, Xloong has strengthened the terminal development and supply chain production and quality, explained Shi.

By optimizing software cloud platform based on image recognition, SLAM, big data and so on, Xloong aspires to provide more convenient and efficient support in AR solutions for all industries.

Founded in 2015, Xloong is now run by a 70 member team, 70% of which are engineers from optics, algorithm, and hard/software backgrounds. The founders come from Huawei and Lenovo.

After receiving an RMB 50 million a Series A+ round from BOE Technology in 2016, the firm secured an undisclosed amount of pre-B financing led by Gobi Ventures last September.

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Updated: Chinese online lender Dianrong increases Series D Funding by $70 Million https://technode.com/2018/01/24/dianrong-d-round/ https://technode.com/2018/01/24/dianrong-d-round/#respond Wed, 24 Jan 2018 06:39:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61618 Updated 24 Jan 2017: This post is updated to include Dianrong’s feedback on IPO plan Chinese online lending platform Dianrong today announced additional Series D round funding of $70 million led by ORIX Asia Capital Limited, a wholly-owned investment vehicle of ORIX Corporation, with the participation of CLSA, the overseas platform of China’s top investment […]]]>

Updated 24 Jan 2017: This post is updated to include Dianrong’s feedback on IPO plan

Chinese online lending platform Dianrong today announced additional Series D round funding of $70 million led by ORIX Asia Capital Limited, a wholly-owned investment vehicle of ORIX Corporation, with the participation of CLSA, the overseas platform of China’s top investment bank CITIC Securities.

This latest investment in Dianrong follows a $220 million Series D round in August 2017 that was led by GIC Private Limited and included CMIG Leasing and Simone Investment Managers. The monster round comes after its $207 million Series C in 2015 that was led by Standard Chartered Private Equity and followed by China Fintech Fund. Investors from earlier funding rounds included Tiger Global Management, AMTD, Northern Lights Venture Capital, and Max Giant.

“ORIX is an amazing company with global reach and a proven commitment to innovation and value creation. We are thrilled to welcome them to Dianrong and look forward to working together to further leverage fintech to better serve the financial needs of small businesses in China and across the region. CLSA is connected to some of the most dynamic companies in Asia and has a growing interest in supporting China’s fintech sector to expand its capabilities. Dianrong shares this commitment and we look forward to working together to help more small enterprises leverage fintech to grow and succeed.”

—Soul Htite, Founder and Executive Chairman of Dianrong

Among the IPO rush of Chinese fintech firms starting in the middle of last year, Dianrong is widely rumored as an IPO candidate. The firm shook up its management last December, where two co-founders Soul Htite and Kevin Guo handed over their duties as co-chief executives. This move has been seen as a step to make itself more attractive to investors in order to prepare for the IPO.

In response to our inquires on IPO plans, the firm answered, “Dianrong is fortunate to be well capitalized and continues to benefit from investors like ORIX and CLSA, who understand fintech and support our growth strategy. That said, we continue to explore all our options in the capital markets and no final decisions have been made.”

Founded in 2012, Dianrong makes loans and sells investment products to individuals and small businesses. The company is often dubbed as Lendingclub of China, not only because it’s founded by Soul Htite, co-founder of U.S.-based LendingClub, but also because it shares a similar business model with the U.S. company.

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Beijing gets serious about cleaning up inappropriate videos targeting children https://technode.com/2018/01/23/beijing-video-children/ https://technode.com/2018/01/23/beijing-video-children/#respond Tue, 23 Jan 2018 10:27:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61559 Beijing’s culture regulator issued an urgent notice on Monday that requires video streaming sites to self-censor all kid-targeted videos such as animations and cosplay dramas in a bid to wipe out inappropriate contents, Tencent Tech has reported. In addition, the regulator also put a ban on the development and production of relevant games and derivatives […]]]>

Beijing’s culture regulator issued an urgent notice on Monday that requires video streaming sites to self-censor all kid-targeted videos such as animations and cosplay dramas in a bid to wipe out inappropriate contents, Tencent Tech has reported.

In addition, the regulator also put a ban on the development and production of relevant games and derivatives contents. Any game including kid-unfriendly contents would be suspended immediately.

Image credit: Baguafu

Children are falling easy prey of online inappropriate contents. Putting Frozen’s Elsa in their video, for example, to get it recognized as featuring that friendly critter, then having Elsa pregnant, having an injection or even sex. There’s also tutorials which teach kids to make fake poop with plasticine and glue.

Western video platform YouTube has had its own share scandals related to its lack of policing around inappropriate content aimed at children, including reference to sex, drugs, alcohol and more. To solve the problem, YouTube has eliminated over 50 channels and 150k videos from their site as of last November. Just as foreign video sites are taking tighter regulations, the same kid-focused videos are proliferating on Chinese mainstream video sites like Youku, iQiyi, Tencent Video and Sohu Video. In response to the public concerns, these sites are responding quickly by delisting these contents.

In an official statement made by Tencent Video, the firm says it has set up a dedicated team for the initiative. Over 121 accounts were suspended and 4000 relevant keywords blocked.

Maybe unbelievable to adults, but the influence of cartoons on children can be very huge and it may lead to tragedy if handled improperly. Pleasure Goat and Big Big Wolf (喜洋洋与灰太狼), one of China’s most popular homegrown animation titles, came under fire when two young boys were tied to a tree, placed on a bed of dried leaves and roasted “like lamb kebabs”, by their peer and alleged friend, in an apparent simulation of a scene in the animation.

China has over 170 million minors and the kids in first-tier cities spend an average of 3.5 hours on the internet.

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Updated: Alibaba rumored to deepen involvement in bike-rentals with upcoming $1 bln Hellobike investment round https://technode.com/2018/01/23/alibaba-rumored-deepen-involvement-bike-rentals-upcoming-1-bln-hellobike-investment-round/ https://technode.com/2018/01/23/alibaba-rumored-deepen-involvement-bike-rentals-upcoming-1-bln-hellobike-investment-round/#respond Tue, 23 Jan 2018 05:44:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61547 Hello BikeUpdated 23 Jan 2017: TechNode Chinese has reached out to Hellobike, Fosun Capital and Hellobike’s early-stage investor GGV, but neither has confirmed the news. Chinese bike rental firm Hellobike (哈罗单车) is going to complete $1 billion worth of round from Ant Financial (an affiliate company of Alibaba Group), Fosun Capital, and some other existing investors, people familiar […]]]> Hello Bike

Updated 23 Jan 2017: TechNode Chinese has reached out to Hellobike, Fosun Capital and Hellobike’s early-stage investor GGV, but neither has confirmed the news.

Chinese bike rental firm Hellobike (哈罗单车) is going to complete $1 billion worth of round from Ant Financial (an affiliate company of Alibaba Group), Fosun Capital, and some other existing investors, people familiar with the matter told Tencent Tech. New heavyweight investors also joined this round, the source added.

If true, this would add to another milestone round to the firm’s fundraising frenzy. In last December alone, Hellobike has announced two hefty financing deals in Series D1 and D2 rounds, securing a combined nearly RMB 3.3 billion from Ant Financial and Fosun Capital. Hellobike merged with a major competitor Yongon in October 2017, and Hellobike’s team is leading the new company.

As of January 20, the firm is operating in 160 cities, providing service to nearly 100 million users with a daily order of 10 million, according to the firm.

After all the fanfare in China’s bike rental industry over the past two years, various industry insiders have their own predictions on the future landscape of this sector. Some see Mobike and ofo sharing the market after beaten all the small competitors. But few expect the industry would enter a tripartite confrontation with the quick rise of another heavyweight player who has potential to gear up to face off against ofo and Mobike.

Different from the two bike rental giants, Hellobike has been focusing on the market in the second- and third-tier cities in China. But as the markets in large cities saturate, the competition among them could become fiercer with more cash burning battles.

It is also interesting to note the role Alibaba plays in the bike rental battle. The e-commerce giant is a lead investor in ofo. At the same time, its financial affiliate Ant Financial has invested in Hellobike. Despite the possible confrontations in sharing the same investor with an arch competitor, partnering with Alibaba is sure attractive. Both ofo and Hellobike were supported by Alipay for the scan-and-ride function. The deposit-free service supported by Sesame Credit also gained huge traction among rental bike riders.

Editor’s note: Chinese news is rife with rumor. TechNode does not vouch for the accuracy of other media reports.

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Father of WeChat announces independent app for Official Accounts https://technode.com/2018/01/15/father-wechat-announces-independent-apps-official-accounts/ https://technode.com/2018/01/15/father-wechat-announces-independent-apps-official-accounts/#respond Mon, 15 Jan 2018 08:44:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61109 Allen Zhang, more commonly known as the “Father of WeChat”, disclosed at WeChat’s annual open class that the company is planning to launch an independent app for Official Accounts, the highly popular feature that’s crucial for any business to interact with customers through WeChat. The team has been working on the project for quite some […]]]>

Allen Zhang, more commonly known as the “Father of WeChat”, disclosed at WeChat’s annual open class that the company is planning to launch an independent app for Official Accounts, the highly popular feature that’s crucial for any business to interact with customers through WeChat.

The team has been working on the project for quite some time and even have finalized a preliminary version, but they didn’t release it because the logic behind the product hasn’t been worked out.

“WeChat is designed as a mobile-first product, but the operating platform of Official Account is highly reliant on PC. Moving from what we have on PC platform to the app or creating a whole different mobile experience. We were torn between the two options. But luckily, we are finishing the app now and it will be released very soon,” said Allen.

Another exciting news for the feature is that WeChat will bring back its in-app tipping feature for iOS versions after negotiation with Apple. “The negotiations with Apple also give us a lot of thinking. The previous tipping system is based on Official Accounts, which may feature the contribution from several writers. The new one will shift to a writer-based structure,” Zhang added.

Originally, the WeChat team encouraged Official Account owners to use QR codes embedded in posts from Official Accounts, allowing users to transfer funds to authors’ individual accounts. Apple’s new iOS policies has put a stop into this function, which in turn ignited conflict with lots of local tech giants including WeChat, Toutiao, Zhihu, and Weibo.

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Xiaomi’s smart wearable partner Huami files for $150 million US IPO https://technode.com/2018/01/15/xiaomi-huami-ipo/ https://technode.com/2018/01/15/xiaomi-huami-ipo/#respond Mon, 15 Jan 2018 03:41:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=61088 Huami Corporation, the smart wearable device partner of Xiaomi, has filed with the United States SEC for a $150 million IPO. The company applies for the listing of its ADSs on Nasdaq Global Market under the ticker symbol “HMI”. No pricing terms were disclosed. Founded in 2013, the Hefei-based startup is the sole partner of […]]]>

Huami Corporation, the smart wearable device partner of Xiaomi, has filed with the United States SEC for a $150 million IPO. The company applies for the listing of its ADSs on Nasdaq Global Market under the ticker symbol “HMI”. No pricing terms were disclosed.

Founded in 2013, the Hefei-based startup is the sole partner of Xiaomi for design and manufacture of Xiaomi wearable products such as smart bands, watches (excluding children watches and quartz watches), scales and associated accessories.

As a prominent part of Xiaomi’s smart hardware ecosystem, Huami has surged to a world’s top smart wearable maker thanks to its low-cost strategy and the Xiaomi brand. The firm has shipped 11.6 million devices in the first nine months of 2017, taking the world’s top spot in terms of units shipped. As of September 30, 2017, it has registered 49.6 million users, according to data revealed in the prospectus. The firm is looking into data mining and AI as the new directions to maintain its sustainable development, Company CEO Huang Wang said at TechCrunch Shenzhen.

Xiaomi, the only customer and distributor of its wearables, currently holds 19.3% of Huami’s total outstanding shares. The firm has entered into a strategic cooperation agreement with Xiaomi, which grants the most-preferred-partner status globally to develop future Xiaomi Wearable Products. This strategic cooperation agreement will expire in October 2020.

The five-year old startup received funding from Xiaomi and Shunwei, the venture capital fund co-founded by Xiaomi CEO. In 2014, it has secured another US$35 million in Series B funding led by Banyan Capital. Rumors surround Huami’s new fundings started to pile up early 2017.

While the IPO filing of Huami was handled in a rather low profile, the IPO plans of its parent company Xiaomi rides on high expectations of the market. Sources close to Xiaomi’s senior executives are claiming that Xiaomi has decided to set its IPO for the second part of 2018 at a market of valuation of $200 billion.

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How proptech is transforming traditional housing market: Q&A with JLL APAC COO https://technode.com/2018/01/15/proptech-jll-qa/ https://technode.com/2018/01/15/proptech-jll-qa/#respond Mon, 15 Jan 2018 02:11:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60864 The evolution of technology is turning it from the unusual to ubiquitous, so much so that there’s hardly an industry that doesn’t feel the disruption. While some sectors, such as finance, are embracing these changes quickly, some long-established fields are moving slower, but the degree at which they are reinvented by the new innovations is not […]]]>

The evolution of technology is turning it from the unusual to ubiquitous, so much so that there’s hardly an industry that doesn’t feel the disruption. While some sectors, such as finance, are embracing these changes quickly, some long-established fields are moving slower, but the degree at which they are reinvented by the new innovations is not a bit less.

Property technology (proptech)—a sector that combines technology and real estate industry—is on the rise in recent years, especially in the Asia Pacific region. 179 proptech start-ups in Asia Pacific have raised funding since 2013, accounting for almost $4.8 billion of the $7.8 billion that has been invested globally since 2013, according to a research by global real estate services firm JLL.

Like in most of the industries, China—which witnessed robust growth in merging internet and information technologies with conventional industries through the government-backed “Internet Plus” initiative—has formed an impressive force in the rise of the proptech trend. The report shows that mainland China saw a total of $2.82 billion of proptech investments, excluding HK’s investment of US$202 million.

Albert Ovidi, APAC COO of JLL (Image credit: JLL)

TechNode got a chance to talk with Albert Ovidi, APAC COO of JLL, a leading professional services firm that specializes in real estate and investment management, to shed lights on the reasons behind this surge as well as the current and future landscape of proptech in China and Asia Pacific region in general.

The Asia Pacific region is taking a big chunk of the global proptech financing, why is proptech taking off in Asia and China specifically?

Why proptech is thriving in Asia and particularly China can be explained by a few factors, such as rapid urbanization and the boom of megacities.

Asia Pacific is home to largest emerging markets like China; 40 out of 47 cities with the fastest population growth rate are in Asia whereas 20 of them are in China alone. This will result in a wider pool of users with diversified needs, where technology comes in handy.

From a social perspective, the rise of the middle class and millennial generation are reaching prime spending stages and their consumption habits tend to lean towards collaborative and flexible spaces, which presents opportunities for proptech start-ups to offer new products and solutions.

It is crucial to note that proptech in Asia Pacific is also accelerated by the technological sophistication of these consumers. Asia accounts for 50% of the total internet users globally and tops the world in the growth of smartphone traffic. With the rise of millennials and their growing tech-savviness, it will boost user preference for technology.

Finally, the support from government and authorities is a good indicator of proptech advancement in Asia Pacific. Asian countries and China, in particular, are showing their support for new technologies and business models.

Blockchain technology is penetrating lots of industries, and property industry is no exception. But the high risk and lack of regulations always made it a controversial topic when comes to application, what do you think are the biggest obstacles in applying it to real estate sector and how to solve them?

Blockchain offers a means to improve transparency and has the potential to improve liquidity as well as access to investment markets for both institutional and retail investors. As the costs associated with trading real estate are much higher than other asset classes, the difference between buyer and seller pricing expectations vary.

Usually, these transactions are carried out via face-to-face interactions with various other parties such as lawyers, bankers, and brokers. One way blockchain-enabled smart contracts could reduce the costs and friction involved with all parties would be to automatically trigger the transfer of money or assets once conditions in the encoded contracts are met. Another way blockchain can facilitate transactions would be to tokenize buildings by dividing ownership of asset into multiple shares.

Barriers to commercial real estate investment could also be reduced, allowing for greater participation among retail investors. However, there will be challenges to regulate and govern the trading of these tokens. More research is required to study the effects of tokenization on asset management, and how tokenized assets will be valued.

The property industry is quickly adapting to the hottest emerging technologies, from VR/AR to blockchain. What do you think are the next technologies that are going have a great impact on the industry?

Aside from blockchain, there are several other technologies that could reshape the real estate industry in Asia Pacific. Artificial Intelligence could transform property in a number of ways, such as machine learning in search engines that could address a customer’s needs and adapt with their changing preferences; image recognition that enables customers to classify, tag and organise images of properties in real-time; and chatbots that help automate real estate processes such as appointment bookings or information provision. Another new technology is 3D printing, which could transform the commercial real estate market considerably, especially in the Project Development vertical as it enables construction activities to be faster, of a higher quality and at lower costs.

Considering other tools like virtual reality, drones, predictive analytics, etc. I expect that the real estate industry will be transformed tremendously within the foreseeable future.

Chinese proptech firms like Lianjia are receiving massive funds at high valuations. Do you think there’s bubble in China’s proptech sector?

The valuation of a startup is made based on the expectations of investors of the company’s future growth. A company’s future growth is indeed decided by its market current potential situation (i.e real estate’s rising price) but those are only among numerous other factors that decide a firm’s growth.

Even if market potential is the only factor affecting investor decisions in valuations, the rising prices of property in a market does not necessarily point to a bubble. In China, high valuations (2012-2017) are mainly based on the valuations of other existing unicorns, which have already received high funding. In fact, China presents a highly dynamic proptech landscape due to its large market size, ability to scale quickly, and diverse population of tech-savvy users.

JLL’s latest report shows that most of China’s funding flowing into brokerage and leasing vertical. Does this mean China’s proptech industry is still in Proptech 1.0 phase? What’s the future landscape of proptech in China?

Our report has pointed out that brokerage and leasing is the most mature of all verticals, primarily because they are focused on the residential market driven by the country’s strong desire for home ownership. While millennials’ home ownership remains rare around the world, up to 70% of Chinese millennials have their own house. Up to 94%of them plan to buy property within the next five years, which is significantly higher than other developed markets.

Chinese consumers have also become highly tech-savvy since the rise of WeChat and grown accustomed to the use of the internet to make purchases. We see China’s proptech industry also moving towards the Property Management vertical, especially in smart home fixtures and controls. Another strong growth sector lies in investment and financing, where online funding platforms like Duocaitou, Huifenqi.com, and WeLend are gaining momentum in China.

How is the trend impacting different countries in the region?

Across the Asia Pacific region, India is another high-performing market for proptech. India tops the list with the most start-ups, largely dominated by the brokerage and leasing vertical brought by the growth of the Indian middle-income population. Elsewhere, Southeast Asia’s proptech sector is much younger and yet to get the volumes of a China or India, with Singapore’s supportive start-up ecosystem as the leader of the pack. The existing internet user base in SEA is expected to grow from 260 million to 480 million by 2020 so there is a high chance that consumers will continue to be more tech-enabled.

Elsewhere, the use of technology in real estate has been increasing in Japan, driven by the government’s focus on entrepreneurship. The Japanese government is even planning to use blockchain technology to underpin their property registries to prevent tampering. A bullish property market coupled with tech savviness will make Japan’s proptech scene very promising in the coming years.

Lastly, Australasia’s start-up scene mainly lies in brokerage and leasing, as well as property management. Australia’s strong demand for home ownership and government’s support towards fintech offer a catalyst for proptech start-ups, and the number of deals in the Investment and Financing vertical is expected to grow as a result.

High potential areas and where the ‘unicorns’ may be found. Can you name China startups that have the potentials to join unicorn club?

We believe the highest potential for new unicorns is likely to be in the brokerage and leasing vertical. Property management may follow thanks to acceleration in smart cities initiatives and also increasingly high expectations of better living conditions. There are a number of Chinese proptech companies that have already reached unicorn status, including Homelink or Lianjia.com, Fagdd.com, Tujia.com and Aiwujiwu.

Technologies are becoming ubiquitous and shaking traditional industries like real estate, how do you see this trend?

With rapid urbanisation, the emergence of the middle class and millennials, and improved user digital sophistication, technology is certainly going to change several industries. Corporates are also starting to recognise the opportunity to gain efficiencies in their business lines and maximise their reach with technology, so we believe that start-ups too will begin seeing a growing market for their products and more interest from these corporates.

In real estate, we foresee that this will result in new partnerships and perhaps some important new players in the region. Not to be ignored, the power of blockchain also expands into the commercial real estate market. It could improve the property search process, accelerate pre-sale due-diligence, ease leasing and subsequent property and cash flow management and finally empower informed decision-making. As a hotspot for blockchain, Asia Pacific could soon expand this technology’s application into various industries including real estate, specifically the commercial sector.

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Didi continues pivot into two wheeled mobility with beta test of electric bike rental https://technode.com/2018/01/11/didi-speeds-up-expansion-to-two-wheel-market-with-e-bike-rental-efforts/ https://technode.com/2018/01/11/didi-speeds-up-expansion-to-two-wheel-market-with-e-bike-rental-efforts/#respond Thu, 11 Jan 2018 10:13:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60939 DidiChinese ride-hailing behemoth Didi is beta-testing its electric bike rental service in South China, a person with knowledge of the matter told TechNode. Didi is said to have won the initial support of at least three cities. The firm is expected to develop its own bike rental brand, or potentially a separate app, with an access […]]]> Didi

Chinese ride-hailing behemoth Didi is beta-testing its electric bike rental service in South China, a person with knowledge of the matter told TechNode. Didi is said to have won the initial support of at least three cities.

The firm is expected to develop its own bike rental brand, or potentially a separate app, with an access point from within Didi’s main app. Didi plans to launch the electric bike rental product in at least three cities within future months, the source added.

From four-wheels to two-wheels

Entering the electric bike sector might seem a brand new effort for the ride-hailing firm, but the business logic behind this move can be seen from its recent layouts. As a dominating player in China’s ride-hailing industry, Didi is on the path towards a greater ambition to address every transportation problem, as shown in the term it defining itself: “a world-leading transportation platform.” This positioning put it conveniently in expanding beyond ride-hailing to the sectors that address short distance trips.

Didi’s foray from four-wheel (long distance) to two-wheel (short distance) sector started years back. Through a series of investments starting in September 2016, Didi tied up with ofo and then embedded ofo’s service into its main app in April last year. Just one day ago, Didi announced it is building a bike-rental platform that integrates ofo, Bluegogo and potentially its own-branded shared bikes.

“Compared to bikes that are usually used for 1-3km trips, electric bikes have a mobility radius of 2-8 km, making it a more versatile vehicle for smaller cities and urban districts,” the source noted.

Incumbents galore

In the prime of China’s bike rental boom, electric bike rental also surged, but only as a complementary niche service for a small group who have serious mid-distance travel demands. But as bike rental market reaching saturation and startups scratched for new development directions, the electric bike rental became a convenient extension, where people expect to duplicate the bike rental success.

Bike rental giants like Mobike are also tapping longer trip businesses through car-hailing partnerships and the launch of in-house electric car rental platform. Local media reports that Mobike is also launching its e-bike project. Similarly, ofo and Hellobike are said to be mulling e-bike services.

Even for a former niche market, the tech giants would face a ton of startup rivals. The existing electric bike startups inlcude Xq Chuxing(享骑电单车), No.7 E-bike (7号电单车) , Relight, MeBike (小蜜单车), Mango Chuxing (芒果电单车) and Banma Bike (斑马电车).

Smart transportation firm Yongjiu Chuxing (永久出行) have launched a combined 100K e-bikes in Shanghai and Hangzhou since last May. “The war among bike rental firms is entering a vicious circle where competitors are vying for users by providing deposit-free service. In a case like this, companies need product differentiation that can bring revenues. Electric bike, thanks to its capabilities to cover longer-distance trips, can partially replace private cars and metros, and therefore easier to form payment habit among users,” Yongjiu’s CEO Zhou Wenming told local media.

Chances against tightening regulation

However, China tech giants’ path to achieve the grand vision could be bumpy. After a bitter-sweet relationship, Chinese government has shown cautiousness about supporting bike rental. The cautious atitude even affected electric bike rental. The Ministry of Transporation issued a policy in August, making it clear that the government will not support the development of electric bike services. Regional municipalities in Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin also released similar policies for security and environmental concerns.

But it would be too early to be bearish about the whole prospect of electric bike industry. Observers believe there is a chance of allowing major market players with solid operational record to explore these new businesses. Given the craze of tech giants and government’s “laissez-faire” attitude towards tech innovations, e-bike rental does have a chance to beat the odds.

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Huawei wins another patent battle against Samsung in China https://technode.com/2018/01/11/huawei-wins-another-patent-battle-samsung-china/ https://technode.com/2018/01/11/huawei-wins-another-patent-battle-samsung-china/#respond Thu, 11 Jan 2018 06:52:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60932 A Chinese court in Shenzhen has ruled today in favor of Chinese smartphone maker Huawei, issuing a ban on its South Korean competitor Samsung from infringing the firm’s wireless communication technology through manufacturing and selling products that use the patent, local media The Paper is reporting. Huawei’s other litigation requests were rejected and Samsung retains […]]]>

A Chinese court in Shenzhen has ruled today in favor of Chinese smartphone maker Huawei, issuing a ban on its South Korean competitor Samsung from infringing the firm’s wireless communication technology through manufacturing and selling products that use the patent, local media The Paper is reporting. Huawei’s other litigation requests were rejected and Samsung retains the right to appeal to a higher court.

The patent infringement spat between Huawei and Samsung took shape in 2016 amid mounting competition between two of the world’s largest smartphone vendors. Most of the litigation is about patents related to mobile technology and design.

Huawei initiated the first attack in May 2016, suing Samsung over patent infringements in the U.S. and China. The Chinese firm claimed Samsung infringed on their 4G technologies, operating systems and user interfaces. In another suit filed in Quanzhou in June, Huawei claimed an indemnity of RMB 80.5 million ($12 million). Samsung fought back two months later, claiming an RMB 161 million damage amount from its Chinese rival.

This wave of patent disputes saw early results in 2017 when Huawei gained the upper hand. In April 2017, the Quanzhou court ruled in favor of Huawei: Samsung was ordered to pay the cash damages of RMB 80 million as required.

Amid slowing smartphone sales worldwide, Huawei has emerged as the second strongest smartphone brand, next only to Samsung. In an increasingly competitive market, patents are one of the primary weapons of defense among big smartphone brands.

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Amazon’s AWS launches joint innovation center in Taiwan https://technode.com/2018/01/11/aws-innovation-center-taiwan/ https://technode.com/2018/01/11/aws-innovation-center-taiwan/#respond Thu, 11 Jan 2018 04:04:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60923 Amazon’s cloud computing arm AWS is launching their first flagship joint innovation center in Taiwan, where they will provide assistance to tech professionals and supports to high-tech startups in the fields of cloud computing, big data, IoT, and AI. Located in Banqiao District, New Taipei City, the center will be jointly operated by New Taipei City government […]]]>

Amazon’s cloud computing arm AWS is launching their first flagship joint innovation center in Taiwan, where they will provide assistance to tech professionals and supports to high-tech startups in the fields of cloud computing, big data, IoT, and AI.

Located in Banqiao District, New Taipei City, the center will be jointly operated by New Taipei City government and FCC Partners, a middle-market cross-border M&A financial advisory services provider.

The partnership is set to create a comprehensive ecosystem of startup innovation, which will help pioneer the shift from traditional industries into digital markets in Taiwan, FCC Partner Chairman Huang Chi-yuan said to local media.

The move is in line with Amazon’s greater push to capitalize on the rise of tech innovations from the Greater China region. AWS just rolled out its first global joint innovation center in Qingdao, Shandong Province in March 2017.

On the other hand, the local government considers investment in the innovation center as a strategic decision, which will contribute to the government’s Asia Silicon Valley Development Plan. Taiwan, once an indispensable part of the world high-tech supply chain, has been suffering from a growth slowdown in recent years. The plan is among a series of governmental efforts to revive the local tech industry.

Before Amazon went forward with this allocation in Taiwan, Microsoft and IBM had both established application innovation centers in Taiwan, including a development center for the IoT industry and a cloud innovation alliance in order to strengthen their ecosystems.

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Five most highly-anticipated Chinese tech IPOs for 2018 https://technode.com/2018/01/08/five-highly-anticipated-chinese-tech-ipos-2018/ https://technode.com/2018/01/08/five-highly-anticipated-chinese-tech-ipos-2018/#respond Mon, 08 Jan 2018 01:46:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60510 After a slow start, Chinese tech firm sped up its IPO rush in the latter half of 2017, marked by hefty IPOs like the ones from China Literature, ZhongAn, Qudian, and Sogou. The past year also witnessed strong performances from some of China’s top listed tech giants. Tencent joined the half-a-trillion-dollar club last November, while […]]]>

After a slow start, Chinese tech firm sped up its IPO rush in the latter half of 2017, marked by hefty IPOs like the ones from China Literature, ZhongAn, Qudian, and Sogou.

The past year also witnessed strong performances from some of China’s top listed tech giants. Tencent joined the half-a-trillion-dollar club last November, while Alibaba is expected to smash the same milestone in no time. The relentless growth continues, setting the stage for Chinese unicorns who are ready to ring the opening bell in the new year ahead with fiercer competition between Hong Kong and New York expected.

Generally, rumors circle around the possibility of a company’s IPO launch before it actually happens. Here’s a list of some of the most widely speculated IPO launches we may see in 2018.

Ant Financial

Despite several delays, Ant Financial remains one of the most hotly anticipated listing candidates from China. The reason is simple. As the most valuable unlisted asset of Alibaba Group, the sheer size of this offering would make it incredibly interesting. Ant Financial’s most recent $4.5 billion monster round was received at an over $60 billion valuation in April 2016.

Ant Financial, the operator of China’s most popular mobile payment tool Alipay and other financial services, was founded in December 2014 when it was spun out of Alibaba before the latter’s record IPO in September 2014.

The company has been on the rumored IPO list for years and is said to be considering both Hong Kong and New York, two of the hottest listing destinations for Chinese tech firms.

Xiaomi

Xiaomi

Despite the struggles in late 2016 and early 2017, Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi is made an epic comeback last year through the combined forces of new flagship model launch, diversified distribution channels and dividends from early investments in overseas markets, especially the Indian one.

The firm broke its annual revenue target by as much as 18 percent, topping the annual revenue goal of about $15 billion. The net profit was estimated to be at least $1 billion in 2017, and profit for 2018 is expected to reach about $2 billion.

It seems good timing for an IPO as the firm’s performance is back on track for robust growth. Bankers estimate that Xiaomi’s IPO could value the company at up to $100 billion.

Tencent Music

Tencent

Tencent Music, the music streaming and downloading service, is expected to be the latest addition to Tencent’s recent efforts to get its affiliates listed.

In addition to social networking and gaming, Chinese tech behemoth Tencent has been able to dominate yet another sector in its home market—music streaming. Through a merger between its flagship music streamer QQ Music and competitor China Music Corporation (CMC) in July 2017, the firm’s new music unit Tencent Music and Entertainment Group (TME) managed to control a whopping 75% of the market  by combining the shares of Kuwo and KuGou—formerly owned by CMC—and QQ Music, according to a report by the Data Center of China internet (DCCI). To consolidate its foothold in domestic or even the global market, the music group has just reached an equity swap agreement Spotify ahead of the rumored IPO.

Before the merger, Tencent affiliate CMC reportedly planned for an independent listing in 2016. Sources with knowledge of the matter disclosed that the IPO would range between $300 to 600 million back then. The IPO size for the new firm is expected to be much bigger than that, somewhere around $1 billion IPO at $10 billion valuation as Bloomberg has predicted.

Tencent is also planning an IPO for its mobile healthcare arm WeDoctor Group, a platform that includes various medical-related services from online diagnosis and medical tips to rating hospitals and doctors.

iQiyi

Baidu has envisioned an IPO for its YouTube-style video streaming service iQiyi for a long time. In May 2014 CEO Yu Gong told Bloomberg that the company planned to IPO within the next three years. The latest update comes from an anonymous source who hinted that the IPO would come as soon as in 2018, valuing the streaming video service at more than $8 billion.

The heated competition is turning video streaming into a capital heavy sector. In a battle against Alibaba-backed Youku and Tencent’s Tencent Video, iQiyi needs more quality content, both self-generated content and exclusive partnerships, to sustain its lead among online video platforms.

The site has raised $1.53 billion from the sale of convertible notes to investors include Hillhouse Capital, Boyu Capital, Run Liang Tai Fund, IDG Capital, Everbright-IDG Industrial Fund, and Sequoia Capital.

Lufax

Lufax, one of China’s largest peer-to-peer lenders and online wealth managers, is reportedly geared up for a Hong Kong initial public offering. The firm, valued at $18.5 billion in its last fundraising round in January 2016, could be raising $3 billion-$5 billion in the IPO as early as the first half of 2018, the report pointed out.

While the IPO rush of Chinese fintech firms is gaining attention from the capital market, it’s normal that Lufax, a top player in the sector, would follow the suit. Lufax’s initial offering has been highly watched by bankers since last year. But the lack of clear regulations on online wealth management has held back its IPO, FT pointed out. Regulatory issues also attribute to the delay of Ant Financial’s IPO.

Image credits: Ant Financial, Xiaomi, Tencent, iQiyi, Lufax

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China is a unique market and this startup is helping foreign hardware makers to crack it https://technode.com/2018/01/03/veeshop-hardware/ https://technode.com/2018/01/03/veeshop-hardware/#respond Wed, 03 Jan 2018 06:54:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60429 China is arguably the world’s largest manufacturing center for smart devices thanks to the quick rise of hardware hubs like Shenzhen. Groups of foreign entrepreneurs come to the country in search of more affordable parts, efficient manufacturers, cheap labor, crowdsourcing, and the vibrant startup community. But even though their products are manufactured here, it is […]]]>

China is arguably the world’s largest manufacturing center for smart devices thanks to the quick rise of hardware hubs like Shenzhen. Groups of foreign entrepreneurs come to the country in search of more affordable parts, efficient manufacturers, cheap labor, crowdsourcing, and the vibrant startup community. But even though their products are manufactured here, it is still a daunting task when they try to sell them in China, a market too large for startups to ignore.

Compared with overseas markets, online marketing in China is more segmented, complex and unpredictable. Even Hover Camera, a drone maker founded by a Chinese team, ran clueless when tapping local market after initial success overseas. “So that’s why they choose to work with VeeShop,” Wendy Wang, founder and CEO of the firm, told TechNode.

VeeShop partners with international smart hardware makers to bring exclusive and high-end products to China via its community of gadget fans by matching key opinion leaders (KOLs) and leveraging online and offline distribution channels.

VeeShop
Image credit: VeeShop

As an electronics retailer, VeeShop is based on yanxuan, a model behind the success of Xiaomi and NetEase Yanxuan. “To tap China’s consumption upgrading trend, yanxuan (which means “strictly selected” in English) helps Chinese customers to build more affordable yet quality life by selecting a limited number of quality items on a few main categories,” said Wendy. For example, products sold on yanxuan are limited to nine main categories and the SKUs are controlled to around 7,000 items.

While NetEase Yanxuan is focused on providing selected daily life products, VeeShop goes after the smart hardware vertical. “Tmall is the upgraded version for Taobao, but now there’s no higher-end version for JD, China’s major electronics e-commerce platform. JD’s sales per order is at around RMB 200 (around $30), we aim at something between RMB 2,000 to 3,000,” Wendy explained. “China has a huge appetite for smart products. We are talking about a $4 billion market for imported smart hardware here.”

Different from JD’s male-centered customer base, 80% of VeeShop users are female. Wendy sees this as a new trend in the smart hardware industry where smart jewelry, smart home gadgets, and smart maternal & baby care devices are on the rise.

What’s more, the 10-month-old startup is also engaged in enterprise-facing business, providing full marketing solutions for foreign startups in penetrating China with partnership cross multiple channels like JD, Mogujie, Suning, KOLs, celebrities, talented management companies of Billboard Asia.

VeeShop Founder & CEO Wendy Wang (Image credit: VeeShop)

The yanxuan model reasonably leads to strict project selection standards for VeeShop. “We got three standards in project selection. First, it has to be an international product that as aspires to enter the Chinese market. Second, the product has to be beautifully designed and aesthetically pleasing. A majority of our clients are CES and Red Dot Design Award winners. Lastly, the team has to be in China, rather than hesitating on making the move or not,” Wendy told us.

The global smart hardware boom coupled with China’s market traction have given VeeShop abundant potential clients. It has partnered with multiple hardware incubators and accelerators from around the world including SOSV’s HAX, the first and largest hardware accelerator in the world that has accelerated 12% of the projects that raised more than 1 million US dollars on Kickstarter. As well as several smart device OEM factories like platform 88, a backdoor for Indiegogo and Kickstarter in China. The firm has worked with over 40 companies since launch.

Wendy illustrates how they usually work with partners by using Hover Camera as an example. “To test whether a product works in China or not before reaching a partnership, we would launch pilot test with KOLs. In the case of Hover Camera, we partners with Li Ziqi, a top food vlogger in China, to include a bird’s eye view in her blogs. We got tons of likes after posting the video and that’s how we got the first hint that this is going to be a success in China.”

“Actually, KOLs are quite open to this kind of cooperation because this would be a win-win situation for both parties. We help hardware startups to get media exposures they needed and KOLs get more technological and cool components in their content, which would help to rebuild their brand image and boost traffic in turn,” Wendy said.

The company has a strong team with experience in business and operations. Company CEO and co-founder Wendy previously worked at PwC as a consultant prior to becoming a serial entrepreneur. She sold her first company Palmap, an indoor map company, to Baidu and it’s now the foundation of Baidu’s LBS department. Then, she co-founded Chinese luxury flower brand Roseonly and BitYes, one of the biggest Bitcoin oversea exchange platform globally founded by Chinese before it closed. Co-founder and COO Jason is also a serial entrepreneur, who has over ten years of operation experience in sales.

Although the smart hardware concept witnessed its first boom as early as 2013, Wendy believes the right timing for getting involved in this sector as an early adopter has just arrived. “Hopping on the hottest trend is the work for investors. The popularity of a field among venture capitalist does not necessarily coincides with that for the consumers. Likewise, it would be too early for mass users to consume current hot technologies like AI. In another word, it takes time to transform investment into actual user adoption. The normal period takes three to five years,” according to Wendy.

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Top 10 Chinese unmanned stores in 2017 https://technode.com/2017/12/27/top-10-chinese-unmanned-stores-2017-2/ https://technode.com/2017/12/27/top-10-chinese-unmanned-stores-2017-2/#respond Wed, 27 Dec 2017 01:39:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60289 The announcement of Amazon Go, the cashierless store concept, in late 2016, coincided with a flurry of Chinese tech companies creating their own versions of unmanned stores. For them, 2017 was a fruitful year for developing their solutions tailored to Chinese consumers, as well as in educating the market. What’s more important behind the quick […]]]>

The announcement of Amazon Go, the cashierless store concept, in late 2016, coincided with a flurry of Chinese tech companies creating their own versions of unmanned stores. For them, 2017 was a fruitful year for developing their solutions tailored to Chinese consumers, as well as in educating the market.

What’s more important behind the quick rise is that the market is ready. High smartphone penetration, ubiquitous mobile payment services, high population density, growing numbers of urban commuters who value convenience and efficiency—everything makes China a fertile land for automated shops.

In line with the rising trend, unmanned convenience store startups became the new darling for Chinese investors. At the same time, traditional convenience retail chains like Japanese convenience store giant Lawson and electronics retailer Suning are also tapping into this trend.

Similar to bike rental services which have been troubled by bike thefts and damage, the staff-less service model may easily fall victim to the same problems. But the market, as well as the regulators, are quickly adapting to the changes over 2017. “Both entrepreneurs and government are more mature. Beijing is reacting swiftly to the new innovations. The Ministry of Commerce is now drafting the new standard for this new sector,” said BingoBox CEO Cheng Zilin at TechCrunch Shanghai.

Here are ten major unmanned stores that caught our attention:

BingoBox (缤果盒子)

Image credit: TechNode

As a forerunner in the vertical, BingoBox rolled out its first “box” in Shanghai this July. The 24-hour self-service convenience retailing booth allows users to enter, pick the goods, scan their RFID tags, and pay with WeChatPay or Alipay through simple smartphone scans. It’s also trying to integrate AI technologies into its shopping experiences. The firm has received over RMB 100 million in Series A. Investors include GGV Capital, Qiming Venture Partners, and Source Code Ventures China.

Tao Café (淘咖啡)

Image credit: TechNode

Alibaba opened its first automated store ,Tao Café, in Hangzhou this year. After entering by scanning a QR code with their Taobao app, users can pick up physical goods and walk through a 1-meter long scanner to automatically pay for the products through Alipay.

F5 Future Store (F5未来商店)

Image credit: F5 Future Store

F5 Future Store is a 24-hour smart unmanned convenience store where customers can order and pay for products at a special terminal or wirelessly with their smartphones. All cooking, brewing drinks, picking, clearing, inventory, cleaning work are done automatically by machines. The firm’s latest RMB 30 million Series B in June this year pushed its total funding to over RMB 54 million. Investors include Sinovation Ventures, Innohub Capital, and TCL Capital.

Xingbianli (猩便利)

Image credit: Xingbianli

Xingbianli is a checkout-free convenience store operator engaged that places snack bars in offices. It provides drinks, biscuits, and instant noodle to office workers, and allows customers to pay via mobile payment options like WeChat Pay and Alipay.

After receiving RMB 100 million angel round in September, the startup booked another RMB 380 million Series A in November. Investors include Sequoia China, Lightspeed China Partners, China Renaissance, and Vision Plus Capital.

JD Daojia (京东到家)

Image credit:JDDJ
Image credit: JD Daojia

JD Daojia, JD’s O2O e-commerce joint venture with delivery service Dada, launched its unmanned vending shelf solution this October, mainly targeting enterprise partners to sell snacks and dairy products. Its solutions are now available in top enterprises like Tencent, JD, DHL, and Pingan Financial Service, covering first- and second-tier cities.

Take Go

Image credit: Take Go

Take Go is the latest effort of traditional FMCG enterprise Wahaha in tapping into the staffless store trend. The firm rolled out Take Go last February in partnership with artificial intelligence solutions provider DeepBlue Technology, which offers technical support for the stores.

Wahaha had already laid out vending machines in 2016 with an estimated investment of RMB 2 billion. It plans to open a hundred thousand new stores in the country in the next three years, and a million in ten years.

Xiaoe Weidian (小e微店)

Image credit: Xiaoe Weidian

Targeting the white collar group, Xiaoe Weidian runs smart vending stores and shelves. Launched in July 2016, the startup now operates over 5,000 stores in top-tier enterprises like Haier, 51job and Xiaomi across more than 10 cities. It claimed a daily peak transaction volume of RMB 200k. The firm just secured a RMB 200 million Series B this October.

Bianlifeng (便利蜂)

Image credit: Bianlifeng

Founded by Qunar CEO Zhuang Chenchao, Bianlifeng is a QR code and mobile payment enabled staffless stores. It tries to differentiate itself by targeting high-end customers with plans to cover central business areas in cities and sell high quality imported goods. Customers can also order merchandise online and go to pick them up at the store. It’s reported that Zhuang has invested a total of RMB 300 million in Bianlifeng.

Fxbox (函数空间)

Image credit: TechNode

Fxbox offers a complete solution integrating various smart technologies such as RFID, facial recognition, and image recognition. The firm has received a Series A from Cherubic Ventures at an RMB 250 million valuation. Company founder CEO Zhao Liang previously worked as CTO of video streaming site Tudou.

Xiaomai (小麦铺)

Image credit: Xiaomai

Xiaomai is a smart convenience store maker. It manufactures seven models of unit across themes including bakery, snacks, community activities. Units of different products are placed in different public locations like metro exits and business districts. The firm currently operates in Beijing and has received RMB 125 million in funding from Aplus Ventures this year.

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Top 5 massive Chinese fundings in 2017–and the companies behind them https://technode.com/2017/12/25/top-5-massive-chinese-fundings-2017-companies-behind/ https://technode.com/2017/12/25/top-5-massive-chinese-fundings-2017-companies-behind/#respond Mon, 25 Dec 2017 01:28:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60219 After the capital winter of 2016, tech startup deal activity in China turned strong again in 2017 but in a more rational way. This year’s list of top funding rounds in China features quite a few familiar names. It’s fair that more established companies would get the largest funding rounds but there seems to be […]]]>

After the capital winter of 2016, tech startup deal activity in China turned strong again in 2017 but in a more rational way.

This year’s list of top funding rounds in China features quite a few familiar names. It’s fair that more established companies would get the largest funding rounds but there seems to be excessive attention to such companies, whereby a small portion of leading startups end up getting more money while the majority remain in a funding shortage, as explained by Li Jingwang, CEO of Chinese tech startup database IT Juzi. So much so that tech behemoths like Didi, ofo, and Mobike managed to raise two or more billion-level rounds in the span of one year in a more risk-averse funding environment.

Sector-wise, the sharing economy, artificial intelligence, and video were some of the hottest verticals in China. Check five of China’s largest tech firm investments for this year.

Didi Chuxing—$5.5 billion + $4 billion

After topping last year’s list with a $7.3 billion round, Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is still the most sought after Chinese tech startup this year. Following a $5.5 billion round in April, the firm announced another $4 billion plus equity funding in December.

If 2016 was when the firm started to dip its toes in overseas markets, 2017 is the year when Didi put its globalization plans in execution. In March, the firm launched its office outside of China, dubbed Didi Labs, in Mountain View, California. After extending to Europe and Africa, it’s pushing harder in the US through a partnership with Lyft. The firm’s international approach was also demonstrated by the launch of a more expat-friendly version in the domestic market and new support for Apple Pay.

Diversification of product lines is another major aspect of Didi’s ecosystem development strategy. Investments in ofo and their partnership made it easy for Didi to embed ofo’s bike rental service to its main app. Food delivery and payments are some of the other projects on its plate.

iQiyi$1.53 billion

iQiyi, the YouTube-style service backed by Baidu raised $1.53 billion from the sale of convertible notes to investors. Investors in the round include Hillhouse Capital, Boyu Capital, Run Liang Tai Fund, IDG Capital, Everbright-IDG Industrial Fund, and Sequoia Capital. Baidu also invested $300 million into the service. One company representative told TechCrunch that the monster round would likely be spent on acquiring content.

In a market where content is the king, video streaming websites are investing heavily in quality content, both self-generated content and exclusive partnerships with other platforms.

Ofo—$450 million + $700 million vs Mobike— Billion dollar-level funding

Image credit: ofo

For Chinese bike rental firms, funding size should not be measured by single rounds but by the total amount raised over a certain period of time. So we put ofo and Mobike, two leaders in the sector, together due to the nature of the fundings, and also the similarity of their business.

Soon after nabbing a $450 million D round in March, bike rental platform ofo completed a series E financing round of more than $700 million on July 6th led by Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, Hony Capital, and CITICPE. In the middle of these two rounds, the company received another nine-digit dollar funding in April. Ofo’s business surpassed the $1 billion valuation mark earlier this year when it announced its $450 million Series D round in February. It is aiming to raise new funds at a valuation of about $3 billion, Bloomberg reported this July.

Ofo’s arch-foe Mobike is no less capable of sweeping up capital, although the firm didn’t specify its funding sizes for each round. Over the past year, Mobike has announced four financing rounds: nine-digit dollar fund in January and February, $600 million E round in July and an undisclosed amount in November. Wall Street Journal reported that the firm’s $600 million round was raised at $3 billion valuation.

The bike rental battle in China is going feverish pitch as competitions expand beyond the national boundary. On the other hand, the industry is witnessing its first group of casualties. There’s a rumor about a possible merger between ofo and Mobike, two top players in the field, but both of the companies say it’s not an option despite pressure from investors.

Koubei—$1.1 billion

Koubei, an Alibaba affiliate company focused on enabling local commerce, closed a $1.1 billion financing round in January this year from investors include Silver Lake, CDH Investments, Yunfeng Capital and Primavera Capital. It is interesting to note that the current round marks the first money from external investors.

Koubei is a joint venture founded in 2015 by Alibaba and its mobile payment affiliate Ant Financial to tap into China’s rising O2O initiative. Both put RMB 3 billion (worth around $480 million at the time) into Koubei when it was created. The idea behind it is to generate business for local retailers by bringing them online, while also offering new commerce opportunities for consumers.

The service fights fierce competition from domestic competitors like Meituan-Dianping, Ele.me, etc.

Toutiao—$1 billion

Toutiao Founder & CEO Zhang Yiming Speaking at TechCrunch Beijing (Image credit: TechNode)

Chinese news reading app Toutiao secured $ 1 billion in a series D round financing in April from investors including returning backer Sequoia Capital and CCB International, the investment arm of China Construction Bank. Reuters reported this August that the firm is planning to raise another $2 billion at a valuation of over $20 billion.

A relatively young startup, Toutiao has grown quickly in the past few years, widely considered as a competent candidate to replace the countries tech incumbents of BAT. Flush with cash, the firm is making investments of its own, such as Flipgram, Musical.ly, and more.

Despite the growth, it has a controversial reputation since its boom. People’s Daily, the official newspaper of Chinese Communist Party, name-checked Toutiao in an op-ed denouncing algorithm-driven news distribution platforms for the echo chamber they potentially create.

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China’s going to take a bigger chunk of world’s $110b app economy in 2018: report https://technode.com/2017/12/20/app-annie-app-economy/ https://technode.com/2017/12/20/app-annie-app-economy/#respond Wed, 20 Dec 2017 07:35:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60121 In the past decade, the whole world has witnessed how mobile phones and smart devices have revolutionized the way people live and think. As the iPhone, the forerunner of this evolution turned 10 in 2017, Apple’s App Store and competing platform Android Market are celebrating their tenth anniversaries in 2018. The decade-long development has brought […]]]>

In the past decade, the whole world has witnessed how mobile phones and smart devices have revolutionized the way people live and think. As the iPhone, the forerunner of this evolution turned 10 in 2017, Apple’s App Store and competing platform Android Market are celebrating their tenth anniversaries in 2018.

The decade-long development has brought the app economy to maturity in a number of ways and the sheer number of apps is perhaps the most impressive aspect. App analytics firm App Annie pointed out in its latest report that the iOS App Store and Google Play had more than 2 million and 3.5 million apps available respectively as of the end of October 2017. Also, the growth shows no sign of slowing with iOS App Store and Google Play seeing 50,000 and 150,000 new apps in October this year. Maturation also takes the form of longer user engagement time, larger in-app consumption and wider industry coverage, the report pointed out.

The continued evolution of markets across the globe has led to the continued growth of app monetization. App Annie forecasts that worldwide consumer spending across all mobile app stores will grow approximately 30% year on year to exceed $110 billion in 2018.

Developing countries are forming a stronger force in boosting this new growth. China will continue to be a key market for app store consumer spend in 2018, growing at a rate that will “significantly outpace the rest of the world,” the report says. While China, a top market for iOS App Store consumer spend, will become a major driver for growth in the iOS system, spending on Android phones will be driven by emerging markets led by India and Brazil.

China is one step ahead of global tech trends 

China has been commonly stereotyped as a follower in innovation, where local entrepreneurs copy technologies or business models already proven to be successful in overseas markets. But that’s no longer the case. In its detailed post, App Annie made 10 app economy predictions for the coming year. China has been playing a leading role in a number of these new trends.

While VR boom is slowing, AR is taking a significant step forward toward joining the mainstream. China powerhouses AlibabaBaidu and Tencent are all engaged in the initiative. Inspired by Pokémon Go, early last year Alipay released its location-based Augmented Reality (AR) hongbao campaign, allowing users to hide and collect hongbao (red envelopes tradtionally containing money) in real locations by scanning objects using their smartphone cameras. Alibaba’s most recent partnership with Starbuck is making the latter’s stores more interactive with AR technologies.

“In the past, it has been easy to segment retailers between bricks-and-clicks and digital-first. However, these lines are becoming increasingly blurred by acquisitionspartnerships and innovation. These activities are impacting all dimensions of the shopper journey, including in-storein-home and delivery,” says the report.

App Annie expects these changes will cause consumers to change their shopping habits in 2018, which will in turn begin to redefine the relationship between and even the very nature of existing retail channels (e.g., mobile apps, web, brick-and-mortar). Blurring between the online and offline worlds is already in full swing in China, and we have a dedicated term for it: “new retail“.

The report also pointed out that cash registers’ longstanding role in the checkout and payment process will be reduced, or in some cases replaced, by mobile. For many consumers, mobile will be a core part of the shopping experience regardless of the channel they choose. China’s ubiquitous mobile payment solutions and the rise of unmanned stores all point to this prediction coming true here.

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WeWork and URWork settle US trademark lawsuit https://technode.com/2017/12/19/wework-urwork-settle-us-trademark-lawsuit/ https://technode.com/2017/12/19/wework-urwork-settle-us-trademark-lawsuit/#respond Tue, 19 Dec 2017 06:05:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60158 The trademark dispute between US co-working behemoth WeWork and its Chinese counterpart URWork in the US has been settled to the satisfaction of both parties. A similar case between the two parties in London has also been withdrawn. It seems that English name of the Chinese co-working giant—”URwork”—will only appear in China in the future. Outside China, […]]]>

The trademark dispute between US co-working behemoth WeWork and its Chinese counterpart URWork in the US has been settled to the satisfaction of both parties. A similar case between the two parties in London has also been withdrawn.

It seems that English name of the Chinese co-working giant—”URwork”—will only appear in China in the future. Outside China, the company will be branded with only its Chinese name, “You Ke Gong Chang” (优客工厂), a move the company has always planned as it claimed in court files.

The boom of co-working industry comes along with the rise of several regional dominators. As they are taking a global focus, competitions is heated. WeWork filed a suit in September after UrWork announced plans for several global hubs in New York, Los Angles, and London. The similarity in name and branding, and thus user confusion, were at the heart of its concerns.

Through a partnership with local partner Serendipity Labs, URwork managed to open a co-branded location in New York earlier this year. They also opened a 300-desk space at 16839 Gale Avenue, Los Angeles.

UrWork has withdrawn both trademark applications that were at issue in the case, for a logo with the letters “UR” on a circular background, as of December 15, according to The Real Deal.

In a statement from WeWork, the co-working company said that the parties had reached “an amicable resolution to the global dispute regarding the use of certain trademarks.” the report pointed out.

In fact, there have been early signs for a peaceful settlement at the beginning of this month. A picture taken at World Internet Conference in Wuzhen depicted perfect harmony between WeWork execs—co-founder Adam Neumann and vice chairman Michael Gross—and URwork founder Mao Daqing was widely circulated on Chinese social networks. A following tour of WeWork execs to URwork’s China locations drew the two firms to more friendly terms.

Likewise, the two co-working giants are facing similar competition in China. Luckily, top players in the industry are focusing diversified segments in the industry as the market evolves.

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Apple Watch Series 3 eligible for refund in China due to LTE setbacks https://technode.com/2017/12/19/apple-watch-series-3-eligible-refund-china-due-lte-setbacks/ https://technode.com/2017/12/19/apple-watch-series-3-eligible-refund-china-due-lte-setbacks/#respond Tue, 19 Dec 2017 04:24:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60154 When Apple released its Series 3 model this September, the cellular capabilities were the biggest selling point for the smart watch. It still is in most of the world–except China. As furious early adopters are growing impatient after three months of waiting, Apple decided that Apple Watch Series 3 owners in China could return the product, […]]]>

When Apple released its Series 3 model this September, the cellular capabilities were the biggest selling point for the smart watch. It still is in most of the world–except China.

As furious early adopters are growing impatient after three months of waiting, Apple decided that Apple Watch Series 3 owners in China could return the product, unrestricted by the 14-day return policy.

After brief availability through telecom carrier China Unicom, owners of the new model found that cellular connectivity was cut off abruptly without a timeframe for comeback. The suspension of this feature last for a couple of months and there’s no sign that the ban will be lifted any time soon.

Chinese Carrier Information for Apple Watch Series 3

At the very beginning of Series 3’s release, Unicom specified the following: “Cellular service available only for mobile lines opened in Guangdong, Henan, Hunan, Shanghai, and Tianjin.” Apple updated the page with reference to support later in 2017 after the September 28 ban. Now, all Chinese carriers — China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, show the support is coming in 2018, Apple Watch Series 3 cellular support site shows.

Now, Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE, which priced at RMB3188, is now no different to a more affordable Apple Watch Series 3 with GPS (RMB 2588).

The ban is essentially caused by the new technology that Apple uses in the Series 3 called an eSIM, a tiny chip that allows users to subscribe to any carrier they choose, and thus loosing the government’s ability in tracking the users.

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Ant Financial partners with Standard Chartered Bank for Belt & Road Initiative https://technode.com/2017/12/19/ant-financial-partners-standard-chartered-bank-belt-road-initiative/ https://technode.com/2017/12/19/ant-financial-partners-standard-chartered-bank-belt-road-initiative/#respond Tue, 19 Dec 2017 01:38:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=60150 Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial Holdings announced Monday the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with Standard Chartered Bank. “Under the terms of the MOU, Standard Chartered Bank will combine its banking expertise and insights in emerging markets with Ant Financial’s industry leading financial tech capabilities, to increase access to financial services for clients based in countries along the “Belt & […]]]>

Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial Holdings announced Monday the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with Standard Chartered Bank.

“Under the terms of the MOU, Standard Chartered Bank will combine its banking expertise and insights in emerging markets with Ant Financial’s industry leading financial tech capabilities, to increase access to financial services for clients based in countries along the “Belt & Road Initiative” route,” according to an official statement.

The partnership marked another milestone in Ant Financial’s globalization drive.  The firm’s leading third-party payment and lifestyle platform, Alipay, has more than 520 million active users, working with over 450 financial institutions and providing in-store payment services for Chinese tourists in more than 30 countries and regions.

Through decade-long development, Ant Financial empowers its strategic partners in emerging markets, including India, Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, Korea and Malaysia, to provide inclusive financial services, such as e-wallet solutions for local populations.

After establishing a foothold in Asian markets, the new partnership would accelerate the group’s efforts in penetrating more markets around the world, which is in line with the government’s Belt & Road plan. The MOU was signed following the 9th UK-China Economic and Financial Dialogue, which was held from December 15 to 16 in Beijing, China.

“We are excited about the opportunity to further collaborate with Standard Chartered Bank,” said Eric Jing, Chief Executive Officer, Ant Financial Services Group. “With the mission to ‘bring the world equal opportunities’, Ant Financial is dedicated to using technology to make financial services more inclusive on a global scale. This MOU with SCB is an important milestone in our efforts to enable our partners to better service their clients around the world.”

Standard Chartered Bank has been working together with Ant Financial since 2012, in areas including funding settlement, FX services and Alipay wallet related solutions. Their tie-up has helped Alipay to extended its service to Hong Kong early this year.

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Here’s how Chinese VCs are adapting to the ever-changing startup scene https://technode.com/2017/12/15/heres-chinese-vcs-adapting-ever-changing-startup-scene/ https://technode.com/2017/12/15/heres-chinese-vcs-adapting-ever-changing-startup-scene/#respond Fri, 15 Dec 2017 06:13:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59956 China presents a fascinating nation for tech entrepreneurs. The speed at which China’s technology grows and transforms is perhaps the most important aspect in defining what’s happening in the country’s startup industry: The Middle Kingdom is now the second largest arena for entrepreneurship with one startup is set up every seven minutes. To highlight the changes, […]]]>

China presents a fascinating nation for tech entrepreneurs. The speed at which China’s technology grows and transforms is perhaps the most important aspect in defining what’s happening in the country’s startup industry: The Middle Kingdom is now the second largest arena for entrepreneurship with one startup is set up every seven minutes.

To highlight the changes, virtually every very period of the past few years has its own theme: smart hardware for 2013-2014, cross-border e-commerce and ride-hailing for 2015, VR and bike sharing for 2016-2017, and unmanned store and new retail for 2017. In China’s tech market, the only thing permanent is change itself.

China’s tech companies pivot and change at an amazing speed to catch up with the market evolutions. Venture capital—those firms financiers behind the scenes—are also experiencing its own paradigm shifts.

Chinese VC is more about RMB than dollar now

“There’s been quite a lot of changes over the past decade. China used to be a predominantly US dollar market. Although dollars is still very active here, it’s more RMB than dollars now.” said Jeff Chi, Vice Chairman of Vickers Ventures, at a panel held on Chinaccelerator Demo Day.

We saw budding signs of this trend as early as 2010, but this year has recorded the full transition of this phenomenon. A total of 3,418 VC funds were established in the first eleven months of 2017, raising a combined RMB 1.61 trillion funding ($243 billion), according to data from research institute Zero2IPO. Of the total, a 95% or 3,339 VCs—managing RMB 1.5 trillion worth of capital—are RMB funds, as compared to 79 USD funds which manage the equivalent of RMB 100 billion.

State-backed entities play an important role in this shift, the firm notes. Overall 439 state-backed funds with a capital size of RMB 756.8 billion were founded in the first three quarters of this year. The state VC coffers topped $336.4 billion as of the end of 2015.

“Also, the flavor has kept changing,” Jeff noted. “The market in 2005 and 2006 were predominantly USD because US IPOs was the only avenue for exits. As domestic IPO opens, the local RMB exchanges has become more dominant and that’s why the past few years has seen privatization of US listed Chinese companies and seek for a relisting here. The interesting thing in the last six months is that we see a reheating of the US IPO market happening. So we live in an interesting time.”

Globalizing and diversifying venture models

The intensifying favor of VCs towards RMB does not necessarily underline their exclusive preferences for local companies. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. More Chinese VC firms are developing a global or focus, partially in line with the globalization strategies of domestic firms.

Chinese tech giants BAT, the once startup steamrollers, are playing an active role in driving this trend by investing in a massive line of rising verticals across the world. For example, Alibaba has invested a total $21 billion in M&A in the past two years, of which overseas market and O2O are the two top fields in this effort, Alibaba Vice President Joseph Tsai disclosed at an investor conference held in mid-2017.

Compared to tech startups, however, the VC business model hasn’t changed that much, but that doesn’t means VCs are not trying their best to reinvent themselves.

“Ventures has been around for quit long now, we have been talking about the new business ideas that would be considerable replacing the venture model, and incubators and accelerators come to the scene. But if you drill down deeper, it’s still a model that works, the cost and production for investors show it is still a viable model,” said Jeff.

Despite the hiccups in China, the recent rise of ICOs is providing a new way of fundraising for startups worldwide, but it will remain an interesting alternative rather than a mainstream funding channel in the long run. “I don’t think ICOs will replace venture capital; it will just play a different role. If you are a company going for ICO or an investor planning an ICO, I recommend being cautious because there’s very few regulation to protect this,” said Jeff.

Melody Zhang from Artesiann Capital Management echoed Jeff’s opinion. “ICO has lowered the barrier for very early-stage investments from incubators and it will be an interesting alternative for fundraising,” she said.

Melody Zhang, Nicholas Ducray, Jeff Chi, William Bao Bean (L-R) image credit: TechNode

Deep technology is sexy again

The time and age for the “me-too” concept where we copy US companies, innovate behind similar concepts and create a Chinese version is gone. “Companies and investors are shifting to a strategy that is going deeper and deeper into tech. Technology as a competitive advantage and having very deep technologies is becoming increasingly important,” Jeff pointed out.

The government has recognized this. As of June 31st, 2017, Chinese AI companies received RMB 63.5 billion or 33.18% of the world’s AI funding. President Xi Jinping has said that China not only tries and aspires to be, but will be a globally AI country by 2020. The government have very bold ambitions for technology, which is well reflected in its rising presence in the VC arena.

“As a firm, we soon move away from consumer industry where you focus on acquiring user cheaply. The cost for user acquisition is increasing. . . therefore we take technology as a competitive advantage. There’s really the way that you upgrade yourself,” Jeff said.

“There’s a few barriers, one is you have to understand the technology, you need people onboard to have a deeper understanding of the technology before, rather than someone who just got a general understanding of how the market goes. Invite some PhDs and researchers on the team. Also, technology is a global phenomenon, you can’t just say that I have this best technology because we are in China. You need to have a view point as to how similar technologies are developing across the world.”

The team is still the top

The team is what every investor talks about when being asked to give a recipe for their successful investments. Panelists at the discussion gave their own definitions of an amazing team.

“[An awesome team] combines a lot of things. Integrity, capability, passion, drive are some of the major attributes that we look for. But a lot of this is about being able to connect. You are going to be partner with this guy for the next five years. If we don’t like each other that would be an disaster. Is there a chance to have a decent conversation and messages across each other, is there a level of mutual trust, the likability and whether can we connect and work together are the most crucial matters,” according to Jeff.

Nicholas Ducray from Cathay Capital cites Pinduoduo, a social e-commerce platform which creates WeChat Groups to buy goods at discounts, as an example. “There are two co-founders of the team. One is from the mobile game company and the second is from a Taobao Partner company. What’s amazing is that they come across the idea by merging what they are good at together.”

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Social travel service Mafengwo pockets $133M Series D for UGC development and big data https://technode.com/2017/12/12/social-travel-service-mafengwo-pockets-133m-d-round-ugc-development-big-data/ https://technode.com/2017/12/12/social-travel-service-mafengwo-pockets-133m-d-round-ugc-development-big-data/#respond Tue, 12 Dec 2017 07:13:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59991 Chinese social travel service Mafengwo announced today that has completed a D round worth $133 million. New investors in this round include General Atlantic, Ocean Link, Temasek, Yuantai Investment, and Hopu. Existing investors Capital Today, Qiming Venture Partners, and Hillhouse Capital also participated. The proceeds will be used to improve the global travel experience, offer user-generated content, […]]]>

Chinese social travel service Mafengwo announced today that has completed a D round worth $133 million. New investors in this round include General Atlantic, Ocean Link, Temasek, Yuantai Investment, and Hopu. Existing investors Capital Today, Qiming Venture Partners, and Hillhouse Capital also participated.

The proceeds will be used to improve the global travel experience, offer user-generated content, deepen the application of advanced analytics, and improve travel guides and services, according to a company statement.

Born out of an online travel community for Chinese millennials, the startup has grown to become an independent online travel platform that aggregates user-generated reviews of destinations, hotels, attractions, and local activities to provide trip planning advice to self-guided travelers in China.

Gang Lü, Co-Founder and COO of Mafengwo, said, “Mafengwo began as one of China’s largest tourism communities and has since evolved to become an independent online travel service platform that covers over 60,000 travel destinations globally and leverages advanced analytics to provide a unique user experience. Our platform continues to be differentiated due to our community of users, who generate diverse and candid feedback, recommendations, and ideas, and our AI-enabled platform, which makes it easy for our users to find the content and recommendations they need to make travel plans.”

The company previously raised an undisclosed C round from investors including Hillhouse Capital, Coatue Management LLC, Qiming Venture Partners in 2015. A $15 million B round was received in 2013. The company expects its total GMV to reach nearly RMB 10 billion in 2017.

The GMV of China’s online travel market approached RMB 176 billion in Q2 2017, rising 24.8% on the previous year. Along with the market boom over the past decade, there’s been a significant change in the way that Chinese people travel: from organized tours to individual trips, where travelers seek in-depth experiences as part of the journey. The rise of Mafengwo, its top rival Qiongyou and a raft of custom traveling platforms find their roots in this change.

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Baidu’s new diagnosis service makes sure your site works perfectly in China https://technode.com/2017/12/12/baidus-new-diagnosis-service-makes-sure-site-works-perfectly-china/ https://technode.com/2017/12/12/baidus-new-diagnosis-service-makes-sure-site-works-perfectly-china/#respond Tue, 12 Dec 2017 04:57:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59986 Youku instead of YouTube, WeChat rather than Twitter, Baidu over Google. These are just a few of the tips for any foreign website aiming for a Chinese audience. To give a more holistic view for those who are hoping to bypass the “Great Firewall”, Chinese search giant Baidu is rolling out a new service in […]]]>

Youku instead of YouTube, WeChat rather than Twitter, Baidu over Google. These are just a few of the tips for any foreign website aiming for a Chinese audience. To give a more holistic view for those who are hoping to bypass the “Great Firewall”, Chinese search giant Baidu is rolling out a new service in Japan which offers website operators a pre-evaluation to determine whether their site is optimized to run in China, Japanese media Nikkei Asian Review is reporting.

Obviously, the huge market and economy behind the “wall” are the biggest drivers for this launch. “The service is aimed at companies and local governments looking to take advantage of the sharp increase in Chinese visitors to Japan amid Beijing’s tightening internet censorship,” the report pointed out.

Baidu is offering the service with LXR, a Tokyo-based maker of Chinese-language sites. Beyond recommendations on shifting to local accessible services, the troubleshooting report addresses a range of problems, from failure to display content properly, slow downloads, improperly displayed fonts and difficulties in showing messages from social media sites. The search giant also helps customers create effective Chinese-language websites.

Although similar services already exist, this is the first time for a Chinese tech giant, which has close relations with the state and complies with government internet control, to launch this kind of diagnosis service. It is still not clear whether the company will make it available globally.

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Didi mulls entering food delivery service, challenging Meituan on home turf https://technode.com/2017/12/12/didi-mulls-enter-meituans-home-turf-food-delivery-service/ https://technode.com/2017/12/12/didi-mulls-enter-meituans-home-turf-food-delivery-service/#respond Tue, 12 Dec 2017 01:57:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59979 DidiChinese ride-hailing giant Didi has a group of employees who are secretly working toward the launch of a food delivery service, local media reports, citing people familiar with matter. The source pointed out that Didi has been engaged in the R&D of food delivery service for quite a while. Product development and technical staff on […]]]> Didi

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi has a group of employees who are secretly working toward the launch of a food delivery service, local media reports, citing people familiar with matter.

The source pointed out that Didi has been engaged in the R&D of food delivery service for quite a while. Product development and technical staff on the project have been relocated to a new office and their details have been removed from Didi’s internal communication contacts, the source added.

Didi has not provided any comment in response to our inquiry into the matter. But a previous conversation with CEO Cheng Wei shows that the firm is at least open to such areas. “Everything is possible. The most important issue is whether it will create value for our users,” said Cheng when asked by Tencent News about the possibilities of entering catering and local life sectors.

Also, there are earlier signs of Didi’s interest in the sector. As early as 2015, the firm partnered with Ele.me for a program similar to ‘UberEATs’, the food delivery service run by Uber. The partnership has potential synergy given that both companies exist within Tencent’s strategic investment ecosystem.

Didi’s new food delivery service will put it in direct competition with Meituan, China’s top O2O titan that itself added a car-hailing function to its app in February this year.

As Chinese internet giants are increasingly blurring the boundaries between sectors, it’s getting harder and harder to define them by a single industry. Alibaba is no longer just an e-commerce giant and search engine has long ceased to be Baidu’s only pillar of business. Such business expansions will cause business overlap between top tech firms, and thus intensify competition in these verticals.

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This startup wants to transform China’s $10b trade show market https://technode.com/2017/12/08/expopromoter/ https://technode.com/2017/12/08/expopromoter/#respond Fri, 08 Dec 2017 09:22:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59895 Although people are quickly shifting online, brick-and-mortar trade shows and exhibitions still hold an important position in the business world for companies that want to expand their customer base and build reliable brands: face-to-face meetings on trade shows drive contracts worth $1 trillion per year. Despite all the costs of buying a booth, staff training, […]]]>

Although people are quickly shifting online, brick-and-mortar trade shows and exhibitions still hold an important position in the business world for companies that want to expand their customer base and build reliable brands: face-to-face meetings on trade shows drive contracts worth $1 trillion per year.

Despite all the costs of buying a booth, staff training, and traveling, exhibitors come to trade shows in the hope of meeting potential customers who are interested in their products or services, and best of all, who are ready to commit to a deal. So it is of crucial importance for trade show organizers to get relevant and professional attendees.

Expo market hasn’t changed for years. Till now, most of the organizers still stick to the traditional way of attracting attendees, such as sending promotional emails, making phone calls and partnership with advertising agencies. Efficiency is still very low. The case is even worse when they want to attract overseas visitors.

ExpoPromoter is a platform which uses data and machine learning technologies to find professional and qualified buyers from all over the world. They provide a hub for any services that might be needed by someone organizing events such as conferences and exhibitions. This includes high-end services for trade show organizers, exhibitors, and visitors: online ticket ordering, stand booking, and attracting attendees.

After submitting attendee profiles to ExpoPromoter, trade show organizers can get their events listed on the promotion banners on over 6,000 partner sites of the platform, which includes, advertising agencies, web masters, event catalogues, and more. Users who click on the banners can fill in a registration form for purchasing the ticket and receive recommendations for similar events in the future.

“The organizers only pay for qualified visitors, or a percentage of expo stand sold. They pay $9 for qualified user registration data and an extra $35 for each attendee if we convert them to incoming attendees,” introduced Hennadiy Netyaha the founder and Global CEO of ExpoPromoter. “We also provide customer support for them, like people from Russia or Europe, we can translate for them.”

“We brought a win-win situation to everyone. Visitors find interesting trade shows more easily, organizers find qualified participants, which will in turn drive booth sales and revenue. Exhibitors get more contract deals and our partners get channels to monetize their traffic,” said Netyaha.

ExpoPromoter already signed contracts with 800 exhibitions and delivered 1 million attendees with a high growth margin of 66%.

The five-year-old startup was founded by a global team with over 50 employees worldwide. Ukrainian founder and CEO Hennadiy Netyaha is a serial entrepreneur who has had five exits in his previous projects, also he a track record of more than 20 years in the exhibition and internet sectors. China head Simon Zagaynov is a trade show veteran coming from Russia. COO Katerina Kachan has ten years experience in e-commerce.

Now operating three offices in London, Kiev, and Shanghai, Netyaha told us the firm is directing a special focus on the Chinese market in the future not only because of the market size but also the innovation here.

“The worldwide market capacity for trade shows is $55 billion. China, which represents $10 billion, is the second largest market in this industry, next only to the US. Two years ago we had a choice between US and Chinese market. Although the US trade show market right now is bigger than the China, we find the market here is more vibrant. We found that main thing in China is you fell this drive. Everyone wants to work here to get their goals and they crave success. You can feel this drive and this is good for business,” said the CEO.

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How Chinaccelerator’s latest batch is making traditional businesses sexy https://technode.com/2017/12/07/how-chinaccelerators-latest-batch-is-making-traditional-businesses-sexy/ https://technode.com/2017/12/07/how-chinaccelerators-latest-batch-is-making-traditional-businesses-sexy/#respond Thu, 07 Dec 2017 11:52:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59834 ChinacceleratorIf you didn’t know it yet, tech is the new sexy. There has been a surge in the development and take up of a wide range of new technologies. Many long-established industries are now using them to their advantage to make their offerings more convenient and efficient. The newest batch at the Shanghai-based Chinaccelerator has […]]]> Chinaccelerator

If you didn’t know it yet, tech is the new sexy.

There has been a surge in the development and take up of a wide range of new technologies. Many long-established industries are now using them to their advantage to make their offerings more convenient and efficient. The newest batch at the Shanghai-based Chinaccelerator has witnessed the latest addition to innovations in this trend, addressing problems in traditional (sometimes boring) industries like tradeshows, hospitality, and catering.

After closely tracking Chinaccelerator’s development over the past four years, we also noticed that there’s a general trend towards enterprise-facing or 2B businesses in its project selection. A total of twelve teams pitched to a hall-full of investors and entrepreneurs last week, eight of which are 2B services, each of them targeting a vertical solving very specific problems.

ExpoPromoter – Tradeshows

Expos in China are a $10 billion market. The success of Chinese trade shows depends on the value of exhibited products purchased, and yet, local organizers do not know how to attract relevant provisional buyers from overseas. Started by a Russian team, ExpoPromoter allows the buying and selling of booths online through targeted digital companies and its own affiliate partners network.

The company has signed contracts with 800 exhibitions and delivered 1 million attendees to date, according to Simon Zagaynov, China head of the firm.

ExpoPromoter team at Chinaccelerator Demo Day (Image credit: Chinaccelerator)

Portier – Hospitality

Modern hotels have lost $12 billion in revenue to Airbnb alone and are squeezed on revenue from online travel agencies. Portier provides hotels with a fully integrated hotel marketing platform, coupled with a service platform on cell phones to increase hotel guest revenue on products and services such as booking the hotel spa or ordering hotel meals.

“The majority of the communication between hotels and their guests happens around the hotel and if the hotel wants to take more advantage of this they need to build stronger relationships with each one of their guests. Today we see that relationship is built around the front desk or concierge desk, but that’s not enough,” said company founder Deniz Tekerek.

Freshchefs – Corporate event catering

Freshchefs team at Chinaccelerator Demo Day (Image credit: Chinaccelerator)

Although online food delivery is in full swing in China, there are few online platforms that offer high-quality catering service to large-scale business events because upscale restaurants and chefs lack the service capacity and logistical network to deliver at scale. Freshchefs’ network of kitchens in Shanghai offer deliverable and tasty dishes from multiple restaurants around town. The platform can deliver from many restaurants in a single order. And best of all, it issues one receipt for the organizer for expenses purposes.

“To get every order delivered on time, we have delivery and capacity matching algorithms to match the size of the orders to the capability of delivery drivers as well as the restaurants,” said Clement Lee, CEO of the firm.

Hi-In – Career planning

There are more than 1.3 million Chinese students studying outside China. Since 2015, around 80% of them, often referred to as sea turtle (海龟, a pun on 海归 meaning to return from overseas), have returned to China and yet 90% of them are unable to find the jobs that they want.

Hi-In uses AI technology to create personalized career action plans for these students that intelligently match online and in-person courses and internships. Experienced mentors on the Hi-In platform guide these students to execute the action plan until landing their dream job. After uploading their resume and answering questions, the platform provides a visualization of past and career future in real time and tells the user what they are missing.

A graduate of the University of Cambridge, Carter Zhou, founder of the company, has entrepreneurial experience ranging from the technical to the creative industry. He is also the founder of Air Media, which organizes Asian celebrity events and student entertainment events.

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Exclusive: Pictures from World Internet Conference suggest WeWork, URWork on an “ice-breaking tour” https://technode.com/2017/12/05/wework-urwork/ https://technode.com/2017/12/05/wework-urwork/#respond Tue, 05 Dec 2017 06:33:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59789 Like its previous versions, the ongoing World Internet Conference in Wuzhen has attracted the biggest names in China’s tech industry. Official meetings and keynotes aside, more casual business dinners, which gather China’s, or even the world’s richest technology tycoons, offered precious opportunities for them to get connected and share insights. It’s in China after all, […]]]>

Like its previous versions, the ongoing World Internet Conference in Wuzhen has attracted the biggest names in China’s tech industry. Official meetings and keynotes aside, more casual business dinners, which gather China’s, or even the world’s richest technology tycoons, offered precious opportunities for them to get connected and share insights. It’s in China after all, where a banquet is crucial in the deal-making process.

While some banquets shed light on the alliance between local tech giants, others may be more intriguing and will invoke different interpretations from lookers. The following picture, which was taken this Monday at Wuzhen, falls in the second category. It depicted perfect table harmony between WeWork execs—co-founder Adam Neumann and vice chairman Michael Gross—and URwork founder Mao Daqing.

After all the disputes between WeWork and URWork, in which the former filed a litigation against its Chinese rival for trademark infringement and unfair competition, it may be hard to believe that the men behind the two rivals would be dining at the same table and sharing a toast.

The picture would easily send us to different speculations from a more friendly settlement about the litigation, or even possible cooperation between the two top shared space and community managers in the world. A recent visit from Adam Neumann and Michael Gross to URWork drew the two firms to more friendly terms.

But it seems too hasty to jump to any conclusions like that. “It’s just a casual meeting between the founders, who know each other, working in the same industry and happen to attend the same occasion. That’s all. There’s no further business indications,” URWork’s spokeswoman told TechNode. WeWork China declined to comment.

WeWork execs visiting URWork with Mao Daqing (People who took these pictures asked to stay anonymous)

China is the most heated battlefield for co-working operators in the past year. After quick expansion, all the competitors in this industry are trying to differentiate in different markets and sectors.

URWork stays focused where co-working first boomed—internet plus and pan-internet companies and is trying to make forays into lower-tier cities, said company CSO Zhang Peng at TechCrunch Shanghai. On the other hand, WeWork is betting on widespread adoption of new workplace models across industries and companies of all sizes to bring diversity to the community. Tier-one and tier-two cities are still its main focus, WeWork managing director Christian Lee told TechNode.

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Tencent affiliates IPO spree to continue into next year https://technode.com/2017/12/05/ipo-spree-of-tencent-affiliates-continues-next-year/ https://technode.com/2017/12/05/ipo-spree-of-tencent-affiliates-continues-next-year/#respond Tue, 05 Dec 2017 03:40:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59781 TencentTencent-backed online healthcare service WeDoctor Group is planning a Hong Kong IPO in the coming new-year at a market valuation of $5 billion to $6 billion, SCMP is reporting. To prepare for the listing, the firm is now seeking a $500 million funding before mid-February in 2018. Started as Guahao, an appointment-scheduling site for patients, […]]]> Tencent

Tencent-backed online healthcare service WeDoctor Group is planning a Hong Kong IPO in the coming new-year at a market valuation of $5 billion to $6 billion, SCMP is reporting. To prepare for the listing, the firm is now seeking a $500 million funding before mid-February in 2018.

Started as Guahao, an appointment-scheduling site for patients, in 2010, WeDoctor gradually scaled up to a platform that includes various medical-related services from online diagnosis and medical tips to rating hospitals and doctors. The firm rebranded itself to WeDoctor in 2015 after receiving $394 million Series C led by a consortium that includes Hillhouse Capital and Goldman Sachs with the participation of Fosun, Tencent, and China Development Bank Capital.

Tencent, as an early-stage investor of the WeDoctor, led a $100 million round in the startup in 2014. Since then, the firm’s service has been integrated into Tencent’s mobile apps like WeChat and Mobile QQ.

WeDoctor is the latest addition to Tencent’s recent initiative to get its affiliate companies listed. This year, the Shenzhen-based internet giant has seen three of its most valuable assets go public. Sogou, the search engine arm of Tencent, made its debut on New York Stock exchange last month. Its online reading unit China Literature has raised US$1.1bln after pricing its Hong Kong IPO at the top of its range early in November. China’s first online-only insurance company Zhong An, in which Tencent holds a stake, raised $1.5 billion in a Hong Kong IPO.

It seems that Tencent’s IPO wave is not going to stop in the coming new year. In addition to WeDoctor, Tencent is also planning an IPO for its music-streaming unit Tencent Music. The Wall Street Journal reported that the music group is in talks with Spotify on swapping stakes of up to 10% in each other’s businesses ahead of their expected public listings next year.

Aside from its affiliates, the tech tycoon itself is performing exceedingly well in the stock market recently, joining the half-a-trillion-dollar club in this past November.

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Here’s how China’s 3 big co-working players are differentiating https://technode.com/2017/11/30/tcsh-co-working/ https://technode.com/2017/11/30/tcsh-co-working/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2017 09:07:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59535 Rising millennial workforce, government support for innovation and startups, changing public attitude from “owing” to “sharing” stuff, and of course the huge market scale: everything makes China a perfect for the development of co-working or shared space industry. Unsurprisingly, the industry took off in China over the past two years in a big way, marked by the emergence […]]]>

Rising millennial workforce, government support for innovation and startups, changing public attitude from “owing” to “sharing” stuff, and of course the huge market scale: everything makes China a perfect for the development of co-working or shared space industry.

Unsurprisingly, the industry took off in China over the past two years in a big way, marked by the emergence of a slew of shared space operators. At TechCrunch Shanghai 2017, we invited management from world’s top players in the field—WeWork, URWork, and naked Hub—to the same stage to share their insights and ideas on several core issues in the industry.

How design makes a difference

As a shared space operator, finding amazing buildings and furnishing that are not just comfortable but also an inspiring environment is where everyone gets started. This is perhaps one of those most obvious but also the toughest problems. Environment design could be done in a million different ways, but a good one combines aesthetics, functionality, and imagination.

Christian Lee, WeWork (R)
Christian Lee, WeWork Asia Managing Director (L) (Image credit: TechCrunch China)

“We have a 400-person global R&D design team, doing A/B testing in buildings. Looking at if we have this much open space, this much closed space, this many meeting rooms and putting up monitors and observing people [to see] what works, what doesn’t, what creates more energy in a building, we can take that and roll it out globally,” said WeWork Asia Managing Director Christian Lee.

Founder and Chairman of naked Group Grant Horsfield echoed Lee’s opinion. “Anybody can arrange a floor and put a coffee machine in, but that’s not co-working. There’s so much more to it. At naked Hub, we have a big design studio with over 50 designers and over 50 software engineers,” said he.

Community is everything

If the design is what gets people started in co-working, building a friendly and vibrant community is how shared co-working space firms manage to stay ahead of other competitors.

Although most of the world still refers to WeWork as a shared space operator, the company is defining itself as a community company to emphasize people. Easy access to the global community is indeed how the firm differentiates from other rivals, especially when tapping China market.

“We’re trying to have as much localization as we can that’s still tied into that global network. We see lots of great innovative companies come into being from this country. Clearly, they are going to be global players in the near future. We can both help Chinese companies grow and expand internationally, not just in space but also through community and ecosystems exists around the world, and of course to provide the access to China for foreign companies who want to be part of this amazing growth story in China,” said Christian Lee in a previous interview with TechNode.

Grant Horsfield, founder & chairman at naked Group (Image credit: naked Hub)
Grant Horsfield, founder & chairman of naked Group (Image credit: TechCrunch China)

In order to build a more active online community, naked Hub has built a Tinder-like social app (except it’s not about hook-ups but about physically meeting people within their office).

“Chinese people have their friends from high school or college. What we are trying to say is there’s a bigger circle you can build. By liking someone’s profile, we got possibilities to actually meet same-minded people offline. I think we are playing with that technology in order to make people interact and connect more,” pointed Grant Horsfield, founder and chairman of naked Group. A global network is also what naked Hub is aiming for. The firm is opening a co-working space at London’s Victoria Station, first outside Asia.

With over 3,000 companies, URWork is building a global network and community. Nowadays, some of the companies are developing very fast, so they not only focus on the region but broader China or the global market.

“From stories you see, the first office of a startup is often set up in Beijing or Silicon Valley, not even Shanghai or Guangzhou, so they need a platform from which they can go faster. We go a step further: I say that we have locations in major cities that Chinese entrepreneurs are ready to go in Singapore, Jakarta, London, San Francisco, New York, etc. When you are ready to go there you will see a familiar platform, same software, and a comfortable environment as the one you see in Beijing,” said Zhang Peng, CSO of URWork.

Target markets & clients

While all the previous competition among these top players centers around the number of locations and attracting startups, as the market matures, they are gradually targeting different sectors.

Zhang Peng, CSO of URWork (R) Image credit: (TechCrunch China)
Zhang Peng, CSO of URWork (R) (Image credit: TechCrunch China)

Chinese giant URWork stays focused where co-working first boomed—internet plus and pan-internet companies, Zhang Peng started his introduction. With a focus on tech startups, URWork is helping them to eliminate the operational issues to stay fully focused on product development. “We try to raise effectiveness and give more service to help you save time. We will do all the rest, from registering the company, legal service, talent hunting, marketing, distribution, etc,” he added.

On the other hand, WeWork and naked Hub bet on widespread adoption of new workplace models across industries and companies of all sizes to bring diversity to the community. “WeWork started to offer enterprise-targeted services since this October, bringing community, technology, services, and spaces to buildings of enterprise clients,” according to Christian.

Naked Hub is also laying out building management by offering software and services to developers to turn their buildings into flexible workspaces. “Personally, we at naked Hub don’t believe in being vertical. We think it’s very important that there’s a natural balance of males, females, lawyers, architects, and designers,” said Horsfield, the naked Hub founder.

Differentiation is also coming to the markets they are looking at. Currently, Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen are where China’s co-working industry is centered. Despite the fierce competition in these cities, naked Hub still believes in the potential in these first-tier cities, “The guys that are playing in the second- and third-tier cities are not a market we are going to target in the near future,” Horsfield added.

Zhang from URWork sees the problem differently. “We are seeking new possibilities in second- and third-tier cities. URWork just launched our first location in third-tier Xiangyang in Hubei Province, one of the famous car manufacturing cities in China,” he said.

The US shared space giant WeWork is going for something in between. First-tier cities are sure their top priority, but they are also looking at second-tier cities like Chengdu and Hangzhou.

The attitude towards location expansion also varies. WeWork shows no signs of stopping in its global expansion, where China holds an increasingly important position. “2018 will be a big year for WeWork China. We just announced another four newly added locations to be open in early 2018, bringing the total number of locations of WeWork in China to thirteen,” said Christian.

URWork has experienced an aggressive expansion over the past six months, investing in many regional co-working spaces such as New Space, UFO in Henan Province, Fountown in Shanghai, and establishing an incubator and an accelerator. After that, the company is slowing the expansion a little bit in an attempt to consolidate their core business in management, build their community, and other aspects, according to Zhang Peng.

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Mobike, ofo say no to merger despite investor pressures https://technode.com/2017/11/30/mobike-ofo-merger/ https://technode.com/2017/11/30/mobike-ofo-merger/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2017 04:17:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59550 mobike ofo bike-rental chinaDespite the rumors and speculation surrounding a possible merger between Mobile and ofo, Mobike co-founder and CEO Davis Wang has made it clear again at TheYearAhead Summit that a “merger is not an option for the company,” local media is reporting. Similarly, ofo founder and CEO Dai Wei also expressed previously that the company would not […]]]> mobike ofo bike-rental china

Despite the rumors and speculation surrounding a possible merger between Mobile and ofo, Mobike co-founder and CEO Davis Wang has made it clear again at TheYearAhead Summit that a “merger is not an option for the company,” local media is reporting.

Similarly, ofo founder and CEO Dai Wei also expressed previously that the company would not consider a merger.

Rumors about Mobike and ofo merger have been around for a while. It can be dated back to months ago when we joked about the same issue with our April Fool’s joke. Different reactions from the two companies sparked speculation about what was the real sentiment internally.

Half a year has passed and the current situation has made a merger more likely as more companies go out business and investors are looking for an exit.

What’s more interesting, the attitude of investors behind these companies are growing more favorable towards a merger to end the costly competitive battle and create a single dominant player, like the case in the merger between Didi and Kuaidi, and then Didi and Uber China.

Zhu Xiaohu, an early stage investor of ofo, said in September that the landscape in China’s bike rental industry has been settled with Mobike and ofo accounting for 95% share of the market. Both firms still need huge operation investments and only a merger could make them profitable. This statement is largely translated as investors are pushing the merger. Bloomberg reported that the investors of the two firms are in talks.

While we need to wait to see who wins this debate, but the situation sure reflects the conflicts between entrepreneurs and investors. Entrepreneurs prefer independence, but investors place profitability as their top priority.

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Four cornerstones for China’s 2nd-hand goods exchange unicorn https://technode.com/2017/11/28/xianyu-four-cornerstones-idle-fish/ https://technode.com/2017/11/28/xianyu-four-cornerstones-idle-fish/#respond Tue, 28 Nov 2017 10:51:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59405 China’s shopping extravaganza Singles’ Day finished two weeks ago, but the aftermath of the 24-hour madness is going to span a whole year. Idle Fish, more commonly known by its Chinese name Xianyu (闲鱼), is helping China’s online consumers to cash in their second-hand or idle items online, not only for alieving financial pressure but also for […]]]>

China’s shopping extravaganza Singles’ Day finished two weeks ago, but the aftermath of the 24-hour madness is going to span a whole year. Idle Fish, more commonly known by its Chinese name Xianyu (闲鱼), is helping China’s online consumers to cash in their second-hand or idle items online, not only for alieving financial pressure but also for the joy of getting connected with new friends.

Born out of China’s e-commerce giant Alibaba, the three-year-old company is now a top second-hand trading platform. It now claims 200 million users and 16 million active users—on par with the active users of China’s largest online marketplace Taobao. Although the low-profile company has never made it public, local media reported two years ago that its valuation hit $3 billion then.

Idle Fish is often referred to as a second-hand goods exchange platform. Instead of second-hand or used goods, which may invoke negative feelings, especially in China, Idle Fish, as well as its users, tend to shift to a more neutral term—idle items—to emphasize the values in these goods.

What’s more, second-hand goods wouldn’t be a term big enough to cover it all. “Idle goods is a broader concept that not only cover used stuff that still has value but also brand new items that are valued by the owners, such as an ill-chosen gift from friends,” Chen said.

Vern Chen, founder of Idle Fish, gave the secret recipe to their success at TechCrunch Shanghai 2017 this Monday. “Since the very beginning of our entrepreneurial journey, the team has laid out four principles that are defining what Idle Fish is about. We are improving the product based on these cornerstones,” said Chen.

1. Mobility-first platform. Compared with PC, a dominating portion of our energy and resources are invested in the development of Xianyu mobile app. “This largely determined by the nature of our service. Idle item sharing is highly dependent on cameras, which is a crucial part of displaying the goods,” said Chen. Of course, the choice is greatly facilitated by the popularity of smartphone and thus the mobility trend in China.

Also, this is a “have-to” decision, according to him, “…because we had but around 20 members of staff in the early days and was beyond our capability to develop both the mobile and desktop sites. Luckily, the users have been quite supportive of this option and we won’t launch PC platform, at least in the short term,” Chen added.

2. Easy to get started. “Idle sharing is for everyone. We are trying to lower the threshold for entry. Every adult user with a Taobao or Alipay account can log in and start to share their goods.”

3. Communication. Compared to Taobao or Tmall where people purchase goods from small retailers, trust is an even a bigger issue among Idle Fish users and this kind of trust is built through detailed communication before or even after the actual purchase. There are 510,000 Fish Ponds, free-flow fish trading units on the platform based either on geographical location or interest. “Around 41% of Idle Fish users would chat or leave messages to others.”

4. Easy transaction. “Facilitating the transaction process is a top priority for us,” said Chen. The reason behind this is straightforward because the final transaction is where all the communication goes toward and you don’t want technical problems to mess it up.

To some extent, Idle Fish fully meets the qualifications for a “sharing economy” business in its truest sense, where the value of idle resources can be rediscovered by those who need it, rather than the “rental economy“ in which case new products are being created to cater for a certain demand. Started as a consumer-targeted model, the app is now expanding to public idle resources from enterprises and judicial sales, for instance.

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Shoplifting isn’t a problem for unmanned stores https://technode.com/2017/11/27/shoplifting-isnt-a-problem-for-unmanned-stores/ https://technode.com/2017/11/27/shoplifting-isnt-a-problem-for-unmanned-stores/#respond Mon, 27 Nov 2017 14:54:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=59321 BingoboxSince Amazon envisioned its staff-less store concept last year, shoplifting has been one of the major concerns that people have raised to question the sustainability of this new shopping model. It’s natural to speculate that unmanned stores will face more shoplifters due to the absence of shopkeepers, guards, cashiers, or whomever onsite to keep an eye […]]]> Bingobox

Since Amazon envisioned its staff-less store concept last year, shoplifting has been one of the major concerns that people have raised to question the sustainability of this new shopping model. It’s natural to speculate that unmanned stores will face more shoplifters due to the absence of shopkeepers, guards, cashiers, or whomever onsite to keep an eye on the behavior of shoppers. But those who are working on the frontier of this innovation think otherwise.

“Risk control is probably the first word that comes to mind when talking about unmanned stores. But with the support of technology, the rate for stolen or damaged goods in our automatic stores is far lower than in traditional retailers,” says Chen Zilin, founder and CEO of BingoBox, at TechCrunch Shanghai today in a panel dedicated to China’s burgeoning staff-less store market.

As a forerunner in the vertical, BingoBox is a 24-hour self-service convenience store that allows customers to enter and make payments through a simple smartphone scan. Their risk control is mainly achieved through a smart retail shelving system equipped with cameras, which will capture the customers’ actions and collect data. Videos detecting irregular behaviors will be sent to the backend to be double checked by employees.

“There are thousands of ways for kleptomaniacs to steal from stores, staffed or unstaffed. But not everyone is determined to steal something at the moment of entering the shops. Our goal is to tell the shoppers that any stealing behavior will be recorded and we can target these behaviors with accuracy,” said Chen.

Personal accountability is another important factor in the company’s risk control solution. Although it’s not 100% necessary, BingoBox still has a cashier where customers can register before they actually making a payment. “By doing so, we aim to integrate the judgment and moral force of the customers in a bid to avoid any misjudgments.”

Chen Haibo, founder & CEO at DeepBlue
Chen Haibo, founder & CEO of DeepBlue (Image credit: TechCrunch China)

Another speaker at the panel, Chen Haibo, founder & CEO of artificial intelligence solutions provider DeepBlue, echoed Chen’s ideas. “Technology can’t solve moral issues. At the pilot stage, our system has experienced lots of extreme testing from venture capitalists and peer entrepreneurs. They tried everything to steal the goods. But when tried to enter the shop a second time, they weren’t admitted because there’s a bad record or unpaid bills. We could even find the videos if they wanted to challenge it.”

“When people know they are entering a closely monitored environment, I don’t think they will behave irresponsibly. Our previous experience shows 99% of the users will act in a responsible way. So I don’t think we should place excessive attention on theft issues,” he added.

FX unmanned stores
Unmanned convenience store F(x) demoing at TechCrunch Shanghai (Image credit: TechNode)

Self-service convenience store startups became the new darling for Chinese investors in the past few months with the entrance of lots of players, big and small. Alibaba has launched its Tao Café in late August, while JD Daojia rolled out unmanned shelf in October. Smaller players include Xingbianli, Easyhome, and more. The trend is also having an impact on traditional convenience retail chains like Japanese convenience store giant Lawson, which have set up two pilot autonomous stores in Shanghai.

From ride-hailing to bike sharing and fintech, Chinese tech startups grow on a bumpy road along with the improvement of the regulatory landscape. Unmanned store industry, a sector already gaining attention from the market, is no exception. “Both entrepreneurs and government are more mature. Beijing is reacting swiftly to the new innovations. The Ministry of Commerce is now drafting the new standard for this new sector,” said Cheng Zilin.

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Troubled Qudian being accused of user info leakage https://technode.com/2017/11/21/troubled-qudian-being-accused-of-user-info-leakage/ https://technode.com/2017/11/21/troubled-qudian-being-accused-of-user-info-leakage/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2017 08:11:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58941 Qudian fintech microloanThe troubled micro-lending tycoon Qudian, which has been questioned for its operation ethics domestically upon massive US IPO, is facing a grimmer situation this week after local media Yiben Caijing reveals possible user information by its employees. The personal information of nearly 1 million students was on sale on black market at a price of RMB 100k. […]]]> Qudian fintech microloan

The troubled micro-lending tycoon Qudian, which has been questioned for its operation ethics domestically upon massive US IPO, is facing a grimmer situation this week after local media Yiben Caijing reveals possible user information by its employees.

The personal information of nearly 1 million students was on sale on black market at a price of RMB 100k. The package was also being sold separately by province with files for each province consisting of tens of thousands of entries. For example, the file for Jiangsu Province includes 51,289 entries. “Data from Beijing, Shanghai and Jiangsu was priced at RMB8,000,” the report citing people familiar with the matter.

These data include a wide range of personal info from generalities like names, addresses, phone numbers to more detailed data such as phone numbers of their parents and friends, loan size, accounts and passwords to CHIS, the state-backed higher-education qualification verification institution in China.

Peddlers claim that Qudian is the source of this package. A former Qudian employee, who speaks under anonymity, confirmed this after comparing the leaked info with the data she owned, the report pointed out. Analysts told Yiben Caijing that the data is more likely to be exported by an insider than from a hacker because it’s saved in a CSV format.

It’s no secret that the personal information leak is rampant in China with details of million of citizens being stolen, shared, and sold online. The source of data leakage varies from government workers to tech companies, and the data usually goes to agencies and private investigation companies for user acquisition.

Earlier this June, 22 Apple distributors were arrested in China for selling user data. Likewise, a former user information leakage forced Chinese e-commerce JD to issue an official announcement to apologize for the subsequent results.

Of course, the recurring personal info leak cases have raised the awareness of relevant authorities. The newly implemented Cybersecurity Law of China prescribes that people who sales a minimum of 50 entries of personal information will be accused and convicted.

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Russia is now the new frontier for Chinese smartphone makers https://technode.com/2017/11/21/xiaomi-huawei-russia/ https://technode.com/2017/11/21/xiaomi-huawei-russia/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2017 03:57:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58920 XiaomiChinese smartphone brands are gaining momentum in their Russia expansion efforts, according to a research report from Counterpoint. As forerunners in this initiative, Xiaomi, which made its official debut in April this year after six months of operation through a distributor, is now the  fifth largest smartphone brand in Russia during Q3 this year, grew by 325% YoY. […]]]> Xiaomi

Chinese smartphone brands are gaining momentum in their Russia expansion efforts, according to a research report from Counterpoint.

As forerunners in this initiative, Xiaomi, which made its official debut in April this year after six months of operation through a distributor, is now the  fifth largest smartphone brand in Russia during Q3 this year, grew by 325% YoY. “Xiaomi was the fastest growing smartphone brand in Russia in both online as well as offline sales,” said Tarun Pathak, Associate Director at Counterpoint Research, in a statement. The firm is also expanding its offline retail expansion efforts in the country by setting up its first 24/7 outlet in Moscow.

Russia smartphone
Image credit: Counterpoint

Huawei and lesser-known Chinese brand Bright & Quick eclipsed Xiaomi with 11% and 5% market share, respectively. However, they are growing at a less, but not insignificant, YOY growth rate of 140% and 177%. Samsung and Apple took the top two spots.

Counterpoint’s Market Monitor service indicates sustained growth in Russian smartphone industry, which grew by 7% annually and 38% sequentially during Q3 2017.Commenting on the analysis, Minakshi Sharma, Research Associate said:

 “The Russian handset market grew during this quarter driven by aggressive marketing campaigns by new Chinese brands and subsequent price cuts from all the leading retail chains as consumer spending during third quarter of the year normally remains high due to the new academic year and a ‘back-to-school’ uptick.”

The saturating domestic arena has forced Chinese smartphone makers to seek new opportunities globally. Cheering milestones in tapping Southeast Asia countries have been recorded. Over 50% of India’s smartphone market is currently controlled by Chinese brands, including Xiaomi, Oppo, Vivo, Shenzhen-based Gionee, and Lenovo.

In addition to strengthening foothold in the existing markets, companies like Xiaomi are eyeing other regional markets from Europe to Africa and Latin America.

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China’s version of Twitch secures fresh D round and starts to make profits https://technode.com/2017/11/21/chinas-version-of-twitch-secures-fresh-d-round-and-starts-to-make-profits/ https://technode.com/2017/11/21/chinas-version-of-twitch-secures-fresh-d-round-and-starts-to-make-profits/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2017 00:47:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58910 DouyuChina’s live-streaming frenzy is still on, at least in the e-sports space. Douyu TV, China’s Twitch counterpart, just finalized an undisclosed amount in a Series D round led by CMB International. The funding size is over RMB 1 billion ($150 million), raised at a valuation of over RMB 10 billion, according to local media citing […]]]> Douyu

China’s live-streaming frenzy is still on, at least in the e-sports space. Douyu TV, China’s Twitch counterpart, just finalized an undisclosed amount in a Series D round led by CMB International. The funding size is over RMB 1 billion ($150 million), raised at a valuation of over RMB 10 billion, according to local media citing people familiar with the matter.

After the round, the Hubei and Shenzhen arm of CMB International will take 4.69% and 0.53% stakes in Douyu TV. State-backed Nanshan Capital, an existing investor of the company, will control 0.04% of the firm through this round. Douyu TV‘s previous $100 million C round was led by Tencent in 2016.

On top of the funding news, Douyu TV also disclosed that it is recording profits now and is expanding actively through external investments. As of present, the firm has invested in 11 live-streaming and video game startups, including e-sports club LCD-Gaming, e-sports fan community Famulei.com and live video streaming social network NonoLive.

Founded in 2013, Wuhan-base Douyu TV is the apparent frontrunner in China’s live e-sports broadcasting vertical. The company claims it controls over 70% of the market after gathering 30 million daily active users and nearly 200 million monthly active users.

However, Douyu TV is not without competitors. Panda TV, a live-streaming venture created by Wang Sicong, the only son of Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin, just received RMB 1 billion funding in May this year. Other players in the field include Tencent’s Penguin E-sports and Huya.

Behind the hefty investment comes the e-sports and live-streaming boom in China, a market which worth RMB 40 billion last year.

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Techstars Startup Weekend spotlights Chinese student innovation https://technode.com/2017/11/14/techtars-startup-weekend-spotlights-chinese-student-innovation/ https://technode.com/2017/11/14/techtars-startup-weekend-spotlights-chinese-student-innovation/#respond Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:07:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58481 TechStars Startup WeekendThe world of shopaholics (aka hand-choppers) was filled with glee and excitements from Singles’ Day extravaganza this weekend. Instead of joining the shopping spree, a small group of geeks and techies were having their own non-stop carnival—Techstars Startup Weekend—in downtown Shanghai’s startup center People Squared. Nearly one hundred of programmers and designers got together to […]]]> TechStars Startup Weekend

The world of shopaholics (aka hand-choppers) was filled with glee and excitements from Singles’ Day extravaganza this weekend. Instead of joining the shopping spree, a small group of geeks and techies were having their own non-stop carnival—Techstars Startup Weekend—in downtown Shanghai’s startup center People Squared.

Nearly one hundred of programmers and designers got together to come up with something awesome. After the prolonged 54-hours of hacking and brainstorming, each team took a turn to pitch on stage in an attempt to impress the judges as well as the audience.

China’s mass innovation and mass entrepreneur initiative has caught nearly every walk of the society, and the university campus is no exception. It makes a lot of sense since universities are home to thousands of researchers and incredibly smart students. At the Techstars event, it was nice to see that the effort is seeing some results as college students are gaining momentum not only as a source of startup innovation but also as a powerful target market: these student entrepreneurs are trying to solve their own problems.

TechStars Shanghai
Modbud team at Techstars Startup Weekend Shanghai (image credit: Techstars)

The Best Startup Prizes goes to Modbud (知霸知), an Uber for study tips platform developed by a team of students from Fudan University. It is an online crowdsourcing platform for university students to share module-specific resources, like notes, past year papers and tips. Users can post questions and receive on-demand answers from one another. The platform would charge subscription fees for unlimited instant access.

Although the young team still haven’t decided whether they would go further with the project, the experience itself is sure an invaluable lesson for them.

“We didn’t expect to go this far, but we’ve learned a lot from the experience. I would say validation is super important, you can be very passionate about something. But it’s not going to be sustainable if no one is going to pay for it. My lesson from the experience is always ask customers what do you want and then go to work on the product, rather than working on the product first and ask the customers how they like it,” said Cheng Junhua, head of the team.

Two other projects were also dedicated to the emerging college student market. Gochiever is a social platform that helps undergraduate students to achieve their long-term goals in life by connecting common minds, life planners, and mentors. 2dolist is a productivity tool enabling users to manage their plans in a more orderly way. They are trying to target the student market first.

Basketball game scientist Vertime walked away with the Best Innovation startup prize. China’s basketball industry is worth RMB 150 million, consisting of China Basketball Association teams, National Basketball League, schools as well as amateur teams. Vertime helps them to do video editing and tagging through the online platform, helping clients to do video analysis, track player stats, as well as give and get game reports.

TechStars Shanghai
Vertime team at Techstars Startup Weekend Shanghai (image credit: Techstars)

The Audience Choice Award went to Remaketory. 41 billion pieces of garment were disposed improperly each year and 95% of them can be reused. Remaketory wants to solve this problem by providing a platform where users can redesign and reconstruct unwanted clothes into new useful items. They go after both individual and business clients.

TechStars Shanghai
Remaketory team at Techstars Startup Weekend Shanghai (image credit: Techstars)

The winning team will first have to face rivals from the Asia-Pacific region and then move on to winners from other regions worldwide. At Techstars Global Startup Weekend, 15,000 participants will compete in 200 editions similar to the ones in Shanghai. Of all the teams pitched at Techstars, 12% will continue with their startup weekend idea.

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Jack Ma’s potential successor reportedly to step down as Alibaba Pictures CEO due to flat performance https://technode.com/2017/11/13/yu-yongfu-to-step-down/ https://technode.com/2017/11/13/yu-yongfu-to-step-down/#respond Mon, 13 Nov 2017 06:00:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58459 Yu Yongfu AlibabaYu Yongfu, CEO of Alibaba’s film arm Alibaba Pictures Groups, is going to step down from management, Tencent Tech is reporting, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Alibaba board chairman Jack Ma and CEO Daniel Zhang have given their approval to the change, the source added. The company is seeking actively to fill the leadership […]]]> Yu Yongfu Alibaba

Yu Yongfu, CEO of Alibaba’s film arm Alibaba Pictures Groups, is going to step down from management, Tencent Tech is reporting, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Alibaba board chairman Jack Ma and CEO Daniel Zhang have given their approval to the change, the source added.

WechatIMG47

The company is seeking actively to fill the leadership vacuum, according to the report. One of the candidates is Lu Fubin, former vice president of Baidu who oversees business in film and video, music, short videos, etc.

Alibaba spokeswoman denied this news in response to our inquiry. Yu also clarified on his Weibo, saying that he’s not leaving the company at the time of this publication. The spokeswoman didn’t comment on whether there’s going to be a change in Yu’s position.

Despite the buzz, the circulation of this rumor reflects the troubles Alibaba Pictures is facing: mediocre performance of a unit where the parent company had placed high hopes (and money) on.

Yu shows strong capabilities in capital operation and integration, demonstrated by the acquisition of mapping service AutoNavi, but he has limited experience in the film business. Youku Tudou, the once No.1 video-streaming under Alibaba Pictures, gradually lost its foothold in competition with upcoming rivals like Tencent Video and iQiyi. The case is worsened by flat box office performances in blockbuster films like See You Tomorrow and Once Upon A Time.

The 41-year-old tech star in China’s internet industry has completed a remarkably fast rise although he’s a relative newcomer to the Alibaba Group. He joined the parent company in 2014, when UCWeb, the mobile internet company he then headed as CEO, was fully acquired by Alibaba in a deal valued at more than $2 billion. In May 2015, he was named the president of Alibaba Group’s mobile internet division. He joined Alibaba Pictures as a non-executive and was later named CEO of the firm in late 2016. Yu was widely guessed to be the successor to the legendary Jack Ma in running the e-commerce empire.

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Alibaba wants 2017 to be Year One for Chinese brand globalization https://technode.com/2017/11/10/alibaba-wants-2017-to-be-year-one-for-chinese-brand-globalization/ https://technode.com/2017/11/10/alibaba-wants-2017-to-be-year-one-for-chinese-brand-globalization/#respond Fri, 10 Nov 2017 06:57:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58329 e-commerce cross-border Tmall GlobalLong gone are the days when Chinese online shoppers have to go through the troubles of shopping platform Haitao—where customers buy imported products from overseas e-commerce platforms or through shopping agents. For Chinese mainlanders, overseas products are now just a few clicks away through maturing cross-border e-commerce sites in China. For most Chinese consumers, the whole idea […]]]> e-commerce cross-border Tmall Global

Long gone are the days when Chinese online shoppers have to go through the troubles of shopping platform Haitao—where customers buy imported products from overseas e-commerce platforms or through shopping agents. For Chinese mainlanders, overseas products are now just a few clicks away through maturing cross-border e-commerce sites in China.

For most Chinese consumers, the whole idea of Haitao is buying high-quality products since their improving economic conditions allow them a better lifestyle. This changing consumption sentiment pioneered by China’s rising middle class has caused a revolution in the country’s manufacturing industry. “Made in China” no longer inherently means cheap, inferior, and unfashionable. Respectable Chinese brands have emerged and Chinese e-commerce platforms are well positioned to present Chinese brands to the world.

Chinese e-commerce titan Alibaba is among the first to foster the cross-border e-commerce trend through Tmall Global, a marketplace for overseas goods to be sold online in China. For the upcoming Single’s Day shopping festival, the company is turning the other way around in an attempt to bring Chinese quality brands internationally. A total of 100 Chinese brands from varied industries were included in the program, including Haier, Midea, Gree, HLA, Peacebird, Joyoung, Jahwa, and more.

Alibaba Tmall World
Alvin Liu, General Manager of Tmall Exports and Imports (L) & Hu Yuling, Tmall World Director (R) (Image credit: TechNode)

“Alibaba has separate units for cross-border e-commerce businesses. Tmall Global for import and Tmall World for export,” Alvin Liu, General Manager of Tmall Exports and Imports, introduced at a recent event. “Not long ago, both imports and exports businesses were based on a B2B2C model (combining business to business—B2B— and business to consumer—B2C—for a complete product or service transaction). The success of Tmall Global and the import business proved the feasibility of a new model with shorter links in the industrial chain. Now, it’s time to move on to the export business, a relatively untapped field that boasts more potentials. We are going to make 2017 Year One for Chinese brands globalization.”

Different from AliExpress, the online retail service made up of small businesses in China and elsewhere offering products to international online buyers, Tmall World primarily goes after the nearly 100 million overseas Chinese who live abroad but still have kept their tastes and spending habits. It’s not surprising that the firm has adopted this soft landing approach similar to Alipay’s globalization strategy since they are the readiest consumers thanks to similar cultural and social backgrounds. Popular Chinese migration destinations, like US, Canada, Australia, and some Southeast Asian countries are expected to see strong demand for this new business.

Logistics is a big concern in cross-border trade. Cainiao, the logistics affiliate of Alibaba, is trying to expand its logistics system overseas. Previously, customers were usually at loss to make their own choices among a series of couriers. Cainiao, as the official recommended deliver, will play a bigger role in this year’s Singles’ Day, according to Tmall World director Hu Yuling.

“Overseas users who choose Cainiao as their courier will get their packages within seven days. For Tmall Supermarket which puts emphasis on service, over 90% of the orders from Hong Kong will enjoy next-day delivery. During the upcoming Singles’ Day, Tmall World will provide free shipping service to first standard weight packages in ten countries,” Hu said.

In addition, synergy effects are being created between Tmall and Lazada, the Southeast Asian e-commerce bigwig in which Alibaba holds a stake. As of last month, dedicated Tmall channels have been launched on regional websites for Lazada’s five core markets in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Philippine.

“We have seen steady and strong growth from our partnership with Lazada. We are ready to smash the past records during Singles’ Day. For brands, there’s no extra work for them except the daily operation of Tmall stores. Tmall and our partners will solve the problems in logistics, website translation, payment and after-sales services,” Hu said.

The globalization initiative makes a lot of sense for both customers and sellers. “While China is entering winter around November, Australia and most of the Southeast Asia countries are still in summer, the geographical difference would allow flip-flop brands like Havaianas to sell all year round.”

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WeWork is going to move even faster in China in 2018: Q&A with WeWork Asia Managing Director https://technode.com/2017/11/09/wework-is-going-to-move-even-faster-in-china-in-2018-qa-with-wework-asia-managing-director/ https://technode.com/2017/11/09/wework-is-going-to-move-even-faster-in-china-in-2018-qa-with-wework-asia-managing-director/#respond Thu, 09 Nov 2017 09:03:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58175 It’s no secret that WeWork, the world’s largest community company, has been aggressive in its China push. After the initial effort to launch its first space in Shanghai in June last year, the company is getting more serious and dedicated to its China expansion. What the company has accomplished so far is pretty impressive. “We have been […]]]>

It’s no secret that WeWork, the world’s largest community company, has been aggressive in its China push. After the initial effort to launch its first space in Shanghai in June last year, the company is getting more serious and dedicated to its China expansion.

What the company has accomplished so far is pretty impressive. “We have been in this market for 16 months with 9 locations across Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong in operation. We just announced another 4 newly added locations to be open in early 2018, adding the total locations of WeWork in China to 13. The average occupancy rate is as high as 90%,” WeWork Asia Managing Director Christian Lee told TechNode. This would make China the second largest country for WeWork in terms of number of locations operated, next only to its homeland in the US, where WeWork has been operating for 7 years.

But it seems that this is nothing near what the company has planned for the emerging market. The already-loaded company received another $500 million investment from existing backers of SoftBank and Hony Capital in July this year. To emphasize their dedication to market, WeWork has made it clear that this hefty round is only for its China business.

Adjustment in management structure was also made accordingly through the establishment of a standalone WeWork China unit. Christian Lee, previously CFO of the firm, relocated to the regional headquarter in Shanghai to oversee Asia operation. He was followed by Alan Ai, who resumes his role as WeWork Greater China General Manager this October after serving as Vice President of Marketing for Shanghai Disney Resort.

“We are working on some more initiatives for China market, 2018 will be a big year for WeWork China,” said Christian. Christian first came to China in 1995 as a foreign language student in Nankai University. More than two decades later, the new vigorous country has a lot more to offer for global citizens like him.

Last week, we caught up with him at WeWork’s whimsical opium factory turned space in downtown Shanghai to discuss WeWork’s China and Asia plans, their newly launched enterprise-faced services, how to build an innovative community here, workplace technology, and more. What follows are the highlights of our conversation.

WeWork Weihai-final-small-3
Image credit: WeWork

Why China and what new opportunities does WeWork see here?

We look around the world and China is obviously the center of a lot of changes that are going on globally right now. So for a company like WeWork, whose mission is helping to connect people, helping companies innovate and expand globally, it’s critical for us to have a meaningful presence in China.

The fast developing economy, people’s passion, the government’s call for mass entrepreneurship, and the 420 million millennial population, all of these exciting facts makes China an important market for us.

Also, we see lots of great innovative companies come into being from this country, Alibaba, Tencent, JD, ofo, Weibo, etc. Clearly, they are going to be global players in the near future. At the same time, it’s a place where a lot of people want to come, learn and invest. So we can both help Chinese companies grow and expand internationally, not just in space but also through community and ecosystems exists around the world, and of course to provide the access to China for foreign companies who want to be part of this amazing growth story in China.

For all the foreign companies coming to a new market, localization is the first priority. But it’s a big term. How do you approach the problem especially when it comes to Asia, a region with diversified user groups and cultures?

We really start by finding an amazing local team and an amazing building. When you look into each of the regions, you will see a very local management team of WeWork, who runs the market, sales, digital and real estate. They are all top talents who have grown up, lived and worked in China, with deep knowledge and expertise of what it means to take a global brand and localize it in China. Over 80% of WeWork members are Chinese locals.

Obviously, the first thing we do is to open buildings and those buildings have to reflect the local design aesthetics. It’s not only about designing a beautiful space, it’s also about being highly functional. WeWork has incredibly deep data analytics on how people use space. We take all that global information and learning about finding, designing and running spaces, then put it back to our real estate and design team. We study what will make people more efficient, what working styles are the best in China, then we use it as tips for design the spaces here. In China, that means bigger conference rooms, more tea, different types of event, and more.

All of these things go to localize, it’s not just one answer, but the combination of team, design, building, functionality of the spaces and digital products.

What’s the plan for China and the whole Asia market?

WeWork is going to open three to five new cities in 2018 in China. We are looking at cities like Shenzhen, Chengdu, Guangzhou and Hangzhou. In addition, four new locations in Shanghai and Beijing are to open in early 2018.

WeWork is renting out buildings faster in China than almost anywhere else in the world. One of the interesting things about China is that once Chinese consumers experience something and realize the value of a product, the adoption rates are incredibly fast, you see companies and individuals really able to make decisions very quickly and move at a pace that’s unparalleled in the rest world. That gives us a lot of confidence in expanding even faster in China.

For the Asia market, WeWork just acquired SpaceMob for Southeast Asia expansion. We are also opening in India (Bangalore and Mumbai) and will have two locations in Singapore and Japan.

WeWork Weihai-final-small-4
Image credit: WeWork

Shared spaces first boomed among freelancers, entrepreneurs and tech startups, but now it’s becoming mainstream with more big corporates moving in. How do you see this trend? How do you combine teams of different size and cultures to fit into one community?

For SME and startups, they want inspiring work environments, like-minded communities for great ideas, resources sharing, collaboration with others and growing their business; for enterprise members, they look a place where could help keep their team innovate, to attract and retain young talents. It is this mix of diverse membership that makes our community full of energy. We will definitely keep this diversity.

We just launched enterprise member solutions on Oct 24th, offering “Off-the-Shelf” and “Powered-by-We” services to our members. With these services, we bring our community, technology, services, spaces to your buildings, make your company tap in our international network immediately.

The good news is that we don’t have to force certain behaviors when it comes to integrating them into the community. The way we design this space is to bring people together. It causes people to come in and contact with each other and have a conversation. We are bringing people together not only over work stuff but over cultural and social things as well. When such social bonds are created it would also help the business models. It happens organically but there’s a lot of decisions and things we have done to create an environment to foster that.

Technology is taking control of our lives, what’s WeWork’s progress in workplace technology?

Technology is pervasive in the way people work now. There’s positive things as well as negative things about that. But it results in certain behaviors. Because we are on the mobile platforms that means you are working 24/7 even when you go home. By definition, personal and work have been blended and I believe that’s particularly true in China. That means the type of work environment you need for the future is a place like WeWork where you have a mixture of dedicated office spaces, social environments where you can sit with your colleagues.

We also think technology can really dehumanize people, there’s a tremendous amount of value in bringing people together. If you don’t have this physical interaction it’s really difficult to get things done and related to people to find ways to collaborate and understand what’s going on in the broader world.

All that being said, technology also has a huge impact for the positive. We certainly use technology as a tool to enhance our community. For instance, we have an app for members to post recruitment information, book conference room, post for potential business cooperation, register for event, provide feedback to our community teams, etc. In China, we are trying to melt our system into WeChat and Alipay, since we know these two platforms are almost dominating every aspects of people’s lives.

It’s one of the ways we design our space. For the building itself, we definitely are using lots of industry-leading technologies like BIM, data collection and analysis (for member behavior), 3D laser scanning of the whole building for a rendering so we can do the design, architect, and get an estimation of the materials we need, etc.

WeWork has more than 400 people team for R&D, including design, globally, we try to build a space that can communicate with our members. As said, we don’t just provide spaces, we provide the community, the energy and inspiring mind for our members. All technologies and design stuff are all applied to serve one purpose, that is to connect real people in real life, to humanize people’s way of life and work.

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Qualcomm signs up to $12bln deal with China’s top smartphone brands https://technode.com/2017/11/09/qualcomm-signs-up-to-12bln-deal-with-chinas-top-smartphone-brands/ https://technode.com/2017/11/09/qualcomm-signs-up-to-12bln-deal-with-chinas-top-smartphone-brands/#respond Thu, 09 Nov 2017 08:13:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58285 The high-stake visit of US president Donald Trump to China has recorded positive results today as the US smartphone chip maker Qualcomm announced non-binding memoranda of understanding (MoU) with three of China’s top smartphone makers: Xiaomi, OPPO and vivo. Each of the companies expressed a non-binding interest in the purchase of components with an aggregate value […]]]>

The high-stake visit of US president Donald Trump to China has recorded positive results today as the US smartphone chip maker Qualcomm announced non-binding memoranda of understanding (MoU) with three of China’s top smartphone makers: Xiaomi, OPPO and vivo.

Each of the companies expressed a non-binding interest in the purchase of components with an aggregate value of no less than $12 billion over the next three years, according to a company statement.

China’s smartphone makers have been gaining momentums over the past few years not only in domestic but also the global market. Along with the trend, smartphone chip industry is has seen strong growth in the country. The world’s top chip maker Qualcomm earns more than half of its revenues in China.

Meanwhile, Chinese phone companies are also looking to have more control over their own hardware. It’s worth noting that Xiaomi was reportedly developing smartphone processors on its own early this year.

“Qualcomm has longstanding relationships with Xiaomi, OPPO and vivo and we are continuing our commitment to investing and helping advance China’s mobile and semiconductor industries,” said Steve Mollenkopf, chief executive officer, Qualcomm Incorporated.

Qualcomm’s rival Broadcom offered a $105 billion buyout bit earlier this week. Tighter partnership with Chinese manufacturers may ease the pressures resulted from the lengthy legal battle with Apple Inc. over patent fees.

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The past, present and future of the world largest shopping spree https://technode.com/2017/11/08/the-past-present-and-future-of-the-world-largest-shopping-spree/ https://technode.com/2017/11/08/the-past-present-and-future-of-the-world-largest-shopping-spree/#respond Wed, 08 Nov 2017 03:24:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57999 Singles' DayThis is just a small part of our coverage of the world’s largest consumption orgy that is Singles Day. Stay tuned the rest of the week as we prepare for the extravaganza at 11:59 pm, November 10. It’s that time of the year again. Chinese hand-choppers, online shopping addicts who promise to chop off a […]]]> Singles' Day

This is just a small part of our coverage of the world’s largest consumption orgy that is Singles Day. Stay tuned the rest of the week as we prepare for the extravaganza at 11:59 pm, November 10.

It’s that time of the year again. Chinese hand-choppers, online shopping addicts who promise to chop off a hand if they continue to buy things they don’t need, are stuck even tighter to their smartphone, fishing for their favorite goods day and night until their shopping carts are full. People talk about the tricks in getting the most coupons form online retailers. Everyone is lurching around, waiting for the clock to strike zero o’clock on November 11 so that they can throw money at their screens.

The past decade has witnessed the most vigorous development of e-commerce in China and Singles’ Day is no doubt a phenomenon that crowns the milestones of each year. While we are approaching the 9th anniversary of the extravaganza, it’s time to look into the past, present and future of Singles’ Day.

World’s largest shopping festival in nine years

Singles’ Day first originated among China’s young people as something like an anti-Valentines Day, when bachelors or bachelorettes could use as an excuse to get together and have their own funs. Seeing the rise of dedicated shopping days globally, Chinese e-commerce giant swooped in quickly in 2009 to rebrand it into China’s, and now the world’s largest shopping festival.

To put the sheer size of Singles’ Day into perspective for those living outside China: Prime Day, the member-only event of Alibaba’s US counterpart Amazon, recorded sales of $1 billion this year. Black Friday’s sales hit $3.34 billion in 2016, while Cyber Monday booked a record-breaking $3.45 billion.

image credit: Carvaka
Image credit: Carvaka

However, these numbers are nothing compared to the size of Singles’ Day, which hit $17.8 billion sales (GMV) in a single day on November 11th last year. The same number would equal  the annual e-commerce sales Spain in 2016. The combined revenue of Amazon Prime day, Black Friday and Cyber Monday only equals 43% of Singles’ Day revenue.

Alibaba Singles' Day
Image credit: Carvaka

What’s more impressive is that it’s only the spending tally on Alibaba’s marketplaces. Alibaba is the trendsetter for Singles’ Day, but the Chinese e-commerce juggernaut is far from being the single power behind the shopping festival culture in China. Other e-commerce competitors like JD have joined to take a piece of the pie.

What to expect this year?

Singles’ Day is continuously breaking its own records since its inception. “Each year, while we celebrate another record-breaking 11.11 after the 24-hour shopping spree, we are also beset by the problem of how to outperform ourselves and deliver greater experiences next year,” Daniel Zhang, Alibaba Group CEO said at the launch event of this year’s Singles’ Day.

This is perhaps the same question that lingers in the minds of millions of customers, sellers and investors. After accomplishing an “impossible mission” of $17.9 billion sales in 2016, what is Alibaba’s goal for this year, and more importantly, how it’s going to realize it?

Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang at 2017 11.11 Kick Off in Shanghai_02
Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang speaking at launch event for Singles’ Day 2017 (image credit: Alibaba)

Even larger scale spree in partnership with global brands and supply chains

Singles’ Day, now officially dubbed the 11.11 Global Shopping Festival, has evolved from a 24-hour online sale into a 24-day festival season celebrated both online and offline. Consumers around the world will enjoy promotions and offers from more than 140,000 brands and 15 million product listings.

For Chinese consumers, who are increasingly aspiring for quality products and a wider range of choice, more than 60,000 international brands will be available to them across the Alibaba marketplaces. Participating brands include Adidas, Bose, La Mer, L’Oréal, Mac, Mattel, Mondelez, Nike, P&G, Shiseido, Siemens, Unilever, Uniqlo, Wyeth, Zara, and more.

In addition, to bring overseas quality brands to local customers, Alibaba is also pioneering a new initiative to lead the globalization of 100 Chinese brands, with a focus on the Southeast Asian markets at the initial stage.

Free shipping will be introduced to ten countries during this year’s Festival to extend the global reach, mainly through its logistics affiliate Cainiao.

Online shopping spree to offline carnival

In the wake of the heat surrounding “New Retail“, a term founder Jack Ma coined to depict the increasingly blurring boundaries between the online and offline shopping worlds, Alibaba is trying to turn Singles’ Day from an online shopping spree to an offline festival.

Alibaba will collaborate with 52 shopping malls to set up 60 New Retail-powered Pop-up Stores across 12 cities in China. Consumers can visit a pop-up store of a cosmetics brand, for example, to experience an augmented reality (AR) lipstick trial. Based on LBS technologies, an AR game on Mobile Taobao App called Catch the Cat will drive online traffic to offline locations. Consumers will use their mobile device to catch the virtual Tmall Cat mascot at a number of retail partner locations to win special perks, discounts, and coupons for use at online and offline stores.

Nearly 100,000 stores available in 31 provinces and 334 cities throughout China will also be converted into “smart stores” to bring a range of New Retail experiences such as facial recognition payment and scan-and-deliver O2O shopping. New Retail will also be rolled out for community stores such as Rural Taobao service centers and neighborhood convenience stores.

Consumer Engagement and Retail as Entertainment

After years of efforts, Alibaba is a powerhouse not only in e-commerce but also in China’s entertainment sector as well. The company is now leveraging its media and entertainment assets to drive online consumption.

Chris Tung, Alibaba Group’s Chief Marketing Officer, said, “Alibaba Group’s 2017 11.11 Global Shopping Festival brings consumers around the world a step closer to realizing the aspirational life where entertainment and retail become one.”

27 global brands have joined with Alibaba to produce the 4-hour Tmall Collection See Now, Buy Now Fashion Show on October 31. Viewers become consumers on the spot and immediately buy what they see in the fashion show, regardless of which platform they choose. 
Introduced in 2016, this year’s fashion show features major brands under fashion conglomerates such as LVMH, SMCP and Estée Lauder.

Directed by Hollywood producer David Hill, the 11.11 Countdown Gala Celebration will feature top-tier singers and movie stars like Pharrell Williams and Jet Li. Additionally, the buzz surrounding the gala piled up since it also features the movie Gong Shou Dao, starring Jack Ma, the legendary Chinese entrepreneur behind Alibaba Group, and Jet Li.

Last but not the least, it is the red envelopes. It might not be the latest innovation when it comes to marketing in China, it’s the most effective one. More than RMB250 million will be shared among Chinese consumers through various interactive games. One of which shoppers can invite friends to form special teams, and once their team’s purchases reach a certain amount collectively, all team members will be able to get discounts and coupons.

Today’s record, tomorrow’s new norm

The skyrocketing sales tend to draw all of our attention, but it’s also important to remain conscious of the fact that Singles’ Day is kind of a “nodal point” economy, where all the consumption powers of shoppers is unleashed during a 24-hour period. The impact before and after the shopping spree should not be overlooked because many would now save their purchases for Singles’ Day to get a better discount. Also, people’s consumption demand may be reasonably decreased after the shopping tally.

“The peak traffic of Singles’ Day in each year will turn into that for a normal day years later,” Tmall World director Hu Yuling citing Alibaba’s Jack Ma. “We use Singles’ Day as a continuous incentive to boost the consumption demand as well as for the construction of infrastructures,” Hu explained.

The firm has done lots of efforts to change customers’ consumption habits, to change Singles’ Day from a 24-hour big shopping spree to an all-year-round new normal. “We have launched Tmall Supermarket, where users can make daily purchases for their groceries. Monthly or weekly small-scale promotion events are also held to create a new normal for online shopping,” she said.

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Southeast Asia is a blue ocean for Chinese gaming firms: report https://technode.com/2017/11/07/southeast-asia-is-a-blue-ocean-for-chinese-gaming-firms-report/ https://technode.com/2017/11/07/southeast-asia-is-a-blue-ocean-for-chinese-gaming-firms-report/#respond Tue, 07 Nov 2017 06:15:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58097 Like the mobile payment industry, China’s gaming market is a highly cleaned-up field, where Tencent and NetEase take a dominating 70% of the market. Instead of diving into the competitive market, increasing domestic internet companies are turning their sights to Southeast Asia (SEA), a relatively untapped region that not only shares a similar culture with […]]]>

Like the mobile payment industry, China’s gaming market is a highly cleaned-up field, where Tencent and NetEase take a dominating 70% of the market. Instead of diving into the competitive market, increasing domestic internet companies are turning their sights to Southeast Asia (SEA), a relatively untapped region that not only shares a similar culture with China but also has more relaxed control from the governments.

A recent report from market research firm Niko Partners further demonstrates the potential of this area by giving impressive projections for the market size. The combined PC online and mobile games revenue in SEA is projected to reach $2.2 billion in 2017, rising to $4.4 billion by 2021, the report pointed out. This forecast has been revised upward from last year, based on the strength of e-sports and new hit international games entering the SEA market.

The number of PC online and mobile gamers in SEA is projected to reach 300 million by the end of 2017, rising to more than 400 million by 2021.

171027_NIKO_Infographic_Mobile-Games_simplified_V01-800x450
Image credit: Niko Partners

Like elsewhere in the world, mobile games are recording a strong uptick in revenue, expecting to surpass PC games revenue in 2018. However, mobile games revenue is additive, not cannibalizing, PC games usage, the report added.

In the wake of globalization initiative of Chinese tech giants, several domestic companies have been accelerating their layout in the SEA region, including Alibaba Games, Perfect World, LineKong, and more.

Tencent has already established a foothold in the region with investment in Sea Limited, (formerly known as Garena) a leader in SEA for PC and mobile games operations and distribution. The company went public on last month in the US, raising $884 million in the IPO.

“E-sports has had a huge impact on the Southeast Asia region and is the primary driver for the explosive growth in PC online games. The heavy growth of the MOBA genre is a major contributor to mobile e-sports as well,” said Lisa Cosmas Hanson, managing partner of Niko Partners.

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Used car trading platform Uxin steers for an US IPO https://technode.com/2017/11/07/used-car-trading-platform-uxin-steers-for-an-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2017/11/07/used-car-trading-platform-uxin-steers-for-an-us-ipo/#respond Tue, 07 Nov 2017 02:00:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=58075 Chinese second-hand car trading platform Uxin, more commonly known as Youxin in Chinese, is planning for an $800 million IPO in the US market, IFR has reported citing people familiar with the matter. The source added that the firm has already hired Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley as the underwriters. Founded in 2011 […]]]>

Chinese second-hand car trading platform Uxin, more commonly known as Youxin in Chinese, is planning for an $800 million IPO in the US market, IFR has reported citing people familiar with the matter. The source added that the firm has already hired Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley as the underwriters.

Founded in 2011 by Dai Kun, former VP of car trading platform Yiche, Youxin is an online transaction service provider for second-hand cars. Its core business brand Youxinpai is a B2B second-hand car auction service platform integrating auctions, vehicle detection, secure payment, logistics and transport for automobile manufacturers, second-hand car agencies and large companies. The company also operates B2C used-car trading platform and car financing service Uxin Finance.

As a leading player in China’s second-hand car trading market, the company has just raised $500 million D round this year from investors that include Warburg Pincus, TPG and Jeneration Capital. An earlier $170 million C round was led by Baidu in 2015.

This is among a series of Uxin’s efforts for an IPO. The firm has been seeking a domestic backdoor listing through assets reorganization with Busen Garment last year. But the deal turned sour due to regulation adjustments made by China Securities Regulatory Commission. Company CEO Dai Kun renewed their decision for an IPO this May.

After the recent IPO wave spearheaded by fintech companies, China’s auto platforms, which have undergone significant development over the past two years, is expected to become the next vertical for public listings. Yixin Capital Ltd., used- and new-auto financing and transactions, is eyeing an IPO in Hong Kong.

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Beijing district suspends new recruitment for innovation spaces due to taxation issues https://technode.com/2017/11/02/beijing-district-suspends-new-recruitment-for-innovation-spaces-due-to-taxation-issues/ https://technode.com/2017/11/02/beijing-district-suspends-new-recruitment-for-innovation-spaces-due-to-taxation-issues/#respond Thu, 02 Nov 2017 05:41:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57857 China has shown unreserved support for innovation and entrepreneurship in the past few years. But it turns out that these support offers are good only under certain conditions and complying with the taxation laws of the country. The industry and commerce regulator of Beijing Chaoyang District issued a notice yesterday to suspend its affiliated shared […]]]>

China has shown unreserved support for innovation and entrepreneurship in the past few years. But it turns out that these support offers are good only under certain conditions and complying with the taxation laws of the country.

The industry and commerce regulator of Beijing Chaoyang District issued a notice yesterday to suspend its affiliated shared space innovation centers and incubators, which offer workplaces for small and medium-sized firms, from making new project recruitments, local media is reporting (in Chinese).

This notice was extended because some of the companies being included in the program failed to adapt to the unified taxation system, which is required by the regulator. The present notice takes effect as from today.

As of present, however, there are no signs that other administrative regions are following suit. A representative from Haidian, another Beijing district home to lots of shared working centers, told local media that they don’t have plans to make similar adjustments.

Among a series of preferential policies and financial supports, entrepreneurship in China has grown at an exponential rate in the past decade. The government sees innovation as a new engine for growth as evidenced by the government venture capital fund worth ($6.5 billion) to support start-ups in emerging industries.

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Tencent’s China Literature $1.1bln IPO speaks volumes about value of IP in China https://technode.com/2017/11/02/tencents-china-literature-1-1bln-ipo-speaks-volumes-about-value-of-ip-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/11/02/tencents-china-literature-1-1bln-ipo-speaks-volumes-about-value-of-ip-in-china/#respond Thu, 02 Nov 2017 01:38:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57842 Online reading tencent ebook china literatureChina Literature (阅文集团), the online reading unit of Chinese tech giant Tencent, has raised $1.1B after pricing its Hong Kong IPO at the top of its range, Bloomberg reports. The company, which Tencent has a 65.38% stake, offered 151.37 million shares globally at an indicated range of HK$48 to HK$55 each. Following this hefty IPO, Tencent […]]]> Online reading tencent ebook china literature

China Literature (阅文集团), the online reading unit of Chinese tech giant Tencent, has raised $1.1B after pricing its Hong Kong IPO at the top of its range, Bloomberg reports. The company, which Tencent has a 65.38% stake, offered 151.37 million shares globally at an indicated range of HK$48 to HK$55 each.

Following this hefty IPO, Tencent is planning another listing for its music spin-off in the near future. “It’s already fielding pitches from banks to handle an IPO for its music arm that could raise at least $1 billion next year,” the report citing people with knowledge of the matter.

China’s heated battle for online publishing broke out in 2013 when new players enter the arena poised to challenge existing incumbents. To tap the rising trend, Tencent acquired China Literature’s predecessor, Cloudary Corp., which was owned by Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd., for $730 million in 2014.

In China, a whole new industry chain surrounding online literature IPs is taking form and now involves music, games, TV dramas, and movie production. Tencent, Alibaba, and Baidu have all entered the battle to compete for the best IPs. For example, the TV version of Chinese fantasy epic Eternal Love, based on stories written by online novelist Tang Qi, became an instant hit at the beginning of this year. The film, OST,  and mobile game version all thrived in the wake of this heat.

The global capital market has been responding exceedingly well to China’s tech stocks in the past few months. Both Hong Kong and the US, the two main destinations for an overseas listing of Chinese companies, have recorded sizable listings from domestic tech firms from online-only insurance service ZhongAn to small loan lending platform Qudian.

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China’s Airbnb equivalent Xiaozhu raises $120m in funding https://technode.com/2017/11/02/chinas-airbnb-equivalent-xiaozhu-raises-120m-in-funding/ https://technode.com/2017/11/02/chinas-airbnb-equivalent-xiaozhu-raises-120m-in-funding/#respond Wed, 01 Nov 2017 22:53:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57838 Chinese peer-to-peer home rental platform Xiaozhu announced Wednesday that it has received $120m in the latest financing round. The firm said vaguely in the statement that the current round has bumped the startup to unicorn status, which means the valuation of this round would be around $1 billion or higher. Yunfeng Capital, the VC firm backed […]]]>

Chinese peer-to-peer home rental platform Xiaozhu announced Wednesday that it has received $120m in the latest financing round. The firm said vaguely in the statement that the current round has bumped the startup to unicorn status, which means the valuation of this round would be around $1 billion or higher.

Yunfeng Capital, the VC firm backed by Alibaba chairman Jack Ma and Target Media founder Yu Feng, led this round. Existing investors including Joy Capital, Morningside Ventures, and Capital Today also participated.

With the new funding, Xiaozhu — ‘little pig’ in English — plans to invest more resources to introduce technologies further enhancing security of house-sharing and building a sustainable platform ecosystem for the whole industry, according to Kelvin Chen Chi, co-founder and CEO of Xiaozhu.

Founded in 2012, Xiaozhu now has listings in over 400 destinations inside and outside of China. As of the first half of this year, it claimed over 20 million active users and more than 200k houses were listed on the platform. Xiaozhu landed a $60 million Series C in 2015, and a $15 million B round in 2014.

“After 5 years of exploration, Xiaozhu pioneered house-sharing business model in China and created a new bilateral market from ground up by building an entire service system that consists of cleaning and photography services,” said Kelvin.

Despite the home sharing boom led by Airbnb in the overseas market, the trend didn’t catch up in China until recent years thanks to the popularity of sharing economy concept in China. Now, the vertical is seeing more competitors.

The house-sharing juggernaut Airbnb is accelerating its China expansion with more localization efforts, despite the recent hiccups in China management team. Another leading rival in the field Tujia is also fully loaded with $300 million fresh funding to explore this market.

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Three lessons learned from Udacity’s initial China failures https://technode.com/2017/10/27/udacity-china-failures-lessons/ https://technode.com/2017/10/27/udacity-china-failures-lessons/#respond Fri, 27 Oct 2017 07:03:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57521 Cracking into the alluring but formidable Chinese market has never been easy. Despite great successes elsewhere, a number of the world’s most powerful tech giants including Google and Uber have fallen out of favor in China. Various reasons contribute to their fiascos, but there’s one common factor behind them: the failure to realize how different […]]]>

Cracking into the alluring but formidable Chinese market has never been easy. Despite great successes elsewhere, a number of the world’s most powerful tech giants including Google and Uber have fallen out of favor in China. Various reasons contribute to their fiascos, but there’s one common factor behind them: the failure to realize how different China can be.

Udacity, the US online education company that provides nanodegree courses including topics such as tech entrepreneurship, full stack development, and data analysis, is among the foreign tech firms that are geared up for China expansion.

After more than a year of effort, the Udacity team has gone through the initial doubts and pains in penetrating China and started to record an uptick in performance. It’s still too early to say that they are proving successful here, but what they have experienced could provide some useful lessons for those aiming for the same thing.

Foreign tech giants failed to realize how different China can be, or rather, they are unwilling or reluctant to do so, especially at the initial stage of tapping into China when still pre-occupied with the glories of their overseas success.

In 2015, Udacity raised a $105 million D Round at a valuation $1 billion as the first online education unicorn in the US. With abundant capital, they naturally spread out to the global market with new teams in China, India, London, and Brazil.

udacity-china-750x446
Udacity China team when they first launching in China last April

“We had high hopes when we launched our Chinese site in April last year because we have this Silicon Valley content. Content from Google, Amazon, Facebook, from the inventors a lot of technologies that we use today, even from the inventors of the database, the programing language that programmers are using. But in the first six months of our operations in China, we had no business,” Udacity China head Robert Hsiung said at NewCo Shanghai, a company tour event held by Chinaccelerator.

Around October last year, the team decided that it’s time to break things. “Everything that we do in the US, we just threw it out of the window and started from zero,” said Hsiung.

Payment habits are different here, adapt accordingly

First and foremost, it is important that you don’t overlook the different payment options and habits of Chinese customers, whether you are a startup trying to explore Chinese market or simply doing business with Chinese companies. It would be a shame if users are attracted by the service but didn’t make a purchase due to terrible purchase experiences.

“The most important change we made is the way we price the products,” Hsiung introduced. The way Udacity used to price the product in China or the way it priced in the US is based on subscriptions, which is very common in the West.

“But in China, no one pays for a subscription, everything is pre-paid here, your phone bill, electricity bill, because the system is not designed to deduct automatically from your credit card or your bank account,” he said. “The culture here is about pre-paying for everything, so we switched to a prepaid model. That was a big plus, enabling us to drive a lot of conversions.”

People consume content differently

“We got a lot of feedback that our courses are a bit too long,” said Hsiung. The complaints are not that surprising since Udacity’s courses originally take six to eight months, 10 hours a week of self-propelled learning to complete.

This is really tough to get through, even for US students who have grown in an education system that advocates self-learning and self-improvement. To some extent, their Chinese counterparts are less tenacious in self-motivated study: teachers and parents have played too important a role in monitoring the progress of their studies since early on.

“We cut the courses into two, enabling us to actually lower the price point and shorten the time to completion. Since October of last year, our revenue has grown by 8X,” he said.

屏幕快照 2017-10-27 下午3.33.09
Udacity China head Robert Hsiung pitching to NewCo attendees

Start from the basics

Localization is a big, big term, but comes down to the basics of execution.

In the case of Udacity, language localization is both basic and critical since there’s lot of translation to be done for their video courses. “When we launched in April last year, we made a huge mistake by giving all our content to one translation agency. We found that what they do is basically to put it into Google Translate and send it back to us. We received lots of complaints from the students,” said Hsiung.

Now, the team has set up a full-time localization division that manages volunteers and translation agencies to ensure the highest-quality translations. The team now only has to do text translation of video subtitles and written content. “As of July this year, we have seven locally-translated courses and this number is going to reach seventeen by the end of December.”

Now operating in China for more than one year, the Udacity China team is proud to see that a lot of innovations thriving here in China are actually impacting the rest of the world.

“Our US platform is shifting to the same way we are structuring our packages, they also offer pay by installments, where students can buy our courses in more affordable ways. They are also adopting the way we use WeChat to bring students together to learn together and help each other.

“The biggest thing we have learned about being in China is that things that work in the US don’t necessarily work here. For any startup, you really have to continually innovate and really empower your team to innovate,” he added.

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Airbnb’s China head Ge Hong leaves after four-month tenure https://technode.com/2017/10/24/airbnbs-china-head-ge-hong-leaves-after-four-month-tenure/ https://technode.com/2017/10/24/airbnbs-china-head-ge-hong-leaves-after-four-month-tenure/#respond Tue, 24 Oct 2017 05:22:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57399 US home rental giant Airbnb announced today that its China head Ge Hong is leaving the company. The firm didn’t disclose the reasons for his departure. The company’s co-founder and chief strategy officer Nathan Blecharczyk is going to take his place. Ge was appointed as vice president and China head of Airbnb this April. Along with […]]]>

US home rental giant Airbnb announced today that its China head Ge Hong is leaving the company. The firm didn’t disclose the reasons for his departure. The company’s co-founder and chief strategy officer Nathan Blecharczyk is going to take his place.

Airbnb-1
Ge Hong (L) VS Nathan Blecharczyk (R)

Ge was appointed as vice president and China head of Airbnb this April. Along with his appointment comes an adjustment to the company’s business strategy, which places increasing focus on Chinese market. Several moves were taken to localize their services from announcing a Chinese name, expand its Beijing tech team to cooperation with Alipay.

Before Ge’s appointment Airbnb’s progress in Chinese market has been relatively slow. Entering China in August 2015, the position for a China head was kept vacant for around two years. It is a little bit surprising that the firm should make a such a huge shift in senior management in just four months, especially for a market it’s placing more importance.

The adjustment in management is sure to impact the home rental giant’s competition with rising domestic rivals, such as Tujia and Xiaozhu. At present, Airbnb China has over 120k homes listed on its platform. More than 2.5 million customers are using their services, up 287% YOY.

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Chinese overseas investors prefer tech stocks: report https://technode.com/2017/10/24/chinese-overseas-investors-prefer-tech-stocks-report/ https://technode.com/2017/10/24/chinese-overseas-investors-prefer-tech-stocks-report/#respond Tue, 24 Oct 2017 01:54:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57257 China’s sizable middle class is on fire. A McKinsey & Company report projected that they would account for 76% of the country’s urban population by 2022. With thickening wallets and an urgent need to diversify investment options, more Chinese investors are turning their sights overseas, especially the US stock market. In addition to its reputation as a more […]]]>

China’s sizable middle class is on fire. A McKinsey & Company report projected that they would account for 76% of the country’s urban population by 2022. With thickening wallets and an urgent need to diversify investment options, more Chinese investors are turning their sights overseas, especially the US stock market.

In addition to its reputation as a more stable market, the attraction of US stock market was intensified by the remarkable performances of US-listed Chinese stocks. The wave, in turn, gave rise to another US IPO spree of Chinese tech firms this fall. Chinese online loan provider Qudian started trading as the fourth-largest US IPO this year. Several domestic peers join the trend by submitting IPO applications, including search engine Sogou, P2P lending platforms of PPDAI Group and Hexindai.

Given the trends, online brokerage service Tiger Brokers released a report to shed lights on preferences and demographics of Chinese-speaking traders who eyes US stock market.

Tech stocks are new favorites of Chinese investors

When we say Chinese people are becoming increasingly tech-savvy, we don’t only refer to the fact they are the first adopters of cutting-edge technology software and voracious buyers of smart gadgets. We also have a knack and understanding for technologies to seek better investment returns. The report shows that tech stock is the most popular category for Chinese-speaking investors.

The list for Top-10 US stocks among Chinese investors was star-studded by big tech names. A dominating 56% interviewees said they have invested in Alibaba, which had a growth of nearly 80 percent since the start of this year. JD and Apple performed equally well to rank the second and third. They are followed by Tesla, Google, Facebook, Baidu, Amazon Nvidia and Weibo.

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Top 10 US-listed stocks for Chinese investors (Image credit: Tiger Brokers)

Younger-generation traders become mainstream

As digital natives, the country’s younger generations are first-movers to the sector. The report points out that post-80s gen represents nearly half (47.2%) of the users with post-90s gen comes as a close second (36.2%).

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Image credit: Tiger Brokers

Regional distribution of the group tends to be concentrated in first-tier cities of Beijing, Shanghai and economically developed provinces of Guangdong, Zhejiang and Jiangsu. Shandong, Hubei, Fujian, Sichuan and Henan provinces also make up the list.

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Regional distribution of Chinese overseas traders (image credit: Tiger Brokers)

Why, what, how of Chinese overseas investors

Why: Compared with domestic under-performing equity market, the decade-long bullish trend of US stock market is the most important reason that drives this shift. In addition, the willingness to invest in household US titles such as Apple, Nike and Starbucks fuels the trend. Other reasons detailed in the report are as follows:

  • Bullish tends in US stock market (31.22%)
  • Star companies in US equity market (29.70%)
  • It’s difficult to get favorable returns through other channels (11.69%)
  • Engaged in industries related to financing or US stock trading (8.56%)
  • Working for, or related to companies that are planning for an US IPO (7.69%)
  • Having overseas study or working experience (2.85%)
  • Others (8.29%)

What: Over 65% of Chinese traders prefer Chinese companies when investing in the US. This is fair enough since the services of these companies have penetrated nearly every aspect of their lives. Besides language, their insights on a particular Chinese company or the industry might be deeper than that of a Wall Street expert who only does distant research.

Interestingly, Chinese investors prefer longer-term investments over shorter ones. Over 55% of Chinese investors will hold a position for over three months, and 20.03% for longer than a year.

How: US equity trading is still a niche market in China. Safety, knowledge, news timelines and language are the major concerns of Chinese investors when investing abroad. The report shows that commission rate, Chinese language support, and trading speed are the most valued factors when finding a broker.

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Collapse of square dancing apps show it’s still too early to cash in on Chinese dama https://technode.com/2017/10/23/square-dancing-crash-china-grannies-dama/ https://technode.com/2017/10/23/square-dancing-crash-china-grannies-dama/#respond Mon, 23 Oct 2017 08:02:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57379 Group-purchasing, ride-hailing, VR/AR, shared spaces, bike-rental… New trends or verticals continue to emerge in China’s tech world. Some will blossom, some will perish, but everything could happen really fast. Unfortunately, startups that are targeting at China’s “dama” (大妈) fall in the second category. Only three or four firms are still in the business while a […]]]>

Group-purchasing, ride-hailing, VR/AR, shared spaces, bike-rental… New trends or verticals continue to emerge in China’s tech world. Some will blossom, some will perish, but everything could happen really fast. Unfortunately, startups that are targeting at China’s “dama” (大妈) fall in the second category. Only three or four firms are still in the business while a majority of their peers either shift focus or collapsed, local media reported.

The apps for square dancing, the unarguably favorite pastime of Chinese dama, began to flourish in 2015. Over the past two years, over 60 startups entered this field. At its peak, apps that boast hundreds of thousands of downloads like Tangdou, Jiuai (就爱) and 99广场舞 began to emerge. Most adopt various means to commercialize the business, from ads, travel, e-commerce to offline events. The live streaming boom also penetrated square dancing app sector, but it’s difficult to keep the users due to sophisticated operations.

A CNNIC report shows that Chinese netizens aged above 60 years totaled 36 million, accounting for 4.8% of China’s 751 million internet users.

Despite the great target user base, square dancing apps still find that a huge portion of their audience is still out of reach for generating revenues. First, it’s hard to encourage a usually suspicious older generation to spend online. In addition, the penetration of online or mobile payment among Chinese seniors is not high although the situation is gradually changing with extensive promotions from Alipay and WeChat Pay.

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Chinese micro lender Qudian under fire after splashy US IPO https://technode.com/2017/10/23/chinese-micro-lender-qudian-under-fire-after-splashy-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2017/10/23/chinese-micro-lender-qudian-under-fire-after-splashy-us-ipo/#respond Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:20:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57373 Qudian fintech microloanDays after its splashy US IPO, Chinese online loan provider Qudian is undergoing a major crisis as local media has begun questioning the sustainability, validity and morality of their business. Born out of student-based Qufenqi, Qudian first grew by offering small loans to colleges students to capitalize on the rising spending power of China’s younger generations. At […]]]> Qudian fintech microloan

Days after its splashy US IPO, Chinese online loan provider Qudian is undergoing a major crisis as local media has begun questioning the sustainability, validity and morality of their business.

Born out of student-based Qufenqi, Qudian first grew by offering small loans to colleges students to capitalize on the rising spending power of China’s younger generations. At the peak of the student micro-loan trend, the firm received investment of Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial. This October, the red-hot Chinese fintech concept drew strong demand for the company to price the fourth-largest US IPO this year.

However, local media’s queries have cast a shade on their prospects of the company. The criticisms are mainly aimed at the legitimacy of their business. As a major player in the student micro-loan sector, Qudian claims to have suspended student-targeted loans in November 2015 as the state has issued a ban on online loans to college students following public outrage over exorbitant rates, porn for payment, and various financial scams.

According to the company’s IPO prospectus, Qudian’ total revenues increased from RMB 24.1 million 2014 to RMB235.0 million in 2015. Total revenues jumped 514% to RMB 1.4 billion in 2016 and further surged 393.3% from RMB 371.6 million in the six months ending June 30, 2016, to RMB 1.8 billion in the same period in 2017. Qudian’s net losses were RMB 233.2 million in 2015. It turned to profitability in 2016 with a net income of RMB 576.7 million in 2016, while in the first half of this year alone it has recorded a net income of RMB 973.7 million.

It’s interesting to note that the company’s performance was unaffected since 2016, even after they gone through a huge shift in their core business. The firm described its target users in its prospectus as “They are young, mobile-active consumers who need access to small credit for their discretionary spending but are underserved by traditional financial institutions due to their lack of traditional credit data and the operational inefficiency of traditional financial institutions.” and “approximately 90.8% of active borrowers are between 18 and 35 years of age.” This is kind of a roundabout way of saying students, according to the PingWest report.

In addition, the company’s excessive reliance on Alipay for acquiring users, fund management and risk control also raised doubt of its sustainability and business independence as a listed company.

The firm is at a critical point, but company CEO Luo Min’s response to the criticism only made the case worse. When being asked whether they will coerce users to borrow from relatives and other platforms whey they fail to pay back the loans, Luo’s answered “If the debts are overdue, that’s a bad debt for us. In this case, we won’t do anything to push them, not even a phone call. If you can’t pay, we will just give it as a welfare. That’s all.

Given the circumstances, even a charity move of the company was translated as an attempt to white-wash the company. Qudian’s CEO Luo Min donated RMB 1 billion worth of shares to set up a charity fund last week.

Chinese fintech IPO spree

Despite the buzz, Qudian’s IPO marks a new US IPO wave of Chinese fintech companies. In addition to Qudian, several Chinese online lending companies, such as PPDAI, Hexindai, and Rong360 also filed with SEC for a US IPO. More players like Dianrong, Lexin Fintech are rumored to be following suit.

As a major investor, Ant Financial holds a 12.5% stake Qudian. Given its relationship with Ant Financial, Qudian’s IPO may also test water for the listing of Ant Financial, which has also developed its own micro-loan services.

From the perspective of development circles, China’s fintech is entering a maturity period where capital is seeking exits and companies are looking for IPOs.

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Why WeChat is going to win the instant app battle in China https://technode.com/2017/10/19/why-wechat-is-going-to-win-the-instant-app-battle-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/10/19/why-wechat-is-going-to-win-the-instant-app-battle-in-china/#respond Thu, 19 Oct 2017 03:53:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57027 To great anticipation, WeChat rolled out Mini Programs—embedded instant apps—in January this year. As a major feature release, the buzz surrounding the Mini Programs piled up months before its actual launch. Discussions among industry insiders went from the actual form of Mini Programs to its potential to disrupt the traditional app store paradigm. In contrast to […]]]>

To great anticipation, WeChat rolled out Mini Programs—embedded instant apps—in January this year. As a major feature release, the buzz surrounding the Mini Programs piled up months before its actual launch. Discussions among industry insiders went from the actual form of Mini Programs to its potential to disrupt the traditional app store paradigm.

In contrast to the mounting buzz around Mini Programs, the feature only received a lukewarm reception in the first few months after its initial launch. Sobering reports detailed users and developers’ negative views in the first month. Upbeat sentiments towards the model soon shifted to skepticism about its validity.

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WeChat Mini Program user growth (left) vs minutes users spend on Mini Programs (right) from Feb-Jul, 2017  (Image credit: TalkingData)

Ten months after the launch, it seems that Mini Programs are finally on track to healthier growth. The Mini Program user growth rate peaked at 96.3% in April. The figure slumped in May, but returned to moderate, but rational 40%-ish growth in the following three months, a report from data analytics service TalkingData shows.

In first seven months, the total users of WeChat Mini Programs increased by over 13 times, the report pointed out. At the same time, people are spending more time on the feature from 1.6 minutes in February to 3.6 minutes in July, showing that people are getting used to them.

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Growth in number of WeChat Mini Programs from Jan to Jul 2017  (Image credit: TalkingData)

The sustainable growth is winning back the hearts of users as well as developers. After hitting a low in the first month, the number of Mini Programs is growing steadily.

Given the market shift, TechNode talked with Zhang Xiang, CEO and founder of Mini Program developer Feeyan, on the trends in Mini Program industry. Founded in 2017, the Beijing-based startup helps users to develop customized Mini Programs. It now provides services for clients in a variety of industries including hospitality, automobile, tourism, real estate, and more.

Why a bumpy start for WeChat Mini Programs?

Expectations for WeChat Mini Programs were way too high before the launch and people got disheartened too quickly when its performance failed to meet all their over-inflated expectations, according to Zhang Xiang.

When we take a second thought, this shouldn’t be the case for an emerging industry like Mini Program, where we have no successful examples to follow. When WeChat official account was rolled out, it takes around a year for the firm to record substantial growth from the feature. Likewise, it’s unrealistic to expect Mini Programs to shoot to huge success in a few months,” he said.

Zhang believes there’s a lot of opportunities to explore because what fueled the high expectations previously still holds water now. WeChat, as the most popular chat app in China, claims near 1 billion monthly active users. For smaller companies and startups, the vast user base of this monster app. Within the app, new companies would have an easier time being discovered as well to engage and monetize the communities.

Another reason for the bumpy start is that WeChat didn’t open its full capacities to the public at first, providing but limited access and support to other services in the WeChat ecosystem. It’s a legitimate choice for WeChat as a move to test the market.

Tencent is developing the product at its own pace to give full functionality to Mini Programs, such as launching advertising bidding and allowing official accounts to create their own Mini Programs. Now, the firm has released a score of new features to make it more accessible “As of now, over 50 access points were opened through integration with official accounts, chat groups and more”, Zhang emphasized.

Multiple big companies are entering the market, who’s going to win?

While WeChat is pioneering the new business model, several trendsetters in China’s tech field are trying to play catch-up. In response to WeChat, Alipay started its own instant apps in September. Xiaomi took the wraps off Direct Service function, a non-install instant service feature, in its MIUI update. Actually, the technology for instant apps is nothing new: Baidu launched Light App back in 2013 using the similar technology.

For Zhang, the question of winners boils down to the following criteria: the size of the Super App’s original user base, its offline existence, and payment capability. Designed to be a tool to connect the online and offline world, payment capability is a critical link to complete the business loop.

Comprehensively speaking, WeChat now enjoys an edge among competitors in these regards, according to Zhang: “Billion-level monthly active users coupled with nearly 30 million official accounts, WeChat has an advantage for pioneering Mini Program service with its strong user-acquisition capabilities and the support from WeChat Pay.”

Compared with WeChat, both the pros and cons for Alipay to run Mini Programs are obvious. As the default payment tool for most Chinese people, Alipay’s force lies on its strong existence in the offline world. However, a payment-only tool will have lower user visiting frequency and doesn’t have the advantages of a mature social chain and traffic source, like the case in WeChat, Zhang explained.

“For Xiaomi, they have its own ecosystem. In terms of user base, MIUI, the operating system, has over 100 million users, in addition to users gained through its smart hardware services, text messages, and browsers. But it has neither the social attributes nor power of a payment system to form a complete business loop,” Zhang commented.

Baidu launched similar feature Light App as early as 2013, but the concept didn’t really take off then. “PC still account for a major source of Baidu’s traffic. Relative weak user stickiness on mobile terminals combined with the lack of powerful payment system lead to the fail of their business.”

Mini-programs by sector

The discussions about which sectors fit better in the Mini Program business model have been around since the idea of instant apps was floated. TalkingData’s report shows that tools, video, and entertainment services stood out in terms of Mini Program user growth. Office and video Mini Programs stood out with an average user retention time of over eight minutes, far higher than the others.

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WeChat Mini Program user growth vs time spent in minutes on Mini Programs by sectors image credit: TalkingData

“Similar to native apps, instant apps are applicable to every vertical. But for the time being, tools, like the ones for weather forecast or ticket sales and O2O lifestyle are taking the lead. Mini Programs promoted by WeChat such as Mobike and fresh e-commerce platform Beequick are lifestyle services,” Zhang told us.

In addition, Mini Program’s potential to foster online retailers is expected to be a growth point for Tencent, who is trying very hard to elbow into the home turn of Alibaba in e-commerce. “Traffic is an important aspect in e-commerce. Tencent has benefited a lot through WeChat-based micro-shops. I think there’s a lot of opportunities if they can attract these online retailers and combine them with offline stores through Mini Programs.” Zhang said.

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JD renews offline effort with new unmanned convenience stores https://technode.com/2017/10/17/jd-renews-offline-effort-with-new-unmanned-convenience-stores/ https://technode.com/2017/10/17/jd-renews-offline-effort-with-new-unmanned-convenience-stores/#respond Tue, 17 Oct 2017 09:59:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57121 Unmanned convenience store is one of the hottest buzzwords in China’s tech world since this summer. As a major force in China’s online retailing market, JD is sure not to be left out. Ahead of this year’s Single’s Day, the e-commerce giant has revealed that it is already testing two unmanned smart store models at its […]]]>

Unmanned convenience store is one of the hottest buzzwords in China’s tech world since this summer. As a major force in China’s online retailing market, JD is sure not to be left out. Ahead of this year’s Single’s Day, the e-commerce giant has revealed that it is already testing two unmanned smart store models at its Beijing headquarter. 

One model, JD’s Unmanned Convenience Store, offers a complete solution integrating various smart technologies. It leverages the latest technologies such as RFID, facial recognition, and image recognition, both to stores operated by JD, and eventually to high-quality third-party retailers. Cameras on the ceilings of the stores can recognize customer movement and also generate heat maps of the activity to monitor traffic flow, product selection, and customer preferences, helping store owners to stock efficiently. 

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The second model, JD’s D-Mart Smart Store Solution, offers low-cost wholesale and piecemeal customization flexibility to allow store owners to upgrade their existing stores and increase efficiency. Complete with smart shelving tools using JD Smart Vision technology that can recognize products and in-store behavior, as well as AI, the solution helps store owners better gauge how to manage inventory and product displays.  

In addition to the unmanned stores, JD is also testing smart solutions in its own JD Retail Experience Shops. Moreover, the company recently entered into a strategic partnership with Sinopec to integrate smart technology into Sinopec’s gas stations across China. 

JD’s rival Alibaba has laid out in the sector through the launch of unmanned shops, facial payment support as well as efforts to revamp offline retailers. Similarly, Alibaba also plans to build an unstaffed gas station in its home city of Hangzhou. The emerging sector has also welcomed startups such as BingoBox, Xingbianli, and GoBox.

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Tencent creates independent online insurance unit https://technode.com/2017/10/17/tencent-joins-alibaba-to-expand-online-insurance-existence/ https://technode.com/2017/10/17/tencent-joins-alibaba-to-expand-online-insurance-existence/#respond Tue, 17 Oct 2017 07:48:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57113 The strategic importance of China’s online insurance industry is increasingly valued by Chinese internet behemoths, so much so that a partial layout in the sector through joint ventures is not enough for their ambition for the sector. One month after China’s online-only insurer ZhongAn, a joint venture among Alibaba, Tencent, and PingAn, went public in […]]]>

The strategic importance of China’s online insurance industry is increasingly valued by Chinese internet behemoths, so much so that a partial layout in the sector through joint ventures is not enough for their ambition for the sector.

One month after China’s online-only insurer ZhongAn, a joint venture among Alibaba, Tencent, and PingAn, went public in Hong Kong stock market, Tencent has decided it’s the time to develop online insurance independently and make it part of its core business.

Through WeMin Insurance Agency, a new insurer in which Tencent owns a 57.8% controlling stake, Tencent recently secured a new operating license from the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) to sell insurance products on its popular messaging apps WeChat and QQ.

Tencent may move a bit slow compared with its arch-rival Alibaba, which already gained the license in September last year, but its entrance proves the quick rise of China’s online insurance sector.

Report from management consulting firm Oliver Wyman shows that 65% of new insurance policies were sold through the internet last year. The industry is expected to surge from RMB 363 billion ($54.8 billion) in 2016 to RMB 1.41 trillion by 2021.

Also, the news also shows China’s most popular apps—WeChat, Alipay and QQ—and major traffic drivers to new businesses are all going to open their support for insurance services. Users can soon find insurances embedded in their frequently used applications.

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Chinese e-commerce titans woo hard liquor makers https://technode.com/2017/10/17/chinese-e-commerce-titans-woo-hard-liquor-makers/ https://technode.com/2017/10/17/chinese-e-commerce-titans-woo-hard-liquor-makers/#respond Tue, 17 Oct 2017 06:08:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=57086 We all know that beverage industry, in general, is lucrative. But of all the verticals, Chinese hard liquor Baijiu, often given as a gift in the country, is a bellwether in terms of profitability. The price of Moutai (茅台), a top baijiu brand in China, varies from thousands to tens of thousands RMB, or even […]]]>

We all know that beverage industry, in general, is lucrative. But of all the verticals, Chinese hard liquor Baijiu, often given as a gift in the country, is a bellwether in terms of profitability. The price of Moutai (茅台), a top baijiu brand in China, varies from thousands to tens of thousands RMB, or even higher.

High-end pricey baijiu like Moutai and Wuliangye (五粮液) were often sold through traditional sales networks in the past. But as the e-commerce industry is taking over China, baijiu industry is no longer an exception. But breaking into the lucrative industry is not easy, nor is it impossible for Chinese online retailers.

JD CEO Liu Qiangdong visited Kweichow Moutai Group recently where the top management of the two companies meet each other to seek possible cooperation (in Chinese). The move comes one year after Moutai reached a partnership with Alibaba Group. The two companies have been working together in cloud computing, AI, blockchain, marketing, payment and new retail.

JD and Alibaba join online liquor retailers who believe that e-commerce is the key to China’s spirits sector. Since the e-commerce sites are recording stagnated growth in more traditional sectors such as clothing and food, the baijiu industry—now worth around RMB 100 billion ($15 billion)—could be a new growth point form them.

Both JD and Alibaba are chasing after Moutai because it’s the largest player in China’s white liquor market. Valued at over RMB 700 billion, it takes nearly half of the total value of liquor sector in China’s A-share market. Driven by the trend, more baijiu brands are seeking cooperation with e-commerce platforms in data sharing, branding, targeted marketing and product tracking.

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JD challenges Alibaba in luxury e-commerce with launch of Toplife https://technode.com/2017/10/10/jd-challenges-alibaba-in-luxury-e-commerce-with-launch-of-toplife/ https://technode.com/2017/10/10/jd-challenges-alibaba-in-luxury-e-commerce-with-launch-of-toplife/#respond Tue, 10 Oct 2017 10:06:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56753 Along with China’s exponential consumption upgrade, local e-commerce giants are racing to the luxury sector. Online retailer JD today announced the launch of its first-ever online marketplace for luxury products called Toplife. The platform allows brands to sell directly to consumers through an end-to-end luxury e-commerce ecosystem that incorporates online stores, premium customer service and […]]]>

Along with China’s exponential consumption upgrade, local e-commerce giants are racing to the luxury sector. Online retailer JD today announced the launch of its first-ever online marketplace for luxury products called Toplife.

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The platform allows brands to sell directly to consumers through an end-to-end luxury e-commerce ecosystem that incorporates online stores, premium customer service and delivery, marketing and branding expertise, and specialized warehousing and inventory. JD Luxury Express, the white-glove delivery service that currently operates in major cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Chengdu, will be made available to a section of Toplife users.

Marquee brands that have already joined Toplife include La Perla, Emporio Armani, Rimowa (LVMH), B&O Play and Trussardi. More brands will be joining the platform, including ones that will be launching their first ever online stores in China, JD suggested.

“Our deep understanding of high-end consumers has enabled us to launch a luxury e-commerce ecosystem that provides a truly premium shopping experience, and helps partners tell their brand story to local consumers,” said Richard Liu, Chairman and CEO of JD.com

The consumption power of China’s sizable middle class is impressive. A McKinsey report shows that over 7.6 million Chinese families have purchased luxury products with a household spending RMB 71,000 ($10.784) in 2016 (in Chinese).

Given the trend, JD has been quite active in high-end luxury and fashion business recently. In June, it has become a large investor in Farfetch, a marketplace for luxury products, with $3.97 billion investment.

JD’s arch competitor Alibaba has laid out in the sector as early as 2015 through strategic investment into luxury and fashion sales website Mei.com. In August, it has stepped deeper in the trend with the launch of a dedicated Luxury Pavilion on its Tmall shopping site.

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Mobike testing ride-hailing feature to challenge Didi & ofo tie-up https://technode.com/2017/10/10/mobike-testing-ride-hailing-feature-to-challenge-didi-ofo-tie-up/ https://technode.com/2017/10/10/mobike-testing-ride-hailing-feature-to-challenge-didi-ofo-tie-up/#respond Tue, 10 Oct 2017 07:40:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56725 Chinese bike rental firm Mobike rolled out a ride-hailing feature in its latest app update through a partnership with car-summoning operator Shouqi Limousine & Chauffer (首汽租车). The new feature allows Mobike users to book the Shouqi’s car services within the bike rental app, and will actually be able to check the location of cars and routes […]]]>

Chinese bike rental firm Mobike rolled out a ride-hailing feature in its latest app update through a partnership with car-summoning operator Shouqi Limousine & Chauffer (首汽租车).

Screenshot of the Mobike app in Shenzhen

The new feature allows Mobike users to book the Shouqi’s car services within the bike rental app, and will actually be able to check the location of cars and routes without switching apps. Payments could be made either through Mobike account balance or WeChat Pay.

It’s currently only available in a few cities including Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, and Wuhan, but will be offered in more cities gradually.

The tie-up reminds us of the similar app integration between Didi and ofo. Only that the current one is less natural than its counterpart given the close relationship between Didi and ofo. In addition to being a strategic investor of ofo, Didi’s influence on ofo also revealed on its power to impact the latter’s management structure. Although this is not necessarily a good thing for ofo, this will be an advantage when it comes to data sharing and more.

On the other hand, Mobike and Shouqi are not related on the capital level. Their partnership is based on the sharing of user base with similar age and consumption power, as pointed out by local media.

Either way, ride hailing and bike rental coming together under one roof makes a ton of sense in that short-term bike rentals can supplement car travel and sidestep traffic in busy urban centers while ride-hailing can cover longer distances. Given the fierce competition between Mobike and ofo, it’s no surprise that Mobike want to fill in this gap.

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China’s Airbnb rival Tujia receives $300 million for online unit https://technode.com/2017/10/10/tujia-300-million-usd-series-e/ https://technode.com/2017/10/10/tujia-300-million-usd-series-e/#respond Tue, 10 Oct 2017 03:01:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56658 It seems that China’s online travel and accommodation industry is still feeling the heat from the Golden Week. China’s home rental unicorn Tujia.com, often dubbed the Airbnb of China, announced today that it just completed a $300 million Series E for its online arm at a valuation of over $1.5 billion. The current round marks […]]]>

It seems that China’s online travel and accommodation industry is still feeling the heat from the Golden Week. China’s home rental unicorn Tujia.com, often dubbed the Airbnb of China, announced today that it just completed a $300 million Series E for its online arm at a valuation of over $1.5 billion. The current round marks the first independent financing for Tujia’s online unit since the separation of online and offline departments earlier this year.

Existing investors of Ctrip and All-Stars Investment lead the round. Several new investors participated, including China Renaissance’s New Economy Fund, Glade Brook Capital, an investor in Airbnb and Uber, and G Street Capital.

The fund gives Tujia a lot of firepower in China’s increasingly crowded homestay market. The US sharing economy darling Airbnb doubled down on Chinese market this year with new China head and a Chinese name. There have been rumors that Airbnb is in talks with Tujia and another local apartment rental platform Xiaozhu on capital cooperation.

The money raised from this round would be used both to “work towards optimizing the user experience by standardizing aspects of our alternative travel accommodations such as linen washing, cleanliness, and smart capabilities,” and to “further invest in the domestic high-end real estate market and in foreign markets,” said company founder and CEO Justin Luo in an internal letter.

The company’s latest D and D+ rounds of financing completed in August of 2015, since when the firm has maintained steady growth in its business, he added.

Tujia now claims to cover 345 domestic destinations and 1,037 foreign destinations, with over 650,000 online listings. The Tujia app has been downloaded by over 180 million users as of August 2017, according to the company.

In the span of five years, Tujia has become a leader in the sector through the integration of three rival accommodation booking platforms of Ctrip Homestay, Qunar Homestay, and Mayi.com. The firm has also worked with eLong, WeChat, Baidu, Tongcheng and other partners to build a cooperative distribution network.

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Co-working in Shanghai: A new way to work https://technode.com/2017/10/04/co-working-in-shanghai-a-new-way-to-work/ https://technode.com/2017/10/04/co-working-in-shanghai-a-new-way-to-work/#respond Wed, 04 Oct 2017 01:55:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56500 Editor’s note: This was produced in partnership with Start Alliance, a business network between the most vibrant startup hubs around the globe. Start Alliance supports startups to adapt business models to international requirements and accelerates corporate innovations. Partner cities are Berlin, New York, Paris, Tel Aviv, and Shanghai. Rock music has appealed to young listeners for decades […]]]>
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Editor’s note: This was produced in partnership with Start Alliance, a business network between the most vibrant startup hubs around the globe. Start Alliance supports startups to adapt business models to international requirements and accelerates corporate innovations. Partner cities are Berlin, New York, Paris, Tel Aviv, and Shanghai.

Rock music has appealed to young listeners for decades with the celebration of freedom, rebellion, exuberance and the spirit of living in the present. For China’s young generation, entrepreneurship is the new “rock n roll” with the same theme in challenging the norms and seeking the unknown. If you want to look into Shanghai’s entrepreneurial spirits, co-working spaces are the right place to go.

Yanping Attic, a factory-turned shared space that sits at Yanping Road in downtown Shanghai, is one of the regular co-working spaces in the metropolitan city. It has all the trimmings of a typical shared space, rows of tables, meeting rooms and lounge-style common areas. Although the loft space is just enough to hold a few companies, it’s a place worth visiting. As the second location of Shanghai’s first co-working space, People Squared, this is pretty much where everything about Shanghai’s co-working bonanza started.

Yanping Attic, the second location of People Squared (Image credit: Dianping)
Yanping Attic, the second location of People Squared (Image credit: Dianping)

My first visit to Yanping Attic dates back to 2013 when co-working hadn’t become a thing yet in China. I was there for a lean startup event. As someone who just transitioned from a finical agency that featured an austere working environment, the space intrigued me with its flexibility, emphasis on building a community and facilitation for communication. But what struck me the most was the people I met there: passionate and self-driven visionaries who see their work as meaningful and truly believe their work is going to achieve something big in the future.

My love for co-working spaces increased gradually over the years following that first visit. As a tech reporter, I’m in constant need of a place to keep me productive. Of course, our company has an office, but the hassle of traveling across the whole city doesn’t always make sense. Working at a Starbucks is another popular choice for people like me, but they only offer a place to sit, mediocre coffee, and overpriced food. At a co-working space, I get more than just a desk; I also get a community to keep track of the trends and mingle with the inspiring brains from various industries.

I believe many have shared my experiences and feelings when they first encounter shared working space. To be fair, the boom of co-working in Shanghai, as well as the whole country, clicks with our feelings.

The huge co-working space market

Co-working originated at the beginning of this century, but it didn’t find its way to China until recently. Although the boom came a bit late, it is taking over the Middle Kingdom in a big way.

There are around 300 co-working spaces and innovation centers in Shanghai with occupancy rates at around 70%, according to report released by local authorities in September 2016. China’s co-working space operators exceeded 3,500 by the end of 2016, offering over 100k desks around the country, research institute CRIC pointed out.

Real estate developers, hospitality operators, financial investors, and media groups are capitalizing on fast-rising demand for the leasing of shared office spaces in China.

In Shanghai alone, we can name a number of big names in the arena from URWork, naked Hub, People Squared, Sandbox and more. Aside from domestic players, foreign counterparts are also eyeing the market. WeWork, the US co-working unicorn valued at around $18 billion, has turned its attention to China with first locations in top-tier cities of Shanghai and Beijing.

The reasons behind the boom

Multiple forces have contributed to this change. The spread of the sharing economy mentality in China helps Chinese customers to shift to a more collaborative consumption lifestyle, which in turn has facilitated the quick adoption of shared office spaces.

In addition to sharing cars and homes, which you can find their counterparts in the western world, China is pushing the boundaries of what we can share and constantly integrating new areas. In the country, you can rent pretty much everything from power banks, umbrellas to basketballs.

The rise of China’s millennial workforce is another propeller of the co-working boom. The new kind of space experience caters for the need of this rising group, which seeks for more flexibility and mobility in their workplace.

“The generational difference makes people work differently so they prioritize different things at work,” pointed out Claire Stephens, Head of Workplace Strategy at global real estate services firm JLL.

“Millennials tend to be more community oriented, particularly with an online community, they are quite tribal as opposed to being identified with a particular company. They could be very loyal if they view that company as being one part of their tribe. So, making them identify with the space is very important.”

Part of the growth of co-working spaces is government-directed, too. In a bid to offset slowing growth in traditional industries, Beijing has called for mass entrepreneurship and innovation. The preferential policies from the government not only help to foster startups, but also the co-working spaces, which provide accommodation and support services.

What’s more, co-working is a possible solution for reinvigorating China’s overstocked real estate industry, which has undergone overproduction problem in the past few years as a pillar of China’s GDP.  China’s research team ANZ estimated last year that it will take about four years for developers to sell their existing stocks.

Consolidation begins in the emerging market

The buzzes surround co-working industry, booming market and huge investments has lead to the excessive fast development of the sector. In a few years, China’s emerging co-working world is heading for a major transformation now.

In a crowded vertical, a few leaders are taking the dominant share of the market. While all the funding and attention is concentrated on a few top players like URWork and WeWork. The other smaller competitors are sinking into oblivion. At this time merging with another rival is a good option to stay in the market; that principle applies to everyone even if you are a unicorn in the sector. URWork, which was raised to unicorn status after receiving a $58 million Series B at a valuation of $1.02 billion in January this year, inked an agreement with another rival, New Space, for a strategic merger earlier this year. New Space itself merged with AA Accelerator back in 2015, while Shanghai-based We+ just merged with CoWork.

Segmentation is expected to differentiate different players

With so many competitors moving in, the question for managers and operators of shared spaces has become “How to remain unique?” The solution is something obvious—differentiation. With shared spaces coming from different backgrounds and DNAs in their companies, this seems an easy solution.

Shanghai-originated People Squared is moving towards vertical segmentation for creative persons in music, content, and food. “As we created space for entrepreneurs, startups, we started to see a lot of talent. Co-working and music have a good harmony together, so we thought, why don’t we provide a dedicated co-working space for them?” said the founder of People Squared, Bob Zheng.

As the emerging working model becomes mainstream, more large and medium-sized companies are jumping onto the bandwagon to benefit from the new style of office management. naked Hub, the Shanghai-based network co-working space affiliated to hospitality group naked Group, is going for the higher-tier market for those large and medium-sized corporates who want to try out the new means of working.

With the founding team coming from a tech background, MyDreamPlus is looking to develop the most techie space where users can control everything from unlocking the doors, printing to booking the conference rooms on your mobile phone.

Another co-working operator Sandbox is trying to develop a platform, where users can search and book desks and meeting rooms at spaces nearby.

Despite the hype surrounding the whole co-working industry, it is still taking a very small market share in the whole office market.

“The space operated by all co-working operators combined is around hundreds of thousands of square meters for now. But if you look at the office industry, that accounts for perhaps less than one percent of the whole traditional office space market.” according to Bill Li, co-founder of MyDreamPlus.

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As outbound tourism grows, China’s giants are following along to fuel their global expansion https://technode.com/2017/10/01/as-outbound-tourism-grows-chinas-giants-are-following-along-to-fuel-their-global-expansion/ https://technode.com/2017/10/01/as-outbound-tourism-grows-chinas-giants-are-following-along-to-fuel-their-global-expansion/#respond Sun, 01 Oct 2017 02:56:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56415 Not long ago, taking vacations away from home was only eligible for a small group of wealthy people in China. But now, thanks to the country’s quick economic growth as well as the stable rise of average incomes, this is no longer the case. China’s tourism industry has witnessed unprecedented development in recent years. The […]]]>

Not long ago, taking vacations away from home was only eligible for a small group of wealthy people in China. But now, thanks to the country’s quick economic growth as well as the stable rise of average incomes, this is no longer the case. China’s tourism industry has witnessed unprecedented development in recent years. The country’s tourism market is worth RMB 4.69 trillion ($705 billion) in 2016, a 13.6% rise from RMB 4.13 billion in 2015 (in Chinese).

While inbound travel still accounts for a major part of the market, the outbound tourism industry has experienced exponential growth. And the momentum continues. China is now the number one source market in the world since 2012, following a trend of double-digit growth in tourism expenditure every year since 2004. Mastercard’s Future of Outbound Travel report indicated an average growth of 8.5% each year between 2016 and 2021.

Market share of inbound (59%) and outbound (41%) tourism during October 1st holiday. (Image credit: Ctrip)

The quick boom of China’s tourism industry in market size is surely impressive. But when observing from another angle, the impact of this trend on China’s tech world is hardly less significant, not only on online tourism platforms but also on China’s globalizing tech startups in general.

Domestic internet giants following the footsteps of Chinese tourists

For Chinese internet giants who are facing a saturating market and tightening competition from local peers, globalization is becoming their top priority to maintain sustainable growth in the long run. China’s tech-savvy and globe-trotting consumers are serving as their best entry point to overseas markets.

Alipay and WeChat Pay—both of which are targeting primarily at Chinese outbound tourists when going global—are great examples of this. With a clear customer profile, the partners they are looking at skew toward those more commonly visited by tourists, such as airports duty-free shops, scenic spots, restaurants, and convenience stores.

Alipay is now being accepted in more than 120k offline stores in 26 countries across Southeast Asia, Europe, North America, and East Asia, while WeChat Pay now available in 15 countries and regions for payments in 12 currencies. Reasonably, the markets they are tapping now and the resources they are putting in each market are highly in line with the popular outbound travel destinations.

Likewise, Chinese outbound tourists are also the ready users for ofo and Mobike—two top Chinese bike rental companies entangled in an escalating globalization war—simply because it’s easier to gain access to a group who is more familiar with bike rental service. The same logic also works for other Chinese companies looking for the foreign market, such as O2O and power bank rental firms.

Changes and recent trends of China’s outbound tourism

Given that China’s tourists have become a crucial link that drives the internalization plan of Chinese tech internet giants, habits and preference changes are of increasing value for China’s tech world. China Tourism Academy and Chinese online travel agent Ctrip have jointly released a report on the tourism for the October 1 holiday, shedding light on the trends and changes in this sector.

The first half of 2017 registered 62.03 million outbound visits, up 5% from last year, the report noted. Following a decade of rapid expansion, China’s outbound tourism market is entering a new normal of steady, slow-to-moderate growth. The middle class that makes up the mainstay of outbound tourism is shifting from shopping spree to in-depth travel in its overseas consumption pattern.

Market share of escorted tours (44%), self-guided tours (11%) and custom tours (45%) in outbound tourism market. (Image credit: Ctrip)

With the arrival of the era of rational consumption, shopping budget that used to claim half of the spending made by outbound travelers will further go down, curbing the increase in China outbound travel spending. This type of travel has entered a stage of “consumption upgrading.” When it comes to spending on accommodation, catering, shopping, and recreation, outbound travelers prefer self-guided tours to get the most out of each destination.

Even when traveling abroad, customers bring their own consumption habits. While O2O services, mobile payment, smart transportation solutions have become so ubiquitous in China, they have yet to become mainstream in some overseas markets. This opens plenty of opportunities for Chinese companies that want to fill in the gap.

China’s super app WeChat is also benefiting from the trend in its somewhat bumpy globalization path. Most Chinese outbound travelers would choose escorted tours due to the language barrier and unfamiliarity with the destination. Ctrip’s report shows during this year’s national holiday half of outbound travelers will choose escorted tours and another half self-guided tours. Thanks to the tour guide services offered by Ctrip and other large travel agencies via WeChat app, outbound travelers are able to consult about destinations, translation, recreation and other information via WeChat groups.

They can also find fellow travelers in the chat groups, or book one-day tour and vehicle use. If Chinese tourists encounter any difficulty when traveling abroad, they may ask for help through Ctrip’s global SOS system, thus substantially improving their sense of security during self-guided tours.

Shifts in popular tourism destinations

The growth in outbound travel from China benefited many destinations in Asia and the Pacific, most notably Thailand, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Malaysia, and the US.

The report points out that major destinations for outbound tourism have witnessed sharp changes in their popularity this year. Compared with last year’s most popular destinations—Thailand, South Korea and Japan, this year Thailand, Japan, and Singapore will attract the most Chinese tourists, with South Korea to host much fewer Chinese travelers and disappear from the top 20 list due to the political disputes between the two countries. Australia surpassed the Maldives to take 10th place thanks to its loosened visa policies. Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam, and other Southeast Asian countries are receiving more travelers from China.

Europe suffered the sharpest decline in its attraction to Chinese tourists in the first half of 2016, but regained its lead in inbound tourism growth later in the year. According to the report, in the first half of 2017 trips to Europe made by Chinese people increased 65% year on year. The total number of trips to the continent for the whole year is estimated to reach 5.5 million, closely behind Southeast Asia and East Asia.

Popular destinations for Chinese outbound tourists during October 1st holiday: Southeast Asia & South Asia (46%), Hong Kong & Macau & Taiwan (13%), Middle East & Africa (6%), Japan & South Korea (12%), Australia (5%), Europe (11%), America (7%) (Image credit: Ctrip)

October 1st is the longest holiday in China, during which the country will see a spike in tourists. The data from this period reflects the most typical traveling model of Chinese people. The traveling demand for this year is further boosted by the fact that National Holiday will coincide with the Mid-Autumn Festival, which means one can take a 9-day vacation with 1 days’ leave—a big driver for long-distance trips.

The report also pointed out that stronger RMB against USD and other favorable factors have encouraged much more Chinese to book trips to long-distance destinations, such as the US, France & Italy & Switzerland, Spain, Austria, Australia, Middle East & Africa (Turkey, Egypt, Morocco, and Kenya).

Compared with outbound travel, domestic travel has been greater in size and growth rate for the first several months of this year. China National Tourism Administration’s data shows domestic travel grows at 13.5% a year, twice as fast as the outbound variety and 40 times as bigger in size too. Chinese people take more than 3 domestic trips a year on average. In the first half of this year, the Chinese made 2.5 billion domestic trips, continuing to be the biggest number in the world.

According to the report, mainland China travelers are increasingly drawn to destinations with more accessibility, higher security and stability, and greater hospitality.

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China places maximum fine on popular social media platforms amid pre-Congress crackdown https://technode.com/2017/09/26/china-places-maximum-fine-on-tech-giants-amid-pre-congress-crackdown/ https://technode.com/2017/09/26/china-places-maximum-fine-on-tech-giants-amid-pre-congress-crackdown/#respond Tue, 26 Sep 2017 07:28:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56181 Chinese cyberspace regulators announced on Monday that they have placed the maximum fine allowable on operators of three of the country’s top social media platforms for failing to censor banned content (in Chinese). All three BAT companies have been affected by the crackdown since the platforms concerned are either owned in whole or part by these […]]]>

Chinese cyberspace regulators announced on Monday that they have placed the maximum fine allowable on operators of three of the country’s top social media platforms for failing to censor banned content (in Chinese).

All three BAT companies have been affected by the crackdown since the platforms concerned are either owned in whole or part by these companies. Through notices handed by different regional offices, the Cyberspace Administration of China—the cyberspace watchdog—handed maximum fines to the operators of Baidu Tieba, Sina Weibo, partly owned by Alibaba, and Tencent’s WeChat, citing the “failure to fulfill their duties in dealing with pornographic and violent contents” as the reasons.

The fine could be up to RMB 500k ($76k) according to the latest cybersecurity guidelines, although the regulator did not specify the amount for each company.

While the Communist Party Congress is coming up in October, the country has tightened controls over cyberspace: its web crackdown in the past couple of months has been wide-ranging. As early as July this year, China has strengthened curbs on VPN. The pressure continued to accumulate over the summer and peaked when Apple removed VPN apps from China App Store.

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UrWork inks joint venture partnership with co-working peer Fountown https://technode.com/2017/09/26/urwork-inks-joint-venture-partnership-with-co-working-peer-fountown/ https://technode.com/2017/09/26/urwork-inks-joint-venture-partnership-with-co-working-peer-fountown/#respond Tue, 26 Sep 2017 04:00:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56168 Consolidation in China’s shared space industry continues as Chinese co-working unicorn UrWork today announced its strategic joint venture partnership with its Shanghai rival Fountown to extend their footprint into Asia and to reinforce community support. The partnership between the two companies takes the form of an equity-swap, which will see both parties co-operating with each other on […]]]>

Consolidation in China’s shared space industry continues as Chinese co-working unicorn UrWork today announced its strategic joint venture partnership with its Shanghai rival Fountown to extend their footprint into Asia and to reinforce community support.

The partnership between the two companies takes the form of an equity-swap, which will see both parties co-operating with each other on locations, membership system, vertical integration of resources across the value chain, as well as the export of technology, management, and expertise, according to a company statement. The announcement did not specify details of the deal.

Fountown, founded on 20 April 2015, is one of the top players in China’s shared space vertical with operations in 25 locations, supplying 20,000 workstations in Shanghai, Beijing, and Chengdu. The current partnership would effectively combine the strength between Fountown and UrWork, which now operates 100 locations in 30 cities in China with total aggregated space of 300,000 sq.m.

China’s co-working industry is developing at an exponential rate and the partnership is largely motivated by better service, a network of scale and enhanced competitiveness. “It’s a win-win partnership that will coerce the industry to strive for high operational standards, prevent malicious competition and tap the shared strengths of Fountown and UrWork to improve the overall operational effectiveness and standard,” said Mao Daqing, founder and CEO of UrWork.

This is not the first time for UrWork to strike a cooperation deal with a competitor. The firm merged with rival New Space in May. New Space itself merged with AA Accelerator back in 2015. The same principle guides URwork’s globalization strategy: In August, it formed a JV partnership with Serendipity Labs Coworking as the first step of the US roll-out and made a strategic investment in Indonesia’s leading co-working space provider Rework to strengthen their SEA network.

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WeChat changes splash screen for the first time ever https://technode.com/2017/09/26/wechat-changes-splash-screen-for-the-first-time-ever/ https://technode.com/2017/09/26/wechat-changes-splash-screen-for-the-first-time-ever/#respond Tue, 26 Sep 2017 02:06:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56142 WeChat just made a subtle but symbolic change this Monday. The app’s iconic launch screen, which features a photo of the Earth taken by NASA from the outer space, was replaced by one taken by FY-4 for a short period between September 25 and 28. This is the first-ever change that the company has made to […]]]>

WeChat just made a subtle but symbolic change this Monday. The app’s iconic launch screen, which features a photo of the Earth taken by NASA from the outer space, was replaced by one taken by FY-4 for a short period between September 25 and 28. This is the first-ever change that the company has made to its launch screen in its six-year history.

The image swap was intended to celebrate the official use of FY-4, China’s second generation of meteorological satellites. The current FY-4A is the first of the series and successfully launched in December last year.

While both images have a boy silhouette standing in front of the Earth, the angles from which the pictures were taken are different. The original NASA photo, usually dubbed Blue Marble, shows Africa as the center of the sphere, while the FY-4’s photo puts China in the middle.

WeChat explained in an official statement: “The African continent is the origin of human civilization. We used its picture as the launch screen in the hope to imply originality: Only with the emergence of human being does communication exist and have meaning. The FY-4A’s photo is meant along the same vein, to evoke the history of the development of Chinese civilization since humanity’s origins by showcasing China’s natural scenery to our hundreds of millions of users.”

In addition to its implied political meaning, the change also indicates a closer tie-up between Tencent and meteorological departments, which is good news for WeChat users who enjoy the convenience brought by meteorological science and technologies. Tencent is not only providing more accurate weather forecast and satellite images to its users, but also access to meteorological science knowledge through official accounts, extreme weather warnings, and meteorological video streaming, according to the firm.

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With new funding, Tiger Brokers paves path for Chinese to invest in overseas stock markets https://technode.com/2017/09/22/with-new-funding-tiger-brokers-paves-path-for-chinese-to-invest-in-overseas-stock-markets/ https://technode.com/2017/09/22/with-new-funding-tiger-brokers-paves-path-for-chinese-to-invest-in-overseas-stock-markets/#respond Fri, 22 Sep 2017 01:51:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56004 While domestic stock market is still characterized by extreme volatility, an increasing number of Chinese investors flock to overseas capital markets in seek of more opportunities. As one of the startups that want to capitalize on this trend, Tiger Broker offers online stock brokerage services to global Chinese retail and institutional investors. The startup announced today that […]]]>

While domestic stock market is still characterized by extreme volatility, an increasing number of Chinese investors flock to overseas capital markets in seek of more opportunities. As one of the startups that want to capitalize on this trend, Tiger Broker offers online stock brokerage services to global Chinese retail and institutional investors.

The startup announced today that Interactive Brokers Group, a top US electronic broker, has agreed to make a strategic investment in the company. CreditEase Fintech Investment Fund, a global venture fund investing in growth-stage fintech companies, is also participating.

The company did not specify the size and detailed terms of this deal. “For Tiger Brokers, there is much to learn from Interactive Brokers in regulation compliance, tax and globalization,” says company founder Wu Tianhua. This may point to the field that the two companies would cooperate in.

Founded in 2014 by Wu Tianhua, Tiger Brokers provides real-time market quotes, streaming news feeds, stock investment tutorials and online stock trading services through an APP named “Tiger Trade”. Users are able to enjoy “trade on the go” experience to trade on US stock markets, Hong Kong Exchanges and China’s A-shares (Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect, Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect).

Tiger Trade is now available in over 200 countries and regions around the world, claiming nearly 1 million users around the world. Last year, the annual turnover of Tiger Trade surged 30 times year-on-year to RMB 120 billion ($18 million) and the number is expected to rise 3.5 to 4 times in 2017.

The company has received a series of fundraising from more than 20 strategic investors, including Wall Street investment guru Jim Rogers, Xiaomi, ZhenFund and China Growth Capital.

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ofo pedals their way into four European countries on World Car Free Day https://technode.com/2017/09/22/ofo-pedals-their-way-into-four-european-countries-on-world-car-free-day/ https://technode.com/2017/09/22/ofo-pedals-their-way-into-four-european-countries-on-world-car-free-day/#respond Fri, 22 Sep 2017 01:01:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=56027 The globalization competition between ofo and Mobike, two of China’s top bike rental giants, is reaching a feverish pitch. Instead of revealing the entrance to overseas markets one by one, ofo announced today that it will be launching in a cluster of four European countries of Russia, Czech Republic, Italy and Netherlands on the September […]]]>

The globalization competition between ofo and Mobike, two of China’s top bike rental giants, is reaching a feverish pitch. Instead of revealing the entrance to overseas markets one by one, ofo announced today that it will be launching in a cluster of four European countries of Russia, Czech Republic, Italy and Netherlands on the September 22nd World Car Free Day.

“We’re exceptionally thrilled to announce our launches in these countries on a day that means so much to ofo. The platform was created with the ambition of improving the environment globally by introducing our low-carbon way of transportation to urban dwellers,” said Dai Wei, founder and CEO of ofo. “ofo is committed to bringing our green service to every city in need of green, convenient short-distance travel solutions.”

Tapping into these new countries, ofo is launching its service in Moscow (Russia), Prague (Czech Republic), Milan (Italy), as well as Groningen & Rotterdam (Netherlands) gradually, according to a company statement.

The launch process and model in each city vary. Through a partnership with local firm Velobike, ofo’s signature yellow bikes are expected to appear on the streets of Moscow in spring of 2018 when the trial launch starts. The bikes will be customized to meet the high Moscow standards and equipped with GPS/Glonass trackers.

Instead of distributing across the city, ofo will begin its deployment in the Praha 7 area of Prague. Also, its service will commence in universities in the Netherlands, where they will offer special price packages for faculty members. For the Italian market, ofo’s yellow bikes are already available in the streets of Milan and will grow to 4,000 by early October.

Alongside the European cities, ofo has also launched its service in Phuket, Thailand with 1,000 bikes. Hackney, one of the most cycle-friendly boroughs in London is going to receive up to 750 more bikes over the coming month.

Altogether, ofo is currently ramping up operations across 13 countries including Austria, China, Japan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, the UK and the US.

While the domestic market is quickly reaching saturation, both ofo and Mobike are placing overseas markets on a higher priority order in their strategic plans. Ofo’s announcement comes just one day after Mobike, which now operates in Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Japan, Italy, and the UK, lands in its first US city Washington DC this Thursday.

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Updated: WeChat’s privacy policy update draws attention to information shared with the government https://technode.com/2017/09/19/now-its-official-wechat-is-watching-you-1/ https://technode.com/2017/09/19/now-its-official-wechat-is-watching-you-1/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2017 07:56:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55870 To some extent, WeChat users were already aware of the possibility that the Chinese government was able to read their private information and messages, but it is still striking when WeChat prompted us to reexamine the privacy policy as the Tencent-owned messaging app detailed in its English policy all the user information it collects as well […]]]>

To some extent, WeChat users were already aware of the possibility that the Chinese government was able to read their private information and messages, but it is still striking when WeChat prompted us to reexamine the privacy policy as the Tencent-owned messaging app detailed in its English policy all the user information it collects as well as its readiness to share this data with the government.

WeChat’s latest update greeted users with a new terms of use and privacy policy, which users must agree to if they want to use the app. WeChat acknowledges that it collects a wide range of personal information such as name, phone number, email address, credit card info, ID as well as the data you made available to the platform like location, chat logs data, and other shared information.

Wechat private

What caught so many people’s eye is the amount of information they share with the government to comply with “applicable laws or regulations.” According to the English policy, WeChat can disclose users’ personal information:

  • in order to comply with applicable laws or regulations;
  • in order to comply with a court order, subpoena or other legal processes;
  • in response to a request by a government authority, law enforcement agency or similar body (whether situated in your jurisdiction or elsewhere);
  • where we believe it is reasonably necessary to comply with applicable laws or regulations;

Interestingly, there seems to be an obvious difference in the company’s attitude when compared with the current update for Weixin (the mainland China version of the app) and a previous version for WeChat  (the global version of the app) users updated in 2015.

Different from the full compliance in providing data for “applicable law and regulations,” there’s little mention of sharing data with government bodies. Instead of blocking WeChat users from using the app, Weixin’s new privacy policy update says (our translation): “Unless it’s required by relevant laws, your objection in providing this information will block the feature concerned, but will not influence the usage of other features.”

The new Chinese privacy policy has evoked a series of outcry from Chinese users who rushed to WeChat on various app stores with furious comments.

“It’s already hardly bearable to collect our personal information. Now WeChat is going too far, even asking for smartphone contact list before logging into the app. Who do you think you are to ask everything about your users, the state secrecy administration?” commented a user under the pseudo name of “M梅梅”.

“User privacy and data protection are not just regulatory obligation but also a key part of the user experience. Weixin (the original Chinese version) has recently updated its privacy policy to reflect the enhancement of user privacy and data protection laws in China,” a Tencent spokesperson told TechNode. “Unfortunately, this fundamentally pro-privacy update was misinterpreted as an admission that we send all user data to the Chinese government. This is not and has never been the case.”

“In case of criminal investigations, we will provide certain information to law enforcement agencies when legally compelled to do so, which is in line with international practices,” they added, emphasizing that information on their servers are encrypted.

“More generally, we would like to emphasize the following points: 1. Protection of user data is a core value of the Weixin/ WeChat team and the updated privacy policy was part of an effort to improve upon this core value. 2. The updated privacy policy applies to Weixin users who have registered in China. 3. Reflecting different regulatory requirements, such as GJDPR, and a different privacy policy applies to users of WeChat (basically non-China users). This policy is reviewed and satisfied by TRUSTe on an ongoing basis,” they said.

Update 21 September 2017, 3 pm: The original article implied that the sharing of personal information with governmental bodies was new. This implication was incorrect; in fact, this part of the privacy policy was included in the 2015 WeChat (global version) Privacy Policy update. We have changed this and provided more detail on the new Chinese policy. We will update again once we get Tencent’s reponse.

Update 29 September 2017, 10am: Included Tencent’s response.

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China eases curbs on in-flight electronics usage https://technode.com/2017/09/19/china-eases-curbs-on-in-flight-electronics-usage/ https://technode.com/2017/09/19/china-eases-curbs-on-in-flight-electronics-usage/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2017 04:28:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55844 Passengers may soon expect less boring trips when they are traveling by air in China. In the latest revision to its aviation regulations, China’s aviation authority is easing the rules on using electronics during flights, paving the way for wider in-flight connectivity, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. The new rules will come into […]]]>

Passengers may soon expect less boring trips when they are traveling by air in China. In the latest revision to its aviation regulations, China’s aviation authority is easing the rules on using electronics during flights, paving the way for wider in-flight connectivity, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. The new rules will come into effect in October this year.

The new revision has lifted the decade-long complete ban on in-flight portable electronics, giving individual airlines the right to determine the management policies for devices such as smartphones, tablets, and laptops. In addition, the regulator also issued corresponding assessment and approval process where airlines can apply for offering this service.

Apart from the mobile devices mentioned above, existing rules also ban passengers from using intercoms, remote-control toys and other devices with remote-control or radio transmitting equipment.

This move comes after relaxing aviation policies towards portable electronics around the world. US and EU aviation regulatory bodies have pioneered this initiative as early as 2013. As an initial step, the new regulation will boost the development in-flight Wifi services among Chinese airlines, local media reports, citing a spokesman from Shanghai-based Spring Airline.

The announcement of this news is one of those “dream come true” for millions of flyers in China,  the world’s second-largest air-travel market. Data from China’s National Statistics Bureau shows that over 490 million passengers traveled by air last year, while over 9.23 million flights have been taken by Chinese airlines only.

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China’s top online-only insurer ZhongAn sets terms for Hong Kong IPO as Softbank weighs in https://technode.com/2017/09/19/chinas-top-online-only-insurer-zhongan-sets-terms-for-hong-kong-ipo-as-softbank-weighs-in/ https://technode.com/2017/09/19/chinas-top-online-only-insurer-zhongan-sets-terms-for-hong-kong-ipo-as-softbank-weighs-in/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2017 02:43:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55835 China’s first online-only insurance agency ZhongAn announced on Monday the terms for the largest and most anticipated IPO of China’s tech scene in the second half of this year. The company plans to issue 199 million new shares at HK$53.70 ($6.88) to HK$59.70 apiece for an up to HK$11.9 billion ($1.5 billion) IPO on the […]]]>

China’s first online-only insurance agency ZhongAn announced on Monday the terms for the largest and most anticipated IPO of China’s tech scene in the second half of this year. The company plans to issue 199 million new shares at HK$53.70 ($6.88) to HK$59.70 apiece for an up to HK$11.9 billion ($1.5 billion) IPO on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Of the total shares, 95% will be offered globally while 5% offered for public subscription in Hong Kong, according to the firm. Trading of the shares will start from September 28th.

Becoming a cornerstone investor in the company, SoftBank Group plans to purchase 72 million shares, or a 5% stake in ZhongAn at the offer price. That means SoftBank Group’s stake would be worth about $522 million.

Founded in 2013, ZhongAn is a joint venture among Alibaba, Tencent and Chinese insurance company PingAn. The firm offers insurance products and solutions for consumer finance, health, automobile and travel services. It’s also planning to add life insurance and other health products after the IPO.

ZhongAn says it has sold over 7.2 billion insurance policies and served over 492 million customers since its inception and claims to be China’s largest insurer in by the number of customers and policies sold.

Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial is ZhongAn’s biggest shareholder with a 16% stake, according to a preliminary prospectus filed in June. PingAn Insurance Group and Tencent each hold 12% of ZhongAn. In 2015, ZhongAn raised RMB 5.8 billion from a group of investors including Morgan Stanley and China International Capital Corp, CDH Investments, and SAIF Partners. The fundraising valued it at about $8 billion at the time.

Reuters, citing a source close to the matter, reports that the institutional portion of ZhongAn’s IPO is oversubscribed. Representatives for ZhongAn declined to comment.

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Didi adds Apple Pay integration. Is it enough to boost Apple Pay adoption in China? https://technode.com/2017/09/15/didi-adds-apple-pay-integration-is-it-enough-to-boost-apple-pay-adoption-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/09/15/didi-adds-apple-pay-integration-is-it-enough-to-boost-apple-pay-adoption-in-china/#respond Fri, 15 Sep 2017 07:36:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55613 DidiChinese ride-summoning giant Didi has recently reached a partnership with Apple to allow iPhone users to make payment with Apple Pay for all of its ride-hailing services from Didi Premier, Didi Express, Didi Luxe, as well as ofo, the bike rental service that’s been embedded in Didi’s main app since April. In addition, the firm is […]]]> Didi

Chinese ride-summoning giant Didi has recently reached a partnership with Apple to allow iPhone users to make payment with Apple Pay for all of its ride-hailing services from Didi Premier, Didi Express, Didi Luxe, as well as ofo, the bike rental service that’s been embedded in Didi’s main app since April.

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Screenshot of Apple Pay on Didi

In addition, the firm is also adding English service for Didi Luxe to provide high-end limousine services through its ride-hailing platform. After launching the original Chinese version several months ago, Didi Luxe is now available in both Chinese and English. The service is currently only operating in Beijing, but it will arrive in Shanghai in the coming months. It will extend to other cities throughout 2017 and 2018, Cai Jingyan, Didi’s senior manager for product communications told TechNode.

This is one of the few cooperations that has been announced since Apple’s billion-dollar investment in Didi was publicized in 2016. Although we have been expecting the news for quite some time—media has predicted the Apple Pay integration upon Apple’s investment announcement one year ago—it may still be translated as a signal for further cooperation between the two big names.

“The main goal of our investment and strategic partnership with Apple is to provide users with better products and service. As a developer in the iOS community ourselves, we are excited that since 2016 Didi has integrated a number of iOS features to its service, including ride-hailing by using Siri, from within the Maps app and from your wrist via Apple Watch. We look forward to strengthening this productive relationship,” Cai told us.

Obviously, support for Apple Pay will be a major step forward for DiDi, which has been pushing its globalization initiatives aggressively. The integration of English version for Didi Luxe also shows the company’s effort to go more international and expat-friendly.

“More flexible and convenient payment options is a core element of user experience. China is home to one of the world’s largest iOS user communities, as well as the world’s largest rideshare market. Today Didi app accepts international credit cards, Union Pay, CMB OneNet, and WeChat and Alipay, plus Apple Pay—probably the most diversified payment structure in our industry; plus cash is accepted for our taxi business. Most of these payment options on our app also have growing influence abroad,” Cai noted.

Along with Didi’s globalization plan, it has partnered or invested in a raft of regional ride-hailing leaders to prompt its ambitious drive. Will these partners benefit from the Apple-Didi tie-up as well? The logic behind proposition makes sense, but it seems it will take time before it can be realized.

Cai gave a vague response: “Didi has invested in seven ride-hailing companies across the world. The network of regional ride-hailing leaders now extends to over 60% of the population across over 1,000 cities in North America, Southeast Asia, South Asia, South America, Middle East, Africa and Europe. These are all very promising markets going through a mobile revolution, a consumer revolution, with expanding purchasing power. We believe that lifestyle revolution will continue to offer excellent opportunities for great products and services.  We are sure our partners are proactively seeking those opportunities.”

This is also a major step for Apple which has launched a series of efforts to localize its services for China, an important but slowing market for the smartphone maker. In addition to naming a new China head in July, Apple has launched its largest promotion for Apple Pay in the country and added WeChat Pay earlier this month. Support for Didi, a dominating and high-frequency usage app in China would not only help Apple’s overall China strategy but also the development of Apple Pay, which has suffered fierce rivalry from local competitors of Alipay and WeChat Pay.

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Chinese becoming less likely to replace their phones: report https://technode.com/2017/09/14/chinese-becoming-less-likely-to-replace-their-phones-report/ https://technode.com/2017/09/14/chinese-becoming-less-likely-to-replace-their-phones-report/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2017 08:54:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55507 iPhone users planning to replace their phones annually dropped from 27.8 percent to 16.0 percent over last year (in Chinese), according to a report from the research unit of Tencent Penguin Intelligence. The same figure for Android users suffered a similar plunge from 34.7 percent to 23.5 percent, but still on a higher replacement rate than […]]]>

iPhone users planning to replace their phones annually dropped from 27.8 percent to 16.0 percent over last year (in Chinese), according to a report from the research unit of Tencent Penguin Intelligence. The same figure for Android users suffered a similar plunge from 34.7 percent to 23.5 percent, but still on a higher replacement rate than iPhones.

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Percentage of users trading their smartphones annually in 2016-2017 (Image credit: Penguin Intelligence)

Even though Chinese smartphone market is quickly nearing its saturation point, it still constitutes a significant driver for the global market as an active replacement market. But as the landscape continues to evolve, the new driving force in smartphone replacement is losing momentum while Chinese users are replacing their smartphones less frequently.

Although this is a general trend in China’s smartphone industry, the feeling is especially strong among iPhone users given it’s usually pricier and sturdier. In a sense, this is good news for Apple which enjoys a better reputation as a more sustainable gadget. However, this is also a bitter news for the smartphone maker which is betting on its new iPhone 8 and iPhone X to turbocharge the slowing Chinese market.

Brand-wise, the replacement cycle of most smartphone brands stood at around two years, the report noted. iPhone features the longest replacement cycle with 40.9 percent of the researched iPhone users are changing their phones after three years of usage or even longer. Xiaomi has the shortest cycle with 80 percent of the users replace their phones within two years.

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Chinese user’s answer to whether they will buy the new iPhone model (Image credit: Penguin Intelligence)

Interestingly, the report also shed some light on Chinese users’ attitude towards Apple’s latest smartphone products iPhone 8 and iPhone X. Among the existing iPhone users, 33.8 percent said they want to buy the new models after the release event. Only 5.2 percent of non-iPhone users are considering to buy a new model and over 80% said they wouldn’t buy.

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Toutiao parent launches global competitor to musical.ly https://technode.com/2017/09/14/toutiao-backed-douyin-launches-competitor-to-musical-ly-tik-tok/ https://technode.com/2017/09/14/toutiao-backed-douyin-launches-competitor-to-musical-ly-tik-tok/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2017 05:12:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55418 It’s no secret that the once low-profile news aggregator Toutiao has hit the jackpot in China with a reportedly $22 billion valuation, challenging the dominance of incumbent tech giants BAT. As a relatively latecomer in the industry, it’s amazing that Toutiao spearheaded forays into a variety of areas and yet managed to achieve impressive growth. The company’s latest […]]]>

It’s no secret that the once low-profile news aggregator Toutiao has hit the jackpot in China with a reportedly $22 billion valuation, challenging the dominance of incumbent tech giants BAT. As a relatively latecomer in the industry, it’s amazing that Toutiao spearheaded forays into a variety of areas and yet managed to achieve impressive growth.

The company’s latest effort taps into two of the hottest trends in China’s tech industry: short video and globalization. Toutiao’s parent company ByteDance is officially launching Tik Tok, a music video platform and social network, across Asia, TechNode learned from the company.

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Screenshots of Tik Tok (Image credit: Tik Tok)

Designed for the new generation of digital natives and social media creators, Tik Tok allows users to quickly and easily make unique short videos to share with friends and the world. Its special effects include shaking and jiving to hip-hop and electronic music, changing hair color, 3D stickers, and other props. In addition, creators can take their talent to the next level and tap into a massive music library.

Viv Gong, Head of Marketing, Tik Tok, said: “The Tik Tok community is growing rapidly in China and now it’s starting to spread quickly into more global markets. Talented youth across the region have a reason to celebrate, create, and share as making music videos is becoming easier and more fun with advanced technology and a world of Tik Tok supporters to cheer them on.”

If the name “Tik Tok“ doesn’t ring any bells, you might have heard its Chinese name “Douyin” instead, which is already one of the fastest growing apps and one of the most popular music video community in the domestic market. The app is filled with 20-somethings girls coming from first-tier and second-tier cities, making funny faces into their smartphone cameras as they lip sync the lyrics of hit songs.

Douyin is catching up quickly as a red-hot video maker app in the past few months with daily active users surging from 290k to over 1.73 million in four months from April to July this year. In addition to the cool app design and features, a series of smart marketing campaigns contributed to the quick success.

Douyin DAU
DAU of Douyin in April-July, unit: 1 million (Image credit: Jiguang)
Douyin
Gender and age distribution of Douyin (Image credit: Jiguang)

The app has partnered with Chinese video platform iQIYI to curate the market’s very first and most viewed hip-hop talent show of 2017 and has created an incubator for talent and a fast channel for auditions. Clearly, the company expects the same formula—capitalizing on a pop culture fanbase—to work in overseas markets. Local pop stars from Thailand and Indonesia have been invited to feature their own content on Tik Tok platform.

Even though Toutiao is a news app, investing in short-video product lines makes sense for the firm given that it not only keeps users on the platform as a more engaging media but also add a new channel for advertising.

Tik Tok goes primarily for Asian market at the launch, but it’s reasonable to assume that Asia will be just a stepping stone for its broader globalization plan. This may put the app in direct competition with musical.ly another China-made short-video editing app that’s already achieved global success. Feeling the pressure from Douyin and other similar apps in Chinese market, musical.ly has launched a Chinese version called Muse to tap the rising domestic market.

Toutiao disclosed earlier this year that it would invest hundreds of million dollars for the overseas expansion of Douyin, but it seems this is just only part of the firm’s globalization drive. Aside from holding stakes in Dailyhunt and BABE in Indonesia, Toutiao acquired Flipagram, a popular video app in the US, this February. The Flipgram investment might pave roads for Toutiao or Douyin’s expansion to US market, where musical.ly first saw major success.

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China’s smash-hit mobile game Honour of Kings is coming to Nintendo Switch https://technode.com/2017/09/14/chinas-smash-hit-mobile-game-honour-of-kings-is-coming-to-nintendo-switch/ https://technode.com/2017/09/14/chinas-smash-hit-mobile-game-honour-of-kings-is-coming-to-nintendo-switch/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2017 02:42:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55473 Chinese tech giant Tencent is bringing its blockbuster game Honour of Kings to Nintendo Switch platform. The free-to-play MOBA game will receive a beta test this winter. Instead of the original game that features Chinese characters and stories, the game landing on Nintendo Switch platform will be the global edition that’s been rebranded under the new title of […]]]>

Chinese tech giant Tencent is bringing its blockbuster game Honour of Kings to Nintendo Switch platform. The free-to-play MOBA game will receive a beta test this winter.

Instead of the original game that features Chinese characters and stories, the game landing on Nintendo Switch platform will be the global edition that’s been rebranded under the new title of “Arena of Valor”.

To cater to the appetites of global users, Tencent reinvented most of the game’s characters for the global edition. The 60-plus characters coming from Chinese history and myth have been replaced by American-style heroes such as Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman.

Even though the characters are different, the core gameplay mechanics are the same. Nintendo Switch players will be able to enjoy all the game’s the signature multiplayer play modes of 5v5, 3v3 and 1v1 as well as the features mobile fans love such as first blood, double-kill, and triple-kill.

Welcoming a new mega title to the platform is indeed exciting news for Switch fans, especially when this is the first time for Nintendo to introduce a MOBA game to the platform. For the game itself, on the other side, smartphone and mobile users will constitute its major fan base. It is unclear how console gamers will react to a mobile-first game.

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China’s game developers take the stage at Steve Jobs Theater https://technode.com/2017/09/13/chinas-game-developers-take-the-stage-at-steve-jobs-theater/ https://technode.com/2017/09/13/chinas-game-developers-take-the-stage-at-steve-jobs-theater/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2017 04:05:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55349 The long-awaited Apple event has come to an end, offering the world some pretty cool tech. But while most of the world is still savoring Apple’s latest hardware updates, we can’t overlook the increasingly important roles that Chinese gaming companies are playing in Apple’s—or even the world’s—content ecosystem. Even a company as great as Apple […]]]>

The long-awaited Apple event has come to an end, offering the world some pretty cool tech. But while most of the world is still savoring Apple’s latest hardware updates, we can’t overlook the increasingly important roles that Chinese gaming companies are playing in Apple’s—or even the world’s—content ecosystem.

Even a company as great as Apple can’t do it all and can only focus on the things it’s good at. Therefore, it’s a common practice for Apple to invite content partners to demo their products at the mega launch event and share their experiences about how Apple’s latest software and hardware updates can enable greater user experiences.

At today’s release, two gaming companies were honored to pitch onstage at Steve Jobs Theater. They are either coming from China or founded by Chinese entrepreneurs. Here’s a quick wrap-up of their demos.

Sky by Thatgamecompany

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Jenova Chen pitching Sky at Apple event (Image credit: Apple)

Thatgamecompany’s newly launched title Sky is a romantic social adventure game, which features its signature artistic designs that could be commonly found in previous works. Light and dark are important themes of the game. Playing as children of the light, the player’s goal is to bring light to where it is needed the most while flying above the clouds to explore the wonders of the mysterious world, introduced Jenova Chen, the company’s CEO. With the aim to be easy for casual players to pick up, the control is simple and intuitive. Social is another important factor in the title, allowing up to eight players from the world to play together.

Thatgamecompany should be a fairly familiar name to hard-core indie game players. The studio is engaged in creating video games that provoke emotional responses from players. Its video games include the award-winning Flash title FlowFlower, and Journey. Originally coming from Shanghai and now working in the US, the company’s co-founder and creative director Jenova Chen tries to make games that tap into feelings that are universal and independent of culture.

The Machines – by Directive Games

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Directive Game CEO Atli Mar pitching The Machines at Apple event (Image credit: Apple)

Shanghai-based VR/AR game developer Directive Games demoed The Machines, one of the world’s first competitive multiplayer games designed to be played entirely in augmented reality, at Apple’s iPhone keynote today. In the game, players can battle their friends in real time, playing the rebels against the dominators. The gamers are able to play in any new angle and to point-and-shoot an iPhone to create the battlefield. Sound added another layer to the immersive experience. As players leaned into the battle, the volume would increase.

With core-team from Ice Land, Directive Games is now headquartered in Shanghai with offices in Reykjavík and Hong Kong. The firm was being recruited in Vive X, HTC VIVE VR accelerator program last year. TechNode got a chance to talk with the team on VR landscape early this year.

Gaming from China

Witnessing Chinese game companies forming a rising force in the world is, by all means, an exciting phenomenon for us who are following local tech scene, but it’s not quite a surprise: the country has already overtaken the US as the gaming capital of the world in terms of market size. The 600 million Chinese gamers have contributed $24.6 billion of the industry’s $101.1 billion global market value in 2016, just ahead of the US’s $24.1 billion, a report from venture capital firm Atomico shows.

Where there’s high demand for gaming content, there will be more quality content providers and a mature ecosystem surrounding the industry. In Directive Game’s case, the fact that an Icelandic team moved all the way around to set up a company in China speaks to the traction that China has gotten for gaming companies, especially in the VR/AR field.

Apart from gaming startups, Tencent has already marked a milestone for China’s gaming developers with its mega-hit Honour of Kings. The title has become the world’s top grossing game earlier this year.

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Beijing joins list of cities saying no to new shared bikes https://technode.com/2017/09/07/beijing-joins-list-of-cities-saying-no-to-new-shared-bikes/ https://technode.com/2017/09/07/beijing-joins-list-of-cities-saying-no-to-new-shared-bikes/#respond Thu, 07 Sep 2017 09:35:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55185 China’s dockless bike rental market is fairly young given that major players in the market like Mobike and ofo weren’t born until very recently. The sector has witnessed breakneck development over the past two years in China, but now the fast-evolving industry is reaching saturation at a speed faster than we expected, at least in […]]]>

China’s dockless bike rental market is fairly young given that major players in the market like Mobike and ofo weren’t born until very recently. The sector has witnessed breakneck development over the past two years in China, but now the fast-evolving industry is reaching saturation at a speed faster than we expected, at least in first-tier and second-tier cities.

After talks with execs from 15 major bike rental companies in the city, Beijing transportation authorities announced today that no more new bikes should be placed in the city (in Chinese). This makes Beijing the 12th city on the lengthening list of cities to halt new bike placement. Given that the capital city has always played a special role in leading governmental regulations, this announcement may trigger more cities to follow suit.

Official data shows that the 15 bike rental startups that are operating in Beijing run a combined 2.35 million bikes in the capital.

Shanghai authorities issued a similar statement just two weeks ago. Other cities joining the initiative include Shenzhen, Guangzhou, and Wuhan. This means that the dockless bike market in all of the first-tier and part of the second-tier cities are saturated, leaving limited growth potential for the bike rental startups there.

Against this backdrop, it seems that lower-tier cities and the global market are where the opportunity lies. Both Mobike and ofo are expanding aggressively in global markets across Europe, South East Asia, and North America. But when tapping totally different markets they do have some serious localization work to do in a bid to fend off fierce local competition.

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Huawei surpasses Apple to become second largest smartphone brand https://technode.com/2017/09/07/huawei-surpasses-apple-to-become-second-largest-smartphone-brand/ https://technode.com/2017/09/07/huawei-surpasses-apple-to-become-second-largest-smartphone-brand/#respond Thu, 07 Sep 2017 03:45:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55154 Chinese leading smartphone maker Huawei has overtaken Apple in global smartphone sales since June to become the world’s second-largest smartphone brand, next only to Samsung, according to the latest report by consulting firm Counterpoint Research. The August sales haven’t been released yet, though the report points out it’s looking strong for the Chinese vendor. With […]]]>

Chinese leading smartphone maker Huawei has overtaken Apple in global smartphone sales since June to become the world’s second-largest smartphone brand, next only to Samsung, according to the latest report by consulting firm Counterpoint Research.

The August sales haven’t been released yet, though the report points out it’s looking strong for the Chinese vendor. With Apple’s major iPhone launch scheduled in less than one week, however, the US smartphone maker is expected to record a rebound in September.

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Image credit: Counterpoint

Still, this is a big deal for Huawei—more commonly known as a network infrastructure manufacturer previousl—to rocket to the top of the industry over the last three to four years. Counterpoint attributes the quick surge to its consistent investment in R&D and manufacturing, which brings excellent design and rich feature sets, aggressive marketing, and sales channel expansion.

Huawei enjoys the leadership position in China and operator-centric markets in Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East, but its presence in South Asian, Indian and North American markets are relatively weak, limiting its potentials to take a sustainable second place position, the report pointed out.

Despite the striking performance in sales, Huawei still lacks a true hero device although it already features a multiple SKU portfolio that ranges from low to high-end products. “While Huawei climbed to be the world’s second largest brand overall, it is surprising to see none of its models breaking into the top ten rankings. While having a diverse portfolio allows Huawei to fight on multiple fronts, it does little to build overall brand recognition; something Huawei badly needs if it is to continue to gain share. While Huawei has trimmed its portfolio, it likely needs to further streamline its product range like Oppo and Xiaomi have done – putting more muscle behind fewer products,” Counterpoint Research senior analyst Pavel Naiya commented.

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Image credit: Counterpoint

Huawei’s surge comes with the rise of a raft of Chinese smartphone makers, like Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi, which have been challenging market incumbents with the latest innovations in bezel-free and full displays, augmented reality, in-house chipsets, and advanced camera features.

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Alibaba signs e-commerce strategic partnership with Mexico https://technode.com/2017/09/07/alibaba-signs-e-commerce-strategic-partnership-with-mexico/ https://technode.com/2017/09/07/alibaba-signs-e-commerce-strategic-partnership-with-mexico/#respond Thu, 07 Sep 2017 01:42:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55145 Alibaba has marked another milestone in its globalization drive: the e-commerce giant signed this Wednesday a strategic partnership with Mexico to bring Mexican products and services, especially from small-and mid-sized enterprises, to its marketplaces. According to the memorandum of understanding, Alibaba will create a special program specifically for Mexico to benefit from the company’s business-to-business […]]]>

Alibaba has marked another milestone in its globalization drive: the e-commerce giant signed this Wednesday a strategic partnership with Mexico to bring Mexican products and services, especially from small-and mid-sized enterprises, to its marketplaces.

According to the memorandum of understanding, Alibaba will create a special program specifically for Mexico to benefit from the company’s business-to-business trading platform Alibaba.com. In addition, Alibaba will share best practices in the operation of its logistics and payment platforms so that Mexican companies might bolster their cross-border e-commerce operations, as well as attract Chinese tourism to Mexico.

Alibaba said it would also provide training in the kinds of analytics that have driven consumer insight and product innovation in the Chinese market.

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Mexico’s Undersecretary of Industry and Commerce of the Ministry of the Economy of Mexico José Rogelio Garza and President Enrique Peña Nieto with Alibaba Group’s Executive Chairman Jack Ma and President Mike Evans. (Image credit: Alibaba)

“Alibaba is committed to inspiring, motivating and enabling SMEs from around the world to grow and thrive through e-commerce and the use of technology,” Alibaba Group Executive Chairman Jack Ma said. “We are delighted to help promote cross-border trade with Mexico through this MOU.”

For Chinese online buyers, the world is just one click away since cross-border e-commerce is in full swing in the Middle Kingdom. As a pioneer in this trend, Alibaba has been laying out in the sector as early as 2014 with the launched of dedicated channel Tmall Global to tap the rising demand of domestic customers for international products. Through partnerships with different countries, curated shopping sites or “pavilions” on Tmall Global are set up to sell popular products and specialties from selected companies to Chinese mainland customers.

After inking partnerships with countries in East Asia, North America and Europe, Alibaba is gradually expanding its focus to Latin America. This is the third MOU that Alibaba has signed with a government in Latin America. In May, the company agreed to help bring food and wine from Argentina to China, while a partnership with Brazil’s national postal service, Correios, was signed in in 2014.

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Chinese cryptocurrency exchanges increase supervision in wake of tightening regulations https://technode.com/2017/09/06/chinese-cryptocurrency-exchanges-increase-supervision-in-wake-of-tightening-regulations/ https://technode.com/2017/09/06/chinese-cryptocurrency-exchanges-increase-supervision-in-wake-of-tightening-regulations/#respond Wed, 06 Sep 2017 04:33:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=55083 China’s recent ban on initial coin offering (ICO), a cross-between crowdfunding and initial public offering, has forced local cryptocurrency exchanges into stricter self-scrutiny about their supervision mechanisms. After months of breakneck development, the ICO sector received a severe blow this Monday when Chinese authorities announced a ban on all related fundraising activities, citing possible financial […]]]>

China’s recent ban on initial coin offering (ICO), a cross-between crowdfunding and initial public offering, has forced local cryptocurrency exchanges into stricter self-scrutiny about their supervision mechanisms.

After months of breakneck development, the ICO sector received a severe blow this Monday when Chinese authorities announced a ban on all related fundraising activities, citing possible financial scam and massive fraud. In addition, all completed ICOs must liquidate and refund investors, according to the rule.

Of the total 60 platforms that have held token offering-related activities inside China, over half have launched the liquidation process or suspended the ICO services upon the news, local media reported. However, the ICO ban seems to be just a beginning for another wave of stricter regulations from Beijing, which reportedly intends to further regulate the crypto economy.

Quickly translating the signal, leading Chinese cryptocurrency exchanges are raising their own risk supervision standards in line with the tightening governmental curbs.

Huobi, a leading digital currency trading platform in China, strengthened risk warning system for users’ BTC withdrawal request. On September 2nd, the exchange raised its trading fee in a bit to curb speculative short-term trading. Another crypto exchange Yunbi released a public letter outlining its reinforced self-disciplinary practices.

Yunbi
Open Letter from Yunbi in Chinese

Early warning signs about governmental crackdown started weeks before. Shanghai regulator halted a block chain business event at the end of August, sparking speculations of a wider curb on the industry back then.

Although the regulation does not directly name any cryptocurrency, the valuation of bitcoin, the most common digital currency used in an ICO, fell in response to the news. Data from SOSOBTC shows that values for 520 out of 580 digital currencies trading on the market are plunging.

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Apple’s new China head, Isabel Ge Mahe, is officially on board https://technode.com/2017/09/04/apple-new-china-head-isabel-ge-mahe-is-officially-on-board/ https://technode.com/2017/09/04/apple-new-china-head-isabel-ge-mahe-is-officially-on-board/#respond Mon, 04 Sep 2017 03:09:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54895 Whith the next iPhone event is fast approaching, Apple has recorded a major change in China, a market of increasing importance for the smartphone maker. In the latest update of its website, the company has added Isabel Ge Mahe to the management team as Vice President and Managing Director of Greater China. Apple announced Ge Mahe’s […]]]>

Whith the next iPhone event is fast approaching, Apple has recorded a major change in China, a market of increasing importance for the smartphone maker. In the latest update of its website, the company has added Isabel Ge Mahe to the management team as Vice President and Managing Director of Greater China.

apple_managing_director_of_greater_china_isabel_ge_mahe_take_office

Apple announced Ge Mahe’s appointment back in July but did not disclose the specific date when she would assume the role. The July announcement pointed out that Ge Mahe will report directly to CEO Tim Cook and COO Jeff Williams. Along with the update on Apple’s site, the company told TechNode that Isabel Ge Mahe has already relocated to Shanghai and started working with the local team.

In its most recent move to fit adapt to the Chinese market, Apple allowed WeChat Pay for making payments on its App Store and Apple Music last week.

Born in Shenyang, Liaoning, and fluent in Mandarin, Isabel earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Electrical Engineering from Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. She holds an MBA from the University of California, Berkeley. Isabel has led Apple’s wireless technologies software engineering teams for nine years, focusing on the development of cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, location and motion technologies for nearly every Apple product. She has also overseen the engineering teams developing Apple Pay, HomeKit, and CarPlay.

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Troubled Jumei doubles down on Ankerbox amid shareholder turmoil https://technode.com/2017/08/31/troubled-jumei-doubles-down-on-ankerbox-amid-shareholder-turmoil/ https://technode.com/2017/08/31/troubled-jumei-doubles-down-on-ankerbox-amid-shareholder-turmoil/#respond Thu, 31 Aug 2017 07:05:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54682 JumeiChinese beauty products e-commerce platform Jumei announced today it has fully acquired power bank rental company Ankerbox. The deal comes three months after the online retailer acquired a controlling 60& stake in the company for RMB 300 million ($45 million). However, it seems that this isn’t a good time for Jumei to make huge exterior […]]]> Jumei

Chinese beauty products e-commerce platform Jumei announced today it has fully acquired power bank rental company Ankerbox. The deal comes three months after the online retailer acquired a controlling 60& stake in the company for RMB 300 million ($45 million).

However, it seems that this isn’t a good time for Jumei to make huge exterior investments of this size given its own troubles caused by sliding performance.

Jumei’s investor Heng Ren Partners made public an open letter this Tuesday, firing shots directly at the company for full responsibility for the debacle over the past 18 months. To the benefit of investors, the firm asked Jumei to distribute a special dividend of $1.50 per share, which would total $225 million.

The letter pointed out that Jumei has suspended any meaningful communication with shareholders for 22 months. During the past 18 months, the market valuation of Jumei has slumped by $397 million, the firm pointed out. “An absurd amount considering the company’s current market value is $479 million,” said Peter Halesworth, Managing Partner in the letter.

Investing in non-core businesses was even cited as one of Jumei’s major missteps. In the wake of plummeting performance, the Chinese e-commerce firm has been adjusting its business model along nearly every hot e-commerce vertical. In addition to e-commerce related businesses, its investment goes broadly from film and television firms, air purifiers as well as power bank rental startups.

The company may consider these investments as new growth points, but its shareholder doesn’t see the point of making unrelated investments when they are already engaged in a burgeoning industry that’s been experiencing double-digit growth annually, especially when these investments are taking an unfair part of the company’s capital pool.

“The more than $59 million invested in these questionable non-core targets is equal to 12% of Jumei’s market cap, and 18% of its cash,” the letter pointed out.

Born out of an incubation project, Ankerbox is one of the top players in China’s heated power bank rental industry. The Shenzhen-based startup now operates in first- and second-tier cities, claims over 1 million daily users.

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Alibaba is revamping China’s offline retailing through a bottom-up approach https://technode.com/2017/08/31/alibaba-is-revamping-chinas-offline-retailing-through-a-bottom-up-approach/ https://technode.com/2017/08/31/alibaba-is-revamping-chinas-offline-retailing-through-a-bottom-up-approach/#respond Thu, 31 Aug 2017 04:55:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54508 Alibaba’s expansion to brick-and-mortar stores started two years ago with a series of investments and acquisitions that worth as much as US$8 billion. To strengthen the offline foray, the Chinese e-commerce giant, which earns hefty profit margin because it does not hold inventories, is rewriting its asset-light model by opening Hema Xiansheng brand and Alibaba […]]]>

Alibaba’s expansion to brick-and-mortar stores started two years ago with a series of investments and acquisitions that worth as much as US$8 billion. To strengthen the offline foray, the Chinese e-commerce giant, which earns hefty profit margin because it does not hold inventories, is rewriting its asset-light model by opening Hema Xiansheng brand and Alibaba staff-less convenience stores.

In its latest move, the company is taking a bottom-up approach in revamping China’s retailing landscape. Alibaba is reaching franchise partnerships with grocery stores in residential communities across China in a move to upgrade these shops with its technologies.

The licensed physical stores will be much smarter and well-targeted. For example, customer preferences and purchasing history data from Ling Shou Tong (LST), Alibaba B2B platform that’s being used in over 500k stores, will be analyzed to provide curated plans on product offerings and marketing campaigns. All-around services will be offered such as merchandise channels and orderings, logistics, marketing, and more.

“There are over 6 million community grocery stores across China, mostly family operations. 70% of such stores are based in third- to sixth-tier cities. 80 percent of the shop owners are above 45-years-old, a group that’s not accustomed to smartphone and new technologies. The lack of technological support resulted in low efficiencies and thus meager profits despite hard work with an average daily operation time range from 12 to 15 hours,” said Lin Xiaohai, vice president of Alibaba.

Tmall.com will license more than 10,000 physical stores in China this fiscal year, the company disclosed.

The first licensed store completed its upgrade recently and was reopened to the public this Monday. Instead of the shabby designs that are typical for a community store in lower-tier cities, the upgraded store has a more modern look that’s similar to high-end convenience stores such as Lawson’s or 7-11.

E-commerce vs brick-and-mortar

E-commerce makes physical stores sound so outdated when it started to take hold in China at the beginning of this century. The heated debate on which model is going to gain supremacy in China’s retailing industry has gone non-stop since then, only peaking in 2013 when Alibaba’s Jack Ma and Wanda Group’s Wang Jianlin, Chinese tycoons in e-commerce and offline retailing industry, made a 100 million yuan (US$16 million) bet on which model would claim a bigger share of the retailing market.

A few years later, it seems that the debate is no longer applicable: the boundary between online and offline is becoming less and less clear. Both e-commerce and brick-and-mortar stores are playing—and will continue to play—crucial roles for modern retailing. A new retailing format where offline/online shopping experiences are connected and optimized through internet technologies is on the rise. Alibaba’s Jack Ma dubbed it as the New Retail.

Jack Ma might be the first to coin the term, he’s not the only one to detect this trend. Alibaba’s arch-rival JD plans to open more than 1 million JD convenience stores across the country in the next five years, in addition to launching 10,000 JD home appliance stores offline.

Meituan-Dianping also entered the field by opening its first offline concept store last month. Another tech behemoth Tencent is taking a more tentative move in venturing offline this week to open WeStore, its brick-and-mortar store for official branded merchandise.

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With fresh funding, Hatchery is ready to satisfy China’s westernizing taste buds https://technode.com/2017/08/31/with-fresh-funding-hatchery-is-ready-to-satisfy-chinas-westernizing-taste-buds/ https://technode.com/2017/08/31/with-fresh-funding-hatchery-is-ready-to-satisfy-chinas-westernizing-taste-buds/#respond Thu, 31 Aug 2017 03:43:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54630 Beijing-based culinary incubator Hatchery has closed an investment from co-working and lifestyle amenities space 5Lmeet at a post-money valuation of RMB 60 million ($9 million USD) to support China growth plans. The current RMB 3 million round from 5Lmeet is expected to be followed by another RMB 5 million to boost the next 18 months […]]]>

Beijing-based culinary incubator Hatchery has closed an investment from co-working and lifestyle amenities space 5Lmeet at a post-money valuation of RMB 60 million ($9 million USD) to support China growth plans.

The current RMB 3 million round from 5Lmeet is expected to be followed by another RMB 5 million to boost the next 18 months of growth, including expansion into Shanghai, company co-founder and CEO Stewart Johnson told TechNode.

The investment commits Hatchery to launching new food concepts in at least two of 5Lmeet’s upcoming developments in Beijing, one targeting October 2017 in Guomao and one in early 2018 in southern Beijing, according to the firm. Hatchery Shanghai headquarters will open in Q1 2018.

5Lmeet, a sister company of co-working unicorn URWork headed by property entrepreneur Mao Daqing, has taken a strategic position in Hatchery following the success of the first incubator partnership in 5Lmeet’s Dongsi location.

“Hatchery is excited by the prospects of the growing 5Lmeet strategic partnership. 5Lmeet has a pipeline of co-living developments planned in Beijing over the next 18 months, and after being incubated by our HatchTrack process, entrepreneurs now have the opportunity to launch their own food concepts in one of 5Lmeet’s innovative lifestyle destinations through our partnership,” explained Stew Johnson.

5Lmeet, valued at over RMB 3.6 billion coming out of its recent funding round, has an extensive pipeline of co-working properties in Beijing for redevelopment over the next twelve months.

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Opinion: China’s sharing economy needs true innovation if it wants to become a pillar industry https://technode.com/2017/08/25/opinion-chinas-sharing-economy-needs-true-innovation-if-it-wants-to-become-a-pillar-industry/ https://technode.com/2017/08/25/opinion-chinas-sharing-economy-needs-true-innovation-if-it-wants-to-become-a-pillar-industry/#respond Fri, 25 Aug 2017 08:46:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54106 Perhaps China is not where “sharing economy” originated, but it sure is one of the countries that has experienced its fullest development and obtained the widest acceptance. In a matter of years, the model has been truly embraced in the Middle Kingdom, growing from a fringe concept only recognized by China’s tech-savvy youth to an economic powerhouse […]]]>

Perhaps China is not where “sharing economy” originated, but it sure is one of the countries that has experienced its fullest development and obtained the widest acceptance. In a matter of years, the model has been truly embraced in the Middle Kingdom, growing from a fringe concept only recognized by China’s tech-savvy youth to an economic powerhouse that’s reshaping traditional industries.

The peer-to-peer nature of the rental economy combined with fast innovation, high smartphone penetration, widespread mobile payment, and a dense population, and users who are more open to the idea of “sharing” rather than “owning” stuff, have all added to the success of the rental economy in China. In addition to average users and tech companies, the government is also engaged in the development of this sector, which is seen as a major driver for its economic growth in the future.

The sector’s transaction volume grew 103 percent YoY to RMB 3.45 trillion ($503 billion) in 2016, according to a report from China’s State Information Center. The report expects the size of this field to grow by 40 percent annually in coming years, accounting for over 10 percent of domestic GDP by 2020, and that the ratio will continue to grow to roughly 20% by 2025.

“Sharing economy” is an umbrella term that covers everything from homes to rides, but it works the best when there’s a high degree of consumer pain in their daily life that guarantees high-frequency usage. For example, the logic behind the ride-hailing boom is straightforward: China’s clogged public transportation prompted the rise of ride-hailing tools like Didi Chuxing which offers passengers are more timely and accessible traveling means and drivers a chance to increase efficiency.

But when we look at the emerging verticals, the problems they are addressing are less painful or even made up. Apart from ride- and home-sharing—which have already achieved great popularity abroad— power bank rental is among the few bubbly verticals that originated from China. Although the sector has already attracted a large amount of attention both from entrepreneurs and investors, arguments on the validity of this idea still go on. Why should I rent a power bank when I already have one? Similar arguments go for several new verticals like basketball and umbrella sharing, both of which have attracted capital flows.

While some ideas may spark skepticism, others will leave you speechless, wondering if these entrepreneurs are actually serious. By adding “sharing economy,” it seems that many either founders lack business sense or are just looking for dumb money from investors. Look at some of the latest ideas:

shared-2
(Image credit left to right: AI Caijing, Haixia, Renmin)

Shared stool: By scanning a QR-code on the stool, users could have a rest on anywhere. (Hmm, wonder what will happen if I sit on the stools directly?)

Shared fridge: Shared refrigerators work similar to vending machines, only that there’s no lock on the fridge, meaning that anyone can easily get the food without paying.

Shared air conditioner: Guangdong-based MOB rolled out shared air conditioners earlier this month, demanding an RMB3,000 deposit and RMB 1 is charged per hour. But user doesn’t seem to buy the idea. “Why not buy one if we have to pay a deposit this high?” one netizen asked.

 It’s pretty clear that there’s a general misunderstanding of the term to an extent that people are using “sharing economy” interchangeably with rental businesses. And this misconception is one of the reasons that turns sharing economy to an over-hyped sector as it is now. “Idle” is a key word for sharing economy, which means the things people want “share” are idle stuff rather than something produced to cater to the demand. The core idea behind this term is to relocate the existing social commodities to increase efficiency.

One of the reasons that rental business tend to label themselves as sharing economy is the market size (in Chinese). Market size is a key factor that leads to the high valuation of ride-sharing companies like Uber. In 2016, there were around 60 thousand taxis in Shanghai and the fleet for China’s top car rental company totaled 30 thousand around the country. On the other hand, there are 1.3 million private cars in Shanghai alone, far exceeding the potentials of a rental business. This explains why the market valuation of ride-sharing firms is much higher than car rental startups.

Although many are engaged in the practice of glorifying rental businesses as sharing economy, it seems that the fanfare surrounding sharing economy only goes on in entrepreneur and VC circles. When it comes to actual user adoption, it’s a bit frustrating. Even among our writers, a group of tech-savvy people, few have tried beyond really painful demands such as ride-hailing, home sharing, and bikes.

Flocking to what ever is hot until the concept stinks is one of the problems of China’s tech circle. What happened to the sharing economy reminds me of what happened to the smart hardware industry when it was at its peak just a few years ago. After the initial rise brought by smart wearables, lame smart gadgets start to emerge. Smart toilet cover, smart fart tracker to track intestine movements (what?), smart waist belt, to name just a few of the weird ideas.

Although the industry is experiencing a sour turn, there is still a future in China since the country is the perhaps the most fertile of any for this type of business model. If the industry wants to maintain its development and become a pillar sector as the government report has predicted, we still need more true innovation rather than gamblers that may or may not profit through hype.

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Baidu’s facial recognition solution under testing at Beijing Airport https://technode.com/2017/08/23/baidus-facial-recognition-solution-under-testing-at-beijing-airport/ https://technode.com/2017/08/23/baidus-facial-recognition-solution-under-testing-at-beijing-airport/#respond Wed, 23 Aug 2017 09:22:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54070 Chinese search giant Baidu has signed a strategic partnership with Beijing Capital International Airport, the world’s second largest airport by passengers, to provide smart and automated management solutions to the latter. Under the deal, Baidu is now running tests of its AI-based facial recognition solutions at the control centers of the airport, mainly for staff […]]]>

Chinese search giant Baidu has signed a strategic partnership with Beijing Capital International Airport, the world’s second largest airport by passengers, to provide smart and automated management solutions to the latter.

Under the deal, Baidu is now running tests of its AI-based facial recognition solutions at the control centers of the airport, mainly for staff admission and data monitoring. This means the testing is only being used for the ground crew. But if everything goes well, it is highly possible that Baidu’s facial recognition technology would go further for support boarding passes, baggage claim or other scenarios of passenger ID verification.

In recent years, Baidu has taken AI as its strategic focus, of which facial recognition is a major unit. Its technology is being applied in several physical deployments from verifying visitor’s identities in Chinese tourist spot of Wuzhen to facilitating checking in and boarding processes for travelers at Nanyang Jiangying Airport of Henan Province.

Facial recognition technology is taking over airports globally. London’s Heathrow Airport has introduced facial recognition-based border control technology earlier this year. The US government has rolled out a plan to reshape airport security around facial recognition.

Aside from face recognition, the company introduced that the tie-up may incorporate partnership in more diversified areas from indoor navigation, smart parking and passenger credit management.

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Ant Financial is opening its unstaffed solution to merchants https://technode.com/2017/08/23/ant-financial-is-opening-its-unstaffed-solution-to-merchants/ https://technode.com/2017/08/23/ant-financial-is-opening-its-unstaffed-solution-to-merchants/#respond Wed, 23 Aug 2017 05:12:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=54047 Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial is adding new fuel to the quick rise of automated stores in China this Tuesday by opening its unmanned technologies to merchants. The Alipay solutions will enable automated customer ID authentication, risk control, payment, and clearance, allowing customers to enjoy service provided by merchants without the help of their staff. […]]]>

Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial is adding new fuel to the quick rise of automated stores in China this Tuesday by opening its unmanned technologies to merchants.

The Alipay solutions will enable automated customer ID authentication, risk control, payment, and clearance, allowing customers to enjoy service provided by merchants without the help of their staff. The same technology has been applied to Tao Café, Alibaba’s cashier-less coffee shop driven by computer vision and sensor technologies. “The matured fraction of our IoT payment solutions is open to the merchants this time,” introduced Jiang Kui, an Ant Financial executive.

Ant Financial expects its technology to have wider applications in all kinds of scenarios such as unmanned sales stands, mini karaoke kiosks, fitness rooms, working spaces, and more. But for the time being, the solution only applies to single-user scenarios rather than more complex cases where multiple users can be identified at the same time.

As much as it may sound like another threat from automation to human labor, the adoption of this technology would not cause huge layoffs, but rather create more business opportunities, according to the company. “The 24/7 service model would create business and job opportunities for industries along the industrial chain, from information processing to sensor manufacturing,” said economist Pan Linhe.

Mao Daqing, CEO of URWork, has dropped hints earlier this month that the co-working unicorn is working with Alibaba to adopt AI in office management. The current news reveals that URWork is among the first offline clients to adopt Ant Financial’s unstaffed solution in its shared spaces. Users can unlock doors, book conference rooms, or use fitness rooms by scanning with their Alipay app.

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URWork aims for largest location ever after RMB 200m funding round https://technode.com/2017/08/22/urwork-aims-for-largest-location-ever-after-rmb-200m-funding-round/ https://technode.com/2017/08/22/urwork-aims-for-largest-location-ever-after-rmb-200m-funding-round/#respond Tue, 22 Aug 2017 08:24:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53990 Chinese coworking behemoth URWork has just wrapped up an RMB 200 million ($30 million) investment today from KCC, a state-owned real estate developer based in Kunming, Yunnan Province. As part of the announcement, URWork says the two companies plan to invest a combined RMB 1 billion for the construction of a 30k square meter city complex […]]]>

Chinese coworking behemoth URWork has just wrapped up an RMB 200 million ($30 million) investment today from KCC, a state-owned real estate developer based in Kunming, Yunnan Province.

As part of the announcement, URWork says the two companies plan to invest a combined RMB 1 billion for the construction of a 30k square meter city complex and innovation center in Kunming’s business hub. Upon completion, the new project will be the largest single space that’s operated by URWork so far.

While URWork is running a race against both domestic and global competitors in pushing its co-working operations to the global market, the current tie-up shows that Chinese co-working unicorn is also expanding across verticals: business complexes that not only involve shared offices but also more diversified business models from commercial centers, conventions, hotels and more.

Of course, all these plans need the solid capital backing. And the amount of money that URWork has raised so far is astonishing. KCC’s investment comes in less than two months after the latest round from Aikang in July as a new addition to the company’s funding frenzy which has far exceeded the billion RMB-level.

Founded in 2015 by Mao Daqing, a former executive of real estate conglomerate Vanke, URWork runs over 100 locations across 30 cities that include Singapore, London, and New York City.

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Shanghai just says “No” to more dockless bikes https://technode.com/2017/08/22/shanghai-just-says-no-to-more-dockless-bikes/ https://technode.com/2017/08/22/shanghai-just-says-no-to-more-dockless-bikes/#respond Tue, 22 Aug 2017 02:31:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53961 Shanghai transportation authorities jointly announced on August 18 that no more new bikes should be placed in the city, taking a firmer stand in its moves to crack down on bike rental services, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. “Upon the announcement of this regulation, all bike-rental companies should place a halt on introducing any […]]]>

Shanghai transportation authorities jointly announced on August 18 that no more new bikes should be placed in the city, taking a firmer stand in its moves to crack down on bike rental services, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

“Upon the announcement of this regulation, all bike-rental companies should place a halt on introducing any new bikes in Shanghai. Violations will be booked in Enterprise Credit System as a severe breach,” according to the statement.

The bike-rental schemes may have provided a greener alternative to China’s clogged public transportation, but they have also created serious headaches for local transportation management institutions. Given that most cyclists opt for whichever bike that’s most accessible on the street, the war between the competitors mainly takes the form of dumping more bikes on the street. As the land-grab battle heats up, however, the overwhelming number of bikes has paralyzed existing bike parking and management. The situation is worsened by illegal parking on the sidewalk or street by careless riders.

This is not the first time for Shanghai authorities to crack down on the bike rental companies. Six leading bike rental companies including Mobike and ofo were asked to suspend bike placement in the city’s central districts early this March, shortly after the government seized over 4,000 illegally parked bikes.

As of February this year, over 30 bike rental startups placed a combined a combined 450 thousand bikes, the country’s largest rental bike fleet, in Shanghai. Now the number more than tripled to 1.5 million, far exceeding the saturation point of 500k bikes, according to Guo Jianrong, secretary of the Shanghai Bike Association.

The disparity in distribution also contributed to the situation. Although bikes have become a nuisance in some downtown areas, it is hard to find them in some rural areas in the city, at least when you want to use them. Bike rental firms are relying on AI to solve this problem. In April, Mobike launched “Magic Cube”, an AI data monitoring platform that’s able to make accurate forecasts of supply and demand for its bike-rentals and provide guidance to bike dispatching, scheduling, and operation.

Shanghai is not a single case. Several first- and second-tier cities such as Beijing, Tianjin and Hangzhou also launched or are preparing to issue similar regulations to control the negative side effects of the bike rental boom.

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Alipay vs WeChat: Challenges and strategies of two payment giants going global https://technode.com/2017/08/18/alipay-vs-wechat-challenges-and-strategies-of-two-payment-giants-going-global/ https://technode.com/2017/08/18/alipay-vs-wechat-challenges-and-strategies-of-two-payment-giants-going-global/#respond Fri, 18 Aug 2017 02:40:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53675 Cash has taken hundreds of years to establish its status as a common medium for trade, but it is quickly turning obsolete across China. Replacing it, the ubiquitous QR code-based mobile payment solutions operated by internet giants like Alibaba and Tencent. From flagship stores of top-notch luxury brands to street butcher shops, payment through third-party […]]]>

Cash has taken hundreds of years to establish its status as a common medium for trade, but it is quickly turning obsolete across China. Replacing it, the ubiquitous QR code-based mobile payment solutions operated by internet giants like Alibaba and Tencent.

From flagship stores of top-notch luxury brands to street butcher shops, payment through third-party apps is as valid as cash itself, only with faster and less of a hassle. Data from research institution iResearch shows that the value of China’s mobile payments market tripled to more than RMB 38.5 trillion ($5.6 trillion) in 2016 and is projected to reach RMB 55 trillion in 2017.

Now the same mobile payment craze that has taken China is making a foray into overseas markets. Alipay and WeChat Pay, the two third-party payment tools that nearly split China’s mobile payment market, are pushing the trend.

Who controls the tourists…

When tapping overseas markets, both companies chose the soft landing approach through easy entry points in Chinese outbound tourists. Known as the world’s most voracious spenders, 135 million Chinese outbound tourists spent a total of $261 billion in 2016, according to World Tourism Organization.

Like in China, the two firms are diligently forming local partnerships to promote themselves as a commercial solution. But the partners they are looking at skew toward those more commonly visited by tourists, such as airports duty-free shops, scenic spots, restaurants, and convenience stores.

Regions and countries like Hong Kong, Thailand, Japan, and Korea are the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists. They are also the places where Alipay record most active overseas usage, a spokeswoman from Ant Financial told TechNode.

Although tourist consumption remains the top priority in the overseas market, the companies behind them are moving towards local users through investment or partnership with local firms. Since 2015, Alipay’s operator Ant Financial invested a series of local e-wallet and fintech startups including Paytm (India), Kakao Pay (South Korea), Mynt (the Philipines), Ascend Money (Thailand), and HelloPay (Singapore).

“In the long run, synergy effects between Alipay and these firms would be created for sharing the technologies, data, users and consumption scenarios,” Andy Li, CEO of SEA fintech startup Silot, commented.

From Alibaba’s perspective, it’s more appropriate to define the initiative as the globalization of Ant Financial’s whole financial ecosystem, of which Alipay is just one part, according to the Ant Financial spokeswoman. Ant Financial expects half of its users coming from overseas market in the future four years, local media has reported (in Chinese).

On the other hand, social networking and gaming giant Tencent is also trying a similar path with investments in Australia-based cross-border payment startup Airwallex, shortly after Tencent co-founder Zeng Liqing invested in RoyalPay, another Aussie cross-border payment service April this year.

“Both Alipay and WeChat Pay are going after tourists first… In stage two, they will open up local wallets to enable peer-to-peer transactions within the local economies. That’s quite ambitious because there’s a lot of regulations,” commented Matthew Brennan, co-founder of China Channel.

“In order to enable that, they have to partner with local companies. It is a slow process in most places. In many countries, I think it’s most likely impossible. Tencent has local wallets in South Africa and Hong Kong. They are able to do it in South Africa because of Naspers, which is a key investor in Tencent. The same for Hong Kong as its so close to China. But every other country is challenging for them,” he added.

For Alipay in particular, it may encounter an extra hurdle from the local banking system. “Alipay may or may not be seen as a potential competitor towards the local banking system in overseas markets as Ant Financial’s domestic success in operation financial products have previously disrupted the traditional banking system in China,” according to Andy.

WeChat Pay plays catch up

Going for totally different markets that feature diverse market conditions and user preferences, internet giants may lose some of their competitive advantages and the secret recipe to local success may act as a hurdle in the exotic land. Only quick adapters to local markets could win.

As one of the earliest entrants to the market, the 13-years-old Alipay was practically the sole dominator in China’s mobile payment sector. It holds over 80 percent of transaction value across China three years ago. However, the app is quickly surrendering territory to a new rival—WeChat Pay. In Q1 2017, Alipay’s market share dropped to 54 percent, while WeChat Pay claimed 40 percent.

Born August 2013, WeChat Pay’s domestic success largely stems from the fact that it’s an extension of social networking and IM tool WeChat, which guarantees high-frequency use from users. On the other hand, Alipay, originally created to provide payment solutions for Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms, has lower usage frequency simply because it is needed only when people need to pay for something.

The red envelope war between WeChat and Alipay is a great example of how the rivalry would shape their relationship domestically. This same reason is also the driving force for Alipay’s endless endeavors to explore social networking features, although most of them failed to click with the users. But when exploring overseas markets where WeChat claims weaker presence due to competition from potent chat apps like Facebook, Twitter, and Line, its support in engaging clients and users for its payment unit is less effective.

“Going after payments rather than social [in the global market] makes a lot of sense for WeChat. The boat has already sailed in terms of social network for messaging apps globally. Facebook won that war,” Matthew says.

Given that, Alipay’s first mover advantages are more obvious after eying overseas for almost a decade. It’s being accepted in more than offline 120k stores in 26 countries across Europe, North America, East Asia, and Southeast Asia. WeChat Pay is now available in 15 countries and regions for payments in 12 currencies.

Despite these hurdles, some hold a more positive view on WeChat Pay’s prospect overseas. “The dynamics inside and outside China are very different. Inside China, Alipay started with a clear head start both online and offline. Outside China, it is very much a blank slate. The main question is which payment method are merchants going to pick. [WeChat] seems to be likely to win the race. But it has much to do with how well they keep marketing their payment solution to overseas merchants,” said Thomas Graziani, CEO of WalktheChat, a WeChat marketing consultancy.

“The main driver here is education. It takes a lot of effort to give overseas merchants a clear understanding of how to integrate either WeChat or Alipay to their existing system. This is the main hurdle to growth,” Thomas added.

The chicken or egg dilemma in Southeast Asia

Several reasons led to China’s mobile payment boom: wide network coverage, high smartphone penetration, and a surge in O2O apps. While infrastructure and prerequisites are all set, we can expect the mobile payment boom as a natural outcome. But when addressing overseas markets that are in various developmental stages, things are different.

“Fintech has experienced two development stages so far. The key words for the first phase are connectivity and enabler, where we set up the infrastructure of the mobile internet and mobile payment to facilitate the interactions between different entities. In the second phase, the keywords are big data and AI, where massive amounts of data are generated,” Andy Li told TechNode.

Wechat-wallet
International (left) and Chinese version of WeChat Wallet (middle and right)

Overseas users often complain that the international version of WeChat is just a stripped down version of the Chinese original and this is often cited one of the reasons for WeChat’s international failure. For Andy, it’s hard to blame Tencent for this not only because it’s tons of work to negotiate new partners across the world, but also because the lack of local infrastructure in some under-developed regions, like Southeast Asia, has made it impossible to support some of the features.

Currently, Alipay and WeChat Pay’s overseas expansion are centered around East Asia and Southeast Asia, which turns out to be the first stop of most Chinese internet companies thanks to the similarities between China and these regions.

The tech landscape in Southeast Asia is very similar to China’s five to ten years ago when the infrastructure was still under construction. “Alipay and WeChat Pay’s promotion of mobile payment solutions in these areas is accelerating the construction of infrastructure. Now it’s like a chicken and the egg situation,” Andy pointed out.

Next frontiers: Europe, North America, and Australia

Meanwhile, Alipay and WeChat Pay’s head-on competition is expanding to more developed markets. Tencent launched WeChat Pay service in Europe this July, two years after Alipay rolled out its service in the region in 2015.

Both solutions entered US market through a partnership with local payment solution providers like First Data and CITCON. They are supported in some of the largest public spaces like Asia Art Museum, Pacific Gateway, and Caesars Palace. among others. Australia has recorded many new moves from both of the companies.

Developed markets have a solid foundation for mobile payment through using digital currencies and credit cards. But smartphone-based mobile payment that generates big data on location and user habits would still pose great potentials in these markets, Andy noted.

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WeChat nears 1 billion users https://technode.com/2017/08/17/wechat-nears-1-billion-users/ https://technode.com/2017/08/17/wechat-nears-1-billion-users/#respond Thu, 17 Aug 2017 07:02:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53805 It seems that Chinese people’s love for WeChat has almost no limits as the app’s monthly active users is quickly nearing the billion-level. Tencent’s interim financial report shows that the combined MAU of Weixin (the original Chinese version) and WeChat (the international version) has hit 963 million, a 19.5% YoY increase as compared with last […]]]>

It seems that Chinese people’s love for WeChat has almost no limits as the app’s monthly active users is quickly nearing the billion-level. Tencent’s interim financial report shows that the combined MAU of Weixin (the original Chinese version) and WeChat (the international version) has hit 963 million, a 19.5% YoY increase as compared with last year’s 806 million.

Growing at the current speed, Weixin/WeChat is expected to hit one billion MAU by Q3 or Q4 this year. If so, the app will be ranked as one of few social networking giants that have passed the milestone, along with Facebook and WhatsApp.

Tencent, the company behind WeChat, recorded a stellar H1 this year with revenue grew 57 percent to RMB106.158 billion ($15.67 billion) and profit hit RMB32.802 billion. As usual, the internet giant remains vague about how much money WeChat is making, but the app sits behind online gaming and social advertising, the star revenues of the report.

Despite the encouraging growth, the company is facing intensifying pressure in how to sustain stable user growth in the long term. One problem stood in their way is the askew user base towards Chinese-speaking chatters. Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan are still top regions where the app prevails.

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After a false start, China sees its first bike-rental IPO https://technode.com/2017/08/17/chinas-first-bike-rental-ipo-youon/ https://technode.com/2017/08/17/chinas-first-bike-rental-ipo-youon/#respond Thu, 17 Aug 2017 04:25:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53797 China’s burgeoning bike-rental industry has witnessed its first-ever IPO as Changzhou-based startup Youon went public today. Shares of Youon started trading this morning on Shanghai Stock Exchange at the initial offering price of RMB 26.85 ($4.02) per share. Despite all the glory in bearing the title of the “first listed bike-rental firm in China”, Youon’s […]]]>

China’s burgeoning bike-rental industry has witnessed its first-ever IPO as Changzhou-based startup Youon went public today. Shares of Youon started trading this morning on Shanghai Stock Exchange at the initial offering price of RMB 26.85 ($4.02) per share.

Despite all the glory in bearing the title of the “first listed bike-rental firm in China”, Youon’s way towards IPO was bumpy with a series of twists and turns. After a failed application in 2015, the firm filed again for listing this March. But the IPO procedure took a halt two months later due to an IP infringement lawsuit filed against the company by Jiangsu business man Gu Tailai, who claims Youon did not have the authorization to use his dockless bike patent.

Founded in 2010, the company’s main business includes the sale of public bikes, the operation of a government-funded public bike rental platform (docking stations required), and that of dockless bike-rental services funded by private investors.

Strictly speaking, Youon is more about dock-based public bike business than the dockless bike-rental platform. An overwhelming 99.8 percent of its revenue comes from the sale (RMB 239 million) and operation (RMB 533 million) of public dock-based bicycles in 2016.

As of 2016, the firm operates public bike systems in over 400 cities, of which roughly half are tier-three and lower-rung cities. It now claims 20 million users and around 7.5 million are registered through Youon’s online platform.

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China’s mobile gamers have sparked an HTML5 renaissance https://technode.com/2017/08/15/chinas-mobile-gamers-have-sparked-an-html5-renaissance/ https://technode.com/2017/08/15/chinas-mobile-gamers-have-sparked-an-html5-renaissance/#respond Tue, 15 Aug 2017 02:06:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53459 While China marked the 90th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in late July with a military parade, the country’s netizens are celebrating the event in their own way by flooding the top social media platforms with PLA uniform portraits. Scanning a QR code and uploading a headshot photo, then a composite self-portrait is ready […]]]>

While China marked the 90th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in late July with a military parade, the country’s netizens are celebrating the event in their own way by flooding the top social media platforms with PLA uniform portraits. Scanning a QR code and uploading a headshot photo, then a composite self-portrait is ready for you to attract tens of “likes” from friends. The trick went viral quickly with page views for the program spiking to 800 million in two days.

Lei Jun-PLA
Xiaomi’s CEO/founder Lei Jun posted his PLA uniform potrait on Weibo (Image Credit: Lei Jun)

The incident has brought the technology behind the program—HTML5—back to the spotlight. Born to high expectations, the technology has run into headwinds due to performance and compatibility issues. But with the development of technology and changing market conditions, it is ready to record a real boom, according to Wen Xiangdong, VP of Egret Technology.

Several market shifts have shed brighter prospects on the technology. At the end of last year, Facebook rolled out Instant Games, a new HTML5-enabled cross-platform gaming experience, on Messenger and Facebook News Feed. On top of that, Adobe announced plans to cease support for Flash by the end of 2020, giving opportunities for more modern open web standards like HTML5 to fill in the gap.

Beijing-based Egret Technology, founded in 2014, offers HTML5 mobile solution and services for games and application professionals. It provides various solutions for HTML5 game studios and developers, including game engine Egret Engine, Egret Runtime, an accelerator used to speed up content by embedding in mobile browsers and applications, and smart GUI editor Egret Wing.

As an early entrant to the industry, Egret Engine is used by over 70% of H5 game developers, according to the firm. A total of 200k users developed more than 8,000 H5 games based on their services.

The company went public last year on China’s National Equities Exchange and Quotations market. As a technology-driven company, Egret’s game engine services are mostly offered for free, according to Wen. The company’s revenues come from game distribution, homegrown game development business and open platform that provides SDK services to game developers, he added.

The twists and turns of a maturing industry

“H5 game is often dubbed the ‘web game for mobile.’ But compared with mobile games, which recorded touch-and-go success in China, H5 gaming has experienced a roller-coster journey over a prolonged period. We are in the industry long enough to experience all the down moments, but luckily the whole market is on the right track to a gradual rise,” noted Wen.

Although Egret Engine-based H5 games like Catch The Crazy Cat became a hit on WeChat as early as 2014, they are mostly casual games with simple gameplay. User passions soon faded away and the lack of a commercialization model made them less sustainable.

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Wen Xiangdong: VP of Egret Technology (Image Credit: Egret)

The recent surge in China’s H5 gaming started from the beginning of last year as more diversified gaming categories emerged. Along with the rise of mid- and hard-core games like SLG (simulation game) and ARPG (action role playing game), the industry recorded another comeback with benchmark games. The H5 version of Shanda’s blockbuster game The World of Legend hit monthly gross revenue of 30 million at the end of last year through ads or in-game purchases.

“For me, diversification in game categories is a key factor in determining the maturity and prospects of a market. Like many other sectors, H5 gaming went through the same development process from having no direction to flocking to one hot sector and then to diversification. H5 gaming is now heading towards diversification and maturing,” Wen said.

The change is being propelled forward by several factors, according to Wen. Firstly, Chinese gamers or Chinese netizens, in general, are more willing to spend money on in-app features. Secondly, large platforms like WeChat, Weibo, QQ, Toutiao are opening their traffic to H5 games. Removing the hassle of downloading an app, H5 games give people a conversation starter or something to do while they wait, both of which click with the social nature of various social media platforms. This is partially facilitated by the openness of H5 technology—which provides one unified way to supply various kinds of games—and removes the problems of re-adapting the programs to different platforms.

Gaming powers from China to the world

After years of neglect, the global H5 gaming market is also warming up, marked by Facebook’s release of Instant Game feature. Against this backdrop, Chinese H5 gaming firms, which have witnessed several successful cases domestically, are poised to take their experiences to the global market.

“Currently, Egret’s overseas users mainly come from Japan, South Korea and Russia. We are trying to expand to more countries in Southeast Aisa and North America. In addition to Facebook, other overseas social platforms like Line and Kakao are also adopting an open attitude towards H5 games,” Wen pointed out.

It seems that Egret is not the only Chinese company that eyes the rising sector. Chukong, the mobile gaming company that stands behind the prevailing Cocos Game Engine, is moving fast to tap the global H5 market with launch of their own title for Facebook Instant Game.

When being asked about rivalry from peers, Wen said: “For an emerging market like H5, cooperation with the few players to build up the market is more important than competition.”

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China’s e-commerce giants are betting big on fresh food https://technode.com/2017/08/09/where-chinas-fresh-e-commerce-heading-after-market-reshuffle-in-2016/ https://technode.com/2017/08/09/where-chinas-fresh-e-commerce-heading-after-market-reshuffle-in-2016/#respond Wed, 09 Aug 2017 03:51:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53108 After decades of stunning growth, there’s little space left in China’s highly consolidated e-commerce market. Fresh food e-commerce—one of the few less-tapped verticals to crack into this field—is, however, expected to become the next “whirlwind” driven by the wide adoption of healthier lifestyles, product diversification, and customer habits. Different from traditional e-commerce, fresh food e-commerce […]]]>

After decades of stunning growth, there’s little space left in China’s highly consolidated e-commerce market. Fresh food e-commerce—one of the few less-tapped verticals to crack into this field—is, however, expected to become the next “whirlwind” driven by the wide adoption of healthier lifestyles, product diversification, and customer habits.

Different from traditional e-commerce, fresh food e-commerce in China has much higher logistics requirements both in shorter delivery time and cold-chain logistics to ensure product quality. The timely and high-frequency nature of fresh food e-commerce orders clicks with what China’s O2O and “new retail” trends can offer. Coined by Jack Ma, the term refers to a new format where internet technology connects and optimizes offline outlets, online stores, and the overall supply chain for achieving high efficiency and self-service.

China’s fresh food e-commerce has recorded strong growth with trading volume soaring 80% YoY to RMB 91.3 billion in 2016 (in Chinese), increasing steadily from RMB 4.05 billion in 2012, according to a report by China E-commerce Research Center (CECRC). This figure is expected to jump to RMB 150 billion in 2017.

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Trading Volume of China’s fresh e-commerce market 2012-2017, unit: RMB 100 million                       (Image credit: CECRC)

Despite the swift market growth, the fresh food e-commerce industry has experienced a roller-coaster journey for the past few years. The rising market potential has drawn crowds of players to the battlefield together with vast amounts of funding from VCs. The number of domestic fresh food e-commerce platforms reached 4,000 in 2016, concentrated mostly in first-tier cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen.

However, the market remains relatively untapped compared to previous e-commerce booms for a reason. The high cost of building end-to-end cold chain logistics, reducing waste, and increasing margins, have all raised the barrier to entry. Even those who manage to build their cold-chain logistics systems will still face profitability problems: Margins in the sector are very low not only due to expensive sourcing and logistic costs but also to low retail prices as more players enter and can only compete on price.

The asset-heavy nature of this industry makes funding a crucial link to support the healthy development of a platform. Due to the high costs, incomplete cold food chain logistics system, however, 88% of the companies are losing money, 7% are recording heavy losses with 4% breaking even and only 1% are actually profitable, according to the CECRC report.

So when the capital winter hit China’s internet market in 2016, fresh food e-commerce platforms were among those who most felt the pressure. Another CECRC report (in Chinese) shows that a total of fourteen companies in this field closed their business last year, including Amazon-backed Yummy77.

This year, together with the revival of China’s capital market, the fresh e-commerce market is warming up. Nearly RMB 3 billion was raised this year in six fresh food e-commerce fundings. After the reshuffle of last year, however, this market is no longer a playground for small startups; there are deep-pocketed backers standing behind nearly every top platforms that survived 2016.

Trustdata
Top-10 fresh food e-commerce platforms in terms of MAU (Image Credit: TrustData)

JD Daojia (京东到家), an O2O e-commerce platform that offers one-hour fresh food and grocery delivery, takes the first place in terms of monthly active users (MAU), data from research institution TrustData shows. The service now partners with over 70,000 local merchants and provides on-demand grocery, fresh products, snacks, flowers, baking and pharmacy shopping in 22 cities, with more than 30 million registered customers. The company’s latest report shows that its income jumped nearly eight times in the first half of this year.

Tencent-backed Miss Fresh (每日优鲜), Womai (中粮我买网, the online fresh food retailer operated by state-owned food processing holding company COFCO Group), Alibaba-backed Hema Store (盒马鲜生), and JD-backed Fruit Day (天天果园) took the other four places in the top-five list.

Additionally, the data shows that top platforms enjoy a dominating advantage in the market, leaving little space for new entrants. MAU of JD Daojia is on par with that for rest of the top-ten platforms combined. Brand awareness, mature logistics support, and traffic are all contributing to the rise.

However, there’s no definite winner in China’s fast-evolving e-commerce market. Numerous competitors are poised to dig in the field. Alibaba can easily create synergy effects among its Tmall Supermarket, Hema Store, Miao.tmall.com, and Yiguo, a fresh e-commerce platform that Tmall invested in. Traditional supermarkets (Walmart and RT Mart) and logistics companies (SF Express and YTO Express) are also setting their sights on the sector to achieve their online transformation.

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Troubled smartphone maker Smartisan seeking revival upon $150m funding https://technode.com/2017/08/08/troubled-smartphone-maker-smartisan-seeking-revival-upon-150m-funding/ https://technode.com/2017/08/08/troubled-smartphone-maker-smartisan-seeking-revival-upon-150m-funding/#respond Tue, 08 Aug 2017 09:45:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53309 Floundering smartphone maker Smartisan has raised RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) in fresh funding, the company’s charismatic founder and CEO Luo Yonghao disclosed at Geek Park’s Rebuild 2017 conference. The former English teacher and now internet celebrity did not disclose the participating investors but did reveal that the new funding will allow the troubled smartphone […]]]>

Floundering smartphone maker Smartisan has raised RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) in fresh funding, the company’s charismatic founder and CEO Luo Yonghao disclosed at Geek Park’s Rebuild 2017 conference.

The former English teacher and now internet celebrity did not disclose the participating investors but did reveal that the new funding will allow the troubled smartphone maker to ship five to six products every year to cover low- to high-tier markets

At the same occasion, Luo also shared the painful experience that Smartisan team has gone through in their “hardest time” in 2016 when the company was on the verge to collapse and almost got acquired by Xiaomi (in Chinese).

Founded in 2012 amid China’s smartphone boom, Smartisan has always been one of the most unique brands, famous for its idealism. Targeting a narrow group of tech-savvy users, the company aimed to draw upon a spirit of artisanship to offer fans a first-rate user experience.

In a crowded marketplace, however, fast-moving competitors don’t leave enough time for those who move slow. The hype surrounding the company in its early days soon faded away due to problems such as failure to ship products on time. Also, the higher-than-expected price tag for early products also put the startup on disadvantage in a market where budget phones like Xiaomi’s prevailed.

Despite the early setbacks, the company’s recent smartphone releases, like Smartisan M1 and Nuts Pro, have received positive reviews and strong market reaction. The struggling company is expected to make a comeback with positive word-of-mouth and sufficient financial support.

Previous investors of the company include PurpleSky, Buttonwood Capital and Tang Yan, founder of Chinese social networking firm Momo.

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Tencent starts testing their contender to Alibaba’s credit rating system https://technode.com/2017/08/08/tencent-finally-enters-credit-rating-to-take-on-alibaba-is-it-too-late/ https://technode.com/2017/08/08/tencent-finally-enters-credit-rating-to-take-on-alibaba-is-it-too-late/#respond Tue, 08 Aug 2017 07:39:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=53258 The battle between Tencent and Alibaba is entering a new field—credit scoring, a key infrastructure that is certain to escalate the mobile payment war between the two internet giants. Tencent opened this week its new credit rating system to limited group users on QQ, WeChat’s older sibling. This marks a big step forward for Tencent:  Not only […]]]>

The battle between Tencent and Alibaba is entering a new field—credit scoring, a key infrastructure that is certain to escalate the mobile payment war between the two internet giants.

Tencent opened this week its new credit rating system to limited group users on QQ, WeChat’s older sibling. This marks a big step forward for Tencent:  Not only does this fill in a glaring gap in their product lineup, it also puts them in direct competition with Alibaba’s Sesame Credit, the dominant mobile credit score.

TechNode has reached out to Tencent to see if and when this service will come to WeChat. When we get a response we will update.

According to leaked screenshots from early testers, the credit scores—ranging from a maximum of 850 points and a minimum of 300 points—were calculated from five indexes: social connections, security, wealth, the ability to honor an agreement, and consumption behavior.

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Unsurprisingly, social data constitutes a major part of Tencent Credit’s rating system. The massive data collected from WeChat and QQ—which claim 900 million and 860 million monthly active users respectively—or even the blockbuster game Honour of Kings would contribute to the data pool. The consumption data was mainly gathered through Mobile QQ and WeChat payment. Given the tie-up between Tencent and JD, it’s highly possible that consumption data from JD would be integrated as well.

Tencent is also partnering with financial institutions like WeBank, China Construction Bank and local service institutions for complementing the credit rating mechanism.

On the other hand, Alibaba’s Sesame Credit rates users credit with scores of between 350 and 950 based on their credit history, behavior preferences (shopping, payment, and P2P transaction histories), ability to honor an agreement, identity features (education, career, and other behavior tied to real-name identity), and social connections. In addition to the first mover advantage, Sesame Credit’s biggest advantage is in the commercial purchase data and user behavior insights Alibaba has been collecting over the years through Taobao, Alipay, and Tmall.

For most users, how credit scores will actually affect daily life is of the most concern. Compared with Sesame Credit which has been integrated into various services of traveling, healthcare, and bike/car rental, the application scenarios of Tencent Credit is rather limited. But one feature did catch our eye: users with high Tencent Credit might be able to ride Mobikes deposit-free, similar to the partnership between ofo and Alipay’s Sesame Credit.

As the backers of China’s two largest third-party mobile payment services Alipay and WeChat Payment, both Alibaba and Tencent have set early sights on the credit scoring sector, an essential component for financial services to solve the rising online security issues by leveraging big data.

In 2014, when Alibaba’s Ant Financial was tinkering on Sesame Credit, Tencent also laid out in the sector with plans to launch a similar product. Both the companies obtained government approval to run their consumer credit rating services two years ago. Compared with the swift development of its competitor, Tencent Credit has made little progress since then, reportedly due to Pony Ma’s insistence on “protecting users’ personal data” (in Chinese).

However, building an in-house credit rating system is of increasing strategic importance as the ecosystem surrounding WeChat matures and the whole country is moving irreversibly towards a cashless society. Furthermore, news of Tencent Credit’s public testing brake out this Monday, amid another round of promotion frenzy between the two internet giants for more territory in China’ mobile payment market.

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Topplus wants to turn your phone’s camera into a Kinect for VR/AR https://technode.com/2017/08/03/topplus-wants-to-turn-your-phones-camera-into-a-kinect-for-vrar/ https://technode.com/2017/08/03/topplus-wants-to-turn-your-phones-camera-into-a-kinect-for-vrar/#respond Thu, 03 Aug 2017 05:14:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52861 Cameras, a crucial factor to assess how good a smartphone is, have improved dramatically over the past decade. Facial recognition, filter effects, QR code scanning for payment: Tons of features rely on camera capabilities to support proper operation. Driven by the success of Pokemon Go, the rising VR/AR technology is now shaping future innovations for smartphone […]]]>

Cameras, a crucial factor to assess how good a smartphone is, have improved dramatically over the past decade. Facial recognition, filter effects, QR code scanning for payment: Tons of features rely on camera capabilities to support proper operation. Driven by the success of Pokemon Go, the rising VR/AR technology is now shaping future innovations for smartphone cameras.

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Xu Yidan, CEO & Founder of Topplus (Image credit: Topplus)

For Xu Yidan, founder and CEO of Topplus, upgrading the smartphone camera is a great way to tap into the burgeoning VR/AR industry. Smartphones, due to their ubiquity, are proving to be the best use case for most applications.

“Smartphones will continue to record the largest smart hardware shipment for the next five years. Compared with helmets and goggles, it has user penetration. More importantly, the ubiquity of mobile payment services on handsets has made it a more accessible means to monetize VR/AR content,” he says.

The Chengdu-based computer vision startup develops camera SDKs and models that enable superior digital cameras functionality for supporting depth mapping, VSLAM (visual simultaneous localization and mapping, a key visual sensing technology), and multi-angle sensing.

The company’s MagicBar, an intelligent camera module embedded with depth function and VSLAM algorithms, enables smart devices to sense the environment comprehensively, and to build up a 3D map in real time.

Topplus’ developer kit allows developers to turn any smartphone camera into a Kinect-like motion sensor for AR games. By leveraging VSLAM and multi-angle sensing technology, a demoed fishing game showcased by the company allows up to four players to enter the same gameplay field simultaneously. Each gamer sees the same setting from different angles and all compete for the same prize-winning fish.

Elbowing into a highly compact market

Providing camera solutions isn’t something easy because it involves partnerships with all players along the smartphone manufacturing chain—camera model makers, chip makers and OEM factories.

“Smartphone manufacturing is a relatively conservative industry. Given the low margins brought by fierce competition, smartphone makers require camera solutions to be ultra stable in order avoid high repair rates. The market is even harder to penetrate because only those with at least 5 million shipment capabilities got the chance to enter the playground. No one wants to take the risk and to do ‘experiment,’” Xu Yidan pointed out.

Topplus’ entry point to the semi-closed market smartphone camera market lies on its patented technology for blurred portrait bokeh technology. Bokeh, a blurring background effect, depends on wide apertures to create depth maps with close-up subjects rendered in focus. After Apple introduced this feature to their phones, this effect has become more popular and could end up as a standard feature for every smartphone in the future.

“While Apple and Huawei hold their patents in the sector, they seldom sell it to smaller smartphone makers. We are licensing this technology to middle and lower-tier smartphone brands. Gaining legitimate patent license is a huge issue when Chinese smartphone makers try to enter overseas market,” Xu Yidan said.

What’s more important than the licensing fees collected from smartphone makers, the bokeh technology enables Topplus to reach deeper cooperation with companies on every link of the whole industrial chain: smartphone makers to open their plant floor data, chip makers for their workflow and model manufacturers for their various specs.

“This data is the prerequisite for being part of the industry, for providing updated camera SDK and model solutions. It’s also where we start,” Xu said.

Choosing the right direction is even harder for AI startups

Few startup ideas are perfect at the very beginning even for internet giants like ofo. That’s why it’s important to fine tune your direction along the startup journey. However, choosing a direction isn’t that easy. Every direction can be the right or the wrong choice simultaneously and nothing can be sure until it’s well underway.

This dilemma is particularly felt by AI startups since the whole industry is still in the early stage of finding potential application areas. “There’s too much of a bubble in the AI industry. Most of the AI startups are living on VC funding rather than generating sustainable revenue themselves through digging deep in a certain vertical,” Xu said.

“There’s too much of a bubble in the AI industry. Most of the AI startups are living on VC funding rather than generating sustainable revenue themselves through digging deep in a certain vertical,” Xu said.

With their computer vision software, one of the hottest branches of AI, Topplus has had its share of struggles. Before shifting to camera solution at the end of last year, the startup has previously focused on virtual glass try-on solution for retailers and tracking and image stabilization system for drones.

As someone who has experienced the painful process, Xu Yidan gives his definition of what’s “a good direction:” “If a direction has the potential to gain 10 billion RMB revenue in the long term, and you can survive on it in the short term,” he said.

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Dianrong snags $220m Series D to further tap China’s $16t internet finance market https://technode.com/2017/08/02/dianrong-snags-220m-series-d-to-further-tap-chinas-16tn-internet-finance-market/ https://technode.com/2017/08/02/dianrong-snags-220m-series-d-to-further-tap-chinas-16tn-internet-finance-market/#respond Wed, 02 Aug 2017 10:11:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52900 Chinese P2P lending platform Dianrong today announced their Series D worth $220 million. This latest funding was led by GIC Private Limited, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, along with CMIG Leasing, Simone Investment Managers, and other institutional and individual investors. The new proceeds will be used for improving risk management, R&D and automation, M&A opportunities and international […]]]>

Chinese P2P lending platform Dianrong today announced their Series D worth $220 million. This latest funding was led by GIC Private Limited, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, along with CMIG Leasing, Simone Investment Managers, and other institutional and individual investors.

The new proceeds will be used for improving risk management, R&D and automation, M&A opportunities and international expansion plans with local partners.

Soul Htite, founder and CEO of Dianrong, said, “The addition of these distinguished global investors not only validates our past successes but reinforces our commitment to ‘The New Finance,’ which applies fintech to deliver greater financial freedom to Chinese families and small businesses. This latest capital injection will help us expand and accelerate these efforts and further drive sustainable and profitable business growth.”

The current round added new ammunition to Dianrong, one of the most heavy-loaded fintech startups in China. In the most recent  Series C round completed in 2015, Dianrong received $207 million from Standard Chartered Private Equity, China Fintech Fund, Tiger Global Management, etc. Investors of earlier rounds include Sun Hung Kai & Co. LimitedZJ Capital, Northern Light.

The change in status of Dianrong’s investors shows that China’s internet finance industry,  boasting a market size of $16 trillion as the world’s largest, is gaining more attention from the market. Starting from VCs and PEs in early rounds, Dianrong’s latest investors include banks, financial institutions and large investment institutions from public capital markets. The trend underlines that the huge potential of interest finance industry is alluring mainstream investors, Soul pointed out.

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In response to inquires on IPO plans, Kevin Guo, founder and co-CEO of Dianrong answered that the current round has loaded the company with abundant cash, so they don’t have a specific IPO timetable for the time being.

Dianrong recently announced the acquisition of the asset-generation operations of Quark Finance, which tripled the company’s local footprint across China. Earlier this year, Dianrong also launched Chained Finance, the first-ever blockchain platform for supply-chain finance developed in partnership with FnConn, a subsidiary of Foxconn Technology Group.

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Didi extends reach to Europe and Africa with Taxify partnership https://technode.com/2017/08/01/didi-extends-reach-to-europe-and-africa-with-taxify-partnership/ https://technode.com/2017/08/01/didi-extends-reach-to-europe-and-africa-with-taxify-partnership/#respond Tue, 01 Aug 2017 09:00:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52765 China’s ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing announced today a strategic partnership with Taxify, a leading ridesharing company in Europe and Africa. Under this partnership, Didi will invest in and collaborate with Taxify, according to a company statement. But the firm did not disclose the specific amount involved. Taxify will utilize the funding to expand its presence […]]]>

China’s ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing announced today a strategic partnership with Taxify, a leading ridesharing company in Europe and Africa.

Under this partnership, Didi will invest in and collaborate with Taxify, according to a company statement. But the firm did not disclose the specific amount involved. Taxify will utilize the funding to expand its presence in core markets in Europe and Africa, the statement noted.

Launched in Estonia in 2013, Taxify is the fastest-growing ride-hailing company in Europe and Africa, offering taxi- and private car-hailing services to over 2.5 million users in major hubs across 18 countries, including Hungary, Romania, the Baltic States, South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya.

The tie-up marks a new addition to Didi’s anti-Uber alliance along its global expansion initiative, only that the new deal spread the rival geographically to new markets in Africa and Europe.

“We’re definitely going global,” said Didi Chuxing president Jean Liu in a previous interview. And the company is moving fast towards that direction, each partner/region at a time. Didi invested 100 million USD in Lyft, Uber’s main competitor in the U.S. market, in September 2015. The battle has also expanded to Southeast Asia through investments in Ola and Grab and to Brazil through investment in local ride-hailing leader 99.

Cheng Wei, founder and CEO of Didi Chuxing, said: “Taxify provides innovative, high-quality mobility services across many diverse markets. We share a strong commitment to harnessing the power of mobile technology to satisfying rapidly evolving consumer demands and revitalizing traditional transportation industry. I believe this partnership will contribute to cross-regional smart transportation linkages between Asian, European and African markets.”

According to data from the company, Didi offers now provides service to over 400 million users in more than 400 cities.

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Alipay teams up with Fave for O2O expansion in SEA https://technode.com/2017/08/01/alipay-teams-up-with-fave-for-o2o-expansion-in-sea-2/ https://technode.com/2017/08/01/alipay-teams-up-with-fave-for-o2o-expansion-in-sea-2/#respond Tue, 01 Aug 2017 07:16:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52749 Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of Alibaba group, has announced a partnership with Fave, Groupon’s successor in Southeast Asia, to provide cross-border payment. The tie-up will first bring this service to Singapore. Through this deal, Alipay users will be able to make payments via the Alipay app at restaurants and offline retailers that are part […]]]>

Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of Alibaba group, has announced a partnership with Fave, Groupon’s successor in Southeast Asia, to provide cross-border payment. The tie-up will first bring this service to Singapore.

Through this deal, Alipay users will be able to make payments via the Alipay app at restaurants and offline retailers that are part of the Fave ecosystem and gain special access to offers and rewards, much similar to its partnership with local O2O service providers in Chinese market.

Unsurprisingly, the service will first target Chinese outbound tourists to SEA, which is becoming an increasingly popular destination for Chinese travelers.

“Restaurants and offline retailers are the backbone of the economy in Singapore. . .  While more than 90% of retail spend is done offline, retailers are always looking for ways to reach out to mobile-savvy customers,” said Joel Neoh, former Groupon executive and founder of Fave. “Currently, millions of users across Southeast Asia use Fave to discover and transact at restaurants and lifestyle retailers. This win-win partnership with Alipay will give our retail partners in Singapore more revenue and more customers.”

Evolved out of Malaysian fitness subscription service KFit, Fave has been expanding rapidly over the past few years as O2O is becoming more mainstream. As Groupon fades, Fave is gradually claiming territories once owned by the group-buying giant. Fave has acquired the Indonesian, Malaysian and Singaporean arms of Groupon over the past one-year period. Regionally, the startup has more than 10,000 restaurants and offline retailers and has over 1 million active users.

In the wake of China’s O2O boom, the SEA market, which shares a lot of similarities with China’s tech landscape five to ten years ago, is quickly coming closer to parity, according to Neoh in a previous interview with TechNode. Mobile payment is no doubt an important part to complete the closed O2O service loop.

Although the companies did not mention partnership beyond Singapore market for the time being, we can take a guess that the link-up might quickly expand to other SEA countries given Fave’s presence across the area and Alipay’s ambitions in the region. Amid an escalating overseas expansion initiative, Alipay is now available in 27 counties worldwide.

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WeChat adding new ad feature to public accounts https://technode.com/2017/08/01/wechat-adding-new-ad-feature-to-public-accounts/ https://technode.com/2017/08/01/wechat-adding-new-ad-feature-to-public-accounts/#respond Tue, 01 Aug 2017 05:23:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52724 WeChat launched an internal testing among key users on Monday for a new feature that would allow public account operators to insert advertisements into their posts. The platform previously only supported ad positions that appear at the top or bottom of the post. The new function gives operators more freedom to choose the specific spots […]]]>

WeChat launched an internal testing among key users on Monday for a new feature that would allow public account operators to insert advertisements into their posts.

The platform previously only supported ad positions that appear at the top or bottom of the post. The new function gives operators more freedom to choose the specific spots where they want the ads to be displayed with more targeted promotion and more context. This means stores like one KOL selling 100 cars in 4 minutes through public account promotions could be more common on the platform.

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Most of the ads are for single items from e-commerce platforms. Users will be redirected to the purchase interface through a single click on the ad. WeChat public account operators can insert ad positions in their post and the system will display corresponding contents according to the product category pre-selected by the operator, including clothing, jewelry, 3C products, food, tourism, education, and more. The accounts are paid on a per-click model.

For the time being, only one ad position can be inserted into a post and there must be at least 300-words before and after the spot. So, short text posts or those involving one video can’t embed ads.

Advertisement is a major means for public account operators to monetize. There’s a lots of channels for doing ads from bottom banner, native ads, and brand sponsorship, however, none of these goes through WeChat’s ecosystem.

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Growth of WeChat social ads revenue (image credit: Kannimai)

Since integrating advertising program for Moments in 2015, the rate of growth of WeChat’s social ad business is slowing down. Launching more ad positions is not only in line with Tencent’s efforts to keep account operators’ ad business inside its own ecosystem but also to drive its own ad growth.

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China’s other search engine Sogou files for US IPO https://technode.com/2017/07/31/chinas-top-search-engine-sogou-files-for-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2017/07/31/chinas-top-search-engine-sogou-files-for-us-ipo/#respond Mon, 31 Jul 2017 12:55:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52693 China internet major Sogou has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a NASDAQ IPO. The number and dollar amount of ADSs to be offered and sold has not determined yet. The news became public as Sogou’s parent company US-listed tech giant Sohu announced its Q2 financial report. The report shows that Sohu’s […]]]>

China internet major Sogou has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a NASDAQ IPO. The number and dollar amount of ADSs to be offered and sold has not determined yet.

The news became public as Sogou’s parent company US-listed tech giant Sohu announced its Q2 financial report. The report shows that Sohu’s Q2 revenue surged 10 percent YOY to $461 million, of which Sogou accounts for $211 million, up 20 percent YOY.

Sogou’s CEO Wang Xiaochuan confirmed the IPO news in an internal letter (in Chinese), where he stated that the firm would go public on the US stock market as early as market conditions permit.

Sogou, established in 2004, is the developer of China’s most popular Chinese input method service Sogou Pinin which takes more than 60% share in the mobile market. It’s also the operator of China’s top search engine, behind market leader Baidu, providing search service for Tencent’s WeChat social media platform as well as Microsoft’ Bing for English search in China. Company CEO Wang Xiaochuan disclosed in a recent speech that the firm is pivoting its focus to AI-driven search and navigation in the future.

In addition to Sohu, Chinese internet Tencent is also a backer of the company. Tencent, which injected $448 million funding in Sogou in 2013, now controls a 45.3 percent stake in the company as the largest shareholder, while Sohu holds 39.3 percent stake in the firm.

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[Gallery] Online literature and VR get the spotlight at China’s biggest gaming conference https://technode.com/2017/07/28/photo-highlights-from-the-chinajoy-2017/ https://technode.com/2017/07/28/photo-highlights-from-the-chinajoy-2017/#respond Fri, 28 Jul 2017 06:05:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52501 China’s biggest entertainment and video gaming conference, ChinaJoy, is under way in Shanghai. The fervor of Chinese gaming fans remains unshaken by the city’s scorching hot weather, and if anything is even more feverish since the event is celebrating its 15th anniversary this year. There was a healthy dose of everything related to gaming at the carnival: […]]]>

China’s biggest entertainment and video gaming conference, ChinaJoy, is under way in Shanghai. The fervor of Chinese gaming fans remains unshaken by the city’s scorching hot weather, and if anything is even more feverish since the event is celebrating its 15th anniversary this year.

There was a healthy dose of everything related to gaming at the carnival: the launch of big gaming titles, virtual reality, gaming payments, and of course, the booth babes who have become a large part of the conference’s charm.

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Two gamers playing on stage

HTC VIVE released a new VR game called Kai-Ri-Sei Million Arthur AR with Square Enix this Thursday. The game features HD boss battles and a card battle system that complements interaction in the VR space.

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Two cosplayers posing for Sogou’s new IP-based mobile game Eternal Love (三生三世)

Intellectual property such as worlds and characters created by China’s online literature is paying off big for the entertainment market, creating opportunities for nearly every element  of the industry from TV dramas and film to gaming. The TV version of Chinese fantasy epic Eternal Love, based on stories written by online novelist Tang Qi, became an instant hit at the beginning of this year. The film and mobile game version followed a few months after the TV version was aired in an attempt to ride the wave. Driven by the trend, the mobile industry is stepping up. The drama and game version surrounding new elements of IP like Princess Agents (楚乔传) were released at the same time this month. Other Chinese IP following the same pattern are Love O2O (微微一笑很倾城) and Ghost Blows Out the Light (鬼吹灯).

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A female gamer testing Kai-Ri-Sei Million Arthur against a blue screen, while her virtual figure is shown with her collaborators in group battle via IVREAL

In partnership with HTC Vive, Chongqing-based IVREAL demoed their MR technology at ChinaJoy. “We use a third-person view to combine the players and the virtual environment. Compared with first-person footage, the use of a new angle would be super helpful for developers to make a live demo and promote their content,” said Tao Shu, founder and CEO of IVREAL.

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Although the VR boom is slowing down as reality sets in (no pun intended), VR booths promising physical activity still lured the most visitors at ChinaJoy. Instead of offering a VR headset alone, nearly all the manufacturers tried to offer more comprehensive experiences that using your whole body. Nined’s VR treadmill works in a similar way to a big baby bouncer, allowing gamers to walk, run, jump, crouch, and sit in their virtual worlds.

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Rowing in VR
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Cycling in VR
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 Shanghai-based VR hardware and software company Hypereal released a bevy of new products including a camera positioning solution for 360° coverage, wireless cameras, VR arcade solutions, as well as VR painting tool Lindori.

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We even spotted a few fintech service providers who want to capitalize on the rise of the global gaming market by providing cross-border payment settlement solutions for gamers.

Established in 2015 in Shanghai, iPayLinks is primarily involved with payment settlement solutions, mobile payments solutions, and development of e-payment technology for cross-border and domestic companies in e-commerce, travel and digital entertainment industries.

”Compared with payments in other industries, cross-border payment for the gaming industry is more fragmented, usually featuring payment through telecom carriers, local e-wallets, bank cards, prepaid cards, etc. We now primarily focus on the SEA market, which is usually the first stop for overseas expansions of game developers thanks to similar cultures,” Sales Vice President of iPayLinks told TechNode.

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Booth of San Francisco-based international payments platform Paymentwall

Last but not the least, here’s what everyone really comes to ChinaJoy for—the booth babes:

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China’s underground anime fan culture is changing how brands market in China https://technode.com/2017/07/26/chinas-underground-anime-fan-culture-is-changing-how-brands-market-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/07/26/chinas-underground-anime-fan-culture-is-changing-how-brands-market-in-china/#respond Wed, 26 Jul 2017 09:19:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52295 Some Chinese tech firms get all the attention. BATJ, Xiaomi, ofo, and all the “sharing economy” startups have dominated headlines over the past few years. However, there is another group of companies who choose to keep a relatively low profile but are nonetheless an important part of China’s ever-growing tech landscape. Bilibili might be a lesser-known name […]]]>

Some Chinese tech firms get all the attention. BATJ, Xiaomi, ofo, and all the “sharing economy” startups have dominated headlines over the past few years. However, there is another group of companies who choose to keep a relatively low profile but are nonetheless an important part of China’s ever-growing tech landscape.

Bilibili might be a lesser-known name for those who are not interested in the ACG (animation, comics, and games around IP such as One Piece and Fate/stay Night) culture or live outside of China, but its impact on the Middle Kingdom is obvious: total monthly active users on par with Pinterest coupled with especially young demographics on their way to commanding more mainstream influence in a matter of years.

Bilibili, more widely known as “B Station” (b站 in Chinese), is the spiritual home for Chinese ACG fans. Founded by Xu Yi in 2009, the site models itself on the early days of Japanese ACG video portal Niconico with its  integration of danmu (弹幕, “bullet screen” in English or “danmaku” in Japanese), a feature that allows viewers to plaster the screen with  instant comments that move from left to right.

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The rise of B Station finds its root in the spread of “2D culture” in China, characterized by fans who develop a strong attachment to 2D characters in cartoons, tradable cards, comics, games, and youth novels. In 2015, iResearch estimated that this community reached as high as 219 million people.

Influenced by this underground trend, China’s mainstream culture is embracing a more open attitude towards content generated by 2D fans. The concept–people freely entertaining each other as an anonymous collective, akin to 9GAG–is gradually being adopted by broader society, for example, an autotuned remix of a Lei Jun’s speech and other memes created on B Station that have gone viral.

The mainstreaming of 2D culture underlines a great demographic shift as China’s post-80 and post-90 groups–both highly-educated digital natives–are coming of age, giving the marginalized ACG culture a demographic dividend. According to data from the company, the average user age is 17 years old, of which 75% were under the age of 24.

While China millennial are growing into independent consumers, they are bringing their tastes and wallets with them. And it’s no surprise that the latest fads among Chinese youths are already changing the way brands behave.

Among a hall full of teenage elves and fantasy warriors at Bilibili World last week, we found booths for a roster of international brands from KFC, Nike, Maybelline to Kotex. However, these outlets are somewhat different from what you could find in downtown shopping malls.

In the Nike demo zone, cartoon characters replace NBA stars to show off Nike sneakers. Feminine hygiene brand Kotex turns its booth into a Japanese-style temple where visitors can wish for good luck during periods or whatever they want. (We are still wondering why this booth was so popular with the boys).

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KFC continues its partnership with Bilibili after a joint live-stream marketing company last year when two anime-styled girls competed to eat 50 pieces of fried chicken. Over 200,000 users watched them in real time.

The brands are still finding their approaches in marketing to this special group. “On the first day of the show, Maybelline’s booth is basically a typical representation of their department store versions. They become more popular in the following shift when helping cosplayers freshen up their makeup,” said Yang Liang, Bilibili’s marketing and PR head.

What we see at Bilibli World is just a part of China’s efforts in co-opting manga and animation as marketing tools. Xiaomi launched a limited edition of its Redmi Note 4 dedicated virtual idol Hatsune Miku, complete with accessories adorned with Miku’s color scheme. Alibaba’s e-commerce website Tmall was heavily decorated with manga-style artwork to help boost sales in the lead-up to the Chinese New Year in 2016.

Even government entities are opting in in an attempt to reach the young demographic. China’s Central Communist Youth League established its presence on Bilibili to better propagate its message. Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs even uses cartoon figures to add flavor to their public WeChat account posts.

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Mobike accelerates European expansion with second stop in Italy https://technode.com/2017/07/26/mobike-accelerates-european-expansion-with-second-stop-in-italy/ https://technode.com/2017/07/26/mobike-accelerates-european-expansion-with-second-stop-in-italy/#respond Wed, 26 Jul 2017 06:36:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52353 Shortly after launching in UK last month, Chinese bike-sharing giant Mobike announced Tuesday that it’s pedaling its way to a second stop in Europe—Italy—in an extended competition with its arch-rival ofo for the global market. The firm said it would first launch several hundreds of Mobikes in Florence across selected high-demand areas with a promotion rate […]]]>

Shortly after launching in UK last month, Chinese bike-sharing giant Mobike announced Tuesday that it’s pedaling its way to a second stop in Europe—Italy—in an extended competition with its arch-rival ofo for the global market.

The firm said it would first launch several hundreds of Mobikes in Florence across selected high-demand areas with a promotion rate of EUR 0.3 per 30 minutes during the trial stage. Official service will available to all of Florence and Milan starting August with the plan to launch around 4,000 bikes in each of the two cities.

Hu Weiwei, Founder of Mobike said: “We are delighted to enter the Italian market, and especially to launch Mobike’s operations in both Florence and Milan, home to so many of history’s greatest innovators and artists. … Mobike is committed to working side-by-side with our partners to preserve and enhance Florentines’, Milanese’s and visitors’ enjoyment of both cities.

Mobike has been in a land grabbing battle with ofo in the domestic market, and the two bike rental powers are now expanding competition overseas gradually since the beginning of this year. They are both targeting at key markets like Singapore and UK and are have been busy piling up ammunitions for a larger scale competition with large funding rounds.

Founded in January 2015, Mobike has expanded across China and into Singapore, the UK and Japan. Mobike is now active in more than 150 cities globally and operates more than 6 million bikes around the world. The platform sees as many as 25 million rides a day with over 100 million registered users.

Company CEO Davis Wang said that Mobike is planning to operate in 200 cites globally by the end of 2017.

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Didi to have even bigger voice in ofo upon new exec appointment https://technode.com/2017/07/26/didi-to-have-even-bigger-voice-in-ofo-upon-new-exec-appointment/ https://technode.com/2017/07/26/didi-to-have-even-bigger-voice-in-ofo-upon-new-exec-appointment/#respond Wed, 26 Jul 2017 04:42:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52344 Chinese bike-rental major ofo confirmed that it has named Fu Qiang, former senior vice president of Didi, as executive president of the company. Fu will report directly to company CEO Dai Wei upon appointment. According to a company statement, Fu will leverage his deep industry experience to help ofo improve operating efficiency and upgrade user experiences. […]]]>

Chinese bike-rental major ofo confirmed that it has named Fu Qiang, former senior vice president of Didi, as executive president of the company. Fu will report directly to company CEO Dai Wei upon appointment.

According to a company statement, Fu will leverage his deep industry experience to help ofo improve operating efficiency and upgrade user experiences.

This appointment comes in line with a tighter link between ofo and Didi, which is a large investor in the company. As a returning investor, the ride-hailing giant has been part of nearly every financing round of ofo since its first investment in Series B Plus in September 2016. Didi added ofo’s service into its main app this April, allowing users to book the bikes directly via the Didi ride-hailing app.

The tie-up between the two makes a tone of sense for their joint initiative in solving China’s transportation problems, but there are concerns that ofo’s founding team or even the startup itself is losing ground to Didi as an independent entity.

Usually, it’s uncommon to see big companies hiring high-level execs from outside, let alone in an executive position that oversees the daily operation of the unicorn. Local media (in Chinese) pointed out executives from Didi have take two of the eight places on ofo’s board. Ofo’s financial vice president was reportedly (in Chinese) replaced by a new recruit from Didi. Moreover, rumors that ofo’s CEO and founder Dai Wei is taking a backseat in company operation have been circulating for some time.

The company’s share structure shows Didi-related influence is gaining the upper hand in ofo. Dai Wei still holds a 36.2 percent stake in ofo’s shares with Didi coming a close second with 25.32 percent. However, the easy alliance between Didi and its early-stage investors like GSR Ventures and Matrix Partners, which are also major investors in ofo, would mean combined share holding would surpass those of ofo’s entrepreneur founding team.

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China’s flower e-commerce blossoms with increasing consumption https://technode.com/2017/07/20/chinas-flower-e-commerce-blossoms-with-increasing-consumption/ https://technode.com/2017/07/20/chinas-flower-e-commerce-blossoms-with-increasing-consumption/#respond Thu, 20 Jul 2017 08:35:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52110 E-commerce has become ubiquitous in China since the mid-2000s, but flower e-commerce, a special vertical under the term, hasn’t blossomed until recently. China’s flower industry is expected to grow at an annual combined growth rate of around 20 percent with market size hitting hundreds of billion RMB by 2020, local media (in Chinese) has pointed out. […]]]>

E-commerce has become ubiquitous in China since the mid-2000s, but flower e-commerce, a special vertical under the term, hasn’t blossomed until recently.

China’s flower industry is expected to grow at an annual combined growth rate of around 20 percent with market size hitting hundreds of billion RMB by 2020, local media (in Chinese) has pointed out.  Government and enterprises, however, have traditionally been the main buyers of flowers and flower arrangements. Typically used at opening ceremonies or big receptions, the number of bouquets sold in China slumped 20 percent in 2014, most probably because of the Eight-point Regulation announced at the end of 2012.

Flower
(Image credit: chyxx.com)

Government (33%) and enterprise (30%) flower consumption still represent a big chunk of the market, data from Daxue Consulting shows. But flower demand from individual customers has risen steadily to 37%

As an indelible part of Chinese collective consciousness, flowers have always held a privileged position representing growth, prosperity, and fulfillment. Combined with the economic boom, the country’s flower industry is growing rapidly against the backdrop of a flourishing middle class. In a country where people were struggling for basic necessities like food and clothing just a few decades ago, buying flowers is an extravagance, even only for special holidays or occasions.

While Chinese are becoming wealthier and can afford a better lifestyle, their pursuits know no boundaries. This is manifested in the fact that China is known to the world as a large buyer of luxury products, cars and more.

According to the recent articles on Captiv8, a flourist blog, it would seem that, traditional brick-and-mortar flower stores are still the major channels where people buy flowers, but weaknesses including high overhead, limited coverage, inconsistent purchasing patterns, and overstocking are all forcing the burgeoning industry to speed up its online transition.

Unsurprisingly, China’s e-commerce and O2O booms quickened the process in a big way. Since the beginning of 2013, a slew of Chinese startups flocked into the sector with their own angle to tap the market. China’s flower e-commerce industry worth RMB 16.88 billion ($2.49 billion) in 2016, expecting to hit RMB 60 billion by 2019, reports from iiMedia (in Chinese) noted.

Gifting and decorating

RoseOnly, a Beijing-based startup founded in 2013, targets high-end flower gifting market and sells rose bouquets from premium vendors. The Beast also goes for the high-end customers with their lavishly decorated bouquets and boxing. The batches from both vary from hundreds to thousands of yuan. Larger arrangements cost up to five-digit sums. RoseOnly received RMB 190 million Series C last April.

In addition to gifting, flower services are more commonly a means to beautify the space and thereby a symbol for quality life in Western countries, where people would make the purchase on a daily basis. Daily flower consumption accounts for only 5 percent of China’s total flower sales, strikingly lower than 30 percent in the US and 40 percent in Holland, according to data from Flower Council of Holland.

The popularity of flower subscription model in China is making flowers more affordable and a common part of our daily lives. The model is quite simple: set your flower preference and delivery frequency, make payment through WeChat or Alipay, then wait for fresh, custom flower arrangements to be delivered to your front door. The best part is that such flower services targeting at daily flower consumptions are never pricey. Normally, users can get four weekly bouquets for as low as 98 RMB ($14.88).

Given the market potential, it’s unsurprising to see a crowded market. Leading players include 24Tidy, the on-demand laundry startup that’s shifting to flowers, Amorflora, FlowerPlus, Reflower. The former two went public on China’s New Third Board, a Chinese share transfer system for small- and medium-sized unlisted corporations. Both FlowerPlus and Reflower announced nine-digit RMB funding this month.

Taobao, JD, and the likes are also dipping their toes in this market through their O2O units, backed by their advantages in brand and logistics. However, the budding sector still faces problems ahead in maintaining the quality of the bouquets, logistics, customer education, and more.

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Apple may stop taxing in-app tipping in China https://technode.com/2017/07/19/apple-may-stop-taxing-in-app-tipping-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/07/19/apple-may-stop-taxing-in-app-tipping-in-china/#respond Wed, 19 Jul 2017 07:56:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52040 Apple is planning to remove its controversial App Store policy of taking a 30 percent cut on tipping from users to content creators in China, local media The Paper is reporting (in Chinese), citing several sources they identified as execs at Chinese internet firms. Several game developers also got wind of Apple’s plan to change its […]]]>

Apple is planning to remove its controversial App Store policy of taking a 30 percent cut on tipping from users to content creators in China, local media The Paper is reporting (in Chinese), citing several sources they identified as execs at Chinese internet firms. Several game developers also got wind of Apple’s plan to change its tipping policies, the report noted.

By classifying tipping or donation as a form of in-app purchase, the US company demanded app makers earlier this year to disable the tipping function per its new App Store rules, allowing Apple to take a 30% cut.

The Paper made public an unconfirmed new App Store policy that people who want to make donations to others without making in-app purchase should meet the following requirements: a) the donation decision is made by the donor; b) the donor will be charged 100% for tipping; c) the tipping is not exchange for any digital content or services. Under the new policy, the tipping will be treated as a means of personal donation.

Since the boom of live streaming, virtual gifting has become a popular form through which users interact and show their gratitude to performers writers, developers and other content providers who give out stuff for free.

Apple’s move of taking a sizable portion of the donations has upset the country, where industry insiders called it an “Apple Tax”. For many, turning a means of expressing personal appreciation into a revenue source is not only unjustified but also reflects the company’s failure to fully understand the Chinese market.

To some extent, this is understandable given that there’s no tipping service in American live streaming apps like Facebook Live and Periscope. Facebook, however, does allow broadcasters to show ads in their streams and to keep 55 percent of the revenue.

After slowing market growth over the past few months, Apple has made several major moves to reinvigorate its Chinese business, including the largest promotion campaign for Apple Pay China-wide yesterday, it named a new China head today.

We have reached out to Apple for comment and will update when we get a response.

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Microsoft joins Baidu’s “Android for autonomous driving” https://technode.com/2017/07/19/microsoft-joins-baidus-android-for-autonomous-driving/ https://technode.com/2017/07/19/microsoft-joins-baidus-android-for-autonomous-driving/#respond Wed, 19 Jul 2017 07:16:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=52034 Shortly after revealing a partnership with Baidu’s Apollo Project, Microsoft announced Tuesday further details of the tie-up. The US internet behemoth will provide cloud infrastructure services via Azure to Apollo’s partners outside of China. As part of the partnership, Baidu and Microsoft plan to explore opportunities to deliver connected vehicle solutions and unique customer experiences […]]]>

Shortly after revealing a partnership with Baidu’s Apollo Project, Microsoft announced Tuesday further details of the tie-up. The US internet behemoth will provide cloud infrastructure services via Azure to Apollo’s partners outside of China.

As part of the partnership, Baidu and Microsoft plan to explore opportunities to deliver connected vehicle solutions and unique customer experiences that aim to digitally transform the autonomous driving industry, according to the statement.

“We’re excited to partner with Baidu to take a giant step in helping automotive manufacturers and suppliers fully realize the promise of autonomous driving,” said Kevin Dallas, corporate vice president, Microsoft. “Today’s vehicles already have an impressive level of sophistication when it comes to their ability to capture data. By applying our global cloud AI, machine learning, and deep neural network capabilities to that data, we can accelerate the work already being done to make autonomous vehicles safer.”

As of July, Baidu has forged partnerships with approximately 50 companies composed of mapping company TomTom, IT firms like Microsoft, Nvidia, tier-one suppliers Bosch and Continental, auto manufacturers like Chery and BAIC Motor, and Uber competitor Grab.

Processing power is a crucial factor for crunching the huge amount of data produced by Apollo system. While Baidu can ensure that power within China, it would be a problem when operating in countries where it doesn’t have much presence, therefore, could be a speed bump for the global adoption of this system.

If Apollo is to become “Android for autonomous cars” in a real sense, stable processing power around the globe is a must, especially when competing with rivals like Alphabet’s Waymo.

On the other hand, Microsoft has already been dipping their toes into the automotive industry through partnerships with BMW, Ford, Renault-Nissan, Toyota and Volvo in a bid to ingest huge volumes of sensor and usage data from connected vehicles and apply that data to deliver actionable intelligence.

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Apple names new China head to bolster slowing China growth https://technode.com/2017/07/19/apple-names-new-china-head-to-speed-up-slowing-china-growth/ https://technode.com/2017/07/19/apple-names-new-china-head-to-speed-up-slowing-china-growth/#respond Wed, 19 Jul 2017 06:18:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51989 Amid slowing growth in China, Apple is creating a new head position for its Chinese team to invigorate the Chinese business. The global smartphone giant announced today the appointment Isabel Ge Mahe, formerly vice president of Wireless Technologies, as vice president and managing director of Greater China. Isabel will report directly to CEO Tim Cook […]]]>

Amid slowing growth in China, Apple is creating a new head position for its Chinese team to invigorate the Chinese business. The global smartphone giant announced today the appointment Isabel Ge Mahe, formerly vice president of Wireless Technologies, as vice president and managing director of Greater China.

Isabel will report directly to CEO Tim Cook and COO Jeff Williams. She will assume her new role later this summer and will be based in Shanghai, the firm says.

“Apple is strongly committed to invest and grow in China, and we are thrilled that Isabel will be bringing her experience and leadership to our China team,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “She has dedicated a great deal of her time in recent years to delivering innovation for the benefit of Apple customers in China, and we look forward to making even greater contributions under her leadership.”

This appointment comes when the global tech giant is gradually losing ground to local smartphone manufacturers like Huawei, VIVO, and OPPO. Apple’s Q1 report revealed that its revenue from China, which lost its status as Apple’s second-largest market to Europe last year, slumped by 14 percent year on year, compared with a 1 percent drop globally.

Apple’s decline as a foreign smartphone maker in China isn’t a single case. Something very similar happened to Samsung, only it’s worse for them. A report from Counterpoint shows that Samsung’s smartphone sales in China dropped around 60 percent in Q1 this year. Samsung Note 7’s battery failure and the company’s belated recall plan in China play no small part to the shattering of the Samsung brand.

The rise of local smartphone brands also plagued the foreign competitors. In 2016, a total of 559.7 million mobile phones were shipped in China, of which local smartphone makers account for a dominating 497.8 million or 88.9% of the total shipments.

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VPNs continue to feel the pressure as a Beijing luxury hotel halts service https://technode.com/2017/07/19/vpns-continue-to-feel-the-pressure-as-a-beijing-luxury-hotel-halts-service/ https://technode.com/2017/07/19/vpns-continue-to-feel-the-pressure-as-a-beijing-luxury-hotel-halts-service/#respond Wed, 19 Jul 2017 03:09:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51966 China’s control over access to the global unfiltered web is still grim. Waldorf Astoria, one of the top luxury hotels in Beijing, stopped providing VPN services last week (in Chinese), which means guests staying at the hotel can no longer access sites such as Facebook and Youtube. This comes right after Chinese authority denied the news […]]]>

China’s control over access to the global unfiltered web is still grim. Waldorf Astoria, one of the top luxury hotels in Beijing, stopped providing VPN services last week (in Chinese), which means guests staying at the hotel can no longer access sites such as Facebook and Youtube.

(Image credit: IDCQuan)

This comes right after Chinese authority denied the news about its ban on personal VPNs after Bloomberg reported last week that China’s top telecom carriers will block individuals from using VPNs by February 2018. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology rebuked the news saying its ban only applies to unlicensed or unqualified businesses and individuals.

While VPN is globally used more by people that care about privacy or connection security, Chinese residents use it mostly when they want to access sites outside of China. Not used by a majority of Chinese internet users, VPNs are common for businesses to communicate internationally and individuals who want to keep in touch with friends and family abroad.

A report from the GlobalWebIndex shows that almost 2 out of 3 China’s VPN users use VPNs at least once a week (with 16% being daily users), but the country didn’t make to the top 5 countries in terms of VPN usage. The top-five countries are Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, India, and Thailand. Unlike in China, these users are most likely seeking access to region-blocked content as well as enhanced privacy.

GWI
(Image credit: GlobalWebIndex)

China’s ban on unlicensed and unregistered VPN providers has been in effect for sometime. The lack of a dedicated authority unit, however, has left a gap in the execution of VPN supervision. China has established a dedicated unit for cyberspace administration in 2014, making it more difficult for VPN services to survive in the legal gray area.

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Failed entrepreneur’s bogus crowdfunding campaign raises questions about post-90s entrepreneurs https://technode.com/2017/07/06/failed-entrepreneurs-bogus-crowdfunding-campaign-raises-questions-about-post-90s-entrepreneurs/ https://technode.com/2017/07/06/failed-entrepreneurs-bogus-crowdfunding-campaign-raises-questions-about-post-90s-entrepreneurs/#respond Thu, 06 Jul 2017 07:35:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51231 When talking about serial entrepreneurs, people tend to focus on the bright side of the term. We would picture visionaries or leaders who have a better understanding of the industry, time management expertise or other traits that would help to beat the odds in the challenging startup scene. In most cases being a serial entrepreneur […]]]>

When talking about serial entrepreneurs, people tend to focus on the bright side of the term. We would picture visionaries or leaders who have a better understanding of the industry, time management expertise or other traits that would help to beat the odds in the challenging startup scene.

In most cases being a serial entrepreneur would make things easier when you talk with investors or partners, but for those with a poor track record, it can be a huge hurdle.

Wang Kaixin, the 19-year-old CEO and founder behind ShenqiBuy or MagicBuy in English, has experienced a roller-coaster year in 2016 along with the rise and fall of her startup, which targeted her teenager peers by selling snacks, stationery, backpacks and anime-related toys.

After raising RMB 20 million ($3 million) funding from reputable VCs like Matrix Partners China, ZhenFund, and Inno Valley, ShenqiBuy shattered after mounting accusations of founder’s malpractices including data fabrication and extravagant spending.

Months after the infamous exit, Wang is back with her second startup. Instead of seeking funding from VCs this time, a post on Wang’s WeChat official account shows that the high school dropout is now crowdfunding in exchange for co-founder status in her new traditional Chinese medicine company.

Wang claimed that before July 30th, only RMB 50,000 was needed to become a co-founder of the new company for what Wang claimed would worth be RMB 500,000 after the crowdfunding deadline. She offered 50 positions for people who want to become her co-founders.

In exchange, the co-founders are promised over RMB 2 million in returns within one year. The investors don’t have to be worried about the operations since she has nine services systems in place, covering every aspect of the business: marketing, traffic and order management, as well as training, Wang claimed.

Despite the lucrative ROI, the whole thing sounded like a cheesy investment scam, not uncommon in China. Nothing was mentioned about their product itself. WeChat has blocked her account just one day after Wang publish her post and the crowdfunding post is not accessible now.

Post-90 generation entrepreneurs have been considered as a rising force in China’s tech landscape since the 2010s, given their acute senses of the market as bold digital natives. However, a slew of events have put an impetuous label on the group, forcing us to give a second thought to the cohort.

Yu Jiawen, the 27-year-old founder and CEO of education app Super Curriculum (超级课程表), shot to national fame after promising to distribute RMB 100 million bonus to employees on a talk show on China’s state media CCTV. When he failed to keep his word one year later, he answered in a frivolous manner, saying that “I chickened out, so what? I planned to hold a release conference to acknowledge this.” Yu’s response enraged Zhou Hongyi, CEO of Qihoo 360, who blow up calling Yu “hypocritical” for making promises he could not keep.

Ma Jiajia, the outspoken post-90 founder of sex toy startup Powerful (泡否), also saw her company fail due to lack of users after catching media spotlight as the talent to innovate China’s sex toy industry.

Post-90 entrepreneur is a special group of China’s rising millennial generation, a cohort now entering adulthood gradually and making a bigger mark on society. They’ve been given all manner of conflicting labels, including open-minded, individualistic, conservative, materialistic and international. Or perhaps, we shouldn’t put so many labels or stereotypes on the group. Everyone’s different after all and there’s are plenty of young entrepreneurs who are achieving their visions in a dependable manner.

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Alibaba launches voice assistant Tmall Genie https://technode.com/2017/07/05/alibaba-launches-voice-assistant-tmall-genie/ https://technode.com/2017/07/05/alibaba-launches-voice-assistant-tmall-genie/#respond Wed, 05 Jul 2017 09:31:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51258 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba launched the smart speaker Tmall Genie X1 today, elbowing its way into the crowded digital voice assistant market where there’re already big name incumbents like Amazon, Apple, Google, and JD (their main e-commerce competitor). Powered by a custom Smart Audio chip, the 126mm-tall virtual assistant speaker supports an 6-beam microphone array […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba launched the smart speaker Tmall Genie X1 today, elbowing its way into the crowded digital voice assistant market where there’re already big name incumbents like Amazon, Apple, Google, and JD (their main e-commerce competitor).

Powered by a custom Smart Audio chip, the 126mm-tall virtual assistant speaker supports an 6-beam microphone array on the top and a subwoofer at the lower part of the device. The gadget needs less than 10 seconds to get connected to the network, outperforming the average of 30 seconds for most current smart home devices on the market.

Enabled by AliGenie, the voice assistant service developed by Alibaba’s homegrown team, Tmall Genie X1 allows users to control with verbal commands. Voice print technology ensures more accurate and secure commands, allowing users not only to purchase from Alibaba’s shopping sites but also to make payments through the device.

X1 supports connection with other smart home appliances on Alibaba’s smart home platform such as Tmall Box, air conditioner, and air purifiers.

屏幕快照 2017-07-05 下午5.11.52

Unsurprisingly, X1 enjoys advantages in price over similar products from US tech giants. With a price tag of only RMB 499 ($73), it’s far more affordable than Apple’s Home Pod ($349), Google Home ($129), and Amazon Echo ($230). JD’s DingDong is priced from RMB 499 – RMB 698, depending on the model.

The product is open for limited public testing starting today, while the official sales date is slated for August 8th.

Alibaba’s virtual assistant now only supports commands in Chinese, which means it’s facing Chinese customers for the time being and won’t form any tangible threats to US companies in their home markets. But it will sure further squeeze their growth in the Chinese market.

The Chinese tech giant is also facing serious competition from domestic competitors. Tencent has launched AI assistant Dingdang earlier this year. All out in AI, Baidu also laid out in the sector through the acquisition of Alexa-like service Raven Tech.

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LeEco faces tightening pressure as court freezes another $2.3 billion in assets https://technode.com/2017/07/05/leeco-faces-tightening-pressure-as-court-freezes-another-2-3-billion-in-assets/ https://technode.com/2017/07/05/leeco-faces-tightening-pressure-as-court-freezes-another-2-3-billion-in-assets/#respond Wed, 05 Jul 2017 07:18:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51239 Cash-strapped LeEco plunged deeper into crisis as the Shanghai High People’s Court froze 519 million Leshi shares controlled by company chairman, Jia Yueting, over unpaid debts connected to the firm’s smartphone businesses. The shares frozen this time are worth around RMB 15.927 billion ($2.3 billion), calculated at 30.68 apiece, according to an announcement from the firm. […]]]>

Cash-strapped LeEco plunged deeper into crisis as the Shanghai High People’s Court froze 519 million Leshi shares controlled by company chairman, Jia Yueting, over unpaid debts connected to the firm’s smartphone businesses. The shares frozen this time are worth around RMB 15.927 billion ($2.3 billion), calculated at 30.68 apiece, according to an announcement from the firm.

The amount represents 99.06 percent of the total shares controlled by Jia. It is around 26.03 percent of the company’s total share, the statement pointed out. It has been nearly three months after the company suspended its shares from trading on April 16.

This comes right after RMB 1.2 billion worth of assets owned by co-founder Jia Yueting, his wife Gan Wei and three subsidiaries were frozen earlier this week.

The court carried this order on behalf of China Merchants Bank. However, local media pointed out China Merchants Bank is not the only bank involved. The report noted that LeEco has also borrowed tens of billion RMB from Ping An Bank. In addition, it has two company loans, totaling RMB1.93 billion, due in August and September this year, which means the worst is probably yet to come for the struggling company.

After early signs of trouble started showing up last October, LeEco’s cash crunch has worsened at an alarming speed. Although the company managed to rake in additional funding and Jia also pulled in capital through pledging his shares, the company’s capital chain is still shattering, even the company’s outspoken leader Jia Yueting admits that LeEco’s cash woes are “far worse than expected”.

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China’s convenience stores no longer need people https://technode.com/2017/07/04/chinas-convenience-stores-no-longer-need-people-bingobox/ https://technode.com/2017/07/04/chinas-convenience-stores-no-longer-need-people-bingobox/#respond Tue, 04 Jul 2017 08:37:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51131 Amazon has promised the retailing world something amazing when it released its cashierless store last year. However, the “everything store” still has yet to make it available to the greater public, but Chinese startups aren’t sitting on their laurels. Already, a few have ready-to-go products with comparable features. “Staffless,” or automated stores, are nothing new, […]]]>

Amazon has promised the retailing world something amazing when it released its cashierless store last year. However, the “everything store” still has yet to make it available to the greater public, but Chinese startups aren’t sitting on their laurels. Already, a few have ready-to-go products with comparable features.

“Staffless,” or automated stores, are nothing new, but internet companies have managed to reinvigorate it with the latest technology, like bike-rental have done recently. They appeared in the earliest form of vending machines, which can be found across the globe. In Japan, where automation has been raised to almost sacred levels, there’s approximately one vending machine for every 23 people, booking annual sales that total more than $60 billion. Several reasons contributed to the huge popularity of automated stores in Japan from a lower cost of labor, expensive real estate, and more.

Why China? Why now?

Unlike its neighbor, vending machines have yet to fully blossom in China. But the factors that propelled vending machine’s huge popularity in Japan have begun to take root in China.

After decades-long economic growth fueled by the demographic dividend, China is now in a position very similar to Japan where an aging society has made labor scarcer and more costly. High population density and expensive property in urban areas also make automated sellers and stores a more favorable choice when compared with renting pricey spaces.

Apart from demographic changes, China’s newly-minted obsession with tech innovations is making it a whole lot easier for the country to adapt to “something new.” Also, the combined forces of ubiquitous mobile payment and O2O services have made the Middle Kingdom ready for tech-enabled retailing solutions.

In fact, several Chinese companies in the sector have been growing rapidly in the past few years, even before Amazon launched Amazon Go in last December. Vending machine vendors like Ubox and Gump Come are known for their pioneering O2O efforts in operating interactive vending machines, which enables customers to make purchases through their mobile app.

And of course, the automated trend not only affects grocery shopping, but also the whole “New Retail” industry which covers automated coffee machines, fresh juice machines, and even mini karaoke and mini fitness kiosks.

First major funding appeared, more to follow

As the first significant venture funding in this field, China’s automated convenience store manufacturer BingoBox announced Monday that it has received RMB 100 million ($14 million) in a Series A led by GGV Capital with participation from Qiming Venture Partners, Source Code Capital and Ventech China, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

Originated in Guangdong’s Zhongshan City, BingoBox has developed fully-automated, 24/7 convenience stores. With full integration with WeChat, users enter and exit using WeChat’s scanning feature.

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BingoBox located near Auchan supermarket in Shanghai (Image credit: TechNode)

Through partnership with global retailors like Auchan, BingoBox stores have over 200 types of products including daily necessities such as drinks, groceries and over-the-counter medicine. Shoppers can pay via WeChat or Alipay while remote service staff can be reached through real-time video in case of malfunctions or when other help is needed. The company is also developing its own supply chain brand called Beibianli (倍便利).

BingoBox-
QR code at entrance of BingoBox (Image credit: TechNode)

Scanning each item and paying with your phone may be less futuristic than Amazon Go, but it’s here now; it’s no exaggeration to say speed is everything in China’s highly crowded tech sector.

After launching a pilot test in Guangzhou’s Zhongshan city in August 2016, the firm rolled out in Shanghai earlier this month and plans to reach 5,000 stores by the end of this year, Chen Zilin, founder and CEO at Bingobox, told TechNode.

Data from the startup shows that the number of items at a 15 square meter BingoBox is on par with a 40 square meter convenience store, offering far lower operation costs.

Similar to bike rental service which has been troubled by bike thefts and damages, however, BingoBox’s staff-less service model may easily fall victim of the same problem. BingoBox has an RFID security system in place to ensure that everything has been paid for.

The company told local media that they have completed over 50,000 transactions without any theft or damage recorded. This could be explained by the stores’ locations in high-end areas, 24-hour video control and Chinese government’s efforts to push real-name registration for online services.

Although the sector is still gaining momentum, BingoBox is not without competitors. Chinese rival GUMP COME is expanding from vending machines to self-service convenience stores. Another automated shop, Moby Mart, has taken the concept further with a cashier-less mobile store.

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China’s consumption upgrade is creating demand for better sleep https://technode.com/2017/06/30/chinas-consumption-upgrade-is-creating-demand-for-better-sleep/ https://technode.com/2017/06/30/chinas-consumption-upgrade-is-creating-demand-for-better-sleep/#respond Fri, 30 Jun 2017 08:31:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=51033 To be successful in the tech market, or any market, being at the right place at the right time is essential. This concerns not only the startup team but also the potential customers and the market situation. There are two paths you can take on the way to find the right alignment of all these factors: […]]]>

To be successful in the tech market, or any market, being at the right place at the right time is essential. This concerns not only the startup team but also the potential customers and the market situation. There are two paths you can take on the way to find the right alignment of all these factors: sticking with one place long enough until the right time arrives, or figuring out the next place that the right time will most likely be.

WechatIMG26

Sleepace, a Shenzhen-based startup for sleep quality monitoring, chose the first path. In 2014 when TechNode first talked with company CEO and founder David Huang, the startup had just launched their medical-grade sleep tracker RestOn for people with sleep problems. This was after they had tried (failed) to target the pre-mature infant and geriatric verticals

“Sleepace have developed sleep trackers for babies and elderlies in 2013,” Huang says. “We still think they are good products, but it’s difficult to get accepted by the market back then when the customers has yet to know the concept of sleep tech.”

But what seemed almost impossible back then is now gaining momentum against the backdrop of different user habits and market landscape.

A more sleep quality aware China

38 percent of Chinese suffer from sleeping disorders, but Chinese people don’t think its a big problem until recently, but that is gradually changing.

A consumption upgrade is driving China’s economy, mainly propelled by more affluent Chinese people who are seeking healthier lifestyles, Huang told TechNode. Along with this trend, Chinese users are paying more attention to their sleep quality. The combined effect of changing customer habits, the popularity of smart hardware as well as an evolution in technology is pushing the market forward.

The huge market potential has attracted a roster of big names to the sector, Huang noted. Samsung has invested in EarlySense, whose contact-free monitoring solution powers Sumsung’s SleepSense. Apple bought Beddit and Nokia acquired health and fitness focused gadget maker Withings.

Apart from internet giants, traditional mattress makers, like Simmons are also laying out in the sector with launch of mattresses with sleep monitoring features. Sleeping quality service is forming a trillion RMB market in China, according to Huang.

Varied product line for diversified user groups

“People from different ages and gender groups may attribute their sleeping problems to different factors. Everything from environmental, physical or physiological factors may lead to sleeping disorders to different extents. So we decided to go in different verticals again in a bid to solve sleeping problems more specifically,” Huang explained.

Over years of development, Sleepace has diversified its product line. Its consumer-focused products now fall into two categories. Sleep monitoring and tracking products include RestOn, Sleep Dot, a mini smart sleep gadget, and smart pillow.

The sleep facilitation category mainly consists of Nox, a smart light/speaker that helps users to fall asleep by using its light and sound programs. In addition to app control, you can control various functions of this device by using hand gestures. Nox now offers different versions for kids and women offering custom contents from the Sleepace as well as content partner Ximalaya, an audio streaming service.

Enterprise-facing businesses offer bedding solutions for hotels and nursery homes.

屏幕快照 2017-06-30 下午1.00.28

Sleepace’s smart devices are now on sale in over 30 countries. “We have registered over 1 million users from around the world. In 2016, around 60 percent came from China and 40 percent from North America and Europe. This year the market share is expected to be half and half,” Huang told us. “Most of our Chinese users are people aged between 30 to 50, while overseas customers tend to be older.”

The company is expected to record profits this year, mainly from sales of hardware, Huang disclosed.

Ensuring long-term engagement

Smart hardware, particularly fitness wearables, fail to keep the interest of users for more than a few months. Huang acknowledged that Sleepace is facing the same problem.

“Unless it’s computer or smartphone, every product will face this problem. We try to attract and keep users by providing premium content and services, including courses on meditation, yoga, and more.” said Huang.

Sleepace just received RMB 50 million (~$7.37 million) Series B Plus led by Xingwang Investment and followed by Ximalaya FM. The financing comes after an RMB 40 million Series B from Luolai Home Textile, a leading home textile product brand in China, and JD.com

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VR evolves as VIVE X graduates focus on physical sensation https://technode.com/2017/06/28/vive-x-graduates-tapping-physical-sensation-to-bring-vr-immersiveness-to-next-level/ https://technode.com/2017/06/28/vive-x-graduates-tapping-physical-sensation-to-bring-vr-immersiveness-to-next-level/#respond Wed, 28 Jun 2017 03:32:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50807 VIVE X, HTC VIVE’s $100 million global VR/AR accelerator program, saw its latest batch graduate on Monday. 33 startups coming from VR/AR hardware, entertainment, services, as well as enterprise solutions and tools pitched their products to an auditorium full of investors, entrepreneurs, and media. Immersiveness, or the perception of being physically in a virtual world, […]]]>

VIVE X, HTC VIVE’s $100 million global VR/AR accelerator program, saw its latest batch graduate on Monday. 33 startups coming from VR/AR hardware, entertainment, services, as well as enterprise solutions and tools pitched their products to an auditorium full of investors, entrepreneurs, and media.

Immersiveness, or the perception of being physically in a virtual world, means everything for a complete VR/AR experience. Until now, that immersive feeling was largely achieved through the eyes and ears. But is that enough to quench the users’ desires for a more realistic virtual experience? The answer from VIVE X graduates is “no.”

From the latest Batch 2, we saw a number of startups who are trying to add more sensations to VR/AR experiences.

TEGway

TEGway, an affiliate of ThermoReal, is a developer of high performance flexible thermoelectric devices (F-TED). With the F-TED technology, the startup’s “ThermoReal” solution allows players to feel temperature and pain. Along with changes of the scene, users can feel instant heat or cold, gradual changes in temperature or the movement of the heat and cold.

“This solution can be integrated easily to all kinds of devices: joysticks, controllers or gamepads and ultimately to haptic gloves or a VR suits in the future,” CEO Kevin Yi told TechNode.

Currently, the firm has built up four prototype products and is looking to apply the technology in more diversified areas, including education, healthcare, and automobile.

Thermo
You can feel temperature changes through a stick attached to the phone.

bHaptics

bHaptics offers users haptic feedback. Players are more immersed and focused into VR with haptic devices for the forearm, forehead, chest, and back. The accompanying haptic editing software makes the devices fully programmable. Developers can conveniently add appropriate haptic feedback to various contents.

IMG_1835

Aurora AR

Even for the visual experience, we can expect something better. Aurora AR designs super large field of view (FOV) with a range of 110 to 135 degrees and augmented reality glass optics. The company has designed products ranging from compact lifestyle glasses integrated with inside out tracking to 110-degree AR glasses. With Aurora’s product, the AR glasses could be used in both indoor and outdoor or even in bright sunlight.

The company is still under prototyping and the product will be available for integration into mass produced AR glasses in September 2017.

Diminishing hunger for new realities

After quick development in 2016, VCs’ appetite for virtual and augmented reality startups diminished gradually. As 2017 Q1 marks the lowest quarterly number of financings and investment total in over a year, industry insiders have raised concerns about the prospect of this industry. But Alvin Wang Graylin, China President of VIVE, believes the market is still robust.

“It’s true that we have witnessed a sharp YoY drop in total capital injected to VR/AR startups. But most of us overlooked the fact that a single financing case of Magic Leap takes an overwhelming proportion of the total funding raised. The funding size of Q1 2017 will be on par with the one a year earlier if we exclude Magic Leap’s deal,” he commented, adding that the hefty financing from Unity and Improbable, which were sealed in Q2 this year, is pushing the investment upward.

Alvin is also expecting the emergence of AAA VR games that could further fuel the development of this market. “There are at least four AAA-type VR games slated for the second half of this year,” he said. “In addition, Steven Spielberg is planning to launch his latest film Ready Player One. The blockbuster movie will show billions of people what VR is when it comes out one year later.”

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Alipay integrates Airbnb to help young travelers save up for dream holiday https://technode.com/2017/06/27/airbnb-buddies-up-with-alipay-to-smartize-saving-plan-for-your-vocations/ https://technode.com/2017/06/27/airbnb-buddies-up-with-alipay-to-smartize-saving-plan-for-your-vocations/#respond Tue, 27 Jun 2017 07:19:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50791 After announcing a Chinese name and appointing its China head earlier this year, Airbnb is moving one step further in its foray to explore the Chinese market. The US homestay giant, together with its Chinese partner Alipay, announced today Travel Deposit (旅行储蓄), a financial feature that will help China’s young travelers to save for their dream vacation. Research […]]]>

After announcing a Chinese name and appointing its China head earlier this year, Airbnb is moving one step further in its foray to explore the Chinese market. The US homestay giant, together with its Chinese partner Alipay, announced today Travel Deposit (旅行储蓄), a financial feature that will help China’s young travelers to save for their dream vacation.

Research conducted by Airbnb shows that spending on vacations accounts for a significant part of spending for China’s millennials. Upon a windfall gain, over 40% of the interviewees choose to spend it on traveling over investing in fixed assets. However, the key to any trip is being smart with your money – and that starts even before you hit the road.

After setting your destination, duration, and date of travel as well as the number of travelers on Alipay, the system will show the sum you have to save per day. It will also transfer the sum to Alipay’s mutual fund Yuebao automatically. Users can also share their travel plans through social networks like WeChat or Weibo.

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Airbnb travel planning and saving through the Alipay app

Airbnb’s partnership with Alipay dates almost three years ago when the tool was first supported as a means of payment on the platform in 2014. The tie-up not only fueled Alipay’s expansion to the US market, but also helped Airbnb to entice Chinese travelers, who are becoming a leading group in the tourism market.

The launch of travel fund feature is a convenient addition to Alipay’s financial product lineup. Since the swiping success of mutual fund Yuebao, Alipay has rolled out a series of similar online financial services for different verticals, such as Yulebao, a fan-driven fund that allows users to invest in movies.

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US firm says ofo leading bike rental race in China https://technode.com/2017/06/27/us-firm-says-ofo-leading-bike-rental-race-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/06/27/us-firm-says-ofo-leading-bike-rental-race-in-china/#respond Tue, 27 Jun 2017 02:20:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50679 The public spat between Tencent’s CEO Pony Ma and GSR Ventures managing director Zhu Xiaohu over who is the most popular bike rental platform has added fuel to China’s already heated bike rental industry. The discussions between investment moguls make it difficult for onlookers to dig up into the correct figures in the burgeoning market. Even […]]]>

The public spat between Tencent’s CEO Pony Ma and GSR Ventures managing director Zhu Xiaohu over who is the most popular bike rental platform has added fuel to China’s already heated bike rental industry. The discussions between investment moguls make it difficult for onlookers to dig up into the correct figures in the burgeoning market. Even the companies themselves found this a challenging task.

7Park Data, a research firm based in New York, recently released its observation together with insights on China’s bike rental market. According to 7Park Data, ofo is leading the race with a 65% market share.

Modern bicycle sharing systems are effective and convenient in solving the “last kilometer” problem in urban China, which has witnessed a decade-long recession of bicycles as a means of transportation due to the popularity of private cars. The bike rental boom is reigniting users’ passions for bicycles while both companies claim to operate an average of 20 million daily rides. The report pointed out that riders are spending an average of around one hour on both ofo and Mobike as of May 2017 – up from an average of 25 minutes earlier this year.

ofo-mobike-b
Image credit: 7Park Data

Ofo is growing at a breakneck speed of 386% in weekly active users from Q4 2016 to Q1 2017, whereas Mobike is growing at a slower but still impressive 180% over the same period of time, the report shows.

Shanghai leads the world with 450,000 shared bicycles, nearly all of which began operating in 2016. Ofo and Mobike have each signed manufacturing deals in a battle for market share (reminiscent of the driver supply turf war between Uber and Didi Chuxing). Ofo owns a majority share in eight of China’s 14 Tier 1 provinces and municipalities with Mobike leading in the remaining six.

ofo-mobike-a
ofo/ Mobile market share in tier-one provinces (Image credit: 7Park Data)

Prospects outside of China

In addition to the local market, 
both companies have begun to expand outside of China. Ofo began operating its service in Singapore in early 2017 as the first Chinese bike rental company to operate overseas in a bid to scale. The Beijing-based startup is now operating in five countries. In a similar initiative, Mobike is also tapping overseas markets in Singapore, UK and more recently Japan.

Localizing products for new markets is the most important thing to get right and bike rental is no exception.

“The dynamics which support the growth of bicycle [rental] are unique in different markets. The success of expansion into other markets will be in part based on these factors – including population density (i.e., high capacity utilization and high availability), economic factors, conducive environments for safe biking (i.e., physical layouts, base rates of crime, etc.), and state/government regulations that do not hinder growth,” 7Park Data’s director of insights, Brian Chaitoff, told TechNode.  “As with ridesharing, access to capital for new entrants is critical to help foster and support growth in new markets.”

One closure, one acquisition

Although the two incumbents are still under the pressure to offer free rides in order to maintain market share, there are some early signs of market consolidation in the sector. Chongqing-based bike rental startup Wukong Bike announced that it is shuttering earlier this month. Shortly afterward, people with knowledge of the matter disclosed that Mobike has recently completed the acquisition of smaller player Unibike.

“As in ridesharing, we expect markets in the long-term to be winner-take-all. This is due, in part, to the benefits realized by riders by having one winner, such as greater access to bikes,” said Brain.

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China’s bike rental consolidation begins with reported Mobike acquisition of Unibike https://technode.com/2017/06/23/chinas-bike-rental-consolidation-begins-with-reported-mobike-acquisition-of-unibike/ https://technode.com/2017/06/23/chinas-bike-rental-consolidation-begins-with-reported-mobike-acquisition-of-unibike/#respond Fri, 23 Jun 2017 03:43:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50644 Tencent Tech (in Chinese) is reporting that China’s top bike rental startup Mobike has recently completed the acquisition of smaller player Unibike, citing people familiar with the matter. The source didn’t specify the sum for this acquisition but pointed out that Mobike is also an investor in their RMB 100 million (around US$ 14.6 million) Series A. “The […]]]>

Tencent Tech (in Chinese) is reporting that China’s top bike rental startup Mobike has recently completed the acquisition of smaller player Unibike, citing people familiar with the matter. The source didn’t specify the sum for this acquisition but pointed out that Mobike is also an investor in their RMB 100 million (around US$ 14.6 million) Series A.

“The report is not accurate. Mobike focuses on continuously improving the user experience, enhancing the competitiveness of core technologies and accelerating the pace of expansion at home and abroad,” said a spokesperson for the company. They did not, however, go into detail about the inaccuracies.

In October 2016, Mobike invested RMB 5 million in UniBike. After that, Unibike started to operate as an affiliated brand for Mobike on China’s university campuses.

If true, this could be a major move for Mobike in their battle against ofo. UniBike resembles ofo in several ways with its original focus on campus market and offering deposit-free services. The source disclosed that Mobike is planning to move to the lower end market with the acquisition of UniBike, noting great opportunities for synergy.

In addition to the tightening battle between the two largest companies in the vertical, the deal is significant because it would mark the first major acquisition in China’s burgeoning bike rental industry.

China’s heated bike rental war leaves little chance for smaller players to survive when facing the companies like ofo and Mobike. The UniBike acquisition comes just a few days after the sector witnessed its first casualty at the beginning of this week: Chongqing-based bike rental startup Wukong Bike announced that it is shuttering just last week.

Despite the unclear answers from the company, we can bet on one thing: After the explosion in the market, China’s bike rental industry is moving fast towards the consolidation phase. Even if UniBike’s acquisition news isn’t true, it won’t take us long to record the first acquisition or dozens that are definitely going to follow.

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Chinese Tinder-like Tantan soon to monetize after raising USD70M Series D https://technode.com/2017/06/21/chinese-tinder-like-tantan-soon-to-monetize-after-raising-usd70m-series-d/ https://technode.com/2017/06/21/chinese-tinder-like-tantan-soon-to-monetize-after-raising-usd70m-series-d/#respond Wed, 21 Jun 2017 08:02:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50563 From WeChat to Momo, China’s social networking craze is non-stop. Tantan, the country’s top dating app, announced today that it has raised a US$ 70 million worth in a Series D, raising the startup’s total fund raised to US$ 120 million. NASDAQ-listed online social entertainment firm YY Inc and Genesis Capital lead the round with […]]]>

From WeChat to Momo, China’s social networking craze is non-stop. Tantan, the country’s top dating app, announced today that it has raised a US$ 70 million worth in a Series D, raising the startup’s total fund raised to US$ 120 million. NASDAQ-listed online social entertainment firm YY Inc and Genesis Capital lead the round with participation from SAIF and Zhongwei Capital.

Founded in 2014, Tantan is a location-based social search mobile app that facilitates communication between mutually interested users. The Chinese app almost identical to Tinder, down to its UI which lets users swipe left and right for potential matches.

Wang Yu, CEO of the Tinder-like app, stated that the company will keep polishing the product for better user experience, and hopefully release VIP membership service in Q3 of this year. Offering free services previously, this will be the first time for Tantan to try out commercialization efforts. The app chooses to monetize through membership. In contrast, Tinder’s commercialization effort mainly takes the form of a paid version in Tinder Plus.

Wang also revealed that Tantan will explore artificial intelligence technology and expand to new markets in the future in an attempt to enable more accurate and personalized social experience.

Rumors about this funding have been swirling for at least a week. Speculations around a possible IPO were widely talked by local media. The current announcement made the news official, but the firm keeps a moderate tone on its IPO plan.

“We do not have a specific timetable for IPO. Going public or not is largely determined by the development stage of our core businesses. Currently, we will put our primary focus on user growth. When you have tens of millions daily active users, IPO would become a natural step,”  a spokesperson told TechNode.

Investment from YY, an pioneer in China’s live streaming boom, also raises speculation about whether Tantan is going to integrate live streaming services to its swipe-based dating business. After all, Momo has already shown that this works with the LBS dating app gaining momentum with a flourishing live-streaming service.

However, it seems that live-streaming is not an option for Tantan now. “We do not have plans to integrate live-streaming features in the near future, our foremost task now still centers around social networking business,” the spokesperson said.

Tantan now claimes 90 million registered users. Excluding the fake and banned accounts, the number of valid users boils down to 60 million, roughly the size of the population of Italy. Among them, “post-90s” account for more than 75%. The DAUs reached 6 million and the second-day return rate is around 75%. Users have made over 3 billion matches in total, the firm disclosed.

The male/female ratio of Tantan’s users is around 6:4, which is actually more balanced than other apps with ratios of 8:2 or even 9:1. The huge gender imbalance in China has made male users a predominant group for most dating apps, who usually account for 80 percent or even 90 percent of the user base. Most users are young professionals living in first-tier and second-tier cities in China.

“Great unfulfilled needs lie in the area of social networks connecting strangers,” said Peng Zhijian, founder of Genesis Capital, “We have great confidence in the Tantan team. They have acute insights and understanding about mobile products, young people and social networking. We believe Tantan will continue with the rapid growth and bring us bigger surprises.”

Previously, Tantan raised a US$ 5 million Series A round in 2015, then completed a US$ 13 million series B round from DCM, KPCB, GX Capital and LB Investment that same year. DST Global, Vision Plus Capital and LB Investment led a US$ 32 million series C round in the app in May 2016.

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Live from TechCrunch – Highlights from the first TechCrunch Shenzhen https://technode.com/2017/06/21/live-from-techcrunch-highlights-from-the-first-techcrunch-shenzhen/ https://technode.com/2017/06/21/live-from-techcrunch-highlights-from-the-first-techcrunch-shenzhen/#respond Wed, 21 Jun 2017 01:41:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50523 Organized by TechNode and TechCrunch, TechCrunch Shenzhen marks TechCrunch’s 7th session in China. After six fantastic tech gatherings in Shanghai and Beijing, this is the first time for TechCunch Summit to make its debut in Shenzhen. Entering a brand new city is a risky step for TechNode and TechCrunch, TechNode founder Dr. Gang Lu acknowledged in […]]]>

Organized by TechNode and TechCrunch, TechCrunch Shenzhen marks TechCrunch’s 7th session in China. After six fantastic tech gatherings in Shanghai and Beijing, this is the first time for TechCunch Summit to make its debut in Shenzhen.

TCSZ-1

Entering a brand new city is a risky step for TechNode and TechCrunch, TechNode founder Dr. Gang Lu acknowledged in the opening remark, but the entrepreneurial and risk-taking spirit that has inspired millions of startups is driving us to move beyond our comfort zone.

Shenzhen is known as an innovation hub where hardware and entrepreneurs could find nearly everything here. It is also a great stepping stone for Chinese startups that want to expand overseas.

TCSZ-2

Nearly 200 startups from around the world showed off their latest products and services at the Startup Alley. Entrepreneurs lined up to meet a stack of over 70 VCs in the hope of finding financial supports that could help their dream come true. One top VC sealed an investment deal on the first day of the event.

The two-day main event welcomed over 60 top speakers from the globe with participation from more than 6000+ participants and over 170 reporters.

Allen Zhu, an investor of ofo and Xiaodian, gives his opinions on the changing markets onstage. He believes that bike rental market will be dominated by ofo and Mobike, the two largest companies in the vertical, leaving very little survival chances for smaller players. For Allen, it is meaningless to dwell on the discussion on whether it’s a rental or sharing business, the most important issue is whether the users are willing to use it or whether they can generate profit.

TCSZ-3

Execs from China’s top power bank rental startups: Tang Yongbo, founder of Xiaodian, and Yuan Yuan, founder and CEO of Ankerbox, also joined to talk the latest trends of the emerging industry. Tang Yongbo disclosed that the company is going to pull the trigger for power bank rental war.

We also brought the co-founders of ofo and Mobike, two largest players in China’s heated bike rental industry, to the same stage. Zhang Siding from ofo disclosed that the bike rental unicorn is now operating nearly 6 million bikes in 120 cities across 5 countries. Joe Xia from Mobike puts more emphasis on how to improve user experience and making bikes smarter.

Ling Kong, CTO of fintech company Dianrong, expects blockchain technology to make major breakthroughs in five years and reach maturity in ten years. Zhang Wei, CTO of selfie app Meitu, discussed the company’s plan in shifting from a tool to a hardware developer and its overseas expansion plans. Li Fan, deputy manager for Strategic Development Department of CITIC Group, discussed how traditional enterprises should embrace the new challenges under the backdrop of tech innovation.

Partner at NIO Capital Ian Zhu expressed bullish views on China’s new energy and internet car industry, say that these two trends might push China’s car industry to leapfrog the western world.

Lots of excellent entrepreneurs shared their minds on the Side Stage, including the founder of FaceOS Technology, head of Huawei NBIoT Department, founder ling.AI Technology as well as execs from Iapppay, Microsoft, QingCloud, and UCloud.

TCSZ-4

In case you missed the event, here are all the highlights. Last but not the least, we want to express our sincere appreciation to all the sponsors and partners for their special efforts.

Let’s meet again at TechCrunch Shanghai this November!

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Slamtec to build a cerebellum for smart robots https://technode.com/2017/06/20/slamtec-to-built-the-cerebellum-for-smart-robots/ https://technode.com/2017/06/20/slamtec-to-built-the-cerebellum-for-smart-robots/#respond Tue, 20 Jun 2017 09:24:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50334 The brain is such complex organ that we are not even close to fully understanding how it works and regulates the rest of the body. Current AI development is focused on perhaps the easiest of brain functions: learning, communication, memory, and sensing. However, the study of the role of the cerebellum, the part of your brain […]]]>

The brain is such complex organ that we are not even close to fully understanding how it works and regulates the rest of the body. Current AI development is focused on perhaps the easiest of brain functions: learning, communication, memory, and sensing.

However, the study of the role of the cerebellum, the part of your brain that controls and regulates voluntary movement, has yet to attract its due attention from the market, according to Lin Ling, chief strategy officer of Slamtec.

“SLAM (simultaneous localization and mapping) is a sub-branch of AI. While AI is playing the role for cerebrum and radar for human vision, SLAM is fulfilling the task of the cerebellum, enabling robots to move fluidly, stay balanced, and be proprioceptive,” he said.

Born out of maker group RoboPeak, Slamtec was bootstrapped by a group of passionate engineers who first built the project as a pastime.

“Back in 2009 when RoboPeak was established, the cost for laser radar models is too high for maker teams like us,” said Lin.

By tolerating some margin of error, the team managed to lower the cost of their RPLIDAR system greatly. With a ready-to-go prototype and market potential, RoboPeak team founded Slamtec in 2013, ready to turn their passion into a business.

Slamtec, as its name suggests, is a startup focused on providing affordable and all-in-one robot autonomous localization and navigation solutions. In addition to low-cost RPLIDAR, the company is gradually shifting its focus to SLAM solution based on LIDAR technology and Zeus robot platform.

“RPLIDAR is just a start point for our vision in solving the mobility problem of robots. In real application scenario, we would face more complicated situations. As the robots move around, the surrounding environment also changes. That’s why we moves to SLAM, an algorithm that enables a robot to map an unknown environment while at the same time tracking its location,” Lin added.

The company’s SLAMWARE is a highly integrated modular autonomous robot localization and navigation solution with SLAM technology based on RPLIDAR and the matched path planning capability.

SLAMTEC zeus
Slamtec shows Zeus at CES 2017

Robot vacuum cleaners are, so far, the most popular robot appliance. However, Slamtec is exploring areas outside vacuum cleaners as well.

“One of the reasons for the rise of robot vacuum cleaners as a consumer electronics is that it is something people are accustomed to and can use in their daily lives. Adoption of new technologies goes through the same path from enterprise- to customer-facing services,” according to Lin. He points out that robots may find their first enterprise boom in security and finance.

Slamtec’s general purpose robot platform Zeus is built to tap this trend. With a built-in enhanced SLAMWARE autonomous localization and navigation system, Zeus can work with different over-the-top applications for mobile advertising, video meeting, accompanying and package delivery.

Along with the AI boom, the robotic industry is gaining momentum in China and around the world. “But the market is rising at a speed slower than we expected,” said Lin. “As one of the earliest Chinese teams in this arena, we expect 2017 and 2018 to record the real boom of this sector.”

Over the past four years, Slamtec has grown from five founding members to a team with over 90 staffs, looking to raise B round financing later this year.

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Live from TechCrunch – China’s biggest selfie app wants to prevent skin diseases https://technode.com/2017/06/20/live-from-techcrunch-chinas-biggest-selfie-app-wants-to-prevent-skin-diseases/ https://technode.com/2017/06/20/live-from-techcrunch-chinas-biggest-selfie-app-wants-to-prevent-skin-diseases/#respond Tue, 20 Jun 2017 08:21:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50482 Meitu, the Chinese beautifying filter app that turned to an overnight hit in the West earlier this year, is giving selfie addicts a more valid reason to continue their obsessions. Enabled by AI technology, Meitu’s selfie apps are expected to give advices not only on quality of makeup application, but also skin condition and potential diseases, said […]]]>

Meitu, the Chinese beautifying filter app that turned to an overnight hit in the West earlier this year, is giving selfie addicts a more valid reason to continue their obsessions.

Enabled by AI technology, Meitu’s selfie apps are expected to give advices not only on quality of makeup application, but also skin condition and potential diseases, said Zhang Wei, CTO of the Xiamen-based company, at TechCrunch Shenzhen today.

“There’s already dermatological diagnosis hardware on the market, but we believe a good hardware should adopt to user behaviors rather than change them. Most existing dermatological devices takes the form of a hardware accessory,” he said. “They might be good products, but it is difficult to keep users. On the other hand, selfie diagnosis allows users to have two tasks done at the same time.”

While Meitu is only a filter tool, Zhang disclosed that the company has plans to integrate social featuintos in their services, but he didn’t specify which form their product is going to take.

Although a majority of Meitu’s users are still in the mainland, the company is gradually spearheading its foray to the global market. In addition to the Western market, the firm has already established their presence in Japanese, South Korean and Southeast Asia markets.

“Expansion into Asia countries is relatively easier thanks to the similarity in our cultures. In general, Asia users have an obsession with white skin, but there are tiny differences in their preferences, which need us to fine-tune the products. For example, Japanese girls like Geisha white, while Chinese girls prefer the rosy white,” said Zhang.

In addition to Meitu, lots of startups are tapping on the photo editing market. Zhang believes going to vertical sectors might be their possibilities.

“Although internet giants like Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent have put out feelers in virtually every tech vertical, they can’t be fully dedicated to each and every of them. Pony Ma would have most of its time for WeChat and QQ, while the rest of the business would only claim 10 to 20% of his or the team’s attention,” he said. “Likewise, newcomers still have opportunities in smaller sectors with advantages of their full dedication. Meitu might be a top player in China’s photo-editing market, but startup groups would find their opportunity in smaller verticals like retina.”

Meitu is the operator of a range of photo-editing apps like MeituPic, MakeUp and stream app Meipai, and Meitu smartphone. Claiming over 456 million users per month, the firm got listed at the end of last year for the largest tech IPO for nearly a decade in Hong Kong stock market.

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Live from TechCrunch – China’s companies forced to move faster to stay ahead https://technode.com/2017/06/19/live-from-techcrunch-chinas-companies-forced-to-move-faster-moving-faster-to-stay-ahead/ https://technode.com/2017/06/19/live-from-techcrunch-chinas-companies-forced-to-move-faster-moving-faster-to-stay-ahead/#respond Mon, 19 Jun 2017 08:02:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50409 With the rise of mass innovation in China, money is flooding into startups, especially those in the latest emerging verticals. Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun puts it more colorfully: “Even a pig can fly if it is in the middle of a whirlwind.” Despite the sector-wise differences, history is repeating itself in China’s internet industry. Nearly […]]]>

With the rise of mass innovation in China, money is flooding into startups, especially those in the latest emerging verticals. Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun puts it more colorfully: “Even a pig can fly if it is in the middle of a whirlwind.”

Despite the sector-wise differences, history is repeating itself in China’s internet industry. Nearly every whirlwind sector is going through a similar path. A certain hot industry attracts a swarm of startups, then a large amount of capital dives in to fuel the extravagant cash burning war for players to snap larger market share. Finally, the battle ends in a merger between the industry leaders, like the case in Didi and Uber China.

But at least one thing is different now: the speed at which the entrepreneurs and investors are reacting to the rise of a new vertical. From the first boom of taxi-booking service in early 2013 to the final merger between Didi and Uber in late 2016, it takes around three years for Didi to establish its sole dominator position in China’s ride-hailing market.

For the bike rental boom, it takes only two years for the industry to witness the creation of its first unicorn. For the on-going rise of power bank rental industry, things are going even crazier. In less than 2 weeks earlier this April, a combined RMB 300 million (US$ 43 million) financing from over 20 investment institutions was thrown into the industry.

“The fast rise of ride-hailing and bike rental industry is taking the country in a big way. Even internet behemoth like BAT are afraid of losing market share in the latest emerging industries,” said Yuan Yuan, CEO of Ankerbox, at TechCrunch Shenzhen today. Ankerbox recently sold a 60% stake to Chinese online retailer Jumei for RMB 300 million.

Yuanyuan
Yuan Yuan, CEO of Ankerbox

The fast reaction from capital is pushing companies into the whirlwind even faster.

“As an entrepreneur, we are feeling the cut-throat competition in this industry. The capital is shortening the industry growth cycle from a few years to one year or even less. Take Xiaodian for example, we are now operating in 33 cities around the country, but if you asking me about this figure next month, it’s probably over 140,” said Tang Yongbo, CEO and founder of Tencent-backed Xiaodian which landed a combined RMB 450 million funds this year.

Tang Yongbo
Tang Yongbo, CEO and founder of Xiaodian

With so much capital flowing in, we have to wonder if the cash burning battle is imminent for power bank rental? The answers from founders of Xiaodian and Ankerbox, China’s top two power bank rental startups, varied, but they echoed in that subsidy-driven strategies is just means for customer education.

“Price war is just a means to educate the customers for them to adopt to the new kind service more quickly”, said Mr. Yuan. “When I was working for Taopiaopiao back in 2015, China’s online sales of movie tickets account for only 20% of the total box offices in China. After the subsidy war, over 80 percent of the tickets were sold through online channels now.”

Yuan further emphasized that the core problem would be how to enhance the user experience in terms of service accessibility, security, and more. “Subsidy is just a method, not the final goal.”

Tang shared Yuan’s opinion but adds more details. “From June 20, Xiaodian will partner with WeChat Pay and mini app to launch pilot testing power bank rental service which a fee of 1 fen (USD 0.014) from users. Through aggressive marketing plans, we want to have more users to know and try out this service.”

Xiaodian and Ankerbox represents two of the mainstream power bank rental service models in China. Xiaodian features fixed charging stations, which are placed in public places including restaurants, billiard rooms, KTVs, and subways. On the other hand, AnkerBox allows users to rent portable power banks which users can take with them and return to other power stations.

“Different models have their own advantages and would find their most suitable application under different scenarios. Still, I think the core problem still lies in the user experience issues I talked about earlier,” said Yuan.

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The ultimate guide to TechCrunch Shenzhen (and some free tickets) https://technode.com/2017/06/16/the-ultimate-guide-to-techcrunch-shenzhen-and-some-free-tickets/ https://technode.com/2017/06/16/the-ultimate-guide-to-techcrunch-shenzhen-and-some-free-tickets/#respond Fri, 16 Jun 2017 12:01:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50254 TechCrunch Shenzhen is upon us, starting in less than 24 hours from June 17 to June 20. In case you’ve missed the highlights, we present to you the ultimate guide to TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017. TechCrunch Shenzhen is going to bring: Main Stage (nearly 50 opinion leaders in tech industry) Two-day Startup Alley (around 200 innovative startups […]]]>

TechCrunch Shenzhen is upon us, starting in less than 24 hours from June 17 to June 20. In case you’ve missed the highlights, we present to you the ultimate guide to TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017.

TechCrunch Shenzhen is going to bring:

  • Main Stage (nearly 50 opinion leaders in tech industry)
  • Two-day Startup Alley (around 200 innovative startups from the world)
  • Two side stages (End Intelligent Sub Forum & Enterprise Service Forum)
  • Four side sessions (TechCrunch & TechNode Media Day, Startup Grind Shenzhen, Shenzhen Innovation Tour, TechCrunch x SVV x Indiegogo Hardware Demo)
  • VC Meetup (70+ VCs)
  • Press conference (Launch of 12+ new products)
  • Hackathon (Over 100 teams for June 17-18)
  • After Party

The New Beginning

Shenzhen is becoming the new starting point for China technology innovations. In addition to our time-honored sessions like Hackathon, mains stage talks, VC Meetup and Startup Alley, TechCrunch China/TechNode is going to add another layer to the definition of technology. Through a partnership with China (Shenzhen) International Fashion Tech Week, we are bringing a cross-industry gala for our audiences.

Click here for your free tickets!

June 17 to June 20

I-Factory, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

We are waiting for you to start a new journey!

Schedule

  • June 17-18 — Hackathon
  • June 19-20 — Main Stage, VC Meetup, Startup Alley, Side Stages, After Party
  • June 17-21 — Side Events

Hackathon

Hackathon

Hackathon (June 17-18) has always been one of the most popular parts of TechCrunch Summit. It’s a nonstop carnival for those that live and breathe code. 24 hours of intense hacking, accompanied by a fantastic chance to present your ideas to a panel of great judges. We welcome anyone who’s passionate about tech to join, no matter if you are a developer, designer or student.

Day 1

H-1
Day 2

H-2

Tasks

Challenge 1: Blockchain and bike rentals (Dianrong and Mobike)

Blockchain technology, with its distributed cloud storage and unbreakable smart contracts, could be the future! Dianrong’s blockchain lab has developed a Blockchain as a Service platform (BaaS). Together with Mobike, the leader in bike-sharing economy, we invite you to explore applications of blockchain technology in the sharing economy.

Dianrong’s BaaS (Blockchain as a service) will open their management server and BaaS Java SDK. A sample application of blockchain technology in car rental payment clearance will also be provided for reference. Additional tools and APIs that Mobike is going to offer include user binding, unlocking, riding status, order detail and account info.

Rewards: The winning group will walk away with 2 Apple Watches and 2 128G iPads. Each participating team will get a hoodie or t-shirt.

Challenge 2: E-commerce (Meet Magento Association)

Magento is an open-source e-commerce solution that can be integrated into third-party applications

Participating teams could choose from two challenges:

  1. Magneto 2 social media integrations

  2. Magneto 2 integrations with e-commerce

Teach Magento 2 E-Commerce Platform to work with Marketplaces, Example Alibaba

Rewards:

1st Place:

  • Listing and promotion as official Magento contributor on all channels
  • Conference tickets for Meet Magento Shenzhen 2017
  • Conference tickets for Meet Magento Germany 2018 (incl. Hotel Accommodation) or conference tickets for Magento Live Australia 2018 (worth each $500)
  • 1 Apple Watch

2nd Place:

  • Listing and promotion as official Magento contributor on all channels
  • Conference tickets for Meet Magento Shenzhen 2017

3rd Place:

  • Conference tickets for Meet Magento Shenzhen 2017

Challenge 3: Robots Loom Task

Designed by the Segway robotic team, Loomo is a programmable, movable, expandable and brand-new universal robot based on Android. Its developer edition was made to establish a comprehensive, stable and convenient robotic developer studio.

The developer edition of Loomo provides developers with software development kits and hardware expansion slots. Developers can develop creative and practical applications by freely invoking Loomo’s vision, navigation, voice, connection, interaction and hardware expansion functional modules.

Rewards: The first prize: champion will gain RMB 3000 and Ninebot One C+*1.  Every task participants will get a T-shirt designed by Hack Marathon of Robot Loomo. The publicity of Loomo’s first batch of alpha test members.

Main Stage

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Main Stage Conference (June 19-20) will include the top entrepreneurs and investors from home and abroad to share their insights on the industry. Top-notch speakers from BGI, Meitu, Mobike, ofo, NextEV and Huami will share their insights on the market. China head of Airbnb will join us for his first public speech after taking the post.

June 19

IMG_1221

June 20

IMG_1223

Click here for more details of the talks.

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VC Meetup

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VC Meetup has become a signature part of TechCrunch Summits since its launch in 2015. Over the last two years, our VC Meetup has created opportunities for over 150 venture capital funds and over 1000 startups to exchange ideas. TechCrunch China/TechNode will bring over 70 VC partners to Shenzhen this year. Over 800 entrepreneurs will be here to present their products.

June 19 13:30 to 17:00

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June 20 13:30 to 17:00

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Startup Alley

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Startup Alley will invite more than 200 startups from around the world to show off their latest products and services. Startups from Singapore, Japan, Israel, Australia, the US, UK, and Germany will be showcasing their latest products. For this year, we will also have special exhibition zones for the trendy tech verticals from AI, hardware & IOT, mobile transportation to VR/AR.

Product Launch

With participants from home and abroad, TechCrunch Shenzhen is the place where you can claim attentions of partners and users from the world.

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Side Stages

End Intelligent Sub Forum

With the development trend of artificial intelligence industry, edge calculating and intelligent front-end have appeared. According to the use of public security, finance, automatic drive and robot, developing varied front end smart product will be a popular trend.

Morning of June 20

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Enterprise Service: How to succeed with custom services

Although 2C service has been the mainstream branch of TMT industry, 2B or enterprise-faced businesses are gaining momentum since 2015. At this dedicated stage for enterprise services, we invited execs from head 2B companies to share their ideas on the trends of this sector.

Evening of June 20

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TechCrunch After Party

TechCrunch is going to bring an amazing After Party to close the two-day event in style. Here, investors and entrepreneurs could have opportunities to communicate at a more relaxed and comfortable atmosphere.

Time: June 20 night

Location: I-Factory, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

TechCrunch Side Events (June 17 to 21)

TechCrunch & TechNode Media Day

The purpose of TechCrunch & TechNode Media Day is to serve for start-ups, provide them a valuable opportunity to communicate with top-class tech-media. This time, not only the TechNode journalists will attend this Media day but also the journalists from TechCrunch come to feel the passion of the startups in China. This is also the first Media Day of TechCrunch in China.

Time: 17, June 15:00-17:00

Location: RocketSpace, Inc. (China), 38th Floor, Shenzhen Bay VC & PE Tower

Reserve you place at the event by connecting Helenzhangyilun@hotmail.com

Shenzhen Innovation Tour

It’s very hard to see the places where innovation actually happens. The interesting work takes place in labs behind locked doors and in conference rooms that require clearance to enter. On June 21st, TechCrunch China and TechNode Innovation Tour will offer you a chance to find out the leading innovation booming in Shenzhen.

TimeJun 21, 09: 00-21: 00

LocationShenzhen

For more detail, please contact Will: raogengming@technode.com

Startup Grind Hosts Discussing Global Connectivity for Startups

The joint efforts of Startup Grind Shenzhen, TechCrunch China and TechNode will bring you an exclusive interview with Allen Chou, CMO of RocketSpace China on how to build a global ecosystem in China.

Time: June 17, 18:00

Location: RocketSpace, Inc. (China), 38th Floor, Shenzhen Bay VC & PE Tower

You sign up at here.

Innovation Hardware Meet-up by TechCrunch x SVV x Indiegogo

TechCrunch, SVV and Indiegogo will work together to make a different innovation hardware salon on June, 21. Experienced entrepreneurs from hardware startups will talk about their unusual stories, share the difficulty what they crossed.In addition, the startup would have the chance to have face to face discussion with IDH, factories, VC and crowdfunding platforms.

Time: June, 21 —14:30-17:00 Innovations of Hardware, 18:00-20:00 Meetup with Indiegogo and VCs

Location: NO.5 Zowee Technology Building, Science & Technology Industrial Park of privately owned enterprises, Pingshan, Xili, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

Sign up by connecting daniel@svv.io

F-tech week
China (Shenzhen) International Fashion Tech Week

China (Shenzhen) International Fashion Tech Week In China is launched by Fashion Tech Industry Accelerator (FTIA), an acceleration program backed by Shenzhen Industrial Design Profession Association (SIDA) and The Council of Fashion Designers of Shenzhen in 2015. Based on the theme of “Meet the Future”, the event aims to reshape the new pattern of technological innovation and is dedicated to providing solutions for “fashion and technology” cross-border innovation projects.

Venue Guide

Venue Layout

FT-week layout

Ticket Benefits

T-benefit

Onsite Interactions

Please follow the official WeChat account of TechNode or TechCrunch China for more onsite interactions including Wifi password, Q&A with speakers, event info and lucky draw.

Tips

Registration: 8:00AM -9:30AM

Registration Channels: Media/Student, Visitors (Two Channels), Main Stage Tickets (Two Channels), Speakers, VIP Guest

Participants must register online beforehand. QR code, or registered phone number or email can be used for admittance. Those who failed to register online could register on-site.

Attendees with media or student pass please bring your business card or student ID card.

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Transportation:

Location: I-Factory, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

Metro: Line 2, Shekougang Station, Exit D1, transfer to Bus Line 204 for I-Factory

Bus: Line 70, Line 204, Line m400, Line N1

Drive: Xingye Street to Haiwan Rd, go straight ahead to the Event Parkinglot.

Shuttle Bus: We provide shuttle bus at Exit D1 of Shekougang Station. The bus will leave every 15 minutes from 8:30 to 18:30
If you have other questions, you can contact us for:
Partnership & Media: media@technode.com
Sponsor: BD@technode.com
Events: event@technode.com
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Chinese e-commerce companies resort to quirky shopping festivals to reinvigorate retail https://technode.com/2017/06/15/jd-618-singles-day-weird-festivals/ https://technode.com/2017/06/15/jd-618-singles-day-weird-festivals/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2017 07:01:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50119 China’s e-commerce boom over the past decade is gradually turning the Middle Kingdom into a country filled with people who identified themselves as “hand-choppers”. The term may sound coming from some thriller movie but relax, it just refers to online shopping addicts who promise to chop off a hand if they continue to buy things […]]]>

China’s e-commerce boom over the past decade is gradually turning the Middle Kingdom into a country filled with people who identified themselves as “hand-choppers”. The term may sound coming from some thriller movie but relax, it just refers to online shopping addicts who promise to chop off a hand if they continue to buy things they don’t need.

Hand-choppers may laugh self-deprecatingly, but the underlying change in consumption habits in China is by no means that easy.

Singles’ Day: Where everything starts

Singles’ Day (光棍节) should actually be called “Double 11” (双十一) because that’s how Chinese people refer to the shopping festival. While couples celebrate and shop for each other on Valentine’s Day, the bachelors/bachelorettes liven up their lonely lives with shopping sprees on their own day.

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba first kicked off the festival ten years ago on its marketplace Taobao and then on Tmall. Since then, the event has evolved into a national consumption festival, smashing historical records year to year.

In 2016, retailers on Alibaba’s platforms recorded RMB 120.7 billion (around US$ 17.8 billion) worth of gross merchandise volume (GMV) in the 24-hour shopping festival, up 32% from US$ 14.3 billion one year earlier. These figures easily eclipsed the US$ 2.74 billion generated online during the Black Friday sales in the U.S. last year.

Although Alibaba launched Singles’ Day, the Chinese e-commerce juggernaut is far from being the single power behind the shopping festival culture in China. Every e-commerce platform in the country has joined in to take a piece of the pie.

11.11-iimedia
Market share of different platforms during Double 11 2016 (Image credit: iiMedia)

In last year’s Singles’ Day, Alibaba’s retail marketplaces of Taobao and Tmall still accounted for 71.2 % percent of the country’s total sales, RMB 169.54 billion, according to a report from research institute iiMedia.

Alibaba’s top rival JD took 19.6%, while other e-commerce competitors Suning.com, Yihaodian and Vipshop taking smaller shares with single digits.

So important to its business, Alibaba even went so far as to trademark a number of related terms in 2014, including including 双十一 (double-eleven), 双十一狂欢节 (double-eleven carnival), and 双十一网购狂欢节 (double-eleven online shopping carnival), raising concerns that the company would use its ownership of the term to claim ownership of the holiday. However, this now seems more a defensive move as the company has not enforced its rights to these terms.

From monopoly to oligarchy

As China’s e-commerce platforms are jumping on the Singles Day bandwagon, more companies are trying to replicate this success by creating shopping festivals of their own.

Different from Singles Day, with its quirky, organic origin, most of the upcoming festivals are created as anniversary celebrations: JD’s 618 for June, 18th, Jumei’s 3.1 for March 1st, Suning.com’s 818 for August 18th, and Vipshop’s 128 (December, 8th). Even LeEco, not known for its e-commerce business, launched a shopping festival for their e-commerce arm LeMall.

With so many festivals available, China’s shopping obsessives don’t have to wait until November 11 to come around. Now they can take advantage of shopping festivals all year round.

Understandably, passion for a single event will ebb. Even Singles’ Day’s annual growth rate is slowing down. The YOY GMV growth rate of Single’s Day slumped from over 477 percent in 2011 to 32 percent last year.

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Taobao and Tmall GMV from 2010 to 2016 (Image credit: iiMedia)

Among a series of shopping holidays, JD’s shopping festival 618 is becoming one of the largest in the country. For this year’s JD 618, the company eliminated JD from its title in an attempt to turn it into a national festival for everyone.

After years of development, the original draw of discounts has gradually losing charm to China’s affluence customers who values more in quality and brand of the products. Festivals that want to stand from the crowd has to address a combination of factors from branding, product quality, logistics, brand partnership, and more. This is also why Alibaba is turning what was once a one-day event into a weeks-long celebration with lead-up events from partner brands, technology roll-outs, and celebrity-filled countdown gala.

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Tencent’s megahit Honour of Kings becomes world’s top grossing game https://technode.com/2017/06/15/tencents-megahit-honour-of-kings-becomes-worlds-top-grossing-game/ https://technode.com/2017/06/15/tencents-megahit-honour-of-kings-becomes-worlds-top-grossing-game/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2017 04:23:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50203 Tencent Tech is reporting that blockbuster multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game Honour of Kings has overtaken Monster Strike this May to become the world’s highest-grossing (in Chinese) game across platforms, according to data released by App Annie. Although Honour of Kings ranked the world’s highest grossing iOS game in March and April this year, this is the first […]]]>

Tencent Tech is reporting that blockbuster multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game Honour of Kings has overtaken Monster Strike this May to become the world’s highest-grossing (in Chinese) game across platforms, according to data released by App Annie.

Although Honour of Kings ranked the world’s highest grossing iOS game in March and April this year, this is the first time for it, or any Chinese gaming titles, to take the crown for iOS and Google Play, a special feat given Google’s weak presence in China.

Screen Shot 2017-06-15 at 12.08.23
App Annie ranking showing Honour of Kings as global #1 in revenue (Image credit: GameLook/Tencent)

Launched in November 2015 by Tencent’s Timi Studio, Honour of Kings is very similar to League of Legends, which sees players battle beasts in a fantasy landscape. Despite the similar visual style and gameplay mechanics, Tencent has managed to successfully localize to China with subtle changes in a mobile-first product strategy, local culture-based characters, and simpler controls.

Tencent’s 2016 annual report showed that the game had over 200 million registered users and over 50 million daily active users, roughly the total population of South Korea.

Tencent’s huge user base from WeChat and QQ, which have hundreds of millions of users in the country, has always been a huge resource to draw upon in terms of acquisition and promotion. Unsurprisingly, Honour of Kings growth is in part driven by WeChat and QQ users who made in-app purchases on game items.

The game has generated revenue of RMB 10.7 billion in Q4 last year. Local media reports that its DAU surged to 80 million during the Lunar New Year in February this year.

As the largest online game publisher in China, online gaming represents 47% of the internet behemoth’s 2016 revenue. The company is going further in the industry with a plan to build an e-sports-themed industrial park in Wuhu city.

Honour of Kings’ success comes while a series of Chinese game developers are gaining momentum. App Annie’s report shows that Chinese content producers snapped four places on the Top-10 grossing iOS app list for May. Tencent took the top place, followed by runner-up NetEase. CMGE and Longtu Game took the 8th and 10th spot respectively in the global market.

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China’s cloud industry moving to new era with emergence of unicorns https://technode.com/2017/06/12/chinas-cloud-industry-moving-to-new-era-with-emergence-of-unicorns/ https://technode.com/2017/06/12/chinas-cloud-industry-moving-to-new-era-with-emergence-of-unicorns/#respond Mon, 12 Jun 2017 08:14:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50078 Just a few years ago, billion-level funding would be beyond the imagination of Chinese cloud computing companies. But now it is becoming more and more tangible as the market matures. QingCloud, a leading player in the field, is announcing the largest ever funding in the industry so far. The cloud computing platform made it public […]]]>

Just a few years ago, billion-level funding would be beyond the imagination of Chinese cloud computing companies. But now it is becoming more and more tangible as the market matures.

QingCloud, a leading player in the field, is announcing the largest ever funding in the industry so far. The cloud computing platform made it public that they have secured D round funding worth RMB 1.08 billion (around US$ 158 million). The current round adds to a US$ 2 million series A in 2012, a USD 20 million Series B in 2013 and USD 100 million in 2016.  The company confirmed with TechNode that it has IPO plans, but declined to offer more details. The firm reportedly is removing their VIE structure to prepare for a local listing.

The massive round is from a consortium of investors, including China Merchants Securities International and China Merchants Zhiyuan Capital Investment (two wholly-owned subsidiaries of China’s top security trading and brokerage firm, China Merchants Securities), Riverhead Capital Investment Management, CICC Jiatai Fund and China Oceanwide Holdings Group. Existing investors of Lightspeed China Partners and Bluerun Ventures also participated.

QingCloud Founders
QingCloud founding team (L-R): Spencer Lin, Richard Huang, Reno Gan (Image credit: QingCloud)

QingCloud’s funding isn’t a single case. It marks the latest in a series of venture investments in this sector, which has bumped several companies in the vertical to unicorn status recently.

Two companies in the arena received similar-sized backings in June alone. Cloud and big data solution provider Dt Dream received an RMB 750 million A round led by Alibaba and Everbright Industry Capital Management. Another Alibaba-backed cloud computing startup Cloudcare received nearly a 1 billion RMB C round led by FOSUN Group and Sequoia Capital China. Tencent-backed UCloud completed an RMB 960 million series D round earlier this year.

Among the companies that have landed billion-level RMB funding, Dt Dream is the only one that announced unicorn status with over US$ 1 billion valuation. This may shed light on the valuations of the other companies, which have received similar size or higher funding.

Behind the investment frenzy is the huge potential of this market. A report from research institute CCID shows that China’s cloud computing market surged 41.7% YOY to RMB 279.7 billion in 2016, forecasting that this figure would reach RMB570.64 billion by 2019 with an annual growth rate of over 20%.

The emergence of several unicorns over a relatively short period of time is signifying a deeper change in the market. In line with the second-half era proposition proposed by Meituan-Dianping CEO Wang Xing, the cloud computing startup pointed that China’s cloud computing market is also entering a special transition point for a new period. While cloud computing platforms only used by non-core businesses for financial clients like banks, insurance, and security companies in the first-half era, it will find wider application in the new era.

Co-founded by IBM alumni Richard Huang, Reno Gan, and Spencer Lin, the company launched the QingCloud platform in July 2013. They now operate 24 data centers, of which 10 are run independently and 14 through partnerships, providing services to over 70,000 enterprise services.

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Live from CES Asia 2017 – 3 things Chinese tech firms must know before going global https://technode.com/2017/06/09/live-from-ces-asia-2017-3-things-chinese-tech-firms-must-know-before-going-global/ https://technode.com/2017/06/09/live-from-ces-asia-2017-3-things-chinese-tech-firms-must-know-before-going-global/#respond Fri, 09 Jun 2017 07:50:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=50045 In a relatively short period of time, Chinese tech companies are becoming increasingly competitive. Moving further to the global market is the next step for nearly every Chinese tech firm. Although expanding globally can be exciting and exhilarating, there are challenges when it comes to the problems of how to make up the gap in […]]]>

In a relatively short period of time, Chinese tech companies are becoming increasingly competitive. Moving further to the global market is the next step for nearly every Chinese tech firm. Although expanding globally can be exciting and exhilarating, there are challenges when it comes to the problems of how to make up the gap in culture, user behavior and more.

At CES Asia this week, a panel of investors, platforms, and startups shared their insights and roadblocks they have encountered in going overseas.

Find a local team, localize your story

Expanding beyond your home turf could be daunting in general, no matter if it’s a Chinese firm scrambling its way overseas, or vice versa. It’s all about how to finding the right local partner, establishing trust with them, and defining the responsibilities and authorization mechanisms, said Denise Peng, Venture Partner at GGV Capital.

Wang Mengqiu, founder and CEO of Zero Zero Robotics, echoed Denise’s point with his own experience in marketing. Selfie drone Hover Camera was featured in more than 2,000 media in one week after its launch in October last year. He attributes their success to the right marketing strategy, created by their local teams.

“A good product is, of course, the core to its success. But it’s important to have a local team who have a good understanding of the market to help out in how you tell your stories,” he said. “Some Chinese CEOs don’t feel comfortable talking with the media. But in countries like the US, storytelling is important to get public attention. Giving stats and dry data is not going to work.”

Marketing costs might be higher, but it’s more predictable

How to make your marketing investment more effective is an art. It is probably the most intriguing question for Chinese companies who just entered a new market.

Most Chinese firms are concerned that their overseas marketing costs may be high, which it is, but all of the panelists agreed that the marketing ROI is higher and more predictable thanks to more mature and standardized marketing industry.

“No matter if it’s Google or Facebook, the ROI is to some extend more predictable. On the contrary, how everything works out in China is more complicated because there are more middle links,” said Jason Wong CEO of Omnicharge.

“Google and Facebook are the two top marketing channels in the US, which account for a majority of the market. When you have covered these two channels, you are half way there. In China, it’s more complicated, there’s Baidu, Taobao, JD and a series of other channels. You have to work with every single of them,” he added.

From market differentiation to market unification

When talking about the relationship between Chinese and overseas markets, we always tend to put our focus on the differences between them. However, the globalization trend is bringing people around world closer and makes every part of the world more similar.

“The success of musical.ly in US market is evidence enough. Live-streaming as a new vertical first boomed in China and we have built a mature model up on it. But beyond the difference in different regions, people’s basic needs for entertainment and having fun are the same,” said Denise Peng.

Market unification is also reflected in the increase of talents with international backgrounds. “It’s no longer about copy-to-China or copy-to-US. It’s about people with diversified background and capabilities to develop something for the world, with fine tunes for different markets,” she said.

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Take the blockchain challenge at TechCrunch Shenzhen’s Hackathon https://technode.com/2017/06/08/take-your-blockchain-challenge-at-techcrunch-shenzhen-hackathon/ https://technode.com/2017/06/08/take-your-blockchain-challenge-at-techcrunch-shenzhen-hackathon/#respond Thu, 08 Jun 2017 06:46:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49914 The TechCrunch Shenzhen Hackathon is only two weeks away! Check out the bevy of tools and prizes that will be featured for the coming weekend. Blockchain and bike rentals Blockchain technology, with its distributed cloud storage and unbreakable smart contracts, could be the future! Dianrong’s blockchain lab has developed a Blockchain as a Service platform (BaaS). Together […]]]>

The TechCrunch Shenzhen Hackathon is only two weeks away! Check out the bevy of tools and prizes that will be featured for the coming weekend.

Blockchain and bike rentals

Blockchain technology, with its distributed cloud storage and unbreakable smart contracts, could be the future! Dianrong’s blockchain lab has developed a Blockchain as a Service platform (BaaS). Together with Mobike, the leader in bike-sharing economy, we invite you to explore applications of blockchain technology in the sharing economy. Dianrong’s top blockchain scientists would guide you through the development process.

Dianrong’s BaaS (Blockchain as a service) will open their management server and BaaS Java SDK. A sample application of blockchain technology in car rental payment clearance will also be provided for reference.

Additional tools and APIs that Mobike is going to offer include user binding, unlocking, riding status, order detail and account info.

Task

Pick one from the following tasks or come up with an innovative use case of blockchain in Mobike’s business on your own

Credit rating: Blockchain-based credit rating solutions to assess Mobike users credit worthiness profile. Automatic discount can be given to people with good credit rating

Crowd-funding: Mobike’s users can become investors of bikes. Blockchain can automatically diversify investment into different bikes, according to bikes usage, investors return can be automatically calculated

Environmental safety: use blockchain to calculate and record carbon savings based on bike miles; use blockchain to track Mobike materials

Finance: use blockchain to guarantee receipt of Mobike deposits; confirmation of investments

Operations: time validated coupons, coupons to be delivered underneath using blockchain that controls time/authenticity but allows single occurrence transference

Prizes

Our sponsors have put up a large number of prizes for the TechCrunch Shenzhen Hackathon. Each participating team will get a hoodie or t-shirt. The winning group will walk away with 2 Apple Watches and 2 128G iPads while the top 10 teams will win a host of prizes to include Ninebot One, PSVR, Nintendo Switch and HHKB.

Sponsors

Dianrong-logo

Dianrong, often coined as ‘Lending Club of China”, is leading company in China’s fintech industry with focuses on P2P lending and banking solutions. The company has launched China’s first-ever blockchain platform called ‘Chained Finance’ in March this year. The platform leverages advanced financial technology to meet the hugely underserved needs of supply chain finance in China.

Mobike-logo

Mobike is a leading bike rental startup in China. Using specially designed bikes equipped with GPS and proprietary smart-lock technology, Mobike enables users of its smartphone app to find a bike near them and unlock it using their smartphones. After reaching their destination, the user parks the bike by the roadside and locks it, automatically making the bike available to other Mobike users nearby.

If you haven’t got your tickets yet, you better get moving!

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The ultimate guide to TechCrunch Shenzhen’s VC Meetup https://technode.com/2017/06/07/the-ultimate-guide-to-techcrunch-shenzhens-vc-meetup/ https://technode.com/2017/06/07/the-ultimate-guide-to-techcrunch-shenzhens-vc-meetup/#respond Wed, 07 Jun 2017 04:21:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49890 TechCrunch Shenzhen is just around the corner along with its most popular session during the conference: VC Meetup. For entrepreneurs who are still shopping about from one venture capital institution to another with your business plan, we offer you the opportunity to meet a stack of VCs for 10 minutes face-to-face communication. VC Meetup has become […]]]>

TechCrunch Shenzhen is just around the corner along with its most popular session during the conference: VC Meetup. For entrepreneurs who are still shopping about from one venture capital institution to another with your business plan, we offer you the opportunity to meet a stack of VCs for 10 minutes face-to-face communication.

VC Meetup has become a signature part of TechCrunch Summits since its launch in 2015. At TechCrunch Beijing last year, a total of 150 venture capital institutions joined and over 750 entrepreneurs pitched their projects at the event.

Opportunities come to those who are prepared. In order to make your 10 minutes more efficient, we have compiled a cheat sheet of funds and their preferred industry.

IDG Capital

As one of the most prestigious venture capital companies, IDG focuses on internet/mobile/tech, modern service & brand, healthcare, industrial technology & resources, media, tourism & real estate. It has a pretty wide investment range from seed round to post C round with funding amounts varying from million to hundred million dollars. They have supported many exceptional companies such as Tencent, Home Inn and Ctrip.

IDG
IDG Portfolio (2016-2017)

Tips: IDG Capital is adapting more conservative investment approach with primary focus on startups in early and expansion stages. They have their own understandings of the founding team and the market.

Bertelsmann Asia Investment

BAI is primarily engaged in investing in mobile, online education, fintech, m-healthcare, and enterprise services. It’s focused on seed round to B round. It also has a Beta Fund to cover early stage and angel investments. The portfolio companies include ifeng.com, Lagou, Mobike (Beta Fund included: Keep and Kapbook) with investment size ranging from million to hundreds of million RMB/eight-digit USD.

BAI
BAI Portfolio (2016-2017)

Tips: Focusing on early stage startups, BAI is a prudent investor, which values following characteristics in projects:
1. Making the best use of the team’s exiting resource to outrun the rivals

  1. Finding differentiated position in the market

  2. Making best use of data accumulated through the product, network and supply chain data

4. Effective team management

SB China Capital (SBCVC)

SBCVC is a leading venture capital and private equity firm that manages both USD and RMB funds. Its investment focuses are on high-tech, high growth companies in TMT, clean technology, healthcare, consumer/retail, and advanced manufacturing sectors. It invests across all stages of companies. The portfolio companies include Alibaba, Best Logistics, Quicktron.

SB
SBCVC Portfolio (2016-2017)

Tips: Established in 2000, SBCVC is a prudent venture capital institution with preference in high tech companies in new energy and manufacturing. Startups connected with the real economy are going to win their attention.

ZhenFund

ZhenFund is a Beijing-based seed fund that focuses on internet, mobile internet, gaming, enterprise software, O2O, e-commerce and education. It has supported in Jumei, Ehang and Xiaohongshu. The investment size ranges from million to tens of million RMB.

ZF
ZhenFund Portfolio (2016-2017)

Tips: A business is nothing without the people who work behind the scenes. ZhenFund is seeking entrepreneurs with passion, dreams and vision.

Qiming Venture Partners

Founded in 2006, Qiming is a leading China venture capital firm with focus on healthcare, consumption, IT and clean technology. Currently Qiming manages five US Dollar funds and four RMB funds with US$ 2.7 billion assets under management. Its portfolio companies include Guahao, Zhihu and Mogujie.

QM
Qiming Portfolio (2016-2017)

Tips: Qiming is looking for entrepreneurs with their own judgment of the market, technology and products.

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Claim your chance for free access to Taobao Crowdfunding for your hardware startup https://technode.com/2017/06/05/claim-your-chance-for-free-access-to-taobao-crowdfunding-for-your-hardware-startup/ https://technode.com/2017/06/05/claim-your-chance-for-free-access-to-taobao-crowdfunding-for-your-hardware-startup/#respond Mon, 05 Jun 2017 08:06:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49788 TechCrunch Shenzhen is working with Taobao Crowdfunding to help startups find a smoother way to the market. The partnership brings a parallel session to TechCrunch Shenzhen, where hardware companies registered at our Startup Alley get the chance to pitch their product at Taobao crowdfunding’s demo zone. The platform allocates online promotion, marketing and professional operational […]]]>

TechCrunch Shenzhen is working with Taobao Crowdfunding to help startups find a smoother way to the market.

The partnership brings a parallel session to TechCrunch Shenzhen, where hardware companies registered at our Startup Alley get the chance to pitch their product at Taobao crowdfunding’s demo zone. The platform allocates online promotion, marketing and professional operational help to the companies in finding their way to Taobao’s massive user base. But the best part of this is that all of this supports is free of charge.

For a hardware startup, you could have a brilliant product, but if it’s not exposed enough, it might easily die. Born as a means for startups to access capital for scaling up, crowdfunding has evolved to be popular if not a must step for Chinese hardware projects to launch their products.

In China, crowdfunding is becoming a major promotional channel, especially for hardware startups. People went so far as to draw a comparison between crowdfunding and e-commerce in China: The country is witnessing the absorption of crowdfunding activities by e-commerce platforms, which makes the crowdfunding industry in China increasingly driven by e-commerce.

Taobao crowdfunding, the crowdfunding unit of e-commerce giant Alibaba, is leading this trend with an edge in online marketing, sales, and e-commerce operation.

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Chinese gaming giants are setting their sights on Europe https://technode.com/2017/06/02/chinese-gaming-giants-are-setting-their-sights-on-europe/ https://technode.com/2017/06/02/chinese-gaming-giants-are-setting-their-sights-on-europe/#respond Fri, 02 Jun 2017 09:38:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49747 As an important part of the global entertainment business, gaming is looking pretty good and the uprising trend of this sector is showing signs of slowing down for the near future as people living the digitalized world are seeking for more entertainment. Global venture capital firm Atomico released a report to shed some light on […]]]>

As an important part of the global entertainment business, gaming is looking pretty good and the uprising trend of this sector is showing signs of slowing down for the near future as people living the digitalized world are seeking for more entertainment. Global venture capital firm Atomico released a report to shed some light on the latest changes in the sector.

2016 has witnessed some remarkable tipping points of the gaming industry, according to the report. Firstly, the field has become a global industry with games revenue exceeding USD$ 100 billion. To put the number into perspective, this means that the gaming industry is now worth three times as much as movies worldwide.

The surge in revenue is in line with the increasing player base, which broke 2 billion for the first time last year.  Mobile has become the most lucrative segment after years of continuous growth.

Atomico’s bullish views towards mobile gaming are shared by many research agencies. Newzoo made a bold prediction that the mobile segment will account for 42 percent of worldwide sales this year and to over half of the total games market by 2020.

B-companies
Image credit: Atomico

China, the home to world’s top gaming developers like Tencent, is taking a fair share of this boom. The report shows that 11 out of 24 gaming companies worth more than US$ billion have come from China. Europe took the runner-up position with 6 companies

While investors have more confidence in publicly listed companies, the enthusiasm is also felt by private gaming firms. Of the total private investments, Europe is taking an increasing share of global games funding rounds, with Chinese acquirers playing a big role.

The top twenty largest games M&A transactions of the last five years have created US$ 46 billion in exit value, of which European targets accounted for 70% of the value. Looking at the origin of the buyers, 55% of deal value came from strategic Chinese acquirers, illustrative of growing interest from China.

This interest is only set to increase in 2017 and beyond, as the growing appetite for fresh content from Chinese gamers leads to investors seeking to exploit this through selective investment in European studios, the report noted.

The analysts attribute this surge to two reasons. For one, although the surge in listed entities has allowed VC communities to see increasing markups, they are often only on paper. Games companies are more than twice as likely to achieve liquidity as $B+ companies from other tech categories.

Additionally, Europe’s unique culture, as well as technical and commercial factors, have helped the region to become a world leader in mobile game development.  Many of these are subtle points, such as the region’s rich, centuries-old history of storytelling and creativity, or, its deeply connected communities of passionate individuals that came together through the region’s mod and demo scenes, creating fertile ground for mobile game development.

Most importantly, European studios were developing for mobile before it even became the “mobile” that we think of today, learning their craft building games on Java and optimizing for Nokia or Motorola feature phones, a world away from the mobile devices and games we recognize today.

On the other hand, the prosperity of European game development finds its root in rising demands from the world, of which China is an important market gaming studios can’t ignore. It’s now not only the world’s largest market of gamers – with over 600 million – but also it’s most valuable by spend, eclipsing the US and even the whole of Europe combined.

“There are unique opportunities. Almost 90% of the 24 billion dollar games companies founded in the last 15 years have achieved liquidity, proportionally more than any other sector – so games studios, especially in Europe, are a good bet. As the Chinese market continues to thirst for content, and continues to expand in size, we expect to see an uplift in Chinese interest,” Mattias Ljungman, Partner at Atomico said.

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Power bank rentals and smart transportation: Meet the experts at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017 https://technode.com/2017/06/02/meet-power-bank-rental-and-smart-transportation-experts-that-are-joining-us-at-tcsz/ https://technode.com/2017/06/02/meet-power-bank-rental-and-smart-transportation-experts-that-are-joining-us-at-tcsz/#respond Fri, 02 Jun 2017 04:02:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49718 From e-commerce to smart hardware, from O2O to ride-hailing, China’s tech industry seems to always be on a rollercoaster ride with the latest emerging verticals. The power of this phenomenon is vividly described by Xiaomi’s founder Lei Jun in his famous saying: “Even a pig can fly if it stands at the center of a whirlwind.” […]]]>

From e-commerce to smart hardware, from O2O to ride-hailing, China’s tech industry seems to always be on a rollercoaster ride with the latest emerging verticals. The power of this phenomenon is vividly described by Xiaomi’s founder Lei Jun in his famous saying: “Even a pig can fly if it stands at the center of a whirlwind.”

Along with the swift change of tech trends, more and more people are digging deeper for the forces behind the rise of a particular sector: whether it’s propelled by market potentials behind them, by the investors or it’s only a hype.

At TechCrunch Shenzhen, we have invited Allen Zhu, an investor who has always one step ahead in tracking the next big things. In addition, top entrepreneurs from power bank rental and smart transportation will be sharing their insights.

Here’s a list of the confirmed speakers for TechCrunch Shenzhen, which is slated for 17 to 20th this June. Welcome to join us for a fantastic event.

Managing Director of GSR Ventures, Allen Zhu

屏幕快照 2017-06-02 上午10.35.43

Allen Zhu is the Managing Director of GSR Ventures, where he focuses on investments in early-stage companies in the internet, mobile, and new media sectors. Allen has rich experience in software product development and global expansion.

Prior to GSR Ventures, he co-founded eBaoTech, a leading provider of insurance core backend systems. He has also worked for McKinsey Greater China, where he earned deep consulting and implementation experience. Allen’s featured portfolio companies include Didi Chuxing, ele.me, ofo and Inke.

Founder/CEO of Xiaodian, Tang Yongbo

Tang has more than seven years working experience in O2O industry, working for Taobao’s local lifestyle unit and Taodiandian, the food ordering service of Taobao.

As one of the leading players in power bank rental industry, Xiaodian, founded by Tang in December 2016, raised RMB 350 million B round in May this year, just one month after the RMB 100 million series A led by Tencent.

CEO of Ankerbox, Yuan Yuan

Yuanyuan

Yuan Yuan is the CEO of Ankerbox, the power bank rental startup that sold 60% stake to Chinese online retailer Jumei for RMB 300 million.

Before Ankerbox, Yuan worked at Alipay since 2011, supervising marketing operation and O2O business. He’s also the founder of Taobao’s movie ticketing business Tao Piaopiao.

Co-founder/President of Ninebot, Cid Wang

Cid Wang

Cid Wang is the president of Ninebot, a smart transportation company.

Ninebot is backed by Sequoia Capital, Xiaomi, Shunwei and West Summit Capital. It acquired Segway Inc. in 2015, making the company the global leader in self-balancing personal transportation business.

Niu Technology, Token Hu

Huyilin

Token Hu is the founder of electric scooter startup Niu Technology, which just launched its U1 smart e-scooter. Hu is also the founder and CEO of UTLAB USA, a technology-driven footwear company.

Prior to that, Hu worked as UX design lead with Microsoft Live, then went on to work with frog design, one of the most famous and innovative design firms around, with clients like Apple, Disney, GE, and many other Fortune 500 brands.

Founder/CEO of Singulato Motors, Shen Haiyin

Shenhaiyin

Shen is the founder and CEO of Singulauto, the designer and developer of smart EV in China. The company has debuted their first EV product iS6 in April this year. The car will be put into mass product in 2018.

Before starting Singulauto, he has decades long experience in hardware, search, ad, gaming and e-commerce. Shen previously worked as CEO of Kingsoft Japan and VP of Qihoo 360.

He holds dual degrees in automation control and industrial management from Shanghai Jiaotong University.

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These 4 failed directions make what ofo it is now https://technode.com/2017/06/01/these-4-failed-directions-make-what-ofo-is-now/ https://technode.com/2017/06/01/these-4-failed-directions-make-what-ofo-is-now/#respond Thu, 01 Jun 2017 01:31:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49631 The best success stories often begin with failures. What we see are the hefty funding rounds, skyrocketing valuations; what we overlook are the embarrassing first efforts, setbacks and radical change of directions. Ofo, the first company bike rental company to gain unicorn status in the emerging sector, meets nearly every definition we have for a successful […]]]>

The best success stories often begin with failures. What we see are the hefty funding rounds, skyrocketing valuations; what we overlook are the embarrassing first efforts, setbacks and radical change of directions. Ofo, the first company bike rental company to gain unicorn status in the emerging sector, meets nearly every definition we have for a successful startup now. However, they too had their own growing pains.

Dai Wei, the 26-year-old CEO and co-founder of ofo, shared at the MTA Festival a few of their first clumsy steps on its road to success as well as the lessons he learned from those first failures.

Ofo started as a student project by alumnus of China’s prestigious Peking University. Sharing a common passion for cycling, Dai Wei and fellow students decided to found their own project in 2014. But how to achieve this goal was not clear

The now-household name “ofo” was born on February 15, 2014 when Dai was working as a volunteer teacher at Qinghai Province. The team thought of several options and finally named the firm ofo as the letters look like a bike. (Finally, we understand why the company’s name is all in lowercase).

Having a good name in place is a good beginning, but for the one year and seven months after that, ofo’s team suffered the growing pains that most startups have encountered in pushing past the initial launch. In retrospect, bike rental was the right path to take, but entrepreneurship is not only about finding the right road but also the right direction.

1. Ele.me for bikes

2014 saw the online food delivery industry take off. Based on Ele.me’s model, ofo’s founding team developed a platform where bike stores can rent out their bikes to travelers. “It was a total failure. Not a single order was received in five months,” Dai said.

2. Second-hand bike trading for students

The startup’s second try was a second-hand bike-trading platform targeting university students. This direction didn’t gain much traction either.

3. Microloan platform for higher-end bikes

In the wake of the surge in student microloan sites like Fenqile and Qufenqi, ofo shifted to micro-loan platform for higher-end bikes and scooters. “We sold out a dozen bikes, but six of them were purchased by our friends,” Dai recalled. Fortunately, Peking University alumni injected around RMB1.5 million funding gradually, which gains them enough time to try out new directions.

4. Buying users

“We seemingly found a possible exploration point in cycle tourism at the beginning of 2015. The whole online tourism industry was taking off, backed by a whopping RMB 3 trillion market size. We thought it was a trend we can capitalize on,” Dai said. This direction witnessed an uptake, allowing the company to book profits for the first time.

“When we had RMB 1 million in our account, we made a terrible mistake. When the subsidy war in the ride-hailing industry was getting started, we decided to buy customers by burning money,” he said. Ofo managed to record remarkable user growth at first, but their model failed to gain further support from VCs and the money they have soon burned out.

In April 2015, the team only had RMB 400 in their account. The impasse forced ofo to rethink what’s the key problem that leads to previous failures. “We found that all our previous efforts want to link bicycle with some hot market and overlooked whether the product is addressing real pain points of the users,” said Dai. “Then we tried to solve the bike theft problem of college students by offering shared bikes.”

Everyone knows the story that follows this shift. In around two years, ofo has grown into a leading bike-rental company, which operates in nearly 100 cities globally. The company is rising at a dizzying speed with valuation that has hit more than US$2 billion.

Lesssons to remember

Few entrepreneurs can go against the trend and resist the temptation to follow the herd into an emerging hot market. However, those who resist this pressure and reflect deeply on whether their product fits the market are most likely to succeed.

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Workplace tech is the key to differentiation says one Beijing co-working startup https://technode.com/2017/05/26/workplace-tech-is-the-key-to-differentiation-says-one-beijing-co-working-startup/ https://technode.com/2017/05/26/workplace-tech-is-the-key-to-differentiation-says-one-beijing-co-working-startup/#respond Fri, 26 May 2017 07:49:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49592 The co-working boom is in full swing in China. Again, the country’s tech history is repeating itself as capitalists are ready to dive in for supporting players, big and small, to buy into market shares. MyDreamPlus, a co-working space operator that runs 16 locations in Beijing, just closed US$20 million B round led by Joy […]]]>

The co-working boom is in full swing in China. Again, the country’s tech history is repeating itself as capitalists are ready to dive in for supporting players, big and small, to buy into market shares.

MDP-bill
Founder & Managing Director of MyDreamPlus- Bill Li

MyDreamPlus, a co-working space operator that runs 16 locations in Beijing, just closed US$20 million B round led by Joy Capital to fuel nationwide expansion. The company has already secured a US$ 5 million series A at the end of 2015.

“Our OaaS (office-as-a-service) product has reached a point where we can take advantage and scale our space with it. The series B funding will be used in space expansion as well as to improve the office working experience. We also plan to spend money on talent and team building,” founder and managing director Bill Li said to TechNode.

The firm is looking at Beijing as the main expansion site with a goal to increase the density there. Now there are nearly 30,000 square meters of new spaces in the pipeline, all located at core commercial areas of the city. “Shanghai and Chengdu are also on our expansion agenda,” Li added.

The funding comes at a time when several major companies in the field are cashing up for a fight for China’s co-working space. Domestically, UrWork raised about US$ 58 million earlier this week, shortly after merging with rival New Space in April and scooping a similar size funding in January. Shanghai-based co-working space operator also booked B round to accelerate global expansion. In addition, their heavy-loaded US counterpart WeWork is also looking at the Chinese market.

With so many competitors moving in, the question for managers and operators of shared spaces has become “How to remain unique?” Operators, like URWork and SOHO3Q, have strengths in property resources with realtor background, while rivals, like naked Hub, may excel in their design and operation with hospitality expertise.

For the MyDreamPlus team, they believe workplace technology is their differentiator in the increasingly crowded market. Gone are the days when co-working spaces are defined by desks and polished spaces only, technology is going to be a crucial component of the shared spaces, according to Li.

In an attempt to fully adapt to Chinese users’ habits, MyDreamPlus’s OaaS system enables office users to control everything through WeChat. After registration on WeChat, most resources, including door admission, workstations, conference rooms, projection, printing, and photocopying, can be controlled while on-the-go. At the same time, the system makes it possible for the space operator to know about the traffic, facilities, and community of the space.

MDP-wechat

Given the technological support, MyDreamPlus has an efficient team for on-site operation. “Currently, we have one community manager on-site for 3,000 square meters space for all 16 locations,” Li noted.

That allows the company to allocate most of its team to product development. Of the 100-staff team, around 70% are engaged in three parts of core development: space design, R&D team, and community operation.

The occupancy rate of MyDreamPlus spaces is normally 95% after a 3 month start period, Li disclosed. The prices range from RMB 1800 to RMB 2200 depending on different locations, lower than WeWork’s China operations, on par with other domestic players.

With the quick boom in the shared working space, Bill Li believes the potential of this industry is huge. “Co-working industry is still taking a very small market share in the whole office market. The space operated by all co-working operators combined is around hundreds of thousands of square meters for now. But if you look at the office industry, that accounts for perhaps less than one percent of the whole traditional office space market. This means, we still have a long way to go.”

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AI is the future of everything at i-Lab demo day https://technode.com/2017/05/24/i-lab-demo-day-may-2017-ai/ https://technode.com/2017/05/24/i-lab-demo-day-may-2017-ai/#respond Wed, 24 May 2017 09:15:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49542 The defeat of top Go player Ke Jie to Google’s AlphaGo is pushing discussions about AI technology to new heights this week. After a series of human vs computer matches, more and more people can see that AI will fundamentally change our lives. Beyond the hype media attention, however, most of the AI technologies remain in […]]]>

The defeat of top Go player Ke Jie to Google’s AlphaGo is pushing discussions about AI technology to new heights this week. After a series of human vs computer matches, more and more people can see that AI will fundamentally change our lives.

Beyond the hype media attention, however, most of the AI technologies remain in the R&D stage are still finding possible ways to be applied in real-life scenarios. The situation is changing gradually with the maturity of the technology itself as well as the market surrounding it. Maybe AI is not something that end customers can use directly, but it is finding its way into nearly every vertical.

i-Lab is an accelerator program supported by Microsoft China, Shanghai Xuhui District government and state-backed electronics company INESA. At the i-Labs demo day held last week, the twelve startups addressed a wide range of problems from education, transportation, robots, and smart city. But if you take a closer look, there’s a common theme in nearly every startup — AI and big data.

Here’s a wrap-up of the 12 startups who demoed at the event.

Shape Joy (形趣)

Shape Joy is an online fitness coach solution that provides personalized training programs. Powered by computer vision technologies and AI technology, Shape Joy’s 3D motion tracking model can capture users’ gestures and give corresponding advice on how to make improvements based on a gamified model.

Michi (米尺)

Michi is startup offering cloud-based field service solutions for manufacturers to turn industrial appliances and more into intelligent devices.

Wizarcan (微肯)

Wizarcan is building an indoor positioning and navigation system based on iBeacon technology. Its clients come from various industries from shopping malls, exhibition centers, museums, metros and more.

Chiwei (驰帷)

Chiwei is working on an online education system that would enable school faculties to better manage their students and staff with big data and AI technology.

AutoGreen (格灵出行)

AutoGreen is bringing its electric vehicle rental service to Shanghai. Together with electric cars, AutoGreen is also setting up parking lots with charging poles.

KangPeng (康朋)

KangPeng is a healthcare startup engaged in the development of an early-warning device for cardiovascular diseases.

MeCourse (ME课)

MeCourse is an online education platform that connects teachers with students living nearby.

ZenSense (征鑫)

Enabled by big data and AI technologies, ZenSense is a pet control management platform that helps clients eliminate harmful creatures that usually carry disease and pose a constant threat to commercial facilities.

E-Building (摩墅狮)

E-Building is a smart solution provider which aspires to make your homes smarter.

Tajian Technology (塔尖科技)

Tajian Technology is engaged in high-end community integration and operation. The company’s revenue comes mainly from promoting luxury products, high-end health care services, and asset management products.

Hrstek (合时)

Hrstek is the developer and manufacturer of robots for special occasions like anti-terrorism, rescue, and environmental detection.

IOTCOMM (智联信通)

IOTCOMM is a smart lighting monitoring system developer. Its smart lighting monitoring control system can realize remote single light control, energy saving, and smart management.

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Video: Behind-the-scenes at one of ofo’s largest bike makers https://technode.com/2017/05/23/video-behind-the-scenes-at-one-of-ofos-largest-bike-makers/ https://technode.com/2017/05/23/video-behind-the-scenes-at-one-of-ofos-largest-bike-makers/#respond Tue, 23 May 2017 09:11:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49503 For China’s increasingly picky bike renters, ease of access is one of the key determinants when choosing from a rainbow of similar bikes. After all, there’s no user experience to speak of if the service isn’t available. Because of this, speed is everything for bike rental companies as they scramble to stake their claim. As […]]]>

For China’s increasingly picky bike renters, ease of access is one of the key determinants when choosing from a rainbow of similar bikes. After all, there’s no user experience to speak of if the service isn’t available. Because of this, speed is everything for bike rental companies as they scramble to stake their claim.

As one of the advocates of this principle, Chinese bike-rental unicorn ofo has been known for its aggressive expansion at home and abroad. The company’s trademark bright yellow bikes flooded the streets almost overnight, but have you ever wondered where these bikes come from and how they are produced?

TechNode got a chance to visit a Flying Pigeon factory in Tianjin, one of the largest bicycle manufacturing hubs in China.

Youku

http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjc4MDc2NzI5Ng==.html?from=s1.8-1-1.2&spm=a2h0k.8191407.0.0

Flying Pigeon is a reputable bike brand in China with over 80 years of history. The company began working with ofo just as the emerging business was taking off and has manufactured over 800,000 bikes for ofo in the four months from December last year to March this year. Its production line for ofo is expected to churn out around 5 million bikes per year, says Huang Shuo, marketing manager of Flying Pigeon.

Not all of the 5 million bikes are produced in Tianjin, according to Huang. “Ofo’s order is featured by cross-regional demand that varies every week. We have regional plants or partner factories across the country to meet ofo’s demand for local production. Of course, all bikes we produce meet the same standards, regardless of factory location.”

“Ofo’s orders account for one-third of our whole production capacity. The rest of our production line include higher-end bikes, sports bikes, and more,” Huang says.

Five million bikes is not a small deal, but that only ranked Flying Pigeon as one of the top-ten bike partners of ofo, according to ofo’s SVP Nan Nan. Apart from Flying Pigeon, the Beijing-based startup also inked a strategic partnership with bike producer Fushida for a 10 million bike per year deal earlier this year.

Ofo’s robust hardware demand underlines a larger market surge in the bike manufacturing industry, boosted by a string of bike-rental services that include ofo, its arch competitor Mobike as well as smaller players such as Bluegogo and HelloBike. It’s safe to say that the bike-rental boom has injected new vigor into flagging bike manufacturing industry.

Although manufacturers are scrambling to raise their production capacity, there’s limited automation and technology in the factories. The components for the bicycles are mostly assembled by manual labor: In the factory we visited, there were 70 to 75 workers on one assembly line.

The market surge may be able to pull in enough hot money to boost an overheated industry in the short term, but they can’t support the sustained development when the market craze cools off.

The bike availability principle that ruled at the beginning of bike-rental boom is losing its charm now when lines of dockless bikes become the cause for mounting pressures on urban management, especially in big cities.

Compared with aiming for higher production capacity, the problems of how to put the right amount of bikes at a place where it is most needed, how to lower the damage rate, and how to repair damaged bikes more efficiently are more pressing problems.

18:20 June 2, 2017: This post was updated to clarify some bike production numbers. 

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VP of TV unit takes over as CEO of Leshi, YT Jia to remain chairman https://technode.com/2017/05/22/head-of-tv-unit-takes-over-as-ceo-of-leshi-yt-jia-to-remain-chairman/ https://technode.com/2017/05/22/head-of-tv-unit-takes-over-as-ceo-of-leshi-yt-jia-to-remain-chairman/#respond Mon, 22 May 2017 07:27:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49463 The troubled LeEco is facing yet another major shakeup and this time it’s from a management reshuffle. Jia Yueting, the legendary Chinese corporate leader, will step down as CEO of Leshi Internet Information & Technology Corp Beijing, the Shenzhen-listed arm of Jia’s larger business empire LeEco, according to announcements from the company. Jia will remain chairman. Liang […]]]>

The troubled LeEco is facing yet another major shakeup and this time it’s from a management reshuffle.

Jia Yueting, the legendary Chinese corporate leader, will step down as CEO of Leshi Internet Information & Technology Corp Beijing, the Shenzhen-listed arm of Jia’s larger business empire LeEco, according to announcements from the company. Jia will remain chairman.

Liang Jun, former Lenovo executive who joined Leshi as an executive in 2012, will replace Jia as CEO of the company. Additionally, the firm’s finance chief Yang Lijie will be replaced by the company’s China CFO Zhang Wei.

This shift is significant for the Chinese firm because it means that Jia Yueting, the spiritual leader of LeEco where he holds a revered position as Steve Jobs did for Apple, is taking a back seat in the company he built from scratch around one decade ago. The lesser presence of a strong leader must bring fundamental changes in lots of aspects in the company from business orientation to company culture.

The once upcoming Chinese internet giant has been entangled into a cash crunch last year due to overstretched expansion strategies that span nearly every hot verticals from video, smartphone, smart TV, cloud to electronic cars. Although the cash-strapped company managed to raise funding from more investors and share transfer, their efforts weren’t quite successful in easing investors concerns.

The situation worsened as its relationship with Yidao Yongche, the ride-hailing service that LeEco holds a controlling stake in, turns sour while the later blames LeEco for diverting an RMB 1.3 billion fund originally earmarked for the firm to other purposes.

This only one of a series of struggles that the company is facing now. Local media reported that the company is preparing for over 1,000 jobs cut across its businesses.

After this shift, Jia will still oversee cooperate governance, strategic planning and core product innovation as chairman for the listed company. Apart from that, Jia says he will put more energy in the development of LeEco’s car business to accelerate innovation and bring its e-cars to the market.

He said to local media that the company’s electric car unit is going to launch Series A financing in the near future and the round is expected to be finalized in 2017.

CEO/Founder identity vs Team Identity

“US startups have a strong sense of team identity and culture that is created not only by CEO but everybody in the team, whereas in Chinese companies it’s more about the personal identity and culture of the CEO,” said veteran entrepreneur tutor William Bao Bean in a previous interview with TechNode.

There are two types of CEOs in Chinese startups, according to William, godmother CEOs who take care of you, and you look up them, and godfather CEO, a criminal boss who leads through fear. According to the description of a former LeEco employee, Jia seems a combination of both. LeEco might be a typical Chinese company that is operated under this culture, it certainly not the only one. As China’ startup industry matures, we hope there will be a new leadership style in the country.

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Tencent reports 58% profit surge on strong Q1 driven by WeChat and gaming https://technode.com/2017/05/18/tencent-reports-58-profit-surge-on-strong-q1-driven-by-wechat-and-gaming/ https://technode.com/2017/05/18/tencent-reports-58-profit-surge-on-strong-q1-driven-by-wechat-and-gaming/#respond Thu, 18 May 2017 12:02:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49364 TencentShortly after hitting US$ 300 billion milestone earlier this month, Chinese internet giant Tencent reported Wednesday better-than expected results for the first quarter of this year ended on March 31, 2017. The company’s revenue surged 55 percent year-on-year (YOY) to RMB 49.55 billion (around US$ 7.18 billion), beating the market estimation of RMB 46.23 billion […]]]> Tencent

Shortly after hitting US$ 300 billion milestone earlier this month, Chinese internet giant Tencent reported Wednesday better-than expected results for the first quarter of this year ended on March 31, 2017.

The company’s revenue surged 55 percent year-on-year (YOY) to RMB 49.55 billion (around US$ 7.18 billion), beating the market estimation of RMB 46.23 billion (US$ 6.7 billion). The profit for the period was RMB 14.54 billion (US$ 2.10 billion), a 57 percent increase YoY.

Tencent-17q1
Source: Tencent

Revenue from value-added services, which include online games and social networking services increased by 41 percent to RMB 35.10 billion for 1Q2017 on a YoY basis. Online advertising revenues increased by 47percent to RMB 6.88 billion in the reporting period. Other revenues increased by 224 percent to RMB 7.55 billion, primarily driven by higher revenues from their payment related and cloud services.

Tencent-2017-q1
Source: Tencent

“We delivered a strong set of operating and financial results for the first quarter of 2017. Financially, our smart phone games, payment related services, digital content subscriptions, PC games and social advertising businesses all contributed to our broad-based revenue growth,” said company chairman and CEO Pony Ma.

Entertainment service benefits from Chinese New Year

The company’s entertainment services from the video platform to newer products such as karaoke app WeSing (全民K歌), photo editing app Pitu (天天P图), and mobile games such as Honor of Kings (王者荣耀) have achieved notable growth during the quarter.

As China’s dominant provider of online and mobile games, the company’s online games revenues grew by 34 percent YoY to RMB 22.81 billion in the reporting period. The increase mainly reflected higher revenues from both smart phone games (such as Honour of Kings and Dragon Nest Mobile) and PC client games (such as LoL and DnF). Of the total, smartphone games contributed RMB 12.9 billion, up 57 percent YOY.

Tencent’s blockbuster MOBA game Honor of Kings went viral since its launch two years ago, driving users in WeChat and QQ to spend money on game items. The firm’s 2016 annual report showed that the game has booked over 50 million daily active users. In Q4 last year, the game has generated a revenue of RMB 10.7 billion. Local media reports that its DAU surged to 80 million during the lunar New Year in February this year.

The company seems to be confident about the growth potential of the MOBA game. “[Honor of Kings] is still in the early stage of its life circle. We will continue to improve and optimize with new features and contents,” company president Martin Lau said in a call conference.

In addition to gaming, the company’s video platform, which featured popular original content also contributed greatly to the revenue growth. Revenue from video subscription services doubled YOY in the reporting period, major driven by self-produced TV drama Ghost Blows Out the Light and licensed TV series Country Love 9.

WeChat keeps strong momentum, QQ growth stagnates

Tencent’s killer app WeChat continues growth momentum as its monthly active users hit 938 million, up 23 percent YOY. It’s also a notable jump from 889 million in Q4 last year.

However, QQ witnessed a slight drop in the period. Its monthly active user dropped 2 percent YOY to 861 million, while that for Q Zone dipped 3 percent YOY to 632 million.

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Survival guide for the AI age from startup guru Kaifu Lee https://technode.com/2017/05/17/survival-guide-in-ai-age-from-startup-guru-kaifu-lee/ https://technode.com/2017/05/17/survival-guide-in-ai-age-from-startup-guru-kaifu-lee/#respond Wed, 17 May 2017 07:14:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49283 Kaifu Lee arguably knows the most about China’s tech landscape. The former Microsoft and Google China executive is now an active opinion leader who gives insights into tech trends and entrepreneurship in the country. Lee, more widely known as the founder of accelerator/VC Sinovation Ventures now, has been unreserved in expressing bullish views on the […]]]>

Kaifu Lee arguably knows the most about China’s tech landscape. The former Microsoft and Google China executive is now an active opinion leader who gives insights into tech trends and entrepreneurship in the country.

Lee, more widely known as the founder of accelerator/VC Sinovation Ventures now, has been unreserved in expressing bullish views on the AI industry, while a group of world’s top scientists, including Stephen Hawking, are adopting a more ominous approach to the technology.

“The most important area for future Sinovation Ventures investment will be artificial intelligence,” as he disclosed at TechCrunch Beijing last year.

Coming from a technical background, Lee has a lot to say about the ongoing craze surround AI and he put his understanding about the industry into his latest book, Artificial Intelligence. In an interview with Sina Tech (in Chinese), Lee explained his views on how we should fend off the increasing challenges from AI.

Tips for the youth

Compared with killer robots that could endanger our lives, job replacement is a more imminent issue brought by AI. This dynamic is already underway and part of the world is feeling it. People losing jobs to robots would become a greater issue in the future, and young people would be the first group to be affected.

Lee’s advice for university students is to dig deeper into your studies to an extent that AI can’t replace your work. He also believes cross-disciplinary research will become the next trend. “AI enjoys unparalleled advantages in big data accumulation in a singular sector, but people could outperform when it comes to cross-disciplinary studies,” he says. “For example, there will be lots of innovation opportunity and startup prospects at the cross-sections among finance, sociology, philosophy, and education.”

He noted that art students may embrace more opportunities in the new era because art and beauty are very hard to replicate with AI. Service industry may also receive a boost, he added.

Tips for traditional enterprises

As an advocate of AI technology, the influential technologist called it “the singular thing that will be larger than all of the human tech revolutions added together, including electricity, [the] industrial revolution, the internet, mobile internet — because AI is pervasive.”

In the fullest belief of AI’s powers to change our world, he suggests traditional enterprises shift to a “back to zero” mindset because the disruptions brought by AI would easily leapfrog over the advantages of older companies.

“For example, brokers, bankers, and insurance companies may be not ready to integrate AI into their products,” he said. “Because the DNA and culture of the industry, past success, and existing profits have become huge burdens for them to move on. Just like Kodak. They knew the age of digital cameras was coming, but the firm can not escape the vicious cycle.”

Tips for VCs

A majority of business application cases in AI industry fall into two models: 2B or 2C. Lee thinks both of them are going to work, but he believes there are more opportunities in the former at present because enterprise applications of AI would generate values faster, especially in banking, insurance, brokerage and the secondary trading market.

For the time being, consumer-facing services would encounter more obstacles because AI isn’t an application. “Although BAT has put their AI technologies in consumer-facing services, that’s because they have a huge user base, big data and commercialization capabilities support that,” he says. “For a startup without traffic sources, there’s no big data to speak of. So it’s more difficult for To C startups to get started.”

Tips for AI talents

By setting up Sinovation Ventures AI Institute, Lee is trying to duplicate the talent training model that he’s experienced with after working for Microsoft Research Asia and Google China.

He also calls for Chinese researchers working overseas to come back to their homeland. Talents originally from China are working in the U.S. because there are more opportunities for global training and career development. These perks that once helped make U.S. preferred employers are becoming less attractive to Chinese professionals with the arrival of AI trend and rising demands for big data. AI is luring more Google, Microsoft and Amazon-trained engineers to come back to China, he emphasized.

Although we are not sure whether China’s going to dominate the AI, but it’s sure a place where we can expect more innovations.

Editor’s note: The translations above are our own.

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IVREAL thinks MR is the key for VR content perception and promotion https://technode.com/2017/05/16/ivreal-thinks-mr-is-the-key-for-vr-content-perception-and-promotion/ https://technode.com/2017/05/16/ivreal-thinks-mr-is-the-key-for-vr-content-perception-and-promotion/#respond Tue, 16 May 2017 05:07:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49207 Virtual reality is spectacular for creating engaging and immersive experiences. However, the experience is deeply personal and what clicks for some people won’t work for others, especially the people watching: onlookers would find you rather dumb while being tethered to a computer and fumbling around, blind and deaf to the outside world. This highlights a notable […]]]>

Virtual reality is spectacular for creating engaging and immersive experiences. However, the experience is deeply personal and what clicks for some people won’t work for others, especially the people watching: onlookers would find you rather dumb while being tethered to a computer and fumbling around, blind and deaf to the outside world.

This highlights a notable problem in VR communication and promotion: how to translate the feeling of being in a fully interactive virtual environment for a large audience. When you can’t even share your feelings with people in the same room, how can you expect to allure those on the other side of the planet.

This is why Chongqing-based IVREAL came together. The Chinese startup was founded in 2016 by Tao Shu and Li Rui to address the promotion and communication problems in VR. The team decided the way to do that was to draw upon MR.

“Scientists and researchers would divide them into specific fields of VR, AR and MR, but in a real application, there’s no clear boundaries and more complementary integration among the sectors,” said Tao Shu, founder and CEO of IVREAL.

Taking the first-person footage from the headset display is the traditional and the easiest method to create a promotion trailer, however, it never provides the viewers the same degree of presence that’s been experienced by the VR players. To solve this problem, IVREAL adopts a 3rd person view to combine the players and the virtual environment.

“It would be super useful for developers to make the live demo and promotion videos,” said Tao. Instead of trackers, the platform would spice it up a little bit by rendering the trackers to something really cool, such as guns or bats.

IVREAL
Screenshot of IVREAL gameplay

While the 3rd person approach has been adopted by several players in this sector, such as YouTube’s Space Studio, there’s still many technical problems to be solved and device set up is one of them, introduced Tao.

“It usually takes five hours or more to install the whole set of devices which involves the green screen, headset, tracker, virtual cameras and reality cameras. “Through double-pairs-fixing technology, we can reduce the installation time greatly to 1-5 minutes. This would reduce the operational cost for VR live streaming service platforms, for example.”

IVREAL now supports both Unity and Unreal, two largest VR game engines, which means its solution is available for more than 95% of the VR contents now, Tao Shu noted.

Tao is a serial entrepreneur and a former professor at Sichuan Fine Arts Institute. With employees from Baidu, GE and Microsoft, the startup has received an undisclosed angel round. They are going to launch the next funding round later this year.

Chinese investors need to rethink their VR thinking

“Offering a model that you can find successful benchmark cases in the past is everything you need for fundraising in China. Investors keep telling you that technologies, patents, none of these matters as long as you have a sound and proven business model,” said Tao.

Believe it or not, Tao’s remarks is reflecting a popular mindset of Chinese investors. A proven business model is the secret recipe for every business and you could copy-and-paste it to everything. Just look at all the frenzies for “sharing-economy”, or shared rental to be more exact. The success of house and bike sharing spawned lots similar startups from power bank to basketball and even umbrella rentals.

While investors are throwing money at these verticals, they are unwilling to take risks and turning a cold shoulder to innovative models and technologies. “China’s moving to a new era for true innovation and our investors should shift to a new mindset to embrace this change too,” Tao commented.

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Chinese netizens react to Russia lifting WeChat ban https://technode.com/2017/05/12/chinese-netizens-react-to-russia-lifting-wechat-ban/ https://technode.com/2017/05/12/chinese-netizens-react-to-russia-lifting-wechat-ban/#respond Fri, 12 May 2017 03:04:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49132 Russian communication watchdog Roskomnadzor removed China’s most popular social networking tool WeChat from the list of prohibited websites this Thursday, nearly one week after the app was blocked for failing to comply with the country’s regulations. The regulator said WeChat has now “provided the information that is necessary to include them in the registry” of […]]]>

Russian communication watchdog Roskomnadzor removed China’s most popular social networking tool WeChat from the list of prohibited websites this Thursday, nearly one week after the app was blocked for failing to comply with the country’s regulations.

The regulator said WeChat has now “provided the information that is necessary to include them in the registry” of online firms.

When the app was blocked on May 4, the news sparked heated discussions on China’s online community because the situation is drawing a comparison on China’s ban on western services, like Facebook and Twitter.

While the Russian authority may claim that WeChat was blocked over its failure to register contact details, some Chinese netizens believe there are more political issues involved and that the news indicated a rift between China’s usual ally.

Others think the media is making a fuss over a trifle technical issue and there’s no point to make a big deal of it.

Despite the discussions, the truth may lie in somewhere in between. It might be a technical issue, but there are some political issues involved as well. Russia is taking an increasingly similar approach to China in controlling its online environment. The country passed a law in 2015 that requires companies to store data about Russian citizens in the country, similar to Chinese regulations preventing data collected in China from leaving the country.

Obviously, this move is not designed to fend off any particular country or company. All kinds of services including LinkedIn, Line, and BlackBerry Messenger have been blocked previously for violating the law.

WeChat, which claims around 900 million monthly active users globally, has yet to meaningfully expand its presence beyond China or the Chinese community overseas. Despite its aggressive global push, a dominating majority of its users still coming from its home country. 

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Ofo hits speed bump as internal corruption allegations go public https://technode.com/2017/05/11/ofo-hits-speed-bump-as-internal-corruption-allegations-go-public/ https://technode.com/2017/05/11/ofo-hits-speed-bump-as-internal-corruption-allegations-go-public/#respond Thu, 11 May 2017 07:28:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49060 Ofo, a leader in China’s burgeoning bike-rental market, has found itself embroiled in corruption allegations this week. The new first broke out on Maimai, a real name registered social networking platform for professionals, where one user was asking about working at ofo. However, the answers that followed took an unexpected turn towards internal corruption allegations. […]]]>

Ofo, a leader in China’s burgeoning bike-rental market, has found itself embroiled in corruption allegations this week.

The new first broke out on Maimai, a real name registered social networking platform for professionals, where one user was asking about working at ofo. However, the answers that followed took an unexpected turn towards internal corruption allegations.

ofo
Screenshot of the Q&A on Maimai

A person claiming to be a former employee laid bare their own experiences, saying that there’s an overtime culture in the company.

996 (means the workday starts at 9 am, finishes at 9 pm, with an extended 6 day week), is the standard work practice here. The internal management is chaotic there’s no mechanism to speak of. Corruption is everywhere from the executive to grass root levels,” they wrote.

But then, a supposed current ofo employee confirmed the corruption allegations by adding that “a regional operator can steal tens of hundreds yuan per month, even a university operator can take tens of hundreds yuan or more.”

According to the exposure, the corrupt employees are ripping off the firm through two means: creating phantom workers (fake positions forged by corrupt staff who put the salaries in their own pockets) or soliciting kickbacks from manufacturing suppliers.

The phantom workers are usually in bike maintenance positions. If the rumors are true, this could partially explain why there’s such a high degree of damage to ofo bikes. Although ofo positioning itself as a connector rather than a maker of bikes, it’s a fact that most of its bikes are made by suppliers rather than contributed by end users. Local media cites a person familiar with the matter as saying that a supply chain leader purchases old tires from friends as pawns them off as new components for manufacturing. Needless to say, there must be some kickbacks involved in a case like this.

In response to the anonymous allegations, ofo has released an open letter to emphasize its zero tolerance attitude towards corruption. We have the open letter translated as below:

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  1. Anti-corruption is a top priority for all enterprises. Ofo established the Risk Control Department in 2016, a fast-forward move for a startup company. In this department, there are a number of experts from public security, supervision, and law, who have rich experience in anti-corruption work.
  2. We have zero tolerance for corruption.  Once a case is verified, we will treat these incidents with fair measures.
  3. These accusations from the anonymous source lack details. These remarks are full of personal emotions but lack the specific details of time, place and character. They should be used neither as evidence for anti-corruption work nor as a news source for quoting when there’s no direct verification from the parties concerned.

The broader picture is that this is not a single case. China’s tech landscape is filled with unsavory practices. Internet giants from BAT to medium-sized firms like Meituan-Dianping and JD have all launched campaigns to clean out corruption.

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A brand consulting company is buying one of China’s biggest live streaming platform https://technode.com/2017/05/10/shunya-buys-50-percent-inke/ https://technode.com/2017/05/10/shunya-buys-50-percent-inke/#respond Wed, 10 May 2017 07:46:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49034 Shunya International Brand Consulting (宣亚国际), an A-share listed communications agency, has announced that they are purchasing at least 50% of Inke (映客), China’s leading live streaming service. Shunya’s announcement said that the deal would involve transactions of shares held by the founding team, staff and investment institutions. The firm added that deal will be conducted in […]]]>

Shunya International Brand Consulting (宣亚国际), an A-share listed communications agency, has announced that they are purchasing at least 50% of Inke (映客), China’s leading live streaming service.

Shunya’s announcement said that the deal would involve transactions of shares held by the founding team, staff and investment institutions. The firm added that deal will be conducted in cash and deal will be concluded within a month. No further details on the shares involved in this deal were revealed. They have also told local media that “. . . Inke’s model is facing great challenges and it needs a capable partner to push its enterprise-facing businesses.”

Shunya offers various communication solutions, including digital power compartment, brand-wide communication, public relations, advertising, experiential marketing, data marketing, and other business solutions.

TechNode has reached out to Inke for comment and will update when they respond.

As an early entrant to the sector, Inke has grown quickly during China’s live streaming frenzy over the past two years. The combined forces of the market and the team has turned Inke into one of the most invested-in upstarts in the country. Here’s a breakdown of its fundraising path:

  • July 2015: RMB 10 million angel round from A8.com
  • Nov 2015: Eight-digit RMB A round from SAIF Partners China, GSR Ventures, Buttonwood Capital
  • Jan 2016: RMB 80 million A+ round led by online gaming firm Kunlun
  • Sept 2016: RMB 210 million Pre-B round led by GX Capital

In a later deal, Inke’s investor Kunlun sold a 3% stake in September 2016 for  RMB 210 million, meaning the valuation of Inke surged more than 17 times to RMB 7 billion in nine months. That’s almost as much as Shunya’s valuation of RMB 7.2 billion when they went public earlier this year.

Despite the surge in valuation, Kunlun’s sale hinted that the company was having profit problems. In 2015, their revenue was only RMB 30.48 million with RMB 1.67 million in net profit.

Like other hot verticals in China, live streaming is one more battlefront in the proxy war between China’s tech giants. Compared with other competitors backed by larger companies, Inke was all by itself and its skyrocketing market valuation made it even harder for the company to find more backing.

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China’s star swimmer Fu Yuanhui live streaming on Inke

2016 has been called “Year One” for China’s live streaming industry. There were more than 200 live streaming services back then and over half of them had capital injections. However, as the live streaming craze cools off and the implementation of regulations tightens, China’s live streaming game is entering a knockout round marked by the death of smaller platforms.

Even for top players like Inke, an app that claimed over 25 million daily active users at its peak, it is difficult to maintain growth based on a capital-driven model. Inke’s monthly operation cost hit around RMB 100 million, founder Feng Yousheng told local media September last year.

The company also encountered roadblocks earlier this month when its app was removed from Apple’s App Store. This was actually the third time was removed by Apple, the previous two being in January and February of 2016.

Inke seems to have few options left outside of Shunya, who just went public on February 15th this year at a valuation of RMB 7.2 billion.

Rumors about a tie-up between the two companies have been circulating since the beginning of April, although Inke denied the news at the time. The two companies created a joint venture in March to explore ad-based business models for live streaming platforms and to connect potential ad clients.

Inke’s founder Feng said to local media this March that “. . . live streaming is compatible with all kinds of business models such as ad, e-commerce, membership and value-added service, but ads are still the one that achieves the best performance.”

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China’s tech M&A in 2017: Less consolidation, higher valuations https://technode.com/2017/05/09/chinas-tech-ma-in-2017-less-consolidation-higher-valuations/ https://technode.com/2017/05/09/chinas-tech-ma-in-2017-less-consolidation-higher-valuations/#respond Tue, 09 May 2017 08:33:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=49009 Consolidation, a normal part of any industry, generally consists of three stages: fragmentation, acquisitions & expansion. The stages are the same for all industries, yet every industry will experience these stages differently. 2015 was a banner year of consolidation for China’s technology industry, marked by a frenzy of M&A cases among top players across various […]]]>

Consolidation, a normal part of any industry, generally consists of three stages: fragmentation, acquisitions & expansion. The stages are the same for all industries, yet every industry will experience these stages differently.

2015 was a banner year of consolidation for China’s technology industry, marked by a frenzy of M&A cases among top players across various vertical sectors while leaders began to emerge from the early fragmented stage.

Such M&A cases could be found everywhere in joint attempts to scoop the market and share the resources, from red-hot sectors like ride-hailing (Didi/Kuaidi), local listing services (58.com/Ganji.com) and O2O (Meituan/Dianping) to smaller fields such as online education (51talk/91waijiao) and social e-commerce service (Pinduoduo/Pinhaohuo). The market consolidation trend continues in co-working space with the merger between URWork and New Space earlier this year.

However, 2017 is shaping up to be a bit different. We will see a steady transition of Chinese internet companies to the expansion stage as more newly-formed tech giants are choosing independent development as a way to capture further growth rather than M&A, an analysis report from M&A intelligence vendor Mergermarket pointed out.

Large-scale fundraising and unicorn deals have become an increasingly prominent aspect of Chinese M&A. Didi Chuxing’s record-breaking US$ 5.5 billion fundraise is the most spectacular reminder of this shift. The case along represents a staggering 27.6% of the total US$ 12.4 billion fundings that local companies received so far this year.

Along with Didi Chuxing, there’s a growing number of Chinese tech giants in this trend. Since last year, we have been continuously bombarded by billion dollar investments as well as the creation of a new breed of unicorns in different verticals. Alibaba’s local services platform Koubei.com raised US$ 1.1 billion and Toutiao, a news mobile application provider, raised a US$ 1 billion Series D.

However, these mega fundraises have not translated into a growing number of takeovers, the report added. So far this year, tech deals have decreased in value by 13% to US$ 19.9 billion (65 deals), compared to US$ 22.8 billion (73 deals) in the same period of 2016. And since the beginning of 2017, 41 fewer deals have been announced compared to the same period in 2015, when 106 deals worth US$ 21.6 billion were announced, according to data from Mergermarket.

Chinese M&A suffered a slower start to the year than has been seen in the last couple of years, with the lowest year-to-date value since 2013 (US$ 39.6 billion). This year has seen 413 deals worth US$ 82.1 billion, a 24.6% drop in value compared to the same period in 2016 (479 deals, US$ 108.8 billion). The first three months of the year represent the lowest quarterly value since Q1 2014 when US$ 52.6 billion changed hands across 267 deals.

Mergermarket Group
Chinese M&A: Quarterly Breakdown (source: Mergermarket Group )

IPOs now provide an attractive exit option for investors with China Securities Regulatory Commission approving 103 IPOs in Q1 2017 alone, a 66% YoY increase, the report noted.

Chinese photo-beautifier Meitu was listed at the end of last year while several Chinese tech companies are reportedly in the IPO pipeline including Tencent-backed online reading platform China Reading, internet company Qihoo 360 and Ant Financial.

Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect and Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect, serving as mutual market access, are expected to make Hong Kong another attractive listing venue for Chinese companies.

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Didi becomes more expat-friendly in China with addition of bilingual features https://technode.com/2017/05/08/didi-becomes-more-expat-friendly-in-china-with-addition-of-bilingual-features/ https://technode.com/2017/05/08/didi-becomes-more-expat-friendly-in-china-with-addition-of-bilingual-features/#respond Mon, 08 May 2017 05:44:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48955 didiDidi Chuxing, the Chinese ride-hailing giant that swallowed Uber China, has announced the beta launch of bilingual functions on its app. The service is now only available in the country’s three top metropolises of Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, where most foreigners live and travel, but the firm disclosed it will be available in other cities later. […]]]> didi

Didi Chuxing, the Chinese ride-hailing giant that swallowed Uber China, has announced the beta launch of bilingual functions on its app.

The service is now only available in the country’s three top metropolises of Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, where most foreigners live and travel, but the firm disclosed it will be available in other cities later. Starting today, users in the three cities will gradually have access to an English interface.

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Real-time, in-app IM translation between English and Chinese

While the company plans to make the app 100% bilingual, it is first starting this feature for core services of Taxi (出租车), Premier (专车)and Express, including ExpressPool (快车and顺风车). The app also enables real-time, in-app instant text messaging translation between English and Chinese to facilitate rider-driver communication. Users will also have access to bilingual customer service support via email and phone.

Before this, the most prominent ride-hailing service in China was Mandarin only. When the company discontinued the English interface of Uber China last year, there was an outcry among China’s laowai (老外, a colloquial term for foreigner) community, who felt abandoned in the upgrade.

In addition, the Didi app is also making improvements in payments with support for major international credit cards. Users can sign up with mobile numbers registered in 12 regions of the world, including the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, the Republic of Korea, Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Australia, Canada, the United States and Brazil.

The move comes amid Didi’s globalization push. While the company is expanding progressively to overseas markets, it considers the “internationalization of mobility services in China . . . a crucial link in Didi’s broader global strategy.”

As an international economic and cultural hub, China increasingly attracts inbound foreign tourists, business travelers, and expatriates. According to Chinese tourism authorities, over 28 million international tourists visited the country in 2016, up 8.3% year-on-year, with over 1 million working and living in China.

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WeChat Pay is coming to the US https://technode.com/2017/05/05/wechat-pay-coming-to-us/ https://technode.com/2017/05/05/wechat-pay-coming-to-us/#respond Fri, 05 May 2017 09:22:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48910 WeChat Pay is growing at an exponential speed even though is a relative latecomer in the mobile payment market. With the backing of China’s largest social networking app WeChat, which now claims more than 889 million monthly active users globally, it comes in a close second to China’s first-mover. Now, its operator Tencent is going […]]]>

WeChat Pay is growing at an exponential speed even though is a relative latecomer in the mobile payment market. With the backing of China’s largest social networking app WeChat, which now claims more than 889 million monthly active users globally, it comes in a close second to China’s first-mover.

Now, its operator Tencent is going to take this service to the US through a partnership with Silicon Valley-based mobile payment startup CITCON. Soon, WeChat users in the US will be able to enjoy the same cashless experiences as they do in China, with the payment tool even supporting RMB settlement.

Despite its popularity in China, WeChat is having a tough time expanding overseas despite huge investments in promotions.  So, this service will first target Chinese tourists who are traveling in the US, an increasingly popular tourism destination for Chinese people who are becoming more affluent.

WeChat’s US launch comes after a round of European expansion. It has set up an office in Italy and an UK unit is also due soon. WeChat Pay is available in 15 countries and regions for payment in 12 currencies.

In addition to WeChat’s overseas expansion, Tencent is accelerating its global layout. In April this year, the internet giant led a US$13 million financing round in Aussie cross-border payment startup Airwallex.

Alipay, WeChat Pay’s arch rival in China, has been engaged in a similar drive for global expansion. As of April this year, Alipay is supported in over 100k offline stores in 26 countries across Europe, North America, East Asia, and Southeast Asia. The number of overseas payment during the three-day leave for May 1 tripled year-on-year, according to data from the company.

Ant Financial, the operator of Alipay, just made an US$ 200 million investment in Kakao Pay, the mobile finance subsidiary of Kakao Corp, parent to South Korea’s leading mobile messaging platform Kakao Talk.

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Meituan corruption probe just the “tip of the iceberg” of corporate corruption https://technode.com/2017/05/05/meituan-corruption-probe-just-the-tip-of-the-iceberg-of-corporate-corruption/ https://technode.com/2017/05/05/meituan-corruption-probe-just-the-tip-of-the-iceberg-of-corporate-corruption/#respond Fri, 05 May 2017 08:15:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48889 China’s hit anti-corruption TV drama In the Name of the People has just come to an end, but the cleanup campaigns for Chinese internet giants is continuing. Meituan-Dianping, the acknowledged O2O giant in China, revealed ten graft cases in the group in an internal email, local media is reporting. A dozen employees and merchants were […]]]>

China’s hit anti-corruption TV drama In the Name of the People has just come to an end, but the cleanup campaigns for Chinese internet giants is continuing.

Meituan-Dianping, the acknowledged O2O giant in China, revealed ten graft cases in the group in an internal email, local media is reporting. A dozen employees and merchants were involved in charges of receiving bribes from merchants, deceiving merchants, stealing personal information of clients, and order scalping, whereby merchants inflate their sales through fake orders to cheat for platform subsidies. The suspected criminals have been handed over to the judiciary authorities for further investigation and trial.

The company says it will adopt a zero tolerance approach for those who make fake orders or conduct online frauds no matter they are company employees or merchants.

This is not the first time Meituan has taken action against illegal behavior. According to the internal statement, the company transferred 30 employees and nearly 200 illegal merchants in 2016 to relevant authorities.

The cases Meituan revealed this time include specific examples from employees soliciting kickbacks from merchants to deliveryman making a profit by asking customers to scan fake QR codes. While it is unclear how long this has been happening, what is clear is that corruption has infected all the core businesses of the company from hotel booking to food delivery.

Meituan’s food delivery business is where the corruption is most severe. This is partly caused by the highly subsidized business model of this sector. Similarly, subsidy fraud is also affecting ride-hailing, another subsidy boosted industry in the country.

Meituan’s announcement has brought the phenomenon of internal corruption in internet companies to the spotlight, but as far as Meituan’s cases are concerned, this kind of practice is something commonplace in the days of click farming, rampant selling of personal information, and empty product scalping, among others.

The severity of the problem has encouraged many companies to publicly disclose corruption cases before they were found out by investigators.

After revealing ten graft cases in November last year, JD launched a second anti-corruption campaign with the announcement of six corruption cases this week, firing eight people who have been taking bribes. Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu have all made their moves through setting up dedicated departments for the clean up internal corruptions. Baidu’s former vice president Li Mingyuan has resigned amid a reported scandal of undisclosed transactions and ethical violations.

Although only bigwigs are involved in this battle now, the joint efforts and determination would foster a healthier industrial environment.

Cleaning up corruption with iron fist measures are sure an important component for an anti-corruption drive. However, like in China’s governmental anti-graft movements, the key problem for these tech behemoths lies in how to establish effective prevention mechanisms to make sure this doesn’t happen in the first place.

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Tracing Baidu’s decline from search engine emperor to the “Yahoo of China” https://technode.com/2017/05/04/tracing-baidus-decline-from-search-engine-emperor-to-the-yahoo-of-china/ https://technode.com/2017/05/04/tracing-baidus-decline-from-search-engine-emperor-to-the-yahoo-of-china/#respond Thu, 04 May 2017 09:03:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48781 If you’ve been paying attention to China’s internet industry, then you are surely aware of the term “BAT”, an acronym that’s used to refer China’s IT triumvirate Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent. For a long time, this term is the only one you need to understand China’s digital market. As pioneers of China’s internet boom, BAT […]]]>

If you’ve been paying attention to China’s internet industry, then you are surely aware of the term “BAT”, an acronym that’s used to refer China’s IT triumvirate Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent. For a long time, this term is the only one you need to understand China’s digital market.

As pioneers of China’s internet boom, BAT are often dubbed as the first generation of Chinese tech companies. When they began, they each had their own distinct focus: Baidu for search, Alibaba for e-commerce and Tencent for social networking and games.

Different from the U.S. and Europe, where internet companies focus on one sector and try to be the best at it, Chinese companies start by focusing on and solving one problem, but their ultimate goal is to build huge companies that can attack all different parts of the market.

As the most typical example of this mentality, BAT have been spreading quickly to each other’s core businesses and whatever is trendy in the market. The presence of BAT kingdoms are so visible in China. They are the powers behind nearly ever emerging sectors from ride-hailing, bike-rental, m-health, online education, AI, cloud and big data.

While the kingdom of Tencent and Alibaba have continued their upward run, Baidu, which comes first in the acronym, is gradually lagging behind. Many have started to doubt whether the internet giant is qualified to remain in the term.

Baidu vs Tencent and Alibaba in market cap

Market capitalization is perhaps the most direct means of evaluating the size of a company. Tencent just reached US$ 302 billion market cap this week. After all the fanfare about its historic IPO in 2014, Alibaba came close to breaking the US$ 300 billion barrier on April 24 with a market cap of US$ 286.6 billion. That number does not include Alipay’s operator Ant Financial, which has been seeking an individual listing in the near future.

Regardless of stock price fluctuations, the market cap of Tencent and Alibaba linger around US$ 300 billion. In comparison, Baidu closed at around US$ 178 per share with approximately US$61 billion market cap at the time of writing. That’s only around one-fifths of its peers.

The NASDAQ-listed company has seen its market cap drop constantly after reaching a historical high of US$ 249 per share on November 10th, 2014. In terms of revenue and profits, the gap between Baidu and the other two companies is also widening due to Baidu’s lack of long-term growth momentum.

屏幕快照 2017-05-04 上午11.15.02
Image credit: The Economist

Always one step behind

BAT are trying their best to diversify their businesses in order to construct an ecosystem that would facilitate synergy effect among different units. Tencent and Alibaba are no doubt the bellwethers in creating their business ecosystems.

For example, you can’t really define Alibaba as an e-commerce company anymore. In addition to its core business, its revenue source is quite diversified with significant growth from cloud computing as well as digital media and entertainment. Its business covers sectors including entertainment, m-health, mobile payment, B2B services and cloud computing. Tencent is doing something very similar but with a slightly different focus. In addition to core messaging tools like WeChat and QQ, Tencent saw positive returns from Tencent Video, Tencent Music, and investments in Dianping and Didi.

However, Baidu is highly reliant on its search service and has few successful investment cases to boast about. Alibaba and Tencent’s startup investment strategy looks like a trawler net fishing,  while Baidu seems to be going for precision strikes. However, precision takes time and the search company has been consistently derided for coming late to the game. For that reason, it has missed chances to capitalize on several waves of tech trends.

China’s ride-hailing market really heated up at the beginning of 2014. At that time Tencent and Alibaba were competing through proxy by investing in Didi and Kuaidi respectively. Baidu joined the battle almost one year after at the end of 2014 through investment in Uber. Something similar happened to Baidu when it’s transitioned to mobile and O2O. Sure it’s the safest to enter the arena when the scene is maturing, but it would also generate the least return.

Bogged down in negative news

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Press coverage about Baidu has trended somewhat negative in the past few years along with a series of scandals.

One of the most scandalous events that sparked public outcry was the death of a college student named Wei Zexi, who blamed Baidu for promoting untrustworthy hospitals that failed to cure his cancer. Baidu’s paid listing practice has long been questioned by the public for selling listings to bidders, especially medical institutions, without adequately checking their claims. In January 2016, it was revealed that Baidu had sold the management rights to a popular online message board on hemophilia to a private hospital in Shaanxi province.

In addition to the incidents themselves, Baidu’s slow and ill-received responses lead the company to a larger PR crisis. The fiasco created a popular meme in the tech circle: “This session of Baidu PR sucks.”

Baidu bets its future on AI

In order to stay focused, Baidu has sold the mobile gaming business that was shaped out of 91 Wireless, acquired for US$ 1.9 billion, and axed several businesses with mediocre performance including their mobile health department, Baidu Future Store (an e-commerce platform), and Baidu Shuoba (a social networking unit).

Now, they are focusing on AI and autonomous driving, especially after Lu Qi, former Microsoft exec, took office as the company’s COO at the beginning of this year. But the company suffered a server brain drain as several top execs in AI unit left the company last month, led by Andrew Ng, the man behind Google Brain.

Baidu, who put forward the concept of Baidu Brain back in 2016, surely enjoys some first mover advantage this time and it’s continuing it through home-grown R&D and investments. In the past one-year period, it has announced acquisition or investment in five startups related to the businesses, including AI service xPerception, electric car manufacturer NextEV, Alexa-like Raven Tech, Velodyne, Lidar for self-driving cars, and fintech company ZestFinance.

In a recent article, The Economist pointed out that Baidu is becoming the Yahoo of China, “a once-dominant search giant that sank owing to lack of innovation and a series of management blunders” and that AI is probably the company’s last resort to restore its former glory.

Currently, however, no matter if it’s Baidu Brain or autonomous driving, Baidu’s AI businesses are more in the R&D stage. They still need more application scenarios to apply these cutting-edge technologies before making profits from it.  Even if they were the first, this advantage is slowly diminishing as both Tencent and Alibaba have announced their own AI projects.

Baidu just open-sourced its self-driving technologies and services through Project Apollo, a tentative commercialization drive of its auto drive technologies, as company COO Lu calls it.

Robin Li also disclosed last month that the company is going to accelerate the commercialization drive for its AI products. We still need time to see what changes this strategic change will bring to the search giant.

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These Ex-Baidu employees are connecting SEA merchants with mobile payment tools https://technode.com/2017/05/03/southeast-asia-fintech-baidu-silot/ https://technode.com/2017/05/03/southeast-asia-fintech-baidu-silot/#respond Wed, 03 May 2017 03:40:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48715 Southeast Asia’s tech landscape shares so many similarities with China’s of five to ten years ago with its maturing internet infrastructure as well as a swift transition to smart and mobile devices. No wonder a plethora of Chinese companies are flocking to the Southeast Asia market in an attempt to duplicate their domestic success in […]]]>

Southeast Asia’s tech landscape shares so many similarities with China’s of five to ten years ago with its maturing internet infrastructure as well as a swift transition to smart and mobile devices. No wonder a plethora of Chinese companies are flocking to the Southeast Asia market in an attempt to duplicate their domestic success in growing Southeast Asian destinations.

Along with this trend, not only internet giants like Xiaomi and Alibaba are targeting at the market as a means of business expansion, but also Chinese startups who find huge possibilities in the area are developing products solely for the territory.

Silot, a fintech startup based in Beijing and Singapore, is one of the companies that is leading this trend. It develops loyalty exchange programs and regional settlement networks across Southeast Asia and other emerging markets. The startup provides settlement and payment solutions as well as marketing and campaign services.

Andy Li, former deputy general manager of Baidu Global Payment, has more than a decade of working experience in internet industry across the Asia Pacific region. After witnessing the fintech boom in China and the disparity between different markets, Andy started Silot with his Baidu teammate Bryan Sun, who now works as CTO.

“Fintech has two development stages. The key words for the first phase are connectivity and enabler, where we set up the infrastructure of the mobile internet and mobile payment to facilitate the interactions between different entities. In the second phase, the keywords are big data and AI, where massive amounts of data is generated,” Andy told TechNode.

Silot is completing the first phase for emerging markets by setting up the infrastructure. Through connecting review-based apps like Dianping and local merchants, the Silot Loyalty Exchange Program offers customized and accurate push promotions by matching the users’ purchasing preferences and merchants’ offer with machine learning and data technology.

IMG_9927

“We are running a B2B business, which links merchants and/or banks with online apps such as promotional apps, delivery apps, marketplace apps, etc. We help merchants to match online users to their business nature by linking them with online apps & e-wallets,” Andy said. “With our big data technology, we are able to generate customer personas to help merchants understand better about their customers.”

“Although there’s an increasing demand for third-party payment services, most of the merchants in Southeast Asia don’t have financial accounts, even if they do, they are accounts of traditional banks, which can’t offer additional values,” he adds.

This is exactly what China experienced a few years ago when the O2O closed loop hadn’t been created, Li pointed out.

Currently, Silot has partnered up with several leading payment solutions and banks across the region. It’s loyalty exchange partners connect the offline merchants with the apps from different countries.

The startup’s system is free of charge for clients so far. In the long-term, it plans to generate revenue from memberships and key accounts on a marketing performance basis.

Apart from startups, China’s investment institutions are also looking into the trend. ZhenFund, China’s reputable angel investor founded by renowned tech guru Xu Xiaoping, just invested in the seed round of Silot, its first portfolio company in Southeast Asia market. “Silot plans to start our next funding round in the next quarter.” Li disclosed.

Li wants the team to stay focused on Singapore and Thailand first before extending Australia, Malaysia, and Indonesia for later on.

Li gives several reasons for choosing Singapore as the pilot market before expanding globally.

“The Singapore government is very friendly to startups with many attractive supporting programs,” he says. “More importantly, Singapore as a financial center is a great place to build settlement related business with full spectral support from its regulations to infrastructures.”

Another reason for the decision is probably the quick rise of fintech in Southeast Asia market. The area saw the greatest number of fintech deals in 2016. Of the total 71 investment deals closed in the year, over half of them went to Singapore-based startups.

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Bike-rental war escalates with Alipay supporting “scan-and-ride” function for six bike-rental apps https://technode.com/2017/04/28/alipay-supports-scan-and-ride-function-for-six-bike-rental-apps-this-is-no-longer-a-startup-battle/ https://technode.com/2017/04/28/alipay-supports-scan-and-ride-function-for-six-bike-rental-apps-this-is-no-longer-a-startup-battle/#respond Fri, 28 Apr 2017 08:42:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48613 Alipay, the online and mobile payment platform operated by Ant Financial, has teamed up with six bike-rental apps to allow users to rent 6 million bikes in 50 cities across China directly through the app’s new “scan and ride” function. Users can unlock any ofo, YouonBike, Bluebike, hellobike, Ubike or funbike vehicle simply by scanning […]]]>

Alipay, the online and mobile payment platform operated by Ant Financial, has teamed up with six bike-rental apps to allow users to rent 6 million bikes in 50 cities across China directly through the app’s new “scan and ride” function.

Users can unlock any ofo, YouonBike, Bluebike, hellobike, Ubike or funbike vehicle simply by scanning its QR code through the Alipay app starting from today, the company announced.

Bike-rental has exploded in China over the past year, with tens of millions of users taking millions of rides every day across the country. However, users are facing with an increasingly bothering problem of choosing between a “rainbow” of different bike rental services. For users, new service eliminates the need to download individual apps for each service. For the companies on the other hand, the partnership helps both parties to drive more traffic.

Bike-rental apps are no longer the only place where urban commuters can borrow a bicycle. Behind the heating competition, there’s an increasing presence of internet giants, who are entering the battle field through capital injection or product line-up, or both.

Mobike’s service was integrated this March into WeChat, a popular messaging app developed by Mobike’s investor Tencent. Didi also added ofo to its app earlier this week in a similar move.

Although Alipay’s cooperation comes a bit late, it has certain advantages. The sheer number of partners, which indicates more bikes, is a plus in a market where bike availability is the top priority for users. When Alipay users scan the QR code, no user registration for separate bike-rental apps is needed for renting the bike. In addition, any user that rents a bike through Alipay automatically receives comprehensive accident insurance.

“Bike-sharing is transforming lifestyles across China, providing a healthy, convenient and affordable way to get across town. Integrating Alipay with these apps will make life even easier for users and help the industry continue its tremendous growth.”

~ Chen Long, Chief Strategy Officer of Ant Financial

Before this product tie-up, Alibaba has already tapped the market through its credit rating system Sesame Credit. Ofo and YouonBike allow users with qualifying scores on Sesame Credit to rent bikes without a deposit.

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This startup wants to shake up data visualization with VR https://technode.com/2017/04/28/this-startup-wants-to-shake-up-data-visualization-with-vr/ https://technode.com/2017/04/28/this-startup-wants-to-shake-up-data-visualization-with-vr/#respond Fri, 28 Apr 2017 06:32:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48594 Our world is now brimming with data. Every home, office, machine and people is contributing their own bits and bytes to the every-growing data pool. Data collection is not the problem anymore. The problem now is understanding it and gleaning insights. Kineviz, a startup that offers custom data visualization solutions and tools for enterprises, wants […]]]>

Our world is now brimming with data. Every home, office, machine and people is contributing their own bits and bytes to the every-growing data pool. Data collection is not the problem anymore. The problem now is understanding it and gleaning insights.

Kineviz, a startup that offers custom data visualization solutions and tools for enterprises, wants to solve the problem by drawing upon VR technology. The company’s product is basically based on a per client basis so as to satisfy specific requirements from different customers in a bit to make complex data easy to understand. The form of the product varies according to customer demands from conference experiences, apps, and internal tools.

Kineviz
Kineviz team — From left to right: Sony Green, Weidong Yang, Travis Bennett

“For a lot of things, 2D is still the best solution,” reckoned Sony Green, head of business development. “But VR offers a lot of advantages over existing data visualizations solutions, especially for certain kind of datas. When you get into really high dimensional data, something like 100 different dimensions per node. It’s difficult to keep track of all that info with lots of 2D graphics and it becomes a very large cognitive load for people to track them on multiple screens at once.”

VR allows us to tap into our natural abililty to process special information. Without looking around, we have an innate understanding of the spaces we are in because that’s how our brains are wired. In a simulated environment created by VR, we use these natural ways of processing information that a 2D screen can’t offer.

Furthermore, VR opens up use cases that were previous impossible by lowering the barrier for common users. You don’t have to be a data scientist: anyone who can play a game can use VR to explore data science in a way that is intuitive.

Thanks to the special capabilities of VR data visualization, this technology is now mainly applied into areas that need to process data with high complexity, such as healthcare and file sharing. Kineviz has already developed solutions for Baystreet Research, Box, and Berkeley.

Adopting a hardware agnostic approach, Kineviz is engaged in developing web VR, which all mainstream VR headsets like HTC Vive and Oculus support. “There’s more flexibility and we can handle all the functionality without having to develop separate solutions,” Sony noted.

Right now games and simulation are pretty much where everyone is focused, but the maturing VR market is also pointing to more business applications of the technology and data visualization is one of the areas it has great potentials.

In addition to VR, Sony says that the firm us also looking into AR. “The hardware and the overall experience of VR is so much more cohesive right now than the AR solutions we have seen,” he said. “That means when AR hardware catches up, we already have some of the questions answered in terms of ways to poach the interface and to program for a 3D special awareness of data.”

Weidong Yang, a Chinese American physicist entrepreneur, founded the company with technologist Travis Bennett in 2014. Based on a shared interest in dancing, Yang also founded Kinetech Arts, a not for profit dance performance company, where dance artists, visual/sound artists, engineers and scientists work together, with the vision of enriching the experience of live performance by the advance of science and technology.

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Get your startup noticed at TechCrunch Shenzhen https://technode.com/2017/04/27/get-your-startup-noticed-at-techcrunch-shenzhen/ https://technode.com/2017/04/27/get-your-startup-noticed-at-techcrunch-shenzhen/#respond Thu, 27 Apr 2017 09:16:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48540 Shenzhen is often dubbed as the Silicon Valley of hardware:  it’s the innovation hub for all things hardware. That’s exactly where we’re taking this year’s TechCrunch Summit. We’ve already told you about the Hackathon, but did you know that we’re also going to have a dedicated space for startups to show off their stuff? Get your voice heard […]]]>

Shenzhen is often dubbed as the Silicon Valley of hardware:  it’s the innovation hub for all things hardware. That’s exactly where we’re taking this year’s TechCrunch Summit.

We’ve already told you about the Hackathon, but did you know that we’re also going to have a dedicated space for startups to show off their stuff?

Get your voice heard by an amazing professional crowd: In the past six sessions of TechCrunch International Summit, over 1,000 companies showed off their products to an amazing group of 30,000 participants. It’s a good chance for your product launch.

Spot international tech trends: As an international event, TechCrunch Summit is the place where techies and entrepreneurs from the global mingle together for the exchange of latest trends in different startup ecosystems. In the past, we introduced country pavilions for international startups from U.S. Japan, Korea, Israel, Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan. This year, we have confirmed the participation of startups from Thailand and Hong Kong, not to mention the companies who hail from China.

Media coverage: Each of the past events have invited over 120 media from home and abroad. In addition to local mainstream news portals, the events are also covered by media from Korea, Japan, Southeast Asia and the Middle East.

VC-meetup: For those who are ready to put their ideas to the ultimate test, we have a dedicated schedule for you. At VC Meetup, you can pitch face-to-face to senior investors from some of the most forward-thinking firms like IDG, Sequoia China, GGV Capital, and Zhenfund.

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You can join us at the Startup Alley as a VIP exhibitor (display logos at event official website as partners, select VIP booths, get VIP pass, media coverage, and promotions), a joint exhibitor (institutions or countries that can demo their products at a joint exhibition area), or a startup.

Each year is bigger than the last, and the same will be true in June for Shenzhen with 180 spots up for grabs. We invite innovative companies in AI, e-commerce, fintech, smart hardware, gaming, VR/AR transportation, mobile healthcare, O2O, and enterprise services to join our startup exhibition area. We would like to provide a platform for more startups to present themselves. 

The summit runs June 17-20 at I-Factory, Nanshan District, Shenzhen. Tickets are available at an early-bird discount until May 1st.

Sponsors help make our events happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact our sponsorship team at shenkunqi@technode.com

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Didi app embeds ofo to provide flexible solution for short trips https://technode.com/2017/04/27/didi-app-embeds-ofo-to-provide-flexible-solution-for-short-trips/ https://technode.com/2017/04/27/didi-app-embeds-ofo-to-provide-flexible-solution-for-short-trips/#respond Thu, 27 Apr 2017 03:58:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48523 DidiAfter weeks of rumors, Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing announced today it has added bike-sharing service from ofo to its app. DiDi users will have direct access to ofo’s bright yellow bikes in the app. As a major investor of ofo, DiDi has poured a combined hundreds of million USD in three financing round of the […]]]> Didi

After weeks of rumors, Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing announced today it has added bike-sharing service from ofo to its app.

DiDi users will have direct access to ofo’s bright yellow bikes in the app.

As a major investor of ofo, DiDi has poured a combined hundreds of million USD in three financing round of the bike-rental company. The product link-up is a major step towards more extensive collaboration between the two.

The cooperation comes shortly after Mobike integrated its service into WeChat, a popular messaging app developed by Mobike’s investor Tencent. Mobike and WeChat’s tie-up has proven quite successful for both parties. The weekly utilization rate of Mobike surged by 100% after it’s  integration, the company disclosed. On the other hand, WeChat’s mini-app program, which witnessed lukewarm reception, also received lots of boost from Mobike.

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Total DAU of WeChat mini-apps

Obviously, the partnership would help ofo to gain more traffic, giving it more edge in a tightening competition with multiplying rivals. But, similar to Mobike-WeChat’s case, ofo isn’t the only one that would benefit from the cooperation. Didi Chuxing has been suffering from a drop in active users since last year after the company called off a previous generous subsidy program. Likewise, ofo, which claims over 10 million orders per day, would also drive Didi’s performance.

Didi
Active rates of Didi since October 2016

Together with the announcement, DiDi disclosed that its bus service will enter into an enhanced partnership with ofo. ofo’s bike-routing analytics will help refine the AI-powered algorithms in DiDi’s real-time bus tracker to better respond to users’ differentiated short-distance mobility needs and design more efficient bike-bus transfer options.

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Merger between URWork and New Space points to maturity in co-working market https://technode.com/2017/04/26/urwork-and-new-space-announce-merger/ https://technode.com/2017/04/26/urwork-and-new-space-announce-merger/#respond Wed, 26 Apr 2017 08:18:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48495 China’s co-working market has well passed its initial growth stage and is shifting quickly to maturity. The completion of this transition is marked today by the largest merger ever in China’s co-working field between two top players in the market. China’s co-working unicorn URWork inked an agreement with another rival New Space for a strategic merger, the […]]]>

China’s co-working market has well passed its initial growth stage and is shifting quickly to maturity. The completion of this transition is marked today by the largest merger ever in China’s co-working field between two top players in the market. China’s co-working unicorn URWork inked an agreement with another rival New Space for a strategic merger, the latter announced today.

The market valuation of the merged entity would hit an impressive RMB 9 billion (US$1.31 billion), the firm disclosed. Beijing-headquartered URWork has raised to unicorn status in January this year after pocketing an RMB 400 million worth of round, the largest capital injection in the vertical so far. Given URWork’s latest round booked a valuation of RMB 7 billion, it puts New Space’s valuation at roughly around RMB 2 billion. A new name for the company has not been mentioned.

Mao Daqing, CEO of URWork, was announced to take the post of board chairman and to co-CEO the new entity with Wang Shengjiang, CEO of New Space, after the merger. The two companies will maintain their independent status with team structures unchanged. The tie-up mainly lies in the sharing of resources.

Both of the two companies were launched in 2015, the year that marked the full boom of China’s co-working industry. As the first unicorn in this vertical, URWork has landed more than RMB 1.2 billion in fundings in overall six found of financing. It runs 66 locations in 18 cities around the globe.

New Space was founded by entrepreneur and educator Yu Minhong (Michael Yu) and senior banker Sheng Xitai. The duo also run Aplus Fund, a startup fund focused on AI, fintech, and entertainment. As of present, New Space is operating more than 30 locations in 13 cities. It has incubated over 200 projects, of which nearly 70% have secured angel or A round funding.

What does URWork &New Space merger mean for WeWork?

Rumors of the URWork and New Space merger have been around since at least last year when local media reported a possible merger between the two March last year. URWork CEO Mao Daqing denied the merger at the time. While the rumors were 1 year early, they came just after WeWork announced an infusion of US$ 430 million from Chinese investors. The logic at the time was that the merger would be to fend off a powerful overseas player, similar to the Didi-Kuadi merger after Uber entered the China market.

Finally confirmed one year later, it’s not just about fighting for their home turf in China, but on a larger scale for the global market.

Since the second half of 2016, URWork has been accelerating its overseas expansion, starting with Singapore, London, New York and Taiwan. Globalization sure will be a top priority for URWork-New space, which now operates nearly 100 locations in 24 cities around the world. The company said they plan to boost the number to 150 locations in 35 cities in three years.

China’s co-working space industry experienced rapid growth over the past few years. In a crowded vertical where only a few top players could survive, merging with another rival is a good option to stay in the market. New Space itself merged with AA Accelerator back in 2015, while Shanghai-based We+ just merged with CoWork. URWork and New Space merger is not the first case and they sure won’t be the last.

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PowerCore founder: Toy-to-life games are about to take off in China https://technode.com/2017/04/25/powercore-toy-to-life-games-are-about-to-take-off-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/04/25/powercore-toy-to-life-games-are-about-to-take-off-in-china/#respond Tue, 25 Apr 2017 07:17:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48439 Toy-to-life games, a category that creates immersive gaming experiences by connecting digital gameplay and physical toys, has become very popular in the west. Activision, the game maker that injected vigor into the genre with its Skylanders franchise, sold over US$ 3 billion worth of games and toys worldwide by 2015. However, the category has yet to become a […]]]>

Toy-to-life games, a category that creates immersive gaming experiences by connecting digital gameplay and physical toys, has become very popular in the west. Activision, the game maker that injected vigor into the genre with its Skylanders franchise, sold over US$ 3 billion worth of games and toys worldwide by 2015.

However, the category has yet to become a big thing in China. But it won’t take long before toy-to-life craze hit the middle kingdom, according to Shen Jia, founder of PowerCore, the Tokyo and East Palo Alto-based startup that aspires to bring its technologies here.

Founded in 2013, PowerCore creates and distributes collectible smart toys that can be scanned into games via NFC or QR codes for a reactive gameplay experience. In addition, the startup also handles digital activations and provides merchandise solutions to gaming companies and brands.

PowerCore

Stumbling blocks

“People always tend to think toy-to-life more about one franchise and a console-type of gaming experience. A couple of problems that was specific in China,” Shen Jia says. “One was that consoles don’t exist here, the other is the console that’s being able to get collection things might be a little big difficult for people to store it in their houses.”

To counter these obstacles, PowerCore’s solution is focused entirely on mobile, in line with China’s shift to mobility. “The toy-to-life sector as far as mobile concern doesn’t really exist right now, even in US and Japan.”

The best form of toy-to-life games, according to Shen, is something like Pokemon Go, where there’s more real life interaction with digital experience. “As a game structure, it incentivizes people to leave the house and do interesting and weird things,” he says. “We have games that help you interact with the environment, with the products you purchase as well as the place you go, that’s what we think the future toy-to-life sector would be like.”

Feeling like a VIP

There’s always something lost in translating the hot IPs from one medium to the other, even if they do, there’s another barrier to overcome, the loss of audiences who share passions for that content.

Shen, who is a big fan of Transformers, cites a personal experience to illustrate this point: “Before what happens is each of the licensed individual properties is doing the marketing themselves,” he says. “If a Transformer film is publishing, there would be movie trailers and the game itself would be promoted by advertisements, and the toys will be in the store by their own advertisement. None of them would work together.”

Through cooperation with IP right holders or movie studios, PowerCore’s platform does allow them to tie that all together by cross-referencing contents that share the same IP. Those who watched a certain movie can use their tickets to unlock cool characters in the game, or if you play the game to a certain level, you can get a discount when buying a movie ticket.

“We create a platform where people like a specific movie franchise to interact on all the different levels,” he adds. “When all of the IP properties work together, as a fan I feel more like a VIP: when I go to the game I have a benefit.”

“If you think from a movie studio and IP point of view before they wouldn’t know the LTV (lifetime value) of a real user. They only know the game LTV, but they didn’t know that the same person that plays this game also bought movie tickets and also bought this toy,” Shen Jia says. “Now we kind of measure that specific LTV of a user at multiple touch points.”

China, Japan, and the US

Shen is also the co-founder of RockYou, which created widgets and apps for MySpace and Facebook. As a serial entrepreneur with experience in the US, Japan, and China, he compared with startup ecosystems in the three countries.

Silicon Valley and Beijing are no doubt the top-level startup hubs with top-notch resources in terms of funding, overall talent pool and innovation speed. The difference between the two cities, according to Shen, lies in how exits work.

“That process is still a little mixed in China. The whole system is changing and everyone in China adapts to the changes a lot faster, so most of the companies look at business models a little bit short term, as opposed to the shoot-for-the-moon type of thing like Facebook and Snapchat,” he says. “Those types of startups are having a harder time starting in China, but in general, the innovation speed in China is ridiculously fast now.”

Japan is still pretty slow as far as startup innovation, Shen thinks this is in part because the culture of being safe still prevails in the country. “Despite the government is very supportive of the tech startup, no nobody is willing to try things that are really adventurous because if you have a failed startup they think you suck, which is kind of nuts.”

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[Gallery] Photo highlights from the Shanghai International Technology Fair 2017 https://technode.com/2017/04/21/gallery-photo-highlights-from-the-shanghai-international-technology-fair-2017/ https://technode.com/2017/04/21/gallery-photo-highlights-from-the-shanghai-international-technology-fair-2017/#respond Fri, 21 Apr 2017 10:10:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48311 This year’s Shanghai International Technology Fair is officially under way. Although bearing Shanghai in its name, the event went well beyond innovations coming from the city or even the country to cover tech breakthroughs from around the globe. Among a dizzying number of products, electric vehicles and VR/AR won the spotlight among the crowd. Here […]]]>

This year’s Shanghai International Technology Fair is officially under way. Although bearing Shanghai in its name, the event went well beyond innovations coming from the city or even the country to cover tech breakthroughs from around the globe.

Among a dizzying number of products, electric vehicles and VR/AR won the spotlight among the crowd. Here are the highlights in case you missed it out.

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While aerial drones have been in full swing in the past few years, some believe it’s time to explore the underwater world. Shanghai-based Rainbowfish Ocean Technology showcased their latest vessel for oceanic tourism. Its maximum water depth for normal usage is up to 120 meters and the embedded battery can last six hours at a full charge.
Moon is a 3D virtual mobile theater developed by Royole, the manufacture of flexible displays, sensors and VR consumer electronics. The device delivers an immersive 3D watching or gaming experience.

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San Fransisco-based startup Kineviz provides customized solutions for data visualization in VR.

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Chery shows off its latest electric car EQ1, which is priced at only around RMB 50k (US$7,264)

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Fourier demonstrates its X1 lower-limb exoskeleton product at the event.

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Enabled by machine translation, Travis is a portable voice translator that let you instantly communicate in over 80 languages. The product is running a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo.

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Developed by Yinlong, this 18 meter- long electric bus that can carry up to 107 people

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Is it table tennis? Is it football? Who can tell?

TeqBall is a project backed by Hungarian company Morgan Star Group. It’s similar to table tennis but instead of using a paddle, you play with a soccer ball. While amateur football fans could play it for fun, professionals could use it for training sessions where their moves and gestures will be tracked by an accompanying monitor for data collection and analysis, explained Tony Zhou, executive at the firm.

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VeChain is a cloud product management platform built on a blockchain. VeChain focuses on four areas: anti-counterfeiting, supply chain management, asset management and client experiences.

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U-Parking raises RMB 12 million to ease parking pain for China’s urban drivers https://technode.com/2017/04/20/u-parking-series-a-parking-gobi-ventures/ https://technode.com/2017/04/20/u-parking-series-a-parking-gobi-ventures/#respond Thu, 20 Apr 2017 08:27:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48257 Chinese parking assistant startup U-Parking announced today that it raised RMB 12 million (around US$ 1.74 million ) Series A led by Gobi Ventures. U-Parking (有车位), founded in Beijing in 2014, provides distributed parking space supplies in big cities in China and secures decent parking experience for both individual users and car-sharing businesses. U-Parking has […]]]>

Chinese parking assistant startup U-Parking announced today that it raised RMB 12 million (around US$ 1.74 million ) Series A led by Gobi Ventures.

U-Parking (有车位), founded in Beijing in 2014, provides distributed parking space supplies in big cities in China and secures decent parking experience for both individual users and car-sharing businesses. U-Parking has implemented a parking spot booking and automated allocation system, using car license plate numbers for identification, to maximize the parking space utilization across the city, and at the same time to cut down marginal costs encountered in parking management.

“U-Parking’s services are perfectly matched to the existing car-sharing services, because they give their business partners more choices of parking spaces at a low cost, and these parking lots are even monitored,” said Michael Zhu, Managing Partner at Gobi Ventures.

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The funding will be utilized to expand its business by providing parking services covering more “nodes” or parking lots in urban areas. U-Parking has now covered more than 300 “node” in over 180 core business region in Beijing’s downtown area. The startup will soon expand its service to other major cities in China including Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, etc.

As a B2C platform, U-Parking mainly goes after commuters, who suffer an increasing degree of unpredictability in parking due to scattered distribution of parking lots, non-standard prices and poor managements. To counter these issues, U-Parking has incorporated features into its app that allows its users to estimate parking costs ahead of time and to ensure standardized services when parking.

At the same time, U-Parking is integrating various third-party service providers such as restaurants and gas stations into its platform to provide all-rounded commuting service for users.

Along with the motorization of China, parking is becoming a big concern for Chinese urban residents especially those in metropolises like Beijing and Shanghai. The rising demand fostered a hot vertical of on-demand parking. Major players in the field include Tingchebao and 51Park.

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Hacking with TechCrunch in the Silicon Valley of hardware https://technode.com/2017/04/20/techcrunch-shenzhen-2017-hackathon/ https://technode.com/2017/04/20/techcrunch-shenzhen-2017-hackathon/#respond Thu, 20 Apr 2017 05:55:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48248 Together with TechCrunch annual summit, TechCrunch Hackathon is coming to China’s hardware hub Shenzhen this year. Hundreds of coders and tech enthusiasts will soon storm the city for a heated competition. The concept of Hackathon finds its roots in Silicon Valley. It’s a marathon-like event where contestant teams use 24 intensive hours to design and […]]]>

Together with TechCrunch annual summit, TechCrunch Hackathon is coming to China’s hardware hub Shenzhen this year. Hundreds of coders and tech enthusiasts will soon storm the city for a heated competition.

The concept of Hackathon finds its roots in Silicon Valley. It’s a marathon-like event where contestant teams use 24 intensive hours to design and develop their products.

As a parallel event of the TechCrunch summit, we have seen three sessions of TechCrunch Hackathon in Beijing and Shanghai. Each of the sessions welcomed more than 200 participants from around the world. This year we here waiting for you to bring whatever great ideas you have and spend a nice weekend to bring it closer to reality.

Hackathon

TechCrunch + Hackathon + You = Amazing

When: 9:00 AM, 17th- 2:00 PM 18th June, 2017

Where: I-Factory, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

Who and how: We welcome anyone who is interested in technology: tech fans, developers, designers and students alike. You can either join as a team or individually and find your new buddies here. But each team in the contest should consist of 3-5 members. Registration information should include division of the work, name list, and an introduction of your product.

Accepted teams will get the chance to pitch their final product to a panel of judges mad up of experts as well as sponsor delegates. The top ten teams will walk away with awards in different categories including the Grand Prize, Most Innovative Product, Most Valuable Product, and Most Complete Product.

One thing to note is that everything made during the Hackathon is the sole property of the creators. Ownership and IP rights all rest their hands. All participants must sign a non-disclosure agreement for the APIs at the Hackathon.

To make it more fair for everyone, we do not allow a semi-finished or finished product to enter the competition, but it’s fine to bring a mature idea to the Hackathon.

One more thing

There are also all sorts of prizes up for grabs. In addition to a fantastic chance to build some awesome with cool guys, Hackathon teams can get a two-day pass to the main conference of TechCrunch Shenzhen where you can chat with founders and investors, honor certificates, TechCrunch souvenir T-shirt and more. Also, the event will be stocked with enough pizza, caffeine and Wi-Fi to keep you going all through the night.

Register here at our official website to reserve your place at the event if you are interested!

Sponsors help make our event happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact our sponsorship team at shenkunqi@technode.com

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Baidu launches open platform Project Apollo to speed up self-driving car development https://technode.com/2017/04/19/baidu-launches-open-platform-project-apollo-to-speed-up-self-driving-car-development/ https://technode.com/2017/04/19/baidu-launches-open-platform-project-apollo-to-speed-up-self-driving-car-development/#respond Wed, 19 Apr 2017 07:27:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48215 Chinese search giant Baidu announced Tuesday an open autonomous driving platform dubbed “Project Apollo” in an attempt to build a more collaborative ecosystem in the self-driving industry. Named after the lunar landing program, the new platform encompasses hardware and software and aims to speed up self-driving car development and create cooperation between automotive and autonomous […]]]>

Chinese search giant Baidu announced Tuesday an open autonomous driving platform dubbed “Project Apollo” in an attempt to build a more collaborative ecosystem in the self-driving industry.

Named after the lunar landing program, the new platform encompasses hardware and software and aims to speed up self-driving car development and create cooperation between automotive and autonomous driving companies.

The “Apollo” project provides a complete hardware and software service solution that includes a vehicle platform, hardware platform, software platform and cloud data services. Baidu will open source code and capabilities in obstacle perception, trajectory planning, vehicle control, vehicle operating systems and other functions, as well as a complete set of testing tools, according to the company’s statement.

In addition, Baidu has announced a specific timetable for the progress of their self-driving project. The company says it will first open its autonomous driving technology for a restricted environment in July; it will then share its technology for cars running autonomously in simple urban road conditions towards the end of the year. Fully autonomous driving capabilities on highways and open city roads will be rolled out gradually over time by 2020.

Baidu has cut several businesses in the past year to keep up with the changing market, but the self-driving car has always been one of the areas where the company has had high hopes. Baidu has set up an autonomous car team in the U.S. almost exactly one year ago. After conducting road tests on the highways and roads of Beijing, the firm had open trial operations of its autonomous car fleet in November 2016 in Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province.

However, the company suffered apparent setbacks recently with the departure of several top executives on the AI and self-driving team. Andrew Ng, the former artificial intelligence scientist of the company, left last month. Shortly afterward, Wang Jin, Baidu’s senior vice-president (SVP) and former general manager of the company’s autonomous driving unit, resigned to start his own self-driving company.

Baidu autonomous cars
Image credit: Navigant

From a technological perspective, Baidu, or internet companies that tapped driverless car industry in general, still has a long way to go. In a report released by Navigant, Baidu took the last place among eighteen contenders in self-driving car tech. Another internet company, Uber, came in the 16thwhile top positions were taken by traditional automotive manufacturers of Ford, GM, and Renault-Nissan.

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Tencent bets on online flea market with $200m investment in Zhuan Zhuan https://technode.com/2017/04/18/tencent-bets-on-online-flea-market-with-200m-investment-in-zhuan-zhuan/ https://technode.com/2017/04/18/tencent-bets-on-online-flea-market-with-200m-investment-in-zhuan-zhuan/#respond Tue, 18 Apr 2017 10:06:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48196 TencentThe decades-long rivalry between Tencent and Alibaba spans almost every hot tech vertical in China. It’s no exaggeration to say that where there’s Tencent, there’s Alibaba and vice versa. The competition between the two Chinese internet giants is now entering another field – second-hand goods trading market. According to the official announcement, Tencent has injected […]]]> Tencent

The decades-long rivalry between Tencent and Alibaba spans almost every hot tech vertical in China. It’s no exaggeration to say that where there’s Tencent, there’s Alibaba and vice versa. The competition between the two Chinese internet giants is now entering another field – second-hand goods trading market.

According to the official announcement, Tencent has injected a hefty US$ 200 million of funding for minority equity in Zhuan Zhuan, the used goods trading unit of China’s Craigslist, 58.com. The funding was raised at a reportedly US$ 1 billion valuation.

Under the agreement, 58.com will integrate the Zhuan Zhuan app and certain used goods related listing channels from the 58 and Ganji classified platforms into a separate group of entities, according to a company statement.

Launched in November 2015, Zhuan Zhuan is an online marketplace where users run their own stores to sell unwanted goods as well as make purchase from other sellers. More than 30 million users have posted a combined 100 million second-hand items on the platform with an average monthly trading volume of nearly RMB 2 billion.

“We are excited to welcome Tencent as both a partner and a direct investor in Zhuan Zhuan. This is a significant endorsement of a platform that was launched only a little over a year ago. Online transactions of used goods are very underdeveloped in China, but mobile technology and increasing user awareness are starting to create significant new opportunities. We are looking forward to accelerated growth in this market with more support from Tencent.” ~Mr. Michael Jinbo Yao, Chairman and CEO of 58.com

The move marked Tencent’s entry into the online used good trading market, which puts the company in direct competition with its arch-foe Alibaba, whose digital flea market Xianyu (闲鱼Idle Fish) is a top player. Alibaba injected last March a US$ 15 million capital support in Xianyu which reportedly had a market valuation of over US$3 billion in 2015.

The tie-up is not surprising given the history between the two companies. Tencent, which comes up short on e-commerce, holds a stake in both 58.com and JD as fortification against Alibaba’s e-commerce empire.

Like other Tencent-backed companies such as Mobike, Didi Chuxing, and JD, 58’s on-demand service Daojia has gained an entry point in WeChat. Given previous examples, it’s highly possible that Tencent would offer Zhuan Zhuan more support through integrating it into its social networking products like WeChat and QQ.

China’s affluent population is now facing the new problem of how to deal with their barely used second-hand stuff, the result of over consumption. Selling it online seems a good option. Analysis agency CBNData predicted that the used-goods trade market could reach 400 billion yuan in mainland China by 2016.

The trend has seen by the rise of a group of second-hand trading platforms like Xianyu and Zhuan Zhuan. The boom even spread into several vertical markets, such as second-hand car trading, smartphones, closing and luxury products.

Public awareness for a more friendly lifestyle and the spread of the sharing economy also contributed greatly to the popularity of second-hand good trading services.

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Power bank rentals are taking off in China but will never be as big as bikes https://technode.com/2017/04/18/why-power-bank-wont-become-another-bike-rental-business-in-china/ https://technode.com/2017/04/18/why-power-bank-wont-become-another-bike-rental-business-in-china/#respond Tue, 18 Apr 2017 07:01:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48173 While the buzz surrounding China’s bike rental industry has yet to cool off, power bank rentals, another vertical under the rental economy business model is causing. What happened previously to the trendy sector is repeating itself again in the Middle Kingdom. The carnival surrounding power bank starts with the influx of massive funding. Five startups […]]]>

While the buzz surrounding China’s bike rental industry has yet to cool off, power bank rentals, another vertical under the rental economy business model is causing. What happened previously to the trendy sector is repeating itself again in the Middle Kingdom.

The carnival surrounding power bank starts with the influx of massive funding. Five startups in the industry have received a combined RMB 300 million (US$ 43 million) financing in less than ten days since the beginning of April with over 20 investment institutions entering the arena. Apart from the ones already secured funding, there are over a dozen similar ones looking at this emerging sector. Here’s a list of the major players in the field.

  • Xiaodian (小电科技): RMB 100 million Series A led by Tencent and Hangzhou Vision Capital Management. Other investors include CDH Investments, GSR Ventures, DT Capital Partners and In Capital.
  • Hidian (Hi电): Eight-digit RMB angel round from Zhizhuo Capital
  • Laidian (来电科技): USD 20 million A round from SIG and Redpoint Ventures China
  • AnkerBox (街电科技): Eight-digit RMB angel round from IDG and Sunwoda
  • Mobao (魔宝电源): Seven-digit RMB angel round from a Biauto executive
powerbank
Charging stations of Xiaodian (L) and AnkerBox (R)

Mobile smartphone charging schemes are nothing new in China. Coin operated charging stations appeared at shopping malls and transportation hubs as early as 2013, but low profitability forced the companies to provide free charging services and monetize through promotion services and advertising. However, the business never really took off. On the contrary, it drew a lot of criticism for forcing customers to download apps that could potentially leak user information.

The current concept of power bank rental has evolved a little bit and falls into to two categories. Represented by Xiaodian, the first category features fixed charging stations, which are placed in public places including restaurants, billiards rooms, KTVs, and subways. They are smaller in size as compared with their predecessors. The other category, represented by Laidian and AnkerBox, allow users to rent portable power banks which users can take with them and return to other power stations. Both of the models support mobile payments.

The rise of the new business is due in no small parts to the boom of bike rentals, where people see the possibility to create another hot vertical under the buzzword–“sharing-economy”. But to what degree the two businesses are comparable to each other and whether the success of bike rental can be duplicated remains another question.

The last-mile problem has been a long-term pain point for urban transportation. The possibilities to solve this problem through technological innovation are small in the short term. In addition, not everyone owns a bike, so bike-rental is a relatively high-frequency service addressing real headaches for customers.

On the other hand, power banks are more affordable and portable. The selling point is they spare users from the hassles of taking their own power banks with them, which means that the service itself is dispensable to some extent and is of much lower frequency because people can easily carry their own mobile charger wherever they go.

One of the factors contributing to the success of dockless bike-rental is its mobility, however, this is missing in the power bank businesses. In either case of the power bank models, uses are attached to some fixed location.

The battery life of most smartphones supports one charge per day now. With the development technologies, the battery of mobile devices will have larger capacities, which means power banks as a device categoy could die out in foreseeable the future.

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MockingBot lets you build mobile app wireframes in minutes https://technode.com/2017/04/13/mockingbot-mobile-app-wireframes/ https://technode.com/2017/04/13/mockingbot-mobile-app-wireframes/#respond Thu, 13 Apr 2017 07:06:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48043 These days, we have to acknowledge that being a programmer is kind of cool, but the days when coding is the crucial skill-set in developing a good mobile app have long gone. Even for experienced programmers who can work with code, wouldn’t you prefer something easier, like a tool that allows you to build prototypes […]]]>

These days, we have to acknowledge that being a programmer is kind of cool, but the days when coding is the crucial skill-set in developing a good mobile app have long gone. Even for experienced programmers who can work with code, wouldn’t you prefer something easier, like a tool that allows you to build prototypes quickly?

That’s exactly what Zhang Yuanyi, the founder of MockingBot, thinks when he first started the project in 2012. Like many entrepreneurs in early 2010s, Zhang was inspired by Mark Zuckerberg’s story and sought to build his own social network service for Chinese users. But he finds it’s darn hard to explain his ideas to friends and there are no products available on the market to facilitate the process.

As a full stack developer, he built MockingBot single-handedly and the product received lots of positive feedbacks after it hit the overseas market in 2012. Zhang explained that he choose to tap overseas market first mostly because the users have better payment habits for software.

Despite the growth, Zhang treated it as a hobby project and for the following four years, he remained the only person on the project. With the rise of startup craze and shifting of China’s user payment habits, MockingBot team believes that it’s the right time for prototyping services to boom.

MockingBot, or Modao (墨刀) in Chinese, is an online mobile prototyping tool that enables users to build interactive mobile app wireframes and prototypes in just a couple of minutes. In a well-organized and clean workspace, users can put their ideas into inspiring user experience by using combo templates, built-in widgets, and intuitive drag-and-drop features, with no coding required.

Real-time collaboration allows you to share prototypes with others by adding your team members to your MockingBot prototype project. “There are more possibilities in this feature, we can also share the prototype to a larger number of testers as a means to validate the features and receive early feedbacks from users,” pointed out Yu Xiaomeng, a post-90 serial entrepreneur, who joined the company one year ago as the co-founder to oversee finance, recruitment and public communications.

屏幕快照 2017-04-13 下午1.18.20

The Beijing-based startup now registered over 420k users globally with most coming from China, where they have launched some marketing campaigns, introduced Yu.

“Of the total users, around 50k are coming from the overseas market, where we have done zero marketing and have recorded a 5 percent payment rate,” Yu says. “We have high hopes for the U.S. and India markets, where we have seen favorable growth.”

“We are a bit intimidated when entering U.S. market because there’s plenty of competitors, like Proto. But we find that the app development in the US is designer-centric, so most of the US prototyping tools need users to import PS or Sketch pre-treated images. On the other hand, China’s app development workflow is product manager-centric, that’s why MockingBot’s ready-to-use models are easy to use. This also greatly shortens the time it takes to generate a shareable app,” said Yu.

While the demand from designer developers continues, there also raise a demand from green-hand users who don’t have designer skills. “Our users in the US are mostly students from colleges, newbies in the app industry, outsourcing companies and small teams,” she explained. In addition, there’s the price difference, which would be an effective means for user acquisition in the initial stages.

After receiving a 5 million RMB pre-A financing from FreeS in April last year, the Beijing-based startup has more than 20 employees now and planning to raise the next round this year.

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China’s foldable selfie drone Hover Camera coming to Apple Store with updated UX https://technode.com/2017/04/13/hover-camera-coming-to-apple-store-with-updated-ux/ https://technode.com/2017/04/13/hover-camera-coming-to-apple-store-with-updated-ux/#respond Thu, 13 Apr 2017 00:00:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47868 Zero Zero Robotics, the Chinese self-flying camera drone maker, announced that its flagship flying camera Hover Camera Passport is now available exclusively on Apple.com and in Apple stores. The device will hit the shelves of Apple stores today in five countries and regions of United States, Canada, China, Hong Kong, and the United Kingdom, the company […]]]>

Zero Zero Robotics, the Chinese self-flying camera drone maker, announced that its flagship flying camera Hover Camera Passport is now available exclusively on Apple.com and in Apple stores.

The device will hit the shelves of Apple stores today in five countries and regions of United States, Canada, China, Hong Kong, and the United Kingdom, the company told TechNode, adding that the gadget will be available in additional countries next month.

The company is also offering a discount price for the Apple-exclusive bundle (US$ 499.95), which includes a Passport, the flagship travel-friendly size flying camera, along with the essentials: two batteries, one charger, adapter and an easy-carry bag. 

Launched in October last year, Passport is among a slew of AI-enabled camera drones which allow users to close-up photos and videos. Now entering a new partnership with Apple, the company has made several updates to enable better integration with Apple’s video capabilities like iMovie and Final Cut Pro X as well as easier sharing and editing from Apple devices. In addition, a new user interface has been integrated into the Passport and its companion app, which supports automated media editing.

Driven by the drone boom, portable flying-camera startups have gained a lot of traction last year. Many of the similar companies, such as SnapLilyStaaker, have received a lot of attention, doing well with booking preorders, however, that’s no guarantee for success. Lily, the autonomous camera drone that sold a whopping $34 million in preorders, shut down in January this year. Hover Camera is one of the first to ship their product.

Currently, Hover Camera has limited distribution channels in overseas markets with its official website only supporting shipment to the U.S. The new partnership with Apple will significantly enhance its presence in the global market.

More importantly, there’s an obvious customer crossover in the tie-up. A majority of Apple users are Hover Camera’s potential buyers, who would use Apple devices to control shoot and edit footages from the startup’s product. Actually, this is also the logic that works with Apple’s partnership with another Chinese drone manufacturer DJI one year ago.

“We’re thrilled to bring autonomous flying photography into the hands of consumers who are excited by truly innovative technology that impact their everyday lives,” said MQ Wang, founder and CEO of Zero Zero Robotics. “We want more customers to capture their memories in a near-effortless way through breathtaking perspectives that can only be achieved through Hover Camera Passport.”

Zero Zero Robotics was co-founded in 2014 by former Twitter software engineer and Stanford Ph.D., MQ Wang, and Stanford Ph.D. Tony Zhang.

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TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017 teams up with Turkish Airlines for global innovation push https://technode.com/2017/04/12/techcrunch-shenzhen-2017-teams-up-with-turkish-airlines-for-global-innovation-push/ https://technode.com/2017/04/12/techcrunch-shenzhen-2017-teams-up-with-turkish-airlines-for-global-innovation-push/#respond Wed, 12 Apr 2017 09:38:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47988 Technology innovation and entrepreneurship have become the main theme in the business world over the last decade. For that reason, TechCrunch Innovation Summit, the most international tech event in China, is receiving attention from more and more global companies. This year, TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017, the latest session of our annual TechCrunch events, has received sponsorship […]]]>
Technology innovation and entrepreneurship have become the main theme in the business world over the last decade. For that reason, TechCrunch Innovation Summit, the most international tech event in China, is receiving attention from more and more global companies.
This year, TechCrunch Shenzhen 2017, the latest session of our annual TechCrunch events, has received sponsorship from several renowned companies including Turkish Airlines.
This partnership marks Turkish Airline’s first-ever sponsorship of a technology innovation event, as they shift their focus to other sectors outside sports and sporting events.
With the boom of global innovation power and cross-regional innovation activities, startups’ demands for seeking global cooperation partners and resources is also on the rise. The international travel plans brought by these emerging companies form a significant growth point for international airlines like Turkish Airlines.
TechCrunch China and its Chinese operator TechNode brought TechCrunch Innovation Summit to China four years ago. In that time, we have seen 6 sessions in Beijing and Shanghai with the participation of entrepreneurs and investors from around the world, such as Europe, North America, Southeast: Asia, Japan and South Korea.
Founded in 1933, Turkish Airlines is a national flag carrier airline of Turkey, a 4-star member of Star Alliance. It operates scheduled services to 298 destinations in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. With an operational fleet of 337 airplanes, including cargo and guest aircraft, Turkish Airlines has been a rated as “Europe’s Best Airline” for six consecutive years as of 2016 by Skytrax.
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NetEase Cloud Music becomes unicorn after $108M series A https://technode.com/2017/04/12/netease-cloud-music-becomes-unicorn-after-108m-series-a/ https://technode.com/2017/04/12/netease-cloud-music-becomes-unicorn-after-108m-series-a/#respond Wed, 12 Apr 2017 07:04:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=48005 Months after the funding rumor, NetEase Cloud Music, the music and radio arm of Chinese internet portal NetEase, announced that it has completed an A round worth RMB 750 million (approx. US$ 108 million). The round puts the company’s valuation at RMB 8 billion, boosting the company to unicorn status four years after its launch […]]]>

Months after the funding rumor, NetEase Cloud Music, the music and radio arm of Chinese internet portal NetEase, announced that it has completed an A round worth RMB 750 million (approx. US$ 108 million). The round puts the company’s valuation at RMB 8 billion, boosting the company to unicorn status four years after its launch in 2013.

Chinese media conglomerate Shanghai Media Group (SMG) led the strategic investment, joined by Mango Cultural and Creative Industry Private Equity Fund, a fund established by Mango Media under the flagship of Hunan Broadcasting System, and CICC Jiatai Fund, the investment unit of China International Finance Company Limited.

The capital raised in this round will be mainly used for enhancing the user experience of the NetEase Cloud Music products, increasing investment on content, developing a healthy patent system and establishing a solution for the upstream and downstream music to provide the users with abundant resources of high quality music, introduced Zhu Yiwen, CEO of NetEase Cloud Music.

In addition to the capital itself, the deal would also put the music streaming service in content partnership with SMG and Mango, two comprehensive culture groups with extensive resources in music talent shows, movies, variety show, music, and more.

NetEase
User Growth Curve of NetEase Cloud Music

Along with the funding news, the company announced that it has amassed 300 million registered users. Over the past four years, the service showed great growth potential. In July 2015, its users broke 100 million and one year later, the number broke 200 million.

NetEase Cloud Music is considered the cool kid in the music streaming market with its smart music recommendation and partnership with indie musicians. The service is also bravely forging into the short video sharing market in an attempt to make the app more social and gain more paying subscribers.

Zhu disclosed that the company’s revenue comes mainly from membership, digital albums, ads, and branded physical products (including toys, notebooks, and cups). The company’s also planning to release a smart hardware product.

As a latecomer in the field, NetEase Cloud Music is still catching up to incumbents like Kugou, QQ Music, and Kuwo Music who have support from either Alibaba or Tencent.

Both Alibaba and Tencent have invested heavily in the entertainment industry to create synergy effects across all sectors. For example, Alibaba has acquired UC browser and Youku Tudou, investing over RMB 2 billion in the strategic transformation of Tudou.

Even with the new funding, it’s hard for NetEase Cloud Music to construct a big entertainment ecosystem to compete with these internet giants. But it’s also a good option to adopt a differentiation strategy by dig deeper in a smaller niche market and avoiding the music copyright barriers.

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3 Chinese journalists who turned into successful tech entrepreneurs https://technode.com/2017/04/11/journalists-china-tech-entrepreneurs/ https://technode.com/2017/04/11/journalists-china-tech-entrepreneurs/#respond Tue, 11 Apr 2017 09:19:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47928 The gradual and painful demise of traditional media has seen more and more talented journalists seek new opportunities. Among the options, starting a business of their own is becoming a favorable alternative. Obviously, journalists would make good entrepreneurs for their expertise in detecting and addressing the latest trends. Moreover, they surely enjoy abundant contact resources to […]]]>

The gradual and painful demise of traditional media has seen more and more talented journalists seek new opportunities. Among the options, starting a business of their own is becoming a favorable alternative.

Obviously, journalists would make good entrepreneurs for their expertise in detecting and addressing the latest trends. Moreover, they surely enjoy abundant contact resources to draw back upon. But more importantly “[j]ournalists tend to possess the right mix of idealism, skepticism, and determination to bring useful ideas to life,” according to the former editor of the Chicago Tribune, Jason Goodrich.

In that vein, TechNode presents 3 journalists-turned-tech entrepreneurs.

Hu Weiwei — Mobike

屏幕快照 2017-04-11 下午2.01.38

In a little bit more than one year, dockless bike rental firm Mobike has brought amazing changes to China’s intercity transportations. Hu Weiwei, the 34-year-old founder of Mobike, once worked as a journalist at the Daily Economics Newspaper, mainly covering automobile news, which later helped her to form Mobike’s founding team.

After leaving the company, she went to The Beijing News and Business Value to report about technology news. In December 2015, she formed a team from her automobile industry networks and established Mobike in 2016. Obviously, Hu’s reporting experience in transportation and technology sector has contributed greatly to her project.

As one of the top players in the vertical, the Chinese bike rental startup has closed its 215 million USD series D in Jan. this year. The company is also planning to expand beyond China to the global market.

Tang Yan — Momo

20141210075935144

Like many Beijing drifters, Momo’s co-founder and CEO Tang Yan, originally from Hunan Province, came to Beijing more than ten years ago in the pursuit of his dreams. Before founding the social networking app with his colleagues, he worked at the internet firm NetEase from 2003 to 2011, when he left his post of editor-in-chief at NetEase’s news service.

As one of the country’s leading dating apps, Momo went public in the US in 2014. The hook-up app, which now claims 81.1 million monthly active users by the end of 2016, is one of the Chinese companies that have capitalized on the booming live streaming services in the country. The firm’s revenue recorded a significant 524% YOY jump to US$ 246.1 million USD in Q4 last year, mainly contributed from the growth of their live streaming business.

Li Xueling — YY

Li Xueling

Li Xueling, the 44-year-old CEO of YY, was a reputable tech reporter before founding the gaming portal for China’s gamers. He joined the China Youth Daily after getting a BA at Renmin University. Li worked for NetEase between 2003 to 2005, when he left the company as editor-in-chief for the news portal.

YY went public on the NASDAQ in late 2012. The firm started as a voice chat service for game players and has since transformed into an interactive video platform. The sectors the platform now covers include music, gaming, education, and dating. The majority of its revenue come from virtual item sales.

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Toutiao pockets $1 billion on the road to becoming China’s next BAT https://technode.com/2017/04/07/toutiao-series-d-1-billion-usd/ https://technode.com/2017/04/07/toutiao-series-d-1-billion-usd/#respond Fri, 07 Apr 2017 06:42:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47828 Chinese news reading app Toutiao secured US$ 1 billion in a series D round financing at the end of 2016 from investors including returning backer Sequoia Capital and CCB International, the investment arm of China Construction Bank, local media is reporting (in Chinese). The Flipboard-like news aggregator app has developed rapidly since its establishment in 2012. The current […]]]>

Chinese news reading app Toutiao secured US$ 1 billion in a series D round financing at the end of 2016 from investors including returning backer Sequoia Capital and CCB International, the investment arm of China Construction Bank, local media is reporting (in Chinese).

The Flipboard-like news aggregator app has developed rapidly since its establishment in 2012. The current round was reportedly received at a whopping 11 billion USD market valuation, more than 20 times higher than the 500 million USD valuation it got when receiving 100 million USD C round more than two years ago.

Interestingly, the news added that Liu Zhen, SVP of Toutiao, is behind the deal. Liu Zhen, a cousin of Didi Chuxing’s president Liu Qing, previously worked as SVP of Uber China to oversee corporate strategy. She joined Toutiao in October 2016 after the Didi and Uber China merger.

The current round also witnessed the exits of Sina and Zhou Hongyi, CEO of Qihoo 360, renowned local tech blogger Lei Jianping disclosed. Sina has sold its share to other investors because there’s increasing business competition between the two companies. Nevertheless, this deal by all accounts must be a profitable deal for Sina, which invested in Toutiao’s C round when its valuation was only 500 million USD. Zhou Hongyi made the sale to cash in to fund Qihoo’s privatization plan.

Lei citing people familiar with the matter that the new funding will be used to support the generation of quality contents. The company is planning to invest in video business and Q&A services in 2017.

In addition, the firm’s aggressive overseas expansion initiative also needs a lot of financial support. As of present, the company has entered North America, Brazil, India, Indonesia and Japan through its news feed app Toutiao or the news aggregation apps it has invested in. Aside from holding stakes in Dailhunt and BABE in Indonesia, Toutiao acquired Flipagram, a popular video app in the US, this Febuary. The app claimed over 12 million users overseas, local media reported.

Toutiao might be still a lesser-known name overseas, but it is one of the local tech giants that have the potential to lead China’s IT industry as a successor to China’s new BAT. As of the end of 2016, The app claimed over 78 million daily active users and 175 million monthly active users with users spending an average 76 minute on the app per day. Amid the video boom, Toutiao is also integrating short-video businesses with video clicks per day surged 605% YOY to around 130 million by 2016. The company has allocated last year 1 billion RMB funding to encourage PGC short video productions.

Like many companies involved in the content agrregation business, Toutiao has hit a speed bump for copyright issues. In 2014, several Chinese mainstream media, including Sohu, filed lawsuits against the company for using their contents illegally. Toutiao solved this problem by launching a program to register mainstream media known for their original contents to protect their rights. Registered medias can receive revenue from content after they claimed to be the original source, even though they publish the contents later than other sources.

The Chinese news app battlefield is quite crowded. Big competitors in the field include Tencent-backed Kuaibao, Alibaba-backed UC Toutiao, Yidian Zixun and more.

TechNode has reached out to the company for their comment on the news and will update when they respond.

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When China’s Biaoqing meets western GIF economy: Q&A with BiaoqingYun CSO Grant Long https://technode.com/2017/04/06/china-biaoqing-biaoqingyun/ https://technode.com/2017/04/06/china-biaoqing-biaoqingyun/#respond Thu, 06 Apr 2017 02:57:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47720 Like any modern netizens that are moving towards an era of visual communications, you may like to throw one or two stickers into the midst of a dull conversation to spice it up in what is being called  “micro-entertainment“. But be careful when you do that in China, you may well start a doutu. Digital […]]]>

Like any modern netizens that are moving towards an era of visual communications, you may like to throw one or two stickers into the midst of a dull conversation to spice it up in what is being called  “micro-entertainment“. But be careful when you do that in China, you may well start a doutu.

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Grant Long, BiaoqingYun’s CSO

Digital expressions have had an amazing impact on the way people talk online. To look into the emerging vertical, we spoke with Grant Long, Chief Strategy Officer for BiaoqingYun, about how China’s digital expression industry is different from the U.S. as well as the unique opportunities coming inside and outside China.

Grant has years of experiences in the industry. He joined Chinese digital expression startup BiaoqingYun this year. Grant previously worked as Head of Strategy and Business Development for Swyft Media, which aims to evangelize emoji and visual expression in mobile messaging. After Swyft was acquired by Monotype, Grant continued his initial dreams of spreading the digital expression business around the globe and found his first stop in China, where the fast paced internet ecosystem was far ahead in the adoption of “biaoqing” (表情), a unifying term to describe stickers, animated GIFs, static shareable memes and more.

“[Biaoqing] are used by young and old (in China), and have an established place in society. And yet, biaoqing seemed to thrive organically despite many inconveniences like limited platform support, and commercialization of the format was scarce. To me, it felt like an opportunity,” he said on his personal blog.

Below is an edited excerpt from our talk with him.

What do you think are the key differences between Chinese and U.S. digital sticker market?

For one, I think it is important to note that biaoqing (emoji/stickers/gifs/etc) have their origin in this part of the world, and while recent adoption in the West has been phenomenal, I think these formats of digital expression are more universally adopted – and loved – in China and the nearby region. However, although biaoqing are relatively new in the West, there has been far more adoption of the unit as a form of advertising – something that I helped to pioneer at my last company, Swyft Media. I think this makes for an exciting opportunity… Adoption of Biaoqing in China is more universal, and yet, the format has not been monetized yet at scale.

What are your tips for localization in overseas markets?

There are several important factors for moving overseas in the biaoqing space. Ease of integration is very important. Every tech company has a lengthy product backlog, so offering a simple integration path is essential to forming partnerships. Additionally, supporting both SDK and API implementations is key – we have both, as well as HTML5 support.

The second factor is relevant content. This requires top artists (illustration, animation, film, etc), an operations team to guide the artists, and a partnership team to form relationships with local IP/content owners. Also important is having data on how people use biaoqing to communicate, and creating content that fits those communication patterns. We know that our artists are amazing, and we know that our data about communication patterns is unmatched. We also have fantastic processes for content operations and partnerships – and as we expand, will likely hire local team members into these positions.

Finally, understanding the competitive landscape and important partners is key here. Many Chinese businesses struggle to expand globally because their teams lack awareness of international markets, trends, etc… it really is a completely different ecosystem of apps outside of China, not to mention pop culture. That is the beauty of our company. Most of our core team is Chinese, but many of our executives lived for long periods abroad in Japan and have fantastic global awareness. Meanwhile, I bring the experience of working for years on biaoqing outside of China. We have a truly international leadership team with the right makeup to have success globally.

Why China and why BiaoqingYun? What’s in the country and the company that attracted you?

You have to be foolish to ignore the growth and economic opportunities that abound in China. The country has a massive population of highly connected mobile internet users, with rising incomes and a propensity to spend. This is also the core of the biaoqing phenomenon that has since expanded to all other parts of the world, yet hasn’t been commercialized in China yet. But the factor that made this an easy decision for me was finding a very capable and experienced team of friendly, trustworthy people that I felt great about taking a risk with. After leaving Swyft Media, I made sure to study the market, the competition, and the team before finally deciding to join. Any new venture is risky; the best way to beat the odds and be extremely successful is to work with a great team! I truly believe we have that.

What’s BiaoqingYun’s business model? What kind of innovations do you want to bring?

At this point, we offer most of our services to app developers for free. Our products are also completely free to end users. However, what we are doing is building a massive scale of attention and engagement from highly connected mobile users, often at times when they are communicating with close personal connections. These moments can prove extremely valuable for brands. We’ve done some small executions with advertising partners – Microsoft, 20th Century FOX, and Paramount, for example – but right now our main focus is on expanding the reach and offering fun and engaging solutions to our app partners and their users.

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How ofo is bringing China’s latest export to the rest of the world https://technode.com/2017/03/28/ofo-overseas-expansion/ Tue, 28 Mar 2017 01:58:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47379 Ofo, China’s latest bike-rental unicorn that Apple CEO Tim Cook paid his tribute to during China visit, is looking beyond the borders of the middle kingdom. “The act of bike-sharing could someday become a lingua franca, connecting people around the world,” said Dai Wei last week at Boao Forum for Asia. The company’s bold global […]]]>

Ofo, China’s latest bike-rental unicorn that Apple CEO Tim Cook paid his tribute to during China visit, is looking beyond the borders of the middle kingdom.

“The act of bike-sharing could someday become a lingua franca, connecting people around the world,” said Dai Wei last week at Boao Forum for Asia.

The company’s bold global expansion initiative comes as arch local competitor Mobike and a group of smaller players are looking at the overseas market. However, it’s still not clear whether it’s a smart move for the new upstart company to open a new battlefield in comparatively developed markets while it’s still entangled in a tough war with domestic players.

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Apple CEO Tim Cook (center right) with ofo CEO Dai Wei (center left) (Image credit: ofo)

Where’s ofo overseas now?

Amid hot local competition with Mobike and a slew of smaller rivals, ofo has expanded strategically since the end of last year.

Companies have their own expansion styles, so it didn’t surprise us when ofo rolled out its service in Singapore earlier this year as the first Chinese bike-rental company to operate overseas.

Up to now, ofo Singapore has launched thousands of bicycles, attracted tens of thousands registered users, according to the company. They also say they have been running trials in San Diego and London area.

“Ofo chose those areas because of the strategic locations for further expand into the US, Europe, and South East Asia,” said a spokesperson.

Closed areas and beyond

Founded by Peking University alumni, ofo was born out of a project to address campus transportation problems and gradually developed into a cycle-rental platform for urban residents. The Beijing-based startup takes closed or semi-closed areas like the office parks and college campuses as their entry points for overseas market.

However, it is widely believed expanding beyond small communities and schools would be difficult for the company in the U.S. or other foreign countries, given they are far less populated than China and have higher car penetration rate. Furthermore, people would consider bike cycling more of a lifestyle or recreation than a transportation means.

“Surprisingly, the demand for bikes are quite high in many cities in foreign countries. The demand for short-distance commute is high in a lot of places, people are not biking mostly because of the lack of convenient means,” said the spokesperson. “Most bike-sharing programs in foreign countries are the ones with docking stations, usually expensive and do not have wide coverage.”

Bike sharing is nothing new for the US nor the UK. But in old bike-sharing programs, like New York City’s Citibike, the expensive cycles are borrowed from and returned to docks in inconvenient locations. Citibikes, at $163 dollars a year, are also prohibitively expensive for many. The Chinese company is having an edge with a much cheaper alternative of 1 RMB ($0.15) to the crowded metro or the gridlocked highway.

Localization and regulation

The company plans to adopt localize in accordance with regional laws and regulations, as well as the preferences of local users. For example, ofo’s signature yellow bike is larger in the US and UK markets to better fit the figures of local cyclists. The company has also added lights to its bikes to stay compliant in the US.

“The challenge is to adapt to the local market, not just from an operational angle, but also culturally. We don’t see it as an obstacle but a challenge which any services would face when going to a foreign country,” said the spokesperson. “Ofo believes with its experience and values, more markets will see the potential of our value and services.”

“Ofo is working with municipality management and help with making rules and regulations which will contribute to a more orderly city planning in the places we operate in,” they added. “The countries we have started our pilot programs are very supportive of ofo’s operation plan.”

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China’s Giphy BiaoqingYun wants to change the way Chinese use stickers https://technode.com/2017/03/24/chinas-giphy-biaoqingyun-wants-to-change-the-way-chinese-use-stickers/ Fri, 24 Mar 2017 06:14:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47206 Wanted or not, we are shifting quickly away from face-to-face communication towards texting. In this new era where people speak with their fingers, emoji (表情 biaoqing in Chinese) are becoming an important part of our daily communications to convey emotions and feelings both for the spoken and the unspoken. This new means of communication has […]]]>

Wanted or not, we are shifting quickly away from face-to-face communication towards texting. In this new era where people speak with their fingers, emoji (表情 biaoqing in Chinese) are becoming an important part of our daily communications to convey emotions and feelings both for the spoken and the unspoken.

This new means of communication has become so common that it is almost impossible to find a purely textual conversation in chat groups. Overall 6 billion out of the 45 billion messages sent out in 2015 in the U.S. were digital expressions. The growing market fostered star projects like Giphy, which was valued at $600 million in the latest round of financing.

BiaoqingYun (literally “emoji cloud” in English) is China’s answer to Giphy. They bill themselves as a platform for personalized expression and communication online, enabling hundreds of millions of mobile users to communicate using fun and engaging media formats like animated GIFs, stickers, and emoji. The company just received an undisclosed amount of A Plus round in January this year.

The Shanghai-based startup was born out of curated avatar design service Siyanhui. The company then grow into a full-fledged platform that powers every aspect of digital expression communication, whether enabling the creation of original content, licensing content or sharing content on social networking and IM platforms through its API.

The firm’s flagship product BiaoqingSoSo API, which enables end users to share GIFs in conversations and on social feeds, has been integrated into top-notch services in China like Alipay, WeChat (through their mini-app), QQ, live streaming platform musical.ly, Tinder-like dating app Tantan and enterprise software Fxiaoke. Up till now, the API has stored over 5 million expressions. The service receives over 100 million search requests per day and has reached 500 million end users, according to the company.

Biaoqingyun

Additionally, the company provides a full product line of the expression services from sticker search engine BiaoqingSoso, fully featured sticker shop SDK, and cloud service.

Although BiaoqingYun has been so far focused on the China market with very limited efforts to expand beyond these borders, the company, like many Chinese startups, is trying to expand its business beyond its home turf.

Grant Long, former exec at Swyft Media, the startup that turns stickers into cash, joined Biaoqing Yun as chief strategy officer earlier this year. Monotype Imaging acquired the New York city-based startup in 2015. After leaving Swyft Media, Grant spent time studying the market, the competition, and the team before finally deciding to join.

“You have to be foolish to ignore the growth and economic opportunities that abound in China. The country has a massive population of highly connected mobile internet users, with rising incomes and a propensity to spend,” Grant said. “This is also the core of the biaoqing phenomenon that has since expanded to all other parts of the world, yet hasn’t been commercialized in China yet.”

“But the factor that made this an easy decision for me was finding a very capable and experienced team of friendly, trustworthy people that I felt great about taking a risk with,” he added. “Any new venture is risky; the best way to beat the odds and be extremely successful is to work with a great team.”

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Chinese photo-sharing app Kuaishou lands US$ 350M strategic investment led by Tencent https://technode.com/2017/03/23/chinese-photo-sharing-app-kuaishou-lands-us-350m-strategic-investment-from-tencent/ Thu, 23 Mar 2017 07:32:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47171 Buzz surrounding China’s video and live streaming craze continues this week as Kuaishou, a video editing and sharing app, announcing the completion of a US$ 350 million USD investment led by Tencent, before a potential IPO reportedly slated for the second half of this year. The new funding is earmarked for improving product experience and R&D,  the […]]]>

Buzz surrounding China’s video and live streaming craze continues this week as Kuaishou, a video editing and sharing app, announcing the completion of a US$ 350 million USD investment led by Tencent, before a potential IPO reportedly slated for the second half of this year.

The new funding is earmarked for improving product experience and R&D,  the company said in a statement, adding that they will invest more in cutting-edge technologies like AI and video analytics technologies to keep the company ahead.

In addition to Tencent, Kuaishou’s previous investors include bigwigs like Sequoia, DCM, and Baidu. But it is still not clear whether the current investors will join this round.

Aside from capital cooperation, Kuaishou disclosed that they would partner with both Tencent and Baidu in product, technology, and services to promote user experience, a move which would further boost the company’s growth thanks to the support from the two Chinese tech giants.

“Kuaishou has brings people closer with their focus on the recording and sharing everyday lives. It’s a product that close to users for its warmth and vigor,” said Pony Ma, CEO of Tencent.

“We believe by pooling together the two companies’ unique user insights, technological capabilities, and operational expertise, we will work closely with Kuaishou to capture the exciting business opportunities as demand for video content continue to grow rapidly,” Tencent told TechNode.

Kuaishou

As a pioneer in China mobile photo- and video-centric craze, Kuaishou, born out of a GIF Kuaishou, has gathered over 400 million users globally. Its app allows users to share video clips or live stream on a variety of topics from mundane activities, from eating food, shopping, and hair tutorials to funny or bizarre performances.

Data from the company shows that the daily active users on the app surpassed 50 million and over 5 million videos were updated every day. The company has launched an overseas version, Kwai,  but the new app is still gaining momentum.

Despite its huge popularity in China, the company is maintaining a relatively a low profile and is very cautious in getting public exposure, partially because the negative press they have gotten regarding vulgar content.  A large proportion of the users are believed to come from lower-tier cities or rural areas, and filmed vulgarity led to the unfair profiling of rural and regional Chinese.

However, the company is definitely trying to become a platform for a wider demographic.

CEO Su Hua told TechNode in a previous interview: “We view Kuaishou as a kaleidoscope. The types of videos shared on Kuaishou are varied and diverse. In most cases, the videos are simple depictions of joyful moments in everyday situations.”

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Andrew Ng leaves Baidu, Wang Haifeng will lead Baidu’s AI business https://technode.com/2017/03/22/andrew-ng-leaves-baidu-wang-haifeng-will-lead-baidus-ai-business/ Wed, 22 Mar 2017 07:05:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47084 AI expert Andrew Ng announced today that he’s leaving Chinese internet giant Baidu which has been betting heavily on AI for its business revival. Andrew didn’t mention his future plans in his announcement. Baidu’s response to TechNode’s inquiries on this matter confirmed Ng’s resignation, “The news was released by Andrew himself on Medium first, Baidu […]]]>

AI expert Andrew Ng announced today that he’s leaving Chinese internet giant Baidu which has been betting heavily on AI for its business revival. Andrew didn’t mention his future plans in his announcement.

Baidu’s response to TechNode’s inquiries on this matter confirmed Ng’s resignation, “The news was released by Andrew himself on Medium first, Baidu has retweeted his posts with our thanks and wishes.”

Andrew took the helm of Baidu’s AI unit in 2014 as Chief Scientist. Before joining Baidu, Andrew built his reputation in the AI industry as the man behind Google Brain, Google’s deep learning arm. He’s also a Stanford University academic and co-founder of education platform Coursera.

Under his leadership, Baidu’s AI group has grown to roughly 1,300 people, which includes the 300-person Baidu Research.

“Our AI software is used every day by hundreds of millions of people. We have had tremendous revenue and product impact, through the many dozens of AI projects that support our existing businesses in search, advertising, maps, take-out delivery, voice search, security, consumer finance and many more,” he said in the announcement.

Wang Haifeng, vice president of Baidu, has been named as head of Baidu’s AI department, reporting directly to Lu Qi, former Microsoft executive and AI expert who joined Baidu as president and COO earlier this year. But it’s still not clear who at Baidu will take Ng’s title of chief scientist.

Andrew’s resignation is a huge blow for Baidu, which has been pushing aggressively for its AI initiative with growing R&D investment, investments in AI startups, such as Alexa-like service Raven Tech, and plans to build a national AI lab.

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Xiaozhu CEO denies acquisition talks with Airbnb, betting big on business travelers https://technode.com/2017/03/22/xiaozhu-ceo-denies-acquisition-talks-with-airbnb-betting-big-on-business-travelers/ Wed, 22 Mar 2017 06:25:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47058 As a crucial part of the sharing-economy, home sharing industry has been accelerating exponentially in the past couple of years. China gets a fair share of home-rental startups and Xiaozhu is one of them. TechNode (in Chinese) got a chance to speak with Chen Chi, CEO of the company, on a variety of topics from Airbnb […]]]>

As a crucial part of the sharing-economy, home sharing industry has been accelerating exponentially in the past couple of years. China gets a fair share of home-rental startups and Xiaozhu is one of them. TechNode (in Chinese) got a chance to speak with Chen Chi, CEO of the company, on a variety of topics from Airbnb acquisition rumor, the prospect of home sharing industry and competition in the market.

Talk with Airbnb never touched capital cooperation

A previous Bloomberg report sparked a lot of speculation on Airbnb’s possible acquisition of its Chinese equivalent. The news agency cited people with knowledge of the matter that Airbnb in talks to acquire Xiaozhu to expand in China’s home rental sharing market. Other media reported that Airbnb gave up the deal because they think Xiaozhu lacks attraction for high-end customers.

Chen Chi has confirmed that the two companies have had lots of talks on different levels on business development and technological cooperation, but he said that’s all. Their talks never moved to capital cooperation.

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Hotel business is still the biggest competitor

2010 was widely considered as year one for China’s home rental industry with the emergence of a group of Airbnb clones like Tujia, Mayi, Airizu and Youtx. The failure of Airizu, which copied Airbnb’s model completely, has forced a majority of the players to exit the non-standardized accommodation sector. Short-term home rental vertical welcomed a new round of revival in 2014 as several platforms like 107Room, Hhz360, and Zuber recorded capital injections.

With the maturity of regulations and public reception, China’s home rental market is growing quickly. Data from China’s Sharing Economy Report 2017 (in Chinese) shows that the country’s short-term home rental market is worth 10 billion RMB (1.45 billion USD) in 2015, up from 140 million RMB in 2012. The annual turnover of this sector reached 24.3 billion RMB in 2016 and the combined capital injection in this sector exceeded 4.6 billion RMB.

As the top players in this industry, Tujia and Xiaozhu have passed their D round and their numbers of registered accommodations exceed 400k and 150k, respectively.

However, domestic short-term rental startups still lack the power to compete with traditional hospitality groups.  “Short-term rental industry has been accelerating in the past two years, but on the macro-level, we are still facing fierce competition from hotels and this will be our focus in the future two or three years.”

“The short-term rental industry has been accelerating in the past two years, but on the macro-level, we are still facing fierce competition from hotels and this will be our focus in the future two or three years,” Chen says.

According to Chen, short-term rental platforms have yet to enter a battle with peer startups. Pressure from hotels and improvement of customer experiences are the two determinants in this industry in the future.

Business trips might be the next big thing

Airbnb’s success might shed some light on competition with hotels for Chinese online accommodations startups. Airbnb added services for business travelers in 2014. Certify that business spending on Airbnb grew 261% in the U.S. and 249% overseas in 2015.

Chen disclosed their plans on business trip services “Lots of business travelers weighing between hotels and short-term rental services.” China’s cooperate travel market is less centralized, so lots of accommodation demands come directly from individual customers on business trips. Xiaozhu wants to start with this group of customers.

Chen noted that vacation rental services are greatly influenced by seasonal factors, and therefore, it constitutes but a small part of the market. The core part still comes from short-term rental services in cities, which features high frequency, stable and right demands.

It’s still too early to talk about profitability

Airbnb turned profitable in the second half of 2016 and anticipates that it will be profitable in 2017 as well.

In respond to profitability questions, Chen responded “It is still too early to talk about profits. Xiaozhu can turn profits now if we give up further development. Currently, our commission revenue can cover all the basic costs. The home sharing industry is still in an early development stage and has great potentials. No companies would be so silly to give up market expansion potentials for short-term profits.”

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Mobike joins ofo in Singapore with official launch https://technode.com/2017/03/21/mobike-singapore-ofo/ Tue, 21 Mar 2017 09:42:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=47008 Months after dropping a hint for taking its services to overseas market, China’s top bike-rental startup Mobike announced today the launch of its hugely popular bike-sharing service in Singapore, the first stop of Mobike’s global expansion. Mobike’s operation in Singapore features its typical scan-and-go service. Singapore residents can now ride a Mobike by downloading the […]]]>

Months after dropping a hint for taking its services to overseas market, China’s top bike-rental startup Mobike announced today the launch of its hugely popular bike-sharing service in Singapore, the first stop of Mobike’s global expansion.

Mobike’s operation in Singapore features its typical scan-and-go service. Singapore residents can now ride a Mobike by downloading the Mobike app and unlocking any Mobike near them by scanning a QR code on the bike.

To soft landing the service in the island state, Mobikes will initially be deployed at selected high demand areas around the city such as MRT stations, industrial parks, and universities such as National University of Singapore, Singapore Management University, and Republic Polytechnic, according to the company.

Despite (or because of) their huge popularity, Chinese bike-rental companies have had a tricky time with local municipalities for the management problems caused by their sprawling growth. In its global expansion, Mobike has been very cautious about complying with the local regulations.

“Mobike plans to work closely with a number of partners in Singapore to identify ‘Mobike Preferred Locations’, areas of high convenience around the city where users can start and end their cycling trip, in addition to existing authorized bicycle parking zones. The company will also work with its partners on activities to educate users on good cycling habits, and where to park bikes,” the firm emphasized in an official statement.

“We are determined to commit time up-front to really understand how each city operates and how Mobike can help. Singapore’s government has been very proactive to support cycling as a viable last-mile transport solution, from the “Walk, Cycle, Ride” scheme to the Park Connector Network. We are confident that Mobike can play a key role in achieving Singapore’s vision of a truly integrated and environmentally friendly transport system with cycling at its core, and we are excited to get started.” — Davis Wang, co-founder and CEO of Mobike

Singapore has got a whole lot of pedal power recently thanks to its friendly public cycling infrastructure. Ofo, Mobike’s arch-competitor in China, also entered the market earlier. But for Mobike, there’s another reason for it to select Singapore as the first overseas market: Singapore-based Temasek is among the few overseas venture capitalists that have a stake in the bike-rental company.

Mobike, which now operates across 33 in China, has entered a land grab battle with local competitor ofo. Now the competition is expanding overseas. Till now, ofo, which now operates in Singapore, U.S and U.K., seem to have one leg up ahead in the global market. However, it is still too early to say that. In Mobike’s defense, this may just another evidence to their different entrepreneurial style.

Going global as appealing as it sounds isn’t easy especially when you have to address different user habits, regulations, a group of established similar projects, like Citi Bike, as well as a rising number of peer startups looking at the global market, such as Bluegogo and LimeBike.

TechNode has reached out to Mobike and ofo for additional comment on their globalization strategies but has not heard back.

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Virtual gifting is not the only way to monetize live streaming: Video++ co-founder https://technode.com/2017/03/21/live-streaming-virtual-gifting-monetization-video/ Tue, 21 Mar 2017 08:16:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46965 Live video streaming is no doubt the new buzz in China. It’s interactive and real-time nature have contributed greatly to the surge, however, virtual gifting, a model that has become as lucrative as gaming, is the real booster that keeps the sustainable development of live-streaming and made it the top trends as it is in […]]]>

Live video streaming is no doubt the new buzz in China. It’s interactive and real-time nature have contributed greatly to the surge, however, virtual gifting, a model that has become as lucrative as gaming, is the real booster that keeps the sustainable development of live-streaming and made it the top trends as it is in China now.

For Dong Huizhi, co-founder and COO of Video++, there’s so much potential in video live streaming right now; virtual gifting is far from being its only commercialization channel.

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Dong made this proposition for his startup Video++, an in-video technologies company headquartered in Shanghai. Launched in 2014, Video++ provides an in-video operation system that currently serves 11,135 video platforms with 10.1 billion service requests per month, he introduced.

Supported by computer vision and AI technologies, Video++ leads in automated video content recognition, tracking, ads matching and creative interactive features.

“Our video structuralization technologies allow computers to identify the persons, objects and contextual relations between them, turning videos into a searchable database,” he said. “Based on the structuralized data, we apply big data and AI technologies to match objects and viewer behavior to updated product and e-commerce info, to give supporting information, or to add interactive and gamification features.”

As a smart video solution, Video++ has grown rapidly in past year thanks to the live streaming boom. On the other hand, Video++’s technologies are adding another layer to the services, helping live streaming platforms to gain a competitive edge in a heated battlefield.

Supported by Video++ online voting feature, hosts could determine their next moves by a real-time audience poll, whether to sing a song or do a dance. Dong introduced that the company has partnered with PandaTV for an online beauty pageant and have worked with Mangguo TV to support Super Girl, one of China’s most successful reality talent shows.

Internet celebrities who got their fame through live streaming platforms are making real cash by selling products in their Taobao shops. Their usual practice for promotion is to broadcast the names of their shops, hoping their fans would search it out on Taobao.

“As you can imagine, the conversion rate of this traditional means is quite low and a large proportion of potential customers were lost,” said Dong, “We are working on a new in-video shopping feature that can redirect shoppers to a homegrown e-commerce marketplace.”

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In addition, Video++ helps clients to run interactive video ads to better engage with audiences, tailoring ads to better achieve specific advertising goals, such as product purchases.

The company has had a bumpy road since its establishment. In early 2015, Video++ got a lot of media exposure as a star project in video/AI sector. As the media coverage brought the company to spotlight, reporting shifted when Chinese online media were filled with (in Chinese) doubts about the company. He added that despite the negative press, Video++ is strong and expanding in the two years after the incident.

“We have expanded from less than 30 to more than 100 staff since then. A large proportion of the leading video platforms including LeTV, iQiyi, Mango TV, are cooperating with us,” he said. “The growth is achieved through word-of-mouth.”

The live streaming boom sure boosted Video++’s growth, but what if the craze ebbs? The current live steaming boom mainly centered around streaming the lives and performances of good-looking ladies or men, said Dong. This kind content would fade away, but live streaming as a new means of communication will survive and resurge in new verticals like education and finance.

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And the ChinaBang 2017 Awards go to … https://technode.com/2017/03/18/and-the-chinabang-2017-awards-go-to/ Sat, 18 Mar 2017 03:00:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46851 It’s that time of the year again: the festive weekend for Chinese techies, startup entrepreneurs and investors alike. ChinaBang Awards, an annual ceremony recognizing the best startups in China, is on the go. To continue last year’s initiative in finding out the amazing startups nationwide- not just 1st tier cities, this year’s ChinaBang Award ceremony […]]]>

It’s that time of the year again: the festive weekend for Chinese techies, startup entrepreneurs and investors alike. ChinaBang Awards, an annual ceremony recognizing the best startups in China, is on the go.

To continue last year’s initiative in finding out the amazing startups nationwide- not just 1st tier cities, this year’s ChinaBang Award ceremony takes place at Changzhou of Jiangsu Province which sits at the center of China’s highly developed Yangtze Delta region.

After a few additions and changes, there are more than twenty award categories for this year from “VC of the Year” and “Entrepreneur of the Year” to “Best Startup” to honor the achievements they’ve made in the past year.

To guarantee the justice of the awards, the award process combined the results of an online poll with judgments from a specialist committee, taking into consideration aspects such as the startups’ innovation, growth potential and market influence.

Here comes the winners, congratulations to you all!

VC of the Year

Yu Lifeng (V Star Capital), Li Feng (FreeS Fund), Elton Jiang (Northern Light Venture Capital), Matt Cheng (Cherubic Ventures)

Entrepreneur of the Year

Hu Weiwei, Mobike

Hu is the founder of Mobike, a leading bike-rental company in China. Using specially designed bikes equipped with GPS and proprietary smart-lock technology, Mobike enables users of its smartphone app to find a bike near them and unlock it using their smartphones. The company is operating in more than 20 cities in China.

Han Kun- Yixia Technology

Han is the founder of Yixia Technology, one of the leading video app developers to have ridden China’s video and live-streaming boom. The company’s core products include Miaopai, a leading video clip editing and sharing app which claimed over video-dubbing app Xiaokaxiu and live streaming platform Yizhibo.

Startup of the Year

Mobike

Emerging Startup of the Year

Zero Zero is the producer of Hover drone cameras.

Pear Video is a live streaming startup.

Philm is a video-editing app that enables users to convert video clips into animated art.

Gago’s cloud-based platform helps farming companies to realize real-time monitoring and make smarter decision-making by leveraging visualized agronomic data.

Uisee: a smart driving technology company

Best Hardware

Xiaomi Mix – Xiaomi’s highly popular flagship smartphone.

Zero Zero

Insta360 is a manufacturer of panoramic cameras. User can attach the cameras to a smartphone for 360 degree panoramic video.

Deepfar Ocean Technology is primarily engaged in the research and development of underwater vehicles for military uses.

Best Apps

Fenda is a knowledge sharing service that enables users to pay to ask celebrities questions and get voice responses from the celebrities.

Flipboard China– the Chinese edition of the magzine-format social networking agreegation app.

Xianyu, meaning an idle fish, is a second-hand e-commerce platform. Customers can use their smartphones to run their stores and add promotional voice recordings to sell their products, making the app more like a social app.

Best Technologically Innovative Product

Yunzhou-Tech is a professional company focusing on USV development and offering USV solutions for water environment sampling & monitoring, hydrographic survey, oceanographic survey, nuclear radiation monitoring and water surface cleaning, etc.

Sougou is the owner and developer of Sogou search engine, Sogou Input and Sogou browser.

Shadow Creator is an VR/AR solution provider.

Best Enterprise Service

Zhipin is an online recruitment platform.

Shimo is a cloud-based productivity suite that combines chat, documents, spreadsheets, and more in a simple interface.

Tezign is an online platform connecting creative professionals with projects efficiently. Tezign engage creative individuals in three areas: graphic design, user interface design and illustration with a variety of organizations with design requests.

Daydao creates one-stop business management cloud platform in China.

Biaoqing Yun provides sticker and emoticon solutions.

Best E-commerce Platform

Aihuishou is an online gadget recycling platform. The company has received an RMB 400 million series D in December last year.

Beibei is an infant care online retailer.

YOHO! is a fashion e-commerce platform.

Best AI Product

Aispeech: a speech recognition and analysis start-up

Microsoft Xiaobing: Microsoft’s chatbot

WestWellLab is a commercial lab specialized in neuromorphic engineering.

Best Online Education Startups

Genshuixue is a website and mobile app that allows users to search for courses, both local and online, in a variety of subjects from piano to SAT prep.

Zuoyebang: a K-12 online education startup.

Haifeng Education: an online education platform

BOXFiSH: an online English training class

Best Fintech Startups

Paymax, a Shanghai-based startup in China’s growing mobile credit field, aims to provide micro loan service that specifically targeted at the country’s working class.

Okcoin: a Chinese crypto-currency trading platform

Maizi Jinfu: an online financial platform

Best VR|AR Startup

7D Vision: a startup engaged in computer vision, graphic and video processing

Hiscene: a AR service provider

uSens is principally engaged in designing gesture recognition and hand-and-head tracking technologies and 3D ‘Human Computer Interaction’ system design.

Chingmu, a developer of infrared optical position tracking system

Whaley: a smart TV startup.

Best Expats Startup

Hatchery: a food and beverage incubator based in Beijing.

MoneyLocker is a startup that shows advertisements on phone unlock screens and rewards users for viewing them,

The Carevoice is a Shanghai-based review-based social platform dedicated to healthcare sector, bringing trusted ratings and recommendations on top quality medical providers. The platform evolved by launching a SaaS solution for insurers and employers to improve the healthcare choices and experiences of their insurance members and employees.

Italki started as a language learning community in 2007. The site evolved into an online teaching platform by creating a marketplace that brings students and teachers together for paid lessons.

tataUFO is a social networking platform for youth.

Most Popular Starutps

AirvisualDaxiangrenshiYaomaicheHongdou LiveTupu TechKnowboxVisionertech, APUS

Startup Service Institution of the Year

Microsoft Accelerator, DayDayUp, INNOSPACE+, URWork, Bigbang Coffee, P2, plug and play, Bay West, Genisis Ark, Q+makerspace

VC Institution of the Year

ZhenFund, Gobi Partners, Vertex Ventures

Best After-invest Service

Yunqi Partners, Cherubic Ventures, Cyanhill Capital

Best Startups from NodeSpace (TechNode’s incubator)

marketinEasy Travel (轻旅星球), Easylinking (生意帮), Yitu8 (易途吧), Meiheyoupin (美盒优品), Huanxing (幻行科技), Robsense (若联科技), Jianghun (匠魂网), Aide Information (艾锝信息)

Best Startups from Changzhou常州创业新锐

Wbne Group (江苏万帮德和新能源科技有限公司), Ston Robotics (金石机器人常州股份有限公司), Maymuse (江苏美淼环保科技有限公司), Volitation (天峋(常州)智能科技有限公司), Changzhou AMT (常州阿木奇声学科技有限公司), Cudatec (江苏赞奇科技股份有限公司), BeStar Sensor (常州波速传感器有限公司), Jingang Technology (江苏金刚文化科技集团股份有限公司), Very Cloud (常州云端网络科技股份有限公司), Changzhou Marine Cable (常州船用电缆有限责任公司), Final11 (兔几科技).

Annual Media Award

Yicai Global

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Xiaomi’s video call provider Agora adds virtual lenses SDK for video apps https://technode.com/2017/03/15/xiaomis-video-call-provider-agora-adds-virtual-lenses-sdk-for-video-apps/ Wed, 15 Mar 2017 14:01:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46727 Agora.io, the real-time video call solution behind Xiaomi and Momo, today announced the launch of Agora Virtual Lenses, a new software development kit (SDK) that allows developers to easily add face tracking and special effects to real-time video and live streaming apps. The new feature includes more than 600 sets of 2D and 3D stickers […]]]>

Agora.io, the real-time video call solution behind Xiaomi and Momo, today announced the launch of Agora Virtual Lenses, a new software development kit (SDK) that allows developers to easily add face tracking and special effects to real-time video and live streaming apps.

The new feature includes more than 600 sets of 2D and 3D stickers as well as virtual lenses and filters aimed at augmenting the user experience and driving higher engagement, according to the company.

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“The way we communicate and share content is constantly evolving. As Snapchat’s success has proven, virtual lenses have added a new layer to the way we interact with one another,” says Tony Zhao, founder and CEO at Agora.io.

Virtual lenses and stickers have become so popular that it turns to a must-have for nearly every social networking, chat and video apps. Apple recently added sticker and filter features to iMessages in iOS 10 update.

The launched of Agora Virtual Lenses would allow every developer to add hundreds of special effects to existing video platforms without a dedicated team of graphic engineers and designers.

Open to all developers, Agora’s latest addition may add fuel to further development of the live streaming sector. Momo, one of China’s top social networking and dating app, saw record revenue growth last year thanks to live streaming.

“We want to democratize that experience by offering a simple SDK that’s open to any developer who wants to add interactive features to existing platforms or channels,” Zhao adds. “There’s a growing opportunity for app developers and social media platforms to capture new revenue streams for themselves and their users with live interactive experiences.”

In addition, the company told Technode that they are going to partner with Hike Messenger, a major rival of WhatsApp in India and social network MeetMe. MeetMe just did a $60million acquisition with Tagged and If(we), and announced they were betting big in video.

Privately held and founded in 2014, Agora.io is a Communications-as-a-Service (CaaS) provider delivering mobile-first real-time communications for brands and businesses globally.

Agora.io features include voice calling, video calling, group conferencing, interactive broadcasting and more. Agoria.io provides communications services to organizations across industries, including telemedicine, education, financial services, customer service, social media applications and mobile gaming. The company’s SDK is installed on more than 500 million devices.

Apart from providing its technology to Xiaomi, Agora.io is backed by Shunwei Capital, whose founding partner and chairman is Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun. Agora’s other investors include Morningside, SIG, GGV Capital, and IDG.

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China-based online services are fighting fraud from within https://technode.com/2017/03/15/china-fraud-95-domestic/ Wed, 15 Mar 2017 13:01:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46712 With the development of technology, fraudsters are becoming increasingly sophisticated. They are tech-savvy, open to new software and tools, and have developed multiple advanced techniques so that fake accounts blend in with normal users. The total estimated cost of global fraud is greater than US$ 50 billion per year and the global losses on credit, […]]]>

With the development of technology, fraudsters are becoming increasingly sophisticated. They are tech-savvy, open to new software and tools, and have developed multiple advanced techniques so that fake accounts blend in with normal users.

The total estimated cost of global fraud is greater than US$ 50 billion per year and the global losses on credit, debit, prepaid general purpose, and private label payment cards reached US$ 16.31 billion last year, a recent report from fraud detection solution Data Visor points out.

Fraudsters are everywhere. The report details the countries hosting the highest number of fraudulent accounts that target online services based in North America and Europe. The US and China host the highest number of fraudulent accounts, but Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe are producing their fair share of malicious accounts as well.

屏幕快照 2017-03-15 上午10.15.37

While online properties based in North America and Europe are attacked by global fraudsters, China-based online services are attacked more by fraudsters in their immediate region.

Ninety-five percent of fraudulent accounts that target China-based services originate from within China. It is interesting to note that most of the coastal provinces are highlighted as the regions where fraudulent accounts were hosted, likely due to larger populations in those locations and the presence of fraudster communities in bigger cities.

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Online fraud in China is growing into a great pain for the country. Liewang Platform, a website where internet users on the mainland can report online fraud cases, reports that online fraud victims in China were each cheated of over RMB 9,400 RMB (around US$ 1360) on average last year, a 90% jump from 2015.

To some extent, the rampancy of online frauds in China is aggravated by the fact that the country is dominated by Android, which controls 79.9% of the market, data from Kantar shows.

Data Visor’s research found that Android, being an open source operating system that gives users (including fraudsters) the flexibility to make system-level customizations and add new features, is more vulnerable to attacks. There are 3x more fraudulent accounts from Android devices compared to those from iOS. Overall 74% of the fraudulent accounts are coming from Android platform, versus a 25% for iOS system.

Furthermore, there are also more apps available for Android systems compared to iOS, some of which are specifically designed to spoof GPS location services on the device, forge network requests, automate human-like activities, or provide other functionalities convenient for conducting fraud. A user from an Android platform is 8x more likely to be fraudulent than a user from an iOS device. When an online service is “mobile only,” criminals will opt for Android as the best platform for attacks, according to Data Visor.

While everything is moving toward mobile, fraudsters and their armies of fake accounts appear to have a preference toward desktop platforms. Data from the report shows 82% of fake accounts originated from desktop machines, compared to only 18% from mobile platforms. The vulnerability of PC platform is largely due to the lack of reliable device fingerprints that can be used to uniquely track web users.

Creating the appearance of a different user can be as simple as clearing the browser cookie and/or spoofing the user-agent string. By contrast, mobile apps sit directly on the device and collect more accurate device identifiers, or monitor user behavior within the app, making it harder for fake accounts to avoid detection. Also, it is much easier for fraudsters to use emulation software on a desktop to create hundreds or thousands of virtual devices, which appear as uniquely legitimate users

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Didi rumored to gain payment license through acquisition of 19Pay https://technode.com/2017/03/13/didi-rumored-to-gain-payment-license-through-acquisition-of-19pay/ Mon, 13 Mar 2017 08:50:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46652 DidiThe spending spree of Chinese internet giants on payment companies continues this week. Adding to a lengthening list of mobile payment company acquisitions, local payment news site Paynews is reporting that Didi will fully acquire 19Pay for RMB 4.3 billion RMB (US$ 622 million), citing people familiar with the matter. The source added that the deal […]]]> Didi

The spending spree of Chinese internet giants on payment companies continues this week. Adding to a lengthening list of mobile payment company acquisitions, local payment news site Paynews is reporting that Didi will fully acquire 19Pay for RMB 4.3 billion RMB (US$ 622 million), citing people familiar with the matter.

The source added that the deal is still under discussion and Didi is expected to fully take over the company in July or August this year. Didi, for their part, has neither confirmed nor denied the discussions to purchase 19pay.

“Mobility covers a rich diversity of payment scenarios. Didi has kept extensive dialogue with partners in this industry,” said a spokesperson. “We continue to focus on our core transportation business and do not have plans to enter the payment business.”

In addition to Didi, the source added that LeEco was also in talks with 19Pay, but the deal went sour because the companies couldn’t agree on the price. This is not surprising given the recent troubles the company has been going through

Founded in 2010, 19Pay is a payment company that provides domestic telecom integration and e-commerce payment services. After gaining third-party payment license in June 2012, Gaoyang Jiexun, the company behind 19Pay, was acquired by GoHigh Data Networks, the listed arm of Datang Telecom in 2013.

As one of the top payment service providers in China, Gaoyang Jiexun’s recharge system offers service to telecom carrier China Unicom in 22 provinces, China Telecom in 5 provinces and China Mobile in 2 provinces. The company has received investment from Sequoia Fund and Zero2IPO Ventures. With businesses in third-party payment, phone bill recharge, gaming recharges, the company’s annual turnover exceeds 30 billion RMB.

Like many other companies that have invested heavily in payment companies, Didi’s motive behind his deal is loud and clear: to have its own payment license.

Given payment license was the primary object of this deal, Didi’s interest of maintaining 19pay’s current business was minimum. But the source disclosed that the startup would not face large-scale layoffs in the future. The current staff would be transferred to the parent company GoHigh Data Networks.

Currently, Didi supports two mainstream third-party payment services: WeChat Payment, the mobile payment tool backed by Didi investor Tencent, and Alipay, Alibaba’s digital payment service that was integrated after the Didi-Kuaidi merger.

With the acquisition of a payment license, Didi may add a payment option of its own, but the company probably won’t stop there.

The license is a further indicator for the company’s plans in expanding into the financial sector, which has become a must-have business of nearly every major Chinese internet company thanks to the proven model and promises of higher margin.

The deal is significant as it demonstrates Chinese internet company’s rising craze toward online payment. However, it also underlines the disappearance of independent payment providers in the country. Sun Jiangtao, founder of Qiandaibao, a mobile payment company recently acquired by Meituan-Dianping, said after the acquisition that “there’s no space for pure play companies in China.” He added that companies with access to customers will process payment themselves, and there won’t be a need for any independent processors.

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Building a browser community: Q&A with Jon von Tetzchner, founder of Opera and Vivaldi https://technode.com/2017/03/10/jon-von-tetzchner-browser-community-qa/ Fri, 10 Mar 2017 03:18:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46527 Being an entrepreneur is all about realizing the long cherished vision regardless of the difficulty of the process. For Jon von Tetzchner, that vision is to build the most powerful browser for users. Jon worked more than ten years as the co-founder and CEO of Opera Software, a majority of which was sold last year […]]]>

Being an entrepreneur is all about realizing the long cherished vision regardless of the difficulty of the process. For Jon von Tetzchner, that vision is to build the most powerful browser for users.

Jon_von_Tetzchner

Jon worked more than ten years as the co-founder and CEO of Opera Software, a majority of which was sold last year to a Chinese consortium led by Qihoo 360. He left Opera in 2010. Motivated by his original vision, however, Jon is back in the arena six years later with Vivaldi, a feature-rich browser for power users, to continue where he’s left with Opera. The Vivaldi browser was born out of a namesake social network and forum site for exiles from Opera’s now-closed community site, which Jon built in 2014.

The Icelandic programmer shared with TechNode his insights on the Chinese browser market as well as how to build an active fan community to power product development here.

Building an active user base is crucial for startups to improve their products constantly based on quick customer feedbacks. This is especially true for Vivaldi, a user-centric browser targeting power users who have higher and more detailed demands.

Why did you leave Opera when it was doing great? 

The reason for leaving the company was a disagreement with investors about the direction of the company. I wanted to continue to grow Opera, while the investors and the current management wanted to sell the company. They did not believe that we could continue the growth we had had for 15 years.

Two years after I left Opera, they decided to change the product philosophy to be more like the others, meaning a simpler browser with limited functionality and flexibility. This made a lot of Opera users unhappy and me as well. I had planned to continue to use Opera for all time, but Opera no longer had the features I and other users wanted. Thus we decided to make Vivaldi, a browser for our friends.

How is Vivaldi different from Opera or any other browsers available on the market now?

The general trend in software is simplification. In the past software was feature rich, but hard to use. During the last 15 years or so, there has been a trend towards simpler software, where features are removed unless they get widespread use. We believe it is possible to make feature rich software that is still easy to use and that adapts to your needs. We see every single user as an individual that deserves to get a browser that fits their need.

This means that Vivaldi has a lot of features that no other browser has and typically many different ways to do the same thing, as we know people differ in how they use this tool. People spend hours each day with their browser, so learning a few tricks is worthwhile if it saves you a lot of time and effort. That is what Vivaldi is all about.

How’s Vivaldi growth in China and what’s your strategies in building a local community?

China is one of our top 20 countries. Clearly, Asia is very important to us and we are seeing a lot of users in many Asian countries, such as Japan, South Korea, and India as well.

We currently have a dedicated Chinese community where Chinese volunteers with whom we engage personally help us understand the needs of the users in the Chinese market.

Vivaldi supports both traditional and simplified Chinese language. We intend to get deep into blogging, social networking sites, online communities. 92% of  Chinese netizens use some kind of social media. Initiatives like the Vivaldi Club by our Chinese volunteers is an example that we do want to reach out to more.

In a vertical community of tools such as browsers, members are the end users. The characteristics of such users are a willingness to try products, a pursuit of individuality, strong practical ability and high engagement in software-related industries. Most of our Chinese users were familiar with Opera and were loyal users of the browser. They believe in Vivaldi’s values and mission of being a very personal browser that adapts to the user.

A large proportion of Chinese internet users are mobile first or even mobile only. What are your plans on releasing mobile browser?

Clearly, we are working on a mobile browser, with a focus on Android. We aim to provide a browser that is more advanced than what you normally find in the market. Also on the mobile side, browsers tend to be too simple for the kind of use you are seeing. Especially for those that only use mobile devices, a more advanced browser is needed, but also for others.

What are your tips for fellow entrepreneurs in product, team management or in managing relations with investors?

I co-founded Opera and I have now co-founded Vivaldi. I am also involved in some other companies, but in general, I have stayed on course. In many ways that is my best advice. Do something that really interests you, whatever it is. You are much more likely to succeed if the project is something that you are engaged in, instead of just a way to make a buck.

It is important to have a great team that has balance. People with different skills, but with the same mission. That applies to the investors as well. They need to be on board with where you want to go or the whole project may be a disaster waiting to happen. So many projects have been destroyed by having team members and/or investors that are not in tune.

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Didi opens self-driving research lab in U.S., the global expansion is getting real https://technode.com/2017/03/09/didi-opens-self-driving-research-lab-in-u-s-the-global-expansion-is-getting-real/ Thu, 09 Mar 2017 04:58:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46494 didiIt’s no secret that Chinese ride-hailing behemoth Didi Chuxing is planning something big for overseas market, but as of present all of its moves are achieved through partnership and investment in regional players of these markets. The company has yet to build an offline existence beyond its home country. But the case won’t be long. […]]]> didi

It’s no secret that Chinese ride-hailing behemoth Didi Chuxing is planning something big for overseas market, but as of present all of its moves are achieved through partnership and investment in regional players of these markets. The company has yet to build an offline existence beyond its home country. But the case won’t be long.

The firm, which acquired Uber’s China operations last year, today officially announced the launch of its first bricks-and-mortar office outside of China, dubbed DiDi Labs, in Mountain View, California.

Through a series of partnerships and investments, Didi has built a global ride-summoning network that’s covering every major player around the world, including Ola in India, Grab in Southeast AsiaLyft in the U.S., and 99 in Brazil. Given Uber is in competition with each and every of them in different regional markets, many jokingly referred this network as the “anti-Uber alliance”.

However, this latest move is of more strategic meaning than just gaining the upper hand. Focusing primarily on AI-based security and intelligent driving technologies, the new lab underlines the company’s efforts into a new field—self-driving. It’s worth to note that the lab’s Mountain View setting puts it in the backyard of leading self-driving companies as well as a pool of the world’s top talents.

Didi Labs will be led by Dr. Fengmin Gong, who became Vice President of Didi Research Institute after his company AssureSec was being acquired by Didi last year.

Dozens of leading data scientists and researchers have joined the team. Among them was Charlie Miller, who made his reputation as the world’s top automobile security experts in testing, in which he and Chris Valasek hacked remotely into the operating systems of a Jeep and took full control of the car.

The lab’s current projects span the areas of cloud-based security, deep learning, human-machine interaction, computer vision and imaging as well as intelligent driving technologies.

Meanwhile, Didi Labs will work in tandem with the broader Didi research network to advance its global strategy, apply research findings to products and services, and help cities develop smart transportation infrastructure. Didi expects to rapidly expand its US-based team of scientists and engineers over the course of the year, the company noted.

The launch of Didi Labs formalize the startup’s effort towards self-driving cars, but that’s only part of Didi’s plan to transform into the world’s leading mobile transportation platform. A source close to the company has told TechNode that Didi is also developing electric cars and they are looking to have more on the road in the future as a more economical and environmentally friendly option for drivers.

Cheng Wei, founder, Chairman and CEO of Didi Chuxing, said:

“Sweeping changes are taking place in the global transportation and automobile industries. As the world’s leading mobility platform, Didi has invested in five industry leaders around the world. Building on rich data and fast-evolving AI analytics, we will be working with cities and towns to build intelligent transportation ecosystems for the future.

As we strive to bring better services to broader communities, Didi’s international vision now extends to building the best-in-class international research network, advancing the global transportation revolution by leveraging innovative resources. The launch of Didi Labs is a landmark in creating this global nexus of innovation.”

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Momo sees record revenue growth thanks to live streaming https://technode.com/2017/03/08/mom-live-streaming-revenue-growth/ Wed, 08 Mar 2017 10:14:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46454 Momo, China’s top location-based social networking app, has continued last year’s growth feat with the announcement of an outstanding performance for the past year. The company, backed by Alibaba, listed on NASDAQ in December 2014. The firm’s revenue recorded a significant 524% YOY jump to US$ 246.1 million USD in Q4 last year, while the […]]]>

Momo, China’s top location-based social networking app, has continued last year’s growth feat with the announcement of an outstanding performance for the past year. The company, backed by Alibaba, listed on NASDAQ in December 2014.

The firm’s revenue recorded a significant 524% YOY jump to US$ 246.1 million USD in Q4 last year, while the annual revenue soared 313% YOY to US$ 553.1 million USD. Momo reported a non-GAAP earning per share of 0.44$ in Q4 and 0.87$ for the whole year.

Momo’s monthly active users bounced to 81.1 million in December 2016 from 69.8 million, rebounding to exceed its historical peak from back in early 2015. This is some amazing improvement after the company began seeing stagnant active user growth in H2 2015.

Previously, Momo cited smartphone sales and software updates as the reason for the stagnation.

From LBS dating app to social platform

Momo is certainly not aiming to become a live streaming company even the business now represents nearly 80% of its revenue. Rather, the company has evolved from a simple location-based feature that helps people discover new relationships. It is now a platform that accommodates a variety of different social and entertainment use cases, including one-to-one communications, group chatting, postings in various formats, and of course, live broadcasting and short videos.

Live streaming drives growth

Momo has been recording profits for eight consecutive quarters, but 2016 is the real start point for its rocketing growth. Like many of the social networking services in China, live streaming became the most significant propeller for its business, generating US$ 194.8 million revenue in Q4 2016.  Add to the platform in Q3 2015, live streaming has taken a larger and larger share of Momo’s revenue stream, up to almost 80%.

Coupling a younger user base with the culture of the platform, paying users picked up quickly. Momo says that in Q4 2016, they had 3.5 million paying live stream users.

Virtual gift-based live video streaming has been highly profitable in China. Momo’s live video streaming business is adopting a similar commercialization model where the platform enables viewers to buy virtual gifts for singers, splitting the gains with the company.

“We believe we are still early in the monetization process and have many opportunities to drive further growth year… In 2016, we have primarily relied on converting existing Momo users onto the live streaming service. In December 2016, the service covered around 23% of the daily active users for the main application. In 2017, we plan to expand the user acquisition effort beyond the Momo platform,” said company CEO Tang Yan in the earnings conference call.

Momo-Q4
Momo 2016 revenue break down (unit: 10k USD) (Image credit: Sina Tech)

Social networking, marketing, and gaming

The rest of the annual revenue was primarily derived from membership and gifting on their social network as well as marketing and gaming, both on mobile.

Value-added service revenues from their social network, which totaled 19.1 million USD in Q4 2016, mainly include membership subscription revenues and virtual gift revenues. The firm cites the increase of premium VIP users and total users as well as virtual gift service as the reason.

Mobile marketing revenues recorded a 29% YOY growth to $19.7 million in Q4 2016, mainly driven by more new customers and orders introduced by sales agents, as well as the increase of eCPM (effective cost per mille) of the in-feed advertisement service.

Momo’s mobile gaming unit has been growing quickly thanks to several big titles like hard-core game Momo Craft and Momo Fight the Landlord. The company is gradually retreating from game publishing joint operations to focus on in-house developed games in 2016. The effect of this strategy is evident that the company’s mobile games revenues surged 45% YOY to $11.3 million in Q4 2016.

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5 must-know Chinese computer vision startups https://technode.com/2017/03/07/5-must-know-chinese-computer-vision-startups/ Tue, 07 Mar 2017 07:30:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46371 Vision plays a central role in human cognition. While we use eyes to see things and the brain to interpret and coordinate, it is difficult for computers or robots to duplicate the way human perceive and visually sense the world around them. Computer vision is the science that aims to give a similar capability to […]]]>

Vision plays a central role in human cognition. While we use eyes to see things and the brain to interpret and coordinate, it is difficult for computers or robots to duplicate the way human perceive and visually sense the world around them.

Computer vision is the science that aims to give a similar capability to a machine. As the supporting technologies surround this multi-disciplinary field moves forward, computer vision is making great leaps to transform a variety of industries from face recognition and healthcare to security, agriculture, and more.

The rising market has given rise to a gold rush of startups all trying to capitalize on the trend. Here are some of the most prominent players coming from China.

Megvii

Face++

Formed in 2012 by Tsinghua University alumni, Megvii is a Beijing-based startup focused on computer vision and artificial intelligence. Its core product Face++ is a cloud-based face recognition technology platform that helps developers and companies to embed advanced face detection, analysis and recognition, and large-scale search techs in their apps and websites. It provides face-related API and offline software development kits as well as customized cloud services to both developers and enterprises.

As one of the earliest entrants to the sector, the company’s face recognition has been widely applied in various industries. Through a partnership with Ant Financial, Face++ has been integrated into Alipay to support facial scan logging in and Smile to Pay, a payment method that allows users to make a purchase by scanning their faces. Its Face++ API has been used by over 50,000 developers include Alipay, Meitu, Lenovo, Didi and Jiayuan.

The company reportedly finished a US$ 100 million fundraising in December last year from investors including CCB International Holdings and Foxconn.

DeepGlint

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DeepGlint is a computer vision startup providing 3D image analysis and deep learning technologies. With the goal of creating a search engine for the physical world, DeepGlint helps computers capture what is happening in real time, and understand the physical world as humans do. Its clients include banks, government, museums,

As one of the leading players in China’s computer vision sector, the company has recorded a major management reshuffle recently. Co-founder and CEO He Bofei resigned in January this year. Zhao Yong, former CTO of the company, is reported to be named as CEO.

SenseTime

Sensetime
Company CEO Xu Li

Founded in 2014, SenseTime focuses on face recognition technology that can be applied to payment and picture analysis, for bank card verification and security systems. In addition, SenseTime is also developing security technology focused on text and characters, body shapes and vehicles.

Its customers include companies like China Mobile, HNA Group, Huawei, Xiaomi, Sina and JD.com

Yitu Technology

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Yitu Technology operates a cloud-based visual recognition engine that enables computers to detect and recognize faces and cars. The system was first applied to security surveillance to help authorities identify persons of interest in criminal investigations and to track traffic violations.

With surveillance and crowd-tracking as the primary focus, the company’s clients include some state authorities like China Customs, China Immigration Inspection as well as cooperate clients like Wanda Group, Huawei and AliCloud.

Leo Zhu, who gained a post-doctoral fellowship on computer vision at MIT, founded the company with high school friend Chenxi Lin, a former cloud computing technology director at Alibaba.

TuPu

tupu

Founded in 2014, TUPU Technology Co., Ltd provides image recognition services with AI algorithms and computer vision technology.

The company is primarily engaged in NSFW/NSFL content filtering, ads recognition, live streaming monitoring and other tailor-made services.

Leonard Li, the CEO of TUPU, was the founding team member of WeChat and the technical director of QQ Mail. In September 2016, TUPU received ten million dollars in Series A Funding Round.

This post is updated at 15:00 March 10th to add more details about Tupu.

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Xiaomi is about to be world’s number 1 wearable company https://technode.com/2017/03/03/xiaomi-fitbit-wearables-number-one/ Fri, 03 Mar 2017 10:28:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46314 While Xiaomi is suffering from gloomy market predictions due to decline in their core business of smartphones, the Chinese electronics company is now receiving a boost from its wearable product line. Shipping 5.2 million smart wearable gadgets in Q4 2016, Xiaomi was ranked the second largest wearable maker in the world with a market share […]]]>

While Xiaomi is suffering from gloomy market predictions due to decline in their core business of smartphones, the Chinese electronics company is now receiving a boost from its wearable product line.

Shipping 5.2 million smart wearable gadgets in Q4 2016, Xiaomi was ranked the second largest wearable maker in the world with a market share of 15.2 percent, according to research firm IDC. Fitbit shipped 6.5 million units in the same period, holding the top position with 19.2 percent market share.

However, the dominant Fitbit, which also topped the annual shipment list, may soon be overtaken by Xiaomi, which shows a strong growth trajectory. The year-on-year growth of Xiaomi stood at 96.2 percent as compared to a 22.7 percent drop for Fitbit.

The worldwide wearables market reached a new all-time high as shipments reached 33.9 million units in Q4 last year, growing 16.9% year over year. The year came to a close with 102.4 million devices shipped.

IDC

Launched in August 2014 at the peak of the wearable craze, Xiaomi’s first generation of Mi Bands have become a quick sell thanks to decent product design and affordable prices (~13 USD), a combo that gives entry-level users quick access to try out the novel products. The firm has sold 18.5 million (in Chinese) Mi Bands as of March last year.

Like for its smartphones, the company’s Mi Band 2, which was launched last year, veered upstream by introducing new devices with OLED screen, heart rate monitoring and a mildly higher selling price (~21 USD). Huami Technology, Xiaomi’s partner in wearables and the developer of the Mi Band, has launched Amazfit to target the mid-and high-market.

Mi Band has hit several overseas markets like India, Indonesia and the U.S., but China still accounts for a predominate chunk of its shipment. According to IDC, Xiaomi still lacks the expertise and brand recognition to expand beyond China.

On the other hand, China is also a hard nut to crack for foreign brands as always. Entering Chinese market as early as 2014, Fitbit has been feeling pressure from the Chinese rival. The U.S. company also teamed up local partners like Tmall to strengthen its Chinese presence. But the latest IDC report indicates that their efforts have yet to witness positive results.

Unsurprisingly, Xiaomi is facing competition from local players like Lifesense, Okii, Huawei and 360 to tap a growing Chinese market, where wearables are expected to overtake tablets as the second-most popular mobile device in 2017. Wearables saw a 47% penetration rate in China in December 2016, but 54% of consumers stated they had plans to purchase one in the following month.

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Didi rival UCAR announces US$ 1B funding, sparks speculation of another ride-hailing war https://technode.com/2017/03/02/ucar-1-billion-ride-war-again/ Thu, 02 Mar 2017 06:50:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46275 The truce between Didi Chuxing and Uber China seemingly left the Chinese ride-hailing titan the sole dominator in China’s highly lucrative market. However, it has opened up new opportunities for other surviving local ride-hailing companies. It would seem that there’s no way for a single company to gobble up the entire Chinese market as a […]]]>

The truce between Didi Chuxing and Uber China seemingly left the Chinese ride-hailing titan the sole dominator in China’s highly lucrative market. However, it has opened up new opportunities for other surviving local ride-hailing companies. It would seem that there’s no way for a single company to gobble up the entire Chinese market as a whole, even if it’s Didi.

UCAR, a prominent rival of Didi in China, announced this week that it raised RMB 4.6 billion in new funds from four investors including China’s interbank network, UnionPay. The company already boasts investment from high-profile players, including Warburg Pincus and Jack Ma.

Different from Didi that relies on private cars and crowd-sourced drivers, UCAR offers its services with an in-house fleet and licensed drivers. These drivers offer UCAR a way to potentially increase margins and avoid government questions about their legal status.

The firm currently operates four product lines: Car. Inc, their Hong Kong-listed car rental arm, Shenzhou Zhuanche, the chauffeured car service as well as an online car marketplace and a car loan service. Lu disclosed that the company is considering to explore new fields given all of its businesses are going to record profits this year, adding that car manufacturing is a possible option.

It’s worth nothing that the funding announced this time is only half the size of the firm’s RMB 10 billion private placement plan announced in last October.

However, board chairman Lu Zhengyao told local media (in Chinese) that more funding will follow and the total financing will be over RMB 7 billion RMB (around US$ 1.02 billion). He added that the funds will be used for marketing, recruitment, offline outlets, and fleet procurement.

Like many Chinese tech startups, UCAR is listed on the Chinese over-the-counter (OTC) market. It was the first of its kind when it was listed in in September last year and is now valued at RMB 40.93 billion. Didi is still preparing for its IPO and no specific timetable has been announced.

Despite the fierce competition and government constraints, local companies keep fighting their way into to China’s ride-hailing market. LeEco-backed Yidao is also targeting the gap that’s being left by Uber’s retreat.

In addition to the old players, new entrants continue to flock to the sector. China’s top O2O titan Meituan added a car-hailing function into its app to complement the existing services from food delivery to ticket booking. Chinese car manufacturer Geely has also expanded its ride-summoning services Caocao Zhuanche to more cities.

When Didi and Kuadi merged, and again when Didi merged with Uber, many predicted that the battle in Chinese ride-hailing industry was coming to an end. As things are now, the market is more mature, but the war may not be over.

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A look into Asian’s tech M&A market with Finquest CEO Tanguy Lesselin https://technode.com/2017/03/02/a-look-into-asians-tech-ma-market-with-finquest-ceo-tanguy-lesselin/ Thu, 02 Mar 2017 04:15:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46234 Initial public offering (IPO) has ceased to be the most appealing way for VC exits. While the demand for exits is still there, the market is shifting towards another path – mergers and acquisitions (M&As). On the global level, M&A activities soared in two straight years to an all-time high in 2016, when a dry spell hit […]]]>

Initial public offering (IPO) has ceased to be the most appealing way for VC exits. While the demand for exits is still there, the market is shifting towards another path – mergers and acquisitions (M&As). On the global level, M&A activities soared in two straight years to an all-time high in 2016, when a dry spell hit the IPO sector. Together with the transition, rose the startups that aim to change the traditional way of connecting and accelerating M&A deals.

FINQUEST_Studio_071_Tanguy Lesselin
Finquest CEO Tanguy Lesselin

Tanguy Lesselin, co-founder and CEO of Finquest, has felt all the points in the traditional M&A model as a former consultant working on post-merger and joint-venture projects. He started Finquest in belief that there is a better solution for tech startups looking for investors.

Finquest is a global platform to foster cross-border mid-market direct investments in Asia to build bridges between institutional investors, M&A Advisors, and Asian mid-market companies.

“Our goal is to help the market identify the right kind of party for the right marketplace. If you want to get these targets manually, you would lose a lot of opportunities,” said Tanguy.

As part of its expansion plan, the Singapore-based company just acquired Detecq, a private marketplace that matches technology companies with strategic investors in Asia. Detecq’s founder Wong Zi En, will join the Finquest team to expand the company’s presence in Asia’s tech ecosystem.

Why tech, why mid-market, why Asia?

Started as a cross-sector platform, Finquest gradually strengthened its presence in technology M&As segment not only because it is becoming an increasingly large part of the M&A market. Tanguy pointed out that tech is becoming less and less a vertical by itself in the sense that all industries are integrating into tech in their value chain.

“Take healthcare, for instance, we are meeting investors that don’t have constraints from VC or PE. When they look at healthcare they could very well buy a hospital or invest in doctor booking application. That’s why every vertical is being penetrated horizontally by tech,” he said.

For the estimated half a million mid-market companies in Asia, most are too small to go public but too large to have their corporate finance needs met by early-stage venture capital firms, crowdfunding platforms, or peer-to-peer lending. Furthermore, less than 1% are currently backed by private equity.

“We define mid-market by transactions between 10 and 150 million USD. In the tech segment, we choose to look at series B and beyond because series B start to be cross-border deals. When you do fundraising as a business owner and CEO, series B is quite often where you expand your operations at the international level,” he said. “So that’s where you would be actually seeking investors who are in new markets and by definition, you don’t have a network there.”

With economic growth in Asia continuing to outpace other regions, the world’s institutional investors are becoming more interested in exploring opportunities in this market. However, lack of access and the market’s overwhelming size and complexity are blocking progress.

“Finquest will keep Asia as the core priority because M&A data is missing here as compared with other countries like the U.S.,” said Tanguy. “I’m not saying I’m not interested in expanding to additional geographies. But the figures in Asia is very significant part of the future growth, It’s more than 50 % of future GDP growth in the world, so it’s already a very large territory.”

Tech M&A in China

China often makes the headlines with regards to M&A transactions these days, for a number of reasons. There is a very strong appetite from Chinese institutional investors and companies to purchase assets outside of China and leverage them in the domestic China market.

“We see strong demand from Chinese investors for IP and brand related assets in general. From an outbound M&A perspective, some of the new constraints imposed by the government may create a more uncertain environment, but we also see more structured funds from large Chinese technology companies looking for investment opportunities in Asia and beyond,” said Tanguy.

“From an inbound perspective, we see strong demand from institutional investors to access Chinese innovative companies in various sectors,” he added. “Because of the highly concentrated market structure in some segments, key industry players outside China are trying to generate new opportunities by approaching the few large players in the digital space.”

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One year on, Apple Pay finding little traction in the Middle Kingdom https://technode.com/2017/02/28/apple-pay-china-little-traction-2017/ Tue, 28 Feb 2017 08:41:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46171 After a slow start, Apple Pay is now dominating its home country, the United States. Data from Boston Retail Partners shows that Apple Pay is now accepted by 36 percent of merchants in the United States, becoming the most popular mobile payment method in the nation. However, it’s only recording lukewarm or even cold reception […]]]>

After a slow start, Apple Pay is now dominating its home country, the United States. Data from Boston Retail Partners shows that Apple Pay is now accepted by 36 percent of merchants in the United States, becoming the most popular mobile payment method in the nation. However, it’s only recording lukewarm or even cold reception in China, which is estimated to be the world’s largest mobile payment market.

When Apple Pay first landed in the Middle Kingdom one year ago, the smartphone giant was expected to make a serious dent in China’s highly consolidated mobile payment market; more than 30 million bankcards were added to Apple Pay during the first day of its official launch.

After one year of operation in China, however, it seems that Apple Pay has failed to become a real threat to the dominance of Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent-backed Tenpay (operator of WeChat Pay), two leading payment tools in the country.

In Q3 last year, Alipay and Tenpay took 50.42% and 38.12% of China’s mobile payment market, data from research institution Analysys showed. With the two leading payment tool taking monopoly, the rest of the players only recorded single-digit shares of the market. Apple Pay did not even make to the top-ten list with shares so small that can be overlooked.

Here are some of the pitfalls that stood in the way of Apple Pay in China.

QR codes rule in China

Technologically speaking, NFC, used by Apple Pay, enjoys many advantages over QR code with its touch-and-go approach and built-in security. But QR code payment has become the widely adopted and deep-rooted practice for Chinese users. Once these habits are formed, they prove difficult to change.

China UnionPay, Apple Pay’s Chinese partners and a long-time proponent of NFC, even succumbed to the QR code pressure and launched its own solution late last year. This is an even bigger surprise given that UnionPay has already partnered with smartphone makers Huawei and Xiaomi to push NFC adoption in China. However, as we can see, this hasn’t changed users habits.

In addition, NFC’s reliance on NFC-equipped smartphones and NFC-compatible POS terminals are also roadblocks for its wide application.

Open payment platforms VS iPhone only service

As a third-party payment services, both Alipay and Tenpay are cross-platform services that are open to users regardless of operating systems and smartphone brands. Hundreds of millions of people are using their smartphone apps to pay both offline and online. Alipay claimed a whopping 450 million users, with Tenpay coming in at a close second.

In comparison, Apple Pay, which only works with Apple hardware, automatically excludes a majority of the China market that only use Android-based phones. What’s more, Apple Pay only supports iPhone 6 or higher. Couple this with iPhone’s slowing sales in the country and it is no surprise the payment option isn’t doing so well.

Extensive offline expansion VS limited offline visibility

In just one day of shopping in China, you will come across legions of Alipay and WeChat Pay logos adorning storefronts and cash registers in department stores, boutiques, and even the small shop down the street.

On the other hand, Apple Pay has much less offline presence due to the limited support. It is usually only available in larger chain brands like Starbucks, Costa Coffee, Carrefour, and 7-Eleven. Even then, many of these stores will also accept both Alipay and WeChat.

Furthermore, Alipay and Tenpay’s offline presence are fueled by their heavy-subsidized expansion plan. Although it’s clear that subsidized expansion is not sustainable, this model has proven a successful way to attract users in many verticals, including ride-hailing, bike-rental, group buying, and other O2O services.

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Story of co-founder booted out over share option dispute goes viral on China’s social media https://technode.com/2017/02/27/co-founder-share-option-dispute-china-social-media/ Mon, 27 Feb 2017 03:20:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46110 As with any business venture, the agreements you make with your partners are important. However, having the wrong, or even no, partnership agreement from early on can be disastrous. A WeChat post that has been flooding Chinese social is a sad testament to this rule. Under the tear-inducing title “Even if my husband didn’t make a penny, […]]]>

As with any business venture, the agreements you make with your partners are important. However, having the wrong, or even no, partnership agreement from early on can be disastrous. A WeChat post that has been flooding Chinese social is a sad testament to this rule.

Under the tear-inducing title “Even if my husband didn’t make a penny, he’s still the best entrepreneur in my heart”, the post was published by Emily Liu, the wife of an entrepreneur. In a couple of hours, the article was read by 100,000 WeChat users and collected nearly 50,000 likes.

Emily’s husband launched a startup with partners in 2010. As the number 2 employee of the company, he is acting as co-founder and CTO. The author gives a vividly and touching description of the hardships her husband and their family went through along the growth of the startup.

However, as the business started to thrive, things got ugly among the founding team. After a talk with company CEO, Emily’s husband failed to gain the share options his partner has promised previously and was stuck with only two choices: either leave the company with nothing or stay with a slim salary.

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Picture of the family in the post

She also pointed out the company’s CEO is playing tricks with them by secretly setting up a new company which he has full ownership.

Although Emily was writing under a pseudonym, China’s powerful netizens soon discovered the true identity of the couple. There’s plenty of clues left in the post: a mobile gaming company and having received funding from both Sinovation Ventures and Sina. To top it off, she even attached a post of their family at the end of the article.

The author’s husband was widely guessed to be Han Donghui, CTO of game developer ZCTTECK GAMES with his CEO partner as Chen Yuxiang. Local media revealed that the two were once colleagues at BBS platform operator Comsenz before starting their entrepreneurial journey.

Chinese social networks are full of indignation about how Han was ill-used and screwed out of the shares that his hard work deserves. People with knowledge of the affair are also adding fuel to public indignation.

Li Mingshun, the founder of Haodai.com who once worked with the two entrepreneurs at Comsenz, went so far as to refer to Chen as “a piece of trash” in his personal WeChat. He added that Han is not the only one and some investors were also screwed by Chen.

Limingshun
Screenshot Li Mingshun’s WeChat comment

But others believe (in Chinese) believe Han has no one to blame but himself.

“Working in a company for seven years as part of senior management and still having no idea about how many shares you own in the company? That’s ridiculous, not only for Han but also for the CEO and investors,” said one commentator. “Because holding share options does not only mean how much money you are going to have from the company but also the responsibilities you are going to take. If the company goes bankrupt, you have to pay for the debt as well.”

At the center of the storm, company CEO Chen Yuxiang responded with his side of the story. Chen admitted his management wasn’t impeccable, especially in delaying the share option plan, but he did defend himself. He said ZCTTECK GAMES has already distributed 2 million RMB of dividends to Han in 2013, instead of 1 million RMB as claimed by Emily.  Chen emphasized that Han has been less motivated since then and several important projects of the company have failed under his leadership.

No matter which side you take, one lesson should be learned from the incident: Even though you are starting a business with your best friend, it’s necessary to have partnership agreements in place to outline each party’s role and obligations as early as possible, ideally at the very beginning, but certainly, before it accumulates profits or bake debts.

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Developer behind China’s most popular video platforms planning US IPO later this year https://technode.com/2017/02/24/yixia-us-ipo-2017/ Fri, 24 Feb 2017 02:18:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46076 yixia ipo 2017China’s burgeoning video and live-streaming sector is going to welcome its first IPO wave this year. Just weeks after Kuaishou’s IPO news broke out, Yixia Technology, the Beijing developer behind Chinese top video blogging app Miaopai, is planning a U.S. IPO later this year, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting, citing people with knowledge of the […]]]> yixia ipo 2017

China’s burgeoning video and live-streaming sector is going to welcome its first IPO wave this year. Just weeks after Kuaishou’s IPO news broke out, Yixia Technology, the Beijing developer behind Chinese top video blogging app Miaopai, is planning a U.S. IPO later this year, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Sources tell us the company is going to appoint senior management next month, which they translated as a signal for the listing.

“They [Yixia Technology] are planning to get listed in the second half of this year, very likely in the U.S. market given that Weibo, a major investor of Yixia Technology is listed on NASDAQ,” our source told us.

The company probably will announce the appointment at the end of this month, but nothing will be said about the IPO timetable, the source pointed out. “On the one hand, the board hasn’t reach consensus, on the other hand, they would try to take a gradual step cause things could change for any big deals like this,” according to our source.

In addition, buzz surrounding Yixia Technology’s IPO has been around for some time. Several series C investors of the company, the founder of StarVC as well as Zhou Wei, partner of KPCB, talked about the firm’s IPO plans previously. Local media (in Chinese) reported that the firm has already signed its security underwriter.

Founded in 2011, Yixia Technology is one of the leading video app developers to have ridden China’s video and live-streaming boom. The company first prospered with Miaopai, a leading video clip editing and sharing app which claimed over 1.7 billion daily views as of September last year. The growth has been fueled by its convenient integration into Weibo, the leading Twitter-like social media and strategic investor of Yixia Technology.

But it seems that Weibo’s investment has been paid off even before the Yixia Technology’s listing. Shares of Weibo jumped recently to historical high due in parts to the boost from Yixia.

Video-dubbing app Xiaokaxiu and live streaming platform Yizhibo, two of Yixia Technology’s video platforms, also recorded significant growth during the past year. According to data from the company, Miaopai and Xiaokaxiu have a combined daily user base of 70 million with Yizhibo covering 10 million daily users.

Investors have been enthusiastic about the Beijing-based firm for some time, where it has pocketed nearly US$ 800 million funding in overall six rounds of financing from Weibo, Sequoia Capital and RedPoint Ventures. The company’s most recent 500 million USD round raised the company’s valuation to between US$ 3 billion to 5 billion.

Han Kun, founder and CEO of Yixia Technology, declined to comment on our inquiries on the issue.

To answer previous inquires from local media on IPO plans, Han said: “Not a single startup that aspires for long-term and sustainable growth would forgo their IPO plan. However, going public is a decision that should be made by taking every aspect of the company into consideration. . . I will leave this problem to our CFO and I will focus more on the product itself.”

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[Updated] O2O bike-rental deposits in China may not be as secure as users think https://technode.com/2017/02/22/bike-rental-deposits-china-unsecure/ Wed, 22 Feb 2017 08:45:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=46005 You must have noticed the boom bike-rental companies in China as an increasing array of rainbow colored bikes mushrooming on streets across the country. Endless financing rounds from big names like Tencent, Didi, and Foxconn have been injected into one or another of the startups that involved in a heating field. Despite the initial “wows” […]]]>

You must have noticed the boom bike-rental companies in China as an increasing array of rainbow colored bikes mushrooming on streets across the country. Endless financing rounds from big names like Tencent, Didi, and Foxconn have been injected into one or another of the startups that involved in a heating field.

Despite the initial “wows” on the changes that bike sharing or, to use a more mundane term bike rental, have brought to our lives, the development of this sector has long been shadowed by pitfalls such bike vandalism and illegal parking.

While these issues are still unsolved, the recent news that investors of Kala, a bike-rental startup operating in Putian of Fujian Province, walking away with all users deposits has sparked public concerns about the safety of their capital. With this question in mind, let’s walk through some of the facts and problems with bike-rental deposits.

Bike rental deposit is no small deal now

In addition to a few firms like Qibei, which provides deposit-free services to Alipay users with high Sesame Credit scores, most of the companies require users to pay a deposit before using the service. The deposit varies: RMB 299 (US$ 43) for Mobike; RMB 298 for Ubike; RMB 199 for Xiaoming Bike; and RMB 99 for Ofo.

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Deposits of bike-sharing platforms (L-R Mobike, Xiaoming Bike, Ofo)

Bike rental companies promise that these deposits are totally refundable since the sum will be used solely as collateral; users will only be charged for each ride through a separate prepaid account.

As the user base grows, the deposit is creating huge cash flows for the companies. Reports from BigData Research (in Chinese) show that the weekly active users of Mobike and Ofo stood at 4.21 million and 4.36 million respectively in mid-January this year. For the two largest players, that’s a billion yuan-level cash pool taking form (1.26 billion RMB for Mobike and 431 million RMB for Ofo).

Prolonged reimbursement cycle

Paying a deposit for using bike rental services sound quite natural for us all. But have you ever given it a second thought? An investor walking away with is certainly rare, but there are other concerns.

Both Mobike and Ofo have stated many times that all the deposits are kept in separate accounts from their operating budget. They promised users could get their deposit back whenever they choose. However, it still takes several days before users can actually receive the reimbursement; this has been complained about by many (in Chinese), especially given that real-time transfers have become standard practice.

In response, inspections conducted by Shenzhen authority (in Chinese), Mobike cited third-party payment tools as the reason for delayed reimbursements. Currently, Mobike supports payment through Alipay and WeChat Payment.

Mobike users receive their deposits within 2-7 working days after applying for the refund, while it takes Ofo riders 1-3 working days to receive it. During this period of time, the users of both companies can not use their services.

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Deposit reimbursement rules: Mobike (L) and Ofo (R)

In traditional rental services, be it real estate or bikes, deposits are usually refunded to the customers once they have handed back the rented property. But with bike-rental apps, the reimbursement application has to be submitted manually. Most people wouldn’t do so due to the hassles involved unless they plan to delete the app for good.

Absence of monitoring puts bike-rental deposit in a financial grey area

Despite the huge capital size, the monitoring for bike rental deposits is still a blind spot. As an emerging sector that has registered a large group of users, proper monitoring process should be involved early on to avoid what’s happened with P2P lending industry in China.

“The way for bike-rental platforms is to make the flow of deposits public and receive monitoring from the mass,” local media cited an industry analyst. “At the same time, bike-sharing is a part of urban transportation. Relevant authorities should strengthen the monitoring of startups, including the management of deposits.”

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In response to public concerns, both Mobike and Ofo have said they have sped up the process to enable real-time deposit reimbursement. TechNode has tested this and have received the refund shortly after submitting the application.

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This post was updated at 18:52 on February 24 to clarify that the Mobike and Ofo have implemented real-time reimbursement.

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This computer vision startup makes a mobile virtual mirror for eyewear retailers https://technode.com/2017/02/21/computer-vision-eyewear-e-commerce/ Tue, 21 Feb 2017 08:22:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45945 The undeniable growth of e-commerce has allowed us to buy just about everything online including glasses. However, online sales of eyewear in China, a country with people obsessed with online purchases, stood at only 6 billion RMB in 2015. This figure represents around just 9% of the annual RMB 67 billion transaction volume. Although online retailers can offer a […]]]>

The undeniable growth of e-commerce has allowed us to buy just about everything online including glasses. However, online sales of eyewear in China, a country with people obsessed with online purchases, stood at only 6 billion RMB in 2015. This figure represents around just 9% of the annual RMB 67 billion transaction volume.

Although online retailers can offer a better selection and lower prices, their weak points are also obvious when compared with brick-and-mortar stores. The lack of try-on experiences for customers to actually touch and feel the eyeglasses prevents the spread of online eyewear sales, but instead promotes the sales of Pure Optical contact lenses which are much more convenient than the traditional glasses.

Topplus, a Chengdu-based computer vision startup, aims to solve this problem. The company’s TopGlasses is an SDK that helps merchants to add try-on experiences to their e-commerce platforms or mobile apps.

With the Dynamic SDK of TopGlasses, the camera gathers real-time head images of users and puts virtual glasses on their face. Users can adjust their head poses as they want and observe the results from different angles.

People with myopia who can’t see the real-time images clearly without their glasses can use TopGlasses’ prerecord SDK. By scanning user’s face as they turning their head right and left horizontally, it takes the SDK just a few seconds to create a realistic model of your face.

WechatIMG20

Although Topplus’s products largely solve the problem of how eyewear fits the user, the company’s COO Wang Yang believes they are tapping the most important aspect of online glasses sales.

“Compared with acquiring new users, which is a more costly way of driving business, maintaining repeat purchase from old customers is a more stable source for merchants to keep long-term and sustainable cash flow,” Wang said. “For returning buyers who already have an understanding of their optometry status and brand, price, after-sales services of the glasses, the problem of how the frame fits the wearers in appearance becomes the sole determinant of online purchasing behavior.”

Wang borrows a concept from Huawei to illustrate Topplus’ business model: “We adopt a customer-centric approach to solving the problems for our clients, so it’s quite flexible when it comes to the actual form we are taking as long as it can serve that function.”

Currently, there are two monetization models for Topplus’ virtual try-on services. Clients with abilities to develop and build 3D frames are charged a license fee. For eyewear manufacturers or brands who don’t want to engage in app development, Topplus can tailor apps to include their technology.

Founded in February 2015, the company’s founder and CEO, Xu Yidan, has more than ten years of experience in computer vision, augmented reality, and photogrammetry. The core team mainly consists of former employees from world’s top companies like Intel, Huawei, and Lenovo.

The company’s virtual try-on SDK is just a starting point. Its tracking and image stabilization system TopUav have been adopted by Chinese hovering drone developer Dobby.

Wang noted that many markets where computer vision is applicable could be revolutionized in the coming years from robots, security, smart city and more. He also admitted that virtual try-on is just one very small application scenario of their technologies: “Aside from technological risks, market risk is another major challenge laying ahead for startups.”

To lower this risk, Topplus launched their face-recognition SDK VOOME this February. Any enterprise or individual developers could use the free SDK for face detection, tracking, face landmark location, and face estimation.

屏幕快照 2017-02-20 下午4.02.02

“VOOME provides a set of testified data. By opening this valuable data to the public, we could involve more people to the initiative in an effort to explore application possibilities of the new technology,” said Wang.

The two-year-old startup has raised an angel round and an undisclosed amount of pre-A financing. For now, they are focusing on the Chinese market after first acquiring clients like Kede.com, a leading eyewear e-commerce marketplace in China, and designer glasses brand Tapole.

Image courtesy of Topplus

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Ant Financial accelerates global expansion with 200M USD investment in Kakao Pay https://technode.com/2017/02/21/ant-financial-accelerates-global-expansion-with-200m-usd-investment-in-kakao-pay/ Tue, 21 Feb 2017 03:51:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45971 Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, announced today a US$ 200 million investment in Kakao Pay, the soon-to-launch mobile finance subsidiary of Kakao Corp, parent to South Korea’s leading mobile messaging platform Kakao Talk. Kakao, which now claims 48+ million users, has launched its mobile payment feature Kakao Pay last year. […]]]>

Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, announced today a US$ 200 million investment in Kakao Pay, the soon-to-launch mobile finance subsidiary of Kakao Corp, parent to South Korea’s leading mobile messaging platform Kakao Talk.

Kakao, which now claims 48+ million users, has launched its mobile payment feature Kakao Pay last year. The platform has accumulated more than 14 million members and gradually evolved from payment transactions to offer innovative and convenient mobile financial services including bill payment, remittance and membership management.

Kakao’s board decided in January to form a separate entity for its Kakao Pay financial service brand, tentatively named Kakao Pay Corp. Young-Joon Ryu, who currently leads Kakao’s fintech division, will head the new company.

Under the agreement, Ant Financial, operator of China’s ubiquitous mobile payment tool Alipay which claimed 450 million users, will offer its wide range of digital financial services through Kakao Pay in South Korea. The new company will increase the number of online and offline merchants by merging Alipay’s 34,000 merchants into Kakao Pay’s system, providing merchants a much larger customer base, according to the company statement.

The partnership would be a win-win cooperation between the two parties as Kakao Pay can gain access to Alipay’s existing online and offline resources and technological support, while Alipay can leverage on Kakao’s huge user base to enter the Korean market.

While leading the domestic mobile purchase transformation, Ant Financial is also taking aggressive steps in overseas expansion through partnerships with local players. Alipay has been supported widely both online and offline in Japan, Korea, and Europe.

Investment is another major channel for the Chinese firm to penetrate overseas markets. Alibaba announced an undisclosed investment into payments service Mynt, a unit of Philippine telco Globe Telecom. It has acquired a 20% stake in Thailand’s third-party payment company Ascend Money last year and has invested in Indian’s PayTM in 2015.

As service first boomed in China, it’s natural for Alipay to take overseas payment made by Chinese users – whether made online or on a vacation abroad, as their first frontier when tapping overseas markets. The company noted that Chinese visitors and tourists will continue to enjoy a broader payment experience in South Korea with Alipay, and also Kakao Pay users will enjoy more digital financial services provided by the growing global footprint of Ant Financial.

On the other hand, the tie-up will benefit Kakao Pay which is facing a crowded local market with competition from Naver Pay (operated by South Korea’s top search engine), Samsung Pay, and retail giant Lotte Group’s L Pay.

“South Korea is an important market for Ant Financial in its global expansion, and we see many opportunities in the market for innovative services and growth in mobile payments. Given Kakao’s leading mobile platform offering and vast customer base, we believe we can bring Ant Financial’s broad experience in digital payments and technology-driven financial services to offer exciting and innovative products to South Korean customers,” said Douglas Feagin, President of Ant Financial International.

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Baidu doubles down on AI by acquiring Alexa-like service Raven Tech https://technode.com/2017/02/16/baidu-doubles-down-on-ai-by-acquiring-alexa-like-service-raven-tech/ Thu, 16 Feb 2017 08:35:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45877 Chinese search giant Baidu has acquired Raven Tech, a Chinese startup focusing on artificial intelligence and next-generation operating systems, the companies announced today. No financial details of the deal were disclosed. Cheng Lu, Raven Tech’s founder, will join Baidu to lead the company’s smart home device business and will work with the Duer team on […]]]>

Chinese search giant Baidu has acquired Raven Tech, a Chinese startup focusing on artificial intelligence and next-generation operating systems, the companies announced today. No financial details of the deal were disclosed.

Cheng Lu, Raven Tech’s founder, will join Baidu to lead the company’s smart home device business and will work with the Duer team on new product development.

Founded in 2014, the Beijing-based company is engaged in AI technology that especially applied to smart home systems.

The company’s IM+AI chatbot Flow is a voice-based search engine and operation system that supports services from third-party apps. The app features a minimalist black-white interface. With simple voice command, users have an all-in-one experience no matter they want to play music, find restaurants or plan a journey.

Services from mainstream apps like Uber and Dianping are supported. In addition, all the information found in Flow can be shared with friends.

Raven

In the rising smart home wave, the company’s also going for hardware market with the launch of Raven H-1, a Lego-like smart home assistant that users could customize different molds for different purposes. The product finished its campaign on JD’s crowdfunding site last year.

The startup has previously received tens of millions of US dollars in investment from ZhenFund, Matrix Partners China, Y Combinator, DCM, and Magic Stone Alternative. Raven Tech is the fifth alumni of Microsoft Venture Accelerator and the only startup team from mainland China in Y Combinator W15.

This deal is among a series of moves as Baidu pushes towards AI and deep learning industry through Baidu Research headed by Andrew Ng.

Although the AI industry is just now recording a boom, it is just as crowded as other red-hot internet verticals in China. In addition to Baidu’s Siri-like assistant Duer, there’s also a slew of similar services from Chinese speech-recognition technology developer iFLYTEK and Chumen Wenwen, a mobile voice search service headed by ex-Googlers.

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Data from Alibaba’s enterprise credit-rating system is now open to the public https://technode.com/2017/02/16/data-from-alibabas-enterprise-credit-rating-system-is-now-open-to-the-public/ Thu, 16 Feb 2017 04:27:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45863 Conducting proper due diligence research is a crucial step for companies before commencing business with a potential partner. Chinese internet giant Alibaba is trying to facilitate the process with the launch of an enterprise credit-rating website that will allow users to gauge potential partners’ creditworthiness with a few clicks. Dubbed Cheng Xin (诚信, “integrity” or “trust” in […]]]>

Conducting proper due diligence research is a crucial step for companies before commencing business with a potential partner. Chinese internet giant Alibaba is trying to facilitate the process with the launch of an enterprise credit-rating website that will allow users to gauge potential partners’ creditworthiness with a few clicks.

Dubbed Cheng Xin (诚信, “integrity” or “trust” in English) the site looks at data gleaned from Alibaba’s SME credit system, which the e-commerce titan built with the national Development and Reform Commission last year.

The system consists of credit grade, credit profile, and electronics passport numbers,  while the credit score of each company is measured from five aspects: basic information, trading behaviors, financial behaviors, commercial relations, and legal representative. The rating scale falls into five categories from the highest to the lowest–AAA, AA, A, BBB, BB.

Data in Alibaba’s enterprise credit system will be updated monthly.

Alibaba-1
Screenshot of Alibaba’s credit-rating page

By searching name of the firm or its legal representative on the newly launched site, users can gain quick access to the credit score of any company in the database. Other relevant information will be also provided, such as the basic information, management, shareholders, investments, and changes in industrial and commercial registrations.

Currently, the system has listed around 100 million enterprises, of which 86 million come from China and 24 million from the U.S. The company said it’s going to add more companies and gradually to include more countries to the system.

Several banks including Huaxia Bank have included Alibaba’s credit data into their risk evaluation system for small-and medium-sized enterprises. SMEs with high credit scores could get no mortgage credit loans at a shorter application cycle.

Alibaba representatives told local media (in Chinese) that this product would facilitate cooperation between companies while lower the fraud risk as well as fundraising costs.

“In international tradings, for example, the lack of credit info about suppliers has increased trading risks, which has inhibited the development of overseas direct sales and distribution,” the Alibaba rep added.

The new service is an example of Alibaba’s endeavors to bring credit transparency to China. Sesame Credit, the company’s credit-scoring for individuals, has become a top credit system in the country after two years of operation.

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Meituan adds ride-hailing feature to take on Didi https://technode.com/2017/02/15/meituan-adds-ride-hailing-feature-to-take-on-didi/ Wed, 15 Feb 2017 02:15:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45823 Didi and Uber’s billion-dollar merger completed last August was assumed to have finally settled the ride-hailing war with Didi as the sole dominator in the Middle Kingdom. However, the peace brought by the truce between world’s two largest ride-summoning services is short lived as well-grounded local rival Meituan has announced they are entering the battlefield. […]]]>

Didi and Uber’s billion-dollar merger completed last August was assumed to have finally settled the ride-hailing war with Didi as the sole dominator in the Middle Kingdom. However, the peace brought by the truce between world’s two largest ride-summoning services is short lived as well-grounded local rival Meituan has announced they are entering the battlefield.

On Tuesday, China’s top O2O titan Meituan added a car-hailing function into its app, which now features a wide variety of services from food delivery, film tickets, hotel reservation and flight/train tickets.

After finding the ride-hailing service in Meituan’s home page, users in Nanjing can book their trips in an interface and operation process very similar to Didi’s. Payments can be made with bank cards, WeChat or QQ Wallet.

Meituan-riding

Meituan’s entrance into the ride-hailing industry is quite unexpected given that the internet giant is mainly focused on local lifestyle services. The company has kept a low profile when talking about the new service, only explaining to local media that the feature was added to fulfill rising demand from users.

Meituan has plans to spread the service to more cities, but hasn’t released a timetable for the expansion.

Meituan, now more commonly known as Meituan-Dianping after its merger with once competitor Dianping, has some tricks up its sleeves in competing with the already established players led by Didi.

Meituan-Dianping now claimes to be the third largest e-commerce platform in China, next only to Alibaba and JD. The company has registered over 600 million users with monthly active mobile users hitting 180 million, a company rep told TechNode. This huge user base is expected to bring traffic to the service.

Additionally, nearly all the services that Meituan provides is directly related to intercity transportation services. This could enable an easy transition from one service to another within the app.

Last year, Meituan’s legendary CEO and Chinese internet opinion leader Wang Xing, put forward a proposition that Chinese internet is entering the “Second Half”, believing that “. . . only deep integration can lead to full transition [from the first to the second half].”

Integrating ride-hailing services could be considered in line with the proposition to penetrate other related services. In addition, the company has acquired Qiandai, a third-party payment startup, to make inroads into online payment sector.

This post is updated on 13:48 February 15th to change some of the operation metrics of Meituan-Dianping.

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Xiaomi turns to brick-and-mortar to bolster decreasing market share https://technode.com/2017/02/13/xiaomi-brick-and-mortar-market-share/ Mon, 13 Feb 2017 08:52:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45782 Xiaomi, a once red-hot Chinese hardware startup touted as the China’s answer to Apple, is encountering serious challenges from local competitors of Oppo, Vivo, and Huawei in the past year. It’s even been being moved from the first to the fifth spot in the market share list. The reasons behind this disastrous drop were multi-faceted and involve […]]]>

Xiaomi, a once red-hot Chinese hardware startup touted as the China’s answer to Apple, is encountering serious challenges from local competitors of Oppo, Vivo, and Huawei in the past year. It’s even been being moved from the first to the fifth spot in the market share list.

The reasons behind this disastrous drop were multi-faceted and involve issues from supply chain management to the lack of high-end products. However, the company’s online-focused marketing strategy is widely considered as a major reason.

Online marketing was a success, but it’s not one-size-fits-all

Born in 2010, Xiaomi positioned itself a brand with internet DNA and tried to engage customers with its geeky positioning. This is perfectly reflected in its slogan “Born for You, Burn for MI” (为发烧而生). In line with the positioning, Xiaomi leveraged corresponding online-focused marketing strategies, rejecting physical retail stores, traditional distribution channels, and conventional advertising as a way to keep lower product prices.

From online flash sales, social media promotion to creating a fanatic fan community, Xiaomi’s marketing moves proved to be a success in tapping China’s urban starter smartphone user base in its early stage of development with smartphones packed decent specs and affordable prices.

As the first regions to adopt smartphones, China tier-one and tier-two cities have gradually becoming saturated in recent years. Lower-tier cities and rural areas, where internet penetration is lower and traditional retailing still dominates, are taking bigger roles in driving smartphone market.

Market changes. Sticking to the old strategies, no matter how effective it was in the past, to tap a different market is obviously not a wise choice.

How will Xiaomi differentiate?

While Xiaomi is losing ground, its local competitors Oppo and Vivo are rising by adopting the exact tactics that Xiaomi once avoided. Now, Xiaomi is shifting to the offline-focused strategy that’s helped its rivals boom.

Xiaomi opened its first flagship retail stores in 2013. Back then, the move was largely a PR effort to build a more favorable company brand. Currently, there’s overall 47 Mi Homes in the country, including one in Hong Kong and one in Taiwan.

The firm’s obviously more serious about going offline this time. Company founder Lei Jun said the smartphone maker is going to add 200 brick-and-mortar Mi Home stores in 2017. A combined 1,000 such stores will be opened in the future three years.

xiaomi

In addition, the company started a pilot of a direct-to-retail model to eliminate distributors and other middlemen. Every individual retailer can order directly from the company on Xiaomi’s marketplace. The site shows that Xiaomi will offer training and incentive plans to individual merchants in the plan. Compared with opening physical stores, this is a less pricey way to reach to customers.

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Meet the best of Chinese underwater drones https://technode.com/2017/02/09/best-underwater-drones-china/ Thu, 09 Feb 2017 08:18:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45716 Emerging Chinese drone manufacturers led by DJI and EHANG have contributed greatly to the full transition of aerial drones from military devices to instruments that we use in everyday life. While they are trying their best to provide a bird’s eye view of our world, there are other Chinese companies are dedicated to give you […]]]>

Emerging Chinese drone manufacturers led by DJI and EHANG have contributed greatly to the full transition of aerial drones from military devices to instruments that we use in everyday life. While they are trying their best to provide a bird’s eye view of our world, there are other Chinese companies are dedicated to give you a glimpse under the sea.

To highlight some of these companies, we’ve come up with a list of consumer oriented underwater drone startups that’s coming from the Middle Kingdom.

Fifish

FiFish Atlantis

FiFish Atlantis is a smart ROV (Remotely Operated underwater vehicle) for the mass consumer market. It allows users to take videos underwater and send back high-definition videos in real-time. Its maximum water depth for normal usage is up to 100 meters and the embedded battery can last two hours at a full charge.

When equipped with a professional camera, it can be used to gather images for VR and AR applications. The FiFish series can also work as an underwater operation platform for industrial use when equipped with robotic arms or ocean environment detection system.

Born out of a project under Chinese incubator platform Taihuoniao, Qiyuan Technology, developer of FiFish Atlantis, has received funding from Chinese startup guru Kaifu Lee and Li Wanqiang, co-founder of Xiaomi.

White Shark Mini

Shark Mini

Designed for recreational purpose, White Shark Mini is a underwater drone that’s able to film two-megapixel videos. It can move with other gadgets attached, such as 3D camera, GPS, and sonar.

Deepfar Ocean Technology, the company behind White Shark Mini, is primarily engaged in the research and development of underwater vehicles for military uses.

Due to the instability and long project cycle of military orders, the Beijing-based company rolled out the White Shark brand at the beginning of last year, spreading to consumer market in an attempt to capitalize on China’s drone boom.  White Shark MAX, another product under the brand, targets professional customers like filmmakers and aquarium staff。

GLADIUS

GLadius+logo

GLADIUS is a smart ROV underwater drone built for filming, observing, and exploring. As a portable device, GLADIUS measures 430mm * 260mm * 95 mm and weighs only 3kg. The gadget comes with two built-in batteries, which can last up to 3 to 4 hours on one charge.

One cool thing about GLADIUS is its ability for precision maneuvers. The Quattro-thrusters design makes it able to nimbly move in all directions at a speed of up to 4 knots or 2m/s.

PowerRay

屏幕快照 2017-02-09 下午3.22.41

While the abovementioned ROVs are created for recreational purposes in general, PowerRay goes into a more specific vertical — fishing. Designed for freshwater, saltwater and even ice fishing, PowerRay is a underwater robot that uses sonar technology and ‘internal fish luring lights’ to detect and attract fish up to 30 meters under water.

To enable more immersive experience, the drone can provide a first person view experience through connecting to a PowerVision VR goggle. With gravity and gesture recognition capabilities, the goggle allows users to interact with and control the robot via head tilting.

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Gay dating app Blued bags strategic investment from China’s state-run media https://technode.com/2017/02/08/blued-investment-china-state-media/ Wed, 08 Feb 2017 07:44:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45656 Contrary to most foreigners would believe, China is shifting to a much milder tone towards the country’s thriving LGBT community, especially when it comes to the online world. This is evident enough with the extent to which LGBT-related topics can be talked about online and the number of tech services that goes after this special group. […]]]>

Contrary to most foreigners would believe, China is shifting to a much milder tone towards the country’s thriving LGBT community, especially when it comes to the online world. This is evident enough with the extent to which LGBT-related topics can be talked about online and the number of tech services that goes after this special group. It seems that the country’s tolerance for GLBT community is spreading from the cyber world to the real world.

Chinese gay chat and hook-up app Blued announced Tuesday that it has sealed eight-digit RMB strategic funding from the investment arm of The Beijing News, a state-backed newspaper group.

The expanding globalization initiative of Blued and its growth in live streaming, e-commerce, gaming healthcare and entertainment were the main reasons for this investment, according to a representative from the investor.

Like many Chinese companies, the Beijing-based startup has been pushing into the rest of the world. It now supports 13 languages and has set up offices in Thailand, Vietnam, and the U.K. In December last year, Blued made a strategic investment with U.S. dating app Hornet in an attempt to make forays into North American and Latin American markets.

The company is recording profits now thanks to thriving live streaming and mobile marketing businesses which have contributed hundreds of millions RMB of revenue in 2016. Revenue from live streaming is expected to maintain stable growth in 2017, while membership, gaming, and healthcare services are expected to become the new revenue growth points, according to the company.

“The current financing round is more of strategic meaning given that the company is booking profits now.” said Geng Le, CEO of the firm.

Born out of LGBT NGO Danlan, Blued has been active in improving the living status of this group.

“Sexual minority is still a highly controversial group, we need a proper channel to talk with the government and the public, letting them know what we are doing and what problems we can solve for society,” Geng said.

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Chinese tech IPO candidates to watch for in 2017 https://technode.com/2017/02/07/2017-ipo-china/ Tue, 07 Feb 2017 07:07:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45641 After a dry spell for tech IPOs in 2016, we are recording a good beginning for a new year with brightening IPO market globally. Snapchat is expected to set a new record for tech IPOs at a 25 billion USD valuation, while a raft of anticipated listings from uprising startups are in the pipeline. As […]]]>

After a dry spell for tech IPOs in 2016, we are recording a good beginning for a new year with brightening IPO market globally. Snapchat is expected to set a new record for tech IPOs at a 25 billion USD valuation, while a raft of anticipated listings from uprising startups are in the pipeline.

As market prospects soar, Chinese tech companies are also poised to win back investors hearts. Here’s a list of IPO candidates from China in this year.

Ant Financial

Ant Financial

Ant Financial, the operator of China’s most popular mobile payment tool Alipay and other financial services, was founded in December 2014 when it was spun out of Alibaba before the latter’s record IPO in September 2014.

As the most valuable spin-off of the e-commerce giant, Ant Financial has completed a 4.5 billion USD round at a valuation of 60 USD billion.

The company has been on the rumored IPO list for years and it seems that the company is in no hurry for the IPO as it’s putting its focus on business growth and user acquisition. But 2017 is definitely on the radar, especially for late 2017.

In preparation to the IPO, Ant Financial reshuffled its top leaders last year. The company is likely to get listed in mainland China and Hong Kong.

Kuaishou

Kuaishou
Image credit: Kuaishou

Kuaishou might be a lesser-known name for users outside of China, but the 3 billion USD video clip and photo editing and sharing app, is hugely popular in the Middle Kingdom, especially in low-tier cities and towns, in the wake of China’s video and photo sharing boom.

The app has recorded its first surge since the beginning of last year, with traffic consumption topping that of Weibo and WeChat, the two biggest mobile apps in the Chinese market.

Currently, Kuaishou claims over 400 million registered users. TechCrunch citing sources that the firm has amassed more than 40 million DAU against 100 million MAU. The same source disclosed that Kuaishou is planning to go public in the U.S. in the later half of this year.

The company is venture backed by Sequoia Capital, DST, Baidu, and DCM.

China Reading

Yuewen
Image credit: China Reading

Backed by Chinese internet titan Tencent, China Reading, aka Yuewen Group, is China’s biggest online publishing and e-book company. Born out of a merger of Tencent Literature and Shanda Cloudary in 2015, the platform claimed some 600 million registered readers across its nine e-reading platforms like QQ Reader and Qidian.

Reuters reported that the company plans to raise up to $800 million in a Hong Kong IPO in 2017.

Qudian

Qudian
Image credit: Qudian

Founded just two years ago, online microlender Qudian rose to prominence on the back of its student loan service Qufenqi, which allows college students and young white-collar workers to purchase smartphones, laptops and other consumer electronics with monthly installments.

The Ant Financial-backed startup is looking to an offshore IPO in Q1 this year to raise more than 500 million USD, local media Caixin reported.

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“Flash delivery” service Shansong clinches 50 million USD series C https://technode.com/2017/02/06/shanshong-delivery-series-c/ Mon, 06 Feb 2017 08:30:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45625 Shansong Express, a Chinese startup that provides intercity courier services, has announced a $50 million series C  led by SIG Asia Investment and Yi Capital, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. Prometheus Capital, a fund backed by Wang Sicong, the son of Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin, also participated. Founded in 2014, Shansong (闪送, literally “flash […]]]>

Shansong Express, a Chinese startup that provides intercity courier services, has announced a $50 million series C  led by SIG Asia Investment and Yi Capital, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. Prometheus Capital, a fund backed by Wang Sicong, the son of Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin, also participated.

Founded in 2014, Shansong (闪送, literally “flash delivery” in English) provides short-distance and same-city logistics services.

Chinese consumers are impatient and speed is crucial to good user experience. Shansong pledges a 60-minutes delivery for orders within five kilometers. After that, its 30 minutes for every other 5 kilometers.

But it seems that the platform is working far more efficient than its basic promises. According to company data, the average delivery time for orders within 5 km in Beijing is 23 minutes and orders within 10 km can be delivered in 33 minutes. According to Shansong, only 1% of parcels are later than promised.

Unlike traditional logistics systems which transport packages from station to station, Shansong assigns a single delivery task to one courier who will be responsible for the order in the whole delivery process, shortening the delivery time and eliminating risks of customer information disclosure.

After three years of development, the Beijing-based startup has accumulated over 12 million users and 184,000 couriers. It currently operates in 31 cities in China and has an average of around 100,000 deliveries daily at an average price of 35 RMB per order.

For the overall incomes, the company would take a 20% and another 10% go to the couriers and users as subsidies. The firm claims to have broken even since April last year.

The funding is earmarked for standardizing its services and expanding into more cities.

Previously, Shansong received an undisclosed series A round from CDH Investments, a series B round led by JD Capital, and a series B+ round from Tiantu Capital.

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Alibaba’s lifestyle unit Koubei snags 1.1B USD to accelerate local expansion https://technode.com/2017/01/25/alibaba-koubei-investment/ Wed, 25 Jan 2017 08:13:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45431 Alibaba has grown into a diversified conglomerate that encompasses several multi-billion dollar affiliates from Ant Financial and AliCloud to Cainiao Logistics. Yesterday, the e-commerce titan announced a 1.1 billion USD financing round for its local life commerce arm Koubei. Investors include Silver Lake, CDH Investments, Yunfeng Capital, and Primavera Capital. Alibaba’s billionaire founder Jack Ma […]]]>

Alibaba has grown into a diversified conglomerate that encompasses several multi-billion dollar affiliates from Ant Financial and AliCloud to Cainiao Logistics. Yesterday, the e-commerce titan announced a 1.1 billion USD financing round for its local life commerce arm Koubei.

Investors include Silver Lake, CDH Investments, Yunfeng Capital, and Primavera Capital. Alibaba’s billionaire founder Jack Ma is one of the founders of Yunfeng Capital. It is interesting to note that the current round marks the first money from external investors.

Although the exact amount contributed by each investor wasn’t clear, Xie Fang, managing director of CDH Investment, confirmed with local media that this is their largest single investment in the TMT sector.

Koubei is a joint venture founded in 2015 by Alibaba and its mobile payment affiliate Ant Financial to tap into China’s rising O2O initiative. Fan Chi, CEO of Koubei, said they will continue to invest in data-supported services in a bid to let offline merchants enjoy the benefits brought by internet technologies.

At the same time, Koubei will cooperate with more third-party partners to create a local life ecosystem that includes all kinds of supports from platform, traffic, marketing, and supply chain.

After more than one year of development, Koubei has partnered with over 1.5 million offline merchants, recording daily orders of 15 million. The platform generated 73.1 RMB billion (10.5 billion USD) payment volume through Alipay during the fourth quarter of 2016, representing a 52 % increase over the prior quarter. It’s 2016 annual gross merchandise volume hit 173.1 billion RMB.

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Alibaba 2016 Q4 Fiscal Report

Despite the growth, Koubei is still recording losses. Alibaba’s quarterly loss attributed to Koubei is around 237 million RMB, according to the company’s fiscal report. Given that Alibaba and Ant Financial each hold half of the shares in Koubei, the quarterly loss of Koubei would stand at 474 million RMB. Alibaba and Ant Financial both put RMB 3 billion into Koubei when it was created.

The e-commerce giant pledged to have “aggressive growth” with Koubei after the funding as it fights competition from Meituan-Dianping, Baidu, and Ele.me.

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Mobike to double annual bike production through partnership with iPhone maker Foxconn https://technode.com/2017/01/24/mobike-to-double-annual-bike-production-through-partnership-with-iphone-maker-foxconn/ Tue, 24 Jan 2017 00:26:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45404 Chinese bike-sharing Mobike is starting the New Year with good news. Just three weeks after receiving 215 million USD fresh funding, the startup announced a strategic partnership with Foxconn, the Taiwanese manufacturing giant behind Apple’s iPhone and numerous other major electronics devices. As part of this deal, Foxconn has also become a strategic investor in […]]]>

Chinese bike-sharing Mobike is starting the New Year with good news. Just three weeks after receiving 215 million USD fresh funding, the startup announced a strategic partnership with Foxconn, the Taiwanese manufacturing giant behind Apple’s iPhone and numerous other major electronics devices.

As part of this deal, Foxconn has also become a strategic investor in Mobike. The details of the deal, however, were not disclosed.

Partnership with iPhone maker will be a strong boost for Mobike’s hardware business in terms of smart bike production, distribution, as well as enhancing its design and user experiences. A company statement disclosed that the tie-up would boost the annual production capacity for Mobike’s proprietary smart bikes to 10 million, up 5.6 million units annually.

Foxconn also intends to locate production hubs in a number of its facilities globally, in locations close to Mobike’s priority markets. Foxconn will also leverage its strengths in industrial design, R&D, and high-tech manufacturing to enhance the Mobike design, with a particular focus on optimizing the user experience and ride quality, the company pointed.

Despite the fashionable designs, Mobike’s innovations in its proprietary smart bike have always been shadowed by criticisms for its exceedingly high production cost.

The cost of the company’s first generation bike is around 20 times of the 299 RMB deposit, company CEO Davis Wang once told local media. That means that a single Mobike could have cost nearly 6,000 RMB (874 USD) when the service was first officially launched in April last year.

The firm has managed to lower the production cost to less than 2,000 RMB and Mobike Lite, a lighter version, costs between 200 RMB and 500 RMB. But this is still much higher than the per unit cost of its arch-rival Ofo, which has a per bike product cost of around 300 RMB for its bikes. Apart from that, Ofo allows users to register their own bikes on the platform in a model to connect bikes rather than make them, said Ofo representative to TechNode.

Of course, Mobike’s bikes are more sturdy and thus have a longer life cycle, but still, higher cost per unity may leave the startup capital dependent, a negative factor for a company that has been entangled in a land-grabbing battle with a mounting number of competitors.

Additionally, the high production cost makes Mobike a really asset-heavy startup given it’s now operating in 13 cities across China. These include China’s largest Tier 1 cities – Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen – where Mobike operates over 100,000 bikes in each location.

Taking too much effort to peddle is another problem beset the company’s smart bike. Getting the wheels rolling on an uphill is no easy feat: Mobike weighs a whopping 25kg, twice the weight of a regular bike. Non-adjustable seat and no damper were among the criticism that raised by local users.

The tie-up with Foxconn is definitely a partnership in need for the company to optimize its hardware and facilitate more quick expansion globally.

“This partnership is all about bringing more bikes to more cities around the world,” said Davis Wang, co-founder, and CEO of Mobike. “In 2017, we aim to enable residents in a hundred cities in China and internationally to enjoy our unique and convenient solution to the global challenge of last-mile travel, and Foxconn is the ideal partner to support these ambitious expansion plans. They are globally renowned for their extremely efficient, high-tech and cost-effective production, and their strengths in design and global supply chain management.”

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Five unicorns coming from China’s emerging verticals https://technode.com/2017/01/23/5-china-tech-unicorns/ Mon, 23 Jan 2017 08:50:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45368 The word “unicorn” was first coined by Aileen Lee of Cowboy Ventures in 2013 to refer to startups valued at $1 billion by private or public markets. They were supposed to a select group of rare and mythical creatures. Since then, however, it has expanded quickly with Chinese companies providing their fair share. Here we […]]]>

The word “unicorn” was first coined by Aileen Lee of Cowboy Ventures in 2013 to refer to startups valued at $1 billion by private or public markets. They were supposed to a select group of rare and mythical creatures. Since then, however, it has expanded quickly with Chinese companies providing their fair share. Here we compile for you a list of unicorn startups coming from China’s emerging sectors.

URWork, co-working

  • Valuation 1.02 B USD
  • Date joined: 1/18/2017
urwork

As one of the leaders in China’ booming co-working space, URWork became the first unicorn company in the sector in January this year after receiving a 400 million RMB (58 million USD) series B at a valuation of 7 billion RMB (1.02 billion USD).

The company was founded in April 2015 by Mao Daqing, former vice president of Chinese real estate conglomerate Vanke Co., Ltd. In addition to providing the physical spaces, the shared-office-space startup is actively constructing an ecosystem that involves all kinds of supporting services, such as financial assistant platform, human resources services, startup acceleration program, and space design.

Data from real estate service JLL shows that the number of co-working spaces in China has grown rapidly this year, with currently over 500 sites in Shanghai and Beijing alone compared to just a few in 2015. Other major players in the field include Soho 3Q, naked Hub, People Squared, Sandbox, and SimplyWork.

Zhihu, knowledge sharing

  • Valuation: 1B USD
  • Date Joined: 1/12/2017
zhihu

China is embracing a transition from free knowledge to paid knowledge and the shift is creating the first unicorn in the sector with China’s Q&A platform Zhihu.

Zhihu, the go-to place for Chinese internet users who want to seek expert insights into various areas, received a 100 million USD D round at a valuation of 1 billion USD this month.

The startup is among a series of companies that’s capitalizing on the rising knowledge sharing trend in China. Zhihu’s competitors include Fenda, the knowledge sharing service developed by science networking platform Guokr, and Baidu Zhidao.

iCarbonX, biotech

  • Valuation: 1B USD
  • Date joined: 4/12/2016
detail1
Jun Wang, founder and CEO of iCarbonX 

China’s biotech market is on the cusp of its boom thanks to huge market size and support from the government. iCarbonX, a biotech startup raised a 1 billion RMB (about $154 million USD) round of series A funding with a valuation of $1 billion USD last April.

The company is building a big data-driven health platform, capable of processing a wide variety of health-related data, including genetic data and data from smart hardware devices.

UBTECH Robotics, robotics

  • Valuation: 1B USD
  • Date joined: 7/26/2016
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Founded in 2012, UBTECH Robotics is engaged in the research, development, and commercialization of humanoid robots for education and entertainment sectors.

As the startup behind bipedal entertainment robots Alpha 2, the company got a ton of free publicity last year after their performance at CCTV’s annual gala, China’s most-watched TV show, and being booked in the Guinness Book of World Records for the “most robots dancing simultaneously”.

Guazi, used car trading

  • Valuation: 1B USD
  • Date joined: 3/12/2016
Guazi-UC

Guazi.com was established by China’s answer to Craigslist, Ganji.com, which later merged with rival online classifieds site 58.com. The used car trading platform was then spun-off from the consortium to facilitate faster growth. The startup got 200 million USD financing round last year at 1 billion USD valuation.

Second-hand car trading is one of the traditional industries Chinese internet companies are poised to disrupt. The rising market has attracted a slew of players includes Cheyipai, Youxinpai, and Renrenche.

Image credit: URWork, Zhihu, iCarbonX

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Here’s what to expect for this year’s Spring Festival hongbao wars https://technode.com/2017/01/22/hongbao-war-spring-festival-2017/ Sun, 22 Jan 2017 08:02:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45329 Spring Festival, an annual celebration of the Chinese New Year, is almost upon us. While some traditions haven’t changed much, like family dinners and lighting firecrackers, others have evolved with the times. Since hongbao (红包 or lucky money in English) went digital on WeChat in 2014, we wait every year to see what exciting new […]]]>

Spring Festival, an annual celebration of the Chinese New Year, is almost upon us. While some traditions haven’t changed much, like family dinners and lighting firecrackers, others have evolved with the times. Since hongbao (红包 or lucky money in English) went digital on WeChat in 2014, we wait every year to see what exciting new features China’s internet giants have introduced. And the Year of the Rooster is no different.

WeChat is out, but that doesn’t mean it’s only Alipay

Although several services backed by the Chinese internet giants have joined the battle, WeChat and Alipay were widely regarded as the two major pioneers of the war since the majority of promotions lean toward them.

One interesting phenomenon for this year is that WeChat, the platform where the red envelope feature boomed, is retreating from the battle.

“Red envelope has completed its historical task. There would be no red envelope promotions on WeChat for the coming Spring Festival.” Zhang Xiaolong, head of WeChat, said on the WeChat Open Class 2017.

This is a surprising development given the critical role hongbao have played in getting traction for WeChat’s payment service. Facilitated by the red packet function, WeChat Payment recorded substantial growth in the past three years, posing a great challenge to the dominance of Alipay to an extent that Alipay’s founder Jack Ma defined it as “the Pearl Harbor attack”. Indeed, over 8 billion WeChat red envelopes were sent during Chinese New Year last year.

But the retreat of WeChat doesn’t necessarily mean the end of the battle. Tencent is replacing WeChat with QQ, another IM tool developed by the company, which also performs exceedingly well in the sector. During Chinese New Year last year, over 308 million red envelopes were sent through QQ, which claims that 75% of their users are from the post-90 gen.

More LBS and AR

Alipay-RE

Although Pokemon Go probably won’t be coming to China anytime soon, it hasn’t stopped Chinese users from having fun in similar games that combine the LBS and AR technologies.

Alipay is continuing last year’s theme of collecting five different styles of fu (福 or “good fortune” in English). Instead of acquiring the fu cards by inviting friends of shaking your phone while watching the New Year’s Eve Gala on CCTV, you can collect the card by scanning anything with the Chinese character fu on it, no matter if it’s on the poster attached to your door or on a physical red envelope.

Another difference from last year is that the 200 million RMB total giveaway will be distributed in various sums among users who have collected all of the five styles of fu cards, rather than everyone sharing the same amount as we saw year.

Actually, this is not Alipay’s first endeavor to integrate new technologies with hongbao. It already launched a Pokemon Go-inspired feature at the end of last year to add more gamified ingredients to the cash gifting function.

QQ-RE

Tencent’s QQ rolled out its marketing campaign for the Spring Festival this week. From Jan. 20 to 24, users in 369 Chinese cities will be able to collect red packets that have been placed in 4.25 million geographical entry points nationwide. The total red packet amount will hit 250 million RMB.

Overall 127 million QQ users have participated, winning 484 million red packets as of 21:00 Jan. 20, Tencent disclosed.

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How do China-based VR developers choose a platform? We asked https://technode.com/2017/01/20/how-do-china-based-vr-developers-choose-a-platform-we-asked/ Fri, 20 Jan 2017 06:38:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45244 The content ecosystem surrounding VR technology is quickly becoming the biggest opportunity in the sector. iiMedia Research expects the revenue from VR content market to soar by 279% from an estimated 98.9 million USD in 2016 to 375.1 million USD in 2017. Driven by the growth, a bunch of VR platforms are now competing for to […]]]>

The content ecosystem surrounding VR technology is quickly becoming the biggest opportunity in the sector. iiMedia Research expects the revenue from VR content market to soar by 279% from an estimated 98.9 million USD in 2016 to 375.1 million USD in 2017.

Driven by the growth, a bunch of VR platforms are now competing for to find the “killer content” to be the core force for them to allure more users.

Similar for other content creators, VR developers’ choice of platform depends on a number of factors: cost and accessibility of hardware as well as developer choice between drive revenue or driving broad adoption. Last week, HTC Vive held a developer meetup in Shanghai. I headed over to see what China’s VR content developers are thinking.

Xu Chenliang, founder of VR content outsourcing company

IMG_6180

In order to realize the positioning functions that needed in the experience, we choose more sophisticated devices. Currently, all of our contents are based on HTC Vive given its excellent VR experience and supporting services as well as the accessibility. Similar to its parent company Facebook, Oculus’s devices and services are still not available, at least in legal channels, in China.

As an early entrant to the VR content market, we have been feeling the market change as more developers are swarming to this sector. I think the supply is outrunning demand and a price war between VR content providers is looming ahead.

Team of Directive Games, developers of VR game Super Kaiju

Super Kaiju

Since our company was recruited into the Vive X accelerator, we are developing obviously for HTC platform, but we have also developed a version for the Oculus as well. We are also planning on putting another version out for the Sony PlayStation VR.

A lot of these VR kits just went retail very recently. So the consumer base for all of these kits are small, obviously, the PlayStation is an exception, but for the ones like Oculus, I would say they are still at the very beginning. They still require bit more time to built the user or installment base before we can see the effect the ecosystem would bring.

Although gaming is the first sector that’s pioneering VR technology adoption, it has yet to commercialize as compared to 2B businesses, like real estate. Our team or even the VR gaming industry is still experimenting with more diversified commercialization models.

The in-app payment model that’s been working well in mobile gaming sector wouldn’t fit here cause most of the users have their VR experiences in VR arcades or VR zones in shopping centers. The basic features would be enough for beginners and it’s difficult to convert VR arcades into paid users. But we believe in the potential of the market when hardware penetration goes up in the future.

Screen Shot 2017-01-20 at 15.39.21

Justin, VR game developer

At this point, the VR platforms are pretty close to each other. HTC Vive started off with a leg up with the controllers that enable stable motion control. Oculus is making great leaps forward with their Oculus touch controllers in the past couple months.

It’s kind of good so you have this kind of duality between the two big companies right now; they are in an arms race to compete with each other. In some industries, you got a single monopoly that controls most things so they don’t have the intention to push their technologies forward. So we are kind of in a good place right now with two companies competing and trying to deliver a better experience to the consumer.

Anonymous developer (chose to not to reveal identity)

We are developing VR contents for car demonstration and airplane maintenance. We are based primarily on HTC Vive now, but also looking to other hardware and platforms. The core parts of the software can be transferred from platform to platform and I think it’s the content quality that really matters. Like an animation, you can watch it in cinema, on PC, or on mobile devices.

Image credit: Emma Lee, Super Kaiju

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This startup wants to be the DJI of the sea https://technode.com/2017/01/19/gladius-this-startup-wants-to-be-the-dji-of-the-sea/ Thu, 19 Jan 2017 06:37:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45171 Chinese companies have taken a leading role in the years-long transition of drones from niche cutting-edge technology to affordable consumer electronics. However, the once emerging sector is already crowded with DJI dominating. Seeing this, one company is moving from air to sea to capture market share. Developed by Shenzhen-based startup Chasing Innovations, GLADIUS is a […]]]>

Chinese companies have taken a leading role in the years-long transition of drones from niche cutting-edge technology to affordable consumer electronics. However, the once emerging sector is already crowded with DJI dominating. Seeing this, one company is moving from air to sea to capture market share.

Developed by Shenzhen-based startup Chasing Innovations, GLADIUS is a smart ROV (remotely operated vehicle) underwater drone built for filming, observing, and exploring. As a portable device, GLADIUS measures 430mm * 260mm * 95 mm and weighs only 3kg. The gadget comes with two built-in batteries, which can last up to 3 to 4 hours on one charge.

One cool thing about GLADIUS is its ability for precision maneuvers. The Quattro-thrusters design makes it able to nimbly move in all directions at a speed of up to 4 knots or 2m/s.

In addition to speed and portability, GLADIUS also excels in terms of the areas it can cover. The underwater drone uses a 100 m buoyant tether to communicate to a towable buoy on the surface of the water. The pilot connects to the buoy using wireless communication technologies, CMO Yang Yang told TechNode.

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The vehicle can go 100 m below the water surface via the tether and 500 m horizontally through long range Wifi communication.

“Using a wireless towable buoy greatly increases the practical range of the vehicle since a physical connection between the vehicle and the pilot doesn’t need to be maintained,” he noted.

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The underwater drone can stream live video with built-in Full HD camera and LED lighting, which enables users to take high-quality 16-megapixel photos and 4K videos. Users can control the drone with a remote control that’s compatible with Android or iOS devices.

Chasing Innovations was started by former engineers from Huawei and now it’s developed to a team of over nearly 20 employees. The company is going to kick off a crowdfunding campaign for its products on Indiegogo in February. The standard version will be priced at 1,399 USD while the premium version will go for 1,699 USD. The super earlybird price on Indiegogo could be as low as 599USD.

Image credits: Chasing Innovations

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URWork becomes co-working unicorn after 58M USD series B https://technode.com/2017/01/18/urwork-becomes-co-working-unicorn-after-58m-usd-series-b/ Wed, 18 Jan 2017 08:47:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45181 Chinese co-working office space URWork is moving a step further to catch up with its U.S. peer WeWork, at least in valuation. The company announced today the completion of 400 million RMB (58 million USD) series B at a valuation of 7 billion RMB (1.02 billion USD), our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. The […]]]>

Chinese co-working office space URWork is moving a step further to catch up with its U.S. peer WeWork, at least in valuation. The company announced today the completion of 400 million RMB (58 million USD) series B at a valuation of 7 billion RMB (1.02 billion USD), our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting.

The valuation may still not comparable to WeWork’s whopping 16 billion USD mark, but it already boosts the company to China’s first co-working unicorn.

Investors of the round include Tianhong Asset Management, a fund management affiliate of Alibaba’s Ant Financial, Junfa Group, Shanghai Chuanghehui, an alumni of renowned business schools, Tianming Shuangchuang Technology and Dahong Group, adding to a top-notch current investor roster that includes reputable VCs like Sequoia Capital China, ZhenFund, and Sinovation Ventures.

As of present, the co-working company has raised six rounds of funding with total venture fundraising of over 1.2 billion RMB (175 million USD).

URWork was founded in April 2015 by Mao Daqing, former vice president of Chinese real estate conglomerate Vanke Co., Ltd. In addition to providing the physical spaces, the shared-office-space startup is actively constructing an ecosystem that involves all kinds of supporting services, such as, financial assistant platform, human resources services, startup acceleration program, and space design.

Operating in twelve Chinese cities serving 15,000 users, the firm is poised to accelerate its oversea expansion that started in second half of 2016 in Singapore, London, New York, and Taiwan.

The new funding is earmarked for opening more spaces domestically and overseas, facilitating business cooperation among member companies, improving and standardizing supporting services, and adopting mobile and smart hardware devices in the spaces, according to a company statement.

Thanks to a series factors like the rise of the millennial workforce and government support, China is recording a boom of co-working spaces in the recent years. Capital flows in the sector to capitalize on the market boom. Upcoming co-working startup nakedHub received new funding at the end of last year for overseas expansion.

While Chinese co-working startups are busy with globalization plans, their foreign counterparts are targeting China. WeWork launched its first space in Shanghai last year after sealing a 430 million USD pay packet to fuel their Asia expansion. Australia’s largest startup hub Fishburners is also entering China.

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Is LeEco’s 2.4B USD new funding enough to redeem the cash-strapped conglomerate? https://technode.com/2017/01/16/is-leecos-2-4b-usd-new-funding-enough-to-redeem-the-cash-strapped-conglomerate/ Mon, 16 Jan 2017 08:08:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45112 Chinese internet company LeEco announced Sunday that it landed 16.8 billion RMB (2.4 billion USD) in fresh funding led by China’s real estate titan Sunac China Holdings Ltd. Sunac will become the company’s second-largest shareholder after the deal. The company disclosed that Sunac will contribute 15 billion RMB of the total funding broken into three […]]]>

Chinese internet company LeEco announced Sunday that it landed 16.8 billion RMB (2.4 billion USD) in fresh funding led by China’s real estate titan Sunac China Holdings Ltd. Sunac will become the company’s second-largest shareholder after the deal.

The company disclosed that Sunac will contribute 15 billion RMB of the total funding broken into three parts:

  • 6.04 billion RMB for 8.61% of the company’s listed arm Leshi Internet from founder & CEO Jia Yueting
  • 7.95 billion RMB for 15% of Leshi Zhixin, the company’s television subsidiary, through transfer existing shares and expansion of share capital
  • 1.05 billion RMB for 33.5% of Le Vision Pictures, LeEco’s film production unit

Hua Insurance and Leran Investment, a state-backed venture capital firm, were also part of the deal, injecting 400 million RMB and 1.43 billion RMB in the company, respectively.

The financing comes at a vital timing for the company, which has experienced two most troubled months after Jia confirmed November that it’s facing a major cash shortage due to overly aggressive expansion plans.

Jia, the 43-year-old tech mogul, has built his reputation as a capital-raising machine in China’s internet industry. Local media Yicai reported that the company has already raked in a whopping 80 billion RMB funding as of November 2016, bankrolling a variety of businesses from smartphone, television, film production to cloud services.

Will the new funding solve the cash squeeze?

This hefty round would definitely ease the capital pressures the company has faced and to rebuild confidence in its investors, but is it big enough to fill in LeEco’s funding gap to the fullest? Jia’s answer for this question is affirmative.

“Apart from LeEco’s electric car business, the 16.8 billion RMB funding is well enough to address all our needs to drive a smooth transition of the LeEco system strategy from the first stage to stage two,” said Jia.

The transition would mark a shift from taking an all-out approach into every business on a shared loop ecosystem on the global level to achieving true eco chemistry between the seven sub-ecosystems.

In the second stage, creating revenues will be a key goal for the listed as well as the unlisted entities. China, the U.S., and India will be the primary focus of the company, said Jia in an internal letter released last November.

LeSEE launches A round financing

According to the funding plan, LeEco’s electric car division, SEE Plan (Super Electric Ecosystem Plan) also the biggest cash-burner, is not included in the current financing round. Jia said last week that they could put their cars into production with a further 10 billion RMB round, adding that more funding is still needed since the project is larger in scale.

LeSEE already raised 1.08 billion USD round in September last year from investors include Yingda Capital Management, China Communication Construction Ltd., and China Aerospace Science & Industry Corp, among others.

Together with the funding news, Jia announced the launch of its funding plan for LeSEE. “We are really looking forward that more investors with visions could join the LeSEE ecosystem. Some progress has been made recently and hopefully we could share more good news within one month,” he said.

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Post-90s are becoming pillar of China’s rising global shopping force https://technode.com/2017/01/13/post-90s-are-becoming-pillar-of-chinas-rising-global-shopping-force/ Fri, 13 Jan 2017 07:47:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45054 Despite the implementation of tougher taxation policies, China’s cross-border e-commerce sector maintained momentum thanks to the combined forces of consumption upgrading (消费升级) and the rise of a younger consumer group. A recent report from Tmall Global and CBNData shows that the online sales value of imported goods maintained a growth rate of more than 30% […]]]>

Despite the implementation of tougher taxation policies, China’s cross-border e-commerce sector maintained momentum thanks to the combined forces of consumption upgrading (消费升级) and the rise of a younger consumer group.

A recent report from Tmall Global and CBNData shows that the online sales value of imported goods maintained a growth rate of more than 30% in 2016. However, that is slower than the 40% growth seen in 2015. The online penetration of China’s total domestic import consumption also continued to rise.

Along with the growth, the market is recording a major shift in consumer demographics – there’s a notable increase in the number of young buyers (defined as those born after 1988). This group, which now accounts for nearly half of all consumption on Tmall Global, represents more than 50% of newly added customers on the platform in the past year, showing a healthy future for purchasing power, the report pointed out.

Tmall1
Sales share of different consumer groups from 2014 to 2016 (source: Tmall Global)

A transition in personal and family circumstances may have contributed to this change; a majority of customers born between 1988 to 1993 have just got their first job after graduating from university, getting married, or having babies. But the consumption power of post-95 and post-00 groups is nascent as this group has yet to find stable income.

Sneakers, maternity and baby products, cosmetics, alcohol, and snacks are the most popular items among the 1988-1993 group. The younger, 1994 to 2000 group favors cosmetics, personal care products, gadget kits, as well as comics and animation derivative products.

Not only are the Tmall Global users getting younger on average, but more and more of them are from lower-tier cities. Over 31% of the new customers in 2016 were from third and fourth-tier cities in China, compared to about 24% of the already-existing customer base. This reflects the growing market reach of Tmall Global, as well as a rising living standard in the less developed cities.

Interestingly, the report also revealed some unexpected boosts in the sales of some very specific categories. The vote for Brexit and subsequent drop in the value of the British pound brought about a spike in sales of products from the UK. The screening of popular Korean TV drama Descendants of the Sun (太阳的后裔) drove the sales of a YSL lipstick that the lead actress wore while a deterioration in air quality boosted the sales of air purifiers.

The biggest level of spending on Tmall Global came from Shanghai, Beijing, Hangzhou, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen.

The top 5 countries for imported goods on Tmall Global were Japan, the U.S., South Korea, Germany and Australia. Here’s a further breakdown of top selling items from these regions:

  1. Japan: beauty products and serums; diapers, strollers, and baby products; personal care products
  2. U.S.: health foods and supplements; baby formula and snacks; bags and luggage
  3. South Korea: beauty products and serums; cosmetics and perfume; women’s apparel
  4. Germany; milk powder, dietary supplements, and snacks; kitchenware; health and nutrition supplements
  5. Australia: health and nutrition supplements; milk powder, dietary supplements, and snacks; coffee, oatmeal, and instant beverages
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Zhihu crowned China’s first knowledge sharing unicorn with 100m USD series D https://technode.com/2017/01/12/zhihu-crowned-chinas-first-knowledge-sharing-unicorn-with-100m-usd-series-d/ Thu, 12 Jan 2017 09:47:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=45021 China’s Quora-like Q&A service Zhihu announced today the completion of a 100 million USD series D, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. The funding would boost the startup to unicorn status with a valuation of over 1 billion USD, according to Kaifu Lee, renowned Chinese startup guru and early-stage backer of the company. Investors of the […]]]>

China’s Quora-like Q&A service Zhihu announced today the completion of a 100 million USD series D, our sister site TechNode Chinese is reporting. The funding would boost the startup to unicorn status with a valuation of over 1 billion USD, according to Kaifu Lee, renowned Chinese startup guru and early-stage backer of the company.

Investors of the round include Capital Today, a reputable VC firm that has invested in NetEase, JD, and Meituan-Dianping, as well as several current investors like Tencent, Sogou, SAIF Partners, Qiming Venture Partners, and Sinovation Ventures.

Launched in December 2010, Zhihu is the go-to place for Chinese internet users who want to seek expert insights into various areas. Originally started as an invitation-only Q&A platform for tech-savvy and entrepreneurial minds, it opened registration in 2013 to everyone. Since then, its topics have diversified to cover popular topics from movies, games, and culture, as well as IT and finance.

As of January this year, Zhihu has 65 million registered users with 18.5 million daily active users. The site has received over 6 million questions and 23 million answers in 2016, according to data from the company.

2016 was a crucial transition for Zhihu: they were able to monetize through the launch of new services, including institutional accounts, ads, cooperation with book stores, and Zhihu Live, a service which allows users to join live one-on-one sessions with topic experts for a fee.

However, the company is facing fierce competition in the knowledge-sharing sector from both old rivals like Baidu Zhidao and up comer Fenda. How to commercialize the product without hurting user and community experience remains a big challenge for the company.

After receiving a 1 million RMB angel round from Sinovation Ventures (formerly known as Innovation Works) in January 2011, Zhihu raised a 8 million USD series A from Qiming Venture Partners and Sinovation Ventures in November of the same year. In June 2014, the startup booked a 22 million USD series B from SAIF Partners and Qiming Venture Partners. In November 2015, Tencent led a 55 million USD series C that valued the company at 300 million USD.

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Nearly 90% phones sold in China in 2016 came from domestic makers https://technode.com/2017/01/12/nearly-90-of-560m-phones-sold-in-china-comes-from-domestic-makers-2016/ Thu, 12 Jan 2017 08:22:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44976 While spearheading aggressive forays into overseas markets, Chinese smartphone brands are also taking a firmer hold of the domestic market and eating into the shares of multinational phone makers like Apple and Samsung. In 2016, a total of 559.7 million mobile phones were shipped in China, up 8.0% from the previous year, according to a report […]]]>

While spearheading aggressive forays into overseas markets, Chinese smartphone brands are also taking a firmer hold of the domestic market and eating into the shares of multinational phone makers like Apple and Samsung.

In 2016, a total of 559.7 million mobile phones were shipped in China, up 8.0% from the previous year, according to a report from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT). The number of new model releases reached 1,446, down 3.3 percent year over year (YOY).

CAICT-1
Source: CAICT

Of the total amount, local smartphone makers have shipped 497.8 million units in 2016, up 16.1% YOY. The figure accounts for 88.9% of the domestic mobile phone shipments, higher than 85.0% one year ago.

The CAICT report shows that the number of new models released by local brands (1381 units) decreased by 2.5% YOY and represented 95.5% of the total number of new model release in the domestic market.

In wake of the smart and well-connected trend of phones, the market share of 4G and smart devices grow stably.

The country’s smartphone shipments surged 14.0% YOY to 521.6 million units in 2016, representing 93.2% of the total domestic mobile phone. Android still dominates China’s smartphone market with 425.4 million units shipped were based on the operating system.

A total 519.4 million or 92.8% of the total shipments in China support 4G networks, up 18.0 percent YOY.

The growth of local companies like Oppo and Vivo were the main contributors to the swift rise in shipments from domestic companies; both Oppo and Vivo drove sales with extensive offline retail outlets as well as innovations in design and key features.

Data from research institute Counterpoint shows that Oppo and Vivo have taken the top two spots in China’s smartphone market with 17% and 16% share respectively in Q3 2016, biting into the shares of Samsung, Lenovo, Xiaomi, Coolpad and Apple.

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Source: Counterpoint

Apart from domestic market, Chinese smartphone brands are expanding quickly in overseas markets like Southeast Asia, Middle East, and Africa. In India, for instance, Chinese brands grabbed 50% of the $10-billion Indian smartphone market in 2016, biting into sales from top-selling competitors like Samsung.

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Security vulnerability hinders Alipay’s social networking foray https://technode.com/2017/01/11/security-vulnerability-beleaguered-alipays-social-networking-foray/ Wed, 11 Jan 2017 05:31:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44935 China’s most popular online payment app Alipay announced Tuesday that it plugged a user authentication security flaw. Alipay got busy patching the flaw after receiving complaints from China’s internet users. Many found they could login into an account with just some personal information and didn’t require a password to make payments. The process of hacking […]]]>

China’s most popular online payment app Alipay announced Tuesday that it plugged a user authentication security flaw.

Alipay got busy patching the flaw after receiving complaints from China’s internet users. Many found they could login into an account with just some personal information and didn’t require a password to make payments.

The process of hacking into an Alipay account takes just a few steps, as described by a  user on China’s Q&A site Zhihu:

  1. Tap forgot my password.
  2. I don’t have my phone.
  3. Select one recently purchased item from nine –
  4. Choose one friend from nine friends or choose one recently used address –
  5. Login successful!

Before Alipay plugged this hole, you could just make payments by scanning a QR without a password.

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Retrieving Alipay password by identifying friends (source: Zhihu)

The required information for verification is easy to guess and puts Alipay user account at risk to anyone who has this information. This could include a user’s intimate friends, Taobao merchants, or even deliverymen if they are included in user’s Alipay contact list, quite possible given Alipay’s aggressive push into social networking.

The company claims it has raised its security level to fix the security flaw. To a retrieve password, Alipay users have to input a verification code that’s been sent to their registered phone number via text messages. For those users whose phones are not around or want to change mobile devices, Alipay said it would evaluate the risk in terms of network environment and whether the account information is intact.

The company also warned users to report loss of the account as soon as possible when receiving notifications about unauthorized logins.

Alipay said that users can only retrieve their login password, not their payment password. However, this is not a valid defense because even though the flaws only allow login, payments still can be made by scanning QR code where no payment password is required even if it’s only small sums.

In the upgraded version, password retrieval through selecting purchased items or friends works only for users who try to recover their passwords through their own previously registered devices.

Alipay’s bumpy way to social networking

This is yet another setback that Alipay has encountered in its social networking push. Just one month ago, the most commonly used payment app was been blasted by criticism for generating lewd content.

Many feared that integrating social networking features into a financial service would put customer assets and personal information at risk.

Although Alipay pledged to raise its security levels, lots of netizens remain skeptical. More than 2,400 people liked a harsh comment from one Weibo user:

“Still want to say dirty words, do your fucking job in payment, and stop dreaming about social networking.”

In response, all Alipay could say was: “You are right.”

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Mini-apps are WeChat’s strategy to connect to the offline world: HuosuMobi Zhao Jiuzhou https://technode.com/2017/01/08/mini-app-allows-wechat-connect-offline-traffic-huosumobi-zhao-jiuzhou/ Sun, 08 Jan 2017 09:26:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44851 “No mini-app stores, no entry point in WeChat, limited push notifications, no sharing in WeChat Moments.” This description from Zhang Xiaolong, Tencent senior vice president and the “Father of WeChat,” on mini-apps has shaken public predictions about WeChat’s product structure. From what we can tell so far, Tencent has been strikingly restrained in integrating mini-apps into […]]]>

“No mini-app stores, no entry point in WeChat, limited push notifications, no sharing in WeChat Moments.”

This description from Zhang Xiaolong, Tencent senior vice president and the “Father of WeChat,” on mini-apps has shaken public predictions about WeChat’s product structure. From what we can tell so far, Tencent has been strikingly restrained in integrating mini-apps into WeChat ecosystem.

In anticipation of the official launch of mini-app on January 9th, increasing attentions is being paid to the new feature, expected to create another boost to China’s internet industry like what WeChat has done with public accounts (公众号).

TechNode had the pleasure of speaking to Zhao Jiuzhou, CEO of HuosuMobi, to hear his insights on the prospect and potential impacts of mini-apps. Founded in 2015, HuosuMobi is a B2B service dedicated to HTML5 app and mini-app development.

WeChat mini-app VS H5 and native apps

H5 apps have once been widely regarded as an alternative to overtake native apps. However, both the pros and cons of this technology are obvious: high development efficiency but poor UX/performance. After years of debate, H5 still lacks traction for developers who want to promote user stickiness and gradually turned into a tool for company or product introduction.

Native apps sure can guarantee rich UI and engaging user experience, but it poses higher demands on development and marketing costs. Moreover, it’s difficult to get users download native apps that only offer low-frequency services.

Zhao believes that mini-apps have combined the advantages of H5 and native apps while get rid of their disadvantages.

“Mini-apps have a similar development process with H5 apps. WeChat is a container and mini-app is more efficient because it has put the key elements for loading on WeChat platform (as compared with H5 which needs to download everything),” he says. “Mini-app provides user experiences similar to native apps. That’s why some media consider it a combination of H5’s acquisition model and native app experience.”

Don’t pin your hopes on WeChat traffic: This about connecting offline to WeChat (O2W)

Perhaps more than the technology, people care about whether mini-apps are going to bring new market opportunities. Despite the limited integration with the WeChat system, many are hoping that mini-apps will bring a traffic boost to their brand or product, like the public account feature. However, they may be sadly disappointed.

With 768 million daily active users as of the end of last year, WeChat is shifting its focus from acheiving a larger user base to engaging current users for a longer period of time. In the past, WeChat is the go-to place for social networking and payment. However, even though we may pay for products and services through WeChat, it is not where the sale begins or ends.

Tencent wants to see more users spending more time on WeChat through mini-apps for shopping and entertainment. Furthermore, the company’s real focus is not only about the consumption made online, but the traffic in offline in bricks-and-mortar stores or spaces. In order to truly connect the physical world to the digital, WeChat has given mini-app the best entrance: the QR code.

In the long-term, mini-apps will be the tool for offline merchants to digitalize their customer base. Of course, it may also bring detrimental impacts to online tools. Once discovering a convenient and hassle-free mini-app, who would download a more heavy and complicated native app?

The leading players in different verticals may start feeling the pressure.

This article is translated from a post that first appeared on our sister site, TechNode Chinese.

Image credit: WeChat

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Here’s what you can learn from China’s biggest startup failures of 2016 https://technode.com/2017/01/06/heres-what-you-can-learn-from-chinas-biggest-startup-failures-of-2016/ Fri, 06 Jan 2017 07:20:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44807 As billionaire investor Warren Buffett once said, “It’s only when the tide goes out that you know who’s been swimming naked.” China’s overly heated venture capital market has spawned numerous startups in 2015, but as dramatic funding slowdown hit the country in 2016, Chinese startups are facing a bleak funding prospect and even once-hot companies are struggling to survive the […]]]>

As billionaire investor Warren Buffett once said, “It’s only when the tide goes out that you know who’s been swimming naked.”

China’s overly heated venture capital market has spawned numerous startups in 2015, but as dramatic funding slowdown hit the country in 2016, Chinese startups are facing a bleak funding prospect and even once-hot companies are struggling to survive the chilly market. Here are a few high-profile failures that in 2016 and the lessons you can learn from them.

Metao – Never try to outspend a giant

Metao-logo

Founded in 2014 by Xie Wenbin, Metao was one of the companies that come up during China’s cross-border e-commerce boom since 2014. The company recorded their first wave of growth as a C2C daigou platform (代购, people or organizations that buy products abroad and ship directly to the end consumer in China).

Because of problems with the C2C daigou model, such as low margins and long delivery periods due to lack of homegrown warehouses, the Beijing-based startup pivoted into a B2C e-commerce platform in mid-2014 to focus on Korean products. However, the shift brought it into direct competition with heavy hitters like JD.com and Tmall.

Metao recorded a short-term growth spurt after pouring money into advertising and offering major sales to attract customers. But a price war with heavy-loaded e-commerce giants could never work.

They finalized their series B round in late 2014, but never made it to series C and eventually closed their doors in mid-2016. The company’s founder was convinced that even with a billion-dollar round, Metao wouldn’t be able to keep up with the e-commerce giants in the war to burn cash.

In addition to the initial angel round, the company raised a combined 35 million USD in two rounds of financing from well-regarded VC firms, including Matrix Partners, Morningside Ventures, and Greenwoods Investment.

Shenqibuy – Just because they’re cool doesn’t mean they know how to run a business

shenqibuy

It could have been one of those legendary stories about how China’s rising post-90s and high-school drop-out entrepreneurs can actually realize their startup dreams. Unfortunately, it turned out to be yet another flash-in-the-pan startup.

Founded in September 2015, Shenqi was an e-commerce platform targeting at the “post-95s”, offering snacks, stationery, backpacks, anime-related toys and other things teenagers would find appealing. The company got massive public attention after its teenage founder Wang Kaixin pitched the project to well-known investors on 我是独角兽  (I am a Unicorn in English) a TV show for startup demos.

After the show, the startup landed a 20 million RMB (3 million USD) funding led by Matrix Partners China with participation from ZhenFund and Inno Valley.

Local media reported in May last year the CEO was guilty of data fabrication and spending the financing to lead an extravagant personal life. Wang defended herself in a recent interview against these accusations, but she acknowledged that management issue is one of the main reasons that led to the sale of the company to Shenzhen Big Bang Tech Co Ltd, her exit, and the shutdown of the website.

Dakele – Don’t build your business around a played out strategy

dakele

Launch in June 2012, Dakele (大可乐 or Big Coke in English) was among a series of China’s smartphone brands that aimed to emulate Xiaomi. All their products were budget phones retailing less than 1000 RMB (153 USD), featuring big screens and Kele UI, the company’s proprietary OS.

Dakele’s selling point, like most Chinese smartphones, was their low price and decent specs. Although the same strategy may have boosted Xiaomi above the pack, the method has already lost its charm in a now more competitive market.

The smartphone maker failed to adapt to the changing market and suspended its business in March last year.

Pengpai Car – Make sure you can actually make money

pengpai

China’s O2O craze has invaded almost every vertical imaginable from food delivery to manicure. The auto industry is no exception.

Pengpai Car was an online platform where users can order car wash and maintenance services. The firm followed a development path popular with many O2O companies, grabbing customers by providing subsidies and monetizing the user base with paid services. With an entry-level car wash service priced as low as 9.9 RMB, the company was successful in acquiring users very quickly. Operating in 22 cities, it once claimed to control 75% of China’s after-sales car service industry.

However, the startup never managed to fully commercialize its user base; its customer conversion rate to value-added businesses like maintenance, insurance, and road rescue services was only in the single digits. The company shut down its services with a WeChat announcement in April 2016.

Pengpai Car raised 10 million RMB in 2014. An 18 million USD series B round was finalized in 2015 from JD at a valuation of 600 million USD.

Li Xiang, founder of auto vertical portal Autohome and co-founder electric car maker NextEV, once said about the O2O car maintenance industry:

Neither on-demand car washing service nor on-demand car maintenance business make sense. It’s crazy to bet on high-value services while losing money on a basic car wash business. The basic rules about people seeking the most efficient services can’t be broken. Most after-sales services in the automobile industry are by nature low frequency. It’s difficult to acquire uses and offer services in this sector.

Image credits: Metao, Dakele, Shenqibuy, Pengpai Car

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Didi accelerates globalization with investment in Brazilian Uber rival 99 https://technode.com/2017/01/05/didi-accelerates-globalization-with-investment-in-brazilian-uber-rival-99/ Thu, 05 Jan 2017 01:53:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44772 Half a year after Didi and Uber struck a truce in the Chinese market, another land-grab between the two is looming, only this time the battle is for the global market. Didi Chuxing announced on Wednesday that it has made a strategic investment in 99 (formerly 99Taxis), an Uber competitor in Brazil market. The company didn’t specify […]]]>

Half a year after Didi and Uber struck a truce in the Chinese market, another land-grab between the two is looming, only this time the battle is for the global market.

Didi Chuxing announced on Wednesday that it has made a strategic investment in 99 (formerly 99Taxis), an Uber competitor in Brazil market. The company didn’t specify the investment size or number of shares involved in the deal.

Under the terms of the partnership, Didi will assume a seat on 99’s Board of Directors and will provide strategic guidance and support, including in the areas of technology, product development, operations and business planning, according to a company statement.

Founded by young Brazilian entrepreneurs in 2012, 99 offers an app-based on-demand private car and taxi-hailing services across 550 cities in Brazil, the world’s second fastest-growing internet market. 99 has over 140,000 registered drivers and more than 10 million user downloads. They maintain a leading position in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and other tier-one cities across Brazil.

Peter Fernandez, CEO of 99, said, “We welcome Didi to Latin America. Didi’s financing, state-of-art technology, and operations knowledge will play a key supporting role as 99 actively expands our network and services in Brazil and reshapes the competitive landscape in Latin America.”

Uber retreats from China, Didi goes global

Didi is the dominant player in China’s ride-hailing market with close to 400 million users in over 400 Chinese cities. However, the Chinese company won’t stop at conquering its home country, as Didi’s president Jean Liu said at a Vanity Fair event last October— “We are definitely going global”.

In line with its globalization drive, the heavily-loaded company has already reached a strategic partnership or invested in several regional ride-hailing leaders across the globe.

Didi invested 100 million USD in Lyft, Uber’s main competitor, in the U.S. market in September 2015. The tie-up generates several avenues of cooperation, such as allowing users to summon rides through each other’s network. Didi is also expanding aggressively in Southeast Asia with investment in Ola and Grab.

Didi’s global expansion puts it in direct competition with Uber; their partnership between the four companies is widely considered as an anti-Uber alliance. With the latest investment in 99, the alliance has expanded to Latin America.

For a time, Didi’s acquisition of Uber China cast the alliance into doubt. However, after the taking solid control of the domestic market, global expansion is now a top priority and consolidating the alliance makes more sense for the company.

In Wednesday’s announcement, Cheng Wei, founder and CEO of Didi Chuxing, highlighted thei cooperation with more global partners:

“China and Brazil are the world’s foremost emerging markets with enormous opportunities for our rideshare industry. Partnering with 99, the local market leader, Didi will begin sharing capabilities and products with more diverse communities and innovators. . . . We look forward to working with more global partners in creating better mobility services and more work opportunities for our cities, as we reshape together the future global transportation system.”

Image credit: Shutterstock

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Mobike books 215M USD Series D led by Tencent and Warburg Pincus https://technode.com/2017/01/04/mobike-books-215m-usd-series-d-led-by-tencent-and-warburg-pincus/ Wed, 04 Jan 2017 12:48:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44761 As China’s bike-sharing war escalates, leading players in the industry are busy to stocking up on funds to in preparation for a stiffening battle. Mobike announced today that it has closed its 215 million USD series D, led by Tencent and Warburg Pincus, a leading private equity firm. New strategic investors in this round include […]]]>

As China’s bike-sharing war escalates, leading players in the industry are busy to stocking up on funds to in preparation for a stiffening battle. Mobike announced today that it has closed its 215 million USD series D, led by Tencent and Warburg Pincus, a leading private equity firm.

New strategic investors in this round include China’s largest travel company Ctrip, global leading private equity firm TPG, and China’s leading hotel operator Huazhu Hotels Group. A number of existing investors including Sequoia China and Hillhouse Capital also participated.

Mobike will work with these leading companies in China’s transport and travel sectors to unlock new growth opportunities and enable more travelers to get around cities more easily, the company added.

This round follows a 100 million USD Series C in September and an undisclosed Series C+ in October last year. Tencent participated as a lead investor in this round following its previous investment in Mobike’s series C+ round.

Mobike began trial operations in Shanghai at the end of 2015 and officially launched in Shanghai in April 2016. It now operates in nine cities across China.

Ofo, arch-rival of Mobike, released a statement shortly after Mobike’s funding announcement, saying:

bike-sharing
Image credit: Zhang Xiangdong

“The bike-sharing industry has never lacked funds or attention. However, what we really need are companies with profitable and sustainable business models.”

Driven by a gold rush mentality, Chinese internet startups have a tendency to flock into the hottest fields after they’ve gotten enough attention. Like the latest rushes to ride-hailing and live-streaming, we now see a similar phenomenon with bike-sharing. A recent screenshot circulated on Chinese social networks showing that there are more than twenty bike-sharing apps on the market now. With such a huge number of players in the vertical, one thing is clear: another transportation war has already started.

Image credit: Mobike

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Faraday Future unveils first ever production vehicle ahead of CES [Updated] https://technode.com/2017/01/04/faraday-future-unveils-first-ever-production-vehicle-ahead-of-ces-updated/ Wed, 04 Jan 2017 06:36:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44728 Correction (January 4th, 19:27): An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Faraday Future is backed by LeEco. Jia Yueting, founder of LeEco, is an investor in Faraday Future. LeEco and Faraday Future are strategic partners.  Faraday Future, the electric car startup backed by LeEco’s billionaire founder Jia Yueting, has revealed its first production […]]]>

Correction (January 4th, 19:27): An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Faraday Future is backed by LeEco. Jia Yueting, founder of LeEco, is an investor in Faraday Future. LeEco and Faraday Future are strategic partners. 

Faraday Future, the electric car startup backed by LeEco’s billionaire founder Jia Yueting, has revealed its first production vehicle, the FF 91, at an exclusive event prior to CES 2017.

Built upon the company’s proprietary powertrain system Variable Platform Architecture (VPA), FF 91 features 130 kWh of battery energy, which the supports a range of 378 miles, the company claims. Peak motor power is 783 kW, equating to 1050 HP, allowing the vehicle to go from 0 to 60 mph in a blink of 2.39 seconds, quicker than Tesla’ Model S P100D, which can reach 60 mph in 2.4 seconds.

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Through their partnership with LeEco, Faraday Future wants the FF 91 to be a smart and connected vehicle. It is capable of remembering drivers’ personal preferences, such as seating positions, favorite music and movies, ideal temperature, and driving style settings to ensure users have a consistent experience. Facial recognition technologies are also integrated to auto-prompt car settings.

The company says that production of the FF 91 is planned to start in 2018; they are now accepting reservations.

Despite the exciting specs and sleek design, many remain skeptical about whether the company can actually deliver the car on schedule or if they’ll be able to ship at given recent troubles.

The carmaker has been drowning in a raft of bad press as of lately with reports of senior employees leaving and factory delays in Nevada due to unpaid bills of millions of dollars. Similarly, LeEco, the Chinese company that’s bankrolling Faraday Future, is also experiencing its own troubles amid a cash crunch and layoffs.

Image credit: Faraday Future

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China to see electric vehicle boom before the rest of the world: Tom Tan, President of BorgWarner China https://technode.com/2017/01/03/china-to-see-electric-vehicle-boom-before-the-rest-of-the-world-tom-tan-president-of-borgwarner-china/ Tue, 03 Jan 2017 08:21:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44699 Like computing, changes in transportation accelerate every year. China, the world’s largest automobile market, is recording a spectacular growth of the New Energy Vehicle (NEV) with 200-plus companies in the industry. Tom Tan, Vice President of BorgWarner Inc. and President of BorgWarner China, recently talked with us to share his thoughts on the rise of NEV in China […]]]>

Like computing, changes in transportation accelerate every year. China, the world’s largest automobile market, is recording a spectacular growth of the New Energy Vehicle (NEV) with 200-plus companies in the industry.

Tom Tan, Vice President of BorgWarner Inc. and President of BorgWarner China, recently talked with us to share his thoughts on the rise of NEV in China and on current trends in the automobile industry. The following are edited excerpts from the interview.

What will be the prospect for China’s automotive industry in the coming ten years? 

China’s auto industry will continue to grow over the next decade, albeit at a much slower pace than the double-digit growth of the last ten years. Overall growth in the low single digits is to be expected.

There are four important trends at work here: 1) China’s population is the largest in the world and urbanizing rapidly; 2) The nation has an ever-increasing middle-class, with growing purchasing power and changing lifestyles; 3) Air pollution is becoming a serious issue; 4) The government has announced an energy strategy that will cap oil importation at the current 60+% level and gradually reduce it.

The first two trends are certainly supporting the continued growth of the automotive industry in China, while concerns about air quality and foreign oil dependency are prompting the government to establish more rigorous fuel and emission standards. Taken together, these four trends provide a major motivation for the government to accelerate the development of New Energy Vehicles (NEVs) such as electric vehicles (EVs), hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), along with highly efficient low-emission combustion engines.

In recent years, China’s government has made a huge effort to promote NEVs, largely to reduce oil importation. As this effort continues, we will see the overall auto market gradually increase, but with HEV and EV growing at a much faster rate, with HEV dominating in the next five years and EV in the five years after that.

It is believed there will be a shift from combustion to electric propulsion systems in the near future. What is your view on this? 

I expect that the market for traditional combustion vehicles will be flat over the next seven years. The growth rate for pure EV will be much higher, but we’re starting from such a small base and the current cost is high, as is user inconvenience, so I expect that the market share will be less than 2% worldwide.

The story could be different in China, though. With strong government incentives and policy guidance, pure EV and plug-in hybrid EV will likely achieve 4%-5% of the total China market, which could be well above one million units a year in five to seven years’ time. We understand that there are now more than ten new companies in China dedicated to building EVs, and most claims to have raised capital of more than $1 billion in first-round financing. We should see the first EVs from these companies in the 2018 to 2020 period.

Due to the advantages of HEVs in terms of technology, cost, and CAFE achievability, we will see hybrids take off faster and on a larger scale in China. The most aggressive forecast is that HEVs will reach 20% market share in 10 years.

How long before we have fully autonomous vehicles on the road? What are the challenges of product innovation?

When we talk about fully autonomous vehicles, we really mean the ultimate SAE Level 5 self-driving car with no steering wheel, pedals, or human driver….it may take another 10 or more years before we see fully autonomous vehicles on the road in any meaningful number.

There are many challenges to overcome including the navigation systems (using radar, lidar, GPS, sensor, vision, laser, or satellite mapping) and the vehicle-to-vehicle (v2v) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (v2i) communication systems that allow vehicles to communicate even under extreme conditions, such as city chaos or heavy snow.

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BorgWarner Automotive Components (Ningbo) Co., Ltd. In Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, China

It has been said that over time, as self-driving cars as well as ride-hailing and on-demand service becomes more prevalent, that the demand for car purchases will decrease. Do you agree?

Yes, to some extent I do agree. A certain number of people will choose to not own a vehicle when self-driving cars and ride-hailing services become mainstream. However, I believe that the majority of people will choose to own their own vehicle for quite a long time.

Certainly, there will be a lot more vehicle-sharing options on the market when self-driving vehicles become mainstream. We will likely see some reduction in private vehicle ownership, especially in cities where parking is problematic and expensive. Car ownership will carry some inconvenience in the future, but this will not necessary mean that most people will want to give up the enjoyment of driving their own vehicle.  There is a social meaning to car ownership that won’t quickly change.

 Image credits: BorgWarner

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TechNode’s Top 10 Fundraising Stories of 2016 https://technode.com/2017/01/02/technodes-top-10-fundraising-stories-of-2016/ Mon, 02 Jan 2017 04:24:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44550 It’s finally 2017. While the capital winter has spooked China’s internet industry since the beginning of 2016, many have still managed to score new funding and hope that this year will be better than last. Overall, social networking, biotech, electric cars were some of the hottest verticals in China. Contrary to what we believed before […]]]>

It’s finally 2017. While the capital winter has spooked China’s internet industry since the beginning of 2016, many have still managed to score new funding and hope that this year will be better than last.

Overall, social networking, biotech, electric cars were some of the hottest verticals in China. Contrary to what we believed before we started looking at our traffic data, funding stories of small and medium-sized startups, rather than BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent), grabbed the top spots in the list. This indicates a shift in interest from China’s internet behemoths to the more innovative startups coming from China.

Here’s the list:

1. Chinese Tinder-Like ‘Tantan’ Rakes In 32 Million USD

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China’s Tinder-like dating app Tantan raised a 32 million USD series C funding from a group of investors, including LB Investment, Vision Capital, and DST Global. The two-year-old app claimed 2.5 million active users, around 80% of which are part of China’s post-90’s generation.

2. Chinese Startup Connecting College Students And Part-Time Employers Raises $8.5 Million Series A

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Chinese startup Qingtuanshe completed a 55 million RMB (about 8.5 million USD) round of series A funding this April. Qingtuanshe’s student-facing app connects university students with part-time jobs, such as shopkeeping at a hamburger joint, live streaming on an app, and even “liking” a company’s social media posts. On the other side, companies can download Qingtuanshe’s free corporate app and post job opportunities and track applications.

3. iCarbonX Becomes China’s First Biotech Unicorn

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iCarbonX, a six-month-old biotech startup, raised a 1 billion RMB (about 154 million USD) round of Series A funding, boosting the Shenzhen-based company to unicorn status with a valuation of $1 billion USD.

4. Used-Car Trading Platform Guazi Seals 200 Million USD Funding

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C2C used-car trading platform Guazi.com completed a 200 million USD financing round in March 2016. Guazi.com was established by online classifieds site Ganji.com, which later merged with rival online classifieds site 58.com.

5. Diabetes Management Platform Weitang Raises Series B From Yidu Cloud

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Diabetes management platform Weitang raised tens of millions USD in series B round of funding led by Yidu Cloud Technology Company Ltd. The app helps patients to track their blood sugar levels, food intake, exercise, and medication using the app, generating a real-time medical record. Based on the data, doctors can then provide customized management plans for patients.

6.  Online Education Firm VIPKID Secures $100M From Yunfeng, Sequoia Capital

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Education platform VIPKID closeda  100 million USD series C from existing investor Sequoia Capital and new investor Yunfeng Capital, the VC firm co-founded by Alibaba founder Jack Ma. 

7. SoftBank, Foxconn Commit $30M To Chinese AI And Cloud Startup

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CloudMinds, an AI and cloud computing startup, raised a 30 million USD round of seed funding, led by SoftBank International.

8. NextEV Co-Founder Lands $120M For Consumer Electric Vehicle Company

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Chinese electric vehicle company Chehejia has raised a combined 780 million RMB (120 million USD) in series A funding at a valuation of 2.98 billion RMB from seven investors.

9. Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics Confirms First Financing At $7.7B Valuation

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Alibaba-backed logistics company Cainiao has sealed their first-ever funding round, worth over 10 billion yuan (1.54 billion USD), from a consortium including Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and GIC Pte Ltd, Malaysia’s Khazanah Nasional Bhd, and China’s Primavera Capital.

10. This Startup Wants To Disrupt China’s Floral Business

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FlowerPlus, a subscription flower delivery service, raised a 70 million RMB (10 million USD) series A round led by New Margin Ventures in May. As an early entrant to the field, FlowerPlus is among a series of no-frills flower delivery services that targets China’s rising middle class. Other similar services include AmorFlora, EasyFlower, and Floral & Life.

Image credits: Shutterstock; TechNode

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25-Year-Old Li Jing Becomes Baidu’s Youngest VP Ever https://technode.com/2016/12/30/25-year-old-li-jing-becomes-baidus-youngest-vp-ever/ Fri, 30 Dec 2016 07:47:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44591 Baidu announced yesterday in an internal letter the appointment of Li Jing, a 25-year-old entrepreneur, as vice president. This makes Li the youngest VP in the history of the search giant. The appointment comes after Baidu’s full acquisition of Beijing Shoujiao Info Technology, the company behind WeChat-based marketing consulting account Professor Li (李叫兽), founded by Li […]]]>

Baidu announced yesterday in an internal letter the appointment of Li Jing, a 25-year-old entrepreneur, as vice president. This makes Li the youngest VP in the history of the search giant.

The appointment comes after Baidu’s full acquisition of Beijing Shoujiao Info Technology, the company behind WeChat-based marketing consulting account Professor Li (李叫兽), founded by Li Jing in 2016. Li will oversee Baidu’s creative advertising business, marketing strategies, productization and will report directly to Baidu’s senior VP Xiang Hailong, according to the company.

The success story of this young entrepreneur soon became the hottest topic on China’s social media. While some were amazed at his achievements at such an early age, others questioned his qualifications. For a time, praise, envy, mockery filled China’s social media.

Compared with other Baidu VPs, Li Jing has only just started his career. Born in 1991, Li graduated from  Wuhan University in 2014, majoring in marketing and went to Tsinghua University for his master’s degree. He set up the WeChat public account Professor Li to share marketing methods. The account gradually accumulated a ton of fans. In the meantime, there were companies asking him to do consulting services on marketing programs, including Baidu.

Many local media compared Li Jing to Li Mingyuan who held the title of Baidu’s youngest VP. He resigned earlier this year following the news of huge private financial scandals earlier this year.

Li Mingyuan’s resignation is perhaps one of the reasons why Baidu made such a bold move to include young members in management: to keep up with the change in a market that’s increasingly dominated by the young generation. Additionally, Baidu has suffered from a series of blows in the past year, including the death of college student Wei Zexi and scandals surrounding Tieba. The company desperately needs to revamp its brand and hopes that Li Jing can help.

Image credit: Professor Li

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EHang Turns Up Volume in Passenger Drone with Command Centers and Flight Tests https://technode.com/2016/12/30/ehangs-passenger-drone-184/ Fri, 30 Dec 2016 03:16:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44513 EHang‘s autonomous passenger drone 184 caused a stir at CES in early 2016. In preparation for this year’s CES, the Chinese drone maker released some new updates about what it claims to be the world’s first autonomous helicopter drone. In a video from the company, the eight-rotor aircraft completes a series of tests, from taking-off and landing, […]]]>

EHang‘s autonomous passenger drone 184 caused a stir at CES in early 2016. In preparation for this year’s CES, the Chinese drone maker released some new updates about what it claims to be the world’s first autonomous helicopter drone.

In a video from the company, the eight-rotor aircraft completes a series of tests, from taking-off and landing, to hovering, maneuvering, altitude recovery, and vertical climbing. According to a company statement, they are now testing autonomous flight test under 4G network while carrying a load.

Different from its debut at CES, where EHang remains quite secretive about the technical specifications of the aircraft, the Chinese drone maker has released some information about its hardware and software, as well as how the product has evolved over the year.

EHang says the third generation propeller has improved has increased aerodynamic efficiency by 10 to 15% and significantly reduced the noise generated by propeller rotation. Previous generations focused on early flight and limit drag.

Its current Battery Management System (BMS) is an industrial-grade solution that monitors the parameters of all cells, including the temperature, current capacity, and voltage.

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EHang 184 running flight test

Given that the aircraft doesn’t allow passengers to control the vehicle, the auxiliary systems play a crucial role in keeping the passengers safe. The company has finished construction of a special flight command center for the EHang 184. Located in Guangzhou, the ground command center will monitor a variety of flight data of EHang 184 as well as air traffic information.

“The command center will not only enable the passengers in the air to make real-time video/voice calls with the ground but also receive real-time flight sensor data from every EHang 184 in the air. This ensures that passengers will understand the real-time flight conditions through one-on-one calls with our ground staff at all times without much tension for the duration of the flight,” explained the company.

The release of all this information comes as the company is trying to win back trust from customers and investors amid a series of recent setbacks. Layoffs, financial problems, as well as news that they have yet to perform a single test flight in the US even with Nevada approval, have all triggered speculation about the health of the company.

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EHang 184 command center in Guangzhou

When the 184 was first announced, it was widely speculated (in Chinese) that EHang was using it to gain more visibility for its standard-sized consumer drones.  This new update shows that the firm may be more serious about the 184 than we previously thought.

However, no release date has been set for the product. From what we have seen, we will still have to wait some time to see an actual demo flight outside of a video.

Image credits: EHang

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WeChat’s Long-Awaited Mini-Apps to Go Live on January 9th [Updated] https://technode.com/2016/12/28/wechats-long-awaited-mini-apps-to-go-live-on-january-9th-updated/ Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:01:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44456 Months after opening for beta tests, Tencent announced today more details about its long-awaited mini-app (小程序) feature. Zhang Xiaolong, Tencent Senior Vice President and the “Father of WeChat,” disclosed at the WeChat Open Class that the new feature will be released on January 9th. At the beginning of the year, Zhang Xiaolong defined mini-apps as “. […]]]>

Months after opening for beta tests, Tencent announced today more details about its long-awaited mini-app (小程序) feature. Zhang Xiaolong, Tencent Senior Vice President and the “Father of WeChat,” disclosed at the WeChat Open Class that the new feature will be released on January 9th.

At the beginning of the year, Zhang Xiaolong defined mini-apps as “. . . apps that you don’t need to install, you can open them simply by searching or scanning them, which accommodates a ‘delete after use’ habit.”

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In November, Zhang posted this photo of mini-apps on his phone’s home screen. (Image credit: Zhang Xiaolong)

What will Mini-Apps Look Like?

There will be no entry point for mini-apps inside the WeChat app itself. Rather, mini-apps will only be accessible through QR codes.

Zhang explained that the design is consistent with the company’s initiative of forming a decentralized landscape away from WeChat.

“This will also motivate internet companies to work closer with offline stores because the entry point of mini-apps is in QR codes rather than WeChat,” he said.

In good news for app stores, Zhang reiterated that WeChat has no plan to develop a store for mini-apps or get involved in app distribution. In addition, these apps will only have limited push notification functions so that users won’t get bombarded with spam. However, if a user wishes, they can choose to receive a limited set of notifications. The details of how this will actually work remains unclear.

It seems that Tencent is aiming something completely different from its previous features. Users cannot share mini-apps in their WeChat Moments, but can send them to friends of group chats. In addition, mini-app search and gaming features are not supported.

There’s Too Many Apps, Does This Solve the Problem?

In today’s world of more than 2 million Apps, we could safely say that There’s TOO MANY APPS for that. Mini-apps could be an option to reinvent the mobile app to make them ubiquitous and constantly accessible.

Tencent is not alone in seeing this market change. Both Apple and Google released some “apps within apps“ feature to give brands and businesses new and more valuable ways of reaching consumers.

WeChat has certainly been the dominant social media player since launching in 2011. However, with its growing ubiquity has also come a growing saturation and stagnant user growth. Mini-apps, a threat to app stores or no, seem to be another move by WeChat to ensure that their service stays as sticky as possible, both online and off.

Update, Dec 29: The original article stated that mini-apps could only be found by scanning QR codes in physical stores. This is inaccurate: WeChat did not specify that mini-app QR codes could only be found in certain places, online or off.

Image credit: Tencent/WeChat

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TechNode’s Top Sharing Economy Stories of 2016 https://technode.com/2016/12/28/sharing-economy-stories-of-2016/ Wed, 28 Dec 2016 03:32:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44416 The sharing economy is exploding in China. Worth about 299 billion USD in 2015, the market is expected to surge by 40 percent over the next five years, China’s National Information Center reported earlier this year. While the sharing economy is relatively a broad term referring to businesses that are based on peer-to-peer sharing of […]]]>

The sharing economy is exploding in China. Worth about 299 billion USD in 2015, the market is expected to surge by 40 percent over the next five years, China’s National Information Center reported earlier this year.

While the sharing economy is relatively a broad term referring to businesses that are based on peer-to-peer sharing of assets and services, the concept is expanding quickly to involve all kinds of business from sharing lodging, transportation, working space, knowledge, skills, and production capabilities.

Here are TechNode’s top sharing-economy stories of 2016.

1. “Uber for Escorts” Services Become Popular in China

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For years, Internet users can rent a fake boyfriend or girlfriend on Taobao to ease the intense pressure from overly concerned relatives during large family reunions. The trend is gradually expanding from renting fake dates for special family occasions to general companionship, like going to the movies, eating dinner, and jogging. “Come Rent Me” is a service that wants to monetize the spare time of China’s young people – by renting it to others.

2. This Ex-Uber Exec Is Creating China’s Uber For Bicycles

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Bike-sharing boomed almost overnight in the latter half of 2016. As a top player in the bike-sharing industry, Mobike expands quickly and operates in eight cities now. In Shanghai alone, the company runs 100,000 bicycles.

3. This Chinese Q&A Platform Is Selling Celebrity Answers For $750 A Pop

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Fenda, which means one-minute answers, is a mix between Quora and Reddit’s AMA operated through a WeChat enterprise account. Answers are delivered via voice messages and are no longer than 60 seconds – hence the name of the service. Three months after its successful launch, regulators suspended the platform for more than one month. The returned version deleted some of the most sensational topics like celebrity gossip and added enhanced audio recognizing censorship abilities.

4. Running A Coworking Space In China: Bob Zheng Founder of People Squared

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As one of the earliest co-working pioneers in China, People Squared (P2) was founded in 2010, long before the real boom of this sector in China. In this exclusive interview with TechNode, Mr. Zheng talked about his view on co-working spaces in China, specific challenges, and what P2 has planned for 2016.

5. Didi Grapples With Devastating Draft Laws From China’s Major Cities

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Tightening regulations are a definite thorn in the side of Didi. In a draft regulation released in October, Chinese regulators have stipulated that drivers must have a local hukou (户口 or residence permit). This is a heavy blow for Didi, as it eliminates more than half of the drivers in Beijing and Shenzhen, and dispels an overwhelming majority of Shanghai drivers from the platform. Despite complaints from leading ride-hailing companies, the state has made the regulation official with minor changes in details.

6. Bad Air Quality Spawns The ‘Uber Of Gyms’ In India

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FITPASS is aiming to bring high-cost gym memberships to the masses through a sharing model, which lets users swipe their card at a number of gyms on a plan that costs up to 70 percent less than competing gym memberships.

Image credit: Shutterstock/TechNode

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This Co-Working Space Uses a Freemium Model to Build Their Community https://technode.com/2016/12/27/sandbox-open-community/ Tue, 27 Dec 2016 06:01:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44381 Just four years ago, co-working spaces were a rarity in China. Propelled by a series of favorable policies and trends, hundreds of thousands of operators have flocked to the emerging market. Local tech media has said that there are over 2,300 co-working operators in the market as of early 2016. After this stunning growth, however, we […]]]>

Just four years ago, co-working spaces were a rarity in China. Propelled by a series of favorable policies and trends, hundreds of thousands of operators have flocked to the emerging market. Local tech media has said that there are over 2,300 co-working operators in the market as of early 2016. After this stunning growth, however, we can now see the inevitable overcapacity problem, leading to major consolidations in the market since the beginning of this year.

“Over the past years, co-working boomed, but the supply has definitely exceeded the demand. The demand is coming up but not as quickly as the supply,” said Liu Lei, founder and CEO of Sandbox, one of the few free co-working spaces in Shanghai. “Having an open community and the belief that anyone can adopt this lifestyle is how we built our demand.”

Why An Open Community?

“In co-working, we sell the community. The key essentials for the community is a group of people that understand each other’s commonality, they share values, interests, and sharing the same space is the fundamental commonality a lot of these people have,” said Liu.

While commonality is easy for most co-working communities to achieve given their word-of-mouth marketing, Liu pointed out that diversity, another essential component that defines a prosperous community, is missing in most of China’s co-working spaces due to the closed nature of their operation.

“I went to a major co-working brand in Shanghai just to look around. There was a glass door, I stand outside the glass door for almost 30 minutes like an idiot and couldn’t get in until the reception opened the door for me,” he said. “The first thing she asked is whom I am here to see. When I told her I just want to take a tour around the facilities, she brings the salesman who inquires on what kind of space I want.”

While noticing that the whole space is 70% empty, Liu wondered why they still kept their doors shut rather than open it up to people who are willing to use it and allow more diversity to flow in.

“With an open community, what happened is your open portion of the room allows diversity to come in, allows people to come for maybe just a cup of coffee, maybe just for the meeting room, or meet a friend or two,” he said. “Those people could be your potential customer, guest’s customer, future suppliers, or partners. That inflow of diversity is essential for a community. We want to have an inflow of different kinds of people. We call it ‘fresh blood’: every day you end up seeing a portion of people you have never seen before. That gives you an opportunity to know them.”

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Freemium Model Pays Well

Being known for providing rental-free spaces, people may easily wonder how Sandbox makes money.

The company seems to have been paid well by building an open community. A four square meter meeting room with the maxim of 5 seats and one round table in Sandbox’s Zhangjiang location is priced at 50RMB per hour.

“In October, from just that one room we generated 6750RMB (971 USD). That’s 57 RMB per square meter per day, much higher than retail space on Huaihai Road [a popular shopping street in Shanghai],” he said.

Hands-off Approach for Running A Space

Sandbox started just a year ago as the odd man out: completely free to use the public space and very few staff. When you walk around Sandbox, you can’t see any senior staff who control the community, just a few trainees or some young hipsters willing to help you out when needed.

“Everything build online because we want to build a space that manages itself. We don’t put in much effort to control the community,” said Liu. “We rarely host events. All the events held in Sandbox are organized by our community members. We provide the space and things just take happen.”

Image credit: Sandbox

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[Infographic] Top Mobile App Trends To Watch Out For 2017 https://technode.com/2016/12/23/top-mobile-app-trends/ Fri, 23 Dec 2016 06:49:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44292 Few emerging technologies have grown as fast as mobile applications. Since Apple first introduced the App Store back in 2008, its pace of evolution has fundamentally changed the way we live, work, and amuse ourselves. While some predicted that its go-go growth days are gone, others see increasing opportunities as smartphone rises along with user […]]]>

Few emerging technologies have grown as fast as mobile applications. Since Apple first introduced the App Store back in 2008, its pace of evolution has fundamentally changed the way we live, work, and amuse ourselves.

While some predicted that its go-go growth days are gone, others see increasing opportunities as smartphone rises along with user maturity. Mobile app research firm App Annie predicted earlier this year that global mobile app downloads will more than double to 284 billion in the next four years.

Regardless of what you believe, one thing is clear; the size of mobile app market is still huge but nothing short of innovation could make you stand out from the crowd.

In a fast-moving area where there’s always something new on the horizon, it’s utterly important to keep yourself with the trend.

App maker Biznessapps has made an infogaphic highlighting  the mobile app trends for the coming year, including:

  • Location-based services to continue its rise
  • Integration of augmented reality into utility apps
  • Android instant apps to become a common trend
  • IOT app integrations to continue unchanged
  • Application security to be more important than ever before
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Image Credit: 123RF

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[Update] Sanook Online Rebranded To Tencent Thailand https://technode.com/2016/12/22/tencent-sanook/ Thu, 22 Dec 2016 04:06:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44278 Chinese internet giant Tencent has branded its wholly owned subsidiary Sanook Online, a leading Thai web portal, to Tencent (Thailand). Sanook started in 1998 as a Thai-based web directory and gradually developped into an all-inclusive entity with businesses ranging from web portal (Sanook.com), news portal (NoozUp), music-streaming (JOOX), IM (WeChat), and e-commerce (Sabuy). Sanook.com claimed […]]]>

Chinese internet giant Tencent has branded its wholly owned subsidiary Sanook Online, a leading Thai web portal, to Tencent (Thailand).

Sanook started in 1998 as a Thai-based web directory and gradually developped into an all-inclusive entity with businesses ranging from web portal (Sanook.com), news portal (NoozUp), music-streaming (JOOX), IM (WeChat), and e-commerce (Sabuy).

Sanook.com claimed over 30 million active monthly users, while JOOX has amassed 22 million users, the report citing data disclosed by the company. To bring these figures into perspective, Thailand’s internet population is 41 million as of June this year; the country has around 68 million people.

Tencent already holds a 49.2% stake in Sanook through a 81.7 million HKD (10.52 million USD) deal completed in October 2010. Different from strategic investments, Tencent is playing a hands-on role in the management of the Thai company with seats in the board. As the local partner, Sanook runs WeChat and JOOX, the in music-streaming platform backed by Tencent, in Thailand.

Tencent Thailand will focus on three businesses in the future: news portal business led by Sanook Online and iPick, entertainment and multimedia by JOOX and Tencent Games, and services by Top Space, an advertising agency, according to the local media report citing Managing Director Krittee Manoleehagul.

As the domestic market has become saturated, the battle among Chinese internet companies is expanding to Southeast Asia market, the first stop for their global expansion. Tencent’s arch-competitor Alibaba is also aggressive in the region with investments in e-commerce platform Lazada, PayTM, and third-party payment service Ascend Money.

The entry of heavy-pocketed Chinese internet giants may lead to fiercer competition for local startups, but on the bright side, the trend will also bring lots of positive effects.

“It’s encouraging to see a lot of similarities between China and SEA. Our current landscape is very similar to China’s of five to ten years ago. For this reason, we expect China to play two key roles for SEA startups: as a provider of strategic capital and as a knowledge-sharing partner”, Joel Neoh, founder of Malaysia’s top gym pass and O2O company KFit, said in a previous interview with TechNode.

Image Credit: Tencent Thailand

This post is updated on 17:55 December 28th to clarify that Sanook has been renamed to Tencent (Thailand) as of December 19th, 2016 rather than an acquisition.

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It’s Official: You Need Local Hukou To Become A Didi Driver in China’s Tier-one Cities https://technode.com/2016/12/22/ride-sharing-china/ Thu, 22 Dec 2016 01:37:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44259 Still remember China’s tough draft regulations on the ride-hailing industry that could potentially cut the number of drivers on major platforms like Didi by half? Well, now it’s official. Beijing and Shanghai each rolled out specific regulations for the car-hailing business yesterday. A majority of requirements from the drafts were kept, including the types of vehicles that […]]]>

Still remember China’s tough draft regulations on the ride-hailing industry that could potentially cut the number of drivers on major platforms like Didi by half? Well, now it’s official. Beijing and Shanghai each rolled out specific regulations for the car-hailing business yesterday.

A majority of requirements from the drafts were kept, including the types of vehicles that can be used and who can drive them. According to the regulations from both cities, drivers on the ride-sharing platforms must have local residency registration (户口). Additionally, the municipalities maintained the requirement that the cars must be registered locally, leaving many of the existing cars that registered in other provinces barred from running.

The blow is extremely significant since both the cities are known for their tremendous migrant populations. Didi’s previous estimate shows that this requirement will slash more than half of its drivers in Beijing and forces out an overwhelming majority of Shanghai drivers from the platform. According to Didi, of the 410 thousand registered drivers in Shanghai, only 10 ten thousand have a Shanghai Hukou.

Beijing has made some minor adjustments on the cars that can be used for ride-hailing. The stipulated minimum engine size (1750ml/1.8T/2.0l) was lowered to less than 1.8T and the minimum wheelbase was reduced from no less than 2700mm to 2650 mm (2600mm for cars in Shanghai). In addition, a five-month transitional period was added so the companies can make the necessary adjustments.

Most of the leading ride-sharing platforms from Didi Uber, Yidao, Shenzhou, to AA Zuche released announcements that they will comply with the regulation. However, given the usual “ask for forgiveness, not permission” approach many of these companies take, we are still skeptical that these rules will be fully followed. There is one silver lining: ride-sharing companies may face less pressure in lower-tier cities that have proposed less restrictive rules.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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Gay Dating App Blued Buys Into Hornet To Boost Global Expansion https://technode.com/2016/12/21/gay-dating-app-blued-buys-into-hornet-to-boost-global-expansion/ Wed, 21 Dec 2016 06:18:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44239 Blued, a Chinese gay flirting app, has entered a strategic partnership with U.S.-based dating app Hornet in an attempt to spread its popularity around the globe. As a part of the cooperation, Blued will invest an undisclosed sum as an extension of the 8 million USD A round Hornet announced in November. Hornet, which claims to be […]]]>

Blued, a Chinese gay flirting app, has entered a strategic partnership with U.S.-based dating app Hornet in an attempt to spread its popularity around the globe. As a part of the cooperation, Blued will invest an undisclosed sum as an extension of the 8 million USD A round Hornet announced in November.

Hornet, which claims to be the world’s second largest gay social network, has now registered over 15 million total users with 3 million monthly active users. The company has grown rapidly over the last year through the acquisition of gay city guide Vespa and LGBT content provider Unicorn Booty. Although Grindr and Scruff may dominate in the U.S., Hornet says it is the number one network in France, Russia, and Brazil.

It is worth noting that Ventech China, a shared investor behind the two companies, may have played a significant role in this partnership. As the leading investor in Hornet’s A round, Ventech China also participated in Blued’s C round.

“Hornet has one of the most successful growth rates of all the gay social apps on today’s global market,” said Geng Le, CEO of Blued. “We share a vision to bring gay apps outside of the first generation hook-up model and into digital homes for the gay community.”

Founded as a virtual community for gay men in 2000, Blued has grown rapidly along with changing public attitudes toward gay people. The app claims to be world’s largest gay social network with approximately 27 million total users and 3 million daily users. Around 80% of their users are in China.

China has seen a “pink economy” boom in recent years. In addition to Blued, a bunch of services like Zank, lesbian dating app The L, and Queers, an app designed to help young people arrange sham marriages between gay and lesbian people, have all seen massive growth. The trend is so strong that Chinese game developer Beijing Kunlun Tech Co. purchased a majority stake in world’s top gay dating app Grindr earlier this year.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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This Is How Alibaba Is Using Big Data to Fight Fakes https://technode.com/2016/12/20/this-is-how-alibaba-is-using-big-data-to-fight-fakes/ Tue, 20 Dec 2016 10:06:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44190 Alibaba has long been haunted by a controversial reputation as the go-to marketplace for counterfeits and fakes. However, they are now under increasing pressure to clean up. In their latest anti-counterfeiting initiative, the China’s e-commerce behemoth is drawing upon the big data technologies in the monitoring, tracking, and detection of counterfeit goods and manufacturers offline. Operation […]]]>

Alibaba has long been haunted by a controversial reputation as the go-to marketplace for counterfeits and fakes. However, they are now under increasing pressure to clean up.

In their latest anti-counterfeiting initiative, the China’s e-commerce behemoth is drawing upon the big data technologies in the monitoring, tracking, and detection of counterfeit goods and manufacturers offline.

Operation Cloud Sword (云剑行动), led by Zhejiang law enforcement, used information provided by Alibaba to stop 417 counterfeit production groups, including 332 suspects and counterfeit good valued at 1.43 billion RMB (205 million USD).

As a continuation of the initiative, the operation will be further extended to Shanghai, Anhui, Jiangxi and Jiangsu, the regions where China’s counterfeiting goods and manufacturing ran rampant, to form the “Cloud Sword Alliance.”

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Counterfeit Facilities Location (source: Alibaba)

How Big Data is Applied in Anti-Counterfeiting

The figures sure appear impressive. But for average customers and tech fans, we may easily wonder how the technology is actually applied. Here’s some insight.

Real Time Scanning and Detection Models Powered by Big Data  

Alibaba’s AI bot continuously scans entire platforms such as Taobao and 1688 (an online market for wholesalers) to detect counterfeit goods. With its 600 data analytics models, the bot analyzes in real-time merchants and product listings using hundreds of millions of data points such as product specification, customer reviews, and user reviews. All the new listings that enter the system each day have to go through the bot’s scanning system, taking about 30 milliseconds from start to finish for each product listing.

The model also analyses relational data associated with the user behavior, merchandise, payment, and logistics (receiver/return addresses) to detect anomalies, determine suspected counterfeit goods, and high-risk merchants for timely interception and disposition.

Optical Character Recognition

OCR (optical character recognition) technology processes text analysis and detects textual information on product images. For example, some watch counterfeiters may put RMB 100,000 in the price field, but they put something like price ranging from RMB 1,000 to 7,800 on the product image which tells it is potentially a fake product, according to information provided by Alibaba.

“For example, some watch counterfeiters may put RMB 100,000 in the price field, but they put something like price ranging from RMB 1,000 to 7,800 on the product image which tells it is potentially a fake product,” said the company.

Textual analysis capabilities are used at a higher-level to analyze syntax and semantics rather than only compare keywords. The image recognition algorithm enables the company to identify the information related to counterfeit goods-related, in particular, irregularities with brand logos and trademarks.

Machine Learning

Alibaba’s detection technology improves itself constantly through self-learning. In addition, all the data gleaned from offline investigations will be adopted by the system to enhance its counterfeit detection and tracking capabilities, creating a virtuous cycle.

Anti-Counterfeiting: A More Pressing Issue For Alibaba Than Ever

While Alibaba is tuning up its global expansion strategy after the record-breaking IPO, anti-counterfeiting is becoming the most pressing issue that affects the confidence and trust of Alibaba’s customers and investors. Chairman Jack Ma has set a goal of getting over half the company’s revenue from overseas. But there’s still a long way for the company to go: that the figure was just 4% when Ma set this goal in 2015.

In addition to expanding businesses, Alibaba is also struggling to rebuild its image as a trusted and responsible international company. Shortly after becoming a member of The International Anticounterfeiting Coalition under the “intermediary” category, Alibaba’s membership was suspended amid a backlash from brands that include Tiffany, Michael Kors, and Gucci. Similarly, the American Apparel & Footwear Association called to re-list Alibaba as a notorious market.

To solve the problem, the company founded the Platform Governance Department in 2015 to fight against fakes and IP infringement. With an annual investment of nearly 1 billion RMB and the joint effort of 2,000 staff, Alibaba’s big data system was able to remove 120 million suspicious items from the platform, according to data released by the company in 2015.

At the same time, the company is firing at other disingenuous practices that used to be prevalent on the platform such as click farming.

“With our big data analytics and technology, we have the ability and we have the will to track down counterfeits once they are detected online, We won’t stop until we bring them to justice with the help of the authorities,” says Jessie Zheng, Chief Platform Governance Officer of Alibaba Group.

Anti-counterfeiting & OEMs

Despite the impressive figures of anti-counterfeiting endeavors, the scale of fakes is still enormous in China.

Earlier this year, at the Alibaba investor day, Ma told that audience that “[f]ake products are of better quality and better price than the real names. They are exactly the same factories, exactly the same raw materials but they do not use the names.”

Later, in a signed article for the Wall Street Journal, he pointed out several reasons why counterfeit goods are so ubiquitous, shedding some light on how to solve the problem. Small Chinese businesses, which used to serve as OEMs for overseas partners, are finding it hard to survive when export demand from Western markets is shrinking. The rise of Internet, with its lower communication and distribution barriers, has become the most accessible channel for the OEMs to sell their extra product, according to Ma.

Upgrading the whole industry perhaps is one way to fix the problem, but this would be long-term crusade and there’s no quick fix. For Alibaba, anti-counterfeiting will be their top priority for now, according to Ma.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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Co-working Isn’t Only Startups: naked Hub Brings Different Model https://technode.com/2016/12/19/coworking-not-startups-naked-group-ceo/ Mon, 19 Dec 2016 09:56:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44164 Co-working spaces in China are usually related to the concepts of entrepreneurialism and startups. This may be because it rose to popularity in the wake of the startup boom. But as the emerging working model becomes mainstream, more large and medium-sized companies are jumping onto the bandwagon to benefit from the new style of office […]]]>

Co-working spaces in China are usually related to the concepts of entrepreneurialism and startups. This may be because it rose to popularity in the wake of the startup boom. But as the emerging working model becomes mainstream, more large and medium-sized companies are jumping onto the bandwagon to benefit from the new style of office management. naked Hub, the Shanghai-based network co-working space, is one of the companies that’s leading the way.

naked Hub @Xintiandi

In Xintiandi—a landmark entertainment area in the heart of downtown Shanghai—naked Hub launched last week its flagship location, a four-floor property of spaces, hot desks, open offices, and meeting rooms that have been designed to meet the taste of “Hubbers”. As the eighth addition to the coworking network, naked Hub Xintiandi has all the trimmings of a typical co-working space, only much, much nicer. All kinds of facilities from a meditation space, fitness area, wine tasting, and chess facilities are offered to keep with the co-working vibe.

Of course, co-working spaces are known as much for the infrastructures and alcohol as for their online communities. naked Hub’s namesake app facilitates and adds values to the physical community. “When an online community is created, people start to work with each other not because they are forced to because they trust each other, that’s, in our opinion, the secret sauce,” said Manoj Mehta, CEO of naked Group.

Going For the High-Tier Market

In an increasingly crowded co-working industry, naked Hub is going for the higher end of the market. For one space in the newly launched Xindiandi location, people have to pay 5,000 RMB (around 719 USD) per month. The cost of a hotdesk starts at 1,800 yuan; others vary by location and privacy ranges from 2,500 RMB to 5,000 RMB.

“We believe the majority of the crowd is at the bottom end. We actually want to give you an office which is significantly better than what you can afford with the same amount of money or less because we help everybody to share the space,” Mehta says.

For a diversifying group of tenants from large corporations to medium-sized companies, the price difference is offset by the other values offered by the space, such as businesses opportunities that arise from an active neighborhood, reception service, parcel pickup, and career development.

“This is probably most expensive in the whole of China, but still more than 35% cheaper than office building next door. But the object is not to be cheap, the object is to give value to our member,” says founder Grant Horsfield. “Most of the Chinese co-working companies are more of trying to focus on startup companies, But people are not going to move from Plaza 66 to other some low-end co-working spaces, but would move from Plaza 66 to here.”

Lots of Chinese co-working spaces mix incubation with co-working to broaden their revenue sources. naked Hub, however, has stayed away from investment.

“At this point, we have no plans for incubation. I relate incubation to a baby formula milk, you only take it for a short period of time, after that you grow to real things,” says Horsfield. “Incubation is for people who are trying to pick companies that they want to invest in. We want to provide a service and create a community.”

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Is there a bubble in the Market?

“I think most of the co-working spaces in China, if not all, are there for the wrong reason: it’s the next attractive thing to do,” says Mehta.

“It’s not necessarily a bubble; it’s a fashion everybody is following. The defintion of bubble is too much right capacity. Right now there’s too much wrong capacity. The places where co-working to thrive are places where normal companies not just incubators, not just startups companies, normal companies as well as startup companies can be together,” he points out.

It’s Not Fast Enough

Launched late last year, naked Hub, backed by hospitality service naked Group, has expanded quickly over the past year. Xintiandi is the eighth location of the co-working network and more are in the pipeline. But, according to Mehta, this is not fast enough. Backed by recent funding, naked Hub has some aggressive expansion plans of establishing 30 new locations in the coming year.

“Our goal right now is to be No.1 in Asia. We already leased some places in Hong Kong and Beijing,” he says. “We are still evaluating the market of Southeastern cities about whether they can bear something like this.”

The company is looking at expanding to all the tier-one cities in China as well as overseas, including Singapore and Sydney.

“All the operations staff has to be local. We have 4-5 five people for each localization. With the use of technology and self-service, it’s important to create an environment where people are doing things themselves,” says Mehta.” Last month, in about 6-7 hubs, we had 90 events. So it’s 15 events per hub per month, things could be quite efficient.”

From Co-working to Co-wellness

In addition to co-working, naked is going to apply the model to the fitness and gym industry. Company founder Horsfield disclosed that naked is going to launch early next year a co-wellness infrastructure and platform where people can rent wellness centers, yoga rooms, and gym studios on an hourly-basis.

image credit: naked Hub

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Lost in Translation – Top Chinese Memes of 2016 https://technode.com/2016/12/16/lost-in-translation-top-chinese-memes-of-2016/ Fri, 16 Dec 2016 02:16:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=44023 With the rapid pace of change, new memes and expressions come and go with the blink of an eye. As 2016 comes to an end, Lost in Translation, with the help of Yaowenjiaozi, is here with the top Chinese memes of 2016.  Primeval Power(洪荒之力) When asked how she won her race at this year’s Olympics in […]]]>

With the rapid pace of change, new memes and expressions come and go with the blink of an eye. As 2016 comes to an end, Lost in Translation, with the help of Yaowenjiaozi, is here with the top Chinese memes of 2016.

 Primeval Power(洪荒之力)

When asked how she won her race at this year’s Olympics in Rio, Fu Yuanhui* responded that she used all of her inner strength and “primeval power.” The term, together with her adorable facial expressions, made for instant memery.

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*Editor’s note: If you don’t know who she is, make sure you check her out. She’s amazing.

Watermelon eaters (吃瓜群众)

“Watermelon eaters” refers a big crowd of passive onlookers. Similar in meaning to lurker, watermelon eaters usually refers to people on social media who do not actually contribute anything. As with any good meme, this has evolved into chicken eaters and pancake eaters, referring people who lurk, but don’t really pay attention.

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Small Target (小目标)

Earlier this year, Wang Jianlin, China’s richest person, said in an interview, “You shouldn’t be that ambitious. Set a small target first, like earning 100 million RMB (15 million USD).” This was his advice to young people who want to be wealthy. And, like any public figure making an embarrassing gaffe, the quote quickly became meme fodder with one-liners like: “First set a small target for losing weight, such as losing 70 pounds in three days.” and “I will set a small target for myself, like finding a boyfriend like Daniel Wu before the Spring Festival.”

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Whenever you disagree with each other… (一言不合就…)

This phrase refers to when a completely irrelevant tangent is brought into a discussion. The most typical usage is when Chinese mock Bollywood for their song-and-dance routines that disrupt the flow of the story: “Whenever they disagree with each other, they solve it by dancing.”

Other examples includes “Whenever you disagree with each other, you take selfies.” and “Whenever you disagree with each other, you solve it with doutu.

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Sinking Friend “Ship” (友谊小船,说翻就翻)

De-friending: a much-discussed phenomenon in the heady early days of Facebook. That same phenomenon has made its way to China. You look up a casual acquaintance or high school sweetheart only to find you’re not friends anymore! To send them a message, you even have to resend a friend request!

The phrase mocks how easy it is for a cyber friendship to fall out. Any tiny trigger can lead to a broken friendship, from taking a bad selfie of your friend to losing weight when they cannot.

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Ge You slouch (葛优瘫)

Originally from a China’s popular TV show I Love My Family (我爱我家), the decades-old photo of the Chinese comedian Ge You slouching has spawned a wave of humorous reinterpretations and imitations online. As the representative sitting position of Beijingers, it is also dubbed the Beijing Slouch. Send us a picture next time you see one!

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Kungfu Forms (套路)

套路 originally refers to a series of skills and tricks in Chinese Kongfu. It now refers to tricking someone into doing something for you for your own personal gain.

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Blue Skinny Mushroom (蓝瘦香菇)

Blue skinny mushroom became an internet phenomenon in China almost overnight. It’s however not about mushroom. The term is pronounced very similar to feel bad (难受) want to cry (想哭) in China’s southern dialect.

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Image Credit: Baidu

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UnionPay Says Better Late Than Never to QR Codes https://technode.com/2016/12/14/unionpay-qr-code/ Wed, 14 Dec 2016 06:00:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43966 China’s state-backed bank card association China UnionPay announced (in Chinese) on Monday that it will start using QR codes to process payments. This seems to be the latest signal that government is relaxing control on the technology, long in use by other sectors. In addition, it is expected that this will create a more competitive environment […]]]>

China’s state-backed bank card association China UnionPay announced (in Chinese) on Monday that it will start using QR codes to process payments. This seems to be the latest signal that government is relaxing control on the technology, long in use by other sectors. In addition, it is expected that this will create a more competitive environment in China’s mobile payment sector. Alipay and WeChat Wallet have been the main players dominating the sector.

Actually, it was only in the last few months that QR codes were legally approved for financial transactions. Since March 2014, all QR code transactions were supposed to be suspended after China’s central bank announced security concerns.

However, the ban has not hindered the rapid application of QR code payment over the last two years. Domestic internet companies led by Alibaba and Tencent have continually pushed the use of this technology.

Chinese Internet companies have a tricky relationship with the country’s regulators. In the rush to increase financial offerings, they have developed an “ask for forgiveness, not permission” approach. Something similar happened with the ride-sharing industry: the legal status of drivers on leading platforms like Didi Chuxing and Dingding Yueche is still being questioned

The efforts of domestic third-party payment companies have been very productive. Data from Internet consultancy Analysys International shows the total transactions by third-party mobile payment tools exceeded 7.5 trillion RMB (1.08 trillion USD) in the second quarter of this year. It is clear that China’s state-backed institutions cannot afford to ignore this trend.

UnionPay faces stiff competition from Alipay (55.4% of market share) and Tencent (32.1% market share). UnionPay seems to be betting that it’s better late than never to enter this market.

Even before mobile payments, QR codes were a regular phenomenon, especially in first- and second-tier cities. The ride-sharing subsidy war between Alibaba-backed Kuadi and Tencent-backed Didi brought millions of users into the mobile payment ecosystem. Afterward, educating them on QR code-based transactions was simple, something that UnionPay does not have to think about.

However, there are still many challenges. Both Alipay and WeChat Wallet are so ubiquitous that changing user habits in favor of another service may prove difficult. Other large challenges include lowering marketing costs and making bankcard payment options available for small offline retailers.

Despite all these, the recent move by UnionPay marks a shift in focus from traditional financial institutions towards financial technology (fintech) solutions. In July of this year, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, a UnionPay member, released a QR code payment function. Several other UnionPay members include China Construction Bank, China Merchants Bank, China CITIC Bank, Minsheng Bank, SPD Bank all followed suit to release similar mobile payment features this year.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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Co-Working Is Booming in China, Here’s Why https://technode.com/2016/12/13/coworking-china/ Tue, 13 Dec 2016 10:55:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43950 China has witnessed a huge boom of co-working spaces in recent years with hundreds of thousands of operators emerging. However, co-working is not happening only in China, but developing along with global trends. At the Co-working China Forum, Claire Stephens, Head of Workplace Strategy at global real estate services firm JLL, shared insight on China’s […]]]>

China has witnessed a huge boom of co-working spaces in recent years with hundreds of thousands of operators emerging. However, co-working is not happening only in China, but developing along with global trends. At the Co-working China Forum, Claire Stephens, Head of Workplace Strategy at global real estate services firm JLL, shared insight on China’s co-working boom.

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Claire Stephens speaking Co-Working China Forum

Sharing Economy Is Changing People’s Concepts of “Ownership”
As the sharing economy takes root in China with increasing vigor, a growing number of Chinese customers are shifting to a collaborative consumption lifestyle. An iiMedia report shows that China’s total revenue from sharing economy is expected to reach 3.95 trillion RMB (roughly 633 billion USD) this year.

Co-working space is among the sectors that benefit most from this mindset change: from owning something to renting something.

“For many years, we had a lot of trouble encouraging people to do desk sharing, but suddenly people are actually asking whether they can have a Mobike for desks. This idea of a sharing economy, of communally using a space is really taking off. And that’s one of the reasons why co-working will potentially be very successful here if you getting the model right,” said Stephens.

Rise of the Millennial Workforce

Millennials, who are taking an increasing portion in China’s business world, want a different type of experience in their working environment. They aren’t interested in status, but more about how an experience feels. Co-working offers flexibility, mobility, and a cachet that many young people are looking for.

“The generational difference makes people work differently so they prioritize different things at work,” Stephens says. “Millennials tend to be more community oriented, particularly with an online community, they are quite tribal as opposed to being identified with a particular company. They could be very loyal if they view that company as being one part of their tribe. So, making them identify with the space is very important.”

Government Support

In line with China’s state support for mass entrepreneurship and innovation, the country is recording a rise of supporting industries that help to foster startups. Co-working spaces and incubating programs mushroomed to take advantage of this trend.

Technology Element is Crucial for Successful Co-working Space

Technology is one the most important features in a co-working space. It is probably the one area where most operators fail.

“At the moment, there’re a lot of people setting up co-working environments which are essentially just nicely-designed business centers. It’s more about having an online and offline community, having people to reach out and use co-working and co-working environment not just when they are in the physical space, but also online.”

Image Credit: Emma Lee, naked Hub

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Ecommerce Giant JD Apologizes for Leak Exposing User Data https://technode.com/2016/12/12/ecommerce-giant-jd-apologizes-for-leak-exposing-user-data/ Mon, 12 Dec 2016 06:23:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43905 Chinese e-commerce giant JD has apologized for a user data leak in an official announcement on Sunday. The data leak exposed millions of users’ user names, passwords, email addresses, QQ accounts, ID numbers, and phone numbers. JD claims that the leak actually took place in 2013. They attribute it to a security loophole in Apache Struts […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant JD has apologized for a user data leak in an official announcement on Sunday. The data leak exposed millions of users’ user names, passwords, email addresses, QQ accounts, ID numbers, and phone numbers.

JD claims that the leak actually took place in 2013. They attribute it to a security loophole in Apache Struts 2, an open-source web application framework used widely by Internet companies and governments.

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Leaked Database (via Yiben Caijing)

JD claims to have notified at-risk customers to update their accounts after detecting and closing the security holes.

Most of the affected users have updated their accounts, according to the announcement. However, the firm acknowledges risks remain for a small portion of users who haven’t updated their account.

The company is urging users to set more complicated passwords to make them harder to crack and changing those passwords regularly. They have already enlisted the help of the authorities.

On Saturday, Huxiu (report in Chinese) reported a 12 GB data package was being sold for between 100k to 700k RMB (14k to 100k RMB). Peddlers were claiming that the data came from JD.

The report cited an insider as saying the package had already been resold several times and was controlled by “. . . at least one hundred scammers.” The insider added that it is still unclear why data from 2013 is now being sold.

This is not the first time the NASDAQ-listed company has had a problem with data leaks. One year ago, more than 100 users filed a collective lawsuit against JD for leaking information and banking fraud.

Image Credit: JD

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From Synthetic Foods To Soft Robotics, Here’s What frog Says About Tech 2017 https://technode.com/2016/12/09/frog-tech-2017/ Fri, 09 Dec 2016 08:25:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43822 Predicting the future is about seeing patterns amid chaos. frog, a global design and strategy firm, has continued its efforts in predicting the future with the release of its latest forecasts for 2017. The firm has a good track record as they predicted VR/AR, AI, and the blockchain would boom this year. Many of the tech […]]]>

Predicting the future is about seeing patterns amid chaos. frog, a global design and strategy firm, has continued its efforts in predicting the future with the release of its latest forecasts for 2017. The firm has a good track record as they predicted VR/AR, AI, and the blockchain would boom this year.

Many of the tech trends prevalent in 2016, such as VR, AI, autonomous driving will continue to resonate in 2017, coupled with other emerging trends. Here is the top-15 tech trends the company expects for the new year.

Autonomous Vehicles with Superhero Performance 

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More than 90% of car accidents are caused by human errors, but will AI-enabled autonomous vehicles perform better than human? frog creative director Matt Conway believes we are not far from the day when autonomous vehicles can significantly lower casualty from car accidents.

“In the instant before an accident, an AV should maneuver in dramatic and utterly non-human ways in order to preserve life,” Conway says. “A dramatic emergency evasive maneuver might seem reckless if it was taken by a human, but under the control of an appropriately trained AI—informed by clusters of real-time sensors—such a maneuver might be as reasonable and life-preserving as any taken by a professional bodyguard.

Precision Medicine and Big Data Will Drive Intimate Health Results

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The wide application of big data technology has already brought fundamental changes to our lives in the ways we work and entertain. frog strategy director Allison Green-Schoop thinks there’s more this technology can do in medical area.

Precision medicine is a new form of health care that is based on data, algorithms, and precision molecular tools. Allison believes doctors will be able to give tailor-made medical suggestions to patients by digging into their social, environmental and economic contexts, rather than judging only from the symptoms.

Our Spaces Become Participants 

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The combination of low-cost sensors and machine learning will enable all kinds of spaces, living rooms, shopping malls, and hospital bays, to be more interactive. Based on the massive data collected by the sensors, machine learning will be used to identify usage patterns and recommend the reconfiguration of a space to drive new behaviors in healthcare, retail, research, manufacturing, work, and residential spaces.

Chad Lundberg & Jud Holliday use an example of customizing hospital rooms for patients.

“Hospitals will shift room layouts, update signage, and adapt lighting and sound to optimize individual patient experiences,” they say. “These will be tailored to patients’ current stress levels, severity and type of conditions, schedules, as well as personal lifestyle and fitness data. Spaces will no longer simply house and support your activities – they will participate.”

Next Year’s Best New Artist

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Machines are not only replacing human labor, they are also playing a bigger role in creative jobs. frog strategists Zach Marley and Graeme Asher point out that AI has already marked several milestones in music, video gaming, and fiction writing sectors.

“These imitative algorithms we find writing pop songs, short films, and generating first-person shooter levels will evolve to process broad and diverse inputs – cross-pollinating rhythms, language, and imagery from deep and unlikely corners of our physical and virtual worlds. This is our new creative frontier,” they write

Synthetic Foods and Cellular Agriculture goes Mainstream

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Designer Andreas Markdalen detects two distinct changes in our grocery stores: one is plant-based proteins are gaining popularity as an animal meat replacement. The second is tissue extracted from live animals is reengineered to grow food like meat, eggs, and dairy in laboratory environments.

Markdalen predicts that more plant-based artificial meat replacements will hit the shelves of our local grocery store in the coming year.

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Business Bots Will ThriveIn the wake of the rising AI fever, frog strategist Toshi Mogi believes AI technologies are going to have wider applications in business use in the coming year. He cites the example of a vintage electric skateboard startup as an example. Robots are used in every link from design, production to marketing, making everything more efficient.

“As intelligent systems and automation further develop to serve the purpose of critical business functions, it is time for a more formalized classification schema for automated businesses,” Mogi writes.

Tricking the Brain to do the Impossible

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Virtual reality therapies (VRT) have already been used for distracting the brain from its current context.  frog strategist Kyle Wolf points out that the technology is now also to creating multi-sensory environments that trick it into driving biological outcomes beyond the reach of medication.

“Initially, we will see VRT addressing the psychological—treating phobias, addictions, and other mental conditions—but soon we will see it enabling physiological outcomes and aiding in practices such as Neurorehabilitation,” Wolf says.

Farming the Sea is the Ultimate “Blue Ocean” Strategy

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Since life itself arose from the oceans, frog’s Patrick Kalaher believes oceans should be our only sustainable source for resources.

“Farming of kelp and bivalves, and open water cultivation of fish will enable us to generate vast amounts of food without using arable land, water, or pesticides. Because farming in the sea isn’t constrained to the surface, it can extend down to the bottom of the ocean, effectively being three-dimensional,” Kalaher says. “On the production side, new tools and techniques for growing and harvesting are being brought online; on the demand side, new value chains and supply chains are evolving, bringing this kind of seafood to more and more tables as the taste for them is developed over time.”

Interfaces In Our Ears

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For decades, human computer interaction has taken a Graphical User Interfaces approach. Creative director Christine Todorovich thinks it’s time for embracing a new interface type that extend beyond the visual. Auto industry is among the first areas where this AUI- the Auto User Interface is applied for it enriches experiences while driving.

“The combination of screen fatigue and technology embedded in everything from cars to homes, is exposing a need for new types of interfaces that extend beyond the visual,” Todorovich says.

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Drones As The Great Equalizer

Application of drones in logistics industry has long been the public focus as more companies like Amazon pioneering their works in the initiative. As this technology is becoming more affordable, government, big enterprises and individual citizens alike are joining this trend.

In addition to commercial uses, frog designer Lilian Tse believes that drones will play a bigger role in humanitarian works thanks to their flexibility, citing the efforts in Rwanda as evidence.

“Rwanda is building the world’s first drone airport to provide medicine that can be quickly flown to those who need it. Rather than wait months for roads to be built, drones can quickly provide critical support to people living outside of urban areas,” Tse writes.

Tse added that several other verticals are also going to benefit from the technology, such as road builders, especially Chinese companies, medical companies, and airports.

Scalable Automatic Data Processing Is The New Last Mile

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In a world that’s exploding with data, the real problem for us is how to make sense of this huge amount of information in a usable and automatic way.

“The art and science of Scalable Automatic Data Processing is nearing prime time, and monitoring weather, predicting traffic patterns, counting fish in the ocean, or listening to forests to determine their health will be used by organizations of all kinds, not just large tech firms like Google and Microsoft,” writes Patrick Kalaher.

Buildings Work Smarter, Not Harder

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While the internet-of-things trend is leading the way to a smarter city, the infrastructure surrounding us is going to integrate more technologies with the efforts from large cooperate companies like MGM Resorts, Wynn, and Tesla.

frog strategist Agnes Pyrchla predicted that this trend could be a massive opportunity for cities, as well as industries like hospitality that depend on large energy-intensive buildings. 

VR-on-Demand

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The VR boom is a main theme for the world’s tech scene in 2016 and the trend is not stopping. Piet Aukeman & Sonny King predict that the VR craze is going beyond the tech-savvy geeks to grab a larger group of mainstream audience.

“Live entertainment venues and performers will be increasingly displaced by low cost/high engagement entertainment options that people can access from the comfort of their home,” they say. “Content creators will be able to deliver low-cost, high-quality experiences that are traded on an open, social market. For those consumers that lack the VR hardware, the community can provide “VR Stations” in malls, transportation terminals, and open spaces.”

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The Rise of Soft Robotics

As robots enter our daily lives, people need them to change from the traditional hard and cold to something easier to interact with. We have already seen softened robots in various industries from automobile to medicine, Mark Freudenberg points out.

“The soft robotics revolution will be gradual but vast. As robots and robotics become increasingly pliable, they will fold into our everyday lives in interesting and vital ways,” Freudenberg says.

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Learning from Machine Learning

By training machine learning networks, people can interact and learn indirectly from the algorithms in other ways, according to Rebecca Blum, citing Gooble’s AlphaGo.

Although Lee Sedol’s defeat raised concerns that machine will doom human race, the designer believes we also evolving through embracing new ways of learning from machines as well. “Learning from machine learning could have an immediate impact on the way we think about education and training, fostering a symbiotic approach to human-machine learning,” Blum says.

 Image Credits: frog design

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What Does China Mean For Southeast Asian Startups? Q&A With KFit Founder Joel Neoh https://technode.com/2016/12/07/china-southeast-asia-kfit/ Wed, 07 Dec 2016 08:09:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43794 Along with the globalization drive of Chinese companies, China is having a greater influence on the rest of the world as a marketplace, a foreign investor, and more importantly, a source of innovation. Southeast Asia (SEA), a densely populated region that’s expected to foster the next unicorn, is among the areas that are feeling these […]]]>

Along with the globalization drive of Chinese companies, China is having a greater influence on the rest of the world as a marketplace, a foreign investor, and more importantly, a source of innovation. Southeast Asia (SEA), a densely populated region that’s expected to foster the next unicorn, is among the areas that are feeling these impacts.

Thanks to geographical adjacency and cultural similarities, SEA has become the first stop for Chinese companies when expanding abroad with an increasing number of Chinese firms like Huawei, Alibaba and Xiaomi are taking their foothold in the region. But what, if anything, will SEA startups gain from this boom?

TechNode got a chance to speak with Joel Neoh, CEO of KFit and former head of Groupon Asia-Pacific, to hear from the other side of the story. Malaysia-based KFit is a gym pass and O2O commerce platform that offers subscribers cheap health options and other offline services like salon and spas. As a hit startup in the region, KFit has marked a series of milestones this year. After securing a 12 million USD series A round this February, the company acquired Groupon Malaysia and Groupon Indonesia earlier this year.

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Screenshots of KFit App

What does China mean for SEA startups? 

China is significant because it has really laid the groundwork for startups in SEA. As frontrunners in online-to-offline (O2O) commerce over the past decade, Chinese startups have evolved into ‘tech giants’ in the world’s largest developing market. They’ve proven that there is a massive growth opportunity in countries with fast-developing infrastructure and rising middle-class income levels.

It’s encouraging to see a lot of similarities between China and SEA. Our current landscape is very similar to China’s of five to ten years ago. For this reason, we expect China to play two key roles for SEA startups: as a provider of strategic capital and as a knowledge-sharing partner.

I see a huge opportunity for China to partner with us as we develop the SEA commerce ecosystem through popularizing high-frequency use cases, such as restaurant payments on online platforms, and other means. We are currently exploring collaborations that will help us capitalize on fast-improving infrastructure and growing mobile penetration across the region to serve SEA’s vast population.

The O2O model is in full swing in China. KFit launched Fave earlier this summer to pioneer the O2O trend in SEA. What were the obstacles you faced in localizing this model for local market?

Benefitting businesses and consumers alike, our O2O platform is already proving its worth in SEA. It successfully generates increased sales for offline businesses (such as restaurants, spas, movie theatres, gyms, and so on), while also offering great savings and convenience to consumers. To date, we have sold over 5 million online vouchers for offline businesses in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore.

For us, the key aspect to localizing this model is to have a deep understanding of the language, culture, consumer habits, and regulation in each country we want to serve. There is no shortcut to this knowledge; we invest a significant amount of time and energy in each of our markets. We work with teams of local experts who understand local merchant requirements and who know local consumers and how best to appeal to them.

What tech trends coming from China do you think would have potential to grow in the Southeast Asia market?

I think there’s huge potential for the ‘consumer internet’ and everything related to it. By this I mean businesses that offer services, products, or content to capitalize on the growing consumer class and the growth of internet and mobile adoption. There are also promising opportunities for large companies to support digital commerce through better and more convenient payment solutions.

As we continue to build our O2O platform in SEA, we see a big opportunity for local services. Even more than transportation or physical goods e-commerce, this sector holds great promise due to how frequently people use local services. At this point, the market is still pretty fragmented and no single player dominates. However, the rapid development of the mobile wallet in SEA will further expedite the adoption and development of O2O local services. This is creating a gap in the market that we hope to close.

As the economy in China slows down, India, being backed by developments of SEA, is expected to overtake China as the next innovation hotspot. How are your views on this?

Like China, both India and SEA have a huge consumer base and growing technology adoption. With a combined population of almost 2 billion people, India and SEA have to be a significant piece of any technology giant’s globalization plan.

India, in particular, has greatly benefited from an influx of global investors. The market is currently the ‘sweet spot’ for China’s BAT companies: the ‘big three’ of Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent. All three are very active in India, with Alibaba investing in Paytm and Snapdeal, Tencent’s Hike and Practo, and Baidu-backed Ctrip investing in India’s largest online travel agency MakeMyTrip.

SEA is currently at an earlier stage of the cycle. For example, in 2015, total investment in Indian startups was USD 9 billion, compared to USD 1.6 billion for SEA startups. So while SEA is quite far behind India in terms of funding today, we foresee that SEA will be the next region to hit an upcycle.

Google, Amazon, and Microsoft for the U.S. Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent for China. What about the tech giants in Southeast Asia? How does the dominance of internet giants impact local entrepreneurial environment? 

The tech giants of the US and China have led the tech world to where we are today. For example, China’s BAT have together played a crucial role in educating the market and spearheading growth in the tech industry over the past decade. Local startups benefit from the ecosystem that these ‘big three’ have built.

In SEA, the more well-funded startups like Lazada, Gojek, and Grab are burning cash and investing time and effort into educating the market about e-commerce and mobile payment. Many startups and growing platforms, like Fave, will benefit from the efforts of these trailblazers to popularize online payment. SEA is still an open market at this point, with a few companies with the potential to grow into the SEA equivalent of one of China’s BAT companies. That’s something we at Fave are aspiring to.

Most disruptive startups attract customers by providing more convenient or cheaper services. The early explosive growth is usually reliant on highly-subsidized models – that’s the case for China’s Didi Chuxing and several others. When the company stops providing subsidies or discounts, they risk losing customers. KFit has just discontinued the offer for unlimited classes for more sustainable profits. How do you balance this?

The core value proposition of our O2O platform is convenient savings for customers and increased sales for businesses. This was our underlying aim when we started, back in April 2015, helping consumers save money and get fit while also supporting gyms and fitness studios to increase sales and gain customers. After signing up more than 65% of all gyms and studios in our key cities in SEA, we are now expanding the same value proposition across new verticals, such as dining, health and beauty, and entertainment. The acquisition of Groupon Malaysia and Groupon Indonesia allows us to integrate millions of customers and thousands of merchants into Fave, achieving greater scale of impact.

In terms of the high-subsidy business model, we must remember that the subsidy is strongly correlated to competition; it’s a factor when competitors are backed by funders with deep pockets. And this is not yet happening in O2O local services in SEA — especially as our largest competitor, Groupon, is now part of our business. As the early market leader in this space, we’re now prioritizing growth in order to establish our position and ensure we dominate the market in terms of users and supply. In the platform business, there is no room for more than two players and so the fight for market position is intense. Once you become a dominant player, you can set sensible prices and increase profits.

Any tips for Chinese startups that are aiming to expand into the Southeast Asian market? 

My best advice for anyone aiming to grow in SEA is to find or invest in a local partner. If you’re already considering a local partner to help you avoid the pitfalls of doing business in our diverse region, try to partner with an individual or company with a strong entrepreneurial spirit. You need someone who can be very nimble and react quickly in order to win in this market. In general, I’d say the SEA startup scene is ‘fast eat slow’ rather than ‘big eat small.’

There is a rise in the number of Chinese entrepreneurs born in the 1980s to 1990s. As a part of this generation, what are your views on the rise of young entrepreneurs globally?

I believe there is rebirth of renaissance thinking among Chinese entrepreneurs of this generation; they believe that they can win globally as well as locally. Better education and global exposure over the past 10 to 20 years, coupled with passion, hard work, and strong ethics have increased the confidence of Chinese entrepreneurs, encouraging them to compete with the rest of the world and build winning global companies.

Image Credit: KFit

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Alibaba Invests In Irish Cinema Analytics Startup Showtime Analytics https://technode.com/2016/12/07/alibaba-showtime/ Wed, 07 Dec 2016 02:45:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43755 Alibaba Pictures, the film and entertainment arm of Alibaba Group, has invested in Irish movie data startup Showtime Analytics, through its cinema ticketing system subsidiary Yueke (aka Finixx). The tie-up will see Showtime and Finixx collaborate to develop products specific to the Chinese cinema industry, the company noted. Founded in 2014, Showtime Analytics provides data […]]]>

Alibaba Pictures, the film and entertainment arm of Alibaba Group, has invested in Irish movie data startup Showtime Analytics, through its cinema ticketing system subsidiary Yueke (aka Finixx). The tie-up will see Showtime and Finixx collaborate to develop products specific to the Chinese cinema industry, the company noted.

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Screenshot of Showtime Analytics Dashboard (via Showtime Analytics)

Founded in 2014, Showtime Analytics provides data analytics products and services to cinema owners and film distributors, allowing them to collate, analyze and visualize their operational data in real time to deliver insights that drive improved business performance. The Irish company now employs 30 full time staff.

Yueke is a leading cinema ticket software system service in China, where its Finixx system serves more than 2,000 theatres and more than 30 third online movie-ticketing platforms, include QQ Movie Ticket, WeChat Movie Ticket, Alipay, Mtime, Gewara and Maoyan. Alibaba Pictures fully acquired the company for 830 million RMB (around 120 million USD) in 2015.

Alibaba Pictures, valued at 9.6 billion USD, has been investing aggressively in building out assets across the film and television production, distribution, and ticketing line. The firm launched a $300 million USD investment fund this July, aiming for film and television production. Earlier this year Alibaba Pictures acquired a stake in Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners. Taobao Piao Piao, the ticketing subsidiary of Alibaba Pictures, raised this May a 1.7 billion RMB (260 million USD) series A, valuing the company at over 13.7 billion RMB.

“In recent years, video-on-demand has stolen a significant march on the cinema industry as the likes of Netflix knows more about its customers and they are using this to their advantage. We want to help cinema owners and film distributors to unlock the potential of their data and help them understand more about the types of films being made, how they’re being made and marketed, and how audiences are responding to them,” said Showtime CEO Richie Power.

Chinese moviegoers’ growing appetite for quality films is fostering a booming movie market. The country is expected to overtake the United States as the world’s largest movie market by the end of this year. The country has now approximately 7,000 cinema screens and is building approximately 27 new cinema screens per day in 2016.

Image Credit: Showtime Analytics

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Alibaba Sues Click Farm Company in Attempt to Burnish Reputation https://technode.com/2016/12/06/alibaba-sues-click-farm-company-to-burnish-reputation/ Tue, 06 Dec 2016 08:47:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43725 Chinese media is reporting that Alibaba has filed a lawsuit against Hangzhou Jianshi Technology Co., Ltd., the company behind click farm site Shatui, for damaging the credibility of Alibaba’s Chinese marketplaces. The e-commerce giant has asked for 2.16 million RMB (312k USD) in compensation for fraudulent practices on their platform. If they win, Alibaba says […]]]>

Chinese media is reporting that Alibaba has filed a lawsuit against Hangzhou Jianshi Technology Co., Ltd., the company behind click farm site Shatui, for damaging the credibility of Alibaba’s Chinese marketplaces. The e-commerce giant has asked for 2.16 million RMB (312k USD) in compensation for fraudulent practices on their platform. If they win, Alibaba says they will use the money to establish an anti-click farm fund. This is the first time a Chinese e-commerce companies has tried to sue a click farm firm.

Despite its huge success, Alibaba still gets a lot of flack for allowing merchants on their platform to engage in various types of malpractice, including selling knock-offs, fake reviews, and fraudulent sales volumes. They have taken big steps to reduce counterfeit goods on the platform. However, they still have large problems with disingenuous reviews, inaccurate sales numbers, and the click farms that enable both of them.

Click farming is used in China to inflate transaction volume, create bogus ratings, and leave fake reviews. With search results determined by a mix of these three factors, more and more merchants are hiring click farms to boost their popularity.

The fraudulent practice first become popular on Taobao and has become a common tactic for many of China’s online services. A grey market has formed with online services like Meituan-Dianping, Ctrip,  and Didi all embroiled in similar click farming scandals.

Alibaba’s lawsuit against Shatui follows a government crackdown on the site in April of  this year. Alibaba has decided to pursue a civil suit because the site was only subjected to an administrative penalty of around 100k RMB. This is far less than the 2 million RMB Alibaba claims Shatui has made from their fraudulent practice.

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Shatui’s Click Farm Services Listing (via Chuangyebang)

Since March this year, Shatui has helped more than 3000 retailers on Taobao and Tmall to doll up their shop credits and reviews, generating 26.39 million RMB in transactions.

Alibaba’s data show that in the one-month period between February 15 to March 15, total click farming has deprived the display priority of around 220k Taobao retailers. The fact that Shatui only serviced 3000 stores shows they’re only the tip of the iceberg.

State authorities and Internet companies are cooperating to address the problem. The National Development and Reform Commission has signed a memorandum with Alibaba for improving the construction of busines credit rating system. In October this year, seven state authorities and eight internet companies including Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu Nuomi, and Didi all entered an agreement to share information on click farming.

Image Credit: Alibaba

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iPhone Explosion Ignites Customer Rage In China https://technode.com/2016/12/05/iphone-explosion-china/ Mon, 05 Dec 2016 08:37:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43692 While the turmoil surrounding Samsung’s exploding phones has yet to settle down, the Chinese Internet is again ablaze (pun-intended!) with rage as customers complain after a series of iPhone explosions. The incident first caught public attention after China’s state media reported the explosion of an iPhone6 Plus on August 31st this year in Zhejiang Province. The owner, […]]]>

While the turmoil surrounding Samsung’s exploding phones has yet to settle down, the Chinese Internet is again ablaze (pun-intended!) with rage as customers complain after a series of iPhone explosions.

The incident first caught public attention after China’s state media reported the explosion of an iPhone6 Plus on August 31st this year in Zhejiang Province. The owner, identified as a Ms. Chen, says that her phone exploded while she was in the car with her family. She reports that the phone began to “puff up” and emit smoke. She was able to quickly kick the phone out of the car before any damage could be caused.

Apple offered Ms. Chen a new smartphone, but did not give any explanation.

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Image from Ms. Chen (via Xinhua)

A similar case happened with Ms. Liu from Jiangsu Province.

“While I was charging my iPhone 6 Plus with the original charger, the rear cover of the phone cracked and melted together with the chair. They nearly caught on fire.” she said to local media.

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Image from Ms. Liu (via Xinhua)

These incidents are not the first case, nor would they be the last, of spontaneous iPhone combustion. In the three-months period ending on Nov. 30th, the Shanghai Consumer Council has received complaints from eight customers who reported their phones igniting, even while charging properly.

Apple’s hard-earned reputation on quality products is in danger as more and more concerns is raised about iPhones. Data from Shanghai Consumer Council shows that the number of complaints addressing Apple surged to 2,763 since the beginning of this year, nearly doubling from the same period last year. In addition, the complaints were mainly focused unusual shutdown iPhone 6 series smartphones.

For a growing numbers of iPhone 6s devices with shutdown problems, Apple has announced a free repair program. This applies to devices that were manufactured between September and October 2015; the company citied battery over-exposure to ambient air during the manufacturing process as the reason for the unexpected shutdowns. However, the company has refused to acknowledge this is as a safety issue.

The news comes when Apple is losing ground to domestic smartphone makers, like Oppo, Huawei, Xiaomi, and Vivo. Although the global smartphone maker is quickly being eclipsed by local competitors in terms of market share, it still holds a top place in the high-end market for quality products and services.

However, the current complaints have led Chinese customers to start doubting whether the phones are worth their high-price. If Apple fails to offer a plan that the public feels comfortable with in a timely manner, like Samsung did, it could be damaging to the global conglomerate.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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VR Tops the List of China’s Top 5 Tech News Searches In 2016 https://technode.com/2016/12/02/chinas-tech-news-searches-2016/ Fri, 02 Dec 2016 07:42:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43648 With the end of 2016 fast approaching, Baidu has announced the most searched news in China. Based on data collected in the first eleven months of this year, a total of 26 lists on a wide range of topics like international and domestic affairs, “in” words, poplar apps were complied by leveraging data from various services […]]]>

With the end of 2016 fast approaching, Baidu has announced the most searched news in China. Based on data collected in the first eleven months of this year, a total of 26 lists on a wide range of topics like international and domestic affairs, “in” words, poplar apps were complied by leveraging data from various services under Baidu’s brand.

Let’s take a look at the top 5 searches about tech.

VR Going Mainstream

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Image credit: Shutterstock

This is year one for virtual reality. Born decades ago, the technology has finally found its way to large-scale commercial applications. The change almost happened overnight in 2016 both in China and globally with the rise of quite a few leading products from head-mounted devices like HTC Vive, Hololens, and Oculus to VR accessories like KAT VR. With the boom of VR arcades around the country, VR technology is no longer a novelty and has entered the everyday life of average consumers.

VR is also taken very seriously by mainland tech companies. Nearly all leading domestic internet companies released VR devices or VR-related services: Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, Xiaomi, LeEco, Sougou, Baofeng, as well as many small companies. At the same time, business use of VR technology is opening more opportunities in this booming market.

Detecting Gravitational Wave

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Recruitment show Only You with Guo demonstrating his equations

For decades, scientists have been attempting to detect the gravitational waves that Albert Einstein predicted in his general theory of relativity. The first observation of gravitational waves was finally made on 14 September 2015 and was announced in February this year.

In China, this news went even further with calls for Fang Zhouzi, an outspoken critic and science writer, to apologize. Five years ago, Fang appeared on 非你莫属 (Only You, a job hunting show) as a judge. During the show, he went on to ridicule Guo Yingsen, a 55-year-old who had been recently laid off, for his belief in gravitational waves. Fang and Zhang Shaoshang, host of the show, were both roasted online for their harsh and, more importantly, erroneous words.

AlphaGo Beats Go Master Lee Se-dol

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Image Credit: Taimeiti

In a competition in March 2016, Google’s AlphaGo program beat Lee Se-dol 3-0 in a best-of-five match of Go, considered to be much more challenging for a computer than chess due to its complexity. The event was seen as a landmark moment for artificial intelligence, and hence, triggered concerns that AI will doom human race in the future. Scientists and engineers have taken sides on what are the future prospects for AI and human race. But one thing is for sure, the technology is receiving the attention it has never obtained before from both entrepreneurs and investors.

Shenzhou 11 Crewed Spacecraft

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Image Credit: CCTV.com

China launched Shenzhou-11 spacecraft on October 17th, sending with the Long March Rocket two astronauts who spent a 33-day stay in the space station. That was the longest Chinese astronauts have spent in space. It is China’s sixth manned space mission since 2003. A source of enormous national pride for China, the space program has been receiving lots of public attention linking is with the country’s economic and technological progress.

Driverless Car

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Image Credit: Baidu,  Baidu’s Concept Car Traveling on the Outskirts of Beijing

Driverless cars, along with AI, is getting lots of traction. As a leading player in the field, Baidu has been testing in the outskirts of Beijing, Wuzhen, and in the U.S. LeEco is also rapidly expanding their testing grounds for autonomous cars both locally and abroad. Despite the attention, there are still lots of technical and ethical obstacles to be solved before the wide application of this technology.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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Shanghai Bike-Sharing Battle: Ofo vs Mobike vs Xiaoming https://technode.com/2016/12/01/shanghai-bike-sharing-batte/ Thu, 01 Dec 2016 11:06:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43624 Ready or not, China, once known as the bicycle kingdom, is in the midst of a cycling revival. While the car has rapidly displaced bikes, we now see more than a dozen startups flooding into the dockless bike-sharing arena. Investors have taken their sides in the stiffening battle, but a more pressing question is which […]]]>

Ready or not, China, once known as the bicycle kingdom, is in the midst of a cycling revival. While the car has rapidly displaced bikes, we now see more than a dozen startups flooding into the dockless bike-sharing arena. Investors have taken their sides in the stiffening battle, but a more pressing question is which startup provides a better experience?

TechNode decided to test out some of the cycling apps to shed some light on this question. We chose Mobike, Ofo and Xiaoming Bike because they are the most accessible bikes on the street of Shanghai and the most easily identified with bright colors: orange and white for Mobike, yellow for Ofo, and blue for Xiaoming Bike.

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Image Credit: Emma Lee

Registration

All three apps require real-name registration with phone number, ID card, and a deposit. But the deposit varies from 299 RMB (43 USD) for Mobike, 199 RMB (29 USD) for Xiaoming Bike, and 99 RMB (14 USD) for Ofo. The difference in deposits is mostly because each company charges a different rate to rent the bikes. However, all the deposits are completely refundable and, if you use WeChat or Alipay, the process is almost frictionless.

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Image Credit: Emma Lee

As to price, Xiaoming Bike wins. In Shanghai, Xiaoming Bike is 0.5 RMB for 30 minutes. However, you can get a 0.1 RMB discount for every friend you invite; the cheapest possible ride is 0.1 RMB for 30 minutes.  Ofo is roughly the same price (but no discount) at 1 RMB per hour, but offers a discounted rate of 0.5 RMB per hour for students. Mobike is the most expensive at 1RMB for 30 minutes for the regular Mobike. Mobike Lite is a bit cheaper at 0.5 RMB for 30 minutes.

With such low prices and little difference, the winner in this space is going to be all about user experience.

Finding & Unlocking Bikes

Finding bikes is one of the biggest differences among the three. Like Didi and Uber, GPS-enabled Mobike and Xiaoming Bike allow users to locate the bikes on the map and help to navigate your path to the exact location of the bike. Users can reserve the bikes 15 minutes (Mobike) or 20 minutes (Xiaoming Bike) before actually using them, making it convenient for those who know they will need it soon.

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Image Credit: Emma Lee

Each Mobike has a QR code printed on the handlebar and on the back. When you scan either one, the lock will open. In addition to a similar QR code-scanning feature, you can unlock the Xiaoming Bike via a Bluetooth-powered, handy if the QR code has peeled off or been defaced. Mobike has said they will also add Bluetooth in their latest update.

If everything goes well, finding your Mobike or Xiaoming Bike should be quite easy, but be mindful: the real world is complicated and sometimes seriously sucks.

Ofo, whose bikes are run of the mill street bikes, does not equip GPS on their run-of-the-mill bikes and so can’t show them on a map. The app can only show an estimated number of bikes around you. This seems like a pretty big design flaw as users will only use Ofo if a bike is right in front of them. Ofo uses a low-tech combo lock. They make up for this, however, by being the only platform that can work directly from WeChat.

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Image Credit: Emma Lee

Mobike plans to have over 100K bikes in Shanghai by the end of this year, company CEO and founder Davis Wang said to local media in October this year. Ofo’s official website shows they have over 200K bikes in the country, of which more than 20K are running in Shanghai. Xiaoming Bike’s team disclosed it’s going to have 400k bikes in Shanghai and Guangzhou by the end of this year.

These figures seem to coincide with our anecdotal findings. Mobike has the widest coverage, not only in downtown areas like Xujiahui, but also in suburban districts like Jiading, Qingpu, and Songjiang. Ofo and Xiaoming Bike are expanding quickly, but they are seldomly seen beyond central Shanghai.

Cycling Experience

Mobike is known for it’s fashionable and sleek design. The original orange bike is sturdy and well crafted, but takes too much effort to paddle. Getting the wheels rolling on an uphill is no easy feat: the bike weighs a whopping 25kg, twice the weight of a regular bike. The Lite version, which weighs 17kg, is much easier to ride. Xiaoming Bike weights 16kg and offers a smooth cycling experience; the adjustable seat is a huge plus. Cycling-wise, however, Ofo is our favorite for its light frame.

If you live more than a few kilometers away from the nearest metro-station, bike-sharing is a nice alternative to walking. But, if you’re outside central Shanghai, Mobike is your only option for the time being; we call it a lucky day if we come across a Mobike Lite. For long-distance travel in downtown areas, Ofo is the best choice because the bike takes a lot less effort to paddle and it’s charged on an hourly basis. If you have a lot of friends, Xiaoming Bike is your choice: inviting four friends for a steep discount isn’t difficult.

The market is just going to get more competitive; these companies need to paddle harder to get ahead of the pack.

Image Credit: Mobike

(1 USD = 6.89 RMB)

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Laundry Service Edaixi Gets Round B Plus, Promises Profit in 12 Months https://technode.com/2016/11/29/edaixi-b-round/ Tue, 29 Nov 2016 03:10:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43585 Chinese on-demand laundry service Edaixi has announced the completion of their B Plus round of funding led by Chinese detergent manufacturer Libai Group. Libai is joined by Chinese conglomerate Profit Palace Group as well as several other unnamed investors. Edaixi did not specify the size of the funding, only saying that the round is worth hundreds of million […]]]>

Chinese on-demand laundry service Edaixi has announced the completion of their B Plus round of funding led by Chinese detergent manufacturer Libai Group. Libai is joined by Chinese conglomerate Profit Palace Group as well as several other unnamed investors. Edaixi did not specify the size of the funding, only saying that the round is worth hundreds of million RMB.

Edaixi, born out of laundromat franchise Rong Chain Laundry, is one of the top on-demand laundry pickup services in China.

According to the firm, the new funding is earmarked for expanding businesses along the laundry industrial chain and quality management.

In addition to the current partnership linking Edaixi with Libai Group, a company up the industrial chain, the Beijing-based startup has made several moves to expand into sectors down the chain, with investments in laundromat franchise EBJ Cleaner and luxury product maintenance service Green Bag Hotel, a subsidiary of the Profit Palace Group.

The funding is significant for Edaixi as it comes amid a year-long funding shortage that hit China’s startup industry. Edaixi was rumored to be considering layoffs which intensified as the O2O craze seems to be cooling in China.

The firm has made some adjustments to live up to the changing market, such as shifting to a partnership model in order to achieve an asset-light business model and refocusing on laundry services instead of positioning itself as a one-stop housekeeping service provider.

After the adjustments, the three-year old startup is showing gross profits and balanced cash flows, according to company founder and CEO Lu Wenyong. Lu added that the company is expecting to generate profits in the next year.

The trio of Chinese Internet giants (Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent or BAT for short) has dipped their toes in nearly every hot vertical as they find investing in startups is a smoother way to expand their businesses. On-demand laundry is no exception. Tencent invested in Edaixi’s angel round in July 2014 while Baidu led a $100 million USD B round in the company in August last year.

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Alipay New Feature Sparks Criticism For Generating Salacious Contents https://technode.com/2016/11/28/alipay-update-criticism/ Mon, 28 Nov 2016 08:12:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43563 Alibaba has been tenacious in spearheading its forays into the social networking sector, where its arch competitor Tencent still rules. The e-commerce giant has added lots of social networking features to the recent updates of Alipay in hopes of capitalizing on the huge user base of the payment app. However, it seems that the users weren’t […]]]>

Alibaba has been tenacious in spearheading its forays into the social networking sector, where its arch competitor Tencent still rules. The e-commerce giant has added lots of social networking features to the recent updates of Alipay in hopes of capitalizing on the huge user base of the payment app.

However, it seems that the users weren’t quite happy about Alibaba’s endeavors in turning a payment tool into a social networking app. “Quanzi”, an interest-based community function in Alipay’s most recent update, version 9.9.7, has now been accused of pimping as erotic photos run rampant in the app.

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In some aspects, Quanzi resembles WeChat’s Moments feature, allowing users to post photos and short videos in a rolling news feed. Users can interact with “Likes”, comment, and send up to 200 RMB (29 USD) as tips to the content creators they like. Commenting is only open to users who has higher than 750 points on Alibaba’s credit-scoring system Sesame Credit.

However, the involvement of monetary reward has lead to the emergence of lots of revealing photos, meant to attract tips from male followers who also sent flirty comments.

The communities, either open for all users or invitation-based, currently covers a range of sectors in the fields of gaming, pets, electronics, and maternal care. But two of the most popular groups are female university students and white-collar women, almost wholly due to their lascivious content. Current estimates put the number of users who have browsed these two groups at over 13 million and 11 million, respectively.

This isn’t the first time for Alipay has tried to add social networking features. In the 9.0 update released in July last year, networking features targeting close friends were added, but similarly, they are not well received by the users.

Wang Sicong, an outspoken blogger and son of China’s richest man Wang Jianlin, is among a group of acute critics on the company.

“Alipay has transformed itself into a place for men to find hookers”, he said on his Weibo account.

Investigative journalist Luo Changping also commented sarcastically, “A small step for social networking, a big step for prostitution.”

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Uber China’s Last 3 Days as Didi Replaces App https://technode.com/2016/11/24/uber-chinas-last-3-days-as-didi-replaces-app/ Thu, 24 Nov 2016 09:32:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43496 After all the drama surrounding Didi Chuxing’s buyout of Uber China, we have all been waiting to see how the once rivals are going to wrap up the past and head towards a joint future. More than three months after the acquisition, we now know that Uber will be officially exiting the Chinese market, both […]]]>

After all the drama surrounding Didi Chuxing’s buyout of Uber China, we have all been waiting to see how the once rivals are going to wrap up the past and head towards a joint future. More than three months after the acquisition, we now know that Uber will be officially exiting the Chinese market, both as a company and as a style of service, everything that makes Uber, well, Uber.

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Instead of the usual promotions that greet users, Uber China’s welcome screen now features an announcement stating that this app will shutdown on November 27.

In line with this move, the company is actively promoting a new Chinese version of Uber China, co-developed by Didi. The new app, rolled out in late-October, was launched across the country on November 3rd after pilot tests in several cities. One thing to note is that it only works in China.

The app comes with a range of major changes with the addition of some popular features on Didi, such as WeChat and QQ connections as well as in-app messaging. However, it has received criticism for removing the English-language interface as well as the option to use a foreign credit card. It is clear now that the new version is much more Didi than Uber.

Local media, citing people familiar with the matter, say that all the drivers on Uber China’s platform will be transferred to Didi by the end of this month. The source added that drivers are Uber China’s most valuable asset; the average cost of acquiring a user is in the tens of RMB, but the cost for attracting a driver is over 1,000 RMB. Drivers are becoming more valuable resources as the government tightens control on the definition of qualified drivers.

Didi has said that Uber China would “maintain independent branding and business operations to ensure stability and continuity of service for passengers” at the time of the acquisition. But recent change indicates that the old Uber team is taking a back seat in operation and direction of the company.

Didi and Uber China’s tie-up reminds us of a very similar deal between Didi and Kuaidi. Their merger, in February of last year, pledged a similar development plan for the two companies such as independent branding and operation. But now, Kuaidi has lagged far behind Didi in every aspect from branding, talent, business, and capital support.

Since the merger, Didi has added a series of services from carpooling to bus services, but Kuaidi only features the trademark taxi and special car service. It seems that Kuaidi has faded out of public attention while last update of the app was released one year ago. Furthermore, Kuaidi’s founding team is rumored to have sold their shares after the acquisition.

At this point, it really does seem that Didi is the winner in China’s ride-hailing industry.

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Co-working Startup naked Hub To Add Up To 30 New Locations With Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2016/11/23/naked-hub-series-b/ Wed, 23 Nov 2016 09:07:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43464 naked Hub, a Shanghai-based network of co-working spaces, announced today an undisclosed amount for the first tranche in their Series B round. This round of funding comes from a fund managed by Gaw Capital Partners, an investment company focusing on real estate markets. According the the company, naked Hub will accelerate its regional expansion and enhance its […]]]>

naked Hub, a Shanghai-based network of co-working spaces, announced today an undisclosed amount for the first tranche in their Series B round. This round of funding comes from a fund managed by Gaw Capital Partners, an investment company focusing on real estate markets.

According the the company, naked Hub will accelerate its regional expansion and enhance its property resources via Gaw Capital Partners. The co-working brand aims to add 24-30 new locations (approximately 150,000 square meters and 30,000 members) across mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and other key Southeast Asian cities.

Backed by lifestyle and hospitality company naked Group, naked Hub now operates 8 hubs in prime Shanghai neighborhoods in Xintiandi, Xuhui, Nanjing Lu (a popular shopping area), Century Avenue (a financial center), Hongqiao (a transportation hub), Jingan, and Gubei.

“Like a tech company, naked Hub moves fast and innovates in an agile way. I believe we already have the strongest in-house user experience and technology team of any co-working operator in Asia and our innovations in online-and-offline service experience for our members has only just begun,” said Dominic Penaloza, CIO of naked Group.

The co-working space market has boomed in recent years, growing 71% annually from 2007 to 2015. It is projected to grow 68% annually from 2016 to 2018. China’s co-working market has also witnessed exponential growth in the wake of global explosion. Companies with different backgrounds such as real estate (UR Work, Soho 3Q), hotel development (naked Hub), media (KrSpace), have all flocked into the sector hoping to ride this wave. Foreign co-working space giants like WeWork and Aussie company Fish Burners have also dipped their toes in the rising market.

According to Wall Street Journal, there were 3,200 co-working space companies in 2014, compared to 400 in 2008. But as the market continues to saturate, companies will have to offer more than just a polished, beautiful space.

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Redpoint Ventures Geoff Yang On Changes In China’s VC Market Over Past Decade https://technode.com/2016/11/23/redpoint-ventures-geoff-yang-vc/ Wed, 23 Nov 2016 04:52:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43447 Despite what has been said and written about the capital “winter” in China, there’s enough evidence to show that China is still an investment hotspot globally. With over 3,000 funds managing more than 1 trillion RMB, the country is world’s second largest destination for venture capital, next only to the United States. As one of the […]]]>

Despite what has been said and written about the capital “winter” in China, there’s enough evidence to show that China is still an investment hotspot globally. With over 3,000 funds managing more than 1 trillion RMB, the country is world’s second largest destination for venture capital, next only to the United States.

As one of the first foreign venture capital firms seeing the potential of this market, Redpoint Venture set up its China team in 2005 and has invested in over 35 Chinese companies, including Qihoo 360, iDreamSky, Yixia, and APUS. The firm adopted a more aggressive strategy despite slowing market growth with the launch of a dedicated 180 million USD fund this October to back innovations coming from China.

At  the Integral Conversation hosted by Esquel Group, we had the pleasure of speaking with Geoff Yang, founding partner of Redpoint Ventures, on a range of topics from his insights on China’s VC market, his investment philosophy, and the traits of successful investors and entrepreneurs.

Geoff co-founded Redpoint Ventures in 1999 and has backed trailblazing consumer and communications platform companies from their founding including Arista, Ask.com, Bluefin, Calix, Efficient Frontier, Foundry Networks, Excite, Juniper Networks, MySpace, and TiVo.

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Redpoint Ventures has been in China for more than 10 years, what do you think are the biggest changes in China’s venture world?

The biggest change is probably how good the entrepreneurs are. Over the last 11 years, we have experienced three generations of entrepreneurs, which is extraordinarily fast. When we first came to China it was “copy-to-China”, local companies basically looking at what works in the U.S. and do a Chinese version. Today some of the things in the U.S. are copied from China. It’s about things that really best suited and almost unique here.

There are very few exits when we first came and almost all of them were U.S. listed exits. Now, there’s lots of U.S.-listed exits but also China-listed exits as well as M&A. One decade ago, it was all about whether a company we developed could be one of the few U.S.-listed Chinese companies. Now the number of exits is quite large. If you look at the top-15 valuable technology companies on the NASDAQ, my guess is six or seven of them are Chinese companies.

Like you said, U.S. market is the top option for Chinese companies to get listed. But now China becomes their No.1 choice and a series of U.S. listed tech stocks choose to seek a relisting the in domestic market. Two of Redpoint Venture’s portfolio companies: iDreamsky and Qihoo 360 chose this path. Why do you think companies are doing this?

There are a couple of reasons for this trend. Firstly, certain industries are almost deemed strategic, for certain businesses, they might not access the government businesses or certain company businesses because they are an U.S. listed company. The other is because there’s an arbitrage value of what the company was worth as a U.S-listed company versus what it could be worth on the China’s stock exchange. Some companies explained it as we are not understood in the U.S. market. But I think the main reason was the arbitrage value in the two markets. Entrepreneurs felt their market value is under appreciated in the U.S. and more properly appreciated in China.

Redpoint Ventures announced a new fund dedicated to China’s market this October. What’s your plan for the funding and what possible verticals are you aiming for?

We have invested in Chinese companies out of our core fund and China represents only 15% of the portfolio in the past. We decided to raise a separate China fund because the number of opportunities in China has skyrocketed in the past few years and there are more opportunities in China than we had capacity for.

I think the opportunities we will go after are still the same ones we have been looking at. Stage wise, it will be early-stage series. In terms of industries, it will be largely consumer, but enterprise is becoming an increasingly important part of the portfolio.

The fund comes at a time when Chinese startups grapple with the so-called “capital winter” or funding shortage. What’s your opinion on this issue? Is China’s VC market going to warm up in the near future?

I think there’s more normalization. For the attractive deals, we still see a very competitive market and there’s still lot of people who are interested in putting money behind great entrepreneurs in various interesting spaces.

A few years ago, China was very hot and a lot of LPs were putting money in China funds. I think everybody is chasing the potential of China and now that things are normalized, people have pulled back some because they are a little bit concerned with the growth rate of China; some funds didn’t get great results. But we still think it’s a very attractive market.

What do you see are the most important characteristics in a successful entrepreneur or startup team?

The biggest is definitely being able to see patterns where other people see chaos. The opportunity comes when nobody know which way to go and one or two people see where the world is going and they move forward in that direction. The second is the ability to articulate to others. If you can’t, you can’t convince others to come joining you.

The third is to be able to adjust on the fly and not to give up. Along every entrepreneurial journey, there’s time when you think you should give up. However, the best entrepreneurs are the ones that can wheel a company into existence. Last is probably the ability to hire people who are smarter than they are and not compromise on hires. It’s very difficult to hire above you, but great entrepreneurs can hire the best people and they are not afraid to hire people that are even smarter than they are.

What have you learned from your past investments that weren’t successful?

One of the things I have learned is that you could be right but timing may be wrong. The second is management makes all the difference in the world. You can never act too early on making management changes. The last is that there are outright failures, stuff that just doesn’t work, but it’s rarely the technology doesn’t work; it’s that the market wasn’t ready and poor management wasn’t addressed quickly enough.

What makes a great venture capitalist? How is it different between China and Silicon Valley?

It’s the same in some aspects. In both places someone sees what there is and imagine what it could be. Someone who has the contacts and network with entrepreneurs and convinces them to partner. Someone who always looks less at what could go wrong and focuses more on what can go right.

In China, understanding of the local landscape is really important. You have to live in the market and understand the dynamics and culture of the market. In China, more than in anywhere else in the world, you really have to have a strong network. You have to know the right people to ask the right questions in order to figure something. Whereas in Silicon Valley, they can talk to people they don’t know as well. People in China tend to do business with someone they’re comfortable. You can usually get a straighter answer if you have the right connection.

What do you think will be the biggest opportunities in the next 5 years?

I think the venture business has been a great business since 2007, when the smartphone revolution really started to take off. We rode that wave until 2014 to 2015. Right now, people are looking to see what’s the next wave, but nothing is really obvious. Machine learning/AI and data analytics are the most obvious candidates.

The real question is: what’s the next platform? I think it’s probably autonomous vehicles and AI, but I am a bit skeptical about VR/AR, which has been seen as a new platform by many people. For applications, it’s digital health and fintech. But, on the whole, it’s a lot less obvious than it was in 2008.

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Getui Pockets $58M D Round To Fuel Customizable Ad Business https://technode.com/2016/11/21/getui-d-round/ Mon, 21 Nov 2016 08:40:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43401 Getui, a third-party push notification service provider which celebrates its sixth anniversary this week, announced Monday a 400 million RMB ($58 million USD) D round from several returning investors. The company disclosed that the valuation for this round doubled that for its C round, which the firm has secured in April this year. The Hangzhou-based startup helps app […]]]>

Getui, a third-party push notification service provider which celebrates its sixth anniversary this week, announced Monday a 400 million RMB ($58 million USD) D round from several returning investors. The company disclosed that the valuation for this round doubled that for its C round, which the firm has secured in April this year.

The Hangzhou-based startup helps app developers to set up and send notifications to users across iOS, Android and other platforms by leveraging data-driven analysis on customer profiles.

According to data from the company, Getui’s SDK installation totaled 12 billion from 8 billion in April this year with daily active users hitting 750 million. Currently, the service covers 1.6 billion mobile devices and 430,000 app developers.

Together with the funding news, the company rolled out Gexin, a mobile marketing platform that help local brands to engage customers more efficiently with specific demographics of their audiences, including age, gender, country, hobby, consumption habits and social networking features.

The company has formed a pretty clear business model after six years of development. Its services and products mainly fall into two categories: push notification services targeting at developers and big-data driven marketing solutions targeting at businesses partners.

Getui’s rivals include both startup competitor JPush and similar services backed by big Chinese internet companies, such as Tencent (XGPush), Baidu (Cloud Push) and Alibaba (Umeng).

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China Still Rules, But Will India Emulate as A Top Tech Frontier? https://technode.com/2016/11/17/china-still-rules-but-will-india-emulate-as-a-top-tech-frontier/ Thu, 17 Nov 2016 08:46:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43355 tiktok ban bytedance alibaba tencent himalayasIndia has emerged as the next hot spot for Chinese smartphone makers while demand from domestic market wanes. Xiaomi, Huawei, ZTE, Vivo, OPPO, nearly all leading phone manufacturers raced to the country in the hope of duplicating their success in the emerging market. Not only in smartphone industry, the mindset prevails in China’s tech circle […]]]> tiktok ban bytedance alibaba tencent himalayas

India has emerged as the next hot spot for Chinese smartphone makers while demand from domestic market wanes. Xiaomi, Huawei, ZTE, Vivo, OPPO, nearly all leading phone manufacturers raced to the country in the hope of duplicating their success in the emerging market. Not only in smartphone industry, the mindset prevails in China’s tech circle as Chinese internet giants seeking to sustain long-term development amid a slowing domestic market.

Given the circumstances, “China vs. India” discussion is heating up. Cheetah Global Lab, the mobile internet-focused research institution of Cheetah Mobile, released a report this week in an attempt to dig possible answers for questions like what is the state of China and India’s internet development and which country will be the global leader in the future?

China’s Internet Development Leads India Overall

Despite a slowing growth, China still takes leads in terms of market size and the number of world-class internet companies when compared to India. China has the world’s largest internet market with 721 million users, while India has 333 million, according to the State of Broadband 2016 report.

In terms of mobile internet users, according to online statistics portal Statista, China’s mobile internet penetration rate is 44.91% as of 2016. If you estimate China’s population at 1.4 billion people, that means China has 629 million mobile internet users. India on the other hand has a mobile internet penetration rate of 24.33%, or 316 million people (total population 1.3 billion). When you compare the two countries, India possesses roughly half the mobile internet users as China.

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Statista’s data shows that as of May 2016 China had seven of the top 19 internet companies in the world by market value, compared to 11 in the U.S, one in Japan and zero in India. According to Cheetah Mobile’s big data platform Libra, at the end of 2015, China possessed eight of the top 14 mobile internet companies in terms of active users, as compared to four in the U.S., one in South Korea and one in Russia.

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India’s burgeoning internet companies possess a golden opportunity for overseas expansion due to the status of English as India’s de facto national language and the huge Indian diaspora, the report pointed out. But despite these natural advantages only a handful of Indian companies have achieved overseas success, including online and mobile restaurant directory Zomato and mobile advertising company InMobi. At the current stage, India’s internet companies are mostly still in the local development stage.

Will China Maintain Its Lead or Will India Catch Up?

In terms of growth potential, India’s internet user numbers could still catch up. According to the G20 National Internet Development Report, India’s internet user base grew by 51.9% in 2015, the fastest growth rate of all member states. Conversely, growth in China’s internet user base has slowed significantly as China reaches the tail end of its so-called demographic dividend.

American venture capitalist Mary Meeker wrote in her 2015 Internet Trends Report that India is going to be the next tech leader and is expected to witness the emergence of a group of world-class internet giants. Cheetah’s report echoed the opinion and the reasons are similar to China’s mobile rise.

India’s internet development has skipped over the PC development stage and jumped right into the mobile internet era. Because of this, many enterprises don’t have baggage from the PC era, especially in the mobile space. Instead, it’s easier for them to compete in the mobile space with lots of space to grow.

The governments of both countries are working very hard to encourage innovation and entrepreneurship by providing strong support in the form of capital, tax relief, and among others. China unveiled “Internet+” action plan while India rolled out multiple new policies to encourage the development of the internet as well as startups, including “Digital India,” “Startup India,” “Skill India” and the “India Innovation Fund.”

However, India holds an open attitude towards foreign internet companies. There are very few licensing requirements, even in sensitive industries like telecommunications. Moreover, the country has a richer talent pool to draw upon thanks to more advanced academic education system. According to a report by global management consulting firm McKinsey, every year India has 1.5 times as many college graduates as China.

Competition VS Cooperation

Even though in some ways the Chinese and Indian internet markets are technically in competition with each other, their relationship is actually mutually beneficial.

China’s internet company is moving closer to India market and their operations in India mainly take three forms, the report concluded, 1) direct operations, such as Cheetah Mobile, Lenovo’s SHARit, and Xiaomi; 2) invest in local market leaders and thus enter the Indian market through capital investment like Alibaba, Ctrip, Tencent, Fosun and Didi; and 3) incubate and invest in early-to-mid stage startups, using the “Chinese experience + India Innovation” model to help these startups with capital, technologies and other resources.

As the Chinese market becomes more saturated, India is the first market that many Chinese companies target overseas. At the same time, India’s internet market development benefits from Chinese investment and expertise.

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LeEco Raises Funding, Reshuffles Management Amid Cash Crunch https://technode.com/2016/11/16/leeco-funding/ Wed, 16 Nov 2016 02:25:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43326 China’s internet giant LeEco announced Tuesday that the company has secured $600 million USD of funding from a dozen of local investors. The funding comes at a time when it’s most needed while public concerns on the grand vision of the company widens after the firm’s billionaire founder Jia Yueting acknowledged in an internal letter […]]]>

China’s internet giant LeEco announced Tuesday that the company has secured $600 million USD of funding from a dozen of local investors.

The funding comes at a time when it’s most needed while public concerns on the grand vision of the company widens after the firm’s billionaire founder Jia Yueting acknowledged in an internal letter that LeEco is facing a cash crunch as it’s expanding too quickly into a group of fledging businesses from smartphone, car, television and sports media.

The investors of this round come from a variety of industries, including menswear maker Hailan Group, furniture company Man Wah Holdings, pharmaceutical firm Luye Group, medical equipment firm Yuwell Group and real estate company Yihua Group.

Most of the investors are headed by Jia Yueting’s classmates at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, where many of the country’s elites seeks to get a second degree.

The fresh funds will go primarily to the firm’s global and car businesses, according to a company statement. Around $300 million USD is to be injected by mid-December while remaining allocations will be decided later.

The investors will not be involved in business operation and the investment is based on trust placed in Jia, according to Zhou Jianping, board chairman of Heilan Group.

In a further move to breathe new life into the company, LeEco announced Tuesday that president of LeEco APAC Tin Mok will be replaced by Anthony Gao, who joined LeEco earlier this year after working at Huawei for 17 years. LeEco’s Asia Pacific expansion will be suspended in a bid to stay more focused on key markets.

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Philm, A Faster Alternative To “Style Transfer” Your Videos https://technode.com/2016/11/15/philm/ Tue, 15 Nov 2016 06:10:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43289 The photo art filter craze ignited by Prisma is extending to short video industry. Suddenly, a plethora of companies scrambled to launch their video style transfer tools. Facebook demoed its stylized filter feature this October, while Russian internet giant Mail.ru launched Aristo. Not to be left out, Prisma started to support real-time style transfer for livestreaming […]]]>

The photo art filter craze ignited by Prisma is extending to short video industry. Suddenly, a plethora of companies scrambled to launch their video style transfer tools. Facebook demoed its stylized filter feature this October, while Russian internet giant Mail.ru launched Aristo. Not to be left out, Prisma started to support real-time style transfer for livestreaming videos this week.

Philm, a video editing app that enables users to convert video clips into animated art works, is one of China’s answers to this trend. Philm, a combo from “photo” and “film”, adopts a neural network approach. Enabled by deep learning technologies, algorithms acquire the artistic style of a painting in terms of color and brush stroke techniques, and apply them in the creation of a new video.

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What’s differentiates Philm from similar apps is its processing speed, according to Jiang Wenyi, CEO and co-founder of the company.

We all know that photo editing apps like Prisma take a couple of seconds to apply the filter because there’s a time gap for processing the images on the cloud and sending the treated pictures back to the users. “Through optimized algorithm, we’ve shortened the processing time with local rendering. Philm allows users to convert the video in real time even if there’s no network connection.” Jiang said.

The company’s CTO Zhang Yin told TechNode that the app could process videos at 30 frames per second (fps) on iPhone6s, generating more stable and fluid looking animations. “This is faster than Facebook’s soon-to-be-released Caffe2Go, which does style transfer at 20 fps on iPhone6s according to the press. Philm’s next update is expected to feature a higher frame rate of 40 fps.” he added.

The feature is currently only available to iOS users who get iPhone 5s or higher, owing to the spec requirements for running locally. The support for Android version will be launched in a few weeks.

In addition, the app features a lot of pinnable and resizable emoji stickers that move with your videos. After attaching the stickers to objects, they will move along with the targets, changing size and orientation to match the object they’re stuck to.

“The final results of these two features matched exceedingly well in style. Attaching a cartoon-style sticker to real world looking videos may seem somewhat obtrusive, but it’s harmonious when it appears in stylized video clips.” Jiang said.

Apart from obvious revenue sources from value-added services such as paid features and membership, the app plans to commercialize its service through cooperation with cooperates and IP brands. “Unlike basic filters, art filter technology has huge application potentials given that it can generate unlimited number of styles in a timely manner, For example, we could add Starbuck’s logo as a sticker or learn the style of Marvel Comics’ film trailers in a bid to promote their films.”

Also, filtered video adds a new expression to social networking by encouraging more people to create and share video content, according to Jiang. It’s applying a stylized mask to what you see for people can hide behind the filters to alleviate the social networking pressures, however the style you choose still reflects your tastes.

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The app, which went live at the beginning of this November, is the work of a 30-employee team led by Jiang Wenyi, the company’s CEO and former co-founder of mobile app data analytics provider Umeng, and Zhang Yin, CTO and former associate professor at UT Austin.

The company has received $4.50 million USD of angel round from Innovative Works, Ping An Ventures, Trends Group, ZhenFund and Ceyuan Ventures. It is now looking for next round of financing, Jiang disclosed.

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China Has More Opportunities Than Challenges For Aussie Startups: Q&A With Austrade Exec Karen Surmon https://technode.com/2016/11/14/australia-startups-landing-pad/ Mon, 14 Nov 2016 03:35:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43020 For Australian startups, or any startup, expanding to a new market could be quite daunting, especially when you are looking at China, but according to Karen Surmon, commissioner from Australian Trade and Investment Commission (Austrade), the difficulty in this mission is way over exaggerated. The challenges are true, but people shouldn’t back out without even […]]]>

For Australian startups, or any startup, expanding to a new market could be quite daunting, especially when you are looking at China, but according to Karen Surmon, commissioner from Australian Trade and Investment Commission (Austrade), the difficulty in this mission is way over exaggerated. The challenges are true, but people shouldn’t back out without even give it a try.

“Australian startups should embrace a global vision and come to markets like China, which has huge potential.  But it can be a bit complicated and daunting when you are sitting in Australia and thinking of how to do it.”

In an attempt to achieve this goal, Austrade launched Landing Pad, a support program that helps Australian entrepreneurs bring their ideas innovative ideas globally. As part of the program, Shanghai Landing Pad opened this September in line with Australia’s National Innovation and Science Agenda.

We caught up with Ms. Karen Surmon, who has taken change in the establishment of Landing Pad Shanghai, to learn more about the program and what it is hoping to do in China and globally.

What is Landing Pad about and what kind of support does it provide to Australian startups?

The Landing Pad is a global program with five locations in San Francisco, Tel Aviv, Singapore, Berlin and Shanghai. The idea is to give Australian-founded startups an opportunity to expand globally by accessing these regional landing pads.

We provide a 90-day free residency to startups admitted to the program. They will have access to industry insights, partner and investor networks from Austrade, as well as direct support from a dedicated Landing Pad Manager. Additionally, we are developing our partnerships with stakeholders in the ecosystem and with professional services companies that can help in advisory, infrastructure, taxation, and legal areas.

Do you have any standard for startups to enter the program?

When startups apply online they have to address several particular criteria, first they have to demonstrate a clear vision and a distinct value proposition. Second, they have to tell us their traction in the Australian market. We don’t have a specific expectation of what they have but we want to understand their current stage of development. We also need to know whether the  idea is scalable. Finally, because there are five locations, we also ask startups to tell us why they want to go to a specific market and what do they want to achieve in that particular market.

Shanghai is just one of the five global hubs where Landing Pad is located. How is the Shanghai branch different from others? How will the different locations cooperate with each other?

For us, Tel Aviv has a two-fold function: firstly, it is positioned to absorb the entrepreneurship culture that is very much engrained in the people of Israel. Second, the country is known as the R&D center of many multinationals, so Tel Aviv landing pad also serves as an effective gateway to global markets.

San Francisco has a very competitive market, so it’s better suited for more mature Australian startups if they got a vision to enter the U.S. market. Similarly, the Landing Pads in Singapore, Shanghai and Berlin are about entering a specific geographical market in Southeast Asia, China and European markets, respectively.

There are five locations in global innovation hotspots. The cross-referencing and the value for businesses to potentially grow from one market to another through this program are really powerful.

What challenges do Australian startups face when expanding into China?

I think there’s a lot of work for us to do in helping to educate Australian startups about the opportunities in China. When they think about the opportunities to go global, they will choose the U.S market first, because there’s a lot more startup history, visibility and opportunity.

The first thing for us is sharing information about the opportunities that are in China. Secondly, it is about helping startups to get over the idea that it’s too difficult with such things as IP protection, complicated regulations, and other localization issues. All of these are real, but that’s why we have set up our program. We can help Australian startups navigate these complexities.

Chinese startups are eagerly expanding to overseas markets. Does Austrade have any similar initiatives to bring Chinese startups to the Australian market?

Initially, this is about bringing Australian startups to China and other Landing Pad markets. But we do see interest also having startups from around the world come to Australia; we are already talking to incubators and accelerators in Australia that might be interested in hosting local Chinese teams.

The Australian capital market is experiencing an upturn. How do you see this trend and its possible impacts on Australian startup ecosystem?

Before 2012, the Australian VC market was quite slow. About 150 million USD sized-rounds were raised per year. This year the market has exceeded the 1 billion USD mark, so in a really short period of time things really kick started again. There’s more businesses looking to the Australian market or looking to access funds in the Australian market, partly thanks to some of the support policies as well the evolution of the market.

What are the most promising verticals coming from Australia?

It’s very broad. Sydney is positioned itself as a hub for fintech and education tech. Also, things like agri-tech are also on the rise because we have a strong agricultural sector now adopting a much more tech-savvy way of operating. Healthcare, tourism, lifestyle and VR/AI are also seeing very exciting developments.

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Lagou Co-founder Ella Bao Talks About How Capital Winter Impacts Startup Recruitment https://technode.com/2016/11/10/lagou-capital-winter/ Thu, 10 Nov 2016 10:44:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43195 Chinese startups have grappled with the so-called “capital winter” since the beginning of this year as funding shortage widens. In the midst of tight budgets, many companies choose to place a freeze on hiring or even downsize the team. Some industry insiders predict a gloomy prospect for hiring industry, but according to Ella Bao, co-founder […]]]>

Chinese startups have grappled with the so-called “capital winter” since the beginning of this year as funding shortage widens. In the midst of tight budgets, many companies choose to place a freeze on hiring or even downsize the team. Some industry insiders predict a gloomy prospect for hiring industry, but according to Ella Bao, co-founder and CMO of tech recruitment platform Lagou, the impact of capital winter is over exaggerated.

“In the third quarter of this year, we have done researches based on recruiting data across 25 verticals of internet and technology industry. For example, there’s a significant drop in the number of positions and hiring companies in O2O sector. But that’s not the case for all. Enterprises and cloud services are recruiting more. I believe it’s a natural shift as demands in some sectors go down, others will experience an uptake.” she said.

“To some extent, the market is saturated but only for those basic and highly replaceable positions. High-end talents with an annual salary of over 300k million RMB will find their ideal positions within five days after their resumes are being posted on our platform.”

Ella also shared her insights on the changes of tech recruiting over the past few years. “One of the largest problems in tech hiring industry is the high mobility of talents. When we started Lagou back in 2012, the average circle for talents to move from one job to another is around two years. But now the man power circle is far shorter than that, which indicates the whole industry is casted in an impetuous atmosphere.”

Established by the founding team of Beijing-based incubator 3W Cafe, Lagou is a job-matching platform to connect tech talents and companies to facilitate the recruitment process. After launching the commercialization move two years ago, the company started to record profits since last year and its revenue is expected to surpass 100 million RMB this year, according to Bao.

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Smartisan Exec Zhu Xiaomu Talks About Balancing Idealism and Market Demand https://technode.com/2016/11/10/smartisan-zhu-xiaomu/ Thu, 10 Nov 2016 01:31:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43161 The name of Smartisan may not ring a bell in your mind, but the fledging Chinese phone maker is already four years old and has attracted a large group of artsy youth fans. However, surviving China’s highly competitive phone market is no easy job. It’s no secret in China’s tech circle that the company has been […]]]>

The name of Smartisan may not ring a bell in your mind, but the fledging Chinese phone maker is already four years old and has attracted a large group of artsy youth fans.

However, surviving China’s highly competitive phone market is no easy job. It’s no secret in China’s tech circle that the company has been struggling to stay afloat given the slim sales margin of previous phones, which have won applauds from the design world but failed to register with a broader group of mass users.

The company’s newly launched make-or-break flagship M1 has received lots of positive reviews from the market thanks to improved hardware specs and highly convenient software innovations like the text editing feature Big Bang and drag-and-drop operation One Step.

But the phone maker also receives some critics for losing the artisan spirits in industrial designing, which is at the core of the brand since its inception. “We have made compromises in the industrial design of M1 for more improvements in specs and functions” said Zhu Xiaomu, UX product director of Smartisan, at TechCrunch Beijing this Monday.

Does compromise in design creates a compromised product? Not necessarily, according to Mr. Zhu. “When putting products into mass production, we have to make compromises. If you want a larger battery capacity, it’s inevitable that the phone will become thicker.”

“That’s why it’s under the M series rather than our trademark T series. M is the initial for “full score” in Chinese. On the scale from one to ten, I would give M1 an “8”, that’s two points more than the passing grade.”

In addition, software innovation is another important driving force of the company. In a forward-looking move to contribute to the Android community, Smartisan plans to make Big Bang and One Step open source technologies in a hope that Google could make them basic features of the Android operating system.

“In the past, Smartisan puts top priority on the look and feel of our products, but the sales figure was not that pretty. In order to survive the cut-throat competition of China’s smartphone market, we decide to roll out a new brand which might failed to offer stunning industrial design but excels in specs, functions and software.” Zhu said.

“Of course, T series is still one of our flagship brand.” But Zhu declined to disclose the release date of Smartisan’s next T series smartphone T3.

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Live Streaming Battle Escalates After Industry Reshuffle https://technode.com/2016/11/09/live-streaming/ Wed, 09 Nov 2016 09:04:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43150 China’s live streaming service goes viral in 2016. The heydays of the flourishing vertical arrive in the first half of this year. Back then, there were more than 300 live streaming platforms in the country thanks to abundant capital supports and easy market access. “It takes only around two days to develop a live streaming […]]]>

China’s live streaming service goes viral in 2016. The heydays of the flourishing vertical arrive in the first half of this year. Back then, there were more than 300 live streaming platforms in the country thanks to abundant capital supports and easy market access.

“It takes only around two days to develop a live streaming app by using the development kits provided by Tencent Cloud or Ali Could,” said Lei Tao, cofounder of Yixia Technology, the company behind China’s top video blogging and live streaming apps of Miaopai, Xiaokaxiu and Yizhibo.

Despite the growth, there’re also concerns that a bubble is formed around the industry. Several industry insiders predicted that the sector is going to be consolidated as half the players going to breathe their last within one year.

“For all the platforms that follow the live streaming craze blindly, most of them will die within six months at the most. I don’t think it’s an industry reshuffle, because such services didn’t stand a chance in the first place.” Lei commented.

The real battle in live steaming sector has just begun for most of the platforms are focused on music, dancing or talent shows. “This kind of performance should account for only a small portion of the contents. There is ample room for integrating with education, finance, healthcare and sports industries. They are the future development directions of this industry,” he believes.

Live streaming platforms have voracious appetites for cash. As of present, only one company booked profits while most of the players are still burning cash.

But Lei thinks it’s still early to eye for profits. “It’s determined by the development stage of the whole industry. To pursuit profits too early may bring negative impacts on the long-term prospects of the platform,” he said. “China’s mobile live streaming industry is now comparable to short video market in 2001 or 2002, when 3G network has just become popularized and a small group of users are freed from the constraint of traffic costs.”

“Most users won’t watch live streaming contents under 4G network because it’s too pricy. Commercialization moves won’t be successful when user demands are not fully unleashed.”

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China’s Biotech Market Is Heating Up https://technode.com/2016/11/09/chinas-biotech/ Wed, 09 Nov 2016 03:38:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43140 China’s biotech market is on the cusp of its truly boom given the huge market size and supports from the government. Like in many other fields, the sheer size of China’s population has become one of the major advantages to boost biotech sector. “China is the second largest market in genetic sequencing industry, next only to […]]]>

China’s biotech market is on the cusp of its truly boom given the huge market size and supports from the government.

Like in many other fields, the sheer size of China’s population has become one of the major advantages to boost biotech sector. “China is the second largest market in genetic sequencing industry, next only to the U.S. Sometimes, the number of patients being treated by one cancer hospital in China exceeds that of a small country. In addition, it also generates large amounts of data for researchers” said Zhao Ruilin, China head of U.S. genetic sequencing service Illumina, at TechCrunch Beijing this Tuesday.

As the country announced its plan to invest 60 billion RMB (US$8.86 billion) by 2030 to accelerate precision medicine initiative, domestic companies started to lay out in the rising industry. Several major capital injection cases in the sector marked this trend.

In April 2015, biotech startup iCarbonX secured a $154 million USD round of Series A funding. One month later, LIVZON Pharmaceutical Group invested 10 million USD in U.S. cancer diagnostics company Cynvenio.

Noticing the change, Illumina plans to expand its biotech accelerator program to China in the beginning of next year, Zhao introduced.

However, there’s still obstacles for large-scale application of the technology. “Currently, the largest market in commercial use is for non-invasive prenatal testing for genetic diseases. So you can imagine, a false negative could have disastrous impacts on a family.” Zhao said.

But increasing the accuracy rate is no easy task and it seems that there’s really little thing we could do about this, even for industry experts. “We could start from the sequencing of a certain gene rather than the whole genetic system,” said David Deng, founder of Ardent BioMed. Ben Chen, vice general manager at Wondfo, suggested users to confirm the result from multiple institutions.

Gene editing is another field that’s been widely talked about. But according to the speakers at the panel, most of the current services target at depiction or discovering the myth behind gene codes. Gene editing has been largely a concept now because there’s a lot of social and ethical issues behind it.

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AI Won’t Doom Human Race Anytime Soon https://technode.com/2016/11/08/ai-wont-doom-human-race-anytime-soon/ Tue, 08 Nov 2016 05:34:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43119 AlphaGo’s landslide victory over Korean Go grandmaster Lee Se-Dol has stirred up concerns that AI might spell the end of the human race. Several leading figures like Stephen Hawking, Bill Gates and Elon Musk, echoed the voice, further raising people’s worries for the existential threat. “The panic was brought up again after the Go competition because evidence […]]]>

AlphaGo’s landslide victory over Korean Go grandmaster Lee Se-Dol has stirred up concerns that AI might spell the end of the human race. Several leading figures like Stephen Hawking, Bill Gates and Elon Musk, echoed the voice, further raising people’s worries for the existential threat.

“The panic was brought up again after the Go competition because evidence show that the results of deep learning are a bit uncontrollable for human perceptions.” said Xu Bing, cofounder and VP at SenseTime. “AlphaGo has made several incomprehensible moves in the game against Lee. Human Go masters consider them as “bad” moves, but they turned out to be decisive steps that lead to its victory.”

However, the three AI experts spoke at TechCrunch Beijing this Monday agreed that public worries for this problem is over exaggerated because technologically speaking there’s still tons of obstacles for AI products to overcome.

“AI technologies is based on deep-learning of human brains, which has more than 300 billion neurons. Currently, no computer platform can accommodate this number of parameters.” said Xu Bing.

Furthermore, AI technologies must own people’s creativity powers if they want to outperform human race, according to Du Yujin, director of R&D at Microsoft Cortana. “Robots could do great jobs in face or voice recognition, but only in fields that have already been defined by human minds.”

In the future five to ten years, the focus of the industry is how to improve efficiency and increase productivity of human labor, like driving, face and voice recognition. In this period, AI may outperform human in certain fields, but certainly not at a comprehensive level, said Yang Ming, co-founder and VP at Horizon Robotics.

”In addition, human’s knowledge is accumulated through a long learning curve, but AI technologies has yet to conquer the long-term memories.” Yang said.

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Three Tips For Chinese Hardware Companies Going Global https://technode.com/2016/11/08/three-tips-for-chinese-hardware-companies-going-global/ Tue, 08 Nov 2016 01:40:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43114 Instead of focusing only on domestic growth, Chinese hardware companies are clearly more mindful of overseas markets in line with the globalization initiative. While smartphone heavyweights like Huawei are constantly hitting milestones in this regard, Chinese hardware startups are following their footsteps in sought of a broader market. Over the past few years, crowdfunding has […]]]>

Instead of focusing only on domestic growth, Chinese hardware companies are clearly more mindful of overseas markets in line with the globalization initiative. While smartphone heavyweights like Huawei are constantly hitting milestones in this regard, Chinese hardware startups are following their footsteps in sought of a broader market.

Over the past few years, crowdfunding has become a popular if not a must step for Chinese hardware projects to kick off their global plan. Chinese projects account for more than 10% of the funds being raised on Indiegogo, Sandy Diao, head of China operation at the crowdfunding platform said at TechCrunch Beijing this Monday.

It’s true that Chinese hardware companies enjoy certain benefits given their vicinity to the world’s manufacturing center in China’s Guangdong Province, where Shenzhen is seated, low labor costs, among others. But the challenges are still daunting and the speakers at event have shared some tips for Chinese hardware startups with a global vision.

Be Prepared for A Long-term Battle

“When it comes to the U.S. market, it is important to find the right crowdfunding platform and be fully prepared for you campaign, because it’s easier to acquire the first group of users through this channel at a relatively low cost. The crowdfunding users are more tolerant and may have lower expectations for the product.” Xiong Yifang, co-founder and CMO at drone maker EHang.

“Even if you had a successful crowdfunding campaign, that does not mean you can win a bright future hands-down. A long-term battle is laying ahead. For instance, if you want to launch your product in traditional offline retailing stores like BestBuy and acquire users on a sustainable basis, you have to do a really great job and there’s no shortcut to it.” Xiong emphasized.

“Exploring an overseas market is supposed to be a complicated procedure with all the issues such as regulations, taxations and local team management.”

Adapt Your Product For Local Needs

This sounds quite an intuitive tip cause culture shocks are inevitable. But sometimes the mistakes are made unconsciously.

“For some Chinese companies that have already gained a certain degree of traction in domestically, going global is about opening new sales channels and the market is easily attainable by copying their successful models. But it’s not that simple. “Sandy Diao pointed out.

“For example, family robots which facilitates communication between adult children and their parents are very popular in China, but it’s very difficult for users in the western world to understand this feature cause that’s not in accordance with their habits.” she said.

Create Online Community To Get Instant User Feedbacks 

For hardware startups, users feedback may not immediate and it’s easy for manufacturers to get lost as to which points they can act on for improvement.

Aaron Liao, co-founder of portable steaming projector, suggested “it’s important to launch a platform where users can give their real time feedbacks to guide our development procedure, especially in overseas market, where the customer preferences and habits are not easily accessible for Chinese manufacturers. In addition, open community platforms will also engage users and increase user stickiness.”

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Mom & Baby Tech Takes Lead At Dubai 100 Demo Day https://technode.com/2016/11/05/dubai-100-demo-day/ Sat, 05 Nov 2016 05:47:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=43040 China’s healthcare industry is in the mist of an innovation drive and the upcoming change is starting from maternity and kid care sector. At the demo day of Dubai 100, a pre-accelerator focused on digital health, half of startups pitched at the event choose mother and baby sector as their first entry point before accessing […]]]>

China’s healthcare industry is in the mist of an innovation drive and the upcoming change is starting from maternity and kid care sector. At the demo day of Dubai 100, a pre-accelerator focused on digital health, half of startups pitched at the event choose mother and baby sector as their first entry point before accessing a broader market.

“We begins as a product focused on chronicle diseases for senior citizens a few years ago, but we now shifts to maternity market because the young generation of parents are more tech-savvy and willing to spend big bucks on related services and products,” said product manager at one of the pitching teams AmeSante.

Unsurprisingly, one awesome startup from mom and kid healthcare vertical MoDoo was announced winner of the competition. Here are all the eight teams that presented to a mix of investors and fellow entrepreneurs last week.

MODOO, BEIJING

Modoo is a smart fetus-monitoring patch that helps parents to alleviate the anxieties of pregnancy. The gadget is 15g in weight and measures 6mm in thickness and 40mm in diameter. It can be attached to the skin easily for passive fetal heart monitoring and movement counting. Online consulting from real experienced doctors helps mothers-to-be to solve their problems in real-time.

AMESANTE, SHANGHAI

AmeSante delivers remote blood pressure and blood glucose monitoring through automated algorithms to help manage a range of diseases. Based on health data collected intelligent hardwires like smart band, pedometer and smart scale, AmeSante gives priorities to diabetes control and helps mothers-to-be for controlling gestational diabetes by providing smart nutritional services.

HEALTHME, SHANGHAI

Healthme is the developer of a flexible and smart wearable thermometer. The device is ultra-thin of only 0.6-0.8 mm and high in accuracy of around 0.05 ℃. When the body temperature of the users rises, they will receive alerts on their smartphone, which is quite convenient for monitoring the health conditions of babies, women, patients and elderlies.

DABAI, SHANGHAI

Dabai is building a high-quality family doctor network to provide easily accessible on-demand health management and medical services. The service is charged on an annual basis, starting from 100 RMB for basic consulting to 399 RMB for special children care.

DOCTOR FORUM

Doctor Forum is building up a patient information transfer system for doctors and professionals. It is also a platform where doctors can regularly build new communication to talk the next emerging challenges.

MAGIKARE, SHANGHAI

MagiKare develops proprietary tele-rehabilitation solutions based on the cutting-edge sensors, motion capture and augmented reality technologies. The technologies are based on VR/AR, new types of sensors, embedded systems and internet communications. The companies is now collaborating with top universities, hospitals and clinics in Europe, America, Australia and Asia.

5BAY, HANGZHOU

5Bay is a one-stop hospital-to-home solution to monitor and improve patients’ medication adherence, creating ease of mind for physicians, patients, carers and families.

RAYPLUS, WUHAN

RayPlus aims to help doctors improve their efficiency and decision-making via cloud-based CAD  technology.

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TCBJ 2016 Updates: Top Speakers From LeEco, Smartisan, Anker and More… https://technode.com/2016/11/02/tcbj-2016-leeco/ Wed, 02 Nov 2016 04:52:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42965 When we say we are going to bring the most impressive and exciting event to China’s tech circle this fall, we mean it. In addition to the amazing speakers we already announced, TechCrunch Beijing is adding a new list of notable names to its speaker lineup. Without further ado, let’s check out some of the new speakers […]]]>

When we say we are going to bring the most impressive and exciting event to China’s tech circle this fall, we mean it. In addition to the amazing speakers we already announced, TechCrunch Beijing is adding a new list of notable names to its speaker lineup.

Without further ado, let’s check out some of the new speakers that going to join us at Beijing next week. If you still haven’t get your ticket yet, don’t miss your final chance to be part of the event.

Brian Hui – SVP at LeMall Global, SVP of Overseas O2O Businesses at Le Holdings Group

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Brian Hui is head of LeEco’s North American operations. He is responsible for all activities of the company, including operations and marketing, as it embarks on a major regional expansion. Brian is also senior vice president of LeMall and is responsible for Lemall.com global strategy, sales and marketing, product development, technology, operations and international expansion.

Brian, a digital enthusiast, has more than 20 years of brand communications, online advertising, e-commerce, channel management and distribution and mobile development experience. He joined LeEco following a five-year career at Amazon.com where he served as vice president and head of consumer marketing, based in Beijing. Prior to Amazon, Brian spent more than seven years at Citibank China in senior level positions in eBusiness and marketing.

Brian earned his bachelor’s degree in Business Economics from Leicester University, and earned his master’s degree in Economics from the School of Economics and Management of the University of Hong Kong.

Xiaomu Zhu – CPO at Smartisan

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Xiaomu Zhu is the CPO of Smartisan, China’s upcoming smartphone maker that is known for its interestingly unparalleled motto “the idealism”.

As the first employee of the company, Zhu has been worked in the company since 2012, overlooking the UX design of Smartisan smartphones.

Prior to that, Zhu worked as an architecture and furniture designer.

Wenwen Niu – Founder & Chairman at Founder Media

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Wenwen Niu is a professional industry commentator and the creator of Founder Media. The group is the operator of The Founder magazine and “The Dark Horse Competition”, both of which aspires to promote innovation and foster startup and fast-growing companies.

Before founding the company in 2008, Niu served as the editor-in-chief of China Entrepreneur Magazine from 1999 to 2008. Niu joined Economic Daily Group in 1991 and was awarded “China News Prize” for three times in two consecutive years.

Tao Lei – Co-founder at YIXIA & Head of Xiaokaxiu

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Tao Lei is the co-founder of Yixia Technology, the Beijing developer behind Chinese video blogging and live streaming apps of Miaopai, Xiaokaxiu and Yizhibo.

Founded in 2011, the company launched its first product Miaopai in 2013 after receiving capital injections from Sina Weibo and Redpoint Ventures.

The app soon becomes a top short-video platform in China. Yixia rolled out Xiaokaxiu and Yizhibo to tap rising craze for videos in 2015 and 2016.

Evan Auyang – Head of Asia-Pacific & Managing Director at GLG

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Evan Auyang is the managing director and dead of Asia-Pacific for Gerson Lehrman Group (GLG), running the firm’s Asia-Pacific operations in 10 offices spanning Greater China, North Asia, Southeast Asia, India and Australia. Prior to his role at GLG in March 2016, Auyang was the deputy managing director of The Kowloon Motor Bus Company (1933) Limited (KMB) and an executive director of the board of directors for Transport International Holdings.

Prior to joining GLG in 2016 and KMB/Transport International in 2009, Auyang was an associate partner at McKinsey & Company. Before management consultancy, Auyang was at Citigroup’s derivatives structuring and marketing unit. He obtained his undergraduate degree from Brown University and his MBA degree from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

Meng Yang – Founder & CEO at Anker

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Meng Yang is the founder and CEO of Anker, the producer of a range of digital accessories such as batteries and chargers, hubs and readers, cases and protectors, and keyboards, and mice.

Before founding Anker in 2011, Yang worked at Google fore more than give years.

He got his Master Degree in data Mining and machine learning at the University of Texas at Austin.

Xiaohua Zhu – Co-founder & CTO at Zaihang & Fenda

zhuxiaohua

Xiaohua Zhu joined China’s science networking service Guokr in 2014. He currently serves as co-founder and CTO of Zaihang and Fenda, China’s two leading knowledge-sharing platforms run by Guokr.

Zhu graduated form Tsinghua University in 2001 and majors in electronics engineering.

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Marvelmind Robotics Walks Away With Top Honor At Slush Shanghai https://technode.com/2016/11/01/slush-shanghai/ Tue, 01 Nov 2016 04:22:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42934 Slush, one of the world’s most prestigious startup events from Finland, has just closed its first-ever summit in Shanghai yesterday, featuring a stellar lineup of speakers, entrepreneurs and investors. Along with the exciting talks on the main stage, fifty amazing startups from the fields of e-commerce, VR/AR, big data, education, healthcare and enterprise services appeared […]]]>

Slush, one of the world’s most prestigious startup events from Finland, has just closed its first-ever summit in Shanghai yesterday, featuring a stellar lineup of speakers, entrepreneurs and investors. Along with the exciting talks on the main stage, fifty amazing startups from the fields of e-commerce, VR/AR, big data, education, healthcare and enterprise services appeared before a great set of judges and audiences from the local and global startup community. They pitched, answered questions, but in the end, only one company could win the battle.

The top honor of the pitch-off went to Marvelmind Robotics, who walked away with a 5 million RMB fund, free space at ZJ Ventures Studio as well as invitation and travel tickets to Slush 100 pitching Competition in Helsinki at the end of this month. In addition to the winner, Slush’s pitching competition rounds up a wide host of promising titles. Here’s the full breakdown of the show’s top-five winners:

Marvelmind Robotics

The Russian startup is a developer of indoor navigation technologies that can be used by autonomous robots, copters or in virtual reality with a precision of around two centimeters. It uses ultrasound waves for the precise determination of distances, and the transducers use a 433 MHz frequency to synchronize their data.

“Of course, there are plenty of other indoor navigation systems available on the market, such as UWB, Bluetooth beacons, magnitometers, WiFi RSSi, etc. but they have their limitations, usually either in precision, or price or size”, said Maxim Tretyakov, head of Marvelmind Robotics. “We are trying to develop the best solution that can balance all these factors.”

The price of the product starts at 59$ for one beacon and now it is sold in more than 30 countries across the world. After receiving the honor, the startup sets about to improve the design of the transducers, obtaining certification and searching for major clients and investors.

Laiye

Laiye is a WeChat-based butler service that tries to emancipate users from downloading never ending numbers of apps. By following Laiye’s WeChat account, AI robots and real-life people are waiting on your beck and call, offering more than thirty services, such as smart calendar, ride-hailing, coffee delivery, errant running and cleaning.

As you get to use the product more, the service gets know you better, which means Laiye could make recommendations and offer solutions based on your likes, dislikes, habits and budgets.

The revenue comes three channels in the form of commissions from partnering service providers, paid programs from customers and licensing fees, the firm introduced.

Since the launch in July last year, the Y-combinator and Microsoft Accelerator alumnus has amassed over 1.5 million users as of present. The top-3 services on the platform are smart calendar, ride hailing, coffee delivery, which account for 75 to 80 percent of the total orders.

NextVPU

NextVPU is a startup in artificial intelligence and computer vision domain with the aim to bring vision capability to all robots, unmanned aerial vehicles, unmanned ground vehicles and other smart devices.

Its first product AngelEye is a smart glass for visually impaired people. The glasses will tell the wearers their location, heading direction, name of the next cross, distance to the next cross and POIs around. The device will recognizing daily objects like cash, color, traffic light, cross walk, stairs, doors, exits, text and face, and getting the users informed with voice message.

AngelEye is currently in internal testing phase and plans to ship 20K glasses globally in the next year.

Sunnatech

With the vision of “Nano for Health”, Sunnatech is nano-fiber material startup from China. The company has developed a nano-fiber small caliber vascular graft to tap China’s hundred billion RMB cardio surgery market. As combination of nano-fiber technology and biomaterial, the product claimed better performance with self-healing and anti-clotting features, allowing the artificial graft to stay in human’s body for a longer period of time. The vascular graft is still waiting for the medical approval in China and will be ready to hit the market in four to five years.

The same technology is applied into a 3D mask for Chinese people who are facing aggravating air pollutions. “To achieve the same filtration performance, Sunnatech’s mask has the least pressure loss comparing with other products on the market, which means wears can breath more freely,” said the company founder.

LAKKA Technologies

LAKKA Technologies is a thin-film sensor manufacturer. By detecting the small vibrations in the radial vein of the wrist, its modules can be used to detect heart rate from the wrist. With a high accuracy, the product can detect the systolic and diastolic pulses of the heart, allowing users to collect valuable data on how the heart performs during exercise and rest.

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VR Companies Are Hunger For B2B Innovation And Here’s Where HTV Vive Has Been So Far https://technode.com/2016/10/29/htc-vive-b2b/ Sat, 29 Oct 2016 11:33:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42901 Along with an accelerated update, virtual reality market is recording a fundamental change on how the emerging technology is being used to change our life. The days when VR technologies only serve as a means to entertain video players have long gone, and B2B applications will be the next big thing. Report from Goldman Sachs […]]]>

Along with an accelerated update, virtual reality market is recording a fundamental change on how the emerging technology is being used to change our life. The days when VR technologies only serve as a means to entertain video players have long gone, and B2B applications will be the next big thing.

Report from Goldman Sachs shows that video games only represents a third of VR software market, while the portion of retail, healthcare, engineering, military and real estate applications are on the rise. All signs show that the timing is ripe.

As a leading player in the market, HTC Vive makes strenuous efforts to be a trailblazer in the field. Here’s the most recent endeavors that the company has made into B2B sector.

Publication

HTC Vive released on October 26th an augmented-VR enhanced reading experience via homegrown VIVEPAPER technology in partnership with Condé Nast Traveler. Using a specially designed AR-enabled physical Vivepaper booklet and the VIVE™ virtual reality system (or a compatible cardboard VR viewer), users could gain access to a wide range of interactions for print content, allowing activation of 360° photos and videos, 3D models, 2D content, and audio just by touching a piece of paper.

Vivepaper is a patent pending technology that leverages Vive’s embedded front-facing camera to enable a type of AR on Vive called “video pass-through AR”. Previously, this camera had only been used for the Chaperone system to protect users from running into walls or objects during use.

Vivepaper employs a hybrid AR-VR model called “Augmented Virtual Reality” (A-VR), where by users can enriched virtual experience and added realism by allowing tactile interactions with a physical object, in this case, a paper booklet. Vivepaper represents the beginning of the convergence of VR, MR, and AR on a single device.

More publishers will soon be releasing Vivepaper versions of their content, including China Daily 21st Century English Newspaper, Caixin VR and the Publishing House of Electronics Industry, according to the company.

With the technology, HTC aims to change the way readers consume, and publishers distribute content, while providing a new way for advertisers to reach audiences.

Hospitality

While top VR devices like HTV Vive are still too pricey for average customers, VR arcades have cropped up, allowing customers to test out the experience without spending big bucks. If people are willing to give it a try in arcades, why not hotels.

Just one day after the launch of Vivepaper, HTC is announcing another partnership with IHG, a global group with a broad portfolio of hotel brands, to provide in-room virtual reality experience.

Since October 31st, guests of three pilot hotels under IHG group will be able to try VR either in a “Vive Zone” or in their own rooms for gaming, entertainment and interaction experiences. The service will be extended to more than 100 hotels in the next year, said Alvin W. Graylin, China Regional President of Vive, HTC.

Education, And More

Education is among the first sectors where VR technology finds its application, and its intimacy with VR has been happily growing day-by-day.

“Over the past year, we have been emphasizing the importance of VR application in education because it’s the most natural way for knowledge acquisition.” HTC has partnered up with a group of education platforms such as Udacity and visual learning platform Lifelique.

“Design is another sector where we expect wider application of VR technology, we are planning to launch a product in this vertical very soon. Also, HTC worked with partners in retailing industry to provide the best immersive shopping experience.” Mr. Graylin told TechNode.

“What we are doing now is to build an ecosystem around VR hardware and contents in an attempt to further boost the development of the whole industry.” he noted.

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All-Star Speakers Led By Kaifu Lee To Join Us At TechCrunch Beijing, Nov. 5-8 https://technode.com/2016/10/27/techcrunch-beijing-2016-kaifu-lee/ Thu, 27 Oct 2016 08:50:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42865 TechCrunch Beijing is quickly approaching and we can’t wait. For all the aspirational geeks and entrepreneurs out there, TechCrunch Beijing Summit features a two-day hackathon from November 5 to 6 and two-day main stage talks from November 7 to 8. At the same time, a series of exciting parallel events will be held raging from […]]]>

TechCrunch Beijing is quickly approaching and we can’t wait. For all the aspirational geeks and entrepreneurs out there, TechCrunch Beijing Summit features a two-day hackathon from November 5 to 6 and two-day main stage talks from November 7 to 8. At the same time, a series of exciting parallel events will be held raging from Startup Alley and Startup Competition and VC Meetup, where each entrepreneur can have ten minutes to pitch your project to investors.

Well, you definitely won’t be sorry if our event is on your schedule, because the speakers are awesome. Sinovation Ventures,  Microsoft Accelerator, Indiegogo, iRobot, Mobike, 700Bike and vHM Design Futures, each of the name is suffice to make a tech news headline. At TechCrunch Beijing, we have bring them together for our audience to take a behind-the-scene look of their stories.

Below is the line-up of the confirmed speakers so far, enjoy it.

Founder & CEO at Sinovation Ventures, Kaifu Lee

likaifu

Dr. Kaifu Lee is an investor and startup guru in China who serves as the founder and CEO of Sinovation Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm formerly known as Innovation Works and Idea Bulb Ventures.

He is the founding president and head of Google China Corporation from July 2005 to 2009. Lee is widely known for his pioneering work in the areas of speech recognition and artificial intelligence. He joined Google from Microsoft Corporation, where he served as Corporate Vice President, after founding Microsoft Research China in 1998.

Prior to joining Microsoft, he served as a Vice President and General Manager at Silicon Graphics Inc. He also spent six years at Apple Inc., from 1990 to 1996, serving as Speech Scientist and Vice President of Apple’s Interactive Media Group.

Dr. Lee holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1988 and a B.S. in Computer Science with highest honors from Columbia University in 1983.

Co-Founder & CEO at 700Bike, Xiangdong Zhang

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Zhang Xiangdong, a series entrepreneur and passionate cyclist joined smart bike startup 700Bike as a co-founder in 2014. Prior to that, Zhang co-founded in 2004 Sungy Mobile, a mobile content provider which got listed on NASDAQ in late 2013.

From 2002 to 2003, Zhang was a correspondent of New Weekly Magazine. From 1999 to 2000, he served as a manager at online retailer Dangdang. He holds a BA in Information Management from Peking University.

Co-founder & CTO at Mobike, Joe Xia

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Joe Xia is an expert in internet of vehicle (IOV) sector. He is a former employee in IOV R&D units of Ford and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, holding more than 20 IOV patents.

In January 2015, Joe joined dockless bike sharing company Mobike as CTO. As a major player in the rising vertical, Mobike leads the new trend and has received the backings from China’s top investors, including Tencent, Hillhouse Capital, Warburg Pincus, Sequoia Capital, Qiming Venture Partners, Bertelsmann and Wang Xing, founder of Meituan who is also a renowned investor.

Co-founder & CEO & Chairman at iRobot, Colin Angle

colin_angle

Colin Angle, co-founder of iRobot, has served as chairman of the board since October 2008, as CEO since June 1997.

Mr. Angle previously worked at the National Aeronautical and Space Administration’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory where he participated in the design of the behavior controlled rovers that led to Sojourner exploring Mars in 1997. He holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering and an M.S. in Computer Science, both from MIT.

Co-Founder at vHM Design Futures, Clive van Heerden

clive-van-heerden3

Clive van Heerden is the co-founder of vHM Design Futures. Before that, Van Heerden worked at Philips Research since 1995. In 1998 he moved to Philips Design where he became the director of the Soft Technologies design research project. In this position Van Heerden coordinated a team of experts from various textile and apparel disciplines to develop wearable electronic and conductive textile solutions.

He also drives the Philips’ “Probes” program, which consists of “far-future” research initiatives to identify long-term systematic shifts and anticipating changes in future lifestyles. The Probes team, under Van Heerden’s leadership, has won numerous international awards including a Red Dot, IF Award and a Time magazine acknowledgment for Best Invention in 2007.

CEO at Microsoft Accelerator Greater China, Bin Luo

luobin

Bin Luo serves as CEO at Microsoft Accelerator. Before joining Microsoft, Luo was the director at Canonical’s Asia-Pacific arm, overseeing business operation, marketing and partner relationship management of Ubuntu operating system.

Prior to that, he has worked in Intel for over 13 years, mainly engaged in investment.

Director of Strategic Programs China at Indiegogo, Sandy Diao

sandy

Sandy works closely with technology and design entrepreneurs to launch their businesses through Indiegogo.

Prior to joining, she ran a $460k crowdfunding campaign for a connected piano hardware product. Before that she worked on Pinterest’s growth marketing team and helped incubate Pinterest’s advertising platform from scratch.

Tickets for TechCrunch Beijing are available now at our official website. More speakers and guests will be announced on a rolling basis. Please check back for announcements.

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China’s Fintech Unicorn My Credit Scoops $400M Financing To Build Industry Fund https://technode.com/2016/10/27/my-credit-scoops-400m/ Thu, 27 Oct 2016 03:06:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42850 My Credit, aka 51 Credit or 51 Credit Card Manager, announced Wednesday that it has secured a $84 million USD C+ round from Harvest Capital and Yintai Group, raising company’s most recent funding to nearly $400 million USD. The news comes just one month after a hefty $310 million USD Series C led by Tiantu […]]]>

My Credit, aka 51 Credit or 51 Credit Card Manager, announced Wednesday that it has secured a $84 million USD C+ round from Harvest Capital and Yintai Group, raising company’s most recent funding to nearly $400 million USD.

The news comes just one month after a hefty $310 million USD Series C led by Tiantu Capital and A-share listed real estate company Xinhu Zhongbao. The C round is raised at a market valuation of over 1 billion USD, marking the emergence of a new unicorn in China’s tech sector.

Founded in May 2012, My Credit is a top credit management service supplier in China. As the company behind intelligent bill management app 51 Credit Card Manager, the startup now has more than 70 million qualified users with business covering online cards application, wealth management, lending, installment and more.

After four years of development, My Credit has started to generate profits with monthly revenue stood at around 100 million RMB ($14.76 million USD) and the annual revenue is expected to exceed 1 billion RMB this year, company CEO Sun Haitao says.

Since the beginning of this year, My Credit initiated a series of moves to expand business and diversify user groups through the acquisition of micro-loan platform 99fenqi and launch of 51rp credit card.

In addition to further boost current services, the Hangzhou-based firm eyes something bigger with the newly raised financing. The firm plans to set up a fund for the investment and merger of fintech companies in the upper and lower links of financial chain in an attempt to create a comprehensive industry ecosystem.

Sun disclosed the fund is going to be launched within this year. Its total capital under management will to reach hundreds of millions RMB with focus on asset management, data and credit services.

Alibaba’s mutual fund Yuebao ignited Chinese users’ zeal for online personal asset management services back in 2013. My Credit is among the first startups that stand out in the credit card management vertical. The company had closed a combined $15 million USD of Series A and A+ round in 2013 and a $50 million USD B round in 2015.

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Uber China Releases Upgraded App With More Local Features Upon Didi Acquisition https://technode.com/2016/10/26/uber-china-releases-upgraded-app-with-more-local-features-upon-didi-acquisition/ Wed, 26 Oct 2016 00:51:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42818 Almost three months after being acquired by Didi Chuxing, Uber China announced Tuesday its first major move after the transaction – an upgrade to its mobile application. The new app is going to be launched in some pilot cities today and across the country on November 3rd. Uber China will expand into 400 cities in China by the end of […]]]>

Almost three months after being acquired by Didi Chuxing, Uber China announced Tuesday its first major move after the transaction – an upgrade to its mobile application.

The new app is going to be launched in some pilot cities today and across the country on November 3rd. Uber China will expand into 400 cities in China by the end of 2016, the company says.

A series of localized functional improvements were introduced and here are some of the major changes in the app.

The upgraded app maintains Uber China’s popular settings including its simple UI and 24-hour in-app customer service. Existing mainland users of Uber China may log in with their original accounts and will receive customized local offers and discounts during the upgrade process.

In the past, Uber in different Chinese cities features various services ranging from People’s Uber to Uber Black, UberX, UberXL. But the new app reduced the service categories to two features “People’s Uber+” and “Uber Black” to focus on the most popular ones.

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The tie-up with Didi Chuxing has brought deeper integration with WeChat and QQ, services from Tecent, which is an investor of Didi. Users could share itinerary via QQ and WeChat.

Many successful local designs from Didi were added including vehicle color specification for users to better spot the car, in-app broadcast and text/voice messaging, as well as estimated fare display prior to user confirmation.

While a raft of localized features was added, the new app’s support for international users were weakened as compared with the previous app. For example, it is only available for mainland users, lacks an English interface and does not support international credit card payment. But the company says these features will be added in future updates.

“Uber China will invest more resources in enhancing our products while ensuring the affordability and reliability of our services,” said Kate Wang, Head of Operations of Uber China.

Apart from the product, Uber China has undergone major changes in its management. Uber China’s former head Liu Zhen left the team upon Didi’s acquisition and joined China’s Flipboard-like news aggregator Toutiao this week.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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Why Third-party Payment License Is The Most Coveted Resource For Chinese Tech Companies https://technode.com/2016/10/25/payment-license-china/ Tue, 25 Oct 2016 06:30:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42802 If you are a company that runs online payment services in China, you must obtain a license to legally conduct the transactions in the country. That’s a basic rule. But for Chinese firms who want to dip their toes in payment industry, getting a license to legalize their status as an online payment agency is becoming […]]]>

If you are a company that runs online payment services in China, you must obtain a license to legally conduct the transactions in the country. That’s a basic rule. But for Chinese firms who want to dip their toes in payment industry, getting a license to legalize their status as an online payment agency is becoming increasingly difficult as more internet giants are making their forays into the business.

Over the past few months, China has recorded a continuous raft of acquisitions on companies holding third-party payment licenses, which authorize non-bank financial institutions to run online payment businesses. It is worth nothing that such licenses could not be treaded, so acquiring a company that already has it is the only path for another company to obtain the license.

Here’s a list of the recent deals that involves the shift of third-party payment license ownership.

The list goes on as this trend not only takes tech firms, but also companies across sectors. Over ten such cases were concluded and acquirers include big names such as China’s top real estate company Wanda and Evergrande, electric maker Midea, according to a non-inclusive report from local media.

Additionally, the competition further tightens with a group of potential “hunters” such as Didi-Uber, Qihoo 360, LeEco and Ctrip are lurching around to find their targets.

Big Market VS Limited Resources

As the prerequisite for e-commerce and fintech services, online payment system is growing to be an indispensable part of all tech companies that want a comprehensive business circle. The market size of China’s third-party payment industry doubled YOY to worth 6.2 trillion yuan ($915 billion USD) in the first quarter of this year, according to data from China E-commerce Research Center. The uprising trend continued in the second quarter to hit 9.34 trillion yuan, up 51% quarter-on-quarter.

China’s non-bank payment sector has been eaten into the user base of traditional bank services. China’s central bank has issued a total of 270 online payment licenses since 2011. Currently, there are overall 267 such licenses in the market, deducting three licenses that have been revoked by the bank due to malpractice by the agencies.

However, the fast expanding industry grapples with problems like financial fraud. To cope with the problems, the bank announced in July this year that it would temporarily cease to release new payment licenses to non-bank payment agencies for as it seeks to regulate the sector.

Surging demand on limited resources send the market value of payment license sky-high. Chinese news portal NetEase cites an industry insider that “the market value of third-party payment licenses has now surged to around 500 million yuan from tens of millions in last year.”

A Possible Way Out For Third-party Agencies

Despite the boom, China’s online payment market was a highly concentrated market dominated by a few leading players. Alipay, Tencent’s Tenpay and Lakala took the top-three spots in China’s mobile payment market, major vertical in online payment industry, accounting for 51.8%, 38.3% and 1.4% of the market share in Q1 this year.

While the top-three company takes an overwhelming 91.5% of the market, it left little space for the rest of companies to survive. Many independent third-party agencies have struggled to find good profit models. Some started to explore services such as peer-to-peer lending and crowdfunding platforms, which involve higher financial risks. Some has suspended related businesses.

This is also the reason why the central bank has suspended the release of new licenses along with the warning that it would punish agencies conducting illegal practices and cancel license of agencies that fail to offer payment services for a long time.

Given the circumstances, being acquired by a company that has user base and traffic resources to make full use of the license sounds a possible way out for third-party agencies with mediocre performance.

image credit: Shutterstock

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China’s AirBNB Tujia Merges Homestay Businesses Of Ctrip and Qunar https://technode.com/2016/10/20/tujia-ctrip-and-qunar/ Thu, 20 Oct 2016 06:59:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42729 Tujia.com, which is often dubbed the AirBNB of China, announced Wednesday that it has entered into a strategic agreement with Ctrip and Qunar to merge vocation home rental businesses of the two Chinese online travel services. It represents another strategic move by Tujia after its purchase of the short-term rental platform Mayi.com this June. Through this acquisition, […]]]>

Tujia.com, which is often dubbed the AirBNB of China, announced Wednesday that it has entered into a strategic agreement with Ctrip and Qunar to merge vocation home rental businesses of the two Chinese online travel services. It represents another strategic move by Tujia after its purchase of the short-term rental platform Mayi.com this June.

Through this acquisition, the homestay channels of both Ctrip and Qunar’s web sites and Apps, along with their operation teams and the entire business will be merged into Tujia, according to the company. Upon the completion of the deal, Tujia will receive a wide range of benefits from Ctrip and Qunar, including inventory, traffic, branding and operations support.

Justin Luo, co-founder and CEO of the company, said that the company would focus on the fusion of the various online brands in the future, unify the management of inventory, improve the whole industrial chain. Any possible future merger will be considered in the context of completing the ecosystem and industry chain, he added.

After five years of development, Tujia has become a leading accommodation sharing platform in China, delivering integrated solutions to guests, real estate developers and individual hosts. Tujia has expanded its overseas business with offices operating in Japan, South Korea, Singapore and the Taiwan region.

Justin Luo also announced Tujia’s launch of its next five-year plan, which will focus on two dimensions – continuing to build the ecosystem and set apart Tujia’s online and offline businesses.

Like on-demand and O2O sectors, Chinese tech startup scene has recorded a continuing spate of consolidations partly because China’s accommodation sharing economy is moving into growth state, partly to the fact that startups needs to consolidate their positions in a more risk-averse investment environment.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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Smartisan Rolls Out Make-or-break Flagship Smartphone M1/M1L https://technode.com/2016/10/19/smartisan-flagship-smartphone-m1m1l/ Wed, 19 Oct 2016 02:40:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42693 Instead of the long-rumored Smartisan T3, China’s fledging phone maker Smartisan Technology took the wraps off the fourth smartphone in its product lineup M1/M1L on Tuesday in a showy press conference held in Shanghai. Together with hardware, the handset vendor also launched a new update for its custom OS. Like always, rumors and hypes surround Smartisan’s new product has […]]]>

Instead of the long-rumored Smartisan T3, China’s fledging phone maker Smartisan Technology took the wraps off the fourth smartphone in its product lineup M1/M1L on Tuesday in a showy press conference held in Shanghai. Together with hardware, the handset vendor also launched a new update for its custom OS.

Like always, rumors and hypes surround Smartisan’s new product has churned up weeks before the official press release. The event gets much local press attention partially because it has been a while for the once high-profile company to make a move, partially because this is a make-or-break point for the Chinese smartphone vendor.

M1 continued its signature minimalist design with aluminum body and seamless strips, which makes it resemble iPhone a lot. Enabled by Android-based Smartisan OS, the smartphone is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon quad-core 821 processor, which clocks at 2.35GHz, along with Adreno 530 GPU.

It comes with two versions, a 5.15 inch M1 and a 5.7 inch M1L, which are offered in three color options of silver, white (mirror stainless steel) and leather coffee. The phone sports a 4080mAh battery that can support a claimed 45.54 hours of continuous phone call. Luckily, the firm has integrated Quick Charge 3.0 technology to get the phone charged more quickly.

smartisan

The power button is integrated into the home button and the SIM card tray is hidden behind keys on the right side. One big difference is Smartisan has finally incorporated finger scanners into its products, a standard for most smartphones now. A handy feature that comes along with the scanner is users can assign various functions to fingerprints, allowing users to open either Alipay or WeChat payment QR codes by scanning different fingers without faffing around with separate apps.

The phone features a 23 megapixel rear camera and a 4 megapixel front facing camera. The rear camera supports 4K video recording.

Unlike most Chinese smartphone companies that try to bombard users with high specs, the company’s charismatic leader Luo Yonghao emphasized that the company puts priority on the look and feel of their products rather than standard hardware. But it’s catching up, at least on par with mainstream flagship products in the country.

Specs:

  • 5.5-inch/5.7-inch in-cell display
  • 2.35GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon quad-core 821 processor
  • Adreno 530 GPU
  • Android based Smartisan OS3.X
  • Dual SIM card
  • M1: 149.36x 71.75x 8.22mm, 146g; M1L: 159.66x 78.96 x 8.32mm, 175g
  • 23MP rear camera with LED flash, f/2.0 aperture, ISOCELL sensor, 4K video recording
  • 4MP selfie camera, OmniVision OV4688
  • 4G LTE / 3G /2G
  • 4080mAh battery

Pricing various according to RAM and memories.

  • M1: 4GB RAM + 32GB – 2,499 yuan ($370)
  • M1L: 4GB RAM + 32GB – 2,799 yuan ($415), 6GB RAM + 64GB – 2,999 yuan ($445)
  • M1L 6GB RAM + 64GB (mirror stainless metal version) 3,299 yuan ($489)

Product info page (in Chinese)

Highlights from Smartisan OS update

At the same event, the company released a new update for its Android-based operating system, which offers more highlights to the event as compared with the hardware. Smartisan OS 3.X sports a raft of features that aims to make smartphone input or textual processing more convenient for mobile users.

Supported by China’s top voice recognition service iFLYTEK, the voice input demo wowed the audience with a reliable and accurate output which the company claimed an accuracy rate of 97%. A good news for users with foreign contacts. Smartisan’s phone book now supports search in English, Japanese and Korea.

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By long pressing the screen, a new feature dubbed “Big Bang” can fragment lengthy paragraphs into word segments, easy for copy to other editing tools, select as search keywords, or drag to a sidebar to share with friends. It’s worth nothing that not only sheer texts, words from pictures can also be processed.

“One Step” facilitates multitask operations by allowing users to put various items such as pictures, files on the top bar, or apps, frequent contacts, commonly accessed settings on the right sidebar, eliminating steps in switching between apps.

In a forward-looking move to contribute to the Android community, Smartisan plans to make “Big Bang” and “One Step” open source technologies in a hope that Google could make them basic features of the Android operating system.

Crucial flagship for the troubled company

Smartisan has hit a tough development path since its first product launch. Its first generation flagship product T1 suffered from capacity problems and the following products U1 and T2 failed to become smash-hits the company once harped about.

The company has been under lot of financial pressure as its total assets has slumped from 825 million yuan at the end of 2015 to 296 million yuan as of the first half of this year. The phone maker has recorded losses of 462 million yuan and 192 million yuan in 2015 and H1 2016, respectively, according to data from Tap4Fun, a listed investor of Smartisan. In June this year, company founder Luo has pledged 2.05 million shares in the company to Alibaba for an undisclosed sum of funding.

Rumors around Smartisan’s acquisition emerged in the past few months and potential investors include all big names from Lenovo, Alibaba, LeEco to Xiaomi. But company founder Luo Yonghao dispelled them. All this makes the flagship handset all the more important, and if the M series lives up to expectations and could register with users, it would gain more time for Smartisan to build a more solid foothold in China’s competitive smartphone battlefield.

Update (10/20/2016) 12:48: This story has been updated to add more information on Smartisan OS’s new features.

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Redpoint Ventures Betting Big On China Tech With $180M USD Fund https://technode.com/2016/10/18/redpoint-ventures-china/ Tue, 18 Oct 2016 02:06:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42667 One week after Baidu announced the launch of a $3 billion internet investment fund, U.S. venture capital Redpoint Ventures spelled another good news for anxious Chinese startups who are seeking to raise fresh capital amid a funding slowdown or “capital winter” as it’s referred by Chinese entrepreneurs. The Menlo Park-based venture firm announced yesterday that it […]]]>

One week after Baidu announced the launch of a $3 billion internet investment fund, U.S. venture capital Redpoint Ventures spelled another good news for anxious Chinese startups who are seeking to raise fresh capital amid a funding slowdown or “capital winter” as it’s referred by Chinese entrepreneurs.

The Menlo Park-based venture firm announced yesterday that it has closed ACE Redpoint Ventures China I, L.P., a $180 million USD fund to invest in early stage consumer and enterprise technology companies based in China.

Redpoint China will be led by David Yuan, Tony Wu and Reggie Zhang who have extensive experiences and a proven track record investing in the Chinese startup market. The new fund will invest in about 25 companies with initial investments expected to average $1-4 million USD, according to the firm.

“With offices in Beijing and Shanghai, Redpoint China will help Chinese entrepreneurs build successful companies by providing access to Redpoint’s global network, domain expertise and capital.” according to a company statement.

Upon the new funding, Redpoint China will run as an independent fund rather than a branch of the global entity, Daivid Yuan noted.

Since 2005, Redpoint Ventures has actively invested in over 35 companies in China. It has achieved a number of successful exits, including Cgen Digital (acquired by Focus Media), Qihoo 360 (NYSE IPO), iDreamSky (Nasdaq IPO), and Domob (acquired by Blue Focus).

More recently, Redpoint has invested in high profile startup companies, including mobile video platform Yixia, APUS, one of the fastest growing Android apps and platforms globally; and Renrenche, a top C2C used-car marketplace in China. Over 90% of Redpoint’s investments in China have been in early stage, where Redpoint Ventures has been either the founding or the first institution investor in the company.

Founded in 1999, Redpoint Ventures has backed over 465 companies globally with 140 IPOs and M+As. In total, the firm manages over $4 billion across multiple funds and Redpoint China is the tenth independent fund managed by the company.

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Living Room Is Ready For a Comeback In China, But Not Without Quality Content https://technode.com/2016/10/14/living-room-ali-youku/ Fri, 14 Oct 2016 09:35:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42590 Over the past three years, Chinese web users who had once been drawn away from televisions towards mobile devices are making their ways back to the traditional living room setting for daily entertainment. Along with the growth of living room tech market, China is expected to have over 250 million internet-connected televisions by the end […]]]>

Over the past three years, Chinese web users who had once been drawn away from televisions towards mobile devices are making their ways back to the traditional living room setting for daily entertainment.

Along with the growth of living room tech market, China is expected to have over 250 million internet-connected televisions by the end of 2017, covering an estimated 700 million viewers calculated the country’s most common household of three members. The market formed around this sector is going to worth a whopping 630 billion RMB ($93 billion USD) by 2020, research institute AVC noted.

As warned, the change is upon us. Data from China’s top video streaming site Youku shows traffic from living room screens enabled by OTT (over-the-top) boxes has eclipsed PC as the second largest traffic source, next only to mobile devices. This is happening much faster than we expected, but it’s natural given the millennial generations who are well adapted to digital era are paying more attentions to family life after getting married or having a kid. Moreover, the living room scene is offering more engaging and interactive experiences ranging from video/music streaming, gaming and shopping.

The demographic change is significant. While watching television has once been considered old fashioned, it’s now become the favor among the young people. A dominating 74% of users on Alibaba’s entertainment platform, one of the largest in China, were under the age of 35.

It seems that the trend is here to stay, creating huge commercial opportunities for domestic companies. China’s internet giant Alibaba has speared its reaches into digital living room industry with the launch of Tmall boxes and content ecosystem surrounded it years ago.

The company is aiming at a more ambitious plan, of which Tmall box or hardware is just a small part. Through cooperation with television manufacturers, Alibaba announced this week its goal to create a premium content ecosystem for the Chinese-speaking community, mainly through capitalizing on the quality contents from Youku, which it has acquired in April this year.

Under the plan, Alibaba’s digital entertainment arm, which claims over 20 million daily operable users to date, will further integrate Youku Tudou’s businesses to create synergy effects in brand, content, data, membership and commercialization plans. Apart from Youku, the partnership involves a star-studded list of content providers from home and broad, such as Disney, BBC, Hasbro, DHX, LEGO, CCTC Animation, CJ, etc.

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Educational content come as a top focus in Alibaba’s digital living room strategy given kids’ center position in family life. At the same event, two products were released for children: a mobile app and an OTT box both of which are dedicated for kid education contents.

Other highlights of the event include the 6.0 update for YunOS for TV, Youku VR and Youku 3D-VR camera.

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Hangzhou Outrunning Beijing and Shanghai To Mint A Top Tech Hub https://technode.com/2016/10/11/hangzhou-outrunning-beijing-and-shanghai-to-mint-a-top-tech-hub/ Tue, 11 Oct 2016 08:36:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42527 When looking at China’s startup hubs, the first names that pop up in our minds would be Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. The advantages are obvious. They are China’s first-tier metropolises both in terms of startup community and economy, offering easy access to investors and mature startup communities. However, the rocketing housing fees and human resource […]]]>

When looking at China’s startup hubs, the first names that pop up in our minds would be Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. The advantages are obvious. They are China’s first-tier metropolises both in terms of startup community and economy, offering easy access to investors and mature startup communities.

However, the rocketing housing fees and human resource costs as well as big-city pitfalls like pollution have forced entrepreneurs to weigh the pros and cons of these cities more carefully before calling them home.

The fact is that more and more entrepreneurs nowadays lean towards second-tier cities thanks to lower operational costs, nicer environment and local government support. The change is so fast that one of the uprising tech hubs — Hangzhou might overtake its sluggish peers as the new “Silicon Valley” of China, a recent report from Vision Plus Capital pointed out.

Alibaba IPO Triggered Startup Frenzy

Apart from being a scenic spot, Hangzhou, in the startup community, is more commonly known as the city where Alibaba started its legend more than one decade ago. Alibaba’s jaw-dropping IPO has inspired millions of Hangzhou entrepreneurs, a great portion of whom are former employees of the e-commerce behemoth, to follow Jack Ma’s footstep in starting their own companies.

The report shows that the number of new startups in Hangzhou surged 107% YOY in the second half of 2014 due in no small parts to the bolster from Alibaba’s IPO which was finalized in September of the same year. To put this number into some perspectives, the growth rate for Beijing and Shanghai in the same period is 64% and 53%. The city maintained its growth momentum straight to the first half of 2015 with a 38% YOY jump as compared with 9% and 8% for Beijing and Shanghai, respectively.

Since 2013, the funding raised by Hangzhou-based startups rocketed 160%, higher than Beijing (121%), Shanghai (119%) and Shenzhen (143%), the report showed. As of present, more than 58 billion RMB ($8.6 billion USD) of capital flowed into Hangzhou.

As startup craze cools down in the second half of 2015 and 2016, Hangzhou’s startup environment perseveres, partially because e-commerce still dominates the city. E-commerce companies have more practical goals in generating revenue, so they are more tenacious when winter capital arrives, according to Chen Hongliang, partner at Vision Plus Capital.

E-commerce Still Dominates, But Enterprise-faced Business Catching Up Quickly

Given that Hangzhou is the hometown of Alibaba, it’s no wonder that e-commerce takes the lead in all startup verticals. The sector has no equal in the city’s startup landscape with around 20% of all the companies in the city falls into that category. But it’s far from the only option. The percentage of enterprise-faced services, fintech, local lifestyle and social networking startups are rising over the years.

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Credit: Vision Plus Capital

“This shows the entrepreneurial environment of Hangzhou is diversifying and maturing,” commented Chen Hongliang. “In the period of economic restructuring, companies face challenges from business upgrading to cutting costs. These needs will foster enterprise-faced services, of which cloud and data service might form the next booming market.”

Chen believes that Alibaba, Ant Financial and Zhejiang University have educated abundant technological talents for the prosperity of local startup scene, which is particularly important for cloud and data services. “The first generation of entrepreneurs has their expertise in business operation and entrepreneurs with technological backgrounds are going took the helm since this year.”

Hangzhou is just among a plethora of rising cities that’s ready to replace the current tech hubs like Beijing. Other top alternative startup hubs in China worth looking into include Chongqing, Chengdu and Xiamen.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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LY.com Merges Wanda Tourism, A Final Move Towards IPO? https://technode.com/2016/10/10/ly-com-wanda-tourism/ Mon, 10 Oct 2016 09:00:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42514 LY.com, a leading player in China’s local attraction ticket arena, announced on Sunday it’s going to merge Wanda Tourism, the traveling arm of Chinese real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, with a mixture of cash and stock. After the transaction, LY.com’s market valuation will exceed 20 billion RMB (around $2.98 billion USD) with a cash deposit of […]]]>

LY.com, a leading player in China’s local attraction ticket arena, announced on Sunday it’s going to merge Wanda Tourism, the traveling arm of Chinese real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, with a mixture of cash and stock.

After the transaction, LY.com’s market valuation will exceed 20 billion RMB (around $2.98 billion USD) with a cash deposit of over 5 billion RMB ($746 million USD), according to a company statement.

Together with the news, LY.com, formerly 17u.com or Tongcheng, revealed that its management has injected a combined 1 billion RMB ($149 million USD) into the company, which means that its founding team still holds a decisive voting position. The statement emphasized that major shareholders Wanda Group, Ctrip and Tencent all support the independent development of LY.com.

Wanda Group set up Wanda Tourism in 2013 as a major effort to expand beyond its home turf in the real estate industry. Over the past few years, the firm has acquired twelve local travel agencies in major cities, hitting annual revenue of 12 billion RMB ($1.7 billion USD) in 2015.

Under the deal, the twelve travel agencies owned by Wanda Tourism will be integrated into LY.com’s resort and scenic sport travel business, one of two independent departments the firm has set up after a major structure overhaul in June this year. The other business segment is dedicated to online sales for plane tickets, train tickets and hotel reservations.

Wanda Group is in the consortium which has poured overall 6 billion RMB funding ($895 million USD) in the ticketing website last year and the current deal is just another step for the two companies to further integrate their online and offline resources.

After the fundraising last year, the company has initiated its A-share listing plan and the current deal is aimed at fueling the IPO plan with the addition of new assets.

“Upon the completion of this merger, LY.com is expected to generate profits in 2017. We forecast the revenue for 2018 to reach 50 billion RMB ($7.45 billion USD) while the net profits surpassing 2 billion RMB. ($298 million USD)” said company founder and CEO Wu Zhixiang.

It is worth noting that rumor goes around that Wanda Group failed to offer the capital it promised in last year’s transaction, so the current merger of Wanda Tourism is used to fill in the gap. LY.com’s CEO Wu dispelled the speculation in an interview with local media CBN. “All the 6 billion RMB investment has long been in position after the press conference back then, including Wanda’s funding.”

However, LY.com, an internet startup, does have a tough road lying ahead in integrating businesses with a traditional company.

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Six Well-funded Chinese “We-media” Startups Other Than Papi Jiang https://technode.com/2016/10/09/we-media-papi-jiang/ Sun, 09 Oct 2016 07:16:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42117 China’s 710 million web-savvy netizens are becoming increasingly reliant on social media, aka we-media or self-media. Digital media overtaking traditional ones is no longer a far-fetched dream in China. In 2016, Chinese adults are going to spend more time on digital media than on traditional media of TV, radio and print, combined, research institute eMarketer predicted […]]]>

China’s 710 million web-savvy netizens are becoming increasingly reliant on social media, aka we-media or self-media. Digital media overtaking traditional ones is no longer a far-fetched dream in China.

In 2016, Chinese adults are going to spend more time on digital media than on traditional media of TV, radio and print, combined, research institute eMarketer predicted this April.

Papi Jiang’s 12 million RMB ($1.8 million USD) fundraising case surprised the crowds when the news first broke earlier this year, but it’s just among a raft of we-media startups that are receiving huge capital inflows. We picked six self-media startups loaded with cash to scrutinize and dissect.

1. Luojisiwei/ Luogic Show (逻辑思维)

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Started in 2012 by founder/host Luo Zhenyu as an online social-issues talk show brand, Luojisiwei, which means “logical thinking” in Chinese, is a multi-media content production company that built an active fan base from its talk show, WeChat subscription account, WeChat micro-shop and Baidu Tieba.

The three-year old startup has been quite successful in commercializing its user base, by selling all kinds of services from ads, books, membership to moon cakes. Luo, who emerged as an opinion leader in China’s intellectual community, is eagerly sought after for making commercial public speeches around the country.

As one of Papi Jiang’s investors, Luojisiwei’s team played an important role in pushing the 22 million RMB ad bid for Papi Jiang’s first commercial ad.

The company has secured an undisclosed amount B round at a valuation of 1.32 billion RMB in October 2015. As of then, its online videos have been played 290 million times in total, while its WeChat public account has over 5.3 million subscribers.

2. Baozou Comic (暴走漫画) 

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Following the popularity of rage comics in the U.S., Baozou Comic introduced the new genre to China by launching a series of internet talk-variety shows where a wide line of topics such as news, literature, politics and history, are commented on in humorous ways. The company’s popular program titles include Baozou Big News Events (暴走大事件), Baozou Kan Sha Pian (暴走看啥儿片), Baozou Lu A Lu (暴走撸啊撸) and so on.

The Xi’an-based startup has received an eight-digit USD dollar C round from NewMargin Ventures together with its previous investor Innovative Works in 2014.

3. Tongdao Dashu/Uncle’s Friends (同道大叔)

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As the Chinese younger generation becomes more serious about the zodiac and how the constellations determines people’s characters, offering constellation-related contents could also be a big business. Uncle’s Friends started as cartoonist startup that draws funny comics, mocking the queer characters of people from the different zodaic signs.

The company has made endeavors to expand business through three subsidiaries, Tongdao Media (cartoon production, WeChat account operation, drama), Tongdao Life (design, production and marketing for derivative constellation products like mascots), Tongdao Film (film and internet-variety program).

According to local media, Uncle’s Friends has generated more than 50 million RMB of revenue in 2015, mainly from ads, e-commerce derivative products and drama. The company has finalized an eight-digit RMB A round at the beginning of this year.

4. Club For Gossip Growth (关爱八卦成长协会)

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Club For Gossip Growth is a well-known internet-variety program on China’s top video site Youku. Hosted by former Hunan TV anchorman Ma Rui, the show exposes celebrity gossip and delivers sharp comments on hot entertainment news in a humorous way. With his highly personal character, Ma Rui is dubbed as the “Chairman Husband” by his fans, mostly female, who also act as paparazzi for the show.

The company has raised 10 million RMB of funding from online marketing service Tensyn in 2015.

5. Pomegranate Granny Report (石榴婆报告)

Pomegranate Granny Report is a budding fashion and lifestyle KOL (key opinion leader). It has been fully acquired by an unnamed company with 60 million RMB in 2015.

6. Laomei, How Do U Think (老美怎么看)

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Centered around the theme of culture shock, Laomei, How Do U Think invites foreigners to try out all kinds of “weird” foods in China such as stinky tofu, chicken feet, preserved eggs, latiao, a Chinese spicy snack made of beans, and so on.


For Chinese who wants to keep up with the headlines, new channels like Weibo, WeChat, Qzone, Baidu Tieba, Youku, forums, blogs are becoming their favorite alternative information source.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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How Youku Allocates Hefty Content Budget And Its Commercialization Plans https://technode.com/2016/10/06/youku-tudou-content/ Thu, 06 Oct 2016 00:00:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42322 As one of the widest spread internet meme goes — “Content is king”. There are plenty of ardent supporters of the philosophy in China’s video streaming industry and the country’s top video site Heyi Group, which is more commonly known as Youku Tudou, is one of them. Procuring quality video content is a strategic focus […]]]>

As one of the widest spread internet meme goes — “Content is king”. There are plenty of ardent supporters of the philosophy in China’s video streaming industry and the country’s top video site Heyi Group, which is more commonly known as Youku Tudou, is one of them.

Procuring quality video content is a strategic focus of the company in recent years with billion-level investments being injected for that initiative each year. It’s easy for us to wonder where did the company has spend all these money and how it’s going to monetize the contents for sustainable revenues. Jim Lerch, business development director at Youku, explained these questions at Shanghai Fashion Web held late last month.

Original/Licensed IP Contents Are The Money Burners

“In terms of content strategy, Youku has been spending a lot of money, a lot more than we did before,” said Jim. The company has poured 600 million RMB (around $90 million USD) and 1.1 billion RMB in original contents and licensed contents respectively in 2015. The figure is expected to jump to 2 billion RMB and 6 billion RMB this year.

“Youku is devoting more resources to the UPGC area to attract content creators, video bloggers and so on.” Jim said.

Licensed content obviously takes a lion’s share of Youku’s content. A large percentage of the funding was spent on some big brand IPs such as China’s top singing reality show The Voice of China (中国好声音).

Original content, a major traffic generator, is also the investment focus of the video-hosting site. For example, the peak views for a single episode of the platform’s No.1 original show Mars Intelligence Agency (火星情报局) hit over 100 million.

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The company started to build its own original IP since 2009 from internet talk shows like Morning Call, which is hosted by songwriter Gao Xiaosong, then went for outdoor reality show, micro movie, web-drama, animation and so on. Since 2014, Youku began to leverage on resources from traditional media to co-develop web-variety programs. Its current partners include Galaxy Media, SMG, Joy Media, Weizhong Media, among others.

We-media, or high-quality videos made by semi-pros, is major driving force, which commands 50% of overall traffic on Youku, Jim pointed out. A combined 10 billion RMB was set aside to make We-media the center of their entertainment ecology.

New Ways To Look At Revenue

“For big licensed IPs, it’s kind of a page view-based. We make some money from the subscriptions in the first few weeks before releasing it to all the users and also there’s ad revenue.” he said.

Derivative revenue is an important part. For big IP like The Voice of China, Youku works with the content owners to get rights to make small little shows that go along with the main show, which means some of the talents will launch parallel talk programs.

Also, brands can get involved to sponsor web shows or series, a more diversified way of marketing as compared to the traditional the pre-roll or post-roll ads. The platform has launched customized broadcasting show for Oreo with two celebrities, where users can interact with the broadcsters as it happened by sending virtual gifts.

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Screenshot of Oreo Customized Live Broadcasting Show

What’s New in Video Industry?

One year ago, we talked about shifting mobile and how this dramatic change from PC to mobile will influence people’s video consuming habits. This year, it has been the rise of OTT (over-the-top) devices, which contributes to something like 15 percent of Youku’s traffic, Jim pointed out.

Another rising trend in the industry is VR, AR and MR. Youku has launched its owe dedicated VR app and has inked partnership with headset makers and content providers for VR experiences. “The services will be monetized through ad products, commerce, O2O, live broadcast, content distribution and more.”

Youku as an Alibaba Company, What Does It Mean for Youku Users and Clients?

One of the biggest changes for Youku this year is that it has become an Alibaba company as part of the internet tycoon’s media and entertainment matrix. Data synergy with Alibaba is the most prominent benefit in line with the platform’s partners, said Jim.

“The traditional way of advertising is way too fragmented to get the same effectiveness comes out of that. There are a lot of things to leverage from our data and from Alibaba’s data. For example, accurate demographic targeting: If you use Alipay you are putting a lot of information because it’s right from your ID card for age and gender. The data also gives insights on real purchase behaviors and intents, customer’s attitudes and needs, etc.”

image credit: Youku Tudou 

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Attention Startup Hopefuls, TechCrunch Beijing Startup Competition Is Open For Applications Now! https://technode.com/2016/10/01/tcbj-startup-battlefield-2016/ Sat, 01 Oct 2016 00:00:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42349 Still enjoying your weeklong October 1st national holiday? But don’t forget the exciting startup gala TechCrunch Beijing is just around the corner in November 5th to 8th. Together with the annual event, TechCrunch China’s premiere startup competition Startup Competition is also back, ready to receive applications from new and yet-to-launch startups with innovative ideas. For those […]]]>

Still enjoying your weeklong October 1st national holiday? But don’t forget the exciting startup gala TechCrunch Beijing is just around the corner in November 5th to 8th. Together with the annual event, TechCrunch China’s premiere startup competition Startup Competition is also back, ready to receive applications from new and yet-to-launch startups with innovative ideas.

For those who aren’t yet familiar, Startup Competition is a series of biannual events where 15 semi-finalists will have the opportunity to present their products live onstage at TechCrunch summits, facing questions from judging panels and peer entrepreneurs alike.

Venture capitalists that have confirmed to participate the event as our judge are from some of the most privileged investment institutions home and abroad, such as ZhenFund, SBCVC, Gobi Partners, Panda Capital, Cheetah Mobile, Cherubic Ventures, Yunqi Partners, iResearch Capital, Innospace, Ameba Capital and so on.

In addition to get valuable feedbacks from industry experts, the 15 semi-finalists will be able to get two free passes to TechCruch events, a booth in startup alley as well as opportunities to demo your product to hundreds of venture capitalists and our media partners.

In the end, however, there can be only one winner who will walk away with final prize. Former participants of competition include uprising drone maker Ehang and cloud virtualization tech company VMFive, both of which have secured millions of funding.

Though our event is based in Beijing, we encourage startups from across China and around the world to apply as long as you are TMT startup and before A round financing. This time we will break the applicant startups into six groups according to the verticals they are engaged in, namely, mobile internet, online finance, lifestyle and consumption, culture and creativity, smart hardware and miscellaneous.

Please click here to check more information and sign up for the event by October 16th.

Don’t hesitate, cause this might be your chance to make everything happen.

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Chinese K-12 Edtech Startup Zuoyebang Raises $60M Funding https://technode.com/2016/09/28/chinese-k-12-edtech-startup-zuoyebang-raises-60m-finding/ Wed, 28 Sep 2016 10:00:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42282 GSX TALZuoyebang, a K-12 online education startup, announced that it has just completed a $60 million Series B funding. The series is co-led by GGV Capital and Xianghe Capital, a venture capital founded by former Baidu executives, with participation of existing investors of Sequoia Capital and Legend Capital. The new funding is earmarked for R&D, team construction and […]]]> GSX TAL

Zuoyebang, a K-12 online education startup, announced that it has just completed a $60 million Series B funding. The series is co-led by GGV Capital and Xianghe Capital, a venture capital founded by former Baidu executives, with participation of existing investors of Sequoia Capital and Legend Capital.

The new funding is earmarked for R&D, team construction and education content, according to the company’s CEO Hou Jianbin.

Officially launched in January 2014 under Baidu’s Q&A site Baidu Zhidao, Zuoyebang is an online learning platform for K-12 students, where users can seek answers by snapping photo of their problems, find teachers for one-on-one Q&A sessions, live stream videos and receive homework evaluation. The site also serves as a nexus to connect students, teachers and parents. The startup claims to have amassed over 175 million users.

As a part of Baidu’s “aircraft carrier program”, which has opened a series of Baidu assets to outside investment, Zuoyebang was spun off from the Chinese search engine in 2015 and received an A round of an undisclosed amount  in the same year.

Like many Chinese startups, Zuoyebang is planning to explore overseas markets as more foreign counterparts are setting their eyes on the Chinese market.

“Generally speaking, K-12 edtech startups are focused on their local markets because the K12 market in different countries varies significantly. But technology-driven startups can break through these barriers. For example, the U.S. adaptive learning company Knewton has entered China as well as 20 other countries around the world. As a tech-driven company, bringing our product to global users is also our long-term goal,” company CEO Hou Jianbin told TechNode.

Of course, there’s plenty of competition in China’s K-12 online education space as Chinese internet giants started to stack their chips in the area. Tencent has invested in two leading players in the industry, Yuanfudao and Entstudy earlier this year.

Zuoyebang still has to face a fierce competition in acquiring and maintaining an active user base, but the new funding has brought the company more time to grow. Although company representatives emphasized that Zuoyebang is now an independent company, its close relation with Baidu will certainly bring more support for its growth, such as in drawing more traffic and possible cooperation with Baidu’s file-sharing platform Wenku and Baidu’s online education arm Chuanke.

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Meituan-Dianping Moves To Second-half Era With Payment Startup Acquisition https://technode.com/2016/09/27/meituan-dianping-qiandai-acquisition/ Tue, 27 Sep 2016 04:08:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42254 Meituan-Dianping, China’s largest group deals site, confirmed Monday that it has fully acquired Qiandai, a third-party payment startup. This means that Meituan-Dianping is able to run financial services ranging from mobile payment, bankcard payment to prepaid cards. The company has not disclosed more details about the deal yet, but one thing is sure: the Chinese unicorn has finally obtained […]]]>

Meituan-Dianping, China’s largest group deals site, confirmed Monday that it has fully acquired Qiandai, a third-party payment startup. This means that Meituan-Dianping is able to run financial services ranging from mobile payment, bankcard payment to prepaid cards.

The company has not disclosed more details about the deal yet, but one thing is sure: the Chinese unicorn has finally obtained the long-coveted third-party payment license through this case, adding another key asset to its O2O ecosystem.

The move is in line with the recent Second-half era proposition proposed by the company’s founder Wang Xing, who claimed a new period is right around the corner for the company, the O2O industry and the whole nation. For him, deep integration among industries is the only solution for us to live up to the change.

The importance of third-party payment license for O2O companies, whose services encompasses of a wide range of services that generally involve payment at some point, is so obvious. With this case, Meituan-Dianping has removed a hurdle along its way to create a closed business circle for O2O industry.

The Chinese tycoon has once rolled out some tentative efforts to include pre-paid functions in its mobile app and website. However, such a feature steps on the policy line for payment services that needs an official license to accommodate in China. Not surprisingly, the company has received a warning this March from the PBOC (People’s Bank Of China) to remove the feature.

The deal is more significant given that the PBOC announced last month that it’s not going to release new payment licenses to non-bank payment agencies for “a certain period” as it seeks to regulate the fast-expanding payment industry.

While Alipay and WeChat Payment are the existing mobile payment solutions for Meituan-Dianping, Qiandai’s acquisition could reduce Meituan-Dianping’s reliance on them and bring the firm more edge against its rivals. Both Baidu Nuomi and Alibaba’s O2O arm Koubei, the two arch-competitors of Meituan-Dianping, have their own payment solutions, Baidu Pay and Alipay.

Founded in 2008, Qiandai is a mobile payment company that provides comprehensive payment solutions for small and medium-sized enterprises. It is one of the first batch of 27 enterprises to obtain the payment license issued by China’s central government. The firm has received a strategic investment from Haitong Securities, IDG-backed RMB fund Harmony Growth in November 2014.

“The acquisition of third-party payment license will help us to provide faster and safer services to user and merchants. We aim to build a comprehensive platform that opens to banks, card operators and other payment institutions in a bid to construct an O2O ecosystem for facilitating mutual development,” said Mu Rongjun, senior VP of Meituan-Dianping.

Image credit: Shutterstock

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VR-enabled Vidahouse Brings Interior Design Back To Creative Ideas https://technode.com/2016/09/23/vr-vidahouse-design/ Fri, 23 Sep 2016 07:00:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42189 People started explaining design as “the rendering of intent“, which breaks the design process into two activities, having the team arriving at the same intentions and having their intentions presented in the desired way. However, the importance of intentionality in the first phase is often overlooked as people running hastily to the rendering or execution phase which usually […]]]>

People started explaining design as “the rendering of intent“, which breaks the design process into two activities, having the team arriving at the same intentions and having their intentions presented in the desired way. However, the importance of intentionality in the first phase is often overlooked as people running hastily to the rendering or execution phase which usually kills more time and energy.

“Designers are spending too much time on duplicated works like drawing up the sketches, building 3D model of their plans and communicating with fellow designers,” said Weisen Chen, founder of designer software startup Vidahouse.

As a veteran interior designer who has worked in the industry for more than two decades, the entrepreneur believes these precious times could be saved and used for what design is really about – the ideas.

To this initiative, Weisen founded Vidahouse with associate Jimmy Zhuang, who feels the pain and share the same dream in revolutionizing interior design process. After two year of development, Vidahouse is officially launched last week in Shanghai.

In many ways, Vidahouse is to visualize the imaginations of designers as they evolve through the development for speeding up concept approvals and identify problems. After scanning a 2D floor plan, even if it’s a hand sketch, the software will complete the 3D modeling automatically within a few seconds which usually takes hours to do in the past. Users can select materials, furniture, styles and products from cloud database to test out their desired effects.

Other interesting features include functions to show your design under different lighting effects and generate photorealistic screenshots for design scheme comparison.

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On top of showing your ideas in real-time, Vidahouse allows users to find, add, share or shop for furniture ideas in 360 degree virtual reality showrooms.

Hampered communication among designers and their clients is another problem Vidahouse aims to solve through visualized and interactive communication. Users can add their friends, clients, fellow designers or suppliers to join the virtual room for giving comments and adjusting current design in real time. An accompanying app is at your disposal to facilitate cross-platform operation.

Apart from facilitating the design process, Vidahouse wants to go a step further to inspire designers with their design DNA sharing platform. Enabled by AI technology, Vidahouse extracts the design elements that can be easily applied into plans for various design styles and spaces.

However, you do need a high-spec computer to run the software due to the large amount of calculations, the company’s co-founder Jimmy stated, and the preferred computer specs are Intel i7 CPU, 32G and 4K screen.

“It was a hard decision to make two years ago at the very beginning of Vidahouse…but we chose the future. The specs we required are becoming mainstream now in the year one for VR technology,” Jimmy said.

Good services never come cheap, but Vidahouse still tries to make it accessible for users who want to take a peek at the new tech. The company offers a 6-month free trial period for earlier adopters.

Starting from China, Vidahouse also sets eyes in overseas market. “We have already launched a few academic partnership projects in Europe and the U.S. The next thing on our agenda is to cooperate with designers and design firms in these markets. Furthermore, this is also a move to bridge the gap between domestic and foreign designer communities.” Jimmy said.

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Jimmy Zhuang (Right), Weisen Chen (Middle)

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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LeEco Rolls Out High Spec-packed LeEco Le Pro 3 At $270 https://technode.com/2016/09/22/leeco-le-pro-3/ Thu, 22 Sep 2016 06:00:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42159 After plenty of speculations surrounding the Le Pro 3, LeEco officially rolled out its new flagship product in China yesterday. At the same event, LeEco claimed it has shipped over 17 million Le Phones as of present. Like other local smartphone manufacturers, globalization is a top priority for the company now. Markets in India, Hong Kong, Russia, the U.S. […]]]>

After plenty of speculations surrounding the Le Pro 3, LeEco officially rolled out its new flagship product in China yesterday.

At the same event, LeEco claimed it has shipped over 17 million Le Phones as of present. Like other local smartphone manufacturers, globalization is a top priority for the company now. Markets in India, Hong Kong, Russia, the U.S. and Asia Pacific regions are their current-prime focus, according to Feng Xing, vice president of the company.

It’s no secret that Chinese smartphone vendors tend to lean towards high-end specs and affordable prices in product push, and LeEco is no exception.

Le Pro 3 looks quite the powerful handset– at least on paper. Enabled by Android 6.0 Marshmallow with LeEco’s EUI 5.8 on the top, the smartphone is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 SoC processor which clocks at 2.35GHz. The new quad-core processor is 10% faster than its predecessor Snapdragon 820, the firm pointed out.

Le Pro 3 features a mental unibody design with a screen size of 5.5-inch 1080p display resolution with 2.5 D curved glass display on the top. Color options include silver, gray, rose gold and gold.

The phone sports a main camera of 16MP with dual tone LED flash and phase detection auto-focus. An 8MP front cameral is at your disposal for shooting selfies.

The device is shipped with a non-removable 7.5mm-thick battery of 4070mAh. It also supports 24W QuickCharge 3.0 with which LeEco is confident to get your phone charged from zero to 35% in 30 minutes and fully charged with around two hours.

LeEco said it already has 5 million Le Pro 3 handsets in stock and the pricing various according to RAM and memories.

  • 4GB RAM + 32GB – 1,799 yuan ($270)
  • 6GB RAM + 64GB – 1,999 yuan ($300)
  • 4GB RAM + 64GB –  2,499 yuan ($375)
  • 6GB RAM + 128GB – 2,999 yuan ($450)

The new addition to Lephone’s product line is open for preorders now and official sales will begin since September 28.

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Le Supercar Scoops $1.08 Billion Funding To Fuel Its Fight Against Tesla https://technode.com/2016/09/20/lesupercar-funding-tesla/ Tue, 20 Sep 2016 01:51:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42127 Chinese internet giant LeEco announced Monday that its electric car affiliate Le Supercar has raised $1.08 billion USD fresh funding, the largest first round funding ever in automotive industry, according to the company. As the huge sum entails, the company disclosed a lengthy investor list that includes big names like Lenovo, Yingda Capital, a venture […]]]>

Chinese internet giant LeEco announced Monday that its electric car affiliate Le Supercar has raised $1.08 billion USD fresh funding, the largest first round funding ever in automotive industry, according to the company.

As the huge sum entails, the company disclosed a lengthy investor list that includes big names like Lenovo, Yingda Capital, a venture capital firm backed by State Grid, Shenzhen Municipality-backed Shenzhen Capital Group, China Minsheng Trust, Macrolink Group and Hongzhao Capital.

LeEco, which is to China what Netflix is to the rest of the world, started from video streaming service and quickly expanded to a plethora of businesses from film production to smart TV, smart phones, e-commerce and cloud computing. Company founder and CEO Jia Yieting said in a previous interview that LeEco’s current model is the “ultimate combination of Tesla, Uber, Apple Amazon and Netflix.”

As a major part of LeEco’s business ecosystem, the company launched its super car project back in 2014. Jia disclosed that the project now has over 1,000 staff. Some of the team members reportedly are former Tesla, BMW and GM employees.

In addition, Le Supercar is developing a global industrial chain in partnership with leaders in auto industry. It has partnered with Aston Martin, GAC Group and U.S. electric car startup Faraday Future, which promised last year to spend $1 billion USD on a factory built near Las Vegas. In August this year, LeEco has signed cooptation agreement with Zhejiang provincial government to set up an auto park in Deqing City with $3 billion investment.

While building automotive is a cash-burning endeavor, Le Supercar has been questioned with funding problems since its launch. This round will probably ease the funding pressure of the company. Jia indicates that the tie-up with state-backed and private conglomerate investors will smooth their way in seeking more supports.

LeSupercar’s financing is just part of LeEco’s funding spree to maintain its explosive growth to a variety of industries. The company’s cloud and sports unites have received 1 billion yuan and 8 billion yuan funding respectively this year.

At the same event, LeEco announced the sales data of its “919” shopping festival has reached 4.48 billion RMB in the past 24 hours.

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Meituan-Dianping CEO On How To Win Battle In “Second Half” https://technode.com/2016/09/15/meituan-dianping-ceo-on-how-to-win-battle-in-second-half/ Thu, 15 Sep 2016 07:00:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42048 The agenda-setting effect has been widely talked in political setting, but it fits equally well in the business world through creating prevailing commercial thoughts that could inspire new business trends. Since 2015, Jack Ma has been touting the idea that China is progressing from an information technology era to data technology era, which underlines Alibaba’s […]]]>

The agenda-setting effect has been widely talked in political setting, but it fits equally well in the business world through creating prevailing commercial thoughts that could inspire new business trends.

Since 2015, Jack Ma has been touting the idea that China is progressing from an information technology era to data technology era, which underlines Alibaba’s commercial plans for the coming years.

A most recent proposition from Chinese Internet opinion leaders is “Second Half” by Wang Xing, CEO of Meituan Dianping.

Wang is a serial entrepreneur known for his shrewd opinions on China’s tech scene. His previous projects such as Xiaonei.com (aka Renren.com) and Fanfou.com have achieved different degree of success in the country. As founder and CEO of Meituan, Wang helped the company to survive the fierce group-buying battle and lead its final merger with archrival Dianping in 2015.

What does “Second Half” mean?

Wang Xing first proposed this idea at an internal meeting in early July. Like Jack Ma, he predicted that China is entering a new era, which he dubbed as the “Second Half”. But for Wang, this era not only marks a new beginning for his company or China’s O2O industry, but also for the whole country.

In a speech made at Yabuli Youth Forum in the same month, Wang further illustrated why it’s time to embrace the new period. (Wang’s speech in Chinese)

After a series of new appointments on the management level in July, Meituan-Dianping just finalized a lengthy three-quarter business and management consolidation since the merger.

Meituan-Dianping now claimed to be the third largest e-commerce platform in China, next only to Alibaba and JD. As of June this year, the company has registered over 600 million users with monthly active mobile users hitting 180 million. The connected platform has registered 20 million POIs (point of interest) and cooperates with over four million merchants.

Marked by the merger of industry leaders like Meituan-Dianping and Didi-Kuaidi-Uber China, China’s O2O industry also witnessed mass consolidation and eager to find new models to better combine online and offline resources.

From the Marco-level, demographic dividend is among the most prominent contributors to China’s economic boom. As the force of this edge weakens, the country is in the face of growth transitions so as to maintain sustainable development. Rising middle class is another driving force, but now how to avoid the middle-income trap is the question need to be addressed in the “Second Half”.

How to win the “Second Half” battle?

“Only deep integration can lead to full transition”, Wang cited a quote to illustrate his point. As an online platform, Meituan-Dianping only brings traffic to local life service providers in the past. “To offer the best service to partners, that’s not enough. Our next step is helping merchants to increase the efficiencies of their business”, said Wang.

Although the platform has attracted more customers for Chinese offline merchants, their connection with merchants stops at that level. More valuable information, such as sales and operation data, are still inaccessible.

As a move to solve this problem, Meituan-Dianping rolled out on August 29th an enterprise resources planning open platform that supports group purchasing, payment, order, shop management, reviewing and more.

Globalization and overseas expansion is another momentum for Chinese companies in the future, Wang noted. It’s difficult for new entrants to break the dominance of BAT in China’s internet market. Likewise, the same problem holds water when Chinese companies are trying to enter the global market that has been controlled by BAT of the world: Google, Amazon and Facebook.

As a latecomer of the global market, Wang thinks Chinese companies can find some reference in Huawei’s globalization strategy: high-tech service with specifically localized features. Moreover, China’s low human resources cost is another advantage over foreign competitors, he pointed out.

image credit: 360doc

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Ready To Unlock Alipay With Your Eyes? Ant Financial Acquires EyeVerify https://technode.com/2016/09/14/ant-financial-eyeverify/ Wed, 14 Sep 2016 08:01:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42033 Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba, has acquired U.S mobile eye verification startup EyeVerify, Inc., according to an announcement published on Tuesday from the latter. The companies did not disclose the cost of the acquisition, though sources who spoke to Bloomberg and Fortune value the deal at $70 million USD and $100 million USD, respectively. The […]]]>

Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba, has acquired U.S mobile eye verification startup EyeVerify, Inc., according to an announcement published on Tuesday from the latter.

The companies did not disclose the cost of the acquisition, though sources who spoke to Bloomberg and Fortune value the deal at $70 million USD and $100 million USD, respectively.

The acquisition wasn’t surprising given the history between the two companies. Ant Financial has been using EyeVerify’s authentication technologies for months under a licensing agreement. According to EyeVerify’s press release, the startup’s technology was previously integrated into Ant Fianncial’s payment authentication platform. The tie-up will allow EyeVerify’s technology to be more widely used in Ant Financial’s products.

Founded in 2012 by a team of computer scientists and engineers, EyeVerify is the developer of “EyePrint ID”, a patent technology that verifies the user’s identity by identifying blood vessel patterns in their eye. By reading these vein patterns in selfies, the technology transforms the data into a fifty character password. The company claims that its tool is 99.99% accurate.

EyeVerify currently has 17 U.S. patents issued and 15 more patents pending to continue its expansion, according to the company.

The startup received a $6 million USD Series A round in 2014. Chinese software company Qihoo 360 and Samsung Electronics were also participating investors.

“The acquisition of EyeVerify is a critical part of our effort to make bold, yet thoughtful moves to continually enhance user trust, safety, and experience,” said Jason Lu, vice president of fraud risk management at Ant Financial. “It is an important extension of our efforts to accelerate the global adoption of secure mobile payments and allows us to improve our overall risk management.”

Despite all the innovations around mobile wallets, payment security is still a huge concern for services providers and individual users alike. In recent years, biometric verification technologies have been widely applied from fingerprint, voice, facial, handwriting, and now eye-pattern recognition technology.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo
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Could Indie Games Be The Cure For Mobile Gaming Startups? https://technode.com/2016/09/14/mu77-indie-game/ Wed, 14 Sep 2016 08:00:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=42016 One of largest distinctions between creative industries and traditional ones, such as manufacturing, is how difficult it is to predict their return on investment, says Lu Jiaxian, the founder of mobile gaming company Mu77. “Companies engaged in traditional industries such as manufacturing could get a clear view about their investment returns,” says Mr. Lu. “All you had to […]]]>

One of largest distinctions between creative industries and traditional ones, such as manufacturing, is how difficult it is to predict their return on investment, says Lu Jiaxian, the founder of mobile gaming company Mu77.

“Companies engaged in traditional industries such as manufacturing could get a clear view about their investment returns,” says Mr. Lu. “All you had to do was add up your cost for components, labor, and the amount of profit you were aiming for.”

“The same principle wouldn’t work in creative industry where investment and return are less correlated,” he says. “A low-budget animation film like Monkey King: Hero is Back could achieve huge commercial success, while blockbuster titles like Throne of Elves could end in gloomy box office revenues.”

For Mu77, partnering with indie games could be a way to counter the unpredictability of the creative industry and maintain a high success rate in China’s increasingly competitive mobile gaming market.

The commercial success of mobile games with licensed IPs  is evident around the world. However, it is difficult for startups to compete with heavy-pocketed gaming giants for quality IP resources. Indie games, which have a smaller but more loyal and niche audience and an established reputation could be a good place to start.

“Firstly, we will obtain the original codes and images from the indie game developers,” says Mr. Lu. “After drilling down into the design logic, we then develop a mobile version of the game by adding features that better suit the habits of mobile gamers for player engagement.”

More importantly, Mu77 integrates monetization features and launches marketing campaigns for the game to attract players outside of the hardcore indie game community.

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In August last year, the company launched a successful pixel art game called Gold Digger, which recorded 20 million RMB (about $3 million USD) of revenue within the first month after its release. Mr. Lu says that their second game Card Monsters, a trading card game, will roll out in one or two months later this year.

“It’s common practice for gaming companies to open their games for testing when 70 to 80 percent of the product is finished,” says Mr. Lu.” With access to a group of loyal game players, we start the testing as early as 30 percent. It gives us time to integrate feedbacks from users along the way to perfect our games.”

Unpredictable return is one of the reasons why China’s mobile gaming investment craze is cooling down. “It’s true that gaming companies may have difficulty maintaining sustainable year-over-year growth, but by setting the focus to a three to five year time frame, we can find some trends governing the company’s growth.”

“The film industry is also facing this problem, but a mature financial industrial chain has helped to lower the risks for investors,” says Mr. Lu. “So there’s still a long way for us to go.”

“I believe the gaming industry will continue to boom because computer game and mobile games are still the most accessible form of entertainment for the masses,” he adds.

Four Trends Shaping Gaming Industry

As a veteran game designer that has worked in the gaming industry for more than a decade, Mr. Lu shared four changes that are shaping China’s gaming industry:

1. “Consumption Upgrade” in Gaming

“Consumption upgrade”, a concept widely used in traditional industries, also applies to the gaming industry. China’s gaming industry, especially the mobile gaming sector, has risen rapidly over the past few years thanks to a growing base of mobile users. It’s easy for developers to gain users in a growing market, but as the market evolves, users are getting a better sense of their own preferences, such as card-collecting games.

“At this time, companies that want to stand out from the crowd should come up with higher quality games that target a specific audience rather than mainstream users,” Mr. Lu pointed out.

“When we first released Gold Digger, it was crystal clear for us that over 80 percent of mainstream users weren’t ready to accept this kind of pixel art game, but it doesn’t matter because our game goes after a small group of pixel game fans.”

2. Globalization

China’s mobile market is entering a development bottleneck. But when looking at the global market, there’s still plenty of emerging markets in India, Indonesia, and Brazil. At the same time, users in developed countries such as Japan and the U.S. are also a major contributor to global mobile game revenues. It’s time to build a global ecosystem.

“I’m not saying that companies only focused on domestic market wouldn’t stand a chance, but it will be a tough path to take,” says Mr. Lu.

Furthermore, lots of Chinese internet companies have taken the lead in overseas expansion. “Their success in foreign markets have forged the path for globalization with lower costs for user acquisition,” he says.

3. Big Data

“In a booming market, there’s little need for refined operations to target at different user groups, but now it’s a game changer in the market,” says Mr. Lu.

Supported by big data, companies will be able to construct data models that can predict user behavior and make corresponding marketing measures to change their behavioral curves.

4. New Technologies

The adoption of new technologies like VR and AR is going to bring a new spike in the global gaming business. “There’s no need for me to further dwell on this point because the success of Pokémon Go has been so obvious,” says Mr. Lu.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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Didi Chuxing Lands $119M Funding From Apple Supplier Foxconn https://technode.com/2016/09/09/didi-chuxing-foxconn/ Fri, 09 Sep 2016 02:36:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41950 It seems that the epic merger between Didi Chuxing and Uber China is not going to end the fundraising spree in China’s ride-hailing industry. After countless financing rounds, Didi Chuxing, China’s dominant ride-hail startup, just received another $119.9 million USD from Foxconn, the world’s largest contract manufacturer of electronics. The news was revealed in a stock […]]]>

It seems that the epic merger between Didi Chuxing and Uber China is not going to end the fundraising spree in China’s ride-hailing industry.

After countless financing rounds, Didi Chuxing, China’s dominant ride-hail startup, just received another $119.9 million USD from Foxconn, the world’s largest contract manufacturer of electronics.

The news was revealed in a stock exchange filling by Foxconn under their trading name, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd. The investment was made through its subsidiary Foxtec Holdings for a 0.355% stake in Didi Chuxing at a valuation of $33.7 billion USD.

As one of the most highly valued startups in China, Didi’s star-studded investor list includes a growing number of global tech giants from locals Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent, to global ones such as Apple and Uber. The Chinese government is also an investor via their sovereign wealth fund, China Investment Corp.

The name Foxconn often draws connection to Apple, one of Foxconn’s largest clients, which also poured $1 billion USD in Didi this May. Although it is still unclear whether Apple facilitated Foxconn’s investment or whether there is a possible collaboration plan between the smartphone icon, manufacturer and ride-hailing company, the tie-up definitely unites their ambitions in the auto industry.

Foxconn has already worked with modeling, circuiting and batteries for automobiles. It’s also the manufacturer for some of the components used by Tesla.

Together with Tencent and China Harmony Auto, Foxconn established an internet car company, Harmony Futeng (和谐富腾), this year. To take on the car sales boom in China, the joint venture operates two subsidiaries: Future Mobility, a high-end smart car project and Aiche, a consumer electric vehicle company.

At the same time, Apple is also working on its own smart car project that involves a few hundred employees.

For Didi Chuxing, investors with a global presence may ease the way for a global expansion. Like Apple’s May investment, neither company have divulged what the strategic partnership could potentially involve.

“Foxconn is a global electronics and mobile technology leader. With the support of Foxconn and other value investors home and abroad, DiDi will continue to push the frontier of innovation for the mobile transportation market and create ever stronger driver and rider communities.”said Didi in a statement.

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AI Has Yet To Defeat Human Intelligence, Here’s Why: iFLYTEK CEO https://technode.com/2016/09/06/ai-iflytek/ https://technode.com/2016/09/06/ai-iflytek/#respond Tue, 06 Sep 2016 08:00:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41684 While the artificial intelligence industry has been around for 60 years, it wasn’t until AlphaGo’s landslide victory over Korean Go grandmaster Lee Se-Dol that AI returned to the spotlight. Se-Dol’s match with AlphaGo brought more attention to the emerging sector, and it also put AI technology under tougher scrutiny from industry experts. Some scientists argued that artificial intelligence might be the most apocalyptic […]]]>

While the artificial intelligence industry has been around for 60 years, it wasn’t until AlphaGo’s landslide victory over Korean Go grandmaster Lee Se-Dol that AI returned to the spotlight.

Se-Dol’s match with AlphaGo brought more attention to the emerging sector, and it also put AI technology under tougher scrutiny from industry experts.

Some scientists argued that artificial intelligence might be the most apocalyptic technology of all. This view has an eager audience, including tech giants from Bill Gates to Elon Musk. The legendary astrophysicist Stephen Hawking went even further, remarking that “the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.”

Although Lee’s failure seems to support this ominous prediction, Hu Yu, the president of Chinese voice recognition giant iFLYTEK, believes AI technology, despite its quick development, still has a long way to go before it’s comparable to human intelligence.

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“AI is divided into three development stages: computational intelligence, sensory intelligence, and cognitive intelligence”, Hu Yu illustrated at a technology meetup held in Shanghai last week.

“Machines have outrun human brain in terms of computational capabilities, a point testified by AlphaGo’s victory over human Go master. Also, technology development in recent years has enabled machines to easily eclipse people’s sensory ability… Nobody can feel or detect the world through radar, ultrasound wave or laser, but computers can.”

“However, the most essential difference of human[s] from animals, or the factor that made us the ruler of the world, lies in our cognition, the ability to acquire knowledge, rationale and to understand through thought, experience and senses. No machine can do that now.”

“What’s more, all the AI-enabled machines are experts in a specific function, AlphaGo and IBM’s Deep Blue for board games, Pepper for companionship and entertainment. The list can go on and on, but none of the machines are made for general functions that are comparable to human being.”

As language is one of the largest distinguishing factors between humans and other livings, many scientists have used it to understand human cognition. “AI is out of the question without understanding of human language, the concepts behind the languages and the relations between the concepts,” he emphasized.

There are two mainstream channels to achieve revolution in sensory and cognition. One major and perhaps a little far-fetched way is to produce a computer replica of the human mind through cognitive neuroscience by simulating the organizing and working principles of the human brain. The tech industry has offered a more accessible solution to the same problem: a big data-based AI or artificial neural network.

The iFLYTEK Super Brain (讯飞超脑, our translation), an artificial intelligence project developed by the Chinese company, is among a rising wave of artificial neural network projects like Google Brain and Baidu Brain.

Currently, iFLYTEK Super Brain consists of a neural view machine, reading machine, and listening machine for sensory capabilities, said Hu. “Neural thinking machines for conception and decision-making and expression machines for execution are also integrated to achieve the leap from sensory to cognitive intelligence.”

Powered by iFLYTEK Super Brain, the company’s AI open platform now provides service to over 180,000 developers. According to the firm, AI technology is currently most favored by smart home and robotics companies, which accounts for more than 70 percent of the developers on the platform. Other industries ready to adopt the emerging tech include smart wearables, entertainment, and security.

Credit: 123RF Stock Photo

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[Update] State-Owned CITIC Jumps On ‘Internet Plus’ Bandwagon With New Cloud Unit https://technode.com/2016/09/06/citic-group/ https://technode.com/2016/09/06/citic-group/#respond Tue, 06 Sep 2016 01:40:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41777 China’s state-owned conglomerate CITIC Group announced last week the establishment of a cloud and big data service subsidiary to fully capitalize on the ongoing internet boom in the country (link in Chinese). This marks CITIC’s shift in focus to internet-related businesses in line with the country’s “Internet Plus” policy. The new firm, dubbed CITIC Industrial […]]]>

China’s state-owned conglomerate CITIC Group announced last week the establishment of a cloud and big data service subsidiary to fully capitalize on the ongoing internet boom in the country (link in Chinese). This marks CITIC’s shift in focus to internet-related businesses in line with the country’s “Internet Plus” policy.

The new firm, dubbed CITIC Industrial Cloud, is focused on platform development, operations, as well as pushing innovation and entrepreneurship, according to a company statement. Based on a market-oriented operation model, the subsidiary is expected to provide technical support and services to the group’s affiliated companies as well as other clients.

As a cloud service broker, the firm’s basic cloud infrastructure platform is a third-party service that acts as an intermediary between providers and purchasers of cloud computing services. The first batch of cloud service providers on the platform includes Alibaba Cloud, Tencent, Yongyou, Knownsec, China Entercom and CITIC Application Service Provider Co., Ltd.

CITIC Industrial Cloud also inked a partnership with AsiaInfo, a software and IT service provider to the telecom industry, and software company Global InfoTech for big data platform construction, software development, and information security.

To start the business, CITIC will first strengthen IT support to fully digitize the business of its subsidiaries and other customers. In addition to the cloud brokerage service, a series of infrastructure arms like a cloud platform for software development and big data will be established in the future. In the long run, the company aims to launch a project to encourage innovation and entrepreneurship among employees.

Update: (Based on an asset light model, the total investment in this project is expected to be around eight-digit RMB, introduced Zhu Gaoming. “We are developing an open platform to integrate all kinds of cloud services, like a super market for clouds, so it’s less capital demanding for infrastructure construction. We only have to cooperate with partners who have these resources.”

Through the construction of this industrial cloud, the company aims to integrate the cross-industry data that CITIC has accumulated from its wide range of businesses from financial services, energy, real estate and more.

“Currently, CITIC Industrial Cloud is positioned as a supporting project that brings the group’s offline businesses online and to inspire new business models. We are not expecting it to generate revenue in the short term. But with the full potential of cloud market, it’s highly possible the subsidiary may go public independently in the future”, said Zhu.”)

CITIC

Jumping On The ‘Internet Plus’ Bandwagon

Fueled by the state’s “Internet Plus” policy, China’s internet craze is quickly taking hold of the whole country, from individual entrepreneurs to state-backed enterprises. China’s state-owned enterprises are holding a more open and active role in pushing internet and technology development, especially through startup ventures.

CITIC Guoan, which is backed by CITIC Group, has invested $20 million USD in NextVR, a virtual reality sports broadcasting startup. China Post Capital, the state-owned investment institution of postal service company China Post Group Corp, is an investor of Ant Financial. Insurance giant China Life Insurance has invested in both Didi Chuxing and Uber China.

Essentially monopolists, one of the greatest advantages of China’s SOEs is their access to resources and their presence in all traditional industries. For example, CITIC Group has a wide range of businesses that include financial services, resources and energy, manufacturing, engineering contracting, and real estate. While technology innovation is upending emerging as well as traditional industries, China’s SOEs are feeling the pressure from up-and-coming tech companies. Jumping onto the internet bandwagon to fully embrace change is perhaps a good option for them to keep up with the evolving market.

This post is updated on 14:47 September 8th to add more details to the story.

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Mobile App Testing Platform Testin Scoops $30M C Round For Overseas Expansion https://technode.com/2016/08/29/testin-round-c/ https://technode.com/2016/08/29/testin-round-c/#respond Sun, 28 Aug 2016 21:40:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41536 Testin, a leading cloud testing service in China, announced last week that it competed a $30 million USD Series C funding round led by an undisclosed domestic dollar fund. Founded in 2011, Testin started off as an enterprise mobile app compatibility test business, providing developers statistics on an apps’ performance in installation, operation, functionality, and UI.. As an […]]]>

Testin, a leading cloud testing service in China, announced last week that it competed a $30 million USD Series C funding round led by an undisclosed domestic dollar fund.

Founded in 2011, Testin started off as an enterprise mobile app compatibility test business, providing developers statistics on an apps’ performance in installation, operation, functionality, and UI..

As an early player in the field, the company gradually expanded its business to solve all kinds of pain points that developers face during the app development cycle, such as prototype testing, service quality monitoring, app crash analytics, and QA test services.

Testin claims to have run tests for more than 1.8 million apps, providing service to more than 700,000 developers. It has testing centers in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and the U.S. with 50,000 terminals coving more than 4,500 smart devices categories, the company says.

This round of financing is earmarked for upgrading products and recruiting and expanding to global markets, according to a statement from the company. Testin launched its global expansion initiative in 2014, and the latest round of funding is expected to speed up international expansion in North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific regions.

After receiving Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners in 2011, the Beijing-based company raised a B round from IDG and Banyan Capital in 2014 and a B+ round led by Haiyin Venture Partners, with participation from existing investors Banyan and IDG, in 2015. The B Series financing totaled $54.9 million USD, according to local media. The current round is raised at a higher valuation than the previous round, the media noted.

Testin has multiple competitors in different verticals given it’s providing testing services in different app development stages, including Tencent’s Utest for real device-based compatibility test, Fir.im and Pgyer for beta testing.

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This Startup Wants To Bridge The Gap Between Chat And Email https://technode.com/2016/08/25/rush-email-app/ https://technode.com/2016/08/25/rush-email-app/#respond Thu, 25 Aug 2016 00:49:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41464 Have instant messaging tools killed email in China? Not quite yet. According to Jo Liu, co-founder of productivity app Rush, the heyday of email is far from over, it just requires a facelift. “Email or instant messaging, this shouldn’t be a single-answer option,” she says. The problem is how to let the two work together.” […]]]>

Have instant messaging tools killed email in China? Not quite yet.

According to Jo Liu, co-founder of productivity app Rush, the heyday of email is far from over, it just requires a facelift.

“Email or instant messaging, this shouldn’t be a single-answer option,” she says. The problem is how to let the two work together.”

There have been a few email clients that handle instant messaging, texting, and group chat. Rush, an app that connects email with messaging communities, is one of them.

The tool has all the trimmings of a typical mail app: support for all major email providers (Gmail, iCloud, Microsoft Exchange and other IMAP accounts), quick search among all mail with keywords or email addresses, automatic addition of email contacts, customized settings for mail, and badge notifications.

But Rush isn’t just an email client. “What we are doing is to let [users]  mail and chat, the two most popular forms of text communication, to play their own parts for the maximum results”, said Jo.

SS-Rush

In addition to mail management, Rush allows users to switch from mail to an iMessage-like chat format to start a conversation. Users can reply with either an email or a chat message according to what they consider appropriate for the situation.

When a user chooses to adopt the chat model, the dialogue will be processed by IM protocol if the receiver is also a Rush client, shortening the processing time from email. The receiver will get a normal looking email if he or she hasn’t download the app.

Similar to WeChat, the hugely popular Chinese social networking app, Rush users can send voice messages as ‘chats’. However, in Rush, users can pause, rewind, and fast-forward voice messages, making it easier to replay them for note-taking. The app also lets users reply directly to a specific message and reference the original email to avoid confusion.

For people on multiple tasks, Rush offers a calendar feature, which helps keep all members in a group to stay on the same page. Rio, an intelligent assistant, pings you when other members change their schedule, keeping users updated with events for more efficient teamwork.

Security is a top priority in the internet age. “Aside from password protection, Rush also uses the standard SSL security protocol to ensure data safety amid transmission”, Jo said.

Founded in February 2015 by Xu Zhe, founder of online service Doit.IM, Rush launched in May this year with its eyes on China and the international market. The startup team now has more than 50 employees working from three offices across Tokyo, Beijing, and Hangzhou.

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Chinese Coworking Space Aims For International Startups: Q&A With SimplyWork CEO Guo Yifan https://technode.com/2016/08/24/chinese-co-working-going-international-startups-qa-simplywork-ceo-guo-yifan/ https://technode.com/2016/08/24/chinese-co-working-going-international-startups-qa-simplywork-ceo-guo-yifan/#respond Wed, 24 Aug 2016 01:08:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41409 The combined growth of the millennial workforce and startup industry is nudging out traditional office spaces in favor of co-working spaces in China. In addition to the rise of domestic co-working  companies, the growing market is also attracting international firms to join the increasingly crowded sector. After sealing a $430 million USD investment to expand into […]]]>

The combined growth of the millennial workforce and startup industry is nudging out traditional office spaces in favor of co-working spaces in China. In addition to the rise of domestic co-working  companies, the growing market is also attracting international firms to join the increasingly crowded sector.

After sealing a $430 million USD investment to expand into Asia in March, WeWork opened its first space in Shanghai in June. Australia’s largest startup hub, FishBurners, also has plans to enter China with its own coworking space at the end of August. While international co-working companies are setting their eyes on China, more and more local spaces are looking at the industry with a global vision.

Founded in 2015, SimplyWork is a co-working space startup based in Shenzhen, one of China’s largest tech hubs. In June, the company secured a 30 million yuan (about $4.5 million USD) Series A round of funding from IDG Capital Partners, Huazhu Group and Vanke Group.

TechNode sat down with Guo Yifan, the CEO and co-founder of SimplyWork to learn a bit more about local co-working spaces and their path to building an international community.

What’s the biggest difference between coworking spaces in the US and coworking spaces in China?

In my opinion, the biggest difference might be the awareness of the coworking concept. Traditional working and traditional office have been around for so long that are upon the table. While a few Chinese people is familiar with “freelancing”, not to mention the coworking industry. Compared with the mature market in the US, it would definitely take longer time and much more effort to make coworking space become more well-known by the mass.

How can a coworking space remain unique as more competitors move in?

Actually we don’t think of other coworking spaces as our competitors. Instead, we consider all of us to be the pioneers in this brand new industry in China, gradually impressing the concept of “coworking” on people, as we all know this is the mainstream and the trend. There are many factors contributing to a unique community and high occupancy rate: attractive interior design, professional entrepreneurial services, creating friendly atmosphere, and so on.

Do you think there’s a bubble in China’s coworking space and incubator market?

Personally speaking, though coworking spaces, incubators and makerspaces spring up in recent years in China and some of them exist only with a short life circle, I don’t think there is a bubble in the market as this is a normal phenomenon. But entering a new market unwisely and blindly is bound for a failure. We still think highly of the promising future and tremendous potential of China’s coworking space market.

Why did you choose Shenzhen?

For us, Shenzhen is a city full of opportunities and potential. We’re close to one of the most significant global financial center -HK – and we’re known as the city of entrepreneurship in China. Rich and diverse resources are just at our fingertips! I think that’s also why many headquarters and factories of the famous high-tech companies like Tencent, Huawei, TCL are also based in Shenzhen.

Its inclusiveness has made it a welcoming home for people with different background and culture from all over the world. Like the saying in Shenzhen, “when you come to Shenzhen, you’re part of Shenzhen”, which happens to be in accordance with the core of coworking: connection, communication and collaboration.

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This Startup Wants To Bring Brick-And-Mortar Boutique Shops Online https://technode.com/2016/08/19/new-arrival-retail/ https://technode.com/2016/08/19/new-arrival-retail/#respond Fri, 19 Aug 2016 02:06:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41321 Much has been written about the rise of e-commerce in China, and how its growth is cutting into more traditional retailers. But from the perspective of customers, the two are not exclusive. Nowadays, few people only shop online or offline. Rather, most consumers choose their shopping channel based on a number of factors including proximity to the store, […]]]>

Much has been written about the rise of e-commerce in China, and how its growth is cutting into more traditional retailers. But from the perspective of customers, the two are not exclusive.

Nowadays, few people only shop online or offline. Rather, most consumers choose their shopping channel based on a number of factors including proximity to the store, price, product quality, and shopping experience.

This integration of online and offline shopping experiences is bringing about a new form of retailing, dubbed “Shop as a Service” by Howell Hu, the founder of New Arrival.

New Arrival is an app that lets customers find offline boutique stores around the world. It’s up to the user whether or not they want to shop at a brick-and-mortar store or an online outlet. Also, the app can be used as a guide for travelers who want to explore fashion stores in different city, says Howell. To distinguish from other online fashion retailers, New Arrival only cooperates with designer or multi-brand stores, or “stores with special fashion tastes”.

“All retailers on New Arrival have their brick-and-mortar stores, which is a big endorsement for product quality and after-sales services,” says Howell.

屏幕快照 2016-08-18 下午12.28.05

“Under our contract with the stores, the prices for the same product will be the same or lower on our platform when compared with the physical shops,” he says.

The app has a Tinder-like feature where users can use a swiping motion to choose their favorite products: swipe right to like it, left to pass, and down to put it into the shopping chart. New Arrival also has a virtual reality feature, which lets online users get a more immersive shopping experience by taking 360 degree tours of physical stores.

“For offline retailers, New Arrival is an useful tool to expand beyond their current customer base and attract more user traffics,” says Howell. “Apart from that, we serve as a Google Analytics for brick-and-mortar retailers and provide insights on their sales data.”

The startup monetizes its service by charging commission for each order and its data analytics services. Currently, the app is only available in iOS. The Android version is expected to launch in September this year, according to Howell.

Howell Hu is an author and serial entrepreneur. In 2014, he and his team started build New Arrival platform. Howell has first-hand experiences of the mobile game, luxury travel OTA and enterprise SaaS in years before involved New Arrival.

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China’s Live Streaming Boom Spawns Online Celebrity Agent Industry https://technode.com/2016/08/18/chinas-live-streaming-boom-spawns-online-celeb-agent-industry/ https://technode.com/2016/08/18/chinas-live-streaming-boom-spawns-online-celeb-agent-industry/#respond Wed, 17 Aug 2016 23:59:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41262 Getting set up with a live streaming account and filming content for audiences might only take a few minutes, but to become a Chinese internet celebrity or ‘wang hong’, is much more complex. Hiring a professional talent agency is becoming a necessary, if not indispensable, part of the wang hong career path in China. For Chinese internet celebrities, […]]]>

Getting set up with a live streaming account and filming content for audiences might only take a few minutes, but to become a Chinese internet celebrity or ‘wang hong’, is much more complex.

Hiring a professional talent agency is becoming a necessary, if not indispensable, part of the wang hong career path in China. For Chinese internet celebrities, fame is short lived – online celebrities enjoy a much shorter time in the limelight compared to film or TV stars.

Papi Jiang, whose humorous video clips went viral early this year, secured a joint investment of 12 million RMB (about $1.8 million USD) this March. A month later, Papi Jiang’s first advertisement sold for 22 million RMB (about $3.3 million USD) in a public auction advanced by a major investor which also backs Luogic Show, a popular talk show. The auction was widely considered by local media as a move to monetize the full commercial potential of Papi Jiang before public attention surrounding the comedian faded.

The earning potential of online celebrities has led to the formation of a full-fledged industry for online internet celebrity talent agencies.

Yujia Entertainment, a Chinese talent agency for online celebrities, announced this week that it secured 100 million yuan ($15 million USD) in series B funding led by Legend Capital and followed by IDG, Prometheus Capital, and Fortune Capital. Wang Sicong, the son of Wang Jianlin, the richest man in China, also participated in Yujia’s latest round of funding.

Founded in 2013, Yujia is an early entrant to the online talent agency industry. The company provides training sessions for internet celebrities on how to dress up, interact with audience members and set up the background settings for live stream videos. In addition, Yujia also provides marketing, distribution, and production support. The company is also working on live streaming entertainment projects and e-commerce platforms for content.

According to Yujia, they currently under 500 selected ‘talents’, chosen for appearance, performances and live streaming time. The firm claims to have a monthly turnover of “tens of millions” of yuan.

Prior to this, the company received a 10 million RMB (about $1.5 million USD) round of Series A funding from IDG, putting it at a valuation of more than 100 million RMB (about $15.1 million USD) last August. The funding is earmarked for the recruitment, training and promotion of talent, according company CEO Wang Chunlei.

Yixia Technology, the parent company of video clip app Miaopai and Xiaokaxiu, has set up an separate department this year to run agent services. Similar companies include Jiuyu, Lijia and Liulianjia, an online celebrity agent and incubation platform which just received 30 million yuan funding from Enlight Media.

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Get Your Apps Discovered With These Five Chinese ASO Tools https://technode.com/2016/08/13/get-apps-discovered-five-chinese-aso-tools/ https://technode.com/2016/08/13/get-apps-discovered-five-chinese-aso-tools/#respond Fri, 12 Aug 2016 21:30:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41172 Getting your apps discovered and downloaded is no easy task as the numbers of apps on both iOS and Android platforms are hitting new records. App store optimization (ASO), which is essentially SEO for mobile apps, is becoming an important step to when it comes to generating traffic to your app. While ASO tools around the […]]]>

Getting your apps discovered and downloaded is no easy task as the numbers of apps on both iOS and Android platforms are hitting new records.

App store optimization (ASO), which is essentially SEO for mobile apps, is becoming an important step to when it comes to generating traffic to your app.

While ASO tools around the world share similarities in data analysis and data mining features, they vary in how the data is used. Overseas ASO services give priority to keyword selection, keyword recommendation and data analysis, but their Chinese peers focus more on improving app store rankings and providing real-time keywords ranking systems, local industry outlet, ASO Master, pointed out.

Here’s a handy guide of China’s most popular ASO tools (via ASO Master) for app developers who want to improve ranking and visibility in the app store

Ann9 (应用雷达)

Co-founded in 2012 by Luo Feng and Wang Yongchang, Ann9, (or app radar in Chinese), is one of the earliest ASO tools on the Chinese market. It’s among the first to provide a top 1500 ranking and can monitor keyword search dynamics. It attracts users by providing free tools and monetizes through ranking services. Besides ASO services, Ann9 is also developing APP SDK tracking services.

The company monitors the data of more than 2 million apps on the iOS platform and claims to cooperate with over 4,000 apps as of the beginning of this year. It has set up data centers in Beijing, Hong Kong and Silicon Valley.

ASO100

ASO100 is an ASO platform that provides mobile marketers with a comprehensive data analytics and optimization report. This tool has real-time data, keywords coverage and rankings. It provides Appstore data in numerous regions and can search Android data in China.

Like many of the domestic startups, ASO100 is expanding to overseas markets. It just launched an international mobile promotion data business this July to help Chinese apps expanding overseas.

Ddashi.com

Ddashi is among the earliest tools to provide iOS and Android monitoring services at the same time. Its featured products include AI competitor analysis and ranking improvement suggestions with a corresponding ASO keyword volume estimate. It’s worth noting that Dashi also offers data services to enterprise information integration platforms.

DeepASO

DeepASO, formerly known as vTool, specializes in offering data analytics services to Chinese app developers who want to expand overseas. It supports ASO data for 21 countries, including popular keyword lists and data searches. The stored keyword may not be 100% accurate; nevertheless, it is a good starting point for your research.

APPBK

When performing your keyword research, APPBK has keyword extension, extraction and selection features. Its data mining tool is a featured service and helps users to select and learn more keywords you might be missing.

As of June this year, the company claims to collect data from 2 billion apps and provides services to 10,000 registered users of which 100 are paid  developers.  APPBK’s founding team members are from Tencent’s search unit, which has since been acquired by mobile search engine Sogou in 2013.

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LeEco Commits $3 Billion To Building Futuristic Auto Park https://technode.com/2016/08/12/leeco-pours-3-billion-build-auto-park/ https://technode.com/2016/08/12/leeco-pours-3-billion-build-auto-park/#respond Fri, 12 Aug 2016 00:18:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41143 Chinese internet giant LeEco announced Wednesday that it’s going to invest 20 billion yuan ($3 billion USD) to build an automotive plant as well as an ‘eco automotive experience’ complex in China’s Zhejiang Province. The park, which will be 2.87 square kilometers, will include an electric car plant which has an annual production capability of around […]]]>

Chinese internet giant LeEco announced Wednesday that it’s going to invest 20 billion yuan ($3 billion USD) to build an automotive plant as well as an ‘eco automotive experience’ complex in China’s Zhejiang Province.

The park, which will be 2.87 square kilometers, will include an electric car plant which has an annual production capability of around 400,000 cars. The investment in auto manufacturing facilities totals 12 billion yuan, the company says. Phase 1 investment capital is set at 6 billion yuan and will result in an annual production capacity of 200,000 cars. Phase 2 is scheduled to begin within two years of Phase 1.

Jia Yueting, CEO and founder of the company, said that the plant would host China’s first high-end car (D-class) assembly line with independent intellectual property rights.

The rest of the capital will go into a automotive theme park, which will supposedly allows customers to experience concept auto projects and other related technology.

According to the plan, all vehicles used in the “automotive eco-town” will be electric, shared, and driven autonomously. In addition, LeEco will also use content resources, such as music, sports and film etc. in the town.

LeEco, previously known as LeTV, started as a video streaming service provider in 2004. The company has diversified rapidly with into smart devices, cloud computing and film production.

LeEco’s electric car project “LeSee” was launched in 2014. The company has partnered with Aston Martin and GAC Group. In April, the company unveiled LeSee, an all-electric concept car with autonomous vehicle capabilities.

LeEco founder Jia Yueting is also an investor in U.S. electric car startup Faraday Future, which promised last year to spend $1 billion USD on a factory built near Las Vegas.

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China Is Watching The Olympics With Internet Companies Instead Of State TV https://technode.com/2016/08/09/tencent-alibaba-rio-olympics/ https://technode.com/2016/08/09/tencent-alibaba-rio-olympics/#respond Tue, 09 Aug 2016 01:20:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=41051 Ever wondered how Chinese people watch the Olympics? Well for the first time ever, they’re probably (legally) streaming it on their mobile devices via one of the country’s two biggest internet companies. China’s state broadcaster CCTV resold the airing right for the Rio 2016 Olympics to Chinese internet giants Tencent and Alisports, the online sports […]]]>

Ever wondered how Chinese people watch the Olympics? Well for the first time ever, they’re probably (legally) streaming it on their mobile devices via one of the country’s two biggest internet companies.

China’s state broadcaster CCTV resold the airing right for the Rio 2016 Olympics to Chinese internet giants Tencent and Alisports, the online sports arm of Alibaba, for 100 million yuan ($15 million USD) each. Under the deal, the two internet firms will be able to stream the 17-day Olympic games within the Chinese mainland.

It marks a huge shift in China’s approach to airing international events. The deals represent the first heavyweight sales of Olympic airing rights by the Chinese state to an outside entity, and instead of TV stations, they’re internet companies.

Since internet streaming rights were officially opened for the Olympics in 2008 (which happened to be the Beijing Olympics), CCTV has sold Olympic content to around 10 online content providers, but never on the scale of the deals settled with Ali and Tencent.

The whopping broadcasting fee reflects the huge appetite for mobile streaming content in China, particularly in sports. But the scarcity of potential bidders indicates another hard fact about the mobile broadcasting market: you have to have some serious cash to take part.

According to an analyst who spoke to 21 Century  Economics Guide, the high broadcasting fee eliminates conventional broadcasting channels from the competition because they lack the network of monetization channels needed to make up for the costs. Top domestic top portal sites Sina, NetEase, Sohu and LeSports have all made jaw-dropping investments in online broadcasting, but were absent from the Olympic bid.

State-media also launched the bidding process less than two weeks before the Olympic Games started, leaving little time for the bidders to seek ad resources. The schedule was made intentionally by the state TV station to fend off ad competition for its in-house online platform CNTV, local media claims. During a similar bid for London 2012 Olympics, the process allowed double the time for bidders to source advertising.

Furthermore, Tencent and Alisports are only allowed to air events 30 minutes after they happen, which means that the higher fee is paid for on-demand content rather than a live broadcasting rights.

The International Olympic Committee sold the rights to telecast the 2014 and 2016 Olympics in China to CCTV for an estimated $160 million USD in 2012. This means the recent sales to Ali and Tencent recoup almost 40 percent of CCTV’s investment for the 2016 games.

Tencent will stream the games through their online platforms and related content will be available on Tencent News and Tencent Sports. As a leader in China’s social networking market, Tencent has rich media and distribution channels, including WeChat, QQ and Tencent Video.

For AliSports, the Olympic content will be integrated into Youku Tudou, the online video subsidiary acquired by Alibaba this April. The sporting unit also cooperates with Alibaba’s core e-commerce arms, streaming sports contents to Alipay and Taobao users via live streaming features.

Major sporting events also brings customers to Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms. Data from Alibaba showed that online searches for ‘Olympics’ on Taobao’s shopping engine spiked 30 percent during the London Olympics four years ago.

Three years ago, the bidding prices would be hard to imagine in China, when the state-backed broadcaster monopolized the broadcasting right for almost all sporting events. Both the 2012 London Olympics and the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics were broadcasted exclusively by the state. The turning point happened in 2014, when China released an ambitious plan to accelerate the development of the country’s sports industry.

According to the plan, the country expects to see sports grow into a 5 trillion yuan (around $800 billion USD) industry by 2025. A set of relaxed taxation policies were also released in an attempt to encourage industry investment.

The effect of the plan was huge. Alibaba established a separate group to tap the emerging market. Broadcasting rights for popular sporting repeatedly hit record-breaking highs.

Tencent signed a five-year exclusive agreement with the NBA to stream the league’s online content for $100 million USD. LeSports, an arm of online conglomerate LeEco, purchased the online streaming rights for China’s top soccer league for 2.7 billion yuan.

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China Runs On QR Codes Even Though They’re Illegal – But Not For Long https://technode.com/2016/08/05/china-legalize-qr-code/ https://technode.com/2016/08/05/china-legalize-qr-code/#respond Thu, 04 Aug 2016 23:28:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40975 China issued the draft of a new law that will legalize payment through QR codes last week, ending a two-year ban on the technology. For those living China-side, it’s a colossal surprise to learn the technology was banned in the first place, as every merchant from 7/11 to the local coffee vendor seems to be using QR codes unhindered. […]]]>

China issued the draft of a new law that will legalize payment through QR codes last week, ending a two-year ban on the technology. For those living China-side, it’s a colossal surprise to learn the technology was banned in the first place, as every merchant from 7/11 to the local coffee vendor seems to be using QR codes unhindered.

China’s central bank issued a law in March 2014 to stop payments made by scanning QR codes with mobile devices. China’s ‘virtual credit cards’, which also use QR codes, were also banned at the time due to security concerns. The regulations came into play just days after Tencent’s WeChat Payment and Alibaba’s Alipay released their virtual credit cards services.

While the authority cited security concerns as the reason for the decision, critics believe the move was not totally impartial. State-backed China UnionPay is losing huge amount on transaction fees to mobile payment transactions made through QR codes as customers are shifting to the more convenient third-party platforms like Alipay and WeChat Payment. The move was widely considered as a protective countermeasure to help the state-controlled bankcard association.

Like many other industries such as car-hailing and game console, QR payment thrived despite it’s in a regulatory gray zone. It’s interesting to note that the government implemented the ban loosely enough to allow monumental growth in the sector. QR codes have yet to take off in the western markets, but they are ubiquitous in China, used across all major platforms in e-commerce, ride-hailing and even peer-to-peer payments.

The widespread adoption and technological improvement have pushed the legalization of QR technology. A number of commercial banks are even jumping on the bandwagon. State-backed Industry and Commercial Bank of China just released a similar feature this month to facilitate mobile payment. China UnionPay is also developing its own QR code payment service in an attempt to regain the lost ground.

It still unclear when the rule will take effect and the current draft is soliciting public opinions.

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Tencent, Baidu, JD.com Double Down On Bitauto With $550M Investment https://technode.com/2016/08/03/biauto-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/08/03/biauto-funding/#respond Wed, 03 Aug 2016 08:37:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40951 Bitauto Holdings, a leading automotive information service in China, announced on Tuesday a $550 million USD strategic investment from a consortium comprised of Tencent, Baidu and JD.com. A company statement noted that the investment would be made in cash, and go toward Bitauto’s e-commerce-related automotive financing platform Yixin Capital. Yixin Capital says the combination of data, users, […]]]>

Bitauto Holdings, a leading automotive information service in China, announced on Tuesday a $550 million USD strategic investment from a consortium comprised of Tencent, Baidu and JD.com.

A company statement noted that the investment would be made in cash, and go toward Bitauto’s e-commerce-related automotive financing platform Yixin Capital.

Yixin Capital says the combination of data, users, and capital resources will help them perform more accurate and efficient credit evaluations and improve their ability to provide financing products and services to targeted customers.

This is the third investment that Tencent and JD have made in the company. After a US$1.5 billion investment in early 2015, the two internet giants, along with Baidu, participated in a US$300 million round in Bitauto in June.

Upon completion of the deal, Bitauto will hold a roughly 47% equity stake in Yixin Capital. The company did not disclose the shares each investor would take after this transaction. In June, Tencent, Baidu and JD took 7.1%, 3.2% and 23.5% of the company’s shares, respectively.

The growth of China’s car market has fueled a handful of related sectors in recent years, including second-hand car trading and electric cars. Online auto loans have also prospered along with China’s internet finance boom.

Compared with developed markets that boast average penetration rates above 50 percent, China’s auto finance penetration rate is relatively low, recorded at just 20 percent in 2014, according to research from Deloitte. The research institute expects the country’s auto finance penetration to reach 50% by 2020.

Autohome, a major rival of Biauto, has undergone a major boardroom tussle earlier this year while Telstra Crop., a leading shareholder of the company sold a 47.7% stake to Chinese insurance tycoon Ping An.

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Here Are The Top Grossing Crowdfunded Animation Films In China https://technode.com/2016/08/03/crowdfunding-animation-film/ https://technode.com/2016/08/03/crowdfunding-animation-film/#respond Wed, 03 Aug 2016 00:44:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40911 There’s no lack of crowdfunding platforms in China, but they are distinctively different the U.S. platforms that made the funding model popular. One of the most recognized disparities between the two is that Chinese backers prefer reward-based campaigns, because they promise a tangible product as a return on their investment. Often crowdfunding in China is just a way for enthusiasts to […]]]>

There’s no lack of crowdfunding platforms in China, but they are distinctively different the U.S. platforms that made the funding model popular.

One of the most recognized disparities between the two is that Chinese backers prefer reward-based campaigns, because they promise a tangible product as a return on their investment. Often crowdfunding in China is just a way for enthusiasts to get their hands on the latest products. Xiaomi is one of many companies that sells limited release products under the guise of crowdfunding.

It’s for this reason that creative projects go largely unfunded on the main platforms. The documentaries, photo projects and art installations that feature on Kickstarter and Indiegogo are largely absent from Chinese platforms.

Thanks to fast growth in the country’s entertainment industry, the film industry has carved itself a small exception.

Data from research institute 01Caijing shows that the total turnover of film and TV crowdfunding campaigns in China hit around 500 million yuan in 2015.

Here are three of the top crowdfunded animation and computer-generated films in China:

Monkey King: Hero is Back

Monkey King: Hero is Back is an excellent advert for the power of crowdfunding. As the top-grossing project in China’s animation history, the film became a smash hit when it was released last summer, making a record-breaking $150 million USD at the box office.

Monkey King’s crowdfunding plan was initiated through WeChat in November 2014 by Lu Wei, the film producer. A total of 89 individuals invested 7.8 million yuan ($1.17 million USD). The final investment return for the backers reached a combined 30 million yuan with yield of nearly 250,000 yuan for each investor.

Directed by first-time director Tian Xiaoping, the animated film is the story about the Monkey King, a legendary figure from the Chinese epic novel Journey To The West.

Big Fish & Begonia

Dahai

Big Fish & Begonia is the second highest grossing Chinese-produced animated feature.

Directed by Liang Xuan and Zhang Chun, Big Fish & Begonia is loosely adapted from a traditional Chinese folklore tale written by Zhuangzi, a famous Chinese philosopher who lived during the 4th century B.C.

The film reportedly took 12 years to produce. The breakthrough point for the project was in 2013, when the team launched a crowdfunding campaign on Demohour, China’s leading crowdfunding platform at the time. The project successfully pulled in both capital support and media attention.

It raised almost 1.6 million yuan (about $240,000 USD) from over 3500 backers, who contributed between 10-500,000 yuan. The record-breaking crowdfunding campaign subsequently attracted substantial funding from China’s leading entertainment company Enlight Media, which funded the film’s completion. The film recorded a box office revenue of 430 million yuan (about $64.7 million USD) as of July 19.

One Hundred Thousand Bad Jokes

SWLXH

Originally adapted from a comic series on U.17.com, the leading online original cartoon website in China, One Hundred Thousand Bad Jokes is a combination of classic and contemporary stories. It became popular among netizens thanks to its use of funny internet slang and Kuso style, a type of Japanese cartoon. The comic managed to attract more fans after it was aired on TV in July 2012.

In 2013, fans of the book rejoiced when the cartoon site created a crowdfunding campaign for the film version, again using crowdfunding platform Demohour.

The campaign raised almost 1.4 million yuan (around $200,000 USD) from 5300 backers. The blockbuster brought in more than 100 million yuan (about $15 million USD) in box office revenue within 10 days after its premier on December 29 2014.

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China’s Short Video Content Makers Need To Do More Than Comedy: VUE Founder https://technode.com/2016/07/30/vue-video/ https://technode.com/2016/07/30/vue-video/#respond Fri, 29 Jul 2016 23:35:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40813 A few years behind the global trend, China’s short video market is warming up thanks to affordable mobile traffic costs and a healthy appetite for video content. “Chinese netizen’s content consumption habits are changing. The integration of short video in China’s top social networking platforms like WeChat and Weibo makes it a more popular medium,” says Kuang […]]]>

A few years behind the global trend, China’s short video market is warming up thanks to affordable mobile traffic costs and a healthy appetite for video content.

“Chinese netizen’s content consumption habits are changing. The integration of short video in China’s top social networking platforms like WeChat and Weibo makes it a more popular medium,” says Kuang Fei, CEO and co-founder of Beijing-based micro video editing app VUE.

Kuang believes there’s still room for improvement in the growing sector.

“It’s true that more and more micro video content is available online. But when you look at them, a great proportion are humorous ones that aim to make you laugh. The narrow content coverage reflects the fact that China’s short video content is generated by the minority, for the majority.”

Kuang believes that humor videos thrive because they can still convey their meaning despite sloppy editing and less-than-professional filming techniques. He believes that by bringing better-quality editing tools to consumers they can promote a wider range of content.

Kuang Fei founded VUE in April this year, an easy-to-use video-editing tool hopes will encourage other types of content. VUE is a video camera and editor that empowers users to capture memorable moments and edit them as well as adding filters and stickers.

VUE allows users to edit 15-second video clips with cutting, splicing and blending tools for both audio and video. Similar to Western video editing counterparts, the app also features a series of 12 filters.

VUE-1

By aiming to lower the production threshold for making quality videos, VUE wants to inspire more grassroots content creators to unleash their creativity and make short videos on more diversified topics.

“All mainstream hobbies or interests can become the source for filming short videos: foods, sports and pets for instance. The improvement of living standards [in China] has enabled us to experience a whole lot more than the past.”

The apps’ iOS version launched globally in June this year in English, simplified and tradition Chinese and Japanese. The Android version is expected to be released at the end of July, Kuang said.

Developing an editing tool that helps amateur video makers to create quality videos is just a start for VUE, said Kuang. “Currently, around 15,000 videos are being created by VUE per day, of which over 30% of them are of high quality.”

“[In the future] we will consider introducing more features, such as video sharing community, social networking and content distribution.” VUE also plans to roll out a dedicated app for professional and veteran users who want to edit longer video footage.

Kuang says cooperation with brands and payment service for special features and advertisements will be their main source for their revenue when they eventually tackle monetization.

The company is founded by three former employees of Wandoujia, the leading Chinese app store  recently acquired by Alibaba.

VUE

Kuang Fei, CEO Founder of VUE (Left 1) and VUE Team

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Four Chinese Drones You Can’t Miss In 2016 https://technode.com/2016/07/28/4-chin-drone/ https://technode.com/2016/07/28/4-chin-drone/#respond Thu, 28 Jul 2016 05:12:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40772 The global commercial drone market is taking off as improvements in technology transform drones from a specialty device into an affordable consumer product. A huge market for consumer drones is blossoming and already, and China is making its mark. Data from state media outlet Xinhua shows that drone exports from China’s hardware hub Shenzhen amounted to $2.7 […]]]>

The global commercial drone market is taking off as improvements in technology transform drones from a specialty device into an affordable consumer product. A huge market for consumer drones is blossoming and already, and China is making its mark.

Data from state media outlet Xinhua shows that drone exports from China’s hardware hub Shenzhen amounted to $2.7 billion yuan ($412 million USD) between January and November 2015, an increase of 9.2 times over the same period in 2014.

Chinese drone makers like DJI lead the trend with unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) equipped with application for various civilian uses. Here, we’ve listed four of the latest drones that you can’t miss. Leave us a comment to tell which one is your favorite!

DJI Phantom 4

You can’t talk about Chinese drones without talking about the DJI, so we’ll get it out of the way first. DJI released their Phantom 4 in March. Compared with the Phantom 3, the device is considerably faster thanks to more efficient motors that allow a maximum speed of 72km per hour. It’s also smarter. Using its frontal sensors, the Phantom 4 has automatic obstacle avoidance, which is the biggest significant upgrade from the Phantom 3. Finally, the Phantom 4’s camera can shoot 12MP photos, record 4K videos, and film at a rate of 120fps (frames per second) in 1080p resolution.

The upgraded experience doesn’t come cheap. The gadget is sold for $1,399USD in the U.S. and 8,999RMB ($1,349USD) in mainland China, the most pricey device yet from DJI’s Phantom series. Extra batteries are expensive too.

EHang Ghost 2.0

ghost2.0

Like the its predecessor Ghost 1.0, EHang’s Ghost 2.0 is piloted with a mobile phone rather than a traditional RC controller, which is line with the company’s goals to develop easy-to-operate drones. The company fine-tuned the entire user experience from the app to the connectivity. But the most interesting selling point is perhaps its complementary VR goggles, which enables video feed from the on-board camera.

Mi Drone
mi-drone-7

Through its partnership with China-based Flymi, Xiaomi revealed its first drone product this May, though the company hasn’t specified a shipment date yet.

The new gadget features a 360-degree camera and a remote controller. Like other products of Xiaomi, Mi Drone is offering relatively good specs for a budget price, though we haven’t tested it out yet. It’s set to retail at 2,499RMB ($375USD) for the 1080p version and 2,999RMB ($450USD)for the 4K version.

Xiaomi launched a crowdfunding project for the 1080p version since May and the 4K version is expected to undergo public testing at the end of this month, according to the company.

ZeroTech Dobby

Dobby

Dobby, a foldable hovering drone made for selfie fans, is the joint effort of Chinese drone maker ZeroTech and Tencent. The drone is easy to put into your pocket, and only 135 by 67 by 36.8mm when folded with a weight of 199 grams. It comes with  a 13 million pixel camera that can shoot 4K videos. Users can control the device through a smartphone app using their voice or gestures.

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How Designers Bring Life Insurance Biz Online: Q&A With Frog Creative Director https://technode.com/2016/07/27/frog-insurance-aia/ https://technode.com/2016/07/27/frog-insurance-aia/#respond Tue, 26 Jul 2016 23:41:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40732 Insurance is one of the traditional industries that has been disrupted by the internet. The global cyber insurance market is scaling up quickly, growing at between 25% to 50%  annually in recent years. While an increasing number of customers are using their mobile phones to research insurance products, insurance companies that marketing with hardcopy flyers […]]]>

Insurance is one of the traditional industries that has been disrupted by the internet. The global cyber insurance market is scaling up quickly, growing at between 25% to 50%  annually in recent years.

Jussi-pic

While an increasing number of customers are using their mobile phones to research insurance products, insurance companies that marketing with hardcopy flyers and brochures in the past are accommodating to this global trend to develop online presentations of their products in an attempt to build a stronger relationship between the company, its customers, and agents.

The process of designing user interface and user experience for a new product can be quite challenging since it’s the combination of a variety of concerns, varying from branding, visual appeal, site architecture to page layout.

Global design and strategy firm frog created a new digital language system for AIA Group, the world’s top life insurer. TechNode sat down with designer of this system Jussi Edlund to discuss the design process for the digital language system and his insights on designing a mobile first and user-friendly product by using human-centered-design methodology.

Can you describe the research process and introduce the system briefly?

Our design research is primarily a set of qualitative user interviews. The research process depends very much on what we do and the client we are talking to, but generally we favor qualitative researches to quantitative researches. We spend more time with fewer people, the reason why we do that is to really get much deeper insights into people, how they actually think, what they think about, how they actually relates to the product to the theme that we are actually talking about.

So in this specific case we focus primarily on life insurance, a lot of the research that we did was around people’s attitudes toward health, wellness, their lives, what are their concerns were, what are their hopes, dreams and aspirations were. We touch on the life insurance topic both directly and indirectly. Because it’s a theme that goes around all your life, then we use the insights to build out the design language system.

What challenges did you face building the system?

When we started the project, we ask ourselves what if Google started a life insurance company tomorrow, what would that look like and we kind of visualize it for ourselves first. It’s probably going to be one button that says “Would you like to buy life insurance?” click yes, then you have got life insurance. It’s something extremely simple. We all thought this would be the product that everybody’s going to like, but nobody liked it.

The reason was that because life insurance is a long-term commitment, if you get it tomorrow you will be paying it for the next forty or fifty years. So, it is a commitment to a company that is substantial financially and has a lot of impacts. You don’t want it to be that simple, you want it to seem a little bit complicated so that you known it’s real.

This insight guided us when we started to visualize the life insurance product for instance. We couldn’t simplify too much, because people had the need to dig a little deeper, to see that maybe I don’t quite understand all of these, but at least I know it’s there. I can look at it later when I have to.

We tried a lot of different ways in laying the content out. We designed everything for mobile first. It put boundaries around for what we can do and can’t do. The design pattern that we leverage from around for things are like progressive disclosure, you start reading something and some more information is shown and you can continue. It’s also very much about visual hierarchy, how do you use typography, illustrations, iconography to actually simplify the way you talk about things, but still letting people dig deeper.

frog-a

The system is designed across platforms, both for PC and mobile terminals, what are the key differences in designing systems for computers and mobile devices?

It’s easier to go one way than the other, scaling something big down is much more difficult than getting something small right. And you can see that in the design system we established. You want to get it right for mobile phone users first and you can set up a set of rule in order to make still look very much presentable on a desktop screen.

Another interesting anecdote on that topic, when we did the research we also thought that people may spend more time on their tablets or their desktop or laptop computers to do research. But we found that around 90% of people just research on the their phones. So getting the design on the phone right was actually become a massive priority for us.

Human-centered design is a buzzword in design industry in recent years. How this concept is reflected in the real design process?

All good design comes from an understanding of how humans actually behave or what they are think about. It is something you want to relate to people. I think what’s happening now or why it’s becoming more and more popular as a topic is that you will see human-centered design processes being to integrated into larger organizations, like insurances companies, big financial institutions, even manufacturing. The organizations that traditionally had a very product focused or internal focused way of designing new services are now trying to go out and identify, “Are we actually doing this the right way? Are we designing the services that people want.” Then, they start to adopt human-centered design methodologies to get a much understanding of whom they are designing for.

Ultimately, human-centered design is to make the things you do relatable. Persona is a tool with which we basically crate a fake people that is related to the research we done.  We give them all kinds of information, like a name, age, a job. That’s how we bring all the people that we interviewed in the field with us through out the designing process by creating a persona in order to look at the design through their eyes.

As a Creative Director at frog Singapore, Jussi’s responsible for guiding multi-disciplinary teams through the entire design processes, from research and insights gathering, conceptualisation through to execution. He has been living and working in the APAC Region since 2006.

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China’s Jackass? Kuaishou CEO Says They Are More Than That https://technode.com/2016/07/22/kuaishou-video/ https://technode.com/2016/07/22/kuaishou-video/#respond Fri, 22 Jul 2016 07:00:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40648 Kuaishou, a video clip editing and sharing app, is among a raft of video platforms that are tapping China’s ongoing video and live-streaming boom. The five-year-old app has caused a sensation on China’s social media recently because of the viral spread of their Jackass-style videos. Dangerous and self-injuring pranks like eating strange things, drinking excess […]]]>

Kuaishou, a video clip editing and sharing app, is among a raft of video platforms that are tapping China’s ongoing video and live-streaming boom. The five-year-old app has caused a sensation on China’s social media recently because of the viral spread of their Jackass-style videos.

Dangerous and self-injuring pranks like eating strange things, drinking excess liquor, jumping into icy rivers and putting fireworks in one’s own crotch are among the most popular videos on the platform. One popular user on Kuaishou named “Gourmet Sister Feng” attracted lots of followers by feasting on light bulbs, whole cubes of wasabi, live goldfish and burning cigarettes.

However, becoming the Jackass of China is not something Kuaishou aimed to do, and shocking videos is just part of the their video content, the company’s CEO Su Hua said in an interview with TechNode.

“We view Kuaishou as a kaleidoscope. The types of videos shared on Kuaishou are varied and diverse. In most cases the videos are simple depictions of joyful moments in everyday situations.”

Apart from stunts, the videos that pull in the most followers range from mundane activities, such as eating food, shopping, and hair tutorials, to funny or bizarre performances.

“In line with the state’s scrutiny on online content, we have a number of initiatives in place to scrutinize and supervise the content, … including advanced multiple-technology filtering, strict manual reviews, a detailed live broadcast behavior code as well as reminders and guidance rules in eye-catching places within the app to alert users.”

Kuaishou-1

Although Kuaishou’s clips have been criticized for being “vulgar” and “coarse”, they have won popularity among young Chinese seeking online novelty. Su noted that 87 percent of Kuaishou’s users are from the post-90’s generation.

For most of us, Kuaishou might be a lesser-known name. It now boasts a substantial 200 million-strong user base, who have uploaded nearly 900 million videos in total. Data from leading telecoms carrier China Unicom shows that the app topped traffic consumption on their network, eclipsing that of Weibo and WeChat, the two biggest mobile apps of the Chinese market.

However the fame was highly controversial, as Kuaishou’s users are widely believed to be from China’s lower-tier cities or rural areas, and filmed vulgarity led to the unfair profiling of rural and regional Chinese.

The app failed to draw the attention of the public in the past, despite a huge user base. It shows that although rural people account for a great proportion of the Chinese population, their voice is scarcely heard by mainstream society.

“It is commonly thought that Kuaishou is focusing on users living in third to fourth-tier cities and rural areas, but this is not really the case. 85 percent of Kuaishou users are from second-tier cities and below, and 15 percent are from first-tier cities, which is in line with China’s Internet user demographic.”

“Many other social media platforms focus their attention on first-tier city users, which perhaps artificially enlarges their popularity figures.”

“We have not split target users but want to give all people the opportunity to share fun and joy, regardless of whether they live in urban or rural areas.” Kuaishou’s CEO explained.

Like most video and live-streaming services, virtual gifts are a major revenue source for Kuaishou. “We have officially launched this function in Q2. It has generated approximately one hundred million yuan in revenue so far.”

“We plan to launch a short video advertising business in Q3 this year. In the future we also plan to introduce membership-based services as well as other added-value services to build up our revenue sources.” Su said.

Local success has prompted the company to seek overseas markets. A regional head office has been set up in Singapore this year in an attempt to tap the South East Asia markets.

“We have already taken steps to enter Indonesia and India. In Indonesia, we are launching an English-language short video social platform named Wakaka”, said Su.

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Meituan-Dianping Inks Strategic Funding From State-Backed China Resources Group https://technode.com/2016/07/20/meituan-dianping-cr/ https://technode.com/2016/07/20/meituan-dianping-cr/#respond Wed, 20 Jul 2016 08:15:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40550 Meituan-Dianping, the top provider of on-demand services in China, has received an undisclosed amount of investment from the funding unit of China Resources Group, a state-owned conglomerate, according to a company announcement. This is the second round of funding that the joint venture has announced since its merger in October 2015. In January this year, […]]]>

Meituan-Dianping, the top provider of on-demand services in China, has received an undisclosed amount of investment from the funding unit of China Resources Group, a state-owned conglomerate, according to a company announcement.

This is the second round of funding that the joint venture has announced since its merger in October 2015. In January this year, the firm closed a massive $3.3 billion USD funding round. With the huge amount of capital in pocket, the current funding is perhaps of more strategic significance, combining Meituan-Dianping’s online platforms with China Resources’ retail assets.

A number of retail brands under China Resources  will be integrated into Meituan Dianping’s online platform as part of the deal, including its supermarket brands Vanguard, Suguo, Tesco, OLE, Vango convenience stores and Pacific Coffee. The new partnership will boost Meituan-Dianping’s capabilities amid its competition with powerhouses like Baidu Waimai and Ctrip.

This investment is among a series of online expansion endeavors by China Resources. The company launched e-commerce site Ewj.com for supermarket chain store Vanguard last year. They have also tried out on-demand delivery services in southern and eastern China. However, most of these services failed to gain traction.

Last year, China Resources sold its entire 35% stake in the joint ventures it had established with WalMart.

Meituan-Dianping now claims to have over 600 million users and cooperates with around 4.32 million offline service providers. Their daily peak volume hit 11.5 million orders in June, according to data released by the company.

China’s state-backed entities, who tend to be more conservative in betting on emerging industries in the past, are taking an increasingly active role in the capital market for internet companies. State-backed insurance company China Life has invested in Didi Chuxing and Uber. The state-owned investment institution of postal service China Post Group Corp. and China national social security fund are both investors in Ant Financial.

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Five Must-Have Apps for China’s Pet Lovers https://technode.com/2016/07/15/five-app-pet-china/ https://technode.com/2016/07/15/five-app-pet-china/#respond Fri, 15 Jul 2016 08:32:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40442 As China’s middle class blooms, the average age of pet owners now squarely overlaps with the country’s tech-savvy youth demographic. A survey on pet owner demographics shows that 74% of urban pet owners are now less than 35 years old. At the same time, the size of the pet care market has jumped from 30 billion RMB […]]]>

As China’s middle class blooms, the average age of pet owners now squarely overlaps with the country’s tech-savvy youth demographic. A survey on pet owner demographics shows that 74% of urban pet owners are now less than 35 years old.

At the same time, the size of the pet care market has jumped from 30 billion RMB ($4.49 billion USD) in 2013 to 50 billion RMB in 2015, according to data from local research institute.

So it’s not at all surprising that China’s passion for pets and tech is coming together in a big way. For those of you with furry friends who don’t want to be left out, here are five of the most popular apps for pets:

Smellme

Smellme is a mobile social platform for pet owners and their pets. Users can share photos, stories, blogs and upload videos of their favorite pets. It allows pet lovers to set up profiles for their pets, find friends, and enter discussions according to location, species and gender. Apart from their social networking, Smellme offers Yelp-like review and rating services for offline pet services. The company has received $6 million USD of Series A funding last April.

Liuliu

Like Smellme, Liuliu is a social network for pets, similar to WeChat for people, but it also tries to solve real-life problems for pet owners. Powered by location-based data, the platform allows users to find other people and their pets nearby for pet breeding, adoption, and temporary care. The company, which is backed by Alibaba, just received tens of millions of RMB in Pre-A financing recently.

Boqii

Founded in 2008, Boqii is one of the earliest companies in this sector. Starting as an online discussion forum for pet lovers, the company is now a leading pet e-commerce company focusing on pet related products, including pet food, accessories, and services. It received a $102 million USD Series C financing led by China Commercial Bank this February.

Yourpet

Again, social networking is the basis of Yourpet. Similar to other communities, members can get tips, share photos, videos and blogs. This site also provides medical tips for members’ pets. At the same time, Yourpet has an extensive offline presence through cooperation with physical store partners. It have set up its first offline flagship store in Guangzhou this year.

Fdog

As a tool, Fdog provides guidance for dog owners about how to raise a dog scientifically. By selecting age, gender and species, the app offers custom dog care solutions so you’ll never forget when to give your pet medicine, food or take them for a walk.

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This Ex-NASA Scientist Is Using Big Data To Raise Yields On China’s Small Farmlands https://technode.com/2016/07/14/gago-agri-tech/ https://technode.com/2016/07/14/gago-agri-tech/#respond Thu, 14 Jul 2016 04:12:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40411 Despite a long agricultural history, China’s farming industry suffers from some serious inefficiencies, partly due to the country’s small and dispersed farming plots. It’s a problem that Beijing-based startup Gago wants to solve through the power of technology. “Compared with the U.S., China’s farm fields are more scattered in nature. For example, the total land for each farmer in […]]]>

Despite a long agricultural history, China’s farming industry suffers from some serious inefficiencies, partly due to the country’s small and dispersed farming plots. It’s a problem that Beijing-based startup Gago wants to solve through the power of technology.

“Compared with the U.S., China’s farm fields are more scattered in nature. For example, the total land for each farmer in the U.S. is around hundreds or thousands of acres, it’s large but it’s relatively easy to manage because it’s usually one piece of big land.”

“But in China, a farm is divided into hundreds of blocks. The first thing we have to do is to define the boundaries of numerous small blocks and to evaluate the land metrics of each one.” Zhang Gong, founder and CEO of Gago, said to TechNode.

Gago’s intelligent agriculture solution, dubbed ‘Wonderland’, is a cloud-based platform for farming companies, enabling real-time monitoring and smarter decision-making by leveraging visualized agronomic data.

Gago processes data with a self-developed algorithm to create customized farm management solutions for different fields. The platform gives advice on pest or disease forecasts for certain crops, maps irrigation plans, optimizes farming machines and intercropping schemes.

“We use three data sources. The first one is remote sensing, which collects the subject images for monitoring the variation of crops and other things. The second source is climate data, which includes historical climate data and weather forecasts. Finally, it’s land and crop data, such as soil moisture and land elevation”, Zhang said.

Gago

Zhang Gong, Founder & CEO of Gago

China’s rapid urbanization is strongly affecting the country’s social structure. “While the farming population in China is shrinking, the total land for each farmer to manage is expanding. They need technology to support large-scale farming.” Zhang noted when talking about the market potential.

Right now Gago provides farming management solutions for five crop types including corn, rice, potato, hay and pitaya. The company plans to add more crop categories, like sugar cane, in the future.

China is the priority for Gago, but the startup is planning to implement their model in countries that also have small and dispersed farming plots. Zhang noted that they have already launched pilot projects in Pakistan and Thailand.

Zhang Gong, an ex-NASA scientist and serial entrepreneur, founded Gago with his fellow researcher Gu Zhu last year. “The satellite and climate data are only for governmental use previously, but they are now increasing the amount of such data that’s open to the public. This makes it possible for a wider commercial application of big data and we believe these data can bring fundamental changes to the agriculture industry.”

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These Three Players Dominate China’s Consolidated Food Delivery Market https://technode.com/2016/07/11/china-food-delivery/ https://technode.com/2016/07/11/china-food-delivery/#respond Mon, 11 Jul 2016 09:10:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40368 The year of 2016 has witnessed the most dramatic changes of China’s food delivery industry with the continuous influx of hefty capital pitted against food security scandals. However, as the country’s food delivery industry begins to wind down, the market is becoming more consolidated with a few leading players controlling a dominant share, with an expected worth of 165.29 billion RMB […]]]>

The year of 2016 has witnessed the most dramatic changes of China’s food delivery industry with the continuous influx of hefty capital pitted against food security scandals.

However, as the country’s food delivery industry begins to wind down, the market is becoming more consolidated with a few leading players controlling a dominant share, with an expected worth of 165.29 billion RMB ($24.71 billion USD) in 2016, according to analytics institute iiMedia Research.

Ele.me, Meituan Waimai and Baidu Waimai, three leading companies of China’s food delivery industry, represent 37.5%, 30.5% and 15.0% respectively of the total market as of May this year, the report pointed out.

As one of the earliest entrants, Ele.me is still the largest player in the industry, but its advantage over Meituan Waimai and Baidu Waimai is narrowing. According to data from Quest Mobile, Ele.me’s monthly active users climbed 124% to 17.46 million in May this year, a slower growth rate compared to Baidu Waimai’s 531% (16.62 million MAU in total) and Meituan Waimai’s 293% (14.94 million MAU in total).

Although the services the three companies provide are quite similar, they do have differences in the target clients and markets.

In terms of regional distribution, Quest Mobile’s data shows Baidu Waimai and Ele.me take the lead in first and second-tier city coverage respectively, while Meituan Waimai has a stronger presence in third and fourth-tier cities.

The white collar market is the competitive focus of all companies thanks to higher purchase frequency, user loyalty and price per order. Ele.me and Baidu Waimai are similar in terms of white-collar user coverage. Meituan’s user demographic leans more toward grassroots consumers.

The three companies take a combined 83% of the market. A wide range of quirky food delivery options emerged like home style cuisine (Home Cook), chef on-demand services (Haochushi, Jinshisong, Idachu) and food delivery services that focus on a special food ingredient (Call A Duck, Call A Chicken).

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This Ex-Uber Exec Is Creating China’s Uber For Bicycles https://technode.com/2016/07/07/mobike-uber/ https://technode.com/2016/07/07/mobike-uber/#respond Thu, 07 Jul 2016 09:01:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40298 Uber has inspired so many on-demand services that the phrase ‘the Uber of _____’ has become more than a little tired. This time, however, we’ve come across a service that is not only Uber-like in spirit and interface, but also in its team makeup. Founded by Davis Wang, a former executive of UberChina, Mobike is an […]]]>

Uber has inspired so many on-demand services that the phrase ‘the Uber of _____’ has become more than a little tired.

This time, however, we’ve come across a service that is not only Uber-like in spirit and interface, but also in its team makeup.

Founded by Davis Wang, a former executive of UberChina, Mobike is an on-demand bicycle rental service. Like Uber, Mobike’s app features a simple interface that tracks your location and shows available bicycles nearby. Users can book a bike 15 minutes before using it, and use an in-app navigation service to find it.

Riders scan a QR code to unlock the bikes, which are provided by the company, and the journey ends when the user re-locks their ride.

mobike

Public bicycle rental is nothing new in China. The government has tested similar projects in several cities to ease transpiration pressures in big cities. But for most of the current bike rental services in the country, riders have to to lock their bike to a special kiosk or bike station along their trip.

Mobike allows riders to lock the bike to any standard bike rack, so they can always park close to their destination. The bike’s return is recorded by GPS data. Once checked back in, the bike is immediately available to another customer.

The app also helps users track health metrics, such as distance traveled and calories burned. First-time users have to pay an refundable deposit of 299 RMB ($44.7 USD) and the services is charged at a flat rate of 1 yuan per 30 minutes no matter where you are.

The services is now operating in Shanghai with over 10,000 bikes in the city, according to Davis Wang.

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The EU Championship Has Reignited China’s Appetite For Shady Online Lotteries https://technode.com/2016/07/04/china-online-lottery/ https://technode.com/2016/07/04/china-online-lottery/#respond Mon, 04 Jul 2016 09:50:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=40208 China is going nuts for the European Championship, though it’s not just the football which is attracting a frenzy of fans. The country’s controversial grey market of online lotteries is once again booming. The lottery sales for 36 group stage games in this year’s UEFA Championship reached 3.75 billion RMB (over $560 million USD), said local […]]]>

China is going nuts for the European Championship, though it’s not just the football which is attracting a frenzy of fans. The country’s controversial grey market of online lotteries is once again booming.

The lottery sales for 36 group stage games in this year’s UEFA Championship reached 3.75 billion RMB (over $560 million USD), said local media, citing data from China’s National Lottery Center. At around 104 million sales per game, the total lottery revenue for the football event is expected to reach 5.3 billion RMB ($795 million USD).

Unlike Western lotteries, China’s lotteries are a little more diverse. While the China Welfare Lottery employs the familiar powerball and scratch-off ticket games, the highly-popular China Sports Lottery also allows fans to predict the outcome of major sports events for different return rates. The government maintains that it’s not gambling, which is technically banned in all forms on the Chinese mainland.

While running lotteries online has been illegal for a little over a year, many major players are finding loopholes in the system by essentially setting up O2O and on-demand services for offline providers. It’s created a grey market of sellers that are making serious cash on China’s [technically not] gamblers.

It’s not the first time China has caught sport-lottery fever. During the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, sales of Chinese online sports lotteries surged to 85 billion RMB ($13.1 billion USD) in 2014 from 42 billion RMB in 2013.

The government then cracked down on the online sales in March 2015, after evidence of fraud was found at several provincial lottery administration centers. The policy effectively suspended the operations of a sector that was worth 85 billion yuan ($12.75 billion USD) in 2014.

Today’s vendors act as intermediaries to get around the new laws. For example, Okooo.com, the web platform of lottery terminal provider REXlot Holdings Ltd., does not get involved in the lottery purchase directly but instead directs buyers to nearby offline lottery stores. The payments can even be made to the online lottery stations, and the stores then keep the physical lotto tickets for the 30 days. Other sites providing similar services include Letouvip and Caipiao365.

In addition to the O2O model, other lottery-related services try to engage users in lottery games based on virtual currencies. These currencies cannot be converted into cash but can be used to purchase other virtual lottery tickets or products like iPhones from the platforms themselves.

From the users’ point of view, the experience is virtually the same as the previous online lottery sales systems, but the chances of encountering untrustworthy platform selling fraudulent lottery tickets are the same, or even higher.

Including the most recent suspension, China’s messy online lottery industry landscape has recorded five major suspension crises between 2007 and 2015. The suspensions affected lottery services run by some of China’s top internet companies, including Alibaba’s Taobao, Sina’s Aicai and similar platforms from Tencent and NetEase.

After one year of suspension, the government remains cautious about the industry. In recent months, reports on a potential re-launch of online lottery sales have piled up in local media, but the government has given no definitive indicators.

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Meet Some Of The Best VR Headsets Coming Out of China Right Now https://technode.com/2016/06/22/vr-headsets-china/ https://technode.com/2016/06/22/vr-headsets-china/#respond Wed, 22 Jun 2016 08:59:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39961 Chinese tech companies are scrambling to take a piece of the hotly-contended VR market. The local VR industry is expected to reach 5.6 billion yuan ($850 million USD) in 2016, and exceed 55 billion yuan by 2020, up from 1.5 billion yuan in 2015, according to data from Chinese research institute iiMedia. With the steep market projection […]]]>

Chinese tech companies are scrambling to take a piece of the hotly-contended VR market. The local VR industry is expected to reach 5.6 billion yuan ($850 million USD) in 2016, and exceed 55 billion yuan by 2020, up from 1.5 billion yuan in 2015, according to data from Chinese research institute iiMedia.

With the steep market projection in mind, TechNode gathered together a few frontrunners  in the VR headset game so far:

HTC Vive

HTC

HTC Vive is a tethered, PC-based VR headset package that includes a headset, two motion controllers, and two base stations. The device provides immersive VR experiences thanks to superb resolution and easy operation. The device still has room for improvement. The system is comparatively complex and requires a large playing space. Still, retailing at $799, this is one of the most promising VR devices we’ve seen.

Baofeng Magic Glass

Magic Glass

Part of their VR video endeavor, Baofeng’s Magic Glass is a smartphone headset that is compatible with Bluetooth-connected controllers. Although the 199 yuan device does not boast any ground-breaking features, its dedicated app platform claimed over 70 games and over 1800 video resources.

LeEco Super Helmet 3D VR Head-Mounted Glasses

Letv-glass

LeEco is a leading Chinese internet giant which has ventured into the VR industry. The company recently released the Super Helmet, featuring a 5.5 inch Sharp liquid crystal panel with a 2560 x 1440 resolution and a 70 degree horizontal view.

One highlight of the device is that the users can adjust the lens, a plus for shortsighted people who want to try it out. The device also has some shortcomings. The gadget does not have an embedded battery, and must be connected to a smartphone or battery bank for power supply.

LeEco also released a low-end smartphone headset dubbed LeTV Cool 1 last year.

DeePoon M2

DP

DeePoon M2 is an all-in-one VR headset. Unlike smartphone and PC-tethered headsets, this device basically runs as a powerful smartphone and offers everything you need in a basic VR experience. However, it doesn’t have all the features you get with a PC-based system, such as motion tracking.

DeePoon is a Chinese consumer-targeted VR manufacturer that offers a full array of VR devices, ranging from VR googles that link to smartphones to all-in-one VR handsets with built-in motherboards and displays. The company raised $30 million USD B round earlier this year.

Join us at TechCrunch VR/AR Summit on June 29 to learn more about China’s VR industry.

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A Day In The Life Of A WeChat-Obsessed User (According To Tencent) https://technode.com/2016/06/21/wechat/ https://technode.com/2016/06/21/wechat/#respond Tue, 21 Jun 2016 10:16:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39941 WeChat is commonly referred to as a messaging service by foreign media, but Chinese users know that the massively popular app, which recorded over 697 million monthly active users as of 2015, is far more than just an IM tool. Tencent, the parent company of WeChat, rarely gives many insights into the wealth of data behind […]]]>

WeChat is commonly referred to as a messaging service by foreign media, but Chinese users know that the massively popular app, which recorded over 697 million monthly active users as of 2015, is far more than just an IM tool.

Tencent, the parent company of WeChat, rarely gives many insights into the wealth of data behind China’s most popular messaging app. They released a report in Oct. 2015 at Tencent Global Partner Conferences, giving a handful of insights, along with an imagined day in the life of a WeChat-obsessed user:

  • 7:00 Get up — Browse WeChat Moment
  • 7:45 Head towards the office — Read two articles or playing games on WeChat while commuting
  • 8:30 Arrive at the office — Buy breakfast with WeChat Payments.
  • 9:00 Start work — Handling messages from WeChat group for work
  • 10:00 Break — Browse WeChat Moments (similar to a Facebook feed) and chat with friends
  • 12:00 Lunch —Pay for meals through WeChat payment
  • 12:45 Afternoon Break— Shopping on JD, which has level-one access on WeChat, and chat with friends
  • 17:00 Head home — Browse WeChat Moments
  • 18:00 Shop on the way home — Buy groceries with WeChat Payment
  • 20:00 Leisure hour — Read posts on WeChat, shop on JD, chat with friends
  • 22:00 Go to bed — Chat with friends and grab an red envelope, a lucky money giving feature.

According to the report, WeChat users are most active around 22:00, a bit earlier than 2014’s 22:30. WeChat users made a combined 280 million minutes worth of calls per day using the video and voice calling functions, the data shows.

Some 60% of WeChat users are young people aged between 15 and 29. On average, they have 128 friends, which will increase by 20% after getting first job. The demographic accounts for 58% of cross-regional calls and their peak-shopping period occurs between 10am and 10pm.

There’s also a gender imbalance in consumption behaviors of WeChat users, but the trend tilts towards male customers, rather than female spenders. The report shows male WeChatters spend 30% more than their female counterparts.

In terms of reading habits, post-90s users have an appetite for entertainment news, while post-80’s gen prefers international and local politics, and the post-60s generation preferred what Tencent dubbed “鸡汤文化,” meaning ‘chicken soup for the soul’ articles.

In terms of regional distribution, WeChat users are still skewed toward larger cities. Their penetration rate in first and second-tier cities stands at 93 percent and 69 percent respectively. The app still only has a 50 percent penetration rate in third to fifth-tier cities, according to Tencent.

Correction (7/22/2016 17:19): This post was updated to correct a mistake. Tencent’s data was announced in October 2015, not July 21, 2016.

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JD Acquires Yihaodian Through Strategic Alliance With Walmart https://technode.com/2016/06/21/jd-acquires-yihaodian/ https://technode.com/2016/06/21/jd-acquires-yihaodian/#respond Tue, 21 Jun 2016 07:28:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39936 Chinese e-commerce titan JD announced Monday that they have inked a strategic partnership with Walmart to better tap Chinese market through a combination of e-commerce and retail. Under the deal, JD will take control of Yihaodian, an online grocery sales platform that Walmart took full ownership in July last year. JD will take over the Yihaodian brand, […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce titan JD announced Monday that they have inked a strategic partnership with Walmart to better tap Chinese market through a combination of e-commerce and retail.

Under the deal, JD will take control of Yihaodian, an online grocery sales platform that Walmart took full ownership in July last year. JD will take over the Yihaodian brand, website and app, while Walmart will continue to operate the Yihaodian direct sales business and will become a vendor on the Yihaodian marketplace.

In exchange, Walmart will grab a 5% equity stake in JD by acquiring about 145 million shares in the online retailer, worth around $1.5 billion USD at JD’s current valuation.

In addition, the partnership covers more diversified cooperation. Walmart’s Sam’s Club China will open a flagship store on JD and offer same- and next-day delivery through JD’s nationwide warehousing and delivery network. Walmart’s China stores will be listed as a preferred retailer on JD’s O2O unit Dada, China’s crowd-sourced delivery platform.

For JD, Yihaodian’s brand and business in eastern and southern China and in key product categories such as high-quality grocery and household goods will improve its geographical and product strengths. On top of that, Walmart’s offline and overseas resources will form a strong complement to boost its O2O and globalization initiatives in competition against Alibaba.

For Walmart, the tie-up brings more opportunities for the U.S. retailor to reshape its operations in China by capitalizing on JD’s online traffic and offline delivery networks.

Yihaodian was founded in 2008 by Liu Junling and Yu Gang, two former executives of Dell. JD’s acquisition is one of a series of equity changes during the company’s troubled growth. The platform sold an 80% stake to insurance company Shenzhen Ping’an for 80 million yuan due to a lack of funding in 2010.

Walmart purchased a 17.7% stake in the company in 2011, and then gradually increased their stake to 51.3% in 2012 before fully acquiring the company last year. However, the company has seen growth slow since Walmart’s acquisition, accounting for only 1.4% of China’s online retailing market, according to China Briefing.

While Yihaodian has missed opportunities to develop into cross-sector e-commerce giants like JD, it holds an important spot in the e-commerce hypermarket vertical. Therefore, it becomes an asset of strategic importance in the e-commerce behemoth’s expansion plans, especially into the online supermarket and fresh produce sectors.

“We believe that this tie up will increase both product selection and overall user experience. We look forward to further developing Yihaodian, which has tremendous strength in important regions of eastern and southern China,” said Richard Liu, CEO of JD.com.

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Ant Financial To Acquire 20% Stake In Thailand’s Ascend Money https://technode.com/2016/06/20/ant-financial-ascend/ https://technode.com/2016/06/20/ant-financial-ascend/#respond Mon, 20 Jun 2016 06:33:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39894 Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba, is planning to acquire a 20 percent stake in Thai third-party payment company Ascend Money, according to an announcement made by China’s Ministry of Commerce last Wednesday. The investment was proposed by Ant Financial’s Hong Kong-listed payment unit Alipay (Hong Kong) Holding Ltd. In addition, the Chinese company is […]]]>

Ant Financial, the financial affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba, is planning to acquire a 20 percent stake in Thai third-party payment company Ascend Money, according to an announcement made by China’s Ministry of Commerce last Wednesday.

The investment was proposed by Ant Financial’s Hong Kong-listed payment unit Alipay (Hong Kong) Holding Ltd. In addition, the Chinese company is also seeking an option to increase its stake by a further 10 percent within 21 months of the transaction being finalized.

Ascend Money, a newly established unit of Ascend Group, is the parent company of online payment service True Money and licensed financial services provider Ascend Nano. Ascend Group is a spin-off from True Corporation, a top-three telecom carrier in Thailand.

As the dominant payment platform in China, Alipay has long set its sights on overseas market to maintain high-speed growth beyond domestic market, where it is facing tightening competition from Tencent’s rival WeChat payment.

Last year, Ant Financial invested over $500 million USD in India’s largest online wallet provider PayTM, which now holds an online banking license in the country. The Chinese firm also helped launched online bank K Bank in Korea with local partners, but due to government restrictions the company still only holds a 2% in the joint venture.

Ant Financial sealed a $4.5 billion USD B round this April at a market valuation of over $60 billion USD.

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Tencent-Backed Entstudy Taps Live Streaming Education With $18M C Round https://technode.com/2016/06/20/entstudy-c-round/ https://technode.com/2016/06/20/entstudy-c-round/#respond Sun, 19 Jun 2016 23:04:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39869 GSX TALChinese after-school tutoring platform Entstudy has sealed a 120 million yuan ($18.21 million USD) C round led by Greenwoods Investment with participation of existing investors of Tencent and Yuanxi Capital. Entstudy (Fengkuang Laoshi), whose Chinese name literally means ‘Fabulous Teachers’, helps connect parents to tutors for one-to-one after-school tutoring services aimed at primary or secondary school-age children. […]]]> GSX TAL

Chinese after-school tutoring platform Entstudy has sealed a 120 million yuan ($18.21 million USD) C round led by Greenwoods Investment with participation of existing investors of Tencent and Yuanxi Capital.

Entstudy (Fengkuang Laoshi), whose Chinese name literally means ‘Fabulous Teachers’, helps connect parents to tutors for one-to-one after-school tutoring services aimed at primary or secondary school-age children.

The new funding will be utilized to develop its live streaming platform Dingdang Classroom (our translation), which is expected to become a major revenue source for the startup. Zhang Hao, CEO and founder of Entstudy, said to local media that the company is expected to surpass 60 million yuan in revenue this year and start to record profits next year.

At the same time, the company will be divided into three departments for community operations, teacher incubator programs and live streaming services.

The current round comes after a $24 million B plus round received last July at a market valuation of $200 million USD. In addition, Tencent’s cooperate venture capital fund invested $20 million USD in the company’s B series.

Tencent Weighs In On Online Education

China’s huge appetite for eduation has moved online in recent years. The country’s market for e-learning soared 19.4% YOY to 119.17 billion RMB in 2015, according to data from research institution Qianzhan.com.

Tencent, the Chinese internet giant with investments in virtually every sector, has set its eyes on the blooming market through both partnerships and investments. Entstudy is among a handful of education startups that Tencent holds stake in.

Since the beginning of this year, the company has invested in three edtech projects, including a $40 million USD round in Yuanfudao, a 100 million yuan B round in English learning startup ABC360, and a 320 million RMB strategic investment in the online unit of Chinese private education behemoth New Oriental Education & Technology Group which follows the establishment of a joint venture with the company in 2014.

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Xiaomi Tests Out Online Banking https://technode.com/2016/06/17/xiaomi-tests-online-banking/ https://technode.com/2016/06/17/xiaomi-tests-online-banking/#respond Fri, 17 Jun 2016 07:12:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39812 It’s no secret that Chinese smartphone vendor Xiaomi has bigger plans than just making smart hardware, and an important part of its ambition is online finance, a business that has become an absolute must for almost all Chinese internet giants. As a further move towards the goal, Xiaomi invested 885 million RMB ($115 million USD) in […]]]>

It’s no secret that Chinese smartphone vendor Xiaomi has bigger plans than just making smart hardware, and an important part of its ambition is online finance, a business that has become an absolute must for almost all Chinese internet giants.

As a further move towards the goal, Xiaomi invested 885 million RMB ($115 million USD) in a newly established online bank through its wholly owned financial subsidiary Yinmi Technology.

To some extend, however, the new bank isn’t a “Xiaomi Bank” in the real sense, because the gadget maker only takes a 29.5 percent stake as the second largest shareholder of the joint venture, which has a total registered capital of 3 billion RMB.

This can be reflected in the name of the bank, which is entitled as “Sichuan Hope Bank” (四川希望银行) after New Hope Group, the largest shareholder, which holds a 30 percent stake in the company. Chengdu Hongqi Chain, a chain retailer, holds a 15 percent stake, while remaining investors take a 25.5 percent.

It’s important to point out that a 30 percent stake is government-prescribed upper limit for a single shareholder in a private bank. Tencent and Ant Financial hold 30 percent in WeBank and MyBank respectively as the biggest shareholder of their respective online banking units.

New Hope Group is a business conglomerate with an extensive financial background in banking, securities and insurance. We may also expect the new bank to have an offline presence thanks to Hongqi Chain’s vast physical store network, which is a major asset when competing against other online banks. Of course, Xiaomi will grant the bank access to its huge (and young) user base.

Online financing has been in Xiaomi’s sights for some time.The company has been in financial businesses from payment (MiPay) to lending and financial management services (MiFinance). Apart from in-house services, Xiaomi has also made a series of finance-related strategic investments. Companies they have invested in include P2P lending site JimuBox, brokerage startup Tiger Brokers and investment management platform Cgtz.com.

Xiaomi’s online banking initiative puts it up against other internet heavyweights. Alibaba and Tencent have expanded considerably into the online banking space since they received their respective banking licenses two years earlier. Xiaomi still doesn’t have the required license, though they have cleared the path to further accreditation by obtaining a payment license as part of their acquisition of third-party payment company Jiefu Ruitong.

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JD-backed Student Microloan Site Fenqile Lands $235M Funding https://technode.com/2016/06/16/fenqile-d-round/ https://technode.com/2016/06/16/fenqile-d-round/#respond Thu, 16 Jun 2016 02:31:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39780 Fenqile, one of China’s leading student micro-loan startups, has sealed $235 million USD in funding, the company announced on Wednesday. The injection is part of a larger D series round that has not yet closed, they noted. Founded in August 2013, Fenqile lends users small sums of money for things ranging from electronics to skill training programs. The service […]]]>

Fenqile, one of China’s leading student micro-loan startups, has sealed $235 million USD in funding, the company announced on Wednesday. The injection is part of a larger D series round that has not yet closed, they noted.

Founded in August 2013, Fenqile lends users small sums of money for things ranging from electronics to skill training programs. The service is mostly target at students and offers budget short and long-term installment plans.

The platform now claims to have over 10 million users from user demographics outside of students. Data from the company shows that its sales for the first half of 2016 have hit 10 billion RMB ($1.52 billion USD).

The financing comes after an undisclosed amount of strategic C round from JD that is received in March last year and $100 million USD B round led by Digital Sky Technologies. Previous investors of the company include K2VC and Sequoia China.

The Wall Street Journal reported in October last year that Tencent was in talks with the company for potential investment, though the internet giant is not included in its confirmed investor list. The round was led by Huasheng Capital, private capital firm established by China Renaissance Partners, and CoBuilder Partners.

The company has issued its asset-backed securities on Shanghai Stock Exchange this March. The firm did not respond to TechNode’s inquiries on IPO plans.

Luo Min, CEO of Fenqile’s top rival Qufenqi, said in an internal letter that they are planning an local IPO. Qufenqi received an undisclosed amount of financing this January after landing $200 million USD investment led by Ant Financial.

The Dark Side Of A Booming Market

The budding lending industry, which taps the growing spending power of China’s new generation, has witnessed booming growth in the country. The growth has also brought about concerns over the industry’s integrity.

Local media revealed in a recent investigation that the loans can easily overwhelm users who misunderstand the terms of the service. They spoke to one Chinese university sophomore student who found themselves in 13,000 RMB debt for a 6,000RMB loan from Qufenqi after allowing it to overdraw by 14 months.

Under the Qufenqi’s previous contract, users have to pay a daily penalty of 1% if they failed to pay back the installment on time, an incredibly high rate considering the daily interest for credit cards is only 0.05%. The company lowered its penalty rate to 0.05% this May.

Users choose such lending platforms over credit cards because it is difficult for university students who don’t have stable incomes to apply for credit cards. On top of that, credit cards have a very low penetration rate compared to U.S. rates.

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This Startup Helps Cars Recognize China’s ‘Anomaly’ Vehicles https://technode.com/2016/06/15/minieye-visual-perception/ https://technode.com/2016/06/15/minieye-visual-perception/#respond Wed, 15 Jun 2016 02:48:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39763 China’s booming automotive market has given rise to a wealth of disruptive tech in the autos industry. While Chinese tech giants, including LeEco and Baidu, have set their sights on global domination, some smaller players are looking to solve problems closer to home, including China’s wildly unpredictable vehicles. For those who’ve experienced China’s roadways first hand, it’s not unusual […]]]>

China’s booming automotive market has given rise to a wealth of disruptive tech in the autos industry. While Chinese tech giants, including LeEco and Baidu, have set their sights on global domination, some smaller players are looking to solve problems closer to home, including China’s wildly unpredictable vehicles.

For those who’ve experienced China’s roadways first hand, it’s not unusual to see trucks bloated with anything from cardboard to livestock driving alongside three-wheeled micro vehicles, which somehow qualify as roadworthy.

minieye
A Minieye road test

Founded in 2012, Minieye develops what they call a ‘smart eye’ for vehicles, which uses computer vision technologies to anticipate possible collisions, building an algorithm specifically for China’s unpredictable roadways.

“It’s a big challenge for algorithm models to recognize not only normal cars but anomaly vehicles which are abundant in China, like three-wheelers dragging a huge tree or straw stacks.” said Liu Guoqing, CEO and founder of Minieye.

“On the other hand, large amounts of data [are] required to refine the model in different light and weather conditions.” said Liu. “We have utilized 33 vehicles to collect video data by running over ten thousand kilometers per day.”

Liu founded the company in Singapore four years ago with a group of computer vision scientists and engineers who were working on an ADAS project for the country’s Media Development Authority.

Currently, the startup has over 30 employees working from two branches, with an algorithm development center in Nanjing and product operation arm in Shenzhen.

The company recently secured an undisclosed amount of funding this April from ZTE Venture Capital. Liu told Technode that the funding is earmarked for algorithm development and pre-install solutions.

Previous investors include the Singapore Media Development Authority, Nanjing Municipality and Wu Yongming, a founding partner at Alibaba and board chairman of AliHealth.

A Growing Market For Local ADAS Products In China

Many local companies are now trying to tap into the ADAS field, which once belonged exclusively to foreign manufacturers in China. The list not only includes big names like Baidu and LeEco, who are leading the field in China’s auto innovation, but also solo startups who specialize in smaller verticals.

Liu is upbeat about the potential for stable growth in China’s ADAS industry, though he believes funding has been overzealous. “Some of the venture capitalists overestimated the growth projection of ADAS industry and China’s investment boom has created a bubble in the sector.”

The market size for Automotive Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) is forecasted to hit $3.1 billion by 2019, according to research by IHS.

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US Ad Tech Platform Smaato Acquired By Chinese Firm For $148M https://technode.com/2016/06/13/smaato-spearhead/ https://technode.com/2016/06/13/smaato-spearhead/#respond Sun, 12 Jun 2016 23:15:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39719 Smaato, San Francisco-based real-time ad tech platform, announced this Friday that they have reached an agreement with China’s Spearhead Integrated Marketing Communication Group for a full acquisition valued at $148 million USD. According to a company statement, the deal, which is still subject to final regulatory approvals, will be conducted through an M&A fund backed by one of […]]]>

Smaato, San Francisco-based real-time ad tech platform, announced this Friday that they have reached an agreement with China’s Spearhead Integrated Marketing Communication Group for a full acquisition valued at $148 million USD.

According to a company statement, the deal, which is still subject to final regulatory approvals, will be conducted through an M&A fund backed by one of Spearhead’s fully-owned subsidiaries.

As one of the world’s leading real-time bidding and supply side platforms (SSP) for mobile advertising, the 11-year-old startup claims to have a combined reach of more than one billion mobile users.

China’s booming mobile ad market has long been a strategic focus for Smaato. In a previous interview with TechNode, the company’s CEO Ragnar Kruse detailed the company’s plans for China hinted at a local partner  for their entry. The deal will give Spearhead a pool of resources to fuel a global expansion, while Smaato will be able to finally tap the Chinese market with a well-established local partner.

“This collaboration creates enormous new opportunities for both partners. Spearhead brings to Smaato not only its expertise and a trusted partnership but opens up the Chinese market for us,” said Smaato CEO and co-founder Ragnar Kruse said in a statement. “Smaato allows Spearhead to expand very quickly outside of China.”

Despite the advantages brought about by the collaboration, the company still have to compete against a slew of rising local competitors like Mobvisa, which acquired NativeX for $24.5 million USD this February.

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Local Rivals Bite Into iPhone’s Market Share In China https://technode.com/2016/06/06/iphone-china/ https://technode.com/2016/06/06/iphone-china/#respond Mon, 06 Jun 2016 09:47:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39574 Having an Apple device is synonymous with being wealthy and fashionable for many Chinese people. And while the mindset remains, a declining number of customers are willing to pay the price, and local competitors are lining up to offer comparable alternatives at a more affordable price. This is evidenced by the iPhone’s sinking market share in China, a market of huge strategic importance […]]]>

Having an Apple device is synonymous with being wealthy and fashionable for many Chinese people. And while the mindset remains, a declining number of customers are willing to pay the price, and local competitors are lining up to offer comparable alternatives at a more affordable price.

This is evidenced by the iPhone’s sinking market share in China, a market of huge strategic importance for the U.S. vendor. In addition to toppling sales worldwide, iPhone’s China market share declined from 16% in Q1 2015 to less than 13% in the same period of this year, according to research institute IDC.

When looking at these numbers, you may wonder why Apple is losing ground and who’s taking over the market. Leveraging on survey results from thousands of smartphone users, Tencent Penguin Intelligence went on a mission to answer these questions.

There’s Still Room For Growth In The Chinese Smartphone Market

Although China’s smartphone market has passed the period of dizzying growth, the field is still robust thanks to high smartphone trade-in rates. Tencent’s research shows that 75.4% of interviewees change their smartphones at least twice a year, of which 34.4% of people buy new smartphones once a year. Only 24.6% of interviewees reported that they used the same smartphone for more than three years.

The report also shows that non-iPhone users change phones more frequently than iPhone users. The report attributes this to the fact that users can expect an iPhone to be fully operational for two years with regular system upgrades, while Android phones may need a complete overhaul in that period. Most of the survey’s iPhone users were well aware of this, as 58.7% of them choose Apple’s iOS system when asked which iPhone feature they would be most reluctant to give up.

Huawei Is The Top iPhone Alternative

Chinese companies have spent years attempting to elbow their way into the high-tier smartphone markets. Companies, including Huawei, are now seeing the fruits of those efforts, as iPhones are no longer the exclusive choice in this lucrative sector.

Among thousands of former iPhone users that have switched to other brands, 25% are using products made by Huawei, whose high-tier smartphones have gained momentum in recent years.

Samsung took the second spot with 17.7%, which shows that the Korean company is still a competitive rival in the high-end market. However, Chinese companies take the lion’s share as the rest of the top-five list was occupied by local companies: Xiaomi (15.1%), OPPO (14.4%) and Vivo (14.2%).

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AR/VR Startup uSens Secures $20M For Hand And Head Tracking Tech https://technode.com/2016/06/03/usens-a-round/ https://technode.com/2016/06/03/usens-a-round/#respond Fri, 03 Jun 2016 09:44:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39526 Augmented and virtual reality startup uSens announced yesterday that they have raised a $20 million USD A round led by Fosun Kinzon Capital, followed by returning investor Maison Capital and six new backers including Great Capital. This new investment will help uSens launch their inside-out 26 DOF (degrees of freedom) hand tracking and 6DOF head tracking tools in 2016, according to a company […]]]>

Augmented and virtual reality startup uSens announced yesterday that they have raised a $20 million USD A round led by Fosun Kinzon Capital, followed by returning investor Maison Capital and six new backers including Great Capital.

This new investment will help uSens launch their inside-out 26 DOF (degrees of freedom) hand tracking and 6DOF head tracking tools in 2016, according to a company statement. DOF refers to the freedom of movement in three-dimensional space, where a higher number indicates an increased flexibility in positioning.

Founded in 2013, uSens is principally engaged in designing gesture recognition and hand-and-head tracking technologies and 3D ‘Human Computer Interaction’ system design. The San Jose-based startup first attracted public attention in 2015 as the developer of wireless AR/VR headset Impression Pi, a Kickstarter hit which raised over $30 million USD.

uSens is now focussing on head and hand position tracking, aiming to replace the need for peripheral devices such as game controllers.

Tracking is critical to ARVR experiences,” said Anli He, CEO and co-founder of uSens. “As ARVR display technologies approach mass adoption, we’re excited to bring great interactive solutions to help ARVR platforms, hardware makers, and especially content developers overcome the complicated challenges of hand and position tracking. ”

“For ARVR to achieve its potential, natural head and hand tracking is required,” said Donghui Pan, chairman and president of Fosun Kinzon Capital. “All consumers want a more immersive experience, and hand controllers simply aren’t the solution.”

“We see great potential in the future applications of uSens’ 3D HCI technology, from entertainment and gaming, to healthcare and behavioral therapy, to architecture, aeronautics, and education.” said Wenli Cui, founding partner of Maison Capital.

The current round would raise the company’s total funding to $26.7 million USD, following a $5.5 million USD Pre-A Series received in 2015 and a $1.2 million USD angel round received in 2014.

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Xiaomi Buys 1500 Patents From Microsoft https://technode.com/2016/06/02/xiaomi-patents-microsoft/ https://technode.com/2016/06/02/xiaomi-patents-microsoft/#respond Thu, 02 Jun 2016 05:23:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39499 Chinese gadget maker Xiaomi struck a deal with Microsoft to purchase around 1,500 patents from the latter for an undisclosed sum, the U.S. company announced on Wednesday. The announcement was made yesterday when Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella visited Beijing. The sale involves patents in voice communications, multimedia and cloud computing sectors, while the licensing portion include wireless communications patents […]]]>

Chinese gadget maker Xiaomi struck a deal with Microsoft to purchase around 1,500 patents from the latter for an undisclosed sum, the U.S. company announced on Wednesday. The announcement was made yesterday when Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella visited Beijing.

The sale involves patents in voice communications, multimedia and cloud computing sectors, while the licensing portion include wireless communications patents as well as other technologies, including video. The deal also covers a wider partnership that includes the cross-licensing and pre-installment of Microsoft Office and Skype onto some of Xiaomi’s devices.

The move underlines Xiaomi’s efforts to acquire intellectual properties in an attempt to explore overseas business amid a saturating domestic smartphone market.

Xiaomi has been investing heavily in intellectual property over several years. Company VP Wang Xiao disclosed that they have applied for more than 3,700 patents in 2015, up from over 2,000 in 2014. In February this year, Xiaomi brought 332 U.S. patents from Intel, shortly after acquiring some wireless communication technologies from Broadcom.

For Microsoft, the move is the latest in an attempt to boost partnerships with Chinese companies. The internet giant teamed up with Chinese search engine Sogou to launch an English language search engine. Microsoft holds more than 60,000 patents, which means the patents held by Xiaomi represent a very small share of the U.S. company’s total IP pool.

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China’s Grindr ‘Blued’ Lands New Financing, Eyes U.S. IPO https://technode.com/2016/06/02/blued-c-round-ipo/ https://technode.com/2016/06/02/blued-c-round-ipo/#respond Thu, 02 Jun 2016 01:58:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39476 Chinese gay flirting app Blued announced on Wednesday the completion of a Series C and C+ round led by Ventech China and Vision Knight Capital respectively. The startup said the funding size is in the hundreds of millions of RMB, without disclosing the specific amount. Founded as a virtual community for gay men in 2000, Blued has grown rapidly along with […]]]>

Chinese gay flirting app Blued announced on Wednesday the completion of a Series C and C+ round led by Ventech China and Vision Knight Capital respectively. The startup said the funding size is in the hundreds of millions of RMB, without disclosing the specific amount.

Founded as a virtual community for gay men in 2000, Blued has grown rapidly along with changing public attitudes toward gay people. The app now claims to have 27 million users as of February this year, of which 20%, or 6 million, come from overseas markets. The company claims to dominate nearly 90% of China’s gay instant messaging market.

Blued, which already available in 9 languages, is now eying an international expansion to compete with the likes of highly-popular U.S. app Grindr, which recently sold a stake to Chinese firm Beijing Kulun. The proceeds from Blued’s latest injection are earmarked for building offices in more countries, recruitment, localization and acquisitions.

The investment will also be used for boost its commercialization initiative through mobile marketing and video streaming. The company told Technode their revenue is expected to hit the hundreds of millions [RMB] in 2016, of which video streaming is major source.

Blued’s goal for the long-term is pretty clear: to raise money by going public and become the number one global player in the industry, said Geng Le, founder of the company.

It seems that Geng isn’t talking about something far-reaching. Blued has overtaken Grindr as the world’s largest same-sex matchmaking app in 2014, while the user metrics for the two companies were 15 million and 10 million, respectively.

Blued has been aggressively raising new funds over the past three years. The company landed three rounds of financing previously, including a 3 million RMB angel round from Zhonglu Capital in 2013, an eight-digit A round from Crystal Stream and a $30 million USD B round led by DCM China in 2014.

Blued’s top rival Zank secured an eight-digit RMB Series B funding last week to develop an e-commerce platform and video streaming business aimed at the gay market.

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This Chinese Q&A Platform Is Selling Celebrity Answers For $750 A Pop https://technode.com/2016/06/01/fenda/ https://technode.com/2016/06/01/fenda/#respond Wed, 01 Jun 2016 07:14:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39438 Wang Sicong, the son of Chinese billionaire and investor Wang Jianlin, made yet another splash in Chinese media this week for grabbing over 130 thousand RMB ($19,800 USD) in three days by answering twenty-five questions, covering a wide variety of topics from investment to his sex life on a Chinese online Q&A platform. The price for each […]]]>

Wang Sicong, the son of Chinese billionaire and investor Wang Jianlin, made yet another splash in Chinese media this week for grabbing over 130 thousand RMB ($19,800 USD) in three days by answering twenty-five questions, covering a wide variety of topics from investment to his sex life on a Chinese online Q&A platform. The price for each question started at 3,000 RMB and has since surged to 4,999 RMB.

Spurred by the news, Fenda, the platform where Wang answered these questions, has received a boost in popularity just one week after their official launch on May 15.

Fenda, which means one-minute answers, is a mix between Quora and Reddit’s AMA, and is operated through a WeChat enterprise account. Answers are delivered via voice messages and are no longer than 60 seconds – hence the name of the service.

Users who are knowledgeable about a particular topic can set a price, usually between 1-500 RMB for their answers and get paid for answering questions from others. If they don’t reply within 48 hours, the money will be reimbursed to those who raised the questions.

Fenda-1

In addition to connecting questioners and respondents in the Q&A chat interface, Fenda has an eavesdropping feature to engage more listeners. Anyone who is curious about the dialogue can listen to the reply for 1 RMB, which is split between the user who asked the question and the user who answered. After the completion of dialogue, Fenda will take 10% from the overall income from both parties.

Wang Sicong is not the only figure that has benefited from the platform. Top earners on Fenda are a diverse group of individuals: Zhang Yu, a gynecologist from Peking Union Medical College Hospital; Shi Hang, a prestigious screenwriter; Tong Dawei, A-list actor; and Wang Feng, a pop singer.

In a shift from the traditional fan economy for internet celebs, China’s cyber world is moving towards a knowledge economy which retails expertise to users under a paid business model.

In addition to Fenda, Guokr, the science networking service behind Fenda, has developped a paid knowledge sharing app Zaihang to connect industry experts and their advocates.

Just one day before Fenda’s launch, Zhihu, a leading Q&A platform in China, rolled out Zhihu Live, which allows users to join live online one-to-one sessions with experts on specific topics for a fee.

Peer skill-sharing platform Skillbank and Beijing-based Pingo Space are also engaged in skill and expertise sharing sector, although their service and business model take different form with Fenda and Zhihu’s.

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This Startup Wants To Disrupt China’s Floral Business https://technode.com/2016/05/31/flowerplus-a-round/ https://technode.com/2016/05/31/flowerplus-a-round/#respond Tue, 31 May 2016 09:29:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39391 FlowerPlus, a subscription flower delivery service, announced on Monday that they have raised a 70 million RMB (US$10 million) Series A round led by New Margin Ventures. Like its name suggests, FlowerPlus offers customers a no-frills flower delivery service. By following the company’s WeChat enterprise account, users can choose different flower packages through the chat interface, set a time and […]]]>

FlowerPlus, a subscription flower delivery service, announced on Monday that they have raised a 70 million RMB (US$10 million) Series A round led by New Margin Ventures.

Like its name suggests, FlowerPlus offers customers a no-frills flower delivery service. By following the company’s WeChat enterprise account, users can choose different flower packages through the chat interface, set a time and place for delivery, and pay using WeChat Payment. Compared to prices offered at brick-and-mortar flower shops, FlowerPlus’ prices are more affordable. Prices for single flower bouquets start at 98 RMB (US$14.88) and 168RMB for mixed ones.

Flowerplus-pic

The Shanghai-based startup currently cooperates with over 500 flower farms, most of them in China’s Yunnan Province, and provides services in major cities, including Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, and Chengdu.

According to Wang Ke, the founder of FlowerPlus, the company will invest its latest round of funding in partnership with more flower farms and development of flower preservation technologies.

The floral business is a new opportunity for startups targeting China’s rising middle class. In October 2015, China’s middle class reached at total 109 million, the largest in the world, according to research by Credit Suisse.

As a traditional industry, the flower business is ripe for disruption, especially in China. Compared to western countries, there are fewer brick-and-mortar flower stores in China. In addition, in a country where people were struggling for basic necessities like food and clothing just a few years ago, buying flowers on a regular basis is not very common.

However, China’s rapid economic transformation has raised incomes, allowing people to spend more on consumer discretionary products and services. Since physical stores cannot meet the rising demand from customers, online flower delivery has become the preferred option.

Chinese startups are tapping the market from different perspectives: RoseOnly is a high-tier online flower store targeting the gift market; EasyFlower is B2B platform that bridges flower farmers and stores; Floral & Life is an e-commence platform for flowers. To fully capitalize on its logistics network, 24Tidy, an on-demand laundry service, also offers a flower delivery service.

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Microsoft Partners With Shanghai Govt To Launch A Second Accelerator in China https://technode.com/2016/05/26/microsoft-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2016/05/26/microsoft-shanghai/#respond Thu, 26 May 2016 11:34:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39275 Microsoft launched Microsoft Ventures Accelerator Shanghai this Tuesday together with Shanghai Xuhui District government and state-backed electronics company INESA. It’s the latest in a global network of Microsoft-backed accelerators. A total of eight acceleration programs, including the newly established on in Shanghai, have been launched in global startup hubs including Beijing, London, Bangalore, Berlin, Paris, Seattle […]]]>

Microsoft launched Microsoft Ventures Accelerator Shanghai this Tuesday together with Shanghai Xuhui District government and state-backed electronics company INESA.

It’s the latest in a global network of Microsoft-backed accelerators. A total of eight acceleration programs, including the newly established on in Shanghai, have been launched in global startup hubs including Beijing, London, Bangalore, Berlin, Paris, Seattle and Tel Aviv.

The Microsoft Beijing accelerator has currently seen 126 projects graduate, providingservices to 500 million users since its establishment in 2012, according to the company. They noted the combined valuation of these projects is 38 billion RMB ($5.8 billion USD).

Like its Beijing counterpart, Microsoft Shanghai Accelerator favors projects in cloud computing, artificial intelligence, deep learning and big data. The company has taken the opportunity to promote their own cloud platform, Azure, in China’s growing cloud industry.

As China seeks to increase local innovation, startup acceleration and incubation programs have mushroomed around the country with varying degrees of success. In Shanghai alone, the number of incubators totaled over 150 a figure that surges to 400 including co-working and ‘innovation’ spaces. While the quick rise of incubators may foster China’s young startups, it brings some disturbing problems as well. (See our previous dive into China’s incubator bubble here)

Of course, Microsoft is not the first U.S.-based entity to explore China’s entrepreneurial market. Amazon’s cloud service AWS has launched a DreamT Accelerator in Shanghai two years earlier. A consortium of Chinese and American financial institutions also launched a Silicon Valley-China tech accelerator, InnoSpring, in 2012.

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Yet Another Patent War Is On: Huawei Sues Samsung Over Infringements https://technode.com/2016/05/25/huawei-sues-samsung/ https://technode.com/2016/05/25/huawei-sues-samsung/#respond Wed, 25 May 2016 08:41:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39251 Huawei Technologies announced on Wednesday that it has filed lawsuits against Korean rival Samsung over alleged patent infringements in the U.S. and China. The dispute mainly relates to Samsung’s alleged unlicensed use of Huawei’s 4G technologies, operating systems, and user interfaces in their smartphones, according to the Chinese smartphone maker. Although the lawsuit was only […]]]>

Huawei Technologies announced on Wednesday that it has filed lawsuits against Korean rival Samsung over alleged patent infringements in the U.S. and China. The dispute mainly relates to Samsung’s alleged unlicensed use of Huawei’s 4G technologies, operating systems, and user interfaces in their smartphones, according to the Chinese smartphone maker.

Although the lawsuit was only filed in courts in the U.S. and China, their dispute is not restricted to these markets, according to Huawei, adding that they are willing to settle the problem with Samsung on a global scale. The Chinese firm didn’t disclose the monetary figure it wants from Samsung.

“Huawei believes that industry players should work together to push the industry forward through open, joint innovation. While respecting others’ patents, we will also protect our own,” said Ding Jianxing, the president of Huawei’s Intellectual Property Rights Department, in a statement.

The Shenzhen-based company has invested heavily in R&D, products, and wireless standards development in recent years, totaling 59.6 billion RMB (US$9.08 billion), or 15 percent of annual revenue, in 2015, according to company financial report.

Samsung’s attitude towards the case is still unclear. In response to an inquiry by Reuter’s, Samsung said only that it would “take appropriate action to defend Samsung’s business interests.”

It’s worth noting that Huawei hasn’t signed any cross-licensing deals with Samsung yet unlike Apple.

To some extent, patent wars underline the escalation of battles between leading smartphone makers. Huawei’s allegation is probably a means to fight competitors for global market share, just like Samsung’s ever-expanding war with Apple.

A report from Gartner shows that Huawei is now the third largest global smartphone manufacturer in terms of global shipment. It beats Apple and Samsung as the No.1 phone maker in China in Q1 this year, according to data from Strategy Analytics.

Patents are useful weapons against competitors. Winners can claim huge financial indemnity or halt the sales of competitor’s products completely. For example, Samsung handed over US$548 million to settle patent disputes with Apple in 2015. Chinese upstart Xiaomi was forced to halt sales of handsets in India after a patent infringement complaint from Ericsson.

Learning from these lessons, Chinese companies are investing heavily in patents. In addition to acquiring some wireless communication technologies from Broadcom, Xiaomi purchased 332 U.S. patents from Intel this February. Lenovo has acquired Motorola, obtaining more than 2,000 patents from Google while striking cross-licensing deals with the latter on 21,000 patents. TCL holds nearly 2,000 mobile patents after merging with Alcatel. Huawei’s case against Samsung marks one of the first intellectual property challenges from a Chinese company against one of the world’s top mobile makers.

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Shanda Group Is Now The Biggest Shareholder In LendingClub https://technode.com/2016/05/24/shanda-lendingclub/ https://technode.com/2016/05/24/shanda-lendingclub/#respond Tue, 24 May 2016 04:53:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39214 Shanda Group has acquired an 11.7% stake in U.S. marketplace lender LendingClub, according to a regulatory filing from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The deal makes the Singapore-based investment company the largest shareholder of LendingClub. The disclosure of the purchase, which was sealed in March and April, sent shares of the lending platform up […]]]>

Shanda Group has acquired an 11.7% stake in U.S. marketplace lender LendingClub, according to a regulatory filing from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The deal makes the Singapore-based investment company the largest shareholder of LendingClub.

The disclosure of the purchase, which was sealed in March and April, sent shares of the lending platform up more than 8% in pre-market trading on Monday, following a plunge after LendingClub’s founder Renaud Laplanche was forced to resign for violating the company’s business practices in a “non-conforming sale” of $22 million in loans.

According to Shanda, the purchase was made to invest in industries with “a large-scale and long-term, sustainable growth potential.”

Founded by Chinese billionaire Chen Tianqiao, Shanda started in 1999 and developed into a leading game maker in China. Shanda Group is a private investment firm that Chen runs in Singapore, which covers a diversified portfolio from media and technology to financial companies.

Although Shanda is best known as a game developer, the company has transformed into an investment company in recent years. Early this year, the company spun off its gaming business and currently does not hold any shares in Shanda Games, according to a company announcement.

Shanda has invested in more than 140 projects in the past decade, which include recent investments such as those in Legg Mason Inc. and Sotheby’s.

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Tencent’s Co-founder Charles Chen Launches $320M Education Prize https://technode.com/2016/05/24/tencents-charles-chen-education-prize/ https://technode.com/2016/05/24/tencents-charles-chen-education-prize/#respond Tue, 24 May 2016 04:20:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39175 Just one month after Tencent CEO Pony Ma donated US$2.1 billion worth of shares to charity, Charles Chen, the low-profile co-founder of Tencent, is doing some of his own  philanthropy by launching the Yidan Prize for education, with a donation of $2.5 billion HKD (US$320 million). The Yidan Prize, named after Chen’s Chinese name, is an […]]]>

Just one month after Tencent CEO Pony Ma donated US$2.1 billion worth of shares to charity, Charles Chen, the low-profile co-founder of Tencent, is doing some of his own  philanthropy by launching the Yidan Prize for education, with a donation of $2.5 billion HKD (US$320 million).

The Yidan Prize, named after Chen’s Chinese name, is an annual international award bestowed in two categories: research and education development. The hefty awards are open to teams and individuals worldwide, and each endowment is worth $30 million HKD (US$3.8 million).

In an interview with local media, Chen recalled the tough lives in early childhood and how his illiterate grandmother helped him to realize the importance of education. The idea of launching this prize was supposedly inspired his experience.

Following the examples of western billionaire philanthropists led by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, a growing member of Chinese tycoons, including Alibaba founder Jack Ma and Tencent founder Pony Ma, are joining charity initiatives.

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Sogou Buddies Up With Microsoft’s Bing To Power English Search https://technode.com/2016/05/23/sogou-bing/ https://technode.com/2016/05/23/sogou-bing/#respond Sun, 22 May 2016 23:57:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39122 Chinese search engine Sogou has partnered up with Microsoft’s Bing to launch two new vertical search channels—Sogou English and Sogou Academic, in a bid to tap China’s increasing demand for global information. The partnership is an extension of an existing prelationship between Microsoft and Sogou. While Google is blocked in China, Bing-powered search engines, including Yahoo, […]]]>

Chinese search engine Sogou has partnered up with Microsoft’s Bing to launch two new vertical search channels—Sogou English and Sogou Academic, in a bid to tap China’s increasing demand for global information.

The partnership is an extension of an existing prelationship between Microsoft and Sogou. While Google is blocked in China, Bing-powered search engines, including Yahoo, are not. According to Sogou the new engine uses a mix of Sogou and Bing services.

The English search engine provides an automatic translation function, allowing users to search for English results by inputting Chinese keywords.

Sogou trails Baidu in the China, with just 8 percent of the total market, though both companies have been looking to diversify their offerings away from the core search business.

We have been committed to the content differentiation strategy,” a Sogou spokesperson told Technode.

“Since 2013 we started to cooperate with Tencent and lunched WeChat Subscription Content Search. Last year we launched Zhihu Search, cooperating with China’s largest Q&A community, Zhihu.”

Although Sogou is aiming at global content, it will focus primarily on innovations targeted at Chinese market, said the sogou representative. “We have a global plan, but it will start from Sogou Keyboard (an input method that the company started with and takes more than 60% share in mobile market).”

This is not Bing’s first foray into English search services. The engine interestingly launched a similar cooperation plan with Baidu for English language search results in 2011.

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Obstacles Lay Ahead for Autonomous Driving https://technode.com/2016/05/19/obstacles-lay-ahead-autonomous-driving/ https://technode.com/2016/05/19/obstacles-lay-ahead-autonomous-driving/#respond Thu, 19 May 2016 08:52:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=39111 Driven by the IoT boom, cars are connected like never before. The connected car panel at CES Asia last week brought together prominent figures to butt heads over tone of the most interesting topics in the field: autonomous driving. HD Maps & Autonomous Driving   High-definition mapping is the core of tomorrow’s self-driving cars. While regular maps are compiled […]]]>

Driven by the IoT boom, cars are connected like never before. The connected car panel at CES Asia last week brought together prominent figures to butt heads over tone of the most interesting topics in the field: autonomous driving.

HD Maps & Autonomous Driving  

High-definition mapping is the core of tomorrow’s self-driving cars. While regular maps are compiled for humans who can make their own judgments under certain conditions, HD maps are designed for machines, said Zhai Yao, a head of product development at Continental Automotive’s smart transportation unit.

“HD maps provide much more detailed information on road conditions which mainly fall into two categories: lane attributes, like width of roads, road curves, and object info, such as road signs and sentry box,” added Jing Muhan, the Vice President of mapping company NavInfo. It’s also about precision. A regular map can position a car within a meter, while HD maps can do it to within as little as ten centimeters.

The complexity of HD maps makes them more demanding to produce and upgrade. Zhai pointed out that crowdfunding maps is a possible solution. “Every vehicle can provide data to the backend to create a road model that can be used by all drivers.”

Kong Xianglai, the manager of Sogou Map, chimed in to add that it’s impossible to maintain a high mapping service quality if companies stick to a traditional industry chain division and rely on only a few mapping companies for mapping data supply. That holds especially true in China, where urban construction has brought constant changes to road conditions.

“We want to engage more end-users as mapping data contributors,” he said. He also noted that while it’s okay to involve individual users for updating POIs (point of interest), updating mapping data has a higher entry barrier in terms of technical concerns.

Jing sees the problem from a mapping service’s point of view. “HD mapping is still a highly professional field which requires professional technologies and data collecting equipment,” he says. More importantly, the government has control over mapping services due to security concerns. Also, it’s difficult for crowdfunding maps to fit in a market that has multiple map formats, said Jing.

Assisted Driving vs. Autonomous Driving

Internet companies and automakers take different views on boosting the market. Carmakers focus more on the vehicle itself with development for better radar or visual cameras, while internet companies want to push and share cloud-based information to cars, Zhai noted.

Their views towards autonomous driving are also divergent. Carmakers prefer to take a more conservative view in adopting smart transportation technologies. Assisted driving technologies, like self-parking and lane keeping are leaping into the market to boost sales, but automakers are very careful when it comes to fully autonomous driving technologies.

“The reason behind this is very simple. If self-driving vehicles become mainstream, cars will become a transportation device. When all the social attributes of car brands disappeared, people’s demand for purchasing their own cars will also decrease,”said Kong.

Meanwhile, internet companies led by Google lean towards fully autonomous driving experiences. “Internet companies enter automobile market as a disruptor,” said Kong.

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English Teaching Site 51Talk Bucks Local Listing Trend To File For U.S. IPO https://technode.com/2016/05/13/51talk-us-ipo/ https://technode.com/2016/05/13/51talk-us-ipo/#comments Fri, 13 May 2016 10:52:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38889 Chinese online English tutoring service 51Talk has filed for a public listing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking to raise $100 million USD in funding. The company still hasn’t confirmed whether they will list on the NYSE or the NASDAQ. If everything goes smoothly, 51Talk will be the first Chinese internet company to list in the U.S. this […]]]>

Chinese online English tutoring service 51Talk has filed for a public listing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking to raise $100 million USD in funding. The company still hasn’t confirmed whether they will list on the NYSE or the NASDAQ.

If everything goes smoothly, 51Talk will be the first Chinese internet company to list in the U.S. this year, amid a recent preference for local listing among Chinese startups. Instabilities in Chinese stock market, which may bring about by policy adjustments, have affected 51Talk’s decision, according to the company.

Founded in 2011, 51Talk offers one-on-one e-learning courses with teachers mainly sourced from Southeast Asian countries who speak English as their native language. The company currently claims to have 6,000 teachers and 2,000 supporting staff, offering courses to over 100,000 paid users.

The Beijing-based company has set up offices in Shanghai, Wuhan and the Philippines. Their backers include ZhenFund, Sequoia Capital, DCM and Shunwei Capital, a fund backed by Xiaomi founder Lei Jun.

Despite stable revenue growth, the company has recording losses due to huge investments in marketing and product development. Its net loss attributable for shareholders hit 402 million yuan in 2015, up from 130 million yuan one year earlier. The company has said that it may continue to record losses in the next few years.

51Talk is one of the major survivors of China’s online education boom, which started in 2014. After sprawling growth, especially the English training sector, consolidation began in 2015, during which 51Talk acquired a rival 91Waijiao, a similar site founded by Gong Haiyan, founder of Chinese online dating service Jiayuan. Remaining competitors include VIPABC and Hujiang.

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China Is Gearing Up For An $8 Billion VR Industry: CES Asia https://technode.com/2016/05/12/vr-ces/ https://technode.com/2016/05/12/vr-ces/#respond Thu, 12 May 2016 12:28:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38825 Virtual reality is undergoing booming development in China, but you don’t know the frenzy until you see people waiting in line for hours to try out VR devices. This year’s CES Asia, held in Shanghai, brought out scores of enthusiastic consumers looking to get a first look at 2016 releases in VR. Reports from Chinese research […]]]>

Virtual reality is undergoing booming development in China, but you don’t know the frenzy until you see people waiting in line for hours to try out VR devices. This year’s CES Asia, held in Shanghai, brought out scores of enthusiastic consumers looking to get a first look at 2016 releases in VR.

Reports from Chinese research company iiMedia show that the Chinese VR market was worth 1.5 billion yuan ($230 million USD) in 2015. This figure is expected to reach 5.6 billion yuan in 2016 and to exceed 55 billion yuan by 2020.

Here’s a handful of the Chinese VR manufacturers who showcased their products at CES this year.

HTC VIVE

HTC

As one of the first VR handsets shipped, HTC Vive provides the best experience among all VR exhibitors at CES Shanghai. The experience is really immersive thanks to superb resolution which lets you forget that you are in a fake world. Game operation is easy to pick up, although there’s still improvement spaces for making the gesture recognition more steady.

The device do requires larger space (around 4 square meters) to avoid accidentally stumbling on something while playing. Also, the wires connected to the handset is very annoying especially when you are playing in a standing position and spins around to defend against attacking zombies.

An impressive VR experience isn’t cheap. The price for the HTC VIVE is around $799.

KAT VR

KATVR

Hangzhou-based startup KAT VR eyes the industry from another angle: accessories. “If we compare VR handset to computers, we are the manufacturer of mouse”, a representative of the company told TechNode. Aiming to create more realistic experience that activates your whole body, KAT VR’s treadmill works similar to a big baby bouncer, allowing gamers to walk, run, jump crouch and sit in virtual worlds.

DeePoon

DP

DeePoon is a Chinese consumer-targeted VR manufacturer that offers a full array of VR devices, ranging from VR googles that link up to smartphones to all-in-one VR handsets with build-in motherboards and displays.

DeePoon is adopting a platform strategy to connect hardware and content developers. Alex Xu, sales director of DeePoon, said there’s currently more than 100 games available for the hardware. Xu added that their diverse product line is priced from 169RMB (US$26) to 2,999RMB.

The company received a $30 million B round from Xiaomi-backed Chinese video streaming site Xunlei and Internet company Kingnet.com last December.

Other exhibitors include Dlodlo (left), VRGATE (middle), Supow (right), among others, most of whom are smartphone VR headset developers.

VR3
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Digital Content Crackdown Ends Golden Age For Personal Cloud Storage In China https://technode.com/2016/05/10/personal-cloud-content-crackdown/ https://technode.com/2016/05/10/personal-cloud-content-crackdown/#comments Tue, 10 May 2016 10:49:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38753 Over the past few years, personal cloud storage in China has witnessed exponential growth as a convenient replacement for mobile storage devices. However behind the boom are looming undercurrents of concern around security and content management. As part of the country’s efforts to ‘clean up’ the internet, five national authorities including the National Anti-Pornography Office, the […]]]>

Over the past few years, personal cloud storage in China has witnessed exponential growth as a convenient replacement for mobile storage devices. However behind the boom are looming undercurrents of concern around security and content management.

As part of the country’s efforts to ‘clean up’ the internet, five national authorities including the National Anti-Pornography Office, the Ministry of Public Security, and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, have jointly launched campaign in March to purge everything from pornography to other content that deemed illegal by the government. The event has created a domino effect in China’s personal cloud storage sector, resulting the shutdown of six major services.

  • March 4–Dongguan-based “115” turned off some of their file-sharing features to prevent dissemination of illegal content.
  • March 17— UC Net Disk, the online storage arm of Alibaba Group, said it would terminate its storage offerings entirely.
  • April 25–VDisk, the storage provider backed by Sina, announced that they would close their free personal service by June 30. The file searching and sharing functions were shut down immediately.
  • April 26–KuaiPan, an online storage provider owned by Nasdaq-listed Xunlei, closed its personal storage service.
  • April 27—Weiyun from internet giant Tencent said that they will turn off some of their sharing functions.
  • May 3—Huawei’s storage service DBank will suspend its data sharing feature and stop providing free data service starting July this year. Paid users will get reimbursement.

The purge is shaking out the industry as most of the companies mentioned above are top-ten players in the market. According to a report BigData Research compiled in December 2015, Baidu Cloud topped the list with 37.86 million monthly active users. Huawei DBank and 360 Cloud took the second and third spot with 13.71 million and 6.87 million MAU, respectively, followed by Weiyun (4.17 million), China Telecom-backed ECloud (3.42 million), VDisk (2.4 million), 115 (2.05 million), KuaiPan (1.05 million), China Mobile-backed MCloud (720K) and Xunlei Cloud (240K).

Different from international online storage providers Dropbox and Google Drive, Chinese online storage services work as content search engines and encourage content sharing between users. The openness of Chinese personal cloud services creates a huge concern for the country’s regulators because it is more difficult for them to control unapproved content.

Even with government intervention and policy risk, companies wouldn’t have given up so easily if they considered it a profitable business. The real reason for the shutdown is the lack of clear business models around cloud storage. In 2013, Chinese internet companies flocked to the personal storage sector and their competition for market share is mainly realized through offering larger free storage spaces, or cash-burning, like many other industries in China.

The market grew rapidly. Chinese research company iiMedia Research Group expects the number of personal storage service users to reach 450 million last year, up from 380 million in 2014. That is more than half of the total 688 million internet users in mainland China, according to China Internet Network Information Centre.

Despite the growth, the companies are still struggling to find a clear business model to commercialize their services. Under the combined stress of a monetization bottleneck and rising service cost, companies have lost their patience and interest in the market. The recent crackdown from the government were simply the last straw.

However, there are companies that are standing firm with their cloud storage services. 360 Cloud Disk announced that they would not close their service, while industry leader Baidu Cloud remains silent about their future plans.

Of course, it would be easy for the remaining players to harvest the market shares that have been left out by their competitors. But they still face the problem of monetizing cloud storage with a clear business model – how they will tackle that remains to be seen.

image credit: Getty Images

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Why Chinese Tech Startups Are Ditching The U.S. Stock Exchanges For The New Third Board https://technode.com/2016/05/09/china-neeq/ https://technode.com/2016/05/09/china-neeq/#respond Mon, 09 May 2016 09:40:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38649 Just two years ago, Chinese internet companies were lining up for IPOs in the U.S. market, but their favor has since shifted towards local stock markets for the accessibility and higher valuations supposedly offered on the mainland. Appetite for U.S. listings started to cool off in the beginning of 2015, since then nearly thirty U.S.-listed tech stocks have initiated […]]]>

Just two years ago, Chinese internet companies were lining up for IPOs in the U.S. market, but their favor has since shifted towards local stock markets for the accessibility and higher valuations supposedly offered on the mainland.

Appetite for U.S. listings started to cool off in the beginning of 2015, since then nearly thirty U.S.-listed tech stocks have initiated privatization plans in seek of a domestic re-listing, among them are big names including Qihoo 360, Momo, Perfect World and Shanda Games. Reports show that not a single Chinese internet or tech company filed for a U.S. listing in the first quarter of this year.

What Is New Third Board And Why Are Startups Choosing It Over Main Boards

Even for a domestic IPO, Chinese companies seeking to go public have quite a few options to choose from as for which market they want to get listed. Shanghai Stock Exchange (SHSE) and Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) are two main boards of China’s stock market, but the listing threshold is higher, for example, they require listed companies to recorded sustained profitability, a condition most internet companies can’t meet in their first few years of operation.

Under these circumstances, China’s New Third Board, officially named the National Equities Exchange and Quotations (NEEQ), is becoming the primary listing destination for Chinese internet startups to clear private equity exit gridlock.

It was a year of explosion for the national over-the-counter equity market in 2015. The number of listed companies surged from more than 800 in June 2014 to nearly 2400 in May 2015. As of the end of 2015, it was home to 5,129 companies with a combined market cap of 2.46 trillion yuan ($374 billion USD), according to state media Xinhua.

The primary reason for the boom is that it has less stringent requirement for listing, providing an alternative financing means for small and medium enterprise, especially those in the high-tech sector. Moreover, the NEEQ offers a fast path to fundraising without getting stuck in the line of more than 700 firms waiting for a main board IPO, which are piled up after the government imposed an IPO halt.

What Kind of Internet Startups Are The Best Fit For NEEQ

The NEEQ is a good listing destination for most domestic internet startups, but not all of them.

According to Wang Pengfei, CEO of NEEQ-listed company Kuaipai, startups that have closed B round are best candidates for the market because they have passed a certain development stage and proved viable against other competitors in their vertical. “It would be too early for A round startups, and financing opportunities from NEEQ will help B round starups to avoid the Series C crunch”, said Wang.

Although the NEEQ has a registration-based listing system rather than the approval-based model adopted by SHSE and SZSE, capacity for profitability is still a key element highly valued by investors. So only those with sustainable business model are better candidates for the market.

At the same time, the NEEQ is not an ideal financing destination for super companies like due to its small capital amount. Data from Bloomberg showed that the total capitalization of the SHSE and the SZSE is at about US$6 trillion, more than 15 times greater than the NEEQ.

Despite the boom, there are still unstable undercurrents in the market, like a thin trading turnover and lack of proper regulation. The regulator is bringing in more changes to improve the listing and trading mechanisms. Since early this March, the board divided its listed companies into innovation market and basic market to manage companies at different development stages.

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Xiaomi Speeds Up Commercialization With Ad Platform Launch https://technode.com/2016/05/04/xiaomi-speeds-commercialization-ad-platform-launch/ https://technode.com/2016/05/04/xiaomi-speeds-commercialization-ad-platform-launch/#respond Wed, 04 May 2016 09:50:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38529 Xiaomi rolled out an ad platform named Xiaomi Marketing yesterday, a service that grants clients access to over 100 million Xiaomi users, said the company. Based on big data, the platform will provide ad distribution, marketing and branding services for customers to reach audiences through the company’s Android-based firmware MIUI, Xiaomi’s app store, browser, news app, a theme […]]]>
屏幕快照 2016-05-04 下午1.41.26

Xiaomi rolled out an ad platform named Xiaomi Marketing yesterday, a service that grants clients access to over 100 million Xiaomi users, said the company.

Based on big data, the platform will provide ad distribution, marketing and branding services for customers to reach audiences through the company’s Android-based firmware MIUI, Xiaomi’s app store, browser, news app, a theme market and other Xiaomi-backed apps. The ads will reach users across platforms from Xiaomi’s smartphones, tablets to smart TVs.

The company said advertisement will become a main revenue source in their future.

Xiaomi’s MIUI, which was launched before the first Xiaomi phone, has over 100 million uses as of February last year, according to the company.

MIUI become popular among users due to its simplified  user interface and partly because of it’s a highly customizable service that allows users to delete pre-installed apps.

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NextEV Co-Founder Lands $120M For Consumer Electric Vehicle Company https://technode.com/2016/05/03/electric-car-maker-chehejia-lands-us120m-rule-streets/ https://technode.com/2016/05/03/electric-car-maker-chehejia-lands-us120m-rule-streets/#respond Tue, 03 May 2016 12:03:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38472 Chinese electric vehicle company Chehejia has raised a combined 780 million RMB (US$120 million) in series A funding at a valuation of 2.98 billion RMB from seven investors, according to company founder Li Xiang. Founded in July last year, Chehejia is backed by a group of seasoned entrepreneurs. Li Xiang has launched two successful startups, Pcpop.com and US-listed […]]]>

Chinese electric vehicle company Chehejia has raised a combined 780 million RMB (US$120 million) in series A funding at a valuation of 2.98 billion RMB from seven investors, according to company founder Li Xiang.

Founded in July last year, Chehejia is backed by a group of seasoned entrepreneurs. Li Xiang has launched two successful startups, Pcpop.com and US-listed automobile site Autohome.com. He is also a co-founder of NextEV, the electric car maker looking to take on Tesla. Li Xiang and Li Bin, another co-founder of Autohome.com launched NextEV last year to go after the top-tier electric vehicle market.

Unlike NextEV which is currently developing high-end concepts and supercars, Chehejia provides smart transportation solutions for mass market users. The ten-month-old startup is developing two smart car models: an SEV for short-distance urban transportation and a more powerful SUV for long-distance journeys.

According to Li, the two models will cover over 90% of the transportation demands of urban citizens, adding that Chehejia’s vehicles will be less dependent on charging piles.

Li has been seeking funding to support his vision since November last year and the current round will increase the company’s total funding raised to 2.5 billion RMB. He noted then that it will take US$200 million and four years for product development and marketing before the Chehejia vehicles are available for mass production.

LEO Group leads this series with a 350 million RMB in exchange for an 11.74% stake in the Beijing-based startup. Other investors include Source Code Fund, Changzhou Wujin Industry Fund and Future Capital.

The latest injection of capital will be used in R&D and the construction of production bases, according to the company. The firm disclosed that the construction of an aluminum production plant and a battery manufacturing factory located in Changzhou Wujin High-Tech Park has begun.

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Xiaomi Releases A Smartwatch That Can Track Your Kids https://technode.com/2016/05/03/xiaomi-mi-bunny/ https://technode.com/2016/05/03/xiaomi-mi-bunny/#respond Tue, 03 May 2016 06:58:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38452 Chinese parents are early adopters when it comes to outfitting their kids with the latest tech apparel, and Xiaomi is capitalizing on the market with a smartwatch designed specifically for children. The Mi Bunny allows parents to set up a ‘safe zone’, issuing an alert when children wander too far. It is also enabled with location sharing capabilities, […]]]>

Chinese parents are early adopters when it comes to outfitting their kids with the latest tech apparel, and Xiaomi is capitalizing on the market with a smartwatch designed specifically for children.

The Mi Bunny allows parents to set up a ‘safe zone’, issuing an alert when children wander too far. It is also enabled with location sharing capabilities, complete with Wi-Fi and GPS. The band has its own pre-installed SIM, allowing children to make and receive calls on the device. The smart device weighs 37g, and like all Xiaomi products, comes with a budget price tag at 299 RMB (US$46).

Mi Bunny

While the device is by no means revolutionary, a low price point will likely boost the band into the homes of concerned parents. The 99 RMB ($15.30 USD) Mi Band, Xiaomi’s debut wearable fitness band, recorded 18.5 million shipments as of March this year, despite having a relatively low range of functions compared to their competitors.

In recent years, appetite for connected devices in China has given rise to a slew of smart wearables including several aimed at kids. Qihoo 360, Sogou, Huawei, LeEco and smartphone maker Better Life have all dipping their toes into the emerging area.

The tracking technology in the device is not a new concept in Asia. There are several startups working to market tracking devices for children, pets and even elderly family members. South Korea’s FAMY, Shanghai-based EasyPal and Singapore’s Watch Over Me have all found traction amid China’s booming appetite for cheap connected tracking devices. Shenzhen-based Lisa has gone one step further, releasing a watch that can track fetal movements, meaning China’s new tech savvy citizens can be monitored from the womb to the grave.

Mi Bunny will be part of Xiaomi’s Mijia smart IoT ecosystem brand, which already includes a series of smart devices like smart rice cookers, air purifiers, water purifiers, wristbands, and smart scales.

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Cheetah Mobile Eyes Artificial Intelligence With US$50M Investment https://technode.com/2016/04/27/cheetah-mobile-ai/ https://technode.com/2016/04/27/cheetah-mobile-ai/#respond Wed, 27 Apr 2016 06:27:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38315 Although the game between AlphaGo AI and legendary chess master Lee Sedol ended over a month ago, the event’s influence is opening doors for companies seeking to explain the significance of AI technology. Fu Sheng, CEO Cheetah Mobile who predicted Lee would win the game, is one of them. At the company’s global media conference held Tuesday, […]]]>

Although the game between AlphaGo AI and legendary chess master Lee Sedol ended over a month ago, the event’s influence is opening doors for companies seeking to explain the significance of AI technology.

Fu Sheng, CEO Cheetah Mobile who predicted Lee would win the game, is one of them. At the company’s global media conference held Tuesday, Fu announced that Cheetah Mobile, the Beijing-based startup best known for its utility apps, is going to open a robotics division with a $50 million USD investment designated for artificial intelligence development. Fu says he is going to lead the team himself.

“AI technology is maturing and there’s no doubt that human labor is going to be replaced by robots”, he said, adding that deep learning and AI will offer a chance to bypass competitors and disrupt the industry landscape.

Technology advantages that many companies have formed over the years can be easily shattered over a short period of time, he noted ominously.

As one of the top Chinese internet startups, Cheetah Mobile is recording overseas success, claiming over 2.34 billion downloads and 635 million monthly active users, of which 78% come from overseas markets, according to the company.

Chinese internet giants are flocking to the rising robotics sector in recent years. Alibaba threw $118 million USD into SoftBank’s robotics program Pepper. Sogou, one of China’s leading search engine, donated 180 million RMB this month to set up an AI school in cooperation with Tsinghua University.

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Ant Financial Raises $4.5 Billion For Rural And International Expansion https://technode.com/2016/04/26/ant-financial-lands-us4-5b-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/04/26/ant-financial-lands-us4-5b-funding/#respond Tue, 26 Apr 2016 08:48:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38271 Ant Financial Services Group, the financial affiliate of e-commerce titan Alibaba, announced today the completion of a US$4.5 billion series B financing. The funding size is astounding, as the company claims it to be the largest-ever individual private tech investment globally. Unsurprisingly, the investor list is long and consists of big names, including consortiums led by China […]]]>

Ant Financial Services Group, the financial affiliate of e-commerce titan Alibaba, announced today the completion of a US$4.5 billion series B financing. The funding size is astounding, as the company claims it to be the largest-ever individual private tech investment globally.

Unsurprisingly, the investor list is long and consists of big names, including consortiums led by China Investment Corp Capital and CCB Trust, a subsidiary of China Construction Bank, along with existing Series A shareholders including China Life, China Post Group, the parent company of the Postal Savings Bank of China, China Development Bank Capital and Primavera Capital Group.

The company secured an undisclosed amount of Series A financing in July last year at a value reportedly over $45 billion USD. Following the latest round the valuation is expected to surpass US$60 billion.

Ant Financial has grown from their core service, Alipay, and spun out from parent Alibaba in 2011 before its blockbuster U.S. IPO. With an active annual user base of 450 million, it provides payment services for e-commerce marketplaces. Those services covers a wide range from wealth management and insurance to micro loans for small and micro enterprises as well as financing for individual consumers.

This new round of funding will support Ant Financial in its goal to expand access to financial services in China’s rural areas, while also fuelling the company’s globalization, according to the company.

The company’s strategic partnership with China Investment Corp Capital will support their continued push into international markets.

In India, Ant Financial has joined forces with One97 Communications, which oversees Paytm, the country’s largest mobile wallet provider, to fund payment services in the under-services Indian e-commerce market.

As of the end of March 2016, MYbank, established by Ant Financial in June 2015, and Ant Micro Loan have collectively provided micro loans to over 20 million small and micro businesses and individual entrepreneurs, according to the company.

“The capital raised in Series B will allow us to invest in the infrastructure, such as cloud computing and risk control, that will underpin our long-term growth in rural and international markets,” said Eric Jing, President of Ant Financial.

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Lei Jun Leaks Mi Band 2,Mi Max Ahead Of Official Debut https://technode.com/2016/04/26/xiaomi-miband2-mi-max/ https://technode.com/2016/04/26/xiaomi-miband2-mi-max/#respond Tue, 26 Apr 2016 05:40:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38259 Lei Jun, the tech entrepreneur and marketing expert behind Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, “accidentally” leaked what looks like the company’s next-generation fitness tracker, the Mi Band 2 and smartphone Mi Max, yesterday when live streaming an event through Xiaomi’s video streaming app. Xiaomi’s first fitness tracker, Mi Band 1, has enjoyed some successes thanks to handy […]]]>

Lei Jun, the tech entrepreneur and marketing expert behind Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, “accidentally” leaked what looks like the company’s next-generation fitness tracker, the Mi Band 2 and smartphone Mi Max, yesterday when live streaming an event through Xiaomi’s video streaming app.

Miband2

Xiaomi’s first fitness tracker, Mi Band 1, has enjoyed some successes thanks to handy features and affordable price of only 13 USD. The shipment of the product surpassed 12 million last year, accounting for 15.4% of the global market share, according to a report by IDG. The company announced in March that they have sold 18.5 million Mi Bands since their launch two years ago.

The leaked pictures show that the new wristband features an LED screen, which the first-gen product failed to offer. There’s also a button near the screen.

CEO of Huami Technology, Xiaomi’s partner in wearables and the developer of the Mi Band, disclosed earlier that the price of this new gadget is going to be higher than the first-gen product.

From the appearance, Mi Band 2 is on par with a slew of smart wristbands made by Chinese hardware makers. Furthermore, customers in China are more picky than two years ago when smart wearables were brand new concept. Perhaps price alone isn’t enough to lock the attentions of users this time.

Of course, we still have to wait for the official release to see whether there’s interesting feature updates.

In the same video, Lei leaked the company’s flagship smartphone Mi Max. The photo confirmed previous rumors about the product: screen larger than 6-inch, and a rear finger scanner along with no Mi logo in the front.

Xiaomi will release the Mi Band 2, Mi Max and MIUI 8, Xiaomi’s custom Android system update, in a press conference slated for May 10.

屏幕快照 2016-04-26 上午11.19.49

A Screenshot of MIUI8

Image credit: Xiaomi

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GOME, Amazon Enter Strategic Partnership To Push O2O Shopping https://technode.com/2016/04/25/gome-amazon-china-o2o/ https://technode.com/2016/04/25/gome-amazon-china-o2o/#respond Mon, 25 Apr 2016 05:43:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38223 China’s electronics appliance maker GOME and Amazon have entered a strategic partnership, they announced last week. As a top home appliance retailer in China, GOME operates 1,800 offline stores across more than 400 cities in China. Its offline and logistics resources will allow Amazon to upgrade their logistics services, especially into lower- tier cities. The offline […]]]>

China’s electronics appliance maker GOME and Amazon have entered a strategic partnership, they announced last week.

As a top home appliance retailer in China, GOME operates 1,800 offline stores across more than 400 cities in China. Its offline and logistics resources will allow Amazon to upgrade their logistics services, especially into lower- tier cities. The offline retailer plans to set up a dedicated supply chain team for Amazon’s projects, the firm added.

Under the deal, GOME has opened a store on Z.cn, Amazon’s Chinese-facing online marketplace. The products on sale currently include traditional home appliances, but the company aims to introduce 10,000 product categories by the end of this year, according to a company statement. The services will start in Beijing and to cover first- and second-tier cities later this year.

Additionally, the two parties will cooperate in the development of supply chains, logistics and after-sales service.

Like most brick-and-mortar stores in China, GOME is having a tough time as more consumers are buying online through the country’s extensive e-commerce network. This tie-up is a major move for the firm as they look to integrate online and offline shopping experiences.

GOME will also gain access to more high-end customers through the partnership. An Amazon report shows that over 90% of cross-border shoppers, which constitutes a great proportion of Amazon’s clients, have bachelor degrees or higher.

Last year, Alibaba Group inked a similar partnership with Suning Commerce, a major rival of GOME, through a $4.6 billion investment to crate synergies in e-commerce and logistics.

Image credit: Amazon

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Highlights of the Shanghai International Technology Fair In Pictures https://technode.com/2016/04/22/photo-highlights-csitf/ https://technode.com/2016/04/22/photo-highlights-csitf/#respond Fri, 22 Apr 2016 06:54:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38091 The China (Shanghai) International Technology Fair (CSITF) kicked off yesterday at the Shanghai World Expo Exhibition and Convention Center. As a state-backed fair on international trade, the event attracted hundreds of companies both domestic and foreign to demonstrate their scientific and technological prowess. There’s a hell of a lot of news to absorb, but don’t worry – here […]]]>

The China (Shanghai) International Technology Fair (CSITF) kicked off yesterday at the Shanghai World Expo Exhibition and Convention Center. As a state-backed fair on international trade, the event attracted hundreds of companies both domestic and foreign to demonstrate their scientific and technological prowess.

There’s a hell of a lot of news to absorb, but don’t worry – here are some highlights from the event:

屏幕快照 2016-04-21 下午8.00.13

A toy robot that can sing, dance and tell stories.

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A robot demos E-Ai, a virtual customer service

C365C40B81DAC7B6660FF925FB7D6E2D

Shanghai-based GSTEM shows off a Lego-like robot band playing “We Will Rock You”.

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A large drone capable of carrying 10kg of fertilizers and pesticides for farming

1

A “cute” healthcare robot

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A volunteer tries out Oculus’s virtual reality headset.

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Finceccanica helicopter model (Italy)

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A Skycruiser aircraft designed for extreme game fans and other industries like disaster rescue, logistics, and agriculture.

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A model of China’s high-speed Harmony bullet train

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A passerbyer checks out Nice Papa’s milk formula at TechNode’s startup booth

This article is part of Technode’s coverage of CSTIF 2016, where Technode was a media partner of the event.

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Is Alibaba The Real Winner Of This Multi-Million Online Celebrity Ad Auction? https://technode.com/2016/04/22/alibaba-papi-jiang/ https://technode.com/2016/04/22/alibaba-papi-jiang/#respond Fri, 22 Apr 2016 06:37:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38183 People in China have become accustomed to the craziness that is the country’s internet startup scene, but 22 million RMB (US$3.4 million) for a single video ad is still a jaw-dropper. The first advertisement by Papi Jiang, China’s hit amateur video girl who secured a joint investment of 12 million RMB last month, was put under hammer […]]]>

People in China have become accustomed to the craziness that is the country’s internet startup scene, but 22 million RMB (US$3.4 million) for a single video ad is still a jaw-dropper.

The first advertisement by Papi Jiang, China’s hit amateur video girl who secured a joint investment of 12 million RMB last month, was put under hammer yesterday with a top bid of 22 million RMB, despite a recent government crackdown forcing online celebrities to take down videos due to the use of curse words. The price is even higher than the ads for China’s most popular TV event, the Spring Festival Gala.

Winner of the bid, a lesser-known cosmetics startup called Lily & Beauty, could gain a one-time promotion through Papi Jiang’s video after May 21st. Other benefits include promotions on Papi Jiang’s Weibo and WeChat accounts (one time each) and multiple ads on Logical Thinking, a knowledge-based video program hosted by Luo Zhenyu, Papi Jiang’s investor and the bid’s organizer.

Being held both offline and online, the bid started at 217,000 RMB and closed at the final bidding price within 7 minutes. Yang Ming, Papi Jiang’s manager, announced that all the money would be donated to the Central Academy of Drama, where she previously studied for a film directing masters course.

There’s not doubt that the auction, the first of its kind, will have a great impacts on China’s new media sector, the internet star economy and their commercialization modes, but there’s also another player that will benefit from the case: Alibaba.

Local media pointed out that all the parties involved in are related to the internet giant. The auction is streamed through Alibaba’s video affiliate Youku, which is aiming to push out more original professionally generated content amid tougher competition between rising video streaming sites like Tencent Video. The auction was also conducted on Alibaba’s online auction platform. The e-commerce giant is also the backer of Papi Jiang’s investor and bid organizer Luo Zhenyu and Series A investor of bid winner Lily & Beauty.

Luo Zhenyu posted a status to squash speculation, saying “22 million RMB for media hype? We are donating big bucks.” However it is undeniable that all the parties – with Alibaba links, have benefited from the deal.

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image credit: 21cbr.com

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Baidu’s Online Video Arm Receives $155M Investment Upon Spinoff https://technode.com/2016/04/21/baidu-video-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/04/21/baidu-video-funding/#respond Wed, 20 Apr 2016 22:22:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=38030 Chinese search giant Baidu announced today that its online video unit Baidu Video is going to run its business independently. Hu Hao, former manager of Baidu’s video business department, has been appointed as CEO of the new subsidiary. Along with the news, the new company is completing a 1 billion RMB ($USD155 million) investment led […]]]>

Chinese search giant Baidu announced today that its online video unit Baidu Video is going to run its business independently. Hu Hao, former manager of Baidu’s video business department, has been appointed as CEO of the new subsidiary.

Along with the news, the new company is completing a 1 billion RMB ($USD155 million) investment led by New Culture Media with participation of Zeus Entertainment and SAIF Partners. The investors will not only bring capital support, but also open up their IP and operation resources to the new spinoff, the company said in a statement.

As the first major move following the spin-off, Baidu Video launched a 500 million RMB investment program earmarked for professionally generated content (PGC) development as the production model of Chinese video sharing sites swings form user-generated content to professionally generated content. The capital will go towards supporting high-quality professional content and production teams, the company added.

Currently, the platform claims to have accumulated over 580 million videos and over 300 million mobile users, cooperating with thousands of PGC producing institutions.

The PGC-focused subsidiary, Baidu-backed online video streaming site iQIYI and Nuomi, Baidu’s group-buying service that has a hand in offline entertainment will form three prominent parts in Baidu’s culture and entertainment business pipeline.

In order to release capital pressure and increase efficiency, Baidu announced an ‘Aircraft Carrier’ project in June 2015, opening up a series of businesses for outside investment. Baidu Video’s funding is the latest move to boost this program. Other businesses that have received outside funding include company’s food delivery service Baidu Waimai, after school tutoring platform Zuoyebang and Baidu Literature.

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Tencent CEO Pony Ma Joins A Growing Number Of Chinese Tech Philanthropists With $2B Donation https://technode.com/2016/04/19/tencents-pony-ma-2b-donation/ https://technode.com/2016/04/19/tencents-pony-ma-2b-donation/#respond Tue, 19 Apr 2016 10:29:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37984 Pony Ma, the founder and CEO of Chinese internet giant Tencent, said Monday that he plans to donate 100 million of Tencent’s shares to the firm’s charity foundation. The shares in the Hong Kong-listed company closed at HK$165.70 a piece on the same day, which puts the donation at a market cap of about $US2.1 […]]]>

Pony Ma, the founder and CEO of Chinese internet giant Tencent, said Monday that he plans to donate 100 million of Tencent’s shares to the firm’s charity foundation. The shares in the Hong Kong-listed company closed at HK$165.70 a piece on the same day, which puts the donation at a market cap of about $US2.1 billion.

The shares will be donated through an unspecified period of time and will go towards supporting medical, educational and environmental causes in China through cooperation with charity programs and projects, the company announced.

Despite fevered economic growth, China lags behind when it comes to charity, partly due to China’s tradition of passing fortunes through a family line. An anecdote that best demonstrates this is that a great proportion of Chinese moguls turned down the invitation to a philanthropy dinner invite from Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and fellow billionaire Warren Buffett in 2010 for fear of being asked to make a donation.

In recent years however, a growing number of Chinese billionaires, especially tech bosses, choose to follow a philanthropic model more similar to their western counterparts, including tycoons like Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder who committed 99% of his shares to charity initiatives.

After setting up Alibaba Charity Foundation in 2011, Alibaba CEO Jack Ma and his co-founder Cai Chongxin launched a personal charitable trust backed by share options in the e-commerce giant valued at around $3 billion. Baidu also launched a charity foundation in 2010. It is worth noting that company shares are becoming a mainstream means for charitable giving among the super-rich.

Image credit: Tencent

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Tencent Rolls Out Long-Awaited Enterprise Version For WeChat https://technode.com/2016/04/19/tencent-enterprise-wechat/ https://technode.com/2016/04/19/tencent-enterprise-wechat/#respond Mon, 18 Apr 2016 22:55:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37957 Chinese internet Tecent finally released today the new enterprise version of WeChat. ]]>

Most Chinese WeChat users run both their work and personal lives on the highly popular app. While some are comfortable with that, others find it a burden mixing constant notifications for both work in play, resulting in what’s been dubbed ‘WeChat fatigue’.

Chinese internet giant Tencent has long been developing a new enterprise version for its popular social networking app in an attempt to solve this problem. The new app, named Enterpriese WeChat, was finally released yesterday following a one month of beta test.

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Unlike WeChat which is a social networking service, ‘Enterprise WeChat’ is positioned as a collaboration and productivity tool that adopts a similar interface to WeChat, enabling users to pick up the service quickly.

Enterprise users can register using either a Tencent enterprise email, WeChat enterprise service account, or uploading company details including name and operation licenses.

Users can synchronize the company’s contacts with one click or search for colleagues more easily. The app provides multiple communication channels ranging from VoIP calls and emails to voice messages. Features also include message receipts, alerts and bookmarks.To help users find a work-life balance, users can even block messages outside of work hours.

The service will be free throughout iOS, Android, Mac and Windows versions, according to the company. A slew of Chinese companies have been tapping the new territory of business collaboration and operation services. Alibaba launched Dingtalk in 2014 to attract business clients. Other startups involved in this field include Teambition, Mingdao, Fxiaoke.

Image credit: Tencent

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China’s Top-10 Online Celebs And How They Commercialize Their Fame https://technode.com/2016/04/14/china-top-10-online-celebs/ https://technode.com/2016/04/14/china-top-10-online-celebs/#respond Thu, 14 Apr 2016 09:05:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37855 The news that Papi Jiang, a 29-year-old online comedian, had securing a whopping 12 million RMB (US$ 1.84 million) investment made headlines in Chinese media last month. People may hold different views about whether Papi Jiang’s brand is worth such a huge amount, but no one denies that internet celebrities are a hot money maker right now. […]]]>

The news that Papi Jiang, a 29-year-old online comedian, had securing a whopping 12 million RMB (US$ 1.84 million) investment made headlines in Chinese media last month.

People may hold different views about whether Papi Jiang’s brand is worth such a huge amount, but no one denies that internet celebrities are a hot money maker right now.

Online celebrities are a fairly new concept to Chinese culture, but they’ve gained traction quickly, driven by the nation’s increasingly entertainment-hungry society. If something clicks, whether it’s a novel, a funny video or song, or even simply being a good looking, silly or egocentric character, netizens love taking online identities to the next level.

Baidu Zhidao recently released a top-10 list of China’s online celebrities in the past decade according to search data. Papi Jiang reached only 9th spot, let’s see who else made the cut:

1: Annie Baby (安妮宝贝)—1998

As one of the earliest online writers in China, Li Jie began writing under the pen name of Annie Baby since 1998. Her works became an instant success on the internet for Li’s a sexy and mysterious writing style. With her books selling exceptionally well, Annie Baby was crowned one of China’s top-earning authors over several years. Although Annie Baby found fame by publishing her works on the internet, she has turned to more traditional publishing channels in recent years. Unlike most online authors in China, Annie Baby is regarded as a highbrow writer and has received a lot of critical praise.

2: Sister Furong (芙蓉姐姐)-2005

Sister Furong

Sister Furong, or Sister Lotus, a woman with no obvious talents except for being a self-proclaimed dancing expert. She found fame through her assertive and flamboyant weblog.

3: Wang Sicong (王思聪)

WangSicong

Wang Sicong, the only son of China’s richest man Wang Jianlin, has made constant splashes on the internet as a outspoken and promiscuous playboy who’s known for engaging in verbal wars online. He gained a large female fan base and was nicknamed ‘The People’s Husband.’ Wang is also being recognized as an aspiring investor and chairman of private investment firm Prometheus Capital. Five of the companies he invested in have since listed, mostly in gaming, including Forgame, iDreamSky and TianGe.

4: Guo Meimei(郭美美)-2011

Guomeimei

Claiming to work for the state-backed Red Cross Society of China, Guo Meimei first gained notoriety in China by openly flaunting her wealth and extravagant lifestyle on social media. She has since been sentenced to a five year imprisonment for running an illegal casino.

5: Sister Feng/Luo Yufeng (罗玉凤)-2009

Sister Feng

Sister Feng gained notoriety in China for passing out flyers in search of her Mr. Right, who was required to meet excessive qualifications. To meet all of her requirements, he needed to be a good looking young man upwards of 176 centimeters tall with a masters degree from one of China’s top Universities. She has an unabashedly inflated ego, claiming to be the brightest human being in the past three centuries.

6: Tong Hua (桐华)-2006

Tong Hua

Tong Hua is a Chinese contemporary romance novelists. A Slew of successful TV shows were based on her works, including Bubu Jingxin, Ballad of the Desert, Song in the Clouds and The Most Beautiful Time.

7: Milk Tea Girl/Zhang Zetian (章泽天)-2009

Zhang zetian

Zhang Zetian, more commonly known as “milk tea girl”, came to fame in 2009 at the age of 19 and is quite popular among students for her natural beauty (discovered originally posing with a cup of bubble tea). After studying at top Chinese university, Tsinghua, she furthered her studies at Columbia University, where she met Richard Liu, the founder of e-commerce giant JD.com.

The romance between the two who have an age difference of 19 years has become hot topic among Chinese netizens. The couple reportedly married last year. Through the relationship, Zhang has become quite active in China’s internet industry. She once worked as the product manager of Microsoft China’s Siri-like tool, Xiaobing, and is now an investor in Uber China.

8: Brother Sharp (犀利哥)-2010

Xilige

Brother Sharp is the nickname given to Chen Guorong, a homeless man. He became a national celebrity for his handsome look after a photograph of him wandering the streets was uploaded online. Although dressed in tattered clothes, his style is still molded by fashion icons and celebrities. Eventually, the Chinese netizens tracked down and helped him to find his home.

9: Papi Jiang/ (Papi酱)-2015

Papi-jiang

Papi Jiang, a graduate from China’s Central Academy of Drama, became a hit by uploading funny videos online. Her videos have been widely circulated across platforms, getting tens of millions more views.

10:Wang Nima (王尼玛)-2013

Wangnima

Wang Nima is the host of a Chinese internet talk show which makes sharp comments on a variety of topics including hot news, history, politics and more. He wears headgear with a comic face during the show.


This list is just a small slice of the vast world of Chinese internet celebrities, which reportedly amount to over 1 million. They generally fall in three development periods according to their most popular medium: words, pictures and multimedia, Baidu’s report concluded.

The first group of Chinese online celebrities mainly attract their fans through the power of language, represented by Annie Baby, Han Han, Guo Jingming and Tong Hua. When the picture era came, the web star tide swung towards an odd appetite for appreciating the ugly, so Sister Furong and Sister Feng became phenomenonal stars of the period. The arrival of multimedia has granted grassroots identities a more convenient way to build up their fan bases.

Chinese web celebs have more diversified channels to commercialize their fame than westerners. Of course, Chinese online celebs also endorse branded products, but the most easy and productive way for a fresh internet face to make money is through Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace.

Many Chinese online stars have developed their own brands and sell their products, usually clothes and cosmetics, on their own Taobao stores. Data from the retailer platform during last year’s Single’s Day sale event shows that 7 out of the top 10 women’s clothing stores are owned by internet celebrities.

Other channels include pushing advertisements for enterprises through social media platforms including Weibo or WeChat, hosting live streaming shows and generating revenue from virtual gifts and appearances.

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Is China’s Startup Incubator Bubble Set To Blow? https://technode.com/2016/04/12/chinas-startup-incubator-bubble/ https://technode.com/2016/04/12/chinas-startup-incubator-bubble/#respond Tue, 12 Apr 2016 15:26:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37719 China’s startup frenzy has gripped the country in a big way. Startup incubators are popping up almost everywhere in the Middle Kingdom. China established its first ever technology incubator back in 1987, but the market didn’t explode until 2005 when the authorities decided to weigh in. The number of domestic incubators surged from around 500 in 2005 […]]]>

China’s startup frenzy has gripped the country in a big way. Startup incubators are popping up almost everywhere in the Middle Kingdom.

China established its first ever technology incubator back in 1987, but the market didn’t explode until 2005 when the authorities decided to weigh in. The number of domestic incubators surged from around 500 in 2005 to over 2,000 in 2015, and the figure is expected to near 5,000 by 2020, a report from research institute iiMedia shows.

Of course, there are many good reasons for the incubation boom. At the policy level, Beijing launched a series of moves to encourage startup innovation and entrepreneurship. In addition to a slew of preferential policies, the country’s state VC coffers held over US $336.4 billion earmarked for startup investment by the end of 2015.

Currently, China’s incubation programs mainly fall into six categories:

Incubators backed by big enterprises grant startups convenient access to capital and technology support. The resources are invested in exchange for new innovations in business models and technologies to boost sustainable development of the backer. (Eg: incubators run by Baidu and Tencent, Microsoft Accelerator)

Incubator + Angel Investors are organized along the Y Combinator model, which provides startups with a certain amount seed funding from private capital and mentorship. In return, they take an equity stake. Instead of generating revenue from renting and training fees, they profit when incubated startups get big and successful enough to be acquired. (Eg: Innovation Works, SusStar)

Incubating and co-working space is more similar to the WeWork model, which offers a shared incubator-like space, community, and more. (Eg: 3W Cafe, Garage Cafe)

Media-backed incubators leverage their media resources by connecting incubating projects with VCs and helping them with media coverage. (Eg: Bang Camp by Chuangyebang)

Incubator program by realtors is a new category that adopts a relatively simple model. It generates profit by collecting rental fees from incubation startups. They are run by big real estate companies that are searching for ways out from the slowing property market. (Eg: Soho 3Q, UR Work)

Incubation programs that have special added value services, whether it’s a tech specialty or access to finance or fashion. (Eg: F Camp by Trends Group)

However, with everything growing at a rocketing pace, many naturally wonder whether there’s a bubble forming. Our answer is yes, just like for China’s internet startup sector in general.

Problems Following Sprawling Growth

Generally speaking, favorable policy support and abundant capital injections are good news for the market, but these initiatives are bringing in mixed results.

The state’s support tactics for startup incubation spaces range from offering free land, lower taxes, subsidies for operational costs, and funding. Incubators have mushroomed and overcapacity problems have ensued shortly afterwards. Not only has the number of incubators risen, but also the area they cover.

A majority of the 67 incubators registered with the Shenzhen government in 2013 and 2014 take up more than 10,000 square meters each, with the biggest standing at half a million square meters. People joke that China’s incubators are outgrowing startups, and they fear there won’t be enough startups to incubate.

The lack of startups has made it easier to enroll in an incubation program, making it more difficult to guarantee quality startups. Some startups lack a clear operation plan and business model. Such projects may survive in a rising market, but as capital winter strikes, a majority of them will languish or die.

iiMedia’s report pointed out that most of China’s incubation spaces stay empty with an occupation rate of less than 40%. With the capital winter upon us, we expect this rate to plunge even lower this year.

After the sprawling growth, many of incubators and accelerators are now treading water as competition among similar startup programs intensifies.

Most Chinese incubators provide similar services, including free or low-priced workspaces, startup training, and operation management, according to iiMedia. There seems to be a disparity between what incubators offer and what startups really need.

Government-Centric Management

The government’s hands-on approach is raising concerns that the state may play an inflated role in the county’s startup scene. iiMedia’s report shows that capital sources for China’s incubation spaces are primarily government (28.4%), enterprise or private (22.8%) and universities (17.7%) with the remaining mixed resources making up a third (33.1%). The government capital is taking a big share in the market, in combination with investments made through universities, which are mostly state-owned.

The Chinese government should “be careful to avoid picking winners (and losers) or crowding out private financing. Empower entrepreneurs and let markets work,” McKinsey Global Institute recommends in a report.

Lack of Sustainable Revenue Models

The most common monetization models adopted by Chinese incubation spaces are space leasing and premium services like IT maintenance and media coverage. But it is not practical to earn money from startups that are struggling with cash flow themselves.

Of course, investment in exchange for startup equity like Y Combinator’s model is another way out, but it requires a much longer timeframe. Moreover, making wise investment decisions is much more demanding and requires a deeper understanding of the market

It is difficult for independent incubators to survive the tough competition when the larger ones are backed by well-funded entities, such as the government or enterprises. It might finally be time for incubators that are eager for quick success and instant benefits to get their dues.

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Didi Speeds Up Globalization To Take On Uber https://technode.com/2016/04/12/didi-uber-lyft/ https://technode.com/2016/04/12/didi-uber-lyft/#respond Tue, 12 Apr 2016 15:25:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37737 Until recently, the competition between Didi Chuxing (former Didi Kuaidi) and Uber was mainly focused on China’s mobile transportation market. It seems that China’s leading ride-hailing service intends to escalate the ride-hailing war by opening up a new battlefield in Uber’s homeland: the U.S. On Tuesday, Didi Chuxing announced the launch of the public beta version […]]]>

Until recently, the competition between Didi Chuxing (former Didi Kuaidi) and Uber was mainly focused on China’s mobile transportation market. It seems that China’s leading ride-hailing service intends to escalate the ride-hailing war by opening up a new battlefield in Uber’s homeland: the U.S.

On Tuesday, Didi Chuxing announced the launch of the public beta version of its Didi Chuxing app with U.S. roaming capabilities in collaboration with Lyft, Uber’s major rival in its domestic market which Didi holds a stake in.

From this week, Didi’s users will be able to request rides in the U.S and access Lyft’s driver network of almost 200 major U.S. cities, including San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, and Washington D.C., through Didi’s app, according to the company’s announcement.

Targeting Chinese travelers, the app provides a cross-border transportation service that switches from Didi’s Chinese version to an overseas version within the native app once the international roaming service is activated. The same Chinese user interface is adopted, allowing the whole process from hailing and paying to providing feedback entirely in Chinese.

The payment can be made through existing in-app payment options on their app in Chinese Yuan, including WeChat and Alipay, at official exchange rates. Other features include on-demand Chinese-to-English human translation to assist driver-passenger communication and 24/7 emergency customer service support in both English and Chinese. An e-invoice function is provided for business travelers as well.

In December 2015, Didi announced a strategic partnership with US-based Lyft, India’s Ola Cabs, and Singapore’s Grab Taxi in an alliance against mutual rival Uber, which is gaining traction beyond its domestic market.

The partnership with Lyft is among the first to connect services of the two apps. Lyft users will be able to use similar services from Didi’s network when roaming in China in Q2 2016.

The roaming products between Didi and other partners are expected to launch throughout the year to cover over 50% of the world’s population, the company added.

As Didi’s presence in the market intensifies, the company is setting its new funding target at 1.5 billion USD which puts effectively its valuation at 20 billion USD.

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Push Notification Service Getui Enters Mobile Marketing With $108M Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2016/04/08/getui-c-round/ https://technode.com/2016/04/08/getui-c-round/#respond Fri, 08 Apr 2016 04:56:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37608 Getui, a third-party push notification service provider, announced on Thursday a 700 million RMB (108 million USD) C round led by Haitong Securities and China Minsheng Bank, followed by all existing Series B investors including SAIF Partners and U.S. venture firm WI Harper. Launched in 2010, Getui offers push notification services, helping app developers to engage their customers […]]]>

Getui, a third-party push notification service provider, announced on Thursday a 700 million RMB (108 million USD) C round led by Haitong Securities and China Minsheng Bank, followed by all existing Series B investors including SAIF Partners and U.S. venture firm WI Harper.

Launched in 2010, Getui offers push notification services, helping app developers to engage their customers more effectively with data-driven analysis on customer profiles.

The company is growing quickly, recording an installed app user base of 8 billion (500 million overseas users), up from 2 billion as of July 2014. Currently, the service covers 1 billion mobile devices and 420,000 app developers. Its clients include Qunar, Didi Chuxing, Weibo, Moji and Baofeng.

The proceeds will be used for expanding to big data and mobile marketing sector as well as the construction of business ecosystem, according to the company.

The company received a seven-digit USD Series A funding in 2011 and eight-digit USD B round led by SAIF Partners in 2014.

China’s growing mobile market is fostering a group of developer-facing services. Getui’s rivals include both startup competitor JPush, which has raised an eight-digit funding last year, and similar services backed by big Chinese internet companies, such as Tencent (XGPush), Baidu (Cloud Push) and Alibaba (Umeng).

Image credit: Getui

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Alibaba Finalizes Youku Tudou Buyout https://technode.com/2016/04/07/alibaba-youku-buyout/ https://technode.com/2016/04/07/alibaba-youku-buyout/#respond Thu, 07 Apr 2016 07:33:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37562 Alibaba is recording another milestone in the construction of their entertainment empire. China’s top video service Youku Tudou Inc. announced Tuesday that it has completed privatization after a six-year run on NYSE, which means the site has become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alibaba according to a 3.5 billion USD buyout deal the companies announced last year. […]]]>

Alibaba is recording another milestone in the construction of their entertainment empire. China’s top video service Youku Tudou Inc. announced Tuesday that it has completed privatization after a six-year run on NYSE, which means the site has become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alibaba according to a 3.5 billion USD buyout deal the companies announced last year.

Victor Koo, the chairman of board and the CEO of Youku Tudou, said the company plans to return to the A share market within 3 years, and the relevant procedures have started. Koo disclosed that the group is still discussing the re-listing, they did not exclude the possibilities of back door listing, restructuring, or transferring to a shareholding company, Tech Sina reports.

It is not difficult to understand the reasons for Youku Tudou’s privatization. The company’s market cap is around 4.57 billion USD, much lower than the 109.1 billion RMB (16.86 billion USD) valuation of a comparable A-share video site Letv.com. Iqiyi, another video sites backed by Baidu, also plans to list on the A share market.

Following the merger, the two companies will share resources in users, e-commerce, data, content and channels, Alibaba CEO Zhang Yong said.

Although Alibaba entered entertainment industry relatively late, the e-commerce behemoth has taken solid steps in building a digital entertainment ecosystem. Currently, Alibaba’s entertainment business has covered all major sectors include Ali Pictures, Ali Music, Ali Game and Ali Sports.

Tencent Interactive, the entertainment unit of Alibaba’s major rival Tencent, also launched a plan last month to create synergy effects among its entertainment-related businesses including Tencent Game, Tencent Literature, Tencent Animation and Tencent Films.

China’s online video scene is getting close to its peak development stage while leading players in the field like Youku Tudou, iQiyi, Tencent Video and Sohu Video are being considered as traditional video sites. More internet giants are supercharging their focus on setting up entertainment ecosystems, of which online video is an important, but not the sole part.

Aside from that, non-traditional video sites are rising in a big way, attracting the attention of both entrepreneurs and investors. AcFun, China’s top ACG associated video sharing site, has received 50 million USD from Youku Tudou. Another similar site Bilibili is recording a valuation of 1.7 billion RMB. Tencent led a 100 million USD investment in gameplay sharing service Douyu TV.

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Meet The Chinese Skill-Sharing App That Wants To Erase Cultural Hurdles https://technode.com/2016/04/06/pingospace-education/ https://technode.com/2016/04/06/pingospace-education/#comments Wed, 06 Apr 2016 07:20:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37533 “You would never become part of a community unless you get fully immersed culturally, even if you are living in the same neighborhood,” says Sophie Su, an Australian-born Chinese entrepreneur. Su has been torn between her Australian identity and Chinese heritage since she was a little kid. “It feels like to live in two separate […]]]>

“You would never become part of a community unless you get fully immersed culturally, even if you are living in the same neighborhood,” says Sophie Su, an Australian-born Chinese entrepreneur.

Su has been torn between her Australian identity and Chinese heritage since she was a little kid. “It feels like to live in two separate worlds and it is a bit lonely when neither of the two societies consider you a true member of their group.”

Triggered by her own personal experience, Sophie created an app dubbed ‘Pingo Space.’ It does’t matter whether you are migrants, overseas students, or expats working in another country, as long as you have the motivation to jump in, leave the rest to Pingo Space, she says.

Pingo Space, originates from the app’s Chinese name 平行国 which means parallel worlds, is an online education and networking platform that connects locals to expats through in-person experiences, creating interactions that would have never existed otherwise.

The Beijing-based startup has developed two separate apps for different clients, one specifically tailored to the Chinese client and the other to fit the needs of the expats or foreign coaches.

Through the Chinese App, local clients who want to know the rest of the world better can select from a variety of skillsets offered by foreign expats, ranging from language exchange to Italian cooking, foreign languages, playing guitar and jiu-jitsu. Customers can write reviews on the training they have received from a certain expat associate.

In addition to individual users, the company’s CEO and co-founder Wen Yunkai, believes Pingo Space’s service will also bring values for enterprise clients. “Through Pingo Space, companies and e-commerce retailors with a global expansion plan can know their overseas customers better.”

With the expat app, expats create their own brand with Pingo Space, personally designing their offerings and setting their schedule, service location and price with immediate payment via WeChat Wallet.

The platform requires all expat associates to register with real names and a TEFL (Teaching English as A Foreign Language) curriculum is provided to improve the training quality for those who have never been teachers before. Beyond that, there’s no restrictions on particular format or lesson plan, expat teachers can craft their dream experiences by themselves.

Weng says that the courses are taken offline for the current version of the app, while course appointment, payment and reviews are completed online. The startup now only provides service in Beijing, but it expects to expand to Shanghai and Guangzhou in the next six months.

Pingo Space is not the first startup eyeing the language and skill sharing market. Similar services include Zaihang, a project backed by science networking service Guokr, and Shanghai-based peer skill-sharing platform Skillbank.

Founded in 2014, Pingo Space’s core team is made up of both foreigners and Chinese nationals passionate about cultural exchange. Su has eight years of experience in education management. Her partner and husband Weng Yunkai is a seasoned entrepreneur  as the CEO and founder of English teaching service Elite Learning.

Pingo Space is winner of The Best Educational Products and Services of 2016 at our ChinaBang Awards this year.

Image credit: Pingo Space

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Xiaomi Leads $25M Investment In Hungama To Fuel Indian Expansion https://technode.com/2016/04/05/xiaom-invests-hungama-india/ https://technode.com/2016/04/05/xiaom-invests-hungama-india/#respond Tue, 05 Apr 2016 05:51:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37468 Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has participated in a $25 million USD financing round in Hungama Digital Media Entertainment, an Indian online publisher and aggregator of entertainment content. This is Xiaomi’s first investment in India and the reason behind the deal is self-evident. As domestic competition in China is stiffening and India is becoming a strategic […]]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has participated in a $25 million USD financing round in Hungama Digital Media Entertainment, an Indian online publisher and aggregator of entertainment content.

This is Xiaomi’s first investment in India and the reason behind the deal is self-evident. As domestic competition in China is stiffening and India is becoming a strategic focus for Xiaomi as they seek to maintain sustainable growth.

Other participants of the round include Hungama’s existing investors Intel Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners and Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, a top investor and billionaire in India. The consortium will pick up a minority, but undisclosed, stake in the Mumbai-based company.

Hungama Digital Media Entertainment is Indian’s leading aggregator, developer, publisher and distributor of Bollywood and South-Asian entertainment content. The company claims to have over 65 million monthly active consumers who access Hungama across platforms for its music, video and movie services. Hungama Play will add 1,500 hours of TV content in Indian languages and English, the company said in a statement.

The new capital is earmarked for content development and improving technological support for Hungama Music and Hungama Play on mobile terminals.

The tie-up will help Xiaomi to integrate Hungama’s content services, including themes and ringtones, into the company’s Mi platform. “We consider smartphones as a platform for us to deliver internet services, and it includes content. As our user base in India grows and as 4G penetration in India continues picking up, we will start to see more and more consumption of digital media through Xiaomi devices,” said Xiaomi vice president Hugo Barra.

Chinese internet companies like Alibaba and Tencent, have made aggressive moves to tap the content market and Xiaomi is no exception. The firm made its first major move into digital content sector in 2014 with a 1 billion USD investment. Of the capital, the firm has invested $300 million in online video provider iQiyi and bought a stake in China’s largest video streaming site Youku Tudou.

Xiaomi entered the Indian market in July 2014 and started to manufacturing locally since last year. Over 75% of its smartphones sold in India are made in the country.

India has over 1.2 billion people as the world’s second largest country in terms of population. However, its internet penetration is comparatively low with 400 million netizens and an estimated 220 million smartphone users. The country is wildly recognized as an emerging market for internet startups as China’s market is reaching saturation.

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Three Startup Opportunities In China’s Booming Maternity Market https://technode.com/2016/04/02/three-startup-opportunities-chinas-booming-maternity-market/ https://technode.com/2016/04/02/three-startup-opportunities-chinas-booming-maternity-market/#respond Sat, 02 Apr 2016 00:25:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37103 Being a new mom can be incredibly stressful. If you are drowned by daily chores and still can’t conceive of popping out to the shops for groceries, you are not alone, at least not in China. As the world’s largest country in terms of population, China records more than 16 million newborn babies per year. The […]]]>

Being a new mom can be incredibly stressful. If you are drowned by daily chores and still can’t conceive of popping out to the shops for groceries, you are not alone, at least not in China.

As the world’s largest country in terms of population, China records more than 16 million newborn babies per year. The sheer size of this new population is makes China the world’s second largest consumer market for babies and children goods after the United States, according to China E-commerce Research Center.

The burgeoning sector has even received a boost from the policy level. In recent years, Beijing has been relaxing family planning policies, such as the well-known ‘one child’ policy, due to concerns over a aging society and slowing economy. Since November 2013, young coupes can have two children if one of the parents is an only child.

Although lots of eligible couples, especially those live in urban areas, are unwilling to have a second child due to financial and other pressures, the effect of this policy is still great. After its implementation, the country is expected to witness another baby boom with the numbers of newborns reaching 20 million by 2018, citing data by Huatai Securities. China E-commerce Research Center predicted that the market is going to worth 100 billion to 200 billion RMB by 2015.

Notably, the sector is filled with young, tech-savvy customers with new spending powers. As the first group that experienced China’s economic and digital boom, the post-80s and post-90s gen are existing online customers and have more disposable income than previous generations. When becoming parents, they are willing spend big bucks on babies, so the market is characterized by a higher price-per order than their predecessors. On the other hand they are also more rational buyers who pay more attention to product quality.

The maturing sector has attracted a slew of entrepreneurs. Here are three hottest baby and maternity-related verticals we can expect to see.

E-commerce

Infant care e-commerce is currently one of the red-hot verticals amid China’s e-commerce boom, and its rise is fueled by the growth of another emerging vertical: cross-border e-commerce.

Contaminated formula, counterfeit dippers and product safety concerns has spurred has triggered a demand from Chinese parents for imported baby products. The trend has attracted some significant investments for relevant sites. In the first nine months of 2015, the infant and mother care industry recorded over 60 funding cases with a total investment of 1.3 billion USD.

Infant care online retailer Mia, a leader in the cross-border e-commerce sector, received a 150 million USD series D funding last year. Their competitor Beibei raised a $100 million USD series C funding at a valuation of nearly $1 billion USD. Jumei, the Chinese cosmetic retailer, also shifted into infant care sector by joining a 300 million USD round for BabyTree, an online community for early care and education.

Despite hefty capital injections, the infant product retailors still have a long way to go when compared to China’s e-commerce giants. Alibaba’s e-commerce market place Tmall, JD and Suning’s Redbaby took the top three spots, accounting for 46.9%, 22.8% and 5.6% of China’s B2C maternity product market in Q2 2015, according to report from Analysys.

The research institute pointed out that China’s turnover of maternity products was at 28.52 million RMB in Q2 2015, of which e-commerce only represents 10%.

Hardware

As the hardware hub of the world, China loves to indulge in weird gadgets, and the smart devices for mothers-to-be and babies may sound even weirder for most of us. The good news is that most of the products stem from the demands of entrepreneurs who are parents themselves, so they should be solving some real problems for you.

Prenatal care is very important to help make sure that the mom and baby are as healthy as possible. Visiting clinics is an indispensible part of the whole pregnancy, but it could be a really hassle if you go there every time for small concerns.

There’s a group of smart hardware helping you ease these worries. A fetal ultrasound tracker is what I considered to be the most useful device as an expecting mom myself. One leader in the sector is iCareNewlife. Other products focused on mothers-to-be include smart fetal movement tracking wristbands like Lisa and B-smart.

Smart gadgets for babies are more diversified, range from milk formula mixers (ingmeng, NicePapa), smart dipper change buckles (Smart PeePee, Bangbeiyi) and  smart thermometers (iThermonitor, Baohuquan).

Most of the products have launched their crowdfunding campaigns to gain supports from Chinese backers who prefer price and deals, not only as a means to get funding but also for marketing.

It is interesting to note that a large number of these smart devices are developed by geek fathers, and hence a great portion of the users are new dads.

On-Demand & O2O

The O2O industry is in full swing in China, and maternity is no exception. As the traditional custom of women “sitting out for a month” after giving birth prevails in China, the demand for O2O postpartum services is huge. New mums can order on-demand services including maternity matrons, milk encouragement massagers, dietitians, postpartum fitness trainers and early care and education professionals, among others.

But the market is still untapped because it is difficult for a third-party platform to standardize and control the quality of these services. Major players in the field are O2O fitness training service HotSlim, infant caring service Youfumama.

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This Tiny Camera Wants To Be Google Analytics For Offline Stores https://technode.com/2016/04/02/meirenji-google-analytics/ https://technode.com/2016/04/02/meirenji-google-analytics/#respond Fri, 01 Apr 2016 22:42:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37421 China’s e-commerce and logistics industry is among the most highly developed in the world, brick-and-mortar stores are still the first choice for many Chinese customers. While data from National Statistic Bureau show that the country’s annual online sales soared 33.3% in 2015, that figure represents a paltry 10.8 percent of overall retail sales. These shoppers represent […]]]>

China’s e-commerce and logistics industry is among the most highly developed in the world, brick-and-mortar stores are still the first choice for many Chinese customers. While data from National Statistic Bureau show that the country’s annual online sales soared 33.3% in 2015, that figure represents a paltry 10.8 percent of overall retail sales.

These shoppers represent a wealth of consumer data that until now has gone largely unmapped.

Unlike e-commerce where retailers can access to a slew of tools to analyze and predict customer appetites, offline stores have really limited data guidance to optimize their services.

Meirenji, the winner of Technode’s Asia Hardware Battle held on Thursday, aims to solve this problem and bring more value to offline retailers. The Shenzhen-based startup is the manufacturer of M1, an easy-to-install indoor monitor. The product can cover a 2-meter shopfront entrance or an area of 40 square meters to capture data such as visitor traffic and average visit duration, says Ding Xiaogang, CEO and co-founder of the firm.

The company’s real value lies in its data analytics services, said Ding. Powered by a self-developed algorithm, the platform processes the crude data collected by the monitor to give storeowners a better overview of what happening in their stores. Together with the POS machine data, Meirenji produces analytics based on deal rate, visitor conversion rate, employee performance and a clear time curve based on deals.

Ding noted that they are planning to add more features to the hardware, like face-recognition, walk-by-traffic, and customer preference analysis. The service package is priced at 2,000RMB (309 USD) per store.

“We decided to make a hardware rather than using the existing cameras in stores because these cameras are highly reliant on a stable internet connection which most of the brick-and-mortar stores failed to provide. M1 has lower requirement for Wi-Fi presence with a local loading functionality.”

The startup now provides service to more than 5000 physical stores across the country. Meirenji is planning to work on data analytics for business circles based on data from different shops around a certain area. The company says they have completed a 12 million RMB of Series A financing.

This article is part of our coverage from Technode’s Asia Hardware Battle and China Bang Awards 2016 event held in Chengdu on March 30th-31st.

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A Capital Winter Is Just What Chinese Entrepreneurs Need: Startup Guru Kaifu Lee https://technode.com/2016/04/01/kaifu-lee-capital-winter-cb2016/ https://technode.com/2016/04/01/kaifu-lee-capital-winter-cb2016/#respond Fri, 01 Apr 2016 15:19:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37337 China’s fast-growing startup scene is somewhat notorious for overzealous funding rounds and skyrocketing valuations for mysteriously opaque products. Until mid-2015, wave after wave of funding entered the market, only to be hampered in the second half of the year increased saturation. So how will China’s startup ecosystem react to a more risk-averse funding environment? According to […]]]>

China’s fast-growing startup scene is somewhat notorious for overzealous funding rounds and skyrocketing valuations for mysteriously opaque products. Until mid-2015, wave after wave of funding entered the market, only to be hampered in the second half of the year increased saturation.

So how will China’s startup ecosystem react to a more risk-averse funding environment? According to Chinese startup guru Kaifu Lee it’s just the medicine China tech needs.

A Capital ‘Winter’ Will Lead To A Better Startup Environment

“China’s startup industry has experienced both the so-called ‘capital bubble’ and ‘capital winter’ in the last year. However this year I see more pragmatic entrepreneurs who are getting better [in their] knowledge of entrepreneurship.”

On-demand and smart hardware (IoT) are two of the sectors that are particularly susceptible to the highs and lows of funding behavior in a volatile market, especially those that have a weaker business model reliant on rapid expansion. “Lots of entrepreneurs adopt the ToVC model [a novel attribute given to cash-burning startups]. They get a high valuation by describing a huge user base and the market potentials they are tapping. It is possible for these startups to attract attention or even funding in the past, but those who brag about their businesses are unable to maintain users and they will face various problems amid a capital winter.”

“Chinese entrepreneurs are becoming more and more pragmatic. Instead of amassing a big user base for a higher valuation, they are spending more time on how to maintain users, how to bring more value to them and solve their real problems. These are the growths that a capital winter brings to Chinese entrepreneurs.”

“Investors are becoming more rational as well. Entrepreneurs may find it more difficult for them to get funding, but it is a better environment for entrepreneurs with vision and aims to create value for users.”

Words For Entrepreneurs In Southwestern China

Although Chengdu’s tech scene is still not comparable to Beijing’s, it is drawing more startups and talents as the tech hub of southwestern China. Despite being known as the Capital of Mobile Games, Chengdu has fostered a range of excellent companies in different sectors, including mobile game developer, Long Mobile, photo service Camera360, streaming projector XGIMI, among others.

Despite this, Mr. Lee believes entrepreneurs still need to go beyond the city borders to spur innovation “Most of the resources, VCs and top events are happening in Beijing. While enjoying a better environment in southwestern China, entrepreneurs should also visit tech hubs like Beijing more frequently to hear more and meet media and investors”, said Lee.

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Alipay, WeChat Pay Speed Up User Authentication Amid Tightening Regulations https://technode.com/2016/03/30/alipay-wechat-real-name-registration/ https://technode.com/2016/03/30/alipay-wechat-real-name-registration/#respond Wed, 30 Mar 2016 07:15:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37281 China has been hastening their real-name registration process for online payments in recent months, and the internet giants behind the country’s biggest payment services are scrambling to get their customers registered before the lock out. China’s central bank released a regulation last December that divides customers into three types according to their online transaction amounts. Corresponding user authentication […]]]>

China has been hastening their real-name registration process for online payments in recent months, and the internet giants behind the country’s biggest payment services are scrambling to get their customers registered before the lock out.

China’s central bank released a regulation last December that divides customers into three types according to their online transaction amounts. Corresponding user authentication requirements are provided for different client types.

屏幕快照 2016-03-30 上午10.32.52

The new regulation is going to take effect in July 1 this year, which means that the online payment platforms only have less than four months to upgrade their systems.

Alipay, the country’s most popular service backed by Alibaba, posted a public Weibo last week, asking customers to complete their real-name registration as soon as possible. Ant Financial, the company behind Alipay, confirmed that customers who failed to complete the process won’t be able to use Alipay services after July 1.

‘Type I’ accounts mainly process small transactions with lower requirements for user identity authentication. Type II and Type III demand at least three and five online authentication channels respectively to prevent illegal transactions like online financial fraud, illegal fundraising and money-laundering.

Alipay has registered more than 800 million users, of which only 300 million are estimated to have registered with their real name, according to data released by the company.

Another leader in China’s mobile payment scene WeChat Payment also posted publicly last week, requesting customers to upgrade their profile with more details before July 1. Although the company didn’t say directly whether they will stop the services if customers failed to upgrade, it is highly possible that customers won’t be able to use WeChat Payment if they do not verify before July 1.

A report from the Payment & Clearing Association of China shows that 945 million total payment accounts have completed real-name registration process as of 2015, accounting for only 43.07% of the total.

In 2012 Beijing has released a draft of proposed legislation that would require providers of payment systems to keep the user name, gender, address, contact means and state ID number of all their users on file.

According to an analyst from the Payment & Clearing Association there are three factors driving the real-name registration push: temporary accounts, for example WeChat users can send red envelops without registering real names that are bound their bank cards, existing accounts that become sleeper bank accounts and accounts held by coming-of-age citizens.

image credit: ShutterStock

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AliHealth Invests $34M In Medical Imaging Services Company Wlycloud https://technode.com/2016/03/30/alihealth-invests-wlycloud/ https://technode.com/2016/03/30/alihealth-invests-wlycloud/#respond Tue, 29 Mar 2016 20:43:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37260 Chinese internet giant Alibaba is taking a step further towards their goal of disrupting China’s medical industry. AliHealth, Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed health affiliate, has invested 225 million RMB (around 34.56 million USD) in Wlycloud, the telemedicine imaging subsidiary of China Resources Wandong Medical Equipment Co., Ltd. Upon completion of this deal, China Resources retains a controlling 75% […]]]>

Chinese internet giant Alibaba is taking a step further towards their goal of disrupting China’s medical industry.

AliHealth, Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed health affiliate, has invested 225 million RMB (around 34.56 million USD) in Wlycloud, the telemedicine imaging subsidiary of China Resources Wandong Medical Equipment Co., Ltd.

Upon completion of this deal, China Resources retains a controlling 75% stake in the company, while AliHealth holds a 25% stake and nomination rights for two out of the five board members.

Founded in 2009, Wlycloud is principally engaged in the development and operation of telemedicine imaging services. Its parent company Wandong Medical Equipment, a former state-owned enterprise founded in 1955, is one of the top medical imaging equipment manufacturers in China.

The match will combine resources from both sides to explore telemedicine services for individual and enterprises customers, according to the company’s statement.

For B2B services, Wlycloud is setting up telemedicine imaging centers to enable medical service delivery at county and town-level hospitals. At the same time, the firm has established third-party medical imaging centers in Beijing and Zhengzhou to ease pressures on big hospitals. Similar centers are under construction in more cities.

Wylcloud’s C2B and C2C services allow patients to upload their medical images in AliHealth app to seek second opinions from professionals on the platform.

Alibaba has made constant clouts on the traditional healthcare industry with ambitious healthcare plans. Other healthcare related moves include the launch of Future Hospital plan and cloud hospital project, the addition of a hospital appointments feature to Alipay, and the launch of prescription purchase app.

image credit: ShutterStock

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Meet The Chinese Tinder-Like Sugar Daddy Dating App For Students https://technode.com/2016/03/24/sudy-sugar-daddy-dating-app-tinder/ https://technode.com/2016/03/24/sudy-sugar-daddy-dating-app-tinder/#comments Thu, 24 Mar 2016 10:14:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37137 Swipe-based dating apps are taking off in a big way globally, and in China they are now working to facilitate the hallowed relationship between ‘sugar daddies’ and ‘sugar babies’. Sudy, a new entrant to the market, is a swipe-based dating app that only pairs rich men with attractive women, especially catering to college students who are looking for financial help […]]]>

Swipe-based dating apps are taking off in a big way globally, and in China they are now working to facilitate the hallowed relationship between ‘sugar daddies’ and ‘sugar babies’.

Sudy, a new entrant to the market, is a swipe-based dating app that only pairs rich men with attractive women, especially catering to college students who are looking for financial help on tuition fees.

While the service sounds somewhat toe-curling, company CEO Kurt Hou believes he is nothing if not morally motivated: “The truth is, we are shocked by the rising number of students who are dropping out of college due to affordability issues. With Sudy, college girls can offer their companionship in return for tuition funding,” he said. “Our main purpose in creating Sudy is to help college students find sugar daddies who can assist in covering the cost of tuition.”

Sudy adopts a Tinder-style interface, allowing users to swipe left or right to “Pass” or “Like” their matches anonymously. To become a verified member, ‘Sugar babies’ can register with an edu.com email to verify their identity, while ‘Sugar daddies’ must upload their passport or tax bill if they want to get verified.

app-store

Of course, these are requirements not compulsory. Users can still browse as visitors, but a verified member enjoys more premium services like publishing posts at anytime and choosing a unique icon.

Sudy’s paid services range from 9.9 USD per month for sugar babies to over 50 USD per month for sugar daddies. The company’s Mr. Hou told TechNode that they are planning to diversify commercialization channels by adding features like virtual gifts and online broadcasting. Mr. Hou added that North American and European markets are top priorities for the startup now.

During the seven-month beta test starting in September last year, Sudy has enrolled over 10,000 members, mainly from the U.S. Canada, U.K. and Australia. Sugar baby to sugar daddy ratio is currently 8:1, while 54 percent of the app’s new registrants are students.

Image credit: Sudy

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Lagou To Expand Beyond IT Hiring With $33M C Round https://technode.com/2016/03/24/tech-hiring-lagou-round-c/ https://technode.com/2016/03/24/tech-hiring-lagou-round-c/#respond Thu, 24 Mar 2016 09:28:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37146 Tech hiring service Lagou announced today the completion of a 220 million yuan (33.8 million USD) C round led by existing investor Hongdao Capital, followed by Qiming Ventures and Rongchao Investment. This round will raise the company’s total funding to nearly 65 million USD. Prior to this financing, Lagou raised 2 million yuan in angel investment from […]]]>

Tech hiring service Lagou announced today the completion of a 220 million yuan (33.8 million USD) C round led by existing investor Hongdao Capital, followed by Qiming Ventures and Rongchao Investment. This round will raise the company’s total funding to nearly 65 million USD.

Prior to this financing, Lagou raised 2 million yuan in angel investment from Chinese top angel investors Bob Xu and Zeng Liqing, $5 million USD in Series A from Bertelsmann and a $25 million USD B round from Qiming Ventures in 2014.

Lagou was initially launched by Xu Dandan, Ma Delong and Bao Aile in 2013 as a parallel project to 3W Café, a to-go place for budding entrepreneurs and angel investors in Beijing’s tech hub Zhongguancun. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visited 3W Café and even drank a coffee there, an anecdote widely circulated in China’s startup community as a government gesture supporting entrepreneurship and innovation.

Lagou is a job-matching platform connecting tech talents and companies to facilitate the recruitment process. The company claims to have registered over 110,000 enterprise customers and 6 million individual users so far.

The company now plans to expand beyond its home-turf in tech hiring. While part of the new funding will be used for R&D, the company is expanding its services into the financial industry and users from this sector now account for more than 15% of their total user base, the firm disclosed.

Based on a back-end payment model, the site allows recruiters to post positions and job seekers to browse jobs free of charge. Payment only applies to employers who have recruited successfully.

After three years of development, the startup launched commercialization plans in the second half of last year, achieving more than 70 million yuan of revenue. This figure is expected to reach 200 million yuan in 2016, the company added.

The market size of China’s online recruitment sector is going to hit 4.61 billion yuan in 2016, an 18.8% growth YOY, according to report by Analysys.

Image credit: Lagou

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Travelzen Lands $92 Million In China’s Largest B2B Online Travel Funding Round https://technode.com/2016/03/22/b2b-travelzen-gets-c-round/ https://technode.com/2016/03/22/b2b-travelzen-gets-c-round/#respond Tue, 22 Mar 2016 08:48:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37076 Travelzen, an international online travel product integration platform, has completed a 600 million yuan (around $92.5 million USD) C round from a consortium composed of Addor Capital, United Capital, Jinpu Innovation Consumption, Everbright Fuzun, Tech Sina reported. Before this round, the firm received two funding rounds in 2010 and 2014 for a combined ‘tens of […]]]>

Travelzen, an international online travel product integration platform, has completed a 600 million yuan (around $92.5 million USD) C round from a consortium composed of Addor Capital, United Capital, Jinpu Innovation Consumption, Everbright Fuzun, Tech Sina reported.

Before this round, the firm received two funding rounds in 2010 and 2014 for a combined ‘tens of millions’ USD.

Launched in 2007 in Hong Kong, the company merged with Shanghai Ever Bright Town Intl Travel Service Co., Ltd., China’s top agency for air ticketing, in 2011 to integrate resources from both sides.

The startup shifted from a B2C to a B2B model in 2013 with the launch of in-house travel platform Tdxinfo, a one-stop service provider for plane tickets, Visa application services, hotel reservations and liner tours.

The funds raised in the latest round are earmarked for Tdxinfo to strengthening investments in airline and liner services as well as fueling an expansion to more regions in China.

The company did not immediately respond for comment.

This financing round is the biggest fundraising amount for a B2B travel service in China’s history. Investors’ willingness to take bold bets on Travelzen underlines their approval for the B2B model. The market also includes many domestic players including Shijie99, 8trip and Ziztour.

Image Credit: Travelzen

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[Asia Beat] Post-80s,90s Gen Are Out, Post-00s Are In: Meitu CEO Wu Xinhong https://technode.com/2016/03/22/post-00-meitu-ceo/ https://technode.com/2016/03/22/post-00-meitu-ceo/#respond Tue, 22 Mar 2016 03:29:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=37014 We all know that, sooner or later, the rising post-00s generation, kids born from 2000 to 2009, will eventually replace the older generations as the dominating force of internet. But the change seems to be coming upon us faster than expected. During Asia Beat held on March 18, Wu Xinhong, founder and CEO of China’s leading photo app developer Meitu, […]]]>

We all know that, sooner or later, the rising post-00s generation, kids born from 2000 to 2009, will eventually replace the older generations as the dominating force of internet. But the change seems to be coming upon us faster than expected.

During Asia Beat held on March 18, Wu Xinhong, founder and CEO of China’s leading photo app developer Meitu, shared a set of interesting data, giving us a peek into how this trend completely changed their the face of their company.

“In 2015, we noticed that China’s post-00s gen are surprisingly active on social networks. Their active degree on Meipai, a video editing app developed by Meitu, is three times that of the post-90s gen and five times that of the post-80s gen. It’s beyond our capacity to amass data from all companies in this sector, but this data alone is enough to underline the imminent exploration of the post-00 user group.”

Booming Post-90s, Post-00s User Demand

In 2007, Meitu team developed a Mars Pinyin Input Method, which converts words and sentences into novelty tags. The service only took them three days to develop, but it brought over 40 million users, according to the company. The startup found that over 80% of the new users are post-90s youth who love to talk via QQ, group chat and QQ Zone.

“We found the post-90s users have passions for pursuing individuality. The Mars Input Method satisfied their needs for celebrating individuality, but there’s still another demand that remained untapped back then: photos”. Wu pointed out that keywords like “unorthodox photos” have high search rates, but the market is still vacant. Meitu launched MeituPic in 2008, and saw a quick spurt in followers, claiming to now have over 500 million users worldwide.

In 2015 we witnessed a boom in demand from the post-00 generation users, which will in turn bring a new opportunity for startups. This time the media has evolved to fast-steaming video, while the competition among photo editing apps has reached a feverish pitch.

The wide application of mobile broadband also set up a groundwork for the spread of video services, Wu noted. To tap this trend, Meitu launched their home-grown video editing app Meipai. Over the past year, video-related services have been a hot spot for both PC and mobile terminals, attracting the attention of users and capital.

This article is part of Technode’s coverage of Asia Beat, where Technode was a media and organizational partner. Translated from TechNode China.

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Tips From China’s Legendary Investor Cai Wensheng https://technode.com/2016/03/18/tips-chinas-legendary-investor-cai-wensheng/ https://technode.com/2016/03/18/tips-chinas-legendary-investor-cai-wensheng/#respond Fri, 18 Mar 2016 10:39:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36931 It is widely acknowledged that China and the U.S. offer two of the richest soils to foster rapid growth in internet startups. In their first endeavors to tap China, the U.S. VCs usually split their capital into three parts for Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland. In most cases, the Chinese mainland is the […]]]>

It is widely acknowledged that China and the U.S. offer two of the richest soils to foster rapid growth in internet startups. In their first endeavors to tap China, the U.S. VCs usually split their capital into three parts for Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland. In most cases, the Chinese mainland is the place that generates the best results. Cai Wensheng, aka Mike Cai, a season angel investor in China, shared this opinion with us at Asia Beat Xiamen on March 17.

If you are interested in China’s startup scene, you must have heard of Mike Cai, who was known for his shrewdness as an angel investor. After making his first fortune from a domain name investment, Cai set up his own startups from scratch. One of his most successful endeavors is web directory 265.com, a clone of Hao123.com which was acquired by Chinese search giant Baidu in 2004. Gradually the young entrepreneur turned to a renowned angel investor. His portfolio companies include Chinese hit services Meitu (photo-centered startup), Baofeng (video player developer and video content provider), CNZZ (online data service), 58.com (classified site), Feiyu Technology (mobile and web game developer) and Falshget Downloads.

At the Asia Beat conference this year, the legendary angel investor shared with us some of his insights on entrepreneurship and investment in China.

User Size and Funding Environment of China

Cai believes that the momentum driving the rapid development of Chinese internet startups is China’s 1.2 billion population. “Given the sheer size of this user base, it is not difficult to understand why investors are still willing to pour investments in cash-burning startups like Didi and Meituan.”

Of course, capital is indispensable in the growth of such a huge market. The development of China’s internet market is boosted by capital from the world’s top VCs and increasingly, domestic investors. The return of U.S.-listed companies to the A-share market underlines the rise of domestic capital. “ Entrepreneurs with creativity and execution powers don’t have to worry about funding, because there’s lots of VCs searching for good projects.

Overseas Expansion

The very first group of Chinese entrepreneurs copied U.S. models. As the market evolves, Chinese entrepreneurs partially learn from western peers and add their own minor innovations to fit in with the local market (eg QQ).

Chinese entrepreneurs can ship their successful services abroad or start new businesses in emerging markets like Indonesia and India, according to Cai. “It’s like twenty years ago when we sell our clothing, shoes and hats to Africa and Europe. Some Chinese entrepreneurs have started their own businesses in these countries back then. They are also quite successful.”

CaiWensheng_1
How to Get Funded?

No matter which model you follow, capital injection will definitely accelerate your development. As an angel investor, Cai values three characteristics in entrepreneurs, working on an industry that has great potential, doing something that is within their capabilities and resources, and hardworking entrepreneurs with a strong vision.

Cai shared that he felt frustrated when investors invested in the project of Charles Zhang, CEO of Sohu.com, rather than his own back in 2000. “Zhang got the money for a reason… Don’t let the investors’ decision influence you. Do your best with you current resources and investment will finally come.”

Entrepreneurs should start from addressing a small problem, amassing your first group of users gradually and then being acknowledged by the VCs. “You will be in a much better state of mind if you decide to do the things you considered right no matter what. If you are wasting your time on running after funding while doing nothing with your product, you were probably doomed.”

Internet Celebrity is Like Individual Webmasters 15 Years Ago

Entrepreneurship under China’s startup tide today can be quite diversified to include painters, musicians or even internet celebrities. “Internet celebrities share similarities like individual webmasters 15 years ago, only the latter have to master a set of skills like domain name registration, marketing and related tech. It’s much easier to be an internet celebrity nowadays, because there’s more platforms, like WeChat public accounts, Weibo and  Meipai, freeing them from technical hurdles to concentrate on what they are good at.

Lobbying

If you are aiming for something big, it’s crucial to possess the ability to learn, to manage and to lobby. By lobbying, he refers to entrepreneurs’ abilities to lure continuous investments. Capital can make a vital difference for startups under rapid development. There are hundreds of taxi-hailing apps in China, but most of them died in the fierce competition. The outstanding lobbying ability of investor Wang Gang, who helped Didi to find continuous funding, contributed a lot to the company’s final survival. It was nearly impossible for e-commerce startups to find funding after the internet bubble burst in 2002, however Jack Ma managed to raise $82 million USD and become the dominator of China’s e-commerce market.

Cai noted that internet has three characteristics: 1. It draws people with similar hobbies and tastes together and helps to maximize the power of this community. 2. Outsourcing. For example, Taobao’s model attracts people to open stores on the platform. 3. Sharing. Uber and Airbnb, two services related to sharing and social networks, are bringing significant changes to our life.

CaiWensheng_2

Translated from TechNode China

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Alibaba Joins China’s Virtual Reality Race With New Research Lab https://technode.com/2016/03/18/alibaba-vr-lab/ https://technode.com/2016/03/18/alibaba-vr-lab/#respond Fri, 18 Mar 2016 10:13:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36923 technodeWhile VR technology is still lingering on the fringes of the mainstream consumer, China’s tech giants are wasting no time in entering the field. Alibaba announced Thursday the launch of its in-house VR research lab, dubbed the ‘GnomeMagic’ Lab after the inventor characters from World of Warcraft, together with the details of their VR strategy. The lab is overseen […]]]> technode

While VR technology is still lingering on the fringes of the mainstream consumer, China’s tech giants are wasting no time in entering the field.

Alibaba announced Thursday the launch of its in-house VR research lab, dubbed the ‘GnomeMagic’ Lab after the inventor characters from World of Warcraft, together with the details of their VR strategy. The lab is overseen by a group of lead engineers from Alibaba’s wireless and architecture divisions, the firm added.

The company’s plan for the VR lab stems from its core e-commerce business. For its first-ever project, the “Crater”, GnomeMagic Lab is going to develop a 3D virtual warehouse with a view to integrate VR into the shopping experience. Alibaba claims to have completed 3D modeling for hundreds of products and will accelerate the process with standard modeling tools.

Together with the lab, the company released Buy+ Plan, aiming to produce high-quality VR content in cooperation with Youku Tudou, Alibaba Entertainment and Alibaba Music.

Alibaba has already been building groundwork in the red-hot VR sector. Alibaba-backed Youku Tudou rolled out 360 degree panoramic videos in January this year, followed by a VR special report on this year’s NPC & CPPCC event. Notably, the company also participated in a $793 million USD C round for augmented reality company Magic Leap this February.

The year of 2016 is often referred to by industry insiders as “Year One” for virtual reality. Many domestic internet giants are flocking to the emerging industry. Alibaba’s rival Tencent announced last December an all-inclusive VR plan, including VR display headsets that support PC, game console and mobile devices. A consumer-level VR product is slated for this year, according to the company.

LeEco, or LeTV, has also taken their first steps into the market with the launch of a VR headset, LeVR Cool 1, in December 2015. Xiaomi is also spearheading forays into the sector with their own VR lab. Smaller players in the battlefield are Ants, Chines video player developer Baofeng, KAT and GDI.

It seems that virtual reality is getting real in China, influencing every field from e-commerce to cultural heritage protection and even sex tech.

Image credit: Alibaba

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[Update] LeSports Lands 8 Billion RMB Funding At 21.5 Billion RMB Valuation https://technode.com/2016/03/18/letv-sports-round-b/ https://technode.com/2016/03/18/letv-sports-round-b/#respond Thu, 17 Mar 2016 23:36:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36880 It seems that March is a good time to be an affiliate company of Chinese internet giant LeEco, former LeTV. Shortly after LeCloud raked in a 1 billion yuan (150 million USD) A round, the company’s emerging online sports media unit LeSports is raising a massive 7 billion yuan (1.07 billion USD) series B, putting LeSports […]]]>

It seems that March is a good time to be an affiliate company of Chinese internet giant LeEco, former LeTV. Shortly after LeCloud raked in a 1 billion yuan (150 million USD) A round, the company’s emerging online sports media unit LeSports is raising a massive 7 billion yuan (1.07 billion USD) series B, putting LeSports at a valuation of 20.5 billion yuan (3.15 billion USD). The news was indirectly revealed from an announcement made by Zhenzhen-listed Caissa Touristic.

[Update]

(Yueting Jia, founder, chairman and CEO of LeSports’ parent company Le Holdings, announced April 7 that the company’s sports arm has secured 8 billion RMB (1.2 billion USD) in Series B financing at 21.5 billion RMB valuation.

LeSports’ Series B financing attracted more than 30 investors including HNA Group as well as several celebrity investors, including Sun Honglei, Jia Nailiang and Liu Tao. The company will announce the full investor list in mid-April.)

According to the statement, the Hainan Airlines-backed travel service has founded an 1.2 billion yuan fund with two other Hainan Airline affiliated companies to invest in LeSports. The fund will hold a 5.85% stake in the online sports media.

Local media reported that Chinese tycoon Wang Jianlin, owner of Wanda Group, CMC Holdings, and a state-backed investment institution also participated.

TechNode called LeEco to confirm the details, but the company declined to comment, only saying that LeSports is closing the B round.

LeSports’ valuation surged more than 6 times compared to its 2.8 billion valuation less than one year ago, when the two-year-old spin-off received a 800 million yuan A round in May last year.

The heavy-loaded company has made constant headlines in the past year with a series of major moves. It acquired sports video streaming site Zhangyu.tv with 300 million yuan, purchased rights to air games in the country’s top soccer league for 2.7 billion yuan, and acquired a large package of soccer and other rights in a deal with Singapore-based sports marketing firm MP & Silva.

Caissa Touristic’s announcement also give us peek into LeSports’ financial status. As of the end of 2015, the online sports media recorded an un-audited revenue of 417 million yuan (64.3 million USD) with a net asset of 408 million yuan (62.9 million USD).

Online sports is a new emerging vertical of China’s thriving online video streaming market. After acquiring half of Guangzhou Evergrande football club with 1.2 billion yuan in 2014, Alibaba established a sports affiliate last year to tackle the growing market. Jack Ma-backed Yunfeng Capital also participated in LeSports’ Series A round financing.

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Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics Confirms First Financing At $7.7B Valuation https://technode.com/2016/03/15/alibaba-cainiao-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/03/15/alibaba-cainiao-funding/#respond Tue, 15 Mar 2016 07:54:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36795 Alibaba-backed logistics company Cainiao has sealed their first-ever funding round from a consortium including Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and GIC Pte Ltd, Malaysia’s Khazanah Nasional Bhd, and China’s Primavera Capital, according to the Chinese e-commerce giant. Alibaba did not disclose the size of this financing round. Local finance media Caixin reported the round is over 10 billion yuan […]]]>

Alibaba-backed logistics company Cainiao has sealed their first-ever funding round from a consortium including Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and GIC Pte Ltd, Malaysia’s Khazanah Nasional Bhd, and China’s Primavera Capital, according to the Chinese e-commerce giant.

Alibaba did not disclose the size of this financing round. Local finance media Caixin reported the round is over 10 billion yuan ($1.54 billion) at a 50 billion yuan ($7.7 billion USD) valuation. Technode reached out to Alibaba to verify these figures, but the spokesperson declined to comment on funding details.

The involvement of foreign investors may underline the company’s overseas expansion plans.

Cainiao was founded in 2013 by a group of investors including Alibaba, investment institution Fosun and department chain store Yin Tai, Forchn Holdings Group, and leading Chinese delivery companies (S.F. Express, ZTO Express, YTO Express, STO Express and Yunda Express).

Unlike Amazon or JD, Alibaba’s e-ecommerce marketplaces don’t offer delivery services before the establishment of Cainiao. Small merchants on the platform have to use third-party delivery services. Cainiao was formed to fill this gap.

Cainao’s ecosystem consists of five main parts including delivery, warehouses, distribution centers, cross-border delivery, and courier services for rural areas, according to a statement from the company. The system now claims to have 128 warehouses and 180,000 express delivery stations in China. As of March this year, the service has covered 224 countries and regions, 2,800 county-level cities in China.

Through partnerships with couriers and warehouse service providers, the platform handles more than 70% of the parcels in China, boasting over 1.7 million delivery person on the platform, the firm added.

Cainiao is not the only delivery service that Alibaba holds shares in. The e-commerce titan has taken a stake in the logistic arm of Haier, a leading home appliance company in China, YTO Express and Singaporean logistics company SingPost.

The new funding will help Cainiao build a more efficient delivery platform, which will in turn pose stiffer competition to JD, Alibaba’s major rival in China, known for their quick and reliable deliveries.

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Used-Car Trading Platform Guazi Seals 200 Million USD Funding https://technode.com/2016/03/14/guazi-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/03/14/guazi-funding/#respond Mon, 14 Mar 2016 07:00:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36774 C2C used-car trading platform Guazi.com has completed a 200 million USD financing round, according to an internal letter cited by Chinese media from the company’s CEO Yang Haoyong. He added that the final size of this round is expected to reach $250 million USD at a valuation of over $1 billion USD. In the letter, the […]]]>

C2C used-car trading platform Guazi.com has completed a 200 million USD financing round, according to an internal letter cited by Chinese media from the company’s CEO Yang Haoyong. He added that the final size of this round is expected to reach $250 million USD at a valuation of over $1 billion USD.

In the letter, the company claims to have recorded a daily sales of 1,027 cars on March 10 with a turnover of 83.72 million RMB (around $12.9 million USD). Over the past 16 months, Guazi has entered 75 cities around the country with support from 4,000 employees, according to Mr. Yang’s internal letter.

With the new funding, the Beijing-based firm plans to expand to 120 cities in 2016, improve car valuation systems, and strengthen cooperation with more partners.

Guazi.com was established by online classifieds site Ganji.com, which later merged with rival online classifieds site 58.com. The used car trading platform was then separated from the consortium to facilitate faster growth.

Yang Haoyong, the founder of Ganji, was appointed as chairman and CEO of Guazi, holding a controlling stake in the company with an investment of $60 million dollars. Following the capital injection, 58 and Ganji Group retain an estimated 46% stake in Guazi.

Second-hand car trading is one of the traditional industries Chinese internet companies are poised to disrupt. The rising market has attracted a slew of players includes Cheyipai, Youxinpai and Renrenche.

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Huawei Taps Mobile Payment Market With ‘Huawei Pay’ https://technode.com/2016/03/10/huawei-pay/ https://technode.com/2016/03/10/huawei-pay/#respond Thu, 10 Mar 2016 07:53:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36676 China’s top domestic smartphone vendor Huawei is seeking to roll out their own mobile payment service, Huawei Pay, in partnership with Bank of China. The announcement comes just as Apple Pay and Samsung pay have begun fledgling services in the country. The new payment service will support Huawei’s hardware products ranging from smartphones to wearables, according to […]]]>

China’s top domestic smartphone vendor Huawei is seeking to roll out their own mobile payment service, Huawei Pay, in partnership with Bank of China. The announcement comes just as Apple Pay and Samsung pay have begun fledgling services in the country.

The new payment service will support Huawei’s hardware products ranging from smartphones to wearables, according to the company. The partnership plans to integrate the online and offline resources of the state-run bank to launch the service, which still has no solid launch date.

Bank of China is the only partner currently working with Huawei Pay, meaning the service still has a lot of partnerships to seal if they want to catch up toApple Pay, which launched in China with 19 bank partners, including Bank of China.

Like Apple Pay, Huawei Pay will be enabled by near-field communications (NFC) technology. Users will have to switch on NFC function and connect their bank cards, mobile devices that contain a NFC chip will interact with in-store contactless readers when users press their devices against them. Huawei will have to release updated devices before the launch of the service.

Xiaomi has also set their sights on the sector. The smartphone maker acquired stakes in third-party payment company Jiefu Ruitong Co., Ltd. earlier this year.

While Apple Pay and Samsung pay pose a significant threat, Huawei Pay’s top priority for now is to compete with the less technical homegrown mobile payment systems: Alipay and WeChat Payment. The two players make up an estimated 80% of China’s mobile payment market, and are powered by QR-code payment technology.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Xiaomi-Like Chinese Smartphone Vendor Collapses Amid Cutthroat Competition https://technode.com/2016/03/09/chinese-smartphone-maker-aims-emulate-xiaomi-collapsed-amid-cutting-throat-competition/ https://technode.com/2016/03/09/chinese-smartphone-maker-aims-emulate-xiaomi-collapsed-amid-cutting-throat-competition/#respond Wed, 09 Mar 2016 09:53:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36642 The ecosystem that permitted the meteoric rise of Xiaomi’s valuation to over $45 billion no longer exists. A year-long contraction in the Chinese smartphone market has yielded a consolidated field of players struggling to find new inroads to a saturated market, and the latest casualty has fallen. Dakele, or “big coke”, the Chinese smartphone maker that once aimed to emulate Xiaomi, has suspended R&D […]]]>

The ecosystem that permitted the meteoric rise of Xiaomi’s valuation to over $45 billion no longer exists. A year-long contraction in the Chinese smartphone market has yielded a consolidated field of players struggling to find new inroads to a saturated market, and the latest casualty has fallen.

Dakele
DaKele founder Ding Xuhong

Dakele, or “big coke”, the Chinese smartphone maker that once aimed to emulate Xiaomi, has suspended R&D along with marketing and business operations, according to the company’s Ding Xiuhong, the former deputy editor-in-chief at online news service NetEase. The rumor of Dakele’s collapse reared its head late last year and the announcement on Mr. Ding’s microblog has finally confirmed it.

“The shuffling of the smartphone industry is much faster and tougher than we expected. We have survived competition in product [and] marketing, but the entry of more internet giants has brought the rivalry to operating capital,” said Mr. Ding.

“The unexpected capital shortage across industries cut our funding sources that were settled earlier.”

Dakele released a total of eight smartphones since their launch in June 2012. All their products are budget phones retailing less than 1000 RMB ($153 USD), featuring big screens and Kele UI, the company’s proprietary OS. Dakele’s selling point, like most Chinese smartphones, is their low price and decent specs. It’s the same strategy that boosted Xiaomi above the pack, though it’s not a method that has as much success in the current market.

The lack of powerful upstream support accelerated the collapse of Dakele. The company’s OEM subsidiary Shenzhen Yunchen Jiye Telecom Co. Ltd., which was shut down in October last year, reported local media.

For Chinese smartphone companies, there are two ways out: find more growth momentum in emerging markets like India and Latin America, or focus on higher-tier markets. Xiaomi has committed to the former, cementing sales channels to emerging markets. Huawei on the other hand rocketed into the high-end market with the Huawei Mate S. Strategies aside, it’s clear that a solid brand and mountains of capital are the fundamental tools required to survive the market squeeze.

Image credit: Dakele

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Enterprise Software Fxiaoke Raises New Funding To Take On Alibaba’s DingTalk https://technode.com/2016/03/08/fxiaoke-series-e-dingtalk-alibaba/ https://technode.com/2016/03/08/fxiaoke-series-e-dingtalk-alibaba/#respond Tue, 08 Mar 2016 08:43:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36591 Enterprise software developer Fxiaoke announced an undisclosed amount of Series E funding led by CITIC Private Equity on Monday. The company is hoping to boost user acquisition after coming into direct competition with Alibaba-backed DingTalk. Current investors Hillhouse Capital, DCM, Northern Light Venture Capital and IDG also participated. The new round came just 10 months after a 100 million USD […]]]>

Enterprise software developer Fxiaoke announced an undisclosed amount of Series E funding led by CITIC Private Equity on Monday. The company is hoping to boost user acquisition after coming into direct competition with Alibaba-backed DingTalk. Current investors Hillhouse Capital, DCM, Northern Light Venture Capital and IDG also participated.

The new round came just 10 months after a 100 million USD D round in September last year. The previous three rounds of financing totaled over 60 million USD.

Fxiaoke has been reforming their core product for some time. Beginning as a Yammer-like enterprise social network in December 2011, the startup turned to a Salesforce model before shifting to a customer relationship management (CRM) platform. Together with the funding news, Fxiaoke announced that they are going to rebrand as a mobile team collaboration platform.

After a failed attempt to challenge Tencent’s Wechat with Laiwang in the individual communication field, Alibaba spotted an opening in the  enterprise mobile chat space, launching DingTalk.

Alibaba’s support in funding and technology enabled DingTalk to expand quickly since its launch in May 2015. The product claimed over 300,000 enterprise customers covering 100 industries as of October last year, according to the company.

In order to fend off the tough competition from DingTalk, Fxiaoke launched a free version in October last year. Luo Xu, the company CEO, admitted that DingTalk’s entry forced them to do so ahead of schedule, and the decision has slashed a great proportion of their Q4 revenue. Fxiaoke claims to have amassed over 300,000 business customers, while the number of active users surged more than 10 times compared with the same period last year.

The competition in China’s SME-focused collaboration and messaging service industry is heating up, with several new leading players like Yammer-like service Mingdao and Teambition also entering the space.

Image credit: Fxiaoke

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Alibaba Invests In Online Lotteries Despite Stiff Regulation https://technode.com/2016/03/07/alibaba-agtech/ https://technode.com/2016/03/07/alibaba-agtech/#respond Mon, 07 Mar 2016 10:44:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36514 It has been a year since Chinese authorities suspended online lottery sales to clean up the once black market. While it’s still uncertain when the halt will be lifted, domestic internet giants are taking a more upbeat view of the industry’s growth in China. Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce behemoth poised to expand into entertainment, online health and securities, […]]]>

It has been a year since Chinese authorities suspended online lottery sales to clean up the once black market. While it’s still uncertain when the halt will be lifted, domestic internet giants are taking a more upbeat view of the industry’s growth in China.

Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce behemoth poised to expand into entertainment, online health and securities, is spearheading a foray into a new industry: lottery. Hong Kong-listed lottery service company AGTech announced today that they have entered into an subscription agreement with a company in which Alibaba holds 60 percent and Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial owns the remaining 40 percent.

Under the deal, the Alibaba-backed company is going to hold a 59.5 percent stake in AGTech in exchange for 2.4 billion HKD (about $300 million USD) at $0.35 HKD a sare, much lower than the company’s market price of $1.99 HKD per share (at closing price on March 5). The market cap of AGTech is nearly 10 billion HKD as of the same date.

The transaction between the two has a lot of strategic significance. After the deal, AGTech will become Alibaba and Ant Financial’s primary partner in running their lottery-related businesses. They will also be their sole partner in applying for a state lottery operation license, the operation of lottery software and hardware and the maintenance of sales channels and websites.

Founded in 2007, AGTech is principally engaged in gaming technologies (game software, systems, hardware and terminals); online and mobile lottery; and lottery management.

“China’s lottery market has great business potentials” an Alibaba spokesperson told state media. “We believe the investment will enable us to gain a upper hand in the market and to dig out the potentials of this market. Our experiences and resources in e-commerce, cloud computing and big data will help AGTech for better development.”

The country’s online lottery sales surged to a record-high of 382.3 billionRMB (US$61 billion) in 2014, up 23.6 percent year-on-year, according to the China Sports Lottery Administration Center.

Image credit: Alibaba

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Chinese Cloud Company QingCloud Seals $100 Million Series C https://technode.com/2016/03/07/qingcloud-series-c/ https://technode.com/2016/03/07/qingcloud-series-c/#comments Mon, 07 Mar 2016 07:34:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36519 QingCloud, a cloud computing platform offering IaaS-based cloud services, announced that they have secured a 100 million USD Series C financing today, led by two RMB funds with participation from existing investor BlueRun Ventures. The new capital will be used for R&D and the construction of cloud infrastructure, the statement added. Co-founded by Richard Huang, Reno Gan […]]]>

QingCloud, a cloud computing platform offering IaaS-based cloud services, announced that they have secured a 100 million USD Series C financing today, led by two RMB funds with participation from existing investor BlueRun Ventures.

The new capital will be used for R&D and the construction of cloud infrastructure, the statement added.

Co-founded by Richard Huang, Reno Gan and Spencer Lin in May 2014, the company launched the QingCloud platform in July 2013 to provide on-demand real-time cloud computing services to enterprise customers. The company now claims to have over 45,000 enterprise customers from both traditional and emerging industries.

QingCloud CEO and Co-founder, Richard Huang, said that “with the help of this round of financing, QingCloud will increase investments in R&D and infrastructure construction to maintain a healthy development pace, and to create more values to enterprise customers with our technology and reliable services.”

After this capital injection, QingCloud’s total funding has reached 122 million USD. The company received a 2 million series A from BluRun Ventures in 2012, and a 20 million series B led by Lightspeed China Partners and joined by Matrix Partners China and BlueRun Ventures in 2013.

China’s rising cloud service market is becoming more complex with the entry of a spate of domestic and international players. In addition to services that have an established presence in China’s cloud sector, like Alibaba’s Aliyun, Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure, plenty of Chinese internet giants are also making forays into the sector.

Tencent plans to throw in 10 billion yuan in cloud computing cooperation, they announced last year, while LeCloud, the cloud-computing unit of LeEco, just secured a 1 billion yuan series A last week. Moreover, well-funded smaller players are also developing quickly such as UCloud and Qiniu.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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LeCloud Pockets 1 Billion RMB Series A https://technode.com/2016/03/04/leeco-cloud-funding/ https://technode.com/2016/03/04/leeco-cloud-funding/#respond Fri, 04 Mar 2016 08:29:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=36434 LeCloud, the cloud computing and data processing arm of Chinese internet giant LeEco (formerly known as LeTV), announced on Thursday that they received a 1 billion yuan (US$150M) of series A led by Chongqing Industrial Investment Fund, a 80 billion yuan state-owned investment fund by the Chongqing government. LeEco’s stake in the cloud computing unit will […]]]>
LeEco

LeCloud, the cloud computing and data processing arm of Chinese internet giant LeEco (formerly known as LeTV), announced on Thursday that they received a 1 billion yuan (US$150M) of series A led by Chongqing Industrial Investment Fund, a 80 billion yuan state-owned investment fund by the Chongqing government.

LeEco’s stake in the cloud computing unit will decrease from 60% to 50%, but the parent will retain a majority stake of LeCloud. The new investor will hold a 16.67% stake in the company.

The funding is earmarked for product development, service optimization, recruitment, business development and marketing. The company also disclosed that they are going to issue stock incentive plans for the LeCloud team.

As part of LeEco’s global expansion plan, LeCloud is going to improve its cloud computing services for video, enterprises business, video sharing, virtual reality and automatic cloud platforms.

According to official data from the company, LeCloud now covers 650 CDN network nodes across 60 countries and regions, providing service for over 100,000 enterprise users and billions of individual users.

The tie-up also brings about a deeper cooperation between LeEco and the Chongqing municipality, China’s cloud computing capital. The internet giant is planning to promote research and development, production, distribution, operation, incubation and management services for cloud computing and big data in Chongqing. The local government will provide support in cooperative operations and broadband resources.

Image credit: LeEco

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UCAR Teams Up With eDaijia To Challenge Didi Kuaidi And Uber https://technode.com/2015/10/16/ucar-teams-up-with-edaijia/ https://technode.com/2015/10/16/ucar-teams-up-with-edaijia/#respond Fri, 16 Oct 2015 10:01:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33358 Lu Zhengyao, Board Chairman of Shenzhou Zuche (L) & Yang Jiajun, CEO of eDaijia (R) UCAR, aka Shenzhou Zuche, Car Inc.’s chauffeured car unit, is entering a strategic partnership with designated driver app eDaijia, the two companies announced this Thursday. Instead of a rumored merger, the tie-up will take the form of investments, sharing mutual […]]]>

Lu Zhengyao, Board Chairman of Shenzhou Zuche (L) & Yang Jiajun, CEO of eDaijia (R)

UCAR, aka Shenzhou Zuche, Car Inc.’s chauffeured car unit, is entering a strategic partnership with designated driver app eDaijia, the two companies announced this Thursday.

Instead of a rumored merger, the tie-up will take the form of investments, sharing mutual user database, API, chauffeur teams and marketing resources. More details of the deal will be confirmed later.

Its yet another match-up between Chinese giant platforms, as O2O giants look to consolidate in a tough market. Didi-Kuaidi, 58.com-Ganji, and Meituan-Dianping mergers have been the defining partnerships in China tech this year.

However, it is worth nothing that there’s something different about the UCAR-eDajia partnership

The three previously mentioned mergers are marriages between similar services looking to edge out competition. In UCAR and eDaijia’s case, the two partners come from different, but closely related verticals to create synergy effects along the industry chain.

Founded in 2011, eDaijia is a ride-hailing app linking users with chauffeurs to drive you home after a night out. The startup claims to have registered over 200,000 drivers and provides services in nearly 300 cities across the country.

On the other hand, Shenzhou Zuche, the chauffeured car arm of car rental service CAR Inc., is equipped with large in-house car fleets. The company claims to see over 300,000 daily transactions, with ten million users spread throughout 60 cities. The cooperation would combine eDaijia’s driver team with Shenzhou Zuche’s vehicle resources as well as the user base and technical teams.

After years of tough competition, China’s mobile transportation sector is now dominated by three powerhouses of Didi Kuaidi, Uber and Shenzhou Zhuanche. Although Shenzhou Zuche is catching up quickly, it still lags far behind the two competitors in terms of market share.

The company is now feeling more pressure as both Didi-Kuaidi and Uber are making exciting advancements in the car-hailing race. Didi Kuaidi last week acquired the first licenses to run private-car-booking service in Shanghai. Uber announced on the same day that it has registered in Shanghai Free Trade Zone and plans to add $1 billion USD for a China push.

Despite the stiff competition, eDaijia leads the private driver market with 70%-90% market share, though Didi Kuaidi rolled out a similar service this July.

UCAR just snagged a $550 million USD B round led by their parent company, while eDaijia received a $100 million D round early this year. Local media reported that Warburg Pincus, a shared investor of both companies, played an active role in forming the partnership.

Image credit: Donews

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Financial Product Search Engine Rong360 Pockets A $160 Million USD Series D https://technode.com/2015/10/15/rong360-round-d/ https://technode.com/2015/10/15/rong360-round-d/#comments Thu, 15 Oct 2015 15:09:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33313 Rong360, the Chinese search and recommendation service for online financial products, has announced the closure of a round exceeding 1 billion RMB ($160 million USD) in series D funding led by Sailing Capital and Jack Ma’s YF Capital, with participation from Sequoia Capital and Star VC, a venture capital co-founded by Chinese A-listers. This round will bring the […]]]>

Rong360, the Chinese search and recommendation service for online financial products, has announced the closure of a round exceeding 1 billion RMB ($160 million USD) in series D funding led by Sailing Capital and Jack Ma’s YF Capital, with participation from Sequoia Capital and Star VC, a venture capital co-founded by Chinese A-listers.

This round will bring the company’s total funding to more than $260 million USD, together with the $60 million USD C round$30 million USD in Series B and $7 million USD Series A. Company CEO Ye Daqing indicated that the funds were raised at a valuation of $1 billion USD.

Rong360, launched in March 2012, let users search and compare a wide variety of online financial products, including saving funds, loans, P2P loans, mortgages and credit card services, helping China’s green-handed investors to distinguish what are the best deals for them.

Screen Shot 2015-10-15 at 10.23.27 AM

The company claims to have included some 170,000 financial products, of which over 70,000 are loans products, 10,000 are credit cards and 80,000 are financial management services. It now provides services to 12.3 million users in 300 cities in total. Founded in 2011, the company scaled up rapidly to more than 700 employees.

Ye commented that Rong360 is considering the possibility of going public in the domestic market in response to a long-rumored IPO.

Image credit: Rong360, ShutterStock

Disclaimer: At TechNode we do our best to verify funding and user numbers, but we are sometimes unable to verify the internal figures of some Chinese startups.

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Another Homegrown Chinese Console Is On Its Way, With $60M In Backing https://technode.com/2015/10/15/fuze-game-console/ https://technode.com/2015/10/15/fuze-game-console/#respond Thu, 15 Oct 2015 15:00:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33325 Fuze Entertainment, a Chinese game console maker founded by Wang Feng, CEO of game developer LineKong, has announced $60 million USD in funding from a consortium including IDG Capital, Northern Light Venture Capital, Fosun Ventures and LineKong. The company has a core team coming from Huawei, NVIDIA, Microsoft, TCL and Tencent. The new funding is primarily earmarked for new gaming content and user […]]]>

Fuze Entertainment, a Chinese game console maker founded by Wang Feng, CEO of game developer LineKong, has announced $60 million USD in funding from a consortium including IDG Capital, Northern Light Venture Capital, Fosun Ventures and LineKong. The company has a core team coming from Huawei, NVIDIA, Microsoft, TCL and Tencent.

The new funding is primarily earmarked for new gaming content and user accumulation, said Wang. He added that they are looking to raise between $100 to $200 million USD in the next round.

The Chinese government has been slowly easing restrictions on game console industry since 2014 after a ban that laster over a decade. They first allowed companies to sell and manufacture on the mainland provided that they have headquarters and factories within Shanghai‘s special economic zone. They then eliminated all previous restrictions on how these companies can operate in China, allowing them to set up shop anywhere.

Although there are still contrasting opinions as to whether the favorable policies will actually see significant market growth, it has undoubtably brought vigor to the sector as more companies, foreign (Microsoft, Sony) and domestic (Huawei, ZTE), are flocking to the market.

Fuze-i

Fuze is still tinkering with the first generation of its new product named Zhanfu, but Wang disclosed that the game console is under testing for hardware, system and contents. At the same time, the startup is setting up a developer platform that offers all-round support in funding, hardware, game centers and player communities.

The company is planning to unveil and take orders for its first-gen product within this year. Nearly one hundred games will be released gradually over the first year from its launch.

Of course as a new entrant to the sector Fuze will face formidable challenges from Sony’s PS4 and Microsoft’s Xbox One, which are now available for Chinese players.

However Wang is very optimistic when taking about competition from the two game console giants. Like most foreign companies, Sony and Microsoft encounter localization problems like the region lock, high prices, and long game-reviewing processes Fuze will target these aspects to get ahead in their early growth stages.

Image credit: Fuze

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Weibo Adds Mobile Social Shopping Feature In New Update https://technode.com/2015/10/14/weibo-adds-mobile-social-shopping-feature-new-update/ https://technode.com/2015/10/14/weibo-adds-mobile-social-shopping-feature-new-update/#respond Wed, 14 Oct 2015 06:55:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33288 Sina Weibo, the Chinese microblogging service that went public last year, has stood out from a crowd of Twitter clones as the definitive winner of China’s microblogging war. However, that’s not the end of the story. The service, which latter rebranded as simply ‘Weibo‘ to mark its prominent position in the field, is suffering from stagnating user growth as […]]]>

Sina Weibo, the Chinese microblogging service that went public last year, has stood out from a crowd of Twitter clones as the definitive winner of China’s microblogging war.

However, that’s not the end of the story. The service, which latter rebranded as simply ‘Weibo‘ to mark its prominent position in the field, is suffering from stagnating user growth as competition with Tencent’s WeChat stiffens.

In an attempt to boost its m-commerce initiative, Weibo’s mobile app has added a new social shopping feature similar to WeChat’s hugely popular micro store, enabling users to sell goods to followers.

Users can promote up to nine products in each post together with product description, prices and inventory information. They can also re-post items from third-party e-commerce sites such as Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao, and mobile commerce marketplace Weimai. Weibo users with 1000 or more followers can apply to join the program.

Similar to WeChat’s micro store, these posts will be shown in users’ Weibo content sharing timeline. According to the company, Weibo has attracted over 20 million experts specializing in various fields. The new feature will act as an effective link to connect the experts and their vast fan base, completing Weibo’s ad and e-commerce ecosystem.

Sina-1

A report from China Internet Network Information Center indicates a total 46.6% of online shoppers accept e-commerce information in their social networks, in which 33.8% of them have actually purchased products from social channels.

Weibo claims to have 212 million monthly active users as of Q2 this year. Among them, 85% comes from mobile terminals. The users for Weibo’s homegrown payment solution Weibo Payment have hit over 46.50 million users.

Image credit: Weibo

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Smartphone Upcycling Gains Momentum In China As Users Trade Phones Every 18 Months https://technode.com/2015/10/13/smartphone-upcycling-china/ https://technode.com/2015/10/13/smartphone-upcycling-china/#respond Tue, 13 Oct 2015 10:17:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33223 If you are one of those hardware fans who’s always itching to get the latest device whenever there’s a new update, you’ll probably have one of those junk drawers spewing out tentacles of wires and gadgets that are covered in dust. Among them, a bunch of old smartphones — sound familiar? That’s exactly the case with many Chinese citizens […]]]>

If you are one of those hardware fans who’s always itching to get the latest device whenever there’s a new update, you’ll probably have one of those junk drawers spewing out tentacles of wires and gadgets that are covered in dust. Among them, a bunch of old smartphones — sound familiar?

That’s exactly the case with many Chinese citizens as the country’s smartphone market is reaching saturation. China now boasts a total of 1.14 billion mobile users, according to data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The country’s smartphone shipment number stood at around 425 million in 2014, while there were only 56.98 million newly added mobile subscribers in the same year.

The gap between these figures indicates that nearly 400 million old smartphones were discarded per year. “Over 90% of the smartphones are purchased for replacing old ones”, said Sun Wenping, head of Shenzhen Smartphone Association, “due to reasons like the need to shift from 2G to 4G networks, or simply for a fancier version.”

Researches show that Chinese smartphone users change their smartphones once every 29-months in 2011, but the period has been shorted to 18 months now. Over 20% of Chinese users will update for a newer phone within one year, while only 8.4% would do so within two years.

Of course, there are tons of great things you can do with your old phone, either as a music player, e-reader or a security camera, but another equally useful option is to trade it in to help bank roll your next phone. Smartphone ‘upcycling’ is forming a huge industry in China, the world’s largest smartphone market. There’s already multiple startups tapping this emerging sector.

We’ve put together a short list of our top picks for those looking to empty the junk draw and recycle some of those old smart phones:

JD.com

JD.com, one of the to-go e-commerce site for electronics, has launched a dedicated channel for electronic trade-in services, where customers can exchange their used smartphones for coupons and bonus. The platform works just like the e-commerce portion, offering the same payment and insurance services.

Aihuishou

Aihuishou  (meaning “love recycling”) is a bidding-based C2B platform for recycling and the sale of second-hand electronic items such as mobile phones and laptops. Aihuishou adopted O2O model and built more than 40 service centers in four core commercial cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen.

Their WeChat service helped to accumulate a huge number of users, who can ask questions and explain the phone’s condition on chat rooms. The user is then lead to nearby offline service center to conduct transaction. Also, the site has its own courier, who collect the used devices and users can ask online to take their old phone.

The company has raised $60 million USD funding of Series C funding led by Tiantu Capital this August. JD also participated this round.

Taolv365

Taolv365, founded in 2009, is an electronics upcycling platform that includes all kinds of services like online electronics tread-in, and the sale of second-hand gadgets as well as dissembled parts. Founded in Shenzhen, the site now operates in all major cities across the country.

Image Credit: ShutterStock

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58.com’s On-Demand Service Arm Snags US$300M From Alibaba https://technode.com/2015/10/13/58-home-alibaba/ https://technode.com/2015/10/13/58-home-alibaba/#respond Tue, 13 Oct 2015 03:21:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33229 58 Home, or 58 Daojia Inc., the on-demand service subsidiary of China’s Craglist, 58.com, has announced US$300 million in series A funding from Alibaba Group, global investment firm KKR and Chinese insurance magnet Ping An Group at a valuation of more than US$1 billion. Upon the completion of this funding, 58.com will maintain majority ownership of 58 […]]]>

58 Home, or 58 Daojia Inc., the on-demand service subsidiary of China’s Craglist, 58.com, has announced US$300 million in series A funding from Alibaba Group, global investment firm KKR and Chinese insurance magnet Ping An Group at a valuation of more than US$1 billion. Upon the completion of this funding, 58.com will maintain majority ownership of 58 Home.

58 Home will continue to enhance the platform with further investments in marketing, research and development, and other operating initiatives, according to an official statement from the company.

Founded in September 2014, 58 Home is a multi-category local services platform that provides information on and access to offline services such as cleaning, moving, babysitting, beauty care, and many other categories in approximately 30 cities in China. With its location-based order processing system, 58 Home’s platform directly connects customers to the nearest independent service providers.

With the diverse business lines in O2O, 58 home has a stiff line up of startup competitors, such as, housekeeping platforms eJiajie, Ayibang, manicure service Helijia, car washing platform Chediandian. In an attempt to better tap these O2O verticals, the parent company has made a total of $1.5 billion USD investments in related startups to create synergy. The firm expressed that it will continue to invest in new startups and business ventures in China’s rapidly expanding home services market.

It is interesting to note that this funding is yet another case of market match-ups between Alibaba-backed and Tencent-backed platform giants, following the merger of Didi-Kuaidi and Meituan-Dianping. Tencent has purchased a 19.9% stake in 58.com for $736 million USD in mid-2014. The internet giant then increased its stake in 58.com to 25%.

Despite having Tencent as a previous backer, 58 Home’s reason for partnering with Alibaba probably lies in the current business landscapes of the two internet giants. Tencent already has stakes in similar O2O services like Dianping and Ele.me. Moreover, the ecosystem formed around WeChat is a premium platform for O2O startups to promote their services, providing Tencent access to rich resources in this aspect.

Alibaba, on the other hand, which is poised to make inroads into the red-hot O2O sector, still has a lot of catching-up to do in this field. Its local lifestyle platform Koubei is relatively new and is in urgent need of new verticals. 58 Home, as one of the few comprehensive on-demand services platforms, seems to be a good choice.

Mr. Michael Jinbo Yao, Chairman and CEO of 58.com, commented that “the 300 million and growing population of digitally literate middle class consumers in China has created a huge but still nearly untapped market for online-to-offline home services. There is a strong need for experienced, trustworthy and effective home service professionals in China, and 58 Home is in a unique position to lead this local services revolution.”

Image credit: 58.com

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Chinese Smart Bike Yunmake Lands Series A Funding Led By Xiaomi Founder https://technode.com/2015/10/10/yunmake-xiaomi/ https://technode.com/2015/10/10/yunmake-xiaomi/#respond Sat, 10 Oct 2015 04:54:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33180 It’s no secret that Chinese internet giants are trying to grab a place in the fledging smart bike market. Xiaomi, which is known their smart hardware ecosystem, connecting everything from wrist bands to air purifiers, has become the latest company to join this bandwagon. Chinese smart bike maker Yunmake announced an eight-digit RMB Series A funding […]]]>

It’s no secret that Chinese internet giants are trying to grab a place in the fledging smart bike market. Xiaomi, which is known their smart hardware ecosystem, connecting everything from wrist bands to air purifiers, has become the latest company to join this bandwagon.

Chinese smart bike maker Yunmake announced an eight-digit RMB Series A funding led by Shunwei Capital Partners, the venture capital firm co-founded by Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun, and followed by Foxconn, Qualcomm, ZhenFundRicebankYinxinggu Capital and a few other investors. Shunwei and Ricebank, the venture capital institution backed by Alibaba founders, also participated the startups’ angel round in 2014.

Company founder and CEO Qiu Yiwu said that the funding will be used for mass production, marketing and new product development. The firm did not disclose the valuation of this round, but Qiu said that it is more than ten times that of the angel round.

Yunmake is a design-driven hardware startup. Its first product Yunbike, which just won Red Dot Design Best of The Best Award, is a sleekly designed electric folding bike weighted at 16kg.

Yunzao-1

Powered by a 36v, 6.6AH battery, Yunbike takes four hours to be fully charged and supports a maximum millage of 30km. While zipping around at up to 25 miles per hour, riders can monitor their speed on an LED display.

And of course, the bike features an app that can keep track all kinds of metrics, like speed, battery, distance traveled, and light control. The app also integrated some social features that will allow you to connect with other riders by sharing and rating bike routes.

The company is planning to launch a second generation product on October 15th.

Yunzao-2

Founded in 2013 by Zhejiang University alumni, Yunmake currently has around thirty staff onboard, most of them are from China’s post-90 gen. Company founder Qui has rich experience in working at the intersection of design, technology and business development as former members of Sony’s China Creative Centre, and Alibaba’s User Experience Design Department.

Image credit: Yunmake

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China Hopes to Boost E-Commerce Industry With New International Payment System https://technode.com/2015/10/09/china-unveils-international-payment-system-boosting-cross-border-e-commerce/ https://technode.com/2015/10/09/china-unveils-international-payment-system-boosting-cross-border-e-commerce/#respond Fri, 09 Oct 2015 08:57:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33154 China’s Central Bank has launched the China International Payment System (CIPS) in Shanghai on Thursday, according to state media. It’s phase one in a plan that will facilitate trade clearing services for cross-border RMB transactions. The second phase of the project  is expected to improve clearing efficiency for direct participants in the RMB market. The latest application of CIPS […]]]>

China’s Central Bank has launched the China International Payment System (CIPS) in Shanghai on Thursday, according to state media. It’s phase one in a plan that will facilitate trade clearing services for cross-border RMB transactions. The second phase of the project  is expected to improve clearing efficiency for direct participants in the RMB market.

The latest application of CIPS system, which was founded in 2012, will cut the payment costs of both enterprises and individuals by enhancing the transaction efficiencies. Previously, cross-border clearing of RMB funds had to be transacted through one of the offshore RMB clearing banks in places like Hong Kong, Singapore and London, or else with the help of a corresponding bank on the Chinese mainland.

The system could ease pressures on both local and international e-commerce platforms, which have been historically hindered by the rigid transaction system.

The launch of CIPS will also enable market participants outside China to clear RMB transactions with their Chinese counterparts directly from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m Beijing time during working days. The latest hours were implemented beginning September 21.

A group of 19 Chinese and international banks are supported by this system, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, China Bank, China Construction Bank, Bank of Communication, Citic Bank and Standard Chartered Bank.

China’s yuan became the fourth largest payment currencies in August this year, hitting a historical record to account for 2.79% of the global payments, according to global transaction services organization SWIFT.

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Our Jury For The 2015 TechCrunch Beijing Startup Competition: Batch II https://technode.com/2015/10/09/techcrunch-startup-competition-batch-ii/ https://technode.com/2015/10/09/techcrunch-startup-competition-batch-ii/#respond Fri, 09 Oct 2015 07:01:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33077 You may have already be familiar with some of the big names that are joining the jury for TechCrunch Startup Competition this November in Beijing. Today, we are adding to the list some of the hottest investors from China’s internet industry. Starting a business from scratch is tough for most entrepreneurs, but finding tutorship in reliable partners and […]]]>

You may have already be familiar with some of the big names that are joining the jury for TechCrunch Startup Competition this November in Beijing. Today, we are adding to the list some of the hottest investors from China’s internet industry.

Starting a business from scratch is tough for most entrepreneurs, but finding tutorship in reliable partners and investors can save a lot of headaches.

TechCrunch Startup Competition is a part of the TechCrunch International Summit, one of the most anticipated technology conferences of the year. We start each day with panels and one-on-one chats featuring special guest speakers, leading venture capitalists and fascinating entrepreneurs addressing the most important topics facing today’s tech landscape.

More speakers and guests of the event will be announced on a rolling basis. If you’re looking to buy tickets register here.

Hans Tung, Partner at GGV Capital

Hans Tong

Hans joined GGV Capital Qiming Venture Partners in 2013 as a Managing Partner to focus on mobile Internet, cross border e-commerce, online education, and gaming industry investments.

Hans has been involved in a wide spread of Chinese startups that have since become category leaders, including Xiaomi, Mafengwo Travel, Vancl.com, Domob Mobile, 51fanli, Forgame, and eHi Car Rental.

Hans has been ranked as a top VC on the Forbes Midas list the past three years (2013, 2014, and 2015). He was also recognized by The Founder and CBN News magazines as a Top 10 Most-Entrepreneur-Friendly VC in China.

Steven Ji, Partner at Sequoia Capital China

019_Steven Ji

Prior to joining Sequoia Capital in 2005, Steven had been with Walden International, Vertex Management and CIV Venture Capital where he was in charge of numbers of investment projects.

Steven Ji was also among the first group of employees at Seagate Technology China, where he held several managerial posts successively.

Steven received his MBA from China Europe International Business School and a Bachelor’s Degree in Electrical Engineering from Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Justin Niu, Managing Partner at IDG Capital

Niu Kuiguang

Justin Niu is actively involved in big data, cloud computing, enterprise services and new technology investments. Justin is experienced in corporate strategy, operational improvement and removing bottle necks for growth stage companies.

Prior to joining IDG Capital, Justin worked at Mckinsey & Company, where he was involved in helping leading companies in various business functions including corporate strategy, market entry, operational improvement and government relationship strategy. Justin earned his B.S. and M.S. degree in Computer Science and Technology from Tsinghua University.

Weiming Xiong, Managing Partner at China Growth Capital

Xiong Weiming

Weiming Xiong has 16 years of experience in investment bank research, private equity and high – tech entrepreneurship in mainland China. He believes that technical innovation drives the change of investment idea. He focus on internet services, including enterprise services, medical treatment & health and consuming industry.

He joined WI HARPER GROUP in 2005 and took a very important seat at the project channel and marketing, in WI HARPER GROUP he took charge of few investment programs such as Maxthon, Chivd, Innovation Works, Mapbar. After that, Xiong became the partner of Bertelsmann Asia and took part in lots of investment programs such as I-Click, Mogujie, Douban and Domob.

At the end of 2012, Xiong joined China Growth Capital as partner. He led the investment programs of 1hu, HunterOn, Microseer etc. He is an alumni of Peking University.

Scott Zheng, Founder of Buttonwood Capital

Zheng Gang

Scott is the founder of Buttonwood Capital, based in Shanghai. He has more than 20 years of investment and start-up experience and insight across a wide spectrum of industries and international businesses.

Prior to founding Buttonwood, Mr. Zheng has been a series entrepreneur, having started and co-started several companies in the last 14 years, including Internet search, video streaming, instant messaging, outdoor LED media, and on-shore Liquefied Natural Gas operations.

In addition to entrepreneurial pursuit, Zheng obtained managing experience through positions such as CFO of Joyou AG (JY8: Xetra), where he played a key role in bringing the Chinese company public at Deutsche Borse’s prime standard market board in 2010; director of business development at W.R. Grace, where he oversaw mergers and acquisition in Greater China region; Asia-Pacific finance manager at Delphi Corporation’s Dynamics and Propulsion division; senior financial analyst at General Motors NA. and investment banking career at Citic Securities in the nascent Chinese securities market back in the mid 90’s.

Xiaoning Li, Founder of VC.cn

Li Xiaoguang

In 2011, Xiaoning Li established the first Chinese internet financing platform vc.cn after returning from the U.S. The site saw angel investments from numerous famous angel investors such as Xiaoping Xu, Kaifu Li, Wensheng Cai, Liqing Zeng, Xiangyang Yang. As an internet fund, vc.cn includes an equity financing platform, Tuopu Fund, and big data platform chuangyepu.com.

Prior to this, Xiaoning Li worked as the vice president of Merrill Lynch. Before that he took places in plenty of famous investment bank, such as JPMorgan Chase & Co and Union Bank of Switzerland. Li acquired his MBA in Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and he got a Masters Degree of computing at the University of Delaware.

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Didi Kuaidi Snag First License To Run ‘Legal’ Private Cars In Shanghai https://technode.com/2015/10/08/didi-kuaidi-license/ https://technode.com/2015/10/08/didi-kuaidi-license/#respond Thu, 08 Oct 2015 10:21:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33109 The race for market supremacy in China’s ride-hailing market has taken a distinctly legal turn. Chinese mobile transportation platform Didi Kuaidi today announced that it has received a license from the Shanghai Municipal Transportation Commission (SMTC) to run private-car-booking services in the metropolitan city. It comes on the same day as U.S. rival Uber announces […]]]>

The race for market supremacy in China’s ride-hailing market has taken a distinctly legal turn.

Chinese mobile transportation platform Didi Kuaidi today announced that it has received a license from the Shanghai Municipal Transportation Commission (SMTC) to run private-car-booking services in the metropolitan city. It comes on the same day as U.S. rival Uber announces the official registration of their China subsidiary in Shanghai’s Free Trade Zone, also hoping to snag a license.

Didi Kuaidi has said that the license makes their services the first legally-authorized online private car booking platform in China.

Operating under the new license, Didi Kuaidi have promised to maintain the quality of vehicles and drivers registered on its platform by providing necessary training, as well as conducting rigorous screening of potential drivers.

The new license requires mandatory insurance, third-party liability insurance, carrier’s liability insurance and passenger insurance, which provide coverage up to 6 million RMB per annum per vehicle. Didi Kuaidi will also add dedicated customer service channels to ensure passenger protection.

The company earned the newly-issued private car license by meeting all criteria set by the SMTC, this includes the requirement for all drivers to hold a public driver license along with other qualifications. Their servers must also be located in China, allowing the government to control and access data centers. As part of Uber’s announcement today they also revealed they would be seeking to meet this requirement in order to get the same license.

Regulatory issues have long been a headache for China’s booming car-hailing companies. All major companies in this arena have been taking steps to obtain legal status.

As the first company to acquire such a license, Didi Kuaidi is moving one step ahead of its arch competitor Uber in obtaining government backing. Uber China announced the are “actively preparing relevant documents and materials, and ready to apply for internet-car-hailing platform permits following designated procedures after the new regulations come out.”

When responding to whether the SMTC is issuing the license to more companies in the near future, Sun Jianping, director of the commission, expressed that “we have set out certain criteria for car-haling companies and the license is open to all companies that could meet these requirements”. He disclosed that Uber is one of the companies seeking this license.

Together with the licensing news, Didi Kuaidi also announced some key metrics for the platform. Originally a taxi-hailing app, Didi Kuaidi has now expanded its service, including taxi hailing, premium car, carpooling and bus sharing, to 360 cities in China through its mobile apps, servicing 200 million people in total.

The company currently processes approximately 3 million private car orders and 3 million taxi rides each day, representing over 80% of the private car service market and over 90% of the taxi hailing service market in China, according to the company.

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Uber Registers In Shanghai Free Trade Zone, Adding $1B To China Push https://technode.com/2015/10/08/uber-subsidiary-china/ https://technode.com/2015/10/08/uber-subsidiary-china/#respond Thu, 08 Oct 2015 10:07:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=33085 Uber announced today that the company has set up a subsidiary named Shanghai Wubo Information Technology Co., Ltd. in Shanghai Free Trade Zone. With a registered capital of 2.1 billion RMB ($330 million USD), this will make Uber the largest registered internet company in Shanghai. Uber disclosed that it is transferring all business in China to local […]]]>

Uber announced today that the company has set up a subsidiary named Shanghai Wubo Information Technology Co., Ltd. in Shanghai Free Trade Zone. With a registered capital of 2.1 billion RMB ($330 million USD), this will make Uber the largest registered internet company in Shanghai.

Uber disclosed that it is transferring all business in China to local servers. To further push its China expansion, the company is going to invest a total 6.3 billion RMB ($992 million USD) in the country over the coming years.

The U.S. taxi app, which first landed in China in February 2014, already operates in 21 Chinese cities, including Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu and Hangzhou. Now, its looking to increase that number to 100 within the next 12 months with the launch of more localized services, according to an announcement from the company.

Despite the quick growth, Uber has been feeling pressure on multiple sides from local government and competitors. This year, police visited the company’s offices in many cities and Uber drivers were arrested in Hong Kong for supposedly operating a portion of their business illegally.

To address policy issues, Liu Zhen, head of Uber China, noted that Chinese authorities are drafting regulations to standardize the country’s taxi-hailing industry, and Uber is ready to comply to the rules and apply for licenses when the regulations were officially released.

On the other hand, Uber is also facing tough competition from well-established local peers like Didi-Kuaidi and Shenzhou Zuche as the major players are getting more ammunition to finance their market-grabbing battle.

It’s no secret that China, the world’s largest transpiration market, is an important part of Uber’s global push.  The company has rolled out a series of localized features like People’s Uber for Chinese users. Shortly after launching uberCOMMUTE in Chengdu, the world’s first city to experience this car-pooling service, Uber opened its API in China this September to empower more local developers.

Image credit: Uber

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176,000 Japanese Stores Will Soon Support Alipay https://technode.com/2015/10/01/alipay-japan/ https://technode.com/2015/10/01/alipay-japan/#respond Thu, 01 Oct 2015 10:30:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32967 Alibaba’s affiliate Ant Financial announced that Alipay will soon support the smart POS network owned by Recruit Lifestyle, a subsidiary of the Japanese business giant Recruit Group. That means Chinese tourists will be able to make offline payments with their Alipay Wallet when travelling in Japan, instead of exchanging for local currency beforehand and running the risk […]]]>

Alibaba’s affiliate Ant Financial announced that Alipay will soon support the smart POS network owned by Recruit Lifestyle, a subsidiary of the Japanese business giant Recruit Group.

That means Chinese tourists will be able to make offline payments with their Alipay Wallet when travelling in Japan, instead of exchanging for local currency beforehand and running the risk of Yen depreciation. Some travel information and special discounts will also be offered to customers who make payments with Alipay.

The payment method will be supported in an initial batch of 200 physical stores this October, covering several popular chain merchants like Bic Camera, PARCO, duty free store Airport Trading, and Umikaji Terrace. Recruit Lifestyle expects to introduce Alipay to all the 176,000 Japanese merchants that are using its POS network by the end of this year, the announcement added.

Japan has become a top travel destination for Chinese tourist thanks to matured travel industry and weak Yen. According to Japanese government data, nearly 2.2 million Chinese people holidayed in Japan in 2014, doubling that of previous year.

Before making offline expansions in Japan, the Chinese payment tool has already made headway online through a partnerships with local e-commerce giants like Rakuten and Yahoo! Shopping Japan.

As a part of its global plan, Alipay is expanding quickly beyond its home market in mainland China to all main Asian markets including Korean, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, as well as European countries and Australia.

In addition to payment, it also offers a wide range of different services from selling local transportation cards, scenery tickets and tax refund services.

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Apple Opens Apple Music, iTunes Movies & iBooks To China https://technode.com/2015/09/30/apple-music-china/ https://technode.com/2015/09/30/apple-music-china/#respond Wed, 30 Sep 2015 05:12:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32950 China has often been left out by foreign internet giants when they are launching new services. Apple first debuted Apple Music this April, but China is dropped from the first batch of 100 countries open to Apple Music this June 30. But the American company has finally announced a delayed launch of Apple Music in China today. […]]]>
Apple-music

China has often been left out by foreign internet giants when they are launching new services. Apple first debuted Apple Music this April, but China is dropped from the first batch of 100 countries open to Apple Music this June 30.

But the American company has finally announced a delayed launch of Apple Music in China today. iTunes Movies and iBooks, two services that were also inaccessible in mainland China, have also opened to Chinese customers today.

Like the overseas version, Apple Music, the company’s music streaming service, is paid on a monthly fee and will offer the same three-month free trial period as to the rest of the world. Apple Music will cost 10 RMB ($1.57 USD) a month, or 15 RMB for a family plan providing service for up to six family members. The fees are quite a bit cheaper than their U.S. equivalents, which are priced at $9.99 USD and $14.99 USD per month, respectively.

iTunes movies start from 5 RMB ($0.79) for HD rentals, with which the fans can watch for an unlimited number of times within 30 days, and 18 RMB for HD purchases. While some of the books will be offered for free, iBooks start from 0.5 yuan (8 cents). The pricing for both iTunes movies and iBooks are on par with similar services in China.

Apple also made some serious endeavors in offering localized contents through partnership with Chinese music production companies, film producers like Bona Film Group, Huayi Brothers Media, and more than 20 Chinese publishers.

Apple2

The company noted in the announcement that Apple Music will be coming to Android phones this fall. The availability of more entertainment services in China is expected to match Chinese Apple Fan’s growing enthusiasm for its hardware.

“Customers in China love the App Store and have made it our largest market in the world for app downloads,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services. “One of the top requests has been more great content and we’re thrilled to bring music, movies and books to China, curated by a local team of experts,” he said.

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China’s Mobile Virtual Network Operators Suffer As License Deadline Looms https://technode.com/2015/09/30/growing-pains-chinas-nascent-mvnos/ https://technode.com/2015/09/30/growing-pains-chinas-nascent-mvnos/#respond Wed, 30 Sep 2015 01:22:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32909 Last week, Xiaomi launched their own carrier network, offering consumers a package deal with phones and a sim for a starting price of approximately $10 USD. While it may seem ambitious to take on the state telecommunication companies at the same game, the truth is that it’s part of a government plan to promote innovation […]]]>

Last week, Xiaomi launched their own carrier network, offering consumers a package deal with phones and a sim for a starting price of approximately $10 USD. While it may seem ambitious to take on the state telecommunication companies at the same game, the truth is that it’s part of a government plan to promote innovation and competition in the industry.

Chinese authorities issued pilot operation licenses to eleven ‘mobile virtual network operators’, or MVNOs, at the end of 2013 and has gradually increased the number of virtual carriers to 42.

Instead of having these carriers compete with the state however, they are merely buying bandwidth from the existing government telcos, and despite a concerted push to get the small players of the ground, the numbers don’t look good for most of the existing MVNOs. And at the end of the year it seems many will be shut down when the pilot licenses are reassessed.

As of present, China’s MVNOs have signed 11.23 million subscribers, which only account for 0.9% of the country’s total mobile users. The number of customers is expected to reach 20 million by the end of this year, a net growth of around 2 million users per month (representing 48% of the total increase). Although this growth rate is by no means slow, it still falls short of the government projection of 50 million users by 2015.

There is also a disparity among current players in the field. Currently, only 35 out of the 42 license-holding operators are running virtual network services, while less then 10 virtual carriers are recording user growth. Some of them have amassed millions of users, (Snail Mobile top the list with 3 million users) and others saw they add fewer than 10 users per month. At present, none are recording profits.

One barrier to user acquisition is high wholesale prices for mobile traffic. The mobile virtual operators, which offer their services by renting infrastructure from the country’s three major carriers, are being offered a wholesale traffic fee double or triple the standard retail price, says Zou Xueyong, head of China MVNO Industry Alliance.

Such a price difference has made it difficult for the MVNOs to create attractive offerings for China’s price-sensitive customers, despite their endeavors providing service packages with zero monthly fees and offering to transfer consumer’s unused monthly data traffic to the following month.

As the two-year pilot program is terminating at the end of this year, the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) is planning to assess the status of current MVNOs and the license of firms with a poor performance will be revoked. The MIIT has yet to form an assessment system, but key standards will include innovation, customization and availability of a professional team, says Xu.

Despite all obstacles, the MVNO sector is still attracting major players to the open market. Aside form Xiaomi, Chinese internet companies like JD, Alibaba and Net.cn have all moved into the industry, as the market valuation of a MVNO license reaches 100 million RMB ($16 million USD).

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VC Meetup: Connecting You With Reliable Investors At TechCrunch Beijing 2015 https://technode.com/2015/09/29/techcrunch-beijing-vcmeetup/ https://technode.com/2015/09/29/techcrunch-beijing-vcmeetup/#respond Tue, 29 Sep 2015 00:00:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32843 Entrepreneurs often find themselves racing against time, torn between their business and personal lives. Your product is being updated, team expanding, but what about your fundraising plans? VC Meetup, a session at this year’s TechCrunch Beijing International Summit, might be of your interest if you are still scrambling about from one venture capital institution to […]]]>

Entrepreneurs often find themselves racing against time, torn between their business and personal lives.

Your product is being updated, team expanding, but what about your fundraising plans? VC Meetup, a session at this year’s TechCrunch Beijing International Summit, might be of your interest if you are still scrambling about from one venture capital institution to another with your business plan.

Every entrepreneur has their own dreams. But when looking back, we only see the successes of star startups like DJI and Ele.me, rather than the bumpy roads they’ve encountered at the early entrepreneurial stages. All entrepreneurs know what it’s like to cool their heels while waiting for investors, who may finally sniff at your ideas.

VC Meetup is dedicated to taking all the hassle out of finding reliable investors by offering entrepreneurs the opportunities to meet a stack of VCs in a short period of time. At TechCrunch 2015’s International Summit in Beijing, every participant holding a 2-day or VC Meetup ticket gets the chance to have a 10 minute face-to-face chat with up to 36 different venture capitalists in a row during a six hour session.

Of course, we do not encourage simple replication of the same pitch. From mid-October, we will introduce the VCs that are going to participate in the session so that entrepreneurs can prepare your speeches and talks with specific investors beforehand.

Finally, I would offer a tip: your responses to some impromptu questions from investors depend on your adaptability skills on-site, be passionate, be interesting. Don’t expect your written pitch to do the work.

Time: 13:30-16:30 on Nov. 2nd and 3rd 

Venue: Wukesong Basketball Park, Hi-Park, Haidian District, Beijing

Form of Meeting:

Every entrepreneur can have face-to-face communication with venture capitalists for ten minutes.

Requirements for VCs:

Higher than the investment director level.

A focus on TMT fields.

Please apply by sending emails to jiaqing@technode.com

Application:

Entrepreneurs can participate in the session with the TechCrunch Beijing 2-day pass or VC Meetup ticket.

Please follow the volunteer and the direction board.

Sign up in here: http://tc-meetvc-en.eventdove.com

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Didi Kuaidi Steps Up Globalization With Investment In Indian Ridesharing App Ola https://technode.com/2015/09/28/didi-kuaidi-ola/ https://technode.com/2015/09/28/didi-kuaidi-ola/#comments Mon, 28 Sep 2015 06:42:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32854 Didi Kuaidi, Uber’s dominant Chinese rival, today confirmed it has made an investment in India’s top ride-hailing app Ola. The company joins a slew of Ola’s existing investors, including Falcon Edge, GIC, Tiger Global Management and Softbank in supporting the company’s continued expansion in India. The news comes from Didi Kuaidi, which did not specify the funding […]]]>

Didi Kuaidi, Uber’s dominant Chinese rival, today confirmed it has made an investment in India’s top ride-hailing app Ola. The company joins a slew of Ola’s existing investors, including Falcon Edge, GIC, Tiger Global Management and Softbank in supporting the company’s continued expansion in India.

The news comes from Didi Kuaidi, which did not specify the funding size. The investment is part of Ola’s latest fundraising goal, a $500 million USD at a valuation of approximately $5 billion USD.

It comes as Didi Kuaidi seals a series of new partnerships with both Chinese and global companies across different sectors, re-branding itself as a comprehensive mobile transportation platform this month.

As a part of its international ride-sharing collaboration program, Didi Kuaidi just inked a strategic investment and business partnership with Lyft, Uber’s arch-rival in the U.S. It also shares the same investment family as GrabTaxi, another leading taxi app in the Southeast Asian market. The investment in Ola adds a leg up to Didi Kuaidi in its competition against Uber as they grapple for market share beyond Chinese market.

Moreover, Didi Kuaidi’s global partnership is not only limited to its home turf in ride-sharing sector. The company just signed a deal with LinkedIn for a partnership covering product integration, technology, recruitment, and brand development. It is also in a partnership discussion with China’s food delivery service Ele.me.

Co-founded in 2011 in Mumbai by Bhavish Aggarwal and Ankit Bhati, Ola runs an internet-based platform that gives passengers access to taxis, leased cars and motorized rickshaws from PC and smartphone apps. Ola claims to be a leader in India’s ride-hailing business with a dominating 80% market share, processing 750,000 rides per day through a network of 320,000 cars across more than 100 cities.

Ola intends to fund its continued expansion across India with the new capital. The company recently announced a plan to invest $75 million USD in a new car leasing program, which is expected to add 10,000 additional drivers to its national network.

Image Credit: Ola

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Meet The Jury For TechCrunch 2015 Startup Competition: Batch I https://technode.com/2015/09/25/tcbj-startup-battlefield-1/ https://technode.com/2015/09/25/tcbj-startup-battlefield-1/#respond Fri, 25 Sep 2015 04:46:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32816 Though Hangzhou and Shenzhen are both evolving swiftly nowadays, Beijing is a tech hub that we could not neglect when talking about China’s startup scene. In the capital city, startups can not only find reliable partners and investors, but also keep up on what are the most trendy concepts in Chinese internet. All startups focused on red-hot sectors like O2O, Fintech and smart […]]]>
底图competition-01

Though Hangzhou and Shenzhen are both evolving swiftly nowadays, Beijing is a tech hub that we could not neglect when talking about China’s startup scene.

In the capital city, startups can not only find reliable partners and investors, but also keep up on what are the most trendy concepts in Chinese internet. All startups focused on red-hot sectors like O2O, Fintech and smart hardware consider Beijing as an important market.

Technode, as a tech media, also calls Beijing our base camp. That’s why we brought TechCrunch back to Beijing this November, where we aim to present an international stage for entrepreneurs to show off innovative ideas from Chinese internet industry to a broader audience.

What’s more, we are delighted to have you on-board for our Startup Competition, which is designed to discover and support outstanding programs. We hope that more startups will get the chance to show their innovation power in the future. To this goal, we have invited legendary investors from China’s top VCs to give their comments and guidance.

We want to discover the most innovative programs and teams in China, and support their further development.

Agenda:

  • Aug. 20 – Oct. 13 Online Application
  • Oct. 14 – Oct. 21 First Round
  • Oct. 22 – Nov. 1 Preparation (for Top 15)
  • Nov. 2 – Nov. 3 Final  Round

Competition System:

  • First Round: The judges all come from well-know institutions at home and abroad, and the judgement will be conducted according to the rule of overall ratings. Based on the average score of each team, top 15 of the total will step into the next round.
  • Semi-Final: Semi-final, in the form of Pitch, will be held at a parallel session of TechCrunch International Summit. Each team will have 7 minutes to present. Through jury assessment and backstage discussions, the top 5 will get their tickets to the Final.
  • Final: Resorting to a Pitch, each team will again get 7 minutes to present in the main venue. Six top VCs of China, through assessment and backstage discussion, will decide the top-3 winners of the competition.

Requirements for Startups:

  • Startups should be focused on TMT sector
  • Have NOT completed an “A” round investment yet.

Rewards:

  • Startups who sign up for the competition would get two tickets for TechCrunch Beijing.
  • Top-15 teams would have the chance to present your products onstage at TechCrunch Beijing.
  • Top-15 teams would receive evaluation from the bigwigs and pre-competition guide from the experts.
  • Top-15 teams would be interviewed specially by TechCrunch China and TechNode.
  • Top-15 teams would get a free booth in TechCrunch Beijing.

For more information and to apply for the Startup Competition visit http://tc.technode.com/en/competition/ and submit your application before Oct. 13. Without further ado, please enjoy the list of our judges.

Duane Kuang: Founding Managing Partner of Qiming Venture Partners and Governor of China Venture Capital Association

duane

Duane has over 20 years of IT industry operational and investment experience. He started his venture capital career since 1999. Prior to founding Qiming, Duane was the Director of Intel Capital China. During his 6 year tenure at Intel Capital, Duane had overall responsibilities for Intel Capital’s investment activities in China.

Prior to Intel Capital, Duane spent over 5 years at Cisco Systems in China, holding various senior management positions in the sales and marketing organizations. Before returning to China in 1994, Duane had a successful engineering and management career in both startup and large global companies in Silicon Valley.

Tony Su: Partner of Walden International

Tony

Walden International is a venture capital company focusing on smart hardware and semiconductor. As an investor Tony has 11 years experience of marketing management in electronic and semiconductor technology field (HuaWei, Semtech); 6 years in investing, dominated numerous programs such as Silergy, DJI, Shanghai Haier semiconductor, DFRobot, GDI, AirSmart System, How are you, MEMsensing and Solarpex etc.

Tony has rich experience of smart hardware and semiconductor investment, meanwhile he also has large number of industry resources.

Jacky Yao: Founding Partner of Seven Seas Partners

Jacky

Office 365 Chief Strategy Officer of Microsoft China 2013 to 2014; MSN Program Manager 2004 to 2007;

General Manager of Tencent Enterprise Products 2007 to 2013;

Project Manager of eComm at Bank of New York & Mellon 2000 to 2004;

Business Process Consultant at PriceWaterhouseCoopers 1999 to 2000.

Xiang Zhou: Managing Director of China Renaissance, Head of China Renaissance Alpha

zhou

Xiang Zhou started his career at China Renaissance, he has more than 6 years experience in working for China Renaissance. He used to be the vice president of Enterprise and Finance Group, and also took places in TMT group, consumer group and Investor Relationship Group.

During the period of working in China Renaissance, he was involved in lots of reorganizations and private placement deals, including ChinaCache, 21vianet, Ambow Education, 56.com, DianDiagnostics, Lefeng.com, Wacai.com, Fenqile.com, Zhaogang.com.

Kevin Wang: Managing Partner of Ameba Capital

Kevin

Ameba Capital was founded by Kevin Wang and Hong Zhao (former managing director of Finance and Treasury Department—Alibaba Group), Zhiguo Li (CEO of Wacai.com and former founder of Koubei.com) in 2011.

Ameba Fund focuses on inventing TMT companies which are in the early and growing stage. The interesting field of Ameba can be divided into O2O, e-business, online education and social network etc. He dominated the programs of Mogujie.com, Kuaidadi.com, Juesheng.com, Chuanke.com, tataUFO, Hotbody.com, Culture Media etc. Before Ameba Capital, Kevin was the executive director and CFO of Kingsoft.

Harry Wang

Harry

Early employee at Facebook and its 1st engineering manager from mainland China. Built the payment security team from scratch to process every payment transaction at Facebook Advisor to Dianping, Baixing, CSDN Master degree in Management Science and Engineering from Stanford Forbes China Columnist. Judge for Forbes China 30 under 30 in 2014 Author of book We Engineered Facebook.

This is just a part of our jury. The judge list to be continued…

For participators, register right now by click the link below:
http://tc.technode.com/en/competition/

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[Update] Alibaba’s YunOS-powered Smartwatch Pay Watch Hits Taobao Crowdfunding Marketplace https://technode.com/2015/09/25/alibaba-debuts-pay-watch-powered-yunos/ https://technode.com/2015/09/25/alibaba-debuts-pay-watch-powered-yunos/#respond Thu, 24 Sep 2015 18:32:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32763 As Apple Pay is finally looking to make inroads to China, Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba, a dominating player in China’s mobile payment sector through its payment affiliate Ant Financial, recently released a payment-focused smartwatch Pay Watch in partnership with Shenzhen-based manufacturer FiiSmart. “Designed and manufactured by FiiSmart, the watch operates on the new “YunOS for Wear” (an […]]]>

As Apple Pay is finally looking to make inroads to China, Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba, a dominating player in China’s mobile payment sector through its payment affiliate Ant Financial, recently released a payment-focused smartwatch Pay Watch in partnership with Shenzhen-based manufacturer FiiSmart.

“Designed and manufactured by FiiSmart, the watch operates on the new “YunOS for Wear” (an operating system) and supports Alipay payment, among many other functions. We are happy to partner with innovative companies who are devoted to adopting the latest technology to bring ultimate convenience to consumers.” said an Alibaba spokesman.

The new gadget sports a 1.63-inch AMOLED display and is powered by dual-core CPU with 4GB of storage. Other specs include Bluetooth, a built-in 300mAh battery that supports 45 hours of regular use and magnetic charging. Also notable, Pay Watch is the first smartwatch that is equipped with Alibaba’s customized Android system YunOS.

As its name suggests, Pay Watch focuses on mobile payment functions with support for Alipay, the payment method run by Ant Financial. This tie-up will effectively grant Pay Watch the wide offline payment networks that Alipay has established. As China’s most popular third-party payment service, Alipay supports payment at around 130,000 offline stores or restaurants, ranging from fast food brands like KFC to super market chains like Carrefour and Walmart.

Paywatch-2

Like on the Alipay app, wearers will be able to make payments by scanning QR codes that are generated by double-clicking the side button. The manufacturer added that transactions can be completed within one second even if there’s no internet connection.

Security is an indispensable part in mobile payment. An infrared sensor embedded will trigger screen lock once the watch is detached from wearer’s wrist.

Apart from mobile payments, it also features average smartwatch functions such as, health tracking, checking weather and receiving push notifications from smartphone.

The product launched a crowdfunding campaign on Alibaba’s Taobao crowd funding platform, offering four versions of Pay Watch at crowd funding prices starting from 699 RMB ($109 USD) or 899 RMB when they hit the market for real.

Mobile payment is becoming a must for smart wearables that want to stand out from the vast crowd of Chinese smart hardware manufacturers. Both Apple Watch and Mi Band have teamed up with Alipay. Shuashua, a near-field communication (NFC) smart bracelet developed by a Beijing startup, also supports transactions with bus and taxi services, as well as supermarkets, restaurants, cinemas and hospitals.

Image credit: Alibaba

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Tencent-backed Medical Service Guahao Wants To Take Chinese Hospitals Online https://technode.com/2015/09/25/guahao-series-c/ https://technode.com/2015/09/25/guahao-series-c/#respond Thu, 24 Sep 2015 18:29:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32792 You might have already heard horror stories about going to a hospital in China WITH chaotic management and long waiting queues. As a native Chinese, I can tell you that a large proportion of them are true. On the bright side, modern technologies, especially the emerging mobile health services, are now bringing great changes to how […]]]>

You might have already heard horror stories about going to a hospital in China WITH chaotic management and long waiting queues. As a native Chinese, I can tell you that a large proportion of them are true. On the bright side, modern technologies, especially the emerging mobile health services, are now bringing great changes to how Chinese patients get medical treatment.

Online medical service provider Guahao is one of the top players in this area. The company just revealed a $394 million USD Series C funding led by Hillhouse Capital and Goldman Sachs with participation of Fosun, Tencent and China Development Bank Capital. The massive round comes on heel of a $100 million USD investment led by Tencent last year.

Along with the funding news, Guahao announced a plan to re-brand the company as WeDoctor Group Limited, a new online healthcare entity incorporating three brands: website Guahao.com, mobile platform We Doctor, and We Doctor Accountable Care Organization, a family medical care management service.

Guahao started as an appointment scheduling site in 2010. It then gradually scaled up to a platform that now includes various medical-related services from online diagnosis and medical tips to rating hospitals and doctors.

As of August this year, the company claimed to have access to data from more than 1,600 hospitals in 25 provinces, registering north than 100 million verified users and 190,000 registered doctors.

The firm plans to invest $150 million USD ($94 million USD from current round and $56 million USD from reserved fund) to construct five regional surgical operation centers with excellent local medical institutions.

As online and mobile healthcare wave is gaining momentum in China, a handful of startups in this sector have pocketed large amounts of funding, such as DXY, ChunyuXingren Doctor, Quyi and Medlinker.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Disclaimer: At Technode we do our best to verify funding and user numbers, but we are sometimes unable to verify the internal figures of some Chinese startups.

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IoT Solution LifeSmart Grabs Nearly $10M To Smarten Your Home https://technode.com/2015/09/24/lifesmart-a-round/ https://technode.com/2015/09/24/lifesmart-a-round/#respond Wed, 23 Sep 2015 21:21:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32735 LifeSmart, an Internet of Things (IoT) and smart home solution provider, announced the closure of a 60 million RMB ($9.4 million USD) Series A funding from Haier SAIF, an IoT investment joint venture of Haier and SAIF Partners, and world’s leading electronics contract manufacturing company Foxconn. The company received 10 million RMB in angel investment last […]]]>

LifeSmart, an Internet of Things (IoT) and smart home solution provider, announced the closure of a 60 million RMB ($9.4 million USD) Series A funding from Haier SAIF, an IoT investment joint venture of Haier and SAIF Partners, and world’s leading electronics contract manufacturing company Foxconn. The company received 10 million RMB in angel investment last year.

The new funding is earmarked for R&D, recruitment, online marketing and branding, as well as stepping up global expansion, said Stephen Meng, co-founder of the company.

The Hangzhou-based startup launched a slew of smart home automation solutions and devices last year when the IoT trend was in full swing across the global tech circle. Its products include cameras, motion sensors, LED light bulbs, magic light strips and open/close sensors.

LifeSmart has set eyes on both domestic and overseas markets since its inception and feedbacks gained from the first batch of users have warranted insightful understandings of market distinctions.

To address the difference, LifeSmart rolled out some entry-level smart hardware in China to attract users in an emerging market with playful features and affordable prices. The marketing was mostly conducted online to go after young tech-savvy users who are in the habits of building their presence online. The newly launched Super Bowl, a $28 USD smart remote controller also functioning as night-light and smartphone charger, is a flagship product targeting at domestic market.

LifeSmart

LifeSmart Super Bowl

For more mature overseas markets in North America and Europe, the company offers products with more practical functions and the marketing channels are mostly offline. LifeSmart just rolled out Frame, a wireless smart camera designed by Beats designer Nick Cronan, to its foreign audiences. Meng disclosed that they have signed agreements with marketing agencies in the U.S., the U.K., Germany and Sweden.

LifeSmart is also seeking more growth points from business clients such as real estate developers and telecom carriers. It has entered partnership with real-estate developer Vanke, Jinmao, and telecom carriers like Sprint and China Unicom.

Image credit: LifeSmart

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Productivity Tool Teambition Raises $12 Million Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/09/22/teambition-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/09/22/teambition-series-b/#respond Tue, 22 Sep 2015 10:08:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32671 Teambition, a team collaboration platform, recently announced $12 million in series B funding led by Northern Light Venture Capital with participation of existing investors Gobi Partners, IDG and Vangoo Capital Partners. The Shanghai-based startup has secured a $5 million USD Series A round led by IDG at the end of last year. As a software as […]]]>

Teambition, a team collaboration platform, recently announced $12 million in series B funding led by Northern Light Venture Capital with participation of existing investors Gobi Partners, IDG and Vangoo Capital Partners. The Shanghai-based startup has secured a $5 million USD Series A round led by IDG at the end of last year.

As a software as a service (Saas) platform, Teambition is a maker of cloud-based project management tools, enabling users to collaborate on projects and share or edit documents in real time across departments, continents, and business applications. It’s available on the web and mobile in Chinese (simplified and traditional), English, Japanese, and Korean.

Amid the rise of 2B services, Teambition has recorded a surge in users with paid clients, increasing from less than ten at the beginning of this year to over 10,000 to date. The company disclosed its user base climbed by nearly 3.5 times since the latest round of financing. Mobile service is taking an increasingly larger share, accounting for nearly 50% of the total traffic.

Upon the new funding, the company plans to consolidate its fermium subscription model by providing free services to all collaboration features, and only charging on collaboration data for enterprise management. Furthermore, the firm is customizing its productivity tools according to the workflow and characteristics of different industry to fit into client demands.

Service teams have been set up in Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Chengdu and Hangzhou. In an attempt to expand overseas markets, it is also recruiting talents around the world including France, New Zealand, the U.S. and Japan.

P50409-133942

Teambition CEO Qi Junyuan

Teambition is among a series of successful projects founded by China’s rising post-90 entrepreneurs. The 24-year-old Qi headed the project in 2011 after founding an online healthcare community program. We interviewed him here, when Qi shared the philosophy behind Teambition.

Image credit: Teambition

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Chinese E-Takeaway Service Dianwoba Receives Funding From Alibaba’s Koubei https://technode.com/2015/09/21/diwnwoba-series-c/ https://technode.com/2015/09/21/diwnwoba-series-c/#respond Mon, 21 Sep 2015 12:15:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32616 Dianwoba, an online food and grocery delivery service, announced an undisclosed amount of Series C funding from Koubei, the local lifestyle services company jointly established by Alibaba Group and its finance affiliate Ant Financial earlier this year. The startup has received a $2 million USD series A funding from Gobi Partners in 2012 and eight-digit USD B series from SAIF […]]]>

Dianwoba, an online food and grocery delivery service, announced an undisclosed amount of Series C funding from Koubei, the local lifestyle services company jointly established by Alibaba Group and its finance affiliate Ant Financial earlier this year.

The startup has received a $2 million USD series A funding from Gobi Partners in 2012 and eight-digit USD B series from SAIF PartnersTelescope and Qiaojing Venture Capital in 2014.

Dianwoba, founded in 2009, was one of the earliest entrants to China’s booming online food delivery sector with widespread networks in Hangzhou and Shanghai. The Hangzhou-based team has teamed up with more than 2000 catering brands so far.

The firm is planning two major business shifts after this new funding announcement. Positioned as an O2O service provider and e-commerce enabler that offers fast and guaranteed delivery service at its inception, the firm choose to enter with a food takeout business since it was a more accessible sector for a startup back then.

As the delivery network matures, it is a no-brainer for the company to restore its initial goal for building a lifestyle service platform that include delivery services addressing more user demands, like helping customers to buy daily supplies.

Dianwoba also rolled out a short-distance delivery platform, Dianwoda, to tap the business customer market. This service will be supported by a logistic team consisting of both crowdsourced and in-house deliverers. The company disclosed that Dianwoda is now operating in more than 10 cities nationwide, including Shanghai, Hangzhou, Nanjing and Wuhan.

On the one hand, the tie-up will grant Dianwoba support from Alibaba-related services like Alipay and Taobao Mobile, on the other hand, the startup is complementing Koubei’s offline expansion. Aside from Alibaba’s homegrown restaurant booking and food ordering service Taodiandian and Koubei Waimai, Koubei recently poured 300 million RMB in Shenghuo Banjing (Life Radius), a Beijing-based O2O service provider and e-commerce enabler that offers same-day guaranteed delivery service for customers of local restaurants and shops.

From another perspective, it makes sense for O2O startups to tap more business lines after testing their delivery network with food takeout services first. China’s top food ordering site Ele.me, which just raised $630 million USD last month, is also in discussion with Didi Kuaidi to build an all-inclusive logistics network.

Image credit: Dianwoba

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China’s Craglist 58.com To Invest 100 O2O Startups: Here’s the List… So Far https://technode.com/2015/09/21/58-com-100-o2o-startup/ https://technode.com/2015/09/21/58-com-100-o2o-startup/#respond Sun, 20 Sep 2015 20:55:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32582 Chinese local listing site 58.com, which Tencent holds a stake in, is among the most active investor and acquirer of Chinese internet startups this year in an attempt to drive its O2O initiative. A total of $1.5 billion USD funding was injected in various projects since the beginning of this year, said 58.com Chief Strategy Officer Chen Xiaohua […]]]>

Chinese local listing site 58.com, which Tencent holds a stake in, is among the most active investor and acquirer of Chinese internet startups this year in an attempt to drive its O2O initiative.

A total of $1.5 billion USD funding was injected in various projects since the beginning of this year, said 58.com Chief Strategy Officer Chen Xiaohua to local media. Among these is 58.com’s merger with its arch-rival Ganji this April which terminated the decade-long battle between China’s two largest classified sites.

As O2O model gains momentum in China, 58.com’s O2O initiative continues to gain traction among local advertisers, and this has prompted the firm to expand footings in all O2O-related space. 58.com launched an ambitious plan to invest in 100 O2O startups.

Company CEO Yao Jinbo summed it up as a 4+N program, which primarily targets at four core businesses of transportation, real estate, on-demand services and recruitment. Startups focused on a wide category of different verticals will also be included in the company’s incubation and investment plan.

Here’s a roundup of 58.com’s O2O investments so far.

1. Transportation

  • 58.com purchased a 7.8% stake in eDaijia, a Beijing-based designated driver app connecting people who have consumed alcohol, with $20 million USD investment last year. Under the deal, 58.com’s designed driver business are integrated into eDaijia’s platform and the local listing site will not run similar services to avoid competition. The startup secured another $100 million USD Series D funding led by Warburg Pincus this May.
  • Guaguaxiche, a location-based car-washing service, secured $10 million USD of Series A funding from 58.com.
  • 58.com has fully acquired JXYDT, a driver’s training service.
  • 58.com has followed an undisclosed amount of Series A in peer-to-peer car sharing platform Baojia in March 2014. Instead of owning cars, Baojia creates a virtual fleet from car owners who list their cars on the car sharing platform and rent them out to nearby drivers. Yao Jinbo, CEO of 58.com is the angel investor of Baojia.
  • 273.cn, a second-hand car trading platform, landed eight-digit round B from IDG, Zheshang Holdings Jincheng and 58.com. The site has processed online trading of 240,000 cars in 2014 with an turnover of 15 billion RMB.
  • 58.com has brought this August a 70% stake in Leftbrain, a technology company that is listed on China’s National Equities and Exchange and Quotation with 100 million RMB. Leftbrain owns and operates AutoComment, a major automotive information website and service platform in China.

2. Home Decoration and Real Estate

  • 58.com has invested $34 million USD in home decoration service platform To8to for a minority stake. Launched in 2009, To8to is a third-party platform for customers, decoration companies, designers and construction material providers.
  • 58.com merged with Anjuke, a Chinese property site launched in 2007, through a $267 million USD acquisition in March this year. 58 Anjuke Property Group will be established to operate all real estate-related businesses of the two companies.

3. On-demand Services

  • Meidaojia, an on-demand beauty service that allow users to make appointments online, has booked eight-digit RMB funding from 58.com. Stated from Chengdu in 2014, Meidaojia has entered strategic partnership with L’Oreal, recruiting site Zhaopin and online dating site Jiayuan.
  • 58.com invested $5 million USD A round in Diandao, an O2O massage booking service. 58.com CEO Yao Jinbo is also the investor of Diandao.
  • 58.com has acquired an undisclosed stake in Lejia Yuesao, a maternity matron service platform which now operates under the brand of 50 Yuesao.

4. Recruitment

  • 58.com acquired recruitment website ChinaHR.com with 1 billion RMB in May this year. Founded in 1997, China HR was the first online recruiting website to target the middle and higher end job market in China. Its services include campus recruiting, headhunting, recruiting process outsourcing and online recruiting.
  • M91, a recruitment site, was wholly acquired by 58.com for an undisclosed sum.

Other deals include $10 million USD investment mobile social service Momo and strategic investment in after-school tutoring startup Laoshihao.

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Car Inc. Leads $550 Million B Round In Chauffeured Car Arm Shenzhou Zhuanche https://technode.com/2015/09/17/car-inc-shenzhou-zhuanche/ https://technode.com/2015/09/17/car-inc-shenzhou-zhuanche/#respond Thu, 17 Sep 2015 08:55:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32535 Hong Kong-listed car rental service CAR Inc. today announced that it has injected US$50 million in Series B funding of UCAR, the operator of its chauffeured car unit Shenzhou Zhuanche in exchange for 443,263 shares in the company. Following this deal, Car Inc. will hold approximately 9.9% of the total issued and outstanding shares of UCAR. Other […]]]>

Hong Kong-listed car rental service CAR Inc. today announced that it has injected US$50 million in Series B funding of UCAR, the operator of its chauffeured car unit Shenzhou Zhuanche in exchange for 443,263 shares in the company. Following this deal, Car Inc. will hold approximately 9.9% of the total issued and outstanding shares of UCAR.

Other investors, including Warburg Pincus affiliate Tourmaline Gem, Legend Capital-backed investment institution Harmony, Haode Investment and the company’s board chairman & CEO Lu Zhengyao, also participated this round and the total consideration including Car Inc.’s investment amounts to US$550 million.

The funding comes just one month a $250 million USD round led by Car Inc. with participation of Warburg Pincus and Legend Capital. Of this round, Car Inc. contributed $125 million USD for a 10% stake in UCAR.

UCAR is one of the largest chauffeured car service providers in China, covering 60 cities nationwide. Different from other competitors like Didi Chuxing (Didi Kuaidi) and Uber that relied on private cars and crowd-sourced drivers, Shenzhou Zhuanche’s services are offered through an in-house car fleet which granted the company legal status to run share-riding services.

As of the end of 2014, UCAR recorded a net assets of -36.20 million RMB (-$56.88 million USD) with net loss hitting 38.20 million RMB, according to data released by Car Inc.

Along with the news, Car Inc. revealed that its substantial shareholder Hertz Holdings Netherlands plans to sell down its stake to 13.6 per cent from 16.1 per cent. Hertz will sell almost 60 million of Car Inc shares to an unidentified independent third party at HK$13.01 per share.

China’s ride-sharing market has saw skyward funding rounds this month. Uber China has secured a $1.2 billion USD funding boost from Baidu on September 8, while its direct rival Didi Chuxing confirmed a $3 billion USD round in the same week.

Image Credit: Shenzhou Zhuanche

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China’s O2O Craze Expands On Campus https://technode.com/2015/09/17/chinas-o2o-craze-expands-on-campus/ https://technode.com/2015/09/17/chinas-o2o-craze-expands-on-campus/#respond Thu, 17 Sep 2015 08:52:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32441 Online-to-Offline (O2O) services have been all the rage in China as citizens are hunting for solutions to urban life. While the model is transforming all industries, Chinese tech startups are expanding the O2O craze to a particular demographic: university students. China has nearly 30 million university students now thanks to the enrollment expansion program launched […]]]>

Online-to-Offline (O2O) services have been all the rage in China as citizens are hunting for solutions to urban life. While the model is transforming all industries, Chinese tech startups are expanding the O2O craze to a particular demographic: university students.

China has nearly 30 million university students now thanks to the enrollment expansion program launched at the beginning of this century, according to a research by Shanghai Jiaotong University. The customer base creates a large and relative untapped market for all kinds of services from education, entertainment, e-commerce to social networking. However, it is not only the sheer market size that lured domestic companies.

Despite being stereotyped as broke penny-pinchers, the group has a considerable amount of spending power. Chinese students’ average annual spending stood at around 11,347 RMB (around $1,826 USD) in 2013. Furthermore, most current university students are post-1995-ers, a new generation born in the digital/mobile era, and more responsive internet-related services and willing to try new things. Accumulating potential customers early is another incentive for companies to deepen forays in this burgeoning vertical.

By a simple definition, O2O is anything digital which connects people to bricks-and-mortar businesses. Considering the special demands of university students, Chinese internet companies are tapping the sector from the following perspectives:

Lifestyle And Logistics

Entertainment, travel, food and logistics are where the O2O model started, and are still its primary focus on campus. The services penetrate every aspect of a student’s life from online food delivery (Ele.me, Meituan), online grocery marketplace (59store, Zhai.me) to logistics services (Xiaomai).

Online Finance Services

China’s student loan market is just one year old, but it has already witnessed the emergence of several leading players in the battlefield. The evolving market has attracted heavy-pocketed Chinese internet giants to jump onboard.

Qufenqi, a leader in the student micro-loan sector, has secured $200 USD investment led by Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Financial this August, only three months after its direct competitor Fenqile got backings from e-commerce site JD in March. As a step towards its financial transformation, China’s Facebook clone Renren launchsed launched its installment payment platform Renren Fenqi. Other emerging companies in this field include Aixuedai, Ufenqi and Aliwey.

However, the booming development of student loan industry also raised public worries of the risks of a high bad debt ratio and the sustainability of funding supply chains.

Part-Time Jobs

Part-time jobs constitute another important part of campus life, allowing students to earning extra money and gain social experiences. Leading startups in this sector include Jianzhimao and Tanlu.

Image Credit: ShutterStock

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Infant Care E-commerce Site Mia Scores $150 Million Series D https://technode.com/2015/09/17/mia-round-d/ https://technode.com/2015/09/17/mia-round-d/#comments Thu, 17 Sep 2015 08:45:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32518 Infant care online retailer Mia, formerly known as Miyabaobei, announced that it has received a $150 million USD series D funding led by Chinese search giant Baidu at a nearly $1 billion valuation. Other investors include existing backers of Sequoia Capital, H Capital and several unnamed U.S. private funds. The round will push the company’s total […]]]>

Infant care online retailer Mia, formerly known as Miyabaobei, announced that it has received a $150 million USD series D funding led by Chinese search giant Baidu at a nearly $1 billion valuation. Other investors include existing backers of Sequoia Capital, H Capital and several unnamed U.S. private funds.

The round will push the company’s total funding to north of $230 million USD, together with $60 million USD Series C, $20 million USD Series B and $1.6 million USD round A, which were received consecutively within the past two years.

Nobody would doubt China’s tech boom, but Chinese internet startups don’t exactly maintain the good reputation when it comes to truthfully estimating their valuation. To ease public doubts about authenticity of the figure, Mia CEO Liu Nan showed a screenshot of the company’s bank account to show that the numbers are real.

Mia-Funding

Mia, an online retailor specializes in items for infants, toddlers, and moms, was founded by mom entrepreneur Liu Nan in 2011 as a storefront on Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace. The company later began its own website and launched e-commerce apps in 2013 when its sales increased.

Liu believes that the domestic baby and maternity industry has great development potential as a sector that sits at the intersection of medical care and education, as well as retailing and service. The tie-up with the search giant will admit Mia access to Baidu’s big data which helps spot user demand and spending behaviors more accurately.

Local media has reported that Baidu management is in discussions about dipping their toes into the cross-border e-commerce sector. Mia’s business matches Baidu’s new ambition, it is expected that the two companies may have more cooperation in this direction.

A series of food safety scandals in China have triggered a demand from Chinese parents for imported baby products. The expanding market has in turn drawn large funding from investors. BabyTree, an online community for early care and education which also integrates an e-commerce business, secured over $300 million USD in funding this JulyBeibei, a direct competitor of Mia, raised a $100 million USD series C earlier this year.

Like Jumei, the Chinese cosmetic retailer which shifts to infant care sector by backing Baby Tree, Mia is also facing complaints from customers about fake products. The company disclosed that a part of the new funding is earmarked for improve user experience and global supply chains.

Image credit: Mia

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Tencent Rolls Out Connected Vehicle Platform To Smarten Your Cars https://technode.com/2015/09/15/tencent-iov/ https://technode.com/2015/09/15/tencent-iov/#respond Tue, 15 Sep 2015 09:30:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32421 While the Internet Of Things frenzy is in full swing in China, local tech giants are expanding their interests in connecting cars. Chinese internet giant Tencent unveiled its internet-of-vehicle (IoV) open platform Tencent Automotive Services yesterday with the launch of an IoV ROM, an IoV app as well as API MyCar. Powered by the Android system, the […]]]>

While the Internet Of Things frenzy is in full swing in China, local tech giants are expanding their interests in connecting cars.

Chinese internet giant Tencent unveiled its internet-of-vehicle (IoV) open platform Tencent Automotive Services yesterday with the launch of an IoV ROM, an IoV app as well as API MyCar.

Powered by the Android system, the new IoV ROM sports multiple smartphone-like capabilities, such as navigation, instant messaging, news, security services and weather applications. Tencent Map and Didi Chuxing provide navigation data to the system. Its WeChat and QQ integration allow speech input and real-time location sharing. The system, which is still under trial, is now compatible with some Volkswagen cars.

The IoV app is mainly designed for in-vehicle systems without internet access. After connecting your smartphone and car through USB or WiFi, users can browse all the information on Tencent’s infotainment platform via the on-board system. The app supports the connectivity protocol of Apple’s CarPlay and Android Auto, and a full range of car brands including Ford, BMW, and Mercedes.

MyCar enables car owners to monitor your vehicle on smartphone, share music and locations, and check car conditions.

The company emphasized that Tencent Automotive Service is an open platform providing a standardized access for segmented automotive systems by using its rich resources in content, social networking and security.

Tencent has been quite active in IoV sector since last year with the launch of IoV plug-and-play gadget Lubao Box and investment in mapping company NavInfo. Tencent-NavInfo cooperation also brought up WeDrive, a comprehensive IoV solution.

Researchers have released quite promising projections for China’s IoV potential, expecting the whole market size to hit 150 billion RMB ($23.55 billion USD) by 2015. It is estimated that 90% of the automobiles will have wireless-internet connectivity as of the end of 2020, a sign indicating that car will become another internet access point after the smartphone.

Along with the growth of China’s IoV dynamics, Chinese internet companies have started to explore the booming sector. Baidu launched an infotainment platform CarLife at the beginning of this year. Alibaba’s partnership with automaker SAIC Motor Corp gives its homegrown system YUN OS wider application to cars in line with the company’s attempt to expand beyond their e-commerce business. Chinese video company LeTV also released a custom OS for the company’s electric car project unveiled last year.

Image credit: Sohu Tech

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Tencent Opens New Film Production Arm As Internet Giants Race To Entertain https://technode.com/2015/09/14/tencent-entertainment/ https://technode.com/2015/09/14/tencent-entertainment/#comments Mon, 14 Sep 2015 09:26:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32387 Chinese online giant Tencent just announced that it is setting up Penguin Pictures, a film production arm for online drama production, investment in films and development of its own pool of artists. The company plans to make minority investments in some 10-15 movies per year. Tencent has already accelerated expansion into China’s booming film production industry through investments in […]]]>

Chinese online giant Tencent just announced that it is setting up Penguin Pictures, a film production arm for online drama production, investment in films and development of its own pool of artists.

The company plans to make minority investments in some 10-15 movies per year. Tencent has already accelerated expansion into China’s booming film production industry through investments in a series of blockbusters since last year, including local box office champion Monster Hunt. The combined box office revenues of films that Tencent has invested in reportedly reached 4.5 billion RMB ($706 million USD).

At the same time, the tech giant revealed a launch schedule for eight self-producted online shows, including one adapted from online literature bestseller ‘Ghost Blows Out the Light’.

To challenge public impression that online shows are low-quality, the company has had a bevy of talented directors and producers come on board, and the budget of each episode is no less than 5 million RMB, according to Fang Fang, an executive of the firm.

Online drama, especially those adapted from best-selling novels, are becoming increasingly popular among China’s younger generation with small-budget productions hitting billions of clicks.

It is interesting to note that Tencent has sent invitations to local media for a launch event on Sept. 17 for Tencent Pictures, a similar entertainment spin-off from Tencent Interactive Entertainment Group, a comprehensive entertainment branch of the internet behemoth.

Establishing two teams or subsidiaries focused on similar products is a typical move for Tencent’s brutal internal competition. It has appeared more than once that Tencent teams from different departments develop products in the same class at the same time.

One successful case of this tactic (that the Tencent CEO is very proud of) was their three concurrent WeChat development teams. The one who published their product and captured the market first won out. Of course, the company only applies this tactic to products that they considered to have strategic importance.

But a company insider also disclosed that Tencent Pictures will have a wider focus on gaming, animation, literature and film & TV sectors, citing a report from Sina Tech.

As two major rivals of Alibaba and Baidu are making inroads into entertainment sector, it is not surprising for us to see that Tencent is also following the trend. As one of the biggest online book publishers in China, it has rich IP resources to capitalize on, furthermore, Tencent is also the investor of Huayi Brothers, China’s Wanrer Bros.

China’s total box office revenue has hit 30.09 billion RMB as of September 5 this year, soaring 48.04% YOY, according to official data released by China’s press and publication watchdog. The rapid market growth has attracted Chinese internet giants to join this booming industry with advantages in capital support, platforms, promotion channels and contents.

Related Articles:

Alibaba’s Aggressive Expansion to Media and Entertainment [Updated]

China’s Tech Giants Taking On the Domestic Entertainment Industry

Alibaba Goes Hollywood: Invests In Paramount’s ‘Mission Impossible’

Image credit: Tencent

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Baidu Injects $40 Million Into Mobile Health Startup Quyi https://technode.com/2015/09/11/baidu-quyi/ https://technode.com/2015/09/11/baidu-quyi/#respond Fri, 11 Sep 2015 08:57:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32350 Chinese mobile healthcare service Quyi announced that it has secured $40 million USD in Series B funding led by Baidu with participation of existing investors of HighLight Capital and SB China Capital. The company received a $8.5 million USD A round was received in September last year. Founded in May 2015, Quyi is the developer of medical apps […]]]>

Chinese mobile healthcare service Quyi announced that it has secured $40 million USD in Series B funding led by Baidu with participation of existing investors of HighLight Capital and SB China Capital. The company received a $8.5 million USD A round was received in September last year.

Founded in May 2015, Quyi is the developer of medical apps designed to shake up China’s medical sector. The Shanghai-based startup has developed three services that target at the core links in the industry.

Its flagship product Quyiyuan aims to improve the patient’s clinical experience by providing all kinds of related services from scheduling appointments, checking diagnosis reports, to making payments.

Quyi Hospital is a telemedicine system bringing together doctors to patients on mobile or in far-flung areas. The company is planning to roll out a new product to connect medical institutions and medical instrument manufacturers.

All of Qiyi’s apps are constructed on the company’s comprehensive information platform, which is supported by patient data collected from Quyiyuan and has deep integration with the systems of partner hospitals. The company claims to have more than 1000 public hospitals on board and expects the number to reach 2000 by the end of this year.

This tie-up will enable Quyi to gain more technical support from the Chinese internet giants in terms of big data, web security and cloud technology. Baidu has entered mobile heath industry with healthcare program “Beijing Health Cloud” and mobile app Baidu Doctor.

Related Articles:

Tencent Invests $40M USD In Medlinker To Help Doctors Communicate

Tencent Leads US$100M Investment in Chinese Medical Service Guahao[Updated]

Chinese Medtech Trends to Watch in 2015

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Russian Internet Giant Yandex Opens Shanghai Office, Helping Chinese Merchants Tap Russian Market https://technode.com/2015/09/11/yandex-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2015/09/11/yandex-shanghai/#respond Fri, 11 Sep 2015 05:20:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32315 David Tsai, Head of Yandex Greater China, at Yandex Office As the political relationship between China and Russia warms up, trading between the two powerhouses is taking a sweet turn. China is now Russia’s largest trading partner, with their annual import-export volume hitting more than $88 billion USD in 2014. The booming cross-border trade sector […]]]>

David Tsai, Head of Yandex Greater China, at Yandex Office

As the political relationship between China and Russia warms up, trading between the two powerhouses is taking a sweet turn.

China is now Russia’s largest trading partner, with their annual import-export volume hitting more than $88 billion USD in 2014. The booming cross-border trade sector has fostered huge business potentials for merchants from both of the countries, and internet giants are poised to capitalize this wave.

Confirming our earlier report, Russia’s internet conglomerate Yandex announced the official launch of its Shanghai office and a Chinese ad marketing platform, aiming to provide a one-stop service for Chinese companies who want to explore the Russian market. This is the first time Yandex has set up an official office in Asia.

“In 2014, more than $2 billion USD worth of China-Russia cross-border trade was processed online, accounting for nearly half of the total volume,”said Daivid Tsai, Manager of Yandex’s Greater China operations.

“More and more companies started to realize the importance of internet technology in helping them to gain access to potential customers. This change has in turn pushed the growth of online ad business and that’s the main reason why Yandex decided to bring our service closer to Chinese clients.”

In addition to search functions and a number of popular internet-related services, Yandex is also Russia’s dominate online ad platform, claiming to have a 96% coverage capability of Russia’s total 80 million internet users. Yandex has already helped several Chinese companies entering Russian market, including Chinese B2C e-commerce site Lightinthebox and biological technology company ZKTeco, Tsai noted.

The new Shanghai Office is primarily focused on offering three solutions for Chinese clients:

Yandex Direct: an automated, auction-based system for the placement of text-based advertising.

Yandex Market: a B2C platform that provides users with an easy to use system to select a product and a place to buy it, compare models and prices, find out more detailed information about a product, read reviews. More than 18,000 active online and “brick-and-mortar” retailers can be found on Yandex Market.

Yandex Money: Russia’s top online payment service, registering over 76,000 businesses users.

As Chinese companies, big and small, are trying to explore the global market, they are also creating a huge new market for advertising. Russian social networking site VKontakte also opened a marketing branch in Beijing last year. Facebook, Twitter and Google have run similar operations, delving into outbound marketing opportunities despite the fact their services are inaccessible in mainland China.

Related Articles:

Russia’s Largest Search Engine Yandex To Open Shanghai Office

Russian Social Networking Site VKontakte Eyes Chinese Ad Market

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Image credit: Yandex

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Xiaomi Invests $15 Million In Online Brokerage Startup Tiger Brokers https://technode.com/2015/09/10/xiaomi-inroads-online-finance-sector-15m-usd-investment-tiger-brokers/ https://technode.com/2015/09/10/xiaomi-inroads-online-finance-sector-15m-usd-investment-tiger-brokers/#respond Thu, 10 Sep 2015 03:50:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32288 China has the world’s second biggest equity market behind the U.S., but the large market is extremely volatile. As the recent stock plunge rattles traders, as many as 500,000 Chinese investors are looking to invest their money in the U.S. stock market. To tap into this market, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has injected over 100 million yuan ($15.6 million […]]]>

China has the world’s second biggest equity market behind the U.S., but the large market is extremely volatile. As the recent stock plunge rattles traders, as many as 500,000 Chinese investors are looking to invest their money in the U.S. stock market.

To tap into this market, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has injected over 100 million yuan ($15.6 million USD) series A into an online brokerage startup Tiger Brokers.

Tiger Brokers is the developer of a web securities and stock transaction system that provides internet brokerage business for US and Hong Kong stocks as well as stocks in China’s A-share market. Its app, ‘Tiger for US Stocks’, is characterized by a Chinese interface and supports multiple handy features like one-click short selling.

This is the largest funding boost the company has received so far. They have recieved previous financing from more than 20 strategic investors include Greenwoods Investment, ZhenFund, China Renaissance K2 Ventures, and Wang Xing, founder of group-buying site Meituan.

As China’s internet finance industry boom continues, online stock brokerage business is potentially a hot up and coming sector. Tiger Brokers’ internet background matches Xiaomi’s ambition in online financing platforms, through which the smartphone maker may capitalize on its huge user base and maturing brand ecosystem.

Over the past few years, Xiaomi has been making big strides into online finance with investments into P2P lending site Jimu Box and online financial service Caogentouzi, as well as launching their own money market fund.

Related Articles:

Xiaomi Leads $37M Investment in Chinese Peer-to-peer Lending Site JimuBox

Xiaomi Launches A Money Market Fund, Pushing Further Into Online Financing

Fintech Trends in China to Watch in 2015

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Business Intelligence Service Baifendian Lands $63M USD Led By Everbright Securities https://technode.com/2015/09/09/baifendian-round-d/ https://technode.com/2015/09/09/baifendian-round-d/#respond Wed, 09 Sep 2015 08:15:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32255 Baifendian, a big data-based recommendation provider, revealed that it has secured 400 million RMB ($62.67 million USD) in series D funding led by Everbright Securities, pushing the startup’s total financing to around $105 million USD. Previous investors include IDG Capital Partners, East Sky Investment and Mingxin China Growth Fund. The funding received this time will be used […]]]>

Baifendian, a big data-based recommendation provider, revealed that it has secured 400 million RMB ($62.67 million USD) in series D funding led by Everbright Securities, pushing the startup’s total financing to around $105 million USD. Previous investors include IDG Capital Partners, East Sky Investment and Mingxin China Growth Fund.

The funding received this time will be used to improve product and technology, talent recruitment, marketing and infrastructures, said Su Meng, board chairman of the company.

Along with the funding news, Baifendian launched BD-OS, a platform that should make getting started with big data analysis and visualization quite easier for enterprises.

Founded in 2009, Baifendian is a Chinese recommendation engine specializes in analyzing customer’s preference, providing integrated optimization solutions for enterprises through in-site traffic conversion and business intelligence analysis.

The company now provides services to more than 2,000 enterprises clients include Huawei, TCL, Yihaodian.com, China Telecom, covering the fields of manufacturing, finance, e-commerce and telecom.

Baifendian recently stroked a strategic partnership with HP to integrate BD-OS into HP’s existing big data solution.

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Image credit: Baifendian

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Baidu Unveils Siri-Like Service ‘Duer’ To Chinese Market https://technode.com/2015/09/08/baidu-duer/ https://technode.com/2015/09/08/baidu-duer/#respond Tue, 08 Sep 2015 13:41:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32196 China’s top search engine Baidu has announced a new Siri-like project called Duer at its annual corporate conference today. The new feature will be added to the 6.8 update of Baidu’s mobile app. Duer is a voice-enabled virtual assistant that helps users with a range of commands. Different from cutie chatbots available on the market, Duer is positioned as […]]]>

China’s top search engine Baidu has announced a new Siri-like project called Duer at its annual corporate conference today. The new feature will be added to the 6.8 update of Baidu’s mobile app.

Duer is a voice-enabled virtual assistant that helps users with a range of commands. Different from cutie chatbots available on the market, Duer is positioned as a professional searching service power-packed with multiple practical functions, said Baidu’s CEO Robin Li.

The CEO summed up the new projects features in three element; accessibility to services across a wide range of industries, a powerful search engine supported by data mining technology and smart human-machine interaction.

“Supported by our search engine and big data technology, Duer is going to bridge the information gap between customers and merchants. The elimination of this gap is going to facilitate users and bring more traffic to businesses,” said Robin.

Over the past year, Baidu has made concerted efforts to develop a service ecosystem that covers nearly every aspect of our lives from travel, restaurants reservation, transportation, education and medical care.

Duer

Duer now provides a personalized assistant service under three scenarios for selecting restaurants, films and pets-related services with deep integration from Baidu Maps and Baidu’s group-buying service Nuomi. It will soon expand to more fields, including beauty services, driving services, education, healthcare and finance.

Although Duer debuted as a feature embedded in Baidu’s mobile app, the search engine is opening the service to its partners in the future, helping them to enhance user experience. The company is also considering the possibility of developing an independent app or making a Duer robot.

The project is one of the first to come out of Baidu Brain, an artificial intelligence project that is led by ex-Google Brain head Andrew Ng.

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Chumenwenwen: Mobile Voice Search Application Aimed at Chinese Market

Image credit: Baidu

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[Update] Qihoo 360 Breaks Up With Coolpad, Exercising $1.49 Billion Put Option On Qiku Joint Venture https://technode.com/2015/09/08/qihoo-360-breaks-coolpad/ https://technode.com/2015/09/08/qihoo-360-breaks-coolpad/#respond Tue, 08 Sep 2015 13:20:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32220 Qihoo 360 today announced that it has issued a notice to smartphone maker Coolpad to exercise its put option, requiring the latter to purchase Qihoo’s entire 49.5% stake in Coolpad E-Commerce, a joint venture between the two which is also the parent company of Coolpad’s sub-brand Dashen and Qihoo-backed smartphone brand Qiku. [Update] Qihoo 360 and Coolpad […]]]>

Qihoo 360 today announced that it has issued a notice to smartphone maker Coolpad to exercise its put option, requiring the latter to purchase Qihoo’s entire 49.5% stake in Coolpad E-Commerce, a joint venture between the two which is also the parent company of Coolpad’s sub-brand Dashen and Qihoo-backed smartphone brand Qiku.

[Update] Qihoo 360 and Coolpad has just reached an agreement on Sept. 18 that the former will raise its stake in the joint venture to 75%, while the rest is hold by Coolpad.

According to an official statement from Qihoo, the company has a put option to sell its entire stake in the joint venture to Coolpad at a total price equal to twice its fair market value, exercisable if Coolpad breaches its non-compete obligations under the shareholders agreement.

The company also proposed a fair market value of $742.5 million USD for the 49.5% stake, based on a US$1.5 billion valuation of the entire share capital of the joint venture. Accordingly, the purchase price payable by Coolpad would be $1.485 billion USD.

The start of this messy breakup can be traced back to Dec. 2014, when the two firms set up a joint venture to focus on mobile terminal products distributed through Internet channels. Qihoo has invested $409.05 million USD for a 45% stake in joint venture and then increased its stake to 49.5% gradually.

Six months later, however, Qihoo has seen its partner turning favor toward a direct competitor LeTV, which became the second largest shareholder of Coolpad by purchasing an 18 percent stake in the company.

Qihoo claimed the agreement with Coolpad specified that Qiku will oversee smartphone production and Coolpad will be responsible for sharing resources in retailing channels and cooperation with telecom carriers. Yet, Coolpad circumvented the agreement through partnership with LeTV and give its competitor access to Qiku’s IP and research capabilities.

Coolpad’s partnership with LeTV have enraged Zhou who responded the news with a resentful WeChat status “Whoever stabbed me in the back to screw me up, my principle is that I will definitely fuck back.”

Several elements have soured the once sweet cooperation between Qihoo and Coolpad. The joint venture started with a dual-brand strategy to focus on different user groups—Dashen on 1,000 RMB budget smartphone market and Qiku on mid-and high-tier markets.

But the two partners are going separate ways as Zhou Hongyi, the CEO of Qihoo, gives more priority to businesses related to Qiku smartphone and Coolpad’s team for Dashen. Although Coolpad is still the controlling shareholder of the joint venture, Qihoo is seeking ways to become the largest shareholding through various means, according to a people close to the matter.

Qihoo responded that they did not excise the option immediately after Coolpad-LeTV tie-up in hopes that further negotiation may settle the matter. But months of talk wasn’t quite productive.

If Coolpad refuses to purchase 49.5% stake, it is highly possible that Qihoo may offer to acquire the remaining stakes in the joint venture. The issuance of this notice might help Qihoo to extract better bargains.

Related Articles:

Qihoo 360 Forms JV with Chinese Smartphone Maker Coolpad

LeTV Becomes Second Largest Shareholder of Coolpad With $350M USD Investment

Qihoo-Backed Qiku Elbows Into The China Smartphone Race

image credit: Sohu

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Tencent Invests $40M USD In Medlinker To Help Doctors Communicate https://technode.com/2015/09/08/tencent-leads-40m-usd-series-b-medlinker-consolidate-medtech-layout/ https://technode.com/2015/09/08/tencent-leads-40m-usd-series-b-medlinker-consolidate-medtech-layout/#respond Mon, 07 Sep 2015 23:35:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32140 Chinese tech giant Tencent is moving another step further in line with its forays into medtech sector by leading a $40 million USD Series B in online healthcare service Medlinker. FY Capital also participated in the round. Medlinker is a China-focussed mobile platform that allows physicians to social network and communicate with each other. Doctors on […]]]>

Chinese tech giant Tencent is moving another step further in line with its forays into medtech sector by leading a $40 million USD Series B in online healthcare service Medlinker. FY Capital also participated in the round.

Medlinker is a China-focussed mobile platform that allows physicians to social network and communicate with each other. Doctors on the platform can find contacts of each other and discuss treatment measures for specific cases. In its latest update, the app added a WeChat-like group-chat feature to facilitate communication among users. While the concept of private tech companies facilitating basic medical services may seem foreign in other countries, China’s health system is often critically underfunded and disjointed.

Medlink users have to register with their real name to ensure the professionality of the platform. Personal information like contacts, hospitals they are working in and job titles are required in the registration process.

Founded in 2014, Medlink’s development is quite impressive for a startup that was established less than one year ago. The company has 200 staff with a core team from both tech and medical backgrounds. The platform now claims to have 100,000 registered users.

The new funding will go primarily into consolidating its online business, aiming to increase the users base from 400,000 to 500,000, according to the company founder and CEO Wang Shirui. He added that the firm is also integrating office productivity features in an attempt to expand beyond the social networking sector.

The company’s existing inventors include Sequoia Capital China, Ce Yuan Ventures and PreAngel. The Chengdu-based startup is moving its operation and core team to Beijing in pursuit of talent, said Wang, but he added the R&D team would remain at Chengdu.

Tencent has made big moves in the online healthcare sector with two hefty investments in health service community DXY and Guahao last year.

Tencent’s arch-rival Alibaba Group has made early inroads into this sector with a series of moves including the acquisition of CITIC 21CN to control drug-data, launching the drug authenticity plan, the future hospital plan, and supporting Alipay Wallet mobile payment in pharmacies. Baidu also lay out in the field with healthcare program “Beijing Health Cloud” and mobile app Baidu Doctor.

Related Articles:

Tencent Injects US$70M in Health Service Community DXY to Tap China’s Red-Hot Healthcare Industry

Tencent Leads US$100M Investment in Chinese Medical Service Guahao[Updated]

Chinese Medtech Trends to Watch in 2015

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Ant Financial Inks Strategic Investment From China Post To Boost Offline Expansion https://technode.com/2015/09/07/alibabas-china-post/ https://technode.com/2015/09/07/alibabas-china-post/#respond Sun, 06 Sep 2015 21:13:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32093 Alibaba’s internet financial affiliate Ant Financial has sealed a private investment deal from China Post Capital, the state-owned investment institution of postal service China Post Group Corp., making them the second largest strategic shareholder in Ant Financial. The two parties already began a strategic partnership last June. The investment comes after an undisclosed amount of A round led by […]]]>

Alibaba’s internet financial affiliate Ant Financial has sealed a private investment deal from China Post Capital, the state-owned investment institution of postal service China Post Group Corp., making them the second largest strategic shareholder in Ant Financial. The two parties already began a strategic partnership last June.

The investment comes after an undisclosed amount of A round led by China’s National Social Security Fund (NSSF), a deal which valued the Alibaba spin-off at $45-$50 billion USD. The social security fund holds a 5% stake in Ant Financial.

Ant Financial operates a series of financial businesses ranging from the country’s most popular payment service Alipay, mutual fund service Yu’e Bao to online credit scoring service Sesame Credit. It has also received the license to run an internet bank, Mybank, which can issue limited loans.

One of the reasons the investment is so valuable is that it may tighten the alliance between Ant Financial and Postal Savings Bank of China (PSBC), the wholly-owned commercial bank of China Post Group Corp. As China’s largest bank by outlets, PSBC has 40,000 branches around the country, offering micro-credit to China’s underserved small businesses and individual borrowers.

The vast offline resources of PSBC, especially in towns and villages, is expected to facilitate Ant Financial’s rural expansion in its attempt to shake up China’s conservative finance sector.

The two companies are also in discussion on cooperation between China Post and Alibaba Group as well as wider applications for Alibaba’s Cainiao logistic system in rural areas.

PSBC is reportedly preparing for an IPO next year, which could raise around $25 billion – the record for an IPO set last year by Alibaba Group. Ant Financial, Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and French bank BNP Paribas and several U.S. PE institutions are reportedly among the preliminary bidders for PSBC’s pre-IPO stake.

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Alibaba and Tencent to Launch Consumer Credit Rating Services

image credit: iHeima

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Hong Kong Startup Lamplight Wants To Analyse Social Media In Asia https://technode.com/2015/09/02/lamplight-seed-round/ https://technode.com/2015/09/02/lamplight-seed-round/#respond Wed, 02 Sep 2015 09:56:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=32048 Asia has the world’s fastest growing population of social media users, which also makes it a difficult market to navigate. As regional social media sites fold, new giants rise up to take their place, often in a completely different medium or format. For those looking to tap into burgeoning social media communities for commercial purposes, this poses […]]]>

Asia has the world’s fastest growing population of social media users, which also makes it a difficult market to navigate.

As regional social media sites fold, new giants rise up to take their place, often in a completely different medium or format. For those looking to tap into burgeoning social media communities for commercial purposes, this poses a challenge. It’s a challenge that Hong Kong-based startup Lamplight Analytics wants to tackle head on.

“The days of ‘Weibo and WeChat in China, Facebook and Twitter everywhere else are long gone if they ever really existed at all,” Lamplight COO Fergus Clarke told Technode. “Indonesia is a good example for this. Jakarta is the biggest city globally for Twitter, while WeChat’s user base is growing at something like 900%.”

The Hong Kong-based startup recently completed a seed funding round of $1.49 million USD, led by venture capital fund Vectr Ventures. Other participants in the investment round included local and international firms, as well as private money.

Clarke and other two co-founders, CEO Sam Olsen and CTO Nathan Pacey launched the company in 2014, after their experience in Asia revealed a lack of specialized tools designed to navigate Asia’s social media landscape. The startup now run by a team of 15 staff and is working with numerous multinational and regional clients.

Lamplight says the new capital is earmarked to develop its proprietary technology, the machine-learning algorithms that drive the platform.

Social-marketing-analytics-startup-Lamplight-hopes-to-go-viral-with-1.5M-seed-funding

To address the complexity of social media analysis in Asian market, Lamplight tools stem from language, culture and geography, among other factors. The platform now supports several languages from English, Cantonese, Mandarin, Japanese, Korean, Malay and Bahasa Indonesia.

“First and foremost we don’t believe it’s possible to truly understand social media behaviour without being based in the region. Platforms, vernacular and user behaviour are ever evolving and only by being on the ground is it possible to keep pace with this.”

“Our technology is essentially about machines understanding human emotions. Of course this starts with deriving meaning from social media posts using natural language processing that is specific to each language but over the coming months we’ll be rolling out even more advanced additions.” Clarke said.

“We’re different from our competitors in that we’re not trying to sell social advertising or CRM platforms. We deliver insight into our clients’ audiences and performance insights to support marketing optimization.”

In response to their plans for the Chinese market, Clarke said “China is a very important market but we are helping our clients on a regional basis.”

A study by global market research and consultancy MarketsAndMarkets shows the social marketing analytics sector has a projected worth of at least $2.75 billion USD by 2019, growing at 35% a year, with Asia second only to North America in terms of market size.

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37degree: Data-backed Social Media Management Service

Image Credit: Lamplight

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Social CRM Service Social Touch Receives $58M USD Strategic Investment From Legend Holdings https://technode.com/2015/09/01/lenovo-social-touch/ https://technode.com/2015/09/01/lenovo-social-touch/#respond Tue, 01 Sep 2015 12:24:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31979 China’s mobile social CRM service provider Social Touch announces it has landed $456 million HKD ($58.8 million USD) of Series D financing from Legend Holdings, the parent company of Lenovo, in exchange for an undisclosed share. The startup has snagged tens of millions dollars in Series C led by Sierra Ventures and followed by existing investors of Legend Capital and GGV Capital. With the […]]]>

China’s mobile social CRM service provider Social Touch announces it has landed $456 million HKD ($58.8 million USD) of Series D financing from Legend Holdings, the parent company of Lenovo, in exchange for an undisclosed share.

The startup has snagged tens of millions dollars in Series C led by Sierra Ventures and followed by existing investors of Legend Capital and GGV Capital. With the new financing, the company is going to increase investments in technology development, mobile advertising and consulting services.

Founded in 2011, Social Touch offers social media services that enable enterprises to create, manage and track social campaigns on Chinese social networks like Weibo and WeiChat.

The company now has four main product lines for marketing strategy and execution services, native advertising solutions, mobile marketing management software, data management and analytics for mobile marketing services.

Social Touch now has more than 700 staff who provides service to over 100 large enterprise customers — including P&G, Dell, Huawei, and around 1,000 medium-sized enterprises.

Mobile internet-related startups have been a major investment focus of Legend Holdings in recent years. The company expressed that the huge potentials in upending traditional marketing services and Social Touch’s excellent are the two main motivations for backing the startup.

China’s nearly 650 million internet users are spending more time online, creating an active environment for social media. This appetite for all things social has spawned an array of companies to capitalize on the growing market, including Kmsocial, 37degree, Vmaibo and WeiboReach.

Related Articles:

Social Touch, A Social Media Management Service, Announced Tens Of Millions Of Dollars In Series C Financing

Social Media Marketing Service Kmsocial Raises Series B Funding Led by Fosun

37degree: Data-backed Social Media Management Service

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Gizwits Lands $200M USD To Ride The IOT Wave In China https://technode.com/2015/08/31/gizwits-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/08/31/gizwits-series-b/#respond Mon, 31 Aug 2015 09:32:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31960 Gizwits, a Chinese Internet-of-Things solution provider, announced today that it has secured $200 million USD in Series B financing from Jiuren Capital and Matrix Partners China. The company raised multi-million dollar funding from Matrix Partners China in August last year. Founded in 2010 as a projected working on Bluetooth-connected toys, Gizwits was officially launched early 2014 […]]]>

Gizwits, a Chinese Internet-of-Things solution provider, announced today that it has secured $200 million USD in Series B financing from Jiuren Capital and Matrix Partners China. The company raised multi-million dollar funding from Matrix Partners China in August last year.

Founded in 2010 as a projected working on Bluetooth-connected toys, Gizwits was officially launched early 2014 as an IoT platform that connects home appliances and consumer electronics products to the internet and smartphones.

It provides IoT developers with data analytics modules as well as IoT management tools such as remote access, notification, and Over the Air (OTA) firmware upgrades. As an open source platform, Gizwits provides developers API access to create new applications to further enhance their connected products.

GizWis now supports some 3 million smart home devices or wearables as of June this year, according to data released by the company.

The new funding will be injected to improve the functions and compatibility of its software development platform to enable more efficient IOT software development and expedites the process of building connected products. In the meanwhile, the company plans to construct an IOT ecosystem which connects the upper and lower links of the industry.

China’s IOT sector has brought about a series of smart hardware platforms backed by internet giants like Alibaba, JD, and Tencent. On the other hand, lots of third-party solution providers are also swarming into the sector.

Related Articles:

Chinese IoT Solution Provider Gizwits Launches a Self-service Development Platform

China’s Smart Hardware Platforms (So Far)

Riding the Internet-of-Things Trends, Solution Providers Emerge in China

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China’s Top Food Ordering Ele.me Eats Up Landmark $630M USD Funding At $3B USD Valuation https://technode.com/2015/08/31/chinas-top-food-ordering-ele-eats-landmark-630m-usd-funding-3b-usd-valuation/ https://technode.com/2015/08/31/chinas-top-food-ordering-ele-eats-landmark-630m-usd-funding-3b-usd-valuation/#respond Mon, 31 Aug 2015 00:23:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31947 China’s top online food takeout site Ele.me announced Friday that it has raised $630 million USD of fresh funding led by CITIC Capital and supermarket chain Hualian at a market cap of more than $3 billion USD, pushing the company’s total investment size to a whopping $1.1 billion USD. The hefty round was followed by current investors […]]]>
Ele.me-logo

China’s top online food takeout site Ele.me announced Friday that it has raised $630 million USD of fresh funding led by CITIC Capital and supermarket chain Hualian at a market cap of more than $3 billion USD, pushing the company’s total investment size to a whopping $1.1 billion USD.

The hefty round was followed by current investors Tencent, JD, Sequoia Capital and new backers of China Media Capital and Gopher Asset.

The company did not specify the investment share of every investor, but disclosed that Hualian contributed $90 million USD and will leverage its offline resources to enable faster food delivery services across the country.

Founded as a student entrepreneurial project in 2009, Ele.me has experienced substantial growth in line with China’s booming O2O industry in recent years. Along with the funding news, the company has  announced some impressive metrics. As of July 2015, the startup’s more than 10,000 employees provide service to more than 40 million users and 300,000 restaurants distributed across north of 260 cities nationwide. The daily turnover hits RMB60 million (US$9.4 million) with 98% comes from mobile users.

Zhang Xuhao, the company’s founder and CEO, said that funding is earmarked for constructing more sophisticated trading and delivery platform, as well as to improve user experience. He indicates the firm is going raise further rounds since constructing an efficient delivery platform needs solid capital support.

China’s booming online food delivery sector has been crammed with multiple players from internet giants Baidu, Tencent and Alibaba, to medium-sized competitors Dianping, Meituan, and all the way to vertical startups Line0, WaimaichaorenDaojiaMeican, Dianwoba. The growing market has attracted strings of capitalists who are eager to pour money in.

However, the fierce competition has made the sector a high money-burning sector where players compete for an increasingly large market share. Of course, investments can help companies to attract users by giving out more coupons or discounts, but when all the players have some funding in their pocket to burn, companies have to differentiate their services with better user experience.

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Winning China’s Online Food Delivery Market: WaimaiChaoren Founder

Image Credit: Ele.me

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WeChat Launches E-Book App To Make Reading Social https://technode.com/2015/08/28/wechat-reading/ https://technode.com/2015/08/28/wechat-reading/#respond Fri, 28 Aug 2015 08:47:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31934 WeChat, China’s most popular chat app, rolled out e-book app Weixin Dushu, or WeChat Read, yesterday. The app allows users to share their reading lists and experiences with WeChat friends, and is currently only available on the iOS platform. WeChat is one of China’s most popular destinations for news reading, but the new app is dedicated […]]]>

WeChat, China’s most popular chat app, rolled out e-book app Weixin Dushu, or WeChat Read, yesterday. The app allows users to share their reading lists and experiences with WeChat friends, and is currently only available on the iOS platform.

WeChat is one of China’s most popular destinations for news reading, but the new app is dedicated for more voracious readers who prefer books. The service will allow WeChat users to read books in EPUB or TXT formats with a clean and ad-free interface.

Weixin Dushu includes a WeChat Moment-like content sharing platform where users can browse through the reading list of WeChat friends and share reading suggestions.

The app has also integrated “Leaderboard” and “Like”, two existing gamification features that have proven successful in WeChat Sport and Games. It also counts how long users have spent on reading in the app and turns it into a social competition, complete with a daily leaderboard that covers all your WeChat friends who have also opted in. Of course, you can close the service if you don’t want to share your reading list or compete with others.

WeChat-Read-pic

The platform now has books cover a wide range of categories from fiction, history, biography to social science. Currently all the books listed in the enclosed e-book store are copyrighted content from third-party publishers, which are free to read or sold for tens of RMB.

Given the fast expansion of the WeChat platform into payments, it is a little disappointing that WeXin Dushu now only supports payment through Apple ID, and not WeChat payment, which is more popular among Chinese users.

Tencent, the parent company of WeChat, has been gearing up to explore the online publishing industry in recent years. The internet giant has joined up with Cloudary, the online publishing business of Shanda, earlier this year to become the largest online book publisher in China.

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Yet Another Chinese Drone Maker Yuneec Pulls In A Massive $60M USD Funding, From Intel! https://technode.com/2015/08/27/yuneec-intel/ https://technode.com/2015/08/27/yuneec-intel/#respond Thu, 27 Aug 2015 06:36:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31915 Chinese aviation company and drone maker Yuneec just announced that it has secured more than $60 million USD financing from Intel. The investment marked yet another hefty capital injection to China’s red-hot drone market, following Ehang’s $42 million USD B round settled this week and DJI’s $75 million USD funding raised in May this year. Yuneec’s core technologies […]]]>

Chinese aviation company and drone maker Yuneec just announced that it has secured more than $60 million USD financing from Intel.

The investment marked yet another hefty capital injection to China’s red-hot drone market, following Ehang’s $42 million USD B round settled this week and DJI’s $75 million USD funding raised in May this year.

Yuneec’s core technologies power its manned aircraft as well as its drones and radio controlled aircraft for the hobby market. The company’s flagship product Typhoon Q500 is a radio-controlled quadcopter featured 4k camera and innovate features like WatchMe which can follow a user’s movements on the ground.

Powered by a built-in Android touch screen, the gadget is easy to use for beginners who can control the device and take off in five minutes, said Yuneec’s CEO Tian Yu.

In addition to drones, Yuneec is also a developer of manned aircrafts. It products include E430, a two seat electric powered airplane and E-Spyder, a single seat electric powered aircraft.

Founded in 1999 in Hong Kong, Yuneec has over 1800 employees spread in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Los Angeles and Hamburg. The company claims to have the capacity to manufacture over 1 million units a year, sold under OEM/ODM brands as well as the Typhoon brand of multi-copters.

This isn’t Intel’s first investment in drone business. The software company has previously invested $10 million PrecisionHawk and an undisclosed sum in Airware.

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Image Credit: Yuneec

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Qihoo-Backed Qiku Elbows Into The China Smartphone Race https://technode.com/2015/08/27/qiku-product-launch/ https://technode.com/2015/08/27/qiku-product-launch/#respond Wed, 26 Aug 2015 23:38:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31900 Days after Smartisan unveiled its latest smartphone, Qihoo 360-backed smartphone company Qiku took the wraps off an ambitious array of new phones. The high-spec lux version packs a 6-inch 2k TFT display by Sharp, a powerful Snapdragon 810, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of internal storage and a fixed 3700mAh battery. It features a 2.5d round edge tempered front screen […]]]>

Days after Smartisan unveiled its latest smartphone, Qihoo 360-backed smartphone company Qiku took the wraps off an ambitious array of new phones.

The high-spec lux version packs a 6-inch 2k TFT display by Sharp, a powerful Snapdragon 810, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of internal storage and a fixed 3700mAh battery. It features a 2.5d round edge tempered front screen with ultra-narrow metal frame of only 1.4 mm. Sharing a similar size of iPhone 6 Plus, the narrow frame allows a higher scree ratio.

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Powered by Snapdragon 808, the flagship version has a 1080P display, 3GB RAM and 16GB storage. The low-spec Youth version, which targets at young customers, features a 5.5-inch 1080P display, 1.3GHz MT6753 processor, 2GB RAM and 16G ROM, 8-megapixel front camera and two 13-megapixel rear cameras.

The three versions are all enabled by 360 OS, the company’s homegrown operating system based on Android. They are retailed at RMB3,599 ($561 USD), RMB1,999 and RMB1,199, respectively, to attract users with different spending powers. The Youth version will be open for preorder Qiku’s official sites and JD today.

A highlight of the new smartphones is that Qiku has made the finger scanner, which is placed at the back of the smartphones, a multiple-functional button that can be used to pick up or lock your phones and even as shutter button for taking selfies.

The company is also adopting a dual-camera technology to enhance the photography functions. Using two 13-megapixel rear cameras, the pictures from two lenses — one for taking colors and the other black-white lens for capturing brightness and other details — are combined together to form a single image via algorithms.

Known as an online security service, Qihoo 360 has begun to sell phones to its expanding audiences since in 2012 through partnership with well-known brands. However, its previous efforts ended in failure. As China’s smartphone market continues to heat up, Qihoo’s CEO Zhou Hongyi is taking things more seriously since last year by investing US$409.05 million to set up a joint venture with smartphone maker Coolpad.

However, this cooperation is taking an interesting turn as its partner Coolpad is also taking an equally-huge investment from LeTV, Qihoo’s direct competitor in exploring smartphone market.

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Qihoo 360 Forms JV with Chinese Smartphone Maker Coolpad

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LeTV Becomes Second Largest Shareholder of Coolpad With $350M USD Investment

Image credit: Qiku

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Uber Opens Up Fare-Split Carpool Service To Chinese Users https://technode.com/2015/08/25/uber-carpool-service-china/ https://technode.com/2015/08/25/uber-carpool-service-china/#respond Tue, 25 Aug 2015 12:41:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31855 In a troubled quest to win over Chinese market, Uber China recently upgraded its non-for-profit ride sharing platform People’s Uber as “People’s Uber Plus”, adding a new feature that allow riders to pick up others who take the same routes and to split the bill. The new service has launched in downtown areas of Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. […]]]>

In a troubled quest to win over Chinese market, Uber China recently upgraded its non-for-profit ride sharing platform People’s Uber as “People’s Uber Plus”, adding a new feature that allow riders to pick up others who take the same routes and to split the bill. The new service has launched in downtown areas of Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

While most of Uber’s services do not require users to input destinations before the ride takes place, this new feature asks riders to designate their destination address and select either “two-person carpool” or “private ride” model.

Uber-Carpool

For those who select “two-person carpool” model, the system will match them with others who are going in the same direction, while each customer can take a maximum of one guest. The users can enjoy a 30% discount on the fare, whether there’s a successful match or not.

While the feature can cut the costs for passengers, not everyone will want to spend more time waiting and share a ride with a complete stranger.

The new service might be favored by riders thanks to lower fares and environmental benefits, but it is arguably tougher for drivers, who do not have a say in taking a second-driver or not. No matter how many passengers a driver takes, Uber will pay a flat fare to them according to mileage. That means Uber will cover the 30% discount in case passengers didn’t get a match along the way while also pocketing the extra fees in case they did.

Moreover, the extra burden for checking a second order and pick-up spots may make the feature less favorable among drivers and bring more security concerns.

In fact, the new service in getting more riders into a single car isn’t a novel idea. Uber has launched a similar service, UberPool in the U.S. since last August. Uber’s arch-competitor Didi-Kuaidi also rolled out its carpooling service Didi Shun Feng Che this July in an attempt to diverse business lines.

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Didi-Kuaidi Launch Carpooling App To Challenge People’s Uber

Baidu Leads C Series Funding for Chinese Ride-Sharing App Tiantian Yongche

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China Breaks 250 Million 4G Subscribers But Growth Is Slowing https://technode.com/2015/08/25/china%ef%bc%8d250m-4g-users/ https://technode.com/2015/08/25/china%ef%bc%8d250m-4g-users/#respond Tue, 25 Aug 2015 00:22:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31807 China has seen its 4G-user base growing at a frantic pace since the launch of 4G networks back in December 2013. The country has now recorded more than 250 million 4G subscribers by the end of July 2015, accounting for 19.4% of the total 1.29 billion mobile users, according to a report released by China’s Ministry […]]]>


China has seen its 4G-user base growing at a frantic pace since the launch of 4G networks back in December 2013.

The country has now recorded more than 250 million 4G subscribers by the end of July 2015, accounting for 19.4% of the total 1.29 billion mobile users, according to a report released by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).

As the Chinese telecom market nears saturation, China’s mobile subscriber growth has slowed dramatically with only 8.5 million newly added subscribers in the first seven months of 2015, a growth size only a quarter for that of the same period of last year.

Despite the stagnating growth, China’s increasingly tech-savvy mobile users are moving towards faster mobile networks with more steady connections. The MIIT report shows that China’s mobile broadband users (3G and 4G subscribers) have increased by 110 million during the reporting period to 695 million, up 8.4% from the end of last year to account for 53.7% of the total mobile users.

4g-2015

China’s mobile users are also clearly phasing out the 3G era. 3G users reduced by 4.36 million in July alone, the reports noted.

Thanks to the increase of users and reduction of 4G service fees, China’s mobile subscribers are becoming voracious users for mobile data services. An average 330.9 MB of data services were consumed every month, up 85.1% YOY.

As of the end of June this year, China has constructed a combined 1.23 million 4G base stations around the country.

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Image Credit: Shutterstock

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Ghost Drone Maker Ehang Raises $42M USD To Tap Commercial Quadcopter Territory https://technode.com/2015/08/25/ehang-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/08/25/ehang-series-b/#respond Tue, 25 Aug 2015 00:09:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31837 Ehang, the developer of Indiegogo crowdfunding hit Ghost Drone, has raised $42 million USD in series B funding led by GP Capital with participation of existing investors GGV Capital, Zhen Fund, Lebox Capital and Oriental Fortune Capital. Ehang did not disclose the valuation of this round, but indicates that it is 100 times that of 16 […]]]>

Ehang, the developer of Indiegogo crowdfunding hit Ghost Drone, has raised $42 million USD in series B funding led by GP Capital with participation of existing investors GGV Capital, Zhen Fund, Lebox Capital and Oriental Fortune Capital.

Ehang did not disclose the valuation of this round, but indicates that it is 100 times that of 16 months ago when the startup was founded.

The money from this latest investment will go toward R&D for both personal and commercial drones, market expansion, and expanding the team. Hu Huazhi, the company’s founder and CEO, disclosed that the drone maker has welcomed four former managers from Chinese internet giants onboard recently.

The company’s flagship product the Ghost Drone is designed as an aerial photography drone outfitted with GoPro. Designed for ease-of-use, the Ghost can be controlled via a compatible mobile app instead of a radio controller, which can be cumbersome for beginners to use. A more convenient tilt control feature is integrated to allow the user to manually pilot the quadcopter by tilting and turning their phones.

Like its main competitor DJI, Ehang is planning to go beyond the territory of personal drones, which are mainly used for aerial photography and video, according to Hu. The startup plans to develop products designed for areas as diverses as agriculture & forestry, search and rescue, mapping, and logistics. Hu said a new flagship product is going to be launched in the second half of this year.

Driven by the global quadcopter craze, Ehang is among the most heavily funded Chinese competitors of DJI, which received a massive $75 million USD round earlier this year.

After receiving over $1 million USD from crowdfunding websites like Indiegogo ($850,000 USD) and its Chinese peers Demohour ($60,000 USD) and Taobao Crowdfunding (222,000 RMB), Ehang has landed a $10 million USD in A round at the end of last year.

The future looks bright for drone startups. According to a report by research institute EVTank, over 378k civil drones have been shipped in 2014, of which 33% are for professional customers and 67% are consumer grade drones. The global shipment is expected to surge 50% in 2015 and creates a $25.9 billion USD market by 2020.

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Drone Developer Ghost Announces US$10M Series A Funding

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Drone Developer DJI Pockets US$75M from Accel Partners

Image Credit: Ehang

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WeChat Steps Up Commercialization With ‘Self-Serve’ Advertisements https://technode.com/2015/08/24/wechat-ad-moments/ https://technode.com/2015/08/24/wechat-ad-moments/#respond Sun, 23 Aug 2015 22:56:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31795 China’s hit messaging app WeChat, which now claimed 600 MAUs, has rolled out a self-serve advertising system for its ‘Moments’, allowing clients to apply for distributing ads in a content sharing timeline similar to Facebook’s News Feed. The company started to test this feature in January this year, but the whole process is managed by WeChat staff […]]]>

China’s hit messaging app WeChat, which now claimed 600 MAUs, has rolled out a self-serve advertising system for its ‘Moments’, allowing clients to apply for distributing ads in a content sharing timeline similar to Facebook’s News Feed.

The company started to test this feature in January this year, but the whole process is managed by WeChat staff and no self-service system was in place back then.

Distributing advertisers on this platform has five steps, including e-mail communication, preparing ad contents, approval, execution and result tracking, as shown in the official website. Advertisers have to fill in an application form to specify their brand positioning, budget, promotion time, among others. These details will determine the final advertising content and pricing. WeChat will also track the marketing analytics and offer relevant data after the ads go live.

The ad will be shown to a group of selected “seed users”, who are more active and tend to interact with ads, as a status from the advertiser’s WeChat Public Account. If users opt out or just leave it there, the possibility that this ad appears in your friends’ timeline is only 20%. The percentage will rise to 95% if you click, like or comment on it.

Each ad will be able to circulate for seven days, while every single user will only receive one ad with in 48 hours. An ad with no likes or comments within six hours will be removed.

WeChat has been very cautious in proceeding commercialization plans since its launch for concerns of harming user experience, as explained by the company. But it seems that they is going to step up monetization drive as its userbase continues to hit record highs, and advertising is definitely one of the main channels.

WeChat has launched a similar self-advertising system for Public Accounts last year that places ads, external links, subscribe buttons and a one-click download button for mobile apps at the bottom of articles published by Public Accounts.

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Image credit: WeChat

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China’s E-Commerce Boom Set to Overhaul Agriculture https://technode.com/2015/08/21/e-commerce-agriculture/ https://technode.com/2015/08/21/e-commerce-agriculture/#respond Fri, 21 Aug 2015 06:52:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31591 China is one of the world’s oldest agricultural societies. At the same time it has one of the fastest growing e-commerce sectors in the world, with highly adapted mobile payment systems and the most rapid 4G network expansion of any country. It’s no surprise that Chinese agriculture and e-commerce are coming together in a big way. China’s […]]]>

China is one of the world’s oldest agricultural societies. At the same time it has one of the fastest growing e-commerce sectors in the world, with highly adapted mobile payment systems and the most rapid 4G network expansion of any country.

It’s no surprise that Chinese agriculture and e-commerce are coming together in a big way. China’s Ministry of Agriculture estimates that online transactions for farm products were valued at over 100 billion RMB ($16.1 billion) last year. There’s still plenty of room for growth however. E-commerce accounts for only 3% of the total agriculture trades in the country, which is perhaps why is becoming a hotly contested battle field for internet companies.

The Internet Plus strategic policy recently introduced by China’s government aims to integrate traditional sectors with online tools. Agriculture was singled out in the plan. Between government support, growing urban demand for agricultural products and an increasing tech-savvy rural residents representing 46% of the total population, every sign indicates it is a good timing for e-commerce services to go deeper in to rural market.

Aside from selling agricultural products via online retailing channels, Chinese internet giants have started to sell agricultural production tools online, moving up one link in the industrial chain. Research show that the market for agricultural production resources including seeds, fertilizers, pesticides and machinery, is worth more than 2 trillion RMB ($312 billion USD). However, the lack of standard practices and multiple middle men has created an asymmetry of information between factories and farmers.

It’s a problem that China’s biggest retailers are keen to tackle. Here are some of the companies working to reconcile China’s agricultural past with a its digitally-driven future.

JD.com’s Dedicated Farm Products Mall

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On August 11 of this year, JD rolled out a dedicated page for farming-related products and services. In addition to delivering seeds or fertilizers to the customers, JD also opened its installment pay, credit and insurance services to users.

In order to better control product quality, JD purchases the seeds, and holds inventory in its own or merchant partners’ warehouses, and then have them delivered with its own logistics system. While the sales of fertilizers and pesticides is mainly run by third-party merchants at present, it is expected to be included into JD’s core business by the end of this year in a bid to guarantee the quality.

The service benefits from JD’s strong delivery system. Local media reported that the company’s existing logistic network has covered over 70% of the country, and is available in 50,000 villages. The e-commerce company plans to open 500 service centers in the country by the end of this year, employing up to 100,000 promotions and marketing staff.

Alibaba’s Platform And Data-Driven Planting Advice

N-taobao

As part of its rural expansion, Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace launched a special agricultural channel, through which farmers can access a one-stop service for buying seeds, farming tools as well as farming guides. The company also promised to give data-driven planting advice to users.

Legend Holdings & Lenovo’s 200 Service Centres In 10 Provinces

Legend Holdings, the parent company of Lenovo, has invested 8-digit USD funding in Yunnongchang, or Cloud Farm, an e-commerce site primarily engaged in the sales of farming products and tools. The site set up service centers in more than 200 county-level cities, covering more than 10 provinces like Shandong, Jiangsu and Henan.

Lenovo has been involved in the agricultural industry since 2010, and holds stakes in a series of agricultural related portfolio companies include liquor company Fenglian Holdings, investor and operator of modern agriculture and food companies Joyvio Group, and eLoancn, a P2P online lending platform focused on agriculture and rural consumers.

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Alibaba Acquires Online Translation Platform 365 Fanyi To Boost Cross-Border Ecommerce

Image Credit: ShutterStock

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Alibaba Acquires Online Translation Platform 365 Fanyi To Boost Cross-Border Ecommerce https://technode.com/2015/08/21/alibaba-acquires-365fanyi/ https://technode.com/2015/08/21/alibaba-acquires-365fanyi/#respond Fri, 21 Aug 2015 06:01:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31775 After striking a strategic partnership with Chinese crowdsourcing translation platform 365 Fanyi (365 Translation) last April, Alibaba has gone a step further to fully acquire the company, utilizing it to remove language barriers for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) when participating in cross-border e-commerce business. Alibaba.com, the international business arm of Alibaba Group, lead the deal which […]]]>

After striking a strategic partnership with Chinese crowdsourcing translation platform 365 Fanyi (365 Translation) last April, Alibaba has gone a step further to fully acquire the company, utilizing it to remove language barriers for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) when participating in cross-border e-commerce business.

Alibaba.com, the international business arm of Alibaba Group, lead the deal which mainly constitutes the acquisition of 365 Fanyi’s translator management system. In addition to Alibaba.com, other international trading platforms under the group, like Tmall Global and AliExpress, are going to benefit from the acquisition.

The team of 365 Fanyi will now join Alibaba’s translation unit to construction a next-generation translation platform.

365 Fanyi was born out of a translation studio run by company’s co-founders, Sam Li and Liu Yu, in 2011. It specializes in providing online translation and interpretation services to domestic and foreign clients. Its biggest feature is bringing the traditional human translation process online through a crowd-sourcing model.

The startup’s translator management system automatically allocates tasks to translators with expertise in the related field. Meanwhile, translators will proofread each other’s works to guarantee the translation quality.

After uploading the original version of text on the company’s website, the system will generate the price for the work within mere seconds, which generally takes hours for a traditional translation company. Moreover, the service is available 7/24.

In addition to its own team of professional translators, the platform has tens of thousands of part-time English, German, French, Japanese, South Koreanand Russian translators. The company has received two rounds of financing from Zhen Fund and China Broadband Capital.

“A lot of the Chinese SMEs attempting to explore the cross-border e-commerce business have encountered language barriers as foreign trade has its own special demands for speedy and exact translation,” said Fu Bipeng, director of Alibaba’s Cross-border Business Department, referencing the value of the new investment.

This deal is expected to further boost Alibaba’s recent endeavours to rev up cross-border e-commerces in competition against a series of local rivals.

Image Credit: 365 Fanyi

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[Update] China’s P2P Lending Site Dianrong Lands Massive $207M USD Series C Backed By Traditional Banks https://technode.com/2015/08/20/dianrong-round-c/ https://technode.com/2015/08/20/dianrong-round-c/#respond Thu, 20 Aug 2015 10:59:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31753 Dianrong, a leading Chinese peer-to-peer lending platform, announced today the closure of a massive $207 million USD of Series C financing, marking the largest funding round in China’s internet lending and financing industry. The funding is co-led by Standard Chartered Bank and China Fintech Fund (CFF), a fintech company equity investor founded by China Minsheng […]]]>

Dianrong, a leading Chinese peer-to-peer lending platform, announced today the closure of a massive $207 million USD of Series C financing, marking the largest funding round in China’s internet lending and financing industry.

The funding is co-led by Standard Chartered Bank and China Fintech Fund (CFF), a fintech company equity investor founded by China Minsheng International Capital and Guangfa Investments, and followed by comprehensive leasing industry group Bohai Leasing. Institution investors from the previous two rounds also participated.

[Update] (Dianrong revealed on Sept. 9 a further detail of the new funding at its Hong Kong press conference. Max Giant Capital, the investment institution founded by Katherine Tsang, ex-chairwoman of Standard Chartered Bank Greater China, also joined this round.)

The current round lengthened Dianrong’s all-star backer list which already includes renowned investors like Tiger Global Management, an early investor in Alibaba and JD.com, Hong Kong’s leading financial institution Sun Hung Kai & Co. Limited, and Northern Lights VC.

The landmark investment will be used to solve what Soul Htite, the company founder and CEO called the PPPP, which stands for People-Process-Product-Publish. Dianrong plans to expand the team by hiring 2,500 to 3,000 employees to add to its existing 1,700 staff in the next eighteen months, said Soul.

“While the team is growing, we are also going to invest in management and consulting in a bid to help the team to operate in a seamless way. Product development and branding are also our major focuses in the future.”

Founded in 2012 by Lending Club co-founder Soul Htite, Dianrong focuses on two distinct businesses now. Its online marketplace facilitates personal and business loans by connecting good quality borrowers to millions of potential lenders in China through our powerful, easy to use and secure internet infrastructure. The banking solution focuses on assisting large financial institutions to transform their operations from a traditional model to a modern internet finance enabled businesses.

It is worth nothing that the investors of this round include some of China’s top commercial banks and financial institutions. Their investment in online financial companies highlights the boom within this sector in China, as well as the changing perception of online financing among traditional financial entities.

“Standard Chartered Private Equity (SCPE) rarely invests in early-stage companies” said Wei Zhu, Managing Director and Global Co-Head of SCPE. “we typically focus on growth and late-stage companies. Dianrong is quite an exceptional case. Standard Chartered has a different investment strategy than typical VC funds.”

“We do not invest in a lot of companies, but emphasize on high quality investments and overall success rate; we would only like to invest in the best and most differentiated company in the industry,” he said.

Dianrong’s co-founder Kevin Guo denied the possibility of an IPO in the near future. “Instead of aiming for sprawling growth in the short term and a quick IPO, we prefer more sustainable development that will generate more benefits for our users. We have reached consensus with our investors who fully understand our initiatives.”

Image credit: Dianrong

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China’s Online Insurance Sales Near $13B USD In H1 2015 https://technode.com/2015/08/20/chinas-online-insurance-h2015/ https://technode.com/2015/08/20/chinas-online-insurance-h2015/#respond Thu, 20 Aug 2015 04:00:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31651 Internet is transforming the way insurance is sold in China. The country’s online insurance premium has hit 81.6 billion RMB ($12.75 billion USD) in the first half of this year, on par with the 85.89 billion RMB ($13.24 billion USD) annual premium incomes achieved in 2014, according to data released by Insurance Association of China. […]]]>

Internet is transforming the way insurance is sold in China.

The country’s online insurance premium has hit 81.6 billion RMB ($12.75 billion USD) in the first half of this year, on par with the 85.89 billion RMB ($13.24 billion USD) annual premium incomes achieved in 2014, according to data released by Insurance Association of China.

Of the total amount, premiums from property insurance policies sold online surged 69% YOY to 36.32 billion RMB, accounting for 8.5% of the total premiums for property insurance. Those from life insurance rose by 343.4% to 45.28 billion RMB, representing 3.5% of the total life insurance sales.

Online insurance premium represents overall 4.7% in the whole industry in H1 2015, up from 4.2% in 2014. Online insurance has become a major momentum to drive the sustainable growth of insurance sector, contributing to 14% of new business growth. The number of insurance firms with online operations increased to 96 from 85 at the end of last year.

The report indicates that the rapid growth of online insurance business is mainly driven by three factors:

  1. Popularity of financial insurance products sold through third-party e-commerce channels, such as Tmall, JD and Ctrip. Motor insurance, which account for 56.4% of online insurance premium incomes in 2014, is another major boost for the growth. However, its dominance is also creating concerns for the unbalanced development of the industry.

  2. Insurance companies, especially small and medium-sized insurance firms, started to realize the importance of online insurance business and poured more resources in the sector.

  3. Maturity of e-commerce platforms and enrichment of insurance product categories.

It is pointed out that the wider application of cloud computing and big data technologies is going to bring new insights to insurance companies and help them get to know their customers better.

Despite the fast growth, the emerging market faces lots of problems like: product homogeneity, inadequate application of new technology and cyber security risks.

As traditional insurance companies are trying to explore online businesses, internet companies are flocking to the sector with edges in e-commerce promotion channels and technologies. Alibaba and Tencent have jointly established Zhong An, an online insurance company, with Chinese insurance company Ping An last year. Tencent Cloud just strikes strategic partnership with Anxin Property Insurance, an internet-aided insurance company, to give full play to its cloud computing and big data technologies.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Aliyun Furthers Overseas Cloud Push With New Data Center In Singapore https://technode.com/2015/08/20/aliyun-singapore-data-center/ https://technode.com/2015/08/20/aliyun-singapore-data-center/#respond Thu, 20 Aug 2015 03:46:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31691 Alibaba Group’s cloud computing arm Aliyun has announced plans to set up a new cloud data center in Singapore. Its headquarters for overseas business will also be based out of Singapore to drive Aliyun’s overseas expansion plan. Scheduled for an early September launch, the Singapore facility will be the seventh globally in addition to existing centers […]]]>
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Alibaba Group’s cloud computing arm Aliyun has announced plans to set up a new cloud data center in Singapore. Its headquarters for overseas business will also be based out of Singapore to drive Aliyun’s overseas expansion plan.

Scheduled for an early September launch, the Singapore facility will be the seventh globally in addition to existing centers in Beijing, Hangzhou, Qingdao, Shenzheng, Hong Kong and the U.S. It is also the second overseas data center to be opened this year by Aliyun after the launch of data center in Silicon Valley this March.

The new cloud data center leverages on Alibaba Group’s recent US$1 billion investment for cloud computing, and will enable more businesses to benefit from secure and reliable Aliyun-powered cloud services while riding on record foreign direct investment flows in Southeast Asia.

The launch of a Singapore center isn’t quite surprising since the company has hinted the move when specifying intended directions of the US$1 billion funding. The company also disclosed plans to establish more centers in the Middle East, Japan and Europe.

Ethan Yu, Vice President of Aliyun, described Singapore a natural destination for overseas headquarters as a springboard to expand into Asia Pacific region. “We are seeing healthy demand for cloud-related data management services in Singapore because of the ease of doing business, comprehensive transport and telecommunications connections and robust intellectual property regime. The stable geo-political climate and abundance of highly skilled talent are advantages too.”he added.

In the June quarter this year, Aliyun’s revenue growth from cloud computing and Internet infrastructure increased 106% year-on-year, driven by the accelerated growth of its cloud computing business compared to 82% in the prior quarter. The service currently serves 1.8 million customers as of June 30, 2015, including key Chinese corporations and Chinese government agencies and state-owned public service providers.

image credit: Aliyun

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StoreDot Charges Up With $18M USD Funding For Electric Vehicle FlashBattery Tech From Samsung https://technode.com/2015/08/19/storedot-samsung/ https://technode.com/2015/08/19/storedot-samsung/#respond Wed, 19 Aug 2015 11:00:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31635 Israeli startup StoreDot, a company developing fast-charging battery technologies, announced today $18 million USD of financing for its new electric vehicle (EV) business unit. The round follows a $42 million USD series B funding received last year, bringing the total funding to-date to $66 million USD. Investors in this round include mostly existing investors such as […]]]>

Israeli startup StoreDot, a company developing fast-charging battery technologies, announced today $18 million USD of financing for its new electric vehicle (EV) business unit. The round follows a $42 million USD series B funding received last year, bringing the total funding to-date to $66 million USD.

Investors in this round include mostly existing investors such as Samsung Ventures and Norma Investments Limited, representing Russian businessman Roman Abramovich, and private investment fund Singulariteam.

The startup is applying its quantum dot-utilizing fast charging battery technology for electronics. “We work with organic compounds that are synthesized in our lab to dramatically reduce the resistance of the battery. Our technology is aiming to create a lithium battery with improved structure and materials”, said StoreDot’s CEO and founder Dr. Doron Myersdorf.

As a business expansion beyond its speedy battery charging technologies for the smartphone domain, the new round of funding is earmarked for development and commercialization of the EV unit. One of the company’s immediate goals is to build the first ever instantly-charging car prototype. Additionally, this funding will allow new hiring and additional labs for the new business unit.

Myersdorf noted, “The funding isn’t a shift towards EV business but an additional technological focus that will work parallel with our smartphone battery technology. That’s why we ensured it’s a different funding round, so we can continue working parallel on both.”

With StoreDot’s proprietary FlashBattery technology, the EV unit is aiming at a goal that allow drivers to recharge their cars in only five minutes as opposed to the long hours it currently takes. Last April, StoreDot has showed off a battery demo that could charge smartphone in 30 seconds.

“The timeline for any EV is about 5 years until it’s commercially available, and the first milestone that we set is to show in one year an initial prototype.”

When talking about obstacles encountered in shifting to EV battery field, he said “The biggest challenge is to work with high current that generates heat while charging, and the infrastructure of the grid – the need to supply more power.”

“In addition to perfecting the FlashBattery itself, the funding will support the development of a powerful charging station, a fast charging standard, and an integrated FlashBattery management system.”

Given Samsung’s dominance in smartphone industry and recent forays into smart car sector, it is natural to look for more cooperation opportunities between StoreDot and the investor when the technology is mature for commercial application. But Myersdorf explained that “We’re working with Samsung like any of our other partners. There’s no commercial agreement or exclusivity that requires us to work with Samsung solely.”

Image credit: StoreDot

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Tencent Backs Canadian Chat App Kik With $50M Investment https://technode.com/2015/08/19/tencent-backs-canadian-wechat-kik-50m-investment/ https://technode.com/2015/08/19/tencent-backs-canadian-wechat-kik-50m-investment/#respond Wed, 19 Aug 2015 06:43:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31682 Chinese internet giant Tencent, the maker of WeChat and QQ, has invested $50 million in Canadian messaging app Kik for an undisclosed amount of stake at a valuation north of $1 billion USD. The investment is part of the company’s D series funding which totaled $120.5 USD million. Kik’s CEO, Ted Livingston, mentioned in a public […]]]>

Chinese internet giant Tencent, the maker of WeChat and QQ, has invested $50 million in Canadian messaging app Kik for an undisclosed amount of stake at a valuation north of $1 billion USD. The investment is part of the company’s D series funding which totaled $120.5 USD million.

Kik’s CEO, Ted Livingston, mentioned in a public letter that the company has been seeking strategic partner for some time. Impressed by what Tencent has been able to do in China with mobile messaging and other services like shopping, music and games, the Kik team expects the new investment will be able boost its competitiveness and emulate WeChat’s success in North America.

Kik is experimenting with a WeChat-like model by launching a trial product Jam to connect fans of top artists.

Targeting a teenage audience, the app claims to have 240 million registered users with 70% percent of them between 13 and 24 years old. They say that 40% of American teenagers are active on Kik.

Ted has said that Kik won’t be targeting China anytime soon, but plans to recruit more employees with the funding.

As the most popular messaging app in China, Tencent’s WeChat announced 600 million monthly active user milestone this month. However, WeChat has been facing a bumpy road in their globalization initiatives and users based on the Chinese mainland still account for a vast majority of its numbers. In March this year, Tencent decided to reduce overseas promotion activities as user growth plateaus.

It now appears the company is taking a more subtle tact, tapping overseas users by investing in local players that have already have a footing in the market. As a part of Tencent’s global expansion plan, the company has acquired a 13.54% stake in Korean mobile messaging app Kakao Talk worth $63.7 million USD, along with acquiring stakes in SnapChat.

Image Credit: Kik

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Tencent-backed WeBank Rolls Out Bare-Bones App https://technode.com/2015/08/18/webank-app/ https://technode.com/2015/08/18/webank-app/#comments Mon, 17 Aug 2015 23:56:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31600 WeBank, China’s first online-only private bank backed by internet behemoth Tencent, quietly released its banking app over the weekend. Its features are remarkably similar to the existing WeChat payment services, though they expect to expand soon. In addition to being named after WeChat, Tencent’s mark on WeBank is clear in its exclusive support for WeChat and […]]]>
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WeBank, China’s first online-only private bank backed by internet behemoth Tencent, quietly released its banking app over the weekend. Its features are remarkably similar to the existing WeChat payment services, though they expect to expand soon.

In addition to being named after WeChat, Tencent’s mark on WeBank is clear in its exclusive support for WeChat and QQ login. After registering a connected bankcard, the users will get a 19-digit WeBank account number.

Only text message verification is needed to connect the first bankcard. But those who want to add a second one have to authenticate through face and voice recognition technologies. The highly anticipated long-distance account opening feature is still unavailable due to security concerns.

It is also a bit disappointing for some users since they can not make payments by swiping a physical bankcard nor transferring money to others with the system for now.

WeBank-pic

The current version works more like a financial platform which offers a Yuebao-like monetary fund, fixed-term fund and and stock funds to cover users with different risk-taking capabilities.

Another major function is money transfer between cards under the same user’s name for saving salaries and paying house installments.

Tencent agreed that the current WeBank is an elementary version with basic features and the company plan to enrich the functions in future updates.

As one of entities that has been granted by the government to run private banks in China, WeBank is the first institution to begin operations under the pilot program since the beginning of this year. Tencent and its competitor Alibaba are the two Internet companies of the ten private investors who are allowed to participate in establishing the private banks.

Image credit: Shutterstock

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WeChat Marked 600 Million Monthly Active Users, Up 37% YOY https://technode.com/2015/08/14/wechat-600m-mau/ https://technode.com/2015/08/14/wechat-600m-mau/#respond Thu, 13 Aug 2015 23:01:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31539 China’s messaging app Wechat has hit 600 million monthly active users  as of Q2 this year, the parent company Tencent announced in an interim financial report. The new figure for Q2 2015 marked a 37% YOY growth from 438 million in Q2 2014, and up from 549 million in Q1 this year. Available in more […]]]>

China’s messaging app Wechat has hit 600 million monthly active users  as of Q2 this year, the parent company Tencent announced in an interim financial report. The new figure for Q2 2015 marked a 37% YOY growth from 438 million in Q2 2014, and up from 549 million in Q1 this year.

Available in more than 20 language versions, WeChat now operates in more than 200 countries and regions.

Although the company is continuing its efforts to drive user engagement in overseas markets, especially in emerging Asian markets, users from Mainland China still account for a dominat proportion of the whole user base. Research from WeChat integrated agency Curiosity China shows that the app has covered more than 90% of smartphones in China as of the Q1 this year.

The average age of WeChat users is 26 years old. Overall 97.7% of the users are under 50, while the users aged between 18 to 36 represent 86.2% of the total, A Curiosity China report indicates.

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The app has an unbalanced gender distribution with 64.3% of the users recorded as male and 35.7% are female. In terms of occupation, private enterprises employees, self-employed people, students and public services workers account for a dominant number of the users.

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Tencent’s older chat app QQ Mobile had 627 million monthly active users, a 20% increase YOY in the reporting period, whereas its desktop-based counterparts QQ IM and Qzone both recorded a stagnating increase of only 2%.

Tencent’s total revenue climbed 19% YOY to 23,429 million RMB ($3,832 million USD) as of Q2 this year. Of the total amount, social networks revenue increased 18% YOY to 5,458 million RMB, mainly driven by growth in subscription as a result of improved mobile privileges and digital content.

Image credit: Curiosity China, ShutterStock

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Car Maintenance B2C Platform Tuhu Completes $100M USD Series C Funding https://technode.com/2015/08/14/tuhu-series-c/ https://technode.com/2015/08/14/tuhu-series-c/#respond Thu, 13 Aug 2015 22:55:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31551 Shanghai-based Lantu Information Technology, operator of car maintenance B2C platform Tuhu, has raked in nearly $100 USD in series C funding from Joy Capital, Welkin, Far East Horizon and Haitong. Existing investors, Legend Capital and Qiming Venture Partners, also participated. The investment is earmarked for team, technology and offline expansion in a bid to maintain sustainable […]]]>

Shanghai-based Lantu Information Technology, operator of car maintenance B2C platform Tuhu, has raked in nearly $100 USD in series C funding from Joy Capital, Welkin, Far East Horizon and Haitong. Existing investors, Legend Capital and Qiming Venture Partners, also participated.

The investment is earmarked for team, technology and offline expansion in a bid to maintain sustainable growth in the company.

Founded in 2011, Tuhu provides automobile after-sales products and services through its website, mobile app, call center and major third party e-commerce platforms. Tuhu offers same-day or next-day delivery and installation services at one of over 6,500 individual local service store partners in more than 260 cities across Mainland China.

Tuhu

Tuhu customers can purchase a wide range of automobile products and services online such as tires, maintenance products, accessories and car wash services. Based on a customer’s car make, model, year and mileage, Tuhu’s website or mobile app is able to generate a customised list of recommended products, all of which can be delivered to and installed at a local service store. Tuhu is also growing its automobile services business, allowing customers to reserve car washes, waxing and other services with a local partner.

The company has recorded sales of 300 million RMB in 2014 and expects this figure to hit 1.5 billion this year.

After bagging a RMB 7-digit angel funding in February 2012, the startup has received USD 7-digit Series A financing from Qiming Venture Partners in January 2013, and USD 7-digit Series B funding in July 2014 from Legend Capital.

Driven by an aging car fleet and rising second-hand car market, China’s automobile after-sales market is expected to exceed 760 billion RMB ($123.53 billion USD) this year, according to government statistics.

As major internet companies like Tencent are trying to explore the market, the auto after-sales sector is becoming crowded. The whole industry is expected to experience a major reshuffle while more players in the field are facing problems in retaining customers or converting them to paid users.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Used Car Trading Platform Mychebao Announces $50M Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/08/13/mychebao-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/08/13/mychebao-series-b/#respond Thu, 13 Aug 2015 00:57:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31507 Chinese used car trading site Mychebao, or Chezhibao in Chinese, has announced the completion of a 300 million RMB ($50 million USD) Series B financing led by Jiuding Capital and Addor Capital and followed by Gobi Partners, Nanjing Venture Capital and Bank of Nanjing. The company’s $10 million USD A round was received from sole […]]]>

Chinese used car trading site Mychebao, or Chezhibao in Chinese, has announced the completion of a 300 million RMB ($50 million USD) Series B financing led by Jiuding Capital and Addor Capital and followed by Gobi Partners, Nanjing Venture Capital and Bank of Nanjing. The company’s $10 million USD A round was received from sole investor Gobi Partners in September 2014, who are also an investor in Technode.

This latest round will see them expand into new markets, optimize operations in current markets, improve the company’s trading platform, bring on new talents and establish second-hand auto retail financial services, according to the company.

Mychebao is a Chinese second-hand auto trading platform, dedicated to providing consumer-to-retailer (C2R) transactions. After receiving applications from car owners, Mychebao will send its auto experts to appraise second-hand cars offline. The appraisal process, which usually takes around 15 minutes, is conducted according to the company’s home-brew VPQS (Vehicle Performance Quality Standard), which include a total of 1027 testing items and is formed by giving consideration to the valuation systems of China, U.S. and Japan. Back-end auto experts will double check the data collected and the system will generate a score for the cars.

On the platform, both car dealers and regular consumers can make offers to car owners through a bidding system. Mychebao holds five auctions per day, while each bidding session takes 30 minutes. The startup also provides some after-sales support. The site will collect a 3% transaction/service fee upon the completion of each transaction.

Founded in 2012, Mychebao now operates in 12 cities, including Beijing, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Chongqing and Nanjing, and plans to expand operations to cover over 50 cities with the new funding. The site currently has a monthly transaction total of 5,000 deals.

Second-hand cars, though generally considered as a risky business, is increasingly favored by China’s rising middle class. Huang Le, founder of Mychebao, expects China’s used car market to record another big boom in the second-half of 2015. China’s new automobile sales recorded a landmark 48% surge in 2009. While these new cars are about to reach an average 5-plus year life cycle, it is expected that more car owners will have plans to trade in their vehicles during this period.

Mychebao is up against a string of competitors in this field, big and small. Alibaba launched Taobao’s secondhand car trading platform in this year. Local listing services 58.com and Ganji.com rolled out similar services. Other startups in the emerging market include Youxinpai, Cheyipai and Renrenche.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Student Micro-loan Site Qufenqi Pins Down $200M Investment Led By Alibaba https://technode.com/2015/08/13/qufenqi-series-e/ https://technode.com/2015/08/13/qufenqi-series-e/#comments Thu, 13 Aug 2015 00:41:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31522 Chinese university student micro-loan site Qufenqi announced that it has secured a massive $200 USD million investment led by Ant Financial, Alibaba Group’s financial-services affiliate, with participation of current investors Kalends, BlueRun Ventures and Source Code Capital. As the fifth investment received by the company, the current round would push the Qufenqi’s total funding to more than $400 […]]]>

Chinese university student micro-loan site Qufenqi announced that it has secured a massive $200 USD million investment led by Ant Financial, Alibaba Group’s financial-services affiliate, with participation of current investors KalendsBlueRun Ventures and Source Code Capital.

As the fifth investment received by the company, the current round would push the Qufenqi’s total funding to more than $400 million, including two $100 million rounds secured in December 2014 and April 2015, eight-digit USD funding landed in August 2014 and two other smaller rounds received in the same year.

The tie-up will help Qufenqi to further integrate its platform with Alibaba’s Alipay and Sesame credit-scoring service to construct a financial ecosystem for university students. Under the deal, Ant Financial will assign a board member for the startup.

Qufenqi is a Chinese electronics retailer that allows buyers, mostly college students and young white collar workers, to pay in monthly installments. The platform focuses on smartphones, laptops, and other consumer electronics. Customers can choose items from e-commerce sites like Tmall and JD, and then pay for them via Qufenqi by selecting a down payment and the number of months they will pay off the remainder.

Additionally, the site also allows students to set up online groceries stores for school mates, aiming for a campus-based marketplace similar to Taobao, according to Luo Min, founder of the company.

It is a logical move for e-commerce giants to back such sites to increase traffic and potential customers. JD has invested in Fenqile, an arch-rival of Qufenqi, earlier this year.

Research by Shanghai Jiaotong University shows that China now has nearly 30 million university students. The huge group, which is characterized growing spending power as future consumers after graduation, has lured rafts of companies to tap the burgeoning sector.

Image credit: Qufenqi

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Xiaomi MIUI App Store Surpasses 20 Billion Downloads https://technode.com/2015/08/10/xiaomis-miui-app-store/ https://technode.com/2015/08/10/xiaomis-miui-app-store/#respond Mon, 10 Aug 2015 02:00:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31480 After regaining the top spot in China by shippments, smartphone giant Xiaomi has marked another milestone, this time with their software. MIUI, the customized Android ROM by Xiaomi, announced that app downloads through its built-in app store surpassed 20 billion as of June this year. It’s good news for the Chinese smartphone maker which posted growth figures […]]]>

After regaining the top spot in China by shippments, smartphone giant Xiaomi has marked another milestone, this time with their software.

MIUI, the customized Android ROM by Xiaomi, announced that app downloads through its built-in app store surpassed 20 billion as of June this year.

It’s good news for the Chinese smartphone maker which posted growth figures below their target last month, suggesting they were suffering from slowing sales in China. The company has been increasingly focussed on less-saturated markets, including Brazil and India.

Xiaomi’s App Store has gained rapid traction since its launch in May 2012. The current landmark comes only nine months after reaching the 10 billion landmark in November 2014. According to the company, a major update is slated for August 13.

Daily downloads in the store have peaked at 85 million, while the store’s dividends from domestic third-party app developers has hit 580 million RMB ($94 million USD) in the first half of this year.

Xiaomi is catching up quickly with the world’s two largest apps stores. As of June, Google Play downloads reached 50 billion, while Apple’s app store downloads totaled 25 million.

The MIUI ROM includes a launcher, an app store, a game center, a browser, a book store, a theme store, cloud storage services, Xiaomi Mall, and a messaging app.

As Google Play still hasn’t been widely available in mainland China, the Android app distribution market is now dominated by big tech companies including Xiaomi, Tencent, and Qihoo 360.

Chinese media expects that the company is going to wheel out their new flagship smartphone RedMi Note 2 in mid to late August, even though the company has given a much more vague timeframe.

Image credit: Xiaomi

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TechNode Launched XNode Co-working Space, Driving Tech Innovation Across China https://technode.com/2015/08/07/technode-launched-xnode-co-working-space-driving-tech-innovation-across-china/ https://technode.com/2015/08/07/technode-launched-xnode-co-working-space-driving-tech-innovation-across-china/#respond Fri, 07 Aug 2015 04:16:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31447 Right now in China tech, few words get a workout quite like innovation. From government policy to the factory floor, the industry is turning itself inside out in an attempt to shift its rep from assemblers to innovators. The country is shaking off its copy-cat reputation to embrace new ideas in some of the fastest growing verticals […]]]>

Right now in China tech, few words get a workout quite like innovation.

From government policy to the factory floor, the industry is turning itself inside out in an attempt to shift its rep from assemblers to innovators. The country is shaking off its copy-cat reputation to embrace new ideas in some of the fastest growing verticals in the world. Buoyed by a massive population, with an insatiable appetite for all things connected, Chinese entrepreneurs are behind some leading innovations in e-commerce, IoT and offline-to-offline services.

It’s all got us bursting with excitement at TechNode, which is why we are beyond thrilled to announce our newest co-working space and accelerator in Shanghai, XNode.

Working spaces in tech have become synonymous with the companies that live in them. From indoor slip and slides to bean bags, whiteboard-walls and standing desks, good tech offices are a reflection of the creativity we enjoy within their walls. At Technode, we love bringing all of that to China.

XNode: World Class Co-Working Spaces For Tech In China

In a 2013 trip to San Francisco, TechNode’s founder Dr. Gang Lu listened in on a speech from Ducan Logan, the founder of  Rocket Space, about the benefit of co-working spaces. Despite rapid growth in the number of competitive tech startups over the past few years, China’s office culture couldn’t be more distant from Silicon Valley, so Gang decided to bring co-working spaces home with him.

Later that year, TechNode rolled out our first workplace program, ‘the Node,’ in the heart of Beijing’s creative district, 798. Since the end of 2014, the Node began to record profits with several hosted companies including Taihuoniao, Jiae, Teambition, MoNo and Nashangban, receiving funding for different stages.

And we want to do more on this. By end of this year, TechNode will launch three venues in Shanghai at Bay Valley, JingAn, and North Bund. Together with our space in Beijing, we believe we now have some of the coolest working spaces China has to offer.

Designed by top interior designers, the three Shanghai venues together have a capacity of over 1,000 desks, together with a series of open facilities, include lounges, conference rooms, open bar and meditation rooms. XNode also provides a set of other support programs including entrepreneur seminars, salons and one-to-one tutoring with experts from internet giants such as Google, Amazon, Baidu, Tencent, Uber etc as well as international law firms and cooperate partners.

Shanghai is just the beginning of the XNode’s network. XNode will be landing in domestic cities including Beijing, Suzhou, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu etc, and partnerships with overseas cities will be announced soon.

The XNode Philosophy

To us, co-working centers are startup projects all by themselves. The ‘hardware’, is the real estate. It has to be comfortable, convenient, affordable and most importantly, inspiring. Our software is the culture we create within those walls, combining our wonderful network of tutors, investors, startups, media and creative partners.

In Chinese,  XNode is “创极无限”, meaning limitless innovation. We focus on nurturing the spirit of the geek and the unending quest for perfection. For us, XNode is not just a business, its our way of giving back to a community that has given us incredible insight into China’s tech landscape. Chinese entrepreneurs are increasingly eager to tap the global market, and at XNode, we want to help that happen by stimulating an innovation environment that is as global as the tech we love.

XNode is about building  a complete startup ecosystem, for Chinese startups and also for International startups which want to enter Chinese market. All hosted startup teams, no matter which city they are based in, will have the opportunity to get in touch with top investors, as well as the chance to join our XFounder Club, a community of fellow entrepreneurs. All activities and events organized by TechNode, ranging from startup salons to conferences, are geared to inspire and involve those who work with us as well as the wider community.

Check back with TechNode to hear more about our ecosystem, and sign up to our mailing list for news on XNode events as well as news about our terrific bunch of startups.

XNode | Yanpu office is now soft open, and our wonderful operation team is there waiting for you! Do drop us an email on contact At thexnode.com.

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Tencent-Backed Laundry App Edaixi Nabs $100M USD From Baidu https://technode.com/2015/08/06/edaixi-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/08/06/edaixi-series-b/#respond Thu, 06 Aug 2015 10:37:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31394 Chinese on-demand laundry app Edaixi (E-washing) announced today that it has secured $100 million USD in series B funding led by Baidu, followed by Matrix Partners China and SIG. Born out of laundromat franchise Rong Chain Laundry, Edaixi is a Uber-modeled, on-demand laundry pickup service for busy urban citizens. Users can select pickup times and pay […]]]>

Chinese on-demand laundry app Edaixi (E-washing) announced today that it has secured $100 million USD in series B funding led by Baidu, followed by Matrix Partners China and SIG.

Born out of laundromat franchise Rong Chain Laundry, Edaixi is a Uber-modeled, on-demand laundry pickup service for busy urban citizens. Users can select pickup times and pay on Edaixi’s app or its WeChat-based service account. The platform will collect your laundry at the appointed time and have them delivered to your door in the next 72 hours.

Edaixi charges a flat 99 RMB ($16 USD) per laundry bag, which may hold 33 skirts or 124 scarves as claimed by the company. Laundry for individual pieces ranges from 9RMB to 29 RMB according to size.

Currently the service has amassed more than 5 million users in 16 Chinese cities, seeing over 100,000 orders per day.

With the new funding, the startup plans to cut its 72-hour service timeframe to 48 hours. The company’s board chairman Zhang Rongyao indicated that the cash will also be used for supporting its customer subsidy program, recruiting talent and delivery personel.

Aside from laundry, Edaixi also provides on-demand cleaning for luxury products, air conditioners, furniture covers, leather goods and shoes. In the future, they plan to extend their O2O reach with home appliance maintenance, shared kitchens and even elderly care services.

As on-demand services are taking hold in transportation, it’s no surprise that more startups are sprouting up to solve the day-to-day chores of China’s growing metropolitan middle class. The on-demand laundry industry is among the most hotly contested sectors by local companies and investors. 24tidy, a leading player in the arena, raised an eight-digit Series A financing last year. Alibaba also launched a similar service on Taobao Life to tap the booming market.

Chinese companies and investors are currently throwing money at the online-to-offline sector (O2O) which is seen as the future model of e-commerce in the country. After receiving Tencent’s angel round in July 2014, Edaixi has raised a $20 million USD series A one month later. Baidu’s investment in the company is a continuation of its endeavor to stay in the O2O game.

Image credit: Edaixi

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Youku-Tudou Rebrands During Agressive Original Content Push https://technode.com/2015/08/06/youku-tudou-heyi/ https://technode.com/2015/08/06/youku-tudou-heyi/#respond Thu, 06 Aug 2015 10:18:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31413 Five months after the organizational changes, Youku Tudou announced today that the video streaming site is re-branding under Heyi Group, marking a significant strategic shift from its previous focus on traffic and traditional video content to self-produced content. The company will invest tens of billions (RMB) in the next three years to construct a culture and entertainment ecosystem, according […]]]>

Five months after the organizational changes, Youku Tudou announced today that the video streaming site is re-branding under Heyi Group, marking a significant strategic shift from its previous focus on traffic and traditional video content to self-produced content.

The company will invest tens of billions (RMB) in the next three years to construct a culture and entertainment ecosystem, according to the company.

Currently, Youku Tudou’s revenue mainly comes from ads during videos. The transformation will allow the company to increase earnings from content marketing and consumers, which is mainly derived from subscription-based service and interactive live entertainment, according to Victor Koo, CEO of Youku Tudou.

As the first step towards this goal, Youku Tudou announced investments in a raft of five startups that may contribute to the construction of a professional community. Here’s a full list of the companies:

Jiae.com specializes in marketing trend-setting, innovative design products. It helps designers and global brands launch new products, build brand awareness, and expand market reach in China. After the investment, Jiae will assist Youku Tudou’s efforts in developing derivative products based on video content produced the investor to support its e-commerce business.

AcFun is an ACG (animation, comic, game) video portal that is characterized by the popular Danmu or “Bullet Curtain”service, which engages audiences by providing live comment displays for online video comment sharing. The company has confirmed with Tencent Tech that this financing round hit $50 million USD, but it didn’t specify the timeframe for the investment.

Copyright issues have long been a headache for “Bullet Curtain websites” as they commonly host or link to pirated videos to display user commentaries on the same screen. Before this tie-up, Youku Tudou and AcFun just settled a piracy suit this March.

The fund will be used to purchase copyrighted content and for cooperation with content providers, said Sun Wen, CEO of AcFun.  Victor Koo added that the company will provide full support to AcFun in financing, content and production of animated films.

Joyme is a mobile game station focused on strategies, information, gift bag stores, game platforms, mobile apps, and more. The company announced this week that it has raised its series C funding led by Youku Tudou with participation from Chinese mobile gaming company Ourpalm.

Rongyi Education is an educational services provider that offers training courses for actors, film producers, artist agents and marketing talents. The investment will bring the two parties together to foster more professional talents for the music, gaming and animation industries.

Logical Thinking is a knowledge-based networking community for China’s younger generations. It interacts with followers through various means including WeChat subscription accounts and talk shows.


Along with efforts to advance its original content by partnering with premium content providers, Youku Tudou has put a lot of efforts into developing user-generated content and self-produced content. According to data from the company, in-house content now accounts for more than 50% of its traffic from both of its video streaming sites Youku and Tudou. Over ten self-produced programs, such as Rage Comics and Logic Thinking have hit a market valuation of over 100 million RMB.

In addition to their ambitious push into self-produced content, the Alibaba-backed online video giant is hopping onto the virtual reality bandwagon, investing in the development of original VR content.

Image credit: Sohu

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China’s E-commerce Transactions Surge 60% to $2.6 Trillion USD https://technode.com/2015/08/05/china-e-commerce-2014/ https://technode.com/2015/08/05/china-e-commerce-2014/#respond Wed, 05 Aug 2015 04:35:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31388 China’s booming e-commerce industry has experienced another year of steep growth in 2014. The transaction volume of the e-commerce market totaled 16.39 trillion RMB ($2.6 trillion USD) in 2014, surging 60% YOY, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). Rapid Growth of 2B (To Business) E-commerce China’s e-commerce frenzy is encouraging domestic companies, […]]]>


China’s booming e-commerce industry has experienced another year of steep growth in 2014. The transaction volume of the e-commerce market totaled 16.39 trillion RMB ($2.6 trillion USD) in 2014, surging 60% YOY, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

Rapid Growth of 2B (To Business) E-commerce

China’s e-commerce frenzy is encouraging domestic companies, big and small, to jump on board with 2B online shopping. The report revealed that the transaction volume of e-commerce targeted at enterprises soared 62.8% YOY to 12.75 trillion RMB in 2014, of which 12.25 trillion RMB is attributable to products and 0.50 trillion to services.

The e-commerce market for individual customers was worth 3.64 trillion RMB in 2014, up 48.6% YOY from the preceding year. Of the total amount, consumer goods account for 2.88 trillion RMB and services represent 0.76 trillion RMB.

Home-grown Platforms Dominate E-commerce Market

E-commerce platforms can be divided into three categories:

1) home-brew online marketplaces built and operated by companies themselves, like the sales and CRM platform of Sinopec Chemical Commercial Holding Co., Ltd.

2) third-party e-commerce sites, eg: Taobao.

3) e-commerce sites that run both in-house and other’s businesses, like JD, which has 70% of its revenue from self-owned businesses and 30% from third-party retailers.

The data show that 8.72 trillion RMB or 53% of the total volume was generated from businesses’ in-house online stores, and 7.01 trillion RMB or 43% from third-party e-commerce platforms. The transaction volume of mixed platforms hit 0.66 trillion RMB in 2014, rising 41.1% YOY.

Third-Party E-Commerce Sites Form Monopolies

Data of third-party e-commerce platforms showed clear monopolies, with 90% of the total trade volume dominated by the top 20 e-commerce sites, including Taobao, Tmall and JD.

The widespread application of 4G networks and huge internet user base have been the major propellers for the swift development of e-commerce industry in China. Moreover, the nation’s economic slowdown in 2014 has pushed more enterprises to seek opportunities online in a bid to reduce costs in marketing, sales and production, according to Sun Qingguo, a representative from NBS.

The growth of e-commerce has triggered the fast development of related industries, like online payment and logistics. For example, China has delivered a total of 14 billion mail packages in 2014, up 51.9% YOY, overtaking the U.S. as the world’s largest country in terms of packages delivered. The bureau noted that it is the fourth year for China’s logistic industry to record an annual growth rate of over 50%.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Tencent-Baidu-Wanda Unveil E-commerce Site Ffan To Compete With Alibaba https://technode.com/2015/08/05/tencent-baidu-wanda-ffan/ Wed, 05 Aug 2015 04:22:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31375 One year after its establishment, Tencent-Baidu-Wanda’s e-commerce joint venture has finally rolled out e-commerce service Ffan to tap into China’s O2O e-commerce industry. In essence, Ffan is an open platform  that aims to redirect online users to all kinds of offline services, such as parking, reservations at restaurants, and purchasing film tickets and products at discounts. The […]]]>
Ffan-pic

One year after its establishment, Tencent-Baidu-Wanda’s e-commerce joint venture has finally rolled out e-commerce service Ffan to tap into China’s O2O e-commerce industry.

In essence, Ffan is an open platform  that aims to redirect online users to all kinds of offline services, such as parking, reservations at restaurants, and purchasing film tickets and products at discounts. The service now integrates a digital membership system, a rewards & points system, online payment service and online marketing programs.

It is obvious that Ffan is targeting at both B2B and B2C models. Through cooperation with business partners, the platform can better connect all member customers for effective promotion programs, unified rewards and payment systems. On the other hand, it will help Wanda increase user stickiness by converting one-time customer to more loyal customers, or membership.

As online shopping has surged, both of these models are of increasingly important for traditional retailers like Wanda, which has been squeezed in sales by “showrooming, ” a phenomonen where shoppers browse products in stores that then buy from e-commerce sites.

It is easy to speculate that Wanda Group will take the helm of the joint venture, as the real estate conglomerate maintains a 70% stake in the company, while Tencent and Baidu share the remainder evenly. However, the tie-up will also help the two internet giants to further expand into the lucrative e-commerce market by capitalizing on existing resources, Baidu through maps and Tencent through WeChat’s commitment to payments and social.

Both Baidu and Tencent have reinforced their commitment to heavy early investment in O2O recently. Tencent has made moves to take control in the food delivery and car-hailing markets, while Baidu recently announced a 20 billion RMB investment in O2O group-buying sit Nuomi to fight off competition from private market players including Meituan.

Alibaba has also taken on the O2O challenge, investing $692 million USD in Intime Retail, one of China’s leading department store operators to develop O2O business. Moreover, the company has launched Miaojie, a service similar to Ffan which helps all physical department stores to tap O2O markets. According to the company, Miaojie is expected to cover 1000 stores across 15 Chinese cities by the end of 2015.

JD is also pushing its O2O business with the support of powerful logistic system, mainly through cooperation with offline stories including supermarkets, convenience stores and fruit and flower stores. Although JD’s O2O business still steers clear of department stores, it would be a rational progression given its dominance in the sectors of consumer electronics, cloths and mother & baby products.

Image credit: Ffan

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China’s AirBNB Tujia Valued at $1B USD Following $300M In Funding https://technode.com/2015/08/04/tujia-series-d/ https://technode.com/2015/08/04/tujia-series-d/#comments Tue, 04 Aug 2015 00:32:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31356 Chinese home rental service Tujia has announced today US$300 million in series D financing at a valuation of more than $1 billion USD, adding a new title to China’s lengthening list of billion-dollar-valued tech startups. All-Stars Investment led this round with participation from Ascott and existing investors. The financing will push Tujia’s total funding to over $464 million USD. The […]]]>
Roomrental

Chinese home rental service Tujia has announced today US$300 million in series D financing at a valuation of more than $1 billion USD, adding a new title to China’s lengthening list of billion-dollar-valued tech startups. All-Stars Investment led this round with participation from Ascott and existing investors.

The financing will push Tujia’s total funding to over $464 million USD. The site raised a $100 million USD Series C last year after receiving a combined 400 million RMB ($64 million USD) in Series A and Series B from GGV Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, CDH Ventures, Qiming Venture Partners, Ctrip and HomeAway.

The new cash is earmarked to help the startup links online and offline resources, improves user experience and expand brand promotion, according to Luo Jun, CEO of the company.

The startup, previously focused on a B2C model, launched a C2C platform to enrich its business lines and announced plans to build overseas headquarters to target the cross-border travel market for Chinese abroad. The startup is also initiating a “campaign” to connect offline home rental partners under the support of Ascott, operators of white-collar apartment and real estate crowdfunding platform 51wofang.

Like Airbnb, Tujia connects property owners with travelers looking for alternatives to hotels. Through more than three years of operation, the site now operates in 255 Chinese cities and 138 overseas cities with more than 310,000 holiday rental homes available on the platform, according to the company.

China’s shot-term rental market is growing at a staggering 159.3% YOY and is worth an estimated 10.5 billion RMB in 2015, according to data from iResearch. The huge market potential has given rise to several domestic players including Ganji-backed Airbnb clone, Mayi.com, and Xiaozhu, the latter of which just secured $60 million USD in round C funding. While both these offerings focus on budget rentals for the lower end of the domestic travel market, Tujia is targeting at middle to high-end Chinese travelers who are looking for a higher-end rental.

Image credit: Tujia, ShutterStock

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Vending Machine Operator Ubox Lands $85M USD Fresh Funding From Carlyle Group https://technode.com/2015/07/31/ubox-carlyle-group/ https://technode.com/2015/07/31/ubox-carlyle-group/#respond Fri, 31 Jul 2015 06:11:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31344 China’s leading vending company Ubox has secured 530 million RMB ($85 million USD) in funding from Carlyle Group in exchange for an undisclosed stake. The investment was made through the Carlyle Beijing Partners Fund, an RMB fund the investment institution has established with the support of the Beijing government. The financing is earmarked to expand Ubox’s vending machine network […]]]>
Ubox-a

China’s leading vending company Ubox has secured 530 million RMB ($85 million USD) in funding from Carlyle Group in exchange for an undisclosed stake. The investment was made through the Carlyle Beijing Partners Fund, an RMB fund the investment institution has established with the support of the Beijing government.

The financing is earmarked to expand Ubox’s vending machine network across the country, improve its digital advertising businesses, and develop more value-added services.

Founded in 2010, Ubox is a key player in China’s vending machine industry. In addition to traditional vending services, Ubox is known for its pioneering O2O efforts in operating interactive vending machines, which enables customers to make purchases through their mobile app and then pick goods from offline vending devices.

Ubox machines support multiple payment methods ranging from credit/debit cards, to more popular mobile payment options like Alipay or WeChat Payment. Not only from retail sales, the company also makes money through ads on its online platform.

Operated under a franchise model, Ubox runs more than 30,000 machines across 58 cities in locations like transit stations and shopping malls across China, according to the company.

“China’s vending machine market is still at an early stage of development, with great potential for growth. The industry has seen an accelerated pace of growth in recent years, driven by increasing disposable income, rising urban population density and consumers’ preference for convenient lifestyles.” said Eric Zhang, managing director of the Carlyle Asia buyout team.

The deal points to the interest from foreign funds in China. As of June 2015, Carlyle Group has invested a combined $6.3 billion USD in 81 projects in China. The Ubox deal comes on the heels of Carlyle’s investment in transportation company Shanghai ANE Logistics Ltd. and equipment leasing firm JIC Leasing Co Ltd.

Image credit: Ubox

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Alibaba Injects $1B USD In Aliyun & Inks Partnership With Yongyou https://technode.com/2015/07/30/alibaba-aliyun/ https://technode.com/2015/07/30/alibaba-aliyun/#respond Thu, 30 Jul 2015 13:48:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31317 Chinese internet giant Alibaba Group announced that it will invest an additional $1 billion USD into cloud computing arm Aliyun, in an attempt to beef up its global presence, improve R&D capacity and foster partnerships with local data technology companies. The investment is intended to set up a global network for Aliyun with new centers […]]]>

Chinese internet giant Alibaba Group announced that it will invest an additional $1 billion USD into cloud computing arm Aliyun, in an attempt to beef up its global presence, improve R&D capacity and foster partnerships with local data technology companies.

The investment is intended to set up a global network for Aliyun with new centers in Middle East, Singapore, Japan and Europe, the company said. Aliyun now has six public data centers in Beijing, Hangzhou, Qingdao, Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Silicon Valley.

Along with the investment, Aliyun has also entered new strategic partnership with Yonyou Software, a leading enterprise management software and cloud service provider in Asia Pacific region. Yongyou claims to have over 2 million government clients or enterprises customers engaged in finance, automobile, medical care and energy.

The tie-up will help Aliyun to capitalize on this customer resources. For the first stage of this cooperation, the partnership will primarily focus on enterprise cloud computing,  big data, digital marketing, and e-commerce solutions, according to the company.

The news comes a week after Aliyun released a series of cloud-based services.

The move underlines the importance Alibaba attaches to cloud computing as a revenue driver. “Big Data and cloud computing are at the heart of Alibaba Group’s strategy for the future,” said Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang.

As foreign cloud services like Amazon Web Service and Microsoft’s Azure are exploring Chinese market, their domestic counterparts are also trying to expand beyond domestic market for global presence. In addition to Aliyun, Chinese cloud services like Tencent Cloud and UCloud also set eyes on overseas markets through constructing a global data center networks.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Cloud Platform EaseMob Scoops Up $12.5M USD Funding Led by Sequoia Capital https://technode.com/2015/07/29/easemob-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/07/29/easemob-series-b/#respond Wed, 29 Jul 2015 10:52:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31294 China’s cloud communications startup EaseMob has secured $12.5 million USD in Series B funding from returning investors of Sequoia Capital, Matrix Partners China and SIG China. EaseMob is really on a roll since last year. The current round followed three successive financing rounds in 2014, a 5 million RMB (roughly $805,500 USD) angel round from Matrix Partners China in May, […]]]>

China’s cloud communications startup EaseMob has secured $12.5 million USD in Series B funding from returning investors of Sequoia CapitalMatrix Partners China and SIG China.

EaseMob is really on a roll since last year. The current round followed three successive financing rounds in 2014, a 5 million RMB (roughly $805,500 USD) angel round from Matrix Partners China in May, a $5 million USD Series A from SIG China in August and a $3 million USD from Sequoia Capital in October.

EaseMob is a PAAS cloud platform that allows developers to integrate instant messaging, voice and data services to their apps by providing open API and SDK packages. It offers full support for Android, iOS and web platforms. As of H1 2015, the services has accumulated 23,062 apps, while its SDK covers 251 million end customers.

A Sequoia Capital representative said the follow-up investment was triggered by the huge potential of the customer service market in China, the excellent team, as well as healthy growth within the company. According to the venture capitalist, EaseMob’s key performances indexes on customer base, daily messages, and DAU surged rapidly in the past year.

As cloud communications technologies are being used increasingly by various businesses, China is witnessing a boom of third-party cloud IM services thanks to the simplicity of the technology and lower investment requirements. Major players in the battlefield include Ronglian, Yunzhixun, and RongCloud. A report by CNIT-Research shows that EaseMob is taking a dominat share in the emerging market.

Market Share of Top Could Communication Platforms in China

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                                              Source: CNIT-Research

(Research is based on data collected between January 1st and April 25th, 2015)

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Didi Kuaidi Launches Service To Drive You Home After A Night Out https://technode.com/2015/07/29/did-chauffeur/ https://technode.com/2015/07/29/did-chauffeur/#respond Wed, 29 Jul 2015 05:05:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31267 Among a series of recent moves to diversify its business, Didi Kuaidi, the dominant transportation platform in China, has launched a on-demand personal designated driver service in ten Chinese cities, include Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou and Chongqing. The feature helps car owners in urban areas find a qualified personal driver nearby to drive their own car home for […]]]>

Among a series of recent moves to diversify its business, Didi Kuaidi, the dominant transportation platform in China, has launched a on-demand personal designated driver service in ten Chinese cities, include Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou and Chongqing.

The feature helps car owners in urban areas find a qualified personal driver nearby to drive their own car home for whatever reason. Didi Chauffeur fares will include a charge for the first 10 kilometers that will vary throughout the day and depend on demand, as well as a fixed price for every additional kilometer traveled. The platform will take around 20% commission from the fare.

To provide protection for both drivers and passengers, every order for Didi’s designated drivers will be covered up to a maximum of 3 million RMB ($483,000 USD) under the chauffeur service liability insurance. The company claims to have registered more than 1 million drivers for the platform.

The Didi ‘Chauffeur’ service will be available in 15 more cities by August 2015, including Chengdu, Changchun, Xiamen, Fuzhou and Qingdao. It is expected that Didi Chauffeur service will be available in more than 100 Chinese cities by the end of this year.

Didi-chauffeur

Fu Qiang, former vice president of Kuaidi Dache, was named as the general manager of Didi-Kuaidi’s Chauffeur Department, marking the most important appointment following the merger.

Since Didi-Kuaidi’s coalition in February this year, rumors run that the Kuaidi management team is going to team-sell shares as they are taking a back seat in operating the combined company. A Wall Street Journal source indicates Kuaidi’s top managers will likely exit from senior roles in the company. The new adjustment may be designed to balance the power of the teams from the former companies.

Didi-Kuaidi usually faces a flock of existing competitors when expanding new businesses, including private car-hailing and car-pooling. However the chauffeur market is less crowded, perhaps due to the fact that existing players are very strong. eDaijia, a Beijing-based designated driver app launched in 2011, is among the one of the most prominent services in the field. It now provides service in more than 150 Chinese and overseas cities.

In the past, Kuaidi-Didi would squash smaller companies and snap up the market share by burning money. But it seems that wont work when competing with a equally loaded rival. eDaijia had secured $100 million USD in funding this May after receiving a $20 million USD round  from classifieds site 58.com in 2014.

China’s chauffeur market is expected to reach a transaction volume of RMB 2.69 billion ($433 million USD) by the end of 2015, the company cites industry analysis.

Image credit: eDaijia, ShutterStock

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Is China Hungry For Micro Video? Not Just Yet: VivaVideo Founder https://technode.com/2015/07/27/vivavideo-one-video-maker-app-aiming-global-market/ https://technode.com/2015/07/27/vivavideo-one-video-maker-app-aiming-global-market/#respond Mon, 27 Jul 2015 12:01:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31184 It’s an understatement to say that Chinese companies struggle to head abroad. Just like the western counterparts that try to push their way in, exiting can be very difficult, especially when it comes to migrating from local social networks to foreign ones, which are mostly banned in China. There’s also significant pain involved in changing e-commerce solutions, or dealing with […]]]>

It’s an understatement to say that Chinese companies struggle to head abroad.

Just like the western counterparts that try to push their way in, exiting can be very difficult, especially when it comes to migrating from local social networks to foreign ones, which are mostly banned in China. There’s also significant pain involved in changing e-commerce solutions, or dealing with the customs headache of global e-retail.

Han Sheng, founder of Chinese micro-video editing app VivaVideo, is tackling a different problem however; people in different countries use video in incredibly different ways.

Southeast Asian users are all about the beautifying features, which apparently are a tough sell in North America. Brazilian are ridiculously skilled at video editing, while other markets struggle to make use of most features and Chinese people love social; if you can’t share it, it’s not worth doing.

It’s a case study of the challenges Chinese companies face when heading overseas, and while we praise tech for being increasingly global, the answer for these companies may still lie in aggressive localization. According to Han, the key to their global strategy will be targeting country-specific social platforms in order to refine the app for each market.

Why Take China-Founded Micro Video Abroad?

Global expansion sounds like an incredible hassle for a Chinese micro-video company who arguably has 1.3 billion consumers in their own backyard, but VivaVideo is dealing with something at home that could possibly make the move abroad more worthwhile; tight competition from Chinese internet giants and a local market that (surprisingly) is just not that into video editing yet. Despite being ravenous consumers of mobile video, content creation is still comparatively weak.

After Vine first gained global traction in 2012, a slew of Chinese startups flocked into the short-form video sharing sector, which was believed to be the next big thing in China’s internet industry after Weibo. Tencent launched Weshow or WeiShi in an attempt to channel the huge user base from their WeChat and QQ platforms. At the same time, Weibo partnered with Miaopai, while Meitu, China’s leading photo app developer, expanded to video clip capturing and editing with Meipai.

But despite early interest from prominent companies, the sector never achieved the same degree of popularity in China as it did in foreign markets. After much pushing and pulling, Tencent quietly closed WeShow earlier this year. Even the backing of gargantuan social platform WeChat couldn’t sell the micro-video in China. There are many reasons why this could be, but two of the major ones commonly cited are inflated mobile traffic costs and the fact that Chinese users are simply better content consumers than generators.

For this reason, Hans Sheng and VivaVideo were looking abroad from the very beginning. The Hangzhou-based startup has nearly 70 million overseas users scattered around Southeast Asia, Middle East, Europe and North America, representing 60% of their total users. Han believes countries like Brazil, India, and Russia – which has a big population and lower smartphone penetration rates – will offer more opportunities for startups like VivaVideo who face stiff competition at home in an unsure market.

Will Younger Audiences Will Bring Micro Video Back To China?

While he intends to focus on global markets for the time being, Hans also believes that China will grow to love video editing back home, it’s just a matter of connectivity, and more importantly, age.

“The prosperity of social video industry will be the combined effect of three factors: The wide application of 4G network, cooperation among SNS platforms, and the growth of a new post-90 and even post-00 user group,” said Hans.

The company has received 5 million RMB of seed investment from Lee Kaifu’s Innovation Works in 2013 and eight-digit RMB in Series A financing from N5 Capital one year later.

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Image Credit: Shutterstock, VivaVideo

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BabyTree Bags $300M USD In Largest Ever Funding Round For Mother & Baby Tech https://technode.com/2015/07/24/jumei-babytree/ https://technode.com/2015/07/24/jumei-babytree/#respond Fri, 24 Jul 2015 07:50:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31166 BabyTree, an online community for early care and education, has secured over $300 million USD in funding. They will use the latest injection to extend their e-commerce operations with the help of their new investors, said the company. It’s the highest round ever recorded by a Chinese company in the maternity and baby market, highlighting booming growth in […]]]>

BabyTree, an online community for early care and education, has secured over $300 million USD in funding. They will use the latest injection to extend their e-commerce operations with the help of their new investors, said the company. It’s the highest round ever recorded by a Chinese company in the maternity and baby market, highlighting booming growth in the sector.

Chinese online cosmetics retailer Jumei has agreed to provide BabyTree with a convertible loan and a revolving credit facility of up to 1.55 billion RMB ($250 million USD), making up the majority of the recent investment. An additional $50 million USD capital was raised from several other unnamed domestic institutions, reaching a final value of $300 million USD. In January 2014, Chinese after-school tutoring services firm TAL Education Group acquired undisclosed amount of minority stake in BabyTree for $24 million USD.

With an annual increase of over 16 million population, China is world’s second largest market for mother and baby products, second only to the U.S., according  to a report by China E-commerce Research Center. The center predicted that the market is going to be worth 100 billion RMB to 200 billion RMB by 2015.

The booming market has drawn crowds of companies and some significant investments. Alibaba purchased a 9.2% stake in U.S. flash sale site  Zulily earlier this year. Mia, a Chinese e-commerce site specializing in items for infants, toddlers, and moms, received a $60 million USD in series C last year, while its competitor Beibei raised a $100 million USD series C funding at a valuation of nearly $1 billion USD earlier this year.

BabyTree is a leading Chinese digital resources and community for maternal and childcare services. The company provides all-round professional information on baby care and health. It now currently claims to have over 10 million daily active users between BabyTree.com, the company’s desktop website, along with mobile apps “BabyTree Pregnancy” and “BabyTree Footprints.”

With the new funding, Babytree plans to develop its own e-commerce platform, which explains the massive amount invested. The tie-up will bring together enormous user base of BabyTree and Jumei’s supply chain and logistics expertise in cross border e-commerce to create a premium e-commerce platform.

Jumei has been facing heavy pressure from domestic competitors like VIPshop, which acquired a major stake Jumei’s direct rival LAFASO last year, in retaining its position as China’s top online cosmetics retailer. Since the end of last year, the U.S.-listed company is shifting focus to the cross-border e-commerce market, of which maternity and baby product accounts for a major part.

After recording a strong growth in its cross-border e-commerce platform Jumei Global, the company has set an ambitious goal of 75% month-over-month growth for Q2, 2015.

Mr. Leo Ou Chen, founder and CEO of Jumei, said that Jumei will open several core resources to BabyTree, including overseas merchant partners, storage, and delivery. A management group led by Jumei co-founder Dai Yusen will also provide professional guidance to the new e-commerce unit of BabyTree.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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China’s JD.com Launches U.S. Mall https://technode.com/2015/07/22/jd-us-mall/ https://technode.com/2015/07/22/jd-us-mall/#respond Tue, 21 Jul 2015 23:02:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31128 China’s e-commerce retailer JD.com has launched a new channel on the company’s JD Worldwide cross-border platform for selling U.S. goods to the country’s growing middle class. “U.S. Mall” will offer American products in a wide range of categories including maternity and baby, red-wine, food, personal care, cosmetics, apparel, home decoration, electronics and home appliances. Authentic American brands […]]]>

China’s e-commerce retailer JD.com has launched a new channel on the company’s JD Worldwide cross-border platform for selling U.S. goods to the country’s growing middle class.

“U.S. Mall” will offer American products in a wide range of categories including maternity and baby, red-wine, food, personal care, cosmetics, apparel, home decoration, electronics and home appliances.

Authentic American brands will be sold on the platform ranging from Converse, Samsonite, Ocean Spray to Nautica Kids and Jeep appeal, and even a line of clothes designed with singer Taylor Swift, according to the company.

The site has partnered up with DHL to handle international delivery for the new U.S. Mall. Richard Liu, CEO of JD, said they do not have plans to construct an in-house international logistics system, but would rather focus on building a strong domestic delivery system that solves the “last-mile” problem for Chinese customers.

The total value of U.S. exports from the U.S. into China totaled $123 billion USD last year, according to DHL.

The launch of U.S. Mall followed the release of similar country-specific channels for French, South Korean, Australian and Japanese products earlier this year.

China’s rising middle class and large consumer base have fostered a lucrative cross-bother e-commerce market as the country’s growing middle class increasingly craves foreign and high quality products.

JD.com’s arch rival Alibaba has tapped the market through a dedicated sub-site called Tmall Global which was launched last year. In a most recent move, the e-commerce giant partnered with a slew of 11 countries to build their curated shopping sites on the platform, bringing the total number of countries to more than 20. According to data released by the company, Tmall Global saw a ten-fold sales increase between February and November 2014.

The burgeoning cross-border e-commerce market also gave rise to Chinese vertical retailers like Metao and Ymatou. All companies related to the sector are poised to take a bite of the cake: SF Express, a leading Chinese express logistics company, rolled out a cross-border e-commerce site SF Haitao, while Chinese internet company NetEase opened a similar service Kaola at the beginning of this year.

Image Credit: JD.com

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Sleepace Receives $7M USD Financing To Monitor Your Naps https://technode.com/2015/07/21/sleepace-receives-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/07/21/sleepace-receives-series-b-funding/#respond Tue, 21 Jul 2015 02:00:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31091 Sleepace, a Shenzhen-based startup for sleep quality monitoring, today announced the completion of a $7 million USD Series B financing round, led by Luolai Home Textile, a leading home textile product brand in China, and followed by e-commerce retailer JD.com. The new round of funding will be used to improve product R&D, enhance branding and market outreach, […]]]>

Sleepace, a Shenzhen-based startup for sleep quality monitoring, today announced the completion of a $7 million USD Series B financing round, led by Luolai Home Textile, a leading home textile product brand in China, and followed by e-commerce retailer JD.com.

The new round of funding will be used to improve product R&D, enhance branding and market outreach, and support the company’s overseas market expansion plans, according to the company.

Sleepace was founded by a group of Peking University alumni in 2011 as as a sleep monitoring product for babies and senior citizens. The company’s latest product is RestOn, a smart sleep monitoring device that tracks sleep health in real time.

The non-wearable device utilizes medical-grade sensors and a patented structure to measure sleep time, heart rate, respiratory rate, body movement, sleep cycles and other important sleep health metrics. Through a bluetooth connection, the Sleepace App analyzes sleep data to provide users feedback on how to rest better.

In terms of product development, Luolai will make Sleepace the centerpiece of its smart bedroom platform by leveraging biometric, behavioral and environmental data to better connect Sleepace with other smart bedroom devices. The integration of Sleepace into JD’s hardware ecosystem will broaden its range of compatible products to more than 500.

RestOn-Install

Sleepace received its initial Series A investment from Shanghai-based venture capital firm Gobi Partners in July 2014. In November 2014, Sleepace debuted the RestOn as part of a successful crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo, attracting over 1,000 backers and exceeding the campaign’s fundraising goal by over 300%.

Hardware makers around the world are trying to solve the problem of poor sleep from a multitude of angles; here’s our review on startups dedicated to tapping the sleep market.

Image Credit: Sleepace

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Xiaomi Users Like History, iPhone Users Like Cars: What Your Smartphone Says About You https://technode.com/2015/07/20/smartphone-brands-toutiao-report/ https://technode.com/2015/07/20/smartphone-brands-toutiao-report/#respond Mon, 20 Jul 2015 09:40:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30748 Brand is identity; from our sneakers to our coffee cup, we like to make sure our logos line up with our egos. And it’s especially true of the coveted digital sidekicks to China’s growing middle class; the smartphone. We know iPhones now outweigh other brands in China’s top tier cities, while Android still reigns dominant countrywide with homegrown startups like Xiaomi […]]]>

Brand is identity; from our sneakers to our coffee cup, we like to make sure our logos line up with our egos. And it’s especially true of the coveted digital sidekicks to China’s growing middle class; the smartphone.

We know iPhones now outweigh other brands in China’s top tier cities, while Android still reigns dominant countrywide with homegrown startups like Xiaomi carving out a mind-blowing consumer following, but what do these superstar brand say about the people who use them?

Chinese news aggregator app Toutiao asked exactly that question. Using data aggregated from personal metrics, news preferences, and browsing data, they went on a mission to find out what exactly your smartphone says about you.

So What Are People Using China’s Top Selling Smartphones For?

If you have an iPhone in China, you are more likely to like cars than other users. How anyone can get excited about driving cars on China’s congested highways is a question in it’s self; but with iPhones being the most expensive consumer option in smartphones, it’s logical that the same users may have a taste for expensive cars.

While Samsung may have been robbed of the top spot in sales, they can at least boast about being worldly as the brand which prefers international news most over its competitors. Huawei and Xiaomi users have an appetite for history and local politics, though they fall short when it comes to engaging with foreign issues.

Girls Are From ViVO And Boys Are from Coolpad

Interested in fashion, mothering, health and women’s affairs? Statistics say you’ll prefer a ViVO or and OPPO phone. While both men and women enjoy Xiaomi and Samsung phones, the numbers also reveal that men have a higher preference for Xiaomi ranking it second, while women rank them third. Coolpad users are not only predominantly male, but they also tend to be older than the users of other brands.

Nubia and HTC users tend to be more tech-savvy and prefer news on digital products, technology and cars, while K-touch and ZTE owners tag military and current political affairs as their favorites.

smartphone-gender

Smartphones And Age

As a country with a strong mobile-first user base, China has a surprisingly savvy population of older mobile users, but age is reflected in brand.

Samsung is ranked as the most popular brand among the 41-50 age group with a 18.4% share, whist Xiaomi and Apple follow with 13.42% and 13.24%, respectively. Apple wins the 31-40-years-old user-group closely with a 8.85% share as opposed to Samsung’s 8.73%. On top of that, Apple dominates the younger groups too, aged 18-30, followed by Xiaomi and Samsung. Domestic smartphone makers Huawei, Lenovo and Coolpad took the fourth to sixth spots across all age groups.

Articles related to Xiaomi scored over 1.2 billion of views, followed by Samsung (747 million), Lenovo (699 million) and Huawei (623 million).

According to the report, Guangdong Province, where the manufacturing hub Shenzhen is based, has a higher percentage (3.92%) of users who enjoy reading smart-device related articles. Shanghai, Fujian, Zhejiang and Hubei followed with 3.79%,  3.75%, 3.67% and 3.47, respectively.

MIUI was hotly discussed among Xiaomi users. Product design is a priority for ViVO users, while price is a more crucial a factor for Meizu followers. ZTE owners are particularly image conscious and value selfie features. App fans have a love for the iPhone’s screen and the Siri function. Interestingly, users also prefer to browse smartphone related news between 9-11 PM.

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Launched in August 2012, Toutiao is a feed reader that uses cumulative usage to feed its smart algorithm. As of present, the app claims to have more than 270 million registered users and over 25 million daily active users.

Image Credit: Toutiao

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Didi-Kuaidi Rolls Out App-Enabled Bus Service In Beijing And Shenzhen https://technode.com/2015/07/20/didi-kuaidi-rolls-commuting-bus-service-beijing-shenzhen/ https://technode.com/2015/07/20/didi-kuaidi-rolls-commuting-bus-service-beijing-shenzhen/#comments Mon, 20 Jul 2015 05:36:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31071 After receiving a massive $2 billion USD funding last week, China’s largest taxi-hailing app Didi-Kuaidi is adding a new alternative to its transportation platform: Didi Bus, a shuttle bus service for commuters. It comes at a time when similar services are being stamped out by wary authorities. The service will start with 33 routes in […]]]>

After receiving a massive $2 billion USD funding last week, China’s largest taxi-hailing app Didi-Kuaidi is adding a new alternative to its transportation platform: Didi Bus, a shuttle bus service for commuters. It comes at a time when similar services are being stamped out by wary authorities.

The service will start with 33 routes in Beijing and 10 routes in Shenzhen and will cover several hundreds journeys in the two cities by end of July, according to the company.

Didi Bus will initially be operated through WeChat, a popular IM tool developed by Didi Kuaidi’s investor Tencent. After following the official account of ‘Didi Bus’ on WeChat, users can register with their phone number and choose their commuting routes and time. Riders will receive an e-ticket which is charged on a pay-as-you go basis at a price of around 7-13 RMB ($1.12 to $2.09 USD) per ride, which is 3-5 times the price of public buses. The company has said it will will provide a freebie price of 0.01 RMB per ride for the first week of operation however.

The internet firm has teamed up with licensed travel agencies and leasing companies to source the bus fleets. The shuttle routes were crowd-formed by requests from travelers, as well as existing route information.

Didi-buss-pic

The service is aimed at urban commuters aged between 20 to 40 years, and is designed to compliment China’s poor public transportation system, Didi Bus is also tapping into ideas on sustainability to help plug their new service, pointing to the poor carpooling record of China’s cities. Didi Bus is the latest step by the Tencent-Ali coalition to expand and monetize the immensely popular hailing app. The merged entity has gradually rolled out carpooling, black car services and designated driver services over the past 6 months.

In addition to tickets, potential revenue sources for this service include bus advertisements, sales of goods and value-added services for riders, including designated seats. The service appears to be similar to Leap Transit, a San Francisco-based luxury bus service for commuters that is commercializing through higher-end services including WiFi connections, refreshments and leather seats.

However, whether the shuttle bus service will make headway in the Chinese market is still to be seen. Leap Transit has suspended operations after receiving a cease-and-desist order from local regulator due to a lack of proper permits, which means the Didi Bus is also facing regulatory risks in China.

Liu Qing, president of Kuaidi, is still quite optimistic about the prospect of Didi Bus in China however. She argued that transport reform will come about in the same way that other changes have in China, saying that “before every new reform there are always contradictory voices, but history repeats, just as private dining replaced state-run cafeterias [in China].”

Image Credit: Didi Kuaidi

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5 Things You Should Know About China’s Booming Gay App Market https://technode.com/2015/07/20/china-gay-app-2015/ https://technode.com/2015/07/20/china-gay-app-2015/#respond Mon, 20 Jul 2015 05:12:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30940 The legalization of same-sex marriage in the U.S. has marked another milestone for equality. But in China, both government and society still lag far behind when it comes to gay rights. Fortunately, one area is making leaps and bounds; tech. Domestic internet companies are taking a more supportive tone to the special group. This February, […]]]>

The legalization of same-sex marriage in the U.S. has marked another milestone for equality. But in China, both government and society still lag far behind when it comes to gay rights.

Fortunately, one area is making leaps and bounds; tech.

Domestic internet companies are taking a more supportive tone to the special group. This February, Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao together with four Chinese LGBT rights groups sponsored 10 Chinese gay couples to travel to Los Angeles and marry. Likewise, Tencent adopted a rainbow flag in a new “Color Fun” function for the Apple Watch version of its popular IM tool QQ

More and more communities, websites and apps are springing up to serve the gay community. Coolchuan, an app promotion service, released a report recently to shed some light on the emerging market of apps designed for gay people in China. So what does the market look like?

1. Gay Male Communities Rule The Chinese App Market

Most Chinese apps targeting the gay community are male-dominated. Lesbian circles are less visible in tech and in society in general, mainly because Chinese women are under more pressure to conform to traditional roles.

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Download Growth of Gay VS Lesbian Apps in H1 2015

2. Lesbian-Focussed Apps Are On The Rise

Even though lesbian-focussed apps are only one tenth of those for gay men, it won’t stay that way for long. The report pointed out that China’s lesbian app sector recorded booming development since the beginning of this year, so the gap could soon be closing.

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Download Growth of Lesbian Apps in H1 2015

3. Blued and Zank Top The List Of Most Popular Apps For The Gay Male Community

Believe it or not, the world’s largest gay dating app is born in China, where public attitude about homosexuality is still more in the closet than open. Blued, a Beijing-based gay app has overtaken popular app Grindr with an average of 15 million yearly users.

The report shows that Blued and its arch-rival Zank dominate Chinese gay app market. Both of them maintained robust growth in the 6 month reporting period, but Blued is clearly outperforming Zank at a faster growth speed.

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Comparison of Download Growth for Gay Man Apps (Jan VS Jun)

4. There’s No Clear Winner In The Lesbian App Market – Yet.

While the current numbers are less impressive than those for men, lesbian focussed apps have an impressive growth rate, almost quadrupling in the past 6 months. The booming lesbian app market has give rise to a slew of leading services like TheL, LesPark and LesDo. However, unlike the more mature gay male app market, the lesbian app sector has yet to witness the emergence of an oligarchy app, every player in the field is still building up their initial user base.

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Comparison of Download Growth for Lesbian Apps (Jan VS Jun)

5. Verticals Are Hot

Apps that focused on verticals recorded more rapid growth. The downloads of Queers, a networking app for gay and lesbians to find partners for sham marriages or co-operative marriages, soared 8465% in the first half of this year. Gay apps also go deeper into more vertical fields, GeeYuu for gaming networking, Aloha for photo-sharing, G-show for video networking.

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Image Credit: Coolchuan

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Mobile Health Service Xingren Doctor Secures $32M USD In Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/07/16/xingren-doctor-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/07/16/xingren-doctor-series-b/#respond Thu, 16 Jul 2015 04:25:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=31004 Chinese mobile health app, Xingren Doctor, announced Wednesday that it has raised 200 million RMB (roughly $32 million USD) in series B financing led by FountainVest Partners, followed by current investors Sequoia Capital China and LightSpeed China Partners. The investment will go primarily into product development and improving their overall business model, said Martin Shen, founder and CEO […]]]>

Chinese mobile health app, Xingren Doctor, announced Wednesday that it has raised 200 million RMB (roughly $32 million USD) in series B financing led by FountainVest Partners, followed by current investors Sequoia Capital China and LightSpeed China Partners.

The investment will go primarily into product development and improving their overall business model, said Martin Shen, founder and CEO of the company.

Xingren Doctor is an mobile healthcare app targeted at doctors, helping them to better manage patients, workplace communications and industry updates. Available for both iOS and Android, doctors in China are using this app to communicate and track the status of their patients, contact other doctors on the network, or follow trends within their specialties.

WeChat integration allows Xingren to capitalize on messaging tools. Each doctor can get a Xingren account on WeChat after registration. Patients can follow the Xingren accounts of their doctors on WeChat and to ask clinical questions directly on the platform.

Launched in September 2014, the service now claims to have accumulated over 130,000 users, and a major reason for the significant series B investment is the team behind the service.

iHealth Management Consulting(Shanghai) Co., Ltd., the company behind Xingren Doctor, is also the developer of Kanchufang, a user-generated database that has collected more than 70,000 information points and medical case records. The company is now in the process of shutting down the Kanchufang service and shifting the full focus of its data pool to Xingren Doctor this year.

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In 2014, Xingren Doctor received a 30 million RMB series A funding led by Sequoia Capital and followed by LightSpeed China Partners. Before that, the team secured a seven-digit USD angel round from LightSpeed China Partners in 2013 for the original Kanchufang service.

The Chinese healthcare system has long been lambasted by the public for its chaotic operations and disparity of healthcare resources between rural and urban areas. In recent years, mobile healthcare services have emerged as a convenient option for complementing the traditional healthcare system, with internet giants and startups flocking into the industry gap.

In 2014, Tencent poured $70 million USD into healthcare community DXY and $100 million USD in medical service Guahao. Alibaba is moving fast into the sector with its ambitious ‘Future Hospital’ plan, drug safety plan, a separate healthcare app. Leading startup companies like Chunyu have also raised impressive funding.

Image credit: Xingren Doctor, ShutterStock

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Fintech Startup Fastacash Pockets $15M USD Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/07/15/fastacash-round-b/ https://technode.com/2015/07/15/fastacash-round-b/#respond Wed, 15 Jul 2015 02:33:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30953 Social-based fintech platform Fastacash has secured a $15 million USD B series, raising the company’s total funding to $23.5 million USD. Rising Dragon Singapore led the latest financing round, which also included fintech venture capital firm Life.SREDA, UVM 2 Venture Investments LP, and other existing investors. Founded in 2012, Fastacash is a global social payments platform that allows users […]]]>

Social-based fintech platform Fastacash has secured a $15 million USD B series, raising the company’s total funding to $23.5 million USD. Rising Dragon Singapore led the latest financing round, which also included fintech venture capital firm Life.SREDA, UVM 2 Venture Investments LP, and other existing investors.

Founded in 2012, Fastacash is a global social payments platform that allows users to transfer money to friends and family over social networks and messaging platforms like Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, Skype, Twitter, SMS & email. It provides accounts both to consumers and companies, where virtual goods, music, and images can also be transferred through its platform.

The company now claims to have over one million end-users, mainly distributed throughout Southeast Asian markets such as India, Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam. Russia is also a strong market for the company.

Fastacash works with banks, mobile operators, remittance companies, payment service providers, mobile wallets and other financial institutions to enable peer-to-peer or person-to-merchant transfers. As of this May, the Singapore-based payment startup has formed partnership with Axis Bank, India’s third largest private bank.

With the new funding, Fastacash plans to strengthen its foothold in India and Southeast Asia, as well as scaling up globally by entering new markets in the U.S., UK, Europe, and the Middle East.

After raising a $1.5 million USD seed funding led by Hong Kong’s Funding the Future in 2012, the company nabbed a $3 million USD in Series A funding from Singapore-based Jungle Ventures, Spring SEEDS Capital, the investment arm of SPRING Singapore, and existing investor.

An additional $4 million USD was received in an extended Series A round, led by Jagdish Chanrai, a Principal of the Kewalram Chanrai Group, and Golden Oriole Investments.

Image Credit: Fastacash

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China Bans Unlicensed Music Streaming, Internet Giants Win Out https://technode.com/2015/07/14/china-bans-unlicensed-music/ https://technode.com/2015/07/14/china-bans-unlicensed-music/#respond Tue, 14 Jul 2015 07:26:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30915 The clock is ticking for China’s online streaming services, with less than 10 days to go before they have to rid their sites of unlicensed, free music. Last week China’s copyright watchdog, the National Copyright Administration (NCA), announced that all related services should remove unlicensed music by the end of the month, adding that those who do not […]]]>

The clock is ticking for China’s online streaming services, with less than 10 days to go before they have to rid their sites of unlicensed, free music.

Last week China’s copyright watchdog, the National Copyright Administration (NCA), announced that all related services should remove unlicensed music by the end of the month, adding that those who do not follow the order will be punished with substantial fines.

The latest announcement is part of the Chinese government initiative Sword Net 2015, an anti-piracy campaign that aims to improve online copyright management, better protect royalty holders and restore confidence in the copyright system, said the NCA.

And while it’s bad news for marginal companies who won’t be able to afford the licensing fees, giants like Tencent QQ, Baidu Music and NetEase Music will be enjoying the opportunity to shake a few smaller players off their coat tails.

Currently, nearly all of China’s online streaming services have copyright issues, just to different degrees, said deputy director of NCA at a conference that assembled management from leading players, including Tencent, KuGou, and Baidu.  Most services in China allow users to access and download popular music for free, monetizing through advertising. The rampant copyright issues in China have made it tough for foreign services that use the paid model to enter, including Apple Music and Spotify, as well Google Music, which attempted a China-exclusive launch in 2012 but later exited.

According to an anonymous music platform executive who gave an interview to Tencent, that NCA has given a further timeframe of two to three months to prepare a final payment plan for legal internet music downloads, on top of the ridding the platforms of unlicensed music by this month.

However, the above-mentioned source also expressed concerns that government involvement may create a monopoly in China’s online music streaming sector. Services backed by deep-pocketed internet companies may benefit from the edict as they have more funding to purchase copyrighted content.

According to a CNIT-Research report, the top 6 music apps in China are currently KuGouTTPOD (supported by Alibaba Group), QQ Music (of Tencent), KuwoDuomi (backed by Chinese digital music company A8) and Baidu Music. Together, they make up 80% of the market as of Q2 2014.

Last week, Apple revealed the countries who would be able to access the new apple music service, leaving China off the list. While the announcement could bring hope to services including Apple Music and Spotify, history has shown that China’s insatiable appetite for pirated media usually prevails.

Image Source: Shutterstock.com

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Ant Financial Adds Local Life And Social Networking Features To Alipay 9.0 Update https://technode.com/2015/07/10/alipay-9-0-update/ https://technode.com/2015/07/10/alipay-9-0-update/#comments Fri, 10 Jul 2015 04:30:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30871 Alibaba’s financial and payment affiliate Ant Financial rolled out a new version of its Alipay app for iOS and Android in what the company called—the most revolutionary update in the past 12 years. In addition to a shift from orange to blue color scheme for the new logo, the app will combine two former independent brands […]]]>

Alibaba’s financial and payment affiliate Ant Financial rolled out a new version of its Alipay app for iOS and Android in what the company called—the most revolutionary update in the past 12 years.

In addition to a shift from orange to blue color scheme for the new logo, the app will combine two former independent brands “Alipay” and “Alipay Wallet” into one. The new update touches more aspects of consumers’ daily lives and some of the new features are as follows:

1. Local Life

In a major change of the home interface, the 9.0 app develops the previous Service Window, a first-level entrance where merchants can have users to follow their official service accounts, into a more inclusive Merchant tab, allowing users to learn the locations of nearby restaurants and shops, get discounted coupons, and settle payments at merchants’ e-shops via Alipay, as they can when shopping online.

Local services will be available via Koubei, a recently launched joint venture between Alibaba Group and Ant Financial aimed at making local services more accessible through O2O (online-to-offline) e-commerce.

2. Social Networking

Another significant change is the addition of Friends tab, which contains social functions such as messaging, an instant money transfer button so people can pay each other electronically, and an IOU tab allowing users to keep track of friendly loans.

3. Financial Features and More

The new Fortune tab has connected all of the users’ accounts for mutual fund and investment services like Yuebao, Zhaocaibao and Yulebao, as well as their stock accounts to display the total investment sum in a bid to facilitate stock trading and participate crowdfunding programs. Peer-to-peer payment for family members or loved ones was integrated. It also supports cross-border payment and tax refund services for travelers in countries like Singapore, Thailand and Korea.

Alipay9.0

Started as an online payment and escrow service, Alipay has now grown into one-stop financial solution for users in the decade-long development. The newly added features have shown the company’s attempt to further tap China’s rising O2O industry in providing more value-added services for both small merchants, retailers and users.

Alipay, which claimed 400 million annual active users with 80% of those being mobile users, has initialized its offline expansion since 2013. The company disclosed this month that Alipay supports payment at overall 130,000 offline stores or restaurants, ranging from fast food brands like KFC to super market chains like Carrefour and Walmart. 200 hospitals have joined Alipay’s “Future Hospital” program. The majority of ride sharing apps, Didi-Kuaidi, Uber, Yongche and Shenzhou Zhuanche have integrated Alipay.

In addition to positive feedback, the app has received some public criticism as its interfaces of the newly-added Merchant and Friends tab look very similar to Dianping and WeChat, two leading apps in local life and IM field.

Alibaba has made its efforts to tap social networking sector in the past to take on WeChat, but its IM tool Laiwang didn’t achieve the success the e-commerce company expected despite large-scale promotions. When taking about the logic behind integrating social functions, Fan Zhiming, president of Ant Financial’s payment business unit, stressed that Alipay 9.0 is not designed to be a stand-alone messaging app like Laiwang. Rather, it allows users to communicate mostly on financial-related matters.

image credit: Alipay

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China’s Airbnb Clone Xiaozhu Secures $60M USD Series C Funding https://technode.com/2015/07/08/chinas-airbnb-clone-xiaozhu-gets-60m-usd-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/07/08/chinas-airbnb-clone-xiaozhu-gets-60m-usd-series-c-funding/#comments Wed, 08 Jul 2015 07:29:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30825 As home-rental pioneer Airbnb is closing a whopping $1.5 billion USD round, one of its Chinese clones Xiaozhu – “little piggy” in Chinese – announced today that it has secured $60 million USD in Series C funding led by JOY Capital, and followed by Morningside ventures, CITIC Capital and Heyu Capital. The funding will be invested in improving the user […]]]>
Xiaozu-pic

As home-rental pioneer Airbnb is closing a whopping $1.5 billion USD round, one of its Chinese clones Xiaozhu – “little piggy” in Chinese – announced today that it has secured $60 million USD in Series C funding led by JOY Capital, and followed by Morningside ventures, CITIC Capital and Heyu Capital. The funding will be invested in improving the user experience, staffing, R&D, and brand, according to Chen Chi, CEO of the company.

The Beijing-based site resembles Airbnb, a C2C platform, in offering daily rental and short-term rooms. However Xiaozhu, like most Chinese Airbnb clones, resembles more of a B2C model where landlords can rent out the whole flat to avoid bunking with a stranger.

Founded by Chen Chi and Wang Liantao, two execs from Ganji-backed Airbnb clone Mayi.com, Xiaozhu has grown rapidly since it was founded in 2012. The company now claims to have home stay options in more than 200 cities around the country, up from 160 cities just one year ago. They also claim to have established offices in 20 cities.

To tap credibility issues in listing rentals online, Xiaozhu has incorporated data from Alibaba’s credit rating system Sesame Credit to better secure the safety of users. At the same time, it enhances the relationship between landlords and tenants to provide a more personal experience.

The new funding comes 13 months after a $15 million USD Series B round received in June last year, and an eight-digit Series A financing was raised in 2012. People with knowledge of the matter disclosed that Xiaozhu is in discussion with new investors, indicating the closure of a new round soon.

China’s short-term room rental market is expected to be worth 10.5 billion RMB (around $1.69 billion USD) in 2015, up 159.3% YOY from 4 billion RMB in 2014, according to data from research institute iResearch. Other homegrown market leader for short-term travel rentals in China include Tujia, Mayi, Zhuwona and Soufun-backed Youtianxia.

Image credit: Xiaozhu

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Baofeng Sets Up Smart TV Brand To Take On Xiaomi and LeTV https://technode.com/2015/07/07/baofeng-sets-smart-tv-jv-take-xiaomi-letv/ https://technode.com/2015/07/07/baofeng-sets-smart-tv-jv-take-xiaomi-letv/#respond Tue, 07 Jul 2015 10:17:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30801 China’s online video service Baofeng has established a joint venture with domestic animation company Alpha Animation and Culture, consumer electronics manufacturer 3Nod and Ririshun, the logistics arm of home appliance giant Hair, to develop a homegrown Smart TV brand Baofeng TV. The joint venture will mean the acquisition of Haier’s smart TV affiliate Tongshuai Chuangzhijia. Under the deal, Baofeng will […]]]>

China’s online video service Baofeng has established a joint venture with domestic animation company Alpha Animation and Culture, consumer electronics manufacturer 3Nod and Ririshun, the logistics arm of home appliance giant Hair, to develop a homegrown Smart TV brand Baofeng TV.

The joint venture will mean the acquisition of Haier’s smart TV affiliate Tongshuai Chuangzhijia. Under the deal, Baofeng will become the largest shareholder of Tongshuai Chuangzhijia by acquiring a 50% stake in the company for 250 million RMB ($40 million USD). Ririshun and Alpha Animation will respectively hold 21% and 10% in the firm, while the rest will be owned by the management team.

Baofeng was once a dominate video company in China, but as the market grew increasingly competitive, it transformed into a streaming portal for the likes of Youku Tudou and iQiyi, who are gaining momentum by investing heavily in copyrighted and user-generated content.

While the shift helped Baofeng avoid direct competition with the hefty players, it also created a questionable business model that is highly reliant on advertising. Currently ads account for more than 99% of the company’s revenue. In addition to the current foray into smart TV sector, the newly-listed company has launched a virtual reality headset this March in an attempt to find a new growth point.

This tie-up is also of strategic importance for Haier, as its major rivals Hisense, Skyworth and TCL have all tapped the smart TV sector.

The combined forces of Baofeng’s huge user base – over 50 million daily active users – 3Nod’s video technologies and Alpha Animation’s copyrighted content, will allow Baofeng TV to stand out in a competitive market, according to Feng Xin, CEO of Baofeng. Ririshun’s extensive retail and logistics chains in third and fourth-tier cities will help them tap into a more diverse spread of consumers

This new joint venture will intensify the already heated batted over China’s smart TV market between Xiaomi and LeTV. Feng Xin, CEO of Baofeng, acknowledged that the operation model of Baofeng TV will be similar to Xiaomi’s with heavy future investment in content.

Image credit: hc360

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Ourpalm Invests $2.3M USD in Australia-listed Mobile Game Developer Animoca Brands https://technode.com/2015/07/06/ourpalm-invests-in-animoca/ https://technode.com/2015/07/06/ourpalm-invests-in-animoca/#respond Mon, 06 Jul 2015 09:26:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30778 Ourpalm, China’s leading listed social web and mobile game developer, has invested $3.1 million AUD (roughly $2.3 million USD) funding in mobile game developer Animoca Brands for a 11.11 percent stake in the Australia-listed company at a premium price of $0.21 per share. As part of the investment, Steven Hu, co-CEO of Ourpalm, will be appointed as […]]]>

Ourpalm, China’s leading listed social web and mobile game developer, has invested $3.1 million AUD (roughly $2.3 million USD) funding in mobile game developer Animoca Brands for a 11.11 percent stake in the Australia-listed company at a premium price of $0.21 per share.

As part of the investment, Steven Hu, co-CEO of Ourpalm, will be appointed as non-executive director of Animoca Brands upon completion of the investment.

The transaction comes after Ourpalm inked partnership with Animoca Brands to publish the later’s hit game Doraemon Gadget Rush in China since March this year.

“The partnership with Ourpalm is expected to greatly enhance Animoca Brands’ ability to increase revenue generation and accelerate penetration into the Chinese market. Ourpalm will work closely with Animoca Brands to grow its market share in China, and widen its game distribution in the region as it leverages Ourpalm’s distribution channels and knowhow,” according to an official statement from the company.

As a spin-off of Appionics Holdings Ltd., commonly known by the consumer name Animoca, Animoca Brands is a Hong Kong-based mobile app developer and publisher aims at global markets. Specialized in making games based on internationally recognized intellectual properties such as Garfield, Ben10, Doraemon, Astro Boy and Ultraman, the company now claimed a combined over 160 million downloads for its 170 portfolio games as of January this year.

Animoca’s current investors include Intel Capital, IDG-Accel and Chinese web-game maker Forgame. The company went public on the Australian Stock Exchange in January this year, raising $2.4 million USD in the initial offering.

As a leading mobile game developer and publisher in China, the Shenzhen-listed Ourpalm is expanding quickly through a series of M&A and investments in mobile gaming companies, include Dovo Entertainment, PlayCrab, ShangGame, Tianma, BlingstormUnity Software and H&R Century Pictures.

As China’s gaming industry matures, domestic gaming developers are attaching more importance to intellectual property rights. In addition to creating homegrown IP brands like Kun Fu Arena, Ourpalm is acquiring more IPs through cooperation and acquisition of fellow companies.

Similarly, another leading gaming company CMGE also develops IP games through obtaining authorizations from brand owners and to create new original stories through cooperation with global top game development teams.

image credit: Animoca Brands

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China’s Ticketing Site LY.com Lands Nearly $1B USD Funding Led By Wanda Group https://technode.com/2015/07/06/ly-com-wanda-group/ https://technode.com/2015/07/06/ly-com-wanda-group/#respond Mon, 06 Jul 2015 09:14:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30774 LY.com (formerly 17U.com or Tongcheng), one of China’s largest ticketing websites, has secured more than 6 billion RMB ($967 million USD) funding from a consortium led by Chinese real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, Tencent Industrial Capital, CITIC Capital Holdings as well as other institutions. The company did not specify the stakes each investors are acquiring. The investment, which marks […]]]>

LY.com (formerly 17U.com or Tongcheng), one of China’s largest ticketing websites, has secured more than 6 billion RMB ($967 million USD) funding from a consortium led by Chinese real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, Tencent Industrial Capital, CITIC Capital Holdings as well as other institutions. The company did not specify the stakes each investors are acquiring.

The investment, which marks the largest single funding in China’s online travel sector so far, is expected to bring the market valuation of LY.com to 13 billion RMB. Up on completion of this deal, LY.com is re-launching its long-suspended IPO within this year, according to an open letter from the company.

Wanda Group, China’s biggest real estate developer that is quickly expanding to internet-related industries, would pay 3.58 billion RMB of the total investment through its entertainment subsidiary Wanda Culture Industry Group Co. People familiar with the matter disclosed that Wanda Group will become the largest shareholder of LY.com after the deal.

The move is considered as an important step for Wanda to continue its forays into China’s booming online truism sector in an attempt to crate synergy effects between its offline resources and LY.com’s online channels. The conglomerate currently operates and is constructing a combined 12 mega entertainment projects across China, and plans to invest in eight more such projects over the next five years. Its offline truism arm claimed an annual revenue of over 20 billion RMB.

As competition in China’s online tourism industry is reaching a feverish pitch, it is more difficult for companies in this sector to monetize their services. In Q1 this year, most of the leading online travel sites in China are recording profit losses: Ctrip (126 million RMB), Qunar (701 million RMB), eLong (180 million RMB) and Tuniu (233 million RMB).

Similarly, LY.com is facing the same problem. Cooperation with Wanda will help LY.com to capitalize on the latter’s offline resources in tourism agencies, amusement parks and more.

Launched in 2004, LY.com provides hotel/ flights/ cruise booking/ sightseeing tickets, services for travelers and group buying deals. The company’s existing investors include Tencent, Oriza, Boyu Capital as well as its major rival Ctrip.

image credit: LY.com, Wanda Group

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6000+ Techies Rock Out At TechCrunch Shanghai https://technode.com/2015/07/06/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-2/ https://technode.com/2015/07/06/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-2/#respond Mon, 06 Jul 2015 00:41:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30733 If you are a startup fan in China, you probably have heard of (or joined!) our TechCrunch Conference this June in Shanghai. If you missed this great gala of Chinese tech industry, here’s the gist of it as well as some impressive stats to know the event better. It all started in 2013 when we first brought […]]]>

If you are a startup fan in China, you probably have heard of (or joined!) our TechCrunch Conference this June in Shanghai. If you missed this great gala of Chinese tech industry, here’s the gist of it as well as some impressive stats to know the event better.

TCSH-stats

It all started in 2013 when we first brought the TechCrunch conference to China, with our first ever Shanghai conference. After a successful shift to Beijing in 2014, we came back to Shanghai with even better guest speakers as well as the most promising startups and venture capitalists. We now look forward to doing two China conferences a year, so keep your eyes peeled for our Beijing event later this year!

More than 6000+ participants attended our event in Shanghai, and we’re hoping each event will be bigger than the last. We saw 151 companies demo their products in startup alley, while 30 firms launched new products. The media coverage is huge with over 150 local media personnel joining to spread the word about China’s growing startup scene.

The two-day event was centred around speeches and ideas from top Chinese and global tech veterans on a wide range of topics ranging from investment, O2O, smart design and entrepreneurship. U.S. and Israeli Consul Generals, who represent the innovation forces from Silicon Valley and Israel, were on stage to share their views on how Chinese startups can make their mark. Three parallel sessions from the Gobi’s Oasis Startup Program, Google Play and Taobao crowd-funding were held along with keynotes and panels in the main conference hall.

Overall 120+ top venture capitalists, including Sequoia China, IDG, Gobi, joined the event, while 600+ entrepreneurs sat down for a special meet-with-VC session to pitch their ideas and hear feedback. Our partner MacDonald, DFJB, Ele.me, and WangPOS also brought their services to show our attendees the real mobile and digital experience.

Please click here for highlights and stories from the event. Also, don’t forget to check out the conference photos. Last but not the least, we want to express our sincere appreciation to all the sponsors partners for their special efforts.

Let’s meet again at TechCrunch Beijing this November.

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Here Are The E-Retailers Tackling China’s Sex Toy Industry https://technode.com/2015/07/02/e-commerce-adult-product-industry/ https://technode.com/2015/07/02/e-commerce-adult-product-industry/#respond Thu, 02 Jul 2015 01:31:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30706 Sex was a taboo subject in China not long ago. Although it’s the largest sex toy manufacturer globally, making 70% of the world’s adult products, most of them are built for export. However, changing social attitudes and the country’s booming e-commerce industry have made the once-sensitive topic a profitable business in China. While Chinese people are still a little conservative […]]]>

Sex was a taboo subject in China not long ago. Although it’s the largest sex toy manufacturer globally, making 70% of the world’s adult products, most of them are built for export.

However, changing social attitudes and the country’s booming e-commerce industry have made the once-sensitive topic a profitable business in China.

While Chinese people are still a little conservative when it comes to purchasing sex toys, e-commerce could help to avoid the embarrassing moments at bricks-and-mortar stores. Moreover, a rising number of online retailers are putting more focus on product quality to begin tapping the growing middle class.

China sales of adult products though B2C platforms has jumped from 73.6% YOY to 3.38 billion RMB in 2014, and this figure is expected to climb at a combined annual growth of around 58% in the future three years, according to a report by research institute Analysys. So in the spirit of that growth, here are some of the e-retailers who are tackling China’s sex toy industry;

Chunshuitang

Chunshuitang, an early entrant to the adult product market, was founded by Lin Degang back in 2003 when China’s e-commerce industry had just begun to take off.

The twelve-year-old company has undergone several transformations since its inception. Since last year, Chunshuitang has begun designing and developing products in-house, ranging from traditional sex toys to smart hardware. The company’s iball, a smart device which incorporates a kegel ball and connects to mobile devices, becomes quite popular among women for post-natal recovery. This month, the firm launched a group of ten smart hardware including a virtual reality masturbation cup and vibrators that can be connected to smartphone apps.

In addition to the launch of the adult health community, Chunshuitang is planning to cooperate with hotels and hospitals for user engagement. It also borrowed the marketing strategy of Alibaba’s Nov. 11 Singles Day campaign, and created a “69 sales day” on June 9th.

After receiving a 30 million RMB A round in 2011, the startup just completed an 80 million RMB Series B funding in March this year at a valuation of around 600 million RMB. Upon release of the funding news, Lin announced the plan for a domestic IPO in 2017.

Taqu (Touch)

Taqu (Touch), formerly known as Xingjiabi, is an adult product m-commerce app, selling everything from sexy underwear to handcuffs from third-party manufacturers. A strict product selection mechanism is adopted to ensure high price-to-quality ratio. Founded in 2012, the app boasted more than 20 million users as of the end of last year.

The company’s founder Huang Tiancai once disclosed in an interview that the company is starting to record profits with annual sales in 2014 breaking 100 million RMB. The company closed a series A round of 50 million RMB last year from Fortune Capital.

X.com.cn

Founded in 1997, X.com.cn is an e-commerce site that sells sex products. Different from competitors, X.com.cn has a wide physical presence across the country through a licensing. It now claimed over 850 offline chain stores nationwide.

Other e-commerce startups who have eyes on the booming market include Qicaigu, Aizhigu, Taohwu, Qicaig, Xmeise.

In addition to vertical B2C platforms dedicated to this sector, comprehensive e-commerce sites like JD, Yihaodian and Taobao, as well as healthcare services are also important channels that allow users to purchase reliable adult products in a more convenient manner.

While promotions of sex-related goods on mainstream media like TV and newspapers are still forbidden in China, the rising social and digital media become main channels for the adult product companies to promote their products. Condom maker Durex has been very successful with its online marketing in China through a series of localized strategies.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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LeTV Becomes Second Largest Shareholder of Coolpad With $350M USD Investment https://technode.com/2015/07/01/letv-coolpad/ https://technode.com/2015/07/01/letv-coolpad/#respond Wed, 01 Jul 2015 01:06:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30685 LeTV, China’s online video streamer eyeing on booming smartphone market, has acquired an 18% stake in smartphone maker Coolpad Group Ltd. with $2.73 billion HKD (about $350 million USD) through its smartphone business subsidiary Leview Mobile HK Ltd. This purchase will make LeTV the second largest shareholder of Coolpad, the company added. Cooperation with Coolpad, which has […]]]>

LeTV, China’s online video streamer eyeing on booming smartphone market, has acquired an 18% stake in smartphone maker Coolpad Group Ltd. with $2.73 billion HKD (about $350 million USD) through its smartphone business subsidiary Leview Mobile HK Ltd. This purchase will make LeTV the second largest shareholder of Coolpad, the company added.

Cooperation with Coolpad, which has around 5,000 patents related to mobile applications, telecommunications and dual SIM card technologies, will complement LeTV’s forces in smartphone manufacturing, R&D, sales channels and after-sales service. On the other hand, the rich video contents from LeTV will help Coolpad to accelerate its development.

In the meanwhile, the tie-up brings a dramatic turn to Coolpad’s partnership with Chinese software giant Qihoo 360, which has taken the cooperation with Coolpad as an important frontier to push forward its smartphone business.

As a new entrant to smartphone sector, Qihoo 360 established joint venture Qiku with Coolpad at the end of 2014. Smartphones manufactured by the joint venture are shipped under brand Dazen, a low-end sub-brand of Coolpad. This year, Qihoo increased its stake in the joint venture from 45% to 49.5%.

Qihoo has spent overall $450 million USD for a non-controlling stake in the joint venture Qiku, whereas LeTV acquired an 18% stake in Coolpad, the parent company, with $350 million USD. It is obvious that it isn’t a good deal for Qihoo.

In response to the LeTV-Coolpad investment news, Qihoo’s CEO Zhou Hongyi released an internal email that include a series of adjustments in Qiku’s senior management team and the plan for an upcoming smartphone launch.

zhouhongyi-1

Coolpad’s partnership with LeTV seems to have enraged Zhou who responded the news with a resentful WeChat status “Whoever stabbed me in the back to screw me up, my principle is that I will definitely fuck back.”

The three parties represented two major forces in China’s smartphone market: Coolpad, a veteran smartphone maker,  LeTV and Qihoo, two internet giants excelled in video contents and internet channels, respectively.

Wang Yanhui, secretary general of China Mobile Committee, commented that there will be little cooperation space for LeTV and Qihoo given the industry status of the two company and the characters of their CEOs. He predicted that Qihoo will increase further increase investment in Qiku for a controlling stake.

image credit: LeTV

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More Challenging, Greater Impact: Lending Club/Dianrong Founder On China https://technode.com/2015/06/29/soul-htite/ https://technode.com/2015/06/29/soul-htite/#respond Mon, 29 Jun 2015 08:40:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30636 This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can […]]]>

This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can follow our updates at @technodechina, or check back here for new stories in the series.

It’s hard enough for a serial entrepreneur to build two successful startups in a row, but, as you can imagine, the challenge will become even greater when those companies are developing products for two completely different markets. However, Soul Htite, the co-founder of Lending Club and founder/CEO of Dianrong, managed to find the secret recipe for achieving this goal.

After co-founding Lending Club and acting as the company’s head of technology for four years, Soul founded Shanghai-based P2P lending platform Dianrong in 2013 in an attempt to recreate the success of Lending Club in China.

Given Soul’s relationship with Lending Club, it is easy to imagine that Dianrong is similar to the U.S. online loan broker and its followers have nicknamed Dianrong the “Lending Club of China.” But Soul explained that Dianrong is different from Lending Club in several ways since it targets users with different investment habits and cultures.

“Lending Club focuses on one type of loaning product, but Dianrong has developed a series of products to cater for the different needs of local users. Chinese investors tend to take less investment risks and prefer automatic investment solutions, and that’s why Dianrong developed Tuantuanzhuan, a technology to lower risks automatically by spreading out investments,” said Soul.

In addition, Dianrong has teamed up with local partners like car service Yihao Zhuanche and Alibaba’s credit rating system Sesame Credit to try out cross-industry cooperation opportunities. “Just like the “Internet Plus” strategy everyone is talking about in China, we are trying to develop more innovative technology and find an internet-based way of thinking. The cooperation with Sesame Credit is one step further in exploring possibilities for big data risk control. Our core competitiveness as an internet financial company is the capacity to run risk control by leveraging all kinds of data collected from the internet. In the case of Sesame Credit, we are now including their data into our risk assessment model under different scenarios.”

Soul

China’s P2P lending industry, a hot vertical in the country’s fintech trends, is gradually transforming the country’s banking industry as well as how Chinese people manage their assets, but there are still many challenges ahead, especially in terms of regulation.

According to Soul, Lending Club had a similar experience in coping with the formation and development of U.S. P2P regulation system, and their respect for governmental monitoring has allowed the company to outgrown other competitors.

Likewise, Dianrong is willing to be a part of the budding P2P lending regulation system in China, Soul said, adding that the company is contributing to the draft of a P2P monitoring whitebook compiled by relevant authorities.

Entrepreneurial Environment of China and Shanghai

Soul started his career as a tech guy. He confessed that he prefers creating innovative products that can change people’s lives to managing a company. “In matured markets like U.S., the only thing startups can do is to provide a better lending product. But we might offer the very first loan experience to users in emerging markets like China, where new technologies may bring bigger impacts.”

For Soul, China provides a favorable environment for entrepreneurship with improving legislative system, wide internet penetration and great talents. “In fact, I have compared the startup environment of Shanghai, Beijing and Shenzhen when first came to China. I finally chose Shanghai because the city is more international and offers more financial talents.”

<Quick Questions>

Advice for foreign startups looking to enter Chinese market.

Firstly, your product must solve some problems for local users. Secondly, always respect the regulations. My experience is to find the most excellent people to work with you cause talents are the biggest fortune of your company.

What’s the most striking cultural difference that shocked you when you first came to China?

In terms of what I am doing now, people loan money for consumption in the U.S., but Chinese people borrow money for doing business or receiving a better education. I think this difference best demonstrate the cultural difference of the two countries.

What do you love about China?

I love a lot of things in China both in terms of entrepreneurial environment and living here. I love Chinese food and steamed buns are my favorite.

What is your personal motto in your life?

Best or nothing.

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Stay Fit and Secure With Smart Tracker Fitkat https://technode.com/2015/06/29/fitness-tracker-fitkat/ https://technode.com/2015/06/29/fitness-tracker-fitkat/#respond Mon, 29 Jun 2015 02:01:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30611 The wearable market is becoming increasingly crowded as slews of companies and startups jumping onto the bandwagon. Despite how young the wearable industry is as a whole, its recent boom is changing the behaviors and habits of customers who are more receptive of the new concept and technology. Yet, the basic features like monitoring calorie burned or […]]]>
FitKat-pic

The wearable market is becoming increasingly crowded as slews of companies and startups jumping onto the bandwagon. Despite how young the wearable industry is as a whole, its recent boom is changing the behaviors and habits of customers who are more receptive of the new concept and technology.

Yet, the basic features like monitoring calorie burned or distant traveled soon lost traction for now tech-savvy users. To overcome this, most wearable makers have been working furiously to go into more specific fields in a bid to differentiate their products from competitors, by gorgeous design, such as Misfit, by features dedicated for certain scenarios like mobile payment, or by focusing on specific user groups, children, women and even pregnant women.

Just like the examples listed above, Fitkat is a smart fitness bracelet. But the addition of security monitoring and fitness alerts is what makes this wearable product different.

In addition to the fundamental functionalities for counting steps, calories and distance covered, Fitkat include a dedicated SOS button which allow wearers to send SOS messages and current location to five pre-selected guardians with a double click.

Another core function of Fitkat is fitness alerts, for water intake by leveraging users’ information on age, weight, height, body type, and daily fixed routine, and for taking pills in case you are on medication.

Fitkat Ul

With safety and reminder features integrated, Fitkat goes after user groups of women, old people and students studying overseas, according the company’s founder and CEO Chirag Jagtiani. “In any kind of culture, we are all worried about our loved one’s safety and well-being no matter where we are or what we do. But today’s world is not the safest place to live in. So we designed these features for them.” he said.

The problem with wearables is that people usually toss their devices aside after just a few months. Fitkat’s main strength in keeping users motivated is its smart coach and adaptive coaching mechanism which give advice to users by analyzing their movement routines.

“During our research we found out that people buy expensive gadgets to compete with one another, basically to show off, so it has become more of a culture need than a personal need. When you meet daily targets at Fitkat, you will get Hi5’d by your friends and family for a job well done.” Chirag added.

Aside from its main market in Hong Kong, Singapore, India and Thailand, Fitkat is planning to explore Chinese mainland market. “We have understood that China market loves games, so for the Chinese version of the app we are introducing a gamification version of Fitkat app where you can compete with each other based on daily challenges. With the help of WeChat, Weibo we will have their friends comment, motivate each other.”

Fitkat is priced at US$69.99 globally, of which shipping accounts for a considerable part. Chirag noted that the price for Chinese market will be lower cause in China the shipping cost will be reduced by a huge number thanks to the proximity to manufacturing center in Shenzhen.

When talking about competition with domestic hardware giants like Xiaomi. Chirag said “Xiaomi is like apple – they have the mass and the mass is very loyal, so it would be wrong to compete with them. But what I have done is to create a whole new segment which is fitness and security. I must say MiBand have a great design, but it has no screen.”

The ultimate goal of Fitkat is to become a big data company, but the primary task for the company now is to attract enough users tapped into the platform so that the team can then segregate themselves into making better wearable devices for different segments such as medical. “We as a team are very interested in medical sensors and sensors in general, and using the kind of user data we have we want to build devices.” Chirag said.

The personal experience of Chirag may best fit the definition for a global citizen. Originally born in Taiwan, he has grew up in Africa, completed education in India, worked in Europe and settled in China since 2005. With 10 years of experience in the telecom field, Chirag has worked for Phillips, Dell and Accenture. As a serial entrepreneur, he is also the founder of  wearable security device company spotNsave.

“We are a very small and young team of eight from India and China, mainly focusing on UI/UX and development. We also have doctor and coach on board advising us on our algorithm and logic. I love the blend between our cultures and today the best IT work you get from is India and China. So I am lucky to be in the right place with the right team.” Chirag added.

image credit: Fitkat

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Alibaba Inks Partnership With 11 Countries To Boost Tmall Global Platform https://technode.com/2015/06/26/alibaba-inks-partnership-11-countries-boost-tmall-global-platform/ https://technode.com/2015/06/26/alibaba-inks-partnership-11-countries-boost-tmall-global-platform/#respond Fri, 26 Jun 2015 05:21:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30591 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has teamed up with an additional 11 countries to build their curated shopping sites or “pavilions” on Tmall Global for selling popular products and specialties from selected companies to Chinese mainland customers. The countries include the U.S., New Zealand, Australia, Switzerland, France, Britain, Spain, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Turkey. Meanwhile, Alibaba also […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has teamed up with an additional 11 countries to build their curated shopping sites or “pavilions” on Tmall Global for selling popular products and specialties from selected companies to Chinese mainland customers. The countries include the U.S., New Zealand, Australia, Switzerland, France, Britain, Spain, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Turkey.

Meanwhile, Alibaba also entered into partnerships with the embassies of 26 countries to improve marketing and promotion operations of their country’s products via Alibaba’s group-buying platform Juhuasuan.

In an attempt to tap the rising demand of domestic customers for international products, Alibaba launched Tmall Global, a dedicated site for overseas brands and merchants to sell goods to Chinese shoppers in February 2014. According to data released by the company, Tmall Global saw a ten-fold sales increase between February and November 2014. More than 5,400 brands from over 20 countries, including U.S. retailor Costco, were settled on the marketplace.

South Korea’s government became the first country to launch an official pavilion on Alibaba’s Tmall.com in May. The recent additions are the second batch for Tmall Global’s country pavilions, and more countries will be added to the program soon. Tmall Global has entered cooperation agreements with warehousing facilitities in the cities of Guangzhou, Zhengzhou, Hangzhou, Ningbo and Shanghai to speed up the custom clearance process.

In recent months, Alibaba Group has been aggressively promoting the growth of cross-border online shopping with government officials and business leaders around the world. Earlier this month, Alibaba Executive Chairman Jack Ma visited the U.S. to talk about Alibaba’s international strategy and how small businesses can use the Web to sell directly to Chinese consumers.

More and more Chinese people choose to purchase high quality and imported products online. A raft of domestic companies have flocked into the cross-border retail sector to tap the booming market.

Image credit: Souhu

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Chinese Offline Payments Giant Lakala Taps $240M USD In New Financing https://technode.com/2015/06/25/lakala-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/06/25/lakala-funding/#respond Wed, 24 Jun 2015 19:58:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30499 Chinese offline payment solution provider Lakala has secured 1.5 billion RMB ($240 million USD) in funding at a valuation of 10 billion RMB ($1.6 billion USD). The round has come from China Taiping Life Insurance Group, China Reinsurance, China Continent Insurance, and The Cilvil Aviation Development Fund, according to an internal e-mail from the company’s CEO […]]]>

Chinese offline payment solution provider Lakala has secured 1.5 billion RMB ($240 million USD) in funding at a valuation of 10 billion RMB ($1.6 billion USD).

The round has come from China Taiping Life Insurance Group, China Reinsurance, China Continent Insurance, and The Cilvil Aviation Development Fund, according to an internal e-mail from the company’s CEO Sun Taoran. Sun added that online recruitment site 51job and software company Glodon are the founding investors of their credit system Kaola Credit.

Lakala, founded in 2005, is one of China’s leading innovators in the e-payment sector, focusing on software solutions for electronic payments, utility billing and digital loyalty programs. It also holds a series of patented terminal devices, like household card payment devices and card-to-mobile payment devices, covering convenience stores, supermarkets, shopping malls, and community groceries.

The company claims to have amassed more than 100 million individual users with over 3 million brick-and-mortar shops in 300 Chinese cities using its payment solutions. Some 2 trillion RMB worth of payment transactions were processed on Lakala’s platform as of this year, according data released by the company.

As code scanning with smartphone becomes a more natural fit for mobile payments, the company’s devices are becoming outdated. Moreover, internet giants such as Alipay and WeChat Payment are pushing consumers into mobile payments via their own e-payment platforms.

By way of differentiating itself, Lakala has transformed into an online financial group over the past two years, covering payment, credit, financial management and P2P business. The company is also expected to be in the first batch of Chinese credit reporting institutions to obtain the license for individual credit reporting business.

In the meantime, Lakala’s financial services unit, which appeals to be following a model set out by Alibaba’s Ant Financial Services Group, is going to face tough competition.

Lakala now has nearly 40 enterprise or individual investors including Legend Holdings, parent company of Lenovo and Xiaomi’s co-founder and CEO Lei Jun. The company is preparing to go public on China’s stock exchange market, Sun Taoran has disclosed in the past.

Image credit: Lakala

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Momo The Latest US-Listed China Tech Company To Reveal Privatization Plans https://technode.com/2015/06/25/momo-go-private/ https://technode.com/2015/06/25/momo-go-private/#respond Wed, 24 Jun 2015 19:47:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30521 Chinese mobile social service Momo has received a buyout proposal today, just six months after listing on the US stock market last December. It comes just days after Chinese internet giant Qihoo 360 revealed plans to go private. Momo marks the 13th Chinese company this year to plan a privatization bid following a US listing, […]]]>

Chinese mobile social service Momo has received a buyout proposal today, just six months after listing on the US stock market last December. It comes just days after Chinese internet giant Qihoo 360 revealed plans to go private.

Momo marks the 13th Chinese company this year to plan a privatization bid following a US listing, with companies now looking to list on the booming local markets in China.

A consortium led by the company’s co-founder and CEO Tang Yan with participation of MatrixPartners China and Sequoia Capital is proposing to purchase the company for $18.90 USD per American depositary share, a 20.5% premium to the closing price of the company’s ADSs on June 22. The company’s market cap is estimated to be around $3.5 billion USD.

The company’s board of directors will form a special committee to evaluate the deal. Momo’s share surged 11% after the announcement of this news.

Starting out as a location-based social networking app for strangers, Momo has transforming into an interest-based mobile social network. The app has accumulated 180.3 million registered accounts as of September 2014, claiming to be the third most popular social app in China after Tencent’s WeChat and Mobile QQ.

Despite its popularity in China, Momo’s path in gaining confidence from U.S. investors has not been smooth, as its product was designed and grown in China. Although Momo’s share price surged to more than $17 USD on the IPO day, it lingered around an issuing price of $13.50 USD apiece for a long time.

Qihoo 360’s recent privatization move may have influenced Momo’s confidence on the matter. Several smaller U.S.-listed Chinese companies including GMCE, iDreamSky and Jiayuan, went private right before Qihoo’s bidding.

As the fourth largest Chinese internet company, which runs businesses across sectors, Qihoo’s return may trigger further delisting waves. Now it’s expected Momo’s efforts will be focussed on a fast local relisting.

Momo-price

Momo Share Price from Google Finance

Image credit: Momo

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Winning China’s Online Food Delivery Market: WaimaiChaoren Founder https://technode.com/2015/06/23/waimaichaoren-lucas/ https://technode.com/2015/06/23/waimaichaoren-lucas/#respond Tue, 23 Jun 2015 02:59:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30431 This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can […]]]>

This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can follow our updates at @technodechina, or check back here for new stories in the series.

Internet and mobile have invigorated the traditional restaurant delivery industry since emerging in New York more than a decade ago. Like in other parts of the world, China’s digital food couriers have witnessed a big boom in recent years.

“It’s amazing to watch how fast things develop in the Chinese internet space, especially how quickly Chinese users can learn new tools and technologies. Five years ago Chinese customers and restaurants didn’t even know what online food ordering was, but now they not only rely on it but leverage it to their advantage.” said Lucas Englehardt, founder and CEO of WaimaiChaoren (外卖超人or Delivery Hero), a restaurant delivery service targeting at white-collar Chinese users.

Unlike local competitors aiming at cutthroat growth, WaimaiChaoren has chosen to develop in a more balanced manner. This is partly due to their user group behavior and partly because of the management style of the team. “We could attract student users much faster with small coupons but white-collar customers are more loyal, stable and have larger purchasing power. They care more about food quality, the restaurant and platform brands and the overall experience such as the delivery speed.” said Lucas.

“Our goal has never been to have the biggest discounts or the most restaurants on the platform. While we do offer coupons, free drinks and other gifts, for us it’s about the brand experience and doing something unique rather than relying on big discounts. For restaurants, we aim to include the best ones regardless of price or cuisine type.”

“WaimaiChaoren won’t open a lot of new cities this year, but is instead digging deeper into our existing 18 cities. We still feel these markets still have big opportunity as there are still many people who don’t know they can order restaurant delivery online. We try to convert them by providing a quality, something they want to share with their friends.” Lucas noted.

Delivery Hero, the Rocket Internet-backed food delivery service that operates in more than 30 countries, invested in WaimaiChaoren in 2012 but the startup still operates as an independent brand in China after the capital injection. (note: WaimaiChaoren prefers to use the Chinese name, rather than the English one to fit local market and to emphasize its independence). In fall last year, WaimaiChaoren acquired Beijing-based Kaichiba to grow presence in the northern areas of China.

When talking about competitions from local rivals Ele.me, Meituan Waimai and BAT, Lucas said “it’s amazing how fast the market has expanded and good for us to be not the only player. Of course it will give us pressure but our biggest challenge is still to educate the market about online food ordering. Having a bunch of companies in the field helps to share the cost of educating consumers and restaurants. We believe it’s a huge market, and that there will be more than one winner.”

Regarding long term development, Lucas pointed out that “when you look though China’s internet markets, sectors like group-buying was super-hot five years ago with more than 1,000 competing for the market. There were really big companies who spent a lot of money and did advertising everywhere. However, only a few of them survived after a couple of years, and they are not always the biggest ones. Restaurant delivery will be similar and it’s the smart, metric driven players who survive. The O2O space is quite young and a lot of innovation is still to come.”

Lucas Englehardt As An Entrepreneur

lucas_03

Lucas came to China to study Chinese while at college. He moved to China in search of adventure in 2007 after working for PricewaterhouseCoopers right out of school. In addition to WaimaiChaoren, he is also the founder of BloggerInsight, network of Chinese experts.

Running a company in China can be tough for a foreigner, but Lucas has managed to fit into China’s startup jungle with deep market understanding and fluent Mandarin Chinese. He considers WaimaiChaoren a Chinese company with a little bit of foreign flavor as he is the only foreigner in the firm, which grew from a 10 person team in 2012 to more than 300 employees today.

Fully understanding the importance of product market fit, Lucas pointed out that all the strategic, marketing and product decisions at WaimaiChaoren are made locally in China by local people. “A lot of big companies have the problem of treating China like any other big market, they apply the same formula that works in other countries to China. But China is a unique and diverse country consisting of various regional markets, a uniform formula doesn’t work here.”

The influence of Lucas’ foreign flavor is best show in WaimaiChaoren’s flat management style and structure. “As an internet startup, our company culture is focused on moving fast. We are going to support the best ideas, no matter if it comes from an intern or the CEO, locally or internationally.”

In sharing his own experience as a serial entrepreneur, Lucas said “Being an entrepreneur is very tough. There are a lot of challenges big and small everyday. It can be really draining emotionally with constant high and lows. My main learning is not to get caught up on every little thing good or bad, just focus on the big picture, just to push as hard as possible and build a strong team.”

Changes of Chinese Internet Industry

“The biggest change since I arrive eight years ago is that the Chinese internet market used to completely dominated by BAT where everyone else is small. If BAT decided to do what you were doing, they would just copy you and try to kill you. What we see now is that they are starting to acquire and merge companies. The Chinese internet is no longer simply BAT as there’s a handful of rising giants like 360, Xiaomi and JD. Of course BAT is very strong, but there’s a whole ecosystem that’s developed around it.”

“Also, for startups there were very few angel investors when I first started. There’s a tons of investors, incubators and startups around now. In the past the only way you could have a successful exit was via IPO but now it’s an option to be acquired by a big company. Companies are starting to work together instead of just trying to fight each other.”

<Quick Questions>

What’s the most striking cultural difference that shocked you when you first came to China?

I think it is about how the management style could be different. In the U.S., especially for internet companies, they have a flat management structure were people are much more equal. In China, it is still more top-down where the boss dictates everything. I think that’s also changing now, especially in startups.

What do you love about China?

I love the sense of family. Not only one’s own family, but also close friends who treat you like a family. I also love China for the speed at which things change and develop. Some people forget what a special time in history this is. We are very lucky to be a part of it and have a front roll seat to observe it happening. I have been fortunate that Chinese people have been very kind to me and put up with my poor Mandarin. Overall, it’s been a fun adventure.

What is your personal motto?

To be passionate and loyal. Do things that you love and find exciting, follow your interests. Stay loyal being to friends and business partners, try to do everything to possible help and protect them. If one follows their passion and conducts themselves in a responsible way I think they are bound to be successful.

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TouchPal Teams Up With Yahoo To Give Users Instant Access To Yahoo Search https://technode.com/2015/06/19/touchpal-yahoo-search/ https://technode.com/2015/06/19/touchpal-yahoo-search/#respond Fri, 19 Jun 2015 11:24:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30453 TouchPal, Chinese keyboard app by Chinese developer CooTek, today announced a strategic partnership with Yahoo that puts Yahoo’s mobile search capabilities into the hands of TouchPal’s Android users. Named “Yahoo Search in Apps”, the new feature allows TouchPal users to access Yahoo’s search engine directly from the keyboard app without the need to switch to a […]]]>

TouchPal, Chinese keyboard app by Chinese developer CooTek, today announced a strategic partnership with Yahoo that puts Yahoo’s mobile search capabilities into the hands of TouchPal’s Android users.

gif

Named “Yahoo Search in Apps”, the new feature allows TouchPal users to access Yahoo’s search engine directly from the keyboard app without the need to switch to a browser. Search results include links, images and videos, as well as the ability to translate text into 40 languages. What’s more, whether your’e using the TouchPal Keyboard with email, text or any other app, anyone can share a link from the search results, with just one click.

Yahoo Search in Apps will be released initially in the U.S. to give more than 16 million TouchPal Android users in the country direct access to Yahoo Search through the mobile keyboard.

“Since we launched Yahoo Search in Apps at our mobile developer conference in February, we’ve been actively expanding our partnerships in this area,” said Ian Weingarten, senior vice president, Head of Global Partnerships at Yahoo. “We’re excited to integrate Yahoo search into TouchPal’s keyboard to enhance their users’ experience and provide new monetization opportunities.”

The partnership is a development of TouchPal’s plan to deliver feature-rich experiences to users beyond keyboard functionality. “TouchPal is moving towards entertaining and personalized features. We consider input solutions not just a tool, but also a bridge to connect people,” said Karl Zhang, co-founder of the company in a preview interview with TechNode.

TouchPal, which has accumulated more than 250 million users globally as of March this year, has added a bunch of new features to engage users, including a collection of more than 800 emoji characters.

Integrating new features has been trendy for keyboard apps to differentiate themselves, Israeli mobile keyboard app Ginger is also adding functions ranging from one-to-one video, casual games to news to the app.

In addition to overseas market, which accounts for a dominating part of the company’s business, it looks that TouchPal is leveraging its focus to China market in recent years with the launch of local service platform TouchPal Life, TouchPal Contact, free voice calling service TouchPal Call.

Image credit: TouchPal

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Cheetah Mobile Launches Global Ad Platform https://technode.com/2015/06/18/cheetah-mobile-launches-global-ad-platform-commercialize-big-user-base/ https://technode.com/2015/06/18/cheetah-mobile-launches-global-ad-platform-commercialize-big-user-base/#comments Wed, 17 Jun 2015 22:28:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30381 China mobile internet company Cheetah Mobile has launched Cheetah Ad Platform, a mobile advertising technology platform designed to help marketers reach and engage global consumers with data-fueled audience targeting technology. Cheetah Mobile’s mobile applications (Cheetah Apps) and media ad network (Cheetah MediaLink) have united to provide brands with the opportunity to reach the right audience, at the right […]]]>

China mobile internet company Cheetah Mobile has launched Cheetah Ad Platform, a mobile advertising technology platform designed to help marketers reach and engage global consumers with data-fueled audience targeting technology.

Cheetah Mobile’s mobile applications (Cheetah Apps) and media ad network (Cheetah MediaLink) have united to provide brands with the opportunity to reach the right audience, at the right time, in the right format to attract users throughout the purchase cycle, according to a statement from the company.

As a leading mobile app developer, Cheetah Mobile has accumulated 1.34 billion users around the world and its mobile monthly active users reached over 440 million in Q1 this year. Given that, advertising is an premium option for the company to capitalize on its huge users base and data.

Cheetah Mobile has long been prepared to tap global advertising industry, which is expected to hit $64.25 billion USD in 2015 according to market research institute eMarketer. In an attempt to expand its media reach, the company has acquired mobile advertising company MobPartner and marketing technology company Zoom Interactive to diversify its mobile network.

“Nearly all big global internet companies like Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo have acquired or invested in advertising companies when they are trying to commercialize services globally. That’s quite natural, because advertising is the most convenient path to monetize services overseas. Unlike in China where marketing alliances like Baidu Union and Taobao Union have taken a chunk of the marketing business, advertising is the most important channel for overseas companies when it comes to marketing and they have gained rich experience in data collection.” Cheetah Mobile CEO Fu Sheng said earlier in an interview when commenting on acquiring two ad companies in a roll.

Over the past two years, Cheetah Mobile’s revenue growth has been driven by a significant ramp-up in mobile advertising in overseas markets. Mobile advertising revenue accounted for 89% of total mobile revenue and 48% of total revenue in Q1 2015.

“The Cheetah Ad Platform gives advertisers and publishers full transparency into inventory, ad placements, and performance. Advertisers can broaden their reach with confidence and capitalize on a massive global consumer audience. Our robust measurement, targeting, and optimization solutions are designed to deliver against key performance indicators, such as return on investment and consumer lifetime value for advertisers.” said Djamel Agaoua, senior Vice President of Cheetah’s worldwide sales and former CEO of MobPartner.

Cheetah Mobile also provides various platform products such as Duba.com, Cheetah Browser, game centres, and mobile app stores to provide multiple user traffic entry points and global content distribution channels for its business partners.

Image Credit: Cheetah Mobile

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Building A Payment Device For O2O: WeiPass Founder Li Yan https://technode.com/2015/06/17/tcsh-weipass/ https://technode.com/2015/06/17/tcsh-weipass/#respond Wed, 17 Jun 2015 00:56:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30154 The mobile payment sector in China has experienced robust growth in the past few years at a speed nearly ten times that for PC-based payments. Li Yan, the founder of WeiPass took the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to talk about how the mobile payment appcessory company is going to tap the thriving market. The crucial […]]]>

The mobile payment sector in China has experienced robust growth in the past few years at a speed nearly ten times that for PC-based payments. Li Yan, the founder of WeiPass took the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to talk about how the mobile payment appcessory company is going to tap the thriving market.

The crucial problem in developing a mobile payment device for O2O industry is how to best connect online and offline resources, according to Li. “Online transactions will naturally bring offline behaviors. After purchasing group-buying service online, the next step will be to valid or redeem the e-coupons offline.”

Pos

The company’s latest product WangPOS is designed to achieve this goal. WangPOS is an android-powered POS machine that supports NFC, Bluetooth and WiFi connection, and camera. After a merchant types in an amount, WangPOS will generate a QR code for users to scan with either WeChat, Alipay or Baidu Wallet.

In addition to mobile payment, the gadget is also an electronic voucher platform based on NFC and mobile ID identification technology. With WangPOS, merchants can receive orders, verify group-buying coupons, and launch promotion plans. More than 100 online services have been integrated into the platform, including big names of Dianping, Ele.me, Meituan and Nuomi. The cost of a unit is 1999 RMB (roughly $322USD).

WeiPass has received US$4 million of Series A funding in 2013 and the more recent US$16 million B round was secured IDG Capital Partners and Shining Capital Management. Before the WangPOS, the company has developed WeiPOS for WeChat payment and an electronic seal and accompanying apps for businesses to manage digital loyalty programs and customers.

Image Credit: TechCrunch Shanghai 2015, Liu Siqi, investment director of Fuson Kunzhong (L) & Li Yan, founder of WeiPass (R)

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Three Tips on Entrepreneurship from PPTV Co-founder Vincent Tao https://technode.com/2015/06/16/tcsh-2015-pptv-taochuang/ https://technode.com/2015/06/16/tcsh-2015-pptv-taochuang/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2015 02:25:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30142 Vincent Tao is more commonly known as the founder of PPTV, China’s largest online TV provider with 300 million active user per month, but he has now taking a new role as chairman of Global Earth Capital, an investment institution founded in September 2014. Tao, who has been on both sides of the tech industry. […]]]>

Vincent Tao is more commonly known as the founder of PPTV, China’s largest online TV provider with 300 million active user per month, but he has now taking a new role as chairman of Global Earth Capital, an investment institution founded in September 2014. Tao, who has been on both sides of the tech industry. Here are three tips he gave to entrepreneurs at TechCrunch last week.

1. Timing

Tao cautions entrepreneurs from flocking into a so-called “hot” industries. “What’s more important than seeking out the next big trend in tech industry is spotting the right timing in doing it, or to check whether the technology and market are mature enough to foster a prosperous industry”, he said.

Many people thinks internet of things (IOT) is going to be the next big thing. This is true according to a Gartner report which showed that IOT is at the peak of industry expectations. “However we also have to bear in mind that an emerging concept has to go through the stages of disillusion and the plateau of productivity after the peak of inflated expectations.”

3. Courage, Passion and Persistence

When talking about characteristics in successful entrepreneurs, Tao said “we are looking for people who can survive the wild jungle of entrepreneurship with their courage, passion and persistence. I like those entrepreneurs who have experienced the ups and downs in doing a startup. Investors may have no ideas about what your project is, but they can tell from the way you are doing it about whether you are tough enough to overcome all the hurdles.”

3. Cooperation through Partnership

Excellent investors and entrepreneurs are two kinds of totally different people who focus on different things, according to Tao. “It is not only about giving and receiving the funding, but a deeper collaboration that enables sharing of resources from both parties.”

Vincent is also the founder of online mapping service GenTango. He sold the company to Microsoft in 2005 and worked as executive of Microsoft USA for four years, responsible for MSFT internet business strategy for China/Japan/Korea. Prior to that, Vincent held a professor position at York University, Toronto.

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Why China Is The Place To Build An Internet Startup For The Future: Chinaccelerator Managing Director https://technode.com/2015/06/16/chinaccelerator-william/ https://technode.com/2015/06/16/chinaccelerator-william/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2015 01:31:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30274 This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can […]]]>

This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders and tech veterans who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can follow our updates at @technodechina, or check back here for new stories in the series.

China is notoriously difficult for foreign companies and entrepreneurs to penetrate due to culture and language hurdles. However, the market is becoming increasingly attractive for expat-entrepreneurs thanks to growing local innovation ecosystems. Some of the foreigner entrepreneurs are still weighing the pros and cons of starting a business in the country, William Bao Bean, the managing director of Chinaccelerator, believes that China is the to-go place to build a successful internet startup for the future.

William’s approach to China doesn’t resemble the “import and adapt” strategy attempted by global internet giants like Facebook, Google and Yahoo. Instead of introducing established foreign companies to Chinese market, William believes the key is inviting the innovation process to China. He joined Chinaccelerator, a global venture accelerator based in Shanghai, which helps entrepreneurial teams coming from all parts of the world to take advantage of proximity to the Chinese market.

William-bao-ben

While China is infamous for copycats, William pointed out that China is also the largest mobile first and mobile only market in the world. There are 649 million internet users in China, and a consumer’s first internet experience is often mobile instead of PC, especially in rural areas.

“Their internet experience is different form someone in Europe and the U.S., so the requirements and the user experience has to be different.”

As a US-born Chinese, William first came to China 20 years ago to improve his language. He started his career as an equity research analyst and then as a technology investment analyst, working for investment institutions like Softbank China & India Holdings and Singtel Innov8, successively. William then joined SOS Ventures, a US$235m accelerator focused venture capital fund, and became the managing director of Chinaccelerator, China’s early-stage startup accelerator.

Three Generations Of China Startups

As a startup and tech veteran who closely witnessed the development China’s internet market during the past decades, William shared his insights on evolution of Chinese internet companies overtime.

The first generation of China internet companies start very small and it takes them a long time to grow. These firms want to build very big companies, whenever something new came up they will build a mini company inside to build that, whether be mobile chat, video, mobile games, typical 1.0 companies are BAT, which build mini companies attacking every different part of the market.

That’s very different from the U.S. and Europe, where internet companies focus on one sector and try to be the best at it. Chinese companies start by focusing and solving one problem, but over time they start to attack all the problems, as a result it is not startup friendly for big companies to compete with small ones. U.S. entrepreneurs will leave their startup for a while and start a new start or become an angel investor or both. Whereas the CEOs of Chinese internet companies continue to run company and invest in startups within their company.

The second generation of Chinese startups emerged six to seven years ago. Instead of building an empire of everything, they are solving specific problems, going after specific verticals, while facing tough competition from the first generation. With good execution power, some of them managed to went public.

China’s third generation startups solve new problems unlike first and second generation companies which address rather simple questions. Third gen startups not only provides a base platform services, but to solve individual consumer problem.

For the first and second-gen startups, they just have to show up and perform better than someone else and they will be the vertical winner. But it is rather difficult for third-gen startups to survive the tough competition. When everybody has money, it is more difficult to find talent, you need to differentiate not only a good product, but also a good team, not only just co-founders but also members, so company culture becomes more important, which is not such a big deal in the past. Team identity became more important in third-gen startups.

Leadership of Chinese vs US Founders

US startups have a strong sense of team identity and culture that is created not only by CEO but everybody in the team, whereas in Chinese companies it’s more about the personal identity and culture of the CEO. But company culture and identity will be more and more important for Chinese startups in the new erafor maintaining staff.

In general, there are two types of CEOs in Chinese startups: godmother CEOs who take care of you, and you look up them, they are generous kind people who lead you and employees follow them; and godfather CEO, a criminal boss who leads through fear, people follow the CEO because they are afraid of him of her. “I hope that Chinese entrepreneurs could learn a third style.” he said.

Building a Company with Lean Startup Approach

“I guess the biggest problems that foreigners have when they come to China is that they think their way is right and other people’s way is wrong, and it important to understand there’s more than one way to do things”, said William. A lot of international companies and entrepreneurs come to China, they think they have the solution while in fact the market does not like their solution.

“If one is to succeed in China, the lean startup approach is very important. When you identify a problem, you come up an solution, then you test it in the market, you let the market to validate your idea.”

“In the US, we have three steps in firing at your goals, getting ready is your strategy, aiming-tactics, firing-execution. China places more importance on execution. Their method is running around and see what you hit. Don’t spend all your times on your tactics.”

Quick Questions

What do you love about China?

Best thing about China is people. China is not one people, one country, but different people with different identities from many cities and even cultures. The internet has allowed that diversity to come out over the last decade. Most foreigner’s don’t think Chinese people have huge amount of freedom, but the fact is that they do have the freedom to be who they want to be.

What’s your personal motto?

My motto is to help people. My job is to focus on very early-stage companies and try to be as helpful as I can. My ability to work in China is based on reputation for being someone who works really hard to helps entrepreneurs get from start to traction. When a company becomes big I am less helpful, because they will have a different set of problems that I don’t have the skill set to help. But in the very early days, I can can help a company to get their strategies right, and get their execution down and to grow, and get the product to market fit.

Image credit: Chinaccelerator, ShutterStock

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Bitnexo Named China’s Best Startup At Seedstars Shanghai https://technode.com/2015/06/16/seedstars-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2015/06/16/seedstars-shanghai/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2015 01:24:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30283 Seedstars World (SSW), the global seeds stage startup competition for emerging markets and fast-growing startup scenes, brought its Chinese round to a successful close during Seedstars Shanghai last week. 12 startups covering the hot areas of online finance, online education and online travel pitched their products to a jury to compete for the regional winner. BitNexo walked away […]]]>

Seedstars World (SSW), the global seeds stage startup competition for emerging markets and fast-growing startup scenes, brought its Chinese round to a successful close during Seedstars Shanghai last week. 12 startups covering the hot areas of online finance, online education and online travel pitched their products to a jury to compete for the regional winner.

BitNexo walked away as the best startup for Seedstars Shanghai. The team will be going to Switzerland in February 2016 for the final pitching round, potentially winning the $500,000 USD equity prize.

BitNexo, which just graduated from Chinaccelerator, is a web platform and software provider that helps cross-border SMB commerce providers pay for goods and services between Asia and Latin America by leveraging Bitcoin. The company’s co-founder & CEO Darren Camas has been involved with Bitcoin since 2011 as head of Business Development for TradeHill/bitcoin.com, and then as partner of Bitcoin exchange CompraBitcoin.

Second place went to corporate training service SXT Learning. SXT Learning allows distribution of learning materials directly to mobile devices. Employees can access their company’s learning resources securely on their mobile device by adding their phone number and they will receive all instructions directly to their phone. The platform helps to achieve more effective training with lower training budgets.

The third prize winner was Seeder, a marketplace that connects building managers with green contractors for retrofits. Seeder allows real estate decision makers to submit their project​ needs and information and collects quotes from​ the appropriate ​providers and suppliers for their building or space. The company has worked with a variety of projects in China, ranging from chain hotels, co-working spaces to office towers.

The other startups invited to pitch were online learning platform 1KE, 3D printed nail jewelry Clawz, connected display ELLA, video crowdfunding platform Kliptap, online finance service Koolla, P2P risk sharing community Tongjubao, social and content marketing platform Robin8, upcycle design shop The Squirrelz and online travel site Yoloboo.

Image credit: SeedStars

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Period-Tracker App Dayima Enters Ecommerce With Monthly Care Packages https://technode.com/2015/06/16/dayima-chaike/ https://technode.com/2015/06/16/dayima-chaike/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2015 01:13:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30178 Commercialization could be a tricky problem for any services, but how does a menstruation-tracking app move into e-commerce? Chai Ke, founder of a leading Chinese period-tracking app Dayima, talked about the company’s monetizing initiatives through its e-commerce platform, Meiyueyouxuan, at TechCrunch Shanghai last week. According to Ke, it’s been a cautious entry, taking over seven months to agree […]]]>

Commercialization could be a tricky problem for any services, but how does a menstruation-tracking app move into e-commerce?

Chai Ke, founder of a leading Chinese period-tracking app Dayima, talked about the company’s monetizing initiatives through its e-commerce platform, Meiyueyouxuan, at TechCrunch Shanghai last week.

According to Ke, it’s been a cautious entry, taking over seven months to agree on the final form of their e-commerce platform. As a female-focused community, Dayima has plenty of options in doing e-commerce business, he believes, “some say we should sell luxury products, but that only focuses on a small portion of our users. What I am trying to find is a business model that can serve all of our users.”

“As a menstruation period tracker, our final choice is to focus on sanitary pads, tampons, warmer pads, brown sugar, ginger tea–consumer goods that every girl would use during their period 12 times a year.” he said.

A distinctive feature of Dayima’s e-commerce services is its “Cycle Purchase”. After placing orders for the things you want, the site will send you the monthly quota of them before your period begins according to tracking data synced from the app, avoiding the obligation of purchasing sanitary pads offline.

Chai believes that their attractiveness is in their ease-of-use. “We do not have the lowest price or even the fastest delivery, but we want to differentiate from other e-commerce sites with convenience, the key recipe to the success of 7-Eleven”, said he.

Chai also emphasized the importance of reproductive apps for women in China, where the lack of family or personal doctors has made fertility features a natural fit for young female users who are born in the age of mobility.

Dayima is one of the most highly funded companies in China’s consumer-facing mobile health space. They raised US$30 million Series C in funding from Ceyuan Ventures and existing investors Sequoia Capital China and Bertelsmann Asia Investments

Chai Ke is serial entrepreneur in the healthcare industry. After several failed projects, he launched Dayima in 2012 which has accumulated over 80 million users as of present.

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Audio Streaming Will Boom In China, But Not Without Copyright Issues: Ximalaya Founders https://technode.com/2015/06/12/audio-streaming-will-boom-in-china-but-not-without-copyright-issues-ximalaya-founders/ https://technode.com/2015/06/12/audio-streaming-will-boom-in-china-but-not-without-copyright-issues-ximalaya-founders/#respond Fri, 12 Jun 2015 10:57:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30221 After the boom of video streaming services, China’s audio streaming business is now seeing substantial growth for the coming years, according to Chen Xiaoyu, co-founder of Chinese podcast sharing service Ximalaya, who spoke at this year’s Techcrunch Shanghai. In the mobile era, audio streaming is an easier means to get information and entertainment especially when users’ eyes are […]]]>

After the boom of video streaming services, China’s audio streaming business is now seeing substantial growth for the coming years, according to Chen Xiaoyu, co-founder of Chinese podcast sharing service Ximalaya, who spoke at this year’s Techcrunch Shanghai.

In the mobile era, audio streaming is an easier means to get information and entertainment especially when users’ eyes are engaged elsewhere, said Chen, adding that this makes it a perfect fit for in-car applications. This year’s Techcrunch Shanghai focussed on the internet of things, and how connectivity will feature in our homes and vehicles in the future.

Chen and his co-founder Yu Jianjun, who is also the Ximalaya CEO, also both noted that copyright would continue to be a feature of early-stage audio streaming startups in China.

“Most early-stage startups do not have enough funding to address copyright issues,” said Jianjun, “but after reaching a certain development stage, ordered regulation is absolutely necessary and an inevitable choice for further development of the whole industry.”

Audio streaming services have also caught the eyes of hardware manufacturers, who see audio content as a means to bring extra value to their products. Chen noted that they have been approached by bulb manufacturers and even fridge makers to integrate their contents. At the same time, audio streaming companies are trying to find hardware to pre-installing their service or launch devices that are compatible with certain car brands.

Launched in March 2013, Ximalaya is an audio sharing platform which allows media companies, musicians and hobbyists to upload files for streaming or downloading. It claims to have more than 150 million users and over 55,000 content creators on its platform as of April. 2015. The company has secured a US$11.5 million A round in May 2014 and a US$50 million B round January this year. The competitors Ximalaya face in China include Kaola FM, Lychee FM and Qingting FM.

Image Source: Techcrunch Shanghai 2015

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Duolingo Secures US$45M Series D Led By Google Capital At US$470M Valuation https://technode.com/2015/06/11/duolingo-series-d/ https://technode.com/2015/06/11/duolingo-series-d/#respond Thu, 11 Jun 2015 03:29:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30195 Language service Duolingo has just closed a US$45 million of Series D funding led by Google Capital with participation of existing investors at a valuation of US$470 million, raising the company’s total funding to US$83.3 million. The company’s previous investors include Union Square Ventures, NEA, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, as well as individual investors […]]]>

Language service Duolingo has just closed a US$45 million of Series D funding led by Google Capital with participation of existing investors at a valuation of US$470 million, raising the company’s total funding to US$83.3 million.

The company’s previous investors include Union Square Ventures, NEA, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, as well as individual investors of actor Ashton Kutcher and author Tim Ferriss.

Founded in June 2012 by reCAPTCHA inventor Luis von Ahn, Duolingo now claimed has gained more than 100 million users around the world by integrating gamification elements introduced for the learning process.

“Duolingo’s mobile-first, adaptive, and gamified platform is changing the way people are learning languages across the globe,” said Laela Sturdy, partner at Google Capital. “We were blown away by Duolingo’s growth than engagement numbers, and we’re thrilled to partner with them as they shape the future of education.”

Before Duolingo, Luis von Ahn has sold two projects to Google. ESP Game, which von Ahn launched in 2005, was acquired by Google. The search giant latter licensed it and turned it into Google Image Labeler which would be used for improving the accuracy of the image search. Von Ahn also sold identity verification device reCAPTCHA to Google in 2009.

Positioned itself as a global language learning service, Duolingo also set eye on China’s huge market. The company first launched a Chinese version for users to learn English in May 2014 and had attracted 1.5 million users in the first week. China is also included as an important part of its recent launch for Duolingo for School, a platform allowing students do extra work in game-like interface and teachers to optimize in-class time by addressing general questions. Duolingo has registered more than 4 million users in China as of Jan. this year, according to Ling Ma, head of Duolingo China.

Like many other foreign services, Duolingo has experienced some tough time in tapping Chinese market due to the unstable access to servers in the country. The company’s service has been partially blocked for a few days last May. Similarly, MOOC site Coursera also faced slow access to its video courses before finding local partner Guokr, a science networking service.

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VCs Can Get Ahead By Targeting BAT’s Weaknesses In Offline: Zhu Xiaohu – TC Shanghai https://technode.com/2015/06/08/tcsh-ele-me-zhangxuhao/ https://technode.com/2015/06/08/tcsh-ele-me-zhangxuhao/#respond Mon, 08 Jun 2015 07:53:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30111 As China’s market grows, internet giants Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent have put out feelers in virtually every tech vertical, making it difficult for newcomers and VCs to crack into existing online markets. According to Zhu Xiaohu, managing partner at GSR Ventures, targeting offline businesses is the best way to avoid competition from BAT. Zhu spoke on a […]]]>

As China’s market grows, internet giants Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent have put out feelers in virtually every tech vertical, making it difficult for newcomers and VCs to crack into existing online markets.

According to Zhu Xiaohu, managing partner at GSR Ventures, targeting offline businesses is the best way to avoid competition from BAT. Zhu spoke on a panel at Techrunch Shanghai this Monday, alongside Zhang Xuhao, founder of online food delivery company Ele.me.com, one of GSR’s early investments.

“Chinese venture capitalists have to cooperate with BAT, because they are taking a dominant part of China’s internet market. But we choose to do venture capital investment in China differently by cooperating with startups that have a more extensive offline presence, where the BAT’s influences are weaker.”

The fierce competition in China’s O2O (online-to-offline) industry has made it a high money-burning sector where players compete for an increasingly larger market share. However Ele.me founder Zhang Xuhao says that O2O has only recently become a late-ROI industry, requiring larger amounts of early investment.

“That’s not the case when we first start Ele.me seven years ago,” said Zhang. “On the contrary, we were making money from the business back then”, he said.

The online food delivery service Ele.me has become one of the biggest startup success stories in China so far. He noted that the early days were more difficult for O2O services, claiming that while companies had a sooner ROI, getting funding itself was incredibly difficult.

“Bringing offline businesses online is costly and needs a lot of capital support. On the positive side, burning money can change users’ behaviors quickly, but it is not a healthy development path,” said Zhang.

Ele.me is now exploring high-tier markets and to construct an in-house logistics system. To further the expansion, the site is building a system where the restaurants can check the food ingredient sources in an attempt to change the industrial chain of food and catering industry.

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“Entrepreneurship is a process of learning and improving yourself,” said GSR Managing Partner, who injected the very first round of angel investment in Ele.me back in 2011. “Not everyone suits entrepreneurism or finds this process inspiring and it is good to have the opportunities to test whether being an entrepreneur is your thing at an early age.”

Zhang Xuhao put together the Ele.me concept with his classmates when studying at Shanghai Jiaotong University. Started as a site targeted at university students and the low-end catering market, the company now provides services in more than 200 cities across China. The startup has received several hefty financing rounds from Chinese Internet giants like Tencent and Dianping.

In China, O2O is expanding into every industry ranging from on-demand massage to manicure. Zhu thinks services with high usage frequencies, at least once a week, are more likely to be successful.

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Mobvoi Launches Smartwatch Powered By Homegrown Android ROM ‘Ticwear’ https://technode.com/2015/06/05/mobvoi-ticwatch/ https://technode.com/2015/06/05/mobvoi-ticwatch/#comments Fri, 05 Jun 2015 10:30:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30061 Chinese mobile voice search company Mobvoi has rolled out a smartwatch enabled by its own Android ROM, Ticwear. The ‘Ticwatch’ is installed with the company’s customized Android Wear system, which launched at the end of last year. The Ticwear Android ROM has gained popularity in China as an alternative to Google services that are largely blocked in China. […]]]>

Chinese mobile voice search company Mobvoi has rolled out a smartwatch enabled by its own Android ROM, Ticwear. The ‘Ticwatch’ is installed with the company’s customized Android Wear system, which launched at the end of last year.

The Ticwear Android ROM has gained popularity in China as an alternative to Google services that are largely blocked in China. Currently, the Ticwear ROM can be integrated into the Moto 360 and the LG G Watch R. The Ticwatch is the third offering, and is the first piece of wearable hardware that the company has produced itself. In addition to Ticwear, Mobvoi is also the startup behind WeChat-based Mandarin voice search service Chumenwenwen.

The new product is available in two models retailed at RMB999 (about US$160) and RMB1199 (about US$190) respectively, and pre-orders for the gadgets are being taken on its distribution partner JD.com from June 18.

Co-designed with Frog Design, the new Ticwatch features a 1.5-inch (3.20 x 3.20cm) Gorilla circular display, but managed to avoid the black stripe at the bottom of Moto 360’s screen. Enabled by 1.2 dual-core MT2601CPU, the smartwatch sports Bluetooth, WiFi , 512MB RAM, 4G ROM, as well as a heart rate monitor and voice control. The company disclosed that the Ticwatch is powered by a 300mAh battery without specifying battery life.

Tickwatch-pic

Ticwear is one of the earliest smartwatch operating systems optimized for Chinese language and Chinese user behavior. The company has claimed that its free-to-download system has had more than 30,000 users since its launch. A dozen customized versions of Chinese mobile apps or web services are now on Ticwear including WeChat, Sogou Maps, Dianping, Didi Dache, Qunar, AutoNavi, Didi Dache, Weibo and Toutiao.

The company also partnered with smart home solution provider BroadLink and My Spin to integrate smart home and internet-of-car functionalities into the smartwatch.

Benefiting from customized Android ROMs for smartphones, Chinese companies want to duplicate the same success by building customized operating systems for Android smartwatches as smart wearables are on the rise. Chinese search engine Baidu launched its smartwatch OS DuWear in April this year, while Tencent is soon wheeling out the TOS.

Image credit: Mobvoi

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: China’s Top Designer Entrepreneurs https://technode.com/2015/06/02/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-6/ https://technode.com/2015/06/02/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-6/#comments Tue, 02 Jun 2015 11:19:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=30011 As China moves to increase local innovation, design is one aspect of our tech market that is on the up and up. At a special panel named Design Plus, TechCrunch Shanghai going will invite five top design entrepreneurs to share their experience working at the intersection of technology, entrepreneurship and design. 1. Jason Huang, TANG Jason is the […]]]>

As China moves to increase local innovation, design is one aspect of our tech market that is on the up and up.

At a special panel named Design Plus, TechCrunch Shanghai going will invite five top design entrepreneurs to share their experience working at the intersection of technology, entrepreneurship and design.

1. Jason Huang, TANG

Huangfeng1

Jason is the founder and CEO of TANG Consulting (Innovation for China), a company committed to bringing innovative design experiences to China’s users. Since 2007, Tang Consulting has provided service to hundreds of clients including Lenovo, ICBC, China Guangfa Bank.

TANG Consulting headquarters are in Shanghai, and have offices and labs in Beijing and Guangzhou for regional project needs. With the support of global partners, TANG provides service for cross-culture projects in 9 locations worldwide.

Prior to TANG, Jason founded UXPA CHINA, a leading Chinese non-profit user experience organization, in 2004 and was the president of this organization for 10 years. 

2. Will Zhang, ARK Design

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Will is the founder of ARK design and oversees innovation strategy and client experiences. Born and raised in countryside in remote Xinjiang, Will studied aerospace engineering in Beijing. He worked at Siemens for more than ten years and accumulated rich experience in  innovation, business management and consulting.

As an early core member of Asian team of ‘Frog Design’, Will helped the company to expand business in the Asian market successfully.
ARK Design is a design and innovation consultancy based in Shanghai, China, helping create world class products, experiences and brands for China market. By providing innovation strategy consulting, ARK Design also helps brands build innovation culture, and long lasting innovation competences.

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3. Token Hu, Niu Technology
Token Hu is the founder of electric scooter startup Niu Technology, which just launched its “N1 smart e-scooter. Hu is also the founder and CEO of UTLAB USA, a technology-driven footwear company.

Prior to that, Hu worked as UX design lead with Microsoft Live, then went on to work with Frog Design, one of the most famous and innovative design firms around, with clients like Apple, Disney, GE, and many other Fortune 500 brands.

4. Yizhou Li, Thinkskey

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Yizhou Lee is the founder and CEO of Thinkskey, a startup focused on smart home solutions. He has experience in mobility design and product design. He also was a design researcher in user study, strategy, process and methodology.

In addition, he consults for some of the biggest Chinese Internet companies, including Baidu, 360 and Leho. Yizhou is the co-founder of 1deaer design research, joint Ph.D. student of RCA & Tsinghua, holds a master’s in industrial design and human factors from Hunan University.

5.Baonan Du, Zhiche Auto

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Baonan Du is the co-founder of smart car manufacturer Zhiche Auto. He graduated with a BFA in industrial design from Tsinghua University (The Central Academy of Art and Design) in 1996.

Prior to Zhiche, he worked as chief designer of PSA Peugeot Citroen’s China design center, Motorola’s North Asia Center, GM Patac and Coolpad’s innovation design center.

The panel is slated for 14:50-15:20 on June 9, please click here for more information of TechCrunch Shanghai.

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Didi-Kuaidi Launch Carpooling App To Challenge People’s Uber https://technode.com/2015/06/02/didi-kuaidi-launches-carpooling-service/ https://technode.com/2015/06/02/didi-kuaidi-launches-carpooling-service/#respond Tue, 02 Jun 2015 03:06:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29978 Just a few days after receiving US$142 million in funding from Weibo, China’s dominant taxi app company coalition Didi-Kuaidi is making further headlines with the launch of a carpooling service ‘Didi Shun Feng Che’. The feature will be added to Didi Dache’s app, aiming to curb traffic gridlock in China’s cities. By leveraging Didi-Kuaidi’s big data and advanced matching […]]]>

Just a few days after receiving US$142 million in funding from Weibo, China’s dominant taxi app company coalition Didi-Kuaidi is making further headlines with the launch of a carpooling service ‘Didi Shun Feng Che’. The feature will be added to Didi Dache’s app, aiming to curb traffic gridlock in China’s cities.

By leveraging Didi-Kuaidi’s big data and advanced matching techniques, the service will calculate routes and match car owners and passengers for carpooling. Car owners can set up default routes, while passengers provide the locations of departure and arrival and the service will automatically find matches.

Last year, the government reiterated that it was illegal to run for-profit ride-sharing services in China, restricting for-profit rides to accredited drivers only. In reaction, Uber launched its People’s Uber pilot program, which allows public ride sharing so long as the price only covers the actual cost of the ride, without a profit margin.

Likewise, the cost of the new Kuaidi Didi project will also cut out profit margin in accordance with the law, and a standard ride fee will cost between 5-10 yuan (US$0.80-1.60) with an additional 1 yuan ($0.16) added per kilometer. The standard fee for the profit-driven taxi model in Beijing is 13 yuan.

In order to ensure safety, Shun Feng Che requires WeChat authorized login and validation of WeChat payment from passengers, with drivers required to have a license check. Shun Feng Che will purchase insurance of 500,000 yuan for each trip.

The company claimed that Shun Feng Che has recruited over 1 million car owners in less two months during their trial period, and they claim their orders will reach 100,000 within a month. The service is expected to cover over 26 cities across China, starting from Beijing by the end of June, the firm added.

China Turns from Premium Services to Carpooling

After the heated competitions in the premium ride market, the tide in Chinese ride-sharing industry is swinging towards carpooling services, a field which is still in its infancy in China.

Dida Pinche, a carpooling app, has secured a massive US$100 million investment this May. Another rival Haha Pinche also received a US$10 million series A investment last August. Internet giants like Baidu, which invested an undisclosed amount of financing in Uber, also joined the war with investments in two ride-sharing apps of Tiantian Yongche and 51yche.

This shift may to some extent contribute to the desire to avoid policy risks. China’s Minister of Transport has said that private cars will never be allowed to operate as commercial vehicles.

Since private cars account for a considerable part of many premium fleets, regional authorities have initiated measures to crack down on premium services. However, the government is quite supportive of carpooling service in theory, as it promotes China’s greener transport goals.

Car-rental services like Zuche, eHi and Yongche entered the premium car services market using only licensed drivers. But they can’t meet the rising transportation demands when competing against a vast pool of private cars and high costs.

What’s more, most premium services focus on first-and second-tier cities, where it is difficult for them to expand. Carpooling services have a distinct advantage, when drivers are able to use the technical platform without limitations.

Image credit: Didi-Kuaidi

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China’s Internet Giants Form A Powerhouse In Burgeoning Online Education Market https://technode.com/2015/06/01/powerhouses-in-chinas-burgeoning-online-education-market/ https://technode.com/2015/06/01/powerhouses-in-chinas-burgeoning-online-education-market/#comments Mon, 01 Jun 2015 10:54:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29890 In a country as obsessed with education as China, it is strongly believed that online education will have great potential, especially in an age where private education is becoming more universal thanks to the education reform and improving economic status of Chinese people. Over the past few years, China’s online education is experiencing massive growth in […]]]>

In a country as obsessed with education as China, it is strongly believed that online education will have great potential, especially in an age where private education is becoming more universal thanks to the education reform and improving economic status of Chinese people.

Over the past few years, China’s online education is experiencing massive growth in all verticals, including preschool, after-school tutoring, overseas study and vocational education.

Lured by the booming market, companies with different backgrounds, internet giants and offline private schools, flocked to the battlefield to build platforms to accommodate some or all sectors of the industry. Internet juggernauts BAT have been notorious for smashing up every trending field in tech and online education is no exception.

Alibaba

With a goal to sell all products on its online marketplace, Alibaba launched Taobao Classmate in 2013, allowing teachers, education agencies set up Taobao stores to sell recorded videos, offline courses or events on the platform. Last year, the ecommerce giant led a US$100 million Series B financing in language learning company Tutor Group and partnered with Peking University, one of China’s top universities, to launch Chinese MOOC Platform.

Baidu

Baidu began its foray into online education by introducing educational content into its in-house platforms. The company launched education portals in its online library Baidu Weku in 2012 to provide video courses, and then rolled out after-school tutoring platform Zuoyebang on Q&A site Baidu Zhidao. Later, the company built 91UP, a platform for education apps and online courses and wheeled out video lecture channel Duxuetang.

Moreover, the internet giant has make several investments and acquisitions in content provider or startups like Wanxue Education, Hujiang, Innobuddy and Chuanke, compensating for its shortage in premium content.

Tencent

Tencent, which is dominant in China’s social network and gaming markets, enabled monetized classes through its QQ Instant Messaging tool in 2013. The company also established a joint venture with New Oriental Education & Technology, a leading private education company, to develop educational apps and services.


China’s private education institutions have been actively seeking to ride the new wave of online education too.

TAL Education

TAL Education (NYSE:XRS), a K-12 after-school tutoring services provider formerly known as Xueersi, refocused to be a tech-oriented education service in 2010. Since then, the company start to make investments in a variety of online platforms.

The company’s investment head Yang Qiang once said that the public deals only account for a small number of current partnerships. The investment logic behind these deals is pretty clear—to cover education platforms for all age groups and interests among students. K-12 is still the core business where TAL is the primarily focus, while other sectors are developing through cooperation with partners.

New Oriental

New Oriental Education & Technology Group (NYSE:EDU), the Chinese behemoth in private education, has seeking new growth points through online education after witnessing decline in enrollment for offline schools.

New Oriental established online course site, Koolearn, way back in 2000. But the performance of the site isn’t impressive that it only had had 9.2 million accumulate registered users. Given the online education trend, New Oriental is planning to invest in US$25 million to 30 million in the market and Koolearn is expected to be a core platform to push forward the online transformation.

On the other hand, New Oriental distributes its contents online via cooperation with internet giants in a bid to gain access to their huge online user base and technical supports. It has had its content on the platform of BesTV, one of the major digital content and solution providers in China. It has established a joint venture with Tencent and another joint venture with testing solution provider ATA to develop online and mobile services for working professionals.

Image credit: Shutterstock

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EVOL Looks To Release iPhone-Case Modules Ahead Of Google’s Project Ara https://technode.com/2015/06/01/evol-iphone/ https://technode.com/2015/06/01/evol-iphone/#respond Mon, 01 Jun 2015 10:28:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29928 As Google’s Project Ara readies for its beta launch this year, a Shenzhen-based startup is working on a case that hopes to create modular extensions for the iPhone, currently seeking backing through their kickstarter. Unlike Project Ara which acts as an exoskeleton with replaceable modules, EVOL is a multi-purpose case, which does not modify the iPhone’s physical […]]]>

As Google’s Project Ara readies for its beta launch this year, a Shenzhen-based startup is working on a case that hopes to create modular extensions for the iPhone, currently seeking backing through their kickstarter.

Unlike Project Ara which acts as an exoskeleton with replaceable modules, EVOL is a multi-purpose case, which does not modify the iPhone’s physical hardware. While it’s obviously less powerful than a highly modifiable Android modular, it could tap the same appetite for personalization among the iOS faithful.

EVOL consists of a group of parts that can be attached to a conductive case, including ultra-slim battery, handles, memory and multiple lenses. The set also includes a EVOL cordless Dock, a base that can charge the iPhone and EVOL Battery as well as the Apple Watch. An accompanying app will be soon be released, helping users to manage all accessories in one place.

The EVOL hopes to have a fast turnaround, and use funding to create further sophisticated modules. At the current rate, it’s possible they will launch around the same time as Google’s Project Ara.

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Currently EVOL supports iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, allowing users to create our own smartphone based on personal preference “as simply as we build a toy from LEGO blocks.”

We at Technode haven’t yet had a chance to test the EVOL ourselves, but it is clear that team is creating something interesting. In the past, the magnetic battery systems have had problems, and similar lenses for iPhones are already on the market. However even if the EVOL only serves to sucessfully bring several existing products into one modular experience, it will be worth its concept.

Recently, the iPhone became the most popular smartphone brand in Urban China by market share, outstripping local startup Xiaomi. Appetite for iOS has grown steadily, however Android still maintains a total market majority.

The EVOL team has launched a Kickstarter campaign which has already raised US$13,403 at the time you’re reading this and still have 22 days to go.

Image Source: EVOL

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Didi-Kuaidi Gobbles Up $142M Investment From Weibo https://technode.com/2015/05/28/weibo-invests-in-didi-kuaidi/ https://technode.com/2015/05/28/weibo-invests-in-didi-kuaidi/#respond Thu, 28 May 2015 03:23:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29913 Didi Dache-Kuaidi Dache, China’s largest taxi-hailing startup which is said to account for more than 90 percent of the market share, has just revealed a US$142 million investment from Weibo, a SEC filing of the Twitter-like social network. Weibo said in the filing the investment will be made through its Cayman Islands holding company Xiaoju Kuaizhi Inc. This investment […]]]>

Didi Dache-Kuaidi Dache, China’s largest taxi-hailing startup which is said to account for more than 90 percent of the market share, has just revealed a US$142 million investment from Weibo, a SEC filing of the Twitter-like social network. Weibo said in the filing the investment will be made through its Cayman Islands holding company Xiaoju Kuaizhi Inc.

This investment comes on heel of a merger between Didi and Kuaidi in Feb this year. The valuation of the combined company is estimated to be around US$8.75 billion, Wall Street Journal reported. Although the merger is still pending regulatory approval, it is widely-acclaimed by the industry as a means to end the money-burning wars between China’s largest taxi apps.

This latest investment strengthens the new Kuaidi-Didi coalition, meaning that American entrant Uber and Chinese contender Yongche, have a challenging fight ahead. DiDi Dache, which still runs as an independent brand after the merger, announced a 1 billion yuan (US$161 million) subsidiary program in May, to offer free rides to users in 12 cities every Monday. Chinese car rental and ride-booking service Yongche announced one day before that it will offer free rides to every user on May 21st every year.

Financing support has become a prominent factor in the battle to win supremacy in the ride-sharing market. The new investment raised concerns among industry insiders that Didi Dache-Kuaidi Dache’s growth is solely dependent on investments as both companies have only very recently made moves to monetise.

However according to an insider cited by Chinese state media “Both Didi and Kuaidi have secured hefty investments before the merger and the money is sufficient to support their development. This allows them to consider more factors like cooperation opportunities when choosing partners rather than only for money.”

The tie-up between Weibo and Didi Dache-Kuaidi Dache is not so surprising since Alibaba owns an 18 percent stake in Weibo, and also stakes in the merged company through its investments in Kuaidi Dache.

Weibo spun off from Sina and went public in the U.S. last April as Weibo Inc. But, people would find it is difficult for Weibo to expand monetization approaches beyond advertising. Investment in Didi-Kuaidi may help Weibo to better commercialize its user base by providing value-added service for transportation.

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Building A Global Language Learning Company In China: Italki Founder https://technode.com/2015/05/27/expat-preneurs-italki/ https://technode.com/2015/05/27/expat-preneurs-italki/#comments Wed, 27 May 2015 07:51:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29844 GSX TALThis post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can follow our […]]]> GSX TAL

This post is part of our series Say Hello To China’s Expat-preneurs, where we will talk to a mix of foreign founders who have tackled China’s growing tech space and won. Stay tuned over the coming three weeks as we talk to foreign founders from Beijing to Shenzhen about what it takes to thrive in China. You can follow our updates at @technodechina, or check back here for new stories in the series.

English education is a big business in China.

If you have been keeping an eye on China’s booming online education market, you know that most of China’s language learning startups focus on the domestic market. From a numbers game, the number of Chinese interested in learning English is huge and growing quickly.

Kevin Chen, an American entrepreneur who co-founded italki, chose to approach the problem differently. “We are building a global platform for anyone to learn any language.  We are not only focused on teaching English to Chinese,” he says.

Kevin started italki in Shanghai as a language learning community in 2007. The site evolved into an online teaching platform in 2010, by creating a marketplace that brings students and teachers together for paid lessons. Kevin describes it as “Airbnb for international language teachers”.

Unlike most Chinese peer learning sites that focus solely on English, italki supports more than 64 languages, including Spanish, French, Japanese, German, and Arabic.  English is still the most popular language, and accounts for more than 50% of the lessons.  According to Kevin, the platform has amassed more than 1.5 million users worldwide and has over 3000 international teachers.

Although it is based in Shanghai, the startup has always had a global focus. “A quarter of our users are from North America, and roughly half are from Europe.  Less than 10% come from China. It surprises many people that more than 90% of our users and revenues come from outside of China,” Kevin notes.

“We do have Chinese users. They tend to be more mature learners, between the ages of 25 and 40.  They have international aspirations — they want to live abroad, have foreign friends, understand international culture, and of course, they want to become fluent. They also value 1-on-1 lessons, and don’t believe in traditional language education.”

“It is a nearly universal experience — people study a language for years in school, but are still unable to have a basic conversation.  This happens because traditional language education is missing human communication.”  With italki, Kevin wants to build an online platform where users can apply their new language skills in a real setting, and immerse themselves in conversation with real native speakers.

To keep up with the mobile trend, italki is planning to launch a mobile app in the summer.  The initial version will mirror many features on the website, with a focus on facilitating human communication and scheduling lessons.

“We love apps and tools.  They are great for learning in your spare time.  You can memorize some extra words or learn a new grammar structure. However, nobody became fluent purely through language games. Anyone who became fluent in a foreign language spent time speaking with real people.” says Kevin.  “The good news is that you don’t have to choose just one language learning product. As we move towards a student-centric world, learners should use every service that helps them learn faster.”

Kevin-Chen

Italki Founder Kevin Chen

Financing Obstacles for a Global Company Based in Shanghai

As a company with a global customer base and offices in Shanghai, italki has faced challenges explaining its story to investors, said Kevin. A lot of Chinese investors are very excited about the domestic online English teaching market, and they find italki too foreign, since China is not a dominant part of their business. Overseas investors, in contrast, find investing challenging because the company is based in China. “This is one reason why we are looking for investors with a global perspective.”

The company generates revenue from transaction fees. italki has been cashflow positive and financing operations is not a problem. “Our goal is to find the right investors. We are looking for people who understand the global potential of this model, and how we can revolutionize language education.” Kevin noted.

Words of Advice for Expat-preneurs

Given the already high difficulty of doing a startup, Kevin said jokingly that it might have been a huge mistake to start a company in Shanghai. Soon after he came to the city more than ten years ago, Kevin founded his first startup, Famento, which was focused on recording family history. Like many expats, he was drawn to the rapid growth and change in China. “However, I underestimated how difficult doing startup in China could be, and I had to pay a lot in time and tuition fees.”

Kevin said he learned a lot from the failure of his first startup. “Obviously you need a strong founding team, with a strong tech lead and product manager. You have to communicate with your customers as early as possible, and validate your assumptions.  If you don’t really understand your customers’ needs, you will end up building the wrong product,” Kevin says.

“Overall, I think it’s worth starting your own company at least once in your life. It is a difficult experience, but also helpful for your personal growth. You learn a lot about yourself, your strengths and weaknesses.”

Starting a Company in Shanghai

Shanghai’s entrepreneurial environment has improved significantly in recent years. “Although it is still smaller than Beijing, it is easier for foreign talent to adjust to Shanghai. There are also increasingly more resources like foreign-friendly startup events and startup accelerators. Shanghai can be good for people who want to work on projects with an international focus.” he said.

<Quick Questions>

1. What’s the most difficult problem you have in China?

I think communication is always a challenge in China. There are straight-up communication problems and also problems that are more cultural. In our own team, I sometimes find that I think I am saying one thing in Chinese, and somebody else is hearing something very different. Certainly, it is part of the challenge of being an international company.  You have to spend more time and energy on getting people on the same page.

2. How do you get involved in the local startup scene?

There are two main things I do outside of italki. First, I am one of the organizers of Techyizu, a non-profit group that organizes startup and technology events in Shanghai, including Barcamp Shanghai. Second, I am a staff member of Xinchejian, the Shanghai hackerspace. I am also helping as a mentor at Chinaccelerator.

3. What is your personal motto in your life?

I don’t think I have a personal motto. Maybe, “What is to give light, must endure burning.” from Viktor Frankl.  Anything that is worth doing is going to take a lot of hard work.

image credit: ShutterStock

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Chinese Preschool App Youban Seals Eight-Digit CNY Funding Round https://technode.com/2015/05/26/pre-school-app-youban-secures-fresh-funding-tal-education/ https://technode.com/2015/05/26/pre-school-app-youban-secures-fresh-funding-tal-education/#respond Tue, 26 May 2015 14:38:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29855 Youban, a Chinese developer of educational apps and content for kids, has received Series B funding from TAL Education Group. The company did not disclose the exact amount of this investment, but said hinted that it was in the area 8-digit (yuan). The startup has raised seed capital in the past from Cai Dongqing, founder of China’s […]]]>

Youban, a Chinese developer of educational apps and content for kids, has received Series B funding from TAL Education Group. The company did not disclose the exact amount of this investment, but said hinted that it was in the area 8-digit (yuan).

The startup has raised seed capital in the past from Cai Dongqing, founder of China’s leading animation company Alpha Animation and Culture, and Series A from Oriental Fortune Capital.

Founded in 2012 by former Tencent staff, Youban develops smart role-play apps for kids in the 0-8 years old age group.  The kids can start a journey with ‘Little Dragon’, or ‘Xiaobanlong’ in Chinese which is a cartoon character that take users on an adventurous trips or accompany them to finish certain learning tasks. The company offer apps for nursery rhymes and poems.

The company’s flagship product “Little Dragon” claims to have surpassed 50 million downloads from more than 10 million users. In addition to apps, the team is also developing IP and animation products.

TAL Education Group, a K-12 after-school tutoring services provider formerly known as Xueersi, is one of China’s more tech-oriented education companies. It already operates a variety of online platforms aimed at students from preschool to college. TAL Education Group has previously invested in three early childhood education startups, childcare portal Babytree, science education site Sharkpark and Heyha, developer of early education tech solutions.

Image credit: Youban

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: China’s Internet Top Dogs https://technode.com/2015/05/24/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-5/ https://technode.com/2015/05/24/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-5/#respond Sun, 24 May 2015 14:48:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29826 The TechCrunch conference is coming back to Shanghai this year. Therefore it’s only right that we include some of the biggest names in that startup scene. We have already announced a number of amazing speakers and today we’re adding to the list with some of the hottest experts from China’s Internet industry. Jeff Xiong, Founding Managing Partner of […]]]>

The TechCrunch conference is coming back to Shanghai this year. Therefore it’s only right that we include some of the biggest names in that startup scene. We have already announced a number of amazing speakers and today we’re adding to the list with some of the hottest experts from China’s Internet industry.

Jeff Xiong, Founding Managing Partner of 7 Seas Ventures

Jeff-xiong

Jeff is the founding management partner of 7 Seas Ventures, a venture capital firm focusing on investing early state cross-border technology companies in US and China.

Previously, Jeff was CTO with Tencent from 2005 to 2013, responsible for product strategy planning of the overall platform, new product innovation, research and development of core technologies and engineering.

Prior to Tencent, Jeff was a senior program manager at Microsoft US since 1996, working on a number of products which were the current darlings, including Internet Explorer, Windows 2000 and MSN Messenger. In 2004, he led the setup of the Microsoft MSN Development Center in Shanghai.

Jiang Liu, President & Founder of Trends Media Group

Liu-jiang

Liu Jiang started Trends Media Group in 1993, which has grown from just one magazine into a stable of sixteen fashion magazines, including Cosmopolitan, Esquire and BAZAAR. The company produces publications, websites, ebooks and web applications in the UAE and Gulf, India, China, Southeast Asia, Australia, New Zealand, North America and Canada.

Trends also operates as a marketing services company providing global solutions for clients by creating digital video, web development, photography, custom publishing and print brokering services.
The future growth for the business is focused on developing a new digital platform that will allow the community of Trends readers, browsers and viewers, to interact, contribute, enquiry and purchase products and services.

Yongqiang Yang, CTO of LeTV

Yang-yongqiang

Yongqiang Yang joined China’s leading video streaming site LeTV in 2005. As core member of LeTV team, he mainly responsible for construction of LeTV ecosystem and the related application works. With many years of work experience in the Internet, mobile Internet and video industry, he has a profound understanding of key technologies and business models in the areas such as online video and Internet TV.

Previously, Yang has worked as executives in Beijing Yindi Taike Co., Ltd. and Pansky Technology from 2001 to 2005.

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JPush Raises Fresh Funding in China’s Crowded Notification Market https://technode.com/2015/05/22/jpush-raises-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/05/22/jpush-raises-fresh-funding/#respond Fri, 22 May 2015 02:16:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29805 JPush, a push notification solution provider, has announced an eight-digit Series B funding led by Fosun with participation of Mandra Capital and returning investor IDG Capital Partners. The company’s CEO Wang Xiaodao disclosed that the new funding is earmarked for R&D, infrastructure construction and marketing. JPush is a third-party push notification service targeted at both iOS and Android platforms, helping app […]]]>
Jpush-pic

JPush, a push notification solution provider, has announced an eight-digit Series B funding led by Fosun with participation of Mandra Capital and returning investor IDG Capital Partners. The company’s CEO Wang Xiaodao disclosed that the new funding is earmarked for R&D, infrastructure construction and marketing.

JPush is a third-party push notification service targeted at both iOS and Android platforms, helping app developers to engage with their user bases more quickly and effectively.

The company also offers a data analytics service that shows metrics such as how many notifications were clicked and opened, and which platform has a higher reaction rate. In a move to expand beyond the notification business, JPush’s latest product JPush IM allows developers to integrate IM features in the apps.

As of right now, the company claims to have a user base of 1.6 billion, covering 900 million mobile devices on the Android and iOS platforms. It has partnered with 80,000 app developers and provided service for more than 170,000 apps. The startup claimed to push over 300 million notifications per day for clients like SF Logistics, Tuniu, DXY, China Telecom and China Eastern Airlines.

China witnessed the first wave of app notification push services five years ago, marked by the founding of JPush in 2011 and Getui, which received Series B funding last year, in 2012. The two companies are now two of the largest players in the industry now.

The booming market has since attracted big internet companies like Baidu (Baidu Cloud Push), Tencent (XG Push), Alibaba (Umeng), Xiaomi (Xiaomi Push) and Huawei to enter the industry in 2013 and 2014. China Mobile, a leading carrier in the country, also rolled out its push service Youtui last year,

China’s third-party notification market now consists of different forces, ranging from internet giants BAT to startups, as well as smartphone developers and telecom carriers. But these companies are still trying to seek a valid business model. Most of their features are currently free and only a small number of value-added and custom services are actually monetized.

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Tencent’s Private Online Bank Launches Small Loans https://technode.com/2015/05/19/tencent-webank-weilidai/ https://technode.com/2015/05/19/tencent-webank-weilidai/#respond Tue, 19 May 2015 11:10:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29776 TencentWeBank, which is considered the first private Internet bank in China, launched its first loan product Weilidai for testing among a limited number of 50,000 selected users from Tencent’s IM tool QQ. Weilidai offers personal loans up to RMB200,000 (US$32,000) free of guarantee or collateral. Supported by an online bank without brick-and-mortar branches, the service is available […]]]> Tencent

WeBank, which is considered the first private Internet bank in China, launched its first loan product Weilidai for testing among a limited number of 50,000 selected users from Tencent’s IM tool QQ.

Weilidai offers personal loans up to RMB200,000 (US$32,000) free of guarantee or collateral. Supported by an online bank without brick-and-mortar branches, the service is available 24/7 via QQ wallet, a mobile payment service, and allows users to borrow and repay the money anytime with a daily interest of around 0.05%. The transaction can be processed within 15 minutes, according to the company.

weilidai

Weilidai available at Mobile QQ

WeBank is also planning to expand the service to Tencent’s WeChat and Tenpay, as well as integrating more services related to money management and payment. To control default risks, Tencent, which has developed a homegrown consumer credit scoring system, is trying to leverage big data collected on its social networking platforms or through third party channels.

As online finance is shaking up the nation’s financial industry, online banking is becoming the next battlefield for Chinese Internet companies. Beijing has been loosening curbs on the sector since last year, allowing five new private banks to be set up in the country.

Among the five banks in the trial program, Shenzhen-headquartered WeBank, which Tencent holds a 30% majority stake in, became the first private bank to start operations under a pilot. Alibaba’s finance arm Ant Financial has also been cleared to launch an online bank in cooperation with Fosun International and other local partners.

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: Meet The Top Female VCs From China https://technode.com/2015/05/19/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-4/ https://technode.com/2015/05/19/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-4/#respond Tue, 19 May 2015 02:16:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29755 In a traditionally male-oriented field, entrepreneurship can be tough for women. In order to avoid some of the prejudices or miscommunication with male investors, some woman entrepreneurs specifically seek out female investors when raising cash for their startups. According to a Fortune Magazine analysis from February 2014, just 4 percent of senior partners at venture […]]]>

In a traditionally male-oriented field, entrepreneurship can be tough for women. In order to avoid some of the prejudices or miscommunication with male investors, some woman entrepreneurs specifically seek out female investors when raising cash for their startups.

According to a Fortune Magazine analysis from February 2014, just 4 percent of senior partners at venture capital firms are women. However, the number of VC firms that include women on their staff is increasing. TechCrunch Shanghai will invite three female investors who are helping to change the face of tech and investment.

Jenny Lee, Managing Partner at GGV Capital

Jenny

A Managing Partner at GGV Capital, Jenny joined the firm in 2005 and was instrumental in setting up the GGV presence in China. Jenny’s areas of focus are on Consumer Internet and SAAS companies especially those in the Mobile Social, IOT, Finance and Education sectors. Jenny led GGV’s investments in hiSoft (NASDAQ: PACT), 21Vianet (NASDAQ: VNET), SinoSun (SHE: 300333), YY (NASDAQ: YY) and successfully saw them go public.

Jenny’s previous operating and finance work experience with Singapore Technologies Aerospace, Morgan Stanley and JAFCO Asia enhanced her role as a preferred board mentor and investor to many entrepreneurs in China. Jenny graduated from Cornell University with a Masters and B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering and an M.B.A. from Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University.

Jenny has been recognized by Forbes magazine in four consecutive years since 2011 in the Global Top 100 VC Midas list and most recently in 2015 as the top female venture capitalist.

Ruby Lu, General Partner at DMC

Ruby

Ruby is the general partner of DCM. Through her role as a board member, she has helped several companies go from startups to large public companies. She sourced and led DCM’s investments in VanceInfo (NYSE: VIT) which later merged with HiSoft to create Pactera (NASDAQ: PACT), BitAuto (NYSE: BITA), and Dangdang (NYSE: DANG).

Prior to joining DCM, Ruby was a Vice President in the Technology, Media and Telecom Investment Banking Group of Goldman Sachs. She joined Goldman Sachs directly out of school and worked in several different offices: Hong Kong, New York, Menlo Park and San Francisco.

Ruby gained her Bachelor degree from University of Maryland and Master’s from Johns Hopkins University.

Wu Haiyan,  Partner at China Growth Capital

Wuhaiyan

Wu Haiyan joined China Growth Capital in 2006 with focus on online finance, consumption, enterprise software and service.

During 2012 to 2014, Wu has led the investments in Tongbanjieefunbox, Just BB, ForMax, FraudMetrixSingbada Inside. She graduated from Tsinghua University.

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: Chinese Geeks Behind Cutting-Edge VR & 3D Interaction Technologies https://technode.com/2015/05/18/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-3/ https://technode.com/2015/05/18/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-3/#respond Mon, 18 May 2015 07:01:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29685 Virtual reality and 3D interaction are among the most exciting fields in tech right now. TechCrunch Shanghai is honored to invite two experts in this arena to share their insights on the future of these fields. Dr. Fei Yue, Co-founder & CTO of uSens  Dr. Fei Yue is the co-founder and CTO of Silicon Valley-headquartered […]]]>

Virtual reality and 3D interaction are among the most exciting fields in tech right now. TechCrunch Shanghai is honored to invite two experts in this arena to share their insights on the future of these fields.

Dr. Fei Yue, Co-founder & CTO of uSens 

Feiyue

Dr. Fei Yue is the co-founder and CTO of Silicon Valley-headquartered startup uSens Inc. Fei has 12 years of experience as a lead scientist and is an advanced expert in human-computer interaction and computer vision. He has contributed to many important products at Nokia, Motorola, Panasonic and Amazon. Prior to that, Fei founded Infinite 3D, a startup innovating virtual reality 3D user interface, where he developed Cube software system in 2004. The system transforms Windows 2D interface into Virtual 360 degree 3D User Interfaces. Fei earned his B.S. degree in Physics from Fudan University and his M.S. and Ph.D in space physics from Rice University.

Founded in 2013 in San Jose, California uSens’ technologies include gesture recognition, head-tracking and 3D HCI (Human Computer Interaction) system design. Currently, the company is working on the next generation of VR + AR headsets. The company’s latest product Impression Pi, a completely wireless VR + AR device, will have head tracking and position tracking abilities, 3D gesture control for an interactive VR experience, and an augmented reality overlay. It just raised over US$30 million worth of funds in a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter.

Dr. Dai Ruoli, Co-founder of Noitom Ltd.

DaiRuoli

Dr. Dai Ruoli is the co-founder of Beijing-based Noitom Limited. Dai’s research mainly focused on motion capture, virtual reality, and wearable devices development. Dai earned his B.S. degree from University of Science and Technology of China in 2002 and his M.S. and Ph. D in space physics from The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Founded in 2011, the company’s mainly engaged in research and development of motion capture technology by the integration of MEMS sensors, pattern recognition, human kinetics, wireless transmission, and virtual reality. Their technology has been applied in a range of industries from animation to medical and from robotics to game interaction.

The company’s PERCEPTION™ is a motion capture system based on inertial sensors. It is capable of providing accurate motion capture data of single or multiple characters. The product has launched an ongoing crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter.

Perception

Please click here for more information about TechCrunch Shanghai.

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Could Social Finance Save Renren, The Failing Facebook Of China? https://technode.com/2015/05/14/renren-fintech/ https://technode.com/2015/05/14/renren-fintech/#comments Thu, 14 May 2015 12:16:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29665 Following a steady fall from grace, Renren’s CEO Joseph Chen announced yesterday that the Chinese social networking platform would transform into a social finance company, following the release of their first quarter results. The shift is less than surprising, as the troubled “Facebook of China” has been struggling to find new momentum recently through their myriad […]]]>
Renren-fenqi

Following a steady fall from grace, Renren’s CEO Joseph Chen announced yesterday that the Chinese social networking platform would transform into a social finance company, following the release of their first quarter results.

The shift is less than surprising, as the troubled “Facebook of China” has been struggling to find new momentum recently through their myriad of operations, including gaming, video streaming and group-buying. The college-focused social networking site has been unable to lift its profile or revenue despite a string of re-direct strategies.

According to the most recent earnings report, Renren’s total net revenue slumped 41.1% YOY to US$13.7 million, while net loss attributable to the company was US$27.6 million as compared with a net income of US$32.3 million in the same period in 2014.

“The first quarter results reflected a bottoming-out of our legacy business in online advertising and gaming. With a leaner cost structure and a topline that is expected to improve going forward, we are on the road to recovery from our recent business transition,” said Joseph Chen.

Renren successfully sold the idea of “Facebook of China” to western investors back in 2011, raising US$743 million in an IPO and hitting a market cap of US$5.5 billion. But the company’s stock price has dropped considerably to about one fifth of its IPO level.

The newest transition to fintech appears to be an urgent transformation into an industry that is fast becoming overcrowded. Since 2012, Renren has invested in a number of fintech startups, such as real estate crowdfunding site Fundrise, student loan consolidation and refinancing platform Social Finance, big data startup FiscalNote, mortgage marketplace Sindeo, online broker Motif Investing, real estate loan service LendingHome and China-based financial social media service Snowball. Chen has said in the past to local media that Renren plans to invest overall US$500 million in fintech companies.

In addition to external investments, Renren rolled out homegrown platform Renren Fenqi (Renren Installment), an installment billing shopping site for college students, in October 2014. Chen claimed that the service now registered more than 270,000 users with a turnover of more than 330 million yuan (US$53 million), mainly generating revenue from commission fees. Renren is rolling its Renren Licai (Renren Personal Finance), a peer-to-peer lending site, out of internal testing later this year to provide loan and data-driven analytics to users.

With investment in second-hand car trading platform Cheyipai and home decoration service Nest, Renren is set to expand to more verticals, offering loans for second-hand car trading and home decoration.

The rise of student spending power in China has given Renren a good breakthrough point to commercialize its large college user base. However, there are still several obstacles for the company.

Renren has launched its own installment billing marketplace, but it is much less sophisticated than mainstream e-commerce platforms like Tmall and JD, which also launched their own installment billing products. In March this year, JD has injected strategic investment in Chinese student micro-credit site Fenqile.

Despite tapping the potential market of growing middle class college students, youth spending behavior is still erratic and unpredictable. The company’s focus will now be how to avoid a situation of high default risk.

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Letv Sports Lands US$128M Funding Led by China’s Top Two Billionaires https://technode.com/2015/05/13/letv-sports-new-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/05/13/letv-sports-new-funding/#comments Wed, 13 May 2015 10:03:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29648 Letv Sports, the sports affiliate of Chinese online video streamer Leshi Internet Information & Technology Corp., has raised a hefty 800 million yuan (US$128.8 million) Series A funding, valuing the video-streaming business at 2.8 billion yuan (around US$451.1 million). This round went through A and A+ periods, luring investments from two of the richest men in China. Wanda […]]]>

Letv Sports, the sports affiliate of Chinese online video streamer Leshi Internet Information & Technology Corp., has raised a hefty 800 million yuan (US$128.8 million) Series A funding, valuing the video-streaming business at 2.8 billion yuan (around US$451.1 million).

This round went through A and A+ periods, luring investments from two of the richest men in China. Wanda Investment, the venture capital fund supported by Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin, leads in period A, and Alibaba’s Jack Ma-backed Yunfeng Capital leads in A+ financing, followed by Fortune Link, Prometheus Capital and funding from numerous individuals.

Following this deal, the stock ownership structure of Letv Sports has restructured its shareholder structure, with Leshi Internet Information and Technology Corporation’s stock dropping to 10% and Lele Interactive becoming the new majority shareholder.

Letv has evolved from a web page on Leshi’s platform in 2012 to a separate entity that streams live sporting events. Letv Sports claim that 121 sports events in 12 categories and 4000 matches will be broadcasted live on average every year, covering various events including football, basketball, tennis, golf and marathon events.

Letv Sports is most commonly known as a sports video streaming platform, but the company is shifting toward a new business model by establishing an ecosystem that features sports event management, content, smart hardware and value-added services.

In terms of content output, Letv Sports will improve the watching experience by providing users with multiple choices of 6-way signal and 4-way interpretation. For events management, Letv Sports has acquired the operations right for a handful of exclusive events.

The company also disclosed plans to develop sports cameras in addition to super bicycles. As for value-added services, the management have made a complete description of the O2O and payment services in the sports-related business, such as sports retail, sports training, sports gaming and lottery services.

Leshi and Alibaba have been competing in various businesses previously, and this deal is the first time that Leshi-backed entities have receive funding from Jack Ma, the founder of Alibaba.

Since Alibaba initiated its aggressive expansion plan into the media and entertainment arena in 2013, the e-commerce giant has invested in various entities within the industry including media IPs, film and TV production, online ticket sales, digital music and digital publishing. The integration of the sports streaming business will compliment the layout of Alibaba’s entertainment ecosystem.

Image credit: NetEase

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: Meet The Top VCs Behind Chinese Entrepreneurs https://technode.com/2015/05/13/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-2/ https://technode.com/2015/05/13/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-2/#respond Wed, 13 May 2015 07:09:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29634 Even the most successful companies usually begin with little more than an idea, but it takes much, much more to grow a concept into a business. Angel investors and venture capital investments are without doubt a crucial element in our tech ecosystem. At TechCrunch Shanghai this year, we are pleased to have a group of top […]]]>

Even the most successful companies usually begin with little more than an idea, but it takes much, much more to grow a concept into a business. Angel investors and venture capital investments are without doubt a crucial element in our tech ecosystem. At TechCrunch Shanghai this year, we are pleased to have a group of top VCs in China to share their stories on contributing to the boom industry of Chinese startups.

More speakers and guests will be announced on a rolling basis. Please check back for announcements. If you’re looking to buy tickets register here.

James Mi, Co-Founder at LightSpeed China Partners

5

James is Co-Founder and Managing Director of Lightspeed China Partners, a leading China-focused early-stage venture capital firm with investments in internet, mobile, services, and information technology. The venture capital’s portfolio companies include Dianping, MediaV, Rong360, eDaijia, Tujia & Innolight.

Previously, James was Managing Director with Silicon Valley-based Lightspeed Venture Partners which manages over USD 2 billion in assets over a series of global offices. Prior to LSVP, James was Director of Corporate Development for Google, responsible for the company’s strategic investments and M&A efforts in Greater China and the pan-Asian region. During this tenure, he led investments in leading Chinese Internet companies including Baidu, Dianping, Xunlei, Tianya and Ganji.

James received a M.S. in Electrical Engineering from Princeton University and a B.S. in Physics from Fudan University. In addition, James received executive management training at Stanford University. James holds 14 U.S. patents in flash memory, communications, Internet security, and commerce. In 2012, James was named by The Founder Magazine as one of the “Top 10 Most Respected VCs in China”.

Duane Kuang, Founding Managing Partner at Qiming Venture Partners

duane

Duane is a Founding Managing Partner of Qiming Venture Partners. He has over 20 years of IT industry operational and investment experience. Duane started his career in 1988 as a software engineer at 3Com Corporation, and 3 years later joined Kalpana Inc, a Silicon Valley startup company later acquired by Cisco as an engineering manager.

He returned to China in 1994 and started his venture capital career in 1999. Prior to founding Qiming, Duane was the Director of Intel Capital China. During his six-year tenure at Intel Capital, Duane had overall responsibilities for Intel Capital’s investment activities in China. Duane is a governor of the China Venture Capital Association.

Hans Tung, Partner at GGV Capital

Hans

Hans joined GGV Capital Qiming Venture Partners in 2013 as a Managing Partner to focus on mobile Internet, cross border ecommerce, online education, and gaming industry investments.

Hans has been involved in a wide spread of Chinese startups that have since become category leaders, including Xiaomi, Mafengwo Travel, Vancl.com, Domob Mobile, 51fanli, Forgame, and eHi Car Rental.

Hans has been ranked as a top VC on the Forbes Midas list the past three years (2013, 2014, and 2015). He was also recognized by The Founder and CBN News magazines as a Top 10 Most-Entrepreneur-Friendly VC in China.

Ken Xu, Investment Partner at Gobi Partners

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Ken joined Gobi in 2003 and was made partner in 2007. Previously, he worked as an investment representative for a Shanghai-based investment company where he was responsible for personal financial management and investment consulting services.

Ken focuses on wireless and broadband applications, education, and the digital television sector. He has multi-industry experience in China covering IT, financial services, real estate, and construction.

Steven Ji, Partner at Sequoia Capital China

019_Steven Ji

Prior to joining Sequoia Capital in 2005, Steven had been with Walden International, Vertex Management and CIV Venture Capital where he was in charge of numbers of investment projects.

Steven Ji was also among the first group of employees of Seagate Technology China, where he held several managerial posts successively.

Steven received his MBA from China Europe International Business School and bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Feng Li, Partner at IDG Capital

Li-Feng

Feng Li is actively involved in investment in education, consumer services, TMT and other high-tech related fields. In the joint of internet and finance, Mr. Li led the investments into Credit Ease, Ripple, Coinbase, Baifendian and Wacai.

Mr. Li launched two start-ups before joining New Oriental Education & Technology Group, where he worked for eight years holding several core management in different departments including education systems, sub-brand’s establishment and promotion, distance education and subsidiary products. After leaving New Oriental in early 2007, he created Miaozhen System, a renowned big-data driven advertising company.

Before that, Mr. Li served at China Renaissance, where he was involved in leading many financing cases. Mr. Li received his M.S. in Chemistry from University of Rochester and BS in Chemistry from Peking University.

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Xiaomi Launches A Money Market Fund, Pushing Further Into Online Financing https://technode.com/2015/05/12/xiaomi-moves-online-finance-money-market-fund-launch/ https://technode.com/2015/05/12/xiaomi-moves-online-finance-money-market-fund-launch/#respond Tue, 12 May 2015 08:52:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29616 Most people know Xiaomi as an upstart smartphone sensation that elbows its way through a stiff market to become the world’s largest startup. But like other Chinese tech giants, Xiaomi is fast expanding into industries outside of hardware, now making new strides in finance. Xiaomi has just launched a money-market fund Huoqibao inside its homegrown mobile app Xiaomi Finance. […]]]>

Most people know Xiaomi as an upstart smartphone sensation that elbows its way through a stiff market to become the world’s largest startup. But like other Chinese tech giants, Xiaomi is fast expanding into industries outside of hardware, now making new strides in finance.

Xiaomi has just launched a money-market fund Huoqibao inside its homegrown mobile app Xiaomi Finance. After registering with one’s national ID, Xiaomi users  who are 18-years old or above will be able to purchase financial products managed by E Fund Management, a third-party financial institution in China.

The fund also supports debit cards of 12 national banks, including, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Bank of China and China Construction Bank.

Xiaomi-finance

Xiaomi is slightly late to the monetary fund battlefield compared with other domestic Internet companies. Alibaba’s mutual fund Yuebao became an instant hit when it was first launched in 2013. As of the end of 2014, Yuebao has managed RMB578 billion (US$93 billion) funds for over 185 million users. A number of big Chinese companies like Tencent, Baidu, Sina, and 58.com all followed the trend to roll out similar services. Xiaomi’s Huoqibao is no exception with the adoption of a similar model — offering the fund service in cooperation with traditional financial institutions.

However Xiaomi’s timing raises doubts. The initial peak in adoption for similar products is dropping, and the annualized yield of other popular funds fell from record high of over 7% to around 4%. Huoqibao currently offers 7-day annualized return rate of 4.95%, slightly higher than Yuebao’s, however, it is difficult to say whether they’ll be able to keep it up.

The company said in a statement that Xiaomi Finance is also planning to construct a mobile data platform and develop a user data-based credit scoring system. By leveraging the user data from MIUI and various smart devices, Xiaomi’s platform hoping to construct a reliable data source, but the real challenge lies on how to protect the private data collected from users, and how to analyze them.

Despite all the data supports, Xiaomi’s obstacle in constructing a credit scoring system is the fact that it hasn’t got a license for this operation. Alibaba’s Ant Financial Services Group and Tencent are the only two Internet companies that have been granted licenses by China’s central bank for running credit services.

At the beginning of this year, Ant Financial rolled out Sesame Credit to give credit scores based on the online behavior of customers and small businesses on Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplaces. Tencent opened its in-house credit rating system for testing among QQ members, which will be released soon.

This is not Xiaomi’s first move in exploring the online finance industry. In 2014, the company led a round of investment in Chinese lending site Jimubox. They also registered a payment company last year.

According to the latest report from IDC, China’s smartphone shipment dropped 4.3% YOY in the first quarter this year, marking the first YOY slump in the past six years. This is going to pose a challenge for Xiaomi, which still makes the majority of its revenue from hardware sales.

Given these circumstances, an online financial platform may give Xiaomi new momentum for pushing smart device sales with the integration of installment, credit loans, financial products and third-party payment options.

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The Key To Learning Mandarin Is Knowing China: Amanda E-Learning App https://technode.com/2015/05/11/amanda-chinese/ https://technode.com/2015/05/11/amanda-chinese/#comments Mon, 11 May 2015 08:25:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29557 Tons of language learning apps have emerged in the attempt to jump on the mobile e-learning bandwagon. To stand out from the crowd, they’ve been trying to approach learning from different angles, either by gamification or by integrating social factors to liven up what can be – lets be honest – a very dull process. No matter what perspective they take, […]]]>

Tons of language learning apps have emerged in the attempt to jump on the mobile e-learning bandwagon. To stand out from the crowd, they’ve been trying to approach learning from different angles, either by gamification or by integrating social factors to liven up what can be – lets be honest – a very dull process.

No matter what perspective they take, the basic idea is to give learners a good reason to stay motivated over the long-run. Although motivation is crucial for all language learners, Chinese presents an especially daunting challenge as one of the toughest languages for native English speakers to grasp.

Shanghai-based startup Amanda, is attempting to approach this challenge from en entirely different perspective: culture.

“For most learners, the language itself is but a tool to know China better, to know how modern Chinese people see the world and how that view is different from a westerner’s.” said Zoe Zhou, co-founder of the company.

Amanda (sounds similar in Mandarin) delivers eight curated stories everyday in both English and Chinese through a clutter-free interface. The stories are hand-picked from a vast sea of local red-hot topics to keep users updated with the most authentic and current stories happening right now in China.

Amanda0pic

Supported by technology from Chinese Voice software provider iFlytek, Amanda offers audio recordings for entire articles and individual words to assist with pronunciation. In order to cover the learners on both ends of the proficiency scale, Amanda selects ‘featured words’ in each article, helping beginners to get started with the most basic words. On the other hand, more sophisticated users can learn the new words specifically or even read the whole article.

In addition, users also can save favorite words and phrases to the customizable wordlist and then synced with their Amanda account. The app is now only available in iOS for iPhone and iWatch, but the Android version is coming very soon.

Launched in this year, Amanda is co-founded by Guan Wang, Zoe Zhou and Charles Li, three entrepreneurs with expertise in language learning, digital marketing and product development. Before Amanda, the trio worked several years at EF Worldwide, an international language trainer, where they gained an understanding of the mobile language learning industry.

“Tons of traditional learning services characterized by well-structured and systematic tutorial models are available on the market. These systems are based on the presupposition that the learners can maintain their initial perseverance and time commitment over time, which is rarely the case.”said Guan Wang, co-founder of the company.

“With Amanda, a service designed for mobile, we didn’t try to solve all the problems but use authentic and interesting content as an ice-breaker to show learners that Chinese is not as difficult as it seems and learning Chinese can be an enjoyable experience.”

“At present, nearly 50% of our users come from the U.S., while around 30% are foreign expats living in China”, explained Zoe. She added that the team is planning to cooperate with partners with a goal to add more content on different verticals, like recruitment, travel and technology.

Amanda-team

Amanda Co-founders: Charles Li, Zoe Zhou, Guan Wang (L-R)

image credit: ShutterStock

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Drone Developer DJI Pockets US$75M from Accel Partners https://technode.com/2015/05/08/drone-developer-dji-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/05/08/drone-developer-dji-funding/#respond Fri, 08 May 2015 09:35:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29510 DJI, the Chinese drone maker, has received US$75 million funding from Accel Partners, a Silicon Valley venture capital which is also investor in Facebook and Dropbox. The deal is concluded at a valuation of US$8 billion, and DJI is in further investment talks with potential partners and investors which are estimated to value the company around […]]]>

DJI, the Chinese drone maker, has received US$75 million funding from Accel Partners, a Silicon Valley venture capital which is also investor in Facebook and Dropbox. The deal is concluded at a valuation of US$8 billion, and DJI is in further investment talks with potential partners and investors which are estimated to value the company around US$10 billion.

The Shenzhen-based company previously received two rounds of eight-digit USD investment from Sequoia Capital China and Mansion Capital.

Founded in 2006, the Shenzhen-based company is a global leader in selling commercial and recreational drones, shipping its products to more than 100 countries.  A CICC report shows that DJI accounts for more than 60% of the world’s drone market, with 70% to 80% shipped overseas and the rest to the domestic market.

The company has generated a revenue of around US$500 million last year and this figure is expected to exceed US$1 billion this year, according to a Forbes report released this Tuesday.

DJI’s drones have been used primarily for aerial photography and video, but the company is expecting to apply them in more fields with the new funding. “We aspire for DJI to offer a platform for unbounded creativity and exploration across areas as diverse as filmmaking, agriculture, conservation, search and rescue, energy infrastructure, mapping, and more,” said Frank Wang, founder and CEO of the company.

As part of the efforts to achieve this goal, the company has teamed up with Chinese video service Youku Tudou to develop a platform where users can upload DJI videos.

Despite the dominant market share, DJI is facing stiffer competition from new rivals as the whole drone market heats up. One of its most prominent domestic competitors is Guangzhou-based Ehang. The company’s flagship product Ghost is as an easy-to-fly aerial photography drone outfitted with a sport camera and controlled using a smartphone app.

Ehang, one of the Top 5 finalist at TechCrunch Beijing Startup Competition, has received US$10 million in Series A funding at the end of last year. Another Chinese drone maker ZERO just inched partnership with computer peripheral equipment maker RAPOO Technology.

Drones have have been a focus of Accel’s investment recently. The venture capital also made an investment in Skydio, but DJI’s deal is by far the largest investment it has ever made in this area.

Image credit: Technode.com, the DJI Inspire 1 and Phantom 3 models on display at last week’s GMIC conference in Beijing.

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TechCrunch Shanghai 2015 Speaker Lineup: Rising Chinese Entrepreneurs https://technode.com/2015/05/07/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-rising-chinese-entrepreneurs/ https://technode.com/2015/05/07/techcrunch-shanghai-2015-speaker-lineup-rising-chinese-entrepreneurs/#respond Thu, 07 May 2015 03:16:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29474 TechCrunch Shanghai is now only a few weeks away! From June 8 to 9, the event will feature talks, roundtable discussions and startup pitches. Guests to take stage this time range from well-known IOT technologists, high-profile venture capitalists to rising entrepreneurs. As part of our TechCrunch event, we will hear the story of four prominent Chinese entrepreneurs whose companies have been […]]]>

TechCrunch Shanghai is now only a few weeks away! From June 8 to 9, the event will feature talks, roundtable discussions and startup pitches. Guests to take stage this time range from well-known IOT technologists, high-profile venture capitalists to rising entrepreneurs. As part of our TechCrunch event, we will hear the story of four prominent Chinese entrepreneurs whose companies have been leading the innovations in their respective verticals.

Zhang Xuhao, Founder of Ele.me

Zhangxuhao

Ele.me (“are you hungry” in Chinese) offers online food ordering services. It also acts as a communication platform between users and restaurants. Started in 2008 as a service targeting university students and the low-end catering market, the site claimed to have recorded more than 110 million orders in the past year. After receiving several hefty financing rounds from Chinese Internet giants like Tencent and Dianping, Ele.me is planning to expand into high-tier markets and to construct an in-house logistics system.

Zhangxuhao bootstrapped Ele.me with his college roommates when he was still studying at Shanghai Jiaotong University.

Chen Qi, Founder & CEO of Mogujie

Chenqi

Mogujie is a social shopping platform focused on women’s fashion consumer e-commerce, providing clothes, shoes, bags, accessories, makeup and beauty for young female users. Starting as a Pinterest-style social sharing site in 2011, Mogujie claims it has had 80 million users as of June 2014, with 35 million being monthly active on mobile. The site has received several investments with the latest US$200 million round secured at a valuation of US$1 billion.

Chen Qi is the Founder and CEO at Mogujie. Before he started this journey, Chen Qi worked at Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace for more than six years.

Yu Jianjun, Co-founder & CEO Ximalaya

Yujianjun

Ximalaya, or Himalaya, is a service website that enables users to share voices and personal radio stations. Its first mobile app was launched in March 2013 and it soon become one of the largest online audio sharing platforms in China, claiming more than 150 million users and over 55,000 content creators on its platform as of April. 2015.

Yu Jianjun cofounded Ximalaya with Chen Xiaoyu in August 2012. As of present, the company has secured a US$11.5 million A round in May 2014 and a US$50 million B round Jan. this year.

Chai Ke, Founder & CEO of Dayima

Chaike

Dayima is a menstruation tracking app that predicts period cycles based on past patterns, offering health tips on avoiding cramps and pre-menstrual syndromes. It also links users to an online forum where they can exchange their experiences. According to the latest data released by the company, the app has registered 80 million users, while 4.2 million of them are active daily. Dayima’s latest US$30 million Series C funding was raised in mid-2014.

As a post-80 gen series entrepreneur, Chai Ke’s previous entrepreneurial endeavors include health community Yoloho.

Please stay tuned for more great speakers! Click here for more information about TechCrunch Shanghai.

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App Annie Acquires Mobidia to Push App Usage Intelligence Global https://technode.com/2015/05/06/app-annie-acquires-mobidia/ Wed, 06 May 2015 07:00:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29436 App analytics and data company App Annie is announcing today the acquisition of Mobidia, a leading mobile measurement company. This acquisition will accelerate the international expansion of App Annie Usage Intelligence by combining large app usage dataset of the two parties, and thus giving insight into the two billion smartphone users worldwide, according to a statement from the company. […]]]>

App analytics and data company App Annie is announcing today the acquisition of Mobidia, a leading mobile measurement company. This acquisition will accelerate the international expansion of App Annie Usage Intelligence by combining large app usage dataset of the two parties, and thus giving insight into the two billion smartphone users worldwide, according to a statement from the company.

Founded in 2004, Mobidia provides mobile analytics and metrics platform, helping clients to gain unique insights into mobile usage trends and improves their application discovery, recommendation and mobile advertising. The startup has received US$16.1 million in six previous financing rounds.

TechNode heard the deal is already completed a few days ago with a mix of cash and equity. Mobidia’s team of 30 joins App Annie, while Mobidia’s Vancouver headquarters will also become App Annie’s 12th global office, App Annie Canada.

“Mobidia’s customers will initially be notified via email after the announcement is made, and in the days and weeks to come, App Annie will be working closely with them to ensure a seamless transition.” introduced Bin Dai, Greater China Director of App Annie.

In conjunction with today’s news, the company also announced that its app usage product Usage Intelligence will be available in 60 countries on iOS and Android. “APAC region is a major part of the new available countries. Data will cover China, Japan, South Korea, India and some Southeast Asian countries like Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand, etc. BRIC countries still witness huge growth, but in terms of other emerging markets, Southeast Asia, Turkey, Vietnam and Mexico are growing fast and worthy of attention. Usage Intelligence is available to all these countries.” said Bin Dai.

Usage_demo only

As a part of its Audience Intelligence product, App Annie launched the beta of Usage Intelligence in January, enabling app developers to spy on a variety of vital statistics of their competitors: active users, time spent on the app, usage frequency and more. “The potential and value of Usage Intelligence are well recognized by our clients.” said Bin Dai, adding that the popularity of Usage Intelligence is the main reason why App Annie acquired Mobidia, which delivers usage data and insights on more than 100,000 apps, with a goal to make the service available in more countries.

“The Mobidia acquisition gives us a unique opportunity to combine the industry’s two largest mobile app usage datasets into one product, giving our customers the most granular and accurate app usage insights ever provided in the mobile sector. This is something valuable to our clients.” said Bin Dai.

App Annie, whose customers generate nearly half of all app store revenue now, has been growing very fast in the past year. Its recent milestones include a massive US$55 million Series D financing received earlier this year and the acquisition of its major competitor Distimo in May of 2014. The quick global expansion enabled App Annie to double its headcount to 300 last year while tripling revenue.

The sprawling expansion may as well give rise to team integration and communication problems. “When acquiring companies, we look for teams who share our passion for mobile apps, drive innovative thinking and are focused on making big things happen in mobile. With Mobidia, we’re fortunate to find a team who fits the culture at App Annie and brings unique mobile tech talent to the table.” Bin Dai commented.

When talking about future acquisition plans, Dai noted “We will invest in connecting data from every area that is mission critical for those who are changing the world through apps. All products and acquisitions are serving this mission.”

Image credit: App Annie

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Tencent’s Smart Device OS Leaked In Pictures https://technode.com/2015/05/06/tencents-smart-device-os-leaked-pictures/ https://technode.com/2015/05/06/tencents-smart-device-os-leaked-pictures/#respond Wed, 06 May 2015 06:31:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29425 After launching Tencent Operating System or TOS at the beginning of this year, Chinese Internet tycoon Tencent rolled out TOS+ strategy last week at GMIC to make the system available for more emerging categories of smart devices ranging from smart wearables, smart TV to virtual reality headsets. Just a few days later, the first leaked images of TencentOS have appeared online. […]]]>

After launching Tencent Operating System or TOS at the beginning of this year, Chinese Internet tycoon Tencent rolled out TOS+ strategy last week at GMIC to make the system available for more emerging categories of smart devices ranging from smart wearables, smart TV to virtual reality headsets. Just a few days later, the first leaked images of TencentOS have appeared online.

The pictures show the Android-based system supports a variety of features that are typical for smart watches, like sports data monitoring, messaging, answering phone call, music, email alert. TencentOS also supports voice commands, payment transaction and it is going to feature several local life services like taxi-hailing, restaurant reservation, fast check-in to get users better informed in different usage scenarios.

TOS

TOS+ aims to build an open source platform that connects all kinds of smart devices, according to the company. For Tencent, it is all ideal platforms for pushing other services like gaming, social and entertainment services, mobile payment services, and more.

Like most of its local competitors, Tencent has made several endeavors in the operating system arena to gain a foothold in what is generally considered as an entry-point product for all the other mobile services. The company has rolled out its customized Android smartphone OS TITA as early as 2012, but the OS didn’t garner much attention. This time, Tencent renewed its efforts with a twitch in focus on Internet-connected devices and wearbles.

This shift seems plausible at this special timing when smart wearables and IOT products have finally started to appeal to a major proportion of Chinese gadget fanatics. Moreover, the unavailability Google service-backed Android Wear in China seems to have to prompted domestic companies to making something of their own.

But Tencent is not the only Chinese company that noticed the change. Chinese search engine Baidu launched its Android-powered smartwatch OS DuWear in April this year.

Image credit: Tencent

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Tencent Game Pushes Global Expansion with Glu Mobile Purchase https://technode.com/2015/04/30/tencent-game-pushes-global-expansion-glu-mobile-stake-purchase/ https://technode.com/2015/04/30/tencent-game-pushes-global-expansion-glu-mobile-stake-purchase/#respond Thu, 30 Apr 2015 05:32:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29378 Chinese internet giant Tencent has agreed to purchase 21 million or 14.6% percent of shares of U.S. mobile game developer Glu Mobile Inc., totaling US$126 million at US$6 apiece, according to a statement released by the Glu Mobile. As part of the deal, Tencent VP Steven Ma will join Glu’s board of directors. NASDAQ-listed Glu Mobile is […]]]>
Tencent Game

Chinese internet giant Tencent has agreed to purchase 21 million or 14.6% percent of shares of U.S. mobile game developer Glu Mobile Inc., totaling US$126 million at US$6 apiece, according to a statement released by the Glu Mobile. As part of the deal, Tencent VP Steven Ma will join Glu’s board of directors.

NASDAQ-listed Glu Mobile is a developer and publisher of free-to-play games for smartphone and tablet devices. The company found major success with a series of hit branded IP games like Kim Kardashian Hollywood, Robocop: The Official Game, and Hercules: The Official Game. Recently the company also announced a five-year deal with pop icon Britney Spears for developing a mobile game.

The tie-up is expected to smooth Glu’s entry into China’s fast-growing gaming market. “Collaboration between our companies will enable Glu to tailor its games more powerfully by tapping Tencent’s strength in online, social and MMO capabilities.” said Ma.

Tencent is investing heavily overseas like other leading Chinese internet companies Alibaba and Baidu. One big difference is that a large part of Tencent’s overseas investment goes to game-related companies, mostly because online gaming has been a major contributor to its revenue.

Mobile gaming is an easier path for the internet giant to commercialize its huge user base it has amassed through homegrown social-networking services like WeChat, Mobile QQ and other mobile apps.

According to the latest report from research firm Newzoo, Tencent’s revenue from gaming business surged 37% YOY to US$7.2 billion in 2014, beating Sony and Microsoft to top the global game revenues list.

Through partnerships and minority stakes, Tencent has invested in a variety of game-related companies that covered almost all the links in gaming industry: basic technology (EPIC Games), game developing (Activision Blizard, Riot), publishing (Level Up, OutSpark), community and tools (ZAMRaptr), and gaming-related services (Kamcord, RunWilder).

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Fuller, Japanese App Analytics Startup To Explore Chinese Market: CEO https://technode.com/2015/04/30/fuller-china/ https://technode.com/2015/04/30/fuller-china/#respond Thu, 30 Apr 2015 03:04:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29305 When talking about mobile app analytics tools, you may think of a variety of services like App Annie and Flurry. But when it comes to app analytics tools in Japan, Fuller is a name worth noting for foreign companies that want to better understand the market. Fuller is a Japanese startup that provides both battery saver apps for […]]]>

When talking about mobile app analytics tools, you may think of a variety of services like App Annie and Flurry. But when it comes to app analytics tools in Japan, Fuller is a name worth noting for foreign companies that want to better understand the market.

Fuller is a Japanese startup that provides both battery saver apps for individual users and mobile app analytics data for business clients. Fuller’s product lines include Mr. Mobile and AppQuarium, two free battery-saving apps, and App Ape, a service that provides data on smartphones and apps.

“The basic concepts of Mr. Mobile and AppQuarium is to keep Ojisan (the cartoon character of Mr. Mobile) or the fishes in the aquarium in good condition by deleting the unnecessary apps that’s eating up your battery. We will tell users which apps are unused based on app usage information, and finally to extend the battery life of your smartphone and improve its operating speed.” said Shuta Shibuya, CEO of the company.

Fuller1

By analyzing the user data collected from these two apps, App Ape allows businesses to conduct a market survey and a competitive research. Since its launch in November 2014, the web browser-based analytics tool has amassed 3,000 free clients and 30 to 40 paid clients. As a freemium product, App Ape’s paid service is based on monthly subscription model. Its clients include Candy Crush, Facebook, DeNA, Gunosy, Eureka, and Adways.

“Our business model is to provide free apps for individual users and collect mobile app usage data from them. The data are then shared with enterprise clients like app developers, advertising agencies, telecom carriers, social media,” said Shibuya.

Both of Fuller’s 2C apps are only available on Google Play, so App Ape’s analytics data only reflects the behaviors of Android users in Japan. “We have the data for all most all apps in Google Play, but not that on iOS platform because App Store doesn’t allow services like us to watch the user usage data”, explained Shibuya.

Fuller2

This February, the company has secured 230 million yen (US$1.9 million) of fresh investment led by Global Catalyst Partners, raising its total funding to 330 million yen together with the 100 million yen round from UK-based m8 capital and Tokyo-based internet service provider Asahi Net received in 2012.

Upon receiving the new round, Fuller plans to expand globally and its first destinations are mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. With a goal of applying its business to markets beyond Japan, the company has set up an office at Shanghai and a Chinese version is going to be released very soon.

Despite the success in Japan, Fuller is still new to the ultra-competitive Chinese market and there are lots of obstacles for the team to overtake, like how to localize and promote the 2C apps, given that their model requires solid user base in order to ensure the reliability of their data analytics service. Moreover, how to handle the multiple Android app stores in China is another problem.

“We are still trying to understand the market here and we want to start with selling Japanese market data to Chinese companies that are interested in expanding to Japan,” said Shibuya. “Our team is also in discussion with local partners to promote our business in China.”

Image credit: ShutterStock

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SideChef Enters China With The Aim Of Making Everyone A Better Chef https://technode.com/2015/04/29/sidechef-china/ https://technode.com/2015/04/29/sidechef-china/#respond Wed, 29 Apr 2015 10:06:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29276 Everyone likes delicious food, but not everyone can cook. Cooking can be a pretty daunting task for some people, and I know this because I usually get completely lost in the kitchen. With a vision of making everyone a great cook, California-based serial entrepreneur Kevin Yu founded SideChef in 2014, a step-by-step cooking app. The startup team decided to take […]]]>

Everyone likes delicious food, but not everyone can cook. Cooking can be a pretty daunting task for some people, and I know this because I usually get completely lost in the kitchen.

With a vision of making everyone a great cook, California-based serial entrepreneur Kevin Yu founded SideChef in 2014, a step-by-step cooking app. The startup team decided to take SideChef to China after receiving positive feedback from the U.S. and European users and a US$1 million seed financing from Peacock Capital and Empower Investment Group at the end of last year.

SideChef-pic

Available across iOS and Android devices, SideChef teach users how to cook in a step-by-step manner, demonstrating every move of a recipe as well as the list of ingredients with pictures and videos. The app also integrated several helpful features like automatic timers and voice controls so that cooks with dirty hands can keep an eye on both their dishes and their devices.

As a part of its global expansion, the Santa Monica-headquartered startup is entering Chinese market with the launch of a Chinese version several weeks ago.

“We have established an office in Shanghai with an excellent team consisting of both foreign expats and Chinese staff who are familiar with the local market,”said Kevin.

Current users of SideChef Chinese are mostly foreigners living in China, mainly because its recent launch and focus on western-style recipes. The startup is now experimenting with localized features and they will be added later based on feedback from local users. Recipes for Chinese cuisine is definitely one of the main directions of SideChef in a bid to fit the taste of Chinese users, explained Kevin.

Before becoming an entrepreneur, Kevin has worked at the world’s leading gaming company Blizzard Entertainment for more than eight years. A deep understanding gaming industry has enabled Kevin to bring gamification mindset into his startups.

Startupgrind

James Huang (L) from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Buyers Interviewing Keven Yu (R) at Startup Grind Meetup

“In the video game industry, users are so passionate, and dedicate so much time to play these video games, why don’t we use the same tactic to design something for education… it’s is about how to make people feel more appreciated when they do every day simple tasks. I think it concerns game design which allows people to feel appreciated for their persistence and growth.”

“We are looking for people who want to have impacts, and very fond of our vision of making something so that every people are be able to cook”.

“In addition to team goals and company goals, we are trying to build a [company eco]system that incorporates personal goals in a bid to prompt individual growth… I know pretty much all my staff’s plans, where they want to be in two years, what they want to do, the skill-set they want to develop. We also encourage them financially to be growing and become a better person.”

As a person who once worked for big cooperate, Kevin believes that it not only relates to experimenting and promoting app and service externally, but also the possibilities to try anything internally, like how to build a better system. “Just like you listen to your service users, you can listen to your team members on how build an better company environment.”

Image credit: Startup Grind

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Social Language Pairs Learners with Native Speakers for Language Exchange and Making Friends https://technode.com/2015/04/28/social-language/ https://technode.com/2015/04/28/social-language/#comments Mon, 27 Apr 2015 23:04:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29219 Learning Chinese is trending, as 40 million people are reportedly studying it as second language around the world. At the same time, English learning is also a major business in China with an annual market size of US$4.8 billion, according to EF Worldwide, an international language training leader. However, acquiring a new language can be […]]]>
Social-language1

Learning Chinese is trending, as 40 million people are reportedly studying it as second language around the world. At the same time, English learning is also a major business in China with an annual market size of US$4.8 billion, according to EF Worldwide, an international language training leader. However, acquiring a new language can be an extremely boring and frustrating experience for most of the leaners. So, why not bring some fun to this painful process?

Social Language is a fun and effective language exchange and social networking marketplace aims at helping learners gain a more organic and effective language learning experience by connecting language learners with native speakers.

The Taiwan-based startup introduces several features for Chinese and English language learning, including user filtering and pairing system for voice chats with native speakers, gamified voice courses, and off-line speech recognition system that can rate users’ speaking skills and accents. A gamification point system is also integrated, allowing users to earn points and ranks on leaderboard by engaging and contributing in the platform.

pic

Social Language has achieved 800,000 downloads in China’s third-party app stores since its initial launch in January 2015, according to the company. Driven by the booming market and the milestones recorded, the smartphone app decided to expand globally.

“While most language learning apps provide ways to memorize words, phrases, and grammatical rules, Social Language believes that practicing and socializing with native speakers is the best way to learn a new language,” says founder Simon Chang. “Within Social Language, a user is not only a student, but also a teacher for other users. Social Language enables users to find language exchange partners on the go, practice in step-by-step voice courses, and receive feedbacks from native speakers in a fun and effective way.”

Social Language has secured multi-million dollar funding last fall from H&Q Asia Pacific, which has been an early investor in leading high-tech companies such as Acer and D-Link.

Simon Chang, the founder of Social Language, is a Taiwanese serial entrepreneur. He started his first DOS-game company in 1993 and founded browser-based gaming platform guocui.com in 2004 in China. After selling the website with US$5 million in 2008, Simon founded an incubator center Crenovator Lab in China in 2012. Social Language is one of the key portfolio applications at Crenovator Lab.

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Windward Gets US$10.8M Led by Horizons Ventures, Li Ka Shing Continues Israeli Shopping Spree https://technode.com/2015/04/28/windward-horizons-ventures/ https://technode.com/2015/04/28/windward-horizons-ventures/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2015 22:03:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29231 Windward, a maritime data and analytics company, today announced a strategic investment of US$10.8 million led by Hong Kong venture capital Horizons Ventures, with participation from Series A investor Aleph, and other leading investors in the financial community. Apart from the funding, a Horizons member will be joining Windward together with several additional investors include, Tom Glocer, […]]]>

Windward, a maritime data and analytics company, today announced a strategic investment of US$10.8 million led by Hong Kong venture capital Horizons Ventures, with participation from Series A investor Aleph, and other leading investors in the financial community.

Apart from the funding, a Horizons member will be joining Windward together with several additional investors include, Tom Glocer, the former CEO of Thomson Reuters, Ret. Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi, the former IDF Chief of Staff and former CEO of the Israeli Ministry of Defense, and Danielle Ullner, the former VP of Strategic Partnerships at Perion.

Started in 2010, Windward translates maritime data into full visibility across the ocean. Windward’s intelligence solution, MARINT, is already in wide use by Security, Intelligence and Law Enforcement agencies worldwide, who use Windward’s data and insights to preemptively identify threats before they reach their shores.

This strategic investment will accelerate Windward’s ability to build the a comprehensive data and analytics platform. In addition, it will make those insights accessible for anyone with stakes at sea and to operationalize its finance solution FORESEA.

FORESEA provides traders, investors and analysts with access to large amounts of unstructured data, critical insights and untapped market opportunities. The product is currently in beta testing and it is scheduled to be launched later in 2015.

“Ship activity across the oceans fuels the global economy but is one of the last analog arenas. The Windward team is revolutionizing this archaic system and bringing visibility to this critically important domain, advancing the global ecosystem,” said Jason Wong of Horizons Ventures.

Horizons Ventures, the venture capital fund backed by Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka Shing, is playing an increasingly active role in Israeli startup scene as one of the largest source of foreign cash for startups in Tel Aviv. The fund has invested in 60 plus startups, of which 27 are Israeli ones receiving a combined US$420 million investment. Its well-known Israeli portfolio companies include navigation app maker Waze, keyboard app Ginger, Kaiima, a seed-technology firm, etc.

image credit: Windward

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Skillbank Helps You to Learn Skills and Find Friends https://technode.com/2015/04/24/skillbank/ https://technode.com/2015/04/24/skillbank/#respond Fri, 24 Apr 2015 07:36:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29179 Do you want to learn a new skills? Either for pursuing a passion or hacking a new professional skill for future career? Shanghai-based startup Skillbank attempts to make these goals easier to accomplish, and more fun. Skillbank is online peer skill-sharing platform to list and book great classes and experiences in the city. Every individual who […]]]>

Do you want to learn a new skills? Either for pursuing a passion or hacking a new professional skill for future career? Shanghai-based startup Skillbank attempts to make these goals easier to accomplish, and more fun.

Skillbank is online peer skill-sharing platform to list and book great classes and experiences in the city. Every individual who has expertise on any subject can apply to open classes, and then market their own courses on various social media after being approved by the platform. At the same time, learners can search the platform for interesting courses close to them. Then, the trainee and the learner can take the one-to-one courses both online or offline according to their specific conditions.

Skillbank has listed courses on a wide-range of subjects ranging from foreign language learning, flower arrangement, cocktail-mixing, cooking to adventures sports, how to drive cars, how to put one makeups, or even how to fly a drone.

The skill trading on Skillbank is based on a virtual currency system. So the interaction between trainers and learners is more like two like-minded friends sharing knowledge on a certain topic rather than a more traditional Teacher and Student relationship.

Therefore, Elaine Zhou, founder of the company, positioned Skillbank as a skill-based social networking platform rather than an online education service, and that’s exactly why they are not going into any vertical training sectors.

“We recommend users to take the courses offline”, said Elaine. She noted that although online students can chat with their teachers in real time or via e-mail, the medium is not as good as the many nuances associated with face-to-face interactions.

“Sometimes, offline training is compulsory for the courses, like how can you learn gardening without getting your hands dirty with earth, or guitar performance without playing the instrument? Our course approval system will eliminate projects, like driving courses, to eliminate safety concerns.” She added that online course will be a secondary option in case the trainer and student are beyond convenient travel distance.

Skillbank

Skillbank Co-founder Elaine Zhou

Elaine Zhou came up with the idea of Skillbank when she was studying international design and business management at Domus Academy. After working as an global online marketing expert in China for seven years, Elaine decided to build this idea into a startup with software engineer Cathy Mu. The two girls began the project last March at Shanghai-based incubator InnoSpace.

Skillbank was launched in mid-August last year for desktop. Elaine says that most of Skillbank users are young people between 20-30 years old.

The team is now optimizing its mobile site to keep up with users’ needs for mobile service. The company has previously received pre-angel investment and it is now planning to raise the angel round for developing a mobile app.

Image credit: ShutterStock

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Taobao Moves to Mobile Commerce with Strategic Tool “Xiaopu” https://technode.com/2015/04/22/taobao-xiaopu/ https://technode.com/2015/04/22/taobao-xiaopu/#comments Wed, 22 Apr 2015 01:14:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29115 Last week, Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace launched a strategic tool named Micro Store, or Xiaopu in Chinese, after two weeks of trials among more than 2 million Taobao merchants. The tool marked a new chapter for the e-commerce giant, expanding further into into the burgeoning mobile commerce (m-commerce) sector. The Xiaopu service offers a series of user-friendly […]]]>

Last week, Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace launched a strategic tool named Micro Store, or Xiaopu in Chinese, after two weeks of trials among more than 2 million Taobao merchants. The tool marked a new chapter for the e-commerce giant, expanding further into into the burgeoning mobile commerce (m-commerce) sector.

The Xiaopu service offers a series of user-friendly features, enabling vendors to set up and operate online businesses from mobile devices. For example, merchants can easily post new products by scanning barcodes, or post new items by taking photos of products where no barcode was available. To complete product dispatch procedures, merchants can simply scan barcodes on shipping bills to enter package tracking numbers, without the need to manually input them.

Xiaopu-1

Screenshots of Xiaopu

To bring more traffic to vendors, Xiaopu gives each merchant their unique storefront access code and a QR code for promoting their businesses across different social media platforms, such as Weitao, Taobao Marketplace’s mobile social media platform, and Weibo, China’s largest micro-blogging website. Consumers can have quick access to a merchant’s Taobao storefront on their mobile devices simply by entering a unique storefront access code or scanning a QR code-based business card using Mobile Taobao.

Apart from that, merchants can also attract traffic from Taobao-related platforms and external platforms by blogging about their businesses or products through Weitao, Taobao Marketplace’s mobile social media platform. More features in this aspect are underway, according to the company.

In addition, Xiaopu service will offer location-based services so that buyers can search for merchants nearby and merchants can provide more personalized services to buyers in the same region. To further lower the entry barrier to e-commerce, Xiapu is also equipped with a loan application function to provide eligible users with financing support.

Compared to traditional e-commerce platforms, mobile-focused marketplaces is a “decentralized” business model which can lower the entrance threshold and traffic acquisition costs for merchants.

Alibaba, which was born before the mobile era, gained supremacy in China’s e-commerce space mainly through PC internet users. With the rise of mobile e-commerce, a group of mobile-focused marketplaces, like Tencent’s Weidian, Paipai Weidian, Koudai Gouwu, has emerged to disrupt the top dog in this vertical.

Alibaba has been shifting focus to wireless services with the launch of Baichuan Program and addition of new features on Taobao Mobile. The launch of Xiaopu is expected to boost Alibaba’s mobile business.

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How Australian Crowdfunded ‘Pozible’ is Getting In On China’s IoT Tsunami https://technode.com/2015/04/21/pozible-iot/ https://technode.com/2015/04/21/pozible-iot/#respond Tue, 21 Apr 2015 05:46:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29105 Pozible Co-founders: Alan Crabbe (L) & Rick Chen (R) After founding Pozible with his Irish counterpart Alan Crabbe in Australia in 2010, Rick Chen, who is Chinese born, helped bring the Melbourne-based crowdfunding site to China last April. Over a one year period, Pozible’s overseas pledges have grown 600%, while its technology category soared 300%, Rick told TechNode. While […]]]>

Pozible Co-founders: Alan Crabbe (L) & Rick Chen (R)

After founding Pozible with his Irish counterpart Alan Crabbe in Australia in 2010, Rick Chen, who is Chinese born, helped bring the Melbourne-based crowdfunding site to China last April. Over a one year period, Pozible’s overseas pledges have grown 600%, while its technology category soared 300%, Rick told TechNode.

While the service is widely used by the arts community to raise funding in Australia, Pozible refocused to smart hardware when landing in China. The logic behind this shift is simple. The promise of most foreign crowdfunding sites, like Kickstarter and Indiegogo has always be helping to start a company, or investing in an idea, but the market reality in China is that Chinese people don’t like to bet on uncertainties, rather they prefer to put money in something they can see instant returns on. So smart hardware campaigns become the most popular crowdfunding category in China with guarantee of sexy and attainable gadgets.

The smart hardware boom in China has prompted the rise of the Internet of Things (IoT) sector with repercussions for smart homes, wearables, connected cities and cars, and beyond. IDC has estimated that by 2020, there’ll be 212 billion connected devices – or about 30 for every person on the earth. The global IoT market is estimated to be worth US$8.9 trillion by 2020.

As Crowdfunding is becoming the alternative way for IoT makers to launch their products, Pozible has recorded a remarkable growth in IoT projects. Rick disclosed that a total of 33 IoT projects on the platform raised RMB10.7 million (US$1.7 million) from 16,641 supporters in the 10 months up to Feb 2015. Three IoT/wearable projects, GEAK Watch IIStar.21 and Gyenno One, ranked among the ten most-funded projects of all time on the platform. Moreover, big companies like Xunlei and Broadlink also ran successful campaigns on the site.

To further prompt IoT projects to join the platform, Pozible has entered in a partnership with Shanghai-Nanxiang government and IDG Capital Partners to provide financial backing for IoT entrepreneurs and help hook them up with investor capital.

“The Internet of Things is a wave, and it’s only going to get bigger,” said founder Rick Chen. “US$600B is going to be invested in the industry by 2020 – and that’s just by the Chinese government. If you’re into IoT, it’s going to be very hard to be competitive if you’re not involved in what’s happening in China right now.”

When talking about the characteristics of Chinese crowdfunding market, Rick noted that most people turn to crowdfunding because they need money, what they found in China was people using crowdfunding because they wanted the crowd.

“Creators would even price rewards so that they were losing money, because they craved early users and the chance to build a community around a new product. Most of the technology projects – from smart bicycles to fitness trackers – had a social media aspect of, this is how you share your experience with your friends.”

“Crowdfunding is ideal for product launches because it allows creators to test demand for their product first, rather than investing in manufacturing and then trying to move stock. Like in many other industries, in IoT this is helping break down the barriers for new inventors and startups who don’t have a lot of capital. It’s evening out the playing field. Pozible is proud that we can be part of helping new companies and ideas get started, especially in the fast-growing area of IoT”, he said.

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Uber China Celebrates One-year Anniversary with UberChopper Pilot Scheme in Shanghai https://technode.com/2015/04/20/uber-china-celebrates-one-year-anniversary-uberchopper-pilot-scheme-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2015/04/20/uber-china-celebrates-one-year-anniversary-uberchopper-pilot-scheme-shanghai/#respond Mon, 20 Apr 2015 12:00:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29086 Uber has rolled out their ‘UberChopper’ service in China celebrating one year since its official launch in the country. The five-year-old U.S. ride-sharing app launched service in Shanghai 12 months ago. Uber representatives said today that they would be launching the service on April 25th. The service starts and ends with UberBlack transportation to a helipad near […]]]>

Uber has rolled out their ‘UberChopper’ service in China celebrating one year since its official launch in the country. The five-year-old U.S. ride-sharing app launched service in Shanghai 12 months ago. Uber representatives said today that they would be launching the service on April 25th.

The service starts and ends with UberBlack transportation to a helipad near downtown Shanghai. Riders will board a EC135 helicopter and take a 30-minute arterial tour over scenic spots and landmark buildings in Shanghai. The service will cost RMB3,000 (US$ 484).

UberChopper will be a one-day pilot program for the time being. The China office will decide whether to continue the service according to market feedback.

Uber has offered similar chopper services in several cities around the world since last year. Unlike other cities where the service is considered a means of transport, UberChopper in China is currently only a sightseeing service for tourists since the Chinese government has yet to open aerial space for low-flying aircraft. At the moment, all such flights have to apply for administration approval one day before.

Over the last year, Uber has expanded rapidly and it now operates in nine Chinese mainland cities. With the operation of a local teams, the company launched a series of local services and operations unique to the Chinese market, such as cooperation with local partners like Baidu, Yongda Automobile, integration with Alipay and the launch of People’s Uber.

Uber-1

Uber Shanghai (2014 April VS 2015 March)

Similar to most of foreign enterprises, Uber also encountered several major setbacks in exploring Chinese market. In addition to the uncertain legal status in China, competition in the country has stiffened recently with taxi-based options Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache joining forces recently to form a strong monopoly on the market.

Recently, China’s Minister of Transport recently said that private cars will never be allowed to operate as commercial vehicles. The transit authorities in Beijing and Shanghai, among other cities, have recently cracked down on car services that allow non-licensed drivers to make a profit.

Uber launched the ‘People’s Uber’ in several cities, which allows civilian ride sharing but does not cost more than the actual cost of the ride. This skirts the law since the service is not-for-profit. Although the service does not make any material gain for Uber or the drivers, it is acting as a place holder should the service become legal in the future.

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Shanghai Startup Funding Landscape in 2015 Q1: Report https://technode.com/2015/04/20/shanghai-startup-funding-landscape/ https://technode.com/2015/04/20/shanghai-startup-funding-landscape/#respond Mon, 20 Apr 2015 04:27:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29064 Shanghai may not be the first name people think of when it comes to the startup scene, but the cosmopolitan city is becoming increasingly popular with both entrepreneurs and venture investors. Shanghai’s startup community is know to be smaller than Beijing’s, but it is more accessible and suits foreigners who want to avoid a total culture shock. In the first quarter […]]]>

Shanghai may not be the first name people think of when it comes to the startup scene, but the cosmopolitan city is becoming increasingly popular with both entrepreneurs and venture investors. Shanghai’s startup community is know to be smaller than Beijing’s, but it is more accessible and suits foreigners who want to avoid a total culture shock.

In the first quarter of 2015, Shanghai has witnessed overall 75 investments in the Technology, Media and Telecommunications (TMT) sector, most of which are focused on local lifestyle and online finance industries, according to a report release by government-backed research institution Shanghai Promotion Center of Mobile Internet Industry.

During the reporting period, China has recorded a total of 391 investments. Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong, Zhejiang and Jiangsu have recorded 140, 75, 54, 27 and 14 cases respectively, accounting for a combined 80% of the total investments.

Shanghai-info

Six out of the total 75 cases in Shanghai have received funding higher than US$50 million, representing 10.9% of the city’s total investments. They are online food delivery service Ele.me (US$350M), classifieds service Baixing (US$100M), steel trading platform Zhaogang (US$100M), cross-border shopping site Ymatou (US$100), hotel reservation app iMike (US$50M), online financing service Julend (hundreds of million dollars).

Local lifestyle and online financing services lead the financing with 23 and 12 cases, followed by e-commerce platform (7), entertainment service (7), digital marketing platform (4) and social networking (4).

Pudong District, Jiading District and Minhang District took the top 3 spots with 22, 10 and 8 investment cases, respectively.

image credit: Shanghai Promotion Center of Mobile Internet Industry & ShutterStock

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58.com and Ganji Confirm Merger: Consolidation of Chinese Internet Companies Continues https://technode.com/2015/04/18/ganji-58-merger/ https://technode.com/2015/04/18/ganji-58-merger/#comments Sat, 18 Apr 2015 03:16:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=29050 New York-listed Chinese classified service 58.com has agreed to acquire a 43.2 percent stake in its arch-rival Ganji.com by issuing around 34 million shares and with US$412.2 million in cash. This merger has terminated the decade-long battle between the two largest classified sites in China, creating an Internet conglomerate with a market cap of over […]]]>

New York-listed Chinese classified service 58.com has agreed to acquire a 43.2 percent stake in its arch-rival Ganji.com by issuing around 34 million shares and with US$412.2 million in cash. This merger has terminated the decade-long battle between the two largest classified sites in China, creating an Internet conglomerate with a market cap of over US$10 billion.

Chinese Internet giant Tencent, which owns 25.3% stake of 58.com, will purchase US$400 million worth of newly issued shares in the company at a price of US$52 apiece.

The two companies will continue to operate independently, while two CEOs will run the joint company as co-CEOs.

According to third-party data, 58.com and Ganji accounts for 40.6% and 33.4% of market share respectively in the local lifestyle category in 2014, followed by Baixing, which represents a 16% share.

Over years of growth, the two companies have developed several overlapped businesses, such as real estate listing and recruitment, and their competitions are mainly focused on these areas. To keep up with the changing market, both companies tried to expand to O2O sector with the launch of 58daojia, an on-demand service for housekeeping, manicure and delivery, Ganji Haoche, a used car trading platform, among others.

Solid financial support is the prerequisite for the growth of both existing and new businesses. Since its establishment, Ganji has gobbled up nearly US$400 million in six rounds of financing with the latest US$200 million round received from Tiger Funds and Carlyle last August. On the other hand, 58.com raised nearly US$150 since 2005 in six rounds from like angel investor Cai Wensheng, SAIF Partners, Warburg Pincus, DCM, etc.

However, the battle between the well-funded rivals become tougher as the marketing costs soared while they spend lavishly to beat out the other. This kind of development can’t be sustainable. The merger will realize major cost, revenue, and strategic business synergies between the two companies, said 58.com CEO Yao Jinbo in a statement.

Merger or acquisition between the two largest players in a certain field isn’t specific to classified site industry in China. In 2012, Youku and Tudou, two largest video streaming sites in China, have merged together. Baidu-backed iQiyi merged peer-to-peer video service PPS in 2013. Chinese online English tutoring service 51Talk acquired rival 91Waijiao, and the most recent case is the merger between China’s two largest taxi-calling app Didi Cache and Kuaidi Dache this year.

Although these companies are from different fields, the logic behind their mergers are similar. After years of tough competition and money-burning, many verticals of Chinese Internet market appear ripe for consolidations as leading well-funded players emerged and smaller competitors died away. While neither of the survivors could beat out the other to win supremacy in the market, a win-win cooperation seems to be a better choice than an all-out fight.

But merger is only the first step of the long journey ahead, as 58.com and Ganji still have lots of overlapped businesses. For example, Tudou has suffered serious loss of users after merging with Youku due to the similar branding and contents of the two sites. Other emerging competitors like iQiyi and Souhu Video have attracted former Tudou users with their different positioning. Likewise, 58.com and Ganji’s merger also faces these problems of how to better integrate overlapped services and to handle the collision of enterprises cultures.

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Baidu Acquires Web Security Firm Anquanbao https://technode.com/2015/04/16/baidu-acquires-anquanbao/ https://technode.com/2015/04/16/baidu-acquires-anquanbao/#respond Thu, 16 Apr 2015 06:01:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28988 Chinese search giant Baidu has acquired online security outsourcing company Anquanbao for an unknown sum. The startup has previously received several financing rounds from Northern Light Ventures, Beijing-based incubator Innovation Works, Alibaba and Tencent. The existing investors will exit after the transaction, which means that Anquanbao will become a fully-owned subsidiary of Baidu. Anquanbao is a cloud-based […]]]>

Chinese search giant Baidu has acquired online security outsourcing company Anquanbao for an unknown sum. The startup has previously received several financing rounds from Northern Light Ventures, Beijing-based incubator Innovation Works, Alibaba and Tencent. The existing investors will exit after the transaction, which means that Anquanbao will become a fully-owned subsidiary of Baidu.

Anquanbao is a cloud-based software program that helps protect websites from security violations like malware and distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. Its product can be easily installed on any website to safeguard it against hackers and security violations.

The company has cooperated with AWS China to offer clients enterprise firewall services. Its customers include big names like SAE, Tencent Cloud, DNSPOD, 51DNS, and more.

Ma Jie, founder and CEO of Anquanbao, established the company in 2011 after working at China’s leading anti-malware service Rising for almost a decade. He also once worked as technology chief at Innovation Works.

After this deal, Baidu will push the cooperation between Anquanbao and Baidu Cloud to speed up website load times and protect them from a range of threats. In addition, Ma will be assigned head of Baidu’s cloud security unit.

The acquisition will bring Baidu’s share in domestic enterprise security market to nearly 30%, making it the largest player in this field. As China’s web security market warms up, CloudFlare is also poised to enter the Chinese market.
Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Alibaba Injects Tmall’s Online Pharmacy Business into Alibaba Health https://technode.com/2015/04/15/alibaba-health/ https://technode.com/2015/04/15/alibaba-health/#respond Wed, 15 Apr 2015 04:14:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28945 China’s e-commerce titan Alibaba Group announced today that it has agreed to transfer the operations of Tmall online pharmacy business to Alibaba Health Information Technology [Alijk.com], the Hong Kong-listed health affiliate of the company, in exchange for the newly issued shares and convertible bonds of the latter. The deal is expected to be finalized by the third […]]]>

China’s e-commerce titan Alibaba Group announced today that it has agreed to transfer the operations of Tmall online pharmacy business to Alibaba Health Information Technology [Alijk.com], the Hong Kong-listed health affiliate of the company, in exchange for the newly issued shares and convertible bonds of the latter. The deal is expected to be finalized by the third quarter of this year, according to the company.

Alibaba Group currently owns a 38.1% stake in Alibaba Health, formerly CITIC 21CN which is a licensed online drug seller with a vast pool of pharmaceutical product data. Alibaba Group and Yunfeng Capital, a venture capital fund co-founded by Alibaba chairman Jack Ma, acquired a combined 54.3% stake in CITIC 21CN in January last year, with the company renamed Alibaba Health that August.

Upon completion of the deal, Alibaba Group’s effective equity ownership of Alibaba Health will increase to about 53%, making the company a consolidated subsidiary of Alibaba Group.

Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace has attracted overall 186 licensed online pharmaceutical retailers, selling OTC drugs, medical instruments, contact lenses and other health care products. Tmall’s online pharmaceutical business generated sales of RMB4.74 billion (around US$763 million) in the year ending March 2015, the company disclosed.

Customers still can purchase pharmaceutical products on Tmall, but Alibaba Health will be the new operator of the business.

According to their statement, Alibaba hopes to better integrate health resources in a bid to construct an connected ecosystem of healthcare services.

Alibaba has made several major moves into the health care market with the launch of  a Future Hospital plan, the addition of a hospital appointments feature to Alipay, and the the launch of prescription purchase app.

Image credit: Alibaba Health

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Mark Your Calendars! Shanghai TechCrunch Conference: June 8-9 https://technode.com/2015/04/15/techcrunch-shanghai-2015/ https://technode.com/2015/04/15/techcrunch-shanghai-2015/#respond Wed, 15 Apr 2015 03:05:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28900 After creating and hosting a number of successful events in China since 2013, TechCrunch and TechNode are getting ready to bring the TechCrunch Conference to Shanghai again. This time we’ll be meeting at the West Bund Art Center at the Huangpu River bank to bring together the best startups and brightest minds in China’s tech industry, so […]]]>

After creating and hosting a number of successful events in China since 2013, TechCrunch and TechNode are getting ready to bring the TechCrunch Conference to Shanghai again. This time we’ll be meeting at the West Bund Art Center at the Huangpu River bank to bring together the best startups and brightest minds in China’s tech industry, so mark your calendar and join us on June 8-9.

When we first brought TechCrunch Conference to Shanghai in November 2013, we aimed to create the best innovation and startup event in the city, if not the country. The conference attracted around 3,000 attendees and more than 100 startups with over a hundred media outlets reporting on the event.

Last August, we made it even bigger in Beijing, luring over 5,000 attendees and 200 startups into our Startup Alley. Over 100 ventures and 150 media outlets joined us in Beijing for an amazing event. We are confident that TechCrunch events are the most eye-catching and international-friendly conferences for startups and entrepreneurs in China.

Coming back to Shanghai this June, TechCrunch and TechNode will bring even better guest speakers as well as the most promising startups and ventures to the show. Unlike previous events, we will collaborate with partners to co-host parallel sessions for product launches, themed workshops, hot topic forums and more. Our feature event “Meet with Investors” will also land in Shanghai, giving passionate entrepreneurs opportunities for a face-to-face meeting with dozens of legendary investors. In addition, we’ve locked in a series of startup gatherings over the week so we can totally immerse ourselves in Shanghai’s passionate entrepreneurial spirit!

From ‘The Red Web’ in 2013 to ‘Red Hardware’ in 2014, TechCrunch Shanghai will focus on ‘Internet of Things’ this year. We see the interconnection of all things as inevitable, which is why we are focusing on diverse areas within the market, such as smart wearables, consumer transport, peer-to-peer technology, intelligent homes and more.

Early bird tickets are now on sale. Please click here for more information about the event.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Baidu Invests in Yet Another Israeli Startup Tonara, a Music Education Service https://technode.com/2015/04/14/baidu-invests-tonara/ https://technode.com/2015/04/14/baidu-invests-tonara/#respond Tue, 14 Apr 2015 09:00:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28749 Israel, the startup nation admired by Chinese entrepreneurs for its vigour and innovation, is becoming the investment destination of choice for the Chinese tech giants as these deep-pocketed companies scour the world for promising investments. Chinese search giant Baidu and Carmel Ventures have co-led a US$5 million round in Tonara, an Israeli music education technology […]]]>
Tonara-pic

Israel, the startup nation admired by Chinese entrepreneurs for its vigour and innovation, is becoming the investment destination of choice for the Chinese tech giants as these deep-pocketed companies scour the world for promising investments.

Chinese search giant Baidu and Carmel Ventures have co-led a US$5 million round in Tonara, an Israeli music education technology company, with participation from existing investors. Baidu’s Senior Director of Corporate Development, Peter Fang, will be joining Tonara’s board.

The Israeli venture capitalist Carmel Ventures closed a US$194 million financing round from a consortium including Chinese investors of Baidu, software provider Qihoo 360 and financial conglomerate Ping An.

Founded in 2011, Tonara has developed score-following technology for musicians. The company currently offers two apps. Tonara is a fully digitized sheet music platform for professional and amateur musicians which follows played music, turns the pages during rehearsal and performance, and offers an extensive catalogue of scores.

Following the success of professional musicians with Tonara, the Wolfie app for teachers and students was launched in 2014. Based on the same proprietary technology, Wolfie aims to transform music education by using iPads to create interactive music learning experiences. Wolfie supports teacher-student communication and features an extensive catalogue of music lessons organized by difficulty level.

The company has built a music library through partnerships with publishers, including a variety of music genres such as children’s classics, screen & stage, Latin, and so on.

“The new funding will enable us to scale up and to reach music students and teachers globally. We’re thrilled to cooperate with Baidu in reaching out to a Chinese audience,” said Tonara CEO Guy Bauman.

Baidu’s first investment in Israeli startup was a US$3 million round in Pixellot Ltd., which develops video cameras that can be controlled remotely to provide footage of sports and music events.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Hong Kong Startup Frenzoo Launches Cross-Game Service After Raising US$1m https://technode.com/2015/04/14/frenzoo-launches-metropolis/ https://technode.com/2015/04/14/frenzoo-launches-metropolis/#respond Tue, 14 Apr 2015 05:06:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28892 Frenzoo, a Hong Kong and San Francisco-based company producing 3D lifestyle games for women and girls, announced today the addition of US$1 million in new funding led by existing investors, including Fresco Capital, K5 Ventures and Anshe Chung Ltd. The company has now raised over $3 million in total seed funding. According to Frenzoo, the […]]]>

Frenzoo, a Hong Kong and San Francisco-based company producing 3D lifestyle games for women and girls, announced today the addition of US$1 million in new funding led by existing investors, including Fresco Capital, K5 Ventures and Anshe Chung Ltd. The company has now raised over $3 million in total seed funding.

According to Frenzoo, the latest round will be used to accelerate the development of its forthcoming Me Girl titles, invest in app marketing and user acquisition, and to hire for key positions in game development, engineering and product management.

At the same time, the company also launched meTropolis, a cross-game universe in which characters, quests and storylines carry over from app to app within the Me Girl franchise. meTropolis enables players to interact with Frenzoo’s Me Girl cast across a diverse range of experiences spanning seven games in total, including four new roleplaying and simulation games — Me Girl Love Paradise, Me Girl Love Story, Glamour Me Girl and Me Girl Celebs — plus the three existing Me Girl titles. These titles have now exceeded 20 million installs between them.

Frenzoo

Screenshots of Frenzoo’s New Apps

Throughout meTropolis, the Me Girl characters in one game might ask a player to help them or their friends out by completing quests in another game, impacting the story in both. For example, a dating columnist in Me Girl Love Story might be asked to help her editor achieve her dreams of being an actress in Me Girl Celebs, and then discover what happens next in Me Girl Love Story upon completion of the quest.

“meTropolis is the first time a mobile gaming company has delivered this level of story integration across apps, and we think our players are going to love it,” said Frenzoo co-founder and CEO Simon Newstead.

The Me Girl line of 3D lifestyle games are based on Frenzoo’s 3D avatar technology, built on top of Unity to provide realistic body movements and facial expressions that help bring the characters to life. Aside from the four new games, other titles in the franchise include Style Me Girl, the role playing game (RPG) that invites players to become a stylist to the stars; Teen Vogue Me Girl, launched in partnership with publishers Conde Nast; and Me Girl Dress Up, in which players step into the role of junior stylist for a popular fashion blog. More Me Girl games will be added to meTropolis later this year.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China Life Invests US$200M in Uber: Source https://technode.com/2015/04/13/uber-china-life-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/04/13/uber-china-life-funding/#comments Mon, 13 Apr 2015 10:11:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28854 Uber has received US$200 million of fresh funding led by Chinese insurance company China Life with participation from other, unnamed investors, a person familiar with the matter told TechNode yesterday. Uber has attracted billions in investment from more than 40 investors, including Google, Goldman Sachs and Fidelity Investments. It now seems the ride-sharing service is targeting Chinese financing. […]]]>

Uber has received US$200 million of fresh funding led by Chinese insurance company China Life with participation from other, unnamed investors, a person familiar with the matter told TechNode yesterday.

Uber has attracted billions in investment from more than 40 investors, including Google, Goldman Sachs and Fidelity Investments. It now seems the ride-sharing service is targeting Chinese financing.

The deal will be Uber’s second capital injection from Chinese investors in past five months. China search giant Baidu poured an undisclosed investment into Uber in December last year, and granted Uber access to the search giant’s local map service. The recent investment confers the same valuation of US$40 billion.

Uber first launched a pilot project in Shanghai in 2013, followed by an official launch in mid-2014. It is now operating in ten Chinese cities. While Uber has grown rapidly, it has also encountered several legal setbacks, as well increasing competition from other transportation and logistics services. 

The two major local taxi-hailing apps, Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, merged earlier this year, and reportedly account for a staggering 95% of China’s taxi app market. While Uber does not compete directly in the taxi market, the local models have formed a formidable competitor.

Uber’s major rivals have partnered up with insurance companies in the past, using the insurers to compensate accidents related to the drivers.

As one of the largest life insurers in China, China Life previously cooperated with local ride-share app Haha Pinche. China Life’s insurance services and its government connections are expected to assist Uber in its bid to localize.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Alibaba’s Mapping Service AutoNavi Unveils LBS+ Open Platform https://technode.com/2015/04/11/alibabas-mapping-service-autonavi-unveils-lbs-open-platform/ https://technode.com/2015/04/11/alibabas-mapping-service-autonavi-unveils-lbs-open-platform/#respond Fri, 10 Apr 2015 19:24:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28828 AutoNavi, China’s leading mapping service fully acquired by Alibaba, has taken the wraps off LBS+, an open platform for location based services. Now serving a broad range of fields like car rental, O2O, smart devices and environmental protection, the platform provides location based service solution plans that integrate development kit, big data, and relevant services […]]]>
Autonavigadget

AutoNavi, China’s leading mapping service fully acquired by Alibaba, has taken the wraps off LBS+, an open platform for location based services. Now serving a broad range of fields like car rental, O2O, smart devices and environmental protection, the platform provides location based service solution plans that integrate development kit, big data, and relevant services and functions.

At the press conference, the company also announced tie-ups with car rental service Zuche, NGO Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, massage booking service Kungfu Bear, and drone developer Ehang.

In addition to AutoNavi’s free digital map database and mobile LBS development kits, LBS+ features location big data analytic services, helping clients gain insights on customer numbers, customer location and hot areas. AutoNavi’s cloud computing service was also integrated, to enable data storage, management and analysis.

Previous LBS open platforms only offers developers with LBS development kits. LBS+ added mapping big data and mapping cloud computing service, enabling users to manage and analyze data, and then to make wiser business decisions based o these results.

Location information is becoming integral to personalized mobile internet applications and services. Most developers choose services provided by market leaders, since mapping is demanding and requires certification from relevant authorities. As a company engaged in the LBS industry for over 12 years, AutoNavi aims to provide better services for developers with LBS+, according to Wei Kaiming, head of the platform.

Yu Yongfu, who took the helm of Alibaba’s location-based services (LBS) division last year, has made several major business shifts. User-facing O2O services were set aside to refocus on business-facing solutions with a goal to provide basic and infrastructure services. With the launch of LBS+, AutoNavi is building an ecosystem centered around basic services.

Aside from LBS capabilities, LBS+ will focus squarely on R&D of LBS technologies and support for developers. Wei pledged that the platform will form no competition with developers.

Image credit: AutoNavi

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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APAC Startup Funding Landscape in 2015: Report https://technode.com/2015/04/10/apac-startup-funding-landscape-2015q1-report/ https://technode.com/2015/04/10/apac-startup-funding-landscape-2015q1-report/#respond Thu, 09 Apr 2015 23:07:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28785 The Asia-Pacific region has witnessed a burgeoning startup ecosystem in recent years. A survey conducted by angel investor Arnaud Bonzom shed more light on the APAC startup landscape, giving more detail on investments received in the region. APAC startups have captured a combined US$9.4 billion in venture capital funding across a total of 436 investments, according […]]]>

The Asia-Pacific region has witnessed a burgeoning startup ecosystem in recent years. A survey conducted by angel investor Arnaud Bonzom shed more light on the APAC startup landscape, giving more detail on investments received in the region.

APAC startups have captured a combined US$9.4 billion in venture capital funding across a total of 436 investments, according to Arnaud’s report, which is based on data from Asia Funding/M&A Newsletter. Thirty VC funds in the region closed a total US$4.44 billion investments with the largest single deal standing at US$910 million.

The report summed up five key trends in the venture capital landscape so far this year:

  • e-commerce and marketplaces captured 53 per cent of the investments by value
  • Out of the eleven biggest funds launched, four were set up by a corporation
  • Nine out of the ten biggest deals were done in China
  • 67 per cent more deals have been done in India than in China
  • The ten most active VCs have closed 29 per cent of the deals

As the largest economic entity in the region, China accounts for nine out of the ten biggest deals. Dianping, China’s leading local ratings and reviews service, took the top spot with a recent US$850 million funding round, while its major rival Meituan followed with US$700 million in financing. With lots of overlapping businesses in group-buying and O2O expansion, the battle between the two companies is expected to escalate after receiving this new funds. Taxi app Kuaidi Dache ranked third with US$600 million in funding as an independent company, although it has since merged with its fierce rival Didi Dache in February this year.

The 6th to 10th spots were taken by smartphone maker Meizu (US$590m), film and television programme producer Enlight Media (US$383m), online food ordering service Ele.me (US$350m), decoration service To8to (US$200m), used car trading platform Youxinpai (US$200m) and video streaming site Imgo.tv (US$200m).

Indian payment finance service One97 Communications, which ranked the fifth in the list, received US$575m worth of investment from Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba. Thus, all of the top 10 deals are linked to China in some way.

Info

In terms of funding stages, Series D or beyond deals stood at US$4.03 billion, accounting for the largest share (43%) of total investments, while seed-stage round deals represented just US$60 million or just 3% of the total investments.

Info-1

China had a good spread of investments across the stages of the funding cycle, from early to late, while most of the deals occurred in Series A financing.

India recorded 67% more deals than China in volume, but China’s deals were worth 3.9 ties more in terms of value.

Of the 11 biggest funds launched, four have been set up by corporations, indicating a trend for big enterprises to keep up with the ever-developing innovation and to play a bigger role in the game. Amongst the funds, Sequoia Capital is the most active one in the region with 32 deals.

Info-2

Image credit: Startintx, Shutterstock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Cloud Service UCloud Bags Landmark Series C Funding for Data Center Construction https://technode.com/2015/04/10/ucloud-bags-landmark-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/04/10/ucloud-bags-landmark-funding/#respond Thu, 09 Apr 2015 22:57:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28798 Chinese cloud service provider UCloud announced today that it has landed nearly US$100 million of Series C financing led by Legend Capital with the participation of VMS Legend Investment Fund, DCM, Bertelsmann and GX Capital. This is largest capital injection in China’s IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) sector so far. The company had previously received Series […]]]>

Chinese cloud service provider UCloud announced today that it has landed nearly US$100 million of Series C financing led by Legend Capital with the participation of VMS Legend Investment Fund, DCM, Bertelsmann and GX Capital.

This is largest capital injection in China’s IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) sector so far. The company had previously received Series A financing in 2013 and a US$50 million B Round in June 2014.

UCloud disclosed this funding will be used in software development, big data and recruitment. A recruitment drive headed by company CEO Ji Xin is on its way to the U.S. for leading talent, the firm added.

Founded in 2012 by former Tencent execs, UCloud specializes in game hosting and related cloud services. It now serves some of the top revenue generating games in China, as well as clients in various industries of e-commerce, mobile internet, SaaS, among others.

With data centers in the U.S. and Hong Kong, UCloud helps Chinese clients support their overseas operations in North America and Southeast Asia. UCloud has entered into partnership with NTT Com Asia to upgrade its Asia-Pacific data center.

The funding will boost the company’s expansion into further areas of business. There is an interesting change in China where cloud services are taking on a new role as incubators for startups that use their services. As one of the pioneers of this trend, UCloud has established an incubator program in Shanghai. The reception of new capital will fuel UCloud’s support for startups and accelerate its cooperation with other startup services around the country. The cloud service also set eyes on a series of hot sectors like big data, online education, O2O and online finance.

Image credit: UCloud

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Dianping Leads $22M Investment in Meican to Further Foray into Online Food Ordering https://technode.com/2015/04/08/dianping-meican/ https://technode.com/2015/04/08/dianping-meican/#respond Wed, 08 Apr 2015 09:45:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28731 The emergence of local food ordering services is fueling a Chinese trend where local diners are promised greater convenience and access to restaurant menus. Some 20.1% of Chinese internet users used online food ordering services in first half of 2014, according to iMedia research. The booming market has made the sector a regular recipient of […]]]>
Meican Pic

The emergence of local food ordering services is fueling a Chinese trend where local diners are promised greater convenience and access to restaurant menus. Some 20.1% of Chinese internet users used online food ordering services in first half of 2014, according to iMedia research. The booming market has made the sector a regular recipient of venture capital funding.

Chinese online food ordering site Meican completed RMB140 million (US$22.56 million) of Series C funding led by the leading local ratings and reviews service Dianping, with the participation of KPCB, Nokia Growth Partners and Trust Bridge Partners. The company received B round funding last year.

Unlike rivals Ele.me and Daojia, which focus on individual customers, Meican targets enterprise clients that cater for their employees. The site also allows users to build a custom homepage by adding their locations and favorite restaurants. Now operating in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Chengdu, Meican is planning to expand to 30 cities in the near future.

Dianping, the lead investor of this round, is also the backer of Ele.me, a popular online food ordering platform with a solid low-end client base which plans to expand into the high-end market. This alliance allows both parties to share user and merchant data, and to integrate their food ordering services. Likewise, the new investment will bring Dianping more data resources and facilitate its expansion to online food ordering for enterprises.

Dianping reportedly received US$850 million of financing from Xiaomi, Tencent, Teasek Holdings and Wanda Group to push its transformation to a O2O local life platform. The company has invested in a group of catering services, such as Hima Software, a CRM solution provider for restaurants and hotels, food ordering service DZB, WiFi solution WiWide, and enterprise resource planning service Shanglong Technology.

The lucrative online food ordering market has spurred the efforts of the domestic tech giants. Chinese e-commerce giant JD led a US$50 million Series D funding in Daojia.com. Etaoshi, which received US$20 million in Series B funding last year, has yet to receive strategic investment from the internet titans, but has formed partnerships with Baidu, Qihoo 360, Alibaba and Meituan.

Image credit: Dianping, Meican

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Meet ChinaBang Awards 2015 Winners, as voted by Chinese Users https://technode.com/2015/04/07/chinabang-awards-2015-winners/ https://technode.com/2015/04/07/chinabang-awards-2015-winners/#respond Tue, 07 Apr 2015 14:53:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28668 ChinaBang Awards, the brainchild of TechNode which honors the best in China’s startups, is now in its fourth year. After two months of nominations, online voting and result reviews, the winners were finally announced at our annual ChinaBang event. Congratulations to all award winners who stood out from over 1,000 nominations this year. Hardware ANTVR […]]]>

ChinaBang Awards, the brainchild of TechNode which honors the best in China’s startups, is now in its fourth year. After two months of nominations, online voting and result reviews, the winners were finally announced at our annual ChinaBang event. Congratulations to all award winners who stood out from over 1,000 nominations this year.

Hardware

ANTVR built a universal wireless virtual reality gaming headset. The Beijing-based company has released several products, including the ANTVR headset, ANTVR camera and Jitao, a VR goggles set which is smartphone compatible.

Taihuoniao: an innovative hardware incubator

XGIMI is a portable projector that can stream videos, photos or other media content from your Android or iOS device onto any surface through WiFi. The company raised US$16 million of funding in 2014.

The One is a smart piano designed to help you learn the instrument faster. The LED lights atop the keyboard guide the players through a more interactive experience. The piano combines with its app to offer one-on-one tutoring to help improve your skills.

Ehang is a drone developer. Ghost drone, their flagship product, can be controlled via mobile app (iOS or Android). Ghost is targeting both Chinese and U.S. markets. The company closed US$10M of Series A funding last year.

Software Design

Zuimeichuangyi (“Beautiful Innovations” in Chinese) is an app that integrates interesting short videos like innovative advertisements, gaming, and so on.

Mono is a content integration platform that recommends premium articles or video clips on fashion, design, lifestyle, and so on. The company has received angel investments from China Renaissance K2 Ventures and Bertelsmann Asia Investments.

Jianshu: a content sharing community.

MIX Filter Master: a photo filter app developed by Camera360.

Yiwen, a TechNode production, is a mobile app which recommends one Chinese interesting startup per day.

Hardware Design

Nokee: a smart glass manufacturer.

Meizu: an upstart Chinese smartphone manufacturer.

Teemo is a GPS tracker for kids that also aims to form a more effective communication channel between children and their parents. The product is created by Chinese software developer Sogou.

Phantom is a smart home solution provider primarily focusing on smart illumination and surveillance. The company reportedly secured US$1.5 million of pre-A investment last year.

AirNut is a pair of smart indoor and outdoor weather stations developed by Moji, aka MoWeather, one of the most popular weather apps in China.

Popular Female Product & Service

Helijia, translated as “beaver’s home”, is a startup that provides on-demand manicure services.

RoseOnly is a high-tier online flower store. The site also launched offline expansion with the opening of bricks-and mortar stores. The company received millions of yuan in Series A financing from Trends Group and tens of million dollars in Series B funding from Tencent in 2013.

Miyabaobei: a Chinese site that sells formula, clothes, and other items for babies and toddlers.

in is an online mobile photo-sharing and social networking service for girls. It enables its users to take pictures and share them with friends.

Meipai is a video clip capturing and editing app by Meitu, China’s leading photo app developer. Eight months after launch, Meipai announced 100 million users in January 2015, with 30 million monthly active and 5 million daily active users.

Medical & Healthcare

Kungfu Bear is a massage booking service that offers full-body, head and neck massages that you can enjoy at home or at the office.

iCareNewlife is a paired handheld ultrasound and smartphone app which track an unborn baby’s heartbeat and lets parents-to-be share the fetal data on social media.

CupTime is a smart cup that gives users health advice while drinking water.

Ledongli is a step counter app that quantifies your life and makes health data fun and useful.

DNurse is a smartphone accessory that helps users to monitor their hypoglycemic index.

Education

TAL Education (Tomorrow Advancing Life) is a leading K-12 after-school tutoring services provider in China.

17zuoye (“homework together”) is an online study platform targeting the Chinese K-12 market.

Yuantiku provides a test practice system and question database. Founded by former NetEase executive Li Yong, the company behind Yuantiku pivoted from Fenbi, a social service for students and teachers. Yuantiku recently raised US$60 million of Series D funding at a valuation of US$360 million.

51talk is an oral English training service providing one-to-one courses. The company has acquired its major rival 91Waijiao earlier this year.

Jike Xueyuan (“geek college” in Chinese) is an online education portal which teaches IT career skills with all course content generated by an in-house development team.

Cloud/Enterprise Service

LeanCloud, previously known as AVOS Cloud, is a BaaS (backend as a service) solution provider.

FIR.im (short for ‘Fly It Remotely’) provides free, fast and safe beta app distribution services.

Teambition is a software as a service (SaaS) platform that provides products and services to foster team collaboration and project management.

QingCloud  is a cloud computing platform that provides IaaS-based (infrastructure as a service) flexible cloud services, supporting private networks, comprehensive monitoring, and multiple real time copy security policy.

Testin focuses on the service quality of mobile internet applications, offering mobile app development and service providers testing services in professional mobile internet development, automated prototypes and automatic adaptation, and also app quality monitoring services.

Overseas Market Exploration

APUSXiaomi, Cheetah MobileCamera360OnePlus

Marketing

Qiniu is a cloud-based storage solutions provider in China, offering one-stop data management services to enterprises.

UCloud: a Chinese cloud service provider.

AAyongche: a car renting and ride-sharing platform.

Baozou Manhua (rage comics): comics with internet humor and everyday lifecombining image and text humorously and distributing them through a wide variety of communication tools.

Getui is a Beijing-based third-party push notification service provider.

Startup of The Year in Hangzhou

Yangche Diandian is a car maintenance platform.

Startup of The Year in Chengdu

XGIMI

Startup of The Year in Hong Kong

Notey is a discovery platform that helps you find the best blogs on over 500,000 topics.

EventExtra helps event organizations, whether corporate or government, to simplify the process and make the event create more of an impact for attendees.

Snapask offers affordable and personalized tuition to students through a mobile app that allows them to post questions and instantly connect to tutors for 1-to-1 real-time study.

Startup of The Year in Taiwan

FLiPER is a popular online publication based in Taipei.

HyXen Technology is a location-based service provider.

Writepath is a site for multilingual editing and online translation services.

Startup of The Year 2015

Didi Dache & Kuaidi DacheSmartisan Technology, DJIEle.me, Meituan Maoyan (a mobile app for movie tickets)

Popularity Award

WiWideCHINACMailtime,  EasemobBoxfish, Ledongli, Helijia,  PhantomChuyeOneBoard

Young Entrepreneur

Yin Sang from Karaoke App 17Chang

Female Entrepreneur

Li Hui from Entrepriese Software Mike CRM

Entrepreneur of The Year 2015

Ma Delong from Tech Recruitment Site Lagou

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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P2P Lending Service Ppdai Lands Series C Funding for Improving Risk Control and Credit System https://technode.com/2015/04/03/ppdai-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/04/03/ppdai-series-c-funding/#respond Fri, 03 Apr 2015 06:09:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28654 Chinese P2P lending site Ppdai has announced that it received Series C funding led by Legend Capital and SIG, and followed by VMS Investment Fund, Sequoia Capital and Lightspeed China Partners. The company did not disclose the exact amount raised, only saying that the funding amount is close to US$100 million. The capital raised will […]]]>

Chinese P2P lending site Ppdai has announced that it received Series C funding led by Legend Capital and SIG, and followed by VMS Investment Fund, Sequoia Capital and Lightspeed China Partners. The company did not disclose the exact amount raised, only saying that the funding amount is close to US$100 million. The capital raised will be used to improve its credit risk management systems.

The Shanghai-based startup had previously received US$25 million of Series A financing from Sequoia Capital in September 2012. A US$50 million B round was secured from Lightspeed China Partners in April 2014.

Founded in 2007, Ppdai is an online platform for peer-to-peer small unsecured loans in China. It standardizes personal behaviors of debit and credit, and brings returns to both lenders and borrowers.

Constructing a high-performance credit risk control system has been the company’s priority in recent years, and successfully launched its risk control system Magic Mirror (our translation) last month. Backed by big data and a series of practical risk management processes, the system gives credit risk ratings for each loan to forecast and manage default levels.

Over the past eight years, Ppdai has amassed more than 6 million users and 4 billion pieces of data, according to company founder Zhang Jun, adding that the bad debt rate is sustainable at 1.7%.

Legend Capital is also the investor of personal finance app Tongbanjie, P2P site P2peye, and CreditCloud.

Image credit: Ppdai

Source: Yuting

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketogtongues)

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Xiaomi Wristband Supports Mobile Payment Enabled by Alipay https://technode.com/2015/04/02/xiaomi-wristband-supports-alipay/ https://technode.com/2015/04/02/xiaomi-wristband-supports-alipay/#respond Thu, 02 Apr 2015 08:24:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28631 As a natural extension of contactless cards, wearable devices are increasingly targeting mobile payments. Huami, the manufacturer of Xiaomi’s hugely-popular smart fitness tracker Mi Band, has entered into a partnership with Alibaba’s payment affiliate Alipay to develop smart wristbands that incorporate mobile payment. After connecting Mi Band with their Alipay account, wearers can make payments by […]]]>
Xiaomi-band

As a natural extension of contactless cards, wearable devices are increasingly targeting mobile payments. Huami, the manufacturer of Xiaomi’s hugely-popular smart fitness tracker Mi Band, has entered into a partnership with Alibaba’s payment affiliate Alipay to develop smart wristbands that incorporate mobile payment.

After connecting Mi Band with their Alipay account, wearers can make payments by placing the wearable device near an Alipay client without needing to enter a password. Acting as the means of ID verification, the wristband connects to the wearer’s phone via Bluetooth when the transaction is being made.

Regarding security concerns, the companies stated that Mi Band will use industry standard encryption to secure payments. Each device has a unique identifier and payments can only be processed only when this pairs with its pre-set Alipay account, so users don’t have to worry that others could make unauthorized payments with their Mi Band if it is lost.

Alipay has opened mobile payment, alerts and voucher verification access to Huami. The payment company noted that they are planning to cooperate with more hardware manufacturers, and further access will be granted to partners so that they can develop custom features as desired.

This feature is now available for Alipay’s 8.6 Android update, with the iOS version to be launched very soon.

Mi Band is not the first wearable device to feature one touch mobile payment in China. Shuashua, a near-field communication (NFC) enabled smart bracelet developed by a Beijing startup, can be used for transactions with bus and taxi services, as well as supermarkets, restaurants, cinemas and hospitals.

The combination of Mi Band’s affordability and the wide usage of Alipay makes the product highly accessible. The Mi Band had shipped over 1 million units as of early December last year, four months after going on sale in August last year, according to Xiaomi.

Wristband-payment

Image credit: Alipay

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Alibaba Group Names Yu Yongfu as President of Its Online Marketing Platform Alimama https://technode.com/2015/04/02/alibaba-yu-yongfu-alimama/ https://technode.com/2015/04/02/alibaba-yu-yongfu-alimama/#respond Thu, 02 Apr 2015 02:35:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28616 China’s e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has appointed Yu Yongfu as president of its online marketing unit Alimama to spearhead the business into new areas of growth. This appointment makes Yu the helmsman of Alibaba’s three important units: the browser, mapping and online marketing. Yu will report to Alibaba Group COO Daniel Zhang directly. The former chief […]]]>

China’s e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has appointed Yu Yongfu as president of its online marketing unit Alimama to spearhead the business into new areas of growth. This appointment makes Yu the helmsman of Alibaba’s three important units: the browser, mapping and online marketing. Yu will report to Alibaba Group COO Daniel Zhang directly.

The former chief executive and chairman of UCWeb, Yu joined Alibaba Group last June when the e-commerce titan acquired the mobile browser, and he was appointed president of the newly-established UC Mobile Business Group under Alibaba. Yu was also named president of Alibaba’s mapping and data service AutoNavi in mid-March this year.

Alimama is an online marketing technology platform that offers sellers on Alibaba Group’s marketplaces online marketing services for both personal computers and mobile devices. Online advertising accounts for the bulk of Alibaba’s income. The company made RMB37.5 billion in revenue from ads on Taobao last year, iResearch estimates.

Alimama is now primarily a business within Alibaba Group with most of its customers retailers on Alibaba marketplaces like Taobao. “Our goal is to expand its focus from e-commerce online marketing to become a leading media platform that efficiently matches advertisers and their target audience,” said Yu Yongfu.

Alimama’s major initiatives for the year include integrating data and technology products and services, building a country-wide and industry-wide platform for data to increase clients’ data utilization, and supporting over 100,000 media partners, according to the company.

Yu’s appointment highlights the strategic importance of online marketing and mobile internet initiatives within Alibaba’s ecosystem. With Yu overseeing the mobile internet business and Alimama, the company will be able to consolidate its resources and increase synergies, ranging from UC browser, AutoNavi Map and mobile search service Shenma.

Similarly, Alibaba appointed Zhang Jianfeng to oversee all e-commerce related arms including Taobao marketplace, Tmall and Juhuasuan last month to enhance synergies among related businesses. 

Image credit: ifanr

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Kingsoft Cloud Lands $66M of Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2015/04/01/kingsoft-cloud-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/04/01/kingsoft-cloud-fresh-funding/#respond Wed, 01 Apr 2015 13:13:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28573 Kingsoft Cloud, the cloud computing arm of software powerhouse Kingsoft Corporation, has received a combined US$66.66 million of capital injection recently. The funding consists of two parts, Series B financing from its parent company and IDG, and a purchase of preferred stock in Kingsoft Cloud by the parent company and Xiaomi. Upon completing the transaction, KingSoft […]]]>

Kingsoft Cloud, the cloud computing arm of software powerhouse Kingsoft Corporation, has received a combined US$66.66 million of capital injection recently. The funding consists of two parts, Series B financing from its parent company and IDG, and a purchase of preferred stock in Kingsoft Cloud by the parent company and Xiaomi.

Upon completing the transaction, KingSoft Corporation, Xiaomi and IDG will hold 52.3%, 24.5% and 3.98% in the company respectively, when calculated at outstanding fully-diluted shares.

Kingsoft Cloud offers a variety of services to subscribers from data hosting and cloud storage to series particularly for developers. With a daily upload of over 258TB, Kingsoft Cloud’s current audience are mainly Xiaomi users since it is the default option on Xiaomi devices.

The company is also trying to explore enterprise service market through strategic cooperation with its parent company, Kingdee and China Telecom. Gaming, one of the top-grossing Internet services in China, is becoming another growth point for the company.

Kingsoft CEO Zhang Hongjiang said Kingsoft Cloud will expand in three directions: 1) providing cloud services for smart hardware such as smart wristbands, smart TV, etc 2) offering greater storage space for personal files, photos and video storage, 3) exploring cooperative opportunities with companies from traditional industries, .

Lei Jun, Kingsoft Corporation executive director who’s better known as Xiaomi CEO, announced an ambitious plan last year to invest US$1 billion in its Kingsoft Cloud service over the next three to five years – the “All-in on Cloud Services” strategy as he refers to it. This investment is likely part of that plan.

China’s public cloud service will be a market worth over a billion RMB by 2016 with a compound annual growth rate of 38.6%, according to IDC. The Chinese cloud market has been heating up with the entrance of domestic Internet giants Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent, as well as foreign players like AWS and Windows Azure.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Internet Companies Race to China’s Fledging Smart Bike Market https://technode.com/2015/04/01/china-smart-bike-market/ https://technode.com/2015/04/01/china-smart-bike-market/#respond Wed, 01 Apr 2015 12:51:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28530 We are about to enter the age where everything is smart, whether smartphone or smart wristband, smart watch or smart home. The technology that enabled these transformations is changing every aspect of our lives, including our means of transportation. China has long been known as the kingdom of the bicycle, with 370 million units in […]]]>

We are about to enter the age where everything is smart, whether smartphone or smart wristband, smart watch or smart home. The technology that enabled these transformations is changing every aspect of our lives, including our means of transportation.

China has long been known as the kingdom of the bicycle, with 370 million units in the country as of 2013. Although the country’s development has greatly weakened the role of bicycles as the major means of transportation, it has given rise to another popular function, as a way of physical exercise or sport.

Putting these trends into perspective, a wave of Chinese internet companies, big and small, are eyeing this market to upend yet another traditional industry.

DuBike

Chinese search giant Baidu launched its smart bike DuBike last year in collaboration with the Industrial Design department of Tsinghua University. DuBike tracks all kinds of health metrics, like heart rate, pedaling frequency, velocity, and seat pressure. An accompanying app collects and analyzes these data, and then gives personalized fitness suggestions.

Moreover, riders can find the best routes to their destination via the navigation signal atop the handlebar or share their fitness data on social media. The bike generates its own electricity by converting kinetic energy to electric.

The company has yet to announce the shipment date and price, but local media have reported that the price tag will be higher than RMB10,000 (US$1,613).

BICI

BICI

BICI (also known as Basic Conception) is a Shanghai-based smart bicycle manufacturer. The company showcased its first product Qizi last year. Like DuBike, Qizi is equipped inbuilt sensors to track cycling stats and find routes, and offer powerful anti-theft protection. The product retails at RMB3,999 and is offered in five candy colors.

Last November, BICI received a boost by closing Series A financing worth several million US dollars, led by early-stage venture capital firm Ceyuan.

700Bike

Zhangxiangdong-700bike1

700Bike was founded in 2012 as a cycling information portal and event organizer that promotes bicycle culture. Zhang Xiangdong, co-founder of NASDAQ-listed Sungy Mobile who is also a passionate cyclist, left the mobile content provider and joined 700Bike as co-founder last year.

700Bike secured last week US$15 million of Series A funding from Banyan Capital, China Growth Capital and IDG Capital Partners, as well as an RMB300 million credit line.

The company is expanding its business to bicycle manufacturing based on internet technology. Its new products are still under development.

LeTV

Besides its moves into the smart car sector, Chinese smart TV and online content company LeTV is also expanding into the smart bike market. LeTV Sports and LeTV’s smart technology affiliate Leie have joined up with an unnamed bicycle manufacturer to develop a new smart bike. The three parties will hold 50%, 10% and 40% of the joint venture respectively. The company is planning to release the smart bike on April 2 and the partner will be announced on the same day.

Image credit: DuBike, BICI, 700Bike

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Hong Kong Luxury Marketplace Luxify Scoops Angel Investment to Boost Global Expansion https://technode.com/2015/04/01/hong-kong-luxury-marketplace-luxify-scoops-angel-investment/ https://technode.com/2015/04/01/hong-kong-luxury-marketplace-luxify-scoops-angel-investment/#comments Wed, 01 Apr 2015 08:18:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28600 Upon the official release of its new website, Hong Kong-based luxury marketplace Luxify has announced that it raised US$$800,000 of seed funding from unnamed investors in Asia and Europe. With the financing, the company is looking to hire more staff and enhance its platform in Hong Kong, London and Singapore. Luxify is a premier online […]]]>
Luxify-pic

Upon the official release of its new website, Hong Kong-based luxury marketplace Luxify has announced that it raised US$$800,000 of seed funding from unnamed investors in Asia and Europe. With the financing, the company is looking to hire more staff and enhance its platform in Hong Kong, London and Singapore.

Luxify is a premier online marketplace for customers to buy and sell new, vintage, and pre-owned luxury items by connecting buyers to dealers, collectors, and sellers in local markets. Luxify offers features according to the needs of both buyers and sellers, both professional and hobbyist.

The new website adds new functions like “Make an Offer” which allows buyers and sellers of luxury goods to directly negotiate. They’ve also streamlined the communication tools and social media integration, and added a geolocation interface that identifies each store. At the moment, the service takes no commission from customers.

Professional retailers as well as private clients use Luxify to transact sales on a wide selection of luxury goods. Luxify offers goods in a range of pre-selected categories, including property, jewelry, motors, art, fashion, wine, travel destinations, jets & helicopters, luxury childrenswear, and more. The company claims to have over US$350 million worth of luxury products listed on the platform.

Product authenticity is of course the key concern for customers when purchasing luxury products. To better meet this, Luxify has also upgraded their complimentary concierge service to include authentication. This service also offers professional photography (using drones and helicopters to take aerial shots) and retouching services, and tailored marketing campaigns.

“The luxury market is extremely fragmented and there is no transparency for buyers to find out the true value of their pre-owned luxury goods. Currently, the limited distribution channels for both sellers and buyers are dominated by offline formats such as pawn shops, traditional auction houses, and specialized second hand boutiques,” says Luxify co-founder Alexis Zirah. “Our new website not only addresses these issues but greatly simplifies the buying and selling process.”

Luxify was founded by Florian Martigny and Alexis Zirah, two Hong Kong residents and businessmen, who were looking to create an online platform for the second-hand luxury market.

Image credit: Luxify

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Fashion Startup CLAWZ Glitzes Your Fingernails with 3D-printed Jewelry https://technode.com/2015/03/30/clawz-3d-printed-nail-jewelry/ https://technode.com/2015/03/30/clawz-3d-printed-nail-jewelry/#respond Mon, 30 Mar 2015 10:08:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28442 Geek culture and fashion have slowly been merging to develop their own thing. If you are taken by this trend, chances are that you’re going to love startup CLAWZ, an online retailer of 3D-printed fingernail jewelry. CLAWZ creates 3D-printed nail art featuring adhesive nails with unique designs. While today’s flamboyant nail art can cause functionality […]]]>
Clawz-pic2

Geek culture and fashion have slowly been merging to develop their own thing. If you are taken by this trend, chances are that you’re going to love startup CLAWZ, an online retailer of 3D-printed fingernail jewelry.

CLAWZ creates 3D-printed nail art featuring adhesive nails with unique designs. While today’s flamboyant nail art can cause functionality problems, CLAWZ allows users to wear and remove the fingernails multiple times. Customers can order the designer fingernail design online with the finished product shipped to your doormat in a few days.

Born out of Chinaccelerator, the 90-day seed stage investment accelerator program, CLAWZ has made some major product improvements since I first met them at Chinaccelerator Batch VI Demo Day last year. By using the process of stereolithography (SLA), the nails are prototyped in PLA plastic resin. The team has managed to develop a thinner fingernail pad, making it less clumsy to wear. A variety of adhesive stickers were tested so as to select the optimal fit in terms of sustainability and thickness.

The company’s Director of Growth Chris Tweten confessed that production gives them a lot of trouble. “It is really difficult to design nails that can be 3D printed with so many factors involved. There are few industrial designers who have experience with this emerging technology. Some might be able to make 3D renders, but they haven’t physically printed them, so finding a designer with the right experience has been really tough. Sometime they make them too thick, thinking that you can’t 3D-print something thinner than 1 mm and that’s what they’ve been told in school. But that’s not the case anymore – the technology allows you to print as thin as 0.001mm now.”

Clawz-moon

The Shanghai-based startup has just launched preorders for a limited edition for its very first product line PHASES, which showcase the lunar cycle with a silver finish. Positioned as designer jewelry, PHASES goes after the high-end market with a relatively high price tag of US$148 (RMB919).

Tweten explained that CLAWZ targets women who are already crazy about nail art. “Even in China, it can be quite expensive to get nail art, with the average price around RMB600-700. The difference with our product is that you can wear them to events and take them off.” The preorder is slightly more expensive than the regular line, since it is the limited edition, he added.

Right now, the site supports payment by debit and credit card through PayPal which is UnionPay enabled. CLAWZ is also working on getting Alipay and WeChat by the official launch of the full line.

CLAWZ has received additional funding through Futurpreneur (formerly Canadian Youth Business Foundation) and closed on a small seed investment around the beginning of this year. The funding will primarily go to product development, purchasing 3D printers and hiring staff for web development, while the rest will go to marketing and living expenses, explained company founder Avery-Anne Gervais.

Chris Tweten (L) & Avery-Anne Gervais (R)

Founded by two Canadian entrepreneurs living in Shanghai, CLAWZ has a dual focus in North America and China. To cope with the regional differences, the startup has partnered with a local marketing company to handle social media channels.

Starting in just Shanghai, CLAWZ is trying to work with the marketing team to target Chinese as well as English channels. It is looking to partner with offline nail salons and boutique fashion stores so that they will carry CLAWZ’s products. Tweten noted that e-commerce is convenient but it takes more time to get established, especially for a radical new product.

Manicure services targeting women are on the rise in the Chinese market. Local on-demand manicure startups like Helijia eye the same market at a price nearly one tenth that of CLAWZ. But Tweten is confident about the market potential, saying, “We are not trying to compete directly with nail salon or nail artists, because CLAWZ is a fashion product rather than a one-time thing. But we are competing with them for the same sales. Users can put our product over the top of their manicure for special events.”

In addition to the PHASES silver design, CLAWZ want to provide many different colors, like gold, bronze and steel, because options have to be available to keep up with ever-changing consumer demand.

Articles published by Clash Graphics make it clear that, this company is on the move and making waves. The company is also working on the launch of a new product line this summer with New York designer Alexis Walsh. “Our ultimate goal is to become a brand that other 3D printing artists and fashion designers want to collaborate with”, said Tweten.

CLAWZ is the second startup for both co-founders. Gervais is the owner of a spray tan studio in Canada and Tweten has worked on a social media marketing project that works with startups and startup organizations.

Tweten says China’s startup environment is very active with more investors and more opportunities. “We’ve had opportunities come our way while in Shanghai. I think it has lot to do with the population difference.”

Image credit: CLAWZ

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Exam Database Yuantiku Pockets $60M Series D Funding at $360M Valuation https://technode.com/2015/03/30/yuantiku-series-d-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/03/30/yuantiku-series-d-funding/#respond Mon, 30 Mar 2015 02:03:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28510 Chinese online education platform Yuantiku has secured US$60 million of Series D funding at a valuation of US$360 million, just six months after announcing US$15 million in Series C last year. The new round was led by CMC Capital Partners and followed by New Horizon Capital, existing investors IDG and Matrix Partners China. Yuantiku offers a database of practice questions for students […]]]>
yuantiku

Chinese online education platform Yuantiku has secured US$60 million of Series D funding at a valuation of US$360 million, just six months after announcing US$15 million in Series C last year. The new round was led by CMC Capital Partners and followed by New Horizon Capital, existing investors IDG and Matrix Partners China.

Yuantiku offers a database of practice questions for students preparing for exams. Powered by intelligent algorithms and big data, the service gives custom tests and analyses based on the student’s performance.

Founded by former NetEase executive Li Yong, the company behind Yuantiku pivoted from Fenbi, a social service for students and teachers built in 2012. The startup’s first K-12-focused offering, an exam database for National College Entrance Exam, became an instant hit after its launch in October 2013. The service claims 13 million users at the present, up from 1.5 million in June last year.

In addition to its exam database, the company also launched Xiaoyuan Search (our translation), an online learning app which allows users to search for questions by taking snapshots so as to avoid complexity and laborious input of hard-to-recognize characters, mathematical symbols and equations. The app has amassed 6 million users, the company added. A live video course product is expected to go live very soon.

The company has expanded to a variety of other tests, such as administrative aptitude tests and essay tests for civil servants, among others.

After this round of financing, Yuantiku will apply student data and their performance analysis into syllabus design and teaching process in a bid to further improve the efficiency of its study methods, said company CEO and founder and Li Yong.

Online education was one of the hottest topics in the Chinese tech industry during 2014, and this trend looks set to continue in 2015.

Image credit: Yuantiku

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Alipay’s Yuebao Fund Rakes in US$3.86B Investment Income for 185M Users in 2014 https://technode.com/2015/03/27/yuebao-2014/ https://technode.com/2015/03/27/yuebao-2014/#respond Fri, 27 Mar 2015 00:17:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28463 Alibaba’s payment affiliate Alipay announced today its mutual fund Yuebao has generated RMB24 billion (US$3.86 billion) in investment returns for more than 185 million users in 2014. The fund’s assets under management (AUM) hit RMB578 billion, more than triple the RMB185.3 billion assets achieved in 2013. Going by these figures, Yuebao’s users hold an average […]]]>

Alibaba’s payment affiliate Alipay announced today its mutual fund Yuebao has generated RMB24 billion (US$3.86 billion) in investment returns for more than 185 million users in 2014. The fund’s assets under management (AUM) hit RMB578 billion, more than triple the RMB185.3 billion assets achieved in 2013.

Going by these figures, Yuebao’s users hold an average RMB3,133 worth of assets per capita as of the end of last year. The fund has generated RMB25.79 billion investment returns since its establishment in 2013, or an average yield of RMB139 for each user.

Launched in 2013 as an online financial service by Alipay, Yuebao has become an instant financial service powerhouse on the strength of Zenglibao, which is run by Tianhong Asset Management and sold exclusively through Yuebao. It has become the China’s largest, and the world’s fourth largest, money market fund as measured by AUM.

After an initial boom, Yuebao is facing stiff competition from similar services, like WeChat’s Licaitong, and other online financial services.

Despite the promising benchmarks revealed by the company, it is apparent that Yuebao has passed its initial boom. User interest in the mutual fund service has ebbed as its average 7-day annualized yield dropped to around 4%. Similarly, the annualized yield of other popular funds also fell to the same level during the second half of last year. The service reported a first decline in Q3 last year with net value decreasing 6.8% to RMB534.89 billion from RMB574.16 billion in Q2 2014.

To gain traction for more users, Yuebao has tried to diversify its services, allowing users to place deposits on smartphones, cars, trips or even houses, and yet continue to earn interest while waiting for sales to be completed. 

In addition, Yuebao is planning to expand to smaller towns and cities beyond its foothold in first and second-tier cities.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Online Video Service Baofeng Heading Towards VR Business after Long-expected in IPO https://technode.com/2015/03/27/baofeng-ipo/ https://technode.com/2015/03/27/baofeng-ipo/#respond Fri, 27 Mar 2015 00:15:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28439 Chinese video player and online video provider Baofeng was listed on Shenzhen Growth Enterprise Market on March 24th, raising RMB510 million (US$82 million). Baofeng closed up 44% on its debut, increasing the company’s market cap to RMB1.23 billion. Company founder Zhou Shengjun started Baofeng as a desktop video player in 2003, and soon the service became […]]]>

Chinese video player and online video provider Baofeng was listed on Shenzhen Growth Enterprise Market on March 24th, raising RMB510 million (US$82 million). Baofeng closed up 44% on its debut, increasing the company’s market cap to RMB1.23 billion.

Company founder Zhou Shengjun started Baofeng as a desktop video player in 2003, and soon the service became popular with Chinese users in the PC age.

Baofeng made several shifts in strategy and technology focus over the following years to keep up with the rapidly-evolving market. In 2008, it became a tool for streaming content from providers such as Youku, when video streaming becoming ubiquitous.

With the smart device craze, the company explored the virtual reality sector with the launch of a budget VR handset last year. In combination with its video services, the VR business will be Baofeng’s key direction in the future, said company CEO Feng Xin at the IPO listing ceremony this week.

The 12-year-old company has more than 50 million daily active users and over 200 million active users per month, Feng noted.

Unlike other online video services, Baofeng has been recording profits, mainly from advertising, premium subscriptions and gaming. According to its IPO prospectus, the firm generated revenues of RMB386 million in 2014, up 18.92% from 2013 (RMB325 million). Net profit climbed 8.61% year-on-year to RMB41.85 million in 2014. Its clients include big names like Taobao, JD, Baidu, Yum!, amongst others.

Although the road to IPO is rarely smooth for any company, it’s fair to say that Baofeng’s journey has been one of the bumpier ones. The Beijing-headquartered firm has filed for IPO twice, once on the U.S. stock market in 2011 and the other one on Shenzhen GEB in 2012, before achieving the milestone this week.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Xiaomi Unveils Super-cheap 40-inch Smart TV for just $322 https://technode.com/2015/03/24/xiaomi-unveils-40-inch-smarttv/ https://technode.com/2015/03/24/xiaomi-unveils-40-inch-smarttv/#respond Tue, 24 Mar 2015 08:38:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28381 Xiaomi took the wraps off a 40-inch model of its smart TV Mi TV 2 today. The Chinese smart device brand has earned a name for selling high-spec gadgets at low price tags, and its Mi TV range is no exception. The new smart TV is priced at only RMB1,999 (US$322), and will be on sale from March 31. […]]]>
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Xiaomi took the wraps off a 40-inch model of its smart TV Mi TV 2 today. The Chinese smart device brand has earned a name for selling high-spec gadgets at low price tags, and its Mi TV range is no exception. The new smart TV is priced at only RMB1,999 (US$322), and will be on sale from March 31.

As for the specs: Mi TV 2 boasts a 40-inch Sharp SDP X-Gen display with a 1920*1080 screen resolution. Running on MI UI, the product is powered by a quad-core MStar 6A908 Cortex-A9 CPU paired with a Mali0450 MP4 GPU, and 1.5GB of RAM with 8GB flash memory.

In addition, Mi TV 2 features a wide range of video content via cooperation with partners including licensed content provider GITV, video sites Youku Tudou, iQiyi, Xunlei, Huace Film & TV and PPS. Some 240,000 hours of copyrighted video content has been integrated to the platform, according to the company.

To boost sales of its smart TV devices, Xiaomi invested US$$1 billion in digital content last year. The majority of this funding has been poured into stakes in China’s leading streaming video platforms Youku Tudou and iQiyi.

The product also has an integrated entertainment center with embedded video games paired with Xiaomi gamepad, online educations contents, music, and so on.

Xiaomismarttv-1

The availability of ever-bigger and cheaper TVs has put 40-inch TV models in danger of being regarded as small screens, though 40-inch screens haven’t lost their attraction, especially for those who want a second TV in their bedroom.

Xiaomi launched a 49-inch Mi TV 2 model last May in China for the equivalent of US$640. The addition of a smaller-sized smart TV completes the Mi TV lineup.

Before the smart TV’s official launch, it was widely speculated that Xiaomi will release two models, one 55-inch 4K capable and another smaller-sized version with full HD. Although the actual products may fall short of these expectations, they are still a good for users considering the competitive price.

The development of smart TV technologies has triggered swift development of this sector. According to a report by LeTV, China’s annual sales of smart TVs exceeded 30 million sets in 2014, with a market penetration rate of nearly 70% expected to reach 85% during 2015.

LeTV, Xiaomi’s arch-rival in the smart TV sector, is planning to launch a new product on April 2nd to compete head-on with Xiaomi.

Image credit: Xiaomi

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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JD.com Injects Strategic Investment in Chinese Micro-credit Site Fenqile https://technode.com/2015/03/23/jd-invests-fenqile/ https://technode.com/2015/03/23/jd-invests-fenqile/#respond Mon, 23 Mar 2015 11:32:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28349 Chinese student micro-credit site Fenqile recently announced an undisclosed amount of investment from e-commerce giant JD.com. The startup has previously received angel investment from China Renaissance K2 Ventures and an A round from Matrix Partners China in early 2014. The new funding follows a massive US$100 million Series B led by DST, followed by Bertlesmann Asia Investments […]]]>
JD-Fenqile

Chinese student micro-credit site Fenqile recently announced an undisclosed amount of investment from e-commerce giant JD.com. The startup has previously received angel investment from China Renaissance K2 Ventures and an A round from Matrix Partners China in early 2014. The new funding follows a massive US$100 million Series B led by DST, followed by Bertlesmann Asia Investments and existing investors.

Founded in 2013, Fenqile allows buyers (mostly college students and young white collar workers) to borrow small sums of money to buy consumer electronics in monthly instalments. Customers can choose items from e-commerce sites like JD and Tmall, and then pay for them via Fenqile by selecting a down payment and the number of months they will pay off the remainder. Interest rates vary accordingly.

It is a logical move for JD to invest in Fenqile despite the fact that the e-commerce giant has already developed its own consumer credit services, both for general users and college students. JD has long teamed up with Fenqile to sell their products, with the latter now one of JD’s largest distribution partners.

Fenqile provides service to college students from over 3,000 universities in around 260 cities nationwide, and has more than 6,000 offline marketing staff to run buyer credit assessments by checking student IDs and basic information. These data help JD to better target user demand.

Most Chinese instalment plan e-commerce sites similar to Fenqile are highly reliant on funding from P2P lending sites due to the lack of their own capital. The high fundraising and operation costs are then taken on by borrowers.

In order to lower their rates of interest, micro-credit sites are trying to cut capital costs by diversifying their funding sources. Fenqile has rolled out a P2P lending site Juzilicai, while its arch rival Qufenqi has also developed a similar service, Jindanlicai. On the other hand, cooperation with JD can also lower operating costs by beefing up traffic. 

Driven by the growing market, China’s student micro-credit sites experienced a whirlwind year in 2014, with multiple players in the battlefield receiving financing support.

Image credit: Fenqile

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Internet Users: Beware Mobile Payment Frauds https://technode.com/2015/03/20/mobile-payment-frauds/ https://technode.com/2015/03/20/mobile-payment-frauds/#respond Fri, 20 Mar 2015 09:42:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28314 As of 2014, China is home to 649 million internet users with millions being added every month. Driven by high smartphone penetration and improving network coverage, more Chinese are using mobile payment services. The country’ annual m-payment turnover soared 134.30% year-on-year to reach US$3.61 trillion in 2014. However, the booming growth of this fledgling industry also […]]]>

As of 2014, China is home to 649 million internet users with millions being added every month. Driven by high smartphone penetration and improving network coverage, more Chinese are using mobile payment services. The country’ annual m-payment turnover soared 134.30% year-on-year to reach US$3.61 trillion in 2014. However, the booming growth of this fledgling industry also brings security concerns. Here are some tricks often used by mobile payment hackers in China.

Fraudulent WiFi

Nowadays, Chinese internet users tend to make payments and bank transfers on-the-go, via public WiFi networks because it is just there and free. However, this habit could make you easy prey for hackers who set up fraudulent WiFi in shopping malls or entertainment centers.

Once WiFi squatters connect their mobile device to this network, their personal information is in danger of being stolen. If they conduct any kind of purchase or transfer in the meantime, hackers can record their IP address and information at the back-end, and then steal their accounts and passwords.

QR Codes with Virus Embedded

Although QR codes never quite took off in the West, they have become immensely popular in China as customers scan codes to find friends, make payments, exchange information, redeem coupons, follow services on WeChat, and so on. Hackers can embed a virus to QR codes so that anyone scanning them will automatically download a virus to their smartphones. Personal information from phone numbers to bank details and passwords can be stolen in seconds.

Phishing Websites

In this case, hackers send out short messages in fraudulent bank service numbers to lure users to log in to a fake website. Once customers input bank accounts and passwords on the site, hackers will steal the information and be able to access the money in their bank accounts.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Mobile Keyboard App Ginger to Explore Chinese Market with Localized Features https://technode.com/2015/03/20/ginger-software-china/ https://technode.com/2015/03/20/ginger-software-china/#respond Fri, 20 Mar 2015 09:24:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28192 Ginger VP Guy Melamed (L) & Ginger CEO Maoz Shacht (R) The increasing use of mobile devices for written communication has made mobile typing an important aspect of our daily life. However, typing on a touch keyboard can be painfully slow and filled with typos because of the difficulty of the small screen. An already tough job […]]]>
Ginger-2

Ginger VP Guy Melamed (L) & Ginger CEO Maoz Shacht (R)

The increasing use of mobile devices for written communication has made mobile typing an important aspect of our daily life. However, typing on a touch keyboard can be painfully slow and filled with typos because of the difficulty of the small screen. An already tough job is even harder for those using a second language, such as English, the de facto global language.

However, the Tel Aviv-headquartered startup Ginger Software is addressing both of these problems with its mobile proofreading keyboard app. Ginger specializes in developing mobile and writing enhancement apps that enable users to write better English and to type faster in over 60 languages.

Powered by its patented NLA (natural language analysis) engine and big data, Ginger detects spelling and grammar mistakes based on the word context and gives alternative expressions to enrich your language.

Besides its typing tools, Ginger has added a series of features that go beyond keyboard functionality. Aiming to increase user productivity while driving engagement on other apps, Ginger recently added “Smart Bar” for its Android Keyboard, allowing users to access their favorite apps directly from the keyboard while staying focused on their interaction with others.

“We found that our users routinely rotate between apps and Ginger Keyboard while communicating with friends, when opening other tasks, scheduling events or searching for something. Smart Bar is not only a simple launcher, it features all kinds of productivity functions like a calendar, to-do search, note-taking, search and so forth, which users can customize by removing or adding any app they like”, company CEO Maoz Shacht told TechNode.

Ginger-smartbar

Ginger has added emoji arts and contextual strikers to enrich user interactions. New features like one-to-one video, casual games and news are expected to launch very soon so that users can make the best use of their time while waiting for responses from friends, Shacht said.

However, these new features are now only available for Android users. Shacht disclosed that they shifted focus to mobile apps a year ago, and the iOS, desktop and web browser versions are being worked on so as to unify the products and provide cross-device services for users.

Although the app aims to help ESL learners to write better English, many of its users are native speakers from the U.S. and U.K.; some 50% of their new users are from U.S. The company’s VP Guy Melamed explained that users on both ends of the language proficiency scale can enjoy Ginger. On the one hand, Ginger helps ESL users improve their English and avoid mistakes. On the other hand, it allows native speakers to type more easily, and reduces the number of their mistakes, too. Other users are mainly from Latin America, Mexico, Brazil, Russia, and Europe.

China and Asia are the logical destinations for Ginger given the huge market potential. Shacht acknowledged that Ginger’s current distribution in China is very narrow. “After making a few mistakes as we entered this new market, we’ve been exploring China in more structured way over the past four/five months and we’ve started seeing the results of that,” he said.

Backed by Li Kashing’s Horizons Ventures, Ginger has partnered with one of biggest telecom carriers in Hong Kong to distribute its keyboard. Its Android keyboard is now available on Xiaomi Store and the company is in talks with other partners to beef up the lineup.

The company has initiated a series of moves to localize the service. “We’ve invested a lot of time to develop Chinese input methods, adding two autocorrect and handwriting input methods, to find a Chinese partner to adapt Ginger to the Chinese market, and to adjust the product to the Chinese way of thinking,” said Melamed. The Ginger Keyboard app on Xiaomi Store, which currently offers English descriptions, will have Chinese descriptions in the coming months.

The improvement of input methods has left little innovation space for keyboard apps. But Shacht believes that keyboards will stay with us while adding more contextual features to improve the convenience and fun of typing. The services to lead the market will be those with contextual awareness for users’ situations or behaviors.

You may have heard of Ginger following Intel’s acquisition of its personal assistant platform last year. It remains an independent company focusing on its product line of intelligent grammar and spell checking software.

Coming from the Startup Nation, Ginger’s growth has been greatly influenced by the Israeli entrepreneurial culture. Shacht says this culture originates from having in the military. From that experience, they learned how to address the same question from fresh angles, to be relentless in solving tough problems, and the importance of collaboration and sharing knowledge.

Israeli startups are attracting massive capital injections from overseas VCs, with the investment total for 2014 double that of 2013, according to Shacht. He noted that foreign VCs help Israeli startups to connect with the right partners and cooperate other portfolio partners, giving lots of additional value to the businesses other than funding.

Image credit: Ginger Software

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Russia’s Largest Search Engine Yandex To Open Shanghai Office https://technode.com/2015/03/18/yandex-open-shanghai-office/ https://technode.com/2015/03/18/yandex-open-shanghai-office/#comments Wed, 18 Mar 2015 13:16:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28267 Russia’s largest search engine Yandex (NASDAQ:YNDX) is planning to open an office in Shanghai to better tap the Chinese market, a company executive told TechNode. Yandex is not going to compete head-on with local incumbent Baidu, but aims to find more cooperation opportunities with Chinese companies and help them to access the Russian market through Yandex […]]]>

Russia’s largest search engine Yandex (NASDAQ:YNDX) is planning to open an office in Shanghai to better tap the Chinese market, a company executive told TechNode.

Yandex is not going to compete head-on with local incumbent Baidu, but aims to find more cooperation opportunities with Chinese companies and help them to access the Russian market through Yandex and various in-house advertising platforms, the source added.

Yandex-pic

Yandex, Baidu and Naver Dominate Russian, Chinese and South Korean Search Market

As one of the largest European internet companies, the Netherlands-headquartered site operates Russia’s most popular search engine yandex.ru which takes 59.9% of Russia market share, according to data from Liveinternet.ru.

In addition to search, the company has a number of popular internet-related services and products that covers many aspects of daily life. Among them, Yandex.Maps is a mapping service, and others include Yandex.Market, an online retail comparison shopping service, taxi-hailing service Yandex.Taxi, Yandex.Search for Mobile, Yandex.Mail, and the online payment service Yandex.Money.

The site now has more than 6,000 employees and 16 offices around the world, boasting wide market coverage in former Soviet countries and Europe. Yandex had also begun attempts to penetrate the Middle East market from last year.

The company went public on the NASDAQ in May 2011, raising US$1.3 billion in the largest technology IPO worldwide that year.

The strengthening of Russian-Chinese cooperation has opened up opportunities for bilateral agreements. The turnover of export and import between China and Russia has been rapidly growing in recent years, reaching US$89.2 billion in 2013. The interest of Chinese business in Russian online customers is also growing from year to year. Russian social networking site VKontakte has also set eyes on the Chinese market and opened a marketing branch in Beijing last year.

Image credit: Yandex, Baidu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Indonesia’s Price Comparison Site Pricebook Receives Fresh Funding, Moving Toward a Marketing Platform https://technode.com/2015/03/18/pricebook-receives-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/03/18/pricebook-receives-fresh-funding/#respond Wed, 18 Mar 2015 05:17:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28230 Indonesia’s leading gadget price comparison portal Pricebook has announced an undisclosed amount of funding from Japanese venture capital Global Brain Corporation, and two other Singaporean venture capitalist IMJ Investment Partners and Hiro Mashita, founder & director of m&s Partners. The company’s US$150,000 seed investment was secured from Incubate Fund in 2013. Pricebook aggregates the product details, reviews […]]]>
Pricebook-team

Indonesia’s leading gadget price comparison portal Pricebook has announced an undisclosed amount of funding from Japanese venture capital Global Brain Corporation, and two other Singaporean venture capitalist IMJ Investment Partners and Hiro Mashita, founder & director of m&s Partners. The company’s US$150,000 seed investment was secured from Incubate Fund in 2013.

Pricebook aggregates the product details, reviews and prices of consumer electronics into its shopping search engine, with the aim of providing an enjoyable shopping experience for both customers and sellers. The site offers price comparison, and enables consumers and businesses to respond to each side’s requests and traditional purchasing/selling behaviors. Consumers can use the active reviews and forum threads to find answers to their questions, while Pricebook provides shop exposure and market data to support sellers’ online marketing.

Pricebook-pic1

Aiming to bring their experience to huge, fast-growing markets, Pricebook expanded to Indonesia and Southeast Asia in December 2013, shortly after being founded in Japan in September that year. The company has established local offices and been developing its services to suit the various markets since then.

The company disclosed that it now caters to hundreds of thousands of monthly visitors and more than ten thousand gadget retailers (including several hundred active offline shops).

With this latest investment, Pricebook will further accelerate its moves to evolve into a marketing platform as well as expanding its team and accelerating partner acquisition.

Founded by Tomonori Tsuji, an online marketing and media development expert, the company now has a team of 12 members, mainly focusing on Indonesian merchandise such as mobile phones, computers, and other electronics.

Image credit: Pricebook

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Used Car Trading Platform Youxin Lands US$170M Round Led by Baidu https://technode.com/2015/03/18/youxin-lands-us170m-round/ https://technode.com/2015/03/18/youxin-lands-us170m-round/#comments Wed, 18 Mar 2015 02:12:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28217 Chinese used car trading platform Youxin has reportedly secured US$170 million of Series C funding from Baidu, KKR and Coatue, just six months after receiving a whopping US$260 million B round led by Warburg Pincus and Tiger Fund. A US$30 million Series A funding was raised from Legend Capital, DCM, Bertelsmann Asia Investments and Tencent in 2013. Founded […]]]>
Youxin-1

Chinese used car trading platform Youxin has reportedly secured US$170 million of Series C funding from Baidu, KKR and Coatue, just six months after receiving a whopping US$260 million B round led by Warburg Pincus and Tiger Fund. A US$30 million Series A funding was raised from Legend Capital, DCM, Bertelsmann Asia Investments and Tencent in 2013.

Founded in 2011 by Dai Kun, former VP of car trading platform Yiche, Youxin’s core business brand Youxinpai is a B2B second-hand car auction service platform integrating auctions, vehicle detection, secure payment, logistics and transport for automobile manufacturers, second-hand car agencies and large companies.

The new funding will be used to develop Youxin’s B2C used car trading platform Youxin Second-hand Car which launches this week. Backed by a team of over 1000 staff, the platform will provide services in over 50 cities, according to the company.

China’s huge used car market is attracting flocks of Chinese internet companies to tap the booming market. Until recently, B2B platforms comprised the majority of car trading services due to the prolonged and complicated nature of transactions. But with a maturing market, more players have started to shift focus to B2C sector. Yixipai’s rival Cheyipai also launched a B2C service recently.

Following the investment, Youxin’s data will be integrated into Baidu’s Aladdin open data sharing platform for the development of new products. The tie-up will effectively connect the account and traffic resources of both parties.  The cooperation also covers financial aspects such as car loans for users, and adding support for Baidu’s payment service Baifubao.

This is not the first time Baidu had invested in the transportation industry. The Chinese search giant acquired a stake in ride-share app Uber last year. Moreover, Baidu is reportedly pushing the rumored merger between Uber and Chinese car rental service provider Yongche.

[Update] Yongche released an official statement to deny the rumor on March 20, claiming that the company is open to cooperation with partners but will stay as an independent company.

On the other hand, Uber has teamed up Chinese luxury auto dealer Yongda Automobiles to provide discounts and financing for Uber drivers’ cars.

Image credit: Youxin

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China’s Tech Giants Taking On the Domestic Entertainment Industry https://technode.com/2015/03/17/chinas-internet-companies-entertainment-industry/ https://technode.com/2015/03/17/chinas-internet-companies-entertainment-industry/#respond Tue, 17 Mar 2015 14:24:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28126 Until quite recently, online video streaming sites purchasing copyrighted content from film and television producers was the only connection between internet companies and the entertainment industry. But now this case is changing. A flock of Chinese internet companies are making major pushes into the entertainment industry to take a piece of China’s booming online consumption […]]]>

Until quite recently, online video streaming sites purchasing copyrighted content from film and television producers was the only connection between internet companies and the entertainment industry. But now this case is changing. A flock of Chinese internet companies are making major pushes into the entertainment industry to take a piece of China’s booming online consumption market. By harnessing big data and their sizable traffic, domestic internet companies are becoming major players in high quality film and TV production.

China’s movie market, already the world’s second largest market after that in the U.S., is maintaining its robust growth. Box-office revenues are expected to surge 88% from US$3.13 billion in 2013 to US$5. 9 billion in 2018, according to report by PwC. Moreover, China’s more than 600 million internet users are becoming increasingly voracious online video consumers, especially via smartphone. Here are how Chinese tech companies are looking to exploit this growing market.

Alibaba

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group launched an investment spree in 2014, injecting huge amounts of capital in film and TV program production companies, including ChinaVision Media Group (renamed Alibaba Pictures Group), Huayi Brothers, state-backed digital content provider Wasu Digital TV Media, Beijing Enlight Media, and more. Partnerships with overseas production studios like Lions Gate Entertainment were established to beef up its entertainment menu.

Although the films Alibaba Pictures Group has invested in like So Young (by actress-turned director Zhao Wei, who is also a major shareholder of the company) and Tiny Times (by popular writer Guo Jingming) have recorded remarkable box-office revenues, the company has yet to turn a profit, with a net loss of HK$443.54 million for the first half of last year.

In order to have a streaming platform for its content, Alibaba spent US$1.22 billion to buy an 18.5% stake in video service Youku Tudou. In addition to film and TV production, the company has also invested in local media and digital music sectors, so as to find new avenues for growth beyond e-commerce.

Alibaba also rolled out the investment-themed project Yelebao in March last year, allowing users to invest small sums in a range of development-phase games, movies, and TV shows, in exchange for certain perks, ranging from fixed rates of return to more interaction opportunities with film production teams.

Tencent

Like its competitors, Tencent’s entertainment efforts have mainly focused on bringing its most popular online games, cartoons and novels to the theater. The company rolled out “Movie Plus” last year in a bid to commercialize its intellectual property. Tencent plans to work on the same-name film versions of popular online games, including QQ Race Car, Roco Kingdom, and so on. The company will also adapt novels of Mo Yan, China’s first Nobel Literature Prize winner.

Baidu & iQiyi

Baidu is also moving to the big screen. Already working on a series of TV shows, the company’s online video streaming portal iQiyi launched its film production studio iQiyi Pictures last year. The studio plans to co-produce seven domestic films and one Hollywood movie within 2015.

LeTV

As one of the first internet companies to enter the entertainment industry, LeTV set up its in-house movie production company way back in 2008. The company was branded as LeTV Films in 2011. In 2014, the studio has produced or published 15 films, snapping up over RMB3 billion in box-office revenues, according to the company.

LineKong

Starting as a mobile game developer, LineKong Entertainment was listed on HKEx Growth Enterprise Market at the end of last year, and acquired stakes in chain theater operator Stellar MegaMedia and online ticket sale marketplace 228.com this month.

In addition to local rivals, foreign internet companies like Netflix are setting eyes on China’s burgeoning entertainment market.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Rocket Internet’s Foodpanda Raises US$110 M Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2015/03/12/foodpanda-raises-us110-m-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/03/12/foodpanda-raises-us110-m-fresh-funding/#comments Thu, 12 Mar 2015 05:40:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28091 Foodpanda, the meal delivery service, today announced that it has secured another US$110 million funding round from Rocket Internet AG, as well as from existing and new investors. The company has now raised more than US$200 million since its launch in 2012. After acquiring key competitors this year in Asia, Mexico, Russia, Brazil, Eastern Europe, Middle East and India, […]]]>

Foodpanda, the meal delivery service, today announced that it has secured another US$110 million funding round from Rocket Internet AG, as well as from existing and new investors. The company has now raised more than US$200 million since its launch in 2012.

After acquiring key competitors this year in Asia, Mexico, Russia, Brazil, Eastern Europe, Middle East and India, the company will now further invest in products and technology, and continue focusing on customer service and loyalty.

As a service that brings dishes from local restaurants to users’ doorsteps, the Rocket Internet-backed startup enables customers to order food via mobile app or online.

For restaurants, the online marketplace helps increase delivery sales through online and mobile platforms and provides them with evolving technology and analytics.  The company currently partners with over 45,000 restaurants.

Now active in 40 countries, Foodpanda is expanding rapidly, especially in southeast Asia. In order to attract a bigger user base, the company has integrated its service with WeChat last year.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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OnePlus Doubles Overseas Markets to 35, Adding 16 from Europe https://technode.com/2015/03/12/oneplus-adds-16-european-countries/ https://technode.com/2015/03/12/oneplus-adds-16-european-countries/#respond Wed, 11 Mar 2015 16:00:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28068 Chinese upstart smartphone manufacturer OnePlus has officially started selling its flagship smartphone One, along with the complete range of accessories, in 16 further European countries, bringing the total number of its overseas markets to 35. The new European markets are Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Romania, […]]]>

Chinese upstart smartphone manufacturer OnePlus has officially started selling its flagship smartphone One, along with the complete range of accessories, in 16 further European countries, bringing the total number of its overseas markets to 35.

The new European markets are Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia, which means that OnePlus One will be accessible to everyone across the entire European Union.

OnePlus-16

The smartphone retails at EUR269 (US$287)/CZK8089/HUF94199/PLN1299 for the Silk White 16GB version or EUR299/CZK8989/HUF104999 /PLN1449 for the Sandstone Black 64GB model.

Aiming to build a global brand from its inception, OnePlus was initially sold in 17 countries across North America, Western Europe, and East Asia, later adding Indonesia and India.

With just a single handset released so far, the company has managed to establish a global presence with premium specs and affordable prices, expanding rapidly from around 30 employees to almost 700 in just over a year. The company’s CEO Pete Lau shared the company’s beginning and global expansion  at TechCrunch Beijing last year.

The firm’s global plan has encountered some setbacks in India. At the end of last year, the local government barred the company from selling One in India due to disputes centering around Cyanogen’s version of Android, licensed exclusively to rival phone maker Micromax in India. Although the authorities has withdrawn the previous order, the incident has motivated OnePlus to speed up the development of its homegrown OxygenOS to gain control of the software on its devices.

OnePlus is planning to launch a new product category in April and the release of OnePlus Two is scheduled for Q3 2015.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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[MWC2015] Cheetah Mobile CEO Fu Sheng: Why Samsung Preinstalls Clean Master on Galaxy S6 https://technode.com/2015/03/10/mwc2015-cheetah-mobile/ https://technode.com/2015/03/10/mwc2015-cheetah-mobile/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2015 09:46:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28028 Samsung showcased its next-generation flagship smartphones Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge at MWC recently. The Korean phone manufacturer has preinstalled Clean Master, a mobile utility app developed by Chinese company Cheetah Mobile, on the two products globally. At the event, TechNode got a chance to chat with Fu Sheng, Cheetah Mobile’s CEO, on their cooperation with Samsung. It […]]]>

Samsung showcased its next-generation flagship smartphones Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge at MWC recently. The Korean phone manufacturer has preinstalled Clean Master, a mobile utility app developed by Chinese company Cheetah Mobile, on the two products globally. At the event, TechNode got a chance to chat with Fu Sheng, Cheetah Mobile’s CEO, on their cooperation with Samsung.

It was the first time Cheetah Mobile had set up an independent booth at MWC, although they had previously demoed their products at the tech gathering with other companies from Beijing’s Zhongguancun tech hub. “More than ten Cheetah Mobile staff from our Beijing and Taipei offices went to MWC Barcelona this year”, Fu said.

It was at MWC 2014 when Samsung and Cheetah Mobile first began their cooperation. Cheetah has since then amassed a sizable user base and gone public on the U.S. Stock Exchange. “Samsung was also in talks with several other companies, but they finally chose us,” said Fu.

Fu revealed that the two companies have discussed their cooperation for nearly a year, during which time they have gone over on every feature and security details of the product. Samsung’s management had heated debates on whether they should pre-load a third-party app or use a similar homegrown app. But after testing the two products, they found Clean Master was the better option.

“We know that Samsung were going to preinstall Clean Master on their smartphones, but it was quite a surprise for us to that they’ve loaded it on their flagship products globally”, Fu said. “Samsung’s endorsement will help Cheetah Mobile further its domestic and global expansion”, he added.

“Our primary goal this year is to commercialize Clean Master. We have already seen achievements in this aspect during Q4 last year. You can find more details in our fiscal report released later this year”, Fu noted. “Clean Master will continue to be our strategic focus, but we’re also developing several new products.”

cheetah-mobile-booth-mwc-2015

Source: Gang Lu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Apple Watch To Hit China with Support for Local Apps WeChat, Alipay and Weibo https://technode.com/2015/03/10/apple-watch-hit-china-wechat/ https://technode.com/2015/03/10/apple-watch-hit-china-wechat/#comments Tue, 10 Mar 2015 05:02:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=28036 Apple has unveiled the final details of its first-ever smart wearable gadget Apple Watch this Monday in San Francisco. The product will be open for pre-orders on April 10th and start shipping on April 24th. After the disappointment of repeatedly missing out on the first wave of various iPhone releases, China will be one of […]]]>
Apple-Watch-a

Apple has unveiled the final details of its first-ever smart wearable gadget Apple Watch this Monday in San Francisco. The product will be open for pre-orders on April 10th and start shipping on April 24th.

After the disappointment of repeatedly missing out on the first wave of various iPhone releases, China will be one of nine regions to get the Apple Watch from its global debut in April. China is becoming an increasingly critical pillar of Apple’s business. A report by UBS showed that the country represented up to 35% of iPhone shipments in the last quarter of 2014, overtaking the U.S. (29%) as the largest market for Apple.

In order to better localize its services for Chinese buyers, the smartwatch has added support for several popular Chinese apps, including WeChat, Alipay and Weibo. Kevin Lynch, Apple’s vice president of technology, demonstrated the watch’s features, including the use of these domestic third-party apps, at their press conference.

Apple Watch owners will be able to receive and send WeChat messages, and to browse the Moments of their WeChat friends, via their watches.

Apple-Watch-Wechat

WeChat interface on Apple Watch

Alipay disclosed that they have finalized the development of an Apple Watch version, sporting simplified features. Only three functions that best suit small-screen operations are included: the mutual fund service Yuebao, QR code for mobile payment, and currency exchange.

Apple-watch-price

Pricing is definitely among the biggest concerns for Chinese buyers. The price comparison chart for Mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan and the U.S shows China is still paying a premium.  Despite the Apple Watch being on the Chinese market from the beginning, the profits offered by the price gap may well motivate scalpers to smuggle watches across the border into the Chinese mainland.

Image credit: Tech Tencent

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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[MWC2015] Meizu Executive on the Upstart Smartphone Maker’s Global Plan https://technode.com/2015/03/06/mwc2015-meizu-executive-talks-global-plan-upstart-smartphone-maker/ https://technode.com/2015/03/06/mwc2015-meizu-executive-talks-global-plan-upstart-smartphone-maker/#respond Fri, 06 Mar 2015 11:11:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27963 It was pretty much a surprise for TechNode to discover that most of the smartphones which Meizu demoed at this year’s MWC are powered by the Ubuntu OS rather than the company’s homegrown OS FLyme, including its flagship MX4, powered by Flyme in its domestic iterations. Spanish smartphone manufacturer BQ was the first phone maker […]]]>

It was pretty much a surprise for TechNode to discover that most of the smartphones which Meizu demoed at this year’s MWC are powered by the Ubuntu OS rather than the company’s homegrown OS FLyme, including its flagship MX4, powered by Flyme in its domestic iterations.

Spanish smartphone manufacturer BQ was the first phone maker to cooperate with Ubuntu. As a mid- and low-end brand, BQ’s designs and features are not impressive enough to tempt current users to adapt to the system. The addition of Meizu into the ecosystem may fuel users’ expectations for the OS.

This year’s MWC was the first time for the two companies to showcase Meizu Phones preloaded with Ubuntu. TechNode got a chance to talk with Angela, the company’s director of international communications, about their global expansion plan.

Meizu’s homegrown Flyme system has yet to gain widespread recognition amongst overseas users. Moreover, some of the features and content on the system are designed for Chinese buyers, making it less competitive overseas. Ubuntu, a well-known open source system, has many loyal fans around the world, especially in Europe. Meizu entered a partnership with Ubuntu with the goal of exploring the European market. Angela told us that the Ubuntu-enabled MX4 debuted at the show is still under testing, but is near the final version. The product will be officially released this April, probably at Ubuntu’s headquarters in London.

TechNode checked out Ubuntu’s system at the event and was clueless at first. It is completely different, both in terms of user interface and user experience, to the dominant iOS and Android systems. “It is an outstanding system, but we face major obstacles in acquiring new users when the interface is so different from mainstream systems, said Angela.

Meizu hasn’t revleaed whether they will support the installation of both Ubuntu and Flyme system on the same handset. But the company prefer to keep them exclusive.

It is no secret that Meizu is expanding into India. “Although there is no fixed timetable, our cooperation with Indian partners, including telecom operators, has reached a stage of substantial operations. The official launch in India is scheduled for April this year,” Angela said.

NOBLUE Note will be their flagship product for India, because its low-cost positioning fits local market demands, noted Angela, adding that the smartphone’s Indian price tag will probably be lower than in China. The Indian version will be pre-installed with Flyme. Angala disclosed Meizu expects to ship at least 700,000 NOBLUE Notes in India this year.

Domestically, Meizu is going to release more new products this year.

A string of Chinese smartphone makers like Xiaomi, OnePlus, ZTE and Huawei consider India a key market. Meizu also takes India as their first stop in overseas expansion, along with cooperation with Ubuntu in Europe. The battle of the Chinese smartphone brands is inxorably spreading overseas in the new year.

Meizu-MWC-1

Source: Gang Lu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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[MWC2015] TouchPal, The Chinese Keyboard App With 250M Users, Seeks Growth From Entertaining Features https://technode.com/2015/03/05/mwc2015-touchpal/ https://technode.com/2015/03/05/mwc2015-touchpal/#respond Thu, 05 Mar 2015 11:35:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27912 At Barcelona MWC, we seldom see booths from Chinese companies other than ZTE, Huawei and Lenovo. Aside from these tech giants, few Chinese companies demoed their products at this year’s tech gathering. Of those who did, Meizu, Meitu Phone and LeTV are upstart domestic hardware manufacturers. In the app category, keyboard app TouchPal caught our eye, […]]]>

At Barcelona MWC, we seldom see booths from Chinese companies other than ZTE, Huawei and Lenovo. Aside from these tech giants, few Chinese companies demoed their products at this year’s tech gathering. Of those who did, Meizu, Meitu Phone and LeTV are upstart domestic hardware manufacturers. In the app category, keyboard app TouchPal caught our eye, alongside Cheetah Mobile and App Annie. 

TouchPal has been focusing on the overseas market since its establishment, maintaining close cooperation with numerous telecom carriers and smartphone manufacturers. (HTC’s latest flagship product the M9 has  TouchPal pre-loaded as the default input method worldwide). Karl Zhang and Susan Li, two of TouchPal’s co-founders, have become frequent visitors to MWC.

The keyboard app has around 250 million users around the world, a figure is expected to hit 400 million this year, covering roughly 18% of overseas Android users (excluding China), Zhang explained. In addition to the U.S., growth is expected to come from the Southeast Asian market, he added.

Boasting excellent features like the Q9 keyboard, mistype correction, and cloud-based buzzword recommendation left little innovation space for mobile input solutions. New features, such as sliding input, have not well received by Chinese users. Meanwhile, the rapid improvement of voice recognition technologies along with the emergence of various smart wearables pose formidable challenges to manual input methods. So what’s the future direction of input companies?  

“TouchPal is moving towards entertaining and personalized features. We consider input solutions not just a tool, but also a bridge to connect people. Both domestic and overseas users have demands in this area”, said Zhang.

To explore these areas, TouchPal added a collection of more than 800 emoji characters last year to keep up with the young people’s communication methods, in the hope of bringing more fun to typing. “It is not an easy job. With a global user base, we have to customize emojis for different emotions according to the cultural background of users in each region”, he noted. “We are constructing a user community to understand and collect the latest youth expressions around the world.”

Zhang thinks the domestic keyboard market is mature, making it difficult for startups to compete head on with giant incumbents. TouchPal will continue its overseas focus, but this doesn’t mean they will give up on the Chinese market entirely. The company has launched a voice call app domestically, with more than 100 million registered users, among which over 10 million are daily active users.

Source: Gang Lu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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[MWC2015] ZTE Releases Latest Flagship Smartphones Star 2 & Blade S6 Styling Voice Control and Gesture Recognition https://technode.com/2015/03/04/zte-releases-latest-flagship-smartphonnes/ https://technode.com/2015/03/04/zte-releases-latest-flagship-smartphonnes/#respond Wed, 04 Mar 2015 10:58:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27921 What kind of innovations do you expect from smartphones? Although people have been doubting whether Apple could maintain its momentum of innovation as it did with the early iPhones, we still expect more. The iPhone 6 saw massive sales through the support of millions of Apple fans in love with the iOS system and Apple’s […]]]>

What kind of innovations do you expect from smartphones? Although people have been doubting whether Apple could maintain its momentum of innovation as it did with the early iPhones, we still expect more. The iPhone 6 saw massive sales through the support of millions of Apple fans in love with the iOS system and Apple’s flourishing app ecosystem. Samsung’s latest models, the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, enthralled us with new materials, curved displays and LoopPay, while LG’s Flex 2 upended the traditional definition of flat-screen smartphones.

Though we’ve been overwhelmed by the innovations of smartphone makers at MWC, TechNode would like offer reminders of areas that shouldn’t be neglected. They remain the areas where users hope for most improvements.

1. Voice: Voice recognition is nothing new. Siri and similar technologies have long been applied in smartphones, raising our anticipations for more efficient human-machine interaction. However, most of us were disappointed. Siri may be a very powerful tool, but we still have to press the screen or button to trigger it. Besides the demand for increased voice recognition accuracy, existing voice recognition technologies rely on cloud services. So, will voice control become useless without good network connections?

2. Gestures and motions: As today’s indispensable digital device, smartphones aren’t sufficiently customizable. When you raise your phone to take a picture, does it open the camera automatically? If the phone is on standby, does it light up and unlock automatically? We believe there is still ample room to innovate.

These are the areas in which users expect further improvement. Analyses show utilization rate of voice command features remains quite low despite it being well known by the public. This is because existing services have failed to provide simple and effective solutions, rather than the lack of relevant demand or users’ low acceptance levels.

ZTE regained our attention when it released a new logo last year. We found little stood out in most of ZTE’s previous smartphones with an exception of Nubia which was used by China’s First Lady Peng Liyuan, but I want to give the thumbs-up to its latest smartphones, as released at the MWC – Star 2 and Blade S6.

ZTE Star 2 has optimized system-level voice control. The biggest highlight is that the phone can hear the voice demands of users without the need to tap any buttons first. Moreover, voice control orders can be processed locally, free from reliance on the cloud. At the same time, acoustic fingerprint technology enables the device to listen to only you. As a latecomer in B2C field, ZTE has invested heavily in voice control R&D and marketing. The smart voice control alliance headed by ZTE includes major companies like Baidu, AutoNavi, Nuance, Audience, NXP and Sensory, to promote the research and application of speech recognition technologies.

ZTE Blade S6 features Smart Sense – an intuitive and practical set of gestures and motion controls. The smartphone lights automatically when you pick it up. The EyeVerify function can unlock the smartphone by scanning your retina.

In face of fierce competition amongst domestic brands on hardware specs and prices, overseas manufacturers are seeking breakthroughs in design and material. ZTE has chosen a user-oriented path to foster more practical innovations.

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Source: Gang Lu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China Halts Online Lottery Sales for Major Overhaul https://technode.com/2015/03/03/china-halts-online-lottery-sales-major-overhaul/ https://technode.com/2015/03/03/china-halts-online-lottery-sales-major-overhaul/#respond Tue, 03 Mar 2015 11:46:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27894 China’s central authorities issued an order at the end of February demanding all provincial and municipal governments report the status of their online lottery sales ahead of March 1st. The new regulation has thus lead to the suspension of lottery sales on nearly 40 websites across China, including major ones like Alibaba’s Taobao, Tencent, NetEase, […]]]>

China’s central authorities issued an order at the end of February demanding all provincial and municipal governments report the status of their online lottery sales ahead of March 1st. The new regulation has thus lead to the suspension of lottery sales on nearly 40 websites across China, including major ones like Alibaba’s Taobao, Tencent, NetEase, and Sina’s Aicai,.

500.com, one of the only two entities Beijing has officially authorized to participate in an online sports lottery pilot program, also halted online lottery sales services. The share price of 500.com plunged after the company announced this.

Buying lottery tickets online has become increasingly popular in China. The country’s lottery sales surged to a record-high of RMB382.3 billion (US$61 billion) in 2014, up 23.6% year-on-year, according to China Sports Lottery Administration Center. Research institute Analysys predicted  that the total online lottery market is expected to reach RMB88.5 billion in 2014, accounting for 22% of total lottery sales in China.

Despite its widespread popularity, China’s online lottery industry faces numerous problems which have raised the concerns of the regulators. In the eight years since 2007, China’s online lottery service has been suspended four times for rectification.

Sports Lottery Administration Center, the country’s official regulator of sports lottery market, sent out audit teams to review the practice of provincial sports lottery authorities from last November. Unlike the previous four suspensions, the audit covers both lottery companies and websites, said Li Jian, founder of lottery consulting agency Caitong Consulting, in an interview with China Business News. He added the whole industry will experience a more extensive overhaul this time.

image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Xiaomi Unveils Ultracheap Action Camera Costing Just $63 https://technode.com/2015/03/02/xiaomi-action-camera/ https://technode.com/2015/03/02/xiaomi-action-camera/#comments Mon, 02 Mar 2015 07:50:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27840 Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is breaking into the sports camera industry with a low-cost camera retailing at only RMB399 (US$63). The GoPro-style gadget is also offered in a RMB499 version which includes an accompanying selfie stick. Dubbed YiCamera (our translation), the new product is made by Ants, or Xiaoyi, a Dropcam-like video monitoring camera maker which is […]]]>
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Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is breaking into the sports camera industry with a low-cost camera retailing at only RMB399 (US$63). The GoPro-style gadget is also offered in a RMB499 version which includes an accompanying selfie stick.

Dubbed YiCamera (our translation), the new product is made by Ants, or Xiaoyi, a Dropcam-like video monitoring camera maker which is a major member of Xiaomi’s ambitious hardware plan.

The camera features an Ambarella A7LS processor and Sony 16MP Exmor R BSI CMOS photo sensor that works under diverse types of lighting. Users can shoot with various video resolutions (1080p/60fp, 720p/120fps, 240p/480fps) under different scenarios. The f/2.8 aperture lens capture 155-degree wide angle views.

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The new snapper supports various shooting mode, including 0.5-60 second time delay, 3-15 second time lapse photography, and up to 7 images per second of continuous shooting. Designed for adventure-buffs, the company also released a waterproof case for the gadget which supports waterproof depths of up to 40m.

Available in grass green and white versions, YiCamera supports WiFi and Bluetooth and has an app for video editing and sharing. It is on sale now on Xiaomi’s website, JD and Tmall.

YiCamera’s price is obviously the clincher when compared to its rivals. GoPro is expanding into China this year so as to reduce its reliance on the US market. GoPro 3+ Silver, on a par with YiCamera in its specifications, costs US$299.99. Xiaomi’s entry into the action camera arena will pose a formidable challenge to GoPro in China.

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The rising hardware craze has drawn a spate of Chinese companies to enter the action camera industry. Shenzhen-based drone maker Dji Innovations is planning to introduce hardware with advanced camera features and to build drones with embedded cameras, while GoPro is poised to launch consumer drones to supplement its action camera lineup.

Ezviz, an internet smart video surveillance brand backed by Chinese video monitoring solution provider Hikvision Digital, released an activity camera last year. VIDIT, a similar product developed by a Chinese startup team, is also entering this market.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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PBOC: China’s M-payment Reaches US$3.6T in 2014 https://technode.com/2015/02/17/pboc-chinas-m-payment-turnover-reaches-us3-6t-2014/ https://technode.com/2015/02/17/pboc-chinas-m-payment-turnover-reaches-us3-6t-2014/#respond Tue, 17 Feb 2015 01:14:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27664 With the rise of smartphone penetration and 4G networks, mobile payment in China has recorded exponential growth both in terms of transaction value and the sectors covered. The latest statistics from the People’s Bank of China shed some light on the booming industry in the last year. In 2014, the central bank processed over 4.52 […]]]>

With the rise of smartphone penetration and 4G networks, mobile payment in China has recorded exponential growth both in terms of transaction value and the sectors covered. The latest statistics from the People’s Bank of China shed some light on the booming industry in the last year.

In 2014, the central bank processed over 4.52 billion mobile payment transactions, up 170.25% from 1.67 billion in 2013. Transaction volume surged 134.30% year-over-year to RMB22.59 trillion (US$3.61 trillion), from RMB9.64 trillion in 2013.

After skyrocketing increases in the past few years, m-payment is entering a period of stable growth, with the growth rate for both the number of transactions and transaction volume declining from 212.86% and 317.56% in 2013.

The country’s e-payment business recorded 33.33 billion transactions worth RMB1,404 trillion, up 29.28% and 30.65% respectively from a year earlier.

Amongst all three e-payment methods recorded by the central bank last year, mobile payment recorded the fastest rate of growth last year. In addition to mobile payment, the turnover of online payment climbed 29.72% to RMB1,376 trillion, while phone payment increased 27.41% to RMB6.04 trillion over the same period.

The report added that China recorded a turnover of RMB1,817 trillion from 62.75 billion non-cash settlements last year, up 13.05% and 25.11% respectively.

It is worth noting that the growth rate for non-cash transaction numbers increased by 3.19% while that for transaction volume declined 11.92%, indicating an increase in micropayments.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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How’s Your Annual Bonus? The Chinese Startup Luring Talent with a Tesla https://technode.com/2015/02/16/wifi-master-key-tesla/ https://technode.com/2015/02/16/wifi-master-key-tesla/#comments Mon, 16 Feb 2015 04:13:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27709 The Chinese lunar New Year is just around the corner. Around this time, expectations among Chinese office workers are high in anticipation of the traditional year-end bonus. For most workers, it’s a pleasant extra, not a windfall. But what if the incentive for this year takes the form of a car—a Tesla? It may seem […]]]>
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The Chinese lunar New Year is just around the corner. Around this time, expectations among Chinese office workers are high in anticipation of the traditional year-end bonus. For most workers, it’s a pleasant extra, not a windfall. But what if the incentive for this year takes the form of a car—a Tesla?

It may seem like a daydream, but this is exactly what is happening to the employees of WiFi Master Key (our translation), a startup backed by Chinese game developer and publisher Shanda. The firm is handing out a surprisingly generous year-end bonus this year by rewarding every member of staff with more than four months at the company with a Tesla.

A company representative disclosed that dozens out of the fifty current employees will receive this reward, but declined to name the specific number. It will cost the startup more than RMB30 million (US$4.8 million) in total, at current prices (RMB734,000 for the Model S) in the Chinese market. The first batch of eight employees received the cars last week. The electric car manufacturer also confirmed the news.

Growing out of Shanda’s Innovation Institute, WiFi Key Master is a mobile app that automatically connects your devices to public WiFi networks when in range. The app claimed more than 500 million users as of the end of September last year, and 230 million monthly active users. It claims to have free access to 120 million WiFi hotspots across China.

“Talent is the key determinant for the success of high-tech companies. Through this move, we want to show how much we value and respect our talent”, said Chen Danian, the startup’s founder (and twin brother of Shanda CEO Chen Tianqiao).

In recent years, China’s booming internet companies have given lavish year-end compensation to employees in a bid to keep them motivated, retain their best workers amid tough competition for talent, as well as to display the company’s exuberance.

This trend is led by the Chinese IT triumvirate known as the BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent). Baidu’s bonus pool hit a record this year, with one top performer getting a bonus equivalent to 50 months’ salary. One Alibaba employee showed off online, saying his bonus was worth more than 100 months’ pay. Tencent has yet to distribute its year-end bonuses, but it’s rumored that staff at its gaming unit received a 68-month bonus last year.

Internet companies topped China’s year-end bonus list with an average reward of RMB39,873 last year. Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing took the three top spots with average bonuses of RMB8523, RMB8235 and RMB7855 respectively, according to a recent survey by PXC.

Image credit: WiFi Master Key

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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What You Need to Know about China’s Fledging Smart TV Market: LeTV https://technode.com/2015/02/15/china-smart-tv-market-letv/ https://technode.com/2015/02/15/china-smart-tv-market-letv/#respond Sat, 14 Feb 2015 18:17:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27340 Aiming to conquer our living rooms, a new generation of Chinese companies have swarmed into the smart TV industry to entice customers through larger screens and internet-based entertainment services. The entry of both traditional home appliance makers and internet companies has led to an explosion in the smart TV and set-top box markets in China. […]]]>

Aiming to conquer our living rooms, a new generation of Chinese companies have swarmed into the smart TV industry to entice customers through larger screens and internet-based entertainment services. The entry of both traditional home appliance makers and internet companies has led to an explosion in the smart TV and set-top box markets in China. LeTV, an online video service and smart TV manufacturer, recently released a report on China’s smart TV market based on data from LeTV App store, third-party research institutions and customer surveys.

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2012-2014 Smart TV and Set-top-box Shipment

According to the report, over 100 million smart TVs and set-top-boxes have been shipped as of the end of 2014. Annual sales of smart TVs exceeded 30 million sets in 2014, with a market penetration rate of nearly 70% expected to reach 85% during 2015. More than 70% of smart TVs shipped are powered by Android.

In terms of regional differences, more developed provinces and cities, with better economiis and higher internet penetration, naturally have higher smart TV penetration rates. Guangdong, Beijing and Jiangsu have the highest smart TV shipment rates.

People born in 1970s and 1980s are the most active smart TV users, accounting for around 70% of total app downloads. Consumers from these age group have started their own families, and therefore have a big appetite for education and lifestyle apps.

Smart TV customers have a highly unbalanced gender ratio, with 89% male and 11% female.

Smart TVs are pulling customers who once abandoned traditional TVs back to their living rooms with bigger screen and rich content. A total of 2,000 smart TV apps hit the shelves in 2014, according to the report.

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Game apps comprise 48% of smart TV app downloads in Q4 2014, up from 25% in Q1. TV sets are ultimately superior for video games and that’s why gaming apps is the hottest category for smart TV apps.

Casual games account for more than half of total gaming apps for now. But the platform is expected to see more mid- and hard-core games as the market expands and attract more game developers.

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Among the top 100 non-gaming apps, video apps account for 16% of the total available, but their downloads comprise 38.6% of the total, indicating that video is still one of most popular content for smart TV.

Only one sixth of smart TV apps had an order conversion rate higher than 30%, still a relatively low level. The report pointed out that the low order conversion rate may caused by the lack of dedicated payment methods on the platform.

You can find the full Chinese version of the slide deck here.

image credit: LeTV

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China’s Two Largest Taxi Apps Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache Confirm Merger https://technode.com/2015/02/14/didi-dache-and-kuaidi-dache-confirm-merger/ https://technode.com/2015/02/14/didi-dache-and-kuaidi-dache-confirm-merger/#comments Sat, 14 Feb 2015 06:31:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27673 Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, China’s two largest taxi-hailing apps, have confirmed that they will merge to become the largest taxi app company in China. The two firms will maintain their brands and independent business operations with their personnel structures unchanged after merger. Cheng Wei and Lu Chuanwei, CEOs of Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache […]]]>

Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, China’s two largest taxi-hailing apps, have confirmed that they will merge to become the largest taxi app company in China. The two firms will maintain their brands and independent business operations with their personnel structures unchanged after merger. Cheng Wei and Lu Chuanwei, CEOs of Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache respectively, will run the consolidated company as co-CEOs.

China’s taxi app market has boomed since 2013, with scores of new startups entering the market. In fierce competition for market share, taxi app startups have burned huge amounts of cash to attract passengers and taxi drivers through cash bonuses, mobile data plans, free mobile chargers, and so on. The intense competition (and high cash burn rate) has made it difficult for small players to survive.

The two industry leader, Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, stood out from the crowd. They have received numerous financing rounds from multiple investors to fund their struggle to become a dominant player. Tencent and Alibaba, two of the best-funded internet giants in China, are respectively the lead investors in Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache. In addition to capital support, Didi has been able to integrate its service into Tencent’s WeChat and Kuaidi into Alibaba’s Alipay, to gain access to more users.

The two taxi apps reportedly account for a staggering 95% of China’s taxi app market. However, the extensive cash burn rate isn’t sustainable. Both companies launched cash incentive plans last year, but when they called them off, they saw a sharp drop on daily order volumes.

The landscape of China’s app sector has become clear as early as the beginning of last year, when most smaller players either died away or were acquired by competitors. Only Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache prospered and continued competing for supremacy. Over the past year, neither company could defeat the other, although they managed to land even lager financing rounds. Kuaidi Dache recently raised US$600 million led by SoftBank, while Didi Dache raised US$700 million from Tencent and others this year.

Investors expect their portfolio companies, in whom they have bet considerable sums, to pay for it before long. Kuaidi CEO Lu Chuanwei said in an internal letter that investors on both sides hope to achieve this merger.

In addition to financial incentives, the merger will avoid opportunity costs, noted Lu, adding that the new company will launch new services very soon.

The tie-up between Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache creates a more powerful rival for Uber, which is expending aggressively in China. Uber recently received an undisclosed investment from China’s search giant Baidu.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Metaps Lands $36 Million Funding to Strengthen AI and Financial Service https://technode.com/2015/02/12/metaps-lands-36-million-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/02/12/metaps-lands-36-million-funding/#respond Thu, 12 Feb 2015 03:41:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27605 Tokyo-based app monetization service Metaps Inc. has completed a US$36 million Series C financing. The company did not reveal the investors of this round, but confirmed that the financing is headed by both pre-existing and multiple new stakeholders from Japan and with the participation of a Silicon Valley venture capital firm. The startup will announce the details of […]]]>
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Tokyo-based app monetization service Metaps Inc. has completed a US$36 million Series C financing. The company did not reveal the investors of this round, but confirmed that the financing is headed by both pre-existing and multiple new stakeholders from Japan and with the participation of a Silicon Valley venture capital firm. The startup will announce the details of new business partnerships formed in this round later this year.

Metaps is a monetization platform that helps developers attract and engage users with the necessary tools and know-how. The platform consists of products like Freemium Ad Network DirectTAP, Exchanger and metaps offerwall, which serves over 100 million app users through their network, and has recorded over 1.2 billion downloads.

To push the company’s business beyond its home turf in app monetization, Metaps disclosed the funding will be used in developing artificial intelligence technology by utilizing its accumulated big data and in improving its financial services. The firm plans to improve its services by improving data analysis, pattern recognition, and future forecasting by the aggressive hiring of experts in the field, and investing in research. Metaps also made a bold plan to reach 10% of the world’s population (800 million people) by 2016.

On the financial operations front, the company is aiming to improve its freemium online payment credit service Spike. Launched early last year, the service has over 50,000 registered accounts, mostly SMEs operating on low profit margins, thanks to its freemium model and simple setup. The company added that Spike will strive to become an all-encompassing financial service and not be limited to online payments.

Metaps has supported app monetization for developers through the formation of eight offices in Japan, the US, Singapore, China, and Korea.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Digital Advertising Service Yoyi Digital Receives US$20M Investment from Guangzhou Daily Media https://technode.com/2015/02/12/yoyi-digital-investment-guangzhou-daily/ https://technode.com/2015/02/12/yoyi-digital-investment-guangzhou-daily/#respond Thu, 12 Feb 2015 02:00:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27557 Yoyi Digital, China’s leading provider of multi-screen programmatic buying and marketing solutions for advertisers and media publishers, has received a US$20 million strategic investment from Guangdong Guangzhou Daily Media (SZ:002181), one of China’s largest media groups and the publisher of two popular mainstream newspapers – Guangzhou Daily and China Business News. The investment will be used […]]]>
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Yoyi Digital, China’s leading provider of multi-screen programmatic buying and marketing solutions for advertisers and media publishers, has received a US$20 million strategic investment from Guangdong Guangzhou Daily Media (SZ:002181), one of China’s largest media groups and the publisher of two popular mainstream newspapers – Guangzhou Daily and China Business News.

The investment will be used to establish a joint venture company between the two parties. Under the deal, Guangzhou Daily will provide Yoyi Digital with extensive access to media channels and content, while Yoyi Digital will utilize its integrated advertising and programmatic buying solutions to optimize the newspaper’s advertising system.

Founded in 2007, Yoyi Digital specializes in developing online targeting technology and internet marketing services. The company provides both impression-based and performance-based advertising and has developed a network of top publishers in China. Its demand side platform (DSP) enables marketers and brands to reach targeted audiences based on their demographics, behavior, expectations, time, and location.

Yoyi’s programmatic buying platform claims to have access to 10 billion displays, 1.2 billion mobile and near 1 billion video daily impressions each day by integrating Google, Taobao, Baidu and other ad exchange platforms in China. The Beijing-headquartered company also has support centers in Shanghai and Guangzhou.

The ongoing transformation of the media industry is seeing a decline in traditional media, especially the newspaper business, and the rise of new media channels. As a traditional media group, Guangzhou Daily Media made several investments and acquisitions last year in mobile gaming and outdoor advertising sectors to keep up with the digital age. The company is expanding into programmatic digital advertising through this investment.

According to research institute iResearch, China’s programmatic advertising market in 2014 was valued at RMB 4.84 billion (US$774 million) with an yearly growth rate of 216.5%, representing 8.9% of China’s total advertising industry. It is expected to be worth RMB28.27 billion by 2017, or 28.2% of the entire market.

“In the digital age, the concept of media has become increasingly fluid with the emergence of new communication modes. This has allowed brands to build deeper engagement with their target audiences,” said Roy Zhou, founder and CEO of Yoyi Digital. “With the convergence of media, content and advertising, the role of digital technologies is a game changer for advertisers and brands.”

Yoyi Digital has received Series A investment from Gobi Partners and Steamboat Ventures in 2010. Series B and Series C funding was secured from Oak Investment Partners and Fidelity, respectively.

Image credit: Yoyi Digital

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Coolpeds’ Lightweight Electric Scooter Changes Your Commute https://technode.com/2015/02/11/lightweight-e-scooter-coolpeds-change-way-commuting/ https://technode.com/2015/02/11/lightweight-e-scooter-coolpeds-change-way-commuting/#respond Wed, 11 Feb 2015 05:40:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27517 Commuting is tough for people living in big cities plagued by air pollution, traffic congestion and an energy crisis. Urban people usually commute within a radius of 5-10 km, a distance too far to walk and too difficult to find parking or taxis. In China every day there are more than 100,000 people moving to […]]]>

Commuting is tough for people living in big cities plagued by air pollution, traffic congestion and an energy crisis. Urban people usually commute within a radius of 5-10 km, a distance too far to walk and too difficult to find parking or taxis. In China every day there are more than 100,000 people moving to cities, and they all need efficient methods of transportation.

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Coolpeds Founder Tony Chan at ChinaBang-Shanghai Station

Coolpeds is a ultra-lightweight electric scooter brand that aims to provide last mile solution for local commuters. Weighing in at 6-9kg, the company’s flagship products are easy to ride and fold in seconds, making them convenient take anywhere, whether on the subway, in offices, or on planes. The scooters contain a high-torque, chain driven motor and uses a sealed lithium battery which can be fully charged in three hours.

While riders are zipping around their neighborhood at up to 20 miles per hour, they can monitor their speed on an LCD display with cool blue lights supported by front and back suspension. In addition, users can charge their smartphones through a USB socket.

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Tony, Coolpeds’ latest product, is a scooter, briefcase and mobile charger combo. The product has an anti-theft function which sounds an alarm when out of a pre-determined safe range, and a solar panel on the suitcase cover as an optional power source. Tony is aimed at a wide range of consumers including university students, office staff, travelers, photographers, cosmetician, and supermarket shoppers.

In addition to its hardware, Coolpeds is developing an accompanying app, where riders can monitor its speed and distance traveled, and find optimal driving routes. CEO Tony Chan added they are planning to integrate health sensors into the scooter, helping users understand their environmental surroundings.

Coolpeds is led by founder and chief architect Tony Chan, who has run successful product design, manufacturing, and distribution businesses in the U.S. and China for over 10 years. After graduating from UCLA, Tony worked at Accenture in Los Angeles and Microsoft in Seattle as a software developer. He then founded a manufacturing and trading company operating in Los Angeles and China.

image credit: Coolpeds

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Video Crowdfunding Platform Kliptap Appeals for Social Causes https://technode.com/2015/02/10/kliptap-appeals-social-causes/ https://technode.com/2015/02/10/kliptap-appeals-social-causes/#respond Mon, 09 Feb 2015 21:11:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27458 Still remember that summer when everyone was dunking buckets of ice water over themselves to raise funds for people with Lou Gehrig’s Disease? The ALS Ice Bucket Campaign engaged more than 400 million people in the cause, raising over US$100 million for the ALS Association to help their patients. The projects demonstrated the power of social […]]]>

Still remember that summer when everyone was dunking buckets of ice water over themselves to raise funds for people with Lou Gehrig’s Disease? The ALS Ice Bucket Campaign engaged more than 400 million people in the cause, raising over US$100 million for the ALS Association to help their patients. The projects demonstrated the power of social media as an effective marketing tool.

Kliptap is a Hong Kong/Shanghai-based video platform for individuals to raise money for social causes and call friends to take action. The site aimsto do so by triggering a chain reaction of video responses to elicit donations and raise awareness.

Most traditional offline fundraising projects have to spend as much as 50 percent of their funds on marketing and admin. Kliptap wants to create a crowdfunding platform to globalize your campaign while minimizing costs, said company co-founder and CEO Connie Leong. The site will receive a five percent platform fee on all transactions on its platform.

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Connie Leong Introducing Kliptap at ChinaBang-Shanghai Station

Video campaigns can be set up in a few simple steps, as Leong showed us at TechNode’s ChinaBang event. After setting your fundraising goal, users can upload a video to introduce your cause and determine which challenge you want people to take. You can then invite your friends through social media or email, which will directed them to a centralized campaign page where they can donate or upload a video response. Leong added that it is up to users to decide which form of challenges they want to take, either silly but funny ones like the ice bucket or more serious and artistic ones.

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Online giving is a US$30 billion market, Leong noted, adding “We are in a position to capture this market as a cause-related crowdfunding platform that primarily features video content”. Kliptap uses video as the primary tool of communication, because it is an powerful way to evoke emotion. It has been proved that video campaigns are more successful, she added.

Compared to its competitors, Kliptap is the first of its kind in Asia and claims to have more social media engagement. It also offers tailored services for video production and has data analysis tools that enable users to understand the outreach of their video messages.

The company has recorded 275% month-on-month growth in monthly active users since launch in November last year. Most of the early adopters came from Hong Kong, an established market in online giving. Kliptap is planning to first develop successful cases in Hong Kong and then expand to mainland China and the global market.

Leong said they have several routes for user acquisition, ranging from university students to corporate co-operation across Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Movember Showdown, a recently closed campaign raising awareness and funds for men’s health, secured US$3,710 of a US$2,000 goal from 75 backers. Three are two other ongoing campaigns on the platform, one  providing bakery training to disadvantaged Chinese youth, the other providing scholarships to girls from rural Guangdong.

Connie Leong and Jasmine Lau, the two company co-founders, have worked together since they met studying at Yale. Two years ago, they started Philanthropy in Motion, a social enterprise developing the next-generation NGO talent in China.

Kliptap graduated from Batch VI of Chinaccelerator in November 2014, where it received US$16,000 in funding. The company is planning to raise more funds for further development.

image credit: Kliptap

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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51 Credit Card Manager Lands US$50M in Series B to Boost Online Business https://technode.com/2015/02/06/51-credit-card-manager-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/02/06/51-credit-card-manager-series-b/#respond Fri, 06 Feb 2015 06:42:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27344 China’s credit card management app 51 Credit Card Manager announced it has secured US$50 million of Series B financing led by GGV Capital at a valuation of nearly US$300 million. The company had closed a combined US$15 million of Series A and A+ round in 2013 from SIG, Crystal Stream and Meridian Capital China. The angel round was received […]]]>

China’s credit card management app 51 Credit Card Manager announced it has secured US$50 million of Series B financing led by GGV Capital at a valuation of nearly US$300 million.

The company had closed a combined US$15 million of Series A and A+ round in 2013 from SIG, Crystal Stream and Meridian Capital China. The angel round was received from legendary Chinese angel investor Charles Xue and Meridian Capital China in 2012.

Company CEO Sun Haitao disclosed that the funding will be used for recruiting, R&D, risk control and marketing. He added that they are in talks with investors for a Series B+ round.

51 Credit Card Manager provides credit card management solutions through analysis of users’ data from credit card bills, bookkeeping, credit card applications and payment transaction. The app has had over 36 million downloads since launch, managing more than 35 million credit cards. It claims to manage the bills of around 20% of China’s most active credit card users.

51Creditcard

Screenshots of 51 Credit Card Manager

Upon receiving this round, the company is looking to expand its online lending business. Last April, the startup added a lending feature ‘Shunshidai’ to the app, allowing users to lend between RMB10,000 (US$1,600) and RMB 60,000 within ten minutes. 51 Credit Card Manager also offers a credit decision system, a risk strategy development service that combines user credit operations. Its partner Yirendai, a online lending site run by CreditEase, will be responsible for running risk control assessments, granting credit lines, and providing funds.

Hangzhou-based Enniu Internet Technology, the company behind 51 Credit Card Manager, has also developed several other financial apps, including a bookkeeping service, a bank card security service, a credit card application and verification app and a credit card cash withdrawal app.

Fintech is a rising sector in China’s tech industry with 150 startups in this field receiving funding last year, according to Chinese startup database ITjuzi.com. Two major competitors of 51 Credit Card Manager are Cardniu and Wacai.

image credit: 51 Credit Card Manager

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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OUYA CEO Talks Alibaba Investment and China Plans https://technode.com/2015/02/04/alibaba-invest-in-ouya/ https://technode.com/2015/02/04/alibaba-invest-in-ouya/#respond Wed, 04 Feb 2015 03:05:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27307 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has made a new investment in OUYA, an U.S. game console manufacturer and open game platform for television. The investment comes to US$10 million according to a WSJ report, though the Santa Monica-based startup declined to comment. OUYA is best known for releasing an Android-powered video game console in a […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has made a new investment in OUYA, an U.S. game console manufacturer and open game platform for television. The investment comes to US$10 million according to a WSJ report, though the Santa Monica-based startup declined to comment.

OUYA is best known for releasing an Android-powered video game console in a highly successful Kickstarter campaign in 2012. In recent years, the company has started to shift its focus from hardware to licensing its games to other devices and manufacturers.

Through this deal, OUYA will bring its gaming platform and game library to Alibaba’s YunOS system, a forked version of Android which powers the company’s Tmall set-top boxes and other third-party devices. OUYA has over 1,000 games built for the TV and nearly 40,000 developers, said OUYA CEO Julie Uhrman.

The lifting of a 13-year ban on game consoles in China has attracted a flock of startups into the market with budget set-top boxes running downloadable and free-to-play games. “Markets like China, without the baggage of the U.S. console market, could be game console leaders in ten years. That’s where OUYA wants to be,” said Uhrman.

The startup has partnered with Xiaomi to bring its software to Chinese households via Xiaomi’s content-streaming television boxes last year. The investment from Alibaba won’t affect its cooperation with Xiaomi and OUYA hopes to team up with more platforms in future, Uhrman added.

When talking about competition from local rivals, she said, “We will not be competing with Chinese console makers but working with them to bring great games to their users.”

discover-apps

OUYA aims to distribute its platform and games globally. “Not only have we shipped OUYAs to gamers all over the world but nearly half of our developers are outside the U.S. We see tremendous growth in markets like China, India, Latin America,” Uhrman noted.

As the saying goes, “Content is king”. Alibaba has integrated a variety of content from third-party developers, ranging from video streaming services, video games to online education contents, into its homegrown set-top boxes like Tmall Box 2 and other devices running Yun OS. Cooperation with OUYA will help Alibaba to further expand its game library, a major selling point for domestic entertainment gadgets.

Chinese hardware makers are investing heavily in premium content. Xiaomi has allocated US$1 billion for digital content, especially online videos for the Xiaomi Smart TV and set-top box.

image credit: OUYA

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Car Rental Service Zuche Jumps into Ride-sharing Market as China Cracks Down on Private Cars https://technode.com/2015/02/03/zuche-ride-sharing-market/ https://technode.com/2015/02/03/zuche-ride-sharing-market/#respond Mon, 02 Feb 2015 22:19:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27261 Chinese car rental service CAR Inc., more commonly known as Zuche, has rolled out a ride-sharing service UCAR Zuche Tailored Car Service (our translation), adding another competitive player to China’s booming taxi-calling industry. The company is planning to launch the service in 60 cities around the country, according to CEO Charles Lu. He said that Zuche, which has started […]]]>
Zuche-1

Chinese car rental service CAR Inc., more commonly known as Zuche, has rolled out a ride-sharing service UCAR Zuche Tailored Car Service (our translation), adding another competitive player to China’s booming taxi-calling industry.

The company is planning to launch the service in 60 cities around the country, according to CEO Charles Lu. He said that Zuche, which has started recruiting drivers in Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, has targeted adding 50 million users this year with an aggressive RMB2.5 billion (around US$400 million) subsidy plan to attract users.

As a leading car rental service in China, Zuche couldn’t have chosen a better timing for expanding into the country’s thriving ride-sharing market. China’s transportation regulator recently ordered all taxi-hailing apps operating in China to exclude private vehicles on their platforms due to security concerns. Only licensed drivers and taxi companies remained legal to provide such services. The apps using private fleets, like Alibaba-backed Kuaidi Dache, Tencent’s Didi Dache and Uber for profit are facing major setbacks.

Although widely criticized by the public, the ban is a good news for companies like Zuche (which are licensed to rent out cars) because it clears the battlefield by ruling out potential unlicensed rivals.

In fact, the company rolled out a similar service a few years ago – assigning drivers to cars rented on the platform. But it cancelled this business in 2011 due to state regulations. Unlike popular taxi-summoning apps that only connect drivers and passengers on an online platform, Zuche, an asset-heavy company that claimed to have more than 55,000 vehicles as of March last year, is more cautious towards risk, hence why it took so long to resume this business.

As the government has taken a new conciliatory tone towards the service, Zuche re-entered the field with it having been proved lucrative by industry leaders over the past two years.

Zuche wheeled out its new business in cooperation with UCar Inc., a third-party one-year startup founded by former Zuche executives. Under the deal, Zuche will lease its fleets to UCar Inc., which means the ride-sharing service will be run independently from the listed entity of Zuche.

Established in September 2007 and headquartered in Beijing, Zuche offers comprehensive care hire services including short-term rental, long-term rental and financial leasing, as well as assorted value-added services such as roadside assistance and one-way rentals. Zuche is operating in 70 major cities, serving more than 1 million individual customers and nearly 10,000 corporate clients as of June 2014. It went public on the Hong Kong stock market last year.

At the same time, Zuche’s major competitor Yongche has joined hands with Haier Group to set up a car rental and car financial leasing joint venture which expects to operate 80,000 to 100,000 cars by 2017. Another rival eHi, which pocketed US$100 million funding from Ctrip, is also beta testing its tailored car service in Shanghai.

image credit: Zuche

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China’s Over-The-Air App Testing Services Aim For Global Expansion https://technode.com/2015/02/03/chinese-over-the-air-app-beta-testing-services/ https://technode.com/2015/02/03/chinese-over-the-air-app-beta-testing-services/#respond Mon, 02 Feb 2015 21:53:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27218 China has become the world’s second largest app economy and the market is still growing, with the number of Chinese mobile app developers nearly doubling each year. To develop quality apps that stand out from the crowd, beta testing is becoming an indispensable step in app development, as it gives developers the chance to improve their product […]]]>

China has become the world’s second largest app economy and the market is still growing, with the number of Chinese mobile app developers nearly doubling each year. To develop quality apps that stand out from the crowd, beta testing is becoming an indispensable step in app development, as it gives developers the chance to improve their product based on feedback from real users outside the app-development team.

A flock of app beta testing services have sprouted in China to tap this rising demand. And after initial success in the domestic market, a few industry leaders are poised to expand globally.

fir.im_

FIR.im (short for Fly It Remotely) provides free, fast and safe beta app distribution services. The app distribution process can be completed in two steps, massively simplifying the current iTunes and Android sync models. App developers should first upload the IPA/APK to the FIR.im platform, when a short URL will be generated. Any tester who opens the URL on their mobile devices can download and install the beta apps on their iOS or Android smartphone. The upload/download process can be completed in around two minutes.

Beyond simple installation, FIR.im has also integrated a variety of features to allow the fast acquisition of a tester’s UDID, checking the status and version history of the app in real time, crash reporting solutions, privacy settings, and more.

Begun as a company focused on Chinese developers, FIR.im is planning to expand globally having releasing an overseas version at the end of last year. In addition to localizing its languages, the startup has set up multiple network centers in the Asia-Pacific and North America to facilitate stable uploading and downloading for overseas users.

When talking about competition with incumbents like TestFlight, Susan Shi, a co-founder of the company, said their service is more flexible with open API and integration of third-party apps.

Major Chinese app developers like input software Sogou, online cosmetics retailer Jumei, health service community DXY, and outbound travel service Qyer, have used the solution to try them out.

Company founder Travis Wang has bootstrapped FIR.im since 2013 as a personal hobby, from when he was still working at AVOS. He then developed the project into a startup in 2014. The number of app developers using their service has grown by more than tenfold in the past year, according to Susan Shi.

The startup launched Budhd, a Crashlytics-like crash reporting solution, at the end of last year.

The firm has pocked undisclosed amount of Series A funding recently, three months after securing millions of RMB in in angel round from Unity Ventures in April last year.

——–

pugongying

Pgyer, one of FIR.im’s competitor, also features simple steps for app beta testing. After uploading the apps, developers will get a short URL and QR code, and testers can install by clicking the URL or scanning the QR code. It is available for developers on major platforms of iOS, Android and Windows OS for free.

Launched in September last year, Pgyer has recorded over 250,000 uploads and is experiencing more than 1 million daily installs at present, company CEO Shi Rui said in a recent interview with local tech media Kuailiyu.

The company is planning to expand to overseas market with addition of a set of new updates after securing an eight-digit angel investment last year.

image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese OBD Hardware Developer AutoBot Receives US$6 Million Series A Funding https://technode.com/2015/01/29/autobot-receives-series-b/ https://technode.com/2015/01/29/autobot-receives-series-b/#respond Thu, 29 Jan 2015 08:36:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27189 The internet-of-vehicles (IoV) has become more of a reality as tech companies vie to create new tech to change the driving experience. Thus far, most of the IoV related services falls into three categories of car OS, on-board diagnostics (OBD) and automatic collision alerts. Beijing-based startup AutoBot is an OBD hardware developer and solutions provider. […]]]>
AutoBot Mini

The internet-of-vehicles (IoV) has become more of a reality as tech companies vie to create new tech to change the driving experience. Thus far, most of the IoV related services falls into three categories of car OS, on-board diagnostics (OBD) and automatic collision alerts.

Beijing-based startup AutoBot is an OBD hardware developer and solutions provider. The company has secured a US$6 million Series A investment from Gobi Partners and ABC Capital, with the proceeds to be used for R&D, marketing and attracting talent, according to the company.

Focusing on Chinese market, the firm has released two products: AutoPro and AutoBot Mini. The devices can be hooked either to a car’s OBD-II module or cigarette lighter to track important real-time driving information, including car performance, fuel consumption, driving habit analysis, driving route records, traffic advice and maintenance reminders. The two gadgets retail at RMB599 (US$96) and RMB129, respectively.

Autobot-1

AutoBot Interface

Running off Bluetooth, data collected can be viewed on the AutoBot app, allowing users to understand their car in a simple, easy-to-understand readout which is shareable through interactive features.

“The Chinese automobile market has been the world’s largest since 2009,” said Thomas G. Tsao, Managing Partner at Gobi Partners. “In recent years, Chinese drivers have expressed significant demand for smart and affordable hardware solutions like AutoBot that improve driver experience and safety. As such, we are very optimistic about AutoBot’s prospects on the market.”

Chinese internet giant Tencent released a similar IoV gadget Lubao Box last year.

image credit: ZOL

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Baidu Unveils In-vehicle Infotainment Platform CarLife https://technode.com/2015/01/28/baidu-carlife/ https://technode.com/2015/01/28/baidu-carlife/#comments Wed, 28 Jan 2015 09:21:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27136 Baidu has taken the wraps off an in-vehicle infotainment platform CarLife, joining China’s escalating battle for car tech supremacy. The Chinese search engine giant has teamed up with three top automakers Audi, Hyundai and Shanghai General Motors in manufacturing cars equipped with internet access and in-vehicle infotainment services. Hyundai plans to showcase its Sonata sedan compatible with Baidu […]]]>

Baidu has taken the wraps off an in-vehicle infotainment platform CarLife, joining China’s escalating battle for car tech supremacy.

The Chinese search engine giant has teamed up with three top automakers Audi, Hyundai and Shanghai General Motors in manufacturing cars equipped with internet access and in-vehicle infotainment services. Hyundai plans to showcase its Sonata sedan compatible with Baidu software in April, according to Yonhap News Agency.

CarLife is a cross-platform connected car service compatible with mainstream on-board systems running on Linux, QNX or Android. For mobiles, the system supports both iOS and Android, covering 95% of smartphones (as claimed by the company). Users can connect their cars and smartphones via Wifi or USB cable.

Based on Baidu Maps, CarLife will offer navigation and other related services, helping drivers find optimal driving routes, avoid traffic jams, update map data, locate parking lots, and more. It also supports hands-free calling and music steaming by NetEase Music.

傲游截图20150128152729

CarLife Interface

This is not the first time that Baidu has dipped a toe in the smart vehicle industry. Last April it rolled out CarNet, a WinCE-based system linking customers’ smartphones with their in-car systems, alongside car service company Tima Networks. However, the two companies have terminated their cooperation on the project. Tima Networks debuted CarNet 1.0 earlier this month independently (as Mydrivers noted).

The global auto industry is increasingly betting on cars that can be connected to the internet via smartphone or even without them. To tap the market, Apple rolled out CarPlay and Google has developed Android Auto to expand their dominance beyond the smartphone screen. Chinese video company LeTV also launched a custom OS for the company’s electric car project unveiled last month.

image credit: Baidu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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MyChi, Your Personal Food Therapy Advisor Enabled by Eastern Wisdom https://technode.com/2015/01/27/mychi-personalized-food-therapy-advisor/ https://technode.com/2015/01/27/mychi-personalized-food-therapy-advisor/#respond Tue, 27 Jan 2015 12:51:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27052 It’s clear that technology is reinvigorating the healthcare industry, from better connecting doctors and patients to crunching big data for optimal diagnosis. Amongst the dizzying potential for technology to transform healthcare, mobile apps and hardware which helping people to stay active, sleep well, or eat healthier are emerging as a major trend. MyChi (Chi or Qi is […]]]>

It’s clear that technology is reinvigorating the healthcare industry, from better connecting doctors and patients to crunching big data for optimal diagnosis. Amongst the dizzying potential for technology to transform healthcare, mobile apps and hardware which helping people to stay active, sleep well, or eat healthier are emerging as a major trend.

MyChi (Chi or Qi is a Chinese concept meaning vital energy) is a combination of smart hardware and mobile app, working as a personalized food therapy adviser giving daily diet tips based on users’ health condition and more.

Developed by Shanghai-based startup Shiyiku, MyChi device is a dime-sized tracking gadget to be placed under your pillow before sleep, to monitor your sleep disturbance overnight. MyChi is powered by a build-in battery that lasts for the lifetime (one year) of the device; users can buy a new one at a discount price when returning an old model.

Whilst Chinese hardware manufacturers are competing to create lower-cost gadgets, the value-add of MyChi lies on the content it delivers rather than its hardware, said David Li, the company’s co-founder and technical consultant who also co-founded the Shanghai-based Xinchejian hacker space.

Instead of just offering dry data as most current smart hardware makers were doing, MyChi combines the REM data from the MyChi device with a few health questions on your daily health symptoms, and then translates these into actionable food therapy recommendations, exercises and alternative health suggestions based on sleep quality models from the Beijing Traditional Chinese Medicine Research Center.

This model derives from meridian organ clock theory, a branch of traditional Chinese medicine which is also the basis of acupuncture and massage (Tuina in Chinese). For instance, the theory defines the period from 11pm to 1am as a key period for liver recovery. Users’ liver functions may have a problem if their sleep is regularly disturbed during this period and they have related symptoms, like sweaty palms and fatigue in the afternoon.

To develop food therapies, the app considers the specific condition of users’ bodies, food attributes and the cooking methods for related meals. Seasonal variation is a key parameter as the theory believes that choosing food in accordance with seasonal and climatic variations has a nourishing effect on the body.

Anna Na, co-founder of the company and a beneficiary of TCM herself, said Chinese food therapy has a long history over many generations despite it generally being viewed as speculative by the rest of the world. She noted that a growing body of scientific evidence supports the effectiveness of its principals.

傲游截图20150126121707

Screenshots of MyChi App

Featuring a simple to-do list interface, MyChi gives the full menu for a day including snacks and drinks. The service is also planning to add separate versions for vegetarian and gluten free users later.

To facilitate recommendations, MyChi has integrated a menu-scanning feature, allowing users to recognize the best foods available for them when dining out. The gadget also offers advice on using massage to improve overall health and welbeing.

MyChi will retail between US$70 and US$75 when crowdfunding on KickStarter in Feb. this year, down from the original price of US$128.

Since the product is released only in English and is going after overseas markets, it is natural to raise the question of whether their target users are ready to accept a service based on TCM, a theory yet to be widely accepted by foreigners.

“Our system is not about using medicines, but emphasizing whole foods and thus is an ideal way for users around the world to benefit from ancient wisdom in a familiar way. Many people in Western societies are looking for natural treatments after modern development and lifestyles have brought a whole new set of problems”, said Anna.

She added that many outside of China are becoming passionate about whole foods as curative. “Furthermore, our plan integrates a balanced eating plan used by many Western nutritionists. MyChi simply takes it to a further level by integrating this with ancient Chinese wisdom.”

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Online Food Takeout Service Ele.me Books Landmark US$350M Round Led by Tencent https://technode.com/2015/01/27/ele-me-books-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/01/27/ele-me-books-funding/#respond Tue, 27 Jan 2015 08:25:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27103 We don’t often hear of startups raising multiple massive fumding rounds within several months, but that’s exactly what happened today when Chinese online food ordering service Ele.me announced another landmark US$350 million in Series E funding from CITICPE, Tencent, JD, Dianping and Sequoia Capital. It will remain an independent company after this round. Ele.me (“Are you hungry?” […]]]>
Ele.me-E

We don’t often hear of startups raising multiple massive fumding rounds within several months, but that’s exactly what happened today when Chinese online food ordering service Ele.me announced another landmark US$350 million in Series E funding from CITICPE, Tencent, JD, Dianping and Sequoia Capital. It will remain an independent company after this round.

Ele.me (“Are you hungry?” in Chinese) had just raised US$80 million Series D funding from Dianping eight months earlier. In late 2013, it received US$25 million of Series C financing. The previous two multi-million dollar rounds were received from GSR Ventures and Matrix Partners in 2011 and 2013, respectively.

Started in 2009 as a service targeting university students and the low-end catering market, the site is planning to expand into high-tier markets with a special focus on white collar workers. The proceeds will also be used to construct an in-house logistics system.

The company took more than 110 million orders from over 20 million registered users in 2014, with coverage in more than 200,000 restaurants across 250 cities around China, according to founder Zhang Xuhao. “Ele.me’s market share has reached 60% and sales from mobiles account for 75% of the total”, Zhang said.

Napos, a paid online food ordering management system, and restaurant ranking services are Ele.me’s two main revenue sources.

The penetration rate of online food ordering services among Chinese netizens reached 20.1% in the first half of 2014, while the group-purchasing turnover for catering services tot alledRMB16.66 billion (US$2.67 billion) over the same period, according to the China E-commerce Research Center.

The huge market has lured many startups as well as venture capitalists. Line0 recently secured US$30 million of Series B funding led by Tencent. Other major competitors include Meituan’s food ordering service Meituan WaimaiDaojia, Taobao Diandian, MeicanDianwoba, etc.

image credit: Ele.me

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Cross-border Shopping Site Ymatou Pockets US$100M Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/01/27/chinese-cross-border-shopping-site-ymatou-pockets-us100m-series-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/01/27/chinese-cross-border-shopping-site-ymatou-pockets-us100m-series-funding/#respond Tue, 27 Jan 2015 04:53:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=27081 Chinese cross-border e-commerce site Ymatou has landed US$100 million of Series B financing led by Sailing Capital International, the investment arm of Shanghai International Group, according to an internal letter (via NetEase) from company CEO Zeng Bibo. This is so far the largest investment in China’s booming overseas shopping sector. The firm has received RMB5 million (US$799,000) […]]]>
Ymatou

Chinese cross-border e-commerce site Ymatou has landed US$100 million of Series B financing led by Sailing Capital International, the investment arm of Shanghai International Group, according to an internal letter (via NetEase) from company CEO Zeng Bibo. This is so far the largest investment in China’s booming overseas shopping sector.

The firm has received RMB5 million (US$799,000) of angel investment in 2010 and US$10 million of Series A funding in 2013.

Launched in 2009, Ymatou is a C2C and M2C e-commerce marketplace principally engaged in cross-border commerce and specialist sales for high quality overseas franchises. The site claimed more than 1 million users and more than 10,000 daily orders, according to Mydrivers. It has set up offices in  Shanghai, New York, Los Angles and San Francisco.

To facilitate more convenient and secure shopping experiences, Ymatou has set up an independent logistics company xLobo Global Express to provide delivery and customs clearance with ten logistics centers across the U.S., Australia, Asia, and Europe. As a third-party platform, xLobo also provides services to other e-commerce platforms such as JD.

Metao, a major startup competitor of the company, has secured US$30 million of Series B funding last year. Moreover, domestic internet companies led by e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD are flocking into this sector.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Celeb Investors Betting on Tech Startups https://technode.com/2015/01/24/chinese-celeb-investors/ https://technode.com/2015/01/24/chinese-celeb-investors/#respond Fri, 23 Jan 2015 20:11:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26989 Internet startup investment is no longer a game just for geeks as the tech market swells. From Ashton Kutcher to Novak Djokovic, celebrities all over the world are racing to invest in innovative tech projects or bootstrapping their own startups. This trend is also in full swing in China. Chinese singer-songwriter Hu Yanbin (Tiger Hu) […]]]>

Internet startup investment is no longer a game just for geeks as the tech market swells. From Ashton Kutcher to Novak Djokovic, celebrities all over the world are racing to invest in innovative tech projects or bootstrapping their own startups. This trend is also in full swing in China.

Tiger-hu

Chinese singer-songwriter Hu Yanbin (Tiger Hu) is known as a talented all-round musician who encompasses genres such as R&B, hip-hop and rock & roll. Hu recently launched NEWBAND, a music education app that offers online video courses on vocal, piano, guitar, bass and jazz drumming.

Authored and taught by Hu and other professional musicians, the courses are around 20 minutes in length. Learners can access tutorials for singing and tips on playing multiple instruments via exercises and demonstrational videos. To attract a mass audience, the courses are based on pop songs. The app, currently available only on Android, updates with courses centered around current hits every week.

It is obvious that celeb entrepreneurs will draw more attention, which some are capitalizing on. Youku, China’s leading online video platform now investing heavily in self-produced content, teamed up with NEWBAND to roll out a music video course NEWBAND: Star Music Class (our translation) with a nearly RMB100 million investment (around US$16 million), according to iHeima.

Newband

Screenshots of NEWBAND

Online education has long been one of the hottest sectors in Chinese tech, but the incumbents of this emerging sector are mostly focused on language, K-12, or exam preparation. After booming growth in past two years, consolidation in China’s online language tutoring market has begun. It’s time for entrepreneurs to spread into different verticals rather than flocking into a few hot areas.


Yuquan

Yuquan–Hu Haiquan, Chen Yufan (L-R)

As one of the most prominent music groups with an interest in Chinese tech, two-man vocal band Yuquan dipped toes in startup investment years ago by financing startups from game developer Dragons Summon to smartwatch maker Tomoon. But most of their tech-related moves are focused on disrupting China’s traditional music industry, which has suffered a dramatic decline following the rise of digital music and music piracy. After releasing an album on USB in 2013, the band launched an album on a mobile app, which came pre-loaded on VOW, a Chinese music streaming headphone.

Star-VC

Ren Quan, Li Bingbing, Huang Xiaoming (L-R)

Chinese A-listers Li Bingbing, Ren Quan, Huang Xiaoming last year launched Star VC, a venture capital firm focused on internet startups. The trio put in funding, test the products and personally back the companies they invest with their reputations. Before this, the three were already known as successful investors in restaurants, bars and clubs, among others. Thus far, Star VC has invested in internet startups like Weibo-backed short-video app Miaopai, Xingyun, a social networking platform for culture and entertainment industry, and Handuyishe, a fast-fashion brand vastly popular on Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace.

Laura Shang, a female electronica singer, joined the latest financing round of fashion service YOHO! in October last year. She also teamed up with Dostyle to release a earplug at JD.

image credit: Sina.com, ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China’s E-commerce Transactions Up 25% to RMB13T in 2014 https://technode.com/2015/01/22/chinas-e-commerce-transaction-25-yoy-rmb13t-2014-moc/ https://technode.com/2015/01/22/chinas-e-commerce-transaction-25-yoy-rmb13t-2014-moc/#respond Thu, 22 Jan 2015 07:25:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26961 China’s annual e-commerce transaction volume is expected to have soared 25% year-on-year to RMB13 trillion (around US$2.1 trillion) in 2014, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce. The Ministry noted that this figure includes both online business-to-business and retail transactions. According to the report, online retail sales alone reached RMB2.8 trillion in 2014, up 49.7% YOY. […]]]>

China’s annual e-commerce transaction volume is expected to have soared 25% year-on-year to RMB13 trillion (around US$2.1 trillion) in 2014, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce. The Ministry noted that this figure includes both online business-to-business and retail transactions.

According to the report, online retail sales alone reached RMB2.8 trillion in 2014, up 49.7% YOY.

China’s consumption market maintained sustainable growth over the past year. The annual retail sales of consumer goods rose 12% YOY to RMB26.2 trillion during 2014.

Consumption as a proportion of GDP growth surged 3% to 51.2% in 2014, becoming a major driver of economic growth.

After years of explosive growth, China’s e-commerce remains one of the most eye-catching sectors in the economy, marked by the huge IPOs of industry leaders Alibaba and JD, as well as Single’s Day, the record-breaking 24-hour online shopfest.

As the country’s urban market is reaching satiation, China’s e-commerce giants started to expand into new markets. As we have written before, cross-border and rural e-commerce are the two hottest e-commerce verticals chased by Chinese online shopping giants.

image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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ChinaBang to Light Up 2015 – Prepare For Entry! https://technode.com/2015/01/21/chinabang-hongkong/ https://technode.com/2015/01/21/chinabang-hongkong/#respond Wed, 21 Jan 2015 11:51:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26871 ChinaBang Awards, an annual ceremony recognizing the best Chinese startups, is entering its fourth year in 2015. As the brainchild of TechNode, ChinaBang Awards honor innovative ideas, startups and entrepreneurs in more than twenty categories to recognize their achievements over the past year. To guarantee the justice of the awards, the award process will combine the results of […]]]>
chinabang-2015-bg-a

ChinaBang Awards, an annual ceremony recognizing the best Chinese startups, is entering its fourth year in 2015. As the brainchild of TechNode, ChinaBang Awards honor innovative ideas, startups and entrepreneurs in more than twenty categories to recognize their achievements over the past year.

To guarantee the justice of the awards, the award process will combine the results of an online poll with judgements from a specialist committee, taking into consideration aspects such as the startups’ innovation, growth potential and market influence.

In 2014, ChinaBang visited the domestic cities of Hangzhou, Suzhou, Shenzhen, Shanghai, Xi’an and Chengdu in search of the most promising startups nationwide. Our footsteps then went international in seeking innovative overseas startups as well as helping domestic companies to establish global presences.

With a goal of further breaking down geographical barriers across regions and startups, ChinaBang is now recruiting creative startups and entrepreneurs from Hong Kong, with support from local partners Cyberport, HKSTP, StartupsHK, Startup College and others. We will build a stage for Hong Kong entrepreneurs to show off their products and services to the public, and to impress investors from renowned VCs like Station HK, Gobi Partners, IDG, GGV, CyberAgent, Cherubic Ventures, Ameba and Yunqi Partners, at a roadshow event slated for March 11st.

Demo teams will receive feedback and suggestions on their future development from mentors and peers. TechNode’s reporting team will also be onsite to interview the entrepreneurs, while the roadshow will be recorded and promoted on our official video site TechNode TV.

Besides operating ChinaBang events,TechNode held a wonderful TechCrunch China/TechNode conference in mid-August last year and introduced eight Chinese startups at TechCrunch Disrupt SF a month later.

As the co-organizer of Asia Beat Taiwan 2014, we have invited a group of Chinese tech veterans to share their insights, including Tiger Shen, VP from Qihoo 360; Harry Wang, Managing Partner of Liner Ventures; Ted Lai, Partner of AngelVest; Tina Cheng, Partner at Cherubic Ventures; eCloud Valley CEO Spenser Liu, and Phil Ren, founder of productivity tool Mingdao. In addition, we will also bring domestic startups, such as smart watch H. Tang, personal finance service Qiandaren, and smart scooter Coolpeds, to pitch at the event to introduce them to broader Asian audience.

If you are with a startup looking to be included in the pitch event, please fill out this form. Alternatively, you can nominate your favorite Hong Kong startups by scanning the QR code below via WeChat. Finalists for the demo will have a greater chance of nomination for “The Best HK Entrepreneur of the Year” at ChinaBang Awards.

This will be a fun event for all of us. We look forward to seeing you there!

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 Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Renren Bets on Fintech with US$40M Stake in Motif Investing https://technode.com/2015/01/21/renren-bets-fintech-us40m-investment-u-s-online-broker-motif-investing/ https://technode.com/2015/01/21/renren-bets-fintech-us40m-investment-u-s-online-broker-motif-investing/#respond Wed, 21 Jan 2015 08:55:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26913 Chinese internet company Renren (NYSE: RENN) has led a US$40 million investment in Motif Investing, a U.S. upstart online broke claiming to pioneer concept-driven investing for individuals and financial advisors. The funding takes Motif’s total capital raised to over US$120 million, with previous funding rounds from JPMorgan Chase, Foundation Capital, Goldman Sachs, Ignition Partners, and […]]]>
Motif-investing

Chinese internet company Renren (NYSE: RENN) has led a US$40 million investment in Motif Investing, a U.S. upstart online broke claiming to pioneer concept-driven investing for individuals and financial advisors. The funding takes Motif’s total capital raised to over US$120 million, with previous funding rounds from JPMorgan Chase, Foundation Capital, Goldman Sachs, Ignition Partners, and Norwest Venture Partners, and others.

Renren founder Joseph Chen will join Motif’s board of directors along with Carl Stern, former vice chairman of the Investment Banking division at Goldman Sachs and former chairman and CEO at the Boston Consulting Group.

Co-founded by former Microsoft exec Hardeep Walia, Motif Investing is a low-cost online broker that lets users invest in the world of big ideas. It allows investors to trade “motifs” – intelligently-weighted baskets of stocks and bonds built around themes, investing styles or multi-asset models – in single transactions for low fees. The platform has now registered nearly 120,000 users and monetizes the service by charging US$10 per stock portfolio.

The new funding is expected to fuel Motif’s expansion into tools for wealth managers and other financial advisors. The San Mateo, California-based startup plans to expand into U.K and Hong Kong markets this year, while cooperation with Renren is expected to facilitate its expansion into mainland China.

Started as a social networking platform for college students, Renren has branched into other areas upon failing to generate profits from core services; moreover, its existing profitable sectors, like online gaming, also started to decline in late 2013. The company has therefore shifted away from advertising and ought new revenue sources to monetize its huge college student user base via student loans, credit cards and online financial businesses.

Joseph Chen has disclosed that Renren is planning to invest approximately US$500 million in fintech startups. Thus far, the company has invested in companies such as real estate crowdfunding site Fundrise, student loan consolidation and refinancing platform Social Finance, and financial social media Snowball.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Travel Platform Aoliday Receives Fresh Funding from Gobi Partners https://technode.com/2015/01/20/aoliday-receives-us1-5-million-seed-investment/ https://technode.com/2015/01/20/aoliday-receives-us1-5-million-seed-investment/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2015 02:36:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26862 Online and outbound travel are two major driving forces in China’s tourist industry as the country’s newly-wealthy middle class and younger generations gain the financial power to explore the world. Aoliday, a Chengdu-based outbound travel platform, is working at the intersection of these two trends announced today that it has received US$1.5 million in seed […]]]>
Aoliday

Online and outbound travel are two major driving forces in China’s tourist industry as the country’s newly-wealthy middle class and younger generations gain the financial power to explore the world.

Aoliday, a Chengdu-based outbound travel platform, is working at the intersection of these two trends announced today that it has received US$1.5 million in seed financing from Gobi Partners. The investment will be used to enhance current tour operations and expanding on its travel destinations.

The company is dedicated to providing outbound independent travel products, packages and services to Chinese-speaking travelers. Through its website and mobile app, Aoliday currently offers over 3,000 independent tour packages, spanning popular destinations in Australia, Fiji, New Zealand, southeast Asia, and United States.

Aoliday’s products and services encompass standalone and package tours, including cruises, extreme sports, hotel booking, leisure activities, local attractions, restaurant booking, sightseeing trips, transportation arrangements, watersports, as well as personal travel offerings.

The platform cooperates with operators of Australian scenic spots, instead of other local travel agencies or tourism wholesalers, in a bid to better control service quality and provide customized services.

James He: Founder and CEO of Aoliday

Aoliday was launched in 2010 as a personal hobby of company founder James He, an industry veteran who has worked in Australian tourism sector for eight years. He then bootstrapped the site into a startup project in 2013.

According to the company, Aoliday has maintained continuous profitability since its establishment. By the end of 2015, Aoliday plans to enhance its offerings to include over 10,000 different tour products and expand into new markets.

“In recent years, Chinese outbound tourism has shown remarkable growth,” said Thomas G. Tsao, managing partner at Gobi Partners. “In consequence, independent travel offerings are increasingly in demand as more travelers break away from the traditional tour group. We believe that Aoliday is well-positioned to capitalize on this shift in consumer habits.”

Aoliday joins a number of other travel investments by Gobi Partners, including Spottly, Tuniu (Nasdaq: TOUR) and Yododo, among others.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Yongche, Haier Set Up US$1.28B Car Rental Joint Venture https://technode.com/2015/01/19/yongche-haier/ https://technode.com/2015/01/19/yongche-haier/#comments Mon, 19 Jan 2015 07:09:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26833 Chinese car rental service provider Yongche, commonly known as Yidao Yongche, and Haier Financial Services, the financial arm of Chinese consumer electronics maker Haier Group, today announced the establishment of Haier Yidao Travel (our translation), a joint venture delivering car rental services, car financial leasing, and more. Under the deal, the two companies will each hold 50% in […]]]>

Chinese car rental service provider Yongche, commonly known as Yidao Yongche, and Haier Financial Services, the financial arm of Chinese consumer electronics maker Haier Group, today announced the establishment of Haier Yidao Travel (our translation), a joint venture delivering car rental services, car financial leasing, and more.

Under the deal, the two companies will each hold 50% in the joint venture, with Haier Financial offering financing resources and Yongche providing operational support.

With an investment claimed to be RMB8 billion (around US$1.28 billion) by 2017, Beijing-based Haier Yidao Travel expects to then be operating 80,000 to 100,000 cars. Yongche’s founder Zhou Hang noted that the company’s current car fleets will be gradually integrated into the new platform.

In September last year, Yongche and Haier established Haier Yidao Auto Financial Services, a joint venture providing financial leasing services to car rental firms on Yongche’s online platform.

Moreover, Yongche has now released test-drive services for Tesla and Volvo, with more car brands are expected to be included. The startup also rolled out designated driving services.

Founded in 2010, Yongche was one of the first Uber-style car rental services in China, and now operates in more than 80 domestic cities and in 24 cities overseas. After landing US$1 million angel investment in 2010, the startup has since secured three rounds of financing: from Morningside Ventures and Qualcomm Ventures in 2011, US$20 million series B round of financing led by CBC Capital, and an undisclosed amount of Series C funding last year.

image credit: Yongche

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Online Education Startup XueXiBao Lands US$20M Series B Funding https://technode.com/2015/01/17/xuexibao-lands-us20m-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/01/17/xuexibao-lands-us20m-funding/#respond Fri, 16 Jan 2015 20:44:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26803 As one of the hottest verticals in China’s booming online education industry, K-12 education attracted a flock of entrepreneurs and investors last year, and this trend seems set to continue this year. XueXiBao, a Beijing-based online platform for K-12 education, announced it has landed US$20 million of Series B financing led by SoftBank China Venture Capital and followed by […]]]>

As one of the hottest verticals in China’s booming online education industry, K-12 education attracted a flock of entrepreneurs and investors last year, and this trend seems set to continue this year.

XueXiBao, a Beijing-based online platform for K-12 education, announced it has landed US$20 million of Series B financing led by SoftBank China Venture Capital and followed by existing backer GSR Ventures, which invested US$3 million in Series A. The company disclosed that it will use the proceeds for product development and expansion.

XueXiBao is an online learning app for middle and high school students in China, helping them to find quick answers to questions.

When students encounter a problem and want to consult others online, their primary concern would be how to show the questions to teachers or fellow students. Powered by home-brew image search technologies, XueXiBao allows users to share the questions by uploading pictures. The app will then recommend corresponding answers in real-time (reportedly within 6 seconds).

Sharing by snapshot is a very useful feature for students, given that most high school questions usually involve hard-to-recognize characters, mathematical symbols and equations. On the other hand, the technology therefore requires higher recognition accuracy.

Xuexibao-pic

Screenshots of XueXiBao

In the latest 2.0 update, XueXiBao has integrated a voice Q&A feature, which allows students to receive problem solving guidance from teachers within an hour of paying RMB1 (US$0.16).

The company’s CEO Huang Yongtao said that K-12 students have weaker study initiatives compared to adults, so XueXibao targets to construct an online study community to improve the learning process.

Launched in May 2014, XueXiBao is now available on both iOS and Android, covering the subjects of math, physics, chemistry and English. The company claims to have over 15 million registered users and a database of more than 30 million questions. Amongst the users, 20,000 are teachers and the rest are either middle or high school students. The startup currently has over 120 employees with over 50% of them technical staff.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Xiaomi Debuts Flagship Smartphone Xiaomi Note, Retailing from US$371 https://technode.com/2015/01/15/xiaomi-note/ https://technode.com/2015/01/15/xiaomi-note/#respond Thu, 15 Jan 2015 09:22:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26756 Instead of the long-rumored smartphone Mi5, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi unveiled today Xiaomi Note, the latest addition to Xiaomi’s higher-spec and higher-priced smartphone product line. Here’s the Xiaomi Note’s tech specs: Operating System: MIUI 6 Weight: 161g Colors: Black, White Display: 5.7-inch display, 1920-by-1080-pixel resolution, 386 PPI Screen: Corning Gorilla Glass 3 Rear Camera: Sony 13 Megapixel Front Camera: Sony 4 Megapixel Bluetooth: Bluetooth […]]]>

Instead of the long-rumored smartphone Mi5, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi unveiled today Xiaomi Note, the latest addition to Xiaomi’s higher-spec and higher-priced smartphone product line. Here’s the Xiaomi Note’s tech specs:

  • Operating System: MIUI 6
  • Weight: 161g
  • Colors: Black, White
  • Display: 5.7-inch display, 1920-by-1080-pixel resolution, 386 PPI
  • Screen: Corning Gorilla Glass 3
  • Rear Camera: Sony 13 Megapixel
  • Front Camera: Sony 4 Megapixel
  • Bluetooth: Bluetooth 4.1
  • Internal: 16GB/64GB
  • CPU: Snapdragon 801
  • WLAN: Wi-Fi 802.11 ac
  • Hi-Fi: 192kHz/24bit
  • Battery: 3000mAh

Xiaomi Note is razor thin at 6.95mm, with an area of 155.1×77.6mm, making it smaller than the iPhone 6 Plus thought it has a larger (5.7-inch) screen. It features a 2.5d round edge tempered front screen and 3D curved glass on the back. The phablet is a dual SIM phone, supporting 4G and both micro and nano SIM cards. But it does not have the fingerprint sensor capabilities Xiaomi fans had expected in the company’s new flagship smartphone.

Xiaomi Note will be available for sale on January 27 at RMB2,299 (US$371) for 16GB and RMB2,799 for 64GB version.

Xiaomi-press

Xiaomi Note, Xiaomi Note Pro, Xiaomi Mini Box, Xiaomi Headphone (L-R)

The Xiaomi Note Pro features a Snapdragon 810 processor, 4G RAM (LPDDR4), 64G ROM and 2560*1440 resolution. This version is priced at RMB3,299.

The launch of Xiaomi Note rounds out Xiaomi’s smartphone product line, which ranges from budget phones like RedMi 2 (RMB669) and RedMi Note (around RMB1,000), to the mid-priced Xiaomi 4 (RMB 1,799 to 1,999) and higher-priced Xiaomi Note.

Xiaomi’s smartphone shipment volume has increased 227% YOY to 61.12 million sets last year, overshadowing the 135% growth rate for its annual sales. The contrast indicates a decline in the average price per unit, suggesting Xiaomi’s budget smartphones are outselling its more expensive models. The addition of a sleek high-end product may help Xiaomi balance its product line and strengthen its foothold in the upper end of the smartphone market.

In addition to the smartphones, Xiaomi also released a headphone and a small video streaming box, priced at RMB499 and RMB199, respectively.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese P2P Lending Site Dianrong Announces Fresh Funding From Tiger Global https://technode.com/2015/01/15/dianrong-announces-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2015/01/15/dianrong-announces-fresh-funding/#respond Thu, 15 Jan 2015 03:13:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26740 Dianrong, China’s leading P2P loan service, announced that it has secured new financing from Tiger Global. The specific investment was not disclosed but it was reported to be between tens to hundreds of million of dollars. The funds will be invested in technology development and team construction, according to company co-founder and CEO Guo Yuhang. The platform had […]]]>

Dianrong, China’s leading P2P loan service, announced that it has secured new financing from Tiger Global. The specific investment was not disclosed but it was reported to be between tens to hundreds of million of dollars. The funds will be invested in technology development and team construction, according to company co-founder and CEO Guo Yuhang.

The platform had just received funding from Sun Hun Kai & Co. Ltd. three months earlier, while other existing investors include ZJ Capital and Northern Light.

Shanghai-based Dianrong is a P2P lending platform for small and medium loans founded by Soul Htite, the co-founder and former technology head of the newly-listed U.S. counterpart Lending Club.

Guo disclosed that Dianrong’s annual turnover exceeded RMB1 billion (roughly US$161 million) in 2014, a figure estimated to surge five-tenfold during 2015. He also predicted that Chinese P2P industry will attract further capital injections in 2015.

As a leading global hedge fund, Tiger Global mainly focuses on the primary market and is an investor in the internet giants Alibaba, JD, Twitter, and Facebook, amongst others. The Dianrong funding marks the first occasion of the fund investing in a Chinese internet finance company.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Rural China: The Next Battlefield for Domestic E-commerce https://technode.com/2015/01/14/rural-ecommerce/ https://technode.com/2015/01/14/rural-ecommerce/#comments Wed, 14 Jan 2015 15:20:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26710 China’s urban e-commerce market is nearing saturation after years of explosive growth, a trend leading China’s online retailers to address the untapped markets in rural areas. Nearly 50% of the country’s 1.36 billion population lives in rural areas; however, less than 30% of rural residents are online and only 10% have bought things online, according to […]]]>

China’s urban e-commerce market is nearing saturation after years of explosive growth, a trend leading China’s online retailers to address the untapped markets in rural areas.

Nearly 50% of the country’s 1.36 billion population lives in rural areas; however, less than 30% of rural residents are online and only 10% have bought things online, according to iResearch. AliResearch, the research arm of Alibaba, has estimated that China’s rural e-commerce market will reach RMB180 billion (around US$29 billion) by 2014 and exceed RMB460 billion by 2016.

After its landmark IPO this year, Alibaba has rural e-commerce in its sights, with cross-border online shopping and data analysis the other two of its three strategic focuses. Over the next three to five years, Alibaba expects to invest RMB10 billion (around US$1.6 billion) in constructing infrastructure and logistics systems in rural China. The plan targets the building of 1,000 county-level operation centers, which will provide services for 100,000 villages countrywide.

The number of “Taobao Villages” — clusters of rural online entrepreneurs with shops on Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace — soared from 20 to 211 in 2014, according to AliResearch. The report added that some 70,000 Taobao Village merchants are selling products on the marketplace.

Taobao-JD

Outdoor Ads of Taobao and JD in Rural Areas (image credit: CB.COM.CN)

JD, China’s second largest e-commerce retailer by sales, has also targeted this untouched market by creating new services tailored to rural e-commerce and establishing county branches, amongst other actions, to gain more extensive coverage in lower-tier cities and even villages.

Through JDbang (not official name), JD’s e-commerce program integrating outsourcing services for third-party retailers on its site, the company has set up its first county-level franchise store in Hebei province in November last year. These bricks-and-mortars stores are expected to number around 1,000 within the next three years. Cooperation with local merchants is expected to solve the last-mile logistical problem for JD and improve its after-sales service in smaller cities.

JD has also initiated its first pilot program for rural e-commerce in Renshou, Sichuan province. The company aims to provide the same services in rural areas as in cities, by establishing local service centers and improving delivery systems in cooperation with both JDbang partners and traditional commercial enterprises.

JD’s launch of a shopping channel on Mobile QQ is likely to attract more customers, Mobile QQ having a high penetration rate in lower-tier cities.

To promote its services, the company has advertised on more than 8,000 billboards in more than 100 townships across the country since the fourth quarter of last year.

Other Chinese e-commerce giants like Dangdang, Yihaodian and Suning also have their own plans to explore the sector through setting up offline service centers, cooperation with local partners, and more.

The huge market presents new growth opportunities for Chinese e-commerce companies facing increasingly intense competition. But there are still several obstacles to overcome before they can turn a profit from this sector.

Despite the huge population, a majority of the rural residents has never shopped online, and most don’t even have access to the internet. Since young people from rural areas tend to work in cities as migrant workers, current residents in lower-tier cities are mostly elderly or children, who are very difficult to be convert into active online shoppers.

In rural China, most middle-aged villagers with purchasing power use mobile phones instead of computers to get online. Rising smartphone penetration in rural regions is hence a boost for rural e-commerce and m-commerce. On the other hand, these middle-aged users are less avid users of internet and social networking than younger generations, who are accustomed to sharing and finding everything online. In urban markets, expanding from PC to mobile may just need a simple duplication of what’s on the website to smartphones, but it requires far greater customization in rural areas due to the difference in users’ browsing habits.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese Companies Flock to Cross-border Shopping, the Next Big Thing in e-Commerce https://technode.com/2015/01/10/china-cross-border-shopping/ https://technode.com/2015/01/10/china-cross-border-shopping/#comments Fri, 09 Jan 2015 22:13:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26654 It is no exaggeration to say that cross-border online shopping is standing at the cusp of the next great leap forward for China’s booming e-commerce sector. The industry recorded sales of over RMB3 trillion (roughly US$483 billion) in the first half of 2014, of which RMB300 billion came from cross-border retailing, according to data from the […]]]>

It is no exaggeration to say that cross-border online shopping is standing at the cusp of the next great leap forward for China’s booming e-commerce sector. The industry recorded sales of over RMB3 trillion (roughly US$483 billion) in the first half of 2014, of which RMB300 billion came from cross-border retailing, according to data from the China E-commerce Research Center. The compound annual growth rate of China’s cross-border e-commerce trade value stood at 31% during 2008-2013, while the total number of cross-border online shoppers exceeded 18 million in 2013, according a Nielsen survey. The growing market has thus attracted many new entrants to share the growing cake.

Kaola-pic

Chinese internet company NetEase opened its cross-border e-commerce site Kaola for public test on January 8, expanding beyond its home turf as a news portal and email provider. Kaola now offers a variety of products in baby and maternal care, healthcare, personal care and cosmetics, and plans to expand beyond these categories after its formal launch. According product type and users’ requirements, the goods are either shipped from domestic bonded warehouses (taking 1-3 days for delivery) or from overseas directly (which take 7-30 days).

There is no doubt Kaola could pick up users quickly from NetEase’s existing user base. But going beyond that is not the only factor leading to a successful e-commerce platform: other crucial aspects include product management, logistics and supply chain management, for instance.

Shunfeng-haitao

SF Express, a leading Chinese express logistics company, today launched cross-border e-commerce platform SF Haitao (our translation). The site’s product inventory is similar to that of Kaola, perhaps not surprisingly given that these three are the best sellers across most cross-border platforms in China. In addition to its logistical backing, SF Haitao also promises to offer foreign products, RMB settlement, and Chinese sales service.

Of course, NetEase and SF-express are not the first companies to target this market, which is becoming increasingly competitive with the entrance of new players.

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba dubbed 2014 “the year of globalization”. Tmall International, the overseas shopping division of Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace, recorded a ten-fold sales growth between February and November last year. In addition, Alipay and Taobao, the payment and C2C market place of Alibaba, are expanding to Australia, one of the most popular cross-border shopping destinations for Chinese online buyers.

Amazon China opened direct shipping for Chinese cross-border shoppers in October last year, making it more convenient for customers to shop for goods from Amazon stores overseas.

Chinese home appliance retailer Suning also launched its U.S. e-commerce website targeting Chinese cross-border shoppers looking to buy American products.

Moreover, e-commerce platforms dedicated to this sector are evolving rapidly. Metao, the cross-border e-commerce site formerly known as CNTaotao, secured US$30 million of Series B financing led by Vertex Venture in 2014. The company claimed nearly 1 million users with monthly sales of over RMB10 million as of last November. A similar platform Ymatou claimed more than 1 million users and more than 10,000 daily orders, according to Mydrivers.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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JD Launches Mobile Shopping App Paipai Weidian https://technode.com/2015/01/08/jd-paipai-weidian-mcommerce/ https://technode.com/2015/01/08/jd-paipai-weidian-mcommerce/#comments Thu, 08 Jan 2015 06:45:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26606 China’s e-commerce giant JD recently launched an app for its mobile shopping marketplace Paipai Weidian (Paipai Micro-store) via Paipai, the Taobao-like C2C e-commerce platform that Tencent transfered to JD last year. Previously only available on their website, Paipai Weidian is a mobile-focused marketplace that lets merchants sell directly to buyers by promoting their products across social networking platforms […]]]>
Paioai-weidian-1

China’s e-commerce giant JD recently launched an app for its mobile shopping marketplace Paipai Weidian (Paipai Micro-store) via Paipai, the Taobao-like C2C e-commerce platform that Tencent transfered to JD last year.

Previously only available on their website, Paipai Weidian is a mobile-focused marketplace that lets merchants sell directly to buyers by promoting their products across social networking platforms such as WeChat, Weibo, Mobile QQ and Q-Zone.

After logging in though their QQ accounts, merchants can run their online stores by uploading items, and managing orders and their shelves, among features. The payment process is supported by both Tencent’s online payment service Tenpay and WeChat Payment, a one-click mobile payment method (developed by Tenpay).

A distinctive feature of Paipai Weidian is the integration of the merchandise distribution system. Small vendors on the platform can choose products from Paipai’s wholesale catalog and sell them in their stores as distributors. Merchants get paid from commission rebates while product suppliers are responsible for product shipment and after sales services.

JD will invest RMB100 million (around US$16 million) to attract businesses to set up stores on the platform.

Koudai Gouwu, a similar platform that claimed RMB15 billion (US$2.45 billion) sales as of last October, received US$350 million Series C financing from Tencent in 2014. Tencent – which also holds a stake in JD – is thus poised to further its retail ambitions in the m-commerce field.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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LifeSmart: All-in-One Solutions to Smarten Your Home https://technode.com/2015/01/07/lifesmart-one-solution-smartize-home/ https://technode.com/2015/01/07/lifesmart-one-solution-smartize-home/#respond Wed, 07 Jan 2015 13:30:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26587 Internet of Things (IoT) and smart homes are amongst the hottest buzzwords in China. As the fledgling industry matures, a string of IOT startups have emerged and are vying to be the next big IoT platform. Hangzhou-based startup LifeSmart, one of the major Chinese players of this arena, is an IoT company specializing in providing smart […]]]>

Internet of Things (IoT) and smart homes are amongst the hottest buzzwords in China. As the fledgling industry matures, a string of IOT startups have emerged and are vying to be the next big IoT platform.

Hangzhou-based startup LifeSmart, one of the major Chinese players of this arena, is an IoT company specializing in providing smart home hardware and software for home automation, home security and energy saving.

LifeSmart Station, Environment Multi-Sensor, Smart Outlet, Camera (L-R)

Since its first product launch in April 2014, LiftSmart has developed a wide array of home automation devices, which generally fall into three categories:

1)    Home security: cameras, motion sensors, open/close sensors, etc.

2)    Smart illumination: magic light strips, LED light bulbs, three-way in-wall light switches, etc.

3)    Smart home decoration solutions for real estate companies: environment multi-sensors, smart outlets, etc.

TechNode recently got the chance to check out some of their products. The company’s smart gadgets center around LifeSmart Station, a wireless hub which connects LifeSmart products as well a user’s other electronic devices. Local hub support ensures normal operation of all connected devices even without internet connection.

After few easy steps to link up the devices, users can then control them via an accompanying app. Like similar products, LifeSmart offers functions from watching real-time videos of your home on smart phone, adjusting room illumination via mobile app, monitoring your home’s environmental data, and more.

Lifesmart

Screenshots of LifeSmart App

What differentiates LifeSmart from its peers is the smart home automation models of its hardware. Based on IFTTT (if this then that) logic, LifeSmart allows users to define the hardware’s interrelations according to their needs and preferences. For example, if the sensors attached to a door detect a movement, it can trigger camera snapshots and push them to the app, so users can know whether it is a family member or a thief. Or the movement can be connected to the LightBulb, which will light automatically when users come home.

LifeSmart is also taking an open approach, aiming to build a unified platform which ties all sensors together and simplifies a smart home. It has teamed with several third-party partners like Philips Hue and iKair to integrate their devices in the platform.

LifeSmart-2

LifeSmart New Camera

The company has just taken the wraps off a wireless HD camera with 360º rotation at the ongoing Consumer Electronics Show 2015 in Las Vegas. It is powered by an in-set battery and can be placed anywhere. Unlike other LifeSmart gadgets, which have to work in conjunction with the central hub, the new camera can operate independently and serve as a hub for other LifeSmart devices. The product also has interactive features, supporting two-way audio, video messaging and storage.

The camera was designed by Branch, an industrial design and branding agency based in Silicon Valley. LifeSmart is planning to mass-produce the new camera by the second quarter of this year. As the company grows, they are planning on increasing their smart-home product line with gas sensors, curtain sensors, and more.

After receiving positive feedback in the domestic market during 2014, the company is planning to expand to the North American and European markets. “Our products will be designed in US, manufactured in China, and offered to a global audience”, said CMO and co-founder Meng Tao.

In addition to the global plan, LifeSmart is also seeking more growth points from business clients such as real estate developers and telecom carriers.

The company was co-founded by a group of tech veterans who have rich experience from large corporations like Huawei, Ericsson, and Alibaba. It has more than 20 staff and received a pre-A round of funding last year.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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[Update] Sony PlayStation to be Region Free in China https://technode.com/2015/01/06/ps4-region-free-china/ https://technode.com/2015/01/06/ps4-region-free-china/#comments Tue, 06 Jan 2015 06:12:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26530 Nearly half a year after setting up a joint venture with Chinese partner Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group, Sony is planning to release its flagship consoles PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita on the Chinese market on January 11. As the day is fast approaching, early reviews of the consoles indicate that PS4 and PS Vita will not be […]]]>

Nearly half a year after setting up a joint venture with Chinese partner Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group, Sony is planning to release its flagship consoles PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita on the Chinese market on January 11. As the day is fast approaching, early reviews of the consoles indicate that PS4 and PS Vita will not be region-locked when they are launched in China.

[Update 1] Sony announced in a statement on Jan. 8 that the company will postpone the sales of PS4 in China due to “various factors”, according Reuters. The new sale date has not yet been determined.

[Update 2] Sony announced on March 10 that  PS4 and PS Vita will be released in Chinese market on March 20.

The Chinese government implemented a game console ban in 2000, citing concerns that violent video games might have negative effects on children. Since lifting the 14-year ban last year, the ability of foreign-developed game consoles to enter China region-free has been a major concern, because it dictates whether Chinese gamers can play the full version of popular games. Foreign games that go through the regulated channels have to submit to rigid censorship before entering the Chinese market.

Sony’s region-free system may be a shot across the bows of Microsoft’s Xbox One, still region-locked after hitting the Chinese market last September. Sony products also enjoy a competitive edge on pricing. The PS4 is set to cost RMB2,899 (about US$468) and the PS Vita will be retail at RMB1,299 (about US$209), while the Xbox One goes for RMB4299 (US$690) with Kinect and RMB3699 (US$594) without.

PS4-Screenshot

Screenshot of the complaint

Xbox One fans resentful of this “unfairness” have even complained to China’s Ministry of Culture, asking the government to block Sony’s new game consoles in China. The complaint was submitted on December 30 last year and there is no word if the authority will take the advice or  block Sony products before their releases in China.

Sony has shipped over 18.5 million unit of the PS4 worldwide as of January 4, up from 13.5 million at the end of October thanks to holiday season shopping sprees. The sales of accompanying games hit 81.8 million units and PlayStation Plus members have exceeded 10 million. According to Vgchartz, Xbox One sales have reached 10 million worldwide.

image credit: Sina

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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How Internet Companies Disrupt China’s Secondhand Car Market https://technode.com/2015/01/06/china-secondhand-car/ https://technode.com/2015/01/06/china-secondhand-car/#comments Mon, 05 Jan 2015 19:52:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26502 The Chinese automobile market has been significant for some time given the country’s huge population and rapidly expanding middle class. China has been the world’s largest auto market by sales since 2010, with the lead extending since then. The sales boom for new automobiles has in turn fostered a domestic used car market, which has in […]]]>

The Chinese automobile market has been significant for some time given the country’s huge population and rapidly expanding middle class. China has been the world’s largest auto market by sales since 2010, with the lead extending since then.

The sales boom for new automobiles has in turn fostered a domestic used car market, which has in fact outpaced growth in sales of new cars since 2012. The trading volume of used cars increased 12.77% year-on-year to 2.82 million in the first half of 2014, with the figure expected to reach around 6 million in 2014 and around 10 million in the next two years, according to data from the China Automobile Dealers Association.

Chinese began buying new cars in huge numbers in 2009, when more than 13.6 million new cars were sold – a 48% increase from the previous year. Five years later, these cars are reaching the end of the average 5-plus year life cycle, so more car owners are planning to trade in their vehicle. Secondhand cars were formerly a hard sell in China, while car owners have to settle for much less, and there being a stigma to used cars. But the secondhand market is becoming increasingly popular as drivers find they can get a decent car at a reasonable price.

However, the used car business is largely dominated by small trading companies operating out of large trading halls or open air markets on city outskirts. The lack of a trusted pricing system, reliable vehicle status certification and full service histories have all inhibited the development of the market.

Internet companies, big and small, have been popping up in response to the growing demand. Local listing service 58.com announced a partnership with a used car evaluation platform in November last year. Classified ads site Ganji.com launched a used car trading platform with an investment of US$100 million just a few weeks later. Alibaba also followed suit to launch Taobao’s secondhand car trading platform in the same month.

Used-car-sale-1

The rising market is also attracting large capital injections. Cheyipai, one of the leading players in China, has secured a combined US$75 million in three rounds of funding. The company’s major rival Youxinpai reportedly pocked US$260 million of Series B funding from Warburg Pincus and Tiger Fund last September. Renrenche recently announced US$20 million of funding led by Ceyuan Ventures and Shunwei Ventures, the venture capital fund backed by Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun.

Domestic used car trading platforms usually fall into the following five categories:

B2B sites serve as auction platforms and do not get involved in the transaction process. They commercialize the service by charging used car valuation fees from sellers and transaction-based commissions from buyers. The cars listed on the platform come from various sources like 4S stores. Examples: Youxinpai, Cheyipai.

B2C platform operators purchase used cars and sell them on to individual customers to pocket the price difference. Examples: UUmaxSohu Secondhand CarTaoche.com, Autohome.

C2B platforms help car owners sell their cars to dealers under a bidding scheme. The platform will run car valuation tests on cars listed on the platform and send them to dealers for their reference. Examples: Gjesc, Pahaoche.

C2C sites connect car owners and sellers to eliminate the middlemen. Examples: Renrenche, Haoche51.

Used car consignment sites operate offline stores where sellers can put their cars up for sale. The platforms also provide car valuation certificates and other services. Examples: SoucheBucar.

China’s used vehicle market only makes up a small portion of total car sales volume as compared with that for the U.S. market, highlighting the vast potentials of this industry.

image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Xiaomi Announces 61M Annual Shipment for 2014, Unveils Budget Smartphone RedMi 2 https://technode.com/2015/01/04/xiaomi-redmi2-shipment-2014/ https://technode.com/2015/01/04/xiaomi-redmi2-shipment-2014/#comments Sun, 04 Jan 2015 05:59:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26455 Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi – now valued at US$45 billion – sold 61.12 million smartphones in 2014, representing a 227% increase on 2013, according to an internal email from Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun. He also revealed that the company’s after-tax income from smartphone sales had soared 135% year-on-year to RMB74.3 billion (around US$11.98 billion) in the […]]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi – now valued at US$45 billion sold 61.12 million smartphones in 2014, representing a 227% increase on 2013, according to an internal email from Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun. He also revealed that the company’s after-tax income from smartphone sales had soared 135% year-on-year to RMB74.3 billion (around US$11.98 billion) in the past year.

To some extent, Xiaomi’s smartphone shipment growth has overshadowed its sales figures, which indicate a decline in the average price per unit. This might be why the company released its sales figures first, rather than the common to announce after-tax results. The decline also suggests that the company’s budget smartphones, such as RedMi and Mi 3, have likely recorded more shipments than higher-priced models like the Mi4.

As China’s smart device battlefield becoming more competitive, Lei noted that 2015 Xiaomi will:

  1. Strengthen strategic ecosystem planning. Xiaomi will continue its 100-hardware-companies strategyover the year to create a more holistic ecosystem. It has invested in more than 20 smart hardware companies to date and has partnered with appliance giant Midea
  2. Go global. Xiaomi is planning to expand overseas markets, having already entering to seven other countries and regions beyond China. Remarkable progress though that is, however, the company failed to reach its goal of expansion to ten countries as planned in April last year. Despite its setbacks in India, Xiaomi has sold over 1 million smartphones there in just five months, the company disclosed.

The year 2014 witnessed the swift development of Chinese smartphone manufacturers. Xiaomi’s major competitor Huawei announced it had shipped over 75 million smartphones last year. OnePlus expects to have shipped 1 million units in 2014 and Smartisan claimed to have sold out 122,063 sets as of early December.

At the same time, Xiaomi today also launched the long-rumored RedMi 2, the second generation of Xiaomi’s RedMi smartphone brand.Running on the MIUI 6 OS, Red Mi2 is powered by a 64-bit quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 410 processor clocked at 1.2GHz. It is 9.4mm thick and 133 gramsin weight. With a 4.7-inch IPS screen that has 1280*720p resolution, RedMi2 supports dual-card and dual-standby mode for both TDD and FDD networks and has 1GB of RAM and up to 32GB of internal storage. The camera is 2megapixel on the front and 8megapixel on the rear.

The device is offered in five candy colors (white, pink, yellow, green and black) and opens for pre-order on the company’s site and the latest version of Tencent’s Mobile QQ for RMB 699 (around US$112). Xiaomi is also planning to release another flagship product on January 15th.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Five Chinese Hardware Verticals to Watch in 2015 https://technode.com/2015/01/02/chinese-hardware-verticals-watch-2015/ https://technode.com/2015/01/02/chinese-hardware-verticals-watch-2015/#respond Fri, 02 Jan 2015 04:30:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26334 A craze for smart hardware has been raging in the past year, especially in China which is at the center of the smart hardware industrial chain. The trend also lured internet giants to build platforms in a bid to better develop and connect the hardware startups. However, the burgeoning market has been plagued by product […]]]>

A craze for smart hardware has been raging in the past year, especially in China which is at the center of the smart hardware industrial chain. The trend also lured internet giants to build platforms in a bid to better develop and connect the hardware startups.

However, the burgeoning market has been plagued by product homogeneity. Smart watches and smart fitness trackers, which led the initial wave of smart hardware, are losing their charm as the market gets clogged with products with little or no difference in features, quality and benefits. Intensifying competition in these two sectors has pushed hardware startups to break into other areas. Here are some interesting areas we think worth nothing and startups which have caught our eye.

WiFi Routers

Most Chinese tech insiders believe that home smart devices will be controlled via router, with new applications needed to meet user’s needs or to improve the experience of these connected devices. This thinking has attracted many internet companies to this sector.

Xiaomi Router is considered the centerpiece of Xiaomi’s smart home plan. In addition, the company has also released a mini WiFi wireless router which is more portable and affordable.

Hiwifi is one of the first smart WiFi routers with built-in internet application in China. To gain traction for its platform, HiWiFi opened up its Linux-based system to developers and smart home appliance makers last July. The company received tens of millions of dollars in its A+ round of funding in 2014.

360 Portable WiFi is a dongle that can be converted to a WiFi hotspot once plugged into a PC or laptop. The product is sold for only RMB19.90 (about $3). Parent company Qihoo 360 claims to have sold out more than 15 million items as of August 2014.

Air Quality Monitors

China’s worsening air quality has been raising people’s awareness of pollution, indoors and outdoors. The crisis has led to the emergence of a series of smart air quality monitors which track environmental data in real time. The air problem has also spurred the air purifier market.

iCelery is an in-vehicle air quality indicator. With in-built VOC sensors, the device helps users measure interior air quality and reminds owners to ventilate or use air purifiers by analyzing the concentrations of pollution and exhaust fumes.

Haier Air Box comes from China’s leading home appliance manufacturer. It is an indoor air quality detector that monitors the indoor environment and can be connected to air conditioners and purifiers (both by Haier and any other brand). An accompanying mobile app displays environmental data and instructs purifiers to operate when air quality is poor.

Airnut is a pair of smart weather stations that helps users monitor indoor and outdoor air quality. It is developed by Moji, or MoWeather, one of the most popular weather apps in China.

iKair is a smart sensor that provides intelligent readouts of indoor environmental factors like air quality and noise levels, and then recommends improvements.

Maternal and Child Care

China’s post-80s and post-90s generations are considered better educated and have grown up in the digital age. As these people have started to have families, it’s natural for these new parents to try out new methods in parenting. The post-80s mothers are rapidly becoming the most important parent group in China.

iCareNewlife is a handheld ultrasound and smartphone app that tracks an unborn baby’s heartbeat. Instead of visiting clinics, parents can easily track fetal sounds with iCareNewlife’s miniature ultrasound device, which connects to smartphone via audio cable, or share data on the baby on social media if they want.

Lisa is a smart fetal movement tracking wristband which helps expectant mothers monitor the condition of their unborn child. Users can read the recorded data on an accompanying app which also provides antepartum weight control and postpartum workout plans. A similar product is B-smart, a smart watch for moms developed by Shenzhen-based Umeox.

Leme is a smart gadget allowing parents to read to their kids at any time or from any location. Parents can read the stories on the app directly to their kids, saving time by having the stories to hand, or record audio clips for their children to listen to when they are unavailable. Leme also can project videos or pictures of the stories being told. Backed by Chinese video content provider LeTV, the app has over 200 stories available. In addition, it also allows real-time communication between parents and children.

360 Child Guard is a GPS tracking bracelet developed by Qihoo. It enables parents to locate the position of their kids and track their movements on a mobile app. Parents also can call and listen to the sounds around them, letting them know whether their kids are in a safe environment.

Teemo is a GPS-powered smart wristband for kids. In addition to the usual features, Teemo has a WeChat-like “Hold-to-talk” function to enable real-time communication between children and parents. The device also allows wearers to use it as the controller for motion sensor games integrated in the accompanying app.

Mozbii, a color picker stylus for kids developed by Taiwanese company Ufro, allows kids to capture and use any colour they set their eyes on.

Connected Portable Projectors

The living room electronics market has long been the focus of consumer manufacturers. After waves of set-top boxes and smart TVs, streaming projectors are the latest product with the potential to transform Chinese living rooms, thanks to their portability and easy access to vast amounts of content.

XGIMI is a portable projector that can stream videos, photos or any other type of content from your Android or iOS device onto any surface through WiFi.

ZECO is XGIMI’s major competitor in the projector market. ZECO’s latest CX6 product comes with YunOS, the custom Android system developed by Alibaba, and is sold on Tmall.

Drones

Dji Innovations is a Shenzhen-based company that produces commercial and recreational unmanned aerial systems. As GoPro is poised to launch consumer drones to supplement its action camera lineup, Dji is also planning to introduce hardware with advanced camera features and to include in-house cameras with their drones.

Ehang is the Chinese startup behind Ghost Drone, a quadcopter that can be controlled with mobile app (iOS and Android). The company just receveived US$10 million of Series A funding led by GGV Capital after snapping up  a combined US$705,000 on Indiegogo and Chinese crowdfunding site Demohour.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Huawei Smartphone Shipments Surge 40% to 75M Units in 2014 https://technode.com/2014/12/31/huawei-smartphone-shipment-2014/ https://technode.com/2014/12/31/huawei-smartphone-shipment-2014/#comments Wed, 31 Dec 2014 08:45:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26400 Chinese telecom equipment and smartphone maker Huawei shipped more than 75 million smartphones in 2014, according to a year-end letter by the company’s Consumer Business Group (source in Chinese). This is a greater than 40% increase from last year, with 34.27 million sets sold during the first half of this year. Huawei attributes the growth to […]]]>

Chinese telecom equipment and smartphone maker Huawei shipped more than 75 million smartphones in 2014, according to a year-end letter by the company’s Consumer Business Group (source in Chinese). This is a greater than 40% increase from last year, with 34.27 million sets sold during the first half of this year.

Huawei attributes the growth to breakthroughs in mid- and high-tier smartphone markets, led by flagship products such as the Mate 7. Sales of the company’s new Honor brand has increased more than 30-fold, according to the letter.

Huawei is experiencing rapid growth in the Middle East, Latin America, Southeast Asia, Africa and the South Asia-Pacific. It has set up more than 450 bricks-and-mortar stores and has nearly 30,000 sales counters around the world,.

Annual revenue from its consumer business group is expected to rise from US$9 billion in 2013 to over US$11.8 billion in 2014, a surge of over 30% year-on-year. The letter added that it is the first time the group has exceeded the 10 billion revenue threshold.

The company claims to be the world’s third largest smartphone manufacturer by shipment, while the gap between the company and industry leaders Apple and Samsung is narrowing, the letter reads.

Another internal email released by Huawei CEO Hu Houkun disclosed that total sales are expected to surge 15% year-on-year to US$46 billion this year (source in Chinese).

image credit: ShutterStock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Ten Chinese Internet-of-Things Startups to Watch in 2015 https://technode.com/2014/12/31/10-chinese-iot-startups-to-watch-in-2015/ https://technode.com/2014/12/31/10-chinese-iot-startups-to-watch-in-2015/#comments Tue, 30 Dec 2014 19:57:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26291 The Internet of Things, or IoT, emerged as the third wave of internet development and is gradually merging the physical and online worlds. Prompted by the smart hardware boom, this sector is in full bloom in China with repercussions across fields such as smart homes, wearables, connected cities and cars, and beyond. The size of […]]]>

The Internet of Things, or IoT, emerged as the third wave of internet development and is gradually merging the physical and online worlds. Prompted by the smart hardware boom, this sector is in full bloom in China with repercussions across fields such as smart homes, wearables, connected cities and cars, and beyond.

The size of the Chinese IoT market has soared from RMB 170 billion (around US$27 billion) in 2009 to RMB365 billion in 2012, and exceeded RMB500 billion in 2013 with annual compound growth of over 30 percent. The burgeoning market is attracting ever more companies: here are ten startups worth watching in the new year.

1. Xiaomi is trying to duplicate its business model, so successful in the smartphone market, in various hardware sectors. After initial success with its low-cost fitness bracelet, the company launched a 100-hardware-companies strategy in a bid to connect more smart gadgets in fields like healthcare (iHealth), smart home (Ants, Yeelink), and so on. The company also announced a strategic partnership with Chinese home appliance giant Midea.

2. Broadlink is smart home solution provider which specializes in IoT Wi-Fi. In addition to existing smart socket and remote controls for infrared devices, Broadlink is also the developer of BroadLink DNA, which helps conventional home appliance makers “smartize” their products. Broadlink’s Wi-Fi solution has been integrated into Xiaomi’s smart router.

3. Gizwits is a Chinese IoT technology platform that connects home appliances and consumer electronics products to the internet and smartphones. GizWits provides IoT developers with data analytics as well as tools such as remote access, notification, and Over the Air (OTA) firmware upgrades. The company has launched a self-serve software development platform Gizwits 2.0 and a programmable microcontroller board GoKit, for smart home gadgets.

4. Ayla Networks China is the Chinese arm of U.S.-based Ayla Network, a startup offering cloud connectivity solutions for manufacturers to turn appliances, HVAC and more into intelligent devices. Upon the receipt of a US$14.5 million investment this year, the company is going into the Chinese market with a series of moves like launching a Chinese site, cooperating with Sina and adding a Chinese director to the board. Dave Friedman, CEO and co-founder, believes that China will lead the world in this sector.

5. Lifesmart is a Hangzhou-based startup principally engaged in developing smart home devices. Its product line includes a smart control center, smart sockets, surveillance cameras, environment sensors, etc.

6. Yeelink helps manufacturers build smart products, from hardware design to mobile app development, from the concept stage to initial products.

7. Landing Technology is a Shenzhen-based smart home startup, dedicated to developing, manufacturing and selling smart home devices and wearable devices and related know-how. Their “IVYLINK” and “Goldweb” brands cover smart devices and network devices & accessories respectively.

8. Orvibo is focused on IoT and smart home hardware. Its product line includes smart gadgets, full-digital visual doorbell products, and cloud platforms that provide intelligent services for thousands of IoT terminals. The company’s flagship product Kepler is an intelligent gas detector that promises to protect your home and loved ones from potential dangerous gas leaks.

9. MXchip was incorporated in Shanghai at the beginning of 2005 with a focus on short distance wireless network technology and products.

10. Phantom is a smart home solution provider primarily focusing on smart illumination and surveillance. The company reportedly secured US$1.5 million of pre-A investment last year.

image credit: Shutterstock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Accessing Frontier Technology Computer Vision With Professor Alan Yuille https://technode.com/2014/12/29/accessing-frontier-technology-computer-vision-professor-alan-yuille/ https://technode.com/2014/12/29/accessing-frontier-technology-computer-vision-professor-alan-yuille/#respond Mon, 29 Dec 2014 03:26:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26274 In the information era, new technologies with world-changing potential are being invented every day. Although implementing them into practical use is no easy task, and it may take years or even decades to do so, the relentless development of technology is making everything possible. Like cutting-edge fields such as 3D printing and augmented reality, computer […]]]>

In the information era, new technologies with world-changing potential are being invented every day. Although implementing them into practical use is no easy task, and it may take years or even decades to do so, the relentless development of technology is making everything possible.

Like cutting-edge fields such as 3D printing and augmented reality, computer vision, which sounded too futuristic to be practical when it emerged in the 1980s, is coming out of the research labs and going mainstream as both the technology and the market mature. As a technology with enormous application potential, computer vision is attracting major companies, like Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, as well as a growing number of start-ups.

Shanghai-based startup Yitu Technology is one of the new industry entrants. Yitu operates a cloud-based visual recognition engine that enables computers to detect and recognize faces and cars. The system was first applied to security surveillance to help authorities identify persons of interest in criminal investigations and to track traffic violations.

Yitu

Leo Zhu, who gained a post-doctoral fellowship on computer vision at MIT, founded the company with high school friend Chenxi Lin, a former cloud computing technology director at Alibaba. Yitu has come a long way since its establishment in 2012. Leo explained that basic face recognition systems can search faces from galleries of millions, while Yitu’s engine can find one face from hundreds of million with higher accuracy in real time.

Positioned as a research- and technology-driven company, Leo invited his Ph.D adviser, Professor Alan Yuille, to give a mini course on computer vision in Shanghai last week. Professor. Professor Yuille was part of the MIT artificial intelligence research arm and has made significant contributions to the emergence of modern computer vision. He is well known for his work on image edge coding, object recognition, and his long term interest in unifying biological and computer vision modeling and technology.

Alan-leo-1

Leo introducing Alan before the mini course

Professor Yuille started out with a BA in mathematics at the University of Cambridge and then was supervised by Professor Stephen Hawking while undertaking a PhD in theoretical physics. His current role is professor in the department of statistics at UCLA and he also holds concurrent appointments in the departments of psychiatry, psychology and computer science.

Yuille believes that the ultimate goal of computer vision is to create intelligent systems which can understand the world as well as or better than human beings. These systems will help us to understand our brain as well as the world we live in. It is estimated that 40-50% of neurons in the cortex are involved in vision, so deeper investigation in this area will help us better understand the brain.

The human brain can handle multiple visual missions in the blink of eye, such as finding the object in a picture while describing its the contents and details at the same time. However, machines only can manage limited missions. Yuille says the problem for researchers is how to use existing systems to process enormous amounts of data to a level similar to human brains.

He considers the fragmented and dispersed field of computer vision one of the factors restricting it from reaching its full potential, in part due to its interdisciplinary nature and rapid growth. There is vast duplication of effort, and not enough building on the work of others. Companies should focus on different verticals rather than duplicating each other’s work.

Computer vision is a rapidly developing technology with enormous applications, and the gap between academic research and industry application is narrowing, especially in the last five years, he noted. Major breakthroughs have been achieved by leading tech companies based on the latest academic research. “Maybe technology will become mature enough to spare the backing theoretical studies someday, but that’s not our concern for now, because there are still lots of deep and fundamental researches to do.”

Yuille himself sits at the junction of research and industrial application, as he is also a co-founder of Blindsight, a startup which has been acquired by Amazon. The company was founded as a part-time job when he was a research fellow and had substantial free time. He added that it was fun to do something “real” after years of academic research. When talking about characteristics that he valued most in entrepreneurs, Alan said they were the ability and confidence to carry things through and the ability to see what the future is going to be.

Professor Stephen Hawking recently warned that intelligent machines could pose a threat to humanity. “The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race”, he said in a BBC interview. When being asked to comment on the idea, Yuille said this fear may concern that the emergence of intelligent machines and robots will lead us to a jobless future. “In one of his speeches thirty years ago, Hawking said machines may replace physicians after we solved problems in theoretical physics. I think he has had this concern decades ago.”

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Student Spending Power Fostering Installment Payment Boom in China https://technode.com/2014/12/26/installment-payment-platform-china/ https://technode.com/2014/12/26/installment-payment-platform-china/#comments Fri, 26 Dec 2014 13:35:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26234 Around the turn of the century, the Chinese government launched a college enrolment expansion plan to raise the national educational level. Consequently, China’s enrolment rate has soared, from around 5% in the early 1990s to 15% in 2002, then leaping to an average of 76% in 2013. This remarkable change has created a special group […]]]>

Around the turn of the century, the Chinese government launched a college enrolment expansion plan to raise the national educational level. Consequently, China’s enrolment rate has soared, from around 5% in the early 1990s to 15% in 2002, then leaping to an average of 76% in 2013. This remarkable change has created a special group of young adults with their own particular needs, a group numbering nearly 30 million, according to a research by Shanghai Jiaotong University.

Despite being stereotyped as broke, this demographic actually has a considerable amount of spending power, given that students at university are very often only children, while Chinese parents are known for their willingness to invest heavily in education.

A report noted that in 2013, Chinese students’ average annual spending stood at around RMB11,347 (around US$1,826), or around half of the disposable income of Chinese urban citizens. Their income mainly comes from their parents, who contribute the majority, and part-time jobs.

As a valuable consumer base known for being responsive to fashion and trends, the new student demographic has prompted the emergence of numerous installment payment platforms in China. Here are some of the leaders  in a field getting significant investor interest:

Qufenqi is a Chinese electronics retailer that allows buyers, mostly college students and young white collar workers, to pay in monthly installments. The platform focuses on smartphones, laptops, and other consumer electronics. Customers can choose items from e-commerce sites like Tmall and JD, and then pay for them via Qufenqi by selecting a down payment and the number of months they will pay off the remainder. The company has scooped three rounds of funding since its foundation in March this year. The latest US$100 million Series C was received from existing investors in early December.

Fenqile, a major competitor of Qufenqi, is similar in terms of business model and user base. The company claims its service covers 2,000 colleges and has sales centers in about 40 Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. It announced a US$100 million Series B round led by DST Advisors and followed by existing investors of Bertlesmann Asia Investment (BAI) and Matrix Partners China.

Renren Fenqi is an installment payment platform backed by China’s Facebook clone Renren. Like its rivals, it also focuses on consumer electronics. Although Renren had tried to expand to various businesses like group-buying and online video in recent years, its user base never went beyond college students. The company is now shifting to focus squarely on its core user base of college students and young adults this year, so it’s reasonable to start with a business that shares the same users.

Aixuedai also targets the consumer electronics market, but it is planning to expand into categories like travel and training. The company was founded in August this year by former Alipay executive Qian Zhilong and Wang Feng, CTO of internet and mobile phone payment solution provider LianlianPay. The site reportedly has received RMB10 million angel investment.

Aliwey, a similar platform, also announced angel investment from Addend Capital this week.

The payment platforms boom reflects the spending habits of China’s young adults, and how they have changed compared with older generations, who are generally more traditional and conservative in spending.

In addition, this group also has huge earning and spending potential. To tap this market, Qufenqi has launched Laifenqi, a small loan provider for young white collar workers, after receiving new funding. The platform will grant users that are working for the Chinese internet giants or startups backed by venture capitalists up to RMB500k credit lines to purchase cars, homes and holidays, and so on.

Despite the rapid development of this emerging industry, it has been questioned for its hefty commission fee charges. For example, the 24-month installment payment for an iPhone6 is RMB267.33 per month, of which just RMB47 is for service fees, meaning users have to pay a total of RMB6415.92 for a handset which is retails at RMB5,288.

Installment-

Screenshot from Qufenqi

The installment platforms are mainly funded by self-owned capital, financing from venture capitalists and other channels. Since most of the current installment platforms have been operating for less than a year, they may fall short sufficient capital support, with P2P lending sites providing a major financing source. The high fundraising cost is then taken on by buyers. For example, Fenqile is reportedly cooperating with P2P lending sites of Yooli and Ppdai at an annualized interest of around 11%. The escalating war and continuous capital injection in this filed have pushed leading players like Qufenqi, Fenqile, Aixuedai to lower the interest rates on their installments.

image credit: Shutterstock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Qihoo 360 Moves Into VoIP with Online Voice-call App https://technode.com/2014/12/24/qihoo-360-online-voice-call-app/ https://technode.com/2014/12/24/qihoo-360-online-voice-call-app/#respond Wed, 24 Dec 2014 01:43:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26148 Shortly after WeChat released its standalone VoIP app, another Chinese internet giant – this time Qihoo 360 – targeted this sector and launched a free voice call app. 360 Free Call (our translation) was released today, and was developed by the team which runs Qihoo’s 360 Phonebook. To enjoy free voice calls, most Chinese VoIP services require […]]]>
360-1

Shortly after WeChat released its standalone VoIP app, another Chinese internet giant – this time Qihoo 360 – targeted this sector and launched a free voice call app. 360 Free Call (our translation) was released today, and was developed by the team which runs Qihoo’s 360 Phonebook.

To enjoy free voice calls, most Chinese VoIP services require both parties to download the app and stay online. The app differentiates itself in only requiring the calling party to be online and have installed the app, which means calls are free even if the call recipients are offline or don’t have the app.

Best known for its keyboard app, TouchPal released a free voice call feature for its lifestyle app in October. Like 360 Free Call, the app also frees call recipients from internet connection and app download restrictions. Upon the release of its iOS version this week, TouchPal announced its Android app’s user demographics after two months of availability. Some 82% of the users are male, while 73% are aged between 19 to 39.

The emergence of IM apps like WeChat has long been posing threats to telecom carriers, who have seen substantial declines in their text messaging revenues. The rise of VoIP service may further reduce their voice call business, historically one of their major revenue sources.

To fend off competition, the telecom operators are turning to data plans as their major revenue stream. The Guangdong branch of China Unicom partnered up WeChat to release WeChat Wo SIM card, which offers higher discounts on data plans. China Telecom has cooperated with NeteEase, with their joint venture’s messaging app EasyChat offering a certain amount of international calls for free. Alibaba has also teamed up with telecom carriers to offer free data plan for Laiwang and Mobile Taobao.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Meizu Launches NOBLUE Note for Budget Smartphone Market https://technode.com/2014/12/24/meizu-noblue-note/ https://technode.com/2014/12/24/meizu-noblue-note/#comments Wed, 24 Dec 2014 01:42:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26177 Chinese smartphone maker Meizu released today NOBLUE, a sub-brand focusing on the rising budget smartphone market. At the same time, the company also took the wraps off NOBLUE Note, the first smartphone under this brand. Meizu’s low-cost handset clones the iPhone 5C’s steel-reinforced and machined poly carbonate and glossy finish, and also is offered in rainbow colors. The […]]]>

Chinese smartphone maker Meizu released today NOBLUE, a sub-brand focusing on the rising budget smartphone market. At the same time, the company also took the wraps off NOBLUE Note, the first smartphone under this brand.

Meizu’s low-cost handset clones the iPhone 5C’s steel-reinforced and machined poly carbonate and glossy finish, and also is offered in rainbow colors.

The gadget is offered in 16G and 32G versions, which retail at RMB999 (US$160) and RMB1,199, respectively. It is open for pre-order on Meizu’s official website, JD and Q-zone now, and will be shipped on December 30.

Meizu-note1

The NOBLUE Note’s specs include:

  • OS: Android 4.4.4+ Flyme
  • Weight: 145g
  • Colors: White, Blue, Yellow, Green, Pink
  • Dimensions: 150.7×75.2×8.9mm
  • Display: 5.5-inch display, 1920×1080-pixel resolution
  • Protection: Corning Gorilla Glass 3
  • CPU: MediaTek MT6752 octa-core processor
  • GPU: Mali T760 MP2/600MHz
  • Rear Camera: 13 megapixel
  • Front Camera: OV5670, 5 megapixel
  • 4G Network: China Mobile TD-LTE, China Unicom TD/FDD-LTE
  • Bluetooth: 4.0
  • WLAN: Wi-Fi 802.11 n/g/b/a
  • Internal memory: 16GB/32GB
  • Battery: 3140mAh

It was no secret that Meizu planned to launch a sub-brand targeting a younger user base, such as high school students and undergraduates, given that parent brand Meizu’s current users are mostly young people in their 30s. NOBLUE is positioned as a smartphone brand for youth with the slogan of “Quality For Young”.

The youth market is also targeted by smartphone manufacturers such as Xiaomi and Coolpad, which released Red Mi and Dashen as brand extensions for high-end and lower-end markets respectively.

image credit: Meizu

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Science Networking Service Guokr Secures US$20M Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/12/22/guokr-funding-tal/ https://technode.com/2014/12/22/guokr-funding-tal/#comments Mon, 22 Dec 2014 05:03:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=26132 Guokr, a popular Chinese mobile and web-based science and technology education community, announced that it has received US$20 million of Series C funding. Of the total investment, US$15 million was secured from TAL Education Group (NYSE: XRS), a leading K-12 after-school tutoring services provider in China, the rest coming from existing investors including IDG. The company had previously received a combined US$4 […]]]>

Guokr, a popular Chinese mobile and web-based science and technology education community, announced that it has received US$20 million of Series C funding. Of the total investment, US$15 million was secured from TAL Education Group (NYSE: XRS), a leading K-12 after-school tutoring services provider in China, the rest coming from existing investors including IDG.

The company had previously received a combined US$4 million funding from Trustbridge Partners in angel and A round. Series B funding was raised from IDG in 2013.

Born out of NGO Squirrel Group in 2010, Guokr is a Chinese social networking service provider that fosters the learning and sharing scientific knowledge. Topics on Guokr range across fields such as biology, psychology, sociology, physics, astronomy, and many more. The company claims more than 25 million users to date from its website, Guokr.com, and affiliated mobile apps.

Guokr content is mainly generated from three sources: professionally-generated-content (PGC) curated by Guokr editors, user-generated-content (UGC) from knowledgeable users, and offline seminars held by Guokr, which invite specialists in various fields to share their expertise.

Guokr also launched a MOOC platform in 2013, partnering with several open education initiatives including international education platform Coursera. Guokr supports the translation of MOOC content into Chinese for Coursera and other MOOC providers and promotes contents for its user base through Guokr.com. To date, Guokr MOOC platform has accumulated a total of 800,000 registered users. Following the new funding round, Guokr is planning to bring more overseas courses to the platform.

In addition, the company has expanded into more areas of popular science by upgrading an existing web channel to a science column for professional scientists, launching the maternal and baby health app Yanjiusheng, and unveiling its first hardware, an air purifier.

TAL’s co-founder and Investment Unit General Manager, Yachao Liu says the funding will help them to reach a complementary customer base of mostly college-based technology enthusiasts, and thus, building a social community through MOOC-based science and technology content for a younger demographic.

TAL Group was previously known as Xueersi and is now making heavy investments in online education. After investing in three online education companies (childcare portal Babytree, MOOC platform Duobei and graduate school admission test prepping site Kaoyan) in 2013, the company is becoming more aggressive in its acquisitions. Just in October, it announced five investment cases in LTG Exam Prep Platform, U.S. higher education provider Minerva Project, kids’ education company Sharkpark and online education platform CGMentor.

一张图读懂好未来_final

image credit: TAL

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Chinese VR Headset Maker ANTVR Hits Market with Slew of New Products https://technode.com/2014/12/12/chinese-vr-headset-maker-antvr-taps-virtual-reality-battlefield-slew-new-products/ https://technode.com/2014/12/12/chinese-vr-headset-maker-antvr-taps-virtual-reality-battlefield-slew-new-products/#comments Fri, 12 Dec 2014 09:02:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25957 Facebook’s whopping US$2 billion acquisition of Oculus has reignited the virtual reality headset market. As one of the new entrants to the burgeoning sector, Beijing-based ANTVR recently released three products, including the ANTVR headset, ANTVR camera and Jitao, a VR goggles set which is smartphone compatible. ANTVR’s headset is equipped with a 6-inch HD display, with 1920×1080/1.03 megapixel […]]]>

Facebook’s whopping US$2 billion acquisition of Oculus has reignited the virtual reality headset market. As one of the new entrants to the burgeoning sector, Beijing-based ANTVR recently released three products, including the ANTVR headset, ANTVR camera and Jitao, a VR goggles set which is smartphone compatible.

ANTVR-headset

ANTVR’s headset is equipped with a 6-inch HD display, with 1920×1080/1.03 megapixel per eye. The sharp picture is projected through an aspherical lens, leaving no space for distortion. The device packs two built-in 9-axis IMU sensor for head rotation and movement tracking. Unlike Oculus which only runs games designed specifically for its hardware, ANTVR supports all mainstream platforms including PC, Xbox, PlayStation and Android devices. In addition, it can be worn without the need to take off your glasses.

This product is not in fact the debut of the ANTVR headset, as it is part of the ANTVR All-in-One Kit, a project which raised US$260,000 on a Kickstarter campaign earlier this year. The company announced this time that the headset is on the Chinese market at a price tag of RMB1,499 (US$242).

ANTVR-cam

ANTVR Camera has a seven-layer, 169 degree wide angle lens per eye, and features 16 megapixel footage and dual-mic stereo recording. The company did not name the shipping date, but disclosed the product is priced at RMB1,499.

Dubbed ‘Jitao’, the goggles set can hold your smartphone in place on the front of the device. It is foldable and works with smartphones sized 4.5-6 inches. It is priced at RMB149. Two similar attempts to make inexpensive VR headset by using smartphones include Google’s Cardboard and Samsung’s Gear VR, which just hit the U.S. market priced at around RMB1,200.

The company has developed three games for Jitao, including a voice command game The Legend of Curse (our translation) and a other game compatible with its convertible controller.

To attract more game developers to this new breed of VR headsets, ANTVR is open sourcing part of its headset technology so that their products can work with multiple gaming consoles and even accommodate other kinds of hardware. Company CEO Tan Zheng said they have partnered with multiple game developers, with, for example, The Legend of Curse being jointly developed with Unity.

The company reportedly secured eight-digit dollars of Series A financing from Sequoia Capital.

Originally from: Zhi Xiaofeng

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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App Annie CEO Bertrand Schmitt Talks Company Growth in The Past Year https://technode.com/2014/12/12/app-annie-ceo-bertrand-schmitt/ https://technode.com/2014/12/12/app-annie-ceo-bertrand-schmitt/#respond Thu, 11 Dec 2014 16:02:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25924 As a leading mobile analytics service, App Annie is known for its business intelligence, and analytics and stats on apps and digital goods. The company now claims to have over 270,000 registered users and more than 600,000 mobile apps using its platform to track app downloads, rankings, and earnings. Over 90% of the top 100 app […]]]>

As a leading mobile analytics service, App Annie is known for its business intelligence, and analytics and stats on apps and digital goods. The company now claims to have over 270,000 registered users and more than 600,000 mobile apps using its platform to track app downloads, rankings, and earnings. Over 90% of the top 100 app publishers on iOS and Google Play use their services.

App Annie has often been quoted or cited as a reliable source for market insights. But in a way, attention to its market intelligence is hiding the company itself, making us overlook how it has evolved and developed as a startup.

App Annie CEO Bertrand Schmitt previously shared with TechNode how he bootstrapped the startup, and our conversation continues on what’s new for the company.

Did App Annie move its headquarters this year?

Schmitt: Yes, we moved our headquarters from Beijing to San Francisco this October. Actually, we set up our headquarters in San Francisco two years ago to better tap the global market. As a global company, 85% of our business is outside China. We have moved our marketing and product management teams to San Francisco this time. But Beijing is still the engineering center and HQ for the Asia-Pacific region.

App Annie bought out major competitor Distimo this May. What changes did this acquisition bring the company?

It’s been six months since we acquired Distimo. After settling into the new environment in the first month, the Distimo team has been fully integrated and we’re working together to improve and develop new products.

The transition of former Distimo clients to App Annie platform was very smooth thanks to the similarities of our products and services. Customers could benefit from a more complete platform for analyzing their apps and the mobile app marketplace.

In addition to internet companies, App Annie had partnered several big-name traditional customers, like BMW, Nestle and Tesco. To some extent, these companies may be reluctant to move into mobile internet. What drives them into this kind of change?

All kinds of enterprise have to face the changes in the mobile internet age. Users are spending more time on mobile devices, less time on TV and newspapers. If you don’t follow the eyeballs, you can become irrelevant. It take time for big enterprises to move, but eventually, they start to accelerate their steps. Most big companies started by using our free products first, and then switch to paid services for more data thereafter.

Do they have a very clear strategy in the development of a mobile app, such as building a universal app for all their services, or just make apps for temporary campaigns?

It really depends on the companies. The strategy for some companies is not organized, since they usually have lots of apps for different markets, some developed by themselves and some by agencies. In that case, they took our advice to centralize their services and make sure the initiatives make sense on a global scale.

Former NASA data scientist Paul Stolorz joined App Annie as Chief Data Scientist this November. What do you think was the main attraction for him to join App Annie and what he will bring to the company?

There are very few people who combine technical knowledge on data science and seniority in managing teams. As for why he picked us, I think Paul has been in the data business long enough, but it’s the first time for him to work for a company with data as its core business. When he worked for Google and Netflix, data was not the end product that customers were going to use. I think he would feel excited to finally work at the center, rather than at the edge of the business.

Some companies hold developer conferences to get their voice heard, like Microsoft’s Build, Apple’s WWDC and Facebook’s F8. Do you have a similar plan?

Six month ago, we launched a similar developer event called App Annie Decode. We have held it in New York, San Francisco and are planning to have it in China, Japan and South Korea. Our strategy is not to have a single big event, but hold more local ones instead.

App Annie released an annual performance report for the first time in the company’s history this November. Does this move indicates a shift in how the company sees itself – from a startup to an enterprise, or to prepare for funding or IPO?

We spend a lot of time talking about the market and very little about us. I think it is time to let people know a bit more about us and show them our development.

We tripled both our user base and revenues over the past year. The company has more than 270 staff at present. More than 180 employees were added to the team this year, of which 40-45 came from the acquisition of Distimo.

The release of the annual report is not designed for fundraising or an IPO, but only to attract more users. App Annie just raised a $17 million round funding from existing investors and we have very close relationship with them.

Originally from: Li Shuhang 

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Sogou Enters Kids Wearable Space with Gamified Smart Tracker https://technode.com/2014/12/10/sogou-teemo/ https://technode.com/2014/12/10/sogou-teemo/#comments Wed, 10 Dec 2014 07:57:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25882 Chinese software developer Sogou has long been known as the company behind the Sogou search engine and Sogou Pinyin, a popular Chinese language input application. The firm has recently jumped on the smart wearables bandwagon by launching Teemo, a smart wristband for kids. Teemo is a brightly colored tracker for kids weighted just 55 grams. […]]]>

Chinese software developer Sogou has long been known as the company behind the Sogou search engine and Sogou Pinyin, a popular Chinese language input application. The firm has recently jumped on the smart wearables bandwagon by launching Teemo, a smart wristband for kids.

Teemo is a brightly colored tracker for kids weighted just 55 grams. It uses 2G GSM connectivity to power its voice messaging and GPS tracking functions. The device uses a 400mAh battery, which supports three hour’s talk time on a single charge or four days on standby, and is water and dust resistant (IP64 rated).

Teemo-2

Like most GPS trackers, Teemo locates the wearers’ location and displays their route on a connected mobile app, helping parents keep track of their kids. But it also aims to form a more effective communication channel between children and busy parents.

Teemo holds a micro-SIM card, so kids can send voice messages to their parents whenever they want by holding down the single button on the gadget. Parents can likewise respond via the mobile app which supports a “Hold to Talk” feature similar to WeChat’s. The wristband will vibrate or sound an alert on receiving any messages.

Another feature is that Teemo can function as a controller for motion sensor games integrated in the app. It now supports three game where you can play as a shooter, drummer or magician.

Instead of displaying time on the screen, Teemo will read it out with a touch of the cover.

Teemo-1

The gadget works with iOS6.0 or above, and Android 4.0 or above.

Teemo is priced at RMB299 (around US$48) with an annual telecom service of RMB240. The price is set higher than that for 360 Child Guard, a major competitor on the market which retails at RMB199 for the wristband, RMB90 for the telecom service.

Source: Li Shuhang

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Internet Companies Crowd Air Purifier Market as Airpocalypse Hits China https://technode.com/2014/12/09/internet-companies-air-purifier/ https://technode.com/2014/12/09/internet-companies-air-purifier/#comments Tue, 09 Dec 2014 10:53:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25795 China’s CCTV Headquarter in Beijing on a Hazy Day At the beginning of Christopher Nolan’s new blockbuster Interstellar, the earth has become an inhabitable dust bowl with lung-choking air. The terrifying dystopia depicted in the movie may cause anxiety in Chinese people, because it’s very similar to what we are experiencing now. The worsening air […]]]>
Dust-bj-1

China’s CCTV Headquarter in Beijing on a Hazy Day

At the beginning of Christopher Nolan’s new blockbuster Interstellar, the earth has become an inhabitable dust bowl with lung-choking air. The terrifying dystopia depicted in the movie may cause anxiety in Chinese people, because it’s very similar to what we are experiencing now.

The worsening air quality has sparked a surge in the sales of air purifiers as people desperately try to protect themselves from the smog. The air purifier market size is expected to jump from RMB12 billion (around US$1.93 billion) in 2013 to over RMB20 billion in 2014 and 75 billion in 2015, according to research institute AVC.

The booming market has attracted many companies. Another AVC report noted that the number of domestic air filter manufacturers has soared 450%, from 21 in Q1 2014 to 95 in Q3 in the same year. Driven by the smart home trend, internet companies account for a substantial number of new entrants poised to compete with current incumbents like home appliance brands Philippe and Sharp, LightAir, and Yadu.

xiaomi-a

Mi Air Filter

Xiaomi released Mi Air Filter today. The device features an H11-level HEPA filter screen to fill a room with 406 cubic meters of clean air per hour (CADR). It claims to remove 99.99% of PM2.5 and 91% of methanol. It opened for pre-order on Xiaomi’s official site at an affordable price of RMB899, with replacement filters at RMB150.

Baomi

Baomi Air Filter

Cheetah Mobile, though best known for its utility apps, unveiled its Baomi air filter this October. The device can detect and filter particles as small as 1.0 microns, the company claims. The device is priced at RMB998 (about US$163) and is expected to go on sale in November.

The newly listed Cheetah Mobile has been spun-off from Kingsoft, which Xiaomi holds a major stake in. It may sound odd that Cheetah Mobile and Xiaomi will compete by releasing similar products, but this may be a strategy to corner market share, in the same way that, for example, Bosch and Siemens also belong to the same parent company.

Xiaodan

Xiaodan

Guokr, a Chinese popular science social networking website, released an egg-shaped air filter dubbed ‘Xiaodan’ (Chinese for ‘little egg’). According to the company, Xiaodan can remove 99% of PM2.5 and 95%+ of methanol in the air. The product is priced at RMB1,984 and has launched a crowdfunding campaign on JD.com.

threepapas

 ThreePapas

ThreePapas is an air purifier developer aiming to provide a safe breathing environment for children. The product is offered in two versions: an RMB4,999 purifier and a smaller RMB999 model. Those filters remove 99.99% of particulate matter and chemical pollutants from the air. It claims to use similar technology to foreign brands, like IQ Air, saying that the air released after filtering would be 100% PM2.5 free.

Other Chinese startups engaged in this field include Nervair and Fairair. The air problem has also triggered  a slew of air quality monitors like iKair, Airnut (a product developed by popular weather app Moji), and Haier Air Box.

Like other smart hardware, the above air purifiers and monitors can be synced with smart phones via dedicated apps, allowing users to check the PM2.5 figures inside their homes once they’ve installed the product.

The AVC report indicated that the most popular price range for air filters is RMB3001-4000. Most new air filter brands developed by internet companies have a price tag lower than this. Many customers will be lured by more affordable prices, but when it comes to health, product quality may be higher in the priority ladder.

Even if customers are willing to pay more for a better product, it is not an easy task to choose high quality air filters. The lack of a compulsory national standard has left users confused when choosing from products ranged from hundreds of RMB to over RMB50,000.

The fledgling field still needs greater regulation and transparency, with some air purifier makers having been criticized for inaccurately describing the capabilities of their products. One usual misleading practice is that most companies tout the maximum Clean Air Delivery Rate (CADR) of their product. As an indicator of  the efficiency of air filters, CADR is a figure measuring the cubic feet per minute of air that have had all the particles of a given size distribution removed. However, working to their maximum capacity will in turn generate 60db to 70db of noise (source in Chinese), which would be impossible in a comfortable environment. Hence the CADR value will be far lower if users keep the noise to reasonable levels.

image credit: Gz12315.org.cn

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Indian Price Comparison Site YouTellMe Scoops US$100K Angel Funding https://technode.com/2014/12/09/youtellme-angel-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/12/09/youtellme-angel-funding/#comments Tue, 09 Dec 2014 10:16:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25838 Mumbai-based online price comparison and product discovery portal YouTellMe announced that it has raised around US$100,000 from Dutch early stage investment firm Bright Ventures. The funding will be used to further optimize the platform and acquire more talent, according to the company. YouTellMe is a smart assistant for online comparison shopping in India, helping users to compare prices […]]]>
Screen Shot - 3 - Half Page - Mobiles

Mumbai-based online price comparison and product discovery portal YouTellMe announced that it has raised around US$100,000 from Dutch early stage investment firm Bright Ventures. The funding will be used to further optimize the platform and acquire more talent, according to the company.

YouTellMe is a smart assistant for online comparison shopping in India, helping users to compare prices of products from multiple online stores in categories like mobile phones, electronics, home and kitchen, fashion and health and beauty for users to discover best products. In addition to price comparison and discovery, the site also works as a recommendation tool and review platform where users rate products and online stores and help fellow shoppers make informed buying decisions.

The one-year-old site claims to be working with over 30 online stores and has more than 3 million products listed on its platform.

The startup was founded in 2013 by Shailendra Dave, an entrepreneur who has over 10 years of corporate experience behind him. Shailendra’s career in Indian television was spent in various roles with major brands including Zee TV, Star Network, UTV and Disney India.

“We want to build an online mall where people can shop for bargains, deals, coupons or simply compare products. In addition, we are a widespread price comparison and product discovery portal with more than 800 categories to choose from”, Shailendra said.

Unlike Western markets where e-commerce is reaching saturation point, India’s online shopping is still booming and attracting new startups. The Indian e-commerce market is expected to be grow at a rapid pace over next five years, reaching US$50-70 billion by 2019, according to the company.

Other players in the same sector in India includes MysmartPrice, Junglee, Pricedekho, Pricebag etc. Pricebag just raised US$2 million angel funding this August.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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WeChat Now Supports Food Delivery Service Foodpanda in Southeast Asia https://technode.com/2014/12/08/wechat-now-supports-foodpanda/ https://technode.com/2014/12/08/wechat-now-supports-foodpanda/#respond Mon, 08 Dec 2014 07:18:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25758 Online food delivery service Foodpanda is launching a partnership with WeChat across Southeast Asia. The tie-up will allow WeChat users to browse nearby restaurants, receive exclusive promotional offers and order food via Foodpanda. The partnership is now live in Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, Philippines, and India. WeChat powered by Foodpanda allows customers an […]]]>

Online food delivery service Foodpanda is launching a partnership with WeChat across Southeast Asia. The tie-up will allow WeChat users to browse nearby restaurants, receive exclusive promotional offers and order food via Foodpanda. The partnership is now live in Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, Philippines, and India.

WeChat powered by Foodpanda allows customers an order process similar to the Foodpanda website or app. After entering their location, users can immediately access a variety of restaurants and cuisines delivering to their area. The feature also offers a set of different cuisines or cities which customers can choose from. The app collaboration allows for payment of cash on delivery or via various integrated online payment options. Users also can download the Foodpanda app directly in their WeChat account.

Foodpanda-pic

Screenshots of Foodpanda WeChat Service Account

To promote the service, Foodpanda provides exclusive weekly deals specifically for WeChat users and a 15% discount for customers that text “WeChat” to the service account, according to the company.

With a population of 600 million people, an expanding middle class and skyrocketing smartphone sales, Southeast Asia has become a prime market in the rise of social messaging apps such as WeChat, which is looking to build a global presence. WeChat had accumulated 100 million overseas users as of August last year.

Backed by German-based Rocket Internet, Foodpanda consists of affiliated brands of Hellofood and Deliver Club and has raised raised over US$100 million in funding since establishment in 2012. Zalora, an online fashion store run by Rocket Internet, also offers its services through WeChat.

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WiFi Solution Provider WiWide Nets US$49M Series C Funding from Tencent and Dianping https://technode.com/2014/12/08/wiwide-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/12/08/wiwide-series-c-funding/#comments Mon, 08 Dec 2014 01:00:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25646 Perhaps Chinese startup WiWide is not familiar to you as an individual, but chances are that you’ve already enjoyed their services if you have used free WiFi in public locations like theaters, restaurants, coffee bars, or airports. The once low-profile company has been making headlines in local media as more Chinese tech giants approach O2O expansion through WiFi hotspot […]]]>

Perhaps Chinese startup WiWide is not familiar to you as an individual, but chances are that you’ve already enjoyed their services if you have used free WiFi in public locations like theaters, restaurants, coffee bars, or airports. The once low-profile company has been making headlines in local media as more Chinese tech giants approach O2O expansion through WiFi hotspot solutions.

Last month, WiWide was listed as a major third-party service provider for WeChat’s public account WiFi connection program. Jerry Zhang, WiWide CEO and founder, disclosed in an exclusive interview with TechNode that WiWide has worked with Tencent on every detail of this program, from product form definition to terminal and access functions, since it launched in March this year.

The company just announced a benchmark Series C financing of RMB300 million (US$49 million) from Tencent and Dianping, adding that WiWide is the only one amongst its WiFi solutions peers to receive funding under the program. The capital is expected to be injected in hardware development, R&D and operations, he said. The company obtained Series B funding from Xiaomi last year, while an RMB10 million A round was secured from Greenwoods Investment in 2012.

WiWide, one of the earliest entrants to the Chinese public WiFi solution sector, was founded in 2007 by serial entrepreneur Jerry Zhang. It is a commercial provider of Wi-Fi network architecture and media services, along with targeted marketing services.

The long industry chain of the commercial WiFi industry makes it hard for companies to manage all the links, such as hardware, firmware, cloud, applications, business development, installation, and maintenance. Thus, most companies only focus on a few links of the industrial chain.

Unlike other rivals, WiWide aims to create an integrated process, offering Wi-Fi network service programming products and services, Wi-Fi network equipment, installation and 24-hour telephone maintenance support, and business development.

Jerry- Wiwide

Jerry Zhang, CEO & Founder of WiWide

Zhang explained WiWide’s innovative approach from the following perspectives: 1) In the smartphone era, WiFi solutions are not just about internet access for customers, but creating gateways for bricks-and-mortar stores to gain customers by pushing services through WiFi hotspots. 2) WiWide offers free hardware and services to bricks-and-mortar stores, while generating revenue from ads and data analytics. The company is now making profits, mainly from premium brand ad clients, like BMW, Benz, Jaguar, Nokia, and Lenovo. 3) It provides wired and wireless networking systems controlled from the cloud. 4) WiWide is cooperating with a raft of companies like Tencent, Dianping and Xiaomi to enable convenient login and further Wi-Fi applications.

WiWide has signed contracts with over 20 main airports in China and over 500 well-known brands of commercial chain stores, from coffee bars (Starbucks, Costa Coffee) and restaurants (Häagen-Dazs, Burger King, South Beauty), to movie theaters, shops, conference centers, providing services to more than one million daily users in more than 30,000 hotspots.

The Beijing-headquartered startup now has more than 300 employees and operates three other branch offices in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Chengdu.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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China’s Mobile Banking Users Surge 50% in 2014: CFCA https://technode.com/2014/12/05/china-mobile-banking-2014/ https://technode.com/2014/12/05/china-mobile-banking-2014/#respond Fri, 05 Dec 2014 10:32:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25713 China’s e-banking business surged for a fifth consecutive year in 2014, with the percentage of personal e-banking customers up 7.2% year-on-year to 43%, according to a survey conducted by China Financial Certification Authority (shared by Cbenet.com in Chinese) The report shows that customers for online banking, mobile banking, phone banking and WeChat banking account for 35.6%, 17.8%, 12.9% […]]]>

China’s e-banking business surged for a fifth consecutive year in 2014, with the percentage of personal e-banking customers up 7.2% year-on-year to 43%, according to a survey conducted by China Financial Certification Authority (shared by Cbenet.com in Chinese)

The report shows that customers for online banking, mobile banking, phone banking and WeChat banking account for 35.6%, 17.8%, 12.9% and 6.8% of e-banking services, respectively. The percentage using online banking as their only e-banking channel dropped 9% year-on-year to 34%, indicating that people are now accessing services through more diversified channels.

E-bank-1

Data Source: CFCA

The number of mobile banking customers soared 50% year-on-year, maintaining the rising trend for the fourth straight year. The report noted that mobile banking is at a pivotal moment, with both long-distance and NFC payment witnessing spikes in demand. It also expects mobile banking clients to represent around 24.1% (22.4-25.8%) of the total e-banking user metric in 2015, of which 40% will purchase financial products on their smartphones.

Some 83% of mobile banking customers uses these services on a regular basis, mainly for its accessibility and preferential transaction fees. However, most users still use it as a complementary channel to online banking, as there are very few (3%) customers who use it as the only e-banking service.

When it comes to financial security, online banking is still recognized as the most secure platform with 72%  giving their vote to it over other channels, like mobile banking (15.0%), phone banking (6.2%), SMS (5.1%) and WeChat banking (1.6%).

Checking accounts, bank transfers and mobile payments are the most commonly used functions for mobile banking in 2014. Payment of mobile fees is the most popular non-financial feature, followed by paying for film tickets and lotteries.

In terms of regional distribution, the number of mobile banking users living in first-tier and second-tier cities climbed 56% and 72% year-on-year, accounting for 25% and 19% of the total, respectively.

Around 74% of e-banking services are accessed though Android smartphones, while 26% use iOS.

The report noted that mobile banking is increasingly gaining clients, as 61% of users seek to access these services proactively in the past year.

image credit: Shutterstock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Collaboration Service Teambition Pockets US$5M Series A Funding, Releases New Product Lines https://technode.com/2014/12/04/team-collaboration-service-teambition-pockets-us5m-series-funding-releases-new-product-lines/ https://technode.com/2014/12/04/team-collaboration-service-teambition-pockets-us5m-series-funding-releases-new-product-lines/#respond Thu, 04 Dec 2014 10:42:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25656 Teambition, a team collaboration platform, has secured US$5 million of Series A funding led by IDG and followed by Vangoo Capital Partners. The new investment will be used in expanding its business across Asia, as well as building R&D team, according to Qi Junyuan, CEO and founder of the company. Teambition has received 7-digit RMB funding from Gobi Partners last […]]]>

Teambition, a team collaboration platform, has secured US$5 million of Series A funding led by IDG and followed by Vangoo Capital Partners. The new investment will be used in expanding its business across Asia, as well as building R&D team, according to Qi Junyuan, CEO and founder of the company. Teambition has received 7-digit RMB funding from Gobi Partners last year.

Teambition is a software as a service (Saas) platform that provides products and services to foster team collaboration and project management. It enables users to collaborate on projects and share or edit documents in real time across departments, continents, and business applications. Users can share their thoughts with project members and learn what’s happening in real time. All project files are saved in the cloud, so members can view and discuss them at any time.

Teambition-app

Teambition Interface

Upon the announcement of the new funding, Teambition also released two new product lines: Talk, an IM tool for modern teams which also integrates several other SaaS service, and Today, a well-designed calendar for businessmen. Both of the apps are available on both iOS and Android.

Talk adopts a WeChat-style interface, helping users to pick up the service quickly as most Chinese people already know how to use WeChat. It also integrates information from other platforms like Weibo, email, RSS, and GitHub. Today allows users to manage their schedules in an orderly way. Both services are based on Teambition’s Open Platform which will be soon available to all developers.

Today-1

Screenshot of Today

Together with its namesake productivity tool Teambition, the startup’s three product lines are dedicated to solving three key business problems: following up project progress, internal communication, and time management. The accounts and back-end data of the three products are integrated together.

Teambition is now used in around a million projects in various industries, including TMT, advertising, modern manufacturing, and education. Although the service was originally favored by small teams, it is now also used by in many large companies, said Qi. Its new enterprise plan, featuring unified management among projects inside one company, was well received by clients in large enterprises, he added.

In addition to the Chinese version, Teambition recently started offering English and Japanese language versions, as there has been a growing amount of foreign adopters.

Teambition was founded in 2011 by Qi Junyuan, a post-90s generation entrepreneur. The startup is based in Beijing and Shanghai, and expects to expand its team from 40 to 80 employees in the near future.

There are several startups eyeing the enterprise social network or software sector in China, such as Mingdao, a Yammer-like service with features tailored to Chinese businesses, and Fxiaoke, China’s answer to Salesforce. The rising market has also attracted internet giants. WeChat rolled out a solution for enterprise communication to convert its existing use base, while NetEase also launched Youdao Cloud Cooperation via its sub-brand Youdao to tap the market.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Carrier-neutral Internet Data Service 21Vianet Announces US$296M Investment from Kingsoft, Xiaomi and Temasek https://technode.com/2014/12/04/carrier-neutral-internet-data-service-21vianet-announces-us296m-investment-kingsoft-xiaomi-temasek/ https://technode.com/2014/12/04/carrier-neutral-internet-data-service-21vianet-announces-us296m-investment-kingsoft-xiaomi-temasek/#comments Thu, 04 Dec 2014 01:51:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25629 Lei Jun (Board Chairman of Kingsoft and Xiaomi), Chen Sheng (Board Chairman & CEO of 21Vianet), Zhang Hongjiang (CEO of Kingsoft and Kingsoft Cloud) 21Vianet Group (Nasdaq:VNET), a leading carrier-neutral internet data services provider in China, has announced that it has entered into share purchase agreements with Kingsoft, Xiaomi and Temasek. The three investors will […]]]>

Lei Jun (Board Chairman of Kingsoft and Xiaomi), Chen Sheng (Board Chairman & CEO of 21Vianet), Zhang Hongjiang (CEO of Kingsoft and Kingsoft Cloud)

21Vianet Group (Nasdaq:VNET), a leading carrier-neutral internet data services provider in China, has announced that it has entered into share purchase agreements with Kingsoft, Xiaomi and Temasek.

The three investors will inject a total of US$296 million of funding into 21Vianet. Kingsoft agreed to a US$172 million investment for a 11.6% stake in 21Vianet. Xiaomi invested US$50 million into a 3.4% stake, while Temasek will invest US$74 million for a 13.1% share of the company.

Following the deal, 21Vianet will build, operate, maintain and provide technical support for new, state-of-art data centers in China to meet the next-generation cloud infrastructure requirements of Kingsoft and designated third parties. Upon meeting certain conditions, 21Vianet will lease to Kingsoft and partners a minimum of 5,000 cabinets over the next three years.

Lei Jun, board chairman of both Kingsoft and Xiaomi, disclosed that Kingsoft is going all-out in cloud services by investing US$1 billion in the netx three to five years.

He also announced that Xiaomi Cloud now has a storage capacity of 47PB and provides service for almost 68 million users. The service has saved more than 24.1 billion pictures for users as of present, with daily growth for pictures at around 90 million and 1.2 million for video clips.

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Ganji To Invest US$100M in C2C Used Car Trading Platform https://technode.com/2014/12/03/ganji-haoche/ https://technode.com/2014/12/03/ganji-haoche/#comments Wed, 03 Dec 2014 04:03:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25614 Ganji.com, one of the largest classified ads sites in China, has launched a used car trading platform named Ganji Haoche (“Ganji Good Car”) to deepen its foray into the O2O (online-to-offline) industry. The company plans to invest US$100 million into this project, mainly in marketing and exploration of business partners. Yang Haoyong, Ganji’s CEO, explained that […]]]>
Ganji-haoche

Ganji.com, one of the largest classified ads sites in China, has launched a used car trading platform named Ganji Haoche (“Ganji Good Car”) to deepen its foray into the O2O (online-to-offline) industry. The company plans to invest US$100 million into this project, mainly in marketing and exploration of business partners.

Yang Haoyong, Ganji’s CEO, explained that the service adopts a C2C rather than the B2C model commonly used by domestic second-hand car trading platforms. He added that this model will directly link car sellers and buyers, thus cutting unnecessary costs from middle-men and used car dealers.

The company claimed that car sellers on the platform will receive around 8-10% higher than current market prices, while buyers will pay 5-7% less. It also promised to refund buyers within 14 days if they are not satisfied with a car.

To guarantee car quality, the platform only lists second-hand cars with an age of less than six years and mileage of under 100,000 miles. A professional team will deliver standardized and on-demand car valuation services to sellers.

Around 370 used cars are listed on the platform as of present with a daily increase of 20 to 30 vehicles, according to the company.

Ganji Haoche will commercialize its service by charging 3% commission on each successful transaction and from value-added services like insurance and maintenance, among others.

China’s trading volume for used cars reached 2.82 million in the first half of 2014, up 12.77% year-on-year, with sales of this market soaring 22.88% year-on-year to RMB170.52 billion (US$27.72 billion) over the same period, according to data released by the company.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Taobao Lures More Shoppers with New Loyalty Feature https://technode.com/2014/12/02/taobao-data-traffic/ https://technode.com/2014/12/02/taobao-data-traffic/#respond Tue, 02 Dec 2014 07:03:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25568 Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao has released a new customer loyalty feature to engage Chinese online shoppers. In cooperation with China’s three major telecom operators, the new Data Traffic Purse service (our translation) allows merchants on Taobao, Tmall or affiliated platforms to gift small sums of mobile data to their customers.  Taobao Mobile users can find […]]]>
Taobao-data-traffic-1

Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao has released a new customer loyalty feature to engage Chinese online shoppers.

In cooperation with China’s three major telecom operators, the new Data Traffic Purse service (our translation) allows merchants on Taobao, Tmall or affiliated platforms to gift small sums of mobile data to their customers. 

Taoba-data purse

Taobao Mobile users can find the feature in My Taobao–My Coupons–My Data Traffic Purse.

Alibaba noted that the data can be deposited in the purse and withdrawn in a lump sum, either to users’ connected phone number or given to others, as a data package from China Unicom, China Mobile or China Telecom. Withdrawal ranges were set between 10MB to 1GB, and can be used countrywide during the month of withdrawal.

Data packages can be distributed to users if their online spending exceeds a certain amount, or if they participate in interactive features, add comments or win a lucky draw.

Taobao added that this feature will function in the promotion activities for Double 12 Day, a shopping festival similar to Alibaba’s Double 11 e-commerce frenzy. As of writing, around 200,000 Taobao merchants have joined this program.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Personal Finance Service Wacai Secures Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/12/01/personal-finance-service-wacai-series-b/ https://technode.com/2014/12/01/personal-finance-service-wacai-series-b/#respond Mon, 01 Dec 2014 08:14:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25549 Driven by the personal finance boom in China, Wacai is one of the leading players in this field and has secured US$50 million of Series B funding led by CBC Capital and CICC Jiacheng, along with Series A investors IDG, CDH Fund and Qiming Venture Partners. This round brings Wacai’s total funding to over US$80 […]]]>

Driven by the personal finance boom in China, Wacai is one of the leading players in this field and has secured US$50 million of Series B funding led by CBC Capital and CICC Jiacheng, along with Series A investors IDG, CDH Fund and Qiming Venture Partners. This round brings Wacai’s total funding to over US$80 million, according to the company.

The financing will be used in technology development, marketing, R&D of financial products, and data mining. Based on data collected, Wacai also plans to construct a user credit system.

Started as a bookkeeping app in 2009, the company has gradually shifted its focus to personal finance management after acquiring financial data analytics company Trust Analytics in 2013.

The Hangzhou-based startup operates several products, including bookkeeping service called Wacai, a credit card manager, monetary fund Wacaibao, and more.

Wacai claimed to have been managing over RMB10 billion (US$1.62 billion) worth of assets for more than 100 million users as of August this year.

image credit: Wacai

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Nearby Happy Hours When You Want Them with Olifun https://technode.com/2014/12/01/olifun-happy-hour/ https://technode.com/2014/12/01/olifun-happy-hour/#respond Mon, 01 Dec 2014 07:29:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25536 Location-based apps are great tools to find places nearby with happy hours and promotions on. Of course, these apps are handy when simply looking for nice bars or restaurants nearby. But location is not necessarily the only parameter when screening out irrelevant options. There’s no benefit in recommending users a bar in the morning, when […]]]>

Location-based apps are great tools to find places nearby with happy hours and promotions on. Of course, these apps are handy when simply looking for nice bars or restaurants nearby. But location is not necessarily the only parameter when screening out irrelevant options. There’s no benefit in recommending users a bar in the morning, when they’re actually looking for a brunch or afternoon tea, even if the bar is just next door. A new happy hour app aims to further narrow down the recommended items, and simply get you down to what you needed right now.

Olifun is both a proximity- and time-based app for users to find happy hours, brunches, ladies nights, lunch sets, dinners, and special promotions nearby right when you want it. In addition to leveraging location data, Olifun enables users to sort by time for venues that are available now, later in the day or tomorrow.

Clicking on any of the recommended items gives more details, such as address, location on the map, phone number, as well as typical price range and other tips.

Olifun-pic

Happy hours won’t be happy for long without friends. After choosing a bar or restaurant to go to, Olifun users can invite friends to join them via WeChat, Whatsapp, email, or SMS.

Since the app is currently only available in English, it offers a convenient feature of showing Chinese and English location addresses to taxi drivers. Olifun is available as iOS app and a WeChat public account, while an Android version is on the way.

Olifun-1

The app currently has over 500 venues and 8,000 events listed, according to a company representative. Although they did not disclose user numbers, Olifun claims to have a high user retention rate – half of all users will use the app again.

Right now, Olifun works only in Shanghai, but it is planning to branch into more Chinese cities in the following six months, and into the Asia-Pacific (APAC) over the next twelve months. The startup noted that the happy hour market is rich with potential, with 53 million young English speaking drinkers in the APAC region.

As an project which has just graduated from Chinaccelerator, Olifun is looking for new funding to acquire users and improve the product.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketofongues)

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Traditional Enterprise Meets the Internet Era: Hikvision Ezviz https://technode.com/2014/11/28/hikvision-ezviz/ https://technode.com/2014/11/28/hikvision-ezviz/#respond Fri, 28 Nov 2014 15:37:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25472 The internet era is posing a great threat to traditional enterprises, leaving them fending off mounting competition as they attempt to retain existing markets and expand new ones. Many businesses are having to find their own paths, embracing and leveraging information technology, to stay in the game. Lenovo plans to establish an internet-related smart device company […]]]>

The internet era is posing a great threat to traditional enterprises, leaving them fending off mounting competition as they attempt to retain existing markets and expand new ones. Many businesses are having to find their own paths, embracing and leveraging information technology, to stay in the game.

Lenovo plans to establish an internet-related smart device company next year against the backdrop of slumping global PC shipments. Traditional home appliance makers like Hisense, and Gree are also entering partnerships with internet companies to work with, rather than against, this trend.

S1-1

Chinese video surveillance product and solution provider Hikvision Digital Technology  last year launched Ezviz, an internet smart video surveillance brand for household and small- and medium-sized enterprises. Like those other companies mentioned, Ezviz has launched partnerships with a series of internet companies, such as Alibaba Cloud, Tencent, Baidu Cloud, Sina Weibo, LeTV and JD, to facilitate technical support and sharing of data.

The brand released today its latest product: S1, a Go Pro-like pocket camera which enables users to capture and share their most precious and exciting moments. S1 measures just 4.5×5.8cm, making it smaller than a credit card, and weighs just 70g. The gadget supports 1200p HD, 170-degree wide angle video footage, HDMI access, and has 68GB of memory. The 1480aAh battery can handle 2.5 hours of continuous usage, and it’s waterproof up to 30 meters.

HIKvison

Unlike Go Pro, which focuses on extreme game hobbyists and outdoor nomads, S1 goes after the mass market with its fashionable design (in five different colors) as well as integration of social and location-based social video sharing features. VIDIT, a similar product developed by a Chinese team, is also going for this market.

Hikvision Ezviz has yet to disclose the price of this product, but an executive has mentioned that since S1 is eyeing the mass market, its price will be “quite affordable”. Ezviz gave four options for S1’s price range in a questionnaire distributed to press conference attendees (RMB500-800, RMB800-1,500, RMB1,500-2,500, RMB 2,500+), asking at which price range people would be willing to pay for the gadget.

Users can add extended 4G modules, battery modules or LCD display to the camera if they want. Ezviz has also developed a set of accessories that go with the camera, including a remote controller, selfie stick and a vehicle-mounting base.

S1-

Other products debuted at the event are C2 mini, a smart monitor measuring 50×50×25mm and priced at RMB199, an upgraded app which connects all Ezviz hardware and communities, and Ezvzi Cloud 3.0.

C2-mini

C2 Mini

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Smart Wearable Maker 16Lab Nets Funding for First Product OZON https://technode.com/2014/11/27/16lab-nets-fresh-funding-ozon/ https://technode.com/2014/11/27/16lab-nets-fresh-funding-ozon/#respond Thu, 27 Nov 2014 01:49:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25457 16Lab, a wearable device maker and software developer based in Kamakura, Japan, has received an undisclosed amount of funding from the GB-V Growth Fund managed by Global Brain Corporation. Aiming to develop minimalist personal computing devices, 16Lab is now working on its first product OZON, a ring-shaped wearable interface device now at theUS final stage […]]]>
16lab-ring

16Lab, a wearable device maker and software developer based in Kamakura, Japan, has received an undisclosed amount of funding from the GB-V Growth Fund managed by Global Brain Corporation.

Aiming to develop minimalist personal computing devices, 16Lab is now working on its first product OZON, a ring-shaped wearable interface device now at theUS final stage of prototyping before mass production. 

OZON is a titanium ring with a pointed extrusion made up of a dual touch surface. By wearing OZON on a finger, users can control PCs, smartphones, tablets, cameras, televisions, lighting fixtures, or other electrical appliances. In addition to precise gesture recognition, OZON also comes with functions which enhance users’ life experiences, such as a contactless key function for doors at home and offices or server-logins, and an e-wallet payment transaction function.

The company has partnered with an array of leading technological partners, such as global manufacturer Alps Electric, to ensure strong functionalities along with security and reliability, according to Ko Kijima, CEO of 16Lab Inc. Manabu Tago, a multiple design awards winner, is leading the design team as a creative director.

With the investment, 16Lab will be able to complete the development of the first generation OZON. 16Lab currently plans to start shipping in eight countries in the summer of 2015.

“We were not only impressed by a working prototype of OZON and its vision, but also impressed by a design management implemented in the company,” said Yasuhiko Yurimoto, CEO of Global Brain.

Global Brain Corporation is a Tokyo-based independent venture capital founded in 1998, which focuses on seed to middle stage IT startup companies. It currently manages five funds with total fund of US$300 million.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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TechNode Roundup: 20+ Hardware Startups at Shanghai TNT Event https://technode.com/2014/11/26/technode-roundup-hardware-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2014/11/26/technode-roundup-hardware-shanghai/#comments Wed, 26 Nov 2014 02:58:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25399 After a wonderful TechCrunch China/TechNode conference with a “Red Hardware” theme this August in Beijing, we brought the passion for hardware to Shanghai last week, holding a special edition of our TechNode Touch (TNT) event to highlight the latest thrilling developments in China’s smart hardware industry. More than twenty hardware startups showcased their products at the […]]]>

After a wonderful TechCrunch China/TechNode conference with a “Red Hardware” theme this August in Beijing, we brought the passion for hardware to Shanghai last week, holding a special edition of our TechNode Touch (TNT) event to highlight the latest thrilling developments in China’s smart hardware industry.

More than twenty hardware startups showcased their products at the event, ranging from smart wristbands to scooters and air filters. Here are the some of the most interesting products demoed at the gathering:

Smart wristbands

LinkLoving: a smart health tracker and mobile phone for older people who might find the complicated operations of smartphones confusing. Users can upload the data by simply connecting the wristband and mobile phone with a cable rather than synchronizing through an app. Their children can check the data via the app and thus monitor the health of their parents and stay in touch accordingly.

H. Tang: a smart watch tailored for the women’s market with an elegant design. In addition to universal features like text and call alerts, calorie intake and weather monitors, H.Tang’s embedded UV sensor informs female users of the intensity of the sun, helping them avoid inadvertent burns or tanning.

Haloband: a simple customizable wristband merged with many phone control functions. It closed a successful Kickstarter campaign last year.

Star 21: a fitness tracker that helps you start a healthy lifestyle and cultivate long lasting healthy habits through a unique gaming experience. It is developed by Singaporean startup OAXIS.

GEAK Watch 2: the second generation of Shanda’s smartwatch brand GEAK Watch. It is one of the first smart watches that feature a round dial design, and claims an 18-day standby battery life or 3 days for regular use.

Weloop: a smart wristband with an e-ink screen.

smart

Smart Home

Energypad: a slim wireless charger. It embeds a 12W GS certified power supply which can work from 100V to 240V AC. 

IvyLink: the company showcased two products, a smart ring for couples and a smart socket.

Kepler: an intelligent gas and carbon monoxide detector with active monitoring, intelligent alarms, portable design and more. Developed by Shenzhen-based smart home solution provider Orvibo.

Modou: a smart router under Shanda’s GEAK brand. Click here for our previous report on the product.

3D Printing

da Vinci 1.0 AiO: an all-in-one desktop printer which integrates scanning and printing capabilities. It is developed by XYZprinting, the Taiwan-based 3D printing designer and manufacturer.

Nanjixiong: a 3D printing platform.

Entertainment

BroadLink: a smart home appcessory maker. The startup showcased a portable WiFi amplifier and its smart plug at the event. The WiFi amplifier is raising funds on JD’s crowfunding platform. The smart plug can remotely control water coolers, water heaters and other appliances at home, or monitor home energy consumption.

Whome Bulb: a music speaker and light show. Through the Whome app, users can sync their music with the Whome Bulbs to change color to the beat and rhythm of music, assign pictures to song, and more. Whome uses a 16m color LED lamp that supports 256 gears regulation.

Daqiuzhang: an Android 4.3-powered game console by Xiaocong Technology. The product features Tegra T40s chip and 32G memory.

Health

NervAir: a smart air filter features a 7-inch screen, helping users track indoor air quality, humidity, outdoor weather, and more.

iCcur: a smart thermometer for babies.

Sky Innovation: a smart blood pressure meter for senior citizens.

Cuptime: a smart cup that can record the water amount you drink everyday and remind you to drink in the most suitable times. Users can store drinking water data and synchronize to their mobile phone by Bluetooth.

Others

Wokamon: an app that combines the functionality of a pedometer and a virtual pet, aiming to motivate fitness device and app users to continue their fitness plans.

Coolpeds: innovative, quality personal mobility scooters that are affordable.

Coolpeds

Coolpeds Founder Tony Chen Demonstrating Latest Product

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Ten Awesome Startups from Chinaccelerator Batch VI https://technode.com/2014/11/26/chinaccelerator-batch-vi/ https://technode.com/2014/11/26/chinaccelerator-batch-vi/#comments Wed, 26 Nov 2014 02:13:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25392 Chinaccelerator, one of the most active startup accelerators in China, kicked off the demo day for its latest batch this Tuesday. Ten projects covering a broad range of industries showcased their products in front of a throng of investors, mentors, fellow entrepreneurs and reporters. The ten startups are run by teams with international backgrounds and passion for entrepreneurship. Here’s a full […]]]>

Chinaccelerator, one of the most active startup accelerators in China, kicked off the demo day for its latest batch this Tuesday. Ten projects covering a broad range of industries showcased their products in front of a throng of investors, mentors, fellow entrepreneurs and reporters. The ten startups are run by teams with international backgrounds and passion for entrepreneurship.

Here’s a full list of all of the presenting companies from yesterday’s demo day:

BootDev-pic
Clawz-New-Logo

Bootdev was founded on the principle that website development can be very complicated. As a ‘Backend as a Service’ (BaaS) platform, Bootdev use the experience on Drupal to deploy the website backend to an Amazon Web Services (AWS) account. The service offers a series of BaaS features, including S3, SOUR search, Google Map, email SMTP support (by AWS Simple Email Service), spam email control, and meta-tags for Facebook, Twitter and Google.CLAWZ are designer jewellery for your nails, which can be worn and removed multiple times, to avoid the functional problems of today’s outrageous nail art. CLAWZ are designed by the hottest nail art designers and are 3D printed in fine metals such as silver, brass and gold. Users can order online and the nails are shipped to your home.

Kliptap-logo-final

Kliptap is a video platform for individuals to fundraise for causes and call friends to action. Working in a process similar to that for the ice bucket challenge, users on Kliptap can grow their circle of supporters by calling upon friends to upload videos so as to promote the cause to their own networks. Kliptap aims to trigger a chain reaction of video responses to raise money and promote the campaign.

fancy-cellar-2-350x308

Fancy Cellar is a wine importer and e-retailer specializing in boutique French wines. It simplifies, accelerates and guides the wine buying process via a Digital Sommelier. Fancy Cellar is now the wine supplier for several 5 star hotels in China, such as the Shangri-La and Waldorf Astoria. The company added that it is already breaking even.

Olifun

Olifun is a mobile app that helps people find nearby happy hours. Olifun leverages location based services and the time of search to give the most relevant, up-to-date recommendations. Olifun is available as a WeChat public account and on the Apple App store, while the Android version is on the way.

RaVaBe_2-350x139

RaVaBe is a digital content publishing tool that simplifies publishing across dozens of social media channels. It is aimed at businesses and individuals that lack SME functions, such as bloggers, CEOs, community managers, sales teams and marketing teams.

RUMAROCKET-LOGO-

Rumarocket saves companies time and money through a set of patent pending automation tools that make hiring more efficient. Rumarocket is a search engine that summarizes performance data, evaluations and assessments for a particular individual to make it easier for companies to predict who would be the best fit to work for them. The startup was also the regional winner of this year’s global startup competition SeedStars World.

tqsurvey-2

TQSurvey is a mobile research tool. Through TQSurvey, clients can have real-time feedback and real customer information. TQSurvey said they provide great content and rewards to engage a larger user base, while user analysis is conducted to guarantee the authenticity of research results. It claims to lower the cost of market research for clients by 90%.

wityu-pic

WITYU.FM is a crowd-curated music platform that lets you listen to thousands of playlists that have been collaboratively curated by the Wityu.fm community. The startup plans to commercialize its service via ad sponsorship and API affiliate program.

zhu-lou-350x136

Zhu-Lou is creating a Student Information System to digitize Chinese public schools. The system will make it easier for administrators to manage their schools, and relieve parents’ anxieties by providing the ability to monitor their child’s performance. Schools and parents will also gain access to quality third-party educational services and software. The company has launched pilot programs in two schools in Shenyang of Liaoning Province. It is expecting to generate revenue from annual fees from schools, data access fees from parents and promotion of third-party online educational services.

As Batch VI closes successfully, the three-month acceleration program for 2015 is now open for application. The deadline is 15th January and the program will start in March.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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RestOn: A Non-Wearable Device Getting You Good Sleep https://technode.com/2014/11/24/reston-sleep-tracker/ https://technode.com/2014/11/24/reston-sleep-tracker/#comments Mon, 24 Nov 2014 11:44:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25380 Most of us have at some point experienced sleeping troubles or even disorders due to life pressures or other outside factors. But there is hope. Shenzhen-based startup Sleepace is dedicated to helping helping troubled sleepers improve the quality of their slumber. The company’s latest product RestOn is a non-wearable device that measures, tracks and analyzes […]]]>

Most of us have at some point experienced sleeping troubles or even disorders due to life pressures or other outside factors. But there is hope. Shenzhen-based startup Sleepace is dedicated to helping helping troubled sleepers improve the quality of their slumber.

The company’s latest product RestOn is a non-wearable device that measures, tracks and analyzes the sleep quality of its users through collecting data on sleep time, heart rate, respiration, body movement and sleep cycles. Powered by a 2-foot long vibration sensor, RestOn takes the form of 2mm-thick belt which is placed under users’ chest and abdomen area during sleep.

RestOn-Install

Simply placing the sensor band under the bed sheet and then covering the base with the magnetic lid turns the device turns on so it’s ready to be used. The combination of the fractional microfiber band and magnetic lid prevent the device moving about under users while they sleep.

The captured data is first stored in the device then synced to your smartphones once connected via Bluetooth. A single battery charge takes around three hours and can deliver a full month of sleep monitoring, so users can rest at ease without worrying about if the battery’s running out and if it needs charged up yet again, the way you do with a smartphone.

Like most smart hardware, the device has an accompanying data analysis app, and provides users with actionable tips and sleeping reports to improve the quality of your rest. According to David Huang, CEO and company founder, the data analytics system is developed in house, in cooperation with Shenzhen health institutions and the health science center of Peking University. RestOn also makes better sleep quality shareable on social media and allows families to track their children’s bed time.

RestOn-family_cloud

Since most current smartwatches or wristbands offer similar sleep tracking features, you might ask why you should purchase a dedicated, separate sleep monitor?

Huang argued that the best sleep advice comes from the most accurate and comprehensive sleep data. RestOn adopts medical-grade sensors to guarantee data accuracy that outperforms wristbands, he says. “RestOn’s accuracy is reinforced by the sensor’s advanced sensitivity, extra-large impact area and close proximity to your vitals.”

Moreover, RestOn goes after customers who value sleep qualities or troubled sleepers. Most of their target users are either under pressure white collar workers, middle-aged men suffering from sleeping problems or those with chronic diseases. For them, even something as small as a wristband could be an impediment to sleep, whereas a non-wearable and ultra-thin device does not impose any extra sleeping burdens.

RestOn is not the only company eyeing this market. Finnish company Beddit is the developer of a similar sleep monitor. Huang claimed their competitive edge against competitors is in providing real-time heart rate and respiratory monitoring data, battery support, and data storage that avoids smartphone connection during the night.

The product has launched a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo and is expects to ship in mid-December, to tap the holiday season market.

Sleepace has released two other sleep quality-related products since its foundation 2011 by Peking University alumni, one for babies and the other for senior citizens. Drawing upon previous experience, Huang offered some tips to fellow hardware makers: 1. Find a precise market positioning for the product and don’t follow trends. The company’s first baby sleep monitor followed the trends in the Western market, but demand for such products is not huge in Chinese market. 2. Product design is something that’s worth investing heavily in. 3. Attention to every detail in the user experience.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketogftongues)

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Francis Leung: The Father of Red Chips as an Angel Investor https://technode.com/2014/11/21/francis-leung/ https://technode.com/2014/11/21/francis-leung/#respond Fri, 21 Nov 2014 09:22:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25345 Francis Leung has worked as an investment banker in Hong Kong for more than thirty years. He has been dubbed “father of the red chips” for leading efforts to get Chinese companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The one-time investment banking pundit has invested in a series of internet companies, such as ChinaHR.com, JD and […]]]>

Francis Leung has worked as an investment banker in Hong Kong for more than thirty years. He has been dubbed “father of the red chips” for leading efforts to get Chinese companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

The one-time investment banking pundit has invested in a series of internet companies, such as ChinaHR.com, JD and 91 Wireless, as an individual investor in recent years. He recently joined the board of Dianrong, a P2P lending platform which just secured funding from Hong Kong’s leading financial institution SHK in October. Here’s what he had to say on the startup environment and the investing market.

Why have you started to invest in startups?

Some friends once suggested I set up funds on my own when I first left investment banks, but I preferred to become an angel investor. Chinese internet companies, especially startups, have promising prospects.

I invested in the recruitment service ChinaHR.com in 2001 and followed another round to help it get though the tough times when the internet bubble burst. I sold shares in ChinaHR.com to an U.S. company in 2008 and recorded pretty good yields.

I poured the funds earned from ChinaHR.com into JD in November 2008, just after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, because I saw a huge Chinese consumption market with most of the industries still in a pre-digital age, which were ripe to be upended by the internet. The success of my investment in JD has reinforced my determination to focus on startups.

As an angel investor, I can bring funding and experience in terms of capital and M&A operations. Most of the companies I’ve invested in over the past few years are growth enterprises. Of course, you can choose more mature companies like CNPC, SINOPEC and China Mobile, or to trade in the secondary market so as to lessen the risks, but for me, I enjoy the process of growing with them and the sense of achievement that follows. It is not only about the money.

What’s your investment philosophy?

The biggest determinant of my investment decisions is the market prospects of the industry or sector which the startups are in. I invested in JD because I saw the upcoming exponential growth of e-commerce, and in 91 Wireless because of the rise of mobile internet. I am bullish on the prospects of the bio-health industry. The bio-pharmaceutical company I invested in recently went public on the NASDAQ recently.

 Why did you invest in Dianrong?

Chinese e-commerce services have potential because the multiple middle links in the traditional sales chain raises product prices. It is the same for China’s financial industry, which is on its way to marketization.

The sales and services for consumer electronics need standardized operations, which means that scale management is a crucial factor for e-commerce sites and only a few near-monopolies will survive. But online financial companies may find more opportunities, as financial products celebrate diversity and innovation. However, it is much tougher to achieve success in finance as compared with retail. Online finance is finance in essence; it needs innovation, service, and risk control.

Some valuable characteristics I found in Dianrong are the innovative spirit of the team, solid technical support and the attention to risk control. Dianrong’s board members have varied backgrounds and experiences, enabling effective brainstorming during meetings.

What support will you bring to Dianrong?

As an experienced and probably the eldest investor and board member, I can give strategic advice to the company from a different perspective. I have worked in financial industry for over three decades and would like to share my social network resources to boost the development of Dianrong. I am also a board member of SHK, the investor in Dianrong’s latest round. My previous experience in the financial industry, especially on funding, enterprise financial affairs and capital markets, will benefit the future development of Dianrong.

Originally from: Zhu Guilin

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Sunnymum: Mobile Healthcare Q&A Service for Mums and Babies https://technode.com/2014/11/20/sunnymum-mobile-healthcare-qa-service/ https://technode.com/2014/11/20/sunnymum-mobile-healthcare-qa-service/#comments Thu, 20 Nov 2014 13:24:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25327 The recent investment surge by internet giants in health-related startups like DXY, Chunyu, Guahao, reflects changing public opinions towards online healthcare. These companies target different verticals to solve problems in pre-digital medical systems. DXY is a socialized communication platform for medical, pharmaceutical and biological knowledge. Chunyu is a mobile healthcare Q&A service aiming to provide better […]]]>

The recent investment surge by internet giants in health-related startups like DXY, Chunyu, Guahao, reflects changing public opinions towards online healthcare.

These companies target different verticals to solve problems in pre-digital medical systems. DXY is a socialized communication platform for medical, pharmaceutical and biological knowledge. Chunyu is a mobile healthcare Q&A service aiming to provide better and easier healthcare information, while Guahao, as its Chinese name suggests, helps patients schedule appointments with doctors and read medical advice.

Launched in August this year, Sunnymum is a mobile healthcare Q&A app for pregnant women and new mums. This market’s desire for relevant knowledge is huge, since the body conditions of both mums and babies evolve quickly, and every mother and baby has unique needs depending on their individual situations. Sunnymum helps them to get quick and convenient access to doctors and get informed about important healthcare issues.

Sunnymum

Jin Liang, founder of the company, previously worked on an offline National Pregnancy Nutrition Course run by the Chinese Medical Doctor Association. Sunnymum brings this course online and helps users to schedule appointments. Additionally, the app also promotes healthcare advice to users.

Jin said that the company is considering cooperating with smart hardware makers, as some other online healthcare firms do. “The collection of data during the whole pregnancy process will help doctors to make better diagnoses.”

The startup claims to have entered partnerships with over 380 maternity and childcare hospitals with more than 3,000 doctors on the platform.

In addition to the Q&A model, Sunnymum is planning to connect the doctors and users in an offline expansion. The company received angel investment this September.

image credit: Shutterstock

Originally from: Zhi Xiaofeng

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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WeChat Adds Wi-Fi Solution to Public Accounts https://technode.com/2014/11/20/wechat-adds-wi-fi-solution/ https://technode.com/2014/11/20/wechat-adds-wi-fi-solution/#comments Thu, 20 Nov 2014 07:28:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25312 WeChat today added a new WiFi connection plugin for its public accounts. The new feature offers Wi-Fi solution plans to bricks-and-mortar stores, connecting Wi-Fi service providers, offline merchants and customers. According to Tencent, this function will be applicable to different scenarios in shopping centers, hotels, hospitals and restaurants. WeChat users will be able to enjoy free […]]]>

WeChat today added a new WiFi connection plugin for its public accounts. The new feature offers Wi-Fi solution plans to bricks-and-mortar stores, connecting Wi-Fi service providers, offline merchants and customers.

According to Tencent, this function will be applicable to different scenarios in shopping centers, hotels, hospitals and restaurants.

WeChat-Wifi-pic1

WeChat users will be able to enjoy free WiFi connection over WeChat public accounts when they enter the corresponding bricks-and-mortar stores.

While users are surfing on the internet, the WiFi connection tab will be displayed at the homepage of WeChat, enabling users to browse the details of connected public accounts in one click. In addition, WeChat will offer merchants various data in fields such as like daily visitors, or sent alerts to customers when they are approaching the stores. These data will enable retailers to derive business intelligence from real-time and historical WiFi analytics and convert customers into promoters via the integration of social channels.

WiFi service providers and third-party developers will also gain access to more data from public accounts, helping them to manage user accounts, and so on.

WeChat-Wifi-1

Tencent reportedly invested in WiWide, a leading domestic business WiFi business which received funding from Xiaomi last year. Tencent have poured over RMB100 million (around US$16 million) in this financing round together with Dianping, the review and rating service in which Tencent holds a stake, the report added.

Tencent isn’t the first internet giant that hopes to have access to all consumers through WiFi hotspot software. Alibaba, Meituan, Xiaomi have all launched their public WiFi solutions to tap the burgeoning sector.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Russian Social Networking Site VKontakte Eyes Chinese Ad Market https://technode.com/2014/11/19/vkontakte-eyes-china/ https://technode.com/2014/11/19/vkontakte-eyes-china/#comments Wed, 19 Nov 2014 05:38:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25272 Foreign social networking sites are effective channels for Chinese companies to reach overseas shoppers. Although Facebook is still inaccessible in mainland China, the company is gradually building a presence here. It has set up an office in Beijing to sell ads to Chinese companies, helping them to establish their brands abroad. VKontakte (VK), the top social […]]]>

Foreign social networking sites are effective channels for Chinese companies to reach overseas shoppers. Although Facebook is still inaccessible in mainland China, the company is gradually building a presence here. It has set up an office in Beijing to sell ads to Chinese companies, helping them to establish their brands abroad.

VKontakte (VK), the top social networking site in Russian-speaking countries, likewise has its eye on attracting Chinese advertisers to its platform. The company announced Tuesday the opening of its marketing branch in Beijing and the cooperation with Chinese mobile app marketing service YeahMobi.

As Russia’s answer to Facebook, the St Petersburg-based company has registered more than 250 million users and has over 100 million daily active users. Some 67% of users are in Russia, the rest coming from other Russian-speaking eastern European countries. The site is now available in 44 languages.

In addition to its comprehensive ad promotion platform launched a year ago, VK has also added a “Group Ad” feature which allows advertisers to display ads and to interact with audiences directly. The social network also offers technical support to Chinese app developers, helping them to localize their services.

Chinese e-commerce and gaming companies might well find opportunities in Russian market. Russia’s 70 million netizens spent a total of US$10 billion online in 2013, though there aren’t  e-commerce juggernauts like Alibaba dominating the local market as yet. The market share of all the local e-commerce services is below 4%.

Social networking and casual games are the most popular categories among the 41.7 million Russian gamers (expected to reach 50 million by the end of 2014). Some 58% of Russian players are willing to make in-game payments and the average revenue per user of the mobile gaming market is US$28.

image credit: Shutterstock

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Foodie Cookbook App Douguo Commercializing Its Community https://technode.com/2014/11/19/foodie-cookbook-app-douguo/ https://technode.com/2014/11/19/foodie-cookbook-app-douguo/#respond Wed, 19 Nov 2014 01:57:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25252 If you are a foodie looking for recipes and peers who can share in your joy of cooking, then Douguo, an online cookbook app helping users share good food and stories, might just be the service for you. Douguo secured US$25 million of Series C funding led by Hillhouse Capital at a valuation of US$300 million at the […]]]>
Douguo-pic

If you are a foodie looking for recipes and peers who can share in your joy of cooking, then Douguo, an online cookbook app helping users share good food and stories, might just be the service for you.

Douguo secured US$25 million of Series C funding led by Hillhouse Capital at a valuation of US$300 million at the end of last year. The previous rounds were funded by GGV Capital and Shanda Capital.

As a recipe sharing platform, Douguo structuralizes the data contributed by users, allowing them to look up, bookmark or share recipes with friends. It offers recipe recommendations of almost every dimension you can imagine, whether by ingredient, cuisine, cooking device, group of people, or health function. When it’s time to start cooking, users can switch to a “step-by-step” mode to see each step clearly as they progress.

To increase user interaction and stickiness, Douguo allows users to recommend, upload their own recipes or dishes, and join discussion forums of various themes.

In Douguo’s latest 5.3 update, the service added an e-commerce channel to sell fresh groceries, condiments and cookers. Users can either purchase one ingredient or all the ingredients prescribed in a recipe as a package with one click. In addition, the company is also planning to commercialize the service by introducing an ad business and by sourcing recipe data.

Douguo is free, and works on iOS, Android phones and tablets as well as on desktop. It now boasts a recipe library around 400,000 and claims 75 million downloads and 1.7 million daily active users.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Alipay and Taobao Expand in Australia, Helping Local Businesses Reach China https://technode.com/2014/11/18/alipay-taobao-expand-presence-australia-helping-local-businesses-reach-china/ https://technode.com/2014/11/18/alipay-taobao-expand-presence-australia-helping-local-businesses-reach-china/#comments Tue, 18 Nov 2014 05:46:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25245 As a part of its global expansion, Alibaba announced today that both its payment affiliate Alipay and Taobao marketplace are committed to bringing Australian products, brands and businesses closer to Chinese customers. This move is expected to boost Chinese consumption of Australian products by connecting Australian consumers with Chinese manufacturers. Alipay has established a Sydney-based […]]]>

As a part of its global expansion, Alibaba announced today that both its payment affiliate Alipay and Taobao marketplace are committed to bringing Australian products, brands and businesses closer to Chinese customers. This move is expected to boost Chinese consumption of Australian products by connecting Australian consumers with Chinese manufacturers.

Alipay has established a Sydney-based venture, Alipay Australia, which will work closely with Paybang, a joint venture by Alipay, in facilitating cross-border trade between the two countries.

In addition, Alipay has been working with Australia Post to sell, distribute and promote the Alipay purchase card across 4,400 retail outlets for Australian shoppers using Tmall.com and Taobao.

Taobao launched its official Taobao Australia E-commerce Channel to bring high-quality food and agricultural products straight to Chinese customers, with Melbourne-based digital solution provider Zoyu Digital helping source authentic Australian products. In partnership with the major Chinese logistics company Sinotrans, Zoyu Digital will help Australian businesses distribute to customers, handling product, sourcing, logistics, custom clearance, marketing and sales, and payment collection.

China and Australia have sealed a major free trade agreement, which means that majority of Australian exports to the Chinese market will become tariff-free over the next four to eight years. This deal will further boost cross-border e-commerce between China and Australia.

With increasing concern for food safety and higher levels of disposable income, Chinese consumers are keen on safe and healthy food from overseas. Statistics from the China E-commerce Research Center show that China’s online overseas market is estimated to reach RMB140 billion by the end of this year. And Australia is one of the most popular shopping destinations among Chinese cross-border online buyers.

Chinese investors are also seeing the potentials of this market. Metao, a cross-border e-commerce platform, just received Series B financing led by Vertex Venture.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Cross-border E-commerce Site Metao Scoops Funding as Chinese e-Shoppers Look Abroad https://technode.com/2014/11/17/cross-border-e-commerce-site-metao-scoops-funding-chinese-online-shoppers-haitao-trend/ https://technode.com/2014/11/17/cross-border-e-commerce-site-metao-scoops-funding-chinese-online-shoppers-haitao-trend/#comments Mon, 17 Nov 2014 12:04:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25222 China’s e-commerce industry has been blooming rapidly, but the country’s online shoppers aren’t stopping at the border. More and more shoppers are heading into new territories in pursuit of the best deals. Dubbed as Haitao (“buying overseas”), Chinese oversea online buyers can buy from foreign online retailers and have the goods directly delivered to their Chinese […]]]>
Metao-pic

China’s e-commerce industry has been blooming rapidly, but the country’s online shoppers aren’t stopping at the border. More and more shoppers are heading into new territories in pursuit of the best deals. Dubbed as Haitao (“buying overseas”), Chinese oversea online buyers can buy from foreign online retailers and have the goods directly delivered to their Chinese address.

According to a Nielsen survey, there are 18 million Chinese cross-border online shoppers who spent RMB216 billion (US$35.24 billion) in 2013. Cosmetics and skin care products, women’s clothing, perfume, and health and food supplements are among the most popular categories from overseas.

Metao, a cross-border e-commerce site formerly known as CNTaotao, reportedly secured US$30 million of Series B financing led by Vertex Venture with participation of Morningside Ventures, Greenwoods Investment and Series A investor Matrix Partners.

The startup has received US$5 million in Series A financing form Matrix Partners, while seed funding came from Chinese legendary angel investors Cai Wensheng and Wang Dongfeng.

Launched on March 3 this year, Metao is an e-commerce platform principally engaged in cross-border commerce and the special sales of overseas brands. The company claimed nearly 1 million users with monthly sales of over RMB10 million.

Xie Wenbin, founder of the site, said the capital will be used for construction, market expansion, branding, marketing, logistics and the construction of warehouses.

Last year, the Chinese government eased curbs on cross-border settlement by launching a pilot program in the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, allowing third-party payment companies to handle this business in cooperation with their bank partners.

image credit: Ebrun

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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Apple Adds UnionPay to Chinese App Store https://technode.com/2014/11/17/apple-adds-unionpay-payment-option-chinese-app-store-customers/ https://technode.com/2014/11/17/apple-adds-unionpay-payment-option-chinese-app-store-customers/#respond Mon, 17 Nov 2014 08:51:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25212 Apple today announced that it has added UnionPay, China’s most popular payment card, as a payment option for App store customers in China. The new option allows Chinese Apple ID users to link their accounts with UnionPay’s debit or credit cards as a simple and convenient way to pay for apps. Before this, the App […]]]>

Apple today announced that it has added UnionPay, China’s most popular payment card, as a payment option for App store customers in China. The new option allows Chinese Apple ID users to link their accounts with UnionPay’s debit or credit cards as a simple and convenient way to pay for apps.

Before this, the App Store supported payment in China only through the Visa, MasterCard and American Express bank networks . Although credit card penetration rate is on the rise in China, it is yet to become a universally used household service as it is in North America, Europe and Japan.

China UnionPay has a virtual monopoly over bank card transactions in China. To date, the total number of UnionPay Cards issued both at home and abroad has exceeded 4.5 billion, enabling UnionPay Card acceptance in over 140 countries and regions.

“The ability to buy apps and make purchases using UnionPay cards has been one of the most requested features from our customers in China,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services, in a statement. “China is already our second largest market for app downloads, and now we’re providing users with an incredibly convenient way to purchase their favorite apps with just one tap.”

In addition to UnionPay, Apple is also seeking a partnership with Alipay, the payment affiliate of Alibaba Group. This tie-up may help Apple in introducing its homegrown payment service Apple Pay into the Chinese market, given the government backing of China UnionPay.

Edited by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

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IndulgeSmart: English-language Restaurant Rating Service for Shanghai https://technode.com/2014/11/14/indulgesmart-english-language-restaurant-rating-service-shanghailanders/ https://technode.com/2014/11/14/indulgesmart-english-language-restaurant-rating-service-shanghailanders/#respond Fri, 14 Nov 2014 10:23:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25173 Dianping or Meituan might be the first destinations for most price-sensitive Chinese peoples when they are looking for a nice restaurant to dine out. But for visitors to Shanghai who can’t read Chinese or are willing to pay a little bit more for a nice dinner, IndugeSmart might be a better choice. IndulgeSmart is an English-language app made […]]]>
IndulgeSmart-1

Dianping or Meituan might be the first destinations for most price-sensitive Chinese peoples when they are looking for a nice restaurant to dine out. But for visitors to Shanghai who can’t read Chinese or are willing to pay a little bit more for a nice dinner, IndugeSmart might be a better choice.

IndulgeSmart is an English-language app made and used locally, helping people find restaurants and bars by location, cuisine or price. IndulgeSmart differentiates itself by being specific and intelligent: instead of giving users undifferentiated restaurant info, as Dianping does, IndulgeSmart deletes the irrelevant ones, such as restaurants that are too far to travel from current positions, while users’ dining preferences, price ranges and dining history are stored in their personal profiles, to narrow down the recommendations to three to five items.

Moreover, most local restaurant rating site users are Chinese, whose tastes might be very different from those of foreigners. IndulgeSmart will give reviews on restaurants from foreigners’ perspectives. It also supports the sharing of restaurant info with WeChat friends.

IndulgeSmart-pic

When talking about competition from SmartShanghai and CityWeekend, two popular services for expats in China, the startup’s founder and CEO Stone Shi said these two services are run by a group of very smart insiders, telling people what events you shouldn’t miss out on the weekend. As a new vertical entrant, IndulgeSmart is a platform powered by its users, adopting a UGC model and telling users how smart you can be yourself when digging restaurants and bars, probably with the help of your friends.

The early adopters of IndulgeSmart are expats living in Shanghai, short term tourists in Shanghai  and Chinese returnees from overseas. Given the higher purchasing power of this demographic, IndulgeSmart is focused on restaurants with a price rage of RMB70 (US$11.4) per person or above, a mid-to-upscale market in China. Stone noted that this sector is quite widely available, citing a report that 20% of restaurants in Shanghai and other mega cities in China charge an average RMB70 per person.

IndulgeSmart now has iOS, Android, and PC versions with over 5000 restaurants in the network, according to Stone. The startup plans to firmly establish its product in Shanghai before branching to other first-tier Chinese cities. “We are aiming for the Greater China region in two years and quite possibly international markets at a future point”, he said.

Stone Shi, IndulgeSmart founder and CEO, has 12 years of experience in product management and marketing strategy, from Silicon Valley startups to multinational corporations. The company is now supported by an eight-member team with international backgrounds.

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Face++ Accelerates Commercial Use of Face Recognition Tech with New Funding https://technode.com/2014/11/13/face-accelerate-commercial-application/ https://technode.com/2014/11/13/face-accelerate-commercial-application/#comments Thu, 13 Nov 2014 09:52:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25153 Face++, a face recognition technology provider, announced that it netted US$22 million of Series B funding at a valuation of over US$100 million from a consortium led by Qiming Ventures and Series A investor Innovation Works. The angel round was received from Legend Star, the angel arm of Legend Holdings, the parent company of Lenovo. Formed in 2012 […]]]>

Face++, a face recognition technology provider, announced that it netted US$22 million of Series B funding at a valuation of over US$100 million from a consortium led by Qiming Ventures and Series A investor Innovation Works. The angel round was received from Legend Starthe angel arm of Legend Holdings, the parent company of Lenovo.

Formed in 2012 by three Tsinghua University alumni, Face++ is a cloud-based face recognition technology company which helps developers and companies to embed advanced face detection, analysis and recognition, and large-scale search techs in their apps and websites. It provides face-related API and offline software development kits as well as customized cloud services to both developers and enterprises.

The Beijing-based startup plans to accelerate the commercial application of its face recognition technology with the new funding, mainly from two perspectives.

1) Application in Financial Services: Financial institutions that integrate facial biometrics data to their systems can improve users’ financial security when they access their private accounts. The startup has entered partnership with Ant Financial, Alibaba’s finance arm which runs Alipay, and several commercial banks.

2) Camera data + IFTTT model: Combining camera data with the flexible If This Then That (IFTTT) service will allow customers to trigger pre-defined functions when the camera captures the facial information of clients. For example, if a camera in a boutique recognizes the facial information of VIP clients, the sales manager can then offer customized services to them so as to optimize the user experience.

The company claims to have been integrated into more than 14,000 apps, covering over 40 million mobile devices per month. Its partners include Alibaba, Qihoo360, Weibo, Momo, Meitu, Camera360, and Jiayuan.

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Qunar Joins Ongoing Open Platform Fight https://technode.com/2014/11/13/qunar-launches-open-platform/ https://technode.com/2014/11/13/qunar-launches-open-platform/#comments Thu, 13 Nov 2014 07:51:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25146 Chinese online travel company Qunar launched a new cloud-based open platform recently, opening its data, access, resources, supply chain, customers, and capital to the entire travel industry. In terms of capital support, Qunar announced that it will provide a combined RMB1 billion (around US$161 million) incubation funding for projects under the platform. “We will offer RMB500,000 […]]]>

Chinese online travel company Qunar launched a new cloud-based open platform recently, opening its data, access, resources, supply chain, customers, and capital to the entire travel industry.

In terms of capital support, Qunar announced that it will provide a combined RMB1 billion (around US$161 million) incubation funding for projects under the platform. “We will offer RMB500,000 of funding for teams that are starting with budding ideas, and the investment is higher for teams with more mature products”, according to Qiu Hui, head of platform. (source in Chinese) He added that developers can decide whether they want to receive capital in exchange for equity or as loans with low interest rates.

The new platform will integrate user behavioral data and general industry data from Qunar, helping airline companies to optimize air routes and ticket prices, as well as providing better customer solutions and support to suppliers. Access for transaction management, fare policy management, financial management and other services can be used to improve efficiency.

Qunar will also open its customer service, operational, and technology resources for all users. The open supply chain includes all of Qunar’s operation of air tickets, train tickets, hotels, resorts, taxis, and so on. The opening of Qunar’s customers will enable customers to do directional marketing and client purchasing.

Chinese IT triumvirate Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent have all launched open platforms to share their resources in a bid to attract more developers and to improve their industrial ecosystem.

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Xiaomi To Invest Millions USD in Video Site Youku Tudou https://technode.com/2014/11/12/xiaomi-to-invest-in-youku-tudou/ https://technode.com/2014/11/12/xiaomi-to-invest-in-youku-tudou/#comments Wed, 12 Nov 2014 08:13:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25103 Chinese smart hardware and internet service provider Xiaomi revealed further details for its ambitious US$1 billion digital content plan released last week. The burgeoning startup announced a strategic partnership with Youku Todou, one of China’s largest internet companies. It plans to acquire the latter’s circulating shares with eight-digit US dollar investment for the development of a multi-screen media and entertainment […]]]>

Chinese smart hardware and internet service provider Xiaomi revealed further details for its ambitious US$1 billion digital content plan released last week.

The burgeoning startup announced a strategic partnership with Youku Todou, one of China’s largest internet companies. It plans to acquire the latter’s circulating shares with eight-digit US dollar investment for the development of a multi-screen media and entertainment ecosystem.

Xiaomi’s founder, chairman and CEO Lei Jun named this partnership as the inaugural project for Chen Tong, VP of content investment and content operation. Chen joined Xiaomi last week having previously served as Sina’s editor-in-chief and Executive Vice President, and is spearheading Xiaomi’s efforts in video content with Wang Chuan, a Xiaomi co-founder and VP.

Xiaomi is a proponent of the business model of selling low price hardware and commercializing the back-end services, which means software and content are essential components in generating revenue. Online video is obviously a crucial sector in this model.

Due to the lack of such resources, Xiaomi has been troubled by problems of streaming video from authorized licensees and copyright infringement lawsuits in the past. But following the creation of the partnership, content from Youku is expected to be available on Xiaomi’s smart set-top boxes, TVs, phones, and tablets.

Sina Tech reported that an industry insider said that Xiaomi is going to take a further step in tapping the digital content market, claiming that Xiaomi is planning to announce a US$300 million investment in iQiyi, another leading online video site in China. He added that an executive from Xiaomi is expected to join the board of iQiyi. The report noted that Xiaomi did not comment on the news.

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Gay Hook-up App Blued on a Mature Chinese LGBT Market https://technode.com/2014/11/12/blued/ https://technode.com/2014/11/12/blued/#respond Wed, 12 Nov 2014 07:05:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25080 China has seen great changes in attitudes towards homosexuality in the past few decades. Although there’s still a long way to go before they have gain equality with heterosexuals, Chinese gay people who once lived a grim life against legal and social judgements are receiving more acceptance throughout society. Gay life in China is now both […]]]>

China has seen great changes in attitudes towards homosexuality in the past few decades. Although there’s still a long way to go before they have gain equality with heterosexuals, Chinese gay people who once lived a grim life against legal and social judgements are receiving more acceptance throughout society.

Gay life in China is now both legal and undisguised, in the cities at least. The spread of tolerance has led to more services targeting the gay community; and, driven by this trend, Chinese investors have set their eyes on this fast-emerging market.

As the news of Apple CEO Tim Cook publicly coming out hit the headlines at the beginning of this month, Blued, a social app for male homosexuals in China, announced another US$30 million of Series B funding led by DCM, just eight months after receiving US$1.6 million in Series A funding in February.

Geng Le, founder of the company and (perhaps not surprisingly) gay himself, started Danlan, a virtual community for homosexuals in China in 2000. The company pivoted to focus on location-based gay hook-up app Blued to capitalize on the rise of mobile internet. Geng disclosed that Blued now has over 15 million users, of which 3 million come from overseas, ousting Grindr (which claimed 10 million users) from the top spot of same-sex match-making apps worldwide.

The startup’s founder cited reports that there are as many as 70 million gay people in China. He also believes that gay people are generally higher paid, and have strong purchasing power. However, the businesses and industry infrastructure serving this community is only now taking form.

Chinese gay dating apps are trying to expand commercially via the O2O industry, in cooperation with gay bars and cafes. Moreover, increasing numbers of brands and e-commerce platforms are more willing to cooperate with gay apps, thanks to more relaxed public attitudes towards gay people, especially on the internet. According to Geng, gay men have their own consumption preferences and art tastes; therefore, companies can partner with gay-related services to celebrate their special value and cultural diversification. Blued also participated, for example, in the production of LGBT-themed film Like Love to promote the gay culture.

Since there is still few Chinese LGBT people who are open with their sexual orientation, it is very difficult for the relevant authorities to monitor the trends here. Blued has played a major role as the communication channel between regional disease control authorities and gay groups when performing surveys and charity projects.

Given that Chinese gay groups are more active than those for lesbians, apps for homosexuals are usually male-dominated, according to a report. Consequently, investment has poured into male hook-up services. Zank, a major competitor of Blued, pocked a multi-million US dollar funding round in July this year. Gee Yuu is another app that has netted investment. Despite the imbalance in market coverage, it is a pretty good starting point for the development of the LGBT market, all things considered. Zank’s subsidiary Laven is one of the first apps for gay women in China.

image credit: iheima.com

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Ten Hardware Startups From HAXLR8R’s Fifth Demo Day https://technode.com/2014/11/11/haxlr8rs-fifth-demo-day/ https://technode.com/2014/11/11/haxlr8rs-fifth-demo-day/#respond Tue, 11 Nov 2014 04:13:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25046 HAXLR8R, an accelerator program for hardware startups around the world, graduated 10 new hardware companies at its fifth Demo Day in San Francisco. Each company completed the 111-day accelerator program in Shenzhen, China where they had access to expert support in design and manufacturing. “Connected hardware is creating a new industrial revolution. Instead of the […]]]>

HAXLR8R, an accelerator program for hardware startups around the world, graduated 10 new hardware companies at its fifth Demo Day in San Francisco. Each company completed the 111-day accelerator program in Shenzhen, China where they had access to expert support in design and manufacturing.

“Connected hardware is creating a new industrial revolution. Instead of the iconic jetpack of vintage science fiction, the future involves low-cost automation, innovative sensors, connectivity and communities built around physical objects,” said Cyril Ebersweiler, founder of HAXLR8R and venture partner at SOSventures. “This fifth batch combines expertise in robotics, AI, nanotechnology and biology to create not only groundbreaking but affordable and delightful products,” Ebersweiler added.

Here are the ten HAXLR8R startups presented at the demo day:

Clarity is a wearable air quality monitor. Created for China, India and other polluted locations, Clarity helps users make smarter decisions with real-time updates on the air around you. The crowd-sourced data will generate the world’s most detailed pollution maps (like Waze but for air quality)

Clarity

Form is introducing Point, a softer approach to home security. Point listens to the sounds of your home, senses what is in the air, and alerts you if anything is wrong. It tells you about the things you care about most, like windows breaking, alarms going off or the presence of smoke. Point gives you the comfort to know that all is fine when you are away—without cameras or complex security systems. Form was started by a Scandinavian team with Apple tenure. Form is now on Kickstarter.

Form


KATIA brings the functionality of an industrial robotic arm to mainstream consumers. It can be trained by touch without programming and runs on an open source platform that can be extended by developers.

Katia

The Keyi Cell Robot is an amazing modular and mobile robotic toy and platform.

Keyi

Linkitz is a new kind of wearable for kids. It is modular – every link is a little electronic toy with its own behavior that kids can play with right out of the box. Linkitz snap together allowing kids to create their own wearable that can do anything: sparkle when a friend is near, send secret messages, or chime along with a hand-clapping game.

Linkitz

OpenTrons is a lab bot for open, easy to use biotech tools that you can connect together to make a modular lab automation system. OpenTrons offers a rapid prototyping platform for biology that accelerates the design-build-test cycle in life-science. The easy-to-use lab bot shares open protocols, allowing for digital fabrication workflows in biotech to accelerate discovery, while the liquid handling robot costs under $3,000. OpenTrons is now on Kickstarter.

Opentrons

Petronics:indoor cats have a natural instinct to hunt that cannot be fulfilled by any cat toy available today. With sensors, actuators, and artificial intelligence, Mousr is a robotic cat toy that can see and react to a cat like a real animal would.

Petronics

Prynt is a case for smartphones that prints pictures instantly. Users can also access data such as movies, gifs or secret texts by scanning their Prynt photos with the app.

Prynt

Robo is an educational toy for kids to awaken their interest in logic, programming and robotics.

Robo

Voltera‘s circuit board printer cuts hardware development time from months to days. By using conductive ink technology, the printer can create prototype boards in the time it takes to get lunch.

Voltera

HAXLR8R is currently taking applications for its sixth round until November 15. Interested applicants can apply here. Click here for recruiting preferences shared by HAXLR8R’s general partner Benjamin Joffe for a better chance of getting enrolled.

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Mobile Enterprise Software Fxiaoke Switches to WeChat-style Interface in 4.0 Update https://technode.com/2014/11/11/fxiaoke-unveils-4-0-version/ https://technode.com/2014/11/11/fxiaoke-unveils-4-0-version/#comments Mon, 10 Nov 2014 23:38:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25003 The intersection of mobility, social and cloud computing continues to significantly influence enterprise communication. Fxiaoke, a mobile enterprise software company, recently rolled out a 4.0 update with the most prominent changes since its establishment, according to the company. Fxiaoke, formerly known as Facishare, was founded at the end of 2011 as a social performance management […]]]>
fxiaoke

The intersection of mobility, social and cloud computing continues to significantly influence enterprise communication.

Fxiaoke, a mobile enterprise software company, recently rolled out a 4.0 update with the most prominent changes since its establishment, according to the company.

Fxiaoke, formerly known as Facishare, was founded at the end of 2011 as a social performance management platform. It changed to its current name and refocused to customer relationship management last year, providing management software tools for sales teams and supports for field operation management, distribution chain management, and CRMs.

Previously adopting a socialized interaction interface similar to Weibo, the new update uses a WeChat-style interface, helping users already familiar with WeChat operations to pick up the service more quickly.

Fxiaoke-1

The 4.0 update has updated functions such as the dynamic CRM models, attendance check, approval, order, share, and agenda. Some major updates were to the app framework to enhance performance in areas with unstable mobile internet coverage, such as elevators or subways.

Claiming more than 60,000 enterprise customers, Fxiaoke has secured Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners last year and an eight-figure dollar total in Series B financing led by Northern Light Venture Capital (NLVC) earlier this year.

Li Quanke, COO for FXiaoke, once noted that the company will not directly complete with WeChat’s enterprise-facing accounts, stating that FXiaoke services will likely integrate with WeChat.

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[Update] Ups and Downs in a Lonely Entrepreneurial Journey: 24tidy’s Yao Zongchang https://technode.com/2014/11/10/24tidys-yao-zongchang/ https://technode.com/2014/11/10/24tidys-yao-zongchang/#respond Mon, 10 Nov 2014 12:30:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=25019 Shanghai-based startup 24tidy is one of the pioneers in China’s fast-moving on-demand laundry industry. Yao Zongchang, the man behind 24tidy, recently shared his entrepreneurial experiences and lessons learned along the way with TechNode. Yao was born in 1983, making him a member of China’s post-80s generation characterized by optimism for the future, entrepreneurship, and individuality. When […]]]>

Shanghai-based startup 24tidy is one of the pioneers in China’s fast-moving on-demand laundry industry. Yao Zongchang, the man behind 24tidy, recently shared his entrepreneurial experiences and lessons learned along the way with TechNode.

Yao was born in 1983, making him a member of China’s post-80s generation characterized by optimism for the future, entrepreneurship, and individuality. When Yao first decided to strike out in 2003 at the age of 20, he opened Beyoon, an ad innovation firm targeting foreign companies. By 2009, the company had established favorable world-of-mouth and most of its clients were Fortune 500 companies. At the end of that year, Yao sold out to his partners for around RMB2 million (around US$327K), thinking the startup environment for the traditional ad industry was deteriorating.

During interactions with CITIC Bank, one of Beyoon’s clients, Yao found out that the lack of funding is a common business problem. So he invested all the money he earned from the first startup to set up Hahadai, one of the earliest P2P lending platforms in China, in September of 2009. The platform enforced rigid risk control policies and acheived a zero bad debt rate.

Hahadai received angel investment in 2009 in exchange for a 60% stake in the company. But, it failed to raise further rounds after the capital was burnt out in the second year, as too much share capital were given away in the angel round. Some investors suggested Yao start another P2P platform, but he declined. Hahadai was closed in 2011.

24tidy

“When I started 24tidy in 2012, I was penniless”, he said. As an art major, Yao self-taught himself programming to construct the website and did part-time design work to sustain the company. After surviving its toughest year in 2013, 24tidy secured RMB10 million of Series A financing from SIP Oriza Seed Fund Management, an early-stage investment platform under Oriza Holdings.

[Update] The startup announced that it netted eight-digit  USD in Series B financing from Sequoia Capital on Nov. 13.

24tiday is now available both on web and mobile, ready to enter new regional markets in Beijing and Nanjing. It claims a monthly order total of over 10,000.

*

Lessons learned from Yao:

Giant competitors that are more established and better-resourced are a danger to startups, but their omnipresence in every vertical means that they can not be the best in each and every sector. This is an opportunity for startups if they stay focused and make the best of every detail. 

Another competitive edge of startups is the ability to act and respond quickly to market changes, thanks to their small size and therefore greater agility.

Entrepreneurship can be a tough journey for many, especially those who are bootstrapping their businesses, but for Yao, it is the feeling of loneliness that bothers him most. As a leader of the group, founders should think at the edge of the curve and it can be isolating to stick to the ideas you believe in despite enduring challenges or even ridicule from families, investors, and colleagues, according to Yao.

‘The startup journey has changed my characteristics to some extent. I am becoming more rational and letting the data talk.”

Originally from: Zhu Guilin

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XYZprinting’s All-in-One 3D Printer and Scanner Hits China https://technode.com/2014/11/08/xyzprinting-3d-printer-scanner/ https://technode.com/2014/11/08/xyzprinting-3d-printer-scanner/#comments Sat, 08 Nov 2014 01:16:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24955 After three decades of development, 3D printing is no longer an exclusive and expensive hobby, and home 3D printers are becoming increasingly available and affordable. McKinsey Global Institute has forecast that 3D printing could generate US$230 billion to US$550 billion per year by 2025 in terms of market scale. The largest source of this, it […]]]>

After three decades of development, 3D printing is no longer an exclusive and expensive hobby, and home 3D printers are becoming increasingly available and affordable. McKinsey Global Institute has forecast that 3D printing could generate US$230 billion to US$550 billion per year by 2025 in terms of market scale. The largest source of this, it suggests, would be from consumer uses, followed by direct manufacturing and the use of 3D printing for tools and moulds. Although 3D printers are still primarily targeting hobbyists, engineers and techies, mainstream consumers are not far behind.

XYZprinting, a 3D printing designer and manufacturer, today launched da Vinci 1.0 AiO, an all-in-one desktop printer which integrates scanning and printing capabilities, to the mainland China market. The concept of all-in-one 3D printers isn’t new: there are several similar printers like AiORobotics’ Zeus, but da Vinci 1.0 AiO differentiates itself with a more affordable price and laser sensing technology.

Moreover, XYZprinting manufactures the printers in Thailand and has a monthly capacity of 10,000 to 20,000 units, according to Simon Shen, chairman of the company. In Chinese market, de Vinci 1.0 AiO has been on sale on e-commerce platforms like Amazon, Taobao, JD and Suning, as well as the bricks-and-mortar Suning Appliance store.

XYZ-1

The scanner features a printing size of 20×20×19cm, scanning size of 15×15cm (max) or 5×5cm (min) and a scanning accuracy of 2m pixel. It allows the use of ABS and biodegradable PLA resins, but only supports single color printing.

Powered by the scanning function, da Vinci 1.0 AiO is recommended for non-techie customers who don’t know how to compile 3D drawings of target objects with professional software. The proprietary scanning assembly underneath the printing platform enables a full 360-degree scan and acquisition of the scanned objects within five minutes.

The company told Technode the printer utilises new dual-head laser scan technology, where one sensor is placed on the top and another placed at the bottom on the facing side so that the sensors can scan an object from odd angles. After the scanning, users can then use Smart-fix technology to improve the coverage rate of a 3D scan.

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At the press conference, XYZprinting also showcased the prototype of Nobel 1.0, a Sterolithography-enabled 3D printer targeted at the professional market. This product is expected to hit the market in 2015.

The company’s two previous products, da Vinci 1.0 and da Vinci 2.0 Duo, have been well received by the market. Shen disclosed that the U.S. market remains XYZprinting’s biggest market globally, accounting for around 40% of their total sales.

“But excellent business prospects for 3D printing in mainland China has meant rapid business growth for us. This is particularly so in the areas of engineering, design, education and creative works,” Shen added. XYZprinting has formed partnerships with a series of domestic institutions, including universities, college, and global design competitions.

Founded in 2013, XYZprinting is supported by New Kinpo Group, a subsidiary of Taiwan-based Kinpo Group, one of the world’s largest electronics conglomerates. XYZprinting China is based in Suzhou, Jiangsu province.

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WeChat Opens API to Connect Official Accounts and Mobile Apps https://technode.com/2014/11/07/wechat-opens-api-connect-official-accounts-mobile-apps/ https://technode.com/2014/11/07/wechat-opens-api-connect-official-accounts-mobile-apps/#comments Fri, 07 Nov 2014 02:01:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24929 WeChat is moving another step forward in terms of openness with community by launching an API to connect mobile apps and their WeChat official accounts today. With this API, developers can added an entry point in their mobile apps to redirect the users to connected WeChat official accounts. The users will enter the chat interface if […]]]>
WeChat-appa

WeChat is moving another step forward in terms of openness with community by launching an API to connect mobile apps and their WeChat official accounts today.

With this API, developers can added an entry point in their mobile apps to redirect the users to connected WeChat official accounts. The users will enter the chat interface if they are already followers of the official account, otherwise, they will be redirected to the account profile page.

Developers can bound their apps with any official account that is under their WeChat open platform accounts. This feature is only available for WeChat 5.3 version or above.

Thanks to the IM features of WeChat, official account will become a premium channel for app developers to interact and get feedback from their users. In addition, developers can push news via their official accounts, a less bothering way to send information to the users as compared with pushing through mobile apps.

The seamless connection between mobile apps and corresponding official accounts will also help WeChat to attract more users for its other services of payment, voice recognition and more.

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NetEase Launches Youdao Cloud Cooperation to Tap Enterprise Service Market https://technode.com/2014/11/06/netease-launches-youdao-cloud/ https://technode.com/2014/11/06/netease-launches-youdao-cloud/#respond Thu, 06 Nov 2014 09:59:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24903 Lots of tech companies have their head in the cloud. Youdao, a sub-brand of Chinese internet company NetEase, recently launched Youdao Cloud Cooperation, an enterprise platform where users can communicate and share notes, spreadsheets and files in real-time, allowing them to create and edit documents online while cooperating with other colleagues. The tool is available across […]]]>

Lots of tech companies have their head in the cloud. Youdao, a sub-brand of Chinese internet company NetEase, recently launched Youdao Cloud Cooperation, an enterprise platform where users can communicate and share notes, spreadsheets and files in real-time, allowing them to create and edit documents online while cooperating with other colleagues.

The tool is available across multiple platforms, including PC, Mac, web, iOS and Android, and is compatible with most mainstream document formats. William Ding, NetEase CEO, said the service is aimed at small teams with less than ten members in the file editing and sharing scenario.

Youdao

Jiang Weihang, NetEase technology director, said traditional enterprise software usually costs a lot and demands promotion by IT departments. He doesn’t think this model suits the Chinese market. Consequently, Youdao Cloud Cooperation will adopt a freemium model, rather than the premium or subscription models adopted by most current enterprise services.

Youdao started as a search engine sub-brand under NetEase. Although Youdao Search didn’t gain traction, the other two products, Youdao Dictionary and Youdao Note, performed much better. As of the end of 2013, Youdao Dictionary claimed nearly 400 million active users and had started to explore the online education sector. Youdao Note, the Evernote clone, announced it had 15 million users last year.

Youdao is seeking to expand this success from individual to the enterprise market. Ding added that Youdao Cloud Cooperation is going to be another strategic focus of the NetEase, on par with NetEase News and EasyChat.

Most Chinese small teams use QQ, email or online disk to share files, but such solutions can lead to version control and cooperation problems, according to statistics from Youdao.

Compared with other Yammer-like enterprise social services like Teambition and Mingdao, Youdao Cloud Cooperation is more similar to WPS Light Office, Google Docs and Office 365. Since Google services are blocked in China, the unavailability of Google Docs, a service widely used by foreign small teams, has left space for domestic services in this sector to prosper.

Tencent also rolled out enterprise-level service Enterprise Account to tap this sector.

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Cursed? China’s Smart Hardware Shipping Strife https://technode.com/2014/11/05/shipping-delay-curse-smart-hardware-china/ https://technode.com/2014/11/05/shipping-delay-curse-smart-hardware-china/#respond Wed, 05 Nov 2014 12:16:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24862 One headache haunting smart hardware manufacturers able to convince customers to pre-order their products is to meet the shipping schedule as promised. Unfortunately, the problem often affects most Chinese smart device makers, both big companies developing products with their own capital and small hardware makers raising money from crowdfunding sites. T-watch, a smartwatch developed by Tomoon […]]]>

One headache haunting smart hardware manufacturers able to convince customers to pre-order their products is to meet the shipping schedule as promised. Unfortunately, the problem often affects most Chinese smart device makers, both big companies developing products with their own capital and small hardware makers raising money from crowdfunding sites.

T-watch, a smartwatch developed by Tomoon Technology, was opened up for pre-order in Sept. last year, promising to ship on December 22nd. Prompted by the endorsement of co-founder Wang Feng, who is also the CEO of game developer LineKong, T-watch snapped up nearly RMB37 million worth of orders. But its shipment has been delayed several times and there’s still no sign of shipping. Backers are becoming irate, demanding refunds from the company.

Smartisan, the ambitious smart phone startup, also had problems in meeting its shipping schedule and offered to refund pre-orders. A host of other domestic smart device makers have failed to their promised time frames, including big ones like Geak Watch, Xiaomi’s router, Qihoo’s child tracking bracelet, and startups like inWatch and Cuptime.

Shipping delay is nothing new to hardware users. Over 80% of the top-50 crowdfunding projects on Kickstarter missed their target delivery dates, according to a report by CNNMoney. Although not all of these projects are hardware-related, the data may to some extend indicate the time frame typical to crowdfunding projects.

Living in a world where everything is a Taobao-click away, Chinese people don’t like to pre-order items which need months of waiting. This mentality means that all the gadgets raising funds in crowdfunding platforms are nearing the production stage. However, neither this advantage nor proximity to the manufacturing hub of Shenzhen have helped, and Chinese smart hardware’s shipping delay rate is reportedly over 70%. The rising delay rate will inevitably be detrimental to customer trust and loyalty, which are essential sales components, especially to Chinese backers who are more sensitive to this matter.

Shipment delays can happen for a variety of reasons. Some teams have underestimated the complexity of the production process and released the product or launched crowdfunding campaigns when they are still in prototype. Unlike software, hardware usually takes a long time to make and bring to market because there are more procedures involved, like molding, testing, and certification. Moreover, many smart products adopt new technologies or new materials. Numerous small problems in multiple links will also result in delays.

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Smart Wearable Maker Codoon Claims 20M Users, Raises New Funds https://technode.com/2014/11/05/codoon-claims-20m-users-upon-raising-new-funds/ https://technode.com/2014/11/05/codoon-claims-20m-users-upon-raising-new-funds/#respond Wed, 05 Nov 2014 10:04:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24868 Chinese smart wearable brand Codoon has raised US$30 million in Series B funding from SIG and SBCVC, it told TechNode. The company had just raised RMB60 million of Series A financing in March this year and also received angel investment from Shanda. In addition, the company said in the press release that its social sports […]]]>

Chinese smart wearable brand Codoon has raised US$30 million in Series B funding from SIG and SBCVC, it told TechNode. The company had just raised RMB60 million of Series A financing in March this year and also received angel investment from Shanda.

In addition, the company said in the press release that its social sports community has amassed more than 20 million users.

Entering the smart wearable sector in 2010, Codoon has released a series of smart devices, including a wristband, a second generatio bracelet, step counter, Bluetooth body scaleCodoon Candy, and Codoon Smile.

codoon

In addition to hardware, Codoon is trying to ride the health and fitness wave in China with multi-platform exercise apps such as Codoon Workout and Codoon Sports. The startup also introduced social elements and big data solutions to the apps to create incentive mechanism. This financing round will be utilised in developing its social networking platform and software.

Codoon is now transforming from a hardware manufacturer to a smart hardware solution and data provider. To facilitate this, the Codoon platform was last year opened to third parties so users can introduce their connections and data from social services or other appcessories. It also released ROM 1.0, a firmware for smart wristbands, in August this year, providing API access to different smart gadget brands. The company is also working on firmware for other smart product categories, said the company’s CEO Shen Bo at a recent event.

Formed by Shen Bo in October 2009, Codoon now has over 40 employees mainly operating from Chengdu and Shenzhen. It is planning to set up a business center in Beijing in the near future.

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Hey, Big Spender: Alipay Teams Up with e-Retailer Gilt https://technode.com/2014/11/04/alipay-ties-online-shopping-site-gilt-facilitate-chinas-luxury-shoppers/ https://technode.com/2014/11/04/alipay-ties-online-shopping-site-gilt-facilitate-chinas-luxury-shoppers/#comments Tue, 04 Nov 2014 06:25:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24818 Alipay, the payment affiliate of Alibaba Group, announced a tie-up with U.S. flash sale e-retailer Gilt which will add Alipay ePass as a checkout option, making it easier for consumers in China to shop for top designer brands. The partnership provides a seamless experience for Chinese Gilt members, allowing them to pay through their existing Alipay accounts on the Gilt website. The Alipay ePass solution is […]]]>

Alipay, the payment affiliate of Alibaba Group, announced a tie-up with U.S. flash sale e-retailer Gilt which will add Alipay ePass as a checkout option, making it easier for consumers in China to shop for top designer brands.

The partnership provides a seamless experience for Chinese Gilt members, allowing them to pay through their existing Alipay accounts on the Gilt website. The Alipay ePass solution is capable of providing payment, logistics, and marketing support to help global brands and retailers connect with Chinese consumers. Gilt members benefit as it avoids the complexity of legacy credit card and international cross-border transactions.

This tie-up marked another step of Alipay’s expansion to overseas markets after cooperation with several foreign e-commerce services like iHerb, My Bag, Rakuten and Yahoo! Shopping Japan. Alipay now supports payment in fourteen currencies via cooperation with e-commerce partners in over 40 countries or regions.

Chinese shoppers account for 29% of the global luxury market and spent US$33 billion on overseas websites in 2013, according to a report by The Economist.

The adoption of Alipay ePass’s payment and marketing option is one of Gilt’s methods of deepening its commitment to China. The site has launched a Chinese version, Chinese speaking customer services as well as preferential shipping rates. Gilt currently ships to over 100 countries around the world.

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Legend Holdings Continues Internet Investment with P2P Platform eLoancn https://technode.com/2014/11/03/legend-holdings-invests-p2p-lending-platform-eloancn-continue-inroads-internet-industry/ https://technode.com/2014/11/03/legend-holdings-invests-p2p-lending-platform-eloancn-continue-inroads-internet-industry/#comments Mon, 03 Nov 2014 09:21:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24781 Legend Holdings Corporation, the parent company of PC and smartphone maker Lenovo Group (HK.0992), has invested an undisclosed amount of financing in P2P lending site eLoancn. Some local media has reported that the investment is around RMB900 million (US$147 million). Founded in 2007 as one of the earliest P2P platforms in China, eLoancn is a Wenzhou-based online lending […]]]>
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Legend Holdings Corporation, the parent company of PC and smartphone maker Lenovo Group (HK.0992), has invested an undisclosed amount of financing in P2P lending site eLoancn. Some local media has reported that the investment is around RMB900 million (US$147 million).

Founded in 2007 as one of the earliest P2P platforms in China, eLoancn is a Wenzhou-based online lending platform where members can borrow and lend money among themselves at better interest rates than a bank typically offers. eLoancn differentiates itself from peers with a special focus on agriculture, farming and rural areas. Its main business comes from farmers’ personal loans, which are mainly used for agricultural reproduction and breeding.

The company claimed to have set up more than 1,000 operation centers across over 100 cities in China. According to the site, it recorded a turnover of RMB300 million in 2013 and RMB1.72 billion this year as of October.

Although the founding team will lose controlling stakes in the company after the capital injection, Wang Sicong, eLoancn founder and CEO, disclosed that the new controlling shareholder has granted them the right to maintain operations.

Wang added that the funding will be used for market expansion, acquisition and IT system upgrading.

Legend Holdings has initiated a series of measures to explore internet-related business. Lenovo has launched a project for smart hardware, named New Business Development (NewBD, or NBD), and is planning to establish an internet-focused smart device company next year to tap the fast-growing consumer mobile device market in China.

Online finance is also an important part of the company’s long-term development program. Legend Holdings’s current financial units include offline payment company LakalaZhengqi Financial, a financial company targeting SMEs, commercial bank Hankou Bank, and insurance company UIB.

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SouFun Partners with Another Home Agency, Tospur https://technode.com/2014/11/03/soufun-partners-with-yet-another-home-agency-tospur/ https://technode.com/2014/11/03/soufun-partners-with-yet-another-home-agency-tospur/#respond Mon, 03 Nov 2014 07:36:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24772 China’s leading real estate portal SouFun (NYSE: SFUN), which recently changed its web address to Fang.com, announced that it has partnered with home agency company Tospur Real Estate Consulting to purchase a 16% share in the latter via private placement for around RMB381 million (US$62 million) in cash. Under the deal, the two companies will […]]]>

China’s leading real estate portal SouFun (NYSE: SFUN), which recently changed its web address to Fang.com, announced that it has partnered with home agency company Tospur Real Estate Consulting to purchase a 16% share in the latter via private placement for around RMB381 million (US$62 million) in cash.

Under the deal, the two companies will also invest RMB60 million (US$9.8 million) and RMB40 million (US$6.5 million) respectively, to form a joint venture to provide real estate financing services. This sector is expected to become a pillar business of SouFun, which just launched a third-party financing business last year.

Formed in Shanghai in 1998, Tospur is a leading Chinese real estate service provider. It offers real estate marketing and sales agency service, financial services, commercial property operation service, and consulting services.

SouFun has been in a strained relationship with its customers this year, amid a slowdown in the domestic property market. Several real estate agencies launched a boycott against excessive fees charged by SouFun for listing property information on the site.

Moreover, SouFun is no longer just a online platform, as it seeks to expand its brokerage business. Before investing in Tospur, SouFun had invested in three leading Chinese real estate firms: World Union Properties Consultancy (SZ: 002285) and Hopefluent Group (HK: 00733), and Century 21 China.

Given the direct conflict of interests, HomeLink, a Beijing-based property agency, has halted its listings on SouFun, citing concerns with SouFun’s behavior in stealing listing information from individual agencies, as it stated in an open letter. (It’s worth noting that HomeLink is also trying to tap the online market by rebranding its home-grown property listing site as Lianjia.com).

5i5j, another leading property agency, also plans to suspend cooperation with SouFun this year.

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What to Know about Chinese Mobile Learners Before Entering the Market https://technode.com/2014/11/01/china-mobile-learners/ https://technode.com/2014/11/01/china-mobile-learners/#respond Fri, 31 Oct 2014 23:52:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24707 With the rapid expansion of mobile internet, online education is undergoing radical transformation with more mobile learners studying while on-the-go to make the best use of their fragmented free time. The increase of smart device penetration, WiFi and broadband connection and software is making mobile learning (or m-learning) an increasingly popular sector for users. As the […]]]>

With the rapid expansion of mobile internet, online education is undergoing radical transformation with more mobile learners studying while on-the-go to make the best use of their fragmented free time. The increase of smart device penetration, WiFi and broadband connection and software is making mobile learning (or m-learning) an increasingly popular sector for users.

As the online education craze in China lures VC money, more startups focused on this sector have emerged in the past year. Let’s take a look at some aspects of the m-learning market in China, as presented in a report jointly released by online education site Hujiang and Baidu Education in October this year.

Who

Mobile learning users have an unbalanced gender ratio, with 58.4% female and 41.6% male. Users aged between 19-30 account for 70.2% of the total students, indicating that college students or graduates who just started their career are the most active mobile learners. The 31-40 and 15-18 age groups follow, to account for 14.1% and 10.3% of users respectively.

MLearning-1

Mobile Learner Distribution by Age

Most mobile learners have received higher education and use mobile learning as a way to further their studies. Junior college or university students account for 32.8%  of users while white collar workers represent 20.5%.

In terms of geographical distribution, second-tier cities take nearly half at 44.7%, while first-tier, third-tier and fourth-tier cities account for 26.5%, 18.1% and 8.8% of the total respectively.

MLearning-3

What

Language learning dominates the m-learning market with an 89.3% market share, driven by the huge English learning demand in China. The share for other courses are: interests (27.3%), occupational tests (13.8%), techniques (13.5%), test prep for overseas study (7.6%), CGAT (China Graduate Admission Test) (6.9%), primary education (6.6%), marketing and management (3.1%), pre-school education (2.0%) and others (0.9%). 

How

Desktop PCs, which represent 69% of the market, are still the most important means for students to get access to online courses, but smartphones are catching up rapidly to account for 65%, while tablets account for 14%. The utilization rate of smartphone is higher in lower tier cities.

4

Apple users constitute a major part of smartphone m-learners, accounting for 30% of the total, while Samsung and Xiaomi follow to account for 15.8% and 14.5%, respectively.

Mlearning-device

How Much

Although the free-to-play or free-to-learn mindset is still prevalent in China, as reflected by the report that 27.3% of the users in the survey want free services, the Chinese payment behavior is gradually changing with 29.1% willing to pay more than RMB500 (US$82) for services they receive per year.

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 image credit: Shutterstock

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On-demand Car Maintenance Service eBaoyang Raises Series A Financing Led by Source Code Capital https://technode.com/2014/10/31/demand-car-maintenance-service-ebaoyang-raises-series-financing-led-source-code-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/10/31/demand-car-maintenance-service-ebaoyang-raises-series-financing-led-source-code-capital/#comments Fri, 31 Oct 2014 07:37:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24720 eBaoyang, an on-demand car maintenance service, has announced that it received US$5 million of Series A financing from Source Code Capital. The funds will be injected in R&D and market expansion, according to the company. eBaoyang is a car maintenance marketplace that enables mechanics to fix users’ cars at their home, office, or any other place that’s […]]]>

eBaoyang, an on-demand car maintenance service, has announced that it received US$5 million of Series A financing from Source Code Capital. The funds will be injected in R&D and market expansion, according to the company.

eBaoyang is a car maintenance marketplace that enables mechanics to fix users’ cars at their home, office, or any other place that’s convenient for them. Users can place orders on the company’s site or via its WeChat service account, and then two professional mechanics will join you at the designated time and place to fix the vehicle.

The maintenance process usually takes around 45 minutes to an hour, allowing users to make the best use of their available time. In addition, the process will be videoed to protect the interests of car owners. Car maintenance reports will be sent to users within three days.

The company was founded by Gao Feng, former executive at internet designated driving service platform eDaijia, in Jan. this year. The firm is now operating in Beijing and Suzhou.

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Taobao Launches Laundry Service to Deeper Forays into Local Life Market https://technode.com/2014/10/30/taobao-launches-laundry-service-deeper-forays-local-life-market/ https://technode.com/2014/10/30/taobao-launches-laundry-service-deeper-forays-local-life-market/#comments Thu, 30 Oct 2014 06:14:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24677 Taobao Life, the local service arm of Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao, wheeled out an on-demand laundry platform in conjunction with several washing service providers, including iLanmao, Ganxike, and Laundry Queen (our translation). With this service, users can schedule a time that is convenient for them to pick up or drop off laundry at their door, by placing an order […]]]>
Taobao-laun

Taobao Life, the local service arm of Alibaba’s e-commerce marketplace Taobao, wheeled out an on-demand laundry platform in conjunction with several washing service providers, including iLanmao, Ganxike, and Laundry Queen (our translation).

With this service, users can schedule a time that is convenient for them to pick up or drop off laundry at their door, by placing an order on a Taobao interface (as shown below). Taobao claims that the platform processed more than 50,000 pieces of laundries in October alone.

Taobao-laun-1

To provide a high quality service, the platform works with quality logistics businesses, such as SF Express, according to the company. The clothes will be cleaned in centralized facilities where the entire process is monitored, with each piece of clothes having its own QR code. The laundry will re-done for free if customers are not satisfied with the level of cleaning.

With on-demand services taking hold in transportation, it’s no surprise to see it expanding to other parts of daily life, like housekeeping, home appliance maintenance, or even manicures, as more customers are willing to pay for the convenience of not having to do the chores themselves.

Already there’s ample competition with on-demand laundry services, and investors have started to realize the potential in this sector. A leading player in the arena 24tidy just raised Series A financing led by SIP Oriza Seed Fund Management and other similar services include Xiyigj,GanxikeLanrizi, and Weixiyi. As a continuation of its O2O expansion, Tencent invested in Edaixi, a service born out of time-honored brand Rong Chain Laundry, earlier this year.

Taobao’s laundry service is launched as part of its local service platform which integrates various local life services like house cleaning, home appliance maintenance, law services, translation, and automobile service, among others.

image credit: Shutterstock

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Co-working with TechNode in the Heart of Shanghai! https://technode.com/2014/10/30/co-working-technode-heart-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2014/10/30/co-working-technode-heart-shanghai/#respond Thu, 30 Oct 2014 01:57:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24660 As a member of Chinese startup ecosystem, nothing makes us here at Technode happier than the chance to embrace a more vibrant startup culture and more dynamic entrepreneurial network locally. To facilitate this, TechNode launched the co-working space theNode in Beijing last year, with the goal of bringing together outstanding entrepreneurs with their bright ideas. […]]]>

As a member of Chinese startup ecosystem, nothing makes us here at Technode happier than the chance to embrace a more vibrant startup culture and more dynamic entrepreneurial network locally. To facilitate this, TechNode launched the co-working space theNode in Beijing last year, with the goal of bringing together outstanding entrepreneurs with their bright ideas.

Our efforts have seen results, with theNode now having accommodated nearly forty startups/accelerators, including innovative product incubator Taihuoniao, recruiting site Nashangban, mobile publishing platform Mono, and more. Moreover, startup salons and activities on a variety of popular topics like online education, mobile apps and fashion, have regularly been held to create a fertile atmosphere that allows newborn companies to flourish.

Continuing the entrepreneurial spirit celebrated by theNode, we are proud to announce that our Shanghai-based co-working space is to open its doors to aspiring entrepreneurs and other startup ecosystem players.

The space is sited at the center of Shanghai with easy transportation and good access to neighboring startup networks. Aside from desk space and office cubicles, the TechNode co-working space provides a flexible but professional working environment to foster innovative ideas. As in Beijing, startup salons and VC meetups will be organized to help members to better integrate into Shanghai’s startup ecosystem.

If you are launching a startup by yourself or with your team, you can rent a working space here for RMB1,200 per person per month. If you have a team with over four staff, we have a few separate rooms for rent too.

Shanghai-office

Address: Room 103, Building No 2, Hailuo Park, Xietu Road No. 2430, Xuhui District, Shanghai

地址:上海市徐汇区斜土路2430号海螺花园2号楼103室

You’re welcome to visit! Please contact us at chenchong@technode.com

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Luxury GEAK Watch 2 Unveiled, Boasts Up to 18-Day Battery Life https://technode.com/2014/10/29/luxury-geak-watch-2/ https://technode.com/2014/10/29/luxury-geak-watch-2/#comments Wed, 29 Oct 2014 07:28:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24649 GEAK Watch, the smartwatch brand backed by China’s leading online gaming company Shanda, unveiled its long-awaited GEAK Watch 2 this week. The new smartwatch is available in standard and Pro versions, and pre-orders for the gadgets are being taken on the company’s website for RMB1,999 (around US$327) and RMB2,499, respectively. Powered by Android 4.3-enabled GEAK Watch OS, […]]]>
GEAK-1024x343

GEAK Watch, the smartwatch brand backed by China’s leading online gaming company Shanda, unveiled its long-awaited GEAK Watch 2 this week. The new smartwatch is available in standard and Pro versions, and pre-orders for the gadgets are being taken on the company’s website for RMB1,999 (around US$327) and RMB2,499, respectively.

Powered by Android 4.3-enabled GEAK Watch OS, GEAK Watch 2 sports a 1.7-inch 320 x 320 circular display, Bluetooth 4.0 (2.3 in the basic model), 2.4GHz WiFi , 384MB RAM, 2GB memory, as well as a heart rate monitor and voice control functionality. (The last two features are on the Pro version only.) The smartwatch uses interchangeable 24mm leather straps, making it compatible with standard straps for traditional watches.

TFScreen

The TF Screen adopted by GEAK Watch 2 utilises an e-ink display effect when in standby mode. This battery-saving function allows an impressive battery life of fifteen days for the standard and eighteen days for the Pro version. Users can switch to the high-definition display mode by pressing the power button. (as shown in the picture above)

The small smartwatch screen limits the sophistication of input methods. To solve this problem, GEAK Watch 2 has adopted a Q9 input keyboard as shown below. If a user wants to input letter “E”, he can press “DEF” button first and then select “E”. Although users therefore have to press two buttons to enter one letter, Xu Peng, CEO of GEAK Smart Wearables, thinks typing efficiency is improved if users can type more accurately.

In addition, GEAK Watch 2 users can input their smartphone or tablet content first and sync them to the smartwatch, if that is more efficient.

Geak-input

The company has also rolled out an APP Store to induce designers and developers to make killer apps for the product.

A nice surprise for customers is that GEAK Watch 1 users who made the purchase in 2013 can exchange their old ones for the second generation product for free.

[Update]The GEAK Watch 2 is crowdfunding on Pozible , where it is pre-selling a limited run of the Pro versions of the watch at a discounted price – 2,099 yuan instead of 2,499 yuan as is listed on the official GEAK site. As of Oct. 30, the project has raised more than US$21,000 from backers, exceeding the target of 100,000 yuan (approx US$16,400) while there is still over 43 days to go.

Originally from: Zhi Xiaofeng

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Will Hardware Craze Boom or Bust? https://technode.com/2014/10/28/will-hardware-craze-boom-bust/ https://technode.com/2014/10/28/will-hardware-craze-boom-bust/#respond Tue, 28 Oct 2014 10:40:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24625 Hardware is all the rage this year. Internet giants are vying to keep ahead in the sector by acquiring hardware startups, rolling out home-grown products or supporting programs. Google closed a massive US$3.2 billion purchase of connected device company Nest Labs while Facebook acquired virtual reality pioneer Oculus VR for US$2 billion, to name only two. The […]]]>

Hardware is all the rage this year. Internet giants are vying to keep ahead in the sector by acquiring hardware startups, rolling out home-grown products or supporting programs. Google closed a massive US$3.2 billion purchase of connected device company Nest Labs while Facebook acquired virtual reality pioneer Oculus VR for US$2 billion, to name only two.

The craze is also taking China by storm, with domestic giants like Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, Xiaomi all investing heavily in the sector. Venture capitalists formerly turned off by hardware’s high startup costs and lengthy start times are also jumping on board.

However, huge capital injections into a market with uncertain prospects may raise the concern of whether it’s worthwhile to invest in. Will the hardware industry continue its booming development or it is just a faddish investment bubble? TechNode founder Lu Gang took to the stage at the annual gala of crowdfunding reality TV show The Makers with six veteran investors to consider this problem.

Boom

Hans Tung, managing partner at GGV Capital, pointed out that most hardware products on the U.S. market target the high-end market with 80-90% of them priced at over US$100. But he think this trend is not going to continue. As an early-backer of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, which released low-budget smart wareable and other smart gadgets this year, Tung believes Xiaomi’s model of offering affordable smart devices and monetizing through cloud-based value-added services is a feasible direction for hardware developers.

He added that selling feature-rich smart gadgets at lower prices might help Chinese hardware makers to stand out from the crowd. Global netizens are expected to increase by 1 billion in the next decade and China should capitalize on this opportunity, Tung said.

It seems that Xiaomi is not the only Chinese company eyeing back-end services. Baidu, Tencent, Alibaba, Meizu and JD all launched smart hardware platforms. Third-party smart home or internet-of-things solution providers are also emerging in China.

Harry Hui, founder of ClearVue Partners, thinks although early-stage investors of hardware companies have to take bigger risks, the overall prospect of this industry is promising. “Leading edge is the bleeding edge. The first or second generation of hardware products may fail, just like the first generation iPhone did not provide the compelling features that its latter versions did. It is quite normal to take three or four generations of hardware to improve the hardware functions and user experiences.”

Michael Zhu, partner of Gobi Partners, said he saw much less hardware projects than for mobile internet, let alone hardware projects with good teams. Zhu’s advice for hardware makers is to target the consumer market and to find a clear product position by answering the questions of “who, what, where, when, why and why not”, because it is important for a startup with limited resources to stay laser-focused on their users and to promote the product through the right channels. They should make sure there are branding experts on their team, cause it is a crucial link to a successful product, he added.

Bust

Dai Zhikang, board chairman of  Zendai Group, said too much money has created a bubble in China’s tech industry in general. Most so-called smart hardware devices should not be named as such and he thought real smart devices should solve the strict demands of users.

It is interesting to see that Huang Yubin, founding partner of Yunqi Capital which just raised US$100 million to invest in smart hardware-related services, saw a bubble in the hardware industry. However, Huang thinks bubbles does not prevent them from investing in the sector. “We are just at the beginning of this hardware trend, which will be more widely accepted by users in the future decade.” Chinese cities Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Dongguan will be at the center of the hardware industry chain and domestic companies should seize this opportunity to go global.

Zhang Suyang, partner with IDG Capital Partners, thinks that a bubble is not necessarily a bad thing. He said a bubble and its bursting are two different things.

Click here to watch the video in Chinese.

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Taiwan, an Easier and Effective Entry Point into Asia https://technode.com/2014/10/28/taiwan-easier-effective-entry-point-asia/ https://technode.com/2014/10/28/taiwan-easier-effective-entry-point-asia/#comments Tue, 28 Oct 2014 08:55:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24606 Home to the world’s leading electronics contract makers, Taiwan has the ingredients to foster a thriving startup ecosystem. But the island has yet to produce a tech startup that’s a household name, and industry insiders have cited many reasons for the situation, such as small market size, insufficient government support, and entrepreneurs’ small-market mentality. The […]]]>

Home to the world’s leading electronics contract makers, Taiwan has the ingredients to foster a thriving startup ecosystem. But the island has yet to produce a tech startup that’s a household name, and industry insiders have cited many reasons for the situation, such as small market size, insufficient government support, and entrepreneurs’ small-market mentality. The innovation environment of Taiwan was even once lambasted by Kai-fu Lee, ex-Google China chief and current CEO of Innovation Works, as diseased. “Some tough medicine should be taken to cure it”, added Lee.

However, the scene is gradually improving, with Taiwan’s startup ecosystem witnessing changes in the mindset among the entrepreneurial community and venture capitalists, as well as in government attitude and policies. For instance, the government has announced a US$400 million fund to invest in tech startups, Foxconn Technology has expanded beyond its beachhead to invest in local mobile authentication startup AirSig, and a raft of local startups like e-commerce site iFit and fashion curation service Re.Mu also secured capital injections from VCs to expand their businesses overseas. Taiwan’s Tech Minister is poised to increase access to 3D printing for high school students.

Despite having a small population of 23 million people, Taiwan is a thriving tech market ranked #5 on Google Play for worldwide sales while Taiwanese people rank #1 in the world for average daily smartphone use, at nearly 200 minutes (ahead of a 32 nation average of 142 minutes), according to a report released by Tokyo-based app monetization service Metaps.

Manageable market size with active users makes Taiwan a perfect place for foreign companies to test the regional market before going all in on Japan or the Asian markets in general, the report noted.

Want to target Japan? Target Taiwan first

Japan is in many ways the holy grail of app marketing, as Japanese users are accustomed to paying for mobile content and have extremely high average revenue per user (ARPU) in comparison to the rest of the world. However, due to an increase in competition and heavy ad spending by local app developers and publishers, the barrier to entry for the Japanese market is extremely high for most Western developers. Without burst advertising in Japan it is extremely difficult to chart high enough to attain any significant level of organic users, and the minimum spend to do this will easily run into a six digit dollar sum.

Taiwan represents an opportunity for western developers to enter into Asia with a lower budget to test the waters before making end roads into larger regional markets like Japan and South Korea.

A look at the Taiwan Google Play Top Grossing charts from September reveals the strong similarity between Taiwan and Japan, with RPGs the top selling category in both markets, and also sharing nine of the top ten  Google Play categories.

TaiwanJapan1027

Categories that are particularly strong in both markets are Action (Taiwan #3/Japan #5) and Casual (Taiwan #4/Japan #2).  Categories with a large disparity in popularity are Strategy (Taiwan #2/Japan #9) and Entertainment (Taiwan #25/Japan #10).

Western and Chinese developers succeeding in Taiwan

Metaps analyzed which apps had the sharpest “ranking incline rate” (rate of increase in rank over the course of the month) in the Taiwan Google Play Top Grossing charts for September, revealing that popular communication app LINE had a total of seven titles in the top 40. There are over 17 million LINE users in Taiwan as of Sept 2014, the report added.

LINETaiwan1027v2

A number of games by Western developers are quite popular in Taiwan, including Candy Crush Saga by KING and Clash Of Clans by Supercell.

In September, the Top Grossing chart was dominated by mainland Chinese and Taiwanese games, like DotA Legends by Taiwanese branch of mainland Chinese developer LemonGame, and Castle Clash by IGG. IGG is one of many mainland Chinese developers that have taken an aggressive approach in Taiwan, particularly because there is no Google Play in China so they must look cross-border in order to establish a user base.

RPG is the top genre in Taiwan

The Role Playing category has the strongest presence on the Taiwan Top Grossing charts. For the Top Grossing charts, a total of 86.5% of the apps charting come from one of the top 10 categories. Of the total 44 Google Play app categories, the remaining 34 make up just 13.5% of all apps charting on Top Grossing in Taiwan, indicating that apps which monetize well come from only a select few categories.

RPG

On the Google Play Top Free chart, the Tools category came out on top with a category frequency rate (percentage of a chart that is made up by apps of a given category over a specified period of time) of 8.8%.

The Card category ranks high on the Top Grossing chart at #6, and ranks low on Top Free at #21, indicating that there are a smaller number of total users but they have a considerably higher than average ARPUThe Tools category ranks at the top of Top Free at #1, and ranks low on Top Grossing at #21, indicating that there are a larger number of users but they have a considerably lower than average ARPU.

Cardbattlegames

On the Google Play Top New Free chart, the Casual category came out on top with a category frequency rate of 12.9%. Once again we compared these results to the Top Grossing charts results.

The Casino category ranks high on Top Grossing at #5, and ranks low on Top New Free at #14, indicating that fewer developers are targeting casino game users than previously.

The Personalization category ranks at the top of Top Free at #6, and ranks low on Top Grossing at #32, indicating that there are a lot of new apps being released but they have a much lower than average ARPU.

Casino

Please join our four-day tour (December 1-4) to Taiwan to take a closer look at its startup scene.

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Chinese Cloud Service Upyun Closes Series A Financing and MBO https://technode.com/2014/10/27/chinese-cloud-service-upyun-closes-series-financing-mbo/ https://technode.com/2014/10/27/chinese-cloud-service-upyun-closes-series-financing-mbo/#respond Mon, 27 Oct 2014 06:25:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24567 Cloud service provider Upyun has announced that it received eight-digit yuan of Series A financing from CDH Fund and Pine Capital, and carried out a management buy-out (MBO). After the MBO, Upyun’s founding team has taken full control of the company’s operation rights. Upyun started as a project providing cloud storage and cloud computing services to another in-house photo-sharing services Yupoo […]]]>

Cloud service provider Upyun has announced that it received eight-digit yuan of Series A financing from CDH Fund and Pine Capital, and carried out a management buy-out (MBO). After the MBO, Upyun’s founding team has taken full control of the company’s operation rights.

Upyun started as a project providing cloud storage and cloud computing services to another in-house photo-sharing services Yupoo in 2005. It became an open service in 2010. Upyun offers unstructured data cloud storage, cloud computing and cloud content delivery (CDN) services for medium- and small-sized enterprises focused on internet and mobile internet industries, allowing customers to focus more on their own product operations.

Upyun now claims to have nearly 500,000 users, of whom 20% are paying clients, including major domestic firms like LeTV, Meipai, Fishing Joy, and Ping-An. The company’s business surged by nearly 10 times at the time of writing compared with the beginning of this year, according to Shen Zhihua,Upyun’s COO.

To meet the mushrooming demand of massive user data distribution, the company has decided to run the enterprise-focused Upyun and consumer-targeted social networking service Huaban independently. Zhou Lei, former CTO of Net.cn, was appointed as CEO of Upyun.

Shen Zhihua disclosed that the funding will be used to build infrastructure, attract talent and for marketing.

Qiniu, a major competitor of Upyun, has secured an eight-digit dollar sum of funding at the end of this August.

image credit: Shutterstock

Originally from: Shuhang

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Chinese iPhone Hacker PanGu Releases iOS8.1 Jailbreak https://technode.com/2014/10/24/chinese-iphone-hacker-pangu-releases-ios8-1-jailbreak/ https://technode.com/2014/10/24/chinese-iphone-hacker-pangu-releases-ios8-1-jailbreak/#respond Fri, 24 Oct 2014 08:56:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24540 PanGu, the first Chinese team to offer an iOS jailbreak, has released an iOS8 and iOS8.1 jailbreak that works on the latest Apple products, as well as older devices using the latest version of iOS. PanGu iOS 8–8.1 jailbreak is currently a Windows only affair, with a Mac OS X version due for a release […]]]>
Pangu-pic

PanGu, the first Chinese team to offer an iOS jailbreak, has released an iOS8 and iOS8.1 jailbreak that works on the latest Apple products, as well as older devices using the latest version of iOS.

PanGu iOS 8–8.1 jailbreak is currently a Windows only affair, with a Mac OS X version due for a release at a later date. It comes in Chinese and English. Watch the installation demo on YouTube or Youku.

With the increase of official distribution channels and iOS updates, the iOS jailbreak rate in China dropped sharply from over 30% to 12.7% in 2013, according to a report by Umeng. Umeng’s latest report showed the jailbreak rate lingering at around 15% in the first quarter of this year.

Umeng-data

iOS Jailbreak Rate in China (Oct 2013-Mar 2014) Source: Umeng

Users use jailbreak services for features that aren’t allowed in App Store, though some built-in security features will be compromised and their phone vulnerable to hackers who could steal passwords and data. When the new iOS updates or third-party software within the system can offer what the smartphone users are looking for, they might reconsider whether it is worthwhile to take the security risks engendered by jailbreaking.

The iOS 8 mobile operating system is Apple’s most open iOS release to date, allowing third-party Touch ID, widget and extension support. Some observers believe that such features could be detrimental to the jailbreak community, while others think it will trigger the emergence of new and innovative tweaks. What new features are you looking for from jailbreaks: phone call recording, T9 dialling or registration address for short messages?

image credit: Shutterstock

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English-learning Site 51Talk Pockets Series C Financing Led by Sequoia Capital https://technode.com/2014/10/24/english-learning-site-51talk-pockets-series-c-financing-led-sequoia-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/10/24/english-learning-site-51talk-pockets-series-c-financing-led-sequoia-capital/#comments Fri, 24 Oct 2014 03:07:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24523 51Talk, an oral English training service providing one-to-one courses, announced that it has received US$55 million of Series C financing led by Sequoia Capital along with DCM and the Shunwei Fund headed by Xiaomi founder Lei Jun. It is worth nothing that 51Talk is the first online education company in which Sequoia Capital invested. Sequoia is […]]]>
51talk

51Talk, an oral English training service providing one-to-one courses, announced that it has received US$55 million of Series C financing led by Sequoia Capital along with DCM and the Shunwei Fund headed by Xiaomi founder Lei Jun.

It is worth nothing that 51Talk is the first online education company in which Sequoia Capital invested. Sequoia is the backer of a number of highly successful Chinese internet companies, like Alibaba, Qihoo 360, VipShop, JD, Dianping, and so on.

51Talk closed a US$12 million Series B round last year and received several million dollars in Series A from DCM at the end of 2012. The angel investment is secured in 2011 from ZhenFund which was founded by legendary angel investor Xu Xiaoping.

51Talk offers e-learning courses at affordable prices, with teachers mainly coming from southeast Asian countries who speaks English as their native language. The company currently claims more than 2,500 foreign teachers, up from 1,000 at the end of last year, and more than 50,000 paying students.

The funds will be used in upgrading the technical platform and IT systems, as well as improving syllabus design. The site is planning to expand into the overseas market and kids’ education, according to Huang Jiajia, CEO of the company.

51talk is also trying to diversify its user experience by setting up offline experience centers, following a similar initiative by major competitor Hujiang. In addition to building such centers in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai, 51Talk is also planning to expand their offline network into second- and third-tier cities, since more than half of their users come from them, Huang added.

image credit: 51Talk

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mCommerce Service Koudai Gouwu Raises Series C Funding Led by Tencent https://technode.com/2014/10/23/koudai-gouwu-raises-series-c-funding-led-tencent/ https://technode.com/2014/10/23/koudai-gouwu-raises-series-c-funding-led-tencent/#comments Thu, 23 Oct 2014 07:29:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24491 Chinese mobile shopping service Koudai Gouwu (“Pocket Shopping”) today announced it has received a massive US$350 million Series C funding led by Tencent and Tiger Fund with the participation of H Capital, Vy Capital, Falcon Edge, DST. Of the total, Tencent has invested US$145 million for a 10% stake in the company. Kaodai Gouwu is a mobile shopping service […]]]>
Koudai-pic

Chinese mobile shopping service Koudai Gouwu (“Pocket Shopping”) today announced it has received a massive US$350 million Series C funding led by Tencent and Tiger Fund with the participation of H Capital, Vy Capital, Falcon Edge, DST. Of the total, Tencent has invested US$145 million for a 10% stake in the company.

Kaodai Gouwu is a mobile shopping service which offers recommendations for users, such as shops, fashion matches, trending products, new arrivals, and editor’s choice. It allows users to review shopping comments by fashionable ladies and beauty experts. Its business model centers on matching shopping interest with merchants and charging for lead generation and possibly also transaction commissions. In addition to redirecting users to Alibaba’s Taobao, Koudai is also a major mobile shopping app that supports WeChat store browsing.

The company’s new product WeDian is a mobile e-commerce platform where small vendors can open stores online and promote their products through various social networking platforms like WeChat. Launched in January this year, it has attracted vendors from 172 countries around the world as of September 2014, and hitting 83 million visitors per month. The total sales of the marketplace has reached RMB15 billion (US$2.45 billion), according to Wang Ke, CEO and founder of the company.

Wang added that the firm plans to invest RMB200 million to bring traffic from Koudai Gouwu and other partner apps like Mligo, to WeiDian retailers.

The company had previously secured Series B investment from Warburg Pincus and US$12 million Series A funding led by Chenwei Ventures and Matrix Partners in 2012. The angel round is raised from Lei Jun, Xiaomi’s founder who is also a legendary angel investor, in 2010.

image credit: Koudai Gouwu

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China’s Baidu, Qihoo, Ping-An Joins US$194M Funding Round in Israeli VC Carmel Ventures https://technode.com/2014/10/23/chinas-baidu-qihoo-ping-an-joins-us194m-funding-round-in-israeli-vc-carmel-ventures/ https://technode.com/2014/10/23/chinas-baidu-qihoo-ping-an-joins-us194m-funding-round-in-israeli-vc-carmel-ventures/#comments Thu, 23 Oct 2014 02:39:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24465 Israeli venture capitalist Carmel Ventures has closed a US$194 million financing round for its new investment fund Carmel Ventures IV from a consortium that includes search giant Baidu, Qihoo 360, the Chinese online security and Internet service provider, and financial conglomerate Ping-An. Other investors include Horsley Bridge Partners. Israel and China are becoming  a close collaborative couple in […]]]>

Israeli venture capitalist Carmel Ventures has closed a US$194 million financing round for its new investment fund Carmel Ventures IV from a consortium that includes search giant Baidu, Qihoo 360, the Chinese online security and Internet service provider, and financial conglomerate Ping-An. Other investors include Horsley Bridge Partners.

Israel and China are becoming  a close collaborative couple in the tech industry. Chinese IT entrepreneurs admire the technology innovations Israel has achieved and China is an ideal market for companies from the Startup Nation to expand beyond their borders.

Both Israeli and Chinese tech industry remain looking up to the U.S. market. But it seems that a more favorable cooporation model between the two nations is taking shape. We have witnessed a string of cases for the merging of the startup ecosystem between the two nations.

Carmel Ventures, part of Israeli private equity group Viola, manages over US$800 million in venture capital and is invested in 35 active companies.

Carmel began investing out of the new fund in January 2014 and currently has five portfolio companies including PlayBuzz and Lucky Fish. Carmel Ventures IV is focused on early-stage tech companies in enterprise software, data center infrastructure, big data, cyber security, financial technology, digital media and consumer applications.

image credit: Carmel Ventures

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Smart WiFi Scale RyFit Helps China’s Health-conscious Generation to Track Health Metrics in Style https://technode.com/2014/10/22/smart-wifi-scale-ryfit-helps-chinas-health-conscious-generation-track-health-metrics-style/ https://technode.com/2014/10/22/smart-wifi-scale-ryfit-helps-chinas-health-conscious-generation-track-health-metrics-style/#comments Wed, 22 Oct 2014 08:55:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24434 China’s health and wellness market is expected to reach a value of around US$70 billion by 2020 as Chinese customers, especially those in cities, recognize the importance of a healthy lifestyle, according to a report by the Boston Consulting Group. This trend has created enormous opportunities for companies focused on health-related sectors. Shanghai-based startup ChronoCloud […]]]>

China’s health and wellness market is expected to reach a value of around US$70 billion by 2020 as Chinese customers, especially those in cities, recognize the importance of a healthy lifestyle, according to a report by the Boston Consulting Group. This trend has created enormous opportunities for companies focused on health-related sectors.

Shanghai-based startup ChronoCloud Medtech is a wearable healthcare solutions developer and manufacturer. The company’s first product RyFit is a smart body analyzer that can record and monitor ten major health metrics including weight, body fat, body water, body mass index, basal metabolic rate, muscle mass, and bone mass, amongst others, introduced Guo Hui, co-founder of the company.

The data collected is uploaded to RySmart system, the big data health analytics system authorized by Minnesota University’s Chronobiology Lab, which crunches the numbers and returns insights and health tips. Guo explained that the system is based on data collected across the globe, including Asian and Chinese people. Users can read all the states and tips through an app on mobile devices. Instead of giving unvarnished statistical data of calories burned or distance travelled, RySmart gives users more actionable tips, such as to drink more water or get outside and start walking.

The smart scale can track the health data of up to nine family members. It will sync the health metrics to the corresponding account of each family member automatically after their accounts being set up via RyFit app. There’s no need to take your smartphone with you when using the scale.

The company claims that RyFit’s detection accuracy for fat, body water and muscle mass is around 0.1%, while that for body weight and bone mass is around 0.1 KG. Guo noted that the health data collected by smart health devices can never reach the accuracy degree achieved by hospital instruments due to costs, but the significance of these data lie in their continuous and consistent nature, which will thus generate strong predictions on health tendencies and possible diseases.

Ryfit-pic

ChronoCloud Co-founder Guo Hui Receiving Award for RyFit at The Makers, a Crowdfunding Reality TV Show

The device weighs 2.62 kg and measures 30cm×30cm×23.5mm. The classic version of RyFit, in black or white offerings, is sold for RMB469 (around US$73), while the youth market versio  is priced at RMB229 and has more color options.

In addition to an in-house e-commerce platform, RyFit is also on sale at JD, Taobao and some offline retail stores. Guo disclosed that they now have more than 30,000 users since first launching in April 2014, while sales are at around 7,000 to 8,000 sets per month.

In June this year, the company partnered with Digital China, which will oversee RyFit’s consumer business. Through this partnership, the company can focus on product development and expansion into corporate market, said Guo. He explained their business clients fall into three categories: companies that purchase RyFit as commercial gifts, health-related brands, like dairy product manufacturer Mengniu and Beingmate, and health management companies.

Two other products the company is developing are a wristband that can track and measure your everyday activities, and a portable blood pressure meter. The wristband will target at the high-end market, according to Guo. He disclosed that the company is also preparing to tap U.S. and European markets next year.

It has been reported that ChronoCloud has secured eight-digit yuan Pre-A investment from Cai Wensheng, a legendary angel investor, and Trends Group. Guo said that the company is now in the process of raising Series A funding.

RyFit is priced very keenly up against Fitbit’s Aria scale which costs RMB1,198 (around US$195) in China. The U.S. health solution provider landed in Chinese market in earlier this year. Beijing-based health-tracking device maker PICOOC is RyFit’s major competitor in the domestic market. The company has raised US$21 million of Series B financing led by existing investor Gobi Partners and joined by Tencent and JD.com this June.

image credit: ChronoCloud

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Car Rental Service eHi Invested US$25 M in Taxi App Kuaidi for 8.4% Stake https://technode.com/2014/10/22/ehi-invests-us25-m-taxi-app-kuaidi/ https://technode.com/2014/10/22/ehi-invests-us25-m-taxi-app-kuaidi/#comments Wed, 22 Oct 2014 02:24:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24414 In April this year, Chinese car rental service eHi Car Services invested US$25 million in Kuaidi Dache’s subscribing series B preferred shares, through eHi’s wholly owned subsidiary Elite Plus Developments Limited, taking an 8.4% stake in the taxi app. The news was recently released in eHi’s prospectus to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with the […]]]>
eHi-pic

In April this year, Chinese car rental service eHi Car Services invested US$25 million in Kuaidi Dache’s subscribing series B preferred shares, through eHi’s wholly owned subsidiary Elite Plus Developments Limited, taking an 8.4% stake in the taxi app. The news was recently released in eHi’s prospectus to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with the prospectus adding that Kuaidi Dache also issued a warrant to Elite Plus to purchase an additional 4,684,074 of their series C preferred shares.

eHi explained that the acquisition is part of its growth strategy to expand its customer base by acquisitions or strategic partnerships in areas which it either does not currently operate or does not sufficient capacity to operate. However, the expansion may expose the company to decreased profitability, and costs from integrating new operations, services and personnel, and so on, the prospectus added.

Founded in 2006, eHi is a traditional car rental company that services both consumer and corporate clients. Chinese online travel giant Ctrip led a US$100 million funding round in eHi at the end of 2013, and then invested an additional US$13 million in the company in April this year, increasing the company’s stake in eHi to 23%. According to the prospectus, eHi plans to raise US$200 million in its U.S. IPO. As the largest shareholder of eHi, Ctrip also led a US$ 60 million round in Chinese car rental service Yonche.

Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache, venture-backed by Alibaba and Tencent respectively, have stood out from the series of Chinese taxi apps amidst the fierce land-grabbing battles in the Chinese taxi app industry last year. Although the taxi app sector is generally considered a money-burner, it is still attracting massive investment from venture capitalists. Take a look here to find out why Chinese investors are willing to take bold bets on the taxi app business.

image credit: eHi

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Uber’s Non-profit Ridesharing Service To Be Available in All Uber Cities in China https://technode.com/2014/10/21/ubers-non-profit-ridesharing-service-to-be-available-in-all-uber-cities-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/10/21/ubers-non-profit-ridesharing-service-to-be-available-in-all-uber-cities-in-china/#respond Tue, 21 Oct 2014 10:49:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24396 Two months after launching rideshare program People’s Uber in Beijing, Uber has announced it is expanding the service to cities including Hangzhou, Chengdu, Wuhan, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Guangzhou. That means People’s Uber will be available in every city in which Uber operates on the Chinese mainland. As a non-profit platform, People’s Uber matches car owners with […]]]>
Uber-People

Two months after launching rideshare program People’s Uber in Beijing, Uber has announced it is expanding the service to cities including Hangzhou, Chengdu, Wuhan, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Guangzhou. That means People’s Uber will be available in every city in which Uber operates on the Chinese mainland.

As a non-profit platform, People’s Uber matches car owners with fellow city residents, while the riders cover the car owners’ journey cost. After travelling, riders and car owners rate each other, as with an eBay or Taobao transaction. For safety and transparency, every trip’s details are logged through Uber’s app.

“Users’ positive feedback for People’s Uber has given us the confidence to expand it to more cities”, said Davis Wang, a senior executive with Uber China. Like most local competitors, People’s Uber offers subsidies to drivers to encourage car owners to join the platform, though the plan varies according to the specific situation in each city, Davis added. However, he declined to give specific operation numbers, such as how many drivers have joined the program.

The company hasn’t disclosed exactly how a non-profit ridesharing program fits into its overall business plan. But the accumulation of more users may eventually help it to transfer them to paid users.

As a company known for localized services, Uber handpicked English-speaking chauffeurs to launch a language-specific service Uber English in Shanghai last month, making it a bit easier for expats and global travellers to get around the city. 

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Tesla Motors to Sell Model S on Alibaba’s Tmall on Singles’ Day https://technode.com/2014/10/21/tesla-to-sell-model-s-on-alibabas-tmall/ https://technode.com/2014/10/21/tesla-to-sell-model-s-on-alibabas-tmall/#respond Tue, 21 Oct 2014 03:47:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24365 Tesla Motors has decided to sell its Model S through Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Tmall on November 11, joining the Singles’ Day shopping festival. It is the first time that Tesla’s cars will be sold other than through their own website in China. Buyers can place an RMB50,000 (US$8,200) deposit for the electric car on Alibaba’s Tmall.com. The […]]]>
Tesla-Tmall

Tesla Motors has decided to sell its Model S through Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Tmall on November 11, joining the Singles’ Day shopping festival. It is the first time that Tesla’s cars will be sold other than through their own website in China.

Buyers can place an RMB50,000 (US$8,200) deposit for the electric car on Alibaba’s Tmall.com. The deposit will be frozen in the customers’ mutual fund Yuebao, enabling customers to enjoy interest on the deposit before they complete the rest of the payment. They can then pick up the car in one of the five cities with Tesla collection points, namely Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Chengdu and Shenzhen. The collection can be made as quickly as in five days. In addition, Tesla offers accessories such as clothing, caps, toolboxes, mugs and blankets on its Tmall store for Singles’ Day.

Tesla’s cooperation with Alibaba can be dated back to April this year when Alipay, the payment affiliate of Alibaba, was added to the payment methods for Chinese users to purchase Tesla’s cars. In September this year, AutoNavi, the mapping service in which Alibaba has a stake, added information about Tesla’s POI charging poles to its maps.

Tesla is not the first car company to capitalize on Alibaba’s ubiquity in Chinese retail. General Motors and Volkswagen AG have launched similar marketing campaigns on Alibaba’s sales platforms.

China is an important market for Tesla, CEO Elon Musk said during his visit to China. To accelerate the construction of power infrastructure, the electric car manufacturer has signed a strategic cooperation agreement with China Minsheng Bank to build at least 200 charging stations in twenty cities nationwide.

image credit: Tesla & Tmall

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Amazon Web Services Teams with Shanghai Municipality to Build DreamT Accelerator https://technode.com/2014/10/20/amazon-web-services-teams-with-shanghai-municipality-to-build-dreamt-accelerator/ https://technode.com/2014/10/20/amazon-web-services-teams-with-shanghai-municipality-to-build-dreamt-accelerator/#respond Mon, 20 Oct 2014 09:37:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24335 Almost a year after plunging into the Chinese market, Amazon Web Services (AWS) recently launched internet-focused startup accelerator DreamT Accelerator together with the Shanghai municipality Jiading district and the experienced entrepreneurial DTer team, providing one-stop services for entrepreneurs. Under the deal, Jiading district will offer free infrastructure to incubatees, including more than 4,000 square meters of co-working […]]]>

Almost a year after plunging into the Chinese market, Amazon Web Services (AWS) recently launched internet-focused startup accelerator DreamT Accelerator together with the Shanghai municipality Jiading district and the experienced entrepreneurial DTer team, providing one-stop services for entrepreneurs.

Under the deal, Jiading district will offer free infrastructure to incubatees, including more than 4,000 square meters of co-working space, apartments and preferential policies. AWS will support the program with its cloud services, technical services and training resources, while DTer will be responsible for day-to-day operations of the accelerator.

DreamT will focus on but not be limited to the sectors of cloud services, wearables and internet of things (IoT), consumption services and online travel, said Zhao Ye, founder of the project. A total of 29 potential incubatees pitched at the launch party. Zhao added that half of these projects have gained angel investment and 30% have received Series A financing.

In terms of technical support, projects under the program will receive up to US$15,000 worth of AWS cloud services, according to Rong Yongkang, vice president of AWS, along with training on the platform to help entrepreneurs master it. Rong added that AWS will invite experts from abroad to share their insights so as to help bridge foreign and domestic startup ecosystems.

DreamT is AWS’s first incubator in China. The cloud computing service is in talks with other partners in Beijing and Chengdu to launch similar incubation programs.

In addition to in-house investment unit of DreamT Venture Capital, the accelerator maintains close cooperation with more than 200 leading angel or VC investors in China. To boost startup development, it now has over 40 international mentors and advisers with expertise in investment, finance, technology and government relation to help the growth of startups incubated in DreamT.

Apply here if you are interested in the program.

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Lenovo Unveils Prototype for Its Customer-targeted New Glass https://technode.com/2014/10/20/lenovo-unveils-prototype-for-its-customer-targeted-new-glass/ https://technode.com/2014/10/20/lenovo-unveils-prototype-for-its-customer-targeted-new-glass/#comments Mon, 20 Oct 2014 08:17:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24310 Lenovo Smart Glasses Product Manager Bai Jie Wearing New Glasses Three months ago, Lenovo launched its internet-based business platform New Business Development (NBD) together with the first wave of four smart devices: two smart glasses, a smart air cleaner and a smart router. For the smart glasses product line, the company revealed the details and prototype for M100, […]]]>

Lenovo Smart Glasses Product Manager Bai Jie Wearing New Glasses

Three months ago, Lenovo launched its internet-based business platform New Business Development (NBD) together with the first wave of four smart devices: two smart glasses, a smart air cleaner and a smart router. For the smart glasses product line, the company revealed the details and prototype for M100, the smart glasses targeted at industry users, but left New Glass, the commercial version, relatively unclear.

The Chinese laptop and smartphone maker later demonstrated New Glass at the annual gala of crowdfunding reality TV show The Makers on October 19, to offer insights into the gadget.

New Glass is specifically designed for Chinese consumers in collaboration with Ceyes (or Yunshizhitong). The product comes with a detachable module with a battery attached at user’s necks via a cable. The device runs on Android and has a single display that sits just in front of your right eye. Unlike most smart glasses on the market, the upper part of the glasses do not include the spectacle frame. They can be clipped to users’ glasses, thus avoiding the inconvenience of adapting to new frames, explained Bai Jie, head of Lenovo’s smart glasses project.

Loaded with Chinese-language operating system, the device boasts a 8MP camera and a 1300mAh battery that can give a full day of life when synced to your phone. New Glass can be controlled via smartphone or voice, while Bai disclosed the company is developing a smart ring that can be used to control the glasses. Bai also said the price tag of this device will be on par with that for a medium-or high-end smartphone.

The M100 has gone on sale to industry developers for RMB8,000 (US$1,298), which includes software support. Bai said the its current users mainly fall into three categories: system developers, techies and games developers.

China’s smart glasses industry is getting more and more players. Google Glass, the pioneer of in this field, is ready to explore the Chinese market and domestic internet giant Baidu just released Baidu Eye. Though it’s still an emerging industry, having further players will help familiarise users as they bid to create a more mature market, according to Bai.

In addition to the NBD program, Lenovo recently announced that it will establish an internet-focused smart device company next year to tap the fast-growing consumer mobile device market in China.

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Hands-on With Alibaba’s Set-top Killer Tmall Box 2: It is Not Only About Videos https://technode.com/2014/10/17/hands-on-with-tmall-box-2/ https://technode.com/2014/10/17/hands-on-with-tmall-box-2/#comments Fri, 17 Oct 2014 09:32:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24235 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is planning to sell a new Tmall Box at the upcoming Singles’ Day sales promotion gala on Nov. 11, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The set-top box is expected to retail at RMB399 (US$65) during the sales event, down from the original price of RMB798. The new product has […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is planning to sell a new Tmall Box at the upcoming Singles’ Day sales promotion gala on Nov. 11, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The set-top box is expected to retail at RMB399 (US$65) during the sales event, down from the original price of RMB798.

The new product has recovered from setbacks by the state regulations which precluded the Tmall Box from streaming online video from providers like Youku and Sohu to TV. I got a chance to take an early peek at the long-awaited device and see how it handled.

Unlike the first generation of the product which was a typical “box” with chamfered edges, Tmall Box 2 adopts an elegant unibody design with a silver base stretching to the upper part of the device as silver stripes. The rest of the cover is a white or champagne plastic frame with the Tmall logo on it. The box itself is a light and portable device weighing just 244 grams and measuring 118×111×26.8mm.

Tmall-box

Powered by Alibaba’s in-house operating system YunOS 2.0, the set-top-box has an Amlogic S80 quad-core processor, Mali 450 GPU, 8G flash memory and 2GB memory. It supports 300M 2.4G/5G dual-channel WiFi connections.

Once you’ve hooked it up, you will be required to log in with your Taobao account either by scanning the QR code via the Taobao Mobile app or by directly inputting your account information. For most smartphone users, the QR code would be the best choice. The input procedure is a little odd in that the keyboard is arranged in alphabetical order, rather than the more familiar Qwerty keyboard.

Tmall box-login

After logging in, you’re led to a main menu of a wide variety of content including, new movies and TV series, entertainment programs, documentaries, kids’ programs, games, apps, music, and of course e-commerce.

One nice difference from other set-top-boxes is that the Tmall Box 2 is not all about video content. As we reported earlier, Alibaba has launched an ambitious plan with a series of prominent partners in various sectors like video games, online educations and music, to create a comprehensive family entertainment ecosystem.

Tmall Box-UI

Tmall Box 2 continues cooperation with video content provider Washu Media and has added Xiami‘s music streaming service. In addition, it integrates online education content via TutorABC, the online English leaning brand under Tutor Group in which Alibaba has invested, as well as the child-focused services of Qiaohu, Babybus, and so on. Baidu’s online education service Chuanke is also available on the platform.

The box has also added cloud-based games into the system, including several foreign-developed blockbusters like World Soccer Winning Eleven, BatMan: Arkham City, Street Fight 4, Lego Harry Potter, and Lego BatMan. Since these games are cloud-based, users can play directly without downloading them, and are priced at RMB4.9-14.9 per month. Moreover, Alibaba has also joined up with globally-renowned developers EAGameloft, and Glu Mobile to present more diversified games.

Different accessories might be needed to play different kinds of games. Some casual games can be played with the wireless controller which comes in the standard package, but more intensive and body-sensor games have to use either a dedicated gamepad or a sensor bar like that for Wii. The sensor bar is priced at RMB99.

Tmall-pad

The controller, which is very pleasant to touch and handle, also supports voice command, allowing users to search for videos, music, and e-commerce services. I tested the feature several times and the accuracy rate is pretty good.

Any product developed by Alibaba rarely neglects e-commerce. The box offers much the same services that are available on PC or mobile. To differentiate from other channels, Tmall Box 2 has added Magic Key (M Key), a button dedicated to e-commerce services, on the controller. Upon pressing M Key, users can participate in promotion events that are only open to Tmall Box users.

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Location-based Mobile Advertising Service AdNear Raises Series B Funding for Market Expansion https://technode.com/2014/10/16/location-based-mobile-advertising-service-adnear-raises-series-b-funding-market-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/10/16/location-based-mobile-advertising-service-adnear-raises-series-b-funding-market-expansion/#respond Thu, 16 Oct 2014 03:57:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24198 AdNear Pte. Ltd., a Singapore and Bangalore-based mobile advertising service, has secured US$19 million in Series B financing from GB-V Growth Fund Investment Limited Partnership, an investment unit managed by Japanese VC firm Global Brain Corporation, Telstra Ventures and incumbent investors of Sequoia Capital and Canaan Partners. The capital will be used to expand in the Asia-Pacific […]]]>
AdNear-pic

AdNear Pte. Ltd., a Singapore and Bangalore-based mobile advertising service, has secured US$19 million in Series B financing from GB-V Growth Fund Investment Limited Partnership, an investment unit managed by Japanese VC firm Global Brain Corporation, Telstra Ventures and incumbent investors of Sequoia Capital and Canaan Partners.

The capital will be used to expand in the Asia-Pacific region. AdNear has previously received US$6.5 million in Series A from Sequoia Capital and Canaan Partners in 2012 and undisclosed angel investment in 2009.

AdNear is a location intelligence company that leverages location and context data for advertisers. Historical location data combined with user behavior and other statistics generate powerful audience insights. The company’s data platform is built on proprietary technology, giving it the strength of location awareness without the need for GPS or operator assistance.

AdNear claims to have profiled more than 320 million users across Asia-Pacific and has worked with brands such as P&G, Woolworths, Audi, Unilever, BMW, Vodafone, Ford, Samsung, and IKEA.

Founded in 2012, AdNear is now headquartered in Singapore with a presence across Australia, South East Asia, Japan and India.

image credit: AdNear

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Business Card Reader App CamCard Taps Enterprise Market Upon Hitting 110M Users https://technode.com/2014/10/15/business-card-reader-app-camcard-taps-enterprise-market-upon-hitting-110m-users/ https://technode.com/2014/10/15/business-card-reader-app-camcard-taps-enterprise-market-upon-hitting-110m-users/#respond Wed, 15 Oct 2014 08:57:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24181 The business card is still one of the most basic networking tools in corporate circles, but the process of managing the details of each and every contact can be a hassle. If you meet ten people at an event, how long do you spend creating new contacts on your phone, with all those mobile numbers, […]]]>
ss_1_cn

The business card is still one of the most basic networking tools in corporate circles, but the process of managing the details of each and every contact can be a hassle. If you meet ten people at an event, how long do you spend creating new contacts on your phone, with all those mobile numbers, email addresses and Twitter handles?

CamCard is a business card reader app that captures contact details by utilising a smartphone’s optical character recognition functions. Launched in 2009, the app has more than 110 million users across over 200 countries to date, of which tens of millions remain active, according to Chen Sa, VP of INTSIG, the parent company of CamCard. She added that the app now supports character recognition for nearly 20 languages.

After the huge success of its personal edition, CamCard is shifting its focus to the enterprise market by releasing a dedicated version CamCard Business. Previously, CamCard’s personal edition adopted a freemium model to cater to the needs of both individual and enterprise users, offering both free and paid versions, with the latter including cloud syncing and extra security features that are more attractive to businesses. This model has accumulated the initial clients for its enterprise version.

Like the personal edition, CamCard Business can scan and read business cards with high accuracy. The new service is constructed on a security system where members of a company are only accessible at their appropriate levels of information. Moreover, users can add notes or reminders to a certain card, or set the best routes to visit a certain customer. The app can be used independently, or be integrated to CRM and ERP systems of big enterprises.

The firm chose Japan as the first market to wheel out its service, with the nation one of the largest markets for the company, accounting for 12% of CamCard’s total business as disclosed by Chen. The new app will hit the U.S. (October), Europe (November), Korea (November) and south-east Asia this year.

INTSIG, the company behind CamCard, is a provider of innovative mobile applications specializing in pattern recognition and image processing. It is also the developer of document scanning and management app CamScanner, snap translator CamDictionary and CamCard for Tradeshow, a business card management solution for trade show exhibitors.

image credit: CamCard

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Chinese Smartphone Brands Take 64% of Domestic Market by Q2 2014: Baidu Report https://technode.com/2014/10/15/chinese-smartphone-brands-take-64-of-domestic-market-by-q2-baidu-report/ https://technode.com/2014/10/15/chinese-smartphone-brands-take-64-of-domestic-market-by-q2-baidu-report/#respond Wed, 15 Oct 2014 05:18:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24165 Android’s near-monopoly in China continues with daily active users of the system advanced by 16% quarter-on-quarter in 2014 Q1 and 10% quarter-on-quarter growth in Q2, according to the Baidu Mobile Distribution Report. The slowdown in the growth rate may however mean that the demographic dividend which triggered Android’s great expansion in recent years is tailing off. […]]]>

Android’s near-monopoly in China continues with daily active users of the system advanced by 16% quarter-on-quarter in 2014 Q1 and 10% quarter-on-quarter growth in Q2, according to the Baidu Mobile Distribution Report. The slowdown in the growth rate may however mean that the demographic dividend which triggered Android’s great expansion in recent years is tailing off.

Android-Baidu

With the rise of domestic smartphone manufacturers, 64% of Chinese smartphone users chose domestic brands as of Q2 2014, up from 58% in Q4 2013. Amongst the benefactors of this growth like Huawei and Lenovo, the two up-and-coming mobile makers Xiaomi and OPPO are the major driving forces for this surge, with their market shares climbing 3% and 2% during the six-month period respectively, according to the report.

SP-Baidu

Chinese users are keen to use the latest versions of Android, with v.4.2 or above becoming the mainstream systems for Android users in China, the report noted. 50% of Android-powered smartphones feature screens with 720p resolution or above.

Driven by the popularity of smartphones and improvement of network coverage, China’s mobile app users surged 27% in H1 this year, with each user estimated to download or update 2.9 apps per day. Some 94% of app downloads are completed in a Wi-Fi environment.

In terms of user demographics, white collar and other urban working groups still constitute the majority of users, but the percentage of student and rural users are increasing. Video and music are the favorite app category for both groups. Search, social networking, news and shopping apps witnessed the most robust growth in H1 2014.

Popupar-baidu

image credit: Baidu & Shutterstock

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Alibaba Unveils Mobile Open Strategy Baichuan Program to Boost Innovation https://technode.com/2014/10/14/alibaba-unveils-mobile-open-strategy-baichuan-program/ https://technode.com/2014/10/14/alibaba-unveils-mobile-open-strategy-baichuan-program/#respond Tue, 14 Oct 2014 09:52:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24129 Chinese internet giant Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) today rolled out Baichuan Program, a plan to boost local startup innovation. Under the program, Alibaba will offer infrastructure support to mobile developers with a view to encouraging a mobile ecosystem connecting cloud and mobile services. In terms of technical support, Alibaba will provide cloud, data storage and security services, helping […]]]>

Chinese internet giant Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) today rolled out Baichuan Program, a plan to boost local startup innovation. Under the program, Alibaba will offer infrastructure support to mobile developers with a view to encouraging a mobile ecosystem connecting cloud and mobile services.

In terms of technical support, Alibaba will provide cloud, data storage and security services, helping projects to lower development and maintenance costs. Business operations, investment and working space resources will also be given to startups. In addition, the e-commerce company will open its data to app developers, giving a complete understanding of users so as to build custom services.

It is worth nothing that companies under the program will also be able to capitalize on Alibaba’s e-commerce capabilities and the group’s trading and payment systems.

According to Alibaba spokesman, Meilimei, a beauty app under the program has activated more than seven million users by leveraging the resources offered by Alibaba. Maternal social shopping app Mamazhidemai witnessed a 50% leap in user retention rate after using its user base profile data.

With Baichuan Program, there’s no need to hire a CTO, Wang Xiruo, VP of Alibaba Group, said: a good project manager and a good idea are sufficient to build an excellent app. Wang added that Baichuan support will accelerate the development cycle and lower cost for developers.

Mobile developers interested in the program can apply here.

image credit: Alibaba

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Business-oriented SNS Service Wolongge Scoops Angel Investment https://technode.com/2014/10/14/business-oriented-sns-service-wolongge-scoops-angel-investment/ https://technode.com/2014/10/14/business-oriented-sns-service-wolongge-scoops-angel-investment/#respond Tue, 14 Oct 2014 07:39:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24120 Technology has brought remarkable innovations to the recruitment industry, opening up greater possibilities and eliminating the information gap between job seekers and recruiters. Wolongge is a business-oriented social networking service aiming to deliver another innovation by facilitating vocational and career communication and evaluation, and the company has announced that it has raised angel investment from iStart […]]]>
Wolongge-pic

Technology has brought remarkable innovations to the recruitment industry, opening up greater possibilities and eliminating the information gap between job seekers and recruiters. Wolongge is a business-oriented social networking service aiming to deliver another innovation by facilitating vocational and career communication and evaluation, and the company has announced that it has raised angel investment from iStart Venture Capital.

Wolongge allows users to follow companies in which they interested and to get insights into working for them, not just from company management, but also from those working on the ground. Users can post about their working experiences for a certain company, as well as sharing tips on interview tactics, salary, welfare, company culture, and so on. Interactions between users are encouraged to expand workplace networks.

As well as a networking tool, the platform is also a premium channel for businesses to find matches for their positions and also to guage their public reputation, so as to make corresponding improvements.

To motivate users to write more reviews on the platform, Wolongge has a virtual currency “Long Yu” which can be earned by contributing content to the community, participating in community events, or simply purchased. Some premium comments or reviews are only visible for paying users via Long Yu.

Founded in 2012, the platform now has more than 100,000 reviews and millions of daily page views.

image credit: Wolongge

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BAI Launches Angel Investment Arm BetaFund to Foster Early-stage Startups https://technode.com/2014/10/13/bai-launches-angel-investment-arm-betafund-to-foster-early-stage-startups/ https://technode.com/2014/10/13/bai-launches-angel-investment-arm-betafund-to-foster-early-stage-startups/#respond Mon, 13 Oct 2014 08:28:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24062 BAI CEO-Annabelle Long Bertelsmann Asia Investments (BAI), the investment arm of Bertelsmann AG in Asia, has announced the launch of BetaFund, an angel investment fund providing financing and professional support to early-stage startups. In next few years, BetaFund expects to invest tens of millions dollars in mobile, social networking and gaming industries, according to the […]]]>

BAI CEO-Annabelle Long

Bertelsmann Asia Investments (BAI), the investment arm of Bertelsmann AG in Asia, has announced the launch of BetaFund, an angel investment fund providing financing and professional support to early-stage startups.

In next few years, BetaFund expects to invest tens of millions dollars in mobile, social networking and gaming industries, according to the company. BAI disclosed that BetaFund is in talks with a variety of startups from fields including mobile content distribution platform and online financial education.

In addition to financial support, BetaFund will also help portfolio companies to leverage resources from other Bertelsmann AG units and BAI partner companies.

Founded in 2008, BAI is a strategic venture investor focused on early-to-growth stage investments, particularly in new media, online education, new technology, service, and BPO sectors.

In the past six years, it has invested in over 30 companies and four funds. Three of its portfolio companies have gone public in the U.S. stock market: car service Bitauto (NYSE: BITA), new media Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) and distance education site CDEL (NYSE: DL).

In terms of investment style, BAI tends to continue investments in former portfolio companies. It is the Series A and Series B investor of recruitment site Lagou and has participated the three financing rounds of menstruation tracking app Dayima.

Other companies in which BAI has invested include interest-based social network Douban, social shopping platform Mogujie, cloud service Ucloud, online performance marketing provider iClick, fashion service YOHO!, and mobile game payment service M09.

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Cloud Communications Service Gotye Pockets Series A Funding from Intel Capital https://technode.com/2014/10/13/cloud-communications-service-gotye-pockets-series-a-funding-from-intel/ https://technode.com/2014/10/13/cloud-communications-service-gotye-pockets-series-a-funding-from-intel/#respond Mon, 13 Oct 2014 04:42:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24045 Gotye, more commonly known as Qinjia in Chinese, is a Shanghai-based startup that creates intuitive technical solutions for services which want to integrate communication functions. The company told TechNode it raised Series A funding from Intel Capital to the tune of tens of millions of US dollars. Intel Capital’s investment will help Gotye to leverage the latest […]]]>
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Gotye, more commonly known as Qinjia in Chinese, is a Shanghai-based startup that creates intuitive technical solutions for services which want to integrate communication functions. The company told TechNode it raised Series A funding from Intel Capital to the tune of tens of millions of US dollars.

Intel Capital’s investment will help Gotye to leverage the latest cloud communication solutions in the world and to apply its service to smart hardware industry. The company claimed this the largest funding in Chinese cloud communications sector to date.

The Twilio-like service provides mobile communication technical solutions, offering simple API and SDK that allow developers to quickly implement communication services into their applications. The firm aims to commoditize communication services by making them much more accessible to developers, rather than the time-consuming and talent-intensive necessity of developing one’s own tools from scratch.

Gotye now has three product lines, offering much the same communication features of current IM tools like WeChat. For cloud-based IM services, the startup offers in-app private chat, group chat, and chat room functions for users. Its voice chat solutions allow multi-party voice communication with intercom mode applicable in 2G networks and real-time voice mode available to 3G users. The mobile customer service plug-in solves the problem of communication between users and developers. Communication requests can be initiated within the app, via email, phone calls, or WeChat.

Gotye supports Android, iOS, and WP8 and is adaptable to all mainstream game engines such as native Java, Cocos2d, Unity3d, Air2, and so on.

Software package size is of course one of the biggest concerns developers have. Xu Zezhong, founder of the company, has said that software packages embedding Gotye SDK would generally increase by 700KB to 800 KB, while their API would rise by around 100KB to 200 KB.

At present, Gotye has opened up around 30 APIs, claiming 9,158 registered developers. Altogether 308 apps are now using its service and 765 apps have integrated it, according to the company.

Gotye was founded by Xu Zezhong, a telecoms industry veteran, in 2011. Currently, the service is mostly adopted by games for in-app communication, cooperating with top-tier Chinese game developers of CMGE, Youzu, Chukong, Changyou, among others. They are currently attempting to expand to further sectors like online education, online healthcare and smart devices.

image credit: Gotye

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Seoul-based Pyra Makes Team Communication More Efficient by Integrating Scattered Services into One Space https://technode.com/2014/10/11/seoul-based-pyra-makes-team-communication-efficient-integrating-scattered-services-one-space/ https://technode.com/2014/10/11/seoul-based-pyra-makes-team-communication-efficient-integrating-scattered-services-one-space/#comments Sat, 11 Oct 2014 10:06:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23999 Effective communication is crucial for the growth and success of projects and companies. Despite living in the information age, where we have colleagues across the globe and stay in touch instantly via the internet, it’s not as easy as it seems. Of course, there are endless communication tools available to facilitate the process. But for now, […]]]>

Effective communication is crucial for the growth and success of projects and companies. Despite living in the information age, where we have colleagues across the globe and stay in touch instantly via the internet, it’s not as easy as it seems. Of course, there are endless communication tools available to facilitate the process. But for now, most of us still struggle with connections and misunderstandings on a daily basis.

A typical team communication process usually involves back-and-forth emails, while colleagues may have to switch to file hosting services like Dropbox when the documents they want to share are too big to email. In a case like this, the users also have to send reminders to team members to move to another platform. Moreover, these services all involve potential references when sharing and managing messages and files. The messages will become messy and information is difficult to track.

Pyra-pic

Pyra Interface

Korean-based startup Pyra is a new collaborative communication service that keeps teamwork focused and cohesive. It allows teams to work in a single centralized space by connecting fragmented communication in a single timeline. One advantage of the chronological structure is that there’s a transparency in the platform; everyone in the team can log on to see the progress of the project.

Pyra uses a “cell” concept to enable users to coordinate their files and communicate with each other. Within the cells, users can integrate all the services in one platform, like assigning tasks, uploading files, and so on.

As a product developed by a team with a strong design background, Pyra’s interface is neatly designed with a focus on brevity and clarity in file-sharing and messaging functions.

Two categories of projects can be established on the platform depending on users’ needs: open projects, where contents are open to non-team members, and the more exclusive private projects. Pyra also offers some multiple-communication tools. One such function is memo stickers which help members to visually communicate with all team members about where to change or add something.

Although the service is available for both PC and mobile terminals, some features are mobile only. Mobile users can swipe on an item to add it to a to-do list or send any “cell” to a specific crew member by dragging and drop.

Unlike similar tools such as Yammer, which is more complex to use, Pyra targets casual users including small design teams, startups and students, said Sang Mun, designer of Pyra, at a backstage interview with TechNode during DreamPlus Day 2014.

He notes that the company plans to monetize its service in three phases. The startup is currently in the first freemium package stage, providing unlimited time and space to users so as to study and test the product. In the second enterprise package phase, Pyra will goes after business owners and IT partners, as well as featuring some exclusive “cell” functionalities, such as security features. Pyra finally aims to become a market place where business owners can find their networks.

Pyra is a project affiliated with Hanwha S&C’s in-company venture TFT (Task Force Team) Solution Lab. Interestingly, two thirds of the team members have design backgrounds; their former clients include Samsung, telecom carrier KT, web portal Naver, and SK Telecom. Pyra has launched its beta version on both iOS and Android platforms in Korean and Japan. It plans to increase presence in existing markets first before heading to the U.S. in Q4 next year.

The cloud collaboration market was worth US$4.2 billion in 2012 with 14% of annual growth, according to Sang.

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Chinese O2O Ecommerce Platform Shequ001 Snags Series B Funding Led by Banyan Capital https://technode.com/2014/10/11/shequ001-snags-series-b-funding-led-by-banyan-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/10/11/shequ001-snags-series-b-funding-led-by-banyan-capital/#comments Sat, 11 Oct 2014 08:40:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=24009 Shequ001, a Chinese e-commerce site that specialises in rapid delivery, has secured Series B investment from Banyan Capital. The news was first released as a tip-off from a person familiar with the matter, but Shequ001 reposted the news on its Weibo account today as confirmation. The detailed terms of the deal are still unknown, though some media […]]]>
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Shequ001, a Chinese e-commerce site that specialises in rapid delivery, has secured Series B investment from Banyan Capital. The news was first released as a tip-off from a person familiar with the matter, but Shequ001 reposted the news on its Weibo account today as confirmation. The detailed terms of the deal are still unknown, though some media reported that the round was raised at a whopping valuation of around 2 billion yuan (around US$326 million).

This financing followed a nine-digit yuan Series A investment six month earlier and the company’s angel round was received from Haiyin Venture Partners and ZJ Capital in October 2013.

Shequ001, which means Community001 in Chinese, was established in 2012 by Shao Yuanyuan, Du Guoqiang and Xue Manzi, better known as Charles Xue, a billionaire venture capitalist and one of the most active investors in the Chinese internet industry.

Operating on a community basis, Shequ001 helps supermarket partners to deliver merchandise to consumers, getting goods to the door usually in around one hour. Instead of managing merchandise itself, Shequ001 leverages resources of local partners and assists them with an in-house delivery team. Shequ001 sources its goods from local stores, tapping into their expertise in warehousing and inventory.

Shequ001 is constructing a network that has one logistics center every five miles, and more in densely populated areas, according to the company.

As of present, Shequ001 has set up 78 bricks-and-mortar delivery centers across twelve cities nationwide, claiming over 700,000 users and upwards of 20,000 orders per day. Shequ001 goes after middle-aged homemakers who purchase groceries every week or on a daily basis. According to the company, middle-aged users account for more than 70% of its total user base.

image credit: Shequ001

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Cross-posting Service IFTTT Adds Support to First Chinese Service Weibo https://technode.com/2014/10/10/cross-posting-service-ifttt-adds-support-first-chinese-service-weibo/ https://technode.com/2014/10/10/cross-posting-service-ifttt-adds-support-first-chinese-service-weibo/#respond Fri, 10 Oct 2014 09:20:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23984 IFTTT, the service for automating common tasks on the web, has announced that it now supports cross-posting on the Chinese microblogging service Weibo. IFTTT (which stands for “If This Then That”) is a service that allows users to set alerts that will trigger a user-defined function. If you connect your Weibo to Instagram or Twitter, […]]]>

IFTTT, the service for automating common tasks on the web, has announced that it now supports cross-posting on the Chinese microblogging service Weibo.

IFTTT (which stands for “If This Then That”) is a service that allows users to set alerts that will trigger a user-defined function. If you connect your Weibo to Instagram or Twitter, then your updates will be cross-posted to all your accounts automatically.

IFTTT now supports 134 free or paid services, or “channels” as referred to by the company. Weibo is the first Chinese service supported by IFTTT.  

The San Francisco-based startup has an English interface only and does not have current plans to release other language versions. Since the service uses different channel names for Twitter and Facebook, both of which are blocked in China, IFTTT is available to Chinese users at present. At present, it might posting on blocked sites a little easier for Chinese users. But nobody can tell what the case will be when the service is adopted by more Chinese services – though we can imagine what might happen.

Originally from: Li Shuhang

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Xiaomi Releases New Smart Gadgets to Boost Smart Home Plan https://technode.com/2014/10/10/xiaomi-releases-new-smart-gadgets-boost-smart-home-plan/ https://technode.com/2014/10/10/xiaomi-releases-new-smart-gadgets-boost-smart-home-plan/#comments Fri, 10 Oct 2014 07:11:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23977 Unlike previous product launches accompanied by fanfare and heavy hype, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi today unveiled four smart home gadgets on its microblog, in a relatively low-profile rollout. The four products are the Ants smart camera, Xiaomi smart socket, Yeelight light and Xiaomi smart remote control center. Ants is a smart camera featuring 720P HD live video stream, […]]]>
Xiaomi-Gadgets

Unlike previous product launches accompanied by fanfare and heavy hype, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi today unveiled four smart home gadgets on its microblog, in a relatively low-profile rollout. The four products are the Ants smart camera, Xiaomi smart socket, Yeelight light and Xiaomi smart remote control center.

Ants is a smart camera featuring 720P HD live video stream, 110-degree wide angle and 4x zoom. With embedded microphone and speaker, Ants supports two-way remote dialogue, while Xiaomi smart socket enables users to power on and off remotely, and it has a USB port.

Yeelight is a Bluetooth 4.0-powered smart bulb which users can adjust for color and brightness via a dedicated smartphone app. Developed by appcessory solution provider Yeelink, Yeelight will be on sale at Xiaomi’s e-commerce platforms very soon.

Little information was released regarding Xiaomi smart remote control center, but the name suggests it might well be a hub to connect all the smart devices in home.

As an up-and-coming tech company, Xiaomi is moving rapidly from smartphones to wireless home and wearables. The release of these four products is a continuation of Xiaomi’s Wi-Fi Router-centered smart home plan. Xiaomi has stated that their hardware products would be “sold at cost” and their aim is to built a unified software platform for all hardware, from mobile devices to smart home appliances.

Although no information was released on prices, it’s reasonable to expect that theses products will be at the affordable end of the market. Ants and Xiaomi smart socket have been opened for free trial on Xiaomi’s Weibo account.

image credit: Xiaomi

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Japanese Startup StudyPact Keeps You Motivated in Online Study https://technode.com/2014/10/09/japanese-startup-studypact-keeps-motivated-online-study/ https://technode.com/2014/10/09/japanese-startup-studypact-keeps-motivated-online-study/#comments Thu, 09 Oct 2014 08:32:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23948 Nowadays, online education has become an important method for people to pursue their studies. But whilst the learning resources are plentiful and easily accessible, how many of us can keep up the motivation to finish courses that we’ve begun? The average retention rate of online education platforms is just 5%, says Toby Hoenisch, CEO of […]]]>

Nowadays, online education has become an important method for people to pursue their studies. But whilst the learning resources are plentiful and easily accessible, how many of us can keep up the motivation to finish courses that we’ve begun?

The average retention rate of online education platforms is just 5%, says Toby Hoenisch, CEO of Japanese startup StudyPact, at DreamPlus Day 2014. Only five out of a hundred people finish courses they sign up for.

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Studypack-Toby

p style=”text-align: center”>StudyPact CEO Toby Hoenisch

Sensing great market potential in this sector, Toby launched StudyPact, a Tokyo-based online study retention tool last year. Premised on having a stake in something you believe in, StudyPact help users achieve their learning goals by adopting a betting mechanism. After choosing courses on one of the integrated study apps, users should decide how many hours they want to study each week and how much money they want to stake on each hour. Once the week ends on midnight Sunday, those who failed to meet their goals for the week are charged according to the pre-set stakes, while those who accomplished their tasks get paid with the money from people missed their goals that week.

“Our expertise is not on content, like teaching languages”. StudyPact does however cooperate with online education content providers, and has been integrated in more than 150 major learning apps like Duolingo, Coursera, and Udemy, said Toby. Language learning is among the most popular topics on the platform, because it demands a longer time frame for users to attain their targets, he added.

StudyPack-Pic

As for payment, users can simply connect their StudyPact account to their credit cards. The platform does not charge users if they achieve all their targets, said Toby.

StudyPact’s Android app is currently running in beta version. It has amassed more than 1,000 downloads after six months of operation, of which around 80% of users have accomplished their tasks and 20% are converted to paying users.

Toby, a big data and gamification expert with a passion for behavioral design, conceived the idea of StudyPact in March last year, and went on to build prototypes to validate the concept. Two co-founders of the company joined him earlier this year, Paul Kitti is an experienced designer and Evan Grossman is a mobile developer whose previous work included a #1 downloaded app in the Japanese iTune Store.

StudyPact is a recent incubatee of Japanese incubator Open Network Lab and it is planning to raise US$1 million seed funding for team construction and marketing.

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Philippine Startup TimeFree Innovations Lets You Use Waiting Time More Productively https://technode.com/2014/10/08/timefree-innovations-lets-use-waiting-time-productively/ https://technode.com/2014/10/08/timefree-innovations-lets-use-waiting-time-productively/#respond Wed, 08 Oct 2014 09:58:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23926 Living in the world’s most populated country China, you’ll doubtless have experienced the frustrations of standing in line all too often. For modern people in a rush, little can be more frustrating. But now Filipino startup TimeFree Innovations has a go at easing the pain of this problem. TimeFree Innovations is a software development company that […]]]>

Living in the world’s most populated country China, you’ll doubtless have experienced the frustrations of standing in line all too often. For modern people in a rush, little can be more frustrating. But now Filipino startup TimeFree Innovations has a go at easing the pain of this problem.

TimeFree Innovations is a software development company that provides virtual queuing solutions to help manage customer flow and create more positive customer experiences. Philip Adrian T. Atilano, founder of the company, was inspired to develop TimeFree, the company’s flagship product, by the terrible queuing experiences he and his friends had suffered. When Atilano was at college in Vietnam, for example, students had to wait in line at the school’s finance office to pay their tuition. Driven crazy by the hours-long waits, Atilano and his friends came up with the idea of a system that informs users when their turn has come.

TimeFree is an SMS-based virtual queuing system. Users first select their target transaction from the kiosk and enter their mobile number. They can then walk away from the queue to do whatever they want, and the system sends an SMS message to the users when their turn is near. In addition to saving the time of individual users, TimeFree also claims to help businesses to increase customer engagement, monitor staff performance and derive proprietary reports and analytics.

Atilano acknowledged that the SMS message is somewhat obsolete now, but he noted that the smartphone penetration rate in Philippines is still not very high. Moreover, an advantage of SMS-based communications is that the users do not have to download the app, as Atilano told TechNode at a backstage interview during DreamPlus Day competition.

The service is mostly used by bank clients at present, but the firm is trying to apply it into more sectors. With a particular focus on services with a high volume of face-to-face transactions, TimeFree is in talks with telecom carriers, clinics, and utility companies, said Atilano.

“We are going through a target customer learning process. Whereas everybody else is focusing on one industry, at this time we really have to test out different scenarios and identify which industries would be our key sector to focus on before moving to the next.”

TimeFree-Chino

CEO & Cofounder of TimeFree — Philip Adrian T. Atilano

After establishing a presence in the Philippines, the startup launched a service in Hong Kong earlier this year and plans to explore other regional markets in Asia, such as Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, in the near future. When asked about plans for the Chinese mainland market, Atilano said they are still trying to study different markets rather than going in directly, as TimeFree monetizes its service through subscriptions.

Starting as a small project in 2009 when the founding members were still in college, TimeFree was founded in 2013 after the team received seed funding. Since then, the co-founders quit their day jobs to work full time at the startup. Later, TimeFree was taken up by Filipino incubator IdeaSpace, receiving US$25,000 funding last year. The company now has five full-time and eight part-time employees.

TimeFree is planning to release a new mobile app that monitors queue flow in real-time by Q4 2014, allowing users to check the people ahead of them online rather than at physical outlets.

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Dianrong, P2P Funding Site Led by Lending Club Cofounder, Pockets Fresh Investment for Market Expansion https://technode.com/2014/10/08/dianrong-p2p-funding-site-led-lending-club-cofounder-pockets-fresh-investment-market-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/10/08/dianrong-p2p-funding-site-led-lending-club-cofounder-pockets-fresh-investment-market-expansion/#comments Wed, 08 Oct 2014 06:44:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23911 Chinese P2P loans service Dianrong today announced it has raised fresh funding from Hong Kong’s leading financial institution, Sun Hung Kai & Co. Limited (SHK), with a view to expansion in Hong Kong and throughout Asia. In addition to the capital, Dianrong also began long-term strategic cooperation with SHK to facilitate its ambitions. Established by Lending […]]]>
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Chinese P2P loans service Dianrong today announced it has raised fresh funding from Hong Kong’s leading financial institution, Sun Hung Kai & Co. Limited (SHK), with a view to expansion in Hong Kong and throughout Asia. In addition to the capital, Dianrong also began long-term strategic cooperation with SHK to facilitate its ambitions.

Established by Lending Club cofounder Soul Htite in 2012, Dianrong is a Shanghai-based online lending platform where members can borrow and lend money among themselves at better interest rates than a bank typically offers. The site lends money to both individuals (P2P) and enterprises (P2B), with enterprise loans accounting for 70% of the total, said Soul in a previous interview with TechNode, adding that Dianrong’s average yield is around 14%.

“The combination of SHK’s 45 years of experience in risk management and operations as well as the technology and cost efficiency offered by Dianrong represents a highly promising model for emerging markets. Following what we have accomplished in mainland China, the model is easily portable to Hong Kong and the rest of Asia”, said Soul.

SHK is a leading financial services group specializing in wealth management, securities brokerage and consumer finance with an extensive branch and office network of over 180 locations across Hong Kong, Macau and mainland China.

In cooperation with local listing service 58.com, SHK’s consumer financing service subsidiary United Asia Finance Ltd. announced earlier this year plans to build a peer-to-peer lending platform for local merchants who post listings on the site.

Dianrong has previously raised millions of yuan in angel investment from ZJ Capital in March 2013 and tens of million dollars from Northern Light later in the same year.

Edited by Mike Cormack

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Indian Interactive How-to Guide Whatfix Wins DreamPlus Startup Battlefield in Seoul https://technode.com/2014/10/05/whatfix-wins-dreamplus-startup-competition-in-seoul/ https://technode.com/2014/10/05/whatfix-wins-dreamplus-startup-competition-in-seoul/#comments Sat, 04 Oct 2014 22:34:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23823 Co-founders of Whatfix with Hanwha CEO S&C Kim Yong Wook Whilst Asian Games in Incheon is coming to an end, Asian startup battlefield heats up in Seoul with passionate entrepreneurs competing for their innovative ideas. DreamPlus Alliance, an alliance composed of top accelerators from 12 Asian regions, announced the winner of its two-day startup competition DreamPlus Day […]]]>

Co-founders of Whatfix with Hanwha CEO S&C Kim Yong Wook

Whilst Asian Games in Incheon is coming to an end, Asian startup battlefield heats up in Seoul with passionate entrepreneurs competing for their innovative ideas. DreamPlus Alliance, an alliance composed of top accelerators from 12 Asian regions, announced the winner of its two-day startup competition DreamPlus Day 2014 in the South Korean capital this week. Altogether fifteen startups from member accelerators around the region go head-to-head to vie for a US$300,000 equity funding as well as considerable localization supports from DreamPlus.

Backed by one of Korean’s largest conglomerates Hanwah S&C, the Seoul-based program helps member accelerators to share their respective success stories and discover effective opportunities for cooperation. It provides various supports in service localization, legal, accounting, marketing for startups venturing into foreign markets.

The alliance members include an in-house ICT accelerator DreamPlus Accelerator (Korea), Chinaccelerator (China), InnoSpace (China), GSF (India), ideosource (Indonesia), ONL (Japan), MAD Incubator (Malaysia), Ideaspace (Philippines), Fatfish Group (Singapore), Pinehurst Advisors (Taiwan), M8VC (Thailand), and Egg Accelerator (Vietnam).

Whatfix, an incubatee of Indian accelerator GSF, is crowned as winner of the event. Whatfix helps to enhance self-serving capability of any web based products and applications. Whatfix is a cloud platform where product teams can collaborate to create interactive guides and integrate inside as well as outside applications. It is applicable across large medium and small enterprises and valid for all Internet and external applications. QuickoLab, the operator of Whatfix, was co-founded Khadim Batti and Vara Kuma, two former employees at Huawei, in 2010 and their first product was SearchEnabler.

With the new funding, Whatfix, as a globally-natured service, planned expand into more markets, said Khadim Batti in a back-stage interview after winning the honor. Whatfix already supports in different languages like English, French, etc., we hope it can be quickly adopted to Korean and South-east Asian markets, he added. The money will also goes in recruiting more talents in technology and marketing.

DreamPlus-logo

Here’s a look at the other amazing stratups that pitched at event:

Pyra (Korea) is a social platform and a new communication tool that helps integrate fragmented communication between people with a common goal in a single space. The company aims to make teamwork more productive with better communication by connecting people and their information in one place. Pyra uses a “cell” concept to allow users to coordinate their files and communicate with each other in a single time-line.

Hivenest (Korea) provides a variety of customer experiences through SNS integration management and analysis solutions for services like Facebook. Hivenest offers a number of B2B digital marketing solutions and B2C online services.

Earthtory (Korea) is a travel service that assists travelers to find information anywhere and anytime. Using a location-based system, the travelers can easily find key attraction, shopping, restaurants and lodgings displayed over a map. Users can create their own personal travel guidebook by choosing their favorite places and then save them in a PDF.

Carffeine (Korea) is a mobile first platform that connects car owners and mechanics. Carffeine’s Cartool solution is a proprietary software for mechanic shops. The platform provides custom car diagnosis reports and other services customized to each individual car owner. Cartool is undergoing a pilot run in five car service centers and is expected to expand into 12 more within the year. The company also offers an extensive database of articles, reports and references from in-house repair experts of car owners.

Neonan (China), web portal startup, offers digital publications on fitness and dating advises for Chinese young men, helping them to be a better version of themselves. The company was founded several years ago by two serial entrepreneurs Michael Yang and Willie Chou. Supported by self-developed contents focused on fashion trends, the brand achieved 300% YOY growth in 2011-2014. As a recent graduate from Chinaccelerator, the company just received seed funding.

Wokamon (China) is a app that combines the functionality of a pedometer and a virtual pet, aiming to motivate fitness device and app users to continue their fitness plans. The principle is quite simple–the more you walk, the more it grows. Every single step you take helps feed your little Wokamon friend and the more active a user is, the more their Wokamons grow and thrive. The app helps to refresh the fun and reduce frictions of the fitness process. Here’s our previous interview with Mars Zhu, co-founder of the company.

Gimmie (Indonesia) is a loyalty platform with native advertising. Points and rewards are given to customers in various ways and analytics are provided to heighten efficiency and sales. Gimmie is a global entity with its customers located in Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines, and Malaysia. The company was founded in August 2011 by David NG who has been working in business development and sponsorship sales for the U.S. and Singaporean companies.

StudyPact (Japan) motivates the world to study harder by allowing online learners to put moneys at stake so as to increase the retention rate of online study services. The learners can set stakes of up to 50 dollars at the platform. The users who missed their study goals for the week will lose them, but if they can achieve the targets, they will get paid from those who have failed their jobs. StudyPact Android app is tied with major learning apps like Duolingo, Coursera, and Udemy. The study retention tool is current running in data version and has generated positive results from users. The users who successfully fulfilled their pact on the platform accounts for 83.1 percent of the total learners, against to only 5% retention rate of regular online learning services, according to the company. StudyPact is based in Tokyo, Japan.

Tapway (Malaysia) provides insightful actionable data to improve business performance to bring online analytics back to offline world. Based on its WiFi and video technology, Tapway offers essential store analytics, chainwide comparison, shopper demographics, and shopper behavior & activity. It targets at cafes, supermarkets, boutiques, etc.

TimeFree Innovations (Philippines), is an SMS-based virtual queuing solution that aims to cater for the growing customer demands in more efficient ways. TimeFree Virtual Queuing System helps businesses to have a more efficient customer flow management and promotes positive customer experiences. The individual customers will not dread going to various offline services because they know they will not be stuck in a long line waiting for their turn. It also provides key analysts to keep track of staff performance on a daily basis. The company is planning to release a new mobile app that monitors queue flow in real-time in Q4 2014. TimeFree monetizes its service on a subscription-based revenue model.

CloudDesk Technology (Singapore) focuses on developing and marketing of desktop virtualization software. Started at the end of 2012, CloudDesk Technology allows Microsoft Windows apps to run on iOS and Android devices via Internet. It is specialized in solve pain points of education and government institutions that have large number of Pcs. CloudDesk Technology is based in Malaysia and also has presence in Singapore.

Q.L.L. (Taiwan), which is shot for quick language learning, offers apps targeting children ages 3-8 years old. The company has published over 150 iOS and Android titles based on step-by-step learning system. The apps are in 5 languages of Traditional & Simplified Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean and Spanish, falling into the categories of language acquisition, children’s stories and general learning. The company recorded 6.5 million app downloads in Taiwan and 300K monthly active users. Q.L.L also helps content providers to digitalize their contents via a web authorizing platform. It is planning to raise US$6 million funding to expand QLL platform, leverage on multiple interfaces, and explore other markets, etc.

Hankster (Thailand) sets up meetings for groups with the aim to change the way people hangout and met new friends in a funnier way, with less pressure, and safety insured. All they have to do is to create their gang, pick the nights, and pick the zones with their mobile apps. The service price starts at US$25 per person per match.

Kooltech (Vietnam) is a Kickstarter project specializes in embedded system hardware/firmware design, wireless and multimedia digital signal processing algorithms, smartphone appcessories, cloud services. KoolTechs products and design services target the emerging IoT market with specific applications in wearables using low-power sensor, iBeacon and Bluetooth Smart, SmartHome automation, home healthcare. The company planned to raise US$500K for marketing and manufacturing.

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Apple Gets Approval from Chinese Regulators to Sell iPhone6 in China Since Oct. 17 https://technode.com/2014/09/30/apple-gets-approval-from-chinese-regulators-to-sell-iphone6-in-china-since-oct-17/ https://technode.com/2014/09/30/apple-gets-approval-from-chinese-regulators-to-sell-iphone6-in-china-since-oct-17/#respond Tue, 30 Sep 2014 08:59:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23829 Apple is going to bring iPhone6 and iPhone6 Plus to Chinese users after receiving a license for the devices to be used on China’s wireless networks. China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) had approved the sale iPhone 6 in China after the U.S. smartphone maker addressed potential security risks that could cause personal data leakage, according […]]]>

Apple is going to bring iPhone6 and iPhone6 Plus to Chinese users after receiving a license for the devices to be used on China’s wireless networks. China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) had approved the sale iPhone 6 in China after the U.S. smartphone maker addressed potential security risks that could cause personal data leakage, according to the MIIT announcement.

Both iPhone6 and iPhone6 Plus are offered in 16GB/64GB/128GB versions and three colors of silver, champagne and space gray. iPhone6 will be sold for 5,288 yuan (around US$860)/6,088 yuan/6,888 yuan, while iPhone6 Plus are priced at 6,088 yuan/6,888 yuan/7,788 yuan, respectively.

The products will be on sale at the retail stores of Apple and the three Chinese telecom carriers, as well as other authorized outlets since October 17. Chinese Apple fans can pre-order since October 10 online or October 14 at the physical stores.

The four iPhone6 models going to be on sale in China are:

  • A1586: iPhone 6, supporting TD-LTE, FDD LTE, WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 and GSM;
  • A1524: iPhone 6 Plus, supporting TD-LTE, FDD LTE, WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 and GSM;
  • A1589: iPhone 6 China Mobile version, supporting TD-LTE, TD-SCDMA, GSM, roaming support WCDMA and FDD LTE;
  • A1593: iPhone 6 Plus China Mobile version, supporting TD-LTE, TD-SCDMA, GSM, roaming support CDMA and FDD LTE.

The Apple craze used to drive Chinese users to buy up the latest Apple products overseas and bring them to China. The huge demand in China has enabled smugglers and sellers to profit heavily off the devices, but that’s apparently not the case this time. The price of smuggled Apple smartphones began to slump even before the devices are available in China.

The price of smuggled iPhone6 dropped from around 12,000 yuan upon the release to around 6,500 yuan now, and that of iPhone6 Plus tumbled from 15,000 yuan to 8,800 yuan, according to a Tencent report

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Xbox One Finally Hits Shelves in China https://technode.com/2014/09/29/xbox-one-finally-hits-shelves-china/ https://technode.com/2014/09/29/xbox-one-finally-hits-shelves-china/#comments Mon, 29 Sep 2014 07:38:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23795 Today, Microsoft’s Xbox One officially goes on sale in China as the first game console that is legally available to Chinese gamers after a 14-year ban on such products. It will be offered in more than 4,000 retail outlets of chain store partners like Suning and Gome across 37 cities in China. In addition, Chinese e-commerce site JD is […]]]>

Today, Microsoft’s Xbox One officially goes on sale in China as the first game console that is legally available to Chinese gamers after a 14-year ban on such products. It will be offered in more than 4,000 retail outlets of chain store partners like Suning and Gome across 37 cities in China. In addition, Chinese e-commerce site JD is also taking orders from Xbox fans.

Xbox One is sold for 4,299 yuan (around US$699) with Kinect and 3,699 yuan without Kinect. However, only 10 games were released in China, despite that there’s already hundreds of games available for the product. Here’s a list of the 10 games:

Exclusive titles from Microsoft Studios: Forza Motorsport 5Kinect Sports Rivals, Powerstar GolfZoo Tycoon, and Max: The Curse of Brotherhood.

Games from the world’s leading developers: Dance Central: Spotlight (Harmonix), Trials Fusion (Ubisoft), Rayman Legends (Ubisoft).

Premium content from Chinese developers: Neverwinter Online (Perfect World), Naughty Kitties (Coconut Island Studio).

According to the company, the Xbox One games portfolio will continue to grow beyond launch with titles like Sunset Overdrive and Halo: The Master Chief Collection. Twelve of the world’s largest developers including Electronic Arts, Ubisoft and 2K are working to bring their gaming favorites to China. Domestic game developers including Gamebar, Yingpei Games, Snail Games, NetEase and Tencent are already working to bring new IP and fan-favorite games to Xbox One.

In addition to games, Xbox One will include a suite of services like Skype, GameDVR and is expected to integrate new entertainment experiences like video contents from BesTV, music, karaoke, fitness, among others.

The launch of Xbox One in Chinese market is just a beginning. The company is going to face tough competition here due to existence of gray market, people’s habits to play games on smartphones rather than game consoles, as well as the entrance of other rivals from home and abroad.

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Alibaba Buys 15% Stake in Hotel Tech Service Shiji to Strengthen Forays into Online Travel Market https://technode.com/2014/09/29/alibaba-buys-15-stake-hotel-tech-service-shiji-strengthen-forays-online-travel-market/ https://technode.com/2014/09/29/alibaba-buys-15-stake-hotel-tech-service-shiji-strengthen-forays-online-travel-market/#respond Mon, 29 Sep 2014 02:34:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23782 Alibaba Group, the Chinese Internet giant that just closed a record-breaking US$25 billion IPO, has invested 2.81 billion yuan (around US$ 459 million) in Chinese hospitality information provider Beijing Shiji Information Technology Co., Ltd. via its online marketplace Taobao. After the deal, Alibaba will hold a 15% stake and one position in board of directors in […]]]>

Alibaba Group, the Chinese Internet giant that just closed a record-breaking US$25 billion IPO, has invested 2.81 billion yuan (around US$ 459 million) in Chinese hospitality information provider Beijing Shiji Information Technology Co., Ltd. via its online marketplace Taobao.

After the deal, Alibaba will hold a 15% stake and one position in board of directors in the latter.

Established in 1995, Shiji Information, a Shenzhen Stock Exchange-listed firm, is principally engaged in developing software that manages room reservations, purchasing, inventory, and point of sales systems, as well as broadband networks and billing systems.

According to the company, nearly 6,000 Chinese hotels use its services, including 90% of Chinese 5-star hotels. The company’s high-end clients includes Grand Hyatt, Sheraton, Hilton, Shangri-la, Marriott, Peninsula and Accor, etc.

Alibaba’s tourism unit Taobao Travel is expected to launch in-depth cooperation with Shiji Information in integrating hotel info system, membership system and mobile payment method, etc.

Alibaba has made several early moves to tap China’s burgeoning online travel market. After establishing an independent Travel Department last year, the company invested in a raft of companies related to online travel business, like social travel app 117go, outbound travel services of Qyer and ByeCity.

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Ride-sharing app Ttyongche Tries to Pair You with Other Commuters During Rush Hour https://technode.com/2014/09/28/ride-sharing-app-ttyongche-tries-pair-commuters-rush-hour/ https://technode.com/2014/09/28/ride-sharing-app-ttyongche-tries-pair-commuters-rush-hour/#respond Sun, 28 Sep 2014 09:17:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23771 Commuting could be a beast, especially in metropolis like Beijing, which is known for its long-term headache of traffic jams. Although there’s no shortage of on-demand car-sharing apps to get you around the city, Ttyongche differentiates itself as a ride-sharing community for commuters to solve their transportation problems during rush hours. After signing up as Ttyongche members, […]]]>

Commuting could be a beast, especially in metropolis like Beijing, which is known for its long-term headache of traffic jams. Although there’s no shortage of on-demand car-sharing apps to get you around the city, Ttyongche differentiates itself as a ride-sharing community for commuters to solve their transportation problems during rush hours.

After signing up as Ttyongche members, car-owners and ride-seekers can post details about their planned journeys and the platform’s smart logistics engine will help to pair the two parties.

The app offers a variety of car-riding experiences, ranging from economy class, comfort class to luxury class, depending on the type of car passengers selected. The riders would be informed about price of the ride upfront.

ttyongche

Screenshots of Ttyongche

As always, security is one of the biggest concerns of ride-sharing experiences. In addition to information about cars, Ttyongche also integrated car-owner profiles like rider reviews and whatever other bio info the driver has included. It has IM feature to allow instant communication between car-owners and passengers. According to the startup, Ttyongche also offers up to 200K yuan (around US$33K) of insurances to both parties.

As an avid advocate of sharing-economy, Zhai Ganglong, founder of the company, said most of Ttyongche’s users have a dual-role as both service providers and receivers in the community. He added that more than 50% passengers on the platform are also car-owners who offer rides.

Like other services, Ttyongche supports online payment. But one thing makes it different from others is that the money users earned on the platform as a car-owner can be used to pay for their rides as passengers.

The Beijing-based startup is founded by Zhai Guanglong, founding member of group-buying service Meituan and former CEO of Chinese Airbnb-like vocation rental service Mayi, in April this year. The company is supported by a 13-member team and only operates in Beijing now. It has received Pre-A funding recently.

image credit: Ttyongche

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Talent Management Platform Rumarocket Wins Seedstars World Battlefield in Shanghai https://technode.com/2014/09/28/talent-management-platform-rumarocket-wins-seedstars-world-battlefield-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2014/09/28/talent-management-platform-rumarocket-wins-seedstars-world-battlefield-shanghai/#comments Sun, 28 Sep 2014 04:08:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23741 Rumarocket CEO Kathleen Yu (R2) with SSW Regional Winner Ticket After successful first edition in 2013 across 20 cities, Seedstars World (SSW), a global startup competition focused on emerging markets and fast-growing startup scenes, continues its initiatives this year and heads to 35 cities across Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America for promising startups. Shanghai leg of […]]]>

Rumarocket CEO Kathleen Yu (R2) with SSW Regional Winner Ticket

After successful first edition in 2013 across 20 cities, Seedstars World (SSW), a global startup competition focused on emerging markets and fast-growing startup scenes, continues its initiatives this year and heads to 35 cities across Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America for promising startups.

Shanghai leg of the world tour culminated as a batch of 14 startups made presentations to a room of passionate entrepreneurs. Like last year, the regional winner will be invited to Geneva in February to compete with all the other regional winners for an equity investment of up to US$ 500,000.

The startups pitched at the event covers most of the hot sectors in the industry including online hiring, e-commerce, mHealth, online education, among others. Let’s take a look at the winners of the competition.

Rumarocket, an end-to-end talent management platform, is voted the best startup at the event. Poor hiring decisions is going to cost companies a lot of time and resources. Rumarocket aims to make hiring more efficient by using advanced machinery learning algorithms to profile potential hires according to their skills, personalities, etc. It is a predictive analytics platform that helps companies objectively assess IT talents. The platform also continues to track the progress of these IT talents once they are already inside the company, ensuring continuous skill growth and development. Founded by a Philippine team, the startup is now operating from Shanghai backed by 90-day intensive accelerator program Chinaccelerator.

Review-based medical platform The CareVoice took the second prize. The CareVoice is an internet startup dedicated to build open, transparent and reliable social platform where users can share health related reviews, enabling people to make better health decisions. Please click here for a detailed report on the company.

The third prize winner is Suzhou Green Expo, a virtual and mobile solution to trade show market in China. The company provides a cloud-based solution to engage a virtual platform, allowing offline events to expand their influences beyond the time and space limits. It offers an electronic briefcase of content management, context management, as well as the digital and mobile assistance. In addition, big data and analytic engine are also provided, helping exhibitors to do performance assessment and determine their follow up actions. Green Expo is established in 2013 by John Cho and 6Connex, a subsidiary of Silicon Valley-based digital marketing agency Design Reactor.

SeedStars

Other projects that pitched at the event are: demand-driven happy hour project Olifun Limited, location-based restaurant and travel review service IndulgeSmart, cloud-based student information system Zhulou, hiring platform for talents who want to find a position in MNC JobedIn, intimate sourcing tool 21Brains, online survey platform TQSurvey, upcycle design shop The SquirrelzShanghaiContactMe, a innovative platform where people can post professional and personal inquiries on various topics, online design platform Design2Gather, as well as e-commerce services of Eco & More and BA YAN KA LA.

6degrees, a phonebook app we once reported, has won SSW’s regional event in Singapore earlier this month.

image credit: Seedstars World

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Weibo-backed Short-video App Miaopai Raises Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/09/26/weibo-backed-short-video-app-miaopai-raises-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/09/26/weibo-backed-short-video-app-miaopai-raises-series-c-funding/#comments Fri, 26 Sep 2014 08:04:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23699 Miaopai, a short-video sharing app Weibo invested in, announced that it raked in US$50 million of Series C financing led by KPCB with participation of Sina, Redpoint Ventures and StarVC. After this funding, Zhou Wei, KPCB partner who is also the investor of JD, will join Miaopai’s board of directors. Miaopai, formerly known as Xuanyixia […]]]>
miaopai-pic

Miaopai, a short-video sharing app Weibo invested in, announced that it raked in US$50 million of Series C financing led by KPCB with participation of Sina, Redpoint Ventures and StarVC. After this funding, Zhou Wei, KPCB partner who is also the investor of JD, will join Miaopai’s board of directors.

Miaopai, formerly known as Xuanyixia before it launched in-depth cooperation with Weibo last year, has raised angel investment from Morningside Ventures, millions of dollars in Series A funding led by Redpoint Ventures and US$25 million in Series B from existing investors last year.

As a Vine-like service, Miaopai allows users to shoot up to ten seconds of video, and then edit or add frames to the video clips before sharing them to friends. In addition to one-click editing function for different themes, Miaopai lets you experiment with filters, music, texts, etc. The face-recognition and 3D virtual background functionalities will be added in future updates. The app now supports Weibo and QQ account login.

Miaopai claimed more than 20 million users as of present. To promote the service, the company has invited hundreds of celebrities to use Miaopai since its launch in August last year. One investor of this round StarVC is founded by three Chinese A-liters of Li Bingbing, Huang Xiaoming and Ren Quan. The backing of celebrities is expected to improve the branding and attract more users for the company.

image credit: Miaopai

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Chinese IT Education Startup Jike Xueyuan Pockets Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/09/26/jike-xueyuan-pockets-series-b-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/09/26/jike-xueyuan-pockets-series-b-financing/#comments Fri, 26 Sep 2014 06:16:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23691 Jike Xueyuan (geeks college in Chinese), an online education platform for Chinese IT talents, announced it has secured US$22 million of Series B funding from SIG and Series A investor BlueRun Ventures. Jike Xueyuan is an online education portal which teaches IT related career skills with all the course contents being generated by an in-house development team. […]]]>
Jike Xueyuan

Jike Xueyuan (geeks college in Chinese), an online education platform for Chinese IT talents, announced it has secured US$22 million of Series B funding from SIG and Series A investor BlueRun Ventures.

Jike Xueyuan is an online education portal which teaches IT related career skills with all the course contents being generated by an in-house development team. Jike Xueyuan now offers more than 300 online video courses covering Android, iOS, HTML5, Cocos2d-X, Java, among others. Launched at the beginning of this year, the service now claimed more than 120,000 registered users.

Jike Xueyuan is also known for its quick response in offering courses on popular contents in software development industry. It is the first Chinese online education platform that provides courses on Flappy Bird, 2048, Swift, etc.

The company offers services to both individual and enterprise clients. It sells membership to individual users at 30 yuan (US$4.89) per month or 260 yuan per year. For cooperation with enterprises, the startup either provides online training program to the clients’ employees or help the companies to recruit suitable talents.

With the investment, the firm planned to expand the content team, as well as to recruit algorithm and data analysis talents. It also has plans to expand to more web development technologies like PHP.

The company’s CEO Jin Yan is the founder of one of China’s earliest mobile developer community eoe. He is also the author of a very popular book on Android development.

China has witnessed the boom of online education in the past one-year period. However, the closure of Tizi and Nahao, two online education sites launched by Gong Haiyan, founder of the US-listed online dating service Jiayuan, have triggered widespread concerns about whether online education will be the next “bubble” to pop.

image credit: Jike Xueyuan

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Personal Finance App Tongbanjie Claims Nearly US$50M of Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/09/25/tongbanjie-claims-nearly-us50m-of-series-b-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/09/25/tongbanjie-claims-nearly-us50m-of-series-b-financing/#respond Thu, 25 Sep 2014 04:24:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23651 Amid the boom of personal finance apps in China, Tongbanjie, a mobile financial app, announced it has received nearly US$50 million of funding led by Legend Capital, and followed by angel and Series A investor China Growth Capital. The company has received Series A financing from IDG Capital and China Growth Capital at the end of last year. […]]]>
Tongbanjie-pic

Amid the boom of personal finance apps in China, Tongbanjie, a mobile financial app, announced it has received nearly US$50 million of funding led by Legend Capital, and followed by angel and Series A investor China Growth Capital.

The company has received Series A financing from IDG Capital and China Growth Capital at the end of last year. The funds will be used to improve the product and marketing, according to the company.

As a financial product aggregator, Tongbanjie allows users to purchase, check and redeem financial products according to their needs and risk-taking capabilities. It serves as a sales channel for financial products like standardized monetary funds, insurance, P2P products, etc.

As of present, Tongbanjie claimed a daily turnover of more than 200 million yuan (around US$ 32.6 million) and a total turnover of over 5 billion yuan since its launch in June 2013. The number of registered users is around 5 million.

He Jun, founder of the company, positioned Tongbanjie as a service for individual users neglected by the banks. The company targets at young users in early-stage of their career who may not have abundant funds to invest in traditional financial products that usually require a high minimum investment amount.

Win-win Financing, a personal financing app with similar focus on young users, also secured fresh financing earlier this year.

image credit: Tongbanjie

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A Joyful Journey to Reclaim Your Creative Confidence with IDEO Partner Tom Kelley https://technode.com/2014/09/24/joyful-journey-reclaim-creative-confidence-ideo-partner-tom-kelley/ https://technode.com/2014/09/24/joyful-journey-reclaim-creative-confidence-ideo-partner-tom-kelley/#comments Wed, 24 Sep 2014 12:43:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23636 As the much sought-after qualities in leaders today, creativity and innovation have enabled the rise and success of countless companies. These traits become more desirable as the public tends to consider them as talents only attributable to a group of creative thinkers led by architects, designers, or musicians. David Kelley and Tom Kelley, the authors of a […]]]>
Kelleys

As the much sought-after qualities in leaders today, creativity and innovation have enabled the rise and success of countless companies. These traits become more desirable as the public tends to consider them as talents only attributable to a group of creative thinkers led by architects, designers, or musicians.

David Kelley and Tom Kelley, the authors of a book entitled Creative Confidence, believe that the distinction between creative and non-creative groups is a misconception and there are far more creative potentials waiting to be tapped within us all.

As founder and partner of premiere innovation and design firm IDEO, the Kelley brothers have been working on the forefront of innovation industry for more than thirty years. In addition to setting up IDEO, David created Stanford d.school as well as many icons of the digital generation including the first mouse for Apple. Tom is also the author for bestsellers like The Art of Innovation and worked as executive fellow at UC Berkeley and University of Tokyo. TechNode had a chance to talk with Tom to share his journey to a creative life.

How do you define creative confidence? What kind of things do you think deprive our creativity?

Tom: Creative confidence is about two things in almost equal parts. The first part is the natural human ability to come up with fresh ideas, an ability that everybody has. The other part just as important is the courage to act on the idea. Creative confidence is like a muscle which can be strengthened through efforts and experiences. One way that helps people to build their creative confidence is to think like a traveler to a new city, be observant and start to ask more questions about the environment.

The biggest obstacle that prevents us from thinking creatively is fear. When we talk about fear, people think the biggest fear is the fear of failure, but we noticed that it is the fear being judged. Even when you look at children when they are breaking a glass, the first thing they do is to look around. They don’t care whether they broke a glass, they care whether other people see it. Another inhibitor is the hierarchy. For me, it’s ok for the head of organizations to maintain their authority, but it’s is not ok if the hierarchy gets in the way of really good ideas that are rooted in the lower management levels. My suggestions to CEOs is keep your structure for communication and decision-making, but find a way to make the ideas flow up and down thought the hierarchy.

Different from your brother David who has a clear goal of becoming a designer at an early age, you worked in a lot of other industries before finally finding your interest in design. It seems that you are a perfect example in building creative confidence. How’s your journey in achieving the transformation?

Tom: If there’s a state-of-mind of creative confidence, there are multiple ways to approach it. David is born a creative person and is always artistic from early age, although he got a degree in electrical engineering, not the most creative degree in the world.

Before I decided to have a creative life at the age of 32, I worked as accountant and airline consultant, and there’s no sign that I am a special creative people. The message of my life is you can start at any time and you have creativity there waiting for you. It’s kind of being offered and you can reach for it.

You have lived in Japan for quite a long time and must be quite familiar with Asian cultures. From your point of view, how cultures and way of thinking affect the creativeness of peoples. What’s the difference between Asian people and westerners in creativity.

Tom: There’s as much creativity in Asia as in everywhere else in the world. If there’s a place to work on, it’s about the courage. It’s not that Chinese young people coming out of college lack that courage, but facing the sociology of organizations they decide it’s best for them to be not too creative. It is the job for all leaders in the world, especially in China, to get the best creativity out of the team.

According to a survey from Adobe, 80% of 5,000 people they interviewed believe creativity relates to economic growth, but sadly, only 25% of the interviewees acknowledge that they have a chance to live up to their creative potentials. That means 75% of the creative energies of people are wasted. I hope some of the managers will read this book, cause I am not asking them to be a sweet person, it is about helping their companies to grow and to attract the talents.

Strict hierarchy might be the pass for success in the 20th century, but it doesn’t feel true in the 21st century. When you look around in Silicon Valley companies, there’s no hierarchy at all. Although we don’t implement every idea from everybody, we listen. If there’s big new idea in social networking, it’s not going to come from a 60 year-old guy who is running the company. It’s going to come from young people who are experimenting it themselves.

Can you talk a bit about the methodologies to push the circulation of ideas?

Tom: There are many subtle things to push this as a manager. For example, when someone walked into your office to offer his new idea, you have to be very careful in how to react, because new idea are usually not yet perfect and it is very easy to become judgmental. A leader with bad attitude towards flawed new ideas will frighten away talents together with their creativity.

To foster a more innovation-friendly environment, team leaders can ignore all the messiness of the idea, but just look at the core idea inside and say “obviously not perfect yet, but I see the shape of an idea in here, please working on it for two more days and show it to our engineering team to see whether they can make it better”.

As a leader, when you see a new idea, which are always fragile, you either have an instinctive reaction to criticize or have an instinctive reaction to build. Of course, if you look at the idea and it’s really bad, then you should tell them right away. But if you see the value in it, nurture that value and people will bring you more ideas.

Creativity plays an important part in starting a new business. What’s your suggestions for startups in building a creative company from the first day of their establishment.

Tom: Startups is a luxury because you get to decide the company’s culture from the beginning. Since David and me have done this in building IDEO, I would recommend two things if you are starting from scratch. The first thing is try to build meritocracy, a culture in which people speak the plain truth and the best ideas are supported and implemented no matter who said it.

The other is to construct a community that you can do constructive critiques. We have a mechanism to build this constructive critiques process, called “I Like…., I wish…”. It helps to express your opinion on the positive side first, when it comes to criticism, “I wish” is expressed as a personal opinion rather than a fact. You have to be willing to let other experienced people help you to make your work better. If every time somebody want to change anything of your work, you gets super defensive, that’s a problem, because it doesn’t give a chance to develop.

Tom Kelley with Chinese Version of His Book

How do you find a balance point between design and technology, cause their might be obstacles in transforming design into real products.

Tom: One way to answer your question is when you creating something new, we really believe in IDEO that there are three factors to take into account, technical, business and human factors. You can look at many failures that missed one or the others. When you trying to figure out what to make there is a process we call user chooser. You don’t know whether an idea will work until you show it to people who are real customers. Before the success of CoinStar, no one knows whether people would take hassle in carrying their heavy coin jars to the grocery store and paying a commission for counting the coins. The company put five prototypes in grocery stores for six weeks to prove that people would do so. Only by prototyping could we know what the customers choose.

Steve Jobs claimed that Apple never do surveys on user habits and they only guide the preference of users. Who should decide what’s the best design, the manufacturers or users.

Tom: We were very close friends with Steve Jobs during his life time and my advice for all companies in the world is don’t think about Apple. We don’t know if Apple can be Apple without Steve Jobs. I have known Steve in 1980 and the performance of Apple fluctuates depending whether Steve is on Apple’s team or not. Up till now, Steve was involved in every product include the iWatch. He even helped to design Apple’s headquarter. If you want to follow Apple’s model, you pretty much have to be Steve Jobs and I don’t know anybody like him.

When you look at user needs, you are not looking at what they need now but the latent needs. Steve has this magical intuition about people’s needs. Tim Cook is doing a good job so far and we have to judge Apple starting from now.

What impact does technologies, like 3D printing and software, have on design?

Tom: I think what the technologies have done in recent years is not the whole answer. 3D printer does not make you a brilliant designer, but it does enable ideas that come from your brain to come to physical world, just as video editing tools on a laptop computer have made it easy for regular people like us to make a really nice video.

Please talk about the design projects you are most proud of.

Tom: I will give you two answers. We helped a Seattle-based healthstream defibrillator startup to design their product in almost ten years ago. We made it so simple that my six-year-old daughter can use it without instruction. The product is now widely used in airports, train stations and public buildings for first aid and saved the lives of lots people. In some way, it is my most favorite project cause it have saved more lives than any other single product that we have developed. Another project is a school system reinventing project in Peru called Innova Schools. We are designing the business model, curriculum and physical environment for the schools. So far we have built 23 such schools and our goal is to build 200 in total.

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Review-based Medical Platform The CareVoice Helps Patients to Make Better Healthcare Decisions https://technode.com/2014/09/19/the-carevoice-helps-patients-to-make-better-healthcare-decisions/ https://technode.com/2014/09/19/the-carevoice-helps-patients-to-make-better-healthcare-decisions/#comments Fri, 19 Sep 2014 09:03:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23518 The CareVoice Team–Sebastien Gaudin (R2) and Ricky Ng-Adam (R1) China is undergoing a tremendous transformation over the past two decades, not only economically but also socially and technically. The huge demographic changes are exerting increasing pressures on China’s existing healthcare system that is still under strain. It seems that more and more people started to recognize the potentials of […]]]>
The CareVoice-team

The CareVoice Team–Sebastien Gaudin (R2) and Ricky Ng-Adam (R1)

China is undergoing a tremendous transformation over the past two decades, not only economically but also socially and technically. The huge demographic changes are exerting increasing pressures on China’s existing healthcare system that is still under strain.

It seems that more and more people started to recognize the potentials of mHealth as a way to reduce costs of healthcare operations and improve healthcare quality. Investors are voting with massive capital injections in companies related to the sector. The list of such companies to receive funding this year is growing, and includes Chunyu (US$50M in Round C), DXY (US$70M from Tencent), as well as iHealth which just received US$25m from Xiaomi.

As one of the startups focused on mHealth industry, The CareVoice (Kangyu in Chinese) is a Shanghai-based review-based social platform dedicated to healthcare sector, enabling patients to share reviews on hospital services, as well as to connect with other patients and professionals.

The company is focused on a special link of the healthcare industry chain because patients’ experience matters and it is difficult to regain trust from patients once bad impressions were formed, according to Sebastian Gaudin, founder and CEO of the company. It takes 12 positive experiences to make up for one unresolved negative experience, according to a report released by the startup.

The platform aims to help patients to make better decisions in finding best-rated hospitals, physicians and treatments that suit their specific healthcare needs. Users can record their medical experiences and post reviews on hospitals, physicians and drugs. The patients will be able to share reviews anonymously with a network mark only visible by their trusted community to prevent privacy issues.

On the other hand, the platform works with healthcare professionals, helping them to improve patients experiences.  It also expects to develop a strong B2B partnership network. For instance, it has started cooperation with renowned hospitals in Shanghai and several insurance companies.

The Carevoice-ss

Screenshots of The CareVoice App

With main focus in China, The CareVoice has released a Shanghai-based iPhone app December last year. The business started to take off since March this year, recording close to 15,000 reviews from over 7,000 registered users as of present. The users who consulting and using the app is twice as much of this number, added Sebastien. The users are mostly female between 25 to 40 years old, a very health-conscious group. The company has released a mobile web version for beta usage on any mobile devices in June.

Since the platform is now mainly based on a star rating system on various criteria, like service, environment, facilities, the team is planning to engage the users to provide more information, either about themselves or add some narrative comments. Sebastien said they are refining the product to facilitate this goal and help users to be more discriminant about what is good and how to use these information.

Like other passionate entrepreneurs, The CareVoice team aims at something big. Its development path is to construct a perfect engineering system and to test as well as to improve the business model gradually. While there are healthcare needs all over the world, the company hopes to expand globally by localizing the product in regions where they can have a team for customer support and partnership, said Ricky Ng-Adam, CTO of the company. In addition to Chinese market, The CareVoice is also launched in New Delhi.

Sebastien Gaudin has worked in world-leading pharmaceutical firm Sanofi for more than 10 years with 4 years in China. He spotted the potential of mHealth industry and incorporated The CareVoice in Hong Kong in July 2013. Ricky Ng-Adam, a former Google employee, is on board as CTO of the company. Like other peers in this emerging sector, The CareVoice has received new funding from existing investors recently.

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Chinese Game Developer Feiyu Technology Files for Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2014/09/18/chinese-game-developer-feiyu-technology-files-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2014/09/18/chinese-game-developer-feiyu-technology-files-hong-kong-ipo/#comments Thu, 18 Sep 2014 10:01:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23491 Feiyu Technology, a Chinese mobile and web game developer, has filed for an IPO on Hong Kong market. Xiamen Haloer and CAIROT, two of China’s leading game developers, merged together into Feiyu Technology July this year for scale operation. Legendary Chinese angel investor Cai Wensheng is the backer for both of the companies. Founded in 2009, Xiamen Haloer […]]]>
Feiyu Tech

Feiyu Technology, a Chinese mobile and web game developer, has filed for an IPO on Hong Kong market. Xiamen Haloer and CAIROT, two of China’s leading game developers, merged together into Feiyu Technology July this year for scale operation. Legendary Chinese angel investor Cai Wensheng is the backer for both of the companies.

Founded in 2009, Xiamen Haloer is the developer of the hugely popular RPG web game Shenxiandao. It then shifted focus to mobile games with the release of a mobile version of Shenxiandao. Other blockbuster games developed by the company include Jiongxiyou and Luanshi.

On the other hand, CAIROT is the operator of casual games Carrot Fantasy and Carrot Fantasy II, which have amassed more than 100 million users since the launch of the franchise in Aug. 2012. The average monthly active user of Carrot Fantasy exceeds 16.90 million in 2013, according to data from iResearch.

According to prospectus released by the company, Feiyu Technology has recorded a revenue of 129 million yuan (around US$21 million) in H1 this year, of which mobile games account for 90 million yuan or 69.6% of the total revenue. Its annual revenue for 2011, 2012 and 2013 are 33.01 million, 158.73 million and 145.05 million yuan, respectively.

Revenue Feiyu

As of June 30, 2014, Feiyu Technology’s RPG games have registered 198.55 million users and the monthly active user for this June is around 2.30 million. The total registered user of Feiyu’s casual games is around 173 million with monthly active users for June stands at 22.5 million.

The company has rolled out altogether seven mobile and plans to launch new games like Carrot Fantasy: Magic Forest, Jiongxiyou II, Battery Run, etc. from H2 2014 to 2015. The prospectus mentioned the company’s plans to enrich game categories and expand R&D teams by investment or acquisition.

Feiyu has teamed up with over 300 third-party game distribution platforms, including Baidu, Tencent, 360.cn, 37wan, 91wan, among others.

Yao Jianjun, founder of Haloer and current CEO of Feiyu, is a serial entrepreneur who has founded ChinaZ and online data service CNZZ. Chen Jianyu, founder of CAIROT and president of Feiyu, is the co-founder of photo-centered startup Meitu and has worked on development team of IQ browser.

The privatization drives of Chinese game stocks from US market are fueled by Perfect World, Shanda Games and The9. Against this backdrop, Chinese gaming companies are looking for more investor interests in Hong Kong. Web game developer Forgame went public in Hong Kong market September last year and casual game developer Ourgame followed the suit four months latter. Online game operator Linekong initiated the long-rumored Hong Kong IPO earlier this month.

image credit: Feiyu Technology

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Uruguayan Bitcoin Startup Moneero To Accelerate Global Expansion with Special Focus on Asian Market https://technode.com/2014/09/18/moneero-to-accelerate-global-expansion-with-special-focus-on-asian-market/ https://technode.com/2014/09/18/moneero-to-accelerate-global-expansion-with-special-focus-on-asian-market/#respond Thu, 18 Sep 2014 07:03:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23486 Moneero, a Latin American bitcoin startup which recently debuted its wallet services to an initial batch of users, is the developer of a bitcoin banking platform that offers safe access to financial services for the non-tech savvy audiences using mainstream social media and popular devices like feature phones, smartphones and ATMs. Targeting at both developed […]]]>
Place_to_9-12-2014 2-54-26 PM

Moneero, a Latin American bitcoin startup which recently debuted its wallet services to an initial batch of users, is the developer of a bitcoin banking platform that offers safe access to financial services for the non-tech savvy audiences using mainstream social media and popular devices like feature phones, smartphones and ATMs.

Targeting at both developed and emerging markets, the Uruguay-headquarter startup have set up two subsidiaries for global expansion, one in the US and the other is in Hong Kong. “Our Hong Kong company is currently in the process of obtaining a license as a regulated Money Service Operator, which will allow us to roll out in Hong Kong and the Asian markets as one of the first regions, said Steven Morell, chief product officer of the company.

Aiming to transform the SMS network into global payment system, Moneero’s SMS texting services allow users to transfer bitcoin from and to any phone number worldwide. Moneero goes beyond SMS texting and its bitcoin banking platform can easily be connected to any social network channels, turning social media platforms into Bitcoin wallets. It has implemented Facebook and Twitter in western market.

To localize the service in Chinese market, Moneero is currently working on implementations of popular local platforms like Renren and Weibo. The same goes for devices: Moneero can be accessed over web and smartphones, but also over simple GSM phones or devices like ATMs and POS Terminals, which are developed with the help of Chinese partner companies.

Moneero just announced that Rodrigo Benzaquen was appointed as the company’s board of directors. Rodrigo was one of the first employees at Latin America’s leading auction site MercadoLibre, where he was first responsible for site infrastructure and data center strategy, NOC/SOC, Infosec, Network Security, HelpDesk and CloudBuilders until he was promoted to Director of R&D in 2011. He currently works with Kaszek Ventures, an active venture capital fund in Latin America.

image credit: Moneero

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Food Delivery Service Daojia Raises US$50M of Series D Financing Led by JD https://technode.com/2014/09/17/food-delivery-service-daojia-raises-us50m-series-d-financing-led-jd/ https://technode.com/2014/09/17/food-delivery-service-daojia-raises-us50m-series-d-financing-led-jd/#comments Wed, 17 Sep 2014 04:40:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23454 Online food delivery service Daojia.com announced that it has closed US$50 million of Series D financing jointly led by JD.com and Macquarie. (source via Sina) This deal marked JD’s second capital injection in Daojia, which has received undisclosed amount of financing in Series C round one year earlier. The funding will be used in R&D, expansion into new […]]]>
Daojia

Online food delivery service Daojia.com announced that it has closed US$50 million of Series D financing jointly led by JD.com and Macquarie. (source via Sina) This deal marked JD’s second capital injection in Daojia, which has received undisclosed amount of financing in Series C round one year earlier.

The funding will be used in R&D, expansion into new cities and construction of delivery team, according to the company.

Founded in 2010, Daojia differentiate itself from other competitors with a special focus on urban medium- and high-tier users and it has constructed an in-house delivery team.

The company’s data shows that Daojia has nearly 1 million users now, operating in eight cities across the country, including Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, etc., up from only two cities one year earlier. In the past one-year period, its restaurant partners nearly doubled to more than 3,000 from 1,800 in Sept. last year, while the number of deliverymen climbed from over 500 to 1,000.

Sun Hao, founder of Daojia, said they planned to continue the expansion, aiming to operate in 20 to 30 cities by the end of 2015.

Similar food ordering and delivery service Ele.me and Etaoshi also received different amount of funding. Moreover, Chinese leading rating and review service Dianping and Alibaba also added food delivery services to tap this market.

image credit: Daojia

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Microsoft ARD Launches New Entity to Foster Cloud-Powered Innovation in China https://technode.com/2014/09/16/microsoft-ard-launches-new-entity-foster-cloud-powered-innovation-china/ https://technode.com/2014/09/16/microsoft-ard-launches-new-entity-foster-cloud-powered-innovation-china/#respond Tue, 16 Sep 2014 06:18:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23422 Eight months after Microsoft affiliate MS Open Tech set up a subsidiary in Shanghai, the U.S. software company’s Asia-Pacific Research and Development Group (ARD) launched another entity in the city to boost gains distributed throughout Chinese ecosystem. Microsoft Asia-Pacific Technology Company Ltd. is a new company focused on locally producing mobile first, cloud first innovation […]]]>

Eight months after Microsoft affiliate MS Open Tech set up a subsidiary in Shanghai, the U.S. software company’s Asia-Pacific Research and Development Group (ARD) launched another entity in the city to boost gains distributed throughout Chinese ecosystem.

Microsoft Asia-Pacific Technology Company Ltd. is a new company focused on locally producing mobile first, cloud first innovation with global impact. It is primarily composed of Microsoft’s Cloud and Enterprise China engineering group with Shen Yuanqing, CEO of ARD, as chief manager. Since starting in early 2005, the China team has been contributing to core platform products including Microsoft Azure, Windows Server, Power BI for Office 365, Visual Studio and e-Commerce platform.

At the event, ARD and its partners presented the latest technologies, services and solutions in the field of cloud computing, big data, Internet of Things and artificial intelligence.

In cooperation with government of Shanghai Minhang District, the company has developed a management dashboard system that integrates monitoring data from health management, livelihood hotline, public opinion dynamics, air quality, noise and transportation, helping the government to make better decisions.

“Business demands and scenarios increasingly require rapid and constant innovation in our mobile first, cloud first world,” said Scott Guthrie, Executive Vice President of Microsoft’s Cloud and Enterprise Group.

With the cloud as a main priority, ARD established the China Cloud Innovation Center (CCIC) in 2010 in Shanghai to help partners and customers in China. Early this year, Microsoft announced that Azure and Office 365 would be available to all China customers.

Microsoft Ventures Accelerator, a Beijing-based startup incubator since 2012, has supported 85 startups from different industries and areas and reached over 100 million users in China and around the world through Azure.

image credit: ARD

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China’s Yongche Gets Series C Funding, A Battle Among Car Rental Services is Imminent? https://technode.com/2014/09/16/china-yongche-gets-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/09/16/china-yongche-gets-series-c-funding/#comments Tue, 16 Sep 2014 03:44:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23417 Chinese car rental and ride-booking service Yongche confirmed that it has secured Series C financing led by Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC), a Singapore gov-backed investment institution which is also the investor of Alibaba and JD. The company did not announce details of the deal, but local media reports that the financing amount exceeds US$100 million with […]]]>
Yongche

Chinese car rental and ride-booking service Yongche confirmed that it has secured Series C financing led by Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC), a Singapore gov-backed investment institution which is also the investor of Alibaba and JD. The company did not announce details of the deal, but local media reports that the financing amount exceeds US$100 million with participation of Baidu.

If the financing amount was true, Yongche’s total funding would reach nearly US$190 million together with US$10 million of Series A received from Morningside Ventures and Qualcomm Ventures in 2011, US$20 million of A+ round from existing investors and CBC Capital and US$60 million of Series B let by Ctrip and DCM in Dec 2013.

As one of the first Uber-style car rental services in China, Yongche is planning to release a commercial vehicle rental service with Baidu. The service will be integrated into Baidu Map as the only car-booking service focused on business trips on the platform. It is also going to support payment via Baidu Wallet in the future.

The competition in commercial vehicle rental market is heating up in China. After the official launch in Shanghai and Beijing, Uber continues its aggressive expansions to the cities of Guangzhou, Shenzhen, which are now in trial periods. New target cities of the U.S. company include Hangzhou and Chengdu, according to an exec of Uber China. Didi Dache also has plans for this sector and has launched a chauffeur training program in Beijing. PPzuche secured US$10 million of Series A financing led by Sequoia Capital China in June. AAyongche netted US$10 million of funding recently. (source in Chinese)

With different players in commercial car rental industry receiving massive financing rounds, what happened so far sounds quite similar to the conditions of taxi-hailing market around the beginning this year when Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache pocketed huge financing from deep-pocketed bakers of Alibaba and Tencent respectively, and then a multi-million cash burning battle soon ensued.

It is worth nothing that car rental services like Yongche, PPzuche and AAyongche are constantly being questioned with illegal operation problems. Beijing municipality has prohibited car rental companies from using private vehicle or other non-lease vehicles for operation, moreover, car rental companies are not allowed to provide driving labors.

image credit: Yongche

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On-demand Home Appliance Maintenance Service Jdguanjia Receives US$1.6M Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2014/09/15/jdguanjia-receives-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/09/15/jdguanjia-receives-fresh-funding/#comments Mon, 15 Sep 2014 09:58:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23386 Following the success of taxi-hailing app Uber, online services that adopt on-demand model are quickly proliferating in various industries like home service, food delivery, laundry, or even manicure. Beijing based startup Jdguanjia, an on-demand maintenance platform for consumer electronics, secured nearly 10 million yuan (US$ 1.6 million) of Pre-A financing from China Growth Capital. The previous 1.70 […]]]>
Jdguanjia-pic

Following the success of taxi-hailing app Uber, online services that adopt on-demand model are quickly proliferating in various industries like home service, food delivery, laundry, or even manicure.

Beijing based startup Jdguanjia, an on-demand maintenance platform for consumer electronics, secured nearly 10 million yuan (US$ 1.6 million) of Pre-A financing from China Growth Capital. The previous 1.70 million angel round was received angel investors of Wang Lijie, founder of PreAngel, and Gu Hao, partner of Sinowisdom.

Founded in 2013, Jdguanjia, which means “home appliance butler” in Chinese, offers on-demand after-sales and recycling services to consumer electronics. With most of stuff in Beijing, Jdguanjia provides maintenance services to a variety of smartphone brands include Samsung, Nokia, Apple, Xiaomi, Huawei, ZTE, etc., as well as Apple tablets. According to the company, up to 80% of the user requests can be completed within 24 hours with an average service time of half an hour.

The funding will be injected to expand services both to other home appliance categories such as, air conditioners, micro-wave ovens, PCs, fridges, and other cities like Tianjin and Shanghai.

“Nowadays, each Chinese family has an average of 35 home appliances with the size of after-sales market reaching 300 billion yuan. Of the total amount, the market size for smartphone maintenance service is 10 billion yuan”, said Wang Daoping, a representative from China Growth Capital.

image credit: Jdguanjia

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Chinese Manufacturer Vargo Release iVargo, Throwing Punches over Smartphone Security https://technode.com/2014/09/15/chinese-manufacturer-vargo-release-ivargo-throwing-punches-smartphone-security/ https://technode.com/2014/09/15/chinese-manufacturer-vargo-release-ivargo-throwing-punches-smartphone-security/#respond Mon, 15 Sep 2014 08:45:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23379 After the rolling-out for a string of smartphones this year by mobile manufacturers like Xiaomi, Meizu, Smartisan and Coolpad, the recent release of iPhone 6 is pushing the smartphone frenzy to a new height. Chinese hardware maker Vargo took the wraps off iVargo, its answer to the smartphone bandwagon, after four years of development. iVargo is tapping […]]]>

After the rolling-out for a string of smartphones this year by mobile manufacturers like Xiaomi, Meizu, Smartisan and Coolpad, the recent release of iPhone 6 is pushing the smartphone frenzy to a new height.

Chinese hardware maker Vargo took the wraps off iVargo, its answer to the smartphone bandwagon, after four years of development. iVargo is tapping the trend from a different angle–security, since the problem of smartphone security is really getting on the nerves of modern people with more large-scale leakage of private information, according to Fu Zhaowei CEO of the company.

Specs:

  • CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 Quad-core chip
  • Display: 4.5-inch retina screen
  • Storage: 2G
  • Battery: 2400 milliamps
  • OS: Vargo OS
  • Thickness: 8.65 mm
  • Rear Camera: 13 megapixel
  • Front Camera: 2 megapixel
  • Bluetooth: Bluetooth 4.0
  • Network: 2G- 4G networks
  • Colors: Six
  • Others: NFC, GPS, compass, g-sensor, FM
iVargo

Although the hardware configuration of iVargo is not quite impressive as compared with that for peers, the company is putting all the efforts in software to protect the data of users. Targeted at governors, businessmen and others who value mobile security, iVargo is supported by a closed system with data encryption technologies for mobile terminal, data transmission process and the servers.

The SIM card, smartphone, Vargo ID of each user are bounded together. When a Vargo phone got stolen and someone other than the owner tries to remove the SIM card from the smartphone, the data stored in the handset will be locked immediately.

Legitimate users of the phone can unlock or download their data via operations on cloud-based Vargo ID. If users set the status of their Vargo ID as “lost mode”, they can receive geographical information of their lost phones once the handset got WIFI or mobile network connections.

iVargo adopted a military-grade encryption technology in data transmission process, said Fu. He added that Vargo also runs independent servers to serve cooperate clients that demand high-level data security service.

Designed for security-conscious professionals, Vargo OS features a dual system, which enables users to log in either work or daily OS so as to separate corporate and personal information. The operating system also offers several business-targeted features, like event timeline in the slide-to-unlock interface, and sending audio, file, business cards in message, etc.

To guarantee security, the smartphone is only compatible with an in-house store Vstore and do not support app downloads from other stores.

iVargo is available in 16G and 32G versions with the former priced at 2,888 yuan (around US$470). This prices might not that appealing to average users given the products from more popular brands like Xiaomi and Meizu are priced lower than this. The 16G version of Meizu’s MX4s and Xiaomi’s latest product are sold for 1,799 yuan and 1,999 yuan respectively.

It seems that we must wait longer to see whether it worth the price, cause Vargo did not show the actual product of iVargo to the audience at the press conference. The product will be open for preorder on Sept 25 at its official site.

disk

The company also released “One More Thing” at the same event, a 269 yuan (around US$ 44) flash storage disk. The product can transmit 30G file within up to 25 seconds while transmission with regular devices usually takes more than one hour, according to CEO of the company.

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iBeacon-powered Smart Sensor Sensoro Sets to Connect Your apps with Real World https://technode.com/2014/09/12/ibeacon-powered-smart-sensor-sensoro/ https://technode.com/2014/09/12/ibeacon-powered-smart-sensor-sensoro/#respond Fri, 12 Sep 2014 04:23:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23352 As one of the eight outstanding Chinese startups that TechNode brought to TechCrunch Disrupt SF this year, Beijing-based Sensoro is the developer of Yunzi, a smart wireless sensor enabled by Apple’s iBeacon technology that is run on Bluetooth Low Energy technology, aka Bluetooth 4.0 or Bluetooth Smart. The device works as both a sensor and […]]]>
Sensoro1

As one of the eight outstanding Chinese startups that TechNode brought to TechCrunch Disrupt SF this year, Beijing-based Sensoro is the developer of Yunzi, a smart wireless sensor enabled by Apple’s iBeacon technology that is run on Bluetooth Low Energy technology, aka Bluetooth 4.0 or Bluetooth Smart.

The device works as both a sensor and a signal by detecting the location and movement of nearby smart devices, as well as transmitting information to them. It is sold at US$65.99 for each set of three Yunzi.

Inspired by chess piece of Chinese game Weiqi or Go, Yunzi features an elegant and sleek design with dual-color injection modeling decorated by high strength alloy keel. With low-power acceleration chip and light sensor embedded, Yunzi understands the exact position and surrounding environmental conditions. The data collected can be used to interact with the mobile apps that has embedded Yunzi SDK.

The battery life is up to 500 days, according to the company. In addition, the gadget is supported by enterprise level security configuration with an automatic sensor guard to prevent unwanted access. The configure RF is up to a maximum radius of 80 meters.

Sensoropic

As modern smartphone-obsessed users spend more time indoors, Yunzi has benefits in providing micro-location sensitive information to smart devices indoors, where GPS and Wi-Fi are not as precise. It can be used by both individual users at home and enterprise users in in-store and offline payment scenarios to enhance users’ shopping experience, etc.

Although iBeacon technology is built into Apple devices operate on iOS7, it’s worth noting that the same BLE technology is also compatible with Android 4.3. and above.

However, a major barrier in application of this technology is that customers have to turn on Bluetooth and location services on the relevant apps and opt-in to receive in-store or indoor notifications.

A prominent competitor of Sensoro is Estimote, a Disrupt and YC alum, whose beacons (3 for $99) will hit market in October. Yunzi has been put into mass production now.

Founded in July 2013, Sensoro is a Microsoft Ventures Accelerator alum, operating from Beijing, Silicon Valley and Seattle. The founding team members have once worked at organizations like NetEase, Microsoft Research Asia and China Aerospace Research Institute with expertise on large scale parallel processing, mobile internet, big data mining, digital circuits and inertial navigation. The company is planing to release a smart payment and authentication device compatible with Apple Pay.

image credit: Sensoro

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Baidu Invests $10.6M in Yet Another Online Education Company Innobuddy, Operator of SmartStudy and SmartPigai https://technode.com/2014/09/11/baidu-invests-10-6m-yet-another-online-education-company-innobuddy-operator-smartstudy-smartpigai/ https://technode.com/2014/09/11/baidu-invests-10-6m-yet-another-online-education-company-innobuddy-operator-smartstudy-smartpigai/#comments Thu, 11 Sep 2014 10:23:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23333 Baidu is taking a further step to expand to online education industry by investing in a third online education company this year. The Chinese search engine has joined Round C in test prep service Wanxue Education in July and acquired Chuanke one month later. Innobuddy, the operator of online education sites of SmartStudy and SmartPigai, announced that it has secured […]]]>

Baidu is taking a further step to expand to online education industry by investing in a third online education company this year. The Chinese search engine has joined Round C in test prep service Wanxue Education in July and acquired Chuanke one month later.

Innobuddy, the operator of online education sites of SmartStudy and SmartPigai, announced that it has secured US$10.6 million of Series A financing from Baidu at a valuation of nearly US$100 million. The company has previously received 10 million yuan (US$1.6 million) of angel investment from undisclosed investors.

SmartStudy

Launched in Feb. this year, SmartStudy is an online education platform engaged in offering preparation courses that help students to pass standardized language tests before they get enrolled in foreign universities. The courses are mainly dedicated to exam-oriented testing strategies for popular tests like TOEFL, SAT, GRE, GMAT, IELTS, etc.

SmartPigai is a personalized writing and oral language improvement site with similar test-oriented focus like SmartStudy. Users can submit their articles or speeches on certain topics prepared by the platform. Language experts with the site will then give personalized suggestions for improvement based on student’s writing patterns and pronunciations, etc.

SmartPigai

Innobuddy is co-founded by Wei Xiaoliang and Zhai Shaocheng, two former execs from leading Chinese private education company New Oriental.

After this round of financing, Innobuddy plans to shift the focus of both sites from PC to mobile terminals. Wei Xiaoliang, co-founder of the company, mentioned that they are experimenting with applying smart wearable helmet in the learning process in a bid to create better learning environment. Wei added that they are considering to use Baidu Eye.

The proceeds will be used in team construction, marketing, contents, and algorithm development, noted Wei.

In addition to traffic and technical supports from Baidu, Wei expects to find more cooperation opportunities will all the services under Baidu, like Baidu Wenku (document sharing site similar to Google Book), Baidu Brain (an artificial intelligence project), Baidu Zhidao (a Q&A style site with social features), among others.

Similar to the case of Wanxue, Baidu’s investment in Innobuddy seems to be mainly driven by its crave for quality education contents.

image credit: SmartStudy

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O2O Beauty Platform Beauty Plus Raises Fresh Angel Investment https://technode.com/2014/09/10/o2o-beauty-platform-beauty-plus-raises-fresh-angel-investment/ https://technode.com/2014/09/10/o2o-beauty-platform-beauty-plus-raises-fresh-angel-investment/#respond Wed, 10 Sep 2014 10:06:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23278 China’s beauty market grew 13% to 162.5 billion yuan ($26.4 billion) in 2013 along with Chinese people’s growing concerns about personal appearances. As more and more shoppers started to buy beauty products online, their purchasing target is expanding from beauty products to beauty services offered by offline stores. O2O beauty service Beauty Plus has received 8 […]]]>

China’s beauty market grew 13% to 162.5 billion yuan ($26.4 billion) in 2013 along with Chinese people’s growing concerns about personal appearances. As more and more shoppers started to buy beauty products online, their purchasing target is expanding from beauty products to beauty services offered by offline stores.

O2O beauty service Beauty Plus has received 8 million yuan (US$1.3 million) of angel investment from Qinjiang Capital and Andrisen Capital.

Founded in April this year, Beauty Plus is an O2O e-commerce platform that sells beauty services from various offline institutions like beauty salons, barber shops, manicure shops, Yoga and postpartum recovery clubs. The site has attracted over 1,000 offline beauty service merchants, but it now only operates in Shenzhen.

To construct a merchant credit system, Beauty Plus launched deposit and merchant rating mechanisms similar to Taobao’s to protect the interests of customers. The deposit will be used to compensate the users when they are dissatisfied with the service.

The company also operates a namesake app where offline merchants can check the status of their shops, and individual users can make reservations and make comments, etc. The app also integrates a beauty community feature, allowing users to share beauty tips.

image credit: Beauty Plus

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B2C Eyewear Retailer SmartBuyGlasses Spills Tips on Localizing Services in China: Joint Interview with Rackspace & SmartBuyGlasses Execs (II) https://technode.com/2014/09/10/rackspace-smartbuyglasses-part-ii/ https://technode.com/2014/09/10/rackspace-smartbuyglasses-part-ii/#respond Wed, 10 Sep 2014 07:36:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23260 As cloud service levels tech battlefield, startups are competing with giant companies from the same starting line. (Please click here for Part I of this interview) SmartBuyGlasses is a B2C e-commerce platform that sells a large range of designer sunglasses, prescription eyewear, contact lenses, optical products and optical services with operations in the U.S., Canada, […]]]>

As cloud service levels tech battlefield, startups are competing with giant companies from the same starting line. (Please click here for Part I of this interview)

SmartBuyGlasses is a B2C e-commerce platform that sells a large range of designer sunglasses, prescription eyewear, contact lenses, optical products and optical services with operations in the U.S., Canada, China, Italy, etc. Starting the business from Australia, SmartBuyGlasses expanded globally with the infrastructure support of Rackspace. It is now available in 15 languages and across more than 30 countries.

While e-commerce sites that sell apparels and other accessories are often haunted by high return rates caused by poor fit, SmartBuyGlasses overcomes the obstacle by adopting a virtual 3D try-on technology. The technology enables customers to try the glasses from their computers, helping the users to see how the glasses look on their faces in real time.

According to the company’s co-founder Tony Zhuang, customers spend more time (20% longer) on their website since the adoption of this 3D try-on tool. He added that the users can take pictures while trying the glasses and share them to social networks like Facebook and WeChat.

To further remove customers’ concerns before the purchase, SmartBuyGlasses also offers pictures and videos of the glasses so that users can see the products in more detail.

During the global expansion of SmartBuyGlasses, Chinese market, which has recorded 3-digit growth in the past two years, will be a main focus of the company in the future, said Tony. The e-commerce retailer has set up an office in Hong Kong and is building a headquarter in Shanghai with multiple facilities, including call center, logistics and IT team.

In addition to localizing the languages, SmartBuyGlasses has launched a bunch of measures to localize its service in Chinese market. It has integrated local payment methods like AliPay. Considering Chinese customers may looking for different brands as compared with foreign customers, SmartBuyGlasses consults internal sales data like best sellers, best brands in other Asian countries of Japan and Korean, the regions that share similar purchase behaviors and fashion trends with China, and then applies the research results to Chinese market.

The site is also trying to interact with customers in a local way, for example, Chinese customers may prefer messages or social networking platforms like QQ, Sina Weibo and WeChat rather than emails for customer service.

Tony thinks Chinese users demand high-quality services, because they are used to get great services from Taobao, Tmall, like 24-hour shipping time, 7-day no question return, etc. SmartBuyGlasses is trying to offer the same level of services.

SBG

When talking about future technology trends, Tony pointed out mobile will be a huge opportunity for success in Chinese e-commerce industry. SmartBuyGlasses is now optimizing its mobile websites, offering better customer experiences in mobile devices. With the aim of duplicating the 3D try-on experience on mobile, the company plans to release apps for both iOS and Android platforms within six months, according to Tony.

SmartBuyGlasses is now in the process to introduce a hybrid cloud together with RackSpace. Tony thinks hybrid cloud is an awesome product, because on the one hand users can take advantage of its flexibility and strong computing power. On the other hand, they still can have very safe data backups.

image credit: SmartBuyGlasses

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Chinese Search Engine Baidu Recruits Micosoft Top Exec Zhang Yaqin https://technode.com/2014/09/09/chinese-search-engine-baidu-recruits-micosoft-top-exec-zhang-yaqin/ https://technode.com/2014/09/09/chinese-search-engine-baidu-recruits-micosoft-top-exec-zhang-yaqin/#respond Tue, 09 Sep 2014 09:29:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23210 Zhang Yaqin, a Microsoft veteran who has been credited with driving Microsoft’s R&D efforts in China, is leaving the software company for personal reasons. [Update] Baidu announced that he would join Chinese search giant Baidu as president for new business. He would report directly to Robin Li, the co-founder and chairman of Baidu. Zhang worked as cooperate vice […]]]>

Zhang Yaqin, a Microsoft veteran who has been credited with driving Microsoft’s R&D efforts in China, is leaving the software company for personal reasons. [Update] Baidu announced that he would join Chinese search giant Baidu as president for new business. He would report directly to Robin Li, the co-founder and chairman of Baidu.

Zhang worked as cooperate vice president of Microsoft and chairman of Microsoft Asia-Pacific Research and Development Group. He led more than 3,000 engineers and scientists engaged in basic research, technology innovations and incubation, product development and strategic partnerships, according to the report.

The now 57-year-old Zhang joined Microsoft as chief scientist at Microsoft Research Asia in 1999. After taking the post as chairman of Microsoft Research Asia during 2000 to 2004, he worked as vice president to oversee Microsoft’s mobile and embedded division, including Window Mobile and Windows CE platform. Since 2006, Zhang is responsible for driving Microsoft’s overall research and development efforts in the Asia-Pacific region.

In recent years, Chinese tech companies like Baidu and Xiaomi has been voracious in snapping up high-profile talents from global Internet giants such as Microsoft and Google in a bid to boost their international businesses and management levels.

Baidu hired Andrew Ng, formerly head of Stanford University’s artificial-intelligence lab, earlier this year to lead its new R&D center and Baidu Brain plan. Hugo Barra, former vice president of product management for Android, left Google for Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi as Vice President of International last year. Zhang Hongjiang, a founding member of Microsoft Research Asia Group, left the software company and join Kingsoft as CEO in 2011.

image credit: Microsoft-news

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How Cloud Services Help Companies to Scale Their Businesses: Joint Interview with Rackspace and SmartBuyGlasses Execs (I) https://technode.com/2014/09/09/rackspace-smartbuyglasses-part-i/ https://technode.com/2014/09/09/rackspace-smartbuyglasses-part-i/#comments Tue, 09 Sep 2014 07:19:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23195 Last week, Ajit Melarkode, managing director of Rackspace Asia-Pacific, and Tony Zhuang, co-founder of e-commerce eyewear retailer SmartBuyGlasses, sit down with TechNode for a joint interview on a wide-ranged discussion ranging from cloud strategies to website building tips for e-commerce retailers. The U.S. managed cloud company Rackspace has been the foundation of SmartBuyGlasses.com infrastructure since 2008, […]]]>

Last week, Ajit Melarkode, managing director of Rackspace Asia-Pacific, and Tony Zhuang, co-founder of e-commerce eyewear retailer SmartBuyGlasses, sit down with TechNode for a joint interview on a wide-ranged discussion ranging from cloud strategies to website building tips for e-commerce retailers.

The U.S. managed cloud company Rackspace has been the foundation of SmartBuyGlasses.com infrastructure since 2008, helping the latter to expand beyond Australia, the market where the e-commerce platform started its business. Under the support of Rackspace, SmartBuyGlasses achieved the business goal to double
sales during the 2013 holiday season.

Rackspace is moving towards a managed cloud approach this year, helping companies to manage their cloud rather than only providing infrastructure services.

There has been rumors about a Rackspace acquisition by teleco CenturyLink recently.

According to Ajit, Rackspace differentiates itself from other services in offering hybrid cloud services of public cloud, private cloud, dedicated cloud, and most importantly, it combines the three.

“Public cloud is for everyone, but it is not necessarily for everything. So if you have applications that are not spiky in the usage, you are not going to make that much of economic cost for using public clouds.”

As more foreign infrastructure services like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure are tapping Chinese market, Rackspace is also trying to find more opportunities in the emerging market.

Rackspace set up data center in Hong Kong in 2008 and started to explore Chinese market in 2009. Although the company don’t have data center in mainland China now, it cooperates with a lot of local partners to serve the market with Hong Kong as the stepping stone, said Ajit.

The cloud usage are different in various countries, Ajit noted. In China, a lot of the cloud usage are still private cloud, Singapore is more dominated by public cloud. It is a combination of public cloud and dedicated cloud in India, while the U.S. and U.K. still have very strong public cloud role.

Another difference between various markets is what the cloud is used for. In the west, we see a lot of cloud usage for disaster recovery, etc. In China, cloud are used for initial usages like backup, storage, but it is changing rapidly, said Ajit.

Rackspace Asia-Pacific focused on helping westbound Asia-Pacific companies to go global and western companies to come in to APAC region, he noted.

As startup scene is booming, Ajit thinks many entrepreneurs rush to set up their company websites without identifying how their website will be used and the type of IT infrastructure needed to successfully support it. Here are some takeaways from Ajit for starting an online business.

–Determine the focus of your website

The first step when setting up an online business is to determine what you’re getting online for. In fact, pinpointing and understanding your online presence will determine what services and solutions are most critical for you to invest in.

For example, if you’re mainly building a website for discovery and brand awareness, then your biggest investment should be in search engine optimisation to boost the visibility of your site. However, if the primary reason is for e-commerce, then investments should be made on the user interface and security to ensure the customer experience is simple, quick, and secure.

–Look to the future, not the present

It’s also important to build your online business with a future outlook in mind. Companies should think in terms of the future of their business, asking themselves: who will be using the site, how many visitors are expected, and how often will the content need to be updated?

As a business grows, so does traffic and content. Therefore, an investment should be made in a flexible and scalable hosting solution, letting you build capacity when it’s needed.

This is especially important for e-commerce companies, as traffic most likely peaks during the holidays or has seasonal spurts. To be successful, companies need to implement an IT solution to effectively manage it, ensuring the website stays up and running despite variations in traffic.

–Your website is a representation of you

Remember, your website is the online face of your brand. If a customer or a potential customer’s first experience with your site is poor, there’s no guaranteeing that they will come back. Therefore, as a start-up who’s just breaking into the market, it is essential your site is optimized, high performing and always running, ensuring a seamless experience for your customer from day one.

Please click here for interview with Tony Zhuang in Part II.

image credit: Rackspace

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ASUS Debuts a 260 Dollar ZenWatch to Tap Smartwatch Industry https://technode.com/2014/09/04/asus-debuts-a-260-dollar-zenwatch-to-tap-smartwatch-industry/ https://technode.com/2014/09/04/asus-debuts-a-260-dollar-zenwatch-to-tap-smartwatch-industry/#respond Thu, 04 Sep 2014 06:55:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23134 Given the PC slump, Taiwanese consumer notebook vendor ASUS has been trying to explore new businesses like smartphone and tablet in recent years. Actually, tablet is ASUS’s second largest product category, accounting for 20% of the company’s total earnings last year. To further diversify the business, ASUS debuts its first smartwatch product ZenWatch at IFA […]]]>

Given the PC slump, Taiwanese consumer notebook vendor ASUS has been trying to explore new businesses like smartphone and tablet in recent years. Actually, tablet is ASUS’s second largest product category, accounting for 20% of the company’s total earnings last year. To further diversify the business, ASUS debuts its first smartwatch product ZenWatch at IFA in Berlin yesterday to tap the burgeoning market.

ZenWatch features a stylish design with stainless steel case, brown swappable Italian leather wristband and rose-gold-colored band inset. Compared with other smartwatch manufacturers, ASUS puts more emphasis on refining the design and craftsmanship, probably because the products is aiming for people who like luxury watches. Here are specs of the product.

  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon™ 400 with 1.2GHz CPU
  • OS: Android Wear
  • RAM: 512MB
  • Storage: 4GB
  • Screen: AMOLED 1.63-inch, 320×320
  • Battery: 1.4Wh
  • Water Proof: IP55
  • Size: 50.6 x 39.8 x 7.9-9.4mm
  • Weight: 50g

ZenWatch features a curved square screen, not following round display trend acclaimed by other smartwatch makers like Moto, LG, Geak Watch, and inWatch. But this design could cause users concerns since round dial plate design might better suits people’s aesthetics for a wrist timepiece.

Zenwatch-1

In terms of operating system, ZenWatch is enabled by ZenUI which is based on Android Wear, the wearable platform Google released in March. The adoption of Android Wear OS may be an advantage for ZenWatch to tap other markets, but it could be an obstacle for its inroads in Chinese market. The user experience of Google service-based Android Wear may be harmed in China, since some Google services are blocked here. Chinese smartwatch brand Geak Watch once considered to adopt Android Wear for the second generation of its product, but eventually gave up due to this reason.

Asus is also going for health and fitness features by integrating “Bio sensor” which is used to measure relaxation levels and 9 Axis Sensor to measure steps taken, heart rate, calories burned, etc.

The product is sold for 199 Euros (US$260) in Europe, but the price tag may vary according to different markets. ASUS did not release shipment timetable for ZenWatch this time.

image credit: NetEase

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Chinese Search Engine Baidu Showcases Google Glass-like Baidu Eye https://technode.com/2014/09/03/chinese-search-engine-baidu-showcases-google-glass-like-baidu-eye/ https://technode.com/2014/09/03/chinese-search-engine-baidu-showcases-google-glass-like-baidu-eye/#comments Wed, 03 Sep 2014 12:08:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23098 When Baidu first released the prototype for its tech accessory project “Eye” in April last year, many have speculated that the news was just one of the April Fool’s Day pranks. The company confirmed latter that the product is based on an actual internal project, albeit more detailed information was scare back then. The Chinese […]]]>

When Baidu first released the prototype for its tech accessory project “Eye” in April last year, many have speculated that the news was just one of the April Fool’s Day pranks. The company confirmed latter that the product is based on an actual internal project, albeit more detailed information was scare back then.

The Chinese search engine took the wraps off Baidu Eye today at Baidu Technology Innovation Conference this year. Since the design and functionalities of Baidu Eye prototype, as revealed last year, is quite similar to Google Glass, the product is inevitably compared with and considered as a clone with minor innovations. But Baidu Eye released today isn’t that similar to Google Glass after all.

Eye

Although Baidu Eye is still worn like glasses, it do not have LCD display. Kaiser Kuo, Baidu’s director of international communications explains that the addition of a screen will impair vision and tire the eyes of wearers. Users can use voice or gestures to control the device. When wearers circles an object in the field with fingers or hold an object in their hands, Baidu Eye can recognize and analyze the objects by recognizing the gestures, and the analysis results will be sent to the connected smartphones.

According to the company, Baidu Eye is powered by Baidu Brain, Baidu’s artificial intelligence project that is led by Andrew NG, once head of Google Brain, the American firm’s deep learning project.

Baidu Eye is expected to find more applications in the fields of O2O, education, e-commerce, transportation. Intime Retail (HK: 1833), one of China’s leading department store operators, has entered partnership with Baidu to integrate its service into Baidu Eye and explore cooperation opportunities to provide new shopping experiences to customers.

The product released today is still not the final version and more features like syncing with social networks and picture/video taking will be included latter, according to Kuo. The company did not mention when the product will be available to the masses.

As hardware is becoming a hot spot in China, Baidu is also putting more focus on this sector. The company released four products for its hardware brand Xiaodu and launched a dedicated website for wearables last year. Baidu aims to attract more partners to adopt its cloud infrastructure and create an App Store-like platform, where users can upload data related to their daily life, once noted by Hou Zhenyu, chief architect of Baidu Cloud.

image credit: Anzhuo

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Taiwan Mobile Authentication Startup AirSig Pockets Funding from Foxconn for Global Expansion https://technode.com/2014/09/03/taiwan-mobile-authentication-startup-airsig-pockets-funding-from-foxconn-for-global-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/09/03/taiwan-mobile-authentication-startup-airsig-pockets-funding-from-foxconn-for-global-expansion/#comments Wed, 03 Sep 2014 09:32:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23085 Taiwan-based mobile authentication startup AirSig has received US$2M of investment from Hon Hai/Foxconn Technology Group. Under the deal, Foxconn will hold a 10% of its share and join the board of directors, bringing the valuation of AirSig to USD$20M. The investment from Foxconn will be used in R&D and expansion into global markets, according to […]]]>
2014_APEC_AirSig_3

Taiwan-based mobile authentication startup AirSig has received US$2M of investment from Hon Hai/Foxconn Technology Group. Under the deal, Foxconn will hold a 10% of its share and join the board of directors, bringing the valuation of AirSig to USD$20M. The investment from Foxconn will be used in R&D and expansion into global markets, according to Pokai Michael Chen, CEO of the company.

AirSig is engaged in developing digital signing technology Air Signature which can accurately identify user and command at the same time. Enabled by the g-sensor and gyroscope that are embedded in smartphones, Air Signature can capture user’s unique way of writing for verifying identity and recognizing command spontaneously.

To unlock the phones, users only need to write in the air using their handsets like a magic wand while keeping one finger on the touch screen during the signing process. The technology also can be used in mobile devices, e-payment, e-commerce, IoT, etc.

Unlock-password

Interface of AirSig Unlock and AirSig Password Wallet

The startup has rolled out three products powered by Air Signature technology: AirSig Unlock, AirSig Password Wallet and AirDoor. AirSig Unlock is an app that helps users to launch apps with one shot by allowing them to set custom gestures to various apps. The app will authenticate and recognize the commands, then activate the apps directly. AigSig Password Wallet is an android input-oriented app, helping users to log in accounts by signing in the air, avoiding any long typing contexts before entering the accounts. AirDoor utilizes the Air Signature tech beyond smartphone to control physical doors.

When compared with other technologies, the company believes the Air Signature tech has overcome some of the shortcomings of other mainstream mobile authentication technologies for password is hard to remember and type; fingerprint identification is not available to most smartphones due to high cost; and facial recognition is easy to hack with photo and hard to use under certain lighting environments.

When it comes to the crucial factor of security, AirSig claimed to be a 3-factor authentication solution, because it considers what you know (your signature), who you are (the particular way to sign you code), and what you have (your own smartphone with AirSig installed) at the same time.

The company was founded in June this year by a group talents who have rich experience in web security and marketing, and once worked at well-known Interment companies like Trend Micro, ASUS, Acer and Inventec.

image credit: AirSig

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Personal Bookkeeping App Suishouji Raises Tens of Million Dollars in Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/09/02/personal-bookkeeping-app-suishouji-raises-series-b-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/09/02/personal-bookkeeping-app-suishouji-raises-series-b-financing/#respond Tue, 02 Sep 2014 08:44:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23041 Chinese bookkeeping app Suishouji has secured millions of dollars in Series B financing led by Fosun Capital and followed by Series A investor Sequoia Capital  China. Suishouji helps users to achieve the goal of being economical and to better master their financial status by keeping accounts, setting budgets, controlling unnecessary expenditure, etc. The note-taking solution […]]]>
Suishouji

Chinese bookkeeping app Suishouji has secured millions of dollars in Series B financing led by Fosun Capital and followed by Series A investor Sequoia Capital  China.

Suishouji helps users to achieve the goal of being economical and to better master their financial status by keeping accounts, setting budgets, controlling unnecessary expenditure, etc. The note-taking solution provides visual and complete dynamic reports to help users know where their spending goes in life. The app also sends alerts to through shot messages or emails when users’ spending exceed the budgets, helping them to control urges for shopping.

The app has amassed over 120 million users, with monthly active users stands at around 3 million, according to the company. The app books over 10 million of notes per day, managing 500 billion yuan (around US$82 billion) of debts and 100 billion yuan of financial investments in 2013. The company expects these figures to double this year.

Feidee, the developer of Suishouji, was initially financed by Kingdee, a Hong Kong-listed enterprise financial software developer and the former employer of core members of Feidee founding team. Feidee is the also the developer of popular credit card manager Kaniu, which has raised US$10 million of funding from Sequoia Capital China last year.

The company added that the funding will be used in data mining and opening up data collected from Suishouji and Kaniu to domestic online finance startups so as to bring them more traffic.

image credit: Feidee

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Tencent Injects US$70M in Health Service Community DXY to Tap China’s Red-hot Healthcare Industry https://technode.com/2014/09/02/tencent-injects-us70m-health-service-community-dxy-tap-chinas-red-hot-healthcare-industry/ https://technode.com/2014/09/02/tencent-injects-us70m-health-service-community-dxy-tap-chinas-red-hot-healthcare-industry/#comments Tue, 02 Sep 2014 03:24:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23033 Ting Ting Group (Dingxiangyuan — DXY), one of China’s largest online healthcare service communities that claimed more than 4 million registered members in China and other countries, will receive a strategic investment of US$70 million from Tencent (HK:00700) in exchange for a minority equity stake in DXY on a fully diluted and as converted basis. Following […]]]>
Dxy-pic

Ting Ting Group (Dingxiangyuan — DXY), one of China’s largest online healthcare service communities that claimed more than 4 million registered members in China and other countries, will receive a strategic investment of US$70 million from Tencent (HK:00700) in exchange for a minority equity stake in DXY on a fully diluted and as converted basis.

Following the closing of this investment, DXY will work with Tencent on a series of initiatives to bring its services to Tencent’s various platforms, including exploring possible services to integrate into WeChat and Mobile QQ, citing the press release. Started as a pharmacopoeia and providing services to doctors and healthcare companies, DXY has been investing in and exploring opportunities related to consumer healthcare since last year, with its products such as the Family Medicine App and DXY Doctor amassing millions of users.

DXY plans to invest the capital received from this investment and other resources into developing healthcare products for doctors, pharmaceutical companies, and consumers. Looking ahead, DXY will launch products in three categories — WeChat-based products, mobile apps, and Web-based products. Moreover, the fund will be used to construct a platform for private practice doctors, allowing more doctors to practice individually or in small group offices rather than concentrating medical resources in big hospitals. DXY also plans to experiment with O2O services, providing doctors in China with a platform and resources to carry out their medical practice on the go thereby fully unlocking the value of their expertise. There will also be O2O services aimed at patients that offer patients a better user experience.

Previously, DXY completed two rounds of investments from DCM and Shunwei China Internet Fund. Following this round of investment, DXY’s founding management team will continue to have a majority stake in DXY and have a majority in its board of directors. David Feng, Vice President of DXY and Richard Peng, Vice President of Tencent, will become DXY’s board members.

With the fast approaching of aging society and government supports, Chinese healthcare industry receiving more attentions from the public. Tencent’s arch-rival Alibaba Group has made early inroads into this sector with a series of moves like acquisition of CITIC 21CN to control drug-data, launching drug authenticity plan, future hospital plan, and supporting Alipay Wallet mobile payment in Pharmacies, etc. Mobile health app Chunyu just landed a landmark US$50 million series C round earlier this month. Internet health platform Kanchufang has received million-dollar level investment. Other startups engaged in this industry are mobile pharmaceutical platform Zhaoniya,and healthcare social platform The CareVoice. image credit: DXY

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Alipay Wallet Teams Up with Huawei to Release Mobile Fingerprint Payment Solution https://technode.com/2014/09/01/alipay-wallet-teams-huawei-release-mobile-fingerprint-payment-solution/ https://technode.com/2014/09/01/alipay-wallet-teams-huawei-release-mobile-fingerprint-payment-solution/#comments Mon, 01 Sep 2014 10:07:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23019 Alipay Wallet, China’s largest third-party payment platform, and smartphone maker Huawei jointly rolled out a biometric security solution for mobile payments today. The new technology will be built into Huawei’s soon-to-be-launched smartphone, the Mate 7. Users of a new Huawei smartphone equipped with a fingerprint reader will be able to make mobile e-payments without passwords […]]]>

Alipay Wallet, China’s largest third-party payment platform, and smartphone maker Huawei jointly rolled out a biometric security solution for mobile payments today.

The new technology will be built into Huawei’s soon-to-be-launched smartphone, the Mate 7. Users of a new Huawei smartphone equipped with a fingerprint reader will be able to make mobile e-payments without passwords using Alipay’s Wallet app, Alipay said in a press release today.

The biometric technology, including encryption and authentication managed by Huawei, will allow mobile users to confirm payments for a wide variety of goods and services with their smartphones simply by swiping a digit instead of lengthy code.

To fend off the hackers, Huawei is providing chip-level security for the Mate 7 with fingerprint data being saved and stored in the TurstZone of cellphone chips. Android system and third party software do not have access to the fingerprint data which is encrypted and stored in the isolated zone.

According to the company, the data cannot be read by the users and only data writing and deleting operations are allowed. In addition, the data stored in the cellphones cannot be used to recreate image of fingerprints.

Huawei will also employ high-level encryption and verification to ensure only approved third-party applications, such as Alipay Wallet, are allowed to access the fingerprint information for transactions.

 image credit: Alipay

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Chrome Extension Ballloon Helps You to Fly Web Files to Clouds https://technode.com/2014/09/01/chrome-extension-ballloon-helps-fly-web-files-clouds/ https://technode.com/2014/09/01/chrome-extension-ballloon-helps-fly-web-files-clouds/#comments Mon, 01 Sep 2014 08:24:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=23008 Originated from e-commerce payment sector, one-click solution is becoming pretty much what everyone wants for online experience. Chengdu-based Ballloon is one of the startups that are trying to bring this superior experience to cloud saving industry. With one left click, Ballloon, a handy Chrome extension, enables users to save images, pics, pdf files or links directly […]]]>

Originated from e-commerce payment sector, one-click solution is becoming pretty much what everyone wants for online experience. Chengdu-based Ballloon is one of the startups that are trying to bring this superior experience to cloud saving industry.

With one left click, Ballloon, a handy Chrome extension, enables users to save images, pics, pdf files or links directly to their Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive or Box without downloading steps. According to the company’s site, more cloud service options like Copy and SugarSync will be available in the future. To get mobile, Ballloon also connects its service with Yo, allowing users to receive alerts when files arrive.

You can hover the mouse over the images and files until finding clouds icons at the right top corner. After clicking on these icons, the documents will be saved to the designated destinations, which can be edited at the cloud setting page. You can also save links by right clicking the URL when browsing a web page.

Ballloon-1

Another nice features that differentiates Ballloon from other similar services is it keeps a log of what and where the users have saved at the Departure interface, helping them to trace the cloud saving histories when losing track of previous documents.

Madhouse Tech, the developer of Ballloon, is established by a group of passionate young visionaries in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. Since rolling out Ballloon 1.0 version in April this year, the teams has fixed tons of bugs in more than 40 beta versions as of present.

Unlike most of Chinese startups that focused on domestic markets when first starting business, Madhouse Tech targets at overseas market since the very beginning of its establishment, given the service is based on Chrome and lots of the Google’s services are blocked in China.

The company has raised seven-digit yuan in angel round and plans to raise Series A when the users grows tenfold of that for present. Madhouse Tech did not disclose the number of current users in an emailed interview, but it has received a handful of positive feedback on the Google site.

image credit: Ballloon

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Female Social Shopping Site Itugo Raises 8-digit Dollars Funding to Develop Faison Social App In https://technode.com/2014/08/29/female-social-shopping-site-itugo-raises-8-digit-dollars-funding-to-develop-faison-social-app-in/ https://technode.com/2014/08/29/female-social-shopping-site-itugo-raises-8-digit-dollars-funding-to-develop-faison-social-app-in/#comments Fri, 29 Aug 2014 10:42:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22977 Itugo, a social shopping platform that focused on the sale of female branded products, reportedly received eight-digit dollars of Series A funding from Matrix Partners, Incapital and National Foundation under Chinese Academy of Science. The company has received Pre-A round financing from a Zhejiang-based fund last November. [Update]: Itugo has confirmed the news with TechNode today. Launched in July […]]]>

Itugo, a social shopping platform that focused on the sale of female branded products, reportedly received eight-digit dollars of Series A funding from Matrix Partners, Incapital and National Foundation under Chinese Academy of Science. The company has received Pre-A round financing from a Zhejiang-based fund last November. [Update]: Itugo has confirmed the news with TechNode today.

Launched in July 2012, the Hangzhou-based startup helps female users to buy clothes or accessories while they browse through the Internet. It also provides female consumers a platform to share their shopping experiences. Different from other social shopping sites like Mogujie, Itugo only sells branded products.

The site now claimed more than 15 million users and cooperates with over 10K female cloth brands. After two years of development, Itugo has more than 80 employees with core team members once worked at Alibaba, local portal platform 19lou or Zhejiang Daily Media Group.

In

According to the company, the proceeds will be used to develop In, a social picture sharing app for girls. After logging in with either Sina Weibo or QQ accounts, In users can add various tags, like brands, location, interests, cutie virtual pasters or any comments to the pictures and share them with friends.

Itugo rolled out In three months ago to capitalize on the rise of mobile trend. The app has recorded more than 2 million active users as of present, according to data released by the company.

image credit: Itugo

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Tencent and Baidu Team Up with Wanda to Challenge Dominance of Alibaba in Chinese E-commerce Industry https://technode.com/2014/08/29/tencent-baidu-team-wanda-challenge-dominance-alibaba-chinese-e-commerce-industry/ https://technode.com/2014/08/29/tencent-baidu-team-wanda-challenge-dominance-alibaba-chinese-e-commerce-industry/#comments Fri, 29 Aug 2014 08:17:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22964 Wanda Group, China’s top commercial property conglomerate which is also engaged in tourism, hotels and entertainment, is teaming up with Chinese Internet giants Tencent and Baidu to set up an e-commerce joint venture by investing 5 billion yuan (around US$814 million) on aggregate. Wanda will hold a dominant 70% stake in the joint venture, while Tencent and […]]]>

Wanda Group, China’s top commercial property conglomerate which is also engaged in tourism, hotels and entertainment, is teaming up with Chinese Internet giants Tencent and Baidu to set up an e-commerce joint venture by investing 5 billion yuan (around US$814 million) on aggregate. Wanda will hold a dominant 70% stake in the joint venture, while Tencent and Baidu will own 15%, respectively.

According to the agreement, the three partners will deepen their collaborations by connecting account systems, sharing traffic, membership benefits, big data, payment and online finance, etc.

Wang Jianlin, chairman of Wanda, added they planned to introduce new investors and the investment amount is expected to reach 20 billion yuan in future five years.

Wang emphasized that the new joint venture will integrate Wanda’s offline retailing resources with location, search and communication services offered by the two partners to build an O2O e-commerce platform. Wanda E-commerce is engaged in sell services rather than physical products, he added. “O2O is the biggest pie in e-commerce and this is just the beginning,” said Wang.

Some analysts pointed out that Tencent’s previous deal with JD, China’s No.2 e-commerce platform by market share, might be one of the reasons for why Wanda E-commerce gives priority to O2O sector. According to the agreement Tencent inked with JD earlier this year, JD will be Tencent’s premier partner in physical product e-commerce industry, and Tencent now only maintained virtual product e-commerce and O2O local life businesses.

The joint venture has named Dong Ce, former executive of luxury product e-commerce sites Jiapin.com and Xiu.com, as CEO. Gao Xia, former vice president of Gaopeng, and Cao Dajun, former CIO of Newegg Greater Los Angeles Area, are respectively appointed as COO and CTO of Wanda E-commerce, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

This tie-up is one of Tencent’s moves to challenge the dominance of Alibaba in China’s e-commerce sector. In the same deal mentioned-above, Tencent acquired a 15% stake in JD. It also transferred its e-commerce sites to JD and allows JD to integrate its service in WeChat and Mobile QQ to commercialize its huge user base. JD grows and catches up with Alibaba rapidly after the cooperation.

Wanda’s establishment of e-commerce join venture us to recall the widely-discussed anecdote between Wang Jianlin and Jack Ma, president of Alibaba. Holding divergent views on how China will shop in 10 years, the two Chinese tycoons almost made a 100 million yuan (US$16 million) bet on the future of Chinese retail sector. In 2013, Wang offered a bet to give Ma 10 million yuan if online consumption has surpassed 50 percent of total retail volume in ten years, and Ma should give Wang the same amount should online consumption fall short.

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Why IDG Taking Bold Bets on Post-90s Gen Entrepreneurs: IDG Founding Partner Hugo Shong https://technode.com/2014/08/28/idg-puts-much-focus-post-90s-gen-entrepreneurs-idg-founding-partner-hugo-shong/ https://technode.com/2014/08/28/idg-puts-much-focus-post-90s-gen-entrepreneurs-idg-founding-partner-hugo-shong/#comments Thu, 28 Aug 2014 09:37:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22924 At Macworld Asia Conference this year, Lu Gang, founder of TechNode, had on-stage interview with Hugo Shong (Xiong Xiaoge), founding partner of IDG Ventures, for the third year in a roll. The conversation covers a variety of topics, raging from the rise of post-90s gen entrepreneurs to venture capital in the U.S. and China. According to Hugo, […]]]>

At Macworld Asia Conference this year, Lu Gang, founder of TechNode, had on-stage interview with Hugo Shong (Xiong Xiaoge), founding partner of IDG Ventures, for the third year in a roll. The conversation covers a variety of topics, raging from the rise of post-90s gen entrepreneurs to venture capital in the U.S. and China.

According to Hugo, his happiest moment last year is when IDG successful took exit from 91 Wireless after Baidu acquired the company with US$1.85 billion. In 2006, IDG raised around US$300 million funding together with Accel Partners and they invested in around 20+ mobile Internet startups. Back then the business model of mobile Internet services was not formed and most of the other VCs held a wait-and-see attitude towards this sector.

As young entrepreneurs are becoming an unneglectable force in Chinese tech industry, IDG is putting more emphasis on startups founded by post-90s gen teams. The venture capital has invested 14 such projects as of present and held campus startup competitions in 18 universities all over the country. Last week, IDG set up a US$ 100 million fund which is dedicated to help these young entrepreneurs.

Hugo said he is now engaged in studying the social community, interests and lifestyles of post-90s gen so as to better guide the investments in mobile Internet industry. As a company founded in 1993, IDG is also a member of the post-90s gen and we are investing with the mentality of this young and innovative group, he said jokingly.

Of course, there are generation gaps between the elder investors and the young teams, but we still trying to understand them because mobile technology and modern life are closely connected. The user experiences of post-90s, who are born to the digital age, are very precious. He believed there will be excellent teams to stand out from the these projects. He added that IDG is also trying to recruit more young fund mangers.

Hugo pointed out post-90s gen is a broad concept. For example, Guo Lie, founder of the hit cartoon image collage app MOYTee, is born in 1989, but he is generally considered as one of most prominent figures in the post-90s entrepreneur boom.

Most of the post-90s gen entrepreneurs just left campus and do not have rich working experiences. When being asked whether he has concerns that the lack of working experiences will harm the development of startups, Hugo argued experience doesn’t matter, because none of us have experiences for mobile Internet. “In the exploration of this sector, we value the future and innovation courage more.”

In addition to provide funding, qualified venture capital is also an expert in relation management, noted Hugo. 1). VCs have to guide the entrepreneurs as their tutors, helping them to figure out future development paths. 2). VCs have to coordinate with governmental departments and guide application procedures since most of post-90s do not have such experiences. 3). Coordination with related departments, investors, partners, etc.

At TechCrunch Beijing held mid-August this year, general partner of CrunchFund Pat Gallagher mentioned that venture capital companies in Silicon Valley are becoming smaller and industry-oriented in recent years. As for the reasons of this trend, Hugo thinks the VCs and PEs in the U.S. are operating in a quite matured and fixed model. They are trying to find a sweet spot to balance the investments and it is easier for VCs to form a preference for a certain industry that they are familiar, has more professional knowledge and more social connections.

But the case is completely different in China, China’s VC industry has a much shorter history than the U.S. IDG only operates for 20 years. With more money flow to startups, Chinese venture capital firms are bigger in capital size, because capital strength is one of the most important factors for VCs to compete with peers in investing in promising startups.

Please click here and there for previous dialogues between Lu Gang and Hugo Shong.

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Chinese Smartphone Maker Coolpad Launches New Products for Premium Brand Dashen https://technode.com/2014/08/27/coolpad-launches-new-products-premium-brand-dashen/ https://technode.com/2014/08/27/coolpad-launches-new-products-premium-brand-dashen/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2014 12:29:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22885 Coolpad, a Chinese smartphone maker, announced today Dashen (literally means “the great god” in Chinese), a smartphone brand run by the company, will be operated independently. At the press conference, the company released five hardware products under the brand, including the much-anticipated Dashen F2, Dashen F1 (China Telecom version), Dashen F1 (Youth version), a mobile […]]]>
Dashen-pic

Coolpad, a Chinese smartphone maker, announced today Dashen (literally means “the great god” in Chinese), a smartphone brand run by the company, will be operated independently. At the press conference, the company released five hardware products under the brand, including the much-anticipated Dashen F2, Dashen F1 (China Telecom version), Dashen F1 (Youth version), a mobile charger and a 3D AR helmet.

Dashen F2 is positioned as a 4G smartphone for the youth. It supports LTE+GSM dual-card and dual-standby mode and is configured with 2GB memory and 16GB flash memory plus 32GB micro SD card expansion. Powered by an octa-core MT6592 processor clocked at 1.7GHz, Dashen F2 features Mali-450MP4 GPU (700MHz), 1280×720 resolutions and 5.5-inch screen. The camera is 5-megapixel on the front and 13-megapixel on the rear.

CoolUI

In addition to the marketing channels directly under Coolpad, the smartphone is open for pre-order at several other platforms like QQ Zone, JD, WeChat, Mobile QQ and China Mobile 10085. The product will be shipped on Sept. 2.

Dashen F2 is priced at 999 yuan, slightly higher than 888 yuan (US$143) for Dashen F1, the first generation smartphone of this brand released earlier this year which brought down octa-core smart phone prices to a new low.

As competition in Chinese smartphone industry went nuclear, major players in the battlefield, like Xiaomi, Huawei, Lenovo are vying to offer low-budget smartphones with increasingly rich features.

As smart wearable becomes a hot spot in China, Coolpad released last year CWatch, a smartwatch designed by a startup incubated by the Media Lab of Hunan University.

image credit: Coolpad

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Xingyun, SNS for Culture and Entertainment Industry, Reportedly Pockets US$6.5M Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2014/08/27/xingyun-pockets-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/08/27/xingyun-pockets-fresh-funding/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2014 07:25:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22863 Compared with social networks targeting at the general masses, vertical or specialized social networks geared towards a certain industry, profession or age group are gaining more traction from users and investors. Xingyun is a social network platform oriented towards the professionals in culture, entertainment and other related industries. The company reportedly secured 40 million yuan (around […]]]>
Xingyun-pic

Compared with social networks targeting at the general masses, vertical or specialized social networks geared towards a certain industry, profession or age group are gaining more traction from users and investors.

Xingyun is a social network platform oriented towards the professionals in culture, entertainment and other related industries. The company reportedly secured 40 million yuan (around US$6.5 million) of Series A financing from Shenzhen Capital Group at a valuation of 200 million yuan.

Xingyun has received 10 million yuan of angel investment from Chinese film star Huang Xiaoming, who co-founded Star VC, a  venture capital company targeting at Internet startups, in July this year.

Xingyun gathers industry talents in entertainment, literature, sports, IT and financial industries, connecting like-minded users and providing business opportunities around these affinities. Similar to Facebook and Q Zone, users can read the news stream in their home pages to keep up with celebrity friends. But Xingyun differs from other social networking sites in that it puts all the functional accesses on top bar of the site, which will direct users to the home page of various artists, shows, training institutions, etc.

Founded in 2012 by Ma Yue, who is also the founder of entertainment and culture platform Moko!, Xingyun has attracted star users including a dozen Chinese A-listers such as Huang Xiaoming, Angelababy, Xu Zheng, Liu Qian, Guo Jingming, Fang Wenshan, and nearly 100K potential stars.

In addition to following real-time news about pop stars and films, Xingyun also provides grassroots member users with training programs and marketing services, paving their ways towards the red carpet. Xingyun membership is priced at a jaw-dropping 1,980 yuan and 3,980 yuan for different service packages. Although this price tag may surprise most of other Internet companies, the user payment ratio is far better than expected, according to company.

image credit: Xingyun

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Venture-backed Meila Helps Beauty Fans to Dress Themselves Up https://technode.com/2014/08/26/venture-backed-meila-helps-beauty-fans-dressing-best/ https://technode.com/2014/08/26/venture-backed-meila-helps-beauty-fans-dressing-best/#respond Tue, 26 Aug 2014 10:20:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22807 Meila, an online beauty community formerly known as Meila Makeup (not official translation), announced US$20 million of Series B financing led by Morningside Ventures with participation of GSR Ventures, IDG, and Yunqi Ventures. This round is received only two months after the startup raised Series A funding from IDG this May. Started as beauty community app for expert makeup and […]]]>
Meila

Meila, an online beauty community formerly known as Meila Makeup (not official translation), announced US$20 million of Series B financing led by Morningside Ventures with participation of GSR Ventures, IDG, and Yunqi Ventures. This round is received only two months after the startup raised Series A funding from IDG this May.

Started as beauty community app for expert makeup and skincare product tips, Meila is now expanding businesses to offer reviews on manicure, hairdressing and clothing matching skills. As an app dedicated to female users, Meila tries to present the premium contents contributed by pop stars, fashion experts and users differently.

In the latest update released this May, Meila gives more priority to picture illustration which is more direct and easy for users to understand. Moreover, users’ comments concerning a certain part of the posts will be displayed under corresponding paragraphs, enabling better interaction between users and the contents.

Meila-pic

Meila also has a web-based site, but its app is getting more traction with more than 40 million registered users and nearly 1 million daily active users so far. Apparently, the dominant users of Meila are females (15 to 25 years old), but the company introduced that around 1% of their users are male.

Meila will commercialize its service by bringing traffic to other e-commerce businesses, like Mogujie, Taobao, Tmall. The manicure business is directed to on-demand service Helijia. But the company said it will not tap O2O sector in the future.

The funding will be used in marketing, branding and team construction, according to the firm. Meila now has 60 employees, operating from Shenzhen, Beijing and Guangzhou.

image credit: Meila

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China’s M-commerce Turnover Rockets 378% YOY to 254B Yuan in H1 2014 https://technode.com/2014/08/26/chinas-m-commerce-turnover-rockets-378-yoy-254b-yuan-h1-2014/ https://technode.com/2014/08/26/chinas-m-commerce-turnover-rockets-378-yoy-254b-yuan-h1-2014/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2014 04:43:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22785 China’s high-speed increase of e-commerce industry in the past decade seems to drawing to a close in recent years. According to report released by China e-Business Research Center, Chinese e-commerce volume sales increased by 43.9% YOY from 754.2 billion yuan (around US$123 billion) in H1 2013 to 1.08 trillion yuan in H1 2014. The whole-year sale […]]]>

China’s high-speed increase of e-commerce industry in the past decade seems to drawing to a close in recent years. According to report released by China e-Business Research Center, Chinese e-commerce volume sales increased by 43.9% YOY from 754.2 billion yuan (around US$123 billion) in H1 2013 to 1.08 trillion yuan in H1 2014. The whole-year sale is expected to reach 2.78 trillion yuan.

E-commerce-2014

China’s E-commerce Market Size (2009-2014)

As competitions in Chinese e-commerce battlefield become fiercer, domestic e-commerce retailers are trying hard to snap up more market shares by exploring business opportunities in lower-tier cities, launching large-scale shopping activities, cooperating with offline stores, etc.

Among all these measures, m-commerce is considered as a major momentum to invigorate the whole e-commerce sector, given the popularity of smart mobile devices and better Internet network connections in China.

According to the report, China’s sales volume of m-commerce industry surged by 378% YOY from 53.2 billion yuan in H1 2013 to 254.2 billion yuan in the first half of this year. The annual turnover for 2014 is expected to hit 632.4 billion yuan.

China’s M-commerce Market Size (2009-2014)

m-commerce

In terms of major players in Chinese e-commerce industry, Tmall and JD still took the top two positions with 57.4% and 21.1% of market shares, respectively. JD is catching up rapidly after integrating Tencent’s e-commerce arms of QQ Wanggou, Paipai.com and Yixun.com. The two oligarchies are followed by Xiaomi, Gome, VIP.com, Suning.com, Amazon China, Dangdang, Tencent’s e-commerce sites, Jumei and others.

Market Share of Chinese E-commerce Companies (2014 H1)

Market-share

The 2014 H1 revenues for some of these companies are JD 107.1 billion yuan, VIP.com 9.41 billion yuan, Suning.com 8.28 billion yuan (exclude open platform and virtual products), Dangdang 6.15 billion yuan, Tencent e-commerce sites 3.84 billion yuan, and Jumei’s sales 3.44 billion yuan.

China’s e-commerce users climbed 26.4% YOY from 277 million to 350 million in the first half of this year. The whole-year figure is expected to reach 390 million by the end of this year, according to the report.

As of the end of June this year, China’s e-commerce business represents 8.7% of the country’s total consumption amount, rising 27.9% YOY from 6.8% in H1 2013 and reaching over 10% by the end of this year.

Data and graphs source: www.100EC.cn

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Alibaba’s Micro-credit Affiliate Releases Yuebao-like Financial Product for Fixed Deposits https://technode.com/2014/08/25/alibabas-micro-credit-affiliate-release-yuebao-like-financial-product-fixed-deposits/ https://technode.com/2014/08/25/alibabas-micro-credit-affiliate-release-yuebao-like-financial-product-fixed-deposits/#comments Mon, 25 Aug 2014 10:40:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22766 Given the huge success of mutual fund service Yuebao, Small and Micro Financial Service Group, Alibaba’s spin-off which is owned by chairman Jack Ma and a series of investors, released a new online financial product Zhaocaibao to deepen its forays into online financial field by setting eyes on fixed deposits. Since fixed deposits are less liquid […]]]>

Given the huge success of mutual fund service Yuebao, Small and Micro Financial Service Group, Alibaba’s spin-off which is owned by chairman Jack Ma and a series of investors, released a new online financial product Zhaocaibao to deepen its forays into online financial field by setting eyes on fixed deposits.

Since fixed deposits are less liquid as compared with current deposits, over 50% of users aged around 30 years old has never put their money into fixed deposit accounts, according to data from Yuebao.

In traditional banks, individual users who are in urgent need of cash only can get the interests of current deposits when they want to withdraw the savings before fixed deposit scheme ends.

Zhaocaibao allows investors to withdraw anytime while enjoying the interests of fixed deposits. Individual investors can submit withdrawal requests before the loan life ends, the system will automatically create a loan under the name of old creditors and pairs it with new investors, enabling the old creditors to receive the funds instantly in their bounded Yuebao accounts.

Another interesting feature of Zhaocaibao is subscription. Yuebao users who connected their accounts to Zhaocaibao platform can pre-set expected interest rates, loan time, and financial product type. The system will place the orders automatically when any financial products complies with the conditions were listed within 30 days.

With Zhaocaibao, users can invest a minimum 100 yuan (US$16.25) to 1,000 yuan of funds.

The company now cooperates with more than 40 financial institutions of banks, funds, insurance companies to provide fixed interest financial services to both SMEs and individual investors on the platform.

Zhaocaibao

Zhaocaibao was under testing since this April with turnovers hitting 11 billion yuan as of August 5, of which 90% come from Yuebao, introduced Yuan Leiming, CEO of the company. With more than 500K users now, the product claimed an annualized yield of 5.4% to 7%, with loan lives ranges between 3 months to 3 years.

Yuan added that Zhaocaibao do not manage the funds, but cooperate with financial institutions that provide guarantees to the capital. Users have to pay up to 0.2% of commissions upon funds redemption, of which 0.1% is being paid to the guaranty institutions, said Yuan.

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Harda: a P2P Tourism Site Differentiates Itself with Travel Guide Service Productization Strategy https://technode.com/2014/08/25/harda-a-p2p-tourism-site-differentiates-itself-with-travel-guide-service-productization-strategy/ https://technode.com/2014/08/25/harda-a-p2p-tourism-site-differentiates-itself-with-travel-guide-service-productization-strategy/#respond Mon, 25 Aug 2014 08:40:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22738 Want to know how hot online tourism industry is in China? Just look at the sheer number of startups in this sector and the funds they’ve received from venture capitalists. Harda is a site focused on P2P travelling, one of the red-hot verticals of the online tourism industry. The site serves as a bridge to […]]]>
Harda-pic

Want to know how hot online tourism industry is in China? Just look at the sheer number of startups in this sector and the funds they’ve received from venture capitalists.

Harda is a site focused on P2P travelling, one of the red-hot verticals of the online tourism industry. The site serves as a bridge to connect overseas tourists who want to travel off the beaten track and local citizens who want to guide them.

The idea sounds similar to some other P2P local guide travel services like Wanzi, Tagalong, Xiankelv and Coolzan. What makes Harda stand out from the crowd seems to be the platform’s ability to provide custom and different tourism experiences to travelers.

Harda allows every tour guide to compile their own travel schedules according to their own tastes. To facilitate the process, the site also provides templates to lower the agenda compilation threshold.

Harda

The local travel guides of Harda are mainly travel experts, local traveling agents, students, etc. The site now provides services in 26 cities all over the world.

In addition, Harda is also trying to integrate more services like ticket booking, hotel reservation, Visa and insurance businesses, among others.

As a startup just launched July 1 this year, the company has received seed funding from Mai Gang, a well-known angel investor in China, at the end of July and eight-digit yuan angel investment from Meihua Venture Capital in mid-August.

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Running Interest-based Startup from Korea with a Global Vision: Viki and Vingle Cofounder Changseong Ho https://technode.com/2014/08/22/running-interest-based-startup-from-korea-with-a-global-vision-viki-and-vingle-cofounder-changseong-ho/ https://technode.com/2014/08/22/running-interest-based-startup-from-korea-with-a-global-vision-viki-and-vingle-cofounder-changseong-ho/#comments Fri, 22 Aug 2014 09:42:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22701 Changseong Ho (L) and Jiwon Moon (R) Drawing upon past entrepreneurial experiences, failed or successful, and applying them into new startups is probably one of the key reasons for why serial entrepreneurs are more likely to succeed than first-time entrepreneurs. This idea has been proved by the experiences of Changseong Ho, co-founder of crowdsouced subtitling […]]]>

Changseong Ho (L) and Jiwon Moon (R)

Drawing upon past entrepreneurial experiences, failed or successful, and applying them into new startups is probably one of the key reasons for why serial entrepreneurs are more likely to succeed than first-time entrepreneurs.

This idea has been proved by the experiences of Changseong Ho, co-founder of crowdsouced subtitling platform Viki, because both of the two pillar concepts of his current endeavor Vingle, global vision and interest-based groups, are derived from his previous entrepreneurial efforts. Ho shared with TechNode this week his entrepreneurial experiences, future visions for Vingle, an interest-oriented service, as well as micro-VC TheVentures.

In 2000, Ho and his wife Jiwon Moon founded their first startup Web-C Intermedia, a fashion simulator, but the company ended total failure in Korean market, mainly due to bad market timing and small market size, said Ho as he reflected on the memory. To their utmost surprise when studying in the U.S., several U.S. companies which are doing exactly the same thing as Web-C Intermedia are very successful there. The failure of his first startup drove Ho to adopt a global vision and expand focus beyond Korean market.

With previous lessons in mind, Ho and Jiwon started crowdsourced subtitling platform Viki in 2007 with an international team. As a volunteer-powered community, Viki offers real-time subtitling of global TV shows, movies and other premium contents. The site now claimed 22 million users, translating contents into more than 160 languages. Viki has been acquired by Japanese e-commerce giant Rukuten with reportedly US$200 million last year.

Vingle

Motivated by the devotion and passions of avid fans, Ho launched his third startup Vingle in 2011, aiming to expand the passionate community power to all kinds of interests across fashion, entertainment, art, pop culture, etc. Moreover, it is not limited only to video this time, said Ho. “Vingle has text, picture and video-oriented contents. But content type doesn’t matter. We provide a space and community where people with similar interests can share and interact. That’s the point.”

Like Viki, Vingle is co-founded by Jiwon and Ho with an international team. Currently, the site has 2.8 million monthly active users mainly come from Korea, the U.S. and some other English-speaking countries. In June, it saw 100 million page views. Among the page views and users, the portion of mobile is keep increasing with 1.4 million app downloads, Ho added.

Founded in 2011, Ho believed Vingle has passed the threshold of amassing its initial user community and the business is starting to take off after reaching a critical mass in Korea. More and more popular bloggers and content contributors use Vingle as their blogging platform or tools to promote their blogs, according to Ho. The company is now building Japanese and Chinese teams, trying to explore cross-border opportunities.

“Most social networking services connects people to people, therefore, the social graph is formed around regional, social, school networks. But Vingle connects like-minded people through interests.”

In addition to some seed funding from Viki, Vingle has received Series A from Korean venture capital K Cube Ventures and planning to raise Series B next year.

Though Vingle has tried some e-commerce related business models, the company’s revenue will eventually based on advertisements by connecting people to the sellers, since they are not going to handle the inventories directly, said Ho.

With the goal of sharing experiences on building an international team and operation, Ho also set up a micro-VC TheVentures to help entrepreneurs who are looking for cross-border opportunities. There are no regional or industry sector restrictions for portfolio companies.

TheVentures has invested in 10 companies since its establishment six months ago. The investment amounts range between US$100k to US$150.

Adopting an aggressive investment strategy, Ho tends get involved in the development of startups that share the same visions with his team and helps these projects to grow by adding new values. As an entrepreneur himself, Ho believed his team has better execution powers. The young venture capital company also hires specialists in technology, marketing, to fill the gaps in case there are some components missing in their portfolio companies.

image credit: Vingle

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Venture-backed Video Community Aipai Lets You Have Fun at UGC Playground https://technode.com/2014/08/21/venture-backed-video-community-aipai-lets-fun-ugc-playground/ https://technode.com/2014/08/21/venture-backed-video-community-aipai-lets-fun-ugc-playground/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2014 09:34:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22679 In an age we often called Web 2.0, what matters most is no longer how long people spend online, but what they are doing online, creating contents, either texts or videos, or share them with friends. Given this shift, the user-generated content (UGC) is expected to be a major momentum to drive further development of Internet. […]]]>
Aipai-pic

In an age we often called Web 2.0, what matters most is no longer how long people spend online, but what they are doing online, creating contents, either texts or videos, or share them with friends. Given this shift, the user-generated content (UGC) is expected to be a major momentum to drive further development of Internet.

While tons of services are built on UGC, Shenzhen-based startup Aipai is the only one that offers all-around video services, ranging from UGC video site Aipai.com, video editing software Paidashi, and an SDK for game developers to integrate game recording features. The contents of Aipai.com are mainly focused on game commentary and entertainment.

The company reportedly announced US$38 million of Series C financing led by SAIF Partners with participation of Series B investor Matrix Partners. The Series A financing was received from CMHJ Partners.

Founded in 2009, Aipai now claimed over 10 million daily active users and more than 50 million monthly active users.

douyu

Of course Aipai is not the only player in game video commentary sector, given the booming development of gaming industry in China. Started out as a video streaming site for ACFUN, DouyuTV, a direct competitor of Aipai, is dedicated to game commentary businesses by adopting a differentiating feature Danmu, allowing audiences to post comments directly on top of the streaming video.

image credit: Aipai

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BesTV Invests US$100M in Digital Marketing Company adSage https://technode.com/2014/08/21/bestv-invests-us100m-digital-marketing-company-adsage/ https://technode.com/2014/08/21/bestv-invests-us100m-digital-marketing-company-adsage/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2014 05:47:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22668 Chinese online media company BesTV (SH:600637) invested nearly US$100 million in mobile digital marketing company adSage for a 51% stake in the company with CICC and CVCapital as financial advisers, respectively. Together with this deal, BesTV planned to establish a digital marketing platform for IPTV, OTT, Internet, mobile Internet and outdoor ads. Founded in 2007 by some ex-Microsoft […]]]>
Bestv-adsage

Chinese online media company BesTV (SH:600637) invested nearly US$100 million in mobile digital marketing company adSage for a 51% stake in the company with CICC and CVCapital as financial advisers, respectively.

Together with this deal, BesTV planned to establish a digital marketing platform for IPTV, OTT, Internet, mobile Internet and outdoor ads.

Founded in 2007 by some ex-Microsoft technical architects, adSage is a leading online advertising technologies and services provider in China, managing SEM/SEO campaigns for clients in terms of campaign analyses, auto bidding, performance tracking, and intelligent optimizations.

According to BesTV’s 2014 H1 financial report, the company has generated 1.43 billion yuan (around US$233 million) of revenue, up 26.91% YOY, recording over 55 million active users.

As one of the largest paid TV operators in China, BesTV’s revenue from PPV (pay per view) business soared 80% YOY in the reporting period, eclipsing 10% YOY for IPTV.

In addition to paid contents, the company’s ad revenue (including Funshion) is surging by more than 200% YOY in H1. Cooperation with adSage may help the online media company to boost its content commercialization drive.

The market size of Chinese digital marketing industry increased 46.1% YOY to 110 billion yuan in 2013, according to data released by the company. This figure is expected to hit 286.2 billion yuan by 2017, rising at a compound annual growth rate of 28.69% from 2013 to 2017.

image credit: BesTV

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Tech Recruitment Site Lagou Announces Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/08/20/tech-recruitment-site-lagou-announces-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/08/20/tech-recruitment-site-lagou-announces-series-b-funding/#comments Wed, 20 Aug 2014 05:15:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22644 As a latecomer of the crowded Chinese online recruitment industry, tech hiring service Lagou has been voracious in raising funds over the past one-year period since its establishment in July 2013. The company recently announced another financing round led by Qiming Ventures and followed by Bertelsmann. Before this round, Lagou has raised 2 million yuan angel […]]]>

As a latecomer of the crowded Chinese online recruitment industry, tech hiring service Lagou has been voracious in raising funds over the past one-year period since its establishment in July 2013. The company recently announced another financing round led by Qiming Ventures and followed by Bertelsmann.

Before this round, Lagou has raised 2 million yuan angel investment from Chinese leading angel investor Bob Xu and Zeng Liqing, as well as US$5 million in Series A from Bertelsmann earlier this year.

Lagou is a job-matching platform to connect tech talents and companies to facilitate the recruitment process. Different from other hiring services, the site adopts a back-end payment model, enabling recruiters to post positions and job seekers to browse jobs free of charge. Recruiters have to pay around 20% of job seekers’ monthly salary if the recruitment succeeds.

Lagou is startup launched by the founding team of Beijing-based incubator 3W Cafe. The idea of establishing Lagou surfaced when the incubator was constantly asked to help finding suitable talents for tech startups.

According to data released by the company, Lagou has registered nearly 1 million individual users and 20K enterprise users coming from more than 20 Internet-related industries, including mobile Internet, gaming, O2O, cloud computing, among others. The platform has posted over 120K positions and delivered 3 million resumes as of present.

This is the third funding case in recruiting industry during the past one week. Ganji, Chinese classifieds service with hiring as one of its core businesses, announced US$200 million financing round on Aug. 13. Enterprise chat app Maimai announced US$20 million in Series B Funding one day latter.

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Mobile Healthcare App Chunyu Lands a Landmark US$50M Series C Round https://technode.com/2014/08/19/mobile-healthcare-app-chunyu-lands-a-landmark-us50m-series-c-round/ https://technode.com/2014/08/19/mobile-healthcare-app-chunyu-lands-a-landmark-us50m-series-c-round/#comments Tue, 19 Aug 2014 08:29:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22614 Medical and healthcare service battlefield is heating up in China with the fast approaching of aging society, more favorable policies from the government as well as the rise of Internet. Chinese medical app developer Chunyu has closed a massive US$50 million Series C financing from CICC, Rushan Venture Capital under DunAn Group, Pavilion Capital run by Temasek, with participation of Series A […]]]>
Chunyu-pic

Medical and healthcare service battlefield is heating up in China with the fast approaching of aging society, more favorable policies from the government as well as the rise of Internet.

Chinese medical app developer Chunyu has closed a massive US$50 million Series C financing from CICCRushan Venture Capital under DunAn Group, Pavilion Capital run by Temasek, with participation of Series A and Series B investor BlueRun Ventures, which injected several millions of dollars in this round.

Founded in 2011 by Zhang Rui, former director at CCTV and chief editor of NetEase, Chunyu is a mobile healthcare service that connects patients and doctors. The company’s flagship app Chunyu Doctor allows users to make inquiries to professional doctors about their potential diseases and symptoms for free. The firm also tapped into baby-care sector with vertical B2C healthcare product Chunyu Pediatrician last year.

According to the company, Chunyu Doctor has amassed more than 30 million users and over 40K online doctors with daily inquiries reaching 50K.

Zhang Rui, CEO of Chunyu, said the new funding will be used to attract more users as well as doctors to join the platform. Calculated at current daily user growth speed, Chunyu Doctor expects to record 100 million users and 200K doctors by the end of next year.

Chunyu is now seeking to cooperate with hospitals, medical companies and pharmacies to commercialize the services, said Zhang. In addition, the company is exploring cooperation opportunities with wearables manufacturers, insurance and gene companies.

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is also making aggressive forays into healthcare sector with drug authenticity plan and future hospital plan. 39.net, one of the first health sites in China, was acquired by software developer Longmaster earlier this year.

In the global market, healthcare services are also chased by VCs in the past one year period. The U.S. startup ZocDoc raised US$152 million, Flatiron Health received US$130 million funding, and CastLight secured US$100 million.

 image credit: Chunyu

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Lending Club, Dianrong Cofounder Soul Htite: P2P Industry To Be Regulated in Future 3-4 Years https://technode.com/2014/08/18/techcrunch-beijing-lending-club-dianrong-cofounder-soul-htite-p2p-industry-regulated-future-3-4-years/ https://technode.com/2014/08/18/techcrunch-beijing-lending-club-dianrong-cofounder-soul-htite-p2p-industry-regulated-future-3-4-years/#comments Mon, 18 Aug 2014 10:18:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22599 Although Chinese P2P industry is still on the rise, the public is becoming increasingly cautious in investing on P2P platforms as more and more users fell victims to scams. Soul Htite, co-founder of Lending Club and its Shanghai-based counterpart Dianrong, shared with us his insights on the differences between the U.S. and Chinese P2P lending industry, risk […]]]>

Although Chinese P2P industry is still on the rise, the public is becoming increasingly cautious in investing on P2P platforms as more and more users fell victims to scams. Soul Htite, co-founder of Lending Club and its Shanghai-based counterpart Dianrong, shared with us his insights on the differences between the U.S. and Chinese P2P lending industry, risk control measures and prospects of the sector in China in a backstage interview during TechCrunch Beijing last week.

TechNode: What’re the differences between Lending Club and Dianrong, as well as the U.S. and Chinese P2P industry?

The two platforms are similar in business model, but are different in a lot of other aspects. In terms of targeted clients, firstly, the U.S. users tend spend borrowed money in consumption, like attending parties, while Chinese users will invest borrowed money in education. After years of development, the U.S. investors are very conscious about the investment risks. On the other hand, Chinese users may be more concerned about the yields rather than the risks at the beginning of their investment. “We will train Chinese investors by warning them about investment risks.”

Secondly, the difference is in loan life. The life of loans is around three to five years in the U.S., but only few months in China. Thirdly, it is very difficult to loan from banks without mortgage in China.

TechNode: What about the yields of Dianrong?

The average yield of Dianrong is around 14.07%. Different the operations of traditional banks, Dianrong allows the deals to be liquidated and settled on a daily basis. Borrowers who refund their loans every day can reduce their loan interests and investors who receive yields every day can take new investments to make the best use of their funds.

To accelerate the investment cycle, we also teamed up with partners like traditional banks, Century 21 China and Sina Weicaifu to include more projects.

TechNode: Please talk a bit about the risk control measures of Dianrong?

The bad debt rate of Dianrong is controlled at 1.27%. We have an excellent risk control team with 700 employees, most of whom come from banks. Dianrong cooperates with big companies to obtain background information of their employees, like their salaries, family members, and health conditions. The platform will be able to access the payment abilities of these employees as individual borrowers more accurate.

Dianrong classifies investors into different groups of green hands, experts and VIPs according to their acceptance degree of P2P lending model, and rolls out products with different investment amount and annualized yields to different investors.

TechNode: What’s the prospects of P2P and P2B lending in China?

In addition to risk control, we need a more transparent operation model. A lot of Chinese P2P and P2B platforms act as capital pools, but Dianrong is operated as platform. We do not manage funds. I think Chinese P2P industry will become more regulated in three to four years.

Originally from: Technode.cn

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Ganji Takes in US$200M Funding Backed by Tiger Funds and Carlyle https://technode.com/2014/08/18/ganji-takes-us200m-funding-backed-tiger-funds-carlyle/ https://technode.com/2014/08/18/ganji-takes-us200m-funding-backed-tiger-funds-carlyle/#comments Mon, 18 Aug 2014 06:54:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22570 Chinese online classifieds service Ganji recently announced a new US$200 million financing round from U.S.-based Tiger Fund and The Carlyle Group. The company has raised nearly US$200 million of financing in previous five rounds since its establishment in 2005. According to the company, the funds will be used in R&D, especially in mobile sector, O2O business, […]]]>
Ganji

Chinese online classifieds service Ganji recently announced a new US$200 million financing round from U.S.-based Tiger Fund and The Carlyle Group. The company has raised nearly US$200 million of financing in previous five rounds since its establishment in 2005.

According to the company, the funds will be used in R&D, especially in mobile sector, O2O business, snapping up more market shares in local services, as well as strengthening marketing and channel management.

Different from previous conservative attitude towards IPO, Ganji, which lists various information ranging from job recruitment, housing and local services, also announced that it is preparing to go public in June next year.

Mark Yang, founder and CEO of the company, disclosed Ganji has recorded profits in 2013. He added the site’s annual revenue is expected to surge 150% in 2014 , while revenue from job recruitment service is expected to hit 700 million (around US$114 million) to 800 million yuan this year.

The company did not disclose detailed terms of the transaction, but Mark Yang emphasized that there’s no VAM deals involved.

As competition among Chinese Craigslist clones is heating up, 58.com, a direct competitor of Ganji, launched IPO on the U.S. market last year and pocketed US$736 million of funding this year in exchange of a 19.5% stake in the company.

It is reported that there are nearly 200 local listing sites in China during 2009 to 2012 and over 90% of these companies have failed in the three-year period. Ganji and 58.com are top two sites that stood out from the crowd. Baixing, a distant third in this industry following Ganji and 58.com, is targeting at smaller cities and mobile services in order to avoid direct competition with the two leading rivals.

image credit: Ganji

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Web Security Startup CloudFlare to Expand Chinese Market, But in A Careful Way https://technode.com/2014/08/15/techcrunch-beijing-web-security-startup-cloudflare-to-expand-chinese-market-but-in-a-careful-way/ https://technode.com/2014/08/15/techcrunch-beijing-web-security-startup-cloudflare-to-expand-chinese-market-but-in-a-careful-way/#respond Fri, 15 Aug 2014 08:48:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22510 Matthew Prince, founder and CEO of CloudFlare, joined our TechCrunch Beijing event this week for a wide-ranging chat with TechCrunch & CrunchBase editor Jonathan Shieber. During the conversation, he touched upon everything from Chinese market to company operations. In case you’re unfamiliar with CloudFlare, it’s a service for website owners that offers protection from online threats, […]]]>

Matthew Prince, founder and CEO of CloudFlare, joined our TechCrunch Beijing event this week for a wide-ranging chat with TechCrunch & CrunchBase editor Jonathan Shieber. During the conversation, he touched upon everything from Chinese market to company operations.

In case you’re unfamiliar with CloudFlare, it’s a service for website owners that offers protection from online threats, speeds up page load time, and optimizes content across devices. Launched five years ago at a TechCurnch event, the company is growing rapidly and raised $50 million in Series C round by December 2012, valued at $1 billion.

CloudFlare is seeking Chinese partners to expand businesses in the market, according to Prince. He added even though CloudFlare do not have a Chinese version, lots of clients here are using our service and China is currently CloudFlare’s second largest market.

But he noted that CloudFlare is going to take a slow and steady development approach in China because “It’s a very special market and it has special concerns. All most all U.S. companies that have entered China have failed. We may fail as well, but we hope to fail in a smarter way, but if we are fortunate, we will succeed.” CloudFlare is still trying to find partners that met their quality standards. Companies that are “best technically and has the best resources to provide that around the world”, as Prince put it.

Prince twittered in June this year that the company is considering to position its Asian headquarter at Hong Kong, instead of Singapore where it was originally planned. The main reason for this change was that the company has received widely acclaimed feedbacks for its recent services to some of the Hong Kong clients.

When talking about expanding in various new markets like China, Europe, America, he asserted that one of the key rules for CloudFlare to enter a new market is to make sure the company follow and respect the laws of these regions.”

In terms of company operations, Prince said the company’s largest investments is on talent recruitment. Although CloudFlare has the abilities to hire more people given the massive financing round, CloudFlare aims to recruit smarter rather than faster in a bid to maintain the favorable company culture they’ve built since its establishment. Other company expenses went to hardware shipment and network support. Actually, CloudFlare has a logistic team for hardware shipment, said Prince.

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Toutiao Founder and CEO Zhang Yiming Talks About Copyright Protection Measures https://technode.com/2014/08/15/toutiao-founder-and-ceo-zhang-yiming-talks-about-copyright-protection-measures/ https://technode.com/2014/08/15/toutiao-founder-and-ceo-zhang-yiming-talks-about-copyright-protection-measures/#respond Fri, 15 Aug 2014 05:02:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22482 At TechCrunch Beijing this week, Zhang Yiming, founder and CEO of Chinese personalized news app Toutiao, sat down with TechCrunch China editor Shuhang Lee for a brief discussion about the much-buzzed-about startup. In less than two years, the news feed app has registered more than 120 million users, becoming one of the most popular apps in […]]]>

At TechCrunch Beijing this week, Zhang Yiming, founder and CEO of Chinese personalized news app Toutiao, sat down with TechCrunch China editor Shuhang Lee for a brief discussion about the much-buzzed-about startup.

In less than two years, the news feed app has registered more than 120 million users, becoming one of the most popular apps in its kind and raised a massive round of US$100 million of Series C funding at a valuation of US$500 million earlier this year.

Popularity aside, Toutiao is troubled by controversial reputations when traditional media, portal websites and even some individuals jointly participated the criticism against it for copyright infringement issues. Chinese mainstream media Souhu has filed a lawsuit against the company, claiming huge economical indemnities.

As a content distributor, Toutiao does not generate contents itself, but crawl content and reformat it onto its own application. The complaints emerged mainly because Toutiao reformats the information for transmission from its own servers, usually removing original ads and replacing them with Toutiao’s own, as well as its deep linking and transcoding. 

When talking about content source, Zhang said it is very common for Chinese media to reprint contents generated by other sources,  in some cases, it is very hard for Toutiao to determine which is original source of a certain article. This problem is significant because it concerned with the issue that to whom the advertising revenues should be shared with.

To address this question, Toutiao is launching a program to register mainstream medias known for their original contents to protect their rights. Registered medias can receive revenues from contents after they claimed to be the original source, even though they publish the contents latter than other sources.

The company’s revenue mainly comes from enterprise advertisers. Although there are more monetization options like charging for premium contents etc., Zhang still considered advertising or smart ads as their the main source of revenue. He added Toutiao is also trying to integrate the services of its ad clients into the app, since redirecting users to other apps or payment methods after they tapping the ads may harm user experiences, he said.

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Flurry VP Sean Galligan on The Age of Living Mobile https://technode.com/2014/08/13/flurry-vp-sean-galligan-age-living-mobile/ https://technode.com/2014/08/13/flurry-vp-sean-galligan-age-living-mobile/#comments Wed, 13 Aug 2014 09:46:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22397 Sean Galligan, vice president of mobile analytics service Flurry, spoke at TechCrunch Beijing, sharing his insights on mobile market and consumer behaviors. As a global app analytics provider, Flurry’s analytics software is supporting more than 540K smartphone apps and tablet apps on over 1.5 billion devices worldwide. Flurry has used its data-backed insights to accelerated […]]]>

Sean Galligan, vice president of mobile analytics service Flurry, spoke at TechCrunch Beijing, sharing his insights on mobile market and consumer behaviors.

As a global app analytics provider, Flurry’s analytics software is supporting more than 540K smartphone apps and tablet apps on over 1.5 billion devices worldwide. Flurry has used its data-backed insights to accelerated revenue and growth opportunities for app developers.

Sean first shared with us lots of statistics based on surveys on the U.S. market. In the past six years, we saw nothing but growth in apps for various fields, he said. As one of the fields that witnessed exponential growth, the number of messaging apps surged by 316% in the past one year period. In fact, these apps are disrupting, in some cases taking monopolies in telecom industry over the past couple of years. They are continuously challenging the dominance of telecom carriers, while WhatsApp has taken away US$33 million from carriers, according to data from Ovum.

Mobile has completely absorbed by social and become quite addictive. Most of the people use social networking services from their mobile devices. In terms of time spend on social networking sites on mobile, 68% for Facebook, 98% for Instagram, 86% for Twitter, 92% for Printerest and 100% for Snapchat. These leading apps are becoming mobile first apps.

Mobile e-commerce is another fast-growing sector. In the U.S. alone, the revenue from m-commerce sector soared 60% from US$20.5 billion in 2012 to US$33 billion in 2013. This figure is expected to reach US$100 billion by the end of 2014, he added.

Sean pointed out that health and fitness apps are emerging with daily average usage of such apps surged by 62% from Dec. 2013 to June this year.

Sean is pretty excited about Chinese market which is seeing rapid growth now. Software is not something specific to Silicon Valley now, it is becoming a global focus. Actually, the U.S. is losing its shares in software sector, representing 34% of the market and this figure is going to drop in the future. As Chinese users spending more times on mobile, China is becoming an important country in software export, according to Sean.

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[TechCrunch Beijing]: Challenges and Prospects of Cryptocurrencies in China https://technode.com/2014/08/12/techcrunch-beijing-challenges-prospects-cryptocurrency-china/ https://technode.com/2014/08/12/techcrunch-beijing-challenges-prospects-cryptocurrency-china/#comments Tue, 12 Aug 2014 14:46:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22351 Bitcoin and cryptocurrency industry in general experienced a dramatic year full of ups and downs, although the budding technological and economic sector have been making waves ever since it first appeared. People’s opinions on cryptocurrencies are becoming more controversial, while industry insiders, even governments, are taking different stands towards them. This morning at TechCrunch Beijing, five prominent figures […]]]>

Bitcoin and cryptocurrency industry in general experienced a dramatic year full of ups and downs, although the budding technological and economic sector have been making waves ever since it first appeared. People’s opinions on cryptocurrencies are becoming more controversial, while industry insiders, even governments, are taking different stands towards them.

This morning at TechCrunch Beijing, five prominent figures in the sector shared with Rui Ma, venture partner at 500 Startup who also served as moderator of the panel, about their insights on Bitcoin and digital currency industry.

There are over 200 kinds of cryptocurrencies over the world, but most of the trading platforms are focused on a few categories. In the case of Chinese leading Bitcoin trading service OKcoin, Star Xu, CEO of the company, said the platform currently only support the trading of Bitcoin and Litecoin. Xu added that they are very cautious in including new cryptocurrencies into its platform in a bid to control the risk of investors. “But we are also open to new digital currencies if the technology is stable and well-received by users”, he added.

Leon Li, founder and CEO of China-based digital currency exchange Huobi, shared Star’s opinion. Leon said Huobi has an internal evaluation system for new virtual currencies in terms of market values, liquidity, etc. Huobi included Litecoin this March.

Huobi just launched BitVC, a trading platform for derivative products of cryptocurencies, in June this year. Leon introduced that the platform targets at global platform and its oversea users account for over 50% of the total. Huobi also acquired Bitcoin trading app Kuaiqianbao, a Bitcoin-focused security-as-a-service provider.

ItBit is a leading Bitcoin provider in system security, market making and data keeping and is one of the first trading platform to introduce infrastructure and expertise of a global financial exchange. Although ItBit do not support RMB transactions at present, Richmond Teo, co-founder and CEO of the company, said the team is considering to cooperate with Chinese trading platforms to tap Chinese market.

Different from other three companies which are focused on cryptocurrency trading like Bitcoin or Litecoin. Yin Chen, cofounder and the CTO of Melotic, positioned the company as a digital assets trading platform. Chen cited two examples of digital assets that are currently trading on the platform. One of them is a Bitcoin media-backed virtual currency which will be distributed to content contributors and readers, and can be used to pay for advertisements on the web media. The other one is a gold-backed digital currency.

—–

Challenges and Prospects of Bitcoin Industry

The biggest challenge Bitcoin industry faces now is that we still haven’t found an application scenario in which users can see the values of Bitcoin on the first sight, Leon pointed out. As a currency, users can see the values of Bitcoin only when its user base reached a certain scale. But at present, Bitcoin industry is still in the early development stage to accumulate seed users.

Bitcoin industry experienced exponential growth in 2013. The number of investors reached 5 million to 10 million by the end of 2013, but we still have a long way to go, said Star Xu. “Our key challenges here is continuous upgrading and improvement of infrastructures.”

According to Richmond Teo, the most significant challenge of the industry is the lack of cooperation with traditional banks, exchanges, financial agencies and Bitcoin exchanges. “We need to develop faster, otherwise, traditional banks or payment methods will invent similar cryptocurencies to replace Bitcoin.”

But to Chen Yan, the challenges mainly come from unclear administrative regulations, cause they will lead to slow development of various applications and infrastructures. The problem is also true to P2P lending industry, he noted.

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Trends Group VP Jeff Chang: It’s Time for Chinese Entrepreneurial Environment to Change https://technode.com/2014/08/12/techcrunch-beijing-trends-group-vp-jeff-chang-time-chinese-entrepreneurial-environment-change/ https://technode.com/2014/08/12/techcrunch-beijing-trends-group-vp-jeff-chang-time-chinese-entrepreneurial-environment-change/#respond Mon, 11 Aug 2014 16:17:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22210 TechNode’s founder Gang Lu took stage at TechCrunch Beijing in a fireside chat today with an old friend of ours Jeff Chang, VP at Trends Group. Fashion addresses the problem of user’s desires for a better life, while most current Chinese products are solving basic pain points of clients, according to Jeff. He illustrated his […]]]>

TechNode’s founder Gang Lu took stage at TechCrunch Beijing in a fireside chat today with an old friend of ours Jeff Chang, VP at Trends Group.

Fashion addresses the problem of user’s desires for a better life, while most current Chinese products are solving basic pain points of clients, according to Jeff.

He illustrated his opinion with an example like this. Both Uber and apps like Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache are on-demand car-hailing services, but the difference between the two kinds of services are: Uber celebrates a fashionable lifestyle in addition to providing car-booking services, on the other hand, the likes of Didi Dache is more focused on solving users’s transportation problems.

Jeff thinks startups engaged in fashion and Lohas-related fields should try to gain recognition from users as luxury brands do by spreading positive values.

“The key point here is not the technology itself, but how to promote the cultural backgrounds behind the technology.” Entrepreneurs are putting too much emphasis on Internet mindset, he said.

Only startups with their unique features or markets can prevail in the future. Japanese, Korean and Taiwanese startups have sensed the transition and are entering a stage to solve different demands for various user groups, while Chinese mainland entrepreneurs are still addressing more general demands of the mass.

As the boundary between technology and fashion is blurring, Trends Group funded a bunch of startups focusing on fashion or digital marketing. One of the group’s latest endeavors in the field is an incubator program named FCamp, which aims to provide guidance to startups that are working at the intersection of fashion and technology.

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Chinese Cloud Services Taking on New Role as Incubators https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-chinese-cloud-services-taking-on-new-role-as-incubators/ https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-chinese-cloud-services-taking-on-new-role-as-incubators/#comments Mon, 11 Aug 2014 14:33:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22189 Guo Peng, vice president of UCloud, Dominique Tu, VP at Kii, and Lv Guihua, president at Qiniu, took stage today at TechCrunch Beijing with TechCrunch China co-editor Shuhang Lee to discuss the red-hot cloud service industry. As old friends of ours, the three panelists have joined us last year at TechCrunch Shanghai to talk about the sector. When being asked to […]]]>

Guo Peng, vice president of UCloud, Dominique Tu, VP at Kii, and Lv Guihua, president at Qiniu, took stage today at TechCrunch Beijing with TechCrunch China co-editor Shuhang Lee to discuss the red-hot cloud service industry.

As old friends of ours, the three panelists have joined us last year at TechCrunch Shanghai to talk about the sector. When being asked to comment on what’s new in the field in terms of expansion and progress of new businesses, Dominique said that one of the most significant characteristics of cloud industry is to remain focused and provide steady services rather than changing businesses every day. “Although we hold a lot of marketing activities, we still take cloud data storage as our primary priority and try to build infrastructures that can solve problems for our clients. The new products we released are all closely related to this focus.”

There’s no significant change in product forms, however, the continuous education of users is bringing more opportunities to the market, said Lv Guihua. Dominique echoed his opinion. He added that more big clients and hardware entrepreneurs use Kii’s services for data processing and user system management so as to focus squarely on design and manufacturing of their products.

It is interesting to notice that Chinese cloud services are taking on a new role as incubators for startups that use their services. All the three companies are in discussion with hardware manufacturers, big or small, but they refused to disclose name of their partners at present.

UCloud has established an incubator program in Shanghai, helping startups to get funds, said Guo Peng. With venture capital as one of its three pillar businesses, Kii teamed up with HWTrek, a Taiwan-based smart hardware platform offering services from product design to funding/crowdfunding. Qiniu is cooperating with VCs, especially early-stage VCs, by sharing and introducing clients to each other.

Lv said it is very easy for cloud storage services to cooperate with hardware makers, since most hardware are wearables dedicated to data collection. He added four categories of hardware products are closely related to cloud services, namely, set-top-boxes, cameras, smart wristbands and smart watches.

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Acton Founder Janelle Wang: Zip Along with RocketSkates, World’s First Smart Wearable for Mobility https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-acton-founder-janelle-wang-zip-along-with-rocketskates-worlds-first-smart-wearable-for-mobility/ https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-acton-founder-janelle-wang-zip-along-with-rocketskates-worlds-first-smart-wearable-for-mobility/#respond Mon, 11 Aug 2014 10:29:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22155 Most of the smart wearable devices currently available on the market are being attached to people’s upper bodies either for fitness tracking or provides features already presented in smartphones. U.S. electric and motorized skates developer Acton is trying something new for wearables industry. This morning at TechCunch Beijing, Janelle Wang, founder and CEO Acton, showed […]]]>

Most of the smart wearable devices currently available on the market are being attached to people’s upper bodies either for fitness tracking or provides features already presented in smartphones. U.S. electric and motorized skates developer Acton is trying something new for wearables industry. This morning at TechCunch Beijing, Janelle Wang, founder and CEO Acton, showed off the company’s new product RocketSkates to our audiences.

If you are a fan of innovative gadgets, you probably have already heard of RocketSkates which launched a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter and received overwhelming feedback from backers. Actually, RocketSkates is an improvement on Acton’s previous offering Spnkix, which was launched last year.

Rocketskate

Janelle introduced that the product is inspired by Nezha, a character from traditional Chinese mythology. Similar to what the mythical character rides, RocketSkates is a pair of electric skates weighted 3kg with four build-in hub motors, allowing riders to zoom at up to 12 miles per hour. Each skate has two hub motors controlled by an on-board microprocessor, and are powered by a lithium-ion battery pack. The skates communicate with each other so they maintain the same speed and behavior.

Just like with the regular skates, RocketSkates don’t require a remote to operate. Users can control the skates with their feet by tilting the skates forward to accelerate, and tilting back on your heel to apply the brakes. Because rider’s feet are so close to the ground, they can walk with the RocketSkates if they need to go up a flight of stairs or want to stop for some coffee.

Janelle mentioned that the learning experience of riding RocketSkates is very easy with an average learning time of less than 10 minutes. She added the remote-free electric skates is targeted to solve last-mile problem for urban commuters, traffic congestion as well as to bring fun to users.

RS

Like most of the smart hardware, RocketSkates can be connected to a dedicated app via Bluetooth to monitor the skates and their performance. In addition to keeping in touch with other RocketSkaters, the app offers route tracking, skate diagnosis, battery status, games, and social interactivity features. Software Developer Kit (SDK) will also be available for developers interested in creating games and app features for RocketSkates.

image credit: RocketSkates

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[TechCrunch Beijing] Google Greater China President Scott Beaumont Talks About The Digital Future https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-google-greater-china-ceo-scott-beaumont/ https://technode.com/2014/08/11/techcrunch-beijing-google-greater-china-ceo-scott-beaumont/#respond Mon, 11 Aug 2014 06:21:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21626 TechCrunch Beijing is officially underway here in Beijing Chaoyang District Park, where hundreds of participants gathered to share and learn about Chinese tech landscape. As the first keynote speaker at the event, Google Greater China President Scott Beaumont took the stage to share his insights on the digital future well as his recommendations to young […]]]>

TechCrunch Beijing is officially underway here in Beijing Chaoyang District Park, where hundreds of participants gathered to share and learn about Chinese tech landscape. As the first keynote speaker at the event, Google Greater China President Scott Beaumont took the stage to share his insights on the digital future well as his recommendations to young entrepreneurs.

Digital can really take on significant challenges, according to Scott Beaumont. There are 632 million netizens in China alone, of which 83.4% are mobile Internet users, according to the latest report China Internet Network Information Center. The consumption behaviors of Chinese user is inevitably changed by the high Internet penetration rate.

Scott started the speech by talking about several changes of customers behaviors and go so far as to said that the customers are getting increasingly “spoiled” in the digital age. Customers want to get instant gratification for first-hand information. They are becoming more informed with infinite choices to get access to information at the real- time. Scott Beaumont think consumers are becoming experts in terms of product cost, production process and user experience. They consult on various review sites, social websites, price-comparison sites, etc.

Dramatic changes in technology and customer behaviors will trigger corresponding innovation in business models. The enterprises and startups have to rethink marketing, or how to engage consumers, who are becoming better-educated over time. Traditional business barriers are being break down, giving way to the rise of new incredible business models. For Scott, marketing is not only a science, but also an art that needs technological support.

As the founder of mobile-startup Refresh Mobile before joining Google in 2009, Scott shared his experiences as an entrepreneur.  He thinks young entrepreneurs should be resilient, passionate about what you can offer, and truly audacious to think big.

Scott Beaumont took office in Google China in mid-2013 after the search giant came under the fire from Beijing censors in 2009 to 2010 when it refused to censor the contents that popped up in Google search on Chinese mainland and moved its servers to Hong Kong in March 2010.

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JD.com Launches Level One Shopping Channel on Mobile QQ https://technode.com/2014/08/08/jd-com-launches-level-one-shopping-channel-mobile-qq/ https://technode.com/2014/08/08/jd-com-launches-level-one-shopping-channel-mobile-qq/#comments Fri, 08 Aug 2014 06:56:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22070 JD.com, a leading Chinese online retailer that Tencent has a stake in, released JD Mobile QQ Shopping, a level one access point channel on Mobile QQ, Tencent’s flagship IM tool which boasts over 490 million active users. Dubbed as “Shopping”, the service is placed under the tab of Moments (not official translation) — below the Game […]]]>
JD-Mobile-qq

JD.com, a leading Chinese online retailer that Tencent has a stake in, released JD Mobile QQ Shopping, a level one access point channel on Mobile QQ, Tencent’s flagship IM tool which boasts over 490 million active users.

Dubbed as “Shopping”, the service is placed under the tab of Moments (not official translation) — below the Game Channel. There are three sub-channels for special sales (flash sale/group-buying businesses), deals from brands and general sales market.

Although Tencent has already added a JD shopping channel to Mobile QQ earlier this year, the channel launched backed then is only a sub-channel in Mobile QQ’s QQ Wallet interface. And a level one shopping channel will help users to find JD’s shopping channel more easily, and therefore, bring more traffic.

According to industry insiders, this service will help JD to capitalize on the huge user base of Mobile QQ and bring more mobile users to the e-commerce platform. More importantly, Mobile QQ has a high penetration rate that go beyond first- and second-tier cities to third-, even sixth-tier cities. This advantage will help JD to tap wider domestic market that were inaccessible to its marketing channels before. The source added that the social networking nature of Mobile QQ will open up more opportunities to JD in socialized e-commerce sector.

Upon Tencent’s announcement of a US$214 million investment in JD.com earlier this year, the Chinese Internet giant promised to provide JD with the best resources on WeChat and Mobile QQ. Tencent has kept its promise by giving JD level one access point at WeChat in this May.

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iDreamSky Co-founder Jeff Lyndon Talks About IPO As Company Stock Begins Trading on Nasdaq https://technode.com/2014/08/08/idreamsky-co-founder-jeff-lyndon-talks-about-ipo-as-company-stock-begins-trading-on-nasdaq/ https://technode.com/2014/08/08/idreamsky-co-founder-jeff-lyndon-talks-about-ipo-as-company-stock-begins-trading-on-nasdaq/#respond Fri, 08 Aug 2014 03:28:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=22056 Jeff Lyndon at TechCrunch Shanghai 2013 Whilst Chinese tech companies flock to the U.S. stock market this year, Chinese game publisher iDreamSky also made its mark on the 2014 IPO market. One month after filling for U.S. IPO, iDreamSky (DSKY: NASDAQ) stock began trading yesterday, offering 7.7 million American depositary shares at an initial public […]]]>
idreamsky

Jeff Lyndon at TechCrunch Shanghai 2013

Whilst Chinese tech companies flock to the U.S. stock market this year, Chinese game publisher iDreamSky also made its mark on the 2014 IPO market. One month after filling for U.S. IPO, iDreamSky (DSKY: NASDAQ) stock began trading yesterday, offering 7.7 million American depositary shares at an initial public offering of US$15.00, above the preliminary US$12.00 to US$14.00 price range. The stock closed up 7% at US$16.05 per share on Aug. 7. Through the IPO the company raised US$115 million and reached a market valuation of approximately US$$695 million.

Jeff Lyndon, co-founder and president of iDreamSky, had a telephone interview with TechNode to talk about the IPO process, insights on Chinese game distribution market and more.

TechNode: What was the IPO process like? And why taking the company public in the U.S. market, while most Chinese game companies choose Hong Kong market. U.S. investors are not very acceptive of Chinese game companies, how did you tell your story to them?

Jeff: Despite small twists and turns, the whole IPO process goes well without encountering major problems or obstacles. Since iDreamSky has been engaged in helping leading foreign games to navigate their ways to Chinese market, we prefer an international and standardized market with more transparent operations. Such a choice will help us to gain more confidence from investors, game developers and partners.

I’ve also concerned with the problem of whether U.S. investors are willing to accept Chinese game companies before. But in the IPO process, I’ve got to know that the U.S. investors have their own insights on Chinese game market. Lots of them either speak Chinese or are Chinese migrants who finished their studies in the U.S. One of the biggest challenges we met in the IPO is to remolding the role of Chinese game publishers and convince the investors that the business model of iDreamsky will be successful.

TechNode: Why this timing after privatization of Giant and Chukong’s IPO suspension?

Jeff: Without consideration for listing schedules of peer companies, we think it is the best time for iDreamSky to go public. For me and my partners, one of the major challenges we facing now is upgrading team structures. As a listed company, it will be easier to attract more professional talents, who will be the footstone for sustainable development of the firm. Additionally, listing on Nasdaq will bolster iDreamSky’s long-term development.

TechNode: Are you satisfied with the market valuation of iDreamSky?

Jeff: We pays more attention to long-term rather than current valuations, since IPO is just a starting point. Market response will be a more fair evidence to gauge the value of a company and iDreamSky will continue to prove its value to investors in the future.

TechNode: How the company is going to be influenced by receiving more funding from internet giants like Tencent, Line, Cheetah?

Jeff: All of the three companies have solid markets both home and abroad. iDreamSky will strengthen global partnership with them to bring domestic games to overseas market and vice versa. In cooperation with Tencent, we plan to launch special versions of Temple Run, Fruit Ninja, Cookie Run for WeChat and QQ Mobile. Moreover, iDreamSky also supports WeChat payment.

TechNode: Since most of Chinese game developers are now in their primary development stage, game publishers developed quickly to bridge the gap between game developers and distribution channels. With the maturity of gaming market, oligarch game companies, which have powers to promote their own products, will appear after merger and acquisition between small game startups and the market of game publishers will be encroached by them. What’s your insights on the future of mobile game publishing industry?

Jeff: No matter which link a company is in the game industry chain, there’s always possibilities to get replaced by competitors. I think the key point here is whether the company can remodel and improve its added values, and evolve with the whole industry. As a game publisher, iDreamSky is in the middle link of the industry. Most of the game publishers deploy a marketing plan of getting listed on various distribution channels and launching large scale marketing campaigns. iDreamSky chooses another path by offering backend and multi-dimensional data analysis services to game developers so as to drive ongoing game optimization and monetization, guiding them with insights on future development directions.

We also launch close cooperation with game developers by obtaining their source codes as co-development partners. In cooperation with distribution channels, iDreamSky launches special versions for different distribution channels rather than the same version without differentiation.

TechNode: iDreamsky is known for its game publishing business. Do you have plans to expand business in upper and lower stream of the industrial chain into game development or distribution channels after the IPO? As mentioned in the prospectus, the proceeds will be used in mergers and acquisitions.

Jeff: As a company focused on mobile games, we are also interested in backend or data analytic services. We hold a wait-and-see attitude towards game content providers and do not roll out the possibility in helping innovative early-stage game startups as a supporting platform.

TechNode: What’s your standards in selecting game development partners?

Jeff: We select partners based on a two-dimensional standards. Firstly, it’s the data of the games. We will launch close test for these games to gain stats on their confirmation process, payment conversion rate, etc. Secondly, we will evaluate the background of game developers and whether they are familiar with the workflow of game development.

TechNode: Are you going to expand from home turf in casual games to explore more mid-core and hardcore games?

Jeff: Casual games will still be our primary focus, but we are also giving more emphasis to mid-core and hardcore games. We’ve released several mid-core and hard-core games like Sanjianhao, Tianjiang, etc.

As an old friend of TechNode, Jeff Lyndon once shared with us on how to help foreign games to be successful in China at TechCrunch Shanghai last year. Here are some takeaways from him.

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Average Broadband Download Speed in China Climbs 8.6% MOM to 4.03 Mbit/s:BDA https://technode.com/2014/08/07/average-broadband-download-speed-china-climbs-8-6-mom-4-03-mbitsbda/ https://technode.com/2014/08/07/average-broadband-download-speed-china-climbs-8-6-mom-4-03-mbitsbda/#respond Thu, 07 Aug 2014 07:57:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21995 China’s average download speed for fixed broadband networks reached 4.03Mbit/s (515.4kByte/s) in Q2 this year, rising 8.6% from 3.71Mbit/s in Q1 this year and 37.5% as compared with the first half of last year, according to a report released by the Broadband Development Alliance, a third party research organization. From regional perspective, Shanghai, Beijing, Jiangsu, […]]]>

China’s average download speed for fixed broadband networks reached 4.03Mbit/s (515.4kByte/s) in Q2 this year, rising 8.6% from 3.71Mbit/s in Q1 this year and 37.5% as compared with the first half of last year, according to a report released by the Broadband Development Alliance, a third party research organization.

U10837P2DT20140807091805

From regional perspective, Shanghai, Beijing, Jiangsu, Sichuan and Fujian grabbed the top five positions in terms of average download speed. Altogether nine provincial-level regions recorded average download speed higher than 4Mbit/s, including the top five regions as well as Zhejiang, Shandong, Tianjin and Guangdong.

China’s regional difference in broadband speed is obvious. Eight out of the nine above-mentioned regions come from the East with an only exception of Sichuan, which is located in the west of China. The average download speed of all provinces exceeded 3Mbit/s.

The average display time for fixed broadband web browsers raised from 2.31 seconds in Q1 to 2.37 seconds in Q2 this year, the report added.

Although the Internet speed for Chinese urbanities is a lot faster than the past few years, it still lags far behind the international level. In order to build out faster Internet infrastructures, China’s State Council launched “Broadband China” plan last year, aiming to realize full broadband network coverage by 2020. 

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Baidu Reportedly Fully Acquires Online Education Site Chuanke https://technode.com/2014/08/06/baidu-reportedly-fully-acquires-online-education-site-chuanke/ https://technode.com/2014/08/06/baidu-reportedly-fully-acquires-online-education-site-chuanke/#comments Wed, 06 Aug 2014 08:14:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21959 Shortly after leading a new round of financing in test prep service Wanxue Education, Baidu is taking another step to further its foray into online education field. The Chinese search giant reportedly fully acquired online education site Chuanke and rebranded as “Baidu Chuanke”. TechNode learned from a person familiar with the matter that the news […]]]>

Shortly after leading a new round of financing in test prep service Wanxue Education, Baidu is taking another step to further its foray into online education field. The Chinese search giant reportedly fully acquired online education site Chuanke and rebranded as “Baidu Chuanke”.

TechNode learned from a person familiar with the matter that the news is true and the deal size is around US$30 million. The source disclosed that Chuanke will remain independent operation after the acquisition and being integrated into Duxuetang, the video lecture channel under Baidu.

Chuanke is a C2C online video course platform founded by former employees from leading Chinese Internet companies like Tencent and Kingsoft, offering a wide variety of contents in elementary education, IT, language learning, financial management, etc.

After receiving seed investments from Ameba Capital, the company has secured Series A funding form Bertelsmann. It is reported that Baidu has injected US$3.5 million in the startup last year.

Originally from: http://cn.technode.com/post/2014-08-06/chuanke-baidu/

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Personal Finance App Win-win Financing Gets Eight-digit Dollars Series A+ Funding to Tap Thriving Chinese Mobile Finance Sector https://technode.com/2014/08/06/personal-finance-app-win-win-financing-gets-eight-digit-dollars-series-a-funding-to-tap-thriving-chinese-mobile-finance-sector/ https://technode.com/2014/08/06/personal-finance-app-win-win-financing-gets-eight-digit-dollars-series-a-funding-to-tap-thriving-chinese-mobile-finance-sector/#comments Wed, 06 Aug 2014 03:49:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21935 Win-win Financing (Yingying Licai in Chinese), a Chinese P2C finance app, announced it has received an additional eight-digit dollars in Series A+ round from GGV Capital after securing reportedly 20 million yuan (around US$ 3.2 million) of Series A financing last year. Win-win Financing started its business in 2013 as a personal finance app helping users […]]]>
Win-Win

Win-win Financing (Yingying Licai in Chinese), a Chinese P2C finance app, announced it has received an additional eight-digit dollars in Series A+ round from GGV Capital after securing reportedly 20 million yuan (around US$ 3.2 million) of Series A financing last year.

Win-win Financing started its business in 2013 as a personal finance app helping users to purchase financial products like monetary funds, etc. The app gradually included P2B and P2P services in 2014. As of the end of June this year, the startup claimed more than 5 million downloads and 1 million registered users. Its turnover has exceeded 3 billion yuan, bringing over 60 million of incomes to investors, according to the company.

While most of traditional financial products target at users aged more than 35 years old, Win-win Financing is after younger users aged between 25 to 35, who just started their career. According to Ye Jinwu, CEO of the company, the per capita investment of traditional P2C and P2P platforms are usually more than 30K yuan. Since the target users of Win-win Financing may not have as much savings in their early career life, per capita investment of Win-win is around 6K to 7K yuan, which in turn leads to different profitability structure of the platform, said Ye.

With the new funding, the company plans to reconstruct its financial asset management team and improve user experience. It is reported that the firm will launch a web version for PC users very soon to complement its app business. According to Ye, three top priorities of the company are: find high-quality assets, risk control and provide quality service to users.

Ye Jinwu, founder and current CEO of Win-win, founded the company in 2013 together with a Alipay-pedigree team.

Jenny Lee, partner of GGV Capital, thinks mobile finance is going to be an innovation forefront in mobile filed. She predicted that the market size of mobile finance industry is expected to reach hundreds of billions yuan with the opening up of Chinese financial industry. Personal finance app Wacai just announced US$15 million of Series A+ funding earlier this year.

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Uber Launches No-profit Ridesharing Service People’s Uber in Beijing https://technode.com/2014/08/05/uber-launches-profit-ridesharing-service-peoples-uber-beijing/ https://technode.com/2014/08/05/uber-launches-profit-ridesharing-service-peoples-uber-beijing/#comments Tue, 05 Aug 2014 05:07:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21869 Three months after soft-launched service in its 100th city of Beijing, Uber introduced a new product to the city–People’s Uber, a no-profit ridesharing service. This service is available now during trial period in Beijing, according to the company. Using the same Uber app, riders can share a car by opening the app, connecting with the driver to confirm their […]]]>
【横版】人民优步

Three months after soft-launched service in its 100th city of Beijing, Uber introduced a new product to the city–People’s Uber, a no-profit ridesharing service. This service is available now during trial period in Beijing, according to the company.

Using the same Uber app, riders can share a car by opening the app, connecting with the driver to confirm their destination, and jumping in.

Uber-People

Screenshots of People’s Uber

Drivers are fellow Beijingers vetted by Uber and rated by users after every trip. Any private car driver with driving license, proper annual inspection on their vehicles and car insurance can join the platform, while the age of their cars should be less than five years. Uber will offer training services to registered drivers.

Since People’s Uber is a no-profit platform, drivers should not charge riders higher than their driving costs and Uber will give a reference price in the app when a ride finished. According to Uber Beijing representative Ben, for-profit ridesharing services are illegal under the laws prescribed by Beijing municipality.

Such an on-demand ridesharing service seems to be quite a fit in Beijing, a city known for its scale and also troubled by rising emissions and severe road congestionAs one the biggest cities in China, Beijing has over 20 million residents and 5 million cars on the rings and hutongs.

At current stage, the U.S. car-summoning startup did not come up with a clear plan on who will take the responsibilities, the drivers or the riders, when an accident happens.

Similar Chinese car sharing startups like PP Zuche and Baojia solve the problem by cooperating with third-party insurance companies to cover expenses for accidents.

image credit: Uber

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CMGE Announces Ambitious Cooperation Plan with All-star IP Partner Team https://technode.com/2014/08/04/cmge-announces-ambitious-cooperation-plan-with-all-star-ip-partner-team/ https://technode.com/2014/08/04/cmge-announces-ambitious-cooperation-plan-with-all-star-ip-partner-team/#comments Mon, 04 Aug 2014 09:36:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21841 As China’s thriving mobile gaming sector hitting 12.52 billion yuan (around US$2 billion) revenue in H1 this year, China Mobile Games and Entertainment Group Limited (CMGE), a leading publisher and developer of mobile games in China, announced a lengthy list packed with star-studded international intellectual property partners last Saturday. The company plans to develop mobile games based […]]]>
CMGE-pic

As China’s thriving mobile gaming sector hitting 12.52 billion yuan (around US$2 billion) revenue in H1 this year, China Mobile Games and Entertainment Group Limited (CMGE), a leading publisher and developer of mobile games in China, announced a lengthy list packed with star-studded international intellectual property partners last Saturday.

The company plans to develop mobile games based on existing brands by obtaining authorizations from brand owners as well as to create new original stories through cooperation with global top game development teams. Xiao Jian, CEO of CMGE, disclosed at the press conference that these new games will be released around Q4 this year or Q1 next year.

CMGE Partners & IP Brands

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CMGE has partnered with renowned Japanese cartoon companies of Toei Animation and GREE to create mobile games based on their widely-poplar animated film series of One Piece, Ikkyuu San and Naruto. The company also cooperates with Japanese partners of Koei Tecmo and SNK to reinvigorate their previous hit games, either PC or Arcade games, and introduces them to Chinese mobile users.

As Japanese cartoons and games are highly acclaimed by Chinese audiences in the past decades, these IP brands and games are hugely popular among the post-80 and -90 generations, who constitute a dominant part of Chinese mobile players now. The reinvention of these timeless classic works may help the company to monetize the nostalgic feelings of Chinese post-80s and -90s who tend to cherish their childhood memories more when nearing or in their early thirties.

“CMGE will make strong collaboration initiatives with IP owners to improve the protection awareness of intellectual properties in the mobile gaming market,” said Xiao Jian. “Besides, we will start to clean up the pirated market in the meanwhile.”

CMGE set up another partnership with Shaolin Temple, the keeper of the Shaolin monk martial arts tradition. The monastery is long famous for its association with Chinese martial arts and particularly with Shaolin Kung Fu.

In addition to cooperate with existing IP brands, the Nasdaq-listed company also poised to develop in-house IP brand Sword of Souls with U.S. teams under the concept of “transmedia”, trying to build entertainment properties span multiple media of movies, games, cartoons, etc.

image credit: CMGE

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Online Trading Portal 8 Securities Unveils Automated Portfolio Service Upon Receiving US$9M Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2014/08/04/online-trading-portal-8-securities-unveils-automated-portfolio-service-upon-receiving-us9m-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/08/04/online-trading-portal-8-securities-unveils-automated-portfolio-service-upon-receiving-us9m-fresh-funding/#respond Mon, 04 Aug 2014 05:01:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21821 8 Securities, a Hong Kong-based social trading & wealth management service that claimed to managing over US$750 million assets for individual investors, has secured US$9 million in Series B funding to accelerate its marketing and customer growth in Japan and Greater China. “We will use the new capital almost exclusively for advertising our new products […]]]>
8Securities

8 Securities, a Hong Kong-based social trading & wealth management service that claimed to managing over US$750 million assets for individual investors, has secured US$9 million in Series B funding to accelerate its marketing and customer growth in Japan and Greater China.

“We will use the new capital almost exclusively for advertising our new products of Auto Portfolio (an automated portfolio service released today) and Social Trading (slated for release in early fall) in Japan. Furthermore, we will be entering Mainland China in 2014 where we have ambitious growth plans.” said Mikaal Abdulla, CEO of 8 Securities.

The new round includes participation from leading financial technology venture funds in both the US and China. 8 Securities’ original investors like Velocity Capital and Leitmotiv Private Equity,  which joined a US$8 million round in 2012, also participated in the round. 

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Unless you have $1 million USD to invest, access to a professionally managed global portfolio is out of reach to most investors. Upon announcement of the new funding, 8 Securities released a new product Auto Portfolio to solves this problem. Only three months after launching a Japanese version in May this year, the new product is another move of the company to tap Japan’s wealth management landscape. The China & Hong Kong version of this product will be launched in two weeks, the company noted.

Auto Portfolio takes aim at Japan’s traditional financial advisers, asset management firms and private banks. The automated portfolio begins with a 3 minute online survey to assess each individual’s goals, risk tolerance and time horizon. The proprietary software then automatically generates a personalized portfolio of up to 16 global exchange traded funds with access to domestic, global and emerging markets across all asset classes.

In a single click customers can select the amount they want to invest, buy the portfolio and monitor its performance on any device and at anytime. Customers can benchmark the performance of their portfolio against popular indexes. The global portfolio is automatically rebalanced for customers based on changing economic conditions. The service costs 0.5% of the average annual value of the portfolio with no other fees or commissions.

 “There are over US$15 trillion in investible assets held by individuals in Japan today which is second only to the United States”, said Nobofumi Iimori, president of 8 Securities in Japan. “There is growing demand by individuals in Japan to hold investments in foreign markets. Investors want to move beyond holding only Japanese assets and are beginning to make global diversification a priority.”

image credit: 8 Securities

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Chinese Cloud Service Provider Qiniu Raises Eight-digit Dollars Series C Financing https://technode.com/2014/08/01/chinese-cloud-service-provider-qiniu-raises-eight-digit-dollars-series-c-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/08/01/chinese-cloud-service-provider-qiniu-raises-eight-digit-dollars-series-c-financing/#comments Fri, 01 Aug 2014 04:22:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21787 Chinese cloud service provider Qiniu Information Technology announced eight-digit dollars of Series C financing led by CBC and followed by existing investors of Matrix Partners China and Qiming Venture Partners, who participated in Series A and Series B round, respectively. The company disclosed that the financing will be used in infrastructure and cloud industrial chain construction, R&D, […]]]>
Qiniu

Chinese cloud service provider Qiniu Information Technology announced eight-digit dollars of Series C financing led by CBC and followed by existing investors of Matrix Partners China and Qiming Venture Partners, who participated in Series A and Series B round, respectively.

The company disclosed that the financing will be used in infrastructure and cloud industrial chain construction, R&D, and expansion into overseas markets.

Qiniu is a cloud-based storage solutions provider in China, offering one-stop data management services to enterprises. The company is founded in 2011 by Xu Shiwei, a former technological researcher at China’s top Internet companies of Kingsoft and Shanda.

The startup now claimed nearly 100K enterprise clients in industries of social networking, interactive entertainment, e-commerce, online education, security, etc.

Qiniu helps enterprises to focus squarely on their products and core businesses rather than wasting time and energy in peripheral matters, according to Xu Shiwei, CEO of the company.

Ucloud, a major competitor of Qiniu just announced US$50M of Series B financing in June this year. In addition to other similar startups like Upyun and Jianguoyun, cloud services backed by big Chinese Internet companies such as Alibaba and Tencent are also tapping this market.

 image credit: Qiniu

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Korean Online Travel Site Zaiseoul Taps Already-crowded Chinese Outbound Tourism Industry with Localized Services https://technode.com/2014/07/31/korean-online-travel-site-zaiseoul-taps-already-crowded-chinese-outbound-tourism-industry-with-localized-services/ https://technode.com/2014/07/31/korean-online-travel-site-zaiseoul-taps-already-crowded-chinese-outbound-tourism-industry-with-localized-services/#comments Thu, 31 Jul 2014 03:17:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21704 Chinese online travelling sites focused on overseas tourism services are going to face fiercer competition in an already-crowded market, as their foreign counterparts are poised to take a bite of the cake. Started as a travel magazine offering monthly insights to Chinese backpackers to South Korea, Zaiseoul is an online travelling site providing tourism services to Chinese […]]]>
zaiseoul

Chinese online travelling sites focused on overseas tourism services are going to face fiercer competition in an already-crowded market, as their foreign counterparts are poised to take a bite of the cake.

Started as a travel magazine offering monthly insights to Chinese backpackers to South Korea, Zaiseoul is an online travelling site providing tourism services to Chinese clients with South Korea as their travelling destination, a popular place for Chinese travelers in recent years as the K-pop trend is in full swing in China.

The tourism site offers quality contents on South Korean scenic spots, accommodations, shuttle buses, shopping centers, etc. to make tourists to travel like a local. It also partnered with Qunar to roll out a local travel guide matching service.

The company just announced US$680K of Series A financing from Korean investor K CUBE VENTURES and the angel round was secured from Primer in 2013. The proceeds will be used to accelerate expansion in Chinese market, as well as to seek cooperation with Chinese IT companies and OTA sites. The South Korean startup plans to launch an app and improve operations of its WeChat official account in the second half of this year.

Zaiseoul is co-founded by two Korean entrepreneurs in 2010. Given a primary focus on Chinese market, 35% of the company’s employees are Chinese, while most of the team members are either graduated from renewed Chinese universities or Chinese majors from Korean universities.

image credit: Zaiseoul

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China Mobile Gaming Eclipses Web Gaming to Hit 12.5B Yuan Revenue in 2014H1 https://technode.com/2014/07/30/china-mobile-gaming-eclipses-web-gaming-hit-12-5b-yuan-revenue-2014h1/ https://technode.com/2014/07/30/china-mobile-gaming-eclipses-web-gaming-hit-12-5b-yuan-revenue-2014h1/#comments Wed, 30 Jul 2014 08:28:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21663 China’s total revenue from gaming industry, including online game, mobile game and stand-alone game markets, rocketed 46.4% YOY to 49.62 billion yuan (around US$8.03 billion) in the first half of this year, according to report released by research institutes of GPC and CNG. Of the total amount, client gaming still takes the No.1 spot in terms of revenue […]]]>

China’s total revenue from gaming industry, including online game, mobile game and stand-alone game markets, rocketed 46.4% YOY to 49.62 billion yuan (around US$8.03 billion) in the first half of this year, according to report released by research institutes of GPC and CNG.

Of the total amount, client gaming still takes the No.1 spot in terms of revenue by generating 25.57 billion yuan. Mobile gaming takes the runner-up position by contributing 12.52 billion yuan, overshadowing Web gaming which recorded 9.18 billion yuan in H1 this year. In the same period of last year, the revenues for mobile gaming and web gaming stood at 2.53 billion and 5.34 billion yuan, respectively.

The report added that the number of Chinese gamer climbed 9.5% YOY to 400 billion in the reporting period.

Chinese client game users reached 130 million, up 3.7% YOY, but its market share slumped 17.2% YOY to 51.5% in H1 this year. The number of mobile gamers surged 89.5% YOY to 330 million, with market share climbed to 25.2% from 17.7% in the same period of last year. Web game users increased 6.5% YOY to around 300 million, with market share inched up 2.7% YOY to 18.5%.

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K-12 Education Platform 17zuoye Looks to Bring Homework Online https://technode.com/2014/07/30/k-12-education-platform-17zuoye-looks-bring-homework-online/ https://technode.com/2014/07/30/k-12-education-platform-17zuoye-looks-bring-homework-online/#comments Wed, 30 Jul 2014 07:08:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21634 Chinese K-12 education sector is attracting lots of startups as online education is in full swing here. There are around 200 million elementary and high school students in China, moreover, Chinese parents are known for their willingness to invest heavily in education of children, mostly of whom are single child of the family. 17zuoye (the name translates to Homework […]]]>
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Chinese K-12 education sector is attracting lots of startups as online education is in full swing here. There are around 200 million elementary and high school students in China, moreover, Chinese parents are known for their willingness to invest heavily in education of children, mostly of whom are single child of the family.

17zuoye (the name translates to Homework together) is an online study platform targeted at Chinese K-12 space. As the name suggests, it creates an online collaborative space for teachers, parents and students to do homework together. The company secured US$20 million Series C round financing from Tiger Management, H Capital and Shunwei Capital at a valuation of around US$100 million.

17zuoye focuses on providing services and products for primary mathematics and English learning. In addition to bring homework online, the platform also offers data-driven analytic reports on students’ performances on key knowledge points, student performance by regions, etc.

Founded in 2011, the company now registered 7 million student users, 146K teacher users and cooperates with nearly 30K schools countrywide.

After receiving angel funding from Chinese entrepreneurs and angel investors Wang Qiang and Xu Xiaoping in 2011, the Beijing-based startup landed US$5 million of Series A funding from Shunwei Capital in 2012 and US$10 million Series B funding in 2013.

Liu Chang, CEO and co-founder of 17zuoye, is a former exec at China’s top private educational service New Oriental. Management team of the firm comes from Chinese Internet companies like Sina, Baidu, Tencent, Alibaba, Jumei, and education institutions like New Oriental, TAL.

image credit: 17zuoye

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Huawei’s Smartphone Shipment Soars 62%YOY to 34M in 2014 H1 https://technode.com/2014/07/29/huaweis-smartphone-shipment-soars-62yoy-34m-2014-h1/ https://technode.com/2014/07/29/huaweis-smartphone-shipment-soars-62yoy-34m-2014-h1/#comments Tue, 29 Jul 2014 06:34:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21587 Huawei has shipped 34.27 million smartphones globally in the first half of this year, surging 62% as compared with the same period of last year, according to stats released by Huawei  Consumer Business Group. Of which, more than 20.56 million smartphones were sold out in the second quarter of this year globally, up 85% YOY. The […]]]>

Huawei has shipped 34.27 million smartphones globally in the first half of this year, surging 62% as compared with the same period of last year, according to stats released by Huawei  Consumer Business Group. Of which, more than 20.56 million smartphones were sold out in the second quarter of this year globally, up 85% YOY.

The telecom gear and smartphone maker said its total shipment for handsets, mobile broadband and other gadgets has reached 64.21 million during the reporting period.

Huawei attributes this growth to the popularity of its flagship products like Ascend P7 and Mate 2 (4G), as well as the robust sales surge in emerging overseas markets. In Q2 2014, Huawei recorded rapid growth in Middle East and Africa, Latin America, Asia-Pacific regions, with smartphone shipment in these areas rocketed 550%, 275% and 180% in YOY growth respectively, according to the firm.

The company’s annual smartphone shipment for 2013 stood at 50 million. The group generated a revenue of more than 135.8 billion yuan (around US$22 billion) in the first half of this year, rising 19% YOY, citing its latest fiscal report.

As more Chinese handset makers like Xiaomi, Meizu are making efforts to develop feature-rich smartphones at lower prices, Huawei is trying to tap the premium handset market, where Apple and Samsung have continued to dominate.

image credit: Huawei

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JD Accepts Xbox One Pre-orders in China via Tencent’s SNS Networks https://technode.com/2014/07/28/d-accepts-xbox-one-pre-orders-in-china-via-tencents-sns-networks/ https://technode.com/2014/07/28/d-accepts-xbox-one-pre-orders-in-china-via-tencents-sns-networks/#comments Mon, 28 Jul 2014 09:12:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21551 JD.com (or JD), China’s leading e-commerce site increasingly known for its efforts in backing up hardware startups, announced this morning that it has attained the exclusive right to take pre-orders for Microsoft’s video game console Xbox One in China. Instead of accepting orders on its website, JD announced in the press release that it will first […]]]>
xbox

JD.com (or JD), China’s leading e-commerce site increasingly known for its efforts in backing up hardware startups, announced this morning that it has attained the exclusive right to take pre-orders for Microsoft’s video game console Xbox One in China.

Instead of accepting orders on its website, JD announced in the press release that it will first take Xbox One pre-orders via WeChat and Mobile QQ, two social networking services offered by Tencent Holdings, the second-largest shareholder of JD. WeChat and Mobile QQ users can place orders for Xbox with a deposit of 499 yuan (US$81) to JD, three days before the company begins taking pre-orders from other Chinese consumers on its website and mobile app on July 31. But the specific price for this product is still unknown.

After selling a 15 percent stake to Tencent this March, JD started its cooperation with the Internet giant by integrating its services onto WeChat and Mobile QQ to capitalize on Tencent’s gigantic user base, as well as to invigorate the online shopping business of the latter. Tencent also announced that its e-commerce properties, including marketplaces Paipai (C2C) and QQ Wanggou (B2C), will be transferred to JD.

Chinese game console industry is heating up after the State Council lifted the 13-year ban on this sector imposed in 2000. To tap this nascent market in China, Microsoft teamed up with Shanghai-based media service BesTV New Media (SH: 600637) last year to set up a joint venture dedicated to this business. The joint venture released Xbox One in Chinese market April this year.

In May 2014, Japanese giant Sony also set up a joint venture with Chinese company Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group to introduce its game console PS4 to Chinese market. Domestic companies like Huawei and ZTE also rolled out products to tap this market.

image credit: JD

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Big Data-based Recommendation Solution Provider Baifendian Raises US$25M of Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/28/big-data-based-recommendation-solution-provider-baifendian-raises-us25m-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/28/big-data-based-recommendation-solution-provider-baifendian-raises-us25m-series-c-funding/#comments Mon, 28 Jul 2014 06:08:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21536 Baifendian Corp., a Beijing-based personalized recommendation technology service, announced that it received US$25 million of Series C financing without mentioned the name of investors. In total, the company has secured roughly US$42.2 million funding together with US$10 million in Series B round received one year earlier and US$7.2 million in Series A financing. The funds received this time will […]]]>
Baifendian-pic

Baifendian Corp., a Beijing-based personalized recommendation technology service, announced that it received US$25 million of Series C financing without mentioned the name of investors. In total, the company has secured roughly US$42.2 million funding together with US$10 million in Series B round received one year earlier and US$7.2 million in Series A financing.

The funds received this time will be used to improve technology, big data application models, talent recruitment and infrastructures, said Su Meng, board chairman of the company.

As global big data ecosystem is taking form, Baifenbai launched this time a new strategy to focused on enterprise-facing big data applications. According to Su Meng, the strategy is consisted of three parts 1): Exploring Aaas (Analysis-as-a-Service) and MaaS (Model-as-a-Service) businesses, both offering final analysis results and allowing clients to customize the analytic models for extended development. 2) All the technologies and services are based on cloud, either public cloud or hybrid cloud. 3) Constructing comprehensive big data platform, opening to third-party developers, as well as part of the data to analysts and scientists.

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Su added that Baifendian is committed to collectivized management of its existing businesses of Baifendian Technology, Xinbo Technology and Qianfendian Technology. Each of the three subsidiaries has their own focus on different sectors of big data services. Baifendian Technology is specialize in big data Internet application, including cooperation with e-commerce sites and media. Xinbo Technology gives priority to big data application in retailing and O2O sector, while Qianfendian Technology is engaged in R&D of basic big data platform and provides big data solution plans to enterprises in traditional industries.

Founded in 2009, Baifendian is a Chinese recommendation engine specializes in analyzing customer’s online shopping preference, providing integrated optimization solutions for e-commerce websites through in-site traffic conversion and business intelligence analysis. Baifendian’s two flagship products are Baifendian Recommendation Engine (BRE) and Baifendian Analytics Engine (BAE), focusing on analyzing shopping preferences across the Internet thereby providing precise marketing services to e-commerce sites.

After five years of development, the company’s big data technologies and services have been applied in various fields of e-commerce, retailing, automobile, finance, branding, serving more than 1,000 enterprise clients, like Yihaodian.com, VANCL.com, Tuniu.com, Coo8.com, 58.com, Xiu.com, Redbaby.com.cn, Mbaobao.com Kela.cn, MasaMaso.com, among others . 

image credit: Baifendian

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Test Prep Service Wanxue Education Takes in Series C Funding Led by Baidu https://technode.com/2014/07/25/test-prep-service-wanxue-education-takes-in-series-c-funding-led-by-baidu/ https://technode.com/2014/07/25/test-prep-service-wanxue-education-takes-in-series-c-funding-led-by-baidu/#comments Fri, 25 Jul 2014 03:30:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21453 Beijing-based education institution Universal Education Group (more commonly known as Wanxue Education) has raised Series C financing from Baidu with participation of HAO Capital, the China-focused private equity firm, and Doll Capital Management (DCM). The company did not disclose financial terms and other details of the investment. But the deal size is rumored to be around tens […]]]>
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Beijing-based education institution Universal Education Group (more commonly known as Wanxue Education) has raised Series C financing from Baidu with participation of HAO Capital, the China-focused private equity firm, and Doll Capital Management (DCM). The company did not disclose financial terms and other details of the investment. But the deal size is rumored to be around tens of millions of dollars, citing a report by Yicai.com.

The proceeds will be used to further grow Wanxue Education’s online education business and promote the development of its cloud-based learning portal, as well as to enhance its online marketing and O2O (online to offline) capacity.

Wanxue Education is a leading Chinese educational institution for professional and academic training for college students. Established in 2006, Wanxue Education is mainly engaged in offering CGAT (China Graduate Admission Test) test preparation training in China, known for its test prep brand Wanxue Haiwen. It also specializes in preparation courses for civil service exams, offering services in 25 provinces, regions, and municipalities across China.

The company has received US$20 million in Series B round from DCM, Sequoia Capital, Legend Capital and F&H Fund Management in 2011. It also raised US$20 million from Sequoia and Legend Capital in 2008.

Upon this new funding, Wanxue Education moved to a new domain name (http://wanxue.jiaoyu.baidu.com/) under Baidu’s existing education portal.

Baidu has made continuous efforts to tap the burgeoning online education sector, as most of Chinese Internet companies are trying to build their online education platforms. After launching a separate search service for education in 2012, the company built 91UP, a platform for education apps and online courses, on 91, an app distributor it acquired last year. Early this year, Baidu also wheeled out video lecture channel Duxuetang, integrating quality contents from more than 70 education institutes.

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Fetal Movement-tracking Wristband LISA Differentiates Itself by Targeting at Niche Audiences https://technode.com/2014/07/24/fetal-movement-tracking-wristband-lisa-differentiates-itself-by-targeting-at-niche-audiences/ https://technode.com/2014/07/24/fetal-movement-tracking-wristband-lisa-differentiates-itself-by-targeting-at-niche-audiences/#comments Thu, 24 Jul 2014 09:18:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21420 There are no shortage of smart wearables on wrists, whether they are smartwatches with diversified features comparable to smart phones or fitness tracking smart wristbands for monitoring vital signs like blood pressures, heart beats, etc. LISA is a smart wristband targets at a special group of users–pregnant women, rather than a more general tech-savvy consumer crowd. Weighted […]]]>
LISA

There are no shortage of smart wearables on wrists, whether they are smartwatches with diversified features comparable to smart phones or fitness tracking smart wristbands for monitoring vital signs like blood pressures, heart beats, etc.

LISA is a smart wristband targets at a special group of users–pregnant women, rather than a more general tech-savvy consumer crowd. Weighted 33g, the gadget features an elegant look with leather strips, steel frame and sapphire display, offering in three colors of white, pink and green to attract its female user base. The band is IP67 (Ingress Protection) rated and claims a battery life of one year.

Lisa-pic1

The users can record the fetal movements by tapping on the dial plate, and then, sync these data to a dedicated mobile app to analyze the health conditions of babies. The app provides curated antepartum weight control and postpartum workout programs. LISA also features step-counter function like most of the other smart wristbands do.

The startup has launched a crowdfunding campaign on Taobao Crowdfunding together with innovative hardware incubator Taihuoniao. The project has raised 115,718 yuan (around US$18,526) as of press time, far exceeding its 10K yuan target.

LISA is not the only hardware startup sets to attract pregnant women. Shenzhen-based smartphone maker Umeox has released B-smart, a smartwatch for moms based on its flagship smartwatch Omate, in cooperation with Babytree, an e-commerce site specializing in the sales of maternal and infant care products.

image credit: LISA

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Here’s What’s New about China’s Fast-evolving Telecom Industry in 2014H1: MIIT Report https://technode.com/2014/07/24/heres-whats-new-about-chinas-fast-evolving-telecom-industry-in-2014h1-miit-report/ https://technode.com/2014/07/24/heres-whats-new-about-chinas-fast-evolving-telecom-industry-in-2014h1-miit-report/#respond Thu, 24 Jul 2014 05:04:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21406 China has recorded 13.97 million 4G subscribers and 471 million 3G users as of June this year, according to the latest stats released by the Ministry of Industry and Technology Information (MIIT). China’s State council once issued a suggestion last year for promoting information consumption and making the sector a new engine to boost domestic demand […]]]>

China has recorded 13.97 million 4G subscribers and 471 million 3G users as of June this year, according to the latest stats released by the Ministry of Industry and Technology Information (MIIT).

China’s State council once issued a suggestion last year for promoting information consumption and making the sector a new engine to boost domestic demand and economic growth.

At the press conference, MIIT spokesman Zhang Feng disclosed that China’s consumption amount on information products and services surged by 20% YOY to 1.34 trillion yuan (around US$215 billion) in the first half of this year. Zhang mentioned three highlights for information consumption data:

  1. The construction of 4G and broadband networks boosts the increase of information consumption. By the end of June, China’s fixed-line broadband users reached 198 million households, while mobile broadband users amounted to 480 million, representing 38.5 of the total mobile phone users.

  2. The upgrading of devices and development of information technology guaranteed steady growth of information consumption. China’s smartphone shipment neared 200 million, accounting for 87% of the total handsets shipped.

  3. Information consumption is expanding from traditional entertainment fields like music and game to new sectors of financial, transportation, medical care, among others. China’s mobile data revenue and traffic surged 46.4% YOY and 52.1% YOY in H1 2014.

The revenue of China’s telecom enterprises providing basic telecom services and value-added services advanced 5.6%YOY and 23.6% YOY during the same period. FTTH (fiber-to-the-home) broadband adopters reached 53.93 million.

Zhang added that China Telecom and China Unicom have launched pilot tests for hybrid 4G strategy that combines TD-LTE and LTE-FDD networks in 16 cities.

China’s three leading state-owned telecom operators (China Mobile, China Unicom, China Telecom) jointly established July 18 China Comservice, a telecom infrastructure service provider, to avoid duplication of investments in infrastructures. The three telcos then will rent infrastructure from the company instead of building everything on their own. Although the company is currently mainly invested by the three state-owned carriers, China Comservice plans adopt a mixed-ownership model and introduce private investments or going public in the future, said Zhang Feng. He mentioned that the company’s registered capital is 10 billion yuan, which is not enough to support a telecom infrastructure service provider, leaving space for injection of private funds.

image credit: Shutterstock

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WeChat-based CRM Solution Weimob Raises 30M Yuan of Series A Financing https://technode.com/2014/07/23/wechat-based-crm-solution-weimob-raises-30m-yuan-of-series-a-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/07/23/wechat-based-crm-solution-weimob-raises-30m-yuan-of-series-a-financing/#comments Wed, 23 Jul 2014 08:40:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21378 Weimob, a WeChat-based CRM solution provider, announced 30 million (around US$4.8 million) of Series A financing from Meridian Capital China at a market valuation of 300 million yuan. The company has received millions yuan of angel investment last year. Sun Taoyong, founder of Wemob, disclosed the new funding will be used in recruitment and development […]]]>
Weimob

Weimob, a WeChat-based CRM solution provider, announced 30 million (around US$4.8 million) of Series A financing from Meridian Capital China at a market valuation of 300 million yuan. The company has received millions yuan of angel investment last year.

Sun Taoyong, founder of Wemob, disclosed the new funding will be used in recruitment and development of products focused on different verticals like catering, food delivery, hairdressing and beauty.

Launched in April 2013, Weimob is a SAAS platform that primarily provides enterprises with WeChat-based development, operation, training, and promotional solutions, helping businesses that do not have software development experiences to build m-commerce platforms on WeChat at lower costs. Wemob also provides SCRM and traffic analytic tools, allowing clients to optimize promotion procedure and improve marketing performance.

According to data released by the company, Weimob’s development team consisted of nearly 200 people, with more than 400,000 enterprises on the Weimob platform as of the end of this June.

Sun pointed out there will be a major reshuffling in WeChat-based third-party service industry and only those competitors with custom services on specific verticals can stand out from the crowd.

Dozens of third-party services have emerged to meet the needs of WeChat official accounts so as to capitalize on WeChat’s gigantic user base. WeChat public account development service Weixinhai secured $13 million funding earlier this year. Other third-party services like mobile shopping services Weigouyi  and  Weixin Kaka, a WeChat marketing service, also surfaced.

image credit: Weimob

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Social App Momo Announces Revenue-sharing Ratio with Game Developers https://technode.com/2014/07/23/social-app-momo-announces-revenue-sharing-ratio-with-game-developers/ https://technode.com/2014/07/23/social-app-momo-announces-revenue-sharing-ratio-with-game-developers/#respond Wed, 23 Jul 2014 04:48:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21350 Yang Ye, Momo’s VP & Manager of Gaming Center Chinese much-buzzed-about social app Momo recently announced its revenue-sharing ratio with developers on its gaming platform. Momo splits 50% of the revenues with most of the game developers and plans to roll out 2-3 games every month in the future, said Yang Ye, Momo’s VP and manager […]]]>

Yang Ye, Momo’s VP & Manager of Gaming Center

Chinese much-buzzed-about social app Momo recently announced its revenue-sharing ratio with developers on its gaming platform. Momo splits 50% of the revenues with most of the game developers and plans to roll out 2-3 games every month in the future, said Yang Ye, Momo’s VP and manager of gaming unit, at a game developer salon held in Chengdu.

Momo just announced 150 million registered users milestone early July, with monthly active users stood at 52.43 million as of the end of this June. Started as a stranger social app, Momo is trying to shake off its “hookup” and flirty reputation to gain attraction to wider user base. Most of Momo’s users are young people that are open and curious to new stuffs. According to Yang, users aged between 19 to 32 years old account for 82% of the app’s total user metrics.

Momogames

The company set up a gaming center in June last year to oversee the service, operation, technical support and promotion for games on its platform. Yang said their team will run at least three pilot tests before the release of a game and launch corresponding marketing campaigns thereafter.

Momo game center has released altogether five games, including casual game ThePuzle, mid-core game Momo Audition, hard-core game Momo Craft, Momo Fight the Landlord, card game Constellation Goddess-3D (not official translation), in cooperation with several gaming companies like Com2uS, 9you, Ejoy, etc.

Zheng Yi, Momo’s director of operations, once said in a previous interview with TechNode the company is not considering to develop homegrown game and will continue cooperation with gaming companies.

According to the statistics from Momo, the registered users of Momo Audition, Momo Craft, Momo Fight the Landlord, Constellation Goddess-3D are 6.26 million, 3.88 million, 2.80 million, 720K, respectively. The company once announced that monthly turnover of Momo Craft reached 12 million yuan (around US$1.92 million) as of early Feb., one month after the release of this game.

“Although we only released five games in the past year, these products help us to figure out what kind of game can better interest our users and to test the payment capacity of users, etc.” said Yang. She added that men form the bulk of payment users.

It is worth noting that most of the mainstream gaming platforms, like Tencent, Wandoujia, and Alibaba, split around 70% of the revenues to game developers, despite that detailed revenue-sharing structures vary according to game turnovers, app user numbers, etc.

When being asked to comment on this difference, Yang said Momo’s cooperation terms with various game developers are different and the resources Momo shares with partners are mutually beneficial and attracting.

image credit: Momo

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Online Smart Exam Database Yuantiku Lands US$15M of Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/22/online-smart-exam-database-yuantiku-lands-us15m-of-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/22/online-smart-exam-database-yuantiku-lands-us15m-of-series-c-funding/#comments Tue, 22 Jul 2014 06:36:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21292 As online education concept is in full swing in China, Yuantiku, an online question bank, raised US$15 million of Series C financing from existing investors of Matrix Partners China and IDG at a market valuation of around US$125 million. The company has received US$2.2 million of Series A financing from IDG in 2012 and US$7 million Series […]]]>
Yuantiku-pic

As online education concept is in full swing in China, Yuantiku, an online question bank, raised US$15 million of Series C financing from existing investors of Matrix Partners China and IDG at a market valuation of around US$125 million. The company has received US$2.2 million of Series A financing from IDG in 2012 and US$7 million Series B from Matrix Partners China and IDG in 2013.

The new funding will be injected in product upgrading, marketing and branding, according to Yuantiku CEO Li Yong.

Yuantiku is an one-to-one online smart exercise database that provides authoritative contents, mostly questions from previous exams, to students preparing to pass various tests. The company launched its first K-12-focused offering, a exam database for National College Entrance Exam, in October last year. This database has had over 1.5 million users as of the end of this June, representing one-sixth of the total students that participated in China’s national college entrance exam this year, according to the company.

The startup has expanded to other tests like, administrative aptitude tests and essay tests for civil servants, politics of entrance exam for postgraduate, first-level constructor, enterprises law counselor, junior accountant, securities qualification test etc.

By leveraging intelligent algorithm and big data mining technology, the database can analyze the test difficulty and performance of users so as identify their weak links and provide tailored exercises. Yuantiku offers online test database on both computers and mobile devices. The services are mainly monetized by charging monthly fees from users.

Founded in August 2012 with core members from NetEase, the Beijing-based team started its business with education community Fenbi, and then shifted focus to Yuantiku in 2013.

image credit: Yuantiku

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Alipay Wallet Adds Bookkeeping and Voice Messaging Features in 8.2 Update https://technode.com/2014/07/22/alipay-wallet-adds-bookkeeping-and-voice-messaging-features-in-8-2-update/ https://technode.com/2014/07/22/alipay-wallet-adds-bookkeeping-and-voice-messaging-features-in-8-2-update/#comments Tue, 22 Jul 2014 03:04:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21269 Alipay, the payment affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, launched an 8.2 update for its mobile app Alipay Wallet, two months after the release of previous version. The new update touches more aspects of consumers’ daily lives and some of the new features are as follows: 1. Bookkeeping One major highlight of this version is the bookkeeping feature that generates […]]]>

Alipay, the payment affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, launched an 8.2 update for its mobile app Alipay Wallet, two months after the release of previous version. The new update touches more aspects of consumers’ daily lives and some of the new features are as follows:

1. Bookkeeping

Alipay-8.2-bookkeeping

One major highlight of this version is the bookkeeping feature that generates account statements automatically based on all the transactions and payments via Alipay. Even if the expenses are not generated via Alipay, users can add them for record. Users can keep track of all financial activities generated by Alipay in different categories, including telecommunications, transportation and shopping expenses.

2. Voice Message and Social Sharing

Alipay-8.2-service1

Previously Alipay Wallet released a “service window” feature where merchants can have users to follow their official service accounts. An interesting update specific to service account merchants and subscribers is that individual users can take photos and share them on social platforms, and send voice messages when transferring payments or browsing service accounts. Other service account-centric updates are improvements on accounts searching and sharing functions.

3. AliPass

Alipay-8.2-ex

Alipay has released functions similar to Apple’s Passbook in previous versions, allowing consumers to view and manage all the e-tickets, vouchers and coupons that they have purchased either through partnering merchants’ websites or via mobile apps that use Alipay as a payment function. This time the app integrated all these functions in the “exploration” page and gives it a new brand name AliPass.

The 8.2 version also made improvements on features of QR code scanning, app launch speed, Internet connection speed, etc. The app is now available for download at iOS and Android platforms. Not surprisingly, the WP version is left out again for the latest update.

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WeChat Teams Up with Easy Taxi to Offer Taxi-calling Services in Singapore https://technode.com/2014/07/21/wechat-teams-up-with-easy-taxi-to-offer-taxi-calling-services-in-singapore/ https://technode.com/2014/07/21/wechat-teams-up-with-easy-taxi-to-offer-taxi-calling-services-in-singapore/#respond Mon, 21 Jul 2014 07:39:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21232 Tencent’s IM service WeChat recently announced a partnership with taxi-hailing app Easy Taxi, allowing users to book taxis rides directly via the popular messaging app. The two company will first launch a pilot program in Singapore and gradually expand it to other markets where both WeChat and Easy Taxi are available. WeChat users in Singapore […]]]>
easy-taxi-wechat

Tencent’s IM service WeChat recently announced a partnership with taxi-hailing app Easy Taxi, allowing users to book taxis rides directly via the popular messaging app. The two company will first launch a pilot program in Singapore and gradually expand it to other markets where both WeChat and Easy Taxi are available.

WeChat users in Singapore only have follow Easy Taxi’s official WeChat account (EasyTaxiSGP) to use the taxi booking function. Like the promotion on taxi fares in China, passengers who booking rides on Easy Taxi through Wechat can save 5 Singapore dollars (US$4), while taxi drivers will get an additional 1 Singapore Dollar (US$0.8) by the end of this month.

Easy Taxi will integrate cashless payment feature on the WeChat platform in the coming weeks, said Li Jianggan, co-founder and Managing Director of Easy Taxi Singapore.

Launched by Rocket Internet in 2011, Easy Taxi started its business from Latin America and expanded to Asian markets in 2013. According to the company, Singapore is now its biggest market in Asia.

Although WeChat did not disclose detailed user metrics by countries, its users in Singapore surged by 503% YOY in the first quarter of this year.

Originally from: cn.technode.com

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Luxury Site SECOO Secures US$100M of Series D Funding for Overseas Expansion https://technode.com/2014/07/21/luxury-site-secoo-secures-us100m-of-series-d-funding-for-overseas-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/07/21/luxury-site-secoo-secures-us100m-of-series-d-funding-for-overseas-expansion/#comments Mon, 21 Jul 2014 05:08:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21220 SECOO, a leading O2O luxury products and related services provider in China, announced today it has raised a landmark round of more than US$100 million in Series D financing led by CMC Capital Partners, with the participation of existing investors like IDG, Ventech China, Crehol Meaningful Capital (invested by Mulliez Family) and Vangoo Capital Partners, etc. […]]]>
SECOO

SECOO, a leading O2O luxury products and related services provider in China, announced today it has raised a landmark round of more than US$100 million in Series D financing led by CMC Capital Partners, with the participation of existing investors like IDG, Ventech China, Crehol Meaningful Capital (invested by Mulliez Family) and Vangoo Capital Partners, etc. The U.S. Silicon Valley Bank also provided an eight-digit dollars credit line to the company.

Given the rising demands from China’s blooming middle class for quality products and better life, Chinese customers have spent overall 350 billion yuan (around US$56 billion) on luxury products in 2013, according to research data released by Bain & Company China. The report added that around two thirds of these consumption were made overseas. To follow this trend, the proceeds from this round will be used to improve local services as well as to expand overseas market, said SECOO CEO Li Rixue.

Different from traditional luxury e-commerce sites, SECOO is a Chinese online luxury and fashion destination with more than 300K UV per day. In order to better serve the customers, the sites also established a series of offline stores in Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, Hong Kong and Tokyo together with well-known luxury product retailers and brands. New stores in Milan and New York are now under construction.

Founded in 2008, SECOO currently claimed over 3 million high-end customers with sales per user for online and offline stores stand at 8,000 yuan (around US$1,280) and 15,000 yuan, respectively.

image credit: SECOO

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Upending Your Sedentary Lifestyle with Gamified Pedometer and Virtual Pet Mashup App Wokamon https://technode.com/2014/07/18/upending-your-sedentary-lifestyle-with-gamified-pedometer-and-virtual-pet-mashup-app-wokamon/ https://technode.com/2014/07/18/upending-your-sedentary-lifestyle-with-gamified-pedometer-and-virtual-pet-mashup-app-wokamon/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2014 09:26:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21168 Despite the fast-growing popularity of smart wearables, especially those for health and fitness tracking devices, there’s a little-known fact that around 50% of users lose interest to these gadgets within a few months. Since most of the fitness tracking wearables available on the market only offer technical-fashioned and monotonous data on steps and calories burnt, it […]]]>

Despite the fast-growing popularity of smart wearables, especially those for health and fitness tracking devices, there’s a little-known fact that around 50% of users lose interest to these gadgets within a few months. Since most of the fitness tracking wearables available on the market only offer technical-fashioned and monotonous data on steps and calories burnt, it is difficult for them to motivate and engage users in the long term.

Mars Zhu and Hazim Abdul Hamid, two former colleagues at renowned marketing communications brand JWT, spotted business opportunities in this tendency and co-founded tech startup Noodum to tackle this problem. I was able to sit down with Noodum CEO Mars Zhu to get a peek of their first offering–Wokamon.

Wokamon

Screenshots of Wokamon

With the aim to get people excited about exercising, Wokamon (short for Walking Monsters) sets to gamify the exercising process by combining a GPS-enabled pedometer with a virtual pet. The principle of this app is quite simple– the more you move, the more your pet grows. The tamagotchi feeds off users’ burnt calories and turns them into happiness credits. Users can check the daily progress of their Wokamon, which will level-up as users exercise more. With five characters to start with, the long term goal is to unlock all Wokamons.

“The virtual pet seemed like a great way of visualizing and giving virtual life to your real-world activity,” says Mars Zhu, co-founder of Noodum.

Additionally, the app is opened up to users’ current fitness tracking hardware in a bid to lower the entry thresholds. Wokamon can sync data from user’s existing fitness wristbands and apps, including Fitbit, Jawbone, Moves, a fitness and activity tracking app Facebook acquired this April, etc.

wokamon_press_02_connect

As of 2013, an estimated 6 million fitness tracker devices are in use, with 1 in 5 smartphone users having installed a health tracking app. A virtual pet gives users an altruistic reason to stay engaged with their tracker, limiting dropoff rates in the category, Zhu said.

The co-founder added that users of different wearables brands or fitness apps only can interact with other members of the same community. Wokamon’s engagement of different devices and apps can help to break these boundaries and create a cross-platform community.

“It’s a fun, casual way to monitoring your fitness and state motivated as you progress through the game”. Zhu pointed out that the number of times a user syncs its fitness data on hardware to apps is a key index to gauge the active degree and stickiness of device users. Wokamon’s syncing times is seven times more frequent than that for regular fitness wristbands, according to a test run by the company. Users sync their data more frequently because they can’t wait to see the growth of their virtual pets, Zhu explained.

The company planned to monetize the services from paid characters, virtual currencies and tools, as well as derivative products like T-shits and toys.

wokamon_press_03_cuteness

Wokamon Cuties

Launched for only half a month, the startup is still in its infancy and mainly operated by the two co-founders. Mars Zhu, who has more than ten years of software development experiences, oversees the technical unit of the company. The other co-founder Hazim Abdul Hamid, a talented Australian designer and illustrator, is in charge of designs for app characters, backgrounds and interface. The characters currently available on the app marked Hazim’s vibrant colors and naïve style. Zhu referred to their virtual pets as ugly cuties jokingly. In addition, the startup is planning to diversify their character styles by inviting more famous illustrators to join the designing team, which in turn will also attracting their fans to use the app.

image credit: Wokamon

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Push Notification Service Getui Announces Eight-digit Dollars Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/18/push-notification-service-getui-announces-eight-digit-dollars-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/18/push-notification-service-getui-announces-eight-digit-dollars-series-b-funding/#respond Fri, 18 Jul 2014 04:13:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21158 Getui, a Beijing-based third-party push notification service provider, has closed an eight-digit dollars of Series B financing led by SAIF Partners, with the participation of all existing Series A investors including U.S. venture firm WI Harper. According to the company, the proceeds will be used for research and development, marketing and branding. Upon release of the funding […]]]>
Igetui-pic

Getui, a Beijing-based third-party push notification service provider, has closed an eight-digit dollars of Series B financing led by SAIF Partners, with the participation of all existing Series A investors including U.S. venture firm WI Harper. According to the company, the proceeds will be used for research and development, marketing and branding.

Upon release of the funding news, Getui rolled out its 2.0 version “Smart Push”. Based on basic push notification features, Smart Push is enabled by a user tagging system to determine what their users need most of, and then, targeting notifications to specific groups to achieve the best notifying effect and avoid being intrusive and annoying to app users.

Getui is a push notification service targeted at both iOS and Android platforms, helping app developers to engage and reach their user bases more quickly and effectively. App developers can set a specific time to send notifications, which are presented in diverse forms of text, picture, and media that developers can select according to their needs.

Getui also offers data analytic reports that show metrics on how many of the notifications were clicked and opened, and which platform has a higher reaction rate, etc.

The company has an installed app users base of 2 billion, covering 600 million mobile devices and 80K app developers as of July 2014. Getui claimed it has occupied over 90% of the third-party notification service market in China. The startup is now working with clients like Weibo, PPTV, Changba, Boyaa and China Merchants Bank.

Getui is founded in 2010 by Fang Yi, a serial entrepreneur who started his entrepreneurial career in 2005. The company previously released Gexin, a free messaging tool recorded 17 million users by 2013. Like other phonebook-based messaging services, Gexin was trapped in development dilemma after the release of Tencent’s dominating IM app WeChat. The company then pivots its business focus to push notification and rolled out the namesake product Getui in March 2012.

Getui, by the way, just kicked off a program to boost the development of app startups. Any team with less than 5 million registered users or under RMB5 million (around US$ 806K) of funding can apply for its free service.

Of course, Getui is not the only player in this market. In addition to its major startup competitor JPush, big Chinese Internet companies, including Tencent, Baidu and Alibaba’s Umeng, are also offering push notification services to apps who use their developer-facing services.

image credit: Getui

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10 Startups You Can’t Miss in China’s Burgeoning Women-Focused Service Industry (Part II) https://technode.com/2014/07/17/10-startups-cant-miss-chinas-burgeoning-women-focused-service-industry-part-ii/ https://technode.com/2014/07/17/10-startups-cant-miss-chinas-burgeoning-women-focused-service-industry-part-ii/#respond Thu, 17 Jul 2014 04:05:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21103 Let’s pick it up where we left off on women-focused startups (click here for Part I). 6. Lmbang Lmbang is a Shenzhen-based mommy communication website where mothers can share and exchange tips on various topics of child rearing, slimming, beauty makeup, emotion, delicacy, sexual health, etc. Most of the users are moms who are born in 1980s […]]]>

Let’s pick it up where we left off on women-focused startups (click here for Part I).

6. Lmbang

lmbang-pic

Lmbang is a Shenzhen-based mommy communication website where mothers can share and exchange tips on various topics of child rearing, slimming, beauty makeup, emotion, delicacy, sexual health, etc. Most of the users are moms who are born in 1980s and 1990s, a group that is open to new and cool stuffs in baby care, parenting, fashion, etc. The platform has more than 20 million registered users with around 2.6 million daily active users and a monthly retention rate of 60%. It just netted US$20 million of Series B financing this June.

7. Iyaya

iyaya

As one of the earliest baby and maternal communication platforms in China (founded in 2003), Iyaya divides users into different groups according to information they submitted upon registration, like birthday of their babies, location, among others. The site has  launched an e-commerce channel to integrate merchants that sell formula, diaper, etc., or offer postpartum workout and early education services. The platform monetizes by charging service/ad fees and shares revenues with merchants. Its revenues reached around 100 million yuan (around US$16 million) as of present. Iyaya has registered more than 20 million users.

Zhang Liang, founder of Iyaya, also founded Mmbang, a mobile maternal community that claimed 10 million users.

8. Yaolan

Yaolan

Yaolan is an online parenting web portal, community, and education platform. Founded in 1999, the company offers quality information and education services to pregnant women and parents of 0-6 year-old in China, cooperating with over 400 experts in pregnancy, gynecology, early education, baby care, phycology, etc. The site has more than 10 million registered members.

 9. SoYoung

Soyoung

SoYoung is an online community where users can share their experiences on having plastic surgery operations and post-operative care tips. The site has more than 500K registered users with 100K of active users, most of them are women. The company is founded by Jin Xing, former execs at Tom.com, Mop and Tencent, in March 2013.

10. Aibaimm

Aibaimm

Started as a group on Chinese popular instant messaging tool QQ, Aibaimm is an invitation-only mom community that focused on high-end users. In addition to offering maternal and children care information, it cooperates with several high-end obstetrics and gynecology hospitals in China for group-buying business. The site has more than 50K registered users and around 30K active users.

image credit: Shutterstock

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Alibaba Buddies Up with Star-studded Partner Team to Deepen Forays into Digital Living Room Market https://technode.com/2014/07/16/alibaba-buddies-up-with-star-studded-partner-team-to-deepen-forays-into-digital-living-room-market/ https://technode.com/2014/07/16/alibaba-buddies-up-with-star-studded-partner-team-to-deepen-forays-into-digital-living-room-market/#comments Wed, 16 Jul 2014 11:33:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21084 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba announced today a plan to construct an all-around family entertainment ecosystem that covers the fields of films & movies, music, game, education and e-commerce based on its set-top-box product Tmall Box. Alibaba continues its cooperation with Wasu Media, one of the several state-authorized content providers, in entertainment contents. Wasu Media will contribute more […]]]>

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba announced today a plan to construct an all-around family entertainment ecosystem that covers the fields of films & movies, music, game, education and e-commerce based on its set-top-box product Tmall Box.

Alibaba continues its cooperation with Wasu Media, one of the several state-authorized content providers, in entertainment contents. Wasu Media will contribute more than 6,000 movies and 150,000 hours of TV plays to the ecosystem, according to Liu Chunning, president of Alibaba’s Digital Entertainment Business Department. Alibaba also teamed up with Dolby and DTS, two audio technology companies, to provide better audio and visual experiences. The music contents will be streamed from Xiami, a subsidiary of Alibaba.

In terms of games, Alibaba integrated ten cloud-based games into the system, including several blockbuster games developed by Konami, 2K, and Falcom. Since these games are based on cloud, users can play directly without downloading them to local. Alibaba also joined hands with global leading game developers of EA, Gameloft, Glu Mobile to present more diversified games.

As online education is in full swing, Alibaba tapped this sector by partnering up with TutorABC, the online English leaning brand under  Tutor Group, to provide real-time interactive language learning services. The cooperation seems quite natural given that Alibaba has led a nearly US$100 million Series B financing in Tutor Group earlier this year. The contents from child-focused services of Qiaohu, a brand run by Japanese education group Benesse Corporation, and Beva will land on the system this August.

Liu emphasized that all the contents will be regulated under DRM (digital right management) to protect the intellectual rights of content providers.

At the press conference, the internet giant also released two interesting functions for Tmall Box. One is a voice command feature that allows users to search for films and music by voice. The other is M Key, a button dedicated to e-commerce services, like special sales, etc.

Alibaba12

Liu Chunning Demonstrating Voice Command Feature and M Key

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10 Startups You Can’t Miss in China’s Burgeoning Women-Focused Service Industry (Part I) https://technode.com/2014/07/15/10-startups-you-cant-miss-in-chinas-burgeoning-women-focused-service-industry-part-i/ https://technode.com/2014/07/15/10-startups-you-cant-miss-in-chinas-burgeoning-women-focused-service-industry-part-i/#respond Tue, 15 Jul 2014 08:27:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21020 Given a role as caregiver of the family, women usually play an especially prominent role in buying things that provide sustenance for home and family. That means women have a great deal of influence in the economy as consumers, or a lot of spending power. Female customers tend view e-commerce or online shopping as a […]]]>

Given a role as caregiver of the family, women usually play an especially prominent role in buying things that provide sustenance for home and family. That means women have a great deal of influence in the economy as consumers, or a lot of spending power.

Female customers tend view e-commerce or online shopping as a fashionable life style and entertainment. According to a report on Chinese e-commerce market, female online shoppers have overshadowed their male counterparts in terms of spending amount and online shopping frequency, despite that male online shoppers outnumbered female ones. More importantly, women love to share with like-minded people on various aspects of their lives, like relationships, families, babies, among others.  

As an active vertical community with high consumption power, women-focused or female community services are becoming the darlings of investors, e-commerce services and advertisers. Mogujie, Lmbang, Dayima and Meet You, four leading Chinese women-focused startups, have received a combined US$285 million of funding from investors in June alone.

Let’s take a look at some interesting companies in this sector (read Part II).

1. Babytree

Babytree

Babytree is a leading Chinese digital resources and community for maternal and childcare services. The company is co-founded by former Google China exec Wang Huainan and former cofounder of EachNet Shao Yibo in 2007. It claimed more than 40 million registered users as of present. The firm has received 150 million yuan ($24.79 million) of strategic investment from Chinese K-12 after-school tutoring service TAL Education (NYSE:XRS) at the beginning of this year.

2. Meilishuo

Meilishuo

Meilishuo is a leading Chinese social network focused on women fashion and lifestyle, helping women to find ideal closing and skin care products which are best suited to them. Meilishuo started the business as a Pinterest-style pinboard site which drives traffic to Taobao, China’s largest e-commerce site. Since last year, Meilishuo is transforming into a C2C e-commerce site with more items sold by internal sellers and more inward promotion campaigns. The company stops using Alipay payment since March this year, but seeks more cooperation with WeChat platform. The company now claimed more than 55 million registered users with its app downloads surpassed 75 million.

3. Mogujie

mogujie-pic

Mogujie, another well-known domestic fashion guide website, is the biggest rival of Meilishuo in China. Similar to Meilishuo, Mogujie is transforming into an independent marketplace rather than a guiding site that redirects users to Taobao. Taobao started to place restrictions on similar shopping guide services, considering their threats to Taobao’s self-hold advertising business. Mogujie has raised US$200 million in Series D funding from a group of investors at a valuation of US$1 billion this June. The site claimed 80 million users, with 35 million being monthly active on mobile.

4. Meet You

MeetYou

Started as a menstruation period tracing app, Meet You gradually shifted its focus to constructing a female community, where users can discuss and share tips on various topics, like parenting, fashion, keeping fit, relationships, etc. Launched in April 2013, the app now claimed more than 50 million registered users with over 3.5 million active users. The company has raised three funding rounds in one year, including a benchmark US$35 million Series C round received this June.

5. Dayima

Dayima is a period tracking and female health app similar to Meet You. Dayima predicts period cycles based on past patterns, offering health tips on avoiding cramps and pre-menstrual syndromes, and links to online forum where users can exchange their experiences on parenting, beauty, etc. Launched in January 2012, Dayima claims it has had 45 million registered users and 3.2 million daily active users. It just announced US$30 million in Series C funding this June.

image credit: Shutterstock

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Real Estate Service Fangdd Raises US$80M of Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/07/15/real-estate-service-fangdd-raises-us80m-series-b-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/07/15/real-estate-service-fangdd-raises-us80m-series-b-financing/#respond Tue, 15 Jul 2014 05:22:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=21006 Fangdd, a Shenzhen-based real estate operation service platform, announced it has secured US$80 million of Series B funding from Vision Knight Capital China Fund, Lightspeed China Partners and Series A investor CDH Venture. The company added that it has received the capital on June 28.  Founded in October 2011, Fangdd is a real estate shopping guide information […]]]>
Fangdd-pic

Fangdd, a Shenzhen-based real estate operation service platform, announced it has secured US$80 million of Series B funding from Vision Knight Capital China Fund, Lightspeed China Partners and Series A investor CDH Venture. The company added that it has received the capital on June 28. 

Founded in October 2011, Fangdd is a real estate shopping guide information platform that provides marketing services to property developers, brokerage agencies and home buyers. Fangdd is based on a “pay-for-performance” model, different from other domestic online estate services that charge customers for listing property information on the platforms, like SouFun and Anjuke.

In addition to the web portal, Fangdd also developed four apps. Fangdd, a namesake mobile app of the company, is focused on individual home buyers who want to find property information. Fangdd Realtor is dedicated to brokers who sell second-hand houses. Both of these two services are now only available in Shanghai. Fangdiantong is a marketing platform for property developers and breakage agencies, and Fangpaipai is a dedicated camera app helping brokers to take high-quality pictures for houses.

According to data released by the company, Fangddd cooperates with more than 5,000 real estate agencies countrywide and lots of first-tier real estate developers including, Vanke, Poly Group, Greenland Group, Longfor, Wanda. Fangdd is now operating in more than 30 cities, including Shanghai, Shenzhen, Wuxi, Nanjing, Chongqing, etc. Its turnover reached 50 billion yuan (around US$8 billion) in the first half of this year and this figure is expected to exceed 150 billion yuan by the end of 2014.

image credit: Fangdd

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Online Estate Service SouFun Teams Up with Premier Chinese Real Estate Firms for Offline Expansion https://technode.com/2014/07/14/online-estate-service-soufun-teams-premier-chinese-real-estate-firms-offline-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/07/14/online-estate-service-soufun-teams-premier-chinese-real-estate-firms-offline-expansion/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2014 11:31:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20992 SouFun Holdings Limited (NYSE: SFUN), a real estate Internet portal in China, recently announced that it has entered into strategic cooperation agreements with Shenzhen World Union Properties Consultancy (SZ: 002285) and Hopefluent Group (HK: 00733), two leading real estate agencies in China. According to the agreements, SouFun will subscribe for new shares of the two companies via private placement and […]]]>

SouFun Holdings Limited (NYSE: SFUN), a real estate Internet portal in China, recently announced that it has entered into strategic cooperation agreements with Shenzhen World Union Properties Consultancy (SZ: 002285) and Hopefluent Group (HK: 00733), two leading real estate agencies in China.

According to the agreements, SouFun will subscribe for new shares of the two companies via private placement and purchase shares from their existing shareholders for a 10% and a 17% shares in World Union and Hopfluent with US$120 million and US$ 91 million, respectively. SouFun will become the second largest shareholder of the two partners, respectively.

The online estate service will cooperate with the two partners across their business lines, including advertising, e-commerce, listing service, new home agency and consultancy. SouFun also planned to cooperate with the two companies to explore internet and real estate financing businesses. SouFun just launched a third-party financing business last year.

It is reported that SouFun is planning to change its realm name to Fang.com and its name to Fangtianxia.

Vincent Mo, SouFun’s executive chairman, said “As the leading online platform in China’s huge real estate market, SouFun has been looking for the leading off-line players to work together for the industrial upgrade of China’s expanding new home and real estate market.

Collaborating with World Union and Hopefluent will help SouFun, which provides online information regarding real estate development in China, to be more conversant with real estate transactions. World Union and Hopefluent, on the other hand will benefit from enhanced operations as these would integrate their operations with an online platform.

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On-demand Laundry Service 24tidy Lands Tens of Millions Yuan in Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/14/on-demand-laundry-service-24tidy-lands-tens-of-millions-yuan-in-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/14/on-demand-laundry-service-24tidy-lands-tens-of-millions-yuan-in-series-a-funding/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2014 06:25:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20978 24tidy, a 24-hour O2O laundry site, raised tens of millions yuan in Series A financing led by SIP Oriza Seed Fund Management, an early-stage investment platform under Oriza Holdings. SIP Oriza is also the baker of online travel platform LY.com and logistics service SF Express. Launched in June last year, 24tidy allows users to schedule pickup and dropoff of laundry […]]]>

24tidy, a 24-hour O2O laundry site, raised tens of millions yuan in Series A financing led by SIP Oriza Seed Fund Management, an early-stage investment platform under Oriza Holdings. SIP Oriza is also the baker of online travel platform LY.com and logistics service SF Express.

Launched in June last year, 24tidy allows users to schedule pickup and dropoff of laundry and dry cleaning stuffs by placing orders via telephone or on Internet. After one year of development, the startup now has around 10 warehouses and more than 30 deliverymen in Shanghai. The company plans to expand to Beijing, Nanjing, as well as other cities in Jiangsu Province after receiving Series A funding.

Yao Zongchang, founder of the company, disclosed that the site recorded more than 20,000 orders with monthly revenue stood at 500K yuan (US$80K) to 600K yuan by May this year. Most of the site’s users aged between 25 to 45 years old, while female users account for 60% of the total.

Yao Zhongchang is a serial entrepreneur whose early entrepreneurial endeavors include an advertisement company and P2P lending platform Hahadai. Steven Ho, former CEO of Yahoo! Kimo, and Daniel Shi, founder of Chinese seed & angel investor platform 23Seed, are the strategic consultants for 24tidy.

A series of similar laundry services surfaced in the past one-year period, including Xiyigj, Ganxike, Lanrizi, Weixiyi, etc., and traditional laundry chain store Rongchain Service also rolled out its online platform. Yao thinks that although the number of competitors is surging, the market size of Chinese laundry industry (around 150 billion yuan) is huge enough to accommodate various players.

American laundry app Washio just announced 10.50 million of Series A financing this June. Washio was launched latter than 24tidy, but it has eclipsed the latter both in funding size and business scale now. However, Yao holds that online laundry service is more applicable to Chinese market thanks thanks to the high population density and relatively low logistics costs in China.

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China’s P2P Lending Turnover Hits US$13B in 2014 H1 https://technode.com/2014/07/11/chinas-p2p-lending-turnover-hits-us13b-2014-h1/ https://technode.com/2014/07/11/chinas-p2p-lending-turnover-hits-us13b-2014-h1/#comments Fri, 11 Jul 2014 08:32:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20925 The turnover of Chinese P2P lending industry reached 81.8 billion yuan (around US$13 billion) in the first half of this year, according to the latest report released by Wangdaizhijia, a leading Chinese information portal website of P2P online loan industry. The turnover for the whole year is expected to reach 202 billion yuan, the report added. […]]]>

The turnover of Chinese P2P lending industry reached 81.8 billion yuan (around US$13 billion) in the first half of this year, according to the latest report released by Wangdaizhijia, a leading Chinese information portal website of P2P online loan industry. The turnover for the whole year is expected to reach 202 billion yuan, the report added.

In 2014 H1, the number of Chinese P2P lending platforms increased steadily at a monthly compound growth rate of 6.11% to 1,184. The information portal predicted that this figure will reach 1,500 by the end of 2014.

The average composite interest rate is 20.17% during the reporting period. The report expects this rate to drop to 17% by the end of this year, while the whole market is becoming more mature and rational.

The average loan life cycle is 4.75 months in the period. This figure is going to vary between 3 to 6 months in the near future, according to the report.

Guangdong, Zhejiang, Shanghai, Beijing and Shandong ranked top five in terms of turnover amounts. The five provinces/cities account for 83.05% of the total transaction volume in H1, while the other provincial regions represent only 16.95% of the total. The number of Chinese P2P investors and borrowers stood at 442K and 189K, respectively, surging to 780K and 500K by the end of this year, according to the report.

 image credit: Shutterstock

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Gesture Controller VID Poised to Disrupt Chinese Motion Sensing Market https://technode.com/2014/07/11/gesture-controller-vid-poised-to-disrupt-chinese-motion-sensing-market/ https://technode.com/2014/07/11/gesture-controller-vid-poised-to-disrupt-chinese-motion-sensing-market/#respond Fri, 11 Jul 2014 06:28:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20903 With the development of technology, people are making continuous efforts to find more convenient and simple human-computer interaction methods through voice, motion, eyeball, and even brain wave. Chinese startup Sharpnow recently released its solution to the problem–VID (Virtual Interactive Desctop), a Leap Motion-like 3D motion tracker and controller. VID controller can track the movement of both […]]]>
VID-pic

With the development of technology, people are making continuous efforts to find more convenient and simple human-computer interaction methods through voice, motion, eyeball, and even brain wave. Chinese startup Sharpnow recently released its solution to the problem–VID (Virtual Interactive Desctop), a Leap Motion-like 3D motion tracker and controller.

VID controller can track the movement of both hands of all 10 fingers with up to 0.01 mm accuracy and no visible latency (10ms). VID is a small box (19mm×34mm×90mm) weighted 110g with slim metal frames. It can be connected to computers powered by Windows 7/8 system via USB port on the left of the gadget.

The product offers two modes. When setting the black sensing panel upwards, the AirMode is opened automatically to identify motions in the conical space above the hardware, as shown in the picture below. The TouchMode will be triggered when the sensing panel is facing the users, identifying motions in the fan area in front of it. Around 20 games have been included in VID app platform.

vid

                             AireMode                                                TouchMode

When taking about future development directions of the product, Liu Jinsu, founder of the company, said they planned to attract more developers by opening SDK and offering visualized programming tools. He added that the startup is considering to develop hardware which can track the motions of other parts of human body like arms, face, and the whole upper body.

VID has launched a funding campaign on Chinese hardware crowdfunding site DemoHour. The product is expected to be shipped this October with a price tag of 590 yuan (around US$95).

Originally from: http://cn.technode.com/post/2014-07-09/vid/

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3 Types of Chinese Internet Companies May Find Opportunities in Overseas Market, GGV Capital Hans Tung https://technode.com/2014/07/10/3-types-of-chinese-internet-companies-may-find-opportunities-in-overseas-market-ggv-capital-hans-tung/ https://technode.com/2014/07/10/3-types-of-chinese-internet-companies-may-find-opportunities-in-overseas-market-ggv-capital-hans-tung/#comments Thu, 10 Jul 2014 11:02:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20859 This week, TechNode got a chance to interview with Hans Tung, a veteran venture capitalist who has become the darling of China’s VC industry after making a successful early bet on Xiaomi Tech. After leaving Qiming Ventures in August last year, Tung joined GGV Capital, a cross-border venture capital firm that focuses on China and U.S., […]]]>

This week, TechNode got a chance to interview with Hans Tung, a veteran venture capitalist who has become the darling of China’s VC industry after making a successful early bet on Xiaomi Tech. After leaving Qiming Ventures in August last year, Tung joined GGV Capital, a cross-border venture capital firm that focuses on China and U.S., two months later in seek of an international platform.

When talking about Xiaomi’s case, Tung said one main reason that driving him to made the investment is Xiaomi’ founder Lei Jun, He said “Lei Jun is a person with logical thinking and reasoning capabilities, and he pays attention to every single detail.”

Tung led investment and serves on the board of Wish, a fast growing cross border mobile commerce company that GGV joined a US$20 million Series B financing this April. Two months later, Wish announced another US$50 million Series C funding led by Founders Fund with the participation of Legend Capital. He is also actively involved with GGV portfolio companies Flipboard and Yodo1.

Born into a Taiwan military family, Hans has grown up under the influence different cultures with 16 years of life experience in the U.S, during which he received his B.S. in Industrial Engineering from Stanford University, and 8 years in Chinese mainland.

Lots of Chinese business and entrepreneurial models can be transplanted to the U.S. market in the future 10 years, he said, adding that one distinctive thinking model of Chinese entrepreneurs is to find a breakthrough point and this thinking pattern is going to help them to find more opportunities in the global market. In addition, most American entrepreneurs are social elites who pay more attentions to demands of talents living in first-tier cities. Globally, it is the common customers who form the mainstream market and Chinese entrepreneurs has amassed abound experiences in this field.

Tung said he prefers teams with cross-cultural backgrounds. For example, Zhang Sheng, co-founder of Wish, is a Chinese who once studied in the U.S., while another co-founder of the company Peter Szulczewski is a Jew from east Europe. He explained that Americans tend to focus on domestic market and ignore overseas opportunities. But teams with multinational backgrounds are more likely to set their eyes on global market. For example, around 50% of Wish’s revenue comes from overseas market.

Tung thinks three kinds of Internet companies may have more opportunities in overseas market.

1. Tools. (eg, 3G.CN, Cheetah Mobile, Qihoo 360, UCweb). Starting their business as tools, these companies transformed to platforms, and then to browsers, entertainment or e-commerce services.

2 Virtual products. Very few foreign companies commercialize their services by selling virtual currencies, a business model which is quite popular in South Korean, Japanese and Chinese markets. ZYNGA has approved that this model is feasible in the U.S. market. The global market size for “fans” economy, which the model is based on, is going to triple or quadruple that in China.

3. M-commerce companies. Tung thinks Chinese m-commerce companies are on the verge of launching IPOs. The market is huge enough, since there are more than 1 billion smartphones in the U.S. and China. Community economy and m-commerce are going to create huge opportunities for entrepreneurs.

Tung disclosed that all of the three projects he has invested during the past six months are related to these three models. Wish is a mobile commerce company targeting at users coming from second- and third-tier cities in the U.S., like Austin, Huston, Waco (Texas) and Encino (California). He joined a US$10 million Series B funding in online gaming service Curse and the third undisclosed program is on affiliate product of Xiaomi hardware.

Originally from: http://cn.technode.com/post/2014-07-09/mobile-online-sales/

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OneStore, Enterprise Retail Power for China’s SMEs to Drive Their Businesses https://technode.com/2014/07/10/onestore-enterprise-retail-power-for-chinas-smes-to-drive-their-businesses/ https://technode.com/2014/07/10/onestore-enterprise-retail-power-for-chinas-smes-to-drive-their-businesses/#comments Thu, 10 Jul 2014 03:07:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20820 OneStore Front Office (POS Interface) HaoLing, a Shanghai-based startup that focuses on developing internet-driven management solutions for retail enterprises, launched SAAS product OneStore for both Chinese and English customers in China last month. OneStore is a cloud-based Point-of-Sales (POS) platform that allows retailers to manage everything from front-office sales, to back-office inventory control and business […]]]>
OneStore-pic

OneStore Front Office (POS Interface)

HaoLing, a Shanghai-based startup that focuses on developing internet-driven management solutions for retail enterprises, launched SAAS product OneStore for both Chinese and English customers in China last month.

OneStore is a cloud-based Point-of-Sales (POS) platform that allows retailers to manage everything from front-office sales, to back-office inventory control and business intelligence.  Because the data is stored and encrypted in AES256, the same security standard used by banks, owners can access and manage their business securely.

Additionally, the service gives retailers the flexibility to sell anywhere, whether it’s in store, at a trade show or an outdoor pop-up store, and allows retailers to compare sales, customer and product metrics across all stores in one unified dashboard. Retailers also can send automated email and SMS receipts to customers with embedded links to drive customer engagement of the store’s social media and e-commerce presence.

Presently at its Beta-testing stage, OneStore will start rolling out in Shanghai over the next few months. The startup also plans to expand its service and support to neighboring cities in the Jiangsu and Zhejiang province later this year. HaoLing aims to reach 500 stores through OneStore by the end of 2014.

Targeting at small-and-medium physical retail businesses in China, OneStore aims to provide convenient and affordable retail management solutions to China’s retail entrepreneurs whose businesses have been encumbered by high IT infrastructure costs, according to Vincent Wong, CEO of the company. The price of OneStore starts at RMB 888 (around US$140) for a year’s subscription.

HaoLing is co-founded by Vincent Wong, former international manager at HSBC, and Jeff Wu, an experienced entrepreneur and engineer, in 2011. Its clients include top tier brands, such as China Mobile, Dove, Nestle, Levis and L’Oreal.

image credit: HaoLing

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Shanda’s GEAK Watch Plans to Ship First Round Dial Smartwatch in Sept. https://technode.com/2014/07/09/shandas-geak-watch-plans-to-ship-first-round-dial-smartwatch-in-sept/ https://technode.com/2014/07/09/shandas-geak-watch-plans-to-ship-first-round-dial-smartwatch-in-sept/#comments Wed, 09 Jul 2014 13:08:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20796 Interface of GEAK Watch2 GEAK Watch, the smartwatch brand backed by China’s leading online gaming company Shanda, is one of the first Chinese manufacturers that released Android-powered smartwatches so as to capitalize on the rising smart wearables trend. After announcing a sales of more than 300K units for its Android 4.1-powdered GEAK Watch1 in April this […]]]>
Geak Watch

Interface of GEAK Watch2

GEAK Watch, the smartwatch brand backed by China’s leading online gaming company Shanda, is one of the first Chinese manufacturers that released Android-powered smartwatches so as to capitalize on the rising smart wearables trend. After announcing a sales of more than 300K units for its Android 4.1-powdered GEAK Watch1 in April this year, the company continues its efforts and is going to unveil the second generation product GEAK Watch2 before the end of this year.

GEAK Watch2 features a round dial design, as Miles Xu, product manager of GEAK Watch, hinted in a previous interview with TechNode. According to Xu, round dial plate complies with people’s design aesthetics for a timepiece, while smartwatches with rectangular displays look too much like gadgets rather than watches. Moto 360, which is the first to feature a round-faced dial, creates a sensation among consumers when it was released earlier this year.

However, it is extremely difficult to manufacture a round dial smartwatch because everything in the electronic world is designed and created in the shape of square, like the circuit board, electronic components and screens. Xu noted that there is a black stripe at the bottom of Moto 360’s screen due to these impediments.

Although GEAK is not the first company to feature a round dial smartwatch, it plans to become the first to ship such a product and the shipment date is slated for September this year, according to Xu.

GEAK-Watch

                             GEAK Watch2                                   Moto 360

In April this year, it has rumored GEAK Watch2 is going to adopt the newly released Android Wear system, but it turns out that the smartwatch is powered by Android 4.3 system. GEAK Watch2 chooses Android 4.3 over Android Wear system because the user experiences of the latter can not be guaranteed in domestic market as Google Now, a service which Android Wear is based on, is blocked in China.

According to Xu, the battery life of GEAK Watch2 will be greatly enhanced by around 75% as compared with that for GEAK Watch1 with the emergence of low battery consumption processors and components. The battery of GEAK Watch2 is expected to last 4-5 days with regular usage, he said.

In order to create an ecosystem for the gadget, GEAK has established a dedicated app store and is promoting a program to engage more app designers and developers to make killer apps for the product.

The smartwatch market is becoming increasingly crowded in recent years, while strings of manufacturers swarmed into this field, including both big names like Apple, Samsung, LG, as well as startups like inWatch and Tomoon, etc. The entrance of various rivals can create more mature market in terms of user base and supply chains, said Tiger Gu, CEO of GEAK Watch. “Just like the case for smartphone market, the growth of iPhone did not kill other smartphone brands, but triggers more rapid development of the whole smartphone market.”

Shanda’s new smart gadget brand Modou also released two smart routers and a smart button last month. The company disclosed that Modou router has shipped more than 20,000 sets since its debut on June 5.

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[Update]Alipay Teams Up with Global Blue to Provide Chinese Tourists Tax Refund Service in Europe https://technode.com/2014/07/08/alipay-teams-global-blue-provide-chinese-tourists-tax-refund-service-europe/ https://technode.com/2014/07/08/alipay-teams-global-blue-provide-chinese-tourists-tax-refund-service-europe/#respond Tue, 08 Jul 2014 11:07:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20761 Alipay, the payment arm of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, has entered into partnership with Swiss tax-refund company Global Blue to launch a service that will allow Chinese tourists to receive tax refunds directly into their Alipay accounts when they are shopping in Europe. According to the company, the service will be available from mid-July at 5,000 […]]]>

Alipay, the payment arm of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, has entered into partnership with Swiss tax-refund company Global Blue to launch a service that will allow Chinese tourists to receive tax refunds directly into their Alipay accounts when they are shopping in Europe.

According to the company, the service will be available from mid-July at 5,000 stores in France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom, as well as South Korea. More countries are expected to roll out the service in the coming month, the company added.

[Update] (In addition to the countries mentioned above, the company planned to roll out this service in Switzerland, Netherlands and Spain in the near future. The users can receive the applied refunds in Chinese yuan in their Alipay accounts after ten working days at the earliest.)

Chinese tourists making purchases at Global Blue’s retail partners can ask for a tax-free form which they then fill out with their Alipay user information. Upon exiting the country, they submit the forms and receipts to the customs desk to get it stamped before mailing it to Global Blue. Alternatively, they can apply for a Global Blue Card that will negate the need to fill out forms.

Alipay had already launched a tax reimbursement service for Chinese tourists shopping in South Korea since October last year. The users only need to fill in the mobile phone numbers they registered with Alipay, passport number and English name getting it stamped and dropping off at specified post box at airport customs. The users can receive the refunds in their Alipay accounts after seven working days.

European Union has become an important and popular destination for Chinese travelers thanks to lower taxes and huge variety of consumer products, especially for cosmetics and luxury goods. However, Chinese visitors to Europe did not collect 1 billion yuan (US$161.02 million) in tax refunds in 2013 due to the troublesome and prolonged (up to 3 months) tax refund application procedure, according to NetEase.

Founded in 1980, Global Blue is a tax free shopping service provider which cooperates with 27,000 retailers in 37 countries. Tourists who purchase items from Global Blue retail partners can apply to get the local sales tax charged on their products refunded to their credit cards, allowing them to shop tax-free.

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Maternal Social Platform Lmbang Secures US$20M of Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/07/maternal-social-platform-lmbang-secures-us20m-of-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/07/maternal-social-platform-lmbang-secures-us20m-of-series-b-funding/#respond Mon, 07 Jul 2014 07:42:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20701 Lmbang (spice moms in Chinese), a Shenzhen-based mommy communication website, announced US$20 million of Series B financing led by Greenwoods Asset Management with participation of Morningside Ventures, VIP.com, Matrix Partners and K2 Ventures. The company has received millions of dollars in Series A financing last year. Double-sigma Investment Management worked as financing consultant for this round. Launched in May 2012, Lmbang […]]]>
lmbang-pic

Lmbang (spice moms in Chinese), a Shenzhen-based mommy communication website, announced US$20 million of Series B financing led by Greenwoods Asset Management with participation of Morningside Ventures, VIP.com, Matrix Partners and K2 Ventures. The company has received millions of dollars in Series A financing last year. Double-sigma Investment Management worked as financing consultant for this round.

Launched in May 2012, Lmbang is a mobile social platform for women where mothers can share and exchange tips on various topics of child rearing, slimming, beauty makeup, emotion, delicacy, sexual health, etc.

The platform has more than 20 million registered users with around 2.6 million daily active users and a monthly retention rate of 60%, according to Jin Zan, CEO of the company. He added that most of their users are moms who are born in 1980s and 1990s, and over 90% of the users aged between 25 to 30.

The funding will be poured into exploration of new business model, branding and team construction. Lmbang now has more than 100 employees.

Services targeting at female users are chased by investors recently. Menstruation tracking app Dayima announces US$30 million of Series C funding one month earlier. Another similar period tracker Meet You also secured US$35 million of Series C financing at the end of this June.

image credit: lmbang

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Mobile Game Publisher iDreamSky Files For Nasdaq IPO to Raise Up to US$115M https://technode.com/2014/07/04/mobile-game-publisher-idreamsky-files-nasdaq-ipo-raise-us115m/ https://technode.com/2014/07/04/mobile-game-publisher-idreamsky-files-nasdaq-ipo-raise-us115m/#comments Fri, 04 Jul 2014 05:07:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20667 iDreamSky Technology, a Chinese 3rd-party mobile game publishing platform, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a Nasdaq IPO to raise up to US$115 million of funding. As a game publisher, iDreamSky distributes third-party games that published and operated on its platform through both proprietary distribution channels and third-party channels, such as app stores and […]]]>
idreamsky

iDreamSky Technology, a Chinese 3rd-party mobile game publishing platform, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a Nasdaq IPO to raise up to US$115 million of funding.

As a game publisher, iDreamSky distributes third-party games that published and operated on its platform through both proprietary distribution channels and third-party channels, such as app stores and device pre-installations. The company’s proprietary distribution channels include in-game cross promotions, its self-operated iDreamSky Game Center and gaming community Uu.cc. In addition, the company also offers live game services and gain user insights through multi-dimensional data analysis engine to drive ongoing game optimization and monetization.

The company is known for collaborating with top-tier international mobile game developers localize to culturalize their editions of hit games for the China market. In order to achieve this goal, iDreamSky will replace some names or sayings in the original game with what Chinese users are familiar with or change the in-app charging patterns (like pricing and charging points) to adapt to the payment habits of Chinese player base. It has helped several popular titles to enter China, including Fruit Ninja, the Temple Run series and Subway Surfers. Jeff Lyndon, co-founder of iDreamSky, once shared with us his insights on operating imported online games in China at TechCrunch Shanghai.

According to the prospectus, iDreamSky recorded 98.3 million of average monthly active users, or MAUs, as of the first quarter of 2014. Its total revenues increased from RMB19.4 million in 2012 to RMB246.6 million (US$40.7 million) in 2013, and from RMB22.1 million in the three months ended March 31, 2013 to RMB174.1 million in the three months ended March 31.

Game revenues constituted the bulk of the company’s total revenues, accounting for 99.9%  of total revenues in the three months ended March 31, 2014. Based on a freemium model, the game revenues are primarily derived from sales of in-game virtual items, including items, avatars, skills, privileges or other in-game consumables, features or functionality.

The proceeds will be invested in acquisitions of game licenses and other intellectual properties rights related to mobile games, as well as mergers and acquisitions, the prospectus noted.

Co-founded by a trio team in Shenzhen in 2009, the company now has hundreds of employees scattered in the U.S., Hong Kong, Beijing, Chengdu, Nanjing, etc. It has received US$10 million of financing on aggregate from Redpoint Ventures and Legend Capital in 2012. THL A19 Limited, a company controlled by Tencent, is the largest shareholder of iDreamkSky with a 26.6% stake.

Several Chinese game companies initiated their IPO plans in the past one-year period driven by mobile game heat and the IPO wave of Chinese enterprises. Webgame developer Forgame get listed on Hong Kong stock market for HK$ 900 million last year, while veteran Chinese causal game developer OURGAME also filed for a Hong Kong IPO recently.

It is worth noting that iDreamSky is the only Chinese game company that choose the U.S. stock market in the one-year period. Although another Chinese mobile gaming company Chukong has filed for an U.S. IPO in April, the company then decided to postpone it due to low valuation.

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Weibo Teams Up with CSM Media Research to Release TV Rating Index https://technode.com/2014/07/03/weibo-teams-csm-media-research-release-tv-rating-index/ https://technode.com/2014/07/03/weibo-teams-csm-media-research-release-tv-rating-index/#respond Thu, 03 Jul 2014 09:51:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20637 China’s newly-listed microblog service Weibo have entered a partnership with CSM Media Research, a TV & radio audience measurement institute, to collaborate on Weibo TV Measurement Index, a big data analysis system for evaluating TV program impacts based social media stats. Bringing together social TV data from Weibo with the audience research expertise of CSM, the […]]]>

China’s newly-listed microblog service Weibo have entered a partnership with CSM Media Research, a TV & radio audience measurement institute, to collaborate on Weibo TV Measurement Index, a big data analysis system for evaluating TV program impacts based social media stats.

Bringing together social TV data from Weibo with the audience research expertise of CSM, the index will calculate on how many times and how many users have mentioned a certain TV program on Weibo platform, as well as to analyze the popularity and demographic patterns of the TV shows.

Weibo will start the calculation six hours before a TV show begins and the calculation will last 24 hours to avoid interference from historical data as well as to guarantee the comprehensiveness of data. The measurement will be composed of two lists for daily and weekly hottest programs. Although the index only covers popular TV shows now, the companies planned to include TV play and sports programs.

Moreover, the two parties also planned to release analytic and whitepaper reports periodically based on Weibo TV measurement index.

According to data from Weibo, the platform has registered over 7,000 accounts of various TV programs, most of which are for TV shows.

Actually, cooperation between microblog service and audience measurement institute is not new to us. Weibo’s U.S. predecessor Twitter has announced a strategic alliance with Kantar Media to develop a new suite of tools to support planning and analytic for TV industry in 2013.

Weibo and CSM Media Research will refer to the cooperation model between Twitter and Kantar, an investor of CSM Media, in terms of product system and structure, but they will also localize the pattern to adapt to Chinese market.

According to data released by the two companies, around a quarter of foreign TV audience talk about TV shows on social media platforms while they are watching them. Investigation by CSM Media shows that over 50% of the audiences who once posted their views about TV shows choose to post on microblog platforms.

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Alipay’s Mutual Fund Service Yu’e Bao Celebrates 1st Anniversary with US$92Bn AUM https://technode.com/2014/07/03/alipays-mutual-fund-service-yuebao-celebrates-1st-anniversary-with-us92bn-aum/ https://technode.com/2014/07/03/alipays-mutual-fund-service-yuebao-celebrates-1st-anniversary-with-us92bn-aum/#comments Thu, 03 Jul 2014 07:11:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20630 Yu’e Bao, Alipay’s fast-growing mutual fund service that triggered an online finance craze in China, recently released some key stats after one year of operation. The fund claimed more than 100 million users and RMB 574.1 billion ($92 billion) in assets under management (AUM) at the end of June. According to recent data from Tianhong Asset Management, Yu’e Bao ‘s fund management company that […]]]>

Yu’e Bao, Alipay’s fast-growing mutual fund service that triggered an online finance craze in China, recently released some key stats after one year of operation. The fund claimed more than 100 million users and RMB 574.1 billion ($92 billion) in assets under management (AUM) at the end of June.

According to recent data from Tianhong Asset Management, Yu’e Bao ‘s fund management company that is majority-owned by Alipay, Yu’e Bao had an average annualized yield of 5.5% since its launch, generating about RMB 11.8 billion in investment income for users. Yu’e Bao ‘s AUM grew 6% in the second quarter, up from RMB 541 billion in AUM on March 31.

Demographic patterns for Yu’e Bao users held steady, with young people under the age of 30 forming the bulk of investors, according to press release from Alipay. The average investment amount increased 17 % to RMB 5,030 from RMB 4,307.

Yu’e Bao’s popularity has upended China’s traditional banking and financial sectors, as users transferred billions of Renminbi from their bank savings accounts to their Yu’e Bao accounts to earn a higher yield. Many of the leading Chinese Internet-related companies, like Tencent, Baidu, Suning, flocked to this sector to launch similar products.

However, the appeal of similar online investment funds started to wane while their returns slumped from a historical high of near 8% on average at the beginning of this year to around 4% recently. But the yields are still higher than the returns from banks, which is around 3.3% for a one-year fixed deposits and 0.35% for current deposits.

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Overseas Shopping Tip App Xiaohongshu Announces Millions of Dollars Funding Upon Release of New Update https://technode.com/2014/07/02/overseas-shopping-tip-app-xiaohongshu-announces-millions-of-dollars-funding-upon-release-of-new-update/ https://technode.com/2014/07/02/overseas-shopping-tip-app-xiaohongshu-announces-millions-of-dollars-funding-upon-release-of-new-update/#comments Wed, 02 Jul 2014 09:12:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20609 Xiaohongshu, an overseas shopping tip app, announced seven-digit dollars of Series A funding led by an existing angel investor from Silicon Valley and followed by ZhenFund. Launched in Dec. last year, Xiaohongshu is an online platform where people can share cross-border purchase information, shopping tips and strategies, helping users to shop smarter overseas. It also integrates information for discount, […]]]>
Xiaohongshu Pic

Xiaohongshu, an overseas shopping tip app, announced seven-digit dollars of Series A funding led by an existing angel investor from Silicon Valley and followed by ZhenFund.

Launched in Dec. last year, Xiaohongshu is an online platform where people can share cross-border purchase information, shopping tips and strategies, helping users to shop smarter overseas. It also integrates information for discount, refund, featured items, shopping malls, etc. The app claims hundreds of thousands of registered users as of present.

Upon release of the funding news, Xiaohongshu is planning to roll out a new version tomorrow. In this update, Xiaohongshu optimizes the interface by putting two columns of Daily Selection and My Follows on the home page so as to present a more clear and simple browsing experience. Several camera filter effects are also added to facilitate the creation of  better pictures.

Although the app is now only available on iOS platform, the company planned to release an Android version early August.

Xiaohongshu started its business by helping overseas travelers to draft a shopping list before they hit the roads. But with the aggregation of more UGC contents, the service is transforming into a community for those who are passionate about fashion and shopping, and want to known more about these fields even though they do not have overseas traveling plans on their schedules.

Located in Shanghai, Xiaohongshu is founded last year by Mao Wenchao, a Stanford MBA graduate with rich experiences in financial and consulting industry, and Miranda Qu, a seasoned marketing expert.  The company is growing fast with staffs tripled to more than 30 employees since its establishment.

image credit: Xiaohongshu

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Ticket Service Gewara Pockets US$32M of Series C+ Funding https://technode.com/2014/07/02/ticket-service-gewara-pockets-us32m-of-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/07/02/ticket-service-gewara-pockets-us32m-of-series-c-funding/#respond Wed, 02 Jul 2014 03:36:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20581 Gewara, a Chinese online ticket service, announced RMB200 million yuan (around US$ 32 million) of Series C+ funding from China Media Capital (CMC), pushing the total amount of its C round financing to more than US$50 million together with US$20 million received  from CHD Investment in Oct. 2013. The capital will be used to improve its […]]]>
Gewara Pic

Gewara, a Chinese online ticket service, announced RMB200 million yuan (around US$ 32 million) of Series C+ funding from China Media Capital (CMC), pushing the total amount of its C round financing to more than US$50 million together with US$20 million received  from CHD Investment in Oct. 2013.

The capital will be used to improve its service and expand into third- and fourth-tier cities, citing Zhang Xuejing, CEO of the company.

According to data released of the company, Gewara has inked online ticket purchasing deals with more than 1,000 movie theaters across nearly 200 cities nationwide, covering nearly 70% of the domestic online movie ticket market. As of the end of this June, Gewara has recorded a turnover of more than RMB600 million and the firm expects this figure to reach RMB1.5 billion by the end of this year.

Zhang noted that they choose CMC over Chinese IT triumvirate BAT (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) because the former is a leading private equity fund which puts its primary focus on investment in cultural and media sector. CMC’s resources in film production and movie theaters will help the development of Gewara, he added.

CMC is established in April 2009 by founding partners like Shanghai Media Group and China Development Bank, with total assets under management of RMB 5 billion. The fund has acquired a 20% stake in the Chinese unit of big-screen theater technology company Imax together with FountainVest Partners April this year. It also holds a controlling stake in News Corps’ Chinese TV channels and partnered with DreamWorks Animation to set up Oriental DreamWorks.

image credit: Gewara

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JD Kicks off Crowdfunding Platform Together with 12 Projects https://technode.com/2014/07/01/jd-kicks-off-crowdfunding-platform-together-with-12-projects/ https://technode.com/2014/07/01/jd-kicks-off-crowdfunding-platform-together-with-12-projects/#comments Tue, 01 Jul 2014 09:51:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20561 Chinese e-commerce giant JD rolled out today a crowdfunding platform dubbed Coufenzi (“whip-round” in Chinese), tapping into yet another field just one week after launching a Travel Channel. The company positioned the new platform as an important part of JD Finance, which offers business like payment as well as financing services for its suppliers and retailers. On […]]]>
JD Crowdfunding

Chinese e-commerce giant JD rolled out today a crowdfunding platform dubbed Coufenzi (“whip-round” in Chinese), tapping into yet another field just one week after launching a Travel Channel. The company positioned the new platform as an important part of JD Finance, which offers business like payment as well as financing services for its suppliers and retailers.

On the platform, investors can interact with the fundraisers to determine product design, manufacturing and pricing, introduced a representative from JD.

Altogether 12 crowdfunding campaigns are launched on the platform now, of which 7 are smart hardware projects, including ZIVOO Box which we featured before, while the rest are pop culture projects for movies and concerts.

Like we talked before, it is quite natural for JD to build a crowdfunding site since it has become one of the first distribution channels for smart hardware after initiating a series of steps in this area, including the launch of hardware accelerator JD+, hardware-targeted cloud service JCloud and cooperation with leading hardware crowdfunding platform DemoHour.

But it seems JD is entering the crowdfunding battlefield at a time when most of its domestic rivals are trying to avoid the crowdfunding concept and pivot to pre-sale platforms.

Although inspired by U.S. platforms like Kickstarter, domestic crowdfunding sites have to adapt to Chinese market which is hugely different from where the model boomed. While the U.S. has a strong culture of donations, which is the basis of the crowdfunding concept, Chinese donors are more practical and interested in projects with tangible products that they can get in the near future. Pre-sale website for smart hardware seems to be a balance point that Chinese crowdfunding sites found for the model in China. Several leading Chinese crowdfunding platforms like DemoHour and Knewbi started to re-brand themselves as smart hardware pre-sale platforms. Australian crowdfunding site Pozible is also entering Chinese market with hardware pre-sale business.

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Online Shopping Tip Site Smzdm.com Launches a Crowdsource Testing Platform for Consumer Products https://technode.com/2014/07/01/online-shopping-tip-site-smzdm-com-launches-a-crowdsource-testing-platform-for-consumer-products/ https://technode.com/2014/07/01/online-shopping-tip-site-smzdm-com-launches-a-crowdsource-testing-platform-for-consumer-products/#respond Tue, 01 Jul 2014 07:06:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20551 Although online shopping is immensely convenient by enabling us to purchase almost anything right from our homes, one thing missing in the shopping experience is that we can not touch and feel the goods to get a more intuitive sense about them as in bricks-and-mortar stores. Just think of all the frustrating moments when you received […]]]>
SMZDM

Although online shopping is immensely convenient by enabling us to purchase almost anything right from our homes, one thing missing in the shopping experience is that we can not touch and feel the goods to get a more intuitive sense about them as in bricks-and-mortar stores. Just think of all the frustrating moments when you received a product which is completely different from the promotion pictures and depictions in terms of quality and function. To avoid these annoying moments, we can learn more about a certain product by reading someone else’s reviews before the purchase, what’s even better now, we can test and review them ourselves.

Smzdm.com (an acronym for Chinese “what’s worth buying”), an independent website that helps customers to find the most cost-effective products online, launched a crowdsource testing platform which invites users to test products for companies free of charge. According a previous statement of the company, testers do not have to return the testing products as long as they can submit a qualified testing review.

By submitting reviews of leaving messages, testers can earn credits or coins on the platform. Different amounts of credits or coins are demanded for participating in tests for different kinds of products in a bid to guarantee the expertise of the testers.

The goods now available on the platform for testing cover a wide categories, like digital products, home appliances, domestic goods, cosmetics, ranging from well-known brands of Sony, Electrolux, Durex, Gunnar to rising domestic brands like Xiaomi, LeTV, Ryfit, etc.

Founded in 2010, SMZDM.com started by offering promotion information and gradually integrated various sectors like overseas shopping tips, etc.

image credit: Smzdm.com

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China’s EBPP Platform FFT Suspends Support for AliPay Payment https://technode.com/2014/06/30/chinas-ebpp-platform-fft-suspends-support-alipay-payment/ https://technode.com/2014/06/30/chinas-ebpp-platform-fft-suspends-support-alipay-payment/#respond Mon, 30 Jun 2014 08:29:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20531 Shanghai FFT, a leading electronic bill presentment & payment (BEPP) platform in China, announced that the company has suspended support for AliPay payment in a bid to guarantee convenient and safe payments on the platform. FFT started to support AliPay payment since 2009. The platform noted in the statement that they made this decision to avoid the reoccurring […]]]>
Fufeitong

Shanghai FFT, a leading electronic bill presentment & payment (BEPP) platform in China, announced that the company has suspended support for AliPay payment in a bid to guarantee convenient and safe payments on the platform.

FFT started to support AliPay payment since 2009. The platform noted in the statement that they made this decision to avoid the reoccurring traffic jam and server breakdown of FFT’s bill processing system and EBPP platform, which are caused directly by the high-frequency bill inquiries from AliPay. FFT emphasized these inquiries are coming from AliPay rather than its users.

AliPay responded that they cooperates with several platforms and FFT is only one of them. AliPay added users still can pay their bills via other channels.

FFT was sponsored by the Shanghai Government and jointly launched by utilities expenditure presentation units and banks in May 2003 to build one-stop e-bill check and payment service.

FFT provides Shanghai-based households with online inquiry and payment services for living expenses on water, electricity, gas, mobile phone, telephone, broadband and digital television as well as vehicle tolls through computer, telephone, mobile phone and other information terminals. The company is planning to expand its business countrywide.

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Xinhuanet, Internet Arm of China’s State-backed Xinhua News Agency, Files for IPO at SSE https://technode.com/2014/06/30/xinhuanet-internet-arm-chinas-state-backed-xinhua-news-agency-files-ipo-sse/ https://technode.com/2014/06/30/xinhuanet-internet-arm-chinas-state-backed-xinhua-news-agency-files-ipo-sse/#respond Mon, 30 Jun 2014 04:32:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20512 Xinhuanet, the Internet portal of state news agency Xinhua, has filed with the China Securities Regulatory Commission for an IPO at Shanghai Stock Exchange. According to the  prospectus, the company planned to issue 51.90 million new shares for 1.497 billion yuan (around $240 million), pushing the company’s total capital stock to 208 million shares. The […]]]>
Xinhuanet1

Xinhuanet, the Internet portal of state news agency Xinhua, has filed with the China Securities Regulatory Commission for an IPO at Shanghai Stock Exchange. According to the  prospectus, the company planned to issue 51.90 million new shares for 1.497 billion yuan (around $240 million), pushing the company’s total capital stock to 208 million shares.

The funds will be injected in construction of information and cloud platform, big data analysis system, new media application technology research center and online education project, according to the company.

The prospectus added that the company’s revenue surged 37.5% YOY to 456 million yuan in 2013, while its net profit advanced 23.9% YOY to 168 million yuan during the same period.

People.cn, a Chinese state news portal  that is comparable to Xinhuanet both in business model and political status, raised 1.38 billion yuan in its IPO at Shanghai Stock Exchange in 2012. According to data from the Internet portal, it generated 1.028 billion yuan of revenue in 2013, up 45.18 % YOY. The company’s net profit climbed 29.75% YOY to 273 million yuan in the same period.

China has been encouraging the reform of previous state-run news portals to enterprises in recent years. People.cn, Xinhuanet and CCTV.com, three major media run by the central government, have been included in the pilot program for the reform in 2009. The pilot program also listed seven main regional media like Eastday, Enorth, Qianlong, Dzwww, etc.

With the rise of new media Internet darlings like Sina and Sohu, the state-backed media like Xinhuanet and People.cn are facing more fierce competitions. But they differentiate themselves from other upcoming rivals with special focus on political news and homegrown contents.

Some of the leading media shares in China include Phoenix Publishing & Media Corp. (SH:601928), Chinese Universe Publishing and Media (SH:600373), Shanghai Xinhua Media (SH:600825), Zhejiang Daily Media Group (SH:600633), BesTV New Media (SH:600637), etc.

China Xinhua News Network Corp (CNC), the TV unit of state-run Xinhua News Agency,went public in Hong Kong in 2012 through a back-door listing.

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P2B is Becoming the Favorite Online Lending Model of Chinese VCs After P2P Heat Ebbs? https://technode.com/2014/06/27/p2b-is-becoming-the-favorite-online-lending-model-of-chinese-vcs-after-p2p-heat-ebbs/ https://technode.com/2014/06/27/p2b-is-becoming-the-favorite-online-lending-model-of-chinese-vcs-after-p2p-heat-ebbs/#respond Fri, 27 Jun 2014 07:33:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20474 As more investors fell victims to P2P scams, the public started to question the credibility and prospects of China’s booming but still lightly regulated P2P lending industry. As of April this year, there are more than 700 P2P lending platforms in China, according to a report by financial news portal 01caijing. During 2011 to April […]]]>

As more investors fell victims to P2P scams, the public started to question the credibility and prospects of China’s booming but still lightly regulated P2P lending industry. As of April this year, there are more than 700 P2P lending platforms in China, according to a report by financial news portal 01caijing. During 2011 to April 2014, at least 118 P2P lending sites, or 16% of the sampled platforms, have experienced different kinds of problems, like suspension of business for rectification, bank run, bankrupt, or even absconding of operation teams, the report added. Chinese search giant Baidu also took its own efforts to crack down the P2P lending frauds.

While P2P lending is haunted by fraud scandals, P2B (peer-to-business), a new online lending model derived from P2P, is catching the eyes of venture capitalists, with two P2B lending platforms announced new funding this week.

Shicaidai-licaifan

Licaifan, a P2B lending platform, announced eight-digit yuan of Series A financing from renowned private fund manager Lin Guangmao. According to the company, it has nearly 100K registered users with an annualized yield of over 12%. Another similar site Shicaidai raised nine-digit yuan in Series A financing from Water Spirit Co-investment Club. Both of the companies emphasized that the new funding will be injected in promoting their risk control abilities.

Several industry insiders cite the rigid financing demands of Chinese SME as the reason for the rise of P2B platforms. Compared with P2P lending, P2B lending is focused on SME borrowers who are now facing financing predicaments, because large banks are reluctant to lend them, mainly due to the lack of collateral and their poor capability in pricing risks, according the experts. Secondly, it is more easy to control financial risks under P2B than under P2P model, they noted.

Qian Haili, analyst with China E-business Research Center, thinks that the two models will finally merge together to provide more service options to investors.

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2014-15 Israel-Asia Leaders Fellowship Now Opened for Application https://technode.com/2014/06/27/2014-15-israel-asia-leaders-fellowship-now-opened-application/ https://technode.com/2014/06/27/2014-15-israel-asia-leaders-fellowship-now-opened-application/#respond Fri, 27 Jun 2014 02:36:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20460 Launched by NFP organization Israel-Asia Center in 2011, Israel-Asia Leaders Fellowship develops and invests in the next generation of leaders in Israel-Asia relations, aiming to build a bridge between exciting ventures and exciting regions. The program focuses on Asian and Israeli students who really show potentials to be leaders in that field for the future. The […]]]>

Launched by NFP organization Israel-Asia Center in 2011, Israel-Asia Leaders Fellowship develops and invests in the next generation of leaders in Israel-Asia relations, aiming to build a bridge between exciting ventures and exciting regions.

The program focuses on Asian and Israeli students who really show potentials to be leaders in that field for the future. The part-time program which is an add-on to Asian students’ existing university studies in Israel, provides them with the high-level contacts, skills and support network to build professional partnerships with Israel in their fields.

The program will introduce the fellows to leaders across different sectors of Israeli society, coordinate innovation field trips and basic skill workshops. Moreover, the project will get the young leaders access to top-level business networking events and march them through top-level professional mentors in their fields.

Graduates of the program have gone on to set up their own Israel-Asia business ventures, head up the Asia/Israel operations for Israeli/Asian companies, set up Israel-Asia NGOs, and work for Israeli embassies in Asia.

The application for the project, which is due July 14,  is now open for a new batch of fellows during 2014-2015. Please click here for further details or here for a video about the fellowship.

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E-commerce System and Service Provider Qianmi Pockets 50M Yuan New Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/26/e-commerce-system-service-provider-qianmi-pockets-50m-yuan-new-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/26/e-commerce-system-service-provider-qianmi-pockets-50m-yuan-new-funding/#respond Thu, 26 Jun 2014 08:29:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20436 Qianmi, a Chinese e-commerce system and service provider, announced 50 million yuan (around US$8) of Series A financing led by Bangsheng Capital, a venture capital affiliate of GOVTOR Capital. The funding will be used to accelerate the construction of service outlets nationwide, according to CEO of the company Shi Zhengchuan. Launched in Oct. 2013, Qianmi is […]]]>
Qianmi

Qianmi, a Chinese e-commerce system and service provider, announced 50 million yuan (around US$8) of Series A financing led by Bangsheng Capital, a venture capital affiliate of GOVTOR Capital. The funding will be used to accelerate the construction of service outlets nationwide, according to CEO of the company Shi Zhengchuan.

Launched in Oct. 2013, Qianmi is the wholly-owned subsidiary of Ofpay.com, a leading e-commerce platform for digital products in China. Qianmi is now focused on providing e-commerce services in five industries of local life, mobile, gaming, fast moving consumer goods and office supplies.

The company is principally engaged in the development and operation of two major e-commerce platforms: E-life and Yunxiao. E-life is a local life e-commerce system, offering payment solutions to various bills for mobile phone, game credits, domestic fees, credit cards, AliPay, etc. This service is going after entrepreneurs, chain stores and property management companies. Yunxiao is a comprehensive e-commerce platform providing distribution, retailing and wholesaling services to medium-and small-sized enterprises that sell physical products.

The startup now claimed more than 2,000 enterprise clients with over 300K outlets nationwide and a monthly turnover of 2.5 billion yuan. According to data from Qianmi, its e-commerce system now covers 80% of first- and second-tier cities, and 95% of third- and lower-tier cities.

image credit: Qianmi

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A Peek into the Pre-paid Card Dominated Mobile Game Payment Market of Thailand: NDP Media https://technode.com/2014/06/26/peek-pre-paid-card-dominated-mobile-game-payment-market-thailand-ndp-media/ https://technode.com/2014/06/26/peek-pre-paid-card-dominated-mobile-game-payment-market-thailand-ndp-media/#respond Thu, 26 Jun 2014 04:02:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20407 With the ongoing discussions surrounding the expansion of nationwide 3G and the installation of a new 4G network in Thailand, the mobile industry of this southeast Asian country is growing rapidly in recent years. There are close to 20 million smartphone users in Thailand – taking up 40% of the overall phone market. There are […]]]>

With the ongoing discussions surrounding the expansion of nationwide 3G and the installation of a new 4G network in Thailand, the mobile industry of this southeast Asian country is growing rapidly in recent years.

There are close to 20 million smartphone users in Thailand – taking up 40% of the overall phone market. There are also more than 7 million tablet computers, with Android reaching more than 70% of the market, according to stats from data driven mobile marketing platform NDP Media. The market size of Thailand’s games market is set to reach US $140 million this year.

Total sales for smartphones in Thailand – 2012-2013

Thailand Smartphone sales

Source: GFK (Jan. 8, 2013)

However, getting into this market is not as easy as you might imagine. Android is by nature a vast landscape of fiercely competing apps, so promotion can be a challenge to companies going local. Thailand is also a developing market, so there are naturally going to be unavoidable obstacles. One of the important ones to overcome is to understand the country’s mobile payment methods. Localizing products for convenient mobile payments is essential for content providers looking to enter the Thai games market. Let’s take a look at four of the most popular mobile game payment methods in Thailand.

1. MOL Points

Mol

MOL Points was created in Malaysia by MOL Global. Early on in 2010 MOL signed a tactical deal with Facebook, and their subsidiary AccessPortal became the payment service provider for Facebook Credits (FB’s own virtual coin). With its spread on FB and Thailand’s craving for social network games, it’s easy to see why MOL’s payment system has been able to become so widely applied.

2. One-2-Call

12call

One-2-Call is main brand from Thailand’s largest mobile communications company AIS, which has the largest number of users in Thailand, according to the report. One-2-Call’s Cash Card has the same prepaid card service as MOL Points, and takes a large portion of payments made on online games. It’s also worth noting AIS also provides the prepaid card service for MOL’s payment channels.

3. Cherry Credits

cherry

Cherry Credits comes from Singapore and is a one-stop game distribution platform. It’s also growing and holds a huge share of the Southeast Asian market. The platform provides a cornucopia of games and other fashionable Asian card-style games. Cherry Credits also provides a leading Global Micropayment Solution which has a broad business base. Not only is it applied to In App Purchasing (IAP), but also touches upon paid for digital content.

4. My Card

My Card

Initiative Services’s points-card product MyCard has a huge distribution base throughout Malaysia and Singapore. It evolved into a games money storage and payment platform, and from 2010 it slowly spread out to other Southeast Asian countries as well as Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau. Thailand is one of the main target markets for the company and today MyCard takes a considerable share of it. What makes MyCard so special are the services and awards they give to members, which have attracted high-quality users. MyCard’s user accounts have already reached 3.5 million, and every month the click through rate reaches more than 450 million.

Other than the methods mentioned above, Thailand still has various other popular mobile payment systems, including the quick finance provider MoneyGram, leading European payment platform E-Wallet Skrill and the world-recognized payment tool Paypal. All of these are becoming more and more widely used and recognized. But when it comes to payments for the relatively niche field of games payments, top-up and prepaid cards are undoubtedly the most popular systems in Thailand.

——

Thailand’s mobile game chart analysis

Thailand GooglePlay

Source: App Annie

The competition in Thailand’s mobile games market has already followed the trend of broadband internet slowly covering the country and become fiercer. Within the field of mobile games, Japan’s Line games are year on year steady at the top of the Thai mobile games charts. This is because Line took a upper-hand in Thailand’s market early on by providing the main instant messaging service there and bringing with it mobile games.

Thailand’s love for light-entertainment games and appetite for gambling-style games have popularized many of the above mobile apps throughout the country. Cultural differences and local thematic trends are concerns that content providers must consider when facing the task of localizing products. At the same time, opening up payment channels and adapting a product’s currency to integrate with local user payment habits are paths that a product must take in order to make its way abroad.

image credit: NDP Media

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AliPay Wallet to Support Mobile Payment in Pharmacies https://technode.com/2014/06/25/alipay-wallet-support-mobile-payment-pharmacies/ https://technode.com/2014/06/25/alipay-wallet-support-mobile-payment-pharmacies/#comments Wed, 25 Jun 2014 09:19:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20386 A month after announcing the ambitious Future Hospital plan, AliPay plans to deepen its foray into medical and healthcare industry by supporting mobile payment services in pharmacies. The company announced today a partnership with ChinaSoft International to explore mobile payment business for medicine industry. ChinaSoft International is a comprehensive provider of end-to-end software and information services, ranging from consulting […]]]>

A month after announcing the ambitious Future Hospital plan, AliPay plans to deepen its foray into medical and healthcare industry by supporting mobile payment services in pharmacies. The company announced today a partnership with ChinaSoft International to explore mobile payment business for medicine industry.

ChinaSoft International is a comprehensive provider of end-to-end software and information services, ranging from consulting to solution and outsourcing. The company has teamed up with CITIC 21Cn, a pharmaceutical data provider that owns the very first license allows third party online drug distribution, to roll out solution plans for online drug administration platform. It is worth noting that Alibaba together with Yunfeng Capital, a private equity firm co-founded by Alibaba Chairman Jack Ma, acquired a 54.3% stake in CITIC 21CN earlier this year.

ChinaSoft International will integrate AliPay mobile payment service into its solution plans. Through the cooperation, AliPay Wallet payment is expected to be available in more than 100K drug stores, where customers can pay for the medicines with AliPay Wallet directly.

The service will first be available in more than 70K pharmacies distributed in the first batch of pilot cities, disclosed a representative of ChinaSoft International.

Before this cooperation, AliPay has entered partnership with more than 20 medicine chain stores, providing mobile payment service in over 10K drug stores all over the country. Star365, a chain drug store that owns more than 2,000 outlets, has inked cooperation deal with Alibaba in Feb this year.

For pharmacies, cooperation with AliPay Wallet not only facilitates the payment process, but also grants them access to AliPay Wallet’s “service window”, where they can interact and distribute membership card or promotion materials to customers, according to the company.

AliPay added that this service will be a part of its Future Hospital plan. AliPay also integrated several mobile health apps, like Chunyuyisheng and 120ask.com to its mobile app.

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Chinese E-commerce Giant JD Launches Travel Channel, Targeting at Mid and High-end Market https://technode.com/2014/06/25/chinese-e-commerce-giant-jd-launches-travel-channel-targeting-at-mid-and-high-end-market/ https://technode.com/2014/06/25/chinese-e-commerce-giant-jd-launches-travel-channel-targeting-at-mid-and-high-end-market/#comments Wed, 25 Jun 2014 06:02:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20372 The newly-listed Chinese e-commerce giant JD launched yesterday a travel channel named “JD Travel” under the theme of “Quality Travel”. The platform is going after mid- and high-end customers, offering a series of services like ticket reservation, hotel, visa application, tourist attraction tickets, car rental, package tours, etc. The tourist packages on the platform are created in […]]]>
JD Travel

The newly-listed Chinese e-commerce giant JD launched yesterday a travel channel named “JD Travel” under the theme of “Quality Travel”. The platform is going after mid- and high-end customers, offering a series of services like ticket reservation, hotel, visa application, tourist attraction tickets, car rental, package tours, etc.

The tourist packages on the platform are created in partnership with various travel agencies. JD will offer these partners various supports in terms of marketing and big data, the company noted. On the marketing level, JD will combine the online travel services with the sales of products closely related to travelling, like outdoor and sports kits, cameras, etc. Tourist who bought tourist services on JD Travel will get coupons for purchasing traveling kits on the platform. JD will also leverage its huge user base to provide supports in user identification, user classification and user demand prediction.

As a new entrant of online travel industry, JD Travel will not get involved in price war, but to focus on providing quality travel services, said Li Chao, vice president of the company.

After launching flight ticket reservation platform in 2011, JD gradually rolled out various services related to travel, like hotel reservation, car rental, visa, etc. JD has acquired hotel reservation platform Hotelvp.com at the beginning of this year.

Although this market is still dominated by few leading companies like Ctrip and Elong, lots of online tourism startups surfaced (click here for a wrap-up story) and several Internet companies also set eyes on the lucrative market. Tencent joins a $82 million round of funding in online travel service 17u. Etao, the shopping search service under Alibaba Group, launched a hotel search service last year.

image credit: JD Travel

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Period Tracker Meet You Announces US$35M Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/24/period-tracker-meet-you-announces-us35m-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/24/period-tracker-meet-you-announces-us35m-series-c-funding/#comments Tue, 24 Jun 2014 06:49:45 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20338 Meet You, a Chinese app for period tracking and female community, announced today US$35 million in Series C funding led by SIG and followed by Matrix Partners China and China Renaissance K2 Ventures. With all funds now in position, they will be injected in the construction of team and its female community, the company added. So […]]]>
Meet You

Meet You, a Chinese app for period tracking and female community, announced today US$35 million in Series C funding led by SIG and followed by Matrix Partners China and China Renaissance K2 Ventures. With all funds now in position, they will be injected in the construction of team and its female community, the company added.

So far the startup has raised three rounds in about a year: millions of dollars of Series A financing in June 2013, and US$15 million in Series B led by Matrix Partners China and followed by founding team of the company.

Meet You started the business as a menstruation period tracing app and gradually shifted its focus to constructing a female community, where users can discuss and share tips on various topics, like parenting, fashion, keeping fit, relationships, etc.

Launched in April 2013, the app now claimed more than 50 million registered users with over 3.5 million active users.

Meet You is expected to commercialize its service by the end of this year with an innovative business model, said Eric Xu, board member of SIG.

Dayima, a direct competitor of the company, also announced US$30 million of Series C funding recently.

Female health tracing apps are more and more commonly used in China. According to stats from research institution Analysys, the monthly active users of similar female health tracking apps exceeded 9 million. But the competition in the arena is becoming fiercer. In addition to major players like Meet You and Dayima, a lot of new startups also set eye on this field, such as fertility app Xiaohuasheng. Glow, an U.S. fertility app, is also preparing to tap Chinese market.

image credit: Meet You

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iMusic BodyRhythm: A New Way to Feel and Share Your Favorite Music https://technode.com/2014/06/24/imusic-bodyrhythm-new-way-feel-share-favorite-music/ https://technode.com/2014/06/24/imusic-bodyrhythm-new-way-feel-share-favorite-music/#respond Tue, 24 Jun 2014 03:44:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20322 Chinese design and innovative product platform Jiae.com recently held a competition at our co-working space The Node under the theme of “When Hardware meets the World Cup”. iMusic BodyRhythm, a song-triggered massage vest which launched crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter last year, is among a slew of interesting hardware rivals that joined the contest. The product is […]]]>
iMusic Body

Chinese design and innovative product platform Jiae.com recently held a competition at our co-working space The Node under the theme of “When Hardware meets the World Cup”. iMusic BodyRhythm, a song-triggered massage vest which launched crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter last year, is among a slew of interesting hardware rivals that joined the contest. The product is now available for pre-order at US$149.95.

iMusic BodyRhythm is a 5.0 pounds massage vest that can be connected to your phone via Bluetooth. iMusic BodyRhythm app can pick up the music you selected from mobile devices and generate a rhythmic drumbeat on your shoulders. Powered by a music sync algorithm, the beat is auto-synced with the rhythm of your favorite music. If you want a different beat rhythm, you can simply tap and shake your iPhone to create your own drumbeat.

The vest has five kinds of pre-programmed massage sequences and users can use them in case there are no mobile device connections. Each sequence will last 15 minutes. The app also added a screen tapping feature, which will give users pokes somewhat randomly.

The BodyRhythm app can record the drumbeat playlist you created so you can enjoy it again later or share the experience with your friends.

The product is developed by iCess, an U.S. company led by ex-concert pianist Uwe Diegel. The team is focused on transferring traditional products into app-enabled accessories for iOS platform.

image credit: iMusic BodyRhythm

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AliPay Wallet Finally Launches a Stripped-down WP Version https://technode.com/2014/06/23/alipay-wallet-finally-launches-stripped-wp-version/ https://technode.com/2014/06/23/alipay-wallet-finally-launches-stripped-wp-version/#respond Mon, 23 Jun 2014 09:29:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20295 AliPay Wallet, the mobile payments and service app of Alibaba Group, has finally launched a WP version of the digital wallet app on Windows Phone app store. AliPay Wallet gradually becomes a household name for Chinese smartphone users with the addition of more and more interesting features, like mutual funds service Yuebao. The mobile app claimed around 100 […]]]>
Alipay

AliPay Wallet, the mobile payments and service app of Alibaba Group, has finally launched a WP version of the digital wallet app on Windows Phone app store.

AliPay Wallet gradually becomes a household name for Chinese smartphone users with the addition of more and more interesting features, like mutual funds service Yuebao. The mobile app claimed around 100 million users and processes one third-of the daily payments for Alibaba as of the end of 2013.

But the service was not available for WP phone users until the launch of this new version today. AliPay team once made a promise on its official microblog earlier this year that they will release AliPay Wallet for WP before July 1 this year.

Although the company did kept its promise by releasing the new app today, only two basic features of credit card repayment and Yuebao are integrated in this new version, while a lot of other popular functions are missing, such as official accounts, payment of domestic bills, and cab-hailing, etc.

According to stats from Microsoft, there are now more than 17 million WP phone users in China. But the figure still lags far behind 270 million daily active users for Android.

image credit AliPay Wallet

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Sina Fully Acquires Lottery Service Aicai.com https://technode.com/2014/06/23/sina-fully-acquires-lottery-service-aicai-com/ https://technode.com/2014/06/23/sina-fully-acquires-lottery-service-aicai-com/#respond Mon, 23 Jun 2014 06:05:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20280 Chinese web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) fully acquired lottery service Aicai.com and rebranded the site as Sina Aicai recently. The founding team of Aicai will remain with the company after the transaction. Aicai is a lottery ticket sales and information platform established in 2007 with Sina as a majority shareholder. The startup is also responsible […]]]>
Aicai

Chinese web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) fully acquired lottery service Aicai.com and rebranded the site as Sina Aicai recently. The founding team of Aicai will remain with the company after the transaction.

Aicai is a lottery ticket sales and information platform established in 2007 with Sina as a majority shareholder. The startup is also responsible for building and managing Sina’s own lottery ticket sales and information platform. The company launched a mobile website in May 2009, which partnered with Sina’s mobile portal in August of the same year.

Chinese online lottery service grows rapidly in recently years. According to a senior executive of 500.com, a newly U.S.-listed Chinese lottery firm, Chinese online lottery sales are expected to jump by at least 70% this year, from 42 billion yuan ($6.7 billion) in 2013.

Driven by the huge market potential, most of Chinese leading Internet companies started to tap this market. In addition to a special channel QQ Lottery and partnership with lottery sites like 8788.cn and 500.com, Tencent teamed up with Chinese paper maker Xiamen Anne to develop an open platform for paperless lottery. NetEase runs a lottery channel. State-backed People.com acquired Okooo.com last year to run its lottery and public service channels. E-commerce giants, like Alibaba, JD, also provide lottery sales services both on their websites and mobile terminals.

As the World Cup hitting full swing, Chinese lottery firms are prepared to cash in on the quadrennial event by launching different degrees of publicity campaigns focused on the tournaments.

image credit: Sina Aicai

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MiliOOne: an E-commerce Solution for European 3F Companies to Enter China https://technode.com/2014/06/20/milioone-an-e-commerce-solution-for-european-3f-companies-to-enter-china/ https://technode.com/2014/06/20/milioone-an-e-commerce-solution-for-european-3f-companies-to-enter-china/#comments Fri, 20 Jun 2014 08:17:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20236 China’s “mass affluent”, or upper-middle class demographic, is expected to reach more than 14 million individuals by the end of this year, according to a new study conducted by Forbes China. The fast growing number of affluent Chinese people, who have more dispensable incomes to pursue a healthier lifestyle, is giving momentum to startups providing […]]]>

China’s “mass affluent”, or upper-middle class demographic, is expected to reach more than 14 million individuals by the end of this year, according to a new study conducted by Forbes China. The fast growing number of affluent Chinese people, who have more dispensable incomes to pursue a healthier lifestyle, is giving momentum to startups providing premium services and products in China.

MiliOOne is a Sino-Italian e-commerce startup that aims to provide European manufacturers of Fashion, Food and Furniture (3F) products with one-stop shop services for selling their goods online in China. Working as a web agency, the company provides e-business services, like market analysis, website localization, online project management, branding, etc. to European producers that want to enter Chinese market.

In addition, the Milan and Shanghai-headquartered company also plan to sell Italian 3F products on its own online shop in China, meeting the needs of Italian companies, who need new markets in terms of mass sales and that of the Chinese end-users, who want to buy goods and services that remember the “Italian life-style”.

MiliOOne has a collaboration with Chinese online e-commerce giants, such as Alibaba Group and JD. Moreover, it also cooperates with Chinese software providers QiaoLab for the web production and Gridsum for SEO and SEM. MiliOOne relates with Bank of China and Grant Thornton China to support in administrative or financial matter.

The company now provides e-commerce services to both famous brands like Ferrari Automotive SpA, Inter FC, Prada and small and medium-sized companies in China.

Prada

Claudio Ferraris, now CEO of MiliOOne, founded the company in 2012 with their business development team based in Milan, Italy and operation team working from Shanghai. Claudio is a globally-minded serial entrepreneur with over 20 years of international managerial experience in Europe, North America and Asia.

Claudio, who entered Chinese e-market more than ten years ago, said one big difference between Chinese and European e-commerce markets is that China has a huge user base, who speak the same language, pay with the same currency and live under the same commercial laws. So it is more easy to produce one site for China and benefit from all these factors.

He added that “Chinese e-commerce market is only getting better for the last 10 years. There are more choices for consumers to find required items, together with easier online payment and more convenient logistics services.

When being asked about future plan for the company, Claudio said MiliOOne is at its initial stage of winning loyal hearts of Chinese consumers and will be focusing on it in the next few years. “We will continue to focus on 3F products that Italy is so proud of. At the meantime, MiliOOne is preparing for the next step of introducing Chinese special goods for overseas online market as China also has got a lot to offer to the world.”

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Light Chaser, an Animation Company backed by Tudou Founder, Raises US$20M of Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/20/light-chaser-an-animation-company-backed-by-tudou-founder-raises-us20m-of-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/20/light-chaser-an-animation-company-backed-by-tudou-founder-raises-us20m-of-series-b-funding/#respond Fri, 20 Jun 2014 06:17:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20241 Animated film production company Light Chaser Animation announced on its microblog that it has closed US$ 20 million of Series B funding led by GGV Capital, Chengwei Ventures and joined by Hillhouse Capital and Series A investor IDG Capital Partners. Light Chaser was founded in March 2013 by founder and ex-CEO of Tudou.com Gary Wang who claimed to build […]]]>
Light Chaser

Animated film production company Light Chaser Animation announced on its microblog that it has closed US$ 20 million of Series B funding led by GGV Capital, Chengwei Ventures and joined by Hillhouse Capital and Series A investor IDG Capital Partners.

Light Chaser was founded in March 2013 by founder and ex-CEO of Tudou.com Gary Wang who claimed to build the company in the way of running an Internet company. Light Chaser aims to create world-class animated films, like Pixar and Dreamworks, but with a Chinese cultural touch.

Light Chaser has attracted art, technology and management talents from mainland China, Hong Kong and Hollywood.

The production for Light Chaser’s first 3D animated feature film Little Door Spirits will be completed by July 2015 with a budget of RMB70 million (US$12 million). The company has released Little Yeyos, the cinematic trailer for the film, March this year. According to the company, the chubby Little Yeyos are favored by the netizens and the video clip recorded more than 10 million views within 48 hours after its release. The original story of this film is by Wang himself who is also a published writer.

According to Sha Ye, managing director at Chengwei Capital, Light Chaser’s second film project has also been started. “It’s a different style from the first one, and yet equally enthralling.  We are really looking forward to them.”

image credit: Light Chaser Animation

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P2P Lending Platform Yooli Raises Tens of Millions Dollars in Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/19/p2p-lending-platform-yooli-raises-tens-of-millions-dollars-in-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/19/p2p-lending-platform-yooli-raises-tens-of-millions-dollars-in-series-b-funding/#respond Thu, 19 Jun 2014 08:43:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20212 Yooli, a P2P lending platform, announced that it has secured tens of millions of dollars in Series B financing led by Morningside Ventures, which is also the investor of  Sohu, Ctrip, Xunlei, UC, Xiaomi and YY. The company has received 10 million of Series A funding from Softbank China Venture Capital last year. The capital will […]]]>

Yooli, a P2P lending platform, announced that it has secured tens of millions of dollars in Series B financing led by Morningside Ventures, which is also the investor of  Sohu, Ctrip, Xunlei, UC, Xiaomi and YY. The company has received 10 million of Series A funding from Softbank China Venture Capital last year.

The capital will be used in product development, upgrading of IT technologies, risk control and team construction, according to Liu Yannan, CEO of the company.

Launched in 2013, Yooli now cooperates with 23 offline micro-credit companies, offering investors access to loans that are originated from many of the smaller P2P platforms. In order to build trust and confidence, Yooli partners with a third party to assess the credit quality of each individual loan. They also partnered with third-party guarantors to ensure that the lenders receive monthly returns.

The company claimed more than 760K registered users with a turnover of more than 1.8 billion yuan (around US$290 million).

The lack of proper regulations has always been the development bottleneck for P2P industry. It is reported that a handful of Chinese P2P sites ran away with an estimated 700 million yuan (over US$110 million) in total in less than half a year. Two of most recent fraud cases that stirred up much public attention are Wangwangdai, which absconded with investors’ money five months after its launch, Beijing-based Wangjinbao and Shenzhen-based Kexun.

After witnessing a series fraud cases of P2P sites, Chinese dominant search engine Baidu removed over 800 P2P lending sites from search results for investigation and unveiled P2P lending white list guidelines in May.

image credit: Yooli

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The Rise of Anonymous Social Sharing Apps in China https://technode.com/2014/06/19/rise-anonymous-social-sharing-apps-china/ https://technode.com/2014/06/19/rise-anonymous-social-sharing-apps-china/#respond Thu, 19 Jun 2014 05:53:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20184 Following all the rages for anonymity and secrecy led by Secret and Whisper, Chinese clones of these hit secret-sharing apps mushroomed this year. In the past month, around eight apps of this genre surfaced in China, pushing the total number of such apps to more than twenty. It is no surprise to see the popularity […]]]>

Following all the rages for anonymity and secrecy led by Secret and Whisper, Chinese clones of these hit secret-sharing apps mushroomed this year. In the past month, around eight apps of this genre surfaced in China, pushing the total number of such apps to more than twenty. It is no surprise to see the popularity of anonymous apps in China, considering the success and buzz around its foreign predecessors . Let’s take a look at the leading ones in Chinese market.

Mimi, which means “secret” in Chinese, is released in March this year. As one of the first Chinese clones of Secret, it became an instant hit weeks after its launch. However, Mimi disappeared from its virtual shelves barely a month after hitting the top spot at Apple app store, due to concerns for piracy (Mimi is a near-perfect clone of Secret in interface and icon styles) and spread of unhealthy contents. Shenzhen Wumii Technology Limited, the developer of Mimi, then rebranded their product as Wumii (no secrets in Chinese) in May after making some improvements on the product. With all the buzz, Chinese app developers started to notice the business potentials of anonymous apps.

Xiaosheng1

Xiaosheng–Copying the clutter of Whisper, Xiaosheng allows users to scroll right or left to view the secrets published and add picture backgrounds to the secrets. You can sort the secrets of other users by the latest, most popular, or their location.

Simiquan

Simiquan–YY, an online broadcasting platform that trying to expand other vertical sectors, launched Simiquan on May 15. Similar to its U.S. predecessor Secret, Simiquan requires users to register with phone numbers. YY is the first Chinese Internet giant that enters this field.

10years

10years.me–Different from other anonymous apps that shares secrets on negative aspects of lives, 10years.me approached the secret-sharing demand from a different angle. The platform encourages users, who are mostly youth just started their careers, to share their future dreams or what their lives will be like in 10 years, cause people may be shy away from sharing their hefty goals in social networks that involve close acquaintances. Users can set up their goals or dreams in the homepages which are arranged in timelines.

hehe1

Hehe–Several core member of audio social app Papa rolled out Hehe in May 21. Although the app shares the same features with other anonymous apps, the company claimed Hehe can screen the malicious rumors by algorithms.

Wuya

Wuya–Team led by Xu Chaojun, the founder of Papa, launched a similar app named Wuya. After entering the app, users are required to give the name of your company or school.

The unavailability of foreign anonymous services like Secret and Whisper in China may have left their Chinese clones a relatively free space to grow. But the competition in domestic market is going to be more fierce with the arrival of Secret, which has launched a Chinese Android version this June. Whisper, the rival of Secret, has received funds from Tencent in its new financing round this May.

Although Chinese secret-sharing apps, like Mimi have whipped up controversies for piracy, lack of monitoring on contents, or being accused for turning into an unhealthy place for people on the edge, their sheer number indicates that there are still huge demands among the public for anonymous sharing.

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Online Vacation Home Rental Service Tujia Nets US$100M of Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/18/online-vacation-home-rental-service-tujia-nets-us100m-of-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/18/online-vacation-home-rental-service-tujia-nets-us100m-of-series-c-funding/#comments Wed, 18 Jun 2014 12:23:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20166 Tujia.com, an online vacation rental service in China targeting middle to high-end Chinese travelers, secured US$100 million of Series C financing, according to a microblog of Luo Jun, CEO of the company. He added that the firm has received all the fundings yesterday. As one of the leading room rental services in China, Tujia has […]]]>
Tujia

Tujia.com, an online vacation rental service in China targeting middle to high-end Chinese travelers, secured US$100 million of Series C financing, according to a microblog of Luo Jun, CEO of the company. He added that the firm has received all the fundings yesterday.

As one of the leading room rental services in China, Tujia has been voracious in raising funds. The company has received its first major investment from LightSpeed in 2012 and a combined 400 million yuan in Series A and Series B funding from an all-star array of investors led by GGV Capital, CDHFund, Ctrip, HomeAway, etc.

Tujia was cofounded in late 2011 by former general manager of Sina Leju and CTO of Escapia Melissa Yang. The startup cooperates with real estate companies and landlords to attract high-end apartments that would fit for the demands of travelers. Tujia also plays a major part in standardizing the services provided by the hosts.

Staffed by some 1000, Tujia now operates in 128 Chinese cities and 68 overseas cities with more than 85K suites available on the platform.

Xiaozhu, a domestic short-term home rental service, also raised US$15 million of Series B financing recently.

image credit: Tujia

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Fashion is the New Geek: TechNode.fr and XFounder Set to Upend Your Mindset for Startup Geeks https://technode.com/2014/06/18/fashion-is-the-new-geek-technode-fr-and-xfounder-set-to-upend-your-mindset-for-startup-geeks/ https://technode.com/2014/06/18/fashion-is-the-new-geek-technode-fr-and-xfounder-set-to-upend-your-mindset-for-startup-geeks/#respond Wed, 18 Jun 2014 07:41:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20143 What will pop up into your mind on hearing the word “GEEK”? Probably a bunch of The Big Bang Theory protagonists who are surprisingly talented on the one hand, but also extremely inward or even look nerdy on the other hand. Your mindset would be changed if you joined us last Friday at Shanghai’s art […]]]>
TechNode Fr

What will pop up into your mind on hearing the word “GEEK”? Probably a bunch of The Big Bang Theory protagonists who are surprisingly talented on the one hand, but also extremely inward or even look nerdy on the other hand. Your mindset would be changed if you joined us last Friday at Shanghai’s art gallery Island6 for the launch party of TechNode French as well as the first gathering of our invitation-only entrepreneur club XFounder, because the XFounder geeks here are sophisticated and primed to explore a new field-fashion!

Committed to the goal of bridging Chinese and global startup ecosystem as ever, TechNode partnered up with the Sino-French digital consulting agency for fashion brands VELVET Group to launch the French version of TechNode two months earlier.

The special occasion also served as a best opportunity to bring together the tech and fashion communities, two fields that boast so much similarities as well as cooperation potentials.

Fashion is ever-changing and it’s about being creative, inventive, and paying excessive attentions to details. These factors also constitute the essential spirits of tech industry. Moreover, fashion is a positive attitude which celebrates the incessant pursuit for better life. As a true believer of the idea that life is the best incubator for startups, Dr. Gang Lu, founder of TechNode, shares similar conception on fashionable lifestyle with our partner and we are dedicated to inspire more innovative ideas and cooperation between the startup geeks and fashion industry.

To practice the belief, TechNode also launched the Node International Entrepreneurship Center at Beijing’s new art district 751D-Park, as well as a series of offline meetups targeting to connect the two areas.

A wild mix of around two hundred participants partied with us last Friday, ranging from the founding members of XFounder (Teambition, Xiaohongshu, Tenyears.me, etc.), founders of early-stage startups (Gurudigger, Singaheart, Weilver, Vtime, etc.), venture capitalists (Orange-Ren Zhen, Gobi Partners-Avery Li, CyberAgent Ventures-Wu Wenwei, etc.), incubators (Innospace, Chinaccelerator, etc.), to e-commerce business heads of premium brands, fashion bloggers, and fashion photographers, etc.

It is worth noting that several startups that participated in the party are actually working at the intersection of technology and fashion, such as P1, an online fashion community for affluent Chinese, and Xiaohongshu, an overseas shopping note that offers tips for overseas purchases.  Our old friend Eike Wobker, digital manager of Nivea, also joined us.

Last but not the least, we want to express our sincere appreciations to the sponsors of this event, Uber, Teambition, Upyun and Island6 for their special efforts in helping us to hold the party.

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Camera360 Debuts New ID Photo Editing and Printing Feature https://technode.com/2014/06/17/camera360-debuts-new-id-photo-editing-printing-feature/ https://technode.com/2014/06/17/camera360-debuts-new-id-photo-editing-printing-feature/#comments Tue, 17 Jun 2014 09:12:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20126 Digital photo service Camera360 added a new ID photo editing and printing feature to its upcoming 5.2 version that will be launched this week. With this new feature, users no longer have to worry about all the rigid proportion specifications required by a standard ID photo, cause the software will guide the users with auxiliary […]]]>
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Digital photo service Camera360 added a new ID photo editing and printing feature to its upcoming 5.2 version that will be launched this week.

With this new feature, users no longer have to worry about all the rigid proportion specifications required by a standard ID photo, cause the software will guide the users with auxiliary lines to facilitate the shooting of an ID photo that is in full accordance with these requirements.

In addition, the feature also allows users to edit the background, whiten the skins, and even change a more formal suit when needed.

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What’s interesting about the new feature is that it lets users to place orders online so as to have their edited ID photos printed and delivered to their homes after paying via WeChat Payment or AliPay. This feature is considered as an effort to monetize the service.

As one of the leading photo editing tools in China, Camera360 is now available on Android, iOS and WP platforms. It claimed nearly 300 million users globally as of May 2014, of which around half of the users come from overseas market.

image credit: Camera360

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Airbnb-like Service Xiaozhu Raises $15mn of Series B Funding Led by Legend Capital https://technode.com/2014/06/17/airbnb-like-service-xiaozhu-raises-15mn-dolars-series-b-funding-led-legend-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/06/17/airbnb-like-service-xiaozhu-raises-15mn-dolars-series-b-funding-led-legend-capital/#comments Tue, 17 Jun 2014 07:27:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20100 Xiaozhu, a Chinese short-term home-rental service, reportedly announced it has secured $15 million of Series B financing led by Legend Capital and followed by existing investor Morningside Ventures, which has poured eight-digit Series A financing in the company in 2012. The capital will be invested in team construction, R&D, branding, said Chen Chi, CEO of the company. Chen […]]]>
Xiaozhu

Xiaozhu, a Chinese short-term home-rental service, reportedly announced it has secured $15 million of Series B financing led by Legend Capital and followed by existing investor Morningside Ventures, which has poured eight-digit Series A financing in the company in 2012. The capital will be invested in team construction, R&D, branding, said Chen Chi, CEO of the company.

Chen Chi and Wang Liantao, two former execs of Ganji.com, founded Xiaozhu in 2012 after leaving Mayi.com, the vocational rental service backed by classified site Ganji.com earlier the same year. Different from other similar services, Xiaozhu integrates more social elements to the platform. The company claimed to have suites available in more than 160 cities countrywide and have established offices in 13 cities.

Triggered by the success of their U.S. predecessor Airbnb, strings of Chinese room-sharing services mushroomed and received funding during 2012 to 2013. Mayi and Xiaozhu, two avid followers of the Airbnb model, announced $10 million funding respectively in 2013. Tujia got a combined 400 million yuan in Series A and B latter the same year. Other similar local services are Zhuwona and Soufun-backed Youtianxia.

Despite the accolades for Airbnb model from Chinese followers, Chinese room-sharing industry has witnessed some turbulences in the past year and whether the sharing economy model will stand a chance in China is being questioned, given the huge differences in credit systems and hotel pricings in Chinese and the U.S. market. Airizu, one of the earliest entrants in travel rentals in China backed by the notorious Samwer brothers, is found closed last year after two years of operation.

Airbnb itself is also taking more active measures to explore Chinese market after receiving a landmark round of $500 million funding at a valuation of $10 billion this April.

image credit: Xiaozhu

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[Update] Online Financial Intermediary 91jinrong Raises RMB200M of Series B Financing https://technode.com/2014/06/16/update-online-financial-intermediary-91jinrong-raises-rmb200m-of-series-b-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/06/16/update-online-financial-intermediary-91jinrong-raises-rmb200m-of-series-b-financing/#respond Mon, 16 Jun 2014 09:24:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20061 [Update] 91jinrong, a Chinese online financial intermediary, announced that it has received Series B funding led by Haitong Capital, a subsidiary of Haitong Securities, and followed by existing investors of CBC Partners and Matrix Partners. A representative of the company told TechNode that 91jinrong raised RMB200 million (around US$32 million) of funding in this round. 91jinrong has secured 60 million yuan of […]]]>
91jinrong1

[Update] 91jinrong, a Chinese online financial intermediary, announced that it has received Series B funding led by Haitong Capital, a subsidiary of Haitong Securities, and followed by existing investors of CBC Partners and Matrix Partners. A representative of the company told TechNode that 91jinrong raised RMB200 million (around US$32 million) of funding in this round.

91jinrong has secured 60 million yuan of Series A financing led by CBC Partners and angel investment from Matrix Partners China.

The company, which is a member of Microsoft Ventures Accelerator’s third class in China, started as an financial intermediary service by matching potential consumers with corresponding financial institutions. After receiving Series A funding last year, 91jinrong added new services, like loan product search, enterprise + personal financial product, car insurance, etc.

The company’s revenue mainly comes from data and advertisement fees, as well as commissions charged on financial institutions. 91jinrong claimed to have formed partnerships with over 300 banks and financial institutions, with over 300 million yuan (around US$48 million) in daily loan transactions, and more than 2,000 daily insurance transactions. The company added that it has booked more than 100 million yuan of revenue in 2013.

Xu Zewei, the company’s founder, said that 91jinrong is expected to expand business to 80 major cities countrywide and record an annual turnover of more than 300 billion yuan by 2015.

image credit: 91jinrong

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Quora-like Service Zhihu Raises $22mn Series B Funding Led by SAIF https://technode.com/2014/06/16/quora-like-service-zhihu-raises-22mn-dollars-series-b-funding-led-by-saif/ https://technode.com/2014/06/16/quora-like-service-zhihu-raises-22mn-dollars-series-b-funding-led-by-saif/#comments Mon, 16 Jun 2014 04:07:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=20030 Zhihu, Chinese Quora-like question-and-answer-style knowledge base, secured $22 million of Series B funding led by SAIF. The company has received Series A financing from Qiming Ventures and angel investment from Innovation Works. Like its U.S. predecessor, Zhihu, which means “Do you know?” in old Chinese, lets users to ask or answer any question and tries […]]]>
Zhihu 1

Zhihu, Chinese Quora-like question-and-answer-style knowledge base, secured $22 million of Series B funding led by SAIF. The company has received Series A financing from Qiming Ventures and angel investment from Innovation Works.

Like its U.S. predecessor, Zhihu, which means “Do you know?” in old Chinese, lets users to ask or answer any question and tries to find the best answers to these questions by leveraging a voting mechanism.

Launched in Dec. 2010, Zhihu started with a group of technical and relatively entrepreneurial minded users based on an invitation-only and authentication model. Zhihu is available for open registration since 2013 to attract larger user base and their topics have diversified substantially to cover popular topics like movies, culture, IT, education, etc.

As of the end of May, the company claimed more than 6 million registered users and answers to over 2 million questions on 150k topics. The website’s average daily unique visitors stand at 2.5 million and average daily PV is around 6 million, the company announced. Zhihu claimed more than 6 million downloads on aggregate for its mobile apps on iOS and Android platforms.

Despite all the similarities and differences between Quora and Zhihu in terms of product features, Zhihu puts more emphasis on delivering information like a media, while Quora focuses more on discussion. Zhihu periodically publishes print and electronic books for knowledge on selected topics. Moreover, the service also host Zhihu Round Table: an offline activity in which multiple experts are invited to write answers to certain questions.

The U.S. Q&A website Quora just raised $80 million of Series C funding at a valuation of $900 million early April.

image credit: Zhihu

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Finnish MOOC Platform Eliademy Launches Chinese Version https://technode.com/2014/06/13/finnish-mooc-platform-eliademy-launches-chinese-version/ https://technode.com/2014/06/13/finnish-mooc-platform-eliademy-launches-chinese-version/#comments Fri, 13 Jun 2014 10:11:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19998 Eliademy, a Finnish e-learning platform offering cloud-based tools for teachers and learners, recently launched Chinese version. CBTec, developer of the platform, positioned Eliademy as “education as a service“ (EaaS). Eliademy supports educators and students with free online classrooms that enable them to create, share and manage courses. The educational content providers can use it as a free […]]]>
Eliademy pic

Eliademy, a Finnish e-learning platform offering cloud-based tools for teachers and learners, recently launched Chinese version.

CBTec, developer of the platform, positioned Eliademy as “education as a service“ (EaaS). Eliademy supports educators and students with free online classrooms that enable them to create, share and manage courses. The educational content providers can use it as a free learning management system and courses created by the teachers will always belong to them.

The company is working hard to present a simple and friendly interface by adding easy to use features so as to make it easier for teachers, even those with little technological backgrounds, to create new courses, said Liang Chao, co-founder of the company. The educators can engage students with features such as discussion boards, videos, images, newsfeed, visual notifications, calendar, etc.

The platform is now available in 26 languages, of which 5 are Asian languages. Backed by an international team, Eliademy is trying to localize their service by partnering with local online education services, said Liang. He added that the company is planning to find a cooperator in China.

Eliademy just received an undisclosed amount of seed funding from Finnish venture capitalist Inventure this April. The company is expected to receive a new round of at least $4 million Series A funding at the end of this year, said the company’s CEO Sotiris Makrygiannis.

Launched in Feb. 2012, the Helsinki-headquartered startup is founded by a group of ex-Nokia veterans led by former Nokia open source technology head Sotiris Makrygiannis.

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Zhaopin Fully Acquires Chinese Business of Jobs DB for $15.72mn https://technode.com/2014/06/12/zhaopin-fully-acquires-chinese-business-jobs-db-15-72mn-dollars/ https://technode.com/2014/06/12/zhaopin-fully-acquires-chinese-business-jobs-db-15-72mn-dollars/#respond Thu, 12 Jun 2014 04:01:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19971 Zhaopin, a leading Chinese career platform that has filed for an U.S. IPO this May, has entered into a share purchase agreement with Jobs DB Inc. to acquire a 100% stake in Jobs DB China Investments Ltd., a subsidiary for the former, for US$15.72 million, according to the amended prospectus of the company. The cash consideration […]]]>

Zhaopin, a leading Chinese career platform that has filed for an U.S. IPO this May, has entered into a share purchase agreement with Jobs DB Inc. to acquire a 100% stake in Jobs DB China Investments Ltd., a subsidiary for the former, for US$15.72 million, according to the amended prospectus of the company. The cash consideration for the transaction has been paid to Jobs DB Inc., the company added.

According to Zhaopin, the acquisition was made mainly to buyback the stakes in CJOL, a privately held recruitment service in southern China that Zhaopin has sold its indirectly held stakes to Jobs DB in 2011. At the time of the disposition, Jobs DB Inc. was 55% owned by SEEK, a major shareholder of Zhaopin. After this transaction, Jobs DB Inc. was an entity controlled by SEEK.

According to the company, stake in CJOL was sold in 2011 to reposition resources in accordance with business strategies at the time and it is purchased now to improve Zhaopin’s competitive position in southern China as they are expanding into those regions. Through its 100% consolidated affiliate in China, Jobs DB China indirectly controls approximately 75.6% equity interest in CJOL.

Launched in 1998, the Hong Kong-headquartered recruiting service Jobs DB is now offering services in 12 countries and regions, including Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, India, Singapore, the U.S., etc.

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Singapore Social, Mobile Agency Techsailor Launches Social CRM Solution Social IQ https://technode.com/2014/06/12/singapore-social-mobile-agency-techsailor-launches-social-crm-solution-social-iq/ https://technode.com/2014/06/12/singapore-social-mobile-agency-techsailor-launches-social-crm-solution-social-iq/#respond Thu, 12 Jun 2014 01:05:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19944 Techsailor, a Singapore-based startup offering social, local and mobile media services, announced the launch of Social IQ, an integrated Social CRM offering, which aims to help the brands to derive tangible business performance on social media. Social IQ’s business framework offers a 25 end-to-end Social CRM use cases ranging from strategy, engagement, response management, creative, content […]]]>
Social IQ framework

Techsailor, a Singapore-based startup offering social, local and mobile media services, announced the launch of Social IQ, an integrated Social CRM offering, which aims to help the brands to derive tangible business performance on social media.

Social IQ’s business framework offers a 25 end-to-end Social CRM use cases ranging from strategy, engagement, response management, creative, content and analytics. It will leverage social platforms to empower various business functions including product innovation, sales & marketing and customer experiences, as brands seek to become more relevant to the social and mobile first consumer.

Being a modular solution, Social IQ presents brands with an array of choices that can be integrated with the existing brand ecosystem based on business needs. The solution integrates practices to help brands in every step of the way to accomplish social for business – from building social strategies to implementing integrated technologies and running these processes on behalf of clients.

Techsailor was founded in 2005 by three National University of Singapore alumni Rex Huang, Wayne Chia, and Leon Leong. The team expanded business in China by setting up a Guangdong office in 2007. The company is now focusing on growing the business across industries throughout the Asia Pacific region. Techsailor was acquired by Indian digital service network To The New in 2013.

image credit: Techsailor

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VoIP and Messaging App Viber Announces 100 Million Concurrent Users https://technode.com/2014/06/11/voip-and-messaging-app-viber-announces-100-million-concurrent-users/ https://technode.com/2014/06/11/voip-and-messaging-app-viber-announces-100-million-concurrent-users/#respond Wed, 11 Jun 2014 09:25:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19921 Viber, a leading mobile communications platform, announced that it has more than 100 million concurrent online users. Additionally, the company claimed more than 360 million registered users, up from 228 million when it was being acquired by Japanese ecommerce giant Rakuten this Feb. It takes the company four months to record the current milestone after claiming 100 […]]]>

Viber, a leading mobile communications platform, announced that it has more than 100 million concurrent online users. Additionally, the company claimed more than 360 million registered users, up from 228 million when it was being acquired by Japanese ecommerce giant Rakuten this Feb.

It takes the company four months to record the current milestone after claiming 100 million monthly active users Feb. this year. Viber’s rapid growth may partly contribute to platform availability, as Viber is focused on offering cross-platform support.

It is now available on multiple platforms, including desktop,  iPhone, Android phones and tablets, Windows Phone, Blackberry, Windows, Windows 8, Mac, Linux, Symbian, etc.

The messaging space is a highly competitive arena. WhatsApp and WeChat, two rivals of Viber, claimed 430 million and 227 million monthly active users respectively. Korean social networking app Kakao announced 140 million users by May this year. QQ, the instant messaging service of Tencent, announced 200 million concurrent users on April 11 2014.

Viber announced the new user number alongside the release of a new version of Viber Desktop that features a new look with a special focus on the ever-popular stickers. It’s easier for users to add stickers to their conversations with a sticker menu that can be docked to the side of the app. Viber Desktop has also been upgraded for better video quality and performance. 

On top of this, the Viber support site is now available in two more languages – Portuguese and Spanish, in addition to the current English and Japanese. 

image credit: Viber

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Weibo Adds Gaming, Review and Payment Features to Mobile App Update https://technode.com/2014/06/10/weibo-adds-gaming-review-and-payment-features-to-mobile-app-update/ https://technode.com/2014/06/10/weibo-adds-gaming-review-and-payment-features-to-mobile-app-update/#respond Tue, 10 Jun 2014 09:51:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19880 Screenshots of Weibo Weibo released its first mobile app update after getting listed on NASDAQ this April. In order to diversify the Twitter-like microblogging service, the new version added three popular features to new update, including online gaming, review and payment. For the gaming sector, the company has launched an online game center, a social networking […]]]>
weibo

Screenshots of Weibo

Weibo released its first mobile app update after getting listed on NASDAQ this April. In order to diversify the Twitter-like microblogging service, the new version added three popular features to new update, including online gaming, review and payment.

For the gaming sector, the company has launched an online game center, a social networking platform, as well as a World Cup-themed casual game, which claimed more than 10 million users four days after its launch. Weibo planned to roll out 1-2 mobile games each month, around 10 games in total by the end of this year. In addition to home-grown games, Weibo disclosed that they will offer game distribution services to other game developers.

With the new Weibo app, users can add their reviews for films, foods, music, books, libraries, hotels, etc.

Weibo also opened Weibo Payment to every user, either business or individual. The company claimed that 23 million Weibo users have bundled their Taobao accounts. As almost all Taobao users have Alipay accounts, those users are able to make payments with Weibo Payment directly.

Weibo is also planning to construct a location-based reviewing system in order to expand offline businesses.

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WeChat Opens Contents to Tencent-backed Search Engine Sogou https://technode.com/2014/06/09/wechat-opens-contents-to-tencent-backed-search-engine-sogou/ https://technode.com/2014/06/09/wechat-opens-contents-to-tencent-backed-search-engine-sogou/#comments Mon, 09 Jun 2014 07:41:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19841 Shortly after releasing a mobile search app this May, Sogou, the search and Internet service provider of Sohu, unveiled today a new search engine where users can find all the contents generated on WeChat platform. The users can search WeChat contents either by public service accounts or by keywords of articles. The contents generated by […]]]>
Sogou WeChat1

Shortly after releasing a mobile search app this May, Sogou, the search and Internet service provider of Sohu, unveiled today a new search engine where users can find all the contents generated on WeChat platform.

The users can search WeChat contents either by public service accounts or by keywords of articles. The contents generated by authenticated accounts will be put on higher rank on the search result list.

The search engine will be available both on mobile and PC terminals. The web version will feature QR codes of the searched public service accounts to facilitate the users to subscribe for these accounts.

This is the first time for WeChat to open its contents to a third-party search engine and it is not surprising for us to see WeChat chose Sogou as its partner. Tencent, parent company of WeChat, acquired a 36.5% stake in Sogou last year and merged its own search service Soso into the latter.

Sogou’s newly released mobile search app is also integrated into Tencent’s various services, like QQ IM, social network Q-zone, online news service QQ.com, etc.

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Car Sharing Platform PPzuche Raises $10mn of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/09/car-sharing-platform-ppzuche-raises-10mn-dollars-of-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/09/car-sharing-platform-ppzuche-raises-10mn-dollars-of-series-a-funding/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2014 04:03:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19831 iCarsclub, a car sharing platform more commonly known as PPzuche in China, secured US$10 million of Series A financing led by Sequoia Capital China and followed by Crystal Stream Capital. The funding will be used to expand car fleet and construct customer service team, according to the company’s CMO Wang Jiaming. The startup has received 3 million yuan […]]]>
PPzuche

iCarsclub, a car sharing platform more commonly known as PPzuche in China, secured US$10 million of Series A financing led by Sequoia Capital China and followed by Crystal Stream Capital.

The funding will be used to expand car fleet and construct customer service team, according to the company’s CMO Wang Jiaming. The startup has received 3 million yuan (US$480K) of angel investment from Singapore government-backed National Research Foundation and Redot Venture.

Instead of owning cars, PPzuche creates a virtual fleet from car owners who list their cars on the car sharing platform and rent them out to nearby drivers who can use the app for key-less entry. The Singapore-startup entered Chinese market by rolling out service in Beijing last October and planned to expand to more Chinese cities like Shanghai and Guangzhou. To protect the interest of car owners, PPzuche cooperates with PICC in China to provide insurances for all the personal cars on the platform.

Wang disclosed that PPzuche has more than 30K users (mostly between 25-35 years old) and over 10K personal cars available for rental in Beijing. He thinks Chinese market potential for private car rental is huge, since nearly 17% of private car users in Beijing and Shanghai are willing to rent out their cars, according to a survey conducted by the company. (the figure for Singapore is 19%)

PPzuche commercializes the service by taking a certain amount of commissions from the rentals, a sharing economy business model similar to room-sharing service Airbnb’s, which has been questioned for its legality by the New York attorney general earlier this year. Belgium also declared the U.S car-hailing service Uber to be illegal in the country this Feb.

Although PPzuche only provides private car rental service rather than driving services, it is suspected of illegal operation for running transportation business without governmental authorized licenses, according to Guo Chunping, a lawyer with Beijing Yingke Law Firm.

But Wang defended they have consulted the matter with an expert from transportation unit of the State Council, who said that PPzuche’s business belongs to the range of disposal of personal belongings.

Compared with Sequoia Capital, Crystal Stream Capital is a young venture capital company focused on startups. Backed by Hillhouse Capital Group and Zhuang Chenchao, CEO of Qunar, the investor has invested in online education service Kuailexue, legal service site Fadoushi,gay flirting app Blued, etc.

image credit: PPzuche

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GEAK Releases Smart Gadget Brand Modou Together with ModouROM https://technode.com/2014/06/06/geak-releases-smart-gadget-brand-modou-together-modourom/ https://technode.com/2014/06/06/geak-releases-smart-gadget-brand-modou-together-modourom/#comments Fri, 06 Jun 2014 07:38:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19813 GEAK, the smart device maker of Shanda, released Modou, a new brand for its smart gadgets, together with several smart devices under the brand, including Modou Router, a LITE version of the router, and a DASH7-powered accessory Modou Button. Additionally, the company also took the wraps off an operating system ModouRom for the routers. Modou Router, […]]]>
Modou

GEAK, the smart device maker of Shanda, released Modou, a new brand for its smart gadgets, together with several smart devices under the brand, including Modou Router, a LITE version of the router, and a DASH7-powered accessory Modou Button. Additionally, the company also took the wraps off an operating system ModouRom for the routers.

Modou Router, formerly known as GEAK Router, features a 2.4-inch touch screen and 128MB memory. It also supports 2.4G/5GHz dual-band as well as 2.0TB mobile disk. The gadget is opened for pre-order now for 149 yuan (around US$24). In addition to the distinguishing touch panel, another differentiator of Modou Router from rivals is that its Wifi passwords are set randomly to fend off Wifi squatters.

The LITE version is for entry-level users, featuring 64MB memory and flash memory. It is priced at 119 yuan.

GEAK’s CEO Huang Dong disclosed that Modou cooperates with several smart home device makers to set up a smart home device alliance. All the members in this alliance will participate in the public testing of Modou smart device kit this July. He added that Modou Button will be open for public testing this August.

Chinese tech companies consider smart router as the gateway that can take control of Internet access and have impact on content consumption in families or working spaces. Qihoo 360BaiduXiaomi and Hiwifi all released smart routers to tap the market.

As a comparatively young brand in China’s hardware manufacturing, GEAK’s product portfolio include smartphones, smart watch and smart ring. The company announced that its flagship smartwatch GEAK Watch1 recorded more than 300K shipments as of April this year. A representative of GEAK told us that GEAK Watch2 will be released in Q3 this year, maybe powered by Google’s latest Android Wear system.

image credit: GEAK

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Voice Call App Inbilin Nets $15mn of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/06/voice-call-app-inbilin-nets-15mn-dollars-of-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/06/voice-call-app-inbilin-nets-15mn-dollars-of-series-a-funding/#comments Fri, 06 Jun 2014 02:24:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19790 Screenshots of Inbilin Voice call app Inbilin announced yesterday that it has secured US$15 million of Series A funding from Qiming Venture Partners and Morningside Ventures. The funding will be injected in team construction and upgrading of servers, according to the company. Launched in May 2013, Inbilin is a social networking voice call app that enables users to call strangers. […]]]>
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Screenshots of Inbilin

Voice call app Inbilin announced yesterday that it has secured US$15 million of Series A funding from Qiming Venture Partners and Morningside Ventures. The funding will be injected in team construction and upgrading of servers, according to the company.

Launched in May 2013, Inbilin is a social networking voice call app that enables users to call strangers. Users can either call the person they interested in or chat with anyone they are paired with randomly.

With synchronous voice connection, the interactions between speakers seem more direct and more genuine. Maybe that’s why the users of Inbilin are mostly young people who are willing to meet new friends and open themselves to the outside world. According to the company’s CEO Liu Jinlong, 70% of the users are young people born in post-90s and users aged between 18 to 22 account for 65% of the total.

The company also disclosed that they planned to release a 3.0 version of the app in the near future. In addition to adjustments in UI, the new version also added a new feature which allows users to set the topics they want to talk about so as to facilitate the search for new friends with common interests.

The company now claimed more than 20 million registered users with around 200k daily active users. The users are mainly distributed in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Wuhan, etc.

image credit: Inbilin

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MYOTee, a Cartoon Image Collage App Taking China by Storm https://technode.com/2014/06/05/myotee-cartoon-image-collage-app-taking-china-storm/ https://technode.com/2014/06/05/myotee-cartoon-image-collage-app-taking-china-storm/#comments Thu, 05 Jun 2014 08:30:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19760 If you are a fan of photo-editing apps like MomentCam or Siyanhui, you probably will love MYOTee, a cartoon image collage app that has gone viral in China around the past Dragon Boat Festival holiday (May 31-June 2). To get started, the users only have to tell the app whether you’re trying to create a male or female […]]]>
MYOTEE

If you are a fan of photo-editing apps like MomentCam or Siyanhui, you probably will love MYOTee, a cartoon image collage app that has gone viral in China around the past Dragon Boat Festival holiday (May 31-June 2).

To get started, the users only have to tell the app whether you’re trying to create a male or female cartoon. Then, the users can select from a wide variety of built-in templates for different parts of the face. More templates for detailed categories are added, including glasses, cloths, hats, habits, backgrounds and talking bubbles.

Although this kind of cartoon image editor is nothing new to us, given previous killer apps, like MomentCam, Bitstrips and iMadeFace, a major differentiator of MYOTee is its cute cartoon style. According to the company, the drawings of MYOTee are designed by a Hong Kong designer in 2007. He has built a popular website to sell T-shirts printed with these cute avatars of pop stars.

The completed images can be downloaded to the camera roll on devices, or shared directly from the app to social networks, such as Sina Weibo, WeChat, etc.

Launched at the end of last year, MYOTee now claimed more than 2 million registered users. The app is currently sitting at the top of the App Store free app chart in China. According to latest data, MYOTee recorded more than 1 million downloads between May 30 to June 2.

MYOTee is founded by Guo Lie, a former employee at Tencent, together with a group of post-90s youths. The company has received millions of yuan of funding from IDG and is seeking for a second round of financing.

image credit: MYOTee

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Microsoft to Open First-ever Retail Store in China? https://technode.com/2014/06/05/microsoft-to-open-first-ever-retail-store-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/06/05/microsoft-to-open-first-ever-retail-store-in-china/#respond Thu, 05 Jun 2014 01:34:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19734 An anonymous Sina Weibo account recently posted pictures of the construction site for a Microsoft retail store with posters reading “Microsoft store is under construction”. If this news is true, it will be the first time for Microsoft to open a specialty retail store in China. The Internet giant opened up the first Microsoft store in Scottsdale, Arizona […]]]>
@MercedesW05AMG

An anonymous Sina Weibo account recently posted pictures of the construction site for a Microsoft retail store with posters reading “Microsoft store is under construction”. If this news is true, it will be the first time for Microsoft to open a specialty retail store in China.

The Internet giant opened up the first Microsoft store in Scottsdale, Arizona back in 2009. In addition to software, the store also sells Xbox game console, Zune, MP3, Windows Phone, as well as accessories, like laptop cases and earphones. Various laptops, netbooks and all-in-one machines manufactured by Acer, Dell, HP, Samsung and Sony are also on sale in Microsoft stores.

The company once commented “various companies are developing excellent hardware, including PCs, laptops, displays and other devices. One of the most important tasks of Microsoft store is to find and demonstrate the best and the latest products developed by different manufacturers.”

During the Worldwide Partner Conference 2013, Microsoft’s chief operating officer Kevin Turner has revealed that the software giant planned to increase at least 26 new retail stores during the one year period between July 2013 to June 2014, with special mentioning that “Microsoft is expecting to open a retail store in China soon”. The company launched recruiting plan for Chinese market in the same year.

Opening a retail store in China may not be a new policy of Microsoft’s new CEO Satya Nadella, because he just took office Feb. this year.

According to the microblog, Microsoft store is located in the downtown area of Shanghai, only next door to the retail store of Apple.

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U.S. Smart Wearables Maker Fitbit Landing in China https://technode.com/2014/06/04/u-s-smart-wearables-maker-fitbit-landing-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/06/04/u-s-smart-wearables-maker-fitbit-landing-in-china/#comments Wed, 04 Jun 2014 06:56:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19707 Fitbit, Inc., a leading U.S. smart wearables maker in the fast-growing connected health and fitness category, has officially entered China this week. At the launch event, the San Francisco-based startup introduced four products into Chinese market, including an activity and sleep-tracking wristband Fitbit Flex (RMB 898/around $145), a clip-based activity and sleep tracker Fitbit One […]]]>

Fitbit, Inc., a leading U.S. smart wearables maker in the fast-growing connected health and fitness category, has officially entered China this week.

At the launch event, the San Francisco-based startup introduced four products into Chinese market, including an activity and sleep-tracking wristband Fitbit Flex (RMB 898/around $145), a clip-based activity and sleep tracker Fitbit One (RMB 898), a clip-based activity tracker Fitbit Zip (RMB 498) and a Wifi smart scale Fitbit Aria (RMB 1,198).

Fitbit

These products are now available for sale in China at JD.com, Apple Stores, FunTalk outlets and will enter the other renowned e-commerce portals in China in succession.

The smart wearable trend is on the rise in recent years. In addition to Chinese smart wearable makers that eye domestic market, their foreign peers also expanding businesses in China, a market too big to ignore.

Jawbone, a major rival of Fitbit, already landed in China a few years earlier and China is so far the second largest overseas market for Jawbone, according to Hosain Rahman, CEO and founder of the company.

Vivofit, a smart wristband brand under Garmin, also debuted their products in China this April.

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Chinese Travel Search Qunar Follows $15mn Series B Financing for Taxi-hailing App GrabTaxi https://technode.com/2014/06/03/chinese-travel-search-qunar-follows-15mn-dollars-series-b-financing-taxi-hailing-app-grabtaxi/ https://technode.com/2014/06/03/chinese-travel-search-qunar-follows-15mn-dollars-series-b-financing-taxi-hailing-app-grabtaxi/#respond Tue, 03 Jun 2014 08:57:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19697 Chinese travel search Qunar (NYSE:QUNR) announced today it followed the $15 million Series B financing for GrabTaxi, a Singapore-based taxi-calling app targeting at Southeast Asia market. The round is led by GGV Capital with participation from existing investor Vertex Venture Holdings, which just invested an undisclosed amount of Series A financing a few months earlier. GrabTaxi is now operating in […]]]>

Chinese travel search Qunar (NYSE:QUNRannounced today it followed the $15 million Series B financing for GrabTaxi, a Singapore-based taxi-calling app targeting at Southeast Asia market.

The round is led by GGV Capital with participation from existing investor Vertex Venture Holdings, which just invested an undisclosed amount of Series A financing a few months earlier.

GrabTaxi is now operating in 15 cities across Southeast Asian countries like Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia, with more than 20,000 taxi driver users. The Series B round will be used to fuel GrabTaxi’s growth into new cities in the region, as well as driver loyalty and retention programs.

Although the company is competing with other taxi-booking service like Rocket Internet’s EasyTaxi, Uber, TaxiMonger and MoobiTaxi in Southeast Asia market, the company said it will continue to focus on this region in the near future, because Southeast Asia, which has around 600 million people, is huge enough to support several taxi-calling startups.

GrabTaxi recently rolled out GrabCar, a high-tier service similar to Uber’s.

Qunar’s investment in foreign taxi-booking app may target to complement its business ecosystem in the burgeoning Southeast Asian market. According to data released by the Ministry of Commerce, the number of Chinese travelers to ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) countries surged by 2.6 times in the past decade to reach 7.32 million by 2012. This figure is expected to reach 14 million by 2016, according to the company.

Kuaidi Dache, a leading Chinese taxi-booking app, also announced its exploration into Southeast Asian market, but none of Chinese taxi-calling services have established their foothold in overseas market as of present.

Ctrip, a major rival of Qunar, also partnered up with taxi-booking services like Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, but their cooperation only applies to domestic market.

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[Update] Personalized News App Toutiao Lands $100mn Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/06/03/update-personalized-news-app-toutiao-lands-100mn-dollars-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/06/03/update-personalized-news-app-toutiao-lands-100mn-dollars-series-c-funding/#comments Tue, 03 Jun 2014 05:25:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19682 Screenshots of Toutiao Toutiao, a personalized news app, announced that it has secured $100 million of Series C financing led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Weibo Corporation at a valuation of $500 million. [Update] (Shortly after announcement of the funding news, Toutiao is questioned by traditional media for copyright infringement issues. As a content distributor, Toutiao […]]]>
toutiao1

Screenshots of Toutiao

Toutiao, a personalized news app, announced that it has secured $100 million of Series C financing led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Weibo Corporation at a valuation of $500 million.

[Update] (Shortly after announcement of the funding news, Toutiao is questioned by traditional media for copyright infringement issues. As a content distributor, Toutiao does not generate contents itself, but aggregate news from other media.

The company announced a statement in response, claiming that Toutiao cooperates only with Internet media as a news search engine. The firm added that it operates in full compliance with Robots Exclusion Protocol for search engines. Please click here for the company’s Chinese statement via Sina.

According to accusations from Souhu, Toutiao collects news from third-party content providers, transcoding the contents into XML format and save them on their own servers. The XML contents will then presented to the readers in the news interface of Toutiao App. Souhu added that although Toutiao adds links of the original news sites at the bottom of its news interface, Toutiao will edit the original site and integrate promotion contents and comments of their own. Souhu has claimed an indemnity of 11 million yuan from the company.

The National Copyright Administration has launched an investigation on Toutiao.)

The company has previously received eight-digit USD Series B financing from Yuri Milner, founder of DST, at a valuation of $60 million in 2013. The seven-digit USD first-round funding were received from SIG in 2012.

Launched in August 2012, Toutiao is a feed reader that tries to integrate the most relevant contents for users by gradually learning what the readers enjoy through analysis on data obtained from their social networking accounts.

The fund will be used in R&D of machine learning technologies, according to Zhang Yiming, founder and CEO of Toutiao.

Sequoia Capital is bullish on the mobile news app sector and the technology of Toutiao, according to Neil Shen, founding partner of the investor. Charles Chao, board chairman of Weibo, said that the investment is made to enhance the synergy effects, because Toutiao is now the largest news source for contents shared to Sina Weibo.

Toutiao’s founder Zhang Yiming is a serial entrepreneur who either established or worked for Internet companies like SyncWrite, ticket booking service Kuxun, community platform Hainei, and property rental site 99fang.

The app registered more than 120 million users with over 40 million daily active users, according to data released by the company.

The Chinese news app battlefield is quite crowded. In addition to mobile apps backed by news portals like NetEase, Sina and Sohu, U.S. social magazine Flipboard also entered Chinese market three years ago and planned to construct a local technical team to tap the market. Local news magazine ZAKER claimed more than 40 million downloads, while an another similar app Xianguo claimed 5 million users.

image credit: Toutiao

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Renren Leads $31mn Round in U.S. Real Estate Crowdfunding Site Fundrise https://technode.com/2014/05/30/renren-leads-31mn-dollars-round-in-u-s-real-estate-crowdfunding-site-fundrise/ https://technode.com/2014/05/30/renren-leads-31mn-dollars-round-in-u-s-real-estate-crowdfunding-site-fundrise/#comments Fri, 30 May 2014 08:17:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19638 Chinese social networking platform Renren (NYSE: RENN) led a $31 million financing round in Fundrise, a U.S. crowdfunding startup that finances commercial real estate projects for investors. Other investors of the landmark round include execs from New York developer Silverstein Properties, the Collaborative Fund, among others. With this financing, Fundrise intends to expand its offerings to institutional […]]]>
fundrise(2)

Chinese social networking platform Renren (NYSE: RENN) led a $31 million financing round in Fundrise, a U.S. crowdfunding startup that finances commercial real estate projects for investors. Other investors of the landmark round include execs from New York developer Silverstein Properties, the Collaborative Fund, among others.

With this financing, Fundrise intends to expand its offerings to institutional investors interested in direct exposure to real estate. It also planned to increase presence in more major U.S. cities.

Founded in 2010 by brothers Ben and Daniel Miller, Fundrise allows both high net worth and small-scale investors to invest in properties for as little as $100 per share. According to the company, it has funneled more than $15 million investments to date from more than 1,000 investors online.

As one of the most popular Chinese social networking services in the web age, the market share of Renren was snapped up by other services like Sina Weibo and WeChat with the arrival of mobile age. In addition to the struggling social networking unit, the company has sold unprofitable service, like group-buying service Nuomi, to cut losses. Moreover, its revenue from Renren Games, the only profitable business, is also declining.

Renren’s total net revenues for the first quarter of 2014 were $24.9 million, representing a 39.9% decrease from the corresponding period in 2013. Net income attributable to the company was $32.3 million, compared to a net loss of $3.1 million in the corresponding period, according to Q1 fiscal report of Renren.

Despite the declining main business, capital operation is a major source of Renren’s revenue. The company’s gain on short-term investments were $27.1 million in Q1, compared to $15.1 million in the corresponding period in 2013. The gain was primarily derived from the sale of marketable securities. As a capital operation expert, China InterActive Corp, the parent company of Renren, has raised funds from Accel Partners, TVC and Softbank, etc.

Real estate crowdfunding sites are chased by investors. Similar sites like Realty Mogul, RealCrowd, Groundfloor all received funding this year.

Joseph Chen, Chairman and CEO of Renren Inc., commented “We have seen crowdfunding sweep through large verticals of consumer finance, including student loans and credit card debt. We believe that the real estate market is the newest frontier for crowd-based financing.” He added that a common point between Renren and Fundrise is community culture.

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Video Game Studio Thatgamecompany Nets $7mn Funding https://technode.com/2014/05/30/video-game-studio-thatgamecompany-nets-7mn-dollars-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/05/30/video-game-studio-thatgamecompany-nets-7mn-dollars-funding/#respond Fri, 30 May 2014 05:14:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19609 Thatgamecompany, an American independent video game studio, announced that it has raised an additional $7 million in funding from Capital Today and a team of other investors. The capital will be used in game development, laying the infrastructure to self-publish, marketing, etc. Thatgamecompany was formerly a developer for Sony Computer Entertainment’s PlayStation games when it was founded in […]]]>

Thatgamecompany, an American independent video game studio, announced that it has raised an additional $7 million in funding from Capital Today and a team of other investors. The capital will be used in game development, laying the infrastructure to self-publish, marketing, etc.

Thatgamecompany was formerly a developer for Sony Computer Entertainment’s PlayStation games when it was founded in the spring of 2006. The company then became independent after secured funding. Thatgamecompany is engaged in creating video games that provoke emotional responses from players. Its video games include the award-winning Flash title flOw, Flower, and Journey.

Chen xinghan

Days before the studio releases the funding news, Jenova Chen, Thatgamecompany’s Chinese co-founder who received education in Shanghai and established his business in the U.S, joined our startup and technology meetup series Tech Node Touch (TNT) in Beijing. Here are some of his insights on gaming industry.

  • Chinese game developers are more pragmatic, while their foreign counterparts put more emphasis on concepts. With the rise of mobile gaming trend, the Chinese mobile games available on various platforms become homogeneous, whether they are card games or casual games. In order to reduce risks, Chinese developers tend to adopt ideas that have been proven successful and put more efforts in game operations. This partly because Chinese market is large enough to allow the existence of similar products. But foreign teams will not duplicate existing ideas and they will put more energy and time in developping innovative games.
  • I noticed that the mobile games based on WeChat platform ranked among the tops in the free app list of iOS platform. Although these games are casual games with simple gameplays, the social features of them can bring more fun to players. The revenue from mobile QQ- and WeChat-based games reached 1.8 billion yuan (around$290 million) in the first quarter of this year, while this figure for first two quarters is expected to reach 2.4 billion yuan.
  • Social gaming is a trend. Even if the platforms don’t develop this business, game developers will do it anyway. For example, Game Of War, a U.S. game connects people from different countries around the world by Google Translate, become an instant success by creating an international community with enhanced user viscosity.
  • Mobile games become popular among users thanks to easy operation and availability in fragmented leisure times. Successful web games and terminal games will be transplanted to mobile games.
Chen xinghan1

Please click here for a detailed Chinese transcript of his speech.

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Eric Alexander: Flipboard Entered Chinese Market at a Good Timing https://technode.com/2014/05/29/eric-alexander-flipboard-entered-chinese-market-good-timing/ https://technode.com/2014/05/29/eric-alexander-flipboard-entered-chinese-market-good-timing/#comments Thu, 29 May 2014 09:01:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19560 Flipboard Chinese Team, Eric Alexander (R3) The Chinese team of mobile social magazine Flipboard recently released the latest update for its Chinese edition. The new version provides a more localized Flipboard experience with curated contents on regionally-relevant topics and localized features. Eric Alexander is the vice president of Flipboard, mainly in charge of international business development. He […]]]>

Flipboard Chinese Team, Eric Alexander (R3)

The Chinese team of mobile social magazine Flipboard recently released the latest update for its Chinese edition. The new version provides a more localized Flipboard experience with curated contents on regionally-relevant topics and localized features.

Eric Alexander is the vice president of Flipboard, mainly in charge of international business development. He met Flipboard’s CEO Mike McCue back in 1995 when they were working at Netscap. Before joining Flipboard in 2011, Eric also worked as business development manager at Tellme Networks, another business founded by Mike McCue. Technode got a chance to visit Eric at his office in Beijing this week.

What’s the proportion of Chinese contents in the new edition?

Chinese contents account for 98% to 99% of the total. Our Chinese team is in discussion with more Chinese content providers in addition to existing ones like Sina Weibo. We did not include video and audio contents in China, although they are very popular in the U.S. But we have started talks with audio content providers like Xiami and Douban FM. One major problem we are facing now is technical obstacle. China just launched 4G networks, but most of the smartphone users are either 2G or 3G subscribers. It will be traffic-consuming for them to watch video and audio contents if they are not in a Wifi environment. That’s why we are trying to construct a technical team in China.

Isn’t there going to have any English contents in the Chinese version of Flipboard?

We keep part of the English contents, but not all of them. We have around 8,000 content providers around the world and it will be too much to integrate all the contents from them. We will put more focus on localized contents.

The English contents we provided in the Chinese version mainly cover gourmet food, fashion, photography and technology, because lots of Chinese people are interested in what’s happening in Silicon Valley or western food and fashion industry. But we do not stream news, since that’s not what Chinese readers interested in. And we respect Chinese laws, the U.S. version of Flipboard has contents from The New York Times, but they will not be included in the Chinese version.

How do you see the cooperation between content providers and content distributors?

We are lucky to have more than 400 close partners, whose Chinese versions will also cooperate with us in China. We respect their decisions and will not use their contents without permission.

I have been rejected when expanding our business in the U.S. We were asked to pay for the contents at the beginning of our cooperation, but I explained that we can share profits with them after attracting more readers with their contents. We inked agreements after they understand our business model. Vanity Fair and New Yorker, two magazines under Condé Nast Publications Inc. are our partners now.

Both Time and People have rejected us, but when they see how we bring advertising profits to other partners, they also cooperate with us.

How does Flipboard bring profits to content providers in the U.S.?

We monetize the service by advertisements. Flipboard will add ads to articles shown in the app and we will share the profits from these ads with content providers.

Our ads are beautifully designed with video and textual contents. They can be subscribed and the number of subscribers will be shown in the interface.

Flipboard 1

Have you agreed on Flipboard’s Chinese name?

We are still in the process of finding a proper Chinese name. Several Chinese names we considered suitable have been registered and it will cost several millions of dollars to buy them. But it is a minor problem and we are promoting the English name “Flipboard” now.

What’s your obstacles in localization?

Establishing a Chinese technical team is our biggest obstacle now, because it will take a lot of time.

Some industry insiders think that Flipboard entered Chinese market too late, what’s your opinion?

Some people say we come too late, but others say we come too early. Even if we were late, I think the potential of Chinese market is still huge. I once consulted Du Hong, Sina’s COO who is also a close friend of us, on this matter, she said we are coming to China at a good timing.

What’s your marketing plan in Chinese market?

We don’t have any budget for marketing, but we are cooperating with smartphone makers like Samsung. We are the content provider for Samsung’s My Magazine. You can see Flipboard logo on every article shown in My Magazine. In addition, our rankings in iOS and Android app stores are among the tops. I consider this favorable word-of-mouth an effective marketing.

Like in the U.S., we also cooperate with local media like Tencent and Sina.

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Chinaccelerator Graduates Nine New Startups in Shanghai https://technode.com/2014/05/29/chinaccelerator-graduates-nine-new-startups-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2014/05/29/chinaccelerator-graduates-nine-new-startups-shanghai/#comments Thu, 29 May 2014 03:06:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19530 After moving from Dalian to Shanghai at the beginning of this year, startup acceleration program Chinaccelerator unveiled the fifth batch of nine startups running through its three-month project. Most of the startups are founded by foreign entrepreneurs with their own insights on Chinese market or Chinese with overseas backgrounds. The nine startups are engaged in a […]]]>

After moving from Dalian to Shanghai at the beginning of this year, startup acceleration program Chinaccelerator unveiled the fifth batch of nine startups running through its three-month project.

Most of the startups are founded by foreign entrepreneurs with their own insights on Chinese market or Chinese with overseas backgrounds. The nine startups are engaged in a wild variety of industries ranging from medical care to fashion, etc. They are also at different development stages, some of them have been running for a couple of years and established sizable user base, like Neonan, while some others are just preparing to launch their products.

Despite all these differences, the nine startups shared their graduation design after three months of sweat and tears early this week. Let’s take a look at them.

1. Agada

Agada is an online medical care service helping Chinese cancer patients to find trusted second options on serious diseases like cancer etc. The site will provide a list of inspected and certified healthcare providers for patients to choose. To guarantee the quality of medical services, Agada will inspect facilitators and hospitals on a yearly basis and monitor customer satisfaction results on a quarterly basis.

2. Asyncode

Asyncode is a software development tool that enables anyone with basic HTML and CSS skills to build fully-fledged applications for solving everyday problems. Asyncode Platform leverages its home-brew HTML-like language and a query language for full stack software development. They provide a PaaS solution to host apps written in their language in a scalable and secure environment, so that users do not need to deal with any technical issues.

3. Chishen.ma

An app for your appetite. Chishen.ma connects foodie’s mood with the perfect meal by providing story driven dish-level recommendations. The app solves the problem of “what do you want to eat” by linking users’ emotions and mood to personal food recommendations, just as the app’s Chinese name indicates (吃神马 is a pun on 吃什么 or what to eat).

4. Daily Themes

Daily Themes offers personalized writing improvement to the billion-plus internet users who speak English as a Second Language and cannot express themselves fluently in written English. Users are encouraged to write regularly on a free and open community about their everyday life and their interests. They will receive personalized suggestions for improvement that are based on their writing patterns. Users can read, comment on, and learn from each other’s work. In addition, users may upgrade to receive detailed reviews and corrections from experts with Cambridge University qualifications.

Daily Themes was founded by three friends who are passionate writers and recent graduates from Yale University. The company has received some media coverage before the demo.

5. Giftpass

Giftpass is a We-Chat based e-gift card service. The presents sent via Giftpass are redeemable at local merchants anytime, anywhere. For merchants, Giftpass will make their merchandises become electronically gift-able. The team is aiming to include 1,600 high-quality merchants listed in the service in six months’ time.

Actually, this startup make me to think about another gift card service Kaado, but Giftpass’ We-Chat based nature may give it an easy access to a larger user base.

6. Neonan

With a goal of empowering young men to become the best version of themselves, the web portal startup Neonan offers digital publications on fitness and dating advices. The company has running for several years. It now has one million monthly unique visitors and decided to focus on video contents in the future. Neonan’s videos has over billion of views on China’s network, according to the company.

7. NYCareerElite

NYCareerElite wants to facilitate hands-on working experiences for Chinese university students by connecting them with international start-ups and entrepreneurs online. The site will be launched soon.

NYCareerElite was founded by Americans Eoin Brown and David Posner, and Chinese Yikai Xu (Duke). Dave and Eoin both graduated from Vanderbilt University and Duke is an undergraduate at Vanderbilt.

8. Shophop

ShopHop is a curated fashion guide that provides local shopping suggestions, helping shoppers to find the fashion labels to their tastes. In addition to finding nearby boutiques, the app also integrates social data to create custom shopping itineraries for users.

The app will be launched this July in Shanghai and gradually expands to other Asian cities like Hong Kong, Bangkok to Tokyo, etc.

The app planned to commercialize its service by adverting and other paid services targeted at boutiques, like commissions on purchases by shoppers who come via a trail on Shophop, but the shop inclusion into data base will be free.

9. Eventures

Eventures is a mobile platform that allows event organizers to publish and share event information and create unique channels for exposure and engagement. Users will get real-time updates about the changes in event agendas, moreover, it also allows organizers to upload files, photos, and videos, as well as to getting feedbacks from attendees via surveys.

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Rebate Site 51fanli Raises $20mn Series B Funding for Offline Expansion https://technode.com/2014/05/28/rebate-site-51fanli-raises-20mn-dollars-series-b-funding-offline-expansion/ https://technode.com/2014/05/28/rebate-site-51fanli-raises-20mn-dollars-series-b-funding-offline-expansion/#respond Wed, 28 May 2014 07:04:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19479 Chinese online rebate and consumer directory website 51Fanli.com announced on its microblog that it has secured $20 million of Series B funding from SIG China Investment. The company has raised eight-digit first-round USD funding jointly led by Qiming Venture Partners and Disney’s venture capital firm Steamboat Ventures in 2011. 51Fanli’s founder and CEO Gary Ge said […]]]>

Chinese online rebate and consumer directory website 51Fanli.com announced on its microblog that it has secured $20 million of Series B funding from SIG China Investment. The company has raised eight-digit first-round USD funding jointly led by Qiming Venture Partners and Disney’s venture capital firm Steamboat Ventures in 2011.

51Fanli’s founder and CEO Gary Ge said this round of funding will be used to expand offline rebate services in a bid to construct a marketing platform that integrates various brands and their online/offline retail channels. The company added that its revenue from mobile business has overshadowed that from PCs.

Founded in 2006, 51fanli is an online shopping directory platform offering users shopping rebates. In addition, the site issues discount vouchers and provides price comparisons, vendor ratings, a single account log-in feature that allows users to enter partner sites using their 51Fanli credentials, and online shopper discussion forum.

51Fanli claimed more than 35 million registered users with more than 2 million daily active users and an annual turnover of 10 billion yuan (around $1.6 billion). It has established cooperation with nearly 400 member vendors, including B2C e-commerce sites like JD, Tmall, Taobao, Ctrip, Amazon, Dianping, Yihaodian, Jumei, etc.

The battles in Chinese e-commerce industry is reaching a feverish pitch with strings of e-commerce companies, like JD, Alibaba, Jumei, VipShop, etc. are trying to get more funding from stock markets. Rebate site, an effective means to attract traffic, is getting more attentions from investors.

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Google Acquires Hong Kong-based Enterprise Mobile Computing Platform Divide https://technode.com/2014/05/28/google-acquires-hong-kong-based-enterprise-mobile-computing-platform-divide/ https://technode.com/2014/05/28/google-acquires-hong-kong-based-enterprise-mobile-computing-platform-divide/#comments Wed, 28 May 2014 03:12:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19487 Divide, a Hong Kong/NY startup, confirmed on its blog that the company has been acquired by Google for an undisclosed sum. The startup added that Divide staff will join Google’s Android team, but it promised “Divide will work as it always has”. Divide, formerly known as Enterproid, is an enterprise mobile computing platform that helps […]]]>
Divide

Divide, a Hong Kong/NY startup, confirmed on its blog that the company has been acquired by Google for an undisclosed sum. The startup added that Divide staff will join Google’s Android team, but it promised “Divide will work as it always has”.

Divide, formerly known as Enterproid, is an enterprise mobile computing platform that helps organizations and individuals to get the most out of mobile technology and corporate BYOD policies. Combining cloud-based management with device-level technology, the platform allows users to configure a separate profile on their own mobile devices for business use, including a suite of business apps for email, calendar, contacts, files, browser, etc.

The company’s name “Divide” literally speaks to its “container approach” in separating cooperation and personal information on employee-owned smartphones and tablets. This approach will cater to the needs of security-conscious enterprises without compromising personal privacy of employees.

According to Recode, the Divide purchase is a part of Google’s plan to make its Android system more enterprise-friendly in workplaces, since Android is usually suspected more vulnerable for malware attacks due to its open source nature.

The company was founded by former Morgan Stanley, MTV and Smule execs and had raised a total of US $25 million from the likes of Google Ventures, Comcast Ventures, Qualcomm Ventures, Globespan Capital Partners and Harmony Partners.

Despite former focus on Android system, Deivide also introduced an iOS version in 2012.

image credit: Divide

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Firefly, an Events Social Service Aiming to Light Up Your Life https://technode.com/2014/05/27/firefly-events-social-service-aiming-light-life/ https://technode.com/2014/05/27/firefly-events-social-service-aiming-light-life/#respond Tue, 27 May 2014 12:04:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19436 Social networking services bring people together, but they do not necessarily ensure close friendship. Without face-to-face communication which guarantees intimacy and close bonding, people are still drifting apart with friends, even though we can know exactly what our friends are doing through their microblogs or WeChat moments. Firefly, an events social app developed by Shanghai-based […]]]>
Firefly screenshots

Social networking services bring people together, but they do not necessarily ensure close friendship. Without face-to-face communication which guarantees intimacy and close bonding, people are still drifting apart with friends, even though we can know exactly what our friends are doing through their microblogs or WeChat moments.

Firefly, an events social app developed by Shanghai-based startup Guanxi. Inc., aims to restore traditional interpersonal relationships by allowing users to invite friends to participate in offline events together, like concerts, exhibitions, parties, so as to facilitate regular face-to-face interaction between humans.

The app will recommend offline activities based on the event categories pre-set by the users. It also allows one-click sharing or invitation to friends to join the activities together.

Firefly compas

Another interesting feature of the app is that it enables users to scan the surroundings to find out what events are going on nearby. This function could be very useful for those who do not have the habits of planning ahead for events.

The app now integrates both paid and free events. Although the users will be redirected to other third-party ticket services to finish the payment for paid events, Firefly planned to add ticket sales features in future updates, according to Alvin Wong Graylin, CEO of the company.

Guanxi Inc. is also the operator of a location-based social networking platform Guanxi.me. After spinning off from mobile search and marketing service provider Minfo Inc. in 2012, Guanxi Inc. has raised Series A funding led by Singapore telecom carrier SingTel Innov8, including an investment from Timothy Draper of Draper and Associates.

Alvin Wang Graylin, founder of Guanxi Inc. and Minfo Inc., is a seasoned entrepreneur with over 20 years of business management experience in the technology industry, including 15years in Greater China.

image credit: Firefly

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China’s Mobile Payment Turnover Surges 255% YOY to 3.89 Trillion Yuan in Q1: PBOC https://technode.com/2014/05/27/chinas-mobile-payment-turnover-surges-255-yoy-to-3-89-trillion-yuan-in-q1-pboc/ https://technode.com/2014/05/27/chinas-mobile-payment-turnover-surges-255-yoy-to-3-89-trillion-yuan-in-q1-pboc/#respond Tue, 27 May 2014 02:48:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19395 China’s e-payment business recorded 7.08 billion orders and a turnover of 292.89 trillion yuan (around $47 trillion) in the first quarter of this year, up 25.92% and 34.60% respectively from a year earlier, according to a report released by Chinese central bank-People’s Bank of China. E-payment includes three categories of payment services of online payment, phone […]]]>

China’s e-payment business recorded 7.08 billion orders and a turnover of 292.89 trillion yuan (around $47 trillion) in the first quarter of this year, up 25.92% and 34.60% respectively from a year earlier, according to a report released by Chinese central bank-People’s Bank of China.

E-payment includes three categories of payment services of online payment, phone payment and mobile payment, the report noted.

The turnover of online payment business climbed 33.81% YOY to 287.75 trillion yuan and that for phone payment declined 14.61% YOY to 1.24 trillion yuan in the reporting period. The turnover of mobile payment sector soared 255.37% YOY to 3.89 trillion yuan in the first quarter this year, while the number of orders hiked 232.20% YOY to 659 million.

China’s mobile payment turnover surged at an YOY growth rate of more than 200% for five straight quarters since Q1 2013. The annual transaction volume of mobile payment business reached 9.64 trillion yuan in 2013, according to a previous report by PBOC.

It is worth nothing that the researches released by the central bank only include bank-level data. The total transaction volume by Chinese independent mobile payments services stood at 1.21 trillion yuan in 2013, according to a report by online tracking and data analysis service iResearch. iResearch’s data excludes services by conventional banks and China UnionPay, the bankcard association, and includes peer-to-peer money transfers.

PBOC’s report added that the online payment turnover by institutions climbed 161.85% YOY to 4.93 trillion yuan in Q1 this year.

image credit: Shutterstock

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Sony Sets Up Joint Ventures with Chinese Partner to Release PS Consoles in China https://technode.com/2014/05/26/sony-sets-up-joint-venture-with-chinese-partner-to-release-ps-consoles-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/05/26/sony-sets-up-joint-venture-with-chinese-partner-to-release-ps-consoles-in-china/#comments Mon, 26 May 2014 07:28:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19359 In addition to Microsoft which launched its flagship Xbox One in China this April, Sony also sets eye on the lucrative market after Chinese authorities lifted the 13-year ban on game consoles. The Japanese giant has entered partnership with Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group (SH:600832) to step up the production and sales of PlayStation consoles and relevant […]]]>
PS4

In addition to Microsoft which launched its flagship Xbox One in China this April, Sony also sets eye on the lucrative market after Chinese authorities lifted the 13-year ban on game consoles.

The Japanese giant has entered partnership with Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group (SH:600832) to step up the production and sales of PlayStation consoles and relevant software in China, according to a statement released by Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Through the subsidiaries of both parties, Sony and Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group planned to set up two joint ventures in Shanghai Free Trade Zone. The two joint ventures will be responsible for hardware and software product/service, respectively.

One of the two joint ventures will have a registered capital of 10 million yuan (around $1.6 million) and it will be responsible for software distribution, marketing and platform construction. The Chinese company will hold a 51% stake, while Sony will hold a 49% stake in the joint venture, according to the statement.

The other joint venture will be in charge of hardware production and marketing, with a registered capital is 43.80 million yuan. Sony will hold a majority stake of 70%, and the rest will be owned by Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group, the statement added.

It is worth noting that both Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group and BesTV, Microsoft’s Chinese partner of Xbox One business, belong to Shanghai Media Group, the cultural investment arm of Shanghai TV Station.

The latest product of Sony’s PlayStation series is PS4, which has recoded more than 7 million shipments globally as of April 6, 2014.

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Chinese Car Rental Service Car Inc.Files for Hong Kong IPO https://technode.com/2014/05/26/car-inc-files-for-hong-kong-ipo/ https://technode.com/2014/05/26/car-inc-files-for-hong-kong-ipo/#comments Mon, 26 May 2014 04:58:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19338 Chinese car rental service Car Inc., formerly known as China Auto Rental Inc. has resumed its IPO plans that were suspended in 2012, but it now aims to go public on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange rather than the U.S. stock market. The company has filed with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange last week. Charles Lu, chief executive of the […]]]>

Chinese car rental service Car Inc., formerly known as China Auto Rental Inc. has resumed its IPO plans that were suspended in 2012, but it now aims to go public on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange rather than the U.S. stock market.

The company has filed with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange last week. Charles Lu, chief executive of the firm, once said in an interview he prefers a Hong Kong IPO to New York because local investors are more familiar with his company.

China Auto Rental, or more commonly known as Zuche, offers comprehensive car hire services including, short-term rentals, long-term rentals and leasing.

The company’s revenue mainly comes from car rental business and used car sales. According to the prospectus, the company’s revenue increased at a compound annual growth rate of 81.6% from 819.2 million yuan ($131.15 million) in 2011 to 2.7 billion yuan in 2013. The company’s Q1 revenue for this year reached 788.2 million yuan, up 37.5% as compared with 573.4 million yuan in the same period of last year.

China Auto Rental claimed a customer base of approximately 1.79 million as of March 31, 2014 and a network of 751 directly operated service locations in 69 major Chinese cities. The company added that its fleet size increased from 25,845 vehicles to 55,403 vehicles from December 31 2011 to March 31, 2014.

The prospectus added that 70% of the proceeds raised will be used to purchase new cars, 20% for payment of bank loans and 10% for operation and others.

After shelving the U.S. IPO back in April 2012, China Auto Rental has raised $200 million in 2012 from Warburg Pincus which now holds a 23.1% stake in the business. Hertz bought $100 million worth of shares in the company in the following year.

image credit: China Auto Rental

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Israeli Mobile Gaming Publisher TabTale Acquires Hong Kong Startup Coco Play to Tap Chinese Market https://technode.com/2014/05/23/israeli-mobile-gaming-publisher-tabtale-acquires-hong-kong-startup-coco-play-tap-chinese-market/ https://technode.com/2014/05/23/israeli-mobile-gaming-publisher-tabtale-acquires-hong-kong-startup-coco-play-tap-chinese-market/#comments Fri, 23 May 2014 14:31:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19223 Israeli mobile gaming publisher for children TabTale announced the acquisition of Coco Play Limited, a Hong Kong-based developer of educational apps and games for kids, together with the latter’s development and executive team. This acquisition will add Coco Play’s 2 million monthly active users to TabTale’s existing 25 million, according to the company. Founded in 2013, Coco […]]]>
TabTale

Israeli mobile gaming publisher for children TabTale announced the acquisition of Coco Play Limited, a Hong Kong-based developer of educational apps and games for kids, together with the latter’s development and executive team. This acquisition will add Coco Play’s 2 million monthly active users to TabTale’s existing 25 million, according to the company.

Founded in 2013, Coco Play is the developer of several kid mobile games like Coco Wedding, Coco Princess etc. According to the company, Coco Play’s apps have earned over ten million downloads on App Store. Some of their popular titles such as Amazing Coloring Studio and Coco Princess reached #1 ranking on the Chinese App Store in the Kids, Education, and Family categories, the firm added.

“We’re excited to be partnering with TabTale and connecting with their large and loyal user base,” added Coco Play co-founder Lu Young. “TabTale has a wealth of experience designing apps for kids, and this partnership will provide us with a deeper understanding of the space on an international level.”

Like many other foreign companies marking foray into Chinese market, TabTale eyes on China’s big audience and hopes Coco Play’s expertise will help the company to adapt to the ecosystem quickly. TabTale’s CEO Sagi Schliesser disclosed that they also planned to found a subsidiary in China.

Via the Coco Play acquisition, TabTale now operates in seven countries and planned to further build its portfolio of 3D children’s games, adding to their more than 250 games, interactive books, and educational apps for iOS, Android, and Windows devices.

Although the company mainly focused on iOS apps, TabTale’s newer business on Android platform is also growing. Schliesser says that the company began distributing apps to GP and Amazon more than two years ago and are gradually recognized by users. In the past year TabTale also announced a collaboration with Microsoft to port apps to Windows8 and Windows.

TabTale’s services are mainly monetized through free-to-play apps using IAP and ads.

Last year, TabTale has acquired Israel-based Kids Games Club, a developer of interactive games and apps for children under twelve. The games from TabTale and Kids Games Club generated over 300 million downloads to date, said the company.

TabTale has raised $12 million in Series B funding in October 2013, and aims to grow their reach in diverse markets with an expanded range of games and educational apps.

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Updates about Matters Concerning Hong Kong Exchange HKCEx https://technode.com/2014/05/23/updates-matters-concerning-hong-kong-exchange-hkcex/ https://technode.com/2014/05/23/updates-matters-concerning-hong-kong-exchange-hkcex/#comments Fri, 23 May 2014 12:10:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19216 TechNode’s recent report on Hong Kong crypto currency exchange HKCEx evoked much concerns from the crypto currency community, as HKCEx is suspected as a scam. Here we write this post to expound on the whole process of the story and express our deepest apologies to those who have been affected by the spread of the […]]]>

TechNode’s recent report on Hong Kong crypto currency exchange HKCEx evoked much concerns from the crypto currency community, as HKCEx is suspected as a scam. Here we write this post to expound on the whole process of the story and express our deepest apologies to those who have been affected by the spread of the news.

TechNode published a press release from HKCEx in 5/15/14, which claimed that the company has received $25 million of funding from some private funds to purchase Bitcoins on the platform. We shortly discovered that it is not appropriate to position the funds as investment or funding and revised the post.

However, the matter grew worse when the domain of HKCEx, hkcex.net, becomes vacant a few days later and we received a lot of complaints from HKCEx users who can’t withdraw funds from the platform. In addition to the redemption problem, investors also complained about the security and transaction problems of the exchange.

A HKCEx user who asked to stay anonymous send us the screenshots of his accounts. He also attached a list of HKCEx victims, adding that an European client has lost more than 80 Bitcoins.

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By then we started to doubt the creditability of HKCEx and emailed their representative Lavin Lam for comment. Lavin responded that “We had a massive DDoS attack and now working hard to restore our infrastructure and continue our payouts.” In response to our request on releasing his contact means to users, he invited us to visit their office and we are actively reaching out to have an interview with him in Hong Kong.

But just before this press, a Hong Kong media reported that HKCEx’s address is fake. The address they announced on the website, Belcher’s Street, 56, Sai Wan, Hong Kong, is a property agency and a convenience store. The post added that some victims have reported to the police. Our Hong Kong-based reporter is still contacting HKCEx.

Another scam fact about the exchange is that it claimed to be one the first Bitcoin exchanges that received MSO license (Money Service Operators) from the Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department. However, the MSO license number 14-02-01350, which is previously shown in the company’s website, is registered by heavy metal exchange MG Foreign Exchange Limited and a reader who claimed to have visited MG in Hong Kong said the company denied to have any relationship with HKCEx.

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Moreover, Bitcoin trading price in HKCEx is around $150 higher as compared with other exchanges, according to an industry insider. The high transaction price attracted Bitcoin investors to charge money and move bricks to earn arbitrage and lead funding cheated.

Another press release HKCEx sent to us claimed they have launched a network of 10 Bitcoin ATMs in 10 shopping and financial centers. But some users said that the ATMs are nowhere to be seen in Hong Kong.

What’s more weird about HKCEx is that it required users to submit notarized passport copy to their “parent company” before withdraw funds from the platform. This measure is considered by many users as a step to hold off from dealing with the matter.

According to an industrial insider, major Bitcoin platforms like Bitstamp and Mt Gox used to ask clients to submit resident doc and passport copy when they need to deposit or withdraw fiat for the purpose of ID verification. But now with the software like Jumio Bison the process of ID verification is becoming automated and users do not have to email ID copies.

If the site was under DDOS attack as claimed by the company, the long duration of the attack (several days) indicates they are not doing their best to mitigate the attacks, said an anonymous expert, adding that most exchanges have flexible bandwidth protocols to mitigate against DDOS attacks.

Moreover, if they are not technically capable to do important things like that, then it is unlikely that they have attracted any VC investments like they claimed, he added.

Once again, we apologize sincerely to all those who have suffered economic losses from the spread of the news. We will definitely be more cautious in handling crypt-currency news tips in the future.

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Alibaba Introduces US Smartphone Game Dots to Taobao Mobile https://technode.com/2014/05/22/alibaba-introduces-us-smartphone-game-dots-taobao-mobile/ https://technode.com/2014/05/22/alibaba-introduces-us-smartphone-game-dots-taobao-mobile/#comments Thu, 22 May 2014 07:30:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19181 The IPO-bound Internet giant Alibaba Group entered an exclusive partnership with U.S. mobile game Dots, which will be the first western developed game to land on Alibaba’s mobile gaming platform. Dots will go live for free download in China under the name 点点 (DOTS) via Mobile Taobao application by 9:00 pm today. For most Chinese users, Mobile Taobao […]]]>

The IPO-bound Internet giant Alibaba Group entered an exclusive partnership with U.S. mobile game Dots, which will be the first western developed game to land on Alibaba’s mobile gaming platform. Dots will go live for free download in China under the name 点点 (DOTS) via Mobile Taobao application by 9:00 pm today.

For most Chinese users, Mobile Taobao is more commonly known as a m-commerce service. Although Mobile Taobao may not be our first option in finding hit mobile games, it may still lure lots of users to try out the integrated gaming and app distribution functionalities given the huge downloads.

As a dominating force in Chinese e-commerce market, Alibaba is still a latecomer in gaming sector. The company launched a mobile game platform earlier this year driven by the rising mobile game trend. Tencent, a major rival of Alibaba, has recorded 10.39 billion yuan ($1.68bn) of revenue from online game sector in Q1 this year. In addition to home-grown games, Tencent also planned to add several international hit titles, such as Candy Crush Saga and Taming Monster.

Similar to some of the hit mobile games like Flappy Bird and a more recent one Piano Tile favored by Chinese gamers, the gameplay of Dots is deceptively simple but highly addictive. Players only have to take four or more circles of the same color and connect them to make a square. Patrick Moberg and Paul Murphy set up the company in 2013 as part of a four-month development session Hackers in Residence program at Betaworks. According to Dots, five billion gamers played the game in the first year with millions more enjoy it every day.

Paul Murphy, co-founder of Dots, said “We are excited to launch Dots in China with Alibaba Group. This partnership will help us share the Dots experience with hundreds of millions of potential players in China.” But in selection of Chinese partners, several factors other than partner’s huge user base should be taken into consideration, like the positioning and vision of the partners.

When first entering China, Korean messaging app LINE partnered up with Qihoo 360, eyeing on its a huge user base. The cooperation didn’t fulfil prior expectations and LINE shifted to Wandoujia after the one-year contract with Qihoo 360 expired.

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Wearhaus: Smart Headphone Bringing Back Social Aspect of Music https://technode.com/2014/05/21/wearhaus-smart-headphone-bringing-back-social-aspect-music/ https://technode.com/2014/05/21/wearhaus-smart-headphone-bringing-back-social-aspect-music/#comments Wed, 21 May 2014 08:40:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19130 Inspired by the music festival “silent disco” trend, headphone brand Wearhaus Inc. recently launched its new product Wearhaus Arc, new wireless headphones that aim to bring back the intimacy and fun of listening to music together. After connecting with Wearhaus app (available for iOS and Android) on your phone or phones nearby, Wearhaus Arc can sync multiple […]]]>

Inspired by the music festival “silent disco” trend, headphone brand Wearhaus Inc. recently launched its new product Wearhaus Arc, new wireless headphones that aim to bring back the intimacy and fun of listening to music together.

After connecting with Wearhaus app (available for iOS and Android) on your phone or phones nearby, Wearhaus Arc can sync multiple users’ headphones using a proprietary Bluetooth mesh network with 30m syncing range, allowing users to share a favorite song with a friend or broadcast a playlist to fellow commuters. A variety of privacy settings are also available: the listener can choose to broadcast to any nearby Arc user, friends only, or to turn off music sharing entirely.

The headphone is sleekly designed with each earcup features an iconic, ring-shaped backlight that can be set to any color via the mobile app. When other people tune in to your music, their lights pulse with the same color – a visual cue to tell who’s listening with you. A capacitive touch panel allows you to easily control volume, playback, and sharing with simple gestures.

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Wearhaus was founded by Nelson Zhang and Richie Zeng, two ex-Berkeley engineering students. As an early member of Xinchejian, the team built the first prototype of Arc at the Chinese hackerspace in July 2013. The project then entered Highway1 – a rigorous, 4-month hardware incubator program backed by PCH International, a veteran supply-chain company with clients ranging from Beats to Apple Inc. Wearhaus is now based in Berkeley, but their industrial designers work out of their studio in Wuxi of Jiangsu Province.

The first batch of Wearhaus Arcs are expected to ship by this holiday season. To prep for the launch, the company kicked off a crowdfunding campaign on Wearhaus website since May 6 for $75K of funding. As of the time of writing it had raised more than $55K from over 320 backers. During the campaign Arc will be available for a special backer’s price of $150. It will run until the end of May, but pre-orders will remain open afterwards at the full $200 retail value. Moreover, the company also planned to launch a campaign on Chinese crowdfunding platform DemoHour later this year.

Even though the argument on whether it is a good time to invest in Chinese music market is still going on, the rising hardware trend has attracted several entrepreneurs who see opportunities in developing smart hardware for music streaming to make their early efforts in this sector. Starwish, a startup founded by a serial entrepreneur in China’s music industry Gary Chen, launched an Android-powered smart headphone VOW and StarChat, a mobile app for musicians to interact with their fans.

image credit: Wearhaus

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Hong Kong-based Online Trading Portal 8 Securities Launches Japanese Version https://technode.com/2014/05/21/hong-kong-based-online-trading-portal-8-securities-launches-japanese-version/ https://technode.com/2014/05/21/hong-kong-based-online-trading-portal-8-securities-launches-japanese-version/#comments Wed, 21 May 2014 05:50:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19115 Hong-Kong based socially networked trading platform 8 Securities announced that it launched a Japanese version www.8securities.co.jp today. 8 Securities allows users to select the markets to trade on, use analytics tools, read news and research, watch videos and interact with other investors through social apps. The key differentiator of 8 Securities compared to other online […]]]>
8Securities Logo

Hong-Kong based socially networked trading platform 8 Securities announced that it launched a Japanese version www.8securities.co.jp today.

8 Securities allows users to select the markets to trade on, use analytics tools, read news and research, watch videos and interact with other investors through social apps. The key differentiator of 8 Securities compared to other online trading platforms is its customizable platform that can integrate apps, as well as its social network functionality.

After announcing the product back in October 2011 at TechCrunch Beijing Disrupt, 8 Securities secured $8 million of funding from private wealthy investors. The platform went live in April 2012 and recorded positive cash flow by 2013.

Tokyo is 8 Securities’ second office launch in Asia following Hong Kong. The first of many product announcements to come in Japan is a new automated global portfolio service. This aims to bring wealth management online and make it fully accessible to everyone at 80% lower cost than traditional asset managers, according to the company. 8 Securities also planned to release new Social Trading Portal in Japan in July.

In addition to Japan, 8 Securities is actively working to enter Chinese mainland market, according to Co-founder and CEO, Mikaal Abdulla.

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Package Tracking Startup AfterShip Lands $1M Series A Funding from IDG-Accel https://technode.com/2014/05/20/package-tracking-startup-aftership-lands-1m-dollars-series-a-funding-from-idg-accel/ https://technode.com/2014/05/20/package-tracking-startup-aftership-lands-1m-dollars-series-a-funding-from-idg-accel/#comments Tue, 20 May 2014 13:01:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19068 AfterShip, a B2B package tracking platform for online retailers, has closed $1 million of Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners (IDG-Accel), which previously invested in Baidu and Tencent. AfterShip provides tracking APIs and Track Button widget to help online retailers easily add package tracking functionality to their stores. The service helps online retailers to […]]]>
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AfterShip, a B2B package tracking platform for online retailers, has closed $1 million of Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners (IDG-Accel), which previously invested in Baidu and Tencent.

AfterShip provides tracking APIs and Track Button widget to help online retailers easily add package tracking functionality to their stores. The service helps online retailers to track shipments, send notifications and get business intelligence on shipping performance.

AfterShip will use the raised funds to develop delivery analytics tools for online retailers to monitor the shipping performance, identify delayed shipments, and estimate the delivery time more accurately. It will also enhance the free Track Button to help online stores to easily display tracking results at their store.

Since its public launch in July 2013, AfterShip claimed to have integrated with 180+ carriers worldwide, with over 15,000 active users (including Groupon Goods, Etsy, Zalora, Lamido, Wish). AfterShip is currently tracking 3 million active shipments each month, with over 25% growth month on month, said the company’s co-founder Andrew Chan to TechNode. He added that AfterShip is also one of the top apps and extensions at Shopify, Bigcommerce, eBay and Magento.

“Sending online customers emails with just a tracking number and no tracking link to get the shipment status no longer meets the customer expectation.” said Teddy Chan, CEO and co-founder of AfterShip.

The Hong Kong-based startup puts its business focus on overseas market because, according to Andrew, most of foreign e-commerce retailers did not integrate real-time logistic tracking data in their sites as their Chinese counterparts do, like in Taobao. Around 60% of the company’s business comes North America, while the rest comes from Hong Kong, Chinese mainland, Europe, and south Africa, he added.

Additionaly, AfterShip will put more focus on tracking of cross-border packages while purchasing products or services from overseas markets has become a trend among online shoppers in recent years.

The company was co-founded by three youth at Startup Weekend program back in 2011. It also the winner for Global Startup Battle 2011. Although one of the co-founders dropped out of the project for further study, the other two founders Andrew Chan and Teddy Chan have bootstrapped the business to date. The company has broken even since last December and they also planned to recruit more talents after the funding.

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Hong Kong Crypto Currency Exchange HKCEx Collapses with Founding Team Suspected Fled https://technode.com/2014/05/20/hong-kong-crypto-currency-exchange-hkcex-collapses-founding-team-suspected-fled/ https://technode.com/2014/05/20/hong-kong-crypto-currency-exchange-hkcex-collapses-founding-team-suspected-fled/#comments Tue, 20 May 2014 07:01:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19063 The domain of Hong Kong-based crypto currency exchange HKCEx, hkcex.net, becomes vacant this week. Before the site is down, many investors reflected that they can’t withdraw their funds from the platform. The founding team is suspected fled, as reported by 3-coin.com. In addition to the redemption problem, several investors also complained about the security and transaction […]]]>

The domain of Hong Kong-based crypto currency exchange HKCEx, hkcex.net, becomes vacant this week. Before the site is down, many investors reflected that they can’t withdraw their funds from the platform. The founding team is suspected fled, as reported by 3-coin.com.

In addition to the redemption problem, several investors also complained about the security and transaction problems of the exchange.

It is worth noting that the Bitcoin trading price in HKCEx is around $150 higher as compared with other exchanges and its trading volume stands at about 500 Bitcoins per day, according to an industry insider. The high transaction price attracted a large number of Bitcoin investors to charge money and move bricks to earn arbitrage and lead funding cheated.

HKCEx has announced $2 million of seed funding last year and recently claimed that some private funds from mainland and Hong Kong planned to purchase $25 million worth of Bitcoins on the platform within next 6 months. It also announced to have opened a network of 10 Bitcoin ATMs in 10 shopping and financial centers in Hong Kong earlier this year.

Some investors think that the funding news is only ill-intended maneuver to trick users to invest money in the platform. They also said that the ATMs are nowhere to be seen in Hong Kong.

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Amazon Invests $20mn in Chinese Online Food Vendor Yummy 77 https://technode.com/2014/05/19/amazon-invests-20mn-dollars-in-chinese-online-food-vendor-yummy-77/ https://technode.com/2014/05/19/amazon-invests-20mn-dollars-in-chinese-online-food-vendor-yummy-77/#comments Mon, 19 May 2014 10:08:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19030 Amazon has invested $20 million of funding in Shanghai-based online food vendor Yummy77. It is the first time for the U.S. e-commerce giant to invest in a Chinese company after entering Chinese market for ten years. Amazon disclosed that it will hold a minority stake in Yummy77, which will continue its independent operation after the […]]]>
亚马逊宣布投资国内领先生鲜电商上海美味七七

Amazon has invested $20 million of funding in Shanghai-based online food vendor Yummy77. It is the first time for the U.S. e-commerce giant to invest in a Chinese company after entering Chinese market for ten years. Amazon disclosed that it will hold a minority stake in Yummy77, which will continue its independent operation after the funding.

The fund is expected to help Yummy77 to enrich product categories and expand operation networks beyond Shanghai.

Launched in Feb 2013, Yummy77 is focused on fresh and gourmet foods, such as seasonal fruit, fresh seafood, eggs, meat, dairy products, etc., taping the growing demand among urban residents for high-quality imported foods and swift delivery. The company’s sales reportedly exceeded 100 million yuan (around $16 million) in December last year and its registered users reportedly surpassed 1 million as of Feb. this year.

Amazon launched online fresh food business Amazon Fresh in 2007 in the U.S. market. But it does not provide this service in China. It is worth noting that Yummy77 is the B2C fresh food unit of TRUE, a listed subsidiary of Chia Tai Group.

As one of the global pioneers in e-commerce industry, Amazon’s performance Chinese market is eclipsed by its Chinese peers. The company is putting more focus and becoming more active in Chinese market with the landing of Kindle devices and cloud service AWS in China last year.

image credit: Yummy77

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Anonymous Sharing Site 10years.me Helps You to Make Future Visions Come True https://technode.com/2014/05/19/anonymous-sharing-site-10years-helps-make-future-visions-come-true/ https://technode.com/2014/05/19/anonymous-sharing-site-10years-helps-make-future-visions-come-true/#comments Mon, 19 May 2014 08:10:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=19016 Catering to people’s needs of sharing stinging secrets with others, foreign anonymous sharing apps like Secret and Whisper are recording a surge in both growth and media attention. Chinese startup 10years.me also tapped this market, but it approached the demand from a different angle. 10years.me brings “who you want to be in 10 years”- a […]]]>
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Catering to people’s needs of sharing stinging secrets with others, foreign anonymous sharing apps like Secret and Whisper are recording a surge in both growth and media attention. Chinese startup 10years.me also tapped this market, but it approached the demand from a different angle.

10years.me brings “who you want to be in 10 years”- a question we would take little time to think about, at least on regular basis, to our daily life. It enables users to anonymously share their secrets on a more positive and aspiring aspect of life-your future dreams, like plans to learn another language, to pass a certain exam or to study overseas, rather than sharing confessions, rumors, complains and praises as the case of Secret and Whisper.

Users can set up eight future goals or dreams in their homepages which are arranged in timelines. After posting a goal on the site, users can update their progresses and experiences in realizing these dreams, as well as to find friends with similar interests. In addition to posting blogs within the site, users also can save and search links and materials relevant to a certain theme outside the site.

People may be shy away from sharing their hefty goals in social networks that involve close acquaintances, like Sina Weibo and WeChat, for fear of being laughed at if they failed at the goals. At an anonymous platform, users not only can share their dreams, but also find friends with similar interests, said Da Xing, former strategy consultant and current CEO the company.

The target users of 10years.me are mostly college students or young professionals (20-35 years old) who just started to find the right track for their lives. Da disclosed that around 60% of their users are girls aged between 20-29 years old.

In addition to various information about the users’ goals, the platform will be able to collect their specific measures in realizing these goals. 10years.me planned to commercialize the service by providing these data to relevant service providers, according to Da Xing.

Da Xing launched the site in Nov. 2013 together with three close friends from college. 10years.me plans to release iOS version in late May and Android version is also coming soon. Moreover, the team also planned to launch an English version for the site this year.

image credit: 10years.me

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Working at the Intersection of Art and Technology: Interview with Concept Artist Scott Robertson https://technode.com/2014/05/16/working-intersection-art-technology-interview-concept-artist-scott-robertson/ https://technode.com/2014/05/16/working-intersection-art-technology-interview-concept-artist-scott-robertson/#comments Fri, 16 May 2014 08:58:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18962 It is very common for products and technologies presented in science fictions and films to come into real life years later, like submarine in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and touch screens in science movie Minority Report. It’s always been amazing for us that how these futuristic technologies and ideas are created by filmmakers […]]]>
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It is very common for products and technologies presented in science fictions and films to come into real life years later, like submarine in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and touch screens in science movie Minority Report. It’s always been amazing for us that how these futuristic technologies and ideas are created by filmmakers or novelists.

Yesterday, I have the honor of chatting with concept artist Scott Robertson to find an answer to this question at the “Talking with Masters” series event jointly held by Knowledge and Innovation Community and Autodesk. Scott also shared with us his career as a designer, his design principle as well as his experience as an entrepreneur.

Scott Robertson is an American concept artist known for his transportation design work and contributions to movies like Star Trek, Steven Spielberg’s Minority Report, etc. As a serial entrepreneur, Scott started a design consulting company with his friend Neville Page after graduation from collage. He was also chair of Entertainment Design at Art Center College of Design and is the founder of Design Studio Press, a publishing company dedicated to art and design education.

Could you start off by telling us a little about the work you currently doing?

I am currently finishing my next book on how to render, like shadings and reflections. It is about the fundamentals of the three big topics of light, shadow and reflectivity. The book is almost done and it’s going to press in the first week of June. I am also doing workshops on and off around the world. I am about to start a “top-secret” industrial design project. Maybe I can say what it was in one year.

As an automobile designer, how do you balance the functionalities and designs?

Automobile design is quite constrained by the package, so there’s not a lot of freedom. You have to work with the package first, and then, if you are working with a heritage brand which has a lot of history, you have to cater to and involve history of the brand, because there are certain expectations. Designers are trying to find out a way to be respectful to the pre-existing package, but it is hard to find a balance point to be both respectful and innovative.

From cars to entertainment, could you tell us how and why you decided to enter this peculiar niche?

If you are doing the styling work, most people want to start something pretty new all the time, but this preference is not going to work when you are cooperating with a heritage automobile brand. It is understandable that those companies don’t want to take a lot of risks. But with entertainment, I can do whatever I want. I always like the innovative first part of an entertainment project. With the blue sky, any options are open. It’s really fun for those who like the front-end part of the process, because it is almost all conceptual. You can design a whole world that’s not ours. If you like the detail work of making real products, entertainment is not that satisfying, because we don’t really make anything. It’s almost all stay digital and imaginary. But if you like imaginary world, it is perfect, which I do.

Working as concept artist in entertainment industry needs lots of imaginations. What things in the world inspire you?

When I was an industrial designer doing more product works, I used to go to movies to find inspirations. But once you start to design the movies or video games, then where do you look? I think nature is the best inspiration. If you are a curious person, you can find inspirations everywhere, architecture, artwork, photography, travel and painting. My colleagues also inspire me, we push each other a lot.

Which of your projects are you the most proud of and Why?

I like the bicycles I designed long time ago. It’s not a product that going to be landfilled, recycled or thrown away. It is a product that people really loved and normally they will hand them down to other people or keep it in the family. It is a functional thing and aesthetically very pleasing. I still have the first bike I ever designed, which is 26 years old, in my studio and it’s still contemporary looking. Probably because it’s timeless. Secondly, I think it’s some of my books.

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Concept Bike by Scott Robertson

From a design standpoint, what are the main similarities and differences between these two worlds?

Car design are about real products, everything has to be built and real customers are going to use them. In entertainment we still have to worry about some of the constraints, but key point here is get entertained by that design. The design becomes more whimsical and toy-like. Although these things can move and be animated, we don’t have to worry about safety. As for similarities, both automobile and entertainment designs are trying to create an immersive and amazing experience, but they achieve the same goal with different methods.

How do concept artists unlash their imaginations in presenting the futuristic technologies in science movies? How do you keep up with the ever-changing technology trends?

We do it with great illustrations, which communicate an experience and an idea for technology that doesn’t yet exist. Conceptual artists show what they think will be the desirable future products or experiences, and then technology could be invented. With the illustration, everybody can look at the image and understand what they are trying to accomplish. But it might take years to accomplish that.

We don’t catch up with technologies, we are years ahead of the technology today. Designers can design the experience of a certain product not concerning themselves with the technologies today or the near future. Designers show the illustration of a completely-real product, but they have absolutely no idea on how to make it. Without that image, you can’t get all the decision makers together to decide upon a direction for a technology budget and where the R& D teams should actually put their efforts. If you have an image and show it to directors of a car company, they can show it to their R&D engineers. Without an image which they can agree upon, it would be difficult to figure out directions. (At the presentation, Scott showed some of the illustrations he made 13 years ago for BMW. The car company is going to release products based on his concepts this year.)

You and Neville Page are close friends since early age. You have worked together in several fields of industrial design, toy design, entertainment design, can you talk about your cooperation and friendship, how you influenced each other?

Both of us are industrial designers and we have been great friends for almost 30 years. We have complementary skills, he’s more into organic surfaces and does a lot of creatures and characters, while I’m more into automobile and architecture environments. We have the ability to work together, one is that we know each other so well, two we work based on the same methodology, same lateral thinking. It’s very easy when we approach a problem, whether it’s a creature, technology, environment, or a script for a pitch, we use exactly the same problem solving methods. We also enjoy each other’s company, which makes it so much easier.

Neville once mentioned that no matter in what filed, creature/character design or product design, the principle of design can be applied to any thing. What’s your principle for design?

First it’s curiosity, or whether you are curious enough to want to learn is big part of our principle. Secondly, it’s passion and determination, which come with each other, because it takes a lot of hard work. Even if it’s just entertainment, the whole idea is to want to improve. Finally, action. It is not just about thinking, it’s about going out and making things happen.

What are some trends that you see happening in industrial design?

I don’t follow trends. The things I do in my own book is far from reality. People are buying the book but not the things I am designing. So I don’t have to worry about the bottom line or the engineering specifications. I am very fortunate cause I can do a lot of whimsical concept designs that are much more theoretical, which don’t follow the trends. I’m not trying to design for a certain customer base, so I don’t follow the trends that much.

What is the role of modern digital tools and technologies in the design process?

They are changing the ways that we can actually design now, because they allow us to design things that in the past would take far too much labor. Let’s say if I want to explore translucent materials to render it 2-dimensionally with pens, it would take a long time and we would stay away from that. But now we can render it in 3D programs. It’s making new materials more available. Also there’re certain level of abstraction that you can do with 3D programs, which again because the labor investment in drawing and painting you would never strived for in the past. It allow us to invent and design things that we have never able to draw or render.

As a serial entrepreneur, what’s your advices for people with similar design backgrounds who want to open their own business?

First person they should hire is a bookkeeper accountant. The success of a business really relies on making all the numbers work. But without a proper support for the business, it would be very difficult for the creative peoples to success in their own business. Designers have good ideas, passions and energies, but they don’t have a realistic understanding of business. As soon as you get involved in other parts of the business, it means you are no longer creative, cause you are wasting too much energy on things you are not good at.

What’s your understanding and vision for Chinese market.

It getting very exciting in China from outside observation. But my hope for China is to find its own design voice. I have to say it’s a little depressing to come to Shanghai and find it feels like a western or European city. China is transforming quickly but it doesn’t feel Chinese to me. I’d love to see Chinese designers start to develop the Chinese aesthetics and then have the general public accept that, as opposed to the general public buying only based on brands. But I don’t know whether that’s going to happen in the next twenty years, because educationally there’s a lot of works to be done. If you want to be competitive, you have to look ahead and see everything happening in the rest of the world.

image credit: Scott Robertson

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Tencent’s Revenue from Online Games Exceeds 10 Billion Yuan in Q1 https://technode.com/2014/05/16/tencents-revenue-from-online-games-exceeds-10-billion-yuan-in-q1/ https://technode.com/2014/05/16/tencents-revenue-from-online-games-exceeds-10-billion-yuan-in-q1/#comments Fri, 16 May 2014 01:17:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18953 Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently announced that the company’s total revenue reached 18.4 billion ($2.99 billion) in first quarter of 2014 ended March 31, an increase of 8% QOQ or an increase of 36% YOY. Of the total amount, VAS revenues increased 21% QOQ to 14. 41 billion yuan, representing 78% of the total revenues for the […]]]>

Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently announced that the company’s total revenue reached 18.4 billion ($2.99 billion) in first quarter of 2014 ended March 31, an increase of 8% QOQ or an increase of 36% YOY.

Of the total amount, VAS revenues increased 21% QOQ to 14. 41 billion yuan, representing 78% of the total revenues for the reporting period.

The revenue from online games surged 23% QOQ to RMB10.39 billion yuan ($1.68bn) in Q1, mainly driven by increased revenues from smart phone games integrated with Mobile QQ and WeChat. The paying user base for Tencent’s mobile games more than doubled, and total revenues approximately tripled to over 1.8 billion yuan during the period. For PC client games, new titles such as Blade & Soul made significant revenue contribution.

According to the report, six of Tencent’s mobile games were ranked within the Top 10 Grossing Chart in China’s iOS App Store at some point during the quarter. In addition to home-grown smartphone games, Tencent also planned to add several international hit titles, such as Candy Crush Saga and Taming Monster.

The company’s revenue from social networks revenues increased 16% QOQ to 4.03 billion yuan. This mainly reflected an increase in platform revenues from smart phone games integrated with Mobile QQ and WeChat.

The monthly active users of WeChat increased 87% YOY to 396 million at the end of the first quarter of 2014. In Q1, the company focused on building an ecosystem for WeChat by integrating Dianping and other services under WeChat Payment, expanding the user base of WeChat Payment via subsidy programme, notably for booking taxi rides; and exploring mobile e-commerce with selected merchants via their Official Accounts.

However, the company’s revenue from online advertising and e-commerce transactions saw a 21% and a 24% QOQ decline during the period. Tencent claimed the decline mainly reflected the impacts of weaker seasonality and their transition of e-commerce strategy.

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[Update] HKCEx Being Questioned about Bitcoin Redemption Problems after Claiming $25mn Orders https://technode.com/2014/05/15/hkcex-being-questioned-about-bitcoin-redemption-problems-after-claiming-25mn-dollars-orders/ https://technode.com/2014/05/15/hkcex-being-questioned-about-bitcoin-redemption-problems-after-claiming-25mn-dollars-orders/#respond Thu, 15 May 2014 01:18:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18923 Hong Kong-based crypto currency exchange HKCEx announced that some private funds from mainland and Hong Kong planned to purchase $25 million worth of Bitcoins in the exchange within next 6 months. The company noted that these funds are not intended to HKCEx, but targeted and designed for the purchase of crypto-currency. However, the news is complicated by complaints […]]]>

Hong Kong-based crypto currency exchange HKCEx announced that some private funds from mainland and Hong Kong planned to purchase $25 million worth of Bitcoins in the exchange within next 6 months. The company noted that these funds are not intended to HKCEx, but targeted and designed for the purchase of crypto-currency.

However, the news is complicated by complaints from users and the story developed toward a different direction. HKCEx is questioned by several users who complained that it is impossible for them to redeem funds, as well as several other security and transaction problems of the exchange. The enraged Bitcoin investors went so far to doubt that the news of receiving $25 million orders is an ill-intended maneuver to trick users to invest money in the platform. Moreover, the domain of HKCEx, hkcex.net, is now vacant.

The exchange responded that the accounts of these readers are suspended for suspicious activities and it is instructing them to unlock the fund. But the problem is not solved as of press time.

It is worth noting that the Bitcoin trading price in HKCEx is around $150 higher as compared with other exchanges and its trading volume stands at about 500 Bitcoins per day, according to an industry insider. When TechNode asked a representative from the exchange to comment on the matter, he answered “HKCEx rates are set by other market traders- individuals, HK banks and financial institutes, we don’t regulate the market”.

HKCEx has previously received $2 million of seed funding and opened a network of 10 Bitcoin ATMs in 10 largest shopping and financial centers in Hong Kong earlier this year.

HKCEx claimed that is among the first Bitcoin exchanges that received MSO license (Money Service Operators) from the Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department. HKCEx said in former press that it is in talks with insurance company AIA Group on the agreement of providing insurance to deposits of all traders and investors.

Note: The post was based on press release from HKCEx, but Cryptocoinsnews.com doubt it’s scam and is doing investigation on it.

image credit: HKCEx

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Smart Home Brand ZIVOO Releases Smart Gadgets, Aiming at A Complete Ecosystem https://technode.com/2014/05/14/smart-home-brand-zivoo-releases-smart-gadgets-aiming-complete-ecosystem/ https://technode.com/2014/05/14/smart-home-brand-zivoo-releases-smart-gadgets-aiming-complete-ecosystem/#comments Wed, 14 May 2014 08:06:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18904 ZIVOO OTT Box ZIVOO Technology, a subsidiary of computer peripheral equipment maker RAPOO Technology, announced ZIVOO brand yesterday to make inroad into smart home industry. The company took the wraps off several new products at the launch event, including an OTT box, a smart router, a smart socket, among others. ZIVOO’s OTT Box integrated more […]]]>

ZIVOO OTT Box

ZIVOO Technology, a subsidiary of computer peripheral equipment maker RAPOO Technology, announced ZIVOO brand yesterday to make inroad into smart home industry. The company took the wraps off several new products at the launch event, including an OTT box, a smart router, a smart socket, among others.

ZIVOO’s OTT Box integrated more than 1.5 million hours of video contents from video service iCNTV. The team also integrated various entertainment functions into ZIVOO box by releasing several peripheral devices including a micro phone, a gamepad and a motion sensor. The company has partnered with Karaoke app Audiocn and motion sensing game platform YD.jiajia to develop corresponding software.

gadget

Wifi antennas which are key components of most routers are removed from ZIVOO router. The gadget, which features 1T hard disc, can automatically adjust the Internet speed of users’ networks according to their usage.

router

ZIVOO Router

ZIVOO’s smart socket allows users to turn on/off the power via a mobile app. Moreover, it also serves as satellite for routers to improve Wifi coverage.

When talking about the positioning of ZIVOO brand, Zou Chao, CEO of the company and former CTO of RAPOO, said their layout in smart home industry is not restricted to hardware level, but to construct an ecosystem for smart home industry by combining hardware and software.

image credit: ZIVOO

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[Disrupt NY 2014] Hosain Rahman: Development of Jawbone in Chinese Market https://technode.com/2014/05/14/disrupt-ny-2014-hosain-rahman-development-of-jawbone-in-chinese-market/ https://technode.com/2014/05/14/disrupt-ny-2014-hosain-rahman-development-of-jawbone-in-chinese-market/#comments Wed, 14 May 2014 02:24:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18890 Started as a Bluetooth headset maker, Jawbone gradually expanded to sports products with its fitness wristband UP. At TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2014, TechNode got a chance to chat with Hosain Rahman, CEO and founder of Jawbone, on the company’s development in Chinese market. Please tell us a bit about current development of Jawbone in China. […]]]>

Started as a Bluetooth headset maker, Jawbone gradually expanded to sports products with its fitness wristband UP. At TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2014, TechNode got a chance to chat with Hosain Rahman, CEO and founder of Jawbone, on the company’s development in Chinese market.

Please tell us a bit about current development of Jawbone in China.

China is so far our second largest overseas market. We have set up offices in several Chinese cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Suzhou, and a customer service team has been established for the region. Jawbone also planned to put forward a Chinese name.

According to a report from Engadget, Baidu-backed Codoon SmartBand looks like Up in terms appearance. What’s your comment?

We did not know that. I will check it up.

What’s your view about intellectual property rights in China?

We attach great importance to the awareness of intellectual property right protection in selection of Chinese partners and distributors, who will be in charge of IP infringement issues in China.

Some customers complained that the first generation of Up is easy to break down. What’s your measures in improving the quality of the second generation product Up 24?

After receiving a lot of feedbacks from customers since the release of UP, we have redesigned our product and choose more durable materials. We are working hard to guarantee better quality for the new product.

What’s your opinion on various wrist wearables?

Wearable gadgets should not be classified according to which part of body they attached to. I consider smartwatch and smart wristband as two different things, although both of them are wearables for wrists. I classify wearable gadgets according to their functions. Fitness monitoring devices are now taking the form of wristbands, but they may be attached to other parts of body for the same function in the future.

What’s the company’s business focus in the future, still on Bluetooth handsets? Or shift to health monitoring devices?

Sorry, we don’t comment on operation questions.

Shuhang

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Alibaba Hires Former Treasury as International Comms Head, Accelerating Expansion to Overseas Market https://technode.com/2014/05/13/alibaba-hires-former-treasury-international-comms-head-accelerating-expansion-overseas-market/ https://technode.com/2014/05/13/alibaba-hires-former-treasury-international-comms-head-accelerating-expansion-overseas-market/#comments Tue, 13 May 2014 08:14:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18878 As a part of Alibaba’s global ambition, the Chinese Internet giant today announced the appointment of Jim Wilkinson, former senior PepsiCo executive who once worked for the U.S. government, as Senior Vice President and Head of International Corporate Affairs. Wilkinson will be based in the San Francisco Bay Area and will be charged with building […]]]>

As a part of Alibaba’s global ambition, the Chinese Internet giant today announced the appointment of Jim Wilkinson, former senior PepsiCo executive who once worked for the U.S. government, as Senior Vice President and Head of International Corporate Affairs.

Wilkinson will be based in the San Francisco Bay Area and will be charged with building and leading Alibaba Group’s international corporate affairs team.

Wilkinson is joining Alibaba at a time when the company is putting more focus on overseas market and its relation with the U.S. is more important than ever. The firm just filed for an U.S. IPO last week.

“As Alibaba extends our platform for entrepreneurs and small businesses around the world, it is important that we have the right people in place who have a track record of building bridges across geographic boundaries,” said Jack Ma, co-founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group.

According to Alibaba’s prospectus, the company’s revenue from international commerce business accounts for 12% of the total in the financial year ended March 31, while the revenue from Chinese commerce represents 84.5% of the total revenue. The revenue from Chinese business soared 86.5% YOY to $4.69 billion, while the revenue from international commerce grew at a much slower speed of 10.5% YOY to $669 million during the same period.

With a dominant position in domestic e-commerce market, expansion into overseas market is a natural step for further development. After launching an U.S. office more than a decade ago, the company has acquired a raft of U.S. firms related to e-commerce business, such as sports retailer Fanatics, e-commerce company ShopRunner, luxury product e-commerce site1stdibs, etc. Alibaba also launched a new e-commerce site 11Main in the U.S. market via two of its wholly-owned subsidiaries Vendio and Auctiva earlier this year.

Bio of Jim Wilkinson

  • PepsiCo — Executive Vice President of Communications
  • Brunswick Group — Managing partner for international business and financial strategy
  • Chief of Staff for U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson
  • Senior Advisor to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
  • Johns Hopkins University (Master of Arts)
  • University of Texas at Arlington (Bachelor of Business Administration, Finance)
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Nuevo Co., Online Fashion Brand Celebrating a New Lifestyle by Inspiring Your Wardrobe https://technode.com/2014/05/13/nuevo-co-online-fashion-brand-celebrating-new-lifestyle-inspiring-wardrobe/ https://technode.com/2014/05/13/nuevo-co-online-fashion-brand-celebrating-new-lifestyle-inspiring-wardrobe/#comments Tue, 13 May 2014 03:02:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18870 Just as the old saying goes, “you are what you wear”, clothes actually can reveal who you are, or even change your identity to some extent. One well-chosen blazer or dress will serve you well all the way from your first day at work and beyond by making you feel smarter and more confident. Chris […]]]>

Just as the old saying goes, “you are what you wear”, clothes actually can reveal who you are, or even change your identity to some extent. One well-chosen blazer or dress will serve you well all the way from your first day at work and beyond by making you feel smarter and more confident.

Chris Ma and Gao Yuan, two friends sharing similar life philosophies, started their own online fashion brand “Nuevo Co.” to bring to life their believes in simple and casual lifestyle. Positioned as a mid-to upper-market fashion retailer, Nuevo Co. recently launched its official website with their first collection for this season.

The two entrepreneurs started the brand by offering men and women wardrobe staple pieces, like T-shirts, tops and blazers, but they plan to expand their product offerings to include other fashion items such as accessories and bags in the future.

Believing in “less is more”, Nuevo Co. focuses on simple and streamlined clothing styles, incorporating contemporary design with fine quality fabrics. Although the price tag of the Nuevo Co. collection is by no means cheap, it is quite affordable and a good value for its product quality.

Chris and Yuan met in New York when they both attended Columbia University for graduate studies. Chris, a fledgling corporate lawyer at a top international firm, was aspired to do something where her true passion lies. Gao, having worked in the financial industry for a number of years, wanted to chart his own professional path. The two immediately hit it off and decided to strike out on their own when they conceived the idea of Nuevo Co.

As a startup, the team handles everything in-house, from design, sourcing, production to distribution. They enlisted the help from their fashion designer friends for cutting-edge designs and handpicked materials and factories to achieve the best results, says Chris.

Screen Shot 2014-05-12 at 5.03.22 PM

Staying true to the founding philosophy of Nuevo Co., rather than using professional models, the company invites their friends to present its collection, so customers get a true sense of what the pieces would look on them in everyday life. The male and female models for the first season collection represent the typical target customers of the brand: well-educated, independent professionals with discriminating taste in fashion rather than brand-obsessed fashionistas.

Although the e-commerce marketplace is now over-crowded with established fashion brands trying to build their online presence, Chris thinks that the competitive edge of Nuevo Co. lies in online-only shopping platform that is free from geographic limitations and the capital-intensive overhead associated with bricks-and-mortar retail stores, which enables the company to better focus on delivering high quality designs and products.

Moreover, Nuevo Co. plans to capitalize on the prominent mobile technology trends in both marketing and sales. The company launched marketing campaigns on social networking platforms like WeChat and is developing its own mobile app.

The company will initially focus on the greater China region, including the mainland, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, said Gao. At the present stage, the Nuevo Co. products are available exclusively on its own Website as the company focuses on building up its Nuevo Co. brand, but Gao noted that they do not rule out the possibility of collaborating with other e-commerce channels in the future.

Nuevo

Gao Yuan (L), Chris Ma (R)

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Digital Marketing Engine AdSame Secures $30 Million Funding for US IPO Next Year https://technode.com/2014/05/12/digital-marketing-engine-adsame-secures-30-million-dollars-funding-us-ipo-next-year/ https://technode.com/2014/05/12/digital-marketing-engine-adsame-secures-30-million-dollars-funding-us-ipo-next-year/#comments Mon, 12 May 2014 10:00:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18846 Chinese intelligent digital marketing service AdSame announced today that it has secured a new round of $30 million funding led by Pacific Venture Partners and Dream Capital Group, and followed by existing investors of Matrix Partners and Vertex Ventures etc. The company added that it plans to launch IPO in US market in 2015. The fund […]]]>

Chinese intelligent digital marketing service AdSame announced today that it has secured a new round of $30 million funding led by Pacific Venture Partners and Dream Capital Group, and followed by existing investors of Matrix Partners and Vertex Ventures etc. The company added that it plans to launch IPO in US market in 2015.

The fund will be used in US IPO, promotion of mobile and multi-screen advertizing products, R&D of wearable products, big data platform for government and introduction of an ad trading platform which has been successfully run by Taipei branch of AdSame.

AdSame provides full service for digital marketing solutions, including online media planning, ad service, campaign management and performance monitoring, evaluation, analysis and optimization etc.

AdSame’s clients cover a wide variety of industries, including food and beverage, automobile, beauty care, financial service, fashion, IT and games.

AdSame was founded in 2009 with headquarters in Shanghai and branches in Beijing, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Chongqing, Changsha, Xiamen, Xi’an, Wuhan and Taipei. AdSame has more than 400 employees globally.

After receiving Series A funding from Matrix Partners, the company received a combined $20 million of Series B financing from Matrix Partners, Vertex Ventures and Susquehanna China Venture Capital in 2011.

A similar digital marketing platform Avazu also raised $48 million of Series A funding earlier this year.

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Alibaba’s MVNO Arm Opens Virtual Mobile Number for Preorder https://technode.com/2014/05/12/alibabas-mvno-arm-opens-virtual-mobile-number-preorder/ https://technode.com/2014/05/12/alibabas-mvno-arm-opens-virtual-mobile-number-preorder/#comments Mon, 12 May 2014 06:44:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18836 Ali Telecom, the MVNO unit of Alibaba Group, has officially launched “Qinxin” brand, which the company will use to market its virtual telecom service. The affiliate also opened its mobile phone numbers for preorder today with each user can reserve up to 4 phone numbers for free. The service will be released in the coming […]]]>
Ali telecom Qinxin

Ali Telecom, the MVNO unit of Alibaba Group, has officially launched “Qinxin” brand, which the company will use to market its virtual telecom service. The affiliate also opened its mobile phone numbers for preorder today with each user can reserve up to 4 phone numbers for free. The service will be released in the coming June.

Like other MVNOs, Ali Telecom don’t own telecommunications infrastructure, but provide services through network access they have leased at wholesale rates from other mobile operators.

All the phone numbers under Qinxin brand will begin with “170”. Services begin with the phone number of “1700”, “1705” and “1709” will be wholesaled from China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom, respectively.

亲卡设计图

The first batch of Ali Telecom’s mobile numbers will begin with “1709”, supporting 3G and 2G networks run by China Unicom.

These mobile numbers will be registered in 25 cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing, etc. A representative from the company noted that the billing standard of mobile numbers with different registration locations will be the same and no roaming fees will be charged.

Alibaba once mentioned that their focus will be data services that will be available for the company’s existing services, Taobao, Alipay, Aliyun, etc.

Several MVNOs licensed by the authorities have opened their mobile numbers for preorder since the beginning of this May, including electronics chains Telephone World and Suning and mobile phone chain Dphone.

image credit: Ali Telecom

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[Disrupt NY 2014] Fred Wilson: Obsession in Hardware May Lead to Fail of Apple, But Chinese Firms are Exceptions https://technode.com/2014/05/09/disrupt-ny-2014-fred-wilson-obsession-hardware-may-lead-fail-apple-chinese-firms-exceptions/ https://technode.com/2014/05/09/disrupt-ny-2014-fred-wilson-obsession-hardware-may-lead-fail-apple-chinese-firms-exceptions/#respond Fri, 09 May 2014 08:46:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18740 Fred Wilson (L) and Michael Arrington (R) Fred Wilson, founder of Union Square Ventures and one of the first investors of Kickstarter, recently took the stage at TechCrunch’s Disrupt NY with TC chief editor Michael Arrington to share their ideas of startup scene. Wilson also made some interesting comments on Chinese hardware sector in a […]]]>

Fred Wilson (L) and Michael Arrington (R)

Fred Wilson, founder of Union Square Ventures and one of the first investors of Kickstarter, recently took the stage at TechCrunch’s Disrupt NY with TC chief editor Michael Arrington to share their ideas of startup scene. Wilson also made some interesting comments on Chinese hardware sector in a backstage interview with TechNode.

When Arrington asked him to predict the future of Internet companies, Wilson said that Apple wouldn’t be one of the top companies by 2020 because it is too rooted in hardware, which is increasingly to become commodity. Apple devices is reaching a saturation point in western market and it can take years before customers to upgrade their existing devices. Apple will maintain its dominance in the near future, but it is hard to predict in the long term. He thinks Google Glass got the right direction but failed at implementation.

Wilson recently wrote a blog to caution against the overvaluation of startups and argued that too much money is the root of all evils. Startups should be careful about pushing valuations too high when they raise funding. He noted that maybe it is a better decision for startups to raise money at a lower valuation and to stick to one or two things, rather than to go aggressive and explore a bunch of different directions at the same time. That means be more efficient with your time and money.

Some industry insiders think Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is over-valued at over $4 billion. However, Wilson said to TechNode that Xiaomi is facing a huge market, it is able to ship hundreds of millions of products as it claimed, so it is unfair to evaluate Chinese companies by western standards.

Hardware projects account for more than 80% of the total programs on Chinese crowdfunding platforms, while they only represent 20% of the total on Kickstarter. Wilson noted that maybe that’s because hardware is the only kind of tangible project that users are willing to invest in. He added there are lots of projects on KickStarter to encourage investments in films and arts. It is a pity to limit the crowdfunding mode in hardware sector.

Union Square Ventures does not have plan to invest in Chinese startups or tap Chinese market now. “China is completely different from western markets and we currently do not have access to talents who can manage the market, he said.

image credit: TC

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[Update] Cheetah Mobile Prices NYSE IPO at $14 Per Share https://technode.com/2014/05/08/update-cheetah-mobile-prices-nyse-ipo-at-14-per-share/ https://technode.com/2014/05/08/update-cheetah-mobile-prices-nyse-ipo-at-14-per-share/#comments Thu, 08 May 2014 13:31:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18728 Cheetah Mobile, the spinoff of Chinese software developer Kingsoft that filed for IPO this April, today announced it planned to raise approximately $168 million funding by offering 12,000,000 American depositary shares (ADS) at $14.00 apiece, with each ADS representing ten Class A ordinary shares of the company. Calculated at this initial offering price, the market valuation of Cheetah […]]]>

Cheetah Mobile, the spinoff of Chinese software developer Kingsoft that filed for IPO this April, today announced it planned to raise approximately $168 million funding by offering 12,000,000 American depositary shares (ADS) at $14.00 apiece, with each ADS representing ten Class A ordinary shares of the company.

Calculated at this initial offering price, the market valuation of Cheetah Mobile’s 138 million ADS shares is expected to reach $1.932 billion after the IPO. Kingsoft’s share in the company will be diluted from 54.1% to 48.6%.

 [Update] The ADSs started 8.9% higher at $15.24 apiece on New York Stock Exchange on May 8. The company’s share edged up 0.71% to close at $14.01 per share on the same day.

The market valuation of Cheetah Mobile tripled in less one year, according to data from the company. Liu Xinhua, CMO of the firm, told TechNode that over 60% of the 180 investors they’ve visited during the three-month road show period invested in the company, including several sovereign wealth funds and long-term funds from Asia, Europe, the U.S. and Canada, etc.

Baidu, Tencent, Xiaomi, Kingsoft acquired a combined $70 million worth of shares in this IPO, helping the company to fight against a common enemy Qihoo.

Cheetah Mobile witnessed exponential growth in the past year with the number of active mobile users surged from 40 million to 220 million, of which 62% are overseas users. Clean Master, an Android storage management app, recorded 240 million installs, according to Fu Sheng, CEO of the company.

The U.S. and European Union constitute the largest overseas market of Cheetah Mobile. In the future, the company will continue to focus on the markets in developed countries.

Fu Sheng noted that they will stick to its current business model of channeling users from their free software to a web browser and monetize through search marketing, advertising, and online gaming.

image credit: Cheetah Mobile

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Alibaba-backed Cainiao Becomes Second Largest Shareholder of Logistics Platform KXTX https://technode.com/2014/05/08/alibaba-backed-cainiao-becomes-second-largest-shareholder-of-logistics-platform-kxtx/ https://technode.com/2014/05/08/alibaba-backed-cainiao-becomes-second-largest-shareholder-of-logistics-platform-kxtx/#comments Thu, 08 May 2014 06:38:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18706 Cainiao Network Technology has completed investment in logistics platform KXTX, becoming the second-biggest shareholder of the latter. This is the first external investment launched by Cainiao Network since its establishment one year ago. Both sides confirmed the investment, but declined to reveal the details. It is reported that the investment was several hundreds of millions […]]]>
Cainiao

Cainiao Network Technology has completed investment in logistics platform KXTX, becoming the second-biggest shareholder of the latter. This is the first external investment launched by Cainiao Network since its establishment one year ago. Both sides confirmed the investment, but declined to reveal the details. It is reported that the investment was several hundreds of millions yuan.

Cainiao has purchased large numbers of land plots in cities of Tianjin, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Wuhan Chengdu and Jinhua for warehouse. Cainiao plans to invest overall 300 billion yuan ($48 billion) in establishing central warehouses in nine core cities and transit ones in over 20 cities, according to plan of Jack Ma.

KXTX is a supply chain and logistics platform focused on road transportation. It has logistic centers in 11 cities countrywide, including Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Wuhan, etc. The company claimed that more than 1,000 medium and small logistics companies have been integrated in its platform.

Under the deal, Cainiao and KXTX will open logistic parks and transit centers to each other, saving costs in establishing transit hubs in the same cities. The parcels generated from Tmall is expected to be delivered by KXTX in the future.

Logistics companies benefited from the expansion of e-commerce market. The daily parcels generated from Taobao and Tmall are over 12 million. At peak, more than 80 million parcels were generated within 13 hours on the annual promotion day of 11th November, 2013.

image credit: Cainiao & KXTX

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Would Chinese Smartphone Maker OONE Stand a Chance in Domestic Hi-end Market with its Flagship Product OONE Oneair? https://technode.com/2014/05/07/would-chinese-smartphone-maker-oone-stand-a-chance-in-domestic-hi-end-market-with-its-flagship-product-oone-oneair/ https://technode.com/2014/05/07/would-chinese-smartphone-maker-oone-stand-a-chance-in-domestic-hi-end-market-with-its-flagship-product-oone-oneair/#comments Wed, 07 May 2014 10:48:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18694 With the boom of Chinese smartphone market and increase of market shares in low-end market, several domestic phone makers like ZTE, Lenovo and Huawei made forays into the more lucrative high-end smartphone arena, which has been occupied by foreign brands like Apple and Samsung. Shanghai-based smartphone maker OONE recently released a 3,299 yuan (around $530) flagship product […]]]>
OONE Oneair

With the boom of Chinese smartphone market and increase of market shares in low-end market, several domestic phone makers like ZTE, Lenovo and Huawei made forays into the more lucrative high-end smartphone arena, which has been occupied by foreign brands like Apple and Samsung. Shanghai-based smartphone maker OONE recently released a 3,299 yuan (around $530) flagship product OONE Oneair to continue this endeavor.

Enabled by Android 4.2.2-based custom UI, the smartphone features 5-inch display with a 720×1280 pixel resolution, 2GB RAM and 8-megapixel front and rear camera. The product is a 5.67mm ultrathin smartphone with a weight of 99g and an extremely slime design. It is available in three colors of blue, ivory white and champagne gold.

Although the company did not disclose the hardware specs of OONE Oneair, it is reported that it will be powered by MT6592 octa-core processor clocked at 2.0GHZ.

The first batch of 60,000 sets are now open for preorder on the company’s official website. Several other e-comerce sales channels like Tmall and JD will be added in the future. Deng Anming, vice president of the company, said OONE planned to open physical retail stores in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen in the second half of this year.

The high price of OONE may attributed in part to costs on design, in part to costs on its custom operating system, which is adapted to habits of Chinese users by CyanogenMod, a firmware developer for Android devices. It is reported that CyanogenMod will share the revenue with OONE based on shipment amounts.

As the trend of budget smartphone with high-end specifications is on the rise, Chinese smartphone users are offered more options than ever to enjoy smartphones with high performances at an affordable price. In addition to the more established budget smartphone makers like Xiaomi, Huawei, ZTE, Lenovo and OPPO, lots of new brands mushroomed to tap this market, such as OnePlus and IUNI. All these smarphone makers offers handsets that are not too shabby for its price tag of around 2,000 yuan, or even lower. In this case, OONE Oneair must offers more stories to attract the price-sensitive Chinese users from its cost-effective rivals.

image credit: OONE

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Alibaba Finally Files for IPO in US Market https://technode.com/2014/05/07/alibaba-finally-files-for-ipo-in-us-market/ https://technode.com/2014/05/07/alibaba-finally-files-for-ipo-in-us-market/#comments Wed, 07 May 2014 02:14:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18678 Alibaba Group finally filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to go public in the U.S. to raise up to $1 billion of funding. The amount is considered a placeholder number which will facilitate the calculation of exchange registration fees. Analysts expects this IPO to break Facebook’s record of $16.4 billion and marking one of the biggest […]]]>

Alibaba Group finally filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to go public in the U.S. to raise up to $1 billion of funding. The amount is considered a placeholder number which will facilitate the calculation of exchange registration fees. Analysts expects this IPO to break Facebook’s record of $16.4 billion and marking one of the biggest IPOs in American history, according to a recent poll by Bloomberg News, who valued the company at nearly $170 billion.

Founded by former English teacher Jack Ma in 1999, Alibaba has a mix of businesses, ranging from retail markets of Taobao, Tmall, Juhuasuan to global wholesale marketplaces of Alibaba.com and 1688.com, as well as global consumer market AliExpress and cloud computing services. Alibaba also runs China’s largest payment processor Alipay, which is not part of this IPO. But it is reported that Alibaba Group is in talks with major shareholders to regain a stake in the payment affiliate.

In the nine months ended December 31, 2013, Alibaba generated 40.5 billion yuan ($6.5 billion) of revenue and net income of 17.7 billion yuan ($2.9 billion), according to the prospectus. Alibaba’s revenue mainly comes from merchants through online marketing services, commissions on transactions and fees for online services. Other sources of revenue are fees from memberships and cloud computing services.

According to the prospectus, Jack Ma hold a 8.9% stake and Softbank owns a 34.4% stake in the company. Yahoo, once the largest shareholder of Alibaba, had owned up to 40% stake in the company for a $1 billion investment in 2005. Alibaba stated to buy back its stake held by Yahoo since 2011 and the latter now owned a 22.6% stake in Alibaba.

Alibaba’s submission of registration documents finally settled the buzz for the much-anticipated IPO of the Chinese e-commerce juggernaut. Alibaba once listed its B2B business on Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKSE) in 2007 for HK$ 11.6 billion, but the performance of the stock failed expectations thereafter. Alibaba then launched a privatization bid of nearly HK$19 billion and got delisted from HKSE in June 2012, seeking for an overall listing of the group by integrating B2B and C2B businesses.

Alibaba wavered between Hong Kong and the U.S. market for a long time and rumors regarding the matter ensued. The company finally settled on launching IPO in the U.S. market in May this year, among many factors, one reason that drive Alibaba to choose U.S. market is HKSE does not support dual-class stock structure.

Alibaba Info

image credit: Alibaba

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Online Food Ordering Service Ele.me Secures $80 Million Funding from Dianping https://technode.com/2014/05/06/online-food-ordering-service-ele-secures-80-million-funding-dianping/ https://technode.com/2014/05/06/online-food-ordering-service-ele-secures-80-million-funding-dianping/#comments Tue, 06 May 2014 08:17:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18660 Ele.me App Ele.me, an online food ordering service, announced today it has secured $80 million of funding from Dianping, China’s leading ratings and reviews service. Although the company did not disclose the stake Dianping going to take in it, Ele.me confirmed that the founding team will still be the controller of the startup. The two companies […]]]>

Ele.me App

Ele.me, an online food ordering service, announced today it has secured $80 million of funding from Dianping, China’s leading ratings and reviews service. Although the company did not disclose the stake Dianping going to take in it, Ele.me confirmed that the founding team will still be the controller of the startup.

The two companies also entered partnership to share user and merchant data and traffic, as well as to integrate food ordering services. Ele.me has had over 20,000 partner restaurants in 30 Chinese cities. The annual sales through Ele.me exceeded 1.2 billion yuan (around $192 million), according to the company.

However, the average price per order on the platform is only around 30 yuan ($4.8), mainly because the service first boomed among university students and its former focus on low-end catering market. The tie-up with Dianping is expected to introduce more middle-and high-tier partner restaurants and attract white-collar customers to the platform. Dianping also rolled out a food delivery channel last year.

The company just secured $25 million of Series C financing last November. With the new funding, the company’s market valuation is expected to reach $500 million, said Zhang Xuhao, co-founder of the company, at a recent interview.

According to data released by Ele.me, China’s total consumption amount on catering industry hit 450 billion yuan in 2013 and this figure is expected to reach 700 billion yuan by 2016 at an annual growth rate of 16%. Consumption amount for food delivering accounts for 10% of the total, which means that the market size of food ordering and delivering industy is expected to reach 70 billion yuan by 2016.

image credit: Ele.me

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Career Platform Zhaopin Files for IPO on NYSE to Raise $100 Million Funding https://technode.com/2014/05/06/career-platform-zhaopin-files-ipo-nyse-raise-100-million-dollars-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/05/06/career-platform-zhaopin-files-ipo-nyse-raise-100-million-dollars-funding/#comments Tue, 06 May 2014 04:21:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18644 China’s leading online recruitment platform Zhaopin has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “ZPIN” on NYSE to raise up to $100 million funds. As one of the pioneers in Chinese recruiting industry, Zhaopin, which means “hire” or “recruit” in Chinese, was founded in 1994 by Steven […]]]>

China’s leading online recruitment platform Zhaopin has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “ZPIN” on NYSE to raise up to $100 million funds.

As one of the pioneers in Chinese recruiting industry, Zhaopin, which means “hire” or “recruit” in Chinese, was founded in 1994 by Steven Chiu, etc. It is engaged in connecting users with relevant job opportunities throughout their career lifecycle with a special focus on educated and skilled users. The site claimed more than 74 million registered users as of 2013 and approximately 10.5 million job postings from 250K unique customers in the fiscal year ended June, 2013.

Zhaopin recorded $147 million of revenue in the fiscal year ended in June 2013. The company’s revenue mainly comes from online recruitment, campus recruitment, assessment and other human resources related services. For the same period, these four businesses accounted for 84.3%, 7.6%, 3.7% and 4.3% of the total revenue, respectively.

Principal shareholders of the company include Seek International, Australia’s largest online job site, and Cavalane Holdings, which own 79% and 19.3% of the company’s stake.

Over the past few years, online recruitment landscape in China has changed rapidly. More new recruiting platforms are challenging the dominance of the three traditional leading sites like Zhaopin, 51job and ChinaHr, with their focus on different groups of job seekers and integration of SNS features. On the other hand, several Chinese classifieds sites like Ganji and 58.com also provide recruiting services.

The rising recruitment services are chased by investors. Liepin, a recruiting services for top-tier talents, received $70 million of Series C funding this April. Neitui, a recruiting service focused on IT talents, announced 2.5 million yuan (around $407K) of angel investment last year. Crowdsourcing recruiting app Renren Headhunting raised two rounds of financing within five months last year. Moreover, career-focused social networking service Linkedin also landed in Chinese market this Feb.

Although the three traditional leading services still take a lion’s share in the market, they are lagging behind new competitors in terms of growth rate.

image credit: Zhaopin

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Tencent Releases IoV Plug-and-play Gadget Lubao Box https://technode.com/2014/05/05/tencent-releases-iov-plug-and-play-gadget-lubao-box/ https://technode.com/2014/05/05/tencent-releases-iov-plug-and-play-gadget-lubao-box/#comments Mon, 05 May 2014 09:23:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18609 At Global Mobile Internet Conference held today in Beijing, Tencent released its first ever Internet of vehicle (IoV) hardware Lubao Box. The product will be put into mass production at the end of June, said Ma Zhe, vice president of the company. Tencent added that Lubao Box will be sold both on e-commerce platforms and […]]]>
Lubao

At Global Mobile Internet Conference held today in Beijing, Tencent released its first ever Internet of vehicle (IoV) hardware Lubao Box. The product will be put into mass production at the end of June, said Ma Zhe, vice president of the company. Tencent added that Lubao Box will be sold both on e-commerce platforms and in 4S stores.

Users can plug the product into the OBD (on-board diagnostics) ports of their cars, where vehicle owner or repair technician can gain access to the current status of the vehicles. Powered by Bluetooth connectivity, the plug-and-play gadget can be thus connected to smartphones and drivers can check the status of their cars via Lubao, a compatible mobile app developed by Tencent.

lubao2

In addition, the service will also give suggestions and scores on the driving habits of users, who can share these scores to social networking platforms like, Tencent Weibo, WeChat and Sina Weibo.

At the same time, Tencent partnered with leading Chinese insurance company PICC and Shell Group to launch a car service platform. PICC will provide free roadside assistance to Lubao Box users, while both of the partners will offer Lubao Box users custom car maintenance services.

image credit: Tencent

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Join Us at Startup Acceleration Program Startupbootcamp FinTech in Shanghai and Beijing https://technode.com/2014/05/05/join-us-startup-acceleration-program-startupbootcamp-fintech-shanghai-beijing/ https://technode.com/2014/05/05/join-us-startup-acceleration-program-startupbootcamp-fintech-shanghai-beijing/#respond Mon, 05 May 2014 07:04:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18592 Startupbootcamp FinTech is a three-month acceleration program focused on financial and e-commerce innovations run by Startupbootcamp, a global accelerator for startups with a mentor and alumni network from more than 30 countries across the world. Startupbootcamp Fintech’s incubation program for this year will be kicked off on August 11 at London. Over 3 months, up to […]]]>
fintech

Startupbootcamp FinTech is a three-month acceleration program focused on financial and e-commerce innovations run by Startupbootcamp, a global accelerator for startups with a mentor and alumni network from more than 30 countries across the world.

Startupbootcamp Fintech’s incubation program for this year will be kicked off on August 11 at London. Over 3 months, up to 10 selected startups will receive €15K in cash per team as pre-seed investment, 4 months of free co-working space and over €450,000 worth of deals from sponsors and partners. The added value of Startupbootcamp Fintech is the pool of 100+ mentors who help startups by opening doors to customers, partners and investors, as well as exposure to 200+ Angels & VCs.

Startupbootcamp Fintech together with its Chinese partner TechNode is calling for domestic startups to join Startupbootcamp Pitch Day, an event to select promising teams for the incubation program to be launched in August London.

If you are interested in sharing your ideas and getting personalized feedbacks from mentors and other entrepreneurs, join the events in Shanghai on May 16 and in Beijing on May 31.

Please register by sending introduction of your startup to cafe@technode.com

Shanghai

Date: May 16th, 2014, 9AM-3:50PM

Venue: IPO Coffee, Innospace, No. 88 Jinjia Road, (near Daxue Road and Minzheng Road), Yangpu District

杨浦区创智天地IPO Coffee(锦嘉路88号,近大学路政民路)

Some mentors of the event come from Gobi Partners, Cyberagent, Silicon Valley Bank

Beijing

Date: May 31st, 2014, 9AM-3:50PM

Venue: The Node, Building A9,  751 D-Park, No.4 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District

朝阳区酒仙桥路4号751时尚设计广场A9-1楼极地国际创新中心

The schedules are the same for the two cities:

  • 09:00 – 09:30 Introduction SBC FinTech
  • 09:30 – 09:55 Team 1-5 pitches
  • 10:00 – 11:40 Team 1-5 mentorship
  • 11:45 – 12:30 Lunch
  • 13:00 – 13:30 Introduction SBC FinTech
  • 13:30 – 14:00 Team 6-10 pitches
  • 14:10 – 15:50 Team 6-10 mentorship
startupbootcamp

image credit: Startupbootcamp

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THRE3D, 3D Printing Product Directory, Aims to Make 3D Printing a Hobby for Everyone https://technode.com/2014/05/04/thre3d-3d-printing-product-directory-aims-make-3d-printing-hobby-everyone/ https://technode.com/2014/05/04/thre3d-3d-printing-product-directory-aims-make-3d-printing-hobby-everyone/#respond Sun, 04 May 2014 10:10:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18560 More and more startups, both domestic and global ones, are endeavoring to make affordable 3D printers for tech-savvy consumers, as 3D printing technology is moving from an expensive industrial process to a more consumer-based technology after years of rapid growth. THRE3D.com is an interactive directory for 3D printing products, projects and locations, navigating techies throughout […]]]>
Thre3d

More and more startups, both domestic and global ones, are endeavoring to make affordable 3D printers for tech-savvy consumers, as 3D printing technology is moving from an expensive industrial process to a more consumer-based technology after years of rapid growth.

THRE3D.com is an interactive directory for 3D printing products, projects and locations, navigating techies throughout a marketplace filled with 3D printing organizations and technologies. THRE3D enables users to both compare and review listings. Each product has its own custom forum for owners to collaborate and communicate on issues and improvements. The platform also planned to add video courses on 3D printing and to establish a call center.

The company was founded in the U.S. Feb last year by Roberto Contreras and Myles Lambert, two American youth who just got their degrees in Economics.

The startup is focused on the U.S. and European markets, because there are more DIY enthusiasts who keep an eye out for 3D printing products, said Roberto, adding that 3D printing technologies are still mainly applied for professional use in China, rather than for hobbies.

Although China is not an ideal target market for 3D printing technologies, it has abundant 3D printer manufacturers which can present streamlined products that boasts similar or the same qualities with their foreign counterparts.

In seek of more Chinese partners, THRE3D is now split between Beijing and across the U.S. All the full-time staff are in Beijing, while part time staff are based out of Houston, New York City and Boston. It has teamed up with several Chinese manufacturers, acting as the exclusive agency for their overseas promotion and branding campaigns.

According to data from research institute TMR, the global market size of 3D printing industry is $2.2 billion in 2012 and this figure is expected to reach $7.24 billion by 2019.

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Hong Kong Taxi-hailing App Taxiwise Acquired by Likeminded Booking Platform IKKY https://technode.com/2014/05/04/hong-kong-taxi-hailing-app-taxiwise-acquired-likeminded-booking-platform-ikky/ https://technode.com/2014/05/04/hong-kong-taxi-hailing-app-taxiwise-acquired-likeminded-booking-platform-ikky/#comments Sun, 04 May 2014 06:39:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18542 Hong Kong-based taxi-booking app Taxiwise has been acquired by Ikky, a Hong Kong company that specializes in bookings, for undisclosed amount. All intellectual property, infrastructure and content were acquired and the Taxiwise founders are joining the team of Ikky this month. Putting focus on cab reservation rather than the more popular on-demand taxi-hailing service, Taxiwise allows […]]]>

Hong Kong-based taxi-booking app Taxiwise has been acquired by Ikky, a Hong Kong company that specializes in bookings, for undisclosed amount. All intellectual property, infrastructure and content were acquired and the Taxiwise founders are joining the team of Ikky this month.

Putting focus on cab reservation rather than the more popular on-demand taxi-hailing service, Taxiwise allows users to book a taxi in advance for hours, days or simply to get picked up as they scheduled and at multiple locations. To make the tour more comfortable and trustworthy, profiles of the taxi drivers are also provided.

Taxiwise targets at expats and non-Cantonese speaking taxi riders who visit Hong Kong, a hot tourism destination which welcomes tens of millions of travelers per year. The app facilitates non-Cantonese speakers to book a sightseeing tour in Hong Kong, helping them to avoid the nuisance of reading the street names or complicated transportation routes.

The company was cofounded by Jean-Marc Ly and Truong Lam at the end of 2012, and took a third founder Lawrence Tse latter. The startup was a part of the very first AcceleratorHK cohort and has secured funding in the past from James Giancotti of BigColors, Felix Lam of Red Chapel Advisors and Stephen Forte – the founder of AcceleratorHK.

IKKY is a reservation platform which enables users to book all daily activities and services such as dinner reservations, doctor’s appointments, and taxi pick-ups. Along with instant confirmation and social media sharing capabilities, the IKKY also lets users to integrate booked activities into calendar, but the platform hasn’t launched yet.

While the war between taxi-booking apps is going nuclear in domestic market, Hong Kong battlefield for the same sector is hardly less crowded. In addition to Hong Kong startups like Taxi Hero and Flytaxi, Rocket Internet’s Easy Taxi and Alibaba-backed Kuaidi Dache also landed in Hong Kong to tap the market last year.

image credit: Taxiwise

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Xbox One to Enter Chinese Market This September, Finally https://technode.com/2014/04/30/xbox-one-to-enter-chinese-market-this-september-finally/ https://technode.com/2014/04/30/xbox-one-to-enter-chinese-market-this-september-finally/#comments Wed, 30 Apr 2014 09:51:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18513 BesTV and Microsoft jointly announced today that they will introduce Microsoft’s flagship game console Xbox One into Chinese market this September. The news finally settles loads of buzz heated up since the establishment of a joint venture E-Home Entertainment Development Co., Ltd. between BesTV and Microsoft and the lifting of bans on game consoles imposed […]]]>

BesTV and Microsoft jointly announced today that they will introduce Microsoft’s flagship game console Xbox One into Chinese market this September. The news finally settles loads of buzz heated up since the establishment of a joint venture E-Home Entertainment Development Co., Ltd. between BesTV and Microsoft and the lifting of bans on game consoles imposed in 2000.

Xie Enwei, senior VP of Microsoft Grater China, is named as the general manager of Microsoft’s Xbox Department China. In addition, he will also in charge of the joint venture. E-Home Entertainment will invest in an innovation project, helping game developers to develop and distribute games based on Xbox One platform.

Microsoft has sold out over 5 million sets of Xbox Ones in 13 countries since its debut at the end of last year, making it the most successful product of Xbox Series, according to the company. Xbox One is sold for $499.99 yuan in US market. Although the two companies did not disclose the price of Xbox One in China, some media reported that it is priced at 4,999 yuan (around $798).

The Chinese gaming industry had 490 million users and saw 38% in total revenue in 2013. Trigger by the huge market potential and ease of regulation curbs, a lot of companies set their eyes on game console sector.

Huawei showed off its homegrown game console Tron at the beginning this year and planned to ship it at around 1,200 yuan this May. ZTE The9, a joint venture co-founded by ZTE and online game company The9, also released a similar game console Fun Box this March.

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LINE Buddies Up with Wandoujia, Bidding Farewell to Qihoo 360 https://technode.com/2014/04/30/line-buddies-up-with-wandoujia-bidding-farewell-to-qihoo-360/ https://technode.com/2014/04/30/line-buddies-up-with-wandoujia-bidding-farewell-to-qihoo-360/#respond Wed, 30 Apr 2014 04:04:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18482 Chinese mobile search service Wandoujia announced today it has partnered with LINE, which will oversee the services and marketing activities of the Korean messaging app in Chinese mainland. In this cooperation, Wandoujia will provide technical supports to LINE’s services in China and the two companies will strengthen the localized features of LINE by integrating the brands and […]]]>
QQ20140430-11

Chinese mobile search service Wandoujia announced today it has partnered with LINE, which will oversee the services and marketing activities of the Korean messaging app in Chinese mainland.

In this cooperation, Wandoujia will provide technical supports to LINE’s services in China and the two companies will strengthen the localized features of LINE by integrating the brands and platform resources of both parties.

LINE entered Chinese market in 2012 through a one-year contract with Qihoo 360, which is responsible for promotion and operation of LINE’s services in local market. After announcing this tie-up, LINE expanded its cooperation with other partners like Baidu, 91, Alibaba.

It is not surprising for us to see the cooperation between LINE and Wandoujia, since the two parties has already kicked off partnership in September last year. Wandoujia, as an app distribution platform, shares similar target users with LINE. Back then, LINE said they will not suspend cooperation with Qihoo 360, which is still an important, but not sole partner of LINE in China.

Qihoo 360 announced today it maintained part of the cooperations with LINE after their contact expired, but it is no longer the operator of LINE’s service in China.

To tap Chinese market, LINE also cooperated with Uniqlo, a Japanese casual wear brand also popular in China.

LINE UNIQLO1

Claiming more than 400 million users globally, LINE recorded $335 million of revenue in 2013, of which 60% from gaming, 20% from paid emoticons, and 20% from official marketing accounts and brand sponsors, according to fiscal report of the company. As the first Asian messaging app that successfully monetized a large user base from paid emoticons, the market valuation of LINE stands at $14.9 billion.

image credit: LINE, UNIQLO

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Online Travel Journal 117go Secures $20 Million Series B Funding, Launches New Product https://technode.com/2014/04/29/online-travel-journal-117go-secures-20-million-dollars-series-b-funding-launches-new-product/ https://technode.com/2014/04/29/online-travel-journal-117go-secures-20-million-dollars-series-b-funding-launches-new-product/#comments Tue, 29 Apr 2014 06:12:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18464 Interface of Tao.117go Chinese trip journal and experience sharing service 117go received $20 million of Series B financing from Softbank China Venture Capital for user base expansion and branding (hat-tip to Tnooz). Before the announcement of this round, the company has raised previous rounds from Redpoint Ventures and Alibaba Group. 117go is a travel diary app supporting the sharing […]]]>
tao117go

Interface of Tao.117go

Chinese trip journal and experience sharing service 117go received $20 million of Series B financing from Softbank China Venture Capital for user base expansion and branding (hat-tip to Tnooz). Before the announcement of this round, the company has raised previous rounds from Redpoint Ventures and Alibaba Group.

117go is a travel diary app supporting the sharing of photos, locations, stories, among other things in a timeline. Launched in October 2011, the service now claimed millions of registered users, with the number of daily active users stands at more than 200K. Tang Yibo, former exec of Chinese leading online travel service Ctrip, joined 117go as president last year.

The company recently released  Tao.117go, a new app for tourism service reservation in travelling destinations. Under the slogan of “Travel Like a Local”, this app will recommend and help users to reserve selected travelling services based on LBS technologies. Travelers also can pay the service via WeChat payment or AliPay.

The company’s competitor Breadtrip has booked around $10 million in Series B financing led by CBC and followed by Vertex Venture, an existing investor who injected $2 million in Series A. Another similar trip story sharing platform Chanyouji also received undisclosed amount of funding from Ctrip last year.

image credit: 117go

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Kuxuexi: MOOC Platform for K-12 E-learning https://technode.com/2014/04/29/kuxuexi-mooc-platform-k-12-e-learning/ https://technode.com/2014/04/29/kuxuexi-mooc-platform-k-12-e-learning/#comments Tue, 29 Apr 2014 03:36:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18450 The concept of MOOC or ‘massive open online course’ as they’re commonly referred to is not new to Chinese techies as more domestic enterprises like NetEase, Guokr and Douban are tapping online education sector with this model. The contents offered by these platforms are mostly focused on higher education courses, mainly because the model entails a self-learning process in nature and the students […]]]>
Kuxuexi Pic

The concept of MOOC or ‘massive open online course’ as they’re commonly referred to is not new to Chinese techies as more domestic enterprises like NetEaseGuokr and Douban are tapping online education sector with this model. The contents offered by these platforms are mostly focused on higher education courses, mainly because the model entails a self-learning process in nature and the students in basic education phases hardly have the capability or the motivation to learn by themselves.

Kuxuexi, a MOOC e-learning platform, is applying the model to K-12 sector. It offers free video courses for K-12 students on subjects that are included in existing school system, like mathematics, physics, chemistry, English, biology and geography. In order to motivate and train the self-learning capabilities of students, the platform is trying to make the courses interesting and fun by integrating contents relevant to daily life and topics students are interested in, said Li Xuhui, founder of the company in an interview with TechNode.

In addition, parents will be able to follow the learning process of their children to either prepare or review the courses with them, rather than hiring private teachers, he said.

Li Xuhui, a former employee at video site Youku-Tudou, started the company in 2013 under the inspiration of US non-profit education website Khan Academy, as well as the demand for educating his child as a caring father. The site’s syllabus design team mainly consisted of students and teachers from renowned universities in China, like Fudan University and Shanghai Jiaotong University.

In addition to the website, the company recently launched apps for both iOS and Android terminals. Li noted that they planned to introduce more interactive features in the future to enhance user engagement.

Gong Haiyan, the founder of US-listed online dating service Jiayuan, also unveiled a K-12 education platform Tizi after releasing online English teaching service 91Waijiao last year. Li added the two services are different in that Kuxuexi is based on video courses, while Tizi is focused on teacher-student interaction based on questions.

image credit: Kuxuexi

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Meitu Releases A Self-portrait Smartphone Meitu Phone 2 https://technode.com/2014/04/28/meitu-releases-self-portrait-smartphone-meitu-phone-2/ https://technode.com/2014/04/28/meitu-releases-self-portrait-smartphone-meitu-phone-2/#comments Mon, 28 Apr 2014 11:20:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18415 Targeting at female selfie-lovers, Chinese photo editing and sharing app developer Meitu launched the second generation of its photography-focused smartphone, one year after launch of the first generation product Meitu Kiss Phone. At the launching event, the company also released an Android-based system MeiOS and a short video app MeiPai. The selling point of the […]]]>
Meitu Phone2 pic

Targeting at female selfie-lovers, Chinese photo editing and sharing app developer Meitu launched the second generation of its photography-focused smartphone, one year after launch of the first generation product Meitu Kiss Phone. At the launching event, the company also released an Android-based system MeiOS and a short video app MeiPai.

The selling point of the phone is 13M front/rear camera. Featuring a 4.7-inch screen, Meitu Phone 2 is powered by MeiOS, Fujitsu Milbeaut image processor and MT6592 octa-core processor. The smartphone will be sold at 2,199 yuan (around $ 350) for 16G version, 2,399 yuan for 32G version and 2,999 yuan for a limited version.

Taking the helm of Meitu almost one year ago, Cai Wensheng, a legendary angel investor in Chinese tech industry, adopted for the company a strategy similar to Xiomi’s – to gain users with comparatively good-value-for-money smartphones, build ecosystem with software and make profits from consumer-facing paid services and business-facing offerings. Like Xiaomi’s MIUI, Meitu released a homegrown operating system MeiOS to complement its product portfolio.

As of April this year, the company has 17 photo-centered apps and PC-based tools, including several popular ones of Meituxiuxiu, Meitukankan, etc. Meitu now claims around 740 million registered users, of which 422 million come from mobile terminals, while the number of daily active users stands at around 23.58 million.

image credit: Meitu

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UCWeb and Alibaba Take on Mobile Search with New Joint Venture, Shenma https://technode.com/2014/04/28/ucweb-and-alibaba-take-on-mobile-search-with-new-joint-venture-shenma/ https://technode.com/2014/04/28/ucweb-and-alibaba-take-on-mobile-search-with-new-joint-venture-shenma/#comments Mon, 28 Apr 2014 06:53:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18383 Interface of Shenma Chinese mobile Internet software service UCWeb and e-commerce giant Alibaba launched today sm.cn, a mobile search service developed by Shenma Inc., a joint venture established by the two companies in July last year. UCWeb and Alibaba reportedly hold a 70% and a 30% stake in the joint venture respectively. CEO and chairman of […]]]>
Shenma Pic

Interface of Shenma

Chinese mobile Internet software service UCWeb and e-commerce giant Alibaba launched today sm.cn, a mobile search service developed by Shenma Inc., a joint venture established by the two companies in July last year.

UCWeb and Alibaba reportedly hold a 70% and a 30% stake in the joint venture respectively. CEO and chairman of UCWeb Yu Yongfu will serve as chairman of Shenma, while Liang Jie, CTO of UCWeb, will serve as president.

Search is one of the best means when it comes to monetizing users/traffic, so Qihoo 360 and the like would eventually tap into search.

UCWeb has always been an important access for the mobile service of searching engine Baidu. Around 35% of Baidu’s mobile search service comes from UC, said CEO of UCWeb in June 2012. It has long been rumored since 2012 that Baidu planned to acquire UCWeb to complement browser service, but no agreement has been reached between them.

However, UCWeb’s tie-up with Alibaba to start a home-grown mobile search service indicates the mobile browser developer is parting with Baidu to adopt a model similar to Qihoo 360’s in an attempt to pocket searching service revenues itself.

With a big plan for Mobile Internet, Alibaba has made a series of strategic investments in UCWeb as early as 2007 and Jack Ma, chairman of Alibaba Goup, joined UCWeb’s board of directors last year. Moreover, the technical team and business of Yisou, the video searching service of Alibaba, has been integrated into UCWeb last year.

Alibaba’s revenues on PCs mainly come from searching marketing and display ads on its marketplaces and a contextual ad network, and the launch a mobile search service may help the e-commerce giant to accelerate its commercialization drive. This tie-in will also fuel the zeal for its upcoming IPO in US stock market.

“Until now, mobile-first search did not exist.” said Yongfu. “Every commonly used search engine in the marketplace today was developed for the desktop, and offers a mobile interface that is only skin deep. By taking a mobile-first approach to search, Shenma will integrate search technology into mobile experiences, transforming the user experience and creating new revenue channels.”

In addition to web searching, Shenma also offers mobile searching service in different verticals, like App, shopping, and fictions. It is expected to add voice and picture search in the future.

China’s mobile search market is valued at $1.3 billion this year and $2.5 billion in 2015, according to research institute iResearch. Triggered by the huge market potential, SoftBank, an investor of Alibaba, led a $120 million round in Wandoujia, a Chinese company that also puts focus to mobile search business.

image credit: Shenma

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Uber Celebrates 100-Cities Milestone as Launching Service in Beijing https://technode.com/2014/04/25/uber-celebrates-100-cities-milestone-launching-service-beijing/ https://technode.com/2014/04/25/uber-celebrates-100-cities-milestone-launching-service-beijing/#comments Fri, 25 Apr 2014 11:25:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18367 Uber, the four-year-old US ride-hailing service, is rolling out service in Beijing, meaning that it is now available in 100 cities around the world. As part of a quiet “soft” landing in Beijing, Uber invited Hugo Barra, head of International at Xiaomi and a leading technology blogger Keso to kick off the service. The minimum […]]]>

Uber, the four-year-old US ride-hailing service, is rolling out service in Beijing, meaning that it is now available in 100 cities around the world. As part of a quiet “soft” landing in Beijing, Uber invited Hugo Barra, head of International at Xiaomi and a leading technology blogger Keso to kick off the service. The minimum fare for Uber’s service in Beijing is 30 yuan ($4.80).

Hugo tries Uber on its first day in Beijing

After landing in Chinese market last summer in Shanghai, the fast-growing company has launched service in Chinese cities of Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Guangzhou, relatively on track with its ambitious plan of landing in one Chinese city every three months. To tap Chinese market, Uber now supports AliPay, a popular payment service under Chinese Internet giant Alibaba, and launched a Chinese name “优步” (a great step forward in Chinese).

Uber

AliPay Paymen Interface of Uber

In addition to Chinese market, Uber also launched hiring spree to accelerate its expansion into Asian markets. It is now available in more than 10 Asian cities, including Bangalore, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, New Delhi, and Seoul.

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Chinese Smart Wristband Gyenoo One Launches Fundraising Campaign on Crowdfunding Site Pozible https://technode.com/2014/04/25/chinese-smart-wristband-gyenoo-one-launches-fundraising-campaign-on-crowdfunding-site-pozible/ https://technode.com/2014/04/25/chinese-smart-wristband-gyenoo-one-launches-fundraising-campaign-on-crowdfunding-site-pozible/#respond Fri, 25 Apr 2014 08:07:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18349 Chinese smart wristband Gyenno One launched a fund-raising campaign on Aussie crowdfunding site Pozible to raise 10,000 yuan ($1,600) of funding. As one of the first Chinese projects to launch crowdfunding campaign on the platform, Gyenno One smashed its funding target within minutes after going live. As of the time of writing it had hit 508,729 yuan and there are 27 […]]]>

Chinese smart wristband Gyenno One launched a fund-raising campaign on Aussie crowdfunding site Pozible to raise 10,000 yuan ($1,600) of funding. As one of the first Chinese projects to launch crowdfunding campaign on the platform, Gyenno One smashed its funding target within minutes after going live. As of the time of writing it had hit 508,729 yuan and there are 27 days left in the campaign.

During the crowdfunding period, the product is offered in two colors of black and white at a minimum price of 399 yuan (around $64), while the official price tag is 1,099 yuan.

Gyenno One is a wrist-based fitness tracker features buttonless TapTap control system, allowing users to monitor physical activity, check time and battery info with double tap. The gadget claimed more than 15 days of battery life though 1.5 hour fast wireless charging, eliminating the clutter of cables, which in turn, guarantees its waterproof functionalities.

Gyenoo Charging

Wireless Charging

As a fitness tracker, Gyenno One can log the sleeping hours of users and provide an accurate assessment of the sleeping patterns. Gyenno X technology automatically detects and switches between exercise and sleeping modes, eliminating the need to change the mode manually.

The company is supported by a group of six experienced hardware developers headed by Ren Kang, a former employee of Huawei. Targeting at IOT industry, the company plans to develop other supporting hardware after the launch of Gyenno One.

With investments from the founding team and an angel investor, Ren Kang told TechNode frankly the real initiative that drives Gyenno to launch fundraising campaign on Pozible is not the lack of capital, but to “bring the imaginative works of Chinese makers to the world stage.” In this case, the crowdfunding platform seems to have turned into a marketing rather than fundraising platform.

Founded in 2010, Pozible has raised around $19 million funding for more than 6,000 projects from users scattered in 104 countries all over the world. The site has launched a Mandarin version and an international team is available now to help Chinese crowdfunders to fully engage a western market.

image credit: Gyenno One

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Online Food Ordering Site Meican Nets New Capital Injection for Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/04/24/online-food-ordering-site-meican-nets-new-capital-injection-for-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/04/24/online-food-ordering-site-meican-nets-new-capital-injection-for-series-b-funding/#comments Thu, 24 Apr 2014 07:39:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18296 Chinese online food ordering site Meican raised undisclosed amount of additional funding for B Series from Trust Bridge Partners, which is also the investor of Douban, Dianping and Renrendai. The capital injection is received shortly after the company announced this March around $10 million of Series B financing led by Nokia Growth Partners (NGP) and […]]]>

Chinese online food ordering site Meican raised undisclosed amount of additional funding for B Series from Trust Bridge Partners, which is also the investor of Douban, Dianping and Renrendai.

The capital injection is received shortly after the company announced this March around $10 million of Series B financing led by Nokia Growth Partners (NGP) and followed by Series A investor KPCB. Deng Yuanyun, board member and general manager of NGP joined Meican’s board after Series B. The angel round was secured from ZhenFund founded by renowned angel investor Xu Xiaoping.

Launched in 2011, Meican, “delicious food” in Chinese, allows users to build a custom homepage by adding their locations and favorite restaurants, facilitating the food ordering process. In addition, users who have placed orders on the platform can check real-time tracking data of each order, like whether the restaurant have started to cook the dishes or the estimated arrival time.

The service has nearly 30,000 partner restaurants in four first-tier cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, receiving 15 orders per user per month on average, said Zhao Xiao, CEO of the company. Meican’s monthly revenue stood at around 1 million yuan (around $1.6 million), mainly comes from commissions charged on restaurants.

Online food ordering services is becoming an indispensable part of urban life, especially for white collars who are too busy to cook themselves proper meals. The huge market leads to the emergence of strings of food ordering and delivering services, which are chased by venture capitalists. Startups like Ele.me, Etaoshi and Daojia.com all received different amounts of funding last year. On the other hand, Chinese leading rating and review service Dianping and Alibaba also added food delivery services to tap this market.

image credit: Meican

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[Update] Alibaba Starts to Sells First Ever Private Brand Hardware Tmall Box for 299 Yuan https://technode.com/2014/04/24/update-alibaba-starts-to-sells-first-ever-private-brand-hardware-tmall-box-for-299-yuan/ https://technode.com/2014/04/24/update-alibaba-starts-to-sells-first-ever-private-brand-hardware-tmall-box-for-299-yuan/#comments Thu, 24 Apr 2014 02:55:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18278 Alibaba starts to sell set-top-box Tmall Box today on its B2C e-commerce site Tmall. This is the first time for the Chinese Internet giant to commercialize private brand hardware, although it has released last year another set-top box Wasu Rainbow together with Wasu Media, one of the several state-authorized content providers. [Update] 5,000 Tmall Boxes […]]]>

Alibaba starts to sell set-top-box Tmall Box today on its B2C e-commerce site Tmall. This is the first time for the Chinese Internet giant to commercialize private brand hardware, although it has released last year another set-top box Wasu Rainbow together with Wasu Media, one of the several state-authorized content providers.

[Update] 5,000 Tmall Boxes were snapped up by consumers within 0.8 seconds and all 50,000 Tmall.com set-top boxes have been sold out today, according to the latest sales stats Alibaba released at around 6:00pm on the same day.

The product is priced at 299 yuan (around $48), while 10,000 Tmall credits will be distributed to each buyer, who can purchase 100 yuan worth of products on Tmall.

The gadget is a 108×108×24.2mm box weighted 0.6 kg. It is powered by dual core 1.5GHz Cortex-A9 processor and run on Alibaba’s Yun OS 1.2.0 system. The product has 1GB RAM, 4GB internal storage and the ability to take in up to 32GB micro SD cards.

Tmall Box has integrated the contents of Youku Tudou, iQiyi, Sohu Video, Xunlei, LeTV, PPTV and WASU, etc. It also supports online shopping from Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms and paying bills through Alipay.

According to the company, overall 530K sets of Tmall Box were given away to Tmall VIP members for public testing since the end of last year.

image credit: Tmall

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Tencent Leads $35 Million Series C Funding in US Web Creation Platform Weebly https://technode.com/2014/04/23/tencent-leads-35-million-dollars-series-c-funding-us-web-creation-platform-weebly/ https://technode.com/2014/04/23/tencent-leads-35-million-dollars-series-c-funding-us-web-creation-platform-weebly/#comments Wed, 23 Apr 2014 08:34:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18220 Weebly, an US website-building service, announced that it has secured $35 million of Series C funding from Chinese Internet giant Tencent and existing investor Sequoia Capital at a market valuation of $455 million. The funds will be used to expand into new markets and increase investment in R&D, according to the company. Weebly, a 8-year-old […]]]>
Weebly

Weebly, an US website-building service, announced that it has secured $35 million of Series C funding from Chinese Internet giant Tencent and existing investor Sequoia Capital at a market valuation of $455 million. The funds will be used to expand into new markets and increase investment in R&D, according to the company.

Weebly, a 8-year-old startup founded by three Penn State students, helps customers, especially small businesses, to build professional-looking websites with drag-and-drop tools, where no coding and technical skills are required. Weebly claimed to hosts more than 20 million sites that are seen by 175 million visitors every month.

Amid the shopping spree of Chinese Internet juggernauts, Tencent has invested $2 billion in overseas markets during the first ten months of 2013 and a large part of which went to startups.

Tencent, which has an office in the U.S. to oversee potential acquisition or investment targets, is expanding its portfolio of fast-growing U.S. startups. The startups it has invested in include, mobile-messaging app Snapchat, e-commerce site Fab, mobile game maker Plain Vanilla, mobile gameplay recording service Kamcord, and game developer Activision Blizzard.

image credit: Weebly

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Outbound Tourism Site Shijiebang Fully Acquires Social Travel Service Tukeq https://technode.com/2014/04/23/outbound-tourism-site-shijiebang-fully-acquires-social-travel-service-tukeq/ https://technode.com/2014/04/23/outbound-tourism-site-shijiebang-fully-acquires-social-travel-service-tukeq/#comments Wed, 23 Apr 2014 03:46:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18208 Shijiebang, an online outbound travel platform, recently fully acquired social tourism service Tukeq and released a new product for outbound travelers. According to Zhang Heping, founder of Shijiebang, the contents of Tukeq will be integrated to Shijiebang in the future. He added that the acquisition of Tukeq, a service that has accumulated substantial mobile users, will facilitate […]]]>
Shijiebang pic

Shijiebang, an online outbound travel platform, recently fully acquired social tourism service Tukeq and released a new product for outbound travelers.

According to Zhang Heping, founder of Shijiebang, the contents of Tukeq will be integrated to Shijiebang in the future. He added that the acquisition of Tukeq, a service that has accumulated substantial mobile users, will facilitate Shijiebang’s expansion into mobile market. Zhang noted the company planned to acquire another one or two self-guided tour services this year.

Founded in May 2011, Tukeq started as a social travel web and mobile app that helps people organize their travel plans by sharing, following and viewing other’s plans. After receiving funds from Innovation Works latter in the same year, the company pivoted to travel guide sector and released a dedicated app. Tukeq claimed millions of users and contents on more than 26,000 overseas scenic spots.

At the same time, Shijiebang released a new outbound travel product which it claimed to has combined the merits of both package tours and self-guided tours. The product offers custom schedules designed by travel experts to tourists who can start their journeys any time they want. It also provides ticket, hotel reservation, visa and car rental services at preferential prices.

Shijiebang has received nearly $10 million of Series A financing from Fosun Capital, ChinaRock and Yahoo founder Jerry Yang last year.

image credit: Shijiebang

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Perfect World Acquires 30 Mn Shares in Shanda Games for $100 Million https://technode.com/2014/04/22/perfect-world-acquires-30-mn-shares-shanda-games-100-million/ https://technode.com/2014/04/22/perfect-world-acquires-30-mn-shares-shanda-games-100-million/#comments Tue, 22 Apr 2014 09:32:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18179 Chinese online game developer and operator Perfect World (NASDAQ: PWRD) announced that it has entered into a share purchase agreement with Chinese MMO rival Shanda Games (NASDAQ: GAME) to acquire overall 30 million class A ordinary shares in the latter with $100 million cash from Shanda Interactive Entertainment Limited, the controlling shareholder of Shanda Games. […]]]>

Chinese online game developer and operator Perfect World (NASDAQ: PWRD) announced that it has entered into a share purchase agreement with Chinese MMO rival Shanda Games (NASDAQ: GAME) to acquire overall 30 million class A ordinary shares in the latter with $100 million cash from Shanda Interactive Entertainment Limited, the controlling shareholder of Shanda Games. The purchase is expected to finalize in 30 days.

In addition, Perfect World also joined the consortium intended for Shanda Games’ privatization drive. The consortium has submitted a preliminary non-binding proposal letter dated January 27, 2014 to the board of directors of Shanda Games at a proposed price of $3.45 per class A or class B ordinary share, or US$6.90 per ADS at a market valuation of $1.9 billion.

Perfect World will take a 5.6% stake in Shanda Game based on its currently valuation of $1.81 million. Both of the parties noted that the investment dose not indicate any cooperation in gaming business operations.

As gaming concept becomes increasingly popular in China, Chinese stock market gains more attraction for US-listed Chinese gaming companies to return to domestic market. Chinese online game operator Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA) has launched a privatization bid in November last year and Shanda Games followed the suit to launch privatization plan in January this year.

For Perfect World, which has lagged behind in going private, the competition in domestic gaming market will be as fierce as ever and an alliance with leading peer will create synergistic effects. Moreover, a minor stake in Shanda Games is a less risky step to test domestic market.

On the other hand, the tie-up may also offer solid supports to Shanda Games. In addition to fend against rivalry from mobile gaming companies, Shanda Games, the major revenue source of its parent company Shanda Interactive, is encumbered by the burdens from other businesses under the group, like  video site Ku6 and online literature platform Cloudary.

The revenue of Perfect World Group mainly comes from investments in film and television industry, while gaming sector only accounts for 30%-40% of the total revenue. To cooperate with a company that has wider business coverage in entertainment industry may help Shanda Games to consolidate its foothold in returning to domestic market.

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AliPay Now Available on Another Japanese E-commerce Giant Rakuten https://technode.com/2014/04/22/alipay-now-available-another-japanese-e-commerce-giant-rakuten/ https://technode.com/2014/04/22/alipay-now-available-another-japanese-e-commerce-giant-rakuten/#comments Tue, 22 Apr 2014 03:46:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18162 AliPay, the payment arm of Chinese Internet titan Alibaba, reached cooperation with Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten to added AliPay as a payment option for purchases on Rakuten Global Market, the cross-border e-commerce unit of the Japnese company. The service is currently available in 250 stores on the platform and will be expanded to all the stores in the […]]]>
Rakuten

AliPay, the payment arm of Chinese Internet titan Alibaba, reached cooperation with Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten to added AliPay as a payment option for purchases on Rakuten Global Market, the cross-border e-commerce unit of the Japnese company. The service is currently available in 250 stores on the platform and will be expanded to all the stores in the future.

Rakuten is the second Japanese e-commerce service that AliPay announced cooperation this month. Last week, AliPay announced it will be added as payment option on Yahoo! Shopping Japan.

Japan has become a popular marketplace for Chinese netizens who want to purchase products overseas, largely due to the depreciation of JPY. The total consumption of Chinese online shoppers in Japanese e-commerce sites surged more than 300% YOY in 2013.

As of the first quarter of this year, AliPay is available in more than 100 Japanese e-commerce sites and more than 1,000 platforms globally, according to data from the company.

Purchasing products or services from overseas markets has become a trend among domestic online shoppers in recent years. To tap the growing market, Alibaba also launched Tmall International, a site dedicated for business entities outside China, where overseas brands and merchants can sell their products directly to Chinese online shoppers.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk Visits China Amid Customer Complaint Turmoil https://technode.com/2014/04/21/tesla-ceo-elon-musk-visits-china-amid-customer-complaint-turmoil/ https://technode.com/2014/04/21/tesla-ceo-elon-musk-visits-china-amid-customer-complaint-turmoil/#comments Mon, 21 Apr 2014 10:44:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18138 Tesla Founder & CEO Elon Musk at a Beijing Event Today Electric vehicle maker Tesla grabbed the attentions of both Chinese media and car buyers since the very beginning of its entry to Chinese market. Elon Musk, founder and CEO of the Silicon Valley-headquartered company, is recently on his tour to China, which he once called […]]]>

Tesla Founder & CEO Elon Musk at a Beijing Event Today

Electric vehicle maker Tesla grabbed the attentions of both Chinese media and car buyers since the very beginning of its entry to Chinese market. Elon Musk, founder and CEO of the Silicon Valley-headquartered company, is recently on his tour to China, which he once called a “wild card” in the company’s future. But he seems to have picked a bad timing, since Tesla’s progress in China seems going quite well with its innovative business model and lower-than-expected price until an recent turmoil which sends the public to question Tesla’s develop sustainability in China.

A group of 23 Chinese Tesla buyers from cities other than Beijing and Shanghai has filed a class action against the company addressed to Tesla Automobile Sales (Beijing), Chinese retailer of Tesla, and CFO of the company Deepak Ahuja. Tesla is accused of consumer fraud or false advertising for changing the shipment order of the preordered automobiles without noticing the customers.

According to the complaint, Tesla promised consumers to ship products according to the payment order of deposit which amounts to 250K yuan ($40,150). However, customers in Beijing and Shanghai received emails to take their preordered cars recently, while buyers in areas other than these two cities are left behind.

In a respond email from Wu Bixuan, Global Vice President and head of Tesla China:

  • Tesla insist on providing every Chinese customer proper charging devices before shipping our products in a bid to guarantee user experience. Currently, we are training lots of third-party electrician teams, which will offer custom charging plans and professional charging service to every user. We are accelerating the construction of service networks. Tesla planned to launch charging services in several large cities in China, like Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu and Guangzhou.

The contradiction between the two parties lies on that customers think Tesla can ship the cars before the construction of power stations and networks are completed, while the car manufacturer insists on shipping them after the construction.

It is reported that Tesla has recorded nearly 5,000 orders from Chinese market, of which at least 200 to 300 are from cities other than Beijing and Shanghai.

EM

Musk said today that China is an important market for Tesla and the company planned to invest heavily in the market to construct power infrastructures. He added that all the power stations will use solar rather than coal powers. In addition, Tesla will offer customize service to Chinese users in the future and will manufacture cars in China in the next three to four years, he said.

Although the explanation from Tesla seems rational to some extent, the lack of their internal communication which caused the generation of so many orders in areas they can yet provide complete service and the postponed construction of infrastructures in areas other than Beijing revealed some problems of Tesla in China. The construction of Tesla’s second Chinese sales outlet in Shanghai, which is scheduled to open in the Q1 this year, lagged behind the plan.

Tesla China’s senior management has undergone major shakeup this year. Tesla China’s general manager Zheng Shunjing, who once served as China country manager of Bentley Motors, left the company on April 1. He is replaced by Wu Bixuan, former senior manager of Apple China.

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Travel and Expense Management Solution Baoku Announces Nearly $10 Mn of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/04/21/travel-expense-management-solution-baoku-announces-nearly-10-mn-dollars-series-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/04/21/travel-expense-management-solution-baoku-announces-nearly-10-mn-dollars-series-funding/#comments Mon, 21 Apr 2014 06:45:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18128 Baoku, Chinese business travel & expense management solution provider, recently confirmed on its microblog that the startup raised nearly $10 million of Series A funding from CBC and AsiaInfo Linkage without disclosing the detailed amount of the financing. Founded in 2007, the Beijing-based SAAS startup builds web-based corporate travel management systems that ensure policy and […]]]>
Baoku

Baoku, Chinese business travel & expense management solution provider, recently confirmed on its microblog that the startup raised nearly $10 million of Series A funding from CBC and AsiaInfo Linkage without disclosing the detailed amount of the financing.

Founded in 2007, the Beijing-based SAAS startup builds web-based corporate travel management systems that ensure policy and regulatory compliance, sales platforms for airlines and traveling agencies, as well analytics systems.

The company currently provides services to more than 2,000 Chinese companies – including Air China, AsiaInfo Linkage, medical equipment manufacturer Smith & Nephew, helping them save up to1.8 billion yuan ($290 million) in travel expenses, according to Baoku. The startup is also the ticket platform developer of Air China, Shenzhen Airlines and Hainan Airlines, etc.

The company’s sales exceeded 1.8 billion yuan last year. In addition to web-based solutions, Baoku also launched an app to tap mobile market, but the firm will continue to focus on 2B business.

Acording to data from Global Business Travel Association, spending on business travel originating in China hit $235 billion in 2013 and China is expected to overtake the U.S. to become the world’s largest market for business travel this year.

image credit: Baoku

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Chinese Real Estate Service Leju Debuts on NYSE https://technode.com/2014/04/18/chinese-real-estate-service-leju-debuts-on-nyse/ https://technode.com/2014/04/18/chinese-real-estate-service-leju-debuts-on-nyse/#comments Fri, 18 Apr 2014 03:41:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18044 Leju (NYSE:LEJU), once a wholly-owned subsidiary of real estate service E-House (NYSE:EJ) and former property channel of Sina, got listed on the New York Stock Exchange for overall $100 million of funding this Thursday, the same day of Sina Weio’s debut on Nasdaq Capital Market. The company has filed for an US IPO this March. […]]]>
Lejupic

Leju (NYSE:LEJU), once a wholly-owned subsidiary of real estate service E-House (NYSE:EJ) and former property channel of Sina, got listed on the New York Stock Exchange for overall $100 million of funding this Thursday, the same day of Sina Weio’s debut on Nasdaq Capital Market. The company has filed for an US IPO this March.

Leju sought to raise as much as $194 million by selling 17.70 million shares for $10-$12 each, but only saw demand through underwriters for 11.50 million shares at the low end of the offer at $10 apiece.

Leju shares opened slightly higher at $10.80 and faded to below the initial offering price later. But the shares closed 18.6% higher at $11.86 per share on the first day of trading, sending the company’s total valuation to $1.42 billion.

According to the prospectus, the company booked $335 million of revenue in 2013, nearly doubling the figure as compared with $171 million one year earlier. The capital will be used in market exploration and construction of technical infrastructures, according to the company.

Chinese Internet giant Tencent acquired 15% of the fully diluted shares of Leju with $180 million in mid-March. Moreover, the two companies has inked strategic cooperation program to jointly develop software and tools dedicated for mobile ecommerce solutions for real estate industry. They also planned to explore additional opportunities for potential cooperation by leveraging Tencent’s social communications platform such as WeChat, and/or other Tencent internet properties.

image credit: Sina

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[Update] Sina Weibo Downsized NASDAQ IPO at $16.26 Apiece https://technode.com/2014/04/17/update-sina-weibo-downsized-nasdaq-ipo-at-16-26-dollars-apiece/ https://technode.com/2014/04/17/update-sina-weibo-downsized-nasdaq-ipo-at-16-26-dollars-apiece/#comments Thu, 17 Apr 2014 11:15:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=18017 Sina Weibo, Twitter-like service under Chinese online media company Sina (NASDAQ:SINA), got listed on Nasdaq Capital Market on April 17 under the ticker symbol of “WB” after it filed for the long-rumored IPO in mid-March. [Update] Sina Weibo downsized its IPO and the company’s shares opened at $16.26 on the first day of its trading, 4.3% lower than […]]]>
Sina Weibo Listing

Sina Weibo, Twitter-like service under Chinese online media company Sina (NASDAQ:SINA), got listed on Nasdaq Capital Market on April 17 under the ticker symbol of “WB” after it filed for the long-rumored IPO in mid-March.

[Update] Sina Weibo downsized its IPO and the company’s shares opened at $16.26 on the first day of its trading, 4.3% lower than its IPO price. Shares of Weibo then surged 19.06% to close $20.24 per share, totaling an market valuation of more than $4 billion.

The company issued 16.80 ADSs at the bottom of its planned range of $17 apiece to raise $285.6 million of capital. The company had planned to sell 20 million ADSs at between $17 and $19 per share.

Sina held a 77.6% stake in Weibo before the IPO. Another big shareholder of the microblog service is Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, which invested $586 million for an 18% stake in Weibo one year earlier.

Alibaba, which is also preparing for an US IPO, now holds a 19.3% stake in Weibo and it has filed to increase its shares to 32% in March, while Sina’s stake is expected to reduce to 56.9%.

According to the prospectus, $250 million of the funds raised in the IPO will be used to pay back the loans from Sina, while rest of the capital will be injected in technology and R&D.

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Recruiting Service Liepin Secures $70 Million of Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/04/16/recruiting-service-liepin-secures-70-million-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/04/16/recruiting-service-liepin-secures-70-million-series-c-funding/#comments Wed, 16 Apr 2014 07:10:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17976 Chinese recruitment service Lieping announced that it raised $70 million of Series C financing led by Warburg Pincus and followed by existing investor Matrix Partners. The fund will be used in R&D and platform construction, according to Dai Kebin, founder and CEO of the company. Liepin is focused on providing recruiting services for top-tier talents. Different from most of the traditional […]]]>
Liep Pic

Chinese recruitment service Lieping announced that it raised $70 million of Series C financing led by Warburg Pincus and followed by existing investor Matrix Partners. The fund will be used in R&D and platform construction, according to Dai Kebin, founder and CEO of the company.

Liepin is focused on providing recruiting services for top-tier talents. Different from most of the traditional recruiting sites which serve as information distribution platforms and gain revenues from advertisements, Liepin gives priorities to providing paid and offline services to customers.

Liepin targets at three kinds of clients, headhunters, talents (2C) and enterprises (2B). The company’s revenue mainly comes from 2B (post jobs, download resumes, advertisers) and 2C (send resumes, get contacts of enterprises or headhunters) businesses. The service for headhunters is free because their existence accelerates the collection of user data and brings more opportunities to users, according to the company.

Founded in 2006, the Beijing-headquartered startup has branched into 11 cities countrywide, including Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Tianjin, Wuhan, etc. The company claimed more than 11 million registered users and around 100K headhunters as of present.

To face the challenges from Linkedin’s entry in to Chinese market, Liepin, a company once learned from Linkedin to integrate social networking features, changed its realm name from Lietou.com to liepin.com earlier this year to unify its name and realm name for future branding.

image credit: Liepin

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Yesmyweb: Web Creation Platform Building Online Presence for Small Businesses https://technode.com/2014/04/16/yesmyweb-web-creation-platform-building-online-presence-for-small-businesses/ https://technode.com/2014/04/16/yesmyweb-web-creation-platform-building-online-presence-for-small-businesses/#comments Wed, 16 Apr 2014 03:01:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17949 Online presence is increasingly important for businesses to improve brand exposure, reach larger user base, receive customer feedbacks, increase sales, reduce marketing costs, etc. However, it is not easy for small businesses to build their online presences due to the lack of web technologies, online marketing experiences, or sufficient budget to hire digital agencies to […]]]>
Yesmyweb pic

Online presence is increasingly important for businesses to improve brand exposure, reach larger user base, receive customer feedbacks, increase sales, reduce marketing costs, etc. However, it is not easy for small businesses to build their online presences due to the lack of web technologies, online marketing experiences, or sufficient budget to hire digital agencies to do so.

Yesmyweb is an online platform where small businesses can create professional looking websites without any technical skills at affordable prices. After signing up at Yesmyweb, users can choose a pre-loaded template that suits the positioning of their products. The layout of the templates are kept flexible to fit for the needs of different users. The contents can be edited easily by adding all kinds of information like product introduction, contacts, or uploading pictures or videos to explain their businesses or services.

The sites created are accessible and friendly to use in all screen sizes. They are also search engine friendly, making the contents exposed in all relative search terms as far as possible.

In addition to the web creation features, the platform also offer cloud service to user’s sites as well as website statistics like number of pageviews. The service is priced at $4 for Starter Plan to create up to one website and $20 for Pro Plan to create up to 10 websites.

The startup was founded in 2014, is based in W+K+ (Open Office project of Wieden+Kennedy Shanghai), and is led by Howell, Gordon, and Lu.

image credit: Yesmyweb

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BTC China Debuts Mobile Bitcoin ATM Picasso https://technode.com/2014/04/15/btc-china-debuts-mobile-bitcoin-atm-picasso/ https://technode.com/2014/04/15/btc-china-debuts-mobile-bitcoin-atm-picasso/#respond Tue, 15 Apr 2014 10:08:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17917 Bitcoin ATMs sprung up on the streets of several big cities worldwide, like New York, Toronto, Zurich, etc. Chinese bitcoin trading platform BTC China recently took the wraps off mobile Bitcoin ATM Picasso in Shanghai, making the metropolis the second Chinese city to get a Bitcoin ATM. As we reported earlier, HKCEx has launched Bitcoin […]]]>
BitcoinATM

Bitcoin ATMs sprung up on the streets of several big cities worldwide, like New York, Toronto, Zurich, etc. Chinese bitcoin trading platform BTC China recently took the wraps off mobile Bitcoin ATM Picasso in Shanghai, making the metropolis the second Chinese city to get a Bitcoin ATM. As we reported earlier, HKCEx has launched Bitcoin ATMs in Hong Kong earlier this year. But BTC China is taking bitcoin ATMs mobile.

BTC China users can purchase bitcoins on Picasso ATM by scanning QR codes displayed in their Picasso Wallets: put RMBs in and the machine will transfer users the equivalent amount of bitcoin to their Picaso Wallets. The ATM will also show the real-time exchange rates between bitcoin and RMB. However, the machine now only supports bitcoin purchase, not bitcoin redemption.

To guarantee the financial security of users, each deal has to be confirmed by both the sellers and buyers. Picasso ATM supports all the major currencies and offers service in several languages.

The sprawling development of Chinese bitcoin market slowed down since the end of last year due to cautions against risk of crypto currencies from Chinese authorities. But Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank Of China, recently said that the government will not ban the trading of bitcoins.

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Tourism Marketplace BeMyGuest Helps You to Travel off the Beaten Track https://technode.com/2014/04/15/tourism-marketplace-bemyguest-helps-travel-beaten-track/ https://technode.com/2014/04/15/tourism-marketplace-bemyguest-helps-travel-beaten-track/#respond Tue, 15 Apr 2014 05:48:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17888 Singapore-based startup BeMyGuest is a free-to-list online travel platform, which aggregates local tourist activities from both individuals and SMEs, and then distributes them to different marketing channels. Clement Wong, CEO and founder of BeMyGuest, started the company in October 2012. He thinks that tourist activities, like local cooking classes or private guides, are the final frontiers of […]]]>
IMG_17042014_104341

Singapore-based startup BeMyGuest is a free-to-list online travel platform, which aggregates local tourist activities from both individuals and SMEs, and then distributes them to different marketing channels.

Clement Wong, CEO and founder of BeMyGuest, started the company in October 2012. He thinks that tourist activities, like local cooking classes or private guides, are the final frontiers of travel distribution, cause when we look at the airlines, hotels, car rentals, everything has been pretty much digitalized, standardized and distributed. However, the only way we can find local tourist activities now is through search engines, he said.

BeMyGuest aims to build a platform to bring local tourist activities together and help the tourist suppliers to further the market beyond their own websites. The contents from suppliers will be digitalized and standardized. Before being distributed to all kinds of marketing channels, the content will be rewritten by professional travel writers and optimized for search engines.

Most of BeMyGuest’s customers are women (accounting for 75% of the total) aged between 25 to 35 from Southeast Asia. The site is primarily targeted at female customers because they are usually the ones who make travel decisions, Wong added. The website is filled with visuals and beautiful scenic spot pictures to fit the online purchasing habits of female users.

The platform will integrate tourist activities at wholesale prices and pocket a 20% commission fee from the suppliers. BeMyGuest is now No.1 in Southeast Asia in terms of inventory number and website traffic, said Wong. He added that the company has recorded more than $300K of sales in 2013 and this figure is expected to hit $1 million this year.

BeMyGuest expanded at an accelerated speed since last year. It has received $402,000 angel fund in October 2013 and more funding from South Korea’s online travel agency Tidesquare. The site also acquired a competitor Indiescapes earlier this year. To further the expansion, the company is making forays to Northeast Asia market, hoping to capture Korean, Japanese and Chinese markets within the next 12-24 months, said Wong.

The company is supported by a 20-member group headed by Clement Wong, who once served in research and marketing roles at Euromonitor International, Travelport and PhoCusWright, and Blanca Menchaca, former global head of online marketing at travel search site of Wego. It is planning to setting up offices in Philippine, China and Thailand in the near future.

BeMyGuest just emerged as winner out of hundreds of startups from all across Asia at the ChannelNewsAsia Startup Competition.

Wong

Clement Wong, CEO & Founder of BeMyGuest

image credit: BeMyGuest

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P2P Lending Service Ppdai Gets Millions of Dollars Series B Funding for Risk Control https://technode.com/2014/04/14/p2p-lending-service-ppdai-gets-millions-dollars-series-b-funding-risk-control/ https://technode.com/2014/04/14/p2p-lending-service-ppdai-gets-millions-dollars-series-b-funding-risk-control/#comments Mon, 14 Apr 2014 08:49:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17863 Chinese P2P lending service Ppdai recently announced that it has raised millions of dollars in Series B financing led by LightSpeed China Partners, Noah Private Wealth Management and existing investor Sequoia Capital. The company has received $25 million of Series A funding from Sequoia Capital in last December. The capital raised this time will be […]]]>

Chinese P2P lending service Ppdai recently announced that it has raised millions of dollars in Series B financing led by LightSpeed China Partners, Noah Private Wealth Management and existing investor Sequoia Capital. The company has received $25 million of Series A funding from Sequoia Capital in last December. The capital raised this time will be used in the credit system and team construction.

Ppdai was founded in 2007 and claimed to be the first P2P lending platform in China. A differentiator of Ppdai from its rivals is that it focused squarely on online lending rather than integrating online and offline lending services like Renrendai, etc. The inflow and outflow of the capital are all completed online. Its target customers are individuals and small- and medium-sized enterprises.

According to Zhang Jun, CEO of the company, the primary problems for P2P lending platforms are risk control and credit system construction. In the past seven years, Ppdai has collected large chunks of data, based on which the company can help customers to prevent the financial risks, said Zhang. He added that the platform’s default rate is less than 1.5% and bad debt rate is 1.52%.

LightSpeed China Partners is also the investor of several other online financial companies, including 360Rong, BTC China and 99Bill. The venture capital company said it invested in Ppdai because the online platform is more effective in attracting funds and has access to grassroots users.

image credit: Ppdai

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Online Cosmetics Retailer Jumei Files for US IPO to Raise up to $400 Million https://technode.com/2014/04/14/online-cosmetics-retailer-jumei-files-us-ipo-raise-400-million/ https://technode.com/2014/04/14/online-cosmetics-retailer-jumei-files-us-ipo-raise-400-million/#comments Mon, 14 Apr 2014 06:41:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17845 Chinese online cosmetics retailer Jumei has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “JMEI” to raise up to $400 million funds. The site offers branded beauty products, fashionable apparel and other lifestyle products by leveraging current sales formats of curated sales, online shopping mall and flash sales. Founded in […]]]>
Jumei

Chinese online cosmetics retailer Jumei has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “JMEI” to raise up to $400 million funds.

The site offers branded beauty products, fashionable apparel and other lifestyle products by leveraging current sales formats of curated sales, online shopping mall and flash sales.

Founded in March 2010, the company’s total net revenues increased by 970.4% from US$21.8 million in 2011 to US$233.2 million in 2012 and further increased by 107.1% to US$483.0 million in 2013. After swinging to profitability to record a net profit of US$8.4 million in 2012, Jumei has booked profits for seven straight quarters, according to the document.

The company now claimed more than 10.5 million users and has worked with approximately 1,700 suppliers and third-party merchants in 2013, including brand owners, distributors, resellers and certain exclusive product suppliers.

The company aims to raise US$ 400 million of funds in the IPO. Lefeng (aka LAFASO), an arch-rival of Jumei, sold a 75% stake in the company to Chinese online discount retailer VIPShop (NYSE: VIPs) earlier this year for $US 132.5 million.

image credit: Jumei

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What’s Shanda’s GEAK Watch2 Will Be Like, Running on Android Wear? https://technode.com/2014/04/11/whats-shandas-geak-watch2-will-be-like-running-on-android-wear/ https://technode.com/2014/04/11/whats-shandas-geak-watch2-will-be-like-running-on-android-wear/#comments Fri, 11 Apr 2014 06:25:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17781 Leaked Photo of GEAK Watch2 With the boom of smart wearable concept led by smartwatches, Google recently released an operating system “Android Wear” for smart wearable gadgets, aiming to take control of the burgeoning market. The new system dedicated to make wearables awesome attracted several leading players in this battlefield onboard. Motorola and LG released […]]]>

Leaked Photo of GEAK Watch2

With the boom of smart wearable concept led by smartwatches, Google recently released an operating system “Android Wear” for smart wearable gadgets, aiming to take control of the burgeoning market. The new system dedicated to make wearables awesome attracted several leading players in this battlefield onboard. Motorola and LG released products powered by the system, while Samsung and Sony are poised to follow the suit.

TechNode got a chance to talk with Mr. Xu, product manager of GEAK Watch, the smartwatch brand under Shanda and also one of the first Chinese smartwatches that are powered by Android system, about their next generation product GEAK Watch2.

The Android 4.1-enabled GEAK Watch1 recorded more than 300K shipments since its launch in June 2013. The smartwatch maker planned to stick to Android and use Android Wear system for its next generation product, he hinted, adding that the release of Android Wear will attract more smartwatch brands to the growing ecosystem.

However, there are still some hard nuts to crack before they can use the system. The user experience of Google’s service in China can not be guaranteed, because a lot of its services are blocked here, like Google Play and Google Plus. Android Wear is based on the voice control service of Google Now, which is unavailable for Chinese users due to the same reason. GEAK have two options, either to customize and adapt the system to Chinese market, or to develop a ROM based on Android Wear, he said.

According to Xu, the battery life of GEAK Watch2 will be greatly enhanced with the emergence of low battery consumption processors and operating systems. GEAK Watch2 is also expected to feature a curved screen, a camera, interchangeable wrist straps with sensors to monitor heart beats or blood pressures, etc. Moreover, the company is considering to release several versions for GEAK Watch2 to cater for the needs of different groups of people.

Putting emphasis on time management and health monitoring, GEAK Watch is developed as an independent mobile gadget with Internet connection through WiFi, rather than accessories to smartphones, said Xu.

Most of the smartwatches currently available on the market feature square screens, Xu thinks that smartwatches with round dial plates will become a trend this year.

Xu noted that all these features are still in development. Although there are already some leaked pictures of GEAK Watch2, it seems that we have to wait for its official release in Q3 this year to know what’s the smartwatch will be like exactly. The product is expected to be sold for around 2,000 yuan (around $320), the same price for its predecessor.

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6degrees, A Self-Updating Phonebook that Connects All Your Relations at Fingertips https://technode.com/2014/04/11/6degrees-self-updating-phonebook-connects-relations-fingertips/ https://technode.com/2014/04/11/6degrees-self-updating-phonebook-connects-relations-fingertips/#comments Fri, 11 Apr 2014 01:50:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17774 As Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy proposed in his six degrees of separation theory, any two people in the world are separated by no more than a chain of 6 acquaintances. 6degrees, a Singapore-based phonebook app, is named after the theory and aims to make connections simple. According to Niranjan Rao, founder of 6degrees, one of […]]]>
6d

As Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy proposed in his six degrees of separation theory, any two people in the world are separated by no more than a chain of 6 acquaintances. 6degrees, a Singapore-based phonebook app, is named after the theory and aims to make connections simple.

According to Niranjan Rao, founder of 6degrees, one of the amazing things about modern life is that we have all our relationships, like families, friends, colleagues, at our fingertips. However, it is also very easy to lose contacts of all the relations because our phone contacts are currently offline.

The only way to update contact information like email address, phone number, house address is to send mass messages, even if you are already connected on other social networking services, like Facebook, Twitter. It is a messy affair to send such messages and your friends also have to update these information manually. That’s how you lose touch with friends, said Rao.

6degrees is a personal contacts manager, allowing users to update their information on friends’ phones whenever they change their contact details- and vice-versa, provided that they are also using the same app. Moreover, the app will backup contacts on the cloud to avoid the mess caused by loss of phones. It also has a feature which helps users to merge or delete duplicate contacts on their phones.

Another interesting feature of 6degrees is the people finder. Normally, when users search people on their phones, it will only show contacts stored in the phonebook, that’s your first degree of contact. 6degrees will show the contacts of your friends’ friends to expand the social circle. Users can require the contact of a certain person from mutual friends.

As for privacy control features, users can hide their contacts or create a trust list of people who have access to their contacts.

“Just like your can search for people, you also can search for businesses, like cafes, convenience stores, etc. This is great for small businesses, because now people can search them not from some separate app but from their own phonebook”, Rao added.

In the last six weeks, 6degrees recorded more than 6,000 downloads from 80 countries in seven languages of English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Spanish for Latin America and Portuguese in Brazil, and Arabic for middle east, said Rao. He added that the biggest markets for the app are US, India (English-only), Brazil and the Middle East with the languages of English, Portuguese and Arabic.

With an Android and web version already available for users, the iOS version is coming next week and the windows phone version is expected to be released by the end of May, Rao confirmed.

6degrees is incorporated in December last year in Singapore and Bangalore by Niranjan Rao, an engineer-MBA with many years experience in investment industry, and Arun Samudrala, who has over 13 years experience in the field of technology, including eight in Silicon Valley.

image credit: 6degrees

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While Other Startups Flock to English Learning Arena, Live It China Takes a Different Path https://technode.com/2014/04/10/while-other-startups-flock-to-english-learning-arena-live-it-china-takes-a-different-path/ https://technode.com/2014/04/10/while-other-startups-flock-to-english-learning-arena-live-it-china-takes-a-different-path/#comments Thu, 10 Apr 2014 01:25:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17742 As increasing numbers of people started to take courses online rather than offline, language learning, an important part of online learning witnessed exponential growth. Live It China is focused on this arena, but it give priorities to Chinese learning for foreigners live in China rather than the more popular English learning. It is a social network […]]]>
Live It China

As increasing numbers of people started to take courses online rather than offline, language learning, an important part of online learning witnessed exponential growth. Live It China is focused on this arena, but it give priorities to Chinese learning for foreigners live in China rather than the more popular English learning. It is a social network and marketplace for language learners and providers to connect by leveraging smart technologies and filters to find perfect match for the users. Julian Gaertner, CEO and co-founder of Live It China, spoke to TechNode about the Hong Kong-based startup.

When the site was established for what initiatives?

The first versions of LiveitChina.com, were established in 2011 because we realized that learning Chinese can, against all prejudices, be easy and greatly rewarding. From our respective experiences in learning Chinese and knowledge-sharing with other learners, Dan (Daniel Ropski, COO, Co-founder) and I saw a future for Chinese learning by running a free and open social media platform for Chinese language learners; one that enabled users to share their learning experiences with each other and highlight the best opportunities. The aim was (and continues to be) to empower language learners and help them make the most effective decisions regarding their choice of local language schools, tutors, and language partners. With this we can guide our users through the learning process from start to finish. Gaining motivation and opportunities to practice — or “live the language” as we like to call it! – is a very important first step to learning a new language. Currently, we are focusing on making this feature really slick for our users: bringing together the best and like-minded language partners to facilitate each other’s learning.

Just as Confucius says: “三人行,必有我师焉” (where there are three people, one of them can be my teacher), Live It China helps you to find out the best Language Partner.

Live It China aims to help language learners to find the ideal language partners, like schools, tutors and language exchange partners. Currently users only can seek language partners on the site, what’s your future plan in exploring the other two sectors for schools and tutors?

We see ourselves as an all-in-one platform for language learners to make the most informed and appropriate choices to learn Chinese. As such schools and tutors are a very important part of the Live It China experience and those features will be launched very soon. We believe that schools are a great way to learn the basics and theory in Chinese, and a good way to start learning a language. Tutors offer a more flexible and personalized solution to language learning based on your interests. Both options complement very well our language partners that are a genuine immersion and real life experience as well as a good source of mutual motivation. We will be looking to partner with the best language schools and tutors, so naturally we want to highlight these services and deals to our users.

Does language learners have to pay for their partners? or the benefit is mutual for both of the parties who can teach each other the language they are good at?

Our site is a free and open platform for language learners to meet and start practicing a language with each other. Our aim is to facilitate this interaction and bring together the best language partners keen on learning, practicing and improving their conversation skills. We want to create a community of language learners that are motivated to help each other towards the same objective: learning a language and also the culture around it.

Please tell us a bit about the Live It China business model?

So at Live It China our focus is on a niche group of people, the Chinese Language Learners. Our job is to provide them the best opportunities to learn, whether it’s through like-minded Language Partners, Tutors and/or Schools. Students benefit because they no longer have to keep searching the web and notice boards in real life to find the right fit for them. And at the same time language service providers are given a platform to promote their skills and services to a dedicated and enthusiastic audience. Our platform provides an overview of different possibilities to start your language journey and offers interesting discounts, while service providers such as schools and tutors can use Live It China as an additional promotion channel to reach more students.

Who are your potential competitors, and what’s your difference with them?

As an online platform, we don’t compete with schools or other service providers. However, a number of online language learning platforms have sprung up in recent years. Most of them aim to create animated or gamified virtual learning environments where the learner interacts with the system. There is no clear market leader at the moment and none of these sites effectively bridge online learning with our real lives. Our concept focuses on real interactions between people, whereas the site acts as a facilitator for knowledge transfer.

Please introduce your team.

Live It China is composed of a multicultural group of young tech-savvy guys and successful language learners from different horizons and backgrounds. They have working experience in various industries such as major media groups, web development and branding, IT consulting, governments, public relations and creative agencies.

Actually, the company has offices in the Philippines and Hong Kong but we are planning to be present in Mainland China by the end of this year.

Live It China mainly focused on markets in Hongkong, Shenzhen, Zhuhai etc. what’s your plan for markets around the country and overseas market?

For us, Hong Kong is the ideal location to launch our platform. The city’s role as the bridge between China and the world, its cultural diversity and well-established ICT infrastructure, creates a form of global citizenship that is worth spreading. Most of our users are language learners, enthusiastic about learning Chinese and understand the potential for using technology to help with the learning process. At the same time we also reach Chinese users who are interested in learning different languages such as English, French, German or Spanish. We mostly help expatriates and overseas university students in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Macau and Zhuhai who need a companion to start their journey in learning Chinese. Essentially we are looking to bring real life learning Chinese to you anywhere in the world.

A lot of online education companies have raised funds recently, but most of them are targeted at Chinese learners who plan to learn foreign languages. Does that give a push to Chinese learning market? What’s your prospect for the online education market?

The Chinese learning market has been growing substantially since 2010. Online education cannot be a replacement for real interaction between learners and this is especially true when learning a language. Nevertheless, technology can help bring together complementary needs and exchanging what you have against what you need. We believe technology can be a tool for knowledge transfer, especially during the learning process, we are just scratches the surface on this.

Technology is also a great way to bring together the ideal language learners, we can match location, languages and even commitment to learning.

What’s your furture plan for Live It China?

One important upcoming release is an improved matching algorithm to bring together ideal language partners.

Another release will be to facilitate language exchange with a learner-optimized translator to allow language partners to communicate and express themselves in another language. The records of the conversation can be used as a digital footprint that you can always go back to, to jog your memory (or inspire new ones)!

We will continue to bring out new features that innovate on ways to facilitate interactions between language learners, to make it more meaningful and conducive for learning.

image credit: Live It China

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TapTalents: A Personalized On-the-Job Training Platform https://technode.com/2014/04/09/taptalents-personalized-job-training-platform/ https://technode.com/2014/04/09/taptalents-personalized-job-training-platform/#comments Wed, 09 Apr 2014 03:26:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17717 For most enterprises, the effects of their expensive training projects for the newly recruited employees are not satisfactory, because the training contents may not applicable to their actual works, moreover, the knowledge acquired are easily forgotten without constant use. TapTalents, a Singapore-based startup, helps enterprises to easily add and deliver various personalized training contents to […]]]>
TapTalents

For most enterprises, the effects of their expensive training projects for the newly recruited employees are not satisfactory, because the training contents may not applicable to their actual works, moreover, the knowledge acquired are easily forgotten without constant use.

TapTalents, a Singapore-based startup, helps enterprises to easily add and deliver various personalized training contents to busy remote workers on their existing mobile devices, introduced Loh Mun Yew, CEO of TapTalents.

The individual employees can learn a new skill while travelling, like how to sell a new product, how to perform a new procedure, how to pitch correctly, or show the training materials full of product details directly to the customers on the worksite. So the workers can learn while they work, and work while they learn.

In addition to delivering the latest contents (texts, images, videos etc) specific to the employees’ tasks, the platform also collects real-time feedbacks from the workers so that the content can be refined for maximum training effectiveness.

TapTalents encourages interaction and collaboration among workers who can share contents with their colleagues. The platform will also track, analyze and recommend relevant contents to workers with similar preferences to speed up knowledge discovery.

Targeted at large-scale enterprises that have high training budgets, the company is now providing services to Fuji Xerox, Santosa and telecom carrier SingTel. The service is priced at SGD10-15 (around $8-$12) per employee per month according to different size of the companies.

“We are not here to replace traditional training services, but to enhance the training effects by transferring the knowledge from classroom to the field”, said Loh Mun Yew.

The company was founded under a 5-month incubation project April 2013. After the project was finished, it was selected in the Singapore-based accelerator Joyful Frog Digital Incubator (JFDI.Asia) for another three months.

During the 7-year working experience in Information Development Authority of Singapore, Loh Mun Yew, founder and CEO TapTalents, spotted the needs for different training experiences in his discussions with lots of large enterprises. Then, he started TapTalents last year with his friend Rendy Ferixsen, now CTO of the company who has more than ten years of experience in telecommunication and billing industry.

image credit: TapTalents

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[Infographic] Why 8/10 Businesses Fail https://technode.com/2014/04/08/infographic-810-businesses-fail/ https://technode.com/2014/04/08/infographic-810-businesses-fail/#respond Tue, 08 Apr 2014 10:20:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17705 It is natural for the ever-changing tech industry to see startups come and go. As China-based startup database Itjuzi has shared with us, several once prominent startups died in 2013. But the crucial point here is that are there any generalizations for the new startups to avoid failure and maintain sustainability? CHINACCELERATOR, a Shanghai-based startup […]]]>

It is natural for the ever-changing tech industry to see startups come and go. As China-based startup database Itjuzi has shared with us, several once prominent startups died in 2013. But the crucial point here is that are there any generalizations for the new startups to avoid failure and maintain sustainability? CHINACCELERATOR, a Shanghai-based startup incubator, made an infographic to address this problem based on the timeline of failures and proposed some suggestions as well.

For more please click on the image below.

Why 8_10 Businesses Fail copy

Image Credit: CHINACCELERATOR

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Online Tour Service Tuniu Files for IPO on NASDAQ to Raise up to $120 Million https://technode.com/2014/04/08/online-tour-service-tuniu-files-ipo-nasdaq-raise-120-million-dollars/ https://technode.com/2014/04/08/online-tour-service-tuniu-files-ipo-nasdaq-raise-120-million-dollars/#comments Tue, 08 Apr 2014 06:21:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17694 Chinese travel service Tuniu has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “TOUR” to raise up to $120 million funds. Tuniu offers travel services including organized tours and self-guided tours, and combined air ticket and hotel booking. The company’s business overlaps with that of the other US-listed Chinese […]]]>
Tuniu Pic

Chinese travel service Tuniu has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for IPO under the ticker symbol of “TOUR” to raise up to $120 million funds.

Tuniu offers travel services including organized tours and self-guided tours, and combined air ticket and hotel booking. The company’s business overlaps with that of the other US-listed Chinese online travel services like Ctrip (NASDAQ:CTRP) and eLong (NASDAQ:LONG), but Tuniu claimed that it distinguished itself from other services with its special focus on leisure travelers.

Before the IPO, the company’s board members and senior executives hold an 86.4% stake in the firm on aggregate, of which 10.9% is controlled by Yu Dunde, founder and CEO of Tuniu.

The company’s revenue reached 1.96 billion yuan in 2013, higher than 1.12 billion yuan in 2012 and 772 million yuan in 2011. Its revenue mainly comes from package tours, which account for more than 90% of the total revenue (1.89 billion yuan in 2013, 1.07 billion yuan in 2012, 751 billion in 2011).

Tuniu booked net loss of 91.9 million yuan, 107.2 million yuan and 79.6 million yuan (US$13.2 million) in 2011, 2012 and 2013, respectively.  Its gross profit rate stood at a relative low level of 6.2% in 2013, although that is up from 3.5% in a year earlier.

Founded in 2006, the company has raised $60 million in Series D from Temasek and existing investor DCM last September. The company’s investors in previous rounds include Gobi Partners and Sequoia.

As China tech stocks performed pretty well in the US stock markets last year, strings of Chinese tech companies flocked to the US stock market since beginning of this year, including online retailer JD.com, Sina Weibo and Kingsoft Subsidiary Cheetah Mobile.

image credit: Tuniu

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Monetizing Your Loyalty and Card Programs at Giift.com https://technode.com/2014/04/04/monetizing-your-loyalty-and-card-programs-at-giift-com/ https://technode.com/2014/04/04/monetizing-your-loyalty-and-card-programs-at-giift-com/#comments Fri, 04 Apr 2014 06:10:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17659 With hundreds of loyalty and card programs out there, keeping on top of your accumulated points, rewards and travel miles can be a real challenge. Giift.com a Singapore-based startup established in 2012, aims to address that problem. Labeled itself as the “LinkedIn of gift cards and loyalty programs”, Giift.com is set to integrate the accumulated rewards, […]]]>

With hundreds of loyalty and card programs out there, keeping on top of your accumulated points, rewards and travel miles can be a real challenge. Giift.com a Singapore-based startup established in 2012, aims to address that problem.

Labeled itself as the “LinkedIn of gift cards and loyalty programs”, Giift.com is set to integrate the accumulated rewards, points and miles on various programs into one place.

Upon registration, users may start building their portfolio by adding miles, loyalty programs, gift cards and memberships. Once added, the dashboard gives you an overview of all the programs and cards you hold, and their value. All of these programs can be redeemed online via access from the dashboard.

Giift1

Another notable functionality of Giift.com is the ability to trade the cards and programs under your portfolio for cash or your preferred cards and loyalty programs. Moreover, users also can share interesting offers and promotion activities with their friends.

The site claimed to have integrated 1,200 loyalty and card programs, including 500 track balance programs in more than 50 countries. Giift.com is currently available in three languages: English, Chinese (Mandarin) and French.

The company was co-founded by Pascal Xatart, CEO of the company who has over 15 years of entrepreneurial experience in software and technology, Laurent Xatart and Jean Herbière.

Giift.com now has more than 20 full-time employees with offices in Singapore, Beijing, New York and Paris. It has received $5.3 million capital from founders and private investors.

image credit: Giift

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[Infographic] How to Pitch A VC with 9 Steps https://technode.com/2014/04/04/infographic-how-to-pitch-a-vc-with-9-steps/ https://technode.com/2014/04/04/infographic-how-to-pitch-a-vc-with-9-steps/#respond Fri, 04 Apr 2014 01:45:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17649 Image Credit: CHINACCELERATOR]]>
How to pitch a VC

Image Credit: CHINACCELERATOR

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Wall of Sport to Make Your Sports Watching Experience Different https://technode.com/2014/04/03/wall-of-sport-to-make-your-sports-watching-experience-different/ https://technode.com/2014/04/03/wall-of-sport-to-make-your-sports-watching-experience-different/#comments Thu, 03 Apr 2014 08:15:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17626 Tadeusz Jankowski, CEO of Wall of Sport The fast approaching Brazilian World Cup to be kicked off this July is definitely beyond exciting for sports fans that have waited for the gala for four years. Wall of Sport, a Singapore-based social sports insight website, may bring more fun to the month-long sports holiday. Wall of […]]]>

Tadeusz Jankowski, CEO of Wall of Sport

The fast approaching Brazilian World Cup to be kicked off this July is definitely beyond exciting for sports fans that have waited for the gala for four years. Wall of Sport, a Singapore-based social sports insight website, may bring more fun to the month-long sports holiday.

Wall of Sport is a social sports platform that integrates live streaming contents from content providers. Sport fans can get instant 24/7 access to an exciting sports community where they can share their passion for sports via either mobile devices or PCs. For traditional sports program broadcasters who see decreasing revenues due to fierce competition from online video services, Wall of Sport can provide second screen experiences to increase the engagement of their audience before, during and after the live game.

What’s distinguish Wall of Sport from other online sport streaming services is that it provides live data feeds, probability ratings, betting odds, and full social media integration, introduced Tadeusz Jankowski, founder of the company.

The prediction of results is based on three kinds of algorithms: 1. Algorithm powered by chunks of sports data to analyze the strength of defense/ attack, goal numbers, home/away advantages. 2. Rating system to evaluate the strength of teams that do not play each other very often (like Brazil and Germany). 3. Algorithm based on actual betting odds from 60 betting companies over the world. The site is linked to betting websites where sports fans can go bet if they want.

With the three algorithms, Wall of Sport covers a lot of games in the fields of soccer (led by FIFA World Cup), hockey, baseball, basketball, football, formula 1, tennis and cricket.

Wall of Sport

The company also planned to issue a virtual currency for fans who do not want to bet to enjoy the excitement and the opportunity to show off their capabilities in predicting the game results accurately. The users can bet with the virtual currency and the names of the best better will be display on the leader board.

The company’s revenue mainly comes from advertising, virtual currency, affiliate gaming commission, merchandising and premium SMS.

Targeting China as No. 1 market, the Chinese version (www.wallofsport.cn) of the one-year-old platform is currently going through ICP approval process. It is in discussion with Chinese content providers like SMG, Guangdong TV, LeTV, PPTV and Chinese lottery and betting services of 500.com and mcp888.com.

Tadeusz, a co-founder of the company, graduated from University of Chicago and worked 15 years in Nokia. The other two co-founders are Toumas and Marcin, who oversee sport betting and algorithm development business respectively. Supported by a 12-member team, the company has branched into Finland, Singapore, Indonesia and planned to set up an office in China.

Wall of Sport has received pre-seed investment and planned to raise $500k to$1 million seed funding for improvement of the platform and marketing.

image credit: Wall of Sport

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Viber Out Comes to Windows Phone 8 as Viber Continues to Focus on Cross-Platform Support https://technode.com/2014/04/03/viber-comes-windows-phone-8-viber-continues-focus-cross-platform-support/ https://technode.com/2014/04/03/viber-comes-windows-phone-8-viber-continues-focus-cross-platform-support/#respond Thu, 03 Apr 2014 00:54:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17600 Viber, a mobile communications platform offering free messaging and HD-quality phone calls, announced today the release of Viber 4.1 for Windows Phone 8, bringing “Viber Out” calls to the platform for the first time. With this new release, Viber users on Windows Phone 8 can make calls to their friends and contacts who have landlines […]]]>

Viber, a mobile communications platform offering free messaging and HD-quality phone calls, announced today the release of Viber 4.1 for Windows Phone 8, bringing “Viber Out” calls to the platform for the first time.

With this new release, Viber users on Windows Phone 8 can make calls to their friends and contacts who have landlines or phones that don’t have Viber. Additionally, the update brings several key Viber features to the mobile Microsoft platform and expands the functionality of the app, including sending video messages, sending multiple photos at the same time, and hands-free Bluetooth support.

Viber just added the Viber Sticker Market to Windows Phone 8 platform in the 4.0 version released in Feb. this year. The Viber 4.1 version for Android, iPhone and Desktop was launched together with the Viber Out feature in December last year.

“With the addition of this critical feature to our Windows Phone 8 version, we are ensuring that the complete Viber experience is available on as many platforms as possible. This focus on cross-platform support is one of our most important commitments to our users,” said Talmon Marco, CEO of Viber.

Viber is now available for iPhone, Android phones and tablets, Windows Phone, Blackberry, Windows, Windows 8, Mac, Linux, Symbian, Nokia S40 and Bada devices over 3G/4G or WiFi connections. The app now claimed over 300 million users in 193 countries.

image credit: Viber

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Israeli Startup DigiGage Makes Your Elevator Rides Fun with an Interactive “Window” https://technode.com/2014/04/02/israeli-startup-digigage-makes-your-elevator-rides-fun-with-an-interactive-window/ https://technode.com/2014/04/02/israeli-startup-digigage-makes-your-elevator-rides-fun-with-an-interactive-window/#comments Wed, 02 Apr 2014 09:25:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17584 Interface of DigiGage We’ve all had the experience of standing in an elevator with a stranger and not being able to figure out where exactly to focus our eyes. DigiGage, a Tel Aviv -based startup just announced global public launch recently, aims to relieve us from the awkward elevator rides and make the experience more friendly and less stressful. DigiGage […]]]>
Digigage21

Interface of DigiGage

We’ve all had the experience of standing in an elevator with a stranger and not being able to figure out where exactly to focus our eyes. DigiGage, a Tel Aviv -based startup just announced global public launch recently, aims to relieve us from the awkward elevator rides and make the experience more friendly and less stressful.

DigiGage delivers a software and sensor system that enables elevator companies to add virtual-windows to closed elevator-cabs. Powered by the sensor, the screen embedded in the wall of elevators can react accordingly. The elevator riders’ angle of view for the objects displayed in the screen will change as they go up and down in the elevator, offering a more engaging experience for the occupants.

The operators can download the different scenarios, like a beautiful ocean reef, or a vintage, artistic clock-themed world to the embedded screen from a cloud-based interface to adapt to the internal designs of the elevators. Moreover, the system provides a complete information-layer that includes real-time building messages, floor specific messages, news and RSS feeds, and even social media connectivity.

The system is compatible with the majority of elevators. More importantly, the whole platform runs completely independently of the elevator system keeping it in-line with all safety regulations.

DigiGage-system-at-a-Kone-elevator-at-Dalian-China-3

DigiGage System at a Kone Elevator at Dalian, China

The system has been rolled out in Israel, the U.S. and Italy. Additionally, DigiGage is sharing that it has already installed a number of systems in Chinese cities of Dalian, Shanghai, including at the SJEC test tower.

Established in 2009, the company is co-founded by Jonathan Einav (CEO) and Ben Kidron (president), two serial entrepreneurs from Israel. The company has raised funds from angel investors.

image credit: DigiGage

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[ChinaBang 2014] Crowfunding Platforms Bring Hardware Makers Closer to End Users – Interview with Yeelink Founder https://technode.com/2014/04/01/chinabang-2014-crowfunding-platforms-bring-hardware-makers-closer-end-users-interview-yeelink-founder/ https://technode.com/2014/04/01/chinabang-2014-crowfunding-platforms-bring-hardware-makers-closer-end-users-interview-yeelink-founder/#comments Tue, 01 Apr 2014 01:30:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17544 At ChinaBang 2014, TechNode got lucky enough to talk with Jiang Zhaoning, founder of appcessory solution provider Yeelink, the winner of ChinaBang battlefield last year. Yeelink offers a series of tools like platform Saas service, home gateway, and APP templates for reference design, helping the makers and enterprises to create new gen electronics, connected devices […]]]>

At ChinaBang 2014, TechNode got lucky enough to talk with Jiang Zhaoning, founder of appcessory solution provider Yeelink, the winner of ChinaBang battlefield last year.

Yeelink offers a series of tools like platform Saas service, home gateway, and APP templates for reference design, helping the makers and enterprises to create new gen electronics, connected devices and App-enabled hardware, as well as providing cloud services to hardware makers. As compared with other cloud services, Yeelink is focused on providing services to hardware manufacturers, Jiang added.

Numerous makers in China have benefited from their service and built remarkable things, like air quality sensor, remote controller, home automation, simulated greenhouses and smart LED lighting systems.

Jiang has previously written an article to compare Chinese and U.S. hardware entrepreneurial environment, he thinks that Chinese startups enjoy advantages in supply chain, because they have easy access to strings of large-scale factories and module makers in Shenzhen, and the human resources costs in China is relatively low. He suggests Chinese hardware manufacturers to focus on developing products that can cater for the needs of customers as well as to improve branding and marketing of their products.

He added that most of the buyers from North America purchase hardware products from China and sell them at North American retailing stores. In this supply chain, the customers are stuck with a few options and do not have a say in what kind of products they want.

The emergence of crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter has changed previous scenario. They give hardware designers opportunities to present their innovative ideas directly to the end-users, even if they do not have factories to put the product into mass production. The customers get a chance to vote for the products they like by investing in these projects to bring the prototype product into life. On the other hand, products welcomed by the customers will also attract the attentions of buyers. Jiang noted that more and more funds set their eyes on hardware projects.

image credit: Yeelink

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Alibaba Invests $692mn in Department Store Operator Intime to Focus on Online to Offline Retail https://technode.com/2014/03/31/alibaba-invests-692mn-dollars-in-department-store-operator-intime-to-focus-on-online-to-offline-retail/ https://technode.com/2014/03/31/alibaba-invests-692mn-dollars-in-department-store-operator-intime-to-focus-on-online-to-offline-retail/#comments Mon, 31 Mar 2014 07:56:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17520 Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group today announced that it planned to invest approximately US$692mn in Intime Retail (HK: 1833), one of China’s leading department store operators. The two companies have agreed to cooperate in developing online to offline (O2O) opportunities. Subject to customary closing conditions, Alibaba’s investment in Intime will comprise of approximately US$214mn for […]]]>

Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group today announced that it planned to invest approximately US$692mn in Intime Retail (HK: 1833), one of China’s leading department store operators. The two companies have agreed to cooperate in developing online to offline (O2O) opportunities.

Subject to customary closing conditions, Alibaba’s investment in Intime will comprise of approximately US$214mn for a 9.9% equity interest in Intime and an approximate US$478mn subscription of convertible bonds issued by Intime, which if converted would give Alibaba no less than a 25% equity interest in Intime.

In connection with this strategic investment, the two companies will explore opportunities to combine the strengths of Alibaba’s Internet commerce technology and platforms with Intime’s physical retail presence in high-end department stores and shopping malls as well as its retail website Yintai.com.

The two companies have agreed to work together to deliver to consumers an online shopping experience connected to Intime’s physical stores and membership system. For example, Alibaba’s Tmall.com—China’s leading online mall—will have access to Intime’s offline inventory product database, enabling a broader product selection of international brands as well as fulfillment of online orders from Intime’s physical stores.

Harnessing Alibaba’s experience in mobile Internet retail, customers will also be able to take advantage of more targeted promotions and membership benefits by connecting their smartphones via wi-fi and location-based technology in Intime stores.

Alibaba and Intime have a track record of O2O collaboration. Intime’s 35 stores partnered with Alibaba on November 11, 2013, piloting a model of offline product selection and online payment. The two companies also jointly promote in-store payment using Alipay.  During the “Mobile Taobao 3.8 Life Festival” in 2014, Intime encouraged use of Alibaba’s Mobile Taobao app to buy and send virtual gift cards.

At the end of 2013, Intime operated 36 stores, including 28 department stores and eight shopping centers. Intime has more than 7.5 million offline SKUs in its product database and over 1.5 million members in its membership system.

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[ChinaBang 2014] Momo Users Prefer Mobile Games with Strong Social Networking Features – Interview with Momo Director of Operations https://technode.com/2014/03/31/chinabang-2014-momo-users-prefer-mobile-games-with-strong-social-networking-features-interview-with-momo-director-of-operations/ https://technode.com/2014/03/31/chinabang-2014-momo-users-prefer-mobile-games-with-strong-social-networking-features-interview-with-momo-director-of-operations/#comments Mon, 31 Mar 2014 06:25:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17507 Chinese location-based messaging app Momo hopped onto the mobile gaming bandwagon and launched altogether three games since the end of last year, including a casual game ThePuzle, a mid-core game Momo Audition, and a hard-core game Momo Craft. Zheng Yi, Momo’s director of operations, shared with us some insights on these games at a backstage interview at […]]]>
Momo - Discover Meet Friend

Chinese location-based messaging app Momo hopped onto the mobile gaming bandwagon and launched altogether three games since the end of last year, including a casual game ThePuzle, a mid-core game Momo Audition, and a hard-core game Momo Craft.

Zheng Yi, Momo’s director of operations, shared with us some insights on these games at a backstage interview at ChinaBang 2014 event. According to the statistics from Momo, the registered users of the three games are 6.22 million, 5.61 million and 2.39 million, respectively. As the latest released game among the three, Momo Craft, a hard-core game with stronger social networking features as compared with the other two games, is well received by the players and outperformed the other two in terms of active users, said Zheng.

All the three games are released in cooperation with gaming companies: ThePuzzle (Com2uS), Momo Audition (9you), Momo Craft (Ejoy). Zheng added that the company is not considering to develop homegrown games and will continue to cooperate with gaming companies to develop games that can enrich the social networking features of the app.

Momo announced 100 million registered accounts and 40 million monthly active users as of Feb this year, becoming the second largest IM tool in China, next only to WeChat.

The company has raked in around US$8 million of revenue since it started monetization from mid-2013 through monthly subscriptions, mobile gaming and sticker shop, according to Tang Yan, founder of the company, in a recent interview.

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Congratulations To ChinaBang 2014 Winners! HAXLR8R Wins Best Institutional Investor https://technode.com/2014/03/28/congratulations-chinabang-2014-winners-haxlr8r-wins-best-institutional-investor/ https://technode.com/2014/03/28/congratulations-chinabang-2014-winners-haxlr8r-wins-best-institutional-investor/#comments Fri, 28 Mar 2014 11:54:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17475 The winners of ChinaBang Awards of the Year 2014 were announced at our annual event yesterday. Congratulations to all of the winners and nominees in nine categories! Hardware accelerator HAXLR8R beat out competitors and took home the best institutional investor award. Best Software/Consumer Apps  NetEase Cloud Music Boqi eJiajie Super – Winner Liulishuo  – Winner Didi Dache – […]]]>

The winners of ChinaBang Awards of the Year 2014 were announced at our annual event yesterday. Congratulations to all of the winners and nominees in nine categories! Hardware accelerator HAXLR8R beat out competitors and took home the best institutional investor award.

Best Software/Consumer Apps

Best Enterprise/ Cloud Services

Best Games

Best Hardware

Best Online Financial Products

Best Startup

Best Institutional Investor

Best Angel Investor

  • Kevin Day
  • Li Zhiguo
  • Cai Wensheng
  • Huang Mingming
  • Zheng Gang – Winner

Innovation of 2013

We left the Innovation Award vacant to wait for a disruptive startup that can shake up Chinese tech industry.

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[ChinaBang 2014] Oral English Practice in Gameplay-Interview with Co-founder of Liulishuo https://technode.com/2014/03/28/chinabang-2014-oral-english-practice-gameplay-interview-co-founder-liulishuo/ https://technode.com/2014/03/28/chinabang-2014-oral-english-practice-gameplay-interview-co-founder-liulishuo/#comments Fri, 28 Mar 2014 00:16:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17457 ChinaBang 2014 was officially underway last night in Beijing. Liulishuo, an oral English practice app, is one of the winners for best software/consumer app award. TechNode got a chance to talk backstage with Ben Hu, co-founder of the company, who has shared with us the latest development of the company. Growing popularity of smartphones has […]]]>

ChinaBang 2014 was officially underway last night in Beijing. Liulishuo, an oral English practice app, is one of the winners for best software/consumer app award. TechNode got a chance to talk backstage with Ben Hu, co-founder of the company, who has shared with us the latest development of the company.

Growing popularity of smartphones has disrupted the traditional language learning experiences. Liulishuo, which literally means “speaking English fluently,” integrates gaming factors into the commonly boring language learning process in a bid to motivate users to practice their oral English. Powered by voice recognition technologies, the app can compare the sentence spoken by native speakers and the language learners, and then, give scores as well as tips for improving pronunciations. Similar to the gameplay of other popular games, Liulishuo users have to accomplish certain missions so as to upgrade to another level.

The content of Liulishuo is based on real-life communication scenarios, like checking in, shopping etc. and the practice sentence are usually very short, facilitating the learners to make the best use of their small time slots. Supported by homegrown contents, the company planned to strengthen the content team and has established cooperation with advisory institutions from the U.S. and Britain, like TEASL (Teaching English As Second Language). The app mainly focused on domestic market and has recorded more than 7 million downloads as of present, Hu said.

Presently, the contents of Liulishuo are all in standard American English and the company planned to release and British accent version in this year due to the rising demand of users, Hu disclosed. But the company will focus on English learning sector in the near future.

To compensate for the miss of interactivity in the service, Liulishuo planned to added new features which allow language users to communicate with each other. This feature will be soon released on its WeChat account.

In addition to Liulishuo, the Shanghai-based startup also launched another similar app King of Vowels globally in cooperation with Cambridge University Publisher. The app adopts the licensed contents of a popular oral English material by the publisher “Clear Speech”, said Hu, adding that they planned to roll out new apps based on the authorized material. This app witnessed nearly 200K downloads within the first week of its launch, according to him. The company now has around 30 employees.

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[ChinaBang 2014] Online Design Tool VXPLO Unlashes Your Imaginations in Crating Interactive Contents without Coding https://technode.com/2014/03/27/chinabang-2014-online-design-tool-vxplo-unlashes-imaginations-crating-interactive-contents-without-coding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/27/chinabang-2014-online-design-tool-vxplo-unlashes-imaginations-crating-interactive-contents-without-coding/#comments Thu, 27 Mar 2014 05:55:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17438 This week, TechNode got a chance to sit down with Meng Zhiping, CEO of VXPLO Interactive Group, a nominee for the cloud service award of ChinaBang 2014. He elaborated on the company’s product, development so far, as well as aspirations for the future. VXPLO (video explorer) is a cloud based editing tool that helps designers and individual […]]]>
meng

This week, TechNode got a chance to sit down with Meng Zhiping, CEO of VXPLO Interactive Group, a nominee for the cloud service award of ChinaBang 2014. He elaborated on the company’s product, development so far, as well as aspirations for the future.

VXPLO (video explorer) is a cloud based editing tool that helps designers and individual users to make interactive online shows without coding. Compared with previous developing process for an interactive web page which involves lines of codes, various devices and browsers, the graphic based editing interface of VXPLO helps users to get rid of the coding process so as to concentrate squarely on design.

vxplo

VXPLO provides a new interactive media format, using original communication protocol to integrate media elements such as video, animation, webpage, images and etc. Based on cloud computing platforms (on AWS overseas and Aliyun in China), VXPLO can be easily used for online video editing, interactive web design and interactive exhibition solutions, he added.

Another highlight of the technology is that contents edited by the tool allow the users to click or tap the objects shown in videos to get the detailed information of a particular product, like the price or the site to purchase it, according to Meng. This makes a lot for sense for both individual consumers and e-commerce sites.

1

Meng disclosed that the company has turned to profit last year, mainly comes from 2B business, which covers large touch screen walls (up to 30 billion pixels of display resolution) featuring multi-touch functions, cross-screen interaction projects by making mobile gadgets into remote controllers of bigger screens etc. Its enterprise customers include Tencent, NetEase, TouchMedia, Cartier, etc.

VXPLO also prepared to launch a free online editing platform for individual users around June this year, where they can edit online slideshows, digital cards, photo albums, video blogs, teaching materials and online resumes. The platform is now available for public testing in both Chinese and English now. The platform is highly compatible with all kinds of browsers and all screens. It supports HTML5, CSS3 and flash, as well as mobile gadgets powered by iOS and Android systems.

This technology can be applied in various fields like advertising, exhibition, interactive shopping, online education etc.

The company has obtained more than 50 patents since its establishment in 2006. VXPLO is headquartered in Shanghai and has branched into Shenzhen, Chengdu, Guangzhou with more than 40 employees. After receiving supports from Hong Kong government-backed creative digital community Cyberport last year, VXPlO is now running a Hong Kong office as its global operating center.

Setting eyes on overseas market, company has launched an English version and planned to establish an office in Silicon Valley latter this year.

VXPLO has received angel investments back in 2008 and planned to raise funds this year.

image credit: VOPLO

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Metaps Releases Closed Beta Version of SPIKE, a Zero Commission Online Payment Service https://technode.com/2014/03/25/metaps-releases-closed-beta-version-spike-zero-commission-online-payment-service/ https://technode.com/2014/03/25/metaps-releases-closed-beta-version-spike-zero-commission-online-payment-service/#comments Tue, 25 Mar 2014 08:12:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17398 App monetization service Metaps released the closed beta version of SPIKE, a no commission online payment credit service that does not require any installation and can be set up in under a minute, as claimed by the company. SPIKE is an online payment service free of all commissions and transaction fees, and there are no additional […]]]>
SPIKE HP

App monetization service Metaps released the closed beta version of SPIKE, a no commission online payment credit service that does not require any installation and can be set up in under a minute, as claimed by the company.

SPIKE is an online payment service free of all commissions and transaction fees, and there are no additional setup fees or monthly charges, lowering the cost for companies, especially small and medium-sized ones which are operating on a low profit margin.

Implementing online payment solutions into web sites and apps usually requires programming support. No programming skill is needed to begin using SPIKE, which can be set up by creation of a unique payment URL or embed button through your SPIKE account and inserting into your website or app. SPIKE is compatible for use on all smartphones, tablets, and all other internet connected devices.

SPIKE was designed for individual and small business owners who have avoided online payment services because of the trouble caused by background checks, high commission rates, and difficulty of installation.

For the beta release, SPIKE will start by offering a “Free Plan” for a limited number of users with a cap on monthly transactions up to $10,000, but will gradually raise this limit in a progression towards a complete “freemium” service. Likewise, SPIKE will offer a paid “Premium Plan” with no cap on monthly sales, with plans to eventually transform it into a freemium service as well. Metaps’s ad network DirectTAP also adopts a freemium model.

image credit: Metaps

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Join ChinaBang 2014 to Meet Porter for a Behind-The-Scenes Look at Alibaba’s Evolution https://technode.com/2014/03/25/join-chinabang-2014-meet-porter-behind-scenes-look-alibabas-evolution/ https://technode.com/2014/03/25/join-chinabang-2014-meet-porter-behind-scenes-look-alibabas-evolution/#comments Tue, 25 Mar 2014 06:43:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17383 It is officially spring and ChinaBang 2014 is just around the corner this Thursday (March 27). In addition to the awarding ceremony to groups of outstanding startups, we are going to debut a fascinating film named “Crocodile in the Yangtze”, an independent memoir on the working experiences of Porter Erisman who worked in Alibaba for […]]]>

It is officially spring and ChinaBang 2014 is just around the corner this Thursday (March 27). In addition to the awarding ceremony to groups of outstanding startups, we are going to debut a fascinating film named “Crocodile in the Yangtze”, an independent memoir on the working experiences of Porter Erisman who worked in Alibaba for eight years as vice president since 2000, at times the only westerner in Alibaba’s senior management team. Porter will join us at the event to share his insights on Chinese tech landscape.

An independent memoir written, directed and produced by Porter, Crocodile in the Yangtze captures the emotional ups and downs of life in Alibaba as a Chinese Internet startup at a time when the Internet brought China face-to-face with the West. The film follows Alibaba chairman Jack Ma, as he battles US giant eBay on the way to building China’s first global Internet company, Alibaba Group. It presents a strikingly candid portrait of Ma and his company, told from the point of view of an “American fly on a Chinese wall” who witnessed the successes and the mistakes Alibaba encountered as it grew from a small apartment into a global company employing more than 16,000 staff. It draws on 200 hours of archival footage filmed by over 35 sources between 1995 and 2009.

As an entrepreneur, cyclist and documentary director, Porter Erisman’s adventures in China began in 1994 when he landed in Beijing to study a year of Mandarin Chinese. He soon fell into a job as a host of China Central Television’s travel program “China Through Foreigner’s Eyes,” traveling to nine provinces as China opened its doors to Western tourists. After studying for an MBA in the US, Porter returned to China in 1998 and soon became involved in China’s Internet boom. When a friend told him that a former English teacher, Jack Ma, was looking for western managers to join his global e-commerce company, Porter became intrigued and decided to join Ma’s company, Alibaba.com. For eight years Porter served as a vice president in Alibaba.com in a variety of roles.

Other amazing speakers of the event include Wen Xin (co-founder, board member and co-chairman of online retailer Lightinthebox), Ji Shisan (CEO of science social networking service website Guokr) and He Keren (dean of Design School of Hunan University, judge of Red Dot Design Award). In addition, more than 200 founders of tech startups will join after-party of the event.

Please register here and let’s party!

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Meiaoju, International Property Marketplace Headed by Lashou Founder Wu Bo, Rakes in 50 Million Yuan Series A Financing https://technode.com/2014/03/24/meiaoju-international-property-marketplace-headed-lashou-founder-wu-bo-rakes-50-million-yuan-series-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/03/24/meiaoju-international-property-marketplace-headed-lashou-founder-wu-bo-rakes-50-million-yuan-series-financing/#comments Mon, 24 Mar 2014 07:48:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17378 Meiaoju, an international property portal for Chinese buyers, secured 50 million yuan (around $8 million) of funding led by DCM and followed by angel round investors of ZhenFund and TXD Ventures, just two weeks after its launch in this month, according to Wu Bo, founder of the company who is also the founder of leading domestic group-buying site Lashou […]]]>

Meiaoju, an international property portal for Chinese buyers, secured 50 million yuan (around $8 million) of funding led by DCM and followed by angel round investors of ZhenFund and TXD Ventures, just two weeks after its launch in this month, according to Wu Bo, founder of the company who is also the founder of leading domestic group-buying site Lashou and online retail brand Meijiale.

Meiaoju aims to bridge the information gap between domestic customers and overseas real estate developers in a bid to save hefty commission fees to realtors. The site provides free services to buyers and no fees will be charged from overseas real estate developers for the first year. Meiaoju will also review the qualifications of developers in order to protect the interests of buyers.

The site has entered partnership with tens of real estate developers in Australia and the U.S. with more than 10,000 houses on sale on the platform. The company disclosed that 55% of its clients come from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong and Zhejiang Province, while nearly 20% come from areas outside China.

With the boom of Chinese economy, more and more people from China’s increasingly wealthy middle to upper class chose to purchase properties overseas, either for investment or for future immigration plans. Juwai, another online property marketplace targeted at Chinese people who have plans to buy real estate overseas, has grown to 1.5 million monthly users with 2.4 million real estate listings, according to TechInAsia.

image credit: Meiaoju

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Mobile Search Service Wandoujia Receives Funding from Goldman Sachs in Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/03/24/mobile-search-service-wandoujia-receives-funding-goldman-sachs-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/24/mobile-search-service-wandoujia-receives-funding-goldman-sachs-series-b-funding/#comments Mon, 24 Mar 2014 02:55:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17366 Wandoujia (or SnapPea), Chinese Android app distributor and mobile service provider, received additional capital injection from Goldman Sachs for Series B financing, shortly after the company announced $120 million funding in the same round led by SoftBank Corp. and joined by DCM, Innovation Works Development Fund (IWDF) and SB Pan-Asia Fund this January. Previously known as a leading […]]]>
Wandoujia

Wandoujia (or SnapPea), Chinese Android app distributor and mobile service provider, received additional capital injection from Goldman Sachs for Series B financing, shortly after the company announced $120 million funding in the same round led by SoftBank Corp. and joined by DCM, Innovation Works Development Fund (IWDF) and SB Pan-Asia Fund this January.

Previously known as a leading Android app distributor in China, Wandoujia now positions itself as a mobile search company and released a 4.0 version which expanded in-app content search service from videos to mobile games, e-books and smartphone themes.

Since the release of 4.0 version in this Jan., the number of users who search videos on Wandoujia exceeded 50 million, while that for users who find e-books and wallpapers surpassed 10 million, according to the company.

Wang Junyu, co-founder and CEO of the company said the capital will help the company to continue its endeavors in building mobile search services.

Four years after its establishment in 2010, Wandoujia now claimed more than 300 million users with over 800k new users added per day.

image credit: Wandoujia

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Why We Adopt An Investment Model That Combines Institutional and Individual Investors? – Interview with Equity Crowdfunding Platform iChuangye CEO https://technode.com/2014/03/21/adopt-investment-model-combines-institutional-individual-investors-interview-equity-crowdfunding-platform-ichuangye-ceo/ https://technode.com/2014/03/21/adopt-investment-model-combines-institutional-individual-investors-interview-equity-crowdfunding-platform-ichuangye-ceo/#comments Fri, 21 Mar 2014 13:44:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17343 iChuangye, a Kickstarter-like crowdfunding service previously known as 5ichuang, launched today its first-ever Demo Day to debut projects that are raising funds on the platform. TechNode got a chance to talk with its CEO Gu Bing, who prefers to name himself as chief service officer of the site, since he considers his works as offering […]]]>

iChuangye, a Kickstarter-like crowdfunding service previously known as 5ichuang, launched today its first-ever Demo Day to debut projects that are raising funds on the platform. TechNode got a chance to talk with its CEO Gu Bing, who prefers to name himself as chief service officer of the site, since he considers his works as offering services to entrepreneurs and venture capitalist in an effort to bridge their demands.

Since its establishment in December last year, iChuangye has selected nearly 100 projects from more than 1,000 applicants to launch fund-raising campaigns on iChuangye and two projects have finalized their campaigns on the platform, said Gu.

He added that they defined neither the industries nor the development stage the applicants should be in, but project creators have to submit detailed introductions of their companies for accreditation. Most of the companies are in the preliminary stage of their development and the fund-raising amounts of projects on iChuangye range between 5 million yuan (around US$800K) and 20 million yuan.

iChuangye adopts a mechanism which requires that individual investors only can follow institutional investors in investing in projects, but they can enjoy the same investment provisions as institutional investors. iChuangye adopts this model because it can protect the interests of individual investors to some extent, as Gu sees it, individual investors have their own insights in selecting projects with huge potentials, but their status does not grant them access to back-end data, which is accessible to institutional investors. More importantly, institutional investors will take over the tasks of project valuation, negotiation with the founding team of projects, as well as company operation after the funding.

For projects on iChuangye, financing from institutional investors have to account for 80% of the total investment, but the site has plans to gradually lower this percentage if capable individual investors, who can fulfill the responsibilities of company operation, financial monitoring etc., emerged, noted Gu.

According to him, the fund-raising process will be a optimal channel to attract die-hard consumers, since the ideal individual investors of a company are also the potential users of these startups.

As for its difference with other domestic crowdfunding platforms, Gu said iChuangye is an equity crowdfunding service, in which equity ownership in a business is given in exchange for investment capital, while DemoHour is transforming into a hardware presale platform, where users invest funding in a startup for its demoed product the platform.

An interesting project pitched at the event is Chelaille, an app which updates commuters about real-time information on bus locations in a bid to save users their precious time wasted in waiting for buses. The company has launched service in more than 20 cities countrywide and registered more than 1 million users.

image credit: iChuangye

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Alibaba Leads $280 Million Series D Funding in U.S. Messaging and Free-calling App Tango https://technode.com/2014/03/20/alibaba-leads-280-million-dollars-series-d-funding-u-s-messaging-app-tango/ https://technode.com/2014/03/20/alibaba-leads-280-million-dollars-series-d-funding-u-s-messaging-app-tango/#comments Thu, 20 Mar 2014 05:36:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17287 Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba invested $215 million in Series D funding of U.S. mobile messaging app Tango. The total amount of this round reached $ 280 million on aggregate together with investments from some prior investors of the company, including Access Industries, Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Jerry Yang, a co-founder of Yahoo Inc. As part of this financing, Michael […]]]>
Tango

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba invested $215 million in Series D funding of U.S. mobile messaging app Tango. The total amount of this round reached $ 280 million on aggregate together with investments from some prior investors of the company, including Access Industries, Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Jerry Yang, a co-founder of Yahoo Inc. As part of this financing, Michael Zeisser, former head of Alibaba’s U.S investment subsidiary, will join the board of directors of Tango.

In addition to messaging and calling services, Tango also introduced new social networking features that allow members to share updates or photos and to find new friends, as well as a content platform that is now home to more than 30 games. It also supports social music sharing through integration with Spotify, which means members can now send each other songs.

Launched in September 2009, the app is now available on iPhone, iPad, Android phones and tablets, Blackberry, Kindle Fire and PC and works across platforms and networks. It now claims 200 million registered users and 70 million active users, mainly from North America, the Middle East, Taiwan and Singapore.

This tie-up may help Alibaba’s home-brew IM tool Laiwang, a challenger of Tencent’s WeChat in domestic market, to improve its messaging and video call features. Alibaba takes Laiwang as a breakthrough point for wireless business and launched promotion activities for the app both internally and externally last year.

Tango has previously secured around $87 million of funding from Access Industries, DFJ, Qualcomm Ventures, Toms Capital, Translink Capital and individual investors like Bill Tai, Shimon Weintraub, Jerry Yang and Alex Zubillaga.

image credit: Tango

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Xiaomi Showcases Budget Phablet Red Mi Note for $130 https://technode.com/2014/03/20/xiaomi-showcases-budget-phablet-red-mi-note-for-130-dollars/ https://technode.com/2014/03/20/xiaomi-showcases-budget-phablet-red-mi-note-for-130-dollars/#comments Thu, 20 Mar 2014 03:25:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17274 Red Mi Note Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi debuts a low-cost phablet, Red Mi Note, on Tencent’s social platform Q-zone yesterday. The new product is opened up for preorder now and will be shipped on March 26 at 799 yuan (roughly US$130) for standard version and 999 yuan for enhanced version, basically on par with the price of Red […]]]>

Red Mi Note

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi debuts a low-cost phablet, Red Mi Note, on Tencent’s social platform Q-zone yesterday. The new product is opened up for preorder now and will be shipped on March 26 at 799 yuan (roughly US$130) for standard version and 999 yuan for enhanced version, basically on par with the price of Red Mi, a budget smartphone of the company.

Enabled by MIUI 5 OS, Red Mi Note standard version is powered by an octa-core MTK 6592 processor clocked at 1.4GHz and features 1G RAM, 8G ROM and 5.5 inch IPS screen. The camera is 5-megapixel on the front and 13-megapixel on the rear. The phablet is a dual SIM phone, supporting both TD-SCDMA and GSM cards. The enhanced version features 2G RAM, 8G ROM and the same processor, which is clocked at 1.7GHz.

It seems that Xiaomi is shifting to devices with bigger screens which has been on a roll since 2011 as tech-savvy consumers are devoting more times to browse web pages and download contents. In addition to the imminent phablet, Xiaomi recently released a MIUI ROM for Google’s Nexus 7 II and speculations swirled that the smartphone maker is going to release tablet soon.

But Xiaomi isn’t the only Chinese phone maker to eye this market. Huawei’s low-cost phablet Honor 3X which shares similar features with Red Mi Note in dual-SIM capability, octa-core processor and 5.5-inch IPS display, is on sale at Huawei’s ecommerce site Vmall and Yixun today. Huawei announced on the same day of Red Mi Note’s release that standard edition of Honor 3X is priced at 998 yuan. The company spun off Honor, a smartphone brand sharing similar positioning as Xiaomi, to run it independently since the end of last year.

image credit: Xiaomi, Huawei

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Mobile Social Game Developer FunPlus Game Announces $74 Million Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/03/19/mobile-social-game-developer-funplus-game-announces-74-million-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/19/mobile-social-game-developer-funplus-game-announces-74-million-series-b-funding/#comments Wed, 19 Mar 2014 07:06:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17238 Mobile social game developer FunPlus secured $74 million of Series B financing from Orchid Asia, SteamBoat Ventures, and existing investor GSR Ventures, raising the company’s total capital received to more than $87 million together with the $13 million Series A funding gained in 2012. The fund raised this round will be injected in marketing and recruitment of excellent game designers and […]]]>
FunPlus

Mobile social game developer FunPlus secured $74 million of Series B financing from Orchid AsiaSteamBoat Ventures, and existing investor GSR Ventures, raising the company’s total capital received to more than $87 million together with the $13 million Series A funding gained in 2012.

The fund raised this round will be injected in marketing and recruitment of excellent game designers and developers, said Andy Zhong, CEO and co-founder of the company.

FunPlus eyes global market since the very beginning of its establishment in 2010. Although the company is yet to be a familiar name to Chinese players, it has earned its credit as the largest Asia social gaming vendor in terms of daily active users on Facebook platform.

The company’s signature games are Family Farm which claims over 4 million daily active users, Royal Story, Fantasy Slots, three games that are available on Facebook platform, as well as Family Farm Seaside, a social game on iOS, Google Play and Amazon platforms. FunPlus’s games are all free-to-play and the company gains profits by selling virtual goods.

FunPlus now claims more than 6 million daily active users as of present, mainly from European and North American markets, which account for 55% and 40% of the company’s total revenue respectively, disclosed Dan Fiden, CSO of the firm. He adds that company’s annual revenue is expected to reach 175 million to 219 million dollars in 2014, while its ARPDAU stands at around 0.1 dollar. The company planned to release 2-3 new games in 2014.

FunPlus was co-founded by three experienced entrepreneurs: Andy Zhong (CEO) is the head of the developer team behind Birthday Cards and Zoo World, two popular apps on Facebook platform; Guan Yitao (CTO) is a software architect once worked in tech companies like Ask.com, Yousendit.com and IBM; Chen Qi (COO) is the former CEO at Spil Games Asia and founder of social networking site 360Quan. FunPlus has over 200 employees and is headquartered in Beijing, with offices in San Francisco and Vancouver.

image credit: FunPlus

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Ecommerce Service MMB Closes New Round of Funding Led by Tencent and MTK https://technode.com/2014/03/18/ecommerce-service-mmb-closes-new-round-of-funding-led-by-tencent-and-mtk/ https://technode.com/2014/03/18/ecommerce-service-mmb-closes-new-round-of-funding-led-by-tencent-and-mtk/#comments Tue, 18 Mar 2014 06:19:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17217 MMB, an m-commerce retailer targeting at rural China markets, announced that it secured a new round of financing led by Tencent and followed by chip maker MTK and Sequoia Capital. MMB has received a combined more than 400 million yuan (around US$65 million) of funding from Far East Holding, Sequoia Capital and Tencent during 2007 […]]]>

MMB, an m-commerce retailer targeting at rural China markets, announced that it secured a new round of financing led by Tencent and followed by chip maker MTK and Sequoia Capital. MMB has received a combined more than 400 million yuan (around US$65 million) of funding from Far East Holding, Sequoia Capital and Tencent during 2007 to 2012.

Founded in 2006 as one of the earliest players in Chinese m-commerce sector, MMB is dedicated to provide online shopping service to grassroots users, who live in third- and fourth-tier cities or farmer-turned workers in big cities. Unlike users in cities who have access through PCs in the daytime at work or at night at home, MMB’s users made purchases through its WAP site on low-end mobile phones that are connected to 2G and more recently with 3G networks. The annual turnover of the company neared 2 billion yuan in 2013.

The company did not announce the amount of the funding, but people familiar with the matter disclosed that the capital injection exceeds 100 million dollars, as reported by Sohu.

The funds will be used in the development of its homegrown low-budget smartphone brand Big Q and the warehouses system around the country, moreover, the company will increase investments in product development and marketing.

Launched in June 2013, MMB’s Big Q smartphone brand currently has three models and targets at young users from small cities. The third generation of the product dubbed Q1 was launched on Tencent’s e-commerce platform Yixun earlier this year. The shipment of Big Q smartphone stood at around 200K last year and it is expected to reach 1 million sets this year, according to the company.

image credit: MMB

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Crypto-currency Trading Platform OKCoin Gets $10 Million Series A Financing Led by Ceyuan https://technode.com/2014/03/18/crypto-currency-trading-platform-okcoin-gets-10-million-dollars-series-a-financing-led-by-ceyuan/ https://technode.com/2014/03/18/crypto-currency-trading-platform-okcoin-gets-10-million-dollars-series-a-financing-led-by-ceyuan/#comments Tue, 18 Mar 2014 02:29:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17203 Chinese crypto-currency trading platform OKCoin has received around ten million dollars of Series A funding from investment institutions (Ceyuan Venture Capital, Mandra Capital, Ventures Lab) and venture capitalists (prominent angel investor Cai Wensheng, founder of e-commerce site Xiu.com Huang Jin, founder of developer community CSDN Jiang Tao, chairman of Chinese Yough Angel Investor Leader Association […]]]>

Chinese crypto-currency trading platform OKCoin has received around ten million dollars of Series A funding from investment institutions (Ceyuan Venture Capital, Mandra Capital, Ventures Lab) and venture capitalists (prominent angel investor Cai Wensheng, founder of e-commerce site Xiu.com Huang Jin, founder of developer community CSDN Jiang Tao, chairman of Chinese Yough Angel Investor Leader Association Yang Ning, founder of angel investor Pre-Angel Wang Lijie, founder of tech media Leiphone Lin Jun, etc.).

This round of financing was closed at the end of last year, said founder of the company Xu Mingxing, adding that the capital will be used in team construction, product development and security improvement. He Yize, vice president of OKCoin, noted that the company is in talks for Series B funding and has plans to explore overseas market.

According to data released by the company, OKCoin’s daily trading volume has reached 300,000 Bitcoins and 13 million Litecoins as of present.

Bitcoin

OKCoin recently launched a P2P lending platform to combine P2P model with Bitcoin. Users can lend idle funds, Bitcoin or Litecoin online to others to grab the interests. But the transaction is more complicated than traditional P2P lending model due to the fluctuating exchange rates between the crypto-currencies and RMB, allowing users to gain profits by having either short or long position in the digital currencies.

BTC China, another Bitcoin trading platform, secured $5 million of Series A financing from investors including LightSpeed at the end of last year.

Although venture capitalists are still willing to take bold bets on Bitcoin market, the government of several countries extended their concerns on the security issues of the virtual currency. China authorities issued a notice on Bitcoin to caution financial institutions and payments services against risks. India and Singapore also tighten their reins on the digital currency.

The collapse of Mt.Gox, once a leading Bitcoin trading platform based in Japan, worsened the concerns, since the company’s bankruptcy was caused by the loss of nearly half a billion dollars worth of digital currencies to hackers, as claimed by the company.

image credit: OKCoin

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Alibaba Partners with Home Appliance Maker Midea To Release Smart Air Conditioner That Can be Controlled on Laiwang https://technode.com/2014/03/17/alibaba-partners-with-home-appliance-maker-midea-to-release-smart-air-conditioner-that-can-be-controlled-on-laiwang/ https://technode.com/2014/03/17/alibaba-partners-with-home-appliance-maker-midea-to-release-smart-air-conditioner-that-can-be-controlled-on-laiwang/#comments Mon, 17 Mar 2014 08:55:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17177 China’s e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba announced today that it entered partnership with Chinese leading home appliance maker Midea. Under the deal, Midea will manufacture home appliances with Internet access, while Alibaba will be responsible for the R&D and operation of a dedicated platform under Aliyun to support these smart appliances. The two parties planned to jointly […]]]>

China’s e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba announced today that it entered partnership with Chinese leading home appliance maker Midea. Under the deal, Midea will manufacture home appliances with Internet access, while Alibaba will be responsible for the R&D and operation of a dedicated platform under Aliyun to support these smart appliances.

The two parties planned to jointly release the first batch of their products under the brand of Midea Smart Air Conditioner on Tmall March 19. These smart air conditioners feature three kinds of outlooks in eight models.

Alibaba disclosed that users will be able to control these air conditioners on Alibaba’s services like IM tool Laiwang and mobile payment app AliPay Wallet from April at the earliest. The users can voice-control the air conditioners to switch on/off, adjust the temperature and humidity, check power consumption conditions, etc.

Alibaba

The voice command from users will be firstly sent to the smart control center powered by Aliyun, and then, the data processed by the center will be sent to smart air conditioners that are connected to the Internet. In addition, the air conditioners will record data like switch on/off time, temperature, humidity by itself and send it to the control center for future use. Customers can reserve after-sales and maintenance services online.

Sina Weibo, the microblogging service which Alibaba holds 18% stake, and Chinese home appliance maker Hisense released last year a similar smart air conditioner, which allows users to remote control the air conditioners by bundling their Sina Weibo accounts. Compared with this product, Alibaba and Midea’s air conditioner is backed by a data control platform and places more emphasis on user data collection.

The cooperation between the two companies is divided into three phases:

  • 2014: To unify protocols for IOT products and realize seamless integration.
  • 2015: To improve R&D and products with data collected from users.
  • 2016: To form complete business chain for smart home industry and launch paid service.

Moreover, Alibaba and Midea planned to open up related protocols and offer standardized API accesses to third-party developers in an attempt to form an open IOT platform.

This is not the first time for Alibaba to enter partnership with home appliance makers. It invested 2.2 billion yuan (around US$358 million) in Haier last December, but the tie-up mainly focused on e-commerce business to leverage the matured home appliance delivery system of Haier so as to complement Alibaba’s delivery business in third-and fourth-tier cities.

image credit: Alibaba

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Tencent Unveils Mobile Navigation Service Lubao To Deepen Forays into Mapping Market https://technode.com/2014/03/17/tencent-unveils-mobile-navigation-service-lubao-to-deepen-forays-into-mapping-market/ https://technode.com/2014/03/17/tencent-unveils-mobile-navigation-service-lubao-to-deepen-forays-into-mapping-market/#comments Mon, 17 Mar 2014 03:06:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17166 Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently launched its homegrown navigation app Lubao. In addition to basic navigation services, Tencent Lubao also features user generated contents and social functions. Users can upload real-time traffic data to the platform and Tencent’s Streetview Maps service will also be integrated to enhance data accuracy. Different from traditional navigation products, Lubao […]]]>
Lubao1

Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently launched its homegrown navigation app Lubao. In addition to basic navigation services, Tencent Lubao also features user generated contents and social functions.

Users can upload real-time traffic data to the platform and Tencent’s Streetview Maps service will also be integrated to enhance data accuracy.

Different from traditional navigation products, Lubao introduced a five-star rating mechanism, which will give users scores on the security level of their driving habits after they finished their trips. The user scores, which can be shared to social networking platforms of Tencent Weibo, WeChat and Sina Weibo, are generated by analyzing factors like, break times, overspeed times, etc.

Baidu Map and Alibaba’ s AutoNavi app currently top China’ s online mapping service market while Tencent is in lack of a strong mapping service which could be leveraged to further consolidate its O2O business along with WeChat. To compete with peers, Tencent poured 60 million yuan ($9.92 million) to fully acquire Beijing-based mapping service Linktech Navi earlier this year to gain proprietary basic mapping data.

image credit: Tencent

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PaoPet, A Professional Pet Care Clinic on Your Mobile https://technode.com/2014/03/14/paopet-professional-pet-care-clinic-mobile/ https://technode.com/2014/03/14/paopet-professional-pet-care-clinic-mobile/#comments Fri, 14 Mar 2014 08:12:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17105 Increasing number of Chinese people beginning to keep pets and it is reported that there are over 150 million pets in China. However, China’s pet service lags far behind pet lover’s expectations in the pet health sector, given that there are only 6,000 registered veterinary hospitals countrywide. With the shortage of health care facilities, PaoPet, […]]]>
Paochong

Increasing number of Chinese people beginning to keep pets and it is reported that there are over 150 million pets in China. However, China’s pet service lags far behind pet lover’s expectations in the pet health sector, given that there are only 6,000 registered veterinary hospitals countrywide.

With the shortage of health care facilities, PaoPet, a pet health care app developed by Beijing Lianchuang Kangchong Technology, can be very handy in diagnosing illness of your pets and keeping track of the health conditions of them. The service is launched in August last year and now available both on Android and iOS platform.

PaoPet provides an open and free online health and medical platform dedicated to pets. After submitting information and symptoms of your pets in texts, pictures, videos, professional veterinarians will respond promptly within five minutes, the company claimed. The app offers a variety of information on pet medicines, prices of these medicines, nearby vet pharmacies, etc., moreover, it introduces a review and rating system for the vet hospitals.

Like most of other pet apps, it also has social features which allow users to post articles and cute pictures of their pets, and to find other pet lovers.

Pet industry begins to attract the eyes of venture capitalists recently. Petta, a social networking app for pet owners neted funding from Zhonglu Capital late 2013 and pet e-commerce site Boqii just closed $25 Million Series B financing led by Goldman Sachs. Online pet community Goumin launched a pet product group-buying app Aichongtuan last year.

image credit: PaoPet

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Chinese Central Bank Calls Off Digital Credit Card Business https://technode.com/2014/03/14/chinese-central-bank-calls-digital-credit-card-business/ https://technode.com/2014/03/14/chinese-central-bank-calls-digital-credit-card-business/#respond Fri, 14 Mar 2014 03:26:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17084 The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the Chinese central bank, reportedly released a notice to suspend the digital credit card businesses together with mobile payment services enabled by scanning the QR codes (source in Chinese). Despite the innovations in QR code payment technology, it also brings information and capital security concerns for the customers. Virtual […]]]>

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the Chinese central bank, reportedly released a notice to suspend the digital credit card businesses together with mobile payment services enabled by scanning the QR codes (source in Chinese).

Despite the innovations in QR code payment technology, it also brings information and capital security concerns for the customers. Virtual credit card is still a pre-matured business in terms of user identification and capital security, according to the PBOC.

The heat for digital credit card business was at full strength in Chinese Internet arena this week as both AliPay Wallet and WeChat Payment, the mobile payment arms of Chinese Internet giants Alibaba and Tencent, announced on Tuesday that they planned to explore this sector together with China CITIC Bank.

This notice will also affect the existing on-site payment services offered by the two mobile payment solutions for services like mobile on-site payment in bricks-and-mortar stores, vending machine at subways, etc.

Digital credit card

PBOC Notice in Chinese

image credit: NetEase

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AliPay Wallet Payment to be Available at Over 5,000 Stores under Footwear Maker AoKang https://technode.com/2014/03/13/alipay-wallet-payment-to-be-available-at-over-5000-stores-under-footwear-maker-aokang/ https://technode.com/2014/03/13/alipay-wallet-payment-to-be-available-at-over-5000-stores-under-footwear-maker-aokang/#comments Thu, 13 Mar 2014 09:35:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17071 Alibaba Group has entered strategic partnership with Chinese footwear maker Zhejiang AoKang Shoes Co., Ltd. (SH:603001). The two parties will cooperate in the fields of mobile payment, membership management, online marketing and data analysis. Under the deal, AliPay Wallet payment will be available at more than 5,000 of AoKang’s franchise stores nationwide from March 20. Users […]]]>

Alibaba Group has entered strategic partnership with Chinese footwear maker Zhejiang AoKang Shoes Co., Ltd. (SH:603001). The two parties will cooperate in the fields of mobile payment, membership management, online marketing and data analysis.

Under the deal, AliPay Wallet payment will be available at more than 5,000 of AoKang’s franchise stores nationwide from March 20. Users can pay by scanning QR codes generated from the cash register and the whole payment process takes no longer than 30 seconds, AliPay added.

Wang Lijuan, manager of AliPay O2O Department, thinks mobile payment not only adds a more convenient payment method for retailers, but also improves user experience and supports their online and offline market.

The transaction volume of AliPay Wallet surpassed 900 billion yuan (around US$146.61 billion) in 2012 with more than 100 million users, according to latest data released by the company.

Chinese Internet giants are riding a wave offline expansion and Alibaba is an avid follower of the trend. Now AliPay Wallet users can make payments for vending machine items in China’s subways, taxi fares, train tickets, goods at Yintai department stores or convenience stores. Setting sights on areas beyond Chinese mainland market, the service is currently available in Hong Kong and Taiwan, and will arrive in South Korea soon.

image credit: AliPay

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Outbound Tourism Service ByeCity Gets Nearly $20 Million Series B Funding Led by Alibaba https://technode.com/2014/03/13/outbound-tourism-service-byecity-gets-nearly-20-million-dollars-series-b-funding-led-by-alibaba/ https://technode.com/2014/03/13/outbound-tourism-service-byecity-gets-nearly-20-million-dollars-series-b-funding-led-by-alibaba/#comments Thu, 13 Mar 2014 06:32:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17058 ByeCity, a Chinese outbound traveling service, announced that it secured nearly $20 million of Series B financing from Alibaba Group and CBC Capital. The company has received around 10 million dollars from JAFCO Asia and Investor Growth Capital in 2008 and an undisclosed amount from TaishanXD in 2011. The capital raised will be used in network construction, […]]]>
ByeCity

ByeCity, a Chinese outbound traveling service, announced that it secured nearly $20 million of Series B financing from Alibaba Group and CBC Capital.

The company has received around 10 million dollars from JAFCO Asia and Investor Growth Capital in 2008 and an undisclosed amount from TaishanXD in 2011. The capital raised will be used in network construction, branding and enhancement of user experiences.

Founded in 2000 as a pioneer of Chinese outbound travelling industry, ByeCity gives priority to its visa application service over other businesses like package tours, hotel and flight ticket reservation, etc.

The company provides simple and easy visa application services with a success rate of 99.8%, according to the firm, adding that it has processed the visa applications of more than 400K tourists in 2013, rocketing 471% YOY from 2012 and 1,233% YOY as compared with 2011. It also pledged to reimburse the customers if their visa applications were failed.

Alibaba Group made forays into online tourism industry along with the booming development of this territory. It established Travel Department last year by integrating relevant businesses like Taobao Travel, and then, invested in social travel app 117go and outbound travel service Qyer. Etao, the shopping search service under Alibaba Group, also started a hotel search service last year.

image credit: ByeCity

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More Than 50% of New Smartphones Were Sold To Upgrade Existing Ones in China: Umeng Report 2013 https://technode.com/2014/03/12/more-than-50-of-new-smartphones-were-sold-to-upgrade-existing-ones-in-china-umeng-report-2013/ https://technode.com/2014/03/12/more-than-50-of-new-smartphones-were-sold-to-upgrade-existing-ones-in-china-umeng-report-2013/#respond Wed, 12 Mar 2014 09:11:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17038 The percentage of new devices that were bought to upgrade existing ones stood at 56% and 59% in Q3 and Q4 last year respectively, eclipsing the percentage for smartphones purchased by first-time buyers, according to the 2013 China Mobile Internet Overview released by Chinese mobile analytics and service provider Umeng. By the end of 2013, China recorded more than 700 […]]]>
Umeng 14-03-12

The percentage of new devices that were bought to upgrade existing ones stood at 56% and 59% in Q3 and Q4 last year respectively, eclipsing the percentage for smartphones purchased by first-time buyers, according to the 2013 China Mobile Internet Overview released by Chinese mobile analytics and service provider Umeng.

By the end of 2013, China recorded more than 700 million active smart devices (including smartphones and tablets), up from 500 million as of Q2 2013.

Budget Android devices priced at or below 1,000 yuan (around US$162.9) account for 35% of the Chinese market. However, 27% of the total users are using high-end devices priced over 3000 yuan and 80% of them are iPhone users. These users are more reliant on mobile Internet and have higher demands for smartphone performance. The users of budget phones prefer casual games.

In 2013, Top 5 non-game categories of mobile app in terms of user growth rate were news, health care, social networking, business, and navigation. Social networking took the third spot thanks to the release of new features (pictures, Gif/short videos) as well as surging demands for new functions like dating and parenting, etc.

Umeng2

Socializing your apps is the key to success for developers. Among the Top 100 apps (apps and games), 55% of them provide links to Chinese social networking services (e.g. Sina Weibo, Wechat, QQ, Renren).

According to the report, the year of 2013 became known as the first year for Chinese developers to take IP seriously with 20% of the Top 100 games were licensed by an existing well know brand, including Dad Where Are We Going?, Pocket Ninja, and Despicable Me, etc. The figure was only 13% in June 2013.

Image credit: Umeng

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Ctrip Offers Free WiFi Service to Outbound Tourists in 100+ Countries https://technode.com/2014/03/12/ctrip-offers-free-wifi-service-to-outbound-tourists-in-100-countries/ https://technode.com/2014/03/12/ctrip-offers-free-wifi-service-to-outbound-tourists-in-100-countries/#respond Wed, 12 Mar 2014 07:14:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17025 Ctrip announced that will it provide free WiFi service to travelers who take part in outbound package tours or semi-self-service tours run by the online traveling giant. Ctrip predicted that nearly 1 million outbound travelers will be able to enjoy this service per year. The service is now available for tourism destinations in more than […]]]>

Ctrip announced that will it provide free WiFi service to travelers who take part in outbound package tours or semi-self-service tours run by the online traveling giant. Ctrip predicted that nearly 1 million outbound travelers will be able to enjoy this service per year.

The service is now available for tourism destinations in more than 100 countries and regions, including Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, Australia, the U.S., Southeast Asia and most parts of Europe. Travelers started their journey from Shanghai, Beijing, Guangdong, Zhejiang and Jiangsu will be the first group of tourists to enjoy this service.

The tour guides will carry one WiFi device for every five tourists who can use the WiFi coverage during their trips. Ctrip will invest over 10 million yuan (US$1.62 milion) in the procurement of WiFi equipment and relevant services, and the company pledged that no extra fees will be imposed on customers. Ctrip added that market price for outbound travelers to rent WiFi equipment is between 50 yuan to 70 yuan per person per day.

Ctrip eyes overseas travelling market in recent years by investing in overseas travel platform ToursForFun, launching car rental services for overseas private travelers and including overseas destinations to its attraction ticket platform.

Ctrip’s mobile apps recorded more than 100 million downloads as of present, of which hotel reservation app represents 35%, flight ticket reservation app accounts for more than 20% and apps for train tickets, attraction tickets and car rental services account for the rest, according to data released by the company.

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Tencent to Release WeChat Credit Card https://technode.com/2014/03/12/tencent-to-release-wechat-credit-card/ https://technode.com/2014/03/12/tencent-to-release-wechat-credit-card/#comments Wed, 12 Mar 2014 04:46:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=17004 Tencent announced Tuesday evening that it will release the first batch of 1 million digital credit cards on its instant messaging tool WeChat together with China CITIC Bank and online insurance company Zhong An, shortly afterwards Alibaba announced a similar program on AliPay Wallet earlier the same day. This service is under internal testing and […]]]>
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Tencent announced Tuesday evening that it will release the first batch of 1 million digital credit cards on its instant messaging tool WeChat together with China CITIC Bank and online insurance company Zhong An, shortly afterwards Alibaba announced a similar program on AliPay Wallet earlier the same day. This service is under internal testing and will be released very soon.

After entering WeChat’s My Bankcard interface, users can apply for the digital credit card by filling in personal information like, name, ID number and phone number.

The similarities and differences of AliPay’s and WeChat’s services are as follows:

1) Both AliPay and WeChat credit cards support online and mobile payments, but the latter also allows users to pay in the designated physical stores by scanning QR codes.

2) Both of the virtual credit cards save users from the troubles of taking care of physical cards and support simultaneous treatment of applications by leveraging credit data of applicants.

The approval process of AliPay credit card is backed by data from Alibaba’s proprieties and China CITIC Bank, while WeChat’s service is backed by data from Tencent’s services, China CITIC Bank and Zhong An, the joint venture of Alibaba, Tencent and Ping An. Moreover, Ping An, one of the largest insurance companies in China, and Zhong An will provide commercial insurance services to WeChat credit card users.

3) The credit line of AliPay’s virtual credit card starts from 200 yuan (about $32), while that for WeChat’s service is classified to three levels, 50 yuan, 200 yuan and 1,000 to 5,000 yuan depending on the online credibility of users. In addition, WeChat offers a 50 day interest-free period and pledged that no annual fee will be charged.

image credit: WeChat

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AliPay Wallet to Roll Out First Ever Digital Credit Card in China https://technode.com/2014/03/11/alipay-wallet-roll-first-ever-digital-credit-card-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/03/11/alipay-wallet-roll-first-ever-digital-credit-card-in-china/#comments Tue, 11 Mar 2014 08:19:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16985 Chinese Internet titan Alibaba will launch China’s first ever Internet credit card next week via AliPay Wallet, the mobile payments and service app of Alibaba Group. China CITIC Bank, the issuer of this credit card, planned to release 1 million for the first batch. AliPay Wallet users can apply for Internet credit cards by sending […]]]>

Chinese Internet titan Alibaba will launch China’s first ever Internet credit card next week via AliPay Wallet, the mobile payments and service app of Alibaba Group. China CITIC Bank, the issuer of this credit card, planned to release 1 million for the first batch.

AliPay Credit Card

AliPay Wallet users can apply for Internet credit cards by sending applications to the official account of China CITIC Bank after following it. The applications will be processed simultaneously by leveraging the consumption and credit records of the applicants, which Alibaba has collected from its various Internet properties. AliPay disclosed that it has more than 300 million real-name users together with rich credit records of them.

The credit line for the first batch of Internet credit cards starts from 200 yuan (about $32), varying according to personal Internet credibility of the applicants.

Focused on online and mobile payment, the virtual credit card not only takes the hassle out of taking care of the physical cards, but also saves users from troublesome application procedures.

In addition, AliPay and China CITIC Bank constructed a risk management mechanism to fend off risks for Internet credit cards based on AliPay’s data as well as the risk management technologies and credit data of China CITIC Bank.

AliPay said this business will benefit more banks, as it will open up Alipay’s data to its bank partners, saving their costs in gaining access to bigger user metrics.

image credit: AliPay

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[Update] E-house Subsidiary Leju Files for US IPO, Inks Cooperation Agreement with Tencent https://technode.com/2014/03/11/e-house-subsidiary-leju-files-for-us-ipo-inks-cooperation-agreement-with-tencent/ https://technode.com/2014/03/11/e-house-subsidiary-leju-files-for-us-ipo-inks-cooperation-agreement-with-tencent/#comments Tue, 11 Mar 2014 04:45:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16970 E-House (NYSE: EJ), a leading real estate services company in China, today announced that its wholly-owned subsidiary Leju, former real estate channel of Sina, has submitted a draft registration statement for a proposed IPO on US market. Moreover, the subsidiary also entered into a strategic cooperation agreement with Tencent (HKG: 0700). [Update] Tencent announced March 21 that it will acquire 15% […]]]>
Leju

E-House (NYSE: EJ), a leading real estate services company in China, today announced that its wholly-owned subsidiary Leju, former real estate channel of Sina, has submitted a draft registration statement for a proposed IPO on US market. Moreover, the subsidiary also entered into a strategic cooperation agreement with Tencent (HKG: 0700). [Update] Tencent announced March 21 that it will acquire 15% of the fully diluted shares in Leju with $180 million and the transactions is expected to be finalized by the end of this month.

Leju is a leading provider of real estate online services including advertising, listings and product launch information (Real Estate Online Information), and online-to-offline e-commerce services that facilitate real estate transactions in China.

E-House may sell part of Leju’s shares, but it will still be the largest shareholder of the latter after the proposed IPO. The number of American depository shares to be issued by Leju in the IPO has yet to be determined, the parent company added.

Under the strategic cooperation agreement between Leju and Tencent, the two companies have agreed to jointly develop software and tools for use on WeChat to facilitate Leju in opening batches of WeChat public accounts associated with real estate projects. Leju has agreed to adopt WeChat payment solutions as the payment method for real estate e-commerce transactions conducted by Leju users on WeChat.

Leju and Tencent will also explore and pursue additional opportunities for potential cooperation, including but not limited to cooperation involving Tencent’s social communications platform such as WeChat, QQ and mobile QQ, the social media service Tencent Microblog, the social networking service Qzone, and/or other Tencent internet properties.

Real estate e-commerce sector has seen rapid growth in recent years. The Chinese market size of this sector reached 9.99 billion yuan (around $1.62 billion) in 2013, of which Leju account for 28.7% of the market share and SouFun account 27.1%, according to data from iResearch. The research institute thinks that cross-boundary cooperation between e-commerce realtors and other industry will facilitate the upgrading of platforms and the innovation of marketing models.

The share price E-House surged more than 200% in the past one-year period, while that for SouFun (NYSE:SFUN), another US-listed Chinese e-commerce realtor, also soared more than 200% from $26 per share a year earlier to $92 apiece at present.

E-House (China) Holdings Limited offers a wide range of services to the real estate industry, including online advertising and e-commerce, primary sales agency, secondary brokerage, information and consulting, offline advertising and promotion and real estate investment management services. It now claimed a nationwide network covering approximately 255 cities.

image credit: Leju

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Smart Wearable Maker Codoon Nets 60 Million Yuan of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/03/10/smart-wearable-maker-codoon-nets-60-million-yuan-of-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/10/smart-wearable-maker-codoon-nets-60-million-yuan-of-series-a-funding/#comments Mon, 10 Mar 2014 10:31:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16952 Codoon, a smart wearable maker, announced that it secured 60 million yuan (around $9.76 million) of Series A financing led by Shenzhen Capital Group and followed by CITIC Capital. The company received 22 million yuan from Chinese online gaming company Shanda in 2011 (Correction: An earlier version of this story said the amount is 10 […]]]>

Codoon, a smart wearable maker, announced that it secured 60 million yuan (around $9.76 million) of Series A financing led by Shenzhen Capital Group and followed by CITIC Capital. The company received 22 million yuan from Chinese online gaming company Shanda in 2011 (Correction: An earlier version of this story said the amount is 10 million yuan).

As one of the earliest among domestic peers to explore smart wearable territory, Codoon is dedicated to develop both hardware and software of smart fitness-tracking wearables. Its hardware products includes Baidu-backed Codoon wristband, second generation of the bracelet, step counter, Bluetooth body scale, Codoon CandyCodoon Smile, etc.

Codoon Workout, the accompanying software for Codoon hardware, can track the activity of users, collect data and give suggestions. It is now available on both website and mobile.

The capital will be injected to develop the health-tracking platform and user community of Codoon, as well as to perfect features of Codoon Workout.

Shen Bo, founder of the company, claimed that Codoon registered more than 10 million users and have shipped tens of thousands pieces of hardware domestically and over 200k units to overseas markets.

image credit: Codoon

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[Update] Joint Venture of ZTE and The9 Unveils Fun Box Priced at 499 Yuan https://technode.com/2014/03/10/update-joint-venture-of-zte-and-the9-unveils-fun-box-priced-at-499-yuan/ https://technode.com/2014/03/10/update-joint-venture-of-zte-and-the9-unveils-fun-box-priced-at-499-yuan/#comments Mon, 10 Mar 2014 07:49:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16934 ZTE The9, a joint venture co-founded by telecom equipment and smartphone maker ZTE and online game company The9, planned to release this month Fun Box, a TV and game smart box which embeds several online games developed by The9, according to a microblog posted by Zhu Jun, CEO of the game developer. [Update]: The joint venture […]]]>
ZTE The9

ZTE The9, a joint venture co-founded by telecom equipment and smartphone maker ZTE and online game company The9, planned to release this month Fun Box, a TV and game smart box which embeds several online games developed by The9, according to a microblog posted by Zhu Jun, CEO of the game developer.

[Update]: The joint venture released Fun Box March 19 and announced that the 499 yuan (roughly US$80) smart box will be open for pre-order on JD from April 10 together with a Bluetooth gamepad which is priced at 199 yuan. Moreover, ZTE The9 has partnered up with game and content providers to form an alliance, including Sohu, Shanda, Youzu, LineKong, Chukong Technology, Funshion, among others.

Powered by game engine based on Android system, the product will feature quad-core 1.9GHz Nvidia Tegra processor, 72 unit Nvidia Geforce GPU and supports 4K hi-definition videos. Zhu also disclosed that the smart box will have a Bluetooth gamepad with gravity and vibration sensors.

Zeng Xuezhong, executive VP of ZTE, disclosed that the product will be released before the launch of Tron, a similar product jointly developed by Huawei and Perfect World and scheduled to hit market this May at around 1,200 yuan (roughly $ 195).

Guangdong Cable Network just invested 12.50 million yuan in ZTE The9 for a 10% stake in the joint venture, which will provide paid gaming, video and reading services for more than 13 million users of the investor.

image credit: The9

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Highly Localized Android-enabled Nokia X Opens Up for Pre-order on Chinese B2C Site JD https://technode.com/2014/03/10/highly-localized-android-enabled-nokia-x-opens-up-for-pre-order-on-chinese-b2c-site-jd/ https://technode.com/2014/03/10/highly-localized-android-enabled-nokia-x-opens-up-for-pre-order-on-chinese-b2c-site-jd/#comments Mon, 10 Mar 2014 03:56:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16916 Nokia X, the long-rumored Android-powered smartphone Nokia officially released in Feb. at MWC, is opened up for pre-order on Chinese B2C site JD today in a bid to explore China, one of the largest markets for Android-based smartphones. The new gadget is priced at 599 yuan (around $ 97) and will be shipped on March […]]]>

Nokia X, the long-rumored Android-powered smartphone Nokia officially released in Feb. at MWC, is opened up for pre-order on Chinese B2C site JD today in a bid to explore China, one of the largest markets for Android-based smartphones. The new gadget is priced at 599 yuan (around $ 97) and will be shipped on March 24.

Highly customized to the habits of Chinese users, Nokia X will feature Android interface developed by Lewa, a Chinese custom ROM developer targets at low-end Android-enabled smartphones, rather than the window phone-styled Metro interface. It will preinstall local service like AutoNavi Maps, online video service iQiyi and iReader.

Nokia will also replace Nokia AppStore with a dedicated Chinese AppStore for Nokia X users in China. Currently, the platform provides around 20,000 localized apps and supports payments via AliPay and credit cards.

Positioned as an entry-level smartphone, Nokia X features 4-inch display with an 854×400 pixel resolution, a Snapdragon S4 8225 SoC with a dual-core processor clocked at 1GHz. Nokia X has 512MB of RAM and 4GB internal storage and the ability to take in micro SD cards. The camera is a disappointing 3-megapixel on the rear and there’s no front-facing camera. The product is offered in six colors, black, white, red, yellow, blue and green.

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Tencent Unveils Revenue-sharing Policy for Mobile Game CPs https://technode.com/2014/03/07/tencent-unveils-revenue-sharing-policy-for-mobile-game-cps/ https://technode.com/2014/03/07/tencent-unveils-revenue-sharing-policy-for-mobile-game-cps/#comments Fri, 07 Mar 2014 08:03:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16859 Tencent recently released the cooperation models and revenue-sharing policies for its mobile game platform, which is engaged in incorporating mobile game titles hosted on various sites and services. Tencent divides gaming content providers (CPs) into three categories according to their cooperation levels with the platform, namely game operators that have access to the platform but […]]]>
Tencent Mobile Game

Tencent recently released the cooperation models and revenue-sharing policies for its mobile game platform, which is engaged in incorporating mobile game titles hosted on various sites and services.

Tencent divides gaming content providers (CPs) into three categories according to their cooperation levels with the platform, namely game operators that have access to the platform but run their service independently, joint operators and exclusive licensed game operators.

According to Piao Yanli, deputy manager of Tencent Game, the first type of CPs will pocket 70% of the revenue, basically on par with the share distributed by Alibaba’s and Wandoujia’s mobile game platforms.

The revenue-sharing ratio between joint game operators and Tencent’s platform is 6:4, while more marketing and operation supports will be offered to CPs. Exclusive listened games will gain the core resources of the platform, like data of all social platforms under Tencent as well as that for high-tier users.

Tencent usually claims channel fees before sharing revenues with CPs based on the rates mentioned above. The company did not disclose the channel fee ratio this time, but it is reportedly to stand at between 25% and 40% of the total revenue before deducting channel fees, according to Biz.265g.

Piao added that more than 50 gaming platforms cooperating with Tencent mobile game service saw over 10 million daily active users, of which 20 are PC platforms and 30 are mobile platforms. 8 PC game platforms registered more than 100 million uses, and 9 mobile platforms have over 100 million users.

It takes 4-10 weeks to finish the business procedures before the games can land on the platform. Piao said Tencent assesses over 200 games per month and the key standards in evaluating these games are core gameplay, technical structure, basic experience and business value.

According to data released by Tencent mobile game platform, the percentage of moderate players reached 45% and excessive gamers hit 34%. The genres of RPG, strategic games and cards account for a large chunk of Chinese mobile gaming revenue, while chess and shooting games have a large user base but less revenue, Piao added.

image credit: Tencent Games

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[Update] Xiaomi-like Mid-price Phone IUNI Hits Market With A Price Tag Around 300 Dollars https://technode.com/2014/03/07/update-xiaomi-like-mid-price-phone-iuni-hits-market-with-a-price-tag-around-300-dollars/ https://technode.com/2014/03/07/update-xiaomi-like-mid-price-phone-iuni-hits-market-with-a-price-tag-around-300-dollars/#comments Fri, 07 Mar 2014 04:36:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16839 IUNI U2 IUNI (abbr. from I am unique), a Shenzhen-based smartphone brand backed by phone maker Gionee, announced that it is going to roll out IUNI U2, the first smartphone under the brand, on March 18. [Update] The product is now sold on JD at 1,799 yuan (around US$290) for 16GB version and 1,999 yuan (around US$322) for 32GB […]]]>
IUNIp

IUNI U2

IUNI (abbr. from I am unique), a Shenzhen-based smartphone brand backed by phone maker Gionee, announced that it is going to roll out IUNI U2, the first smartphone under the brand, on March 18. [Update] The product is now sold on JD at 1,799 yuan (around US$290) for 16GB version and 1,999 yuan (around US$322) for 32GB version.

Powered by IUNI OS based on Android 4.3, IUNI U2 features metal casing, quad-core Snapdragon 800 (MSM8974) processor with frequencies ranging from 300MHz to 2150MHz, Andreno 330 GPU and 2GB RAM+8GB ROM. The 4.7-inch screen features 1080P resolution format, while the resolution for front-facing camera and rear camera is 4.0MP and 16MP, respectively.

IUNIOS

IUNI OS

Positioned as a smartphone for the youth, the interface of IUNI OS, which launched for public testing mid-Feb., is simple and clean, following the flat design trend led by Apple’s iOS 7. The company claimed that no third-party apps will be pre-installed in the product.

Although IUNI will adopt a similar business mode to Xiaomi’s in taking e-commerce platform as sales channel, building brand community, developing proprietary ROM, He Xiaojun, brand manager of IUNI, said that IUNI differs from Xiaomi in brand positioning and it will keep abundant supply of its products rather than adopting Xiaomi’s flash sales model.

Douban, an interest-based social network popular among young people, partnered with IUNI as the marketing platform and content provider of the smartphone brand.

image credit: IUNI

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Xunlei and BesTV Team Up to Release STB and Tap Internet TV Sector https://technode.com/2014/03/07/xunlei-bestv-team-release-stb-tap-internet-tv-sector/ https://technode.com/2014/03/07/xunlei-bestv-team-release-stb-tap-internet-tv-sector/#comments Fri, 07 Mar 2014 04:00:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16791 Chinese download manager Xunlei (Thunder) teamed up with media service BesTV to release Red Thunder (not official translation), a custom set-top box for subscribers of Xunlei’s paid service Xunlei VIP. The product will be shipped on March 28. For a price of 399 yuan (around $ 65), Xunlei users can get a package of services […]]]>

Chinese download manager Xunlei (Thunder) teamed up with media service BesTV to release Red Thunder (not official translation), a custom set-top box for subscribers of Xunlei’s paid service Xunlei VIP. The product will be shipped on March 28.

For a price of 399 yuan (around $ 65), Xunlei users can get a package of services and products for the first year, including the new set-top box, 699 yuan worth of video contents, 299 yuan worth of NBA game live stream and 180 yuan Xunlei platinum membership. The company added that the annual fee for the second year is 199 yuan.

Powered by Android 4.2 system, Red Thunder features 1.5GHz dual-core processor, Mali-400 3D GPU, 1G RAM and 8G ROM. The device is also equipped with HDMI output and supports three high-definition video formats of 720p, 1080i and 1080p. The gadget also embeds the cloud download accelerator developed by Xunlei.

Shanghai Media Group (SMG)-backed BesTV will stream more than 400K hours of copyrighted high-definition video contents via the new product, including live stream of NBA games.

Xunlei and BesTV announced shortly after the release of Red Thunder that they entered into partnership to explore Internet television territory. Under the deal, Xunlei will be responsible for marketing of its membership system and provide technological supports, while BesTV will offer copyrighted contents by leveraging its television platforms and content management experiences.

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Social Marketing Service Weizoom Wins Tens of Millions Yuan Financing Led by CDH Investments https://technode.com/2014/03/06/social-marketing-service-weizoom-wins-tens-millions-yuan-financing-led-cdh-investments/ https://technode.com/2014/03/06/social-marketing-service-weizoom-wins-tens-millions-yuan-financing-led-cdh-investments/#comments Thu, 06 Mar 2014 11:09:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16812 Social marketing service Weizoom announced that it raised tens of millions yuan of investment from four investors led by CDH Investments and followed by Qifu Fund and two undisclosed investment institutions. All the funds are now in position, the company added. Weizoom has secured two rounds of 7-digit sum investments in previous rounds from Zero2IPO […]]]>
Weizoom1

Social marketing service Weizoom announced that it raised tens of millions yuan of investment from four investors led by CDH Investments and followed by Qifu Fund and two undisclosed investment institutions. All the funds are now in position, the company added.

Weizoom has secured two rounds of 7-digit sum investments in previous rounds from Zero2IPO Group and state-backed Zhongguancun Fund.

Founded in 2012, Weizoom is engaged in helping enterprises and institutions to build up efficient social marketing management platform as well as offering one-stop micro-blog marketing solutions and services on different social platforms like Sina Weibo and WeChat.

The fund will be used in R&D and team construction, according to Wang Zhen, founder and CEO of the company. Although Weizoom does not record profits at present, Wang expects the company to swing to profits this year.

Weizoom shares revenue with its customers according to their sales. One of the company’s well-known cases is the marketing campaign for smartphone maker Xiaomi. Weizoom is trying to diversify its clientele and now provide services for China Telecom, China Merchants Bank, COFCO, as well as e-commerce sites like Dangdang, VanclJumei, etc.

image credit: Weizoom

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Open-source Futuristic Robot Ai.Frame Launches Fundraising Campaign on Crowdfunding Site Pozible https://technode.com/2014/03/05/open-source-futuristic-robot-ai-frame-launches-fundraising-campaign-on-crowdfunding-site-pozible/ https://technode.com/2014/03/05/open-source-futuristic-robot-ai-frame-launches-fundraising-campaign-on-crowdfunding-site-pozible/#comments Wed, 05 Mar 2014 08:52:21 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16770 Chinese humanoid robot manufacturer Ai.Frame just kicks off a crowdfunding campaign at Pozible, a global crowdfunding site, to raise a $5,000 round under the support of Loving the Crowd, a domestic crowdfunding consulting firm offering one-stop solutions to hardware developers and makers from China. Loving the Crowd and Pozible teamed up to bring the creative and imaginative works […]]]>
Ai.Frame

Chinese humanoid robot manufacturer Ai.Frame just kicks off a crowdfunding campaign at Pozible, a global crowdfunding site, to raise a $5,000 round under the support of Loving the Crowd, a domestic crowdfunding consulting firm offering one-stop solutions to hardware developers and makers from China.

Loving the Crowd and Pozible teamed up to bring the creative and imaginative works of Chinese makers to the world stage and Ai.Frame is the first project launched by their strategic alliance. In order to bring the “Best of Chinese Innovations” to western world, Pozible launched a Mandarin version, moreover, an international team is available now to help the translation of messages so that crowdfunders can fully engage a western market.

Ai.Frame builds customizable robots and birds for fans of anime and of building model planes. The Ai.Frame Robot and Bird is powered by Arduino/STM32 and servo motors. It can be controlled via bluetooth, sound and visual commands and an app that will be made available to smartphone users.

The Ai.Frame Robot and Bird will be available in acrylic or wood and at around 250 – 440 grams, while the toy-size robots range in size from seven to nine inches in height. It has a range of more than 300 movements, including hip hop dancing, and a motion sensor that prevents it from running into obstacles.

The Ai.Frame Robot and Bird are programmable, have a shell that allows people to engrave customized messages and includes stylized accessories, and can be 3D printed. Ai.Frame is sold starting at $259, a quarter of the price of other sophisticated humanoid robots on the market, according to the crowdfunding site.

Ai. Frame is developed by a very young team led by Hu Jiaqi and Sun Zebo, two Shanghai-based entrepreneurs. The team added that 70% of received funds will be used to manufacture and ship physical products to backers, 20% to support future research, and the other to set up the Ai.Frame company.

image credit: Ai.Frame, Pozible

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Digital Advertising Solution Provider Avazu Rakes in $48 Million of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/03/05/digital-advertising-solution-provider-avazu-rakes-in-48-million-dollars-of-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/05/digital-advertising-solution-provider-avazu-rakes-in-48-million-dollars-of-series-a-funding/#comments Wed, 05 Mar 2014 03:46:15 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16754 Avazu, a Shanghai-headquartered digital marketing agency, secured $48 million of Series A financing from Gaorong Capital, unnamed Internet giants and U.S. Internet fund (source in Chinese). The capital will be used in research and development as well as acquisitions of companies with relevant businesses, according to Shi Yi, founder and CEO of the firm. The […]]]>
Avazu

Avazu, a Shanghai-headquartered digital marketing agency, secured $48 million of Series A financing from Gaorong Capital, unnamed Internet giants and U.S. Internet fund (source in Chinese). The capital will be used in research and development as well as acquisitions of companies with relevant businesses, according to Shi Yi, founder and CEO of the firm.

The company’s product portfolio includes three performance marketing platforms, namely Avazu DSP (real-time auction ad exchange platform), Avazu Tracking (cross-platform ad performance tracking system) and Avazu Private Exchange (private ad exchange).

It applies real time bidding (RTB) into Avazu DSP platform, allowing buyers and advertisers to achieve higher campaign efficiency through impression-based bidding, using intelligent data of time, frequency, content, behavior, interest, price etc. for each impression.

Avazu’s partners include both domestic Internet giants like Tencent, Baidu and International companies like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo. The company has established offices in Beijing, Tokyo, Amsterdam and planned to branch into New York, Berlin, Seoul and London in future three to six months.

Shi Yi said the company is well-positioned to take the challenge of mobile social marketing in technology. He disclosed that mobile business account for 50% of total business in last year and this figure is expected to hit 80% in 2014.

image credit: Avazu

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DonationShop: a Charity E-commerce Site Manufacturing Branded Merchandises for Non-profits in Shenzhen https://technode.com/2014/03/04/donationshop-a-charity-e-commerce-site-manufacturing-branded-merchandises-for-non-profits-in-shenzhen-2/ https://technode.com/2014/03/04/donationshop-a-charity-e-commerce-site-manufacturing-branded-merchandises-for-non-profits-in-shenzhen-2/#comments Tue, 04 Mar 2014 08:26:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16707 Launched earlier this year, DonationShop is a Hong Kong-headquartered charity e-commerce website, which helps charity organizations/non-profits to collect donations by selling branded merchandise on the website, which will also set up and host e-stores for them. The sellers only need to select the type of merchandise, graphics and branding, while DonationShop will manufacture, pack and […]]]>
DonationShop

Launched earlier this year, DonationShop is a Hong Kong-headquartered charity e-commerce website, which helps charity organizations/non-profits to collect donations by selling branded merchandise on the website, which will also set up and host e-stores for them.

The sellers only need to select the type of merchandise, graphics and branding, while DonationShop will manufacture, pack and ship the products on behalf of them.

What’s impressive about the startup is that these organizations do not have to bother with all the troubles in shipping its branded products, more importantly, the sellers are saved from the trouble of raising initial investments, and therefore, avoid the financial risks involved in case a charity’s products fail to sell.

The startup keeps a fee close to the wholesale price of the product when a product gets sold, and the rest of the profit goes to the charity seller’s PayPal account. The products are manufactured by DonationShop’s factory located in Shenzhen and shipped in a post addressed to end-users.

In addition to non-profits, DonationShop also caters for the needs of public figures, politicians, celebrities, brands, corporation, media, high traffic websites or just good promoters for various causes.

“Since this is a very new way to collect donations, our goal is to create a trend among public figures, brands or companies to have a donation shop and use their names to help.” says David Rubben, founder of the company. “Once this donation idea is established among few bright public figures, many will follow and a lot more donations will be done for the charities across the world.” he noted.

image credit: DonationShop

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[Update] Interactive Website Feedback Tool TrackDuck Launched Chinese Version, Secured €200K Seed Funding https://technode.com/2014/03/04/update-interactive-website-feedback-tool-trackduck-launched-chinese-version-secured-200k-euros-seed-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/03/04/update-interactive-website-feedback-tool-trackduck-launched-chinese-version-secured-200k-euros-seed-funding/#comments Tue, 04 Mar 2014 05:41:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16698 TrackDuck, a Lithuanian visual feedback tool for websites and web development, just released a Mandarin version for its website in an attempt to explore Chinese market. [Update] It’s now secured a €200,000 seed funding from Kima Ventures and Practica Capital. To improve the complicated and time-consuming process of web development, TrackDuck helps designers and web developers to communicate […]]]>
TrackDuck

TrackDuck, a Lithuanian visual feedback tool for websites and web development, just released a Mandarin version for its website in an attempt to explore Chinese market. [Update] It’s now secured a €200,000 seed funding from Kima Ventures and Practica Capital.

To improve the complicated and time-consuming process of web development, TrackDuck helps designers and web developers to communicate and collaborate in a more effective way. Various participants in a project can comment, check status, assign feedback and issues with colleagues in real time, faster than sending emails. Live websites also can get feedback from all the visitors if the clients choose to. The web-based tool claimed to achieve 30-70 percent improvement in communication.

To avoid misunderstandings, every reported bug is marked directly in the website and comes with snapshots, comment, priority and technical details. TrackDuck also integrated other project management tools like Basecamp and Jira into the process.

Moreover, the firm pays special attention to privacy of their clients, using SSL256 bit encrypted connection and storing all user data in secured cloud storages.

Apart from offering free services to clients’ first project permanently, the company’s service is priced at $9 to $49 per month according to size of their clients. Backed by Helsinki’s Startup Sauna, the company is currently seeking for 200,000 Euro round (roughly $275K).

image credit: TrackDuck

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Dangbei, Third-party App Store for Smart TV https://technode.com/2014/03/03/dangbei-third-party-app-store-smart-tv/ https://technode.com/2014/03/03/dangbei-third-party-app-store-smart-tv/#respond Mon, 03 Mar 2014 09:43:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16671 The development of a new generation of smart TVs in China is giving rise to smart TV apps, since apps are the best way to gain traction from Smart TV users, just like on smartphones. Dangbei, an app store for smart TV, is focused on this market. Taking a similar model with mobile app store […]]]>

The development of a new generation of smart TVs in China is giving rise to smart TV apps, since apps are the best way to gain traction from Smart TV users, just like on smartphones. Dangbei, an app store for smart TV, is focused on this market.

Taking a similar model with mobile app store Gfan, Dangbei runs a news site ZNDS and a TV client Dangbei Market, which are complementary to each other.

Launched in Sep. 2013, DZDS is positioned as a smart TV portal where users can download various TV apps and share their experiences in using new software and hardware. The site’s daily visitors stood at around 100K.

Dangbei Market now provides more than 300 TV apps to users, who can upgrade and download these apps on the platform. The apps store is compatible with set-top boxes under over 10 brands, like Alibaba’s Tmall Box, Xiaomi and LeTV. Its monthly downloads hits around 400K.

The company has raised millions of angel investment from Zhejiang Daily Media. Dangbei is supported by a 20-member team led by Jin Linglin, a serial entrepreneur in smart TV industry.

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Pet E-commerce Site Boqii Closes $25 Million Series B Financing, Poised for Offline Expansion in 2014 https://technode.com/2014/03/03/pet-e-commerce-site-boqii-closes-25-million-dollars-series-b-financing-poised-offline-expansion-2014/ https://technode.com/2014/03/03/pet-e-commerce-site-boqii-closes-25-million-dollars-series-b-financing-poised-offline-expansion-2014/#comments Mon, 03 Mar 2014 07:29:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16662 Boqii, an e-commerce site focusing on pet related products, has closed $25 million of Series B funding from an unnamed U.S. venture capitalist and existing investors led by Goldman Sachs. Started as a pet community in 2008, Boqii registered more than 3 million users as of present, covering a wide category of services like pet […]]]>
Boqii

Boqii, an e-commerce site focusing on pet related products, has closed $25 million of Series B funding from an unnamed U.S. venture capitalist and existing investors led by Goldman Sachs.

Started as a pet community in 2008, Boqii registered more than 3 million users as of present, covering a wide category of services like pet community and pet product e-store. Positioned as a pet product retailer, Boqii has teamed up with other e-commerce sites of Taobao, Tmall, JD, Yixun, Yihaodian to expand sales channels. Boqii started to foster a homegrown brand since the second half of last year.

Furthermore, the company also launched a platform to integrate offline pet service providers like pet beauty salons, pet trainers, veterinary hospitals and photo studios in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Nanjing and Nanjing, etc. The company planned to expand offline business in Beijing in this year.

The company has raised tens of millions of dollars in Series A financing from Goldman Sachs last June. The capital raised this time will be used in branding and marketing.

image credit: Boqii

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Personal Finance App Wacai Books $15 Million Series A+ Funding, Names Ameba Capital Founding Partner as CEO https://technode.com/2014/02/28/personal-finance-app-wacai-books-15-million-dollars-series-a-funding-name-ameba-capital-founding-partner-as-ceo/ https://technode.com/2014/02/28/personal-finance-app-wacai-books-15-million-dollars-series-a-funding-name-ameba-capital-founding-partner-as-ceo/#comments Fri, 28 Feb 2014 08:45:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16535 Wacai, a personal finance app developer, announced today it has secured $15 million of Series A+ funding from Qiming Venture Partners. The company has raised about ten million dollars of Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners and $3 million from CDH Investments last year. This round brings Wacai’s total funding to nearly $30 million. […]]]>

Wacai, a personal finance app developer, announced today it has secured $15 million of Series A+ funding from Qiming Venture Partners. The company has raised about ten million dollars of Series A funding from IDG Capital Partners and $3 million from CDH Investments last year. This round brings Wacai’s total funding to nearly $30 million.

Li Zhiguo, founding partner of angel investor Ameba Capital, will assume the post of Wacai’s CEO. Li worked as an angel investor since 2010 after Koubei, a ratings and reviews service he founded, was acquired by Alibaba in 2008. The projects he invested in include, social shopping service Mogujie, taxi-booking app Kuaidi Dache, interest-based social network Huaban, Wacai, etc.

Li said that it is the promising prospects of Internet finance industry and the team that attracted him to join the company. The firm is now supported by a team of round 70 employees. Li added the capital raised this time will be used to attract more talents.

With the rise of mobile internet, the threshold for financial management and financial products are lowered, and therefore, creating a huge market for personal financial management, noted Li.

The company’s core product Wacai, a bookkeeping service which claimed 60 million users, added fund trading features since last year. Wacai has teamed up with several funds, insurance companies and banks, enabling users to purchase monetary funds, stock funds and bond funds on the app. It also rolls out some high profit financial products on 18th every month to attract more users. Li added the daily sales of these products exceeded 100 million yuan ($16.27 million).

image credit: Wacai

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Ule, Ecommerce Platform Venture Backed by China Post and TOM, Raises $110 Million Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/28/ule-ecommerce-platform-venture-backed-by-china-post-and-tom-raises-110-million-dollars-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/28/ule-ecommerce-platform-venture-backed-by-china-post-and-tom-raises-110-million-dollars-funding/#comments Fri, 28 Feb 2014 06:43:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16522 Ule, an-ecommerce platform jointly established by state-backed China Post and TOM Group in 2010, reportedly secured $110 million of financing from unnamed investors at a valuation of $830 million (via Sina Tech). After the investment, China Post’s stake in the joint venture reduced from 51% to 44.24%, but it is still the largest shareholder of […]]]>
Ule

Ule, an-ecommerce platform jointly established by state-backed China Post and TOM Group in 2010, reportedly secured $110 million of financing from unnamed investors at a valuation of $830 million (via Sina Tech).

After the investment, China Post’s stake in the joint venture reduced from 51% to 44.24%, but it is still the largest shareholder of Ule. TOM owns 42.51% stake in the company, down from 49% before the deal. The new investors will hold a combined 13.25% stake.

The website offers wide range of products including home goods, foods, infant and mother care, personal care, fashion and electronic goods etc. Ule has launched Youxnp, an e-commerce site for green agricultural products which target at high-end customers. It also has a dedicated channel for bulk purchase of government agencies and state-owned enterprises.

Different from other domestic e-commerce sites, which rely on third-party logistics services, Ule leverages the logistics resources of China Post, which has more than 50,000 post offices nationwide to provide offline delivery and sales services.

The strong logistic and warehouse capabilities of China Post and TOM Group’s technological support are the main reasons that attracting this capital injection, according to the company. The funding will be used to expand its mobile ecommerce business.

The transaction volume of Ule surged 175% YOY to 1.43 billion yuan ($231.93 million) by the end of 2013. Its repeat purchase rate reached 66% in the Q4 2013, while average price per order hit 448 yuan, higher than industry average, according to data released by the company.

image credit: Ule

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New Year Themed Apps and Brand Game Sequels Rules Feb: Wandoujia https://technode.com/2014/02/28/new-year-themed-apps-and-brand-game-sequels-rules-feb-wandoujia/ https://technode.com/2014/02/28/new-year-themed-apps-and-brand-game-sequels-rules-feb-wandoujia/#comments Fri, 28 Feb 2014 06:20:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16509 Chinse Android app distributor Wandoujia released the latest issue for this February, shedding light on the holiday success stories and game branding triumphs during the period. 1. Mobile Catches a Ride on the Year of the Horse The Chinese New Year usually heralds a lull in app downloads as more people spend time with friends […]]]>

Chinse Android app distributor Wandoujia released the latest issue for this February, shedding light on the holiday success stories and game branding triumphs during the period.

1. Mobile Catches a Ride on the Year of the Horse

The Chinese New Year usually heralds a lull in app downloads as more people spend time with friends and family, but some apps defied traditional drops in downloads and scored big on the occasion.

Red Envelope

WeChat “Red Envelope”

WeChat debuted a viral “Red Envelope” function in its messenger, allowing users to send the traditional New Year’s gift of cash electronically. Users can have fun in gaining random amounts from a single envelope via the “lottery” features. 4.82 million WeChat users took part in the lucky money game on 2014 Chinese New Year eve, as disclosed by WeChat’s parent company Tencent. Tencent lured 8 million bank cards to their payments system over the holiday, because users had to link their bank cards to Tencent’s payment service for distributing or receiving the cash gifts.

Sending well-wishes and clever poems to family and friends for the coming year is a New Year’s Eve tradition. Beautiful Wishes and Hourse-Year Blessings are two apps that climbed to the Top Ten Apps by enabling users to share beautiful holiday cards via social networks. The two apps recorded 32,393 and 10,060 downloads respectively.

Top app

In addition to New Year themed apps, the holiday also triggered a surge in app downloads in general before the 7-day holiday started on Jan. 31, as more and more people who work in big cities tend to download apps to kill times on their way back to hometowns, according to a report by Papaya Mobile.

2. Episode II: Games That Strike Back

Wandoujia 2

New game sequels got massive downloads and filled the charts this month. Six of the top fifteen new games demonstrate the brand loyalty of Chinese gamers with massive monthly downloads. Chinese consumers are notorious for their risk adverse behavior, and it seems this rewards risk adverse developers willing to leverage brand power: If it aren’t broke, make a sequel.

Top Game
Fatest Growing Game
Fatest Growing app

image credit: Wandoujia

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Shanghai to Ban Taxi-booking Apps during Rush Hour https://technode.com/2014/02/27/shanghai-to-ban-taxi-booking-apps-during-rush-hour/ Thu, 27 Feb 2014 09:57:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16484 After following Beijing’s lead in banning the bidding feature of taxi apps last year, Shanghai city government recently released another ban to tighten the regulations on taxi-hailing apps (via Tech Sina). New rules released by the Shanghai Municipal Transport and Port Authority prohibited the use of booking apps by taxi drivers during rush hours (7:30 […]]]>

After following Beijing’s lead in banning the bidding feature of taxi apps last year, Shanghai city government recently released another ban to tighten the regulations on taxi-hailing apps (via Tech Sina).

New rules released by the Shanghai Municipal Transport and Port Authority prohibited the use of booking apps by taxi drivers during rush hours (7:30 am to 9:30 am; 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm) and banned their use entirely by private vehicles licensed for hire. The new regulations will take effect from March 1 and Beijing may release similar policies latter on.

The new rules will also prohibit drivers from answering phone calls and using mobile devices while carrying a customer, as well as preventing the apps from sending messages to drivers who have already picked up a customer. Cab drivers who refuse to act responsibly may be slapped with up to 15-day suspension or hefty fines.

After the fierce competition last year, the taxi app market is now dominated by Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, which is ventured backed by Tencent and Alibaba respectively. The two apps hold a combined 90% the market by daily taxi app orders last year, according to iResearch.

In order to gain bigger market share, the price war between these two apps escalates from the beginning of this year with both parties boosting cash rebates to taxi drivers and customers to new heights.

As a countermeasure for the governmental ban on taxi apps, Alibaba just announced that AliPay users who take taxis in rush hour can pay via AliPay Wallet’s QR bar scanning feature, which allows customers continue to enjoy 13 yuan cash rebate per ride without opening taxi apps.

In addition to capital supports, the two internet giants also integrated the taxi apps into their flagship services to attract bigger user base. Didi Dache is integrated into Tencent’s IM tool WeChat, while Kuaidi Dache is linked to Alibaba’s leading payment application Alipay.

Didi Dache reportedly spent 400 million yuan ($65.28 million) of cash rebates in the one month period ended in Feb 9, claiming to distribute 1 billion yuan in total. Its registered users doubled to more than 40 million compared with the figure before the promotion, according to vice president of the company Zhang Jing.

Kuaidi Dache disclosed that it had spent more than 100 million yuan as of early Feb., while its daily orders have surged to 6 million per day as of present from 500K at the end of last year. To ease the pressures on servers caused by rapid growth of data, Kuaidi’s data will be transferred to the cloud computing platform developed by Ali Cloud, the firm recently announced. Both of the two companies claimed that they will continue the battle.

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HKCEx to open Bitcoin ATM Network in Hong Kong https://technode.com/2014/02/27/hkcex-to-open-bitcoin-atm-network-in-hong-kong/ https://technode.com/2014/02/27/hkcex-to-open-bitcoin-atm-network-in-hong-kong/#comments Thu, 27 Feb 2014 09:37:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16475 After bagging $2 million in seed funding from local investors, Hong Kong Crypto Exchange (HKCEx) has announced to open a network of 10 Bitcoin ATMs in 10 largest shopping and financial centers in Hong Kong. Each machine will allow users to buy and sell online any of five basic crypto-currencies, including Bitcoin, Litecoin, Namecoin, Novacoin, […]]]>
HKCEX1

After bagging $2 million in seed funding from local investors, Hong Kong Crypto Exchange (HKCEx) has announced to open a network of 10 Bitcoin ATMs in 10 largest shopping and financial centers in Hong Kong. Each machine will allow users to buy and sell online any of five basic crypto-currencies, including Bitcoin, Litecoin, Namecoin, Novacoin, Peercoin, and to make a withdrawal with HKD or USD.

The ATMs will have a direct connection to the HKCEx, so that one could track online all the current exchange rates. It will also allow users to either login to their HKCEx wallets or to make buying and selling for cash on a no-name basis.

A registered user will also be able to top up its HKCEx account with cash, to deal in with no barriers and to withdraw some free funds and either get cash or change them to digital currency. Each ATM will be equipped with all the up-to-date technologies such as QR-scanner, two-factor user identification and chip-based keys.

HKCEx Chairman & CEO Pheng Cheah noted that “Bitcoin and other crypto-currency traders will get a chance to make deals on the exchange itself with no middlemen involved that usually cost a 20% service fee. HKCEx has set up a project to place at least 20 additional Bitcoin ATMs in Hong Kong during 2014.

HKCEx has been carried on cooperation with several Chinese banks. However, there was no sign of the ATM to be installed in Mainland.

The sprawling growth of Bitcoin market slowed down after relevant Chinese authorities cautioned financial institutions and payment services against the risks of crypto currencies, making clear that Bitcoin is a virtual good rather than legal tender. Following the warning, AliPay and TenPay, two leading domestic third-party payment services, terminated payment and clearing services for crypto-currencies.

Moreover, Mt. Gox, Tokyo-based once leading Bitcoin trading platform, suspended trading on Feb 25, and rumors swirled that the company is going to declare bankruptcy.

Note: The post was based on press release from HKCEx, but Cryptocoinsnews.com doubt it’s scam and is doing investigation on it.

image credit: HKCEx

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Wandoujia to Split 70% Revenue to Game Developers with Less Than 500K Yuan Monthly Turnover https://technode.com/2014/02/27/wandoujia-to-split-70-revenue-to-game-developers-with-less-than-500k-yuan-monthly-turnover/ https://technode.com/2014/02/27/wandoujia-to-split-70-revenue-to-game-developers-with-less-than-500k-yuan-monthly-turnover/#comments Thu, 27 Feb 2014 03:12:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16466 Chinese Android app distributor and mobile service provider Wandoujia announced a new revenue share structure for jointly operated mobile games in 2014. The new revenue sharing rate will come into effect from March 1, 2014. Developers of game apps with 500K yuan ($81,567) of turnover or lower will get 70% of the total revenue, 10% higher […]]]>

Chinese Android app distributor and mobile service provider Wandoujia announced a new revenue share structure for jointly operated mobile games in 2014. The new revenue sharing rate will come into effect from March 1, 2014.

Developers of game apps with 500K yuan ($81,567) of turnover or lower will get 70% of the total revenue, 10% higher than before. Wandoujia will split 50% of the revenue for game apps with more than 500K yuan of turnover.

E-commerce giant Alibaba also launched a mobile game platform earlier this year. Alibaba will pocket 20% of the revenue, while 70% of the revenue will be distributed to developers and the rest 10% will be donated to charity funds.

In addition, Wandoujia will offer 100K yuan worth of advertising resources per month to apps with 500K to 1 million yuan of turnover, while 300K yuan worth of ad resources will be given to games with more than 1 million yuan of turnover.

Wandoujia added they want to provide more curated promotion activities to premium developers by offering advertising services, helping them to gain more traction from users.

Wandoujia claims more than 300 million users and distributes more than 30 million apps per day. The apps available on the platform cover a wide category including games, e-book, music, wallpaper, etc.

image credit: Wandoujia

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Tripper: a Live Interpreter and Travel Assistant Helping Travelers to Enjoy Local Fun https://technode.com/2014/02/26/tripper-a-live-interpreter-and-travel-assistant-helping-travelers-to-enjoy-local-fun/ https://technode.com/2014/02/26/tripper-a-live-interpreter-and-travel-assistant-helping-travelers-to-enjoy-local-fun/#comments Wed, 26 Feb 2014 12:11:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16446 Tripper is a tourism mobile app which can instantly connects users to live human interpreters and travel assistants in seconds with no pre-planning. The app is also equipped with a massive custom database with cheapest Asian travel resources including flights, hotels, tours and restaurants, a GPS map of users’ location, and a special camera option. Tripper is more […]]]>

Tripper is a tourism mobile app which can instantly connects users to live human interpreters and travel assistants in seconds with no pre-planning. The app is also equipped with a massive custom database with cheapest Asian travel resources including flights, hotels, tours and restaurants, a GPS map of users’ location, and a special camera option.

Tripper is more like a “local assistant on steroids” combining human language skills, massive Asian travel databases, and partnership rates to solve problems one may have abroad – interpretation, transportation, food, entertainment, emergency.

Tripper

 Tripper Main Screen

Designed for ease of use, the main screen of Tripper is quite simple. Just press the button of your need and a pop up window will appear – allowing you to choose your calling method (local phone/IP calling). From there, you’ll instantly call one of the live operators who will provide interpretation/travel assistance over the phone. Currently, the company’s calling centers are located in mainland China and they planned to establish calling centers in other countries.

The target users of Tripper are Chinese outbound tourists and foreigners who travel or live in China. Tripper’s service is priced at $0.5 per minute. Users also can pay by day or by month. The app now provides languages services in Chinese, English, and Japanese.

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Dianping Wedding to Offer Marketing and Promotion Services for Merchants https://technode.com/2014/02/26/dianping-wedding-to-offer-marketing-and-promotion-services-for-merchants/ https://technode.com/2014/02/26/dianping-wedding-to-offer-marketing-and-promotion-services-for-merchants/#respond Wed, 26 Feb 2014 06:42:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16431 Dianping, leading Chinese local lifestyle information and trading platform, will offer marketing and promotion services to merchants on various links of the wedding business chain by leveraging its wedding channel. Dianping’s wedding channel currently provides wedding services in 12 categories like wedding ceremony, photography, wedding feast, wedding clothes, etc. Around 1,000 merchants have settled on […]]]>

Dianping, leading Chinese local lifestyle information and trading platform, will offer marketing and promotion services to merchants on various links of the wedding business chain by leveraging its wedding channel.

Dianping’s wedding channel currently provides wedding services in 12 categories like wedding ceremony, photography, wedding feast, wedding clothes, etc. Around 1,000 merchants have settled on the platform.

According to investigation conducted by Dianping, the market size of Chinese wedding industry is expected to hit more than 800 billion yuan ($130.54 billion) this year, and this figure does not include derivative consumptions, said Li Jing, co-founder of Dianping.

Dianping is not alone in this area of China, a similar wedding service 591wed just secured tens of millions of capital injection last year.

Backed by 90 million monthly active users, this platform may enjoy an upper hand in competition against rivals in attracting users, especially after Tencent takes a 20% stake in Dianping, a deal which enables Dianping to take advantage of Tencent’s user base, social and other resources.

Started as a ratings and reviews platform, Dianping expanded to other vertical sectors in recent years, such as hotel booking, food ordering and food delivery.

image credit: Dianping

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HWTrek: a Community-driven Crowdfunding Platform Dedicated to Bring Hardware Ideas to Life https://technode.com/2014/02/26/hwtrek-a-community-driven-crowdfunding-platform-dedicated-to-bring-hardware-ideas-to-life/ https://technode.com/2014/02/26/hwtrek-a-community-driven-crowdfunding-platform-dedicated-to-bring-hardware-ideas-to-life/#comments Wed, 26 Feb 2014 03:58:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16418 Strings of companies hopped on the smart device bandwagon to tap this burgeoning sector. But many of them find it is difficult to get funds and find a trusted manufacturer to bring the ideas for their carefully-designed products into life, especially when there are higher demands for product quality and cost control in mass production. […]]]>
HWtrek

Strings of companies hopped on the smart device bandwagon to tap this burgeoning sector. But many of them find it is difficult to get funds and find a trusted manufacturer to bring the ideas for their carefully-designed products into life, especially when there are higher demands for product quality and cost control in mass production.

HWTrek (Hardware Trek), a Taiwan-based global community for digital electronics, aims to address these problems by providing a crowdfunding platform where it also pairs manufacturers with project creators to help navigate the complexities of bringing new hardware to market.

In addition, the company has scores of experts in product design, engineering, and manufacturing. It has partnered with 130+ top-tier OEMs and ODMs players including Pegatron, Wistron, Qisda, and WPG Holdings in Asia.

HWTrek recently debuts its new consumer electronics community platform, which aimed to enhance the communication and data exchange between hardware inventors, design and manufacturing experts and financial backers to bring next-generation hardware dreams to market.

Over 400 project creators and startups from the U.S. and Europe have registered on HWTrek since it was first launched in September 2013. More than 150 experts have joined the expert community.

In addition to the expert community feature of HWTrek, the platform also offers the experts an opportunity to showcase and demo their solutions, enabling inventors to leverage their valuable and tested knowledge. HWTrek’s first crowdfunded hardware projects will be available in Q2/Q3 of 2014.

image credit: HWTrek

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Gay Flirting App Blued Secures Around 10 Million Yuan Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/25/gay-flirting-app-blued-secured-around-10-million-yuan-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/25/gay-flirting-app-blued-secured-around-10-million-yuan-series-a-funding/#comments Tue, 25 Feb 2014 08:31:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16384 Chinese gay-flirting app Blued received roughly 10 million yuan ($1.6 million) of Series A funding from Crystal Stream for recruiting staff and growing user base, as its founder has confirmed on Weibo. The company has raised 3 million yuan of angel investment from Zhonglu Capital half a year ago. Similar to other dating apps for […]]]>

Chinese gay-flirting app Blued received roughly 10 million yuan ($1.6 million) of Series A funding from Crystal Stream for recruiting staff and growing user base, as its founder has confirmed on Weibo. The company has raised 3 million yuan of angel investment from Zhonglu Capital half a year ago.

Similar to other dating apps for straight people like Momo, Blued has the usual photo and chat features and enables users to see the pictures and profiles of other people via location-based service.

Blued attracted more than 3 million users as of present since its launch last year. The number of daily active users represents around 40% of the total, while monthly active users account for nearly 70% of the total users.

Blued is backed by Danlan, a virtual community for gays in China with 3 million registered users as of the end of last year.

With 30 employees, the team is planning to develop Pinked, a similar app for lesbians. Founder of Blued Geng Le believes that China has 70 million gay people, creating a $300 billion market per year, according to EuroMonitor International, a U.K. research Institute.

image credit: Blued

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Mobile Voice Search Service Chumen Wenwen Gets Nearly $10 Million of Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/25/mobile-voice-search-service-chumen-wenwen-gets-nearly-10-million-dollars-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/25/mobile-voice-search-service-chumen-wenwen-gets-nearly-10-million-dollars-series-b-funding/#comments Tue, 25 Feb 2014 05:21:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16369 Mobvoi, developer of mobile voice search service Chumen Wenwen, secured nearly $10 million of Series B financing led by SIG and followed by existing Series A investors. The company has received $1.62 million of Series A funding from Sequoia Capital and ZhenFund in 2012. The capital will be injected in R&D, promotion and team construction, said Li Zhifei, founder of the company. Mike […]]]>

Mobvoi, developer of mobile voice search service Chumen Wenwen, secured nearly $10 million of Series B financing led by SIG and followed by existing Series A investors. The company has received $1.62 million of Series A funding from Sequoia Capital and ZhenFund in 2012.

The capital will be injected in R&D, promotion and team construction, said Li Zhifei, founder of the company. Mike Lei, former research scientist at Google’s voice recognition unit, will assume the post as CTO. It is worth noting that Li also worked for Google at its machine translation team before he started Mobvoi in 2012.

Li cited three factors as the driving force to attract this investment: 1. Promising prospect of mobile voice searching industry; 2. The company currently has more than 20 employees, mostly of who come from renowned universities. The rapid development of the company’s homegrown voice searching engine in the past year has proven the team’s executive power, said Li. 3. Chumen Wenwen has a complete set of voice searching technologies ranging from voice recognition to semantic analysis and app content searching.

In the past six months, Chumen Wenwen continues to enrich the voice searching functions for local lifestyle services that are available in its WeChat-based account, which currently covers the fields of catering, group-buying, navigation, weather, tourism, urban transportation, etc. The company also launched an Android version.

The firm’s voice searching technology has been embedded in several third-party apps, like Dianping (Andoird version), AutoNavi and Dangdang.

Chumenwenwen LZF

Li Zhifei: Founder of Chumenwenwen

image credit: Mobvoi

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VoIP Service Viber to Deliver an Exclusive Version for Nokia X Family https://technode.com/2014/02/25/voip-service-viber-to-deliver-an-exclusive-version-for-nokia-x-family/ https://technode.com/2014/02/25/voip-service-viber-to-deliver-an-exclusive-version-for-nokia-x-family/#comments Tue, 25 Feb 2014 01:43:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16359 Viber, the leading mobile communications platform offering free messaging and HD-quality phone calls, announced that it will provide Nokia X device users with a version of Viber that is at parity with Viber’s latest version for Android. The app will be pre-installed on Nokia X smartphones. Nokia released the long-rumored Android-powered Nokia X smartphones at […]]]>

Viber, the leading mobile communications platform offering free messaging and HD-quality phone calls, announced that it will provide Nokia X device users with a version of Viber that is at parity with Viber’s latest version for Android. The app will be pre-installed on Nokia X smartphones.

Nokia released the long-rumored Android-powered Nokia X smartphones at Mobile World Congress (MWC) this year. The Nokia X version will be available immediately in the Nokia Store.

“Working with Nokia is a natural step towards bringing Viber to all platforms including Windows Phone and S40.” said Talmon Marco, CEO of Viber. “This strategic partnership will help us provide Nokia users with a great messaging and calling experience enhanced with photo sharing, stickers and other Viber functionality.”

“We believe that great innovation is enhanced through applications, therefore we made sure to offer many of the most popular applications on our new Nokia X family of devices,” said Bryan Biniak, vice president, Developer Experiences at Nokia.

The app will be available to demo at MWC 2014 in Barcelona. Viber claimed to have registered over 300 million users in 193 countries.

image credit: Viber

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Amazon to Begin Selling Three Kindle Fire Tablets in Chinese Market on Feb 25, 2014 https://technode.com/2014/02/24/amazon-to-begin-selling-three-kindle-fire-tablets-in-chinese-market/ https://technode.com/2014/02/24/amazon-to-begin-selling-three-kindle-fire-tablets-in-chinese-market/#comments Mon, 24 Feb 2014 08:56:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16331 Kincle Fire HD After tapping Chinese tablet market with Kindle Paperwhite and Kindle Fire HD series last June, Amazon is going to deepen is forays into the market by officially releasing three Kindle devices on Amazon China in a roll tomorrow, including two latest refresh of the Kindle Fire lineup, Kindle Fire HDX 7” and Kindle […]]]>
a

Kincle Fire HD

After tapping Chinese tablet market with Kindle Paperwhite and Kindle Fire HD series last June, Amazon is going to deepen is forays into the market by officially releasing three Kindle devices on Amazon China in a roll tomorrow, including two latest refresh of the Kindle Fire lineup, Kindle Fire HDX 7” and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9”, as well as Kindle Fire HD.

The specs and new features of these products are the same as their U.S. counterparts. The minimum prices for Kindle Fire HDX 7”, Kindle Fire HDX 8.9” and Kindle Fire HD is 1.699 yuan ($278.75), 2,999 yuan and 1,099 yuan, respectively.

Amazon also buddied up with leading Chinese music and video apps, including Baidu Music, Douban FM, iQiyi and Sohu Video to optimize video and music functions of their products.

image credit: Amazon

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Indie Music Recommendation Site Luoo Helps You to Dig Out Soul-touching Music https://technode.com/2014/02/24/indie-music-recommendation-site-luoo-helps-you-to-dig-out-soul-touching-music/ https://technode.com/2014/02/24/indie-music-recommendation-site-luoo-helps-you-to-dig-out-soul-touching-music/#comments Mon, 24 Feb 2014 07:58:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16322 Screenshot of Luoo The 11-year old Luoo is a personalized music recommendation website which aims to better promote indie music and bands. It is currently available on website and iOS platform, while the Android and WP version will be released soon. Luoo provides brand-new interpretations of music rather than simply showcases the good music. The […]]]>
Luoo1

Screenshot of Luoo

The 11-year old Luoo is a personalized music recommendation website which aims to better promote indie music and bands. It is currently available on website and iOS platform, while the Android and WP version will be released soon.

Luoo provides brand-new interpretations of music rather than simply showcases the good music. The music handpicked by experts in different domains of music is arranged in the form of journals, which is composed of music, text and pictures to express different emotions and attitudes. Users can either comment or share them to friends.

Luoo’s text contents range from feature articles of indie music to introduction and interviews of indie bands. Moreover, it has professional editors with special tastes who combine music, literature and photographs together.

Luoo also randomly displays music to listeners together with the stories and feelings written by other listeners of the same song. Users can comment on the song or interact with other listeners to share their feelings. More than 30,000 of users come here to listen to the music with entirely different stories, feelings and lives.

Popular music dominates mainstream music streaming platforms like Baidu Music and QQ Music. Indie music or original music, which focused on smaller group of fans, is supported by dedicated products like Luoo, 5sing and YYFC. It is easier for indie music platforms to tackle the issues of copyright and profitability because of the small audience.

image credit: Luoo

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Alibaba Launched Tmall International, an E-commerce Site for Overseas Products https://technode.com/2014/02/24/alibaba-launched-tmall-international-an-e-commerce-site-for-overseas-products/ https://technode.com/2014/02/24/alibaba-launched-tmall-international-an-e-commerce-site-for-overseas-products/#comments Mon, 24 Feb 2014 07:24:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16304 Screenshot of Tmall International Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group recently launched Tmall International, a site dedicated for business entities outside China, where overseas brands and merchants can sell their products directly to Chinese online shoppers. The newly launched international platform provides genuine products that are produced or sold in overseas markets. In addition, the platform offers […]]]>
tmall.hk_

Screenshot of Tmall International

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group recently launched Tmall International, a site dedicated for business entities outside China, where overseas brands and merchants can sell their products directly to Chinese online shoppers.

The newly launched international platform provides genuine products that are produced or sold in overseas markets. In addition, the platform offers a direct delivery service. Merchants on the platform also offer Chinese language customer service through Alibaba’s instant messaging platform Alitalk, as well as 72-hour shipping, and product return facilities in mainland China.

More than 140 foreign merchants from the U.S., U.K., Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, etc. have settled on the platform, including B2C sites like Bonjour, Strawberrynet, Etmall, Kenko, as well as premium brands, such as Anna Sui and NYR. To prepare for the launch, Tmall International has been recruiting international businesses since July last year.

International merchants who want to join the platform have to pay an initial deposit of $25,000 and a yearly fee based on the types of goods they sell. TMall International will also collect a service fee of either 5% or 6% per transaction, depending on the product, according the requirements released by the site.

At the current stage, online shoppers can purchase baby products, healthcare products, beauty products and apparel on the site.

Tmall International will run independently as a subsidiary of Alibaba, affiliating to the newly established International B2C Department, which also oversees Alibaba’s global shopping arm AliExpress and Taobao Overseas, a unit focused on Southeast Asian market.

Chinese online shoppers’ demands to purchase cheaper and better products outside China surged in recent years, mainly focused on the fields of infant formula and maternal products, foreign-branded cosmetics and luxury goods, among others.

The market size for Chinese online Daigou industry, which means buying via overseas contacts through Taobao or other professional buyer agencies and websites, surpassed 70 billion yuan ($11.49 billion) in 2013, according to data released by Alibaba.

image credit: Tmall

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Download Service Provider Xunlei Releases Smart WiFi Router Specs and Features https://technode.com/2014/02/20/download-service-provider-xunlei-releases-smart-wifi-router-specs-and-features/ https://technode.com/2014/02/20/download-service-provider-xunlei-releases-smart-wifi-router-specs-and-features/#comments Thu, 20 Feb 2014 10:47:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16284 Xunlei, one of the most commonly used download service in China, positioned its smart router products as smart router + hi-definition downloader + high-speed mobile hard disk when it announced its foray into the smart router market at the beggining of this year amid heated competitions. The company just released the specs and features of a homegrown […]]]>
Xunlei

Xunlei, one of the most commonly used download service in China, positioned its smart router products as smart router + hi-definition downloader + high-speed mobile hard disk when it announced its foray into the smart router market at the beggining of this year amid heated competitions.

The company just released the specs and features of a homegrown router, which will be priced at less than 350 yuan ($57.52) (source in Chinese). Powered by Broadcom processor, the new product adopts 802.11ac WiFi technology and supports 5GHz and 2.4 GHz dual band with total bandwidth of 1.2Gbps.

As the first-generation product, the new gadget does not have embedded hard disk, but there will be a USB 3.0 access for users to connect mobile disks, according to the company.

The users can start a download task on the router via either smartphones or remote control on PCs. It will be open for testing preorders very soon.

Security service Qihoo 360 just released a smart router with similar specs, but its focus is on security functions.

image credit: Xunlei

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Qihoo 360 Unveils Smart Router Specs Together with A Router System https://technode.com/2014/02/20/qihoo-360-unveils-smart-router-specs-together-with-a-router-system/ https://technode.com/2014/02/20/qihoo-360-unveils-smart-router-specs-together-with-a-router-system/#respond Thu, 20 Feb 2014 08:39:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16275 Qihoo 360, the Chinese Internet company who is most known for offering free security services, recently released the specs and features for an in-house router which gives priority to security functions like anti-fishing and anti-Trojan. Powered by Qualcomm AR9344 processor, the new gadget features 128MB ROM, adopts 802.11ac WiFi technology and supports 5GHz and 2.4 […]]]>

Qihoo 360, the Chinese Internet company who is most known for offering free security services, recently released the specs and features for an in-house router which gives priority to security functions like anti-fishing and anti-Trojan.

Powered by Qualcomm AR9344 processor, the new gadget features 128MB ROM, adopts 802.11ac WiFi technology and supports 5GHz and 2.4 GHz dual band.

The router is enabled by “360 SOS Security System”, a homegrown system dedicated for smart routers which has embedded app store and private cloud. In addition to opening the system to other router manufacturers, the company also planned to open SDK of the platform to developers. Moreover, users can control the router via app on their smartphones.

The product is manufactured by a Taiwan-based listed company, according to Qihoo 360, without mentioning the name of the company. The new product, which reportedly will be priced at lowered than 200 yuan ($32.87), is still under testing and the shipping time is not determined yet (via Tech Sina).

The company added that they explored routers industry because it is the center to connect all smart devices in our homes. To tap this market, Qihoo has released last year two wireless routers, one with an average size and the other is a dongle.

image credit: Qihoo 360

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Social Media Marketing Service Kmsocial Raises Series B Funding Led by Fosun https://technode.com/2014/02/19/social-media-marketing-service-kmsocial-raises-series-b-funding-led-by-fosun/ https://technode.com/2014/02/19/social-media-marketing-service-kmsocial-raises-series-b-funding-led-by-fosun/#comments Wed, 19 Feb 2014 09:51:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16233 Kmsocial, a cross-platform social media marketing management service, secured tens of millions dollars in Series B funding led by Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and followed by Series A investor Fidelity Growth Partners Asia (via Tech Sina). Founded in 2010, Kmsocial is dedicated to provide high-performance social media management tools, helping […]]]>
KMsocial

Kmsocial, a cross-platform social media marketing management service, secured tens of millions dollars in Series B funding led by Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and followed by Series A investor Fidelity Growth Partners Asia (via Tech Sina).

Founded in 2010, Kmsocial is dedicated to provide high-performance social media management tools, helping customers to achieve efficient promotion across multiple social media. Visual maps are also presented to offer valuable information and data analysis.

The company’s core product is Kongming Social Management Platform, which offers services like social media monitoring, CRM, social network ads and data analysis, among others. Moreover, the firm also helps users to develop low-budget custom WeiboApp, third-party apps based on Weibo platform covering the categories of entertainment, life, information, etc.

The capital will be used in R&D of new products and team construction, according to founder and CEO of the company E Wei. Around 1,600 companies are using their services, citing official web of the company.

A raft of similar startups mushroomed in recent years, but with focuses on different aspects. 37degree gives more focus to content management, similar to another media management company Social Touch. Vmaibo includes the functions of reputation management, content push and Weibo tracking, WeiboReach analyzes the distribution channels of Weibo and Weiresearch features topic analysis and activity monitoring.

image credit: Kmsocial, Baidu

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Shanghai FTZ Launches Pilot Program for Cross-border RMB Payment https://technode.com/2014/02/19/shanghai-ftz-launches-pilot-program-for-cross-border-rmb-payment/ https://technode.com/2014/02/19/shanghai-ftz-launches-pilot-program-for-cross-border-rmb-payment/#comments Wed, 19 Feb 2014 07:18:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16222 Shanghai Free Trade Zone (FTZ) launched a new pilot program for RMB cross-border settlement service, allowing five third-party payment companies, namely, All In Pay, 99Bill, ChinaPay, EasiPay, ShengPay to handle this business in cooperation with their bank partners (via Tech Sina). In order to carry out the service, each of the five payment service providers will […]]]>

Shanghai Free Trade Zone (FTZ) launched a new pilot program for RMB cross-border settlement service, allowing five third-party payment companies, namely, All In Pay, 99Bill, ChinaPay, EasiPay, ShengPay to handle this business in cooperation with their bank partners (via Tech Sina).

In order to carry out the service, each of the five payment service providers will open a cross-border RMB account at one of the Shanghai branches of five commercial banks, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Bank of China, China Construction Bank, China Merchants Bank and Minsheng Bank.

This move allows domestic individual consumers as well as enterprises to purchase overseas services or products with RMB directly, facilitating the transaction procedures. More importantly, no commission fee will be charged for RMB settlements.

According to the guideline from PBOC, companies with online payment licenses that are either located in Shanghai or run subsidiaries in the free trade zone can provide cross-border RMB payment services. This means all the 17 payment companies with online payment license in Shanghai are qualified to run this business.

It is worth noting that the Hangzhou-headquartered Alipay and Shenzhen-based Tenpay, two leading domestic payment services backed by Alibaba and Tencent respectively, are not included in the scale. But both Alipay and Tenpay are now offering their own cross-border payment solutions.

The transaction volume of RMB cross-border settlement hit 4.63 trillion yuan ($762.21 billion) in 2013, up from 2.94 trillion yuan in one year earlier, according to PBOC.

Chinese e-payment business grows rapidly in recent years, recording 25.78 billion orders and a turnover of 1,075 trillion yuan in 2013, up 27.40% and 29.46% respectively from a year earlier, according to bank-level data released by PBOC.

The pilot free trade zone which was launched in September last year has initiated a series of reforms for Chinese Internet industry, despite that there are still a lot of Internet businesses not allowed in the zone as expected.  Chinese State Council finally lifted the ban on game console imposed in 2000, allowing foreign-invested companies to produce and sell game consoles in the newly established free trade zone.

image credit: Dfdaily

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Shou65: Tourism Platform Helps You Travel Like a Local https://technode.com/2014/02/19/shou65-tourism-platform-helps-you-travel-like-a-local/ https://technode.com/2014/02/19/shou65-tourism-platform-helps-you-travel-like-a-local/#respond Wed, 19 Feb 2014 05:33:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16209 More and more Chinese travelers hit the road for backpack tours rather than the old-fashioned escorted tours to experience a more adventurous journey filled with unpredictable possibilities, like opportunities to meet new friends and to experience local lives. Shou65, a peer-to-peer tourism service platform, is dedicated to connect individual backpack travelers and local travelling guides […]]]>
Shou65

More and more Chinese travelers hit the road for backpack tours rather than the old-fashioned escorted tours to experience a more adventurous journey filled with unpredictable possibilities, like opportunities to meet new friends and to experience local lives.

Shou65, a peer-to-peer tourism service platform, is dedicated to connect individual backpack travelers and local travelling guides to dig out these potentials in a journey.

The tourists can post their travelling plans on the platform to search for companions or local guides. After getting connected via the platform, the local guide will recommend low-budget hotels, local culture and cuisine etc. to the backpack travelers upon their arrival at the destinations.

The two parties can bargain to determine the price for the guiding service and the travelling activities. The transaction will be conducted via the platform, which will charge a 10% commission from the deal. In addition, a credit system is established to provide reference for users in selecting either tourists or guides.

The platform has registered 100,000 users as of present since its launch in November 2013. Shou65 is currently run by a team of 11 employees headed by Luo Zhun, a serial entrepreneur who is the founder of e-commerce site Yuanjing, local life community 21home and former executive of new portal HSW.

The company has raised funding from angel investor Tisiwi. It is now seeking for new capital injections for platform construction and overseas market expansion.

image credit: Shou65

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Interior Decoration Platform To8to Nets $16.48 Million of Series B Funding from Sequoia Capital https://technode.com/2014/02/18/interior-decoration-platform-to8to-nets-16-48-million-of-series-b-funding-from-sequoia-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/02/18/interior-decoration-platform-to8to-nets-16-48-million-of-series-b-funding-from-sequoia-capital/#comments Tue, 18 Feb 2014 09:57:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16174 Decoration service platform To8to recently announced that it raised around 100 million yuan ($16.48 Million) of Series B funding led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Series A investor Matrix Partners (source in Chinese). Launched in 2009, To8to is a third-party platform for customers, decoration companies, designers and construction material providers. One of the company’s core […]]]>
To8to

Decoration service platform To8to recently announced that it raised around 100 million yuan ($16.48 Million) of Series B funding led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Series A investor Matrix Partners (source in Chinese).

Launched in 2009, To8to is a third-party platform for customers, decoration companies, designers and construction material providers. One of the company’s core businesses is Zhuangxiubao, a free AliPay-like escrow online payment service for decoration industry targeted at customers.

Before the whole project started, customers have to pay a 20% of the total price to decoration companies, and another 20% to To8to platform as deposit. Zhuangxiubao divided the decoration process into four individual stages of water and electricity, wood, painting and completion. During the construction, To8to will send third-party monitoring and assessment teams to assess the service quality of decoration companies when each of stage ends. The decoration companies will receive a 20% of the total service price for each of the previous three stages when they passed the assessments. Zhuangxiubao will pay the 20% deposit to the decoration companies one month after completion of the project upon signature of the customers.

The platform currently has attracted nearly 60,000 decoration companies and 700,000 designers from 80 cities countrywide.

According to the company’s board chairman and CEO Wang Guobin, the capital will be used in market expansion to more cities, team construction, and enhance supports for decoration companies, designers and decoration workers.

image credit: To8to

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[Update] Education Service Uniquedu Gets $20 Million Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/18/update-education-service-uniquedu-gets-20-million-dollars-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/18/update-education-service-uniquedu-gets-20-million-dollars-series-a-funding/#comments Tue, 18 Feb 2014 05:58:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16161 Uniquedu, a leading comprehensive educational solution provider, announced that it has secured $20 million of Series A financing from Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and an unnamed investment institution. Uniquedu is dedicated to train the talents of software development professionals and project management in the areas of mobile Internet, cloud computing, […]]]>
Kaikeba1

Uniquedu, a leading comprehensive educational solution provider, announced that it has secured $20 million of Series A financing from Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and an unnamed investment institution.

Uniquedu is dedicated to train the talents of software development professionals and project management in the areas of mobile Internet, cloud computing, and Internet marketing, as well as other cutting-edge domains.

Started as an offline education service, Uniquedu launched last August Kaikeba (classes begin in Chinese), a MOOC platform focused on training of IT talents, where Uniquedu put their homegrown curriculum online for anyone to learn using video and web-based testing. The capital received this time reportedly will be invested in the construction of Kaikeba platform.

Students who finished their courses and passed the exams on Kaikeba will get certificates. Similar to Coursera, Uniquedu is working with several famous Chinese universities, like Beihang University, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Dalian University of Technology, Xiamen University, which will honor these certificates and exchange them for credits towards a degree in these universities.

Kaikeba has a special group which is dedicated to design the online syllabus to adapt to the features of online educational scenario, such as to attract the attentions of learners, optimize user experience, timetable and distribution of knowledge points.

In addition to individual learners, Kaikeba also offers its services to universities, adopting a B2B2C model to be more specifically.

Headquartered in Beijing, Uniquedu also launched international branches in California’s Silicon Valley, Miami and Tokyo.

Online education sector witnessed massive capital injections this week. Language-learning service TutorGroup just secured $100 million Series B financing led by e-commerce giant Alibaba.

image credit: Kaikeba

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China’s App Download Rush Kicks off Chinese New Year https://technode.com/2014/02/18/chinas-app-download-rush-kicks-off-chinese-new-year/ https://technode.com/2014/02/18/chinas-app-download-rush-kicks-off-chinese-new-year/#comments Tue, 18 Feb 2014 03:01:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16022 As more than more Chinese people leave their hometowns to work in big cities, the Lunar New Year has become a rare once-a-year opportunity for migrant workers to spend coveted time offline and engaged in IRL (in-real life) activities with their loved ones. The 7-day Chinese New Year holiday saw huge downloads, which in turn, […]]]>

As more than more Chinese people leave their hometowns to work in big cities, the Lunar New Year has become a rare once-a-year opportunity for migrant workers to spend coveted time offline and engaged in IRL (in-real life) activities with their loved ones.

The 7-day Chinese New Year holiday saw huge downloads, which in turn, created a golden opportunity for mobile apps to attract users, according to a report released by social gaming ad network Papaya Mobile on the mobile ad trends on Android pre and post-January 31 (Chinese New Year Day).

Chunyun’s effect on mobile activity

A map released by Baidu shed some light on the magnitude of the annual migration (ChunYun in Chinese) before the Spring Festival. An estimated 3.6 billion journeys happened in China during the period between January 16 and February 24, according to the report.

The relationship between the migration and smartphone usage in this day and age is a no-brainer. Inevitably users will occupy their commute – some which could take two days by train or bus – and vacation by consuming apps or mobile games on their mobile devices.

In fact, during the migration the average click volume between January 16 and February 6 was 51.5% higher than the period before January 16, suggesting that mobile usage based on mobile ad clicks increase during the holiday. Clicks during the migration (ending February 6) increased 48.5%, according to data from AppFlood, a commission-free, results driven network developed by Papaya Mobile.

TotalClicksCNYHoliday2014-01

Apps tend to be downloaded prior to the migration

In fact the highest rates of installs happen just before the migration, because mobile users are more inclined to download apps before their long trips.

More specifically, the install rate on AppFlood climbed to 0.56% on the back of a 117% jump between January 11 and January 12, just three days before the start of the migration, and peaked the day after at 0.57%. In fact, this spike coincided with a rush of Chinese advertisers on AppFlood who allocated mobile advertising budgets for the CNY in advance of the Chinese New Year rush.

MobileAdInstallRateAdvertiserCNY2014-01

However, as the migration progressed and conceivably more people departed to make the journey home, it is found that the install rate reflected trends resulting from the migration and time spent with family. The install rates steadily decreased after January 16 an average of 1.37% day-over-day for a total decline of 28.7% up to February 6.

Mobile “Arcade” games: the hottest Chinese New Year app category

In addition to WeChat which led the period with the Lucky Money feature, this report also covered the average daily volume of clicks on mobile ads between January 12 (when install activity spiked) and February 6 (the end of the official Chinese New Year) to identify Android app categories that were most popular during the general migration period. Expectedly the casual and easy to play games in the Arcade category, accounting for 9.55% of the total daily average clicks, topped the list followed by Entertainment (3.42%), Racing (2.89%), Casual (1.75%), and Media and Video (1.64%) to round out the top five.

CNY10MostPopularAndroidAppCategories-01

How the Chinese New Year affects advertisers

The Chinese New Year holiday is one of the rare opportunities for developers to pick up quality and affordable users – particularly during the days leading up to the Chinese New Year.

Comparing average mobile ad installs before and after January 10 (when installs picked up leading into Chunyun), it is find that mobile advertisers on average garnered 121.9% more installs. However, advertisers should note that the bulk of installs occurred before January 23.

MobileAdInstallAdvertiserCNY2014-01

More importantly, China remains a source of cheap traffic. The cost of acquiring a single user during the Chinese New Year rush when the IR hit 0.56% on January 13 was just $0.31 and $0.30 the day after when the IR hit a ceiling of 0.57%. The CPI during Chunyun (starting January 16) averaged just $0.29.

CPIforCNY2014-01

image credit: Papaya Mobile

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China’s Mobile Payment Turnover Soared 317% YOY to $1.59 Trillion in 2013: PBOC https://technode.com/2014/02/17/chinas-mobile-payment-turnover-soared-317-yoy-to-1-59-trillion-dollars-in-2013-pboc/ https://technode.com/2014/02/17/chinas-mobile-payment-turnover-soared-317-yoy-to-1-59-trillion-dollars-in-2013-pboc/#comments Mon, 17 Feb 2014 09:37:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16136 The turnover of Chinese mobile payment industry rocketed 317.56% year-over-year to 9.64 trillion yuan ($1.59 trillion) in 2013, while the number of orders hiked 212.86% year-on-year to 1.67 billion, according to the bank-level data released by Chinese central bank-People’s Bank of China. E-payment business grows rapidly in 2013, recording 25.78 billion orders and a turnover of 1,075 […]]]>

The turnover of Chinese mobile payment industry rocketed 317.56% year-over-year to 9.64 trillion yuan ($1.59 trillion) in 2013, while the number of orders hiked 212.86% year-on-year to 1.67 billion, according to the bank-level data released by Chinese central bank-People’s Bank of China.

E-payment business grows rapidly in 2013, recording 25.78 billion orders and a turnover of 1,075 trillion yuan, up 27.40% and 29.46% respectively from a year earlier. E-payment includes three categories of payment services of online payment, phone payment and mobile payment. In addition to mobile payment, the turnover of online payment business climbed 28.89% YOY to 1,061 trillion yuan and that for phone payment declined 8.92% YOY to 4.74 trillion yuan in the same period.

The report added that China recorded a turnover of 1,608 trillion yuan from 50.16 billion non-cash settlements last year, up 21.92% and 24.7%, respectively.

The total transaction volume by Chinese independent mobile payments services reached 1,219.74 billion yuan (roughly $200 billion) in 2013, a 707% year-over-year increase, according to the latest report by online tracking and data analysis service iResearch. iResearch’s data excludes services by banks and China UnionPay, the bankcard association, and  includes peer-to-peer money transfers.

image credit: CUTV

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WeChat Payment to Support Social E-commerce Network Meilishuo https://technode.com/2014/02/17/wechat-payment-to-support-social-e-commerce-network-meilishuo/ https://technode.com/2014/02/17/wechat-payment-to-support-social-e-commerce-network-meilishuo/#respond Mon, 17 Feb 2014 07:10:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16122 In addition to nine categories of mobile payments that are currently available on the platform, WeChat is going to add a fashion channel for its payment service in cooperation with social e-commerce network Meilishuo (source in Chinese). The service, which is expected to be launched this month, will recommend and support the payment of fashion products […]]]>
Meilishuo

In addition to nine categories of mobile payments that are currently available on the platform, WeChat is going to add a fashion channel for its payment service in cooperation with social e-commerce network Meilishuo (source in Chinese).

The service, which is expected to be launched this month, will recommend and support the payment of fashion products from Meilishuo merchants to WeChat users, enabling Meilishuo to lure bigger user metrics.

Meilishuo partnered up with WeChat as one of the first adopters of WeChat platform as early as April 2012. But the cooperation is focused on sharing shopping contents to WeChat friends back then.

Meilishuo built a in-house trading platform last year, which recorded 45 million yuan ($7.42 million) of monthly turnover as of Jan this year, disclosed the firm’s CEO Xu Yirong in an open letter.

The monthly and daily users of Meilishuo reached 45.79 million and 2.54 million on PC in December last year, according to data from Enfodesk.  Meilishuo’s mobile app saw 60 million downloads, according to the company. The monthly active users reached 9.28 million as of Dec. 2013, according to data from Enfodesk eCDC (data source).

Tencent, the operator of WeChat, led the Series D financing in Meilishuo in 2012. The company has received a combined $30 million investments from GGV Capital, Sequoia Capital, Bluerun Ventures and Zero2IPO in previous rounds of funding.

Xu Yirong added that the company planned to revamp its group-purchasing and special sales channels in February, as well as invest heavily in branding.

image credit: Meilishuo

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[Update] Alibaba Leads $100 Million Series B Financing in Language-learning Service TutorGroup https://technode.com/2014/02/17/alibaba-leads-100-million-dollars-series-b-financing-in-language-learning-service-tutorgroup/ https://technode.com/2014/02/17/alibaba-leads-100-million-dollars-series-b-financing-in-language-learning-service-tutorgroup/#comments Mon, 17 Feb 2014 04:40:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16112 Online education service TutorGroup is closing a nearly $100 million USD round of Series B financing from Alibaba Group, Singapore investment company Temasek and Qiming Venture Partners. [Update] TutorGroup announced this March that SBI Group (formerly known as Softbank Finance Group) invested in the company through its education-focused fund SBI-Fudan Fund as a strategic partner. TutorGroup […]]]>
vipabc

Online education service TutorGroup is closing a nearly $100 million USD round of Series B financing from Alibaba Group, Singapore investment company Temasek and Qiming Venture Partners. [Update] TutorGroup announced this March that SBI Group (formerly known as Softbank Finance Group) invested in the company through its education-focused fund SBI-Fudan Fund as a strategic partner.

TutorGroup plans to use the funding to accelerate further growth across Asia market, and also expand its presence in the Americas. The company has raised $15 million in Series A from Qiming Venture and CyberAgent in 2012.

Although TutorGroup’s research and development group is based in Silicon Valley, most of its offices are spread across Asia. Founded in 2004, it now runs four brands of English-learning site VIPABC, TutorABC, English-learning service for youth TutorABC Jr (8-18 years old) and TutorMing for Mandarin Chinese.

With more than 2,000 teachers in 30 countries and 60 cities around the world, TutorGroup provides real-time interactive language learning through millions of class sessions annually. Powered by a proprietary technology platform that combines software, individual student’s history and data analytics, the service recommends class size, learning pace and content that best suit the language learners.

The financing comes at a time of rapid growth for the company. VIPABC.com and TutorABC.com have served more than 5 million classroom sessions, combining for more than 10,000 hours of course content, all of which is accessible for classes at any time. Moreover, TutorGroup just announced a partnership with former NBA star Yao Ming, who is also focused on improving global education through the Yao Ming Foundation.

TutorGroup forecasts the adult English language-learning segment alone within China is growing at 25% annually, and will grow to more than U.S. $21 billion by 2016. Within China alone, TutorGroup expects sales to experience a triple-digit annual growth rate in the years to come.

The company also established a scholarship for Chinese language learning students in the United States and Singapore, offering 10,000 free sessions to students selected from an application contest on TutorMing.org.

Alibaba Group has launched online education platform Taobao Classmate last year. This investment is considered as another step for the e-commerce juggernaut to explore online education market.

Chinese education is undergoing a revolution towards private and online education with a wave of startups raised findings in the first half of 2013. 51Talk raised $12 million Series B financing from funds backed by Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun in last December and 91waijiao raised funds in last year. Big Chinese Internet companies also swarmed into this industry by building homegrown online education platforms.

image credit: TutorGroup

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Second-hand Car Trading Platform Cheyipai Books $50 Million Round from Sequoia Capital https://technode.com/2014/02/14/second-hand-car-trading-platform-cheyipai-books-50-million-dollars-round-from-sequoia-capital/ https://technode.com/2014/02/14/second-hand-car-trading-platform-cheyipai-books-50-million-dollars-round-from-sequoia-capital/#comments Fri, 14 Feb 2014 10:43:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16051 Cheyipai, a leading domestic second-hand car trading platform, announced on its microblog today that the company secured $50 million of capital injection led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Morningside Ventures, Matrix Partners, and CITIC Capital (source in Chinese). The fund will be used to optimize the user experience and establish service networks all over the country. Founded in 2009, the company’s […]]]>
Used Car Trading Platform Cheyipai Books $50 Million Round from Sequoia Capital

Cheyipai, a leading domestic second-hand car trading platform, announced on its microblog today that the company secured $50 million of capital injection led by Sequoia Capital and followed by Morningside VenturesMatrix Partners, and CITIC Capital (source in Chinese). The fund will be used to optimize the user experience and establish service networks all over the country.

Founded in 2009, the company’s core technology is a normalized used car detection and valuation system 268V, which is developed by its cofounder Wang Tiezhong. The cars on the platform are sold to overall 163 cities countrywide.

Cheyipai charges used car valuation fees from sellers, and transaction-based and other commissions from buyers. A percentage of commissions will go to its 4S store partners.

There are around 100,000 used car dealers in China and Cheyipai has established cooperation with 6% of the total, according to Yang Xuejian, cofounder of the company (via Sina Tech). The company planned to partner up with 10% of the car dealers in 2014.

Chinese used cars are expected to near 10 million by 2014 and exceed 20 million by 2020, according to China Automation Dealers Association. More and more companies entered this market, like Youxinpai and KBB-like used car valuation service Gongpingjia.

 image credit: Cheyipai

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Outbound Tourism Special Sales Site Lailaihui Secured Millions of Dollars in Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/14/outbound-tourism-special-sales-site-lailaihui-secured-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/14/outbound-tourism-special-sales-site-lailaihui-secured-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-funding/#respond Fri, 14 Feb 2014 10:38:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=16039 Lailaihui, a special sales site for outbound travelling services, has received millions of dollars in Series A financing led by CDH Fund and followed by existing angel investor Unity Ventures. The capital will be used in the construction of call center and platform, as well as the expansion of product lineups. The site’s monthly turnover […]]]>
Lailaihui1

Lailaihui, a special sales site for outbound travelling services, has received millions of dollars in Series A financing led by CDH Fund and followed by existing angel investor Unity Ventures.

The capital will be used in the construction of call center and platform, as well as the expansion of product lineups. The site’s monthly turnover hit 10 million yuan ($1.66 million) as of present in less than half a year since its establishment in September last year.

Lailaihui is focused on providing low-budget ticket and hotel reservation services for outbound backpack travelers. Different from other discount travelling services like ilvxing and Go!, both of which lowered the price by snapping up last-minute orders, the price of Lailaihui’s services is reduced in two ways of presale and weekend outbound travelling.

Most travelling agencies pre-book mid-or long-term flights and hotels to lower the costs, so they presale these products to release pressures on capital. To avoid price disruption on the market, these agencies usually sell these products via third-party platforms at preferential prices.

On the other hand, the price of outbound tourism service for regular weekends will be much lower as compared with that for long holidays, like the 7-day National Holiday Festival.

The site’s operator Lailaiwang, a B2B tourism information provider which cooperates with more than 1,000 travelling service wholesalers and 40,000 retailers, is a strong backer for Lailaihui, a  B2C sector under the company.

image credit: Lailaihui

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Uber for China Now Supports AliPay Payment https://technode.com/2014/02/13/uber-for-china-now-supports-alipay-payment/ https://technode.com/2014/02/13/uber-for-china-now-supports-alipay-payment/#comments Thu, 13 Feb 2014 14:14:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15989 After landing in Shanghai for a trial period started last August, the U.S. car rental service Uber is officially launched in Shanghai today. To localize their service for Chinese market, Uber released a new Chinese name “优步” (a great step forward in Chinese). More importantly, it adds AliPay as a form of payment and just […]]]>
Ubershanghai

After landing in Shanghai for a trial period started last August, the U.S. car rental service Uber is officially launched in Shanghai today.

To localize their service for Chinese market, Uber released a new Chinese name “优步” (a great step forward in Chinese). More importantly, it adds AliPay as a form of payment and just as ondemnadly provides various discount coupon codes in the US, the same way uber has also launched multiple discount codes to get people more interested in the app. This means that Uber users can pay via one of China’s most popular third-party payment systems in RMB. Uber used to charge only in U.S. dollars via credit cards in Shanghai when it first landed in the city. But AliPay is currently only available for iOS users. An another interesting localization move for the company is that its users can book lion-dancing service, a popular activity for Chinese to celebrate the Lunar New Year, on Uber’s platform during the Spring Festival.

As a car-booking service platform which does not run car companies itself, Uber cooperates with licensed Chinese car rental services and shares revenues with them. For its Chinese cooperators who usually provide luxury car service for hotels, Uber helps them to increase the efficiency and fill in the down time in a bid to utilize car resources more efficiently, according to Allen Penn, APAC CEO of the company. Uber’s Shanghai partner is Chenghuan Mobile Leasehold.

The revenue-sharing ratio of Uber platform is roughly 20% for Uber and 80% for car companies, but the ratio varies in different cities according to the condition of local markets, Allen said. The ETA (estimated time of arrival) in Shanghai is between 5 to 10 minutes, according to which part of the city the user is, he added.

Uber’s business growth rate in Shanghai is quite promising since it first launched here, outperforming that for San Francisco, New York, Paris and Singapore, according to Sam Gellman, Uber’s APAC Head of Expansion.

Uber now provides services in three Chinese cities of Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, while the latter two cities are still in trial periods. Uber’s expansion is relatively on track with its ambitious plan of landing in one Chinese city every three months.

The startup expanded rapidly in the global market, landing in more than 70 cities across 25 countries in four years since its establishment. It now provides service in 15 Asian cities.

Uber takes Asia as a strategic focus in 2014 and planned to build a new lifestyle for peoples live here. The company launched a hiring spree for nearly thirty senior positions for branch offices in 14 cities across Asia.

image credit: Uber

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Metaps Platform Apps Surpass 1 Billion Downloads https://technode.com/2014/02/12/metaps-platform-apps-surpass-1-billion-downloads/ https://technode.com/2014/02/12/metaps-platform-apps-surpass-1-billion-downloads/#comments Wed, 12 Feb 2014 11:15:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15951 Tokyo-headquartered app monetization service Metaps announced that the total downloads of apps on the Android monetization platform “metaps” has surpassed 1 billion. Metaps is an Android monetization platform that supports developers by providing them with the necessary tools and know-how to successfully attract and engage users. The metaps platform consists of the Freemium Ad Network […]]]>
metaps 1 billion eng

Tokyo-headquartered app monetization service Metaps announced that the total downloads of apps on the Android monetization platform “metaps” has surpassed 1 billion.

Metaps is an Android monetization platform that supports developers by providing them with the necessary tools and know-how to successfully attract and engage users. The metaps platform consists of the Freemium Ad Network DirectTAP, Exchanger and metaps offerwall products, providing a complete suite of monetization solutions to Android developers.

The rapid growth of metaps platform can be attributed to the company’s expansion to in Asian markets, according to Metaps CEO Katsuaki Sato. Metap has entered into partnerships with LINE and KAKAO. The recent opening of their Shanghai office has also improved implementation of Metaps developer solutions in Greater China.

Last year, Metaps closed $11 million series B round of funding led by Fidelity Growth Partners Japan and now has offices in Japan, US, Singapore, China, Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

image credit: Metaps

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Chinese Web Game Revenue Hit 7.43 Billion Yuan in 2013 H2 https://technode.com/2014/02/12/chinese-web-game-revenue-hit-7-43-billion-yuan-in-2013-h2/ https://technode.com/2014/02/12/chinese-web-game-revenue-hit-7-43-billion-yuan-in-2013-h2/#comments Wed, 12 Feb 2014 10:19:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15937 The sales revenue of Chinese web game industry hit 7.43 billion yuan (roughly $1.23 billion) in the second half of 2013, according to research report jointly released by research institutes of GPC and CNG. Of the total revenue, 3.39 billion yuan was generated during in Q3 2013, while Q4 revenue surged to 4.04 billion yuan. […]]]>

The sales revenue of Chinese web game industry hit 7.43 billion yuan (roughly $1.23 billion) in the second half of 2013, according to research report jointly released by research institutes of GPC and CNG.

Of the total revenue, 3.39 billion yuan was generated during in Q3 2013, while Q4 revenue surged to 4.04 billion yuan.

Figure1

Revenue of Web Game Industry (2012Q4-2013Q4)

The market share of web game dropped 2.6% and 0.2% quarter-on-quarter to 15.2% and 15% in Q3 and Q4 last year.

figure2

Market Share of Web Game Industry (2012Q4-2013Q4)

Chinese web game players surged 10.4% QOQ to 286 million in Q3 and further climbed 5.8% QOQ to 303 million in Q4.

Figure 3

Web Game Players (2012Q3-2013Q4)

Overall 88.3% of web game players are male. 78.9% of them aged between 20 to 39 years, of which 40.5% are between 30 to 39, 38.4% between 20 to 29, and 9.8% between 10 to 19.

According to the report people between 20 to 39 years old are in the preliminary or middle stage of their career, the quick login and the gameplay design of web games cater for their needs for entertainment and to release pressures from works.

Data source: GPC IDC and CNG

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Alibaba’s U.S. Subsidiaries to Launch E-commerce Site 11 Main https://technode.com/2014/02/12/alibabas-u-s-subsidiaries-to-launch-e-commerce-site-11-main/ https://technode.com/2014/02/12/alibabas-u-s-subsidiaries-to-launch-e-commerce-site-11-main/#comments Wed, 12 Feb 2014 07:15:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15919 Screenshot of 11 Main Vendio and Auctiva, two wholly owned American subsidiaries of Chinese e-commerce operator Alibaba Group, are set to launch a new e-commerce site named 11Main in the U.S marekt. 11 Main is positioned as a boutique e-commerce business, offering high-quality products from selected eBay merchants in fashion, tech and jewelry industry in the pre-launch phase. The site […]]]>
11Main

Screenshot of 11 Main

Vendio and Auctiva, two wholly owned American subsidiaries of Chinese e-commerce operator Alibaba Group, are set to launch a new e-commerce site named 11Main in the U.S marekt.

11 Main is positioned as a boutique e-commerce business, offering high-quality products from selected eBay merchants in fashion, tech and jewelry industry in the pre-launch phase. The site plans to charge a 3.5% commission fee when an item sells with a $50 cap, lower than eBay’s. No commission fee will be charged for selling printed books, DVDs and music.

The site aims to build a compelling platform which can offer different user experiences as compared with traditional e-commerce platforms like eBay and Amazon. The new marketplace has told sellers it will help them attract new buyers with special offers, advertising and funding opportunities. It also allows sellers to upload banners and logos so as to arrange them in a Pinterest-style.

The new site was conceptualized, developed and will be operated by Alibaba’s abovementioned two U.S. subsidiaries which it acquired in 2010.

However, as Alibaba is dominating the domestic retailer e-commerce market with Taobao and Tmall, overseas expansion is a natural step for further development. The group merged three international platforms of Alibaba’s AliExpress, Tmall International and the international division of Taobao into one marketplace last year, targeting at individual customers overseas.

Alibaba has launched U.S. office more than a decade ago. The company has invested in U.S. sports retailer Fanatics and later led a $206 million investment in U.S. e-commerce company ShopRunner in 2013. It also injected $15 million in luxury product e-commerce site 1stdibs this year.

In recent years, successful Chinese Internet giants started to set eyes on overseas markets by either acquiring or investing in foreign companies, big or small. Chinese internet giant Tencent has invested around $2 billion in overseas markets last year. A surprising deal is Tencent led a $150 million round in Fab.com, a US-based online retailer for design products.

image credit: Alibaba

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Mobile Game Portal Joyme Gets $21.5 Million Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/02/11/mobile-game-portal-joyme-gets-21-5-million-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/02/11/mobile-game-portal-joyme-gets-21-5-million-series-b-funding/#comments Tue, 11 Feb 2014 09:00:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15896 Joyme.com, a Beijing-based mobile game portal operator, reportedly received 130 million yuan ($21.5 million) of Series B funding from Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and followed by existing investor BlueRun Ventures (via Tech Sina). The company has received several million U.S. dollars in series A investment from BlueRun Ventures in 2011. The capital […]]]>
Joyme

Joyme.com, a Beijing-based mobile game portal operator, reportedly received 130 million yuan ($21.5 million) of Series B funding from Fosun Group’s venture capital arm Fosun Venture Capital Investment and followed by existing investor BlueRun Ventures (via Tech Sina). The company has received several million U.S. dollars in series A investment from BlueRun Ventures in 2011.

The capital will be invested in team expansion, content and branding, according to Chen Yang, founder of the company. He added that Joyme will release a new development strategy in March this year, aiming to provide comprehensive service to players, developers and distribution platforms.

Founded in 2011, Joyme is a gaming community which provides products such as game guides, gaming information and mobile apps. The company is now run by a 100+ member team headed by Chen Yang, former lead producer of EA China.

Fosun has previously invested in Perfect World and LineKong, while BlueRun is the investor of Waze, Ganji and Meilishuo.

image credit: Joyme

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DeNA China Names Ren Yi New CEO as Wang Yong Steps Down from the Position https://technode.com/2014/02/11/dena-china-names-ren-yi-new-ceo-as-wang-yong-steps-down-from-the-position/ https://technode.com/2014/02/11/dena-china-names-ren-yi-new-ceo-as-wang-yong-steps-down-from-the-position/#comments Tue, 11 Feb 2014 06:20:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15877  Isao Moriyasu (Left): DeNA CEO, Wang Yong (Center), Ren Yi (Right) DeNA China announced that the company’s CEO Wang Yong stepped down from his position due to personal reasons after five years at the helm of the Japanese game operator’s Chinese unit. Wang is named as honorary director in recognition of his contributions during the long […]]]>
Dena Wang

 Isao Moriyasu (Left): DeNA CEO, Wang Yong (Center), Ren Yi (Right)

DeNA China announced that the company’s CEO Wang Yong stepped down from his position due to personal reasons after five years at the helm of the Japanese game operator’s Chinese unit. Wang is named as honorary director in recognition of his contributions during the long tenure. Ren Yi, former vice president and head of CEO office, is named as the new CEO (source in Chinese).

DeNA entered Chinese mobile market by acquiring the local mobile social network Tianxia back in July 2009. DeNA China’s businesses which mostly based on feature phones back then, failed to catch up with the rising trend of smartphone and lagged behind in face of fierce competitions from prevailing local social networking services like Weibo and Renren.

The company then shifted focus and released in 2011 Mobage China Network, the Chinese version of a popular Japanese mobile social game platform under DeNA which allows gamers to buy social games and virtual goods, aiming to introduce successful Japanese games into Chinese market. However, the Chinese versions of these Japanese HTML5-powered blockbusters were not well accepted by Chinese players after being transformed into smartphone platforms.

In the two recent years, DeNA China is mainly focused on R&D, operation and distribution of social network games. DeNA China recorded profits in 2013 thanks to the success of first-party title NBA: My Dream and Blood Brothers. The company currently has more than 300 employees. Ren Yi disclosed that the firm will deepen its cooperation with different game distribution channels and media in this year.

The parent company DeNA is a Tokyo-based developer and operator of mobile services including free-to-play games, the Mobage social games platform, e-commerce and other online offerings. The company’s revenue tumbled for five straight quarters to $411 million in the fourth quarter of 2013 (Q3 fiscal year), down 20% YOY. The Japanese company started to explore various new fields by releasing music player Groovy, free call app Comm and travelling portal Skygate, etc.

image credit: DeNA

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Qianshengqian, Handy Financial Portfolio Recommendation App for Investment Novice https://technode.com/2014/02/10/qianshengqian-handy-financial-portfolio-recommendation-app-for-investment-novice/ https://technode.com/2014/02/10/qianshengqian-handy-financial-portfolio-recommendation-app-for-investment-novice/#respond Mon, 10 Feb 2014 10:49:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15851 Screenshots of Qianshengqian Qianshengqian (money generator in Chinese) is a mobile financial app developed by Beijing-based startup RQQ Network. It is dedicated to recommend customized mix of investment portfolios to users. Powered by an algorithm developed by the company, users can get a curated investment plan after answering a few questions like how much risk […]]]>
Qianshengqian Screen

Screenshots of Qianshengqian

Qianshengqian (money generator in Chinese) is a mobile financial app developed by Beijing-based startup RQQ Network. It is dedicated to recommend customized mix of investment portfolios to users.

Powered by an algorithm developed by the company, users can get a curated investment plan after answering a few questions like how much risk you’re willing to take, current assets, family, educational and occupational backgrounds.

Moreover, users can check information of their financial products on the app, such as interests of the products, information of the distributors, etc. The company planned to launch an in-app purchase feature in the near future, but currently it only redirects the clients to relevant websites.

The service now provides recommendation service for three kinds of low-risk financial products, namely monetary fund, P2P lending and optimal financial planning. The target users of this service are white-collar customers without investment experiences.

Different from Alibaba’s mutual fund Yuebao which lowered the threshold for buying financial products by enabling users to purchase the funds in AliPay Wallet app directly, Qianshengqian only provides recommendation services. But the selling point of this service is higher return.

image credit: Qianshengqian

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Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun Leads $100 Million Round of Financing in Vancl https://technode.com/2014/02/10/vancl-closes-series-g-of-more-than-100-million-dollars-financing-led-by-xiaomi-ceo-lei-jun/ https://technode.com/2014/02/10/vancl-closes-series-g-of-more-than-100-million-dollars-financing-led-by-xiaomi-ceo-lei-jun/#comments Mon, 10 Feb 2014 07:38:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15828 Vancl, a branded apparel e-commerce service, confirmed that it has closed Series G financing of more than $100 million led by Lei Jun, CEO and co-founder of smartphone maker Xiaomi, and followed by Temasek, Ceyuan, IDG Capital Partners, Qiming Ventures and SAIF Partners (source in Chinese). The company has secured overall $422 million in previous six rounds […]]]>

Vancl, a branded apparel e-commerce service, confirmed that it has closed Series G financing of more than $100 million led by Lei Jun, CEO and co-founder of smartphone maker Xiaomi, and followed by Temasek, Ceyuan, IDG Capital Partners, Qiming Ventures and SAIF Partners (source in Chinese).

The company has secured overall $422 million in previous six rounds of financing from IDG, Ceyuan, Qiming Venture Partners, among others.

Chen Nian, founder of the company, said that Vancl will adopt a business model and positioning similar to Xiaomi’s and put more emphasis on mid- and high-tier products in 2014.

Chen Nian,CEO of Vancl,and Lei Jun co-founded Joyo.com in 2000. Joyo was acquired by Amazon in 2004 and would become Amazon China. Chen Nian, as we know, founded Vancl after that. Lei Jun later became an angel investor that would invest in YY, UC Web, Lakala, among others.

That’s why Xiaomi and Vancl are like sister companies. Xiaomi has been using Vancl’s delivery service. It is reported that Vancl will use the new funding to make a turnaround by copying Xiaomi’s business secrets.

Vancl started as an online men’s shirt brand in 2007 and developed rapidly ever since with continuous injections of capital. The company lost its way after crazy expansion into a variety of categories in 2011, from electronics to swabbers, as acknowledged by Chen Nian.

In May last year, the company shifted its focus back to clothing and opened up to cooperate with third-party brands. It also acquired a couple of small clothing brands, such as Crucco which was founded by a former Vancl executive, and span of the express unit Rufengda.

Latter in the same year, the company integrated the three major businesses, namely, V+, Special Sales, and third-party brands. V+ team is currently responsible for the operation of third-party brands.

Vancl reportedly faced capital chain disruptions last October due to the large inventories and excessive business lines. It is reported that the company has slashed its workforces heavily during the period.

image credit: Vancl

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AliPay Neared 300 Million Users as of 2013 https://technode.com/2014/02/08/alipay-neared-300-million-users-as-of-2013/ https://technode.com/2014/02/08/alipay-neared-300-million-users-as-of-2013/#comments Sat, 08 Feb 2014 10:58:06 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15814 Alibaba’s payment arm AliPay announced that nearly 300 million users have registered the service as of the end of 2013, recording overall 12.5 billion transactions in the past year. Among the total AliPay users, more than 100 million clients use the service via AliPay Wallet, the mobile app for AliPay, booking a turnover of more […]]]>

Alibaba’s payment arm AliPay announced that nearly 300 million users have registered the service as of the end of 2013, recording overall 12.5 billion transactions in the past year.

Among the total AliPay users, more than 100 million clients use the service via AliPay Wallet, the mobile app for AliPay, booking a turnover of more than 900 billion yuan ($148.42 billion) and 2.78 billion transactions in 2013.

AliPay Wallet recorded more than 100 million transactions during the seven-day Lunar New Year holiday (Jan.31-Feb.6), accounting for 52% of the total transactions conducted via AliPay during the festival.

AliPay added that the users of mutual fund Yuebao exceeded 61 million as of Feb. 6, up from 49 million as of January 15. The company just announced that Yuebao amounted to 250 billion yuan (roughly $41 billion) as of January 15.

It is worth noting that AliPay is under pressure from WeChat Payment, which offers pretty much the same payment services like AliPay, including taxi-booking, train ticket and film ticket reservation, mutual funds (Licaibao), and phone bill charge, etc.

According to data from iResearch, the market size of Chinese third-party mobile payment service hit 1.22 trillion yuan last year, up 707% YOY. The research institute predicted that this market would soar 141.1% YOY this year.

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KongZhong Invests 16.5 Million Dollars in Casual Game Operator OurGame https://technode.com/2014/02/08/kongzhong-invests-in-casual-game-operator-ourgame/ https://technode.com/2014/02/08/kongzhong-invests-in-casual-game-operator-ourgame/#respond Sat, 08 Feb 2014 07:08:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15807 Leading Chinese digital entertainment company KongZhong (NASDAQ: KONG) recently announced that it planned to invest 100 million yuan in cash (around US$ 16.5 million) in the long-established casual game operator OurGame (also known as LianZhong in Chinese) (source in Chinese). This transaction is set to close before the end of February 2014. As one of the earliest and […]]]>

Leading Chinese digital entertainment company KongZhong (NASDAQ: KONG) recently announced that it planned to invest 100 million yuan in cash (around US$ 16.5 million) in the long-established casual game operator OurGame (also known as LianZhong in Chinese) (source in Chinese). This transaction is set to close before the end of February 2014.

As one of the earliest and most popular providers of Internet-based casual board and card games in China, OurGame is principally focused on casual games, chess and card games since its foundation in 1998. With the arrival of mobile era, OurGame started to shift its focus from PC to browser and mobile terminals since 2011 after addressing the turmoil of dispersed ownership. The company has been struggling for a while due to the fierce competition from Tencent and Shanda.

Currently, the company provides cross-platform supports for more than 300 board and card games, mahjong, casual games and large graphic games. OurGame’s Fight the Landlord, one of the most popular card games in China, has recorded more than 40 million downloads as of present. Other popular games developed by the company include Poker World and Texas Hold’em.

Board and card games are among the most popular games in China. The number of Internet board and card game users in China reached 259.0 million in 2013, making up 80% of all game users, according to data released by China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC).

image credit: Ourgame

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Chinese People Choose IM Tools over Text Messages in Sending Lunar New Year Greetings https://technode.com/2014/02/06/chinese-people-choose-im-tools-over-text-messages-in-sending-lunar-new-year-greetings/ https://technode.com/2014/02/06/chinese-people-choose-im-tools-over-text-messages-in-sending-lunar-new-year-greetings/#comments Thu, 06 Feb 2014 05:57:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15766 Chines people used to send Lunar New Year greetings to their beloved ones via text messages (around 0.1 yuan or 1.64 cents per message) or phone calls. With the popularity of IM services which only chage for data flows, more and more people shift to WeChat, QQ or Weibo to extend New Year greetings in […]]]>

Chines people used to send Lunar New Year greetings to their beloved ones via text messages (around 0.1 yuan or 1.64 cents per message) or phone calls. With the popularity of IM services which only chage for data flows, more and more people shift to WeChat, QQ or Weibo to extend New Year greetings in recent years.

The number of messages sent through WeChat doubled YOY on the eve of Chinese Spring Festival (Jan. 30, 2014), the peak date when Chinese send wishes for the new lunar year. The number of messages received via WeChat tripled during the same period as compared with 2013. In the peak minute of the day, around 10 million messages were sent, according to data released by Tencent, developer of WeChat.

The number of messages sent through QQ, another popular IM service developed by Tencent, hit 13.6 billion, peaking at 32.70 million messages per minute during the eve of lunar new year. Moreover, 16 million users sent wishes via QQ Video, citing data released by Tencent.

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Unit: 100 million messages     Period: Spring Festival (Data source)

This year’s number of greeting text messages sent via telecom carriers is estimated to slump at least 5% YOY to 30 billion from 31.17 billion in 2013 and 32 billion in 2012, respectively.

Under the pressure of IM services, the declining trend of text message revenue continues ever since it witnessed the first drop in 2011. In the first half of last year, the revenue of China Mobile, China’s largest telecom operator by revenue, from phone call business dropped 1.2% YOY, while that for texting message business plunged 5.5% YOY.

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StarComposer: a Music Creation Tool for Both Novices to Veterans https://technode.com/2014/02/06/starcomposer-a-music-creation-tool-for-both-novices-to-veterans/ https://technode.com/2014/02/06/starcomposer-a-music-creation-tool-for-both-novices-to-veterans/#respond Thu, 06 Feb 2014 02:07:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15752 Screenshot of StarComposer StarComposer is a music creation app developed by British startup P4S Publishing.  Originated as part of an educational programme for school children aged 5 – 15 years, StarComposer developed into the existing iOS app, including teenagers and adults into its user base– any music lover with or without formal musical education. To distinguish itself from […]]]>
Star

Screenshot of StarComposer

StarComposer is a music creation app developed by British startup P4S Publishing.  Originated as part of an educational programme for school children aged 5 – 15 years, StarComposer developed into the existing iOS app, including teenagers and adults into its user base– any music lover with or without formal musical education.

To distinguish itself from other music apps which either take a more complicated and professional studio-like approach, or dedicated to the exploration of a singular instrument, StarComposer is engaged in developing features marked by quick pick-up-and-play element, fun and entertainment value, alongside colorful and engaging interactive design.

The technology and intuitive concept of StarComposer brings immediacy to music making with or without any musical knowledge whatsoever. Within minutes the users can create a unique combination of melodies and riffs (repeated segments of songs) to produce a finished song.

StarComposer is Free to download with music styles of Dance and Pop and also offers a total selection of 11 musical styles with the remainder being R&B, Funk, Metal, Reggae, Dubstep, Drum & Bass, Blues, Rock.

Each musical style features four musical instruments offering a choice of four pre-recorded studio-quality music loops. A total of 16 in all, that can be mixed and matched by tapping the interface to form a completed musical arrangement. As a bonus, vocals can be laid on top using headphones if desired.

Basic information on the typical roles within song composition can be found by tapping the individual instrument panels. However, this information is probably best demonstrated by the users experience and understanding of how their chosen musical loops sound and blend together as a finished piece, making the educational aspect of the app a creative process in itself. StarComposer also adheres to the software guidelines for children, carries parental control settings and is currently free from advertising.

The app’s download figures reached 1.2 million to-date since its release on 5th Sept 2013, with the Asian download market share accounting for 30% of the overall figure.

The startup has localized the app into 12 languages which include both traditional and simplified Chinese. Taking Asia as one of the marketing focuses, P4S Publishing released a special edition in-app purchase featuring Congratulations – one of China’s most popular New Year songs. The app is also quite popular in other Asian countries like Singapore and South Korea.

image credit: StarComposer

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Viber Sticker Market Lands on Windows Phone 8 In Latest Update https://technode.com/2014/02/06/viber-sticker-market-lands-on-windows-phone-8-in-latest-update/ https://technode.com/2014/02/06/viber-sticker-market-lands-on-windows-phone-8-in-latest-update/#comments Thu, 06 Feb 2014 00:33:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15744 Viber, a VoIP service claiming more than 200 million users, recently launched Viber 4.0 on Windows Phone 8, an important update that brings the latest Viber features to Microsoft’s mobile platform including the Viber Sticker Market. Viber is currently available for the mainstream operating systems like iOS and Android. In addition to sticker shop which […]]]>
Promo image - WP8 Version 4.0

Viber, a VoIP service claiming more than 200 million users, recently launched Viber 4.0 on Windows Phone 8, an important update that brings the latest Viber features to Microsoft’s mobile platform including the Viber Sticker Market.

Viber is currently available for the mainstream operating systems like iOS and Android. In addition to sticker shop which is considered a must for mobile messaging apps — thanks to LINE who has successfully run such a shop in terms of popularity and revenue, the new version added a spate of new features which bring the Windows Phone 8 version of Viber in-line with other versions of the app, including improvements on features for status, photos and notifications.

Viber users can send free text messages, fun stickers, photos, videos and doodles, share locations anywhere in the world, make free HD-quality calls and communicate with Push-To-Talk.

“Over the last several months, we have taken significant steps to make the full Viber experience available across as many platforms as possible, and the release for Windows Phone 8 is another step along that path,” said Talmon Marco, CEO of Viber.

In last December, the company just launched Viber Out, a new feature that allows users to make low-cost calls to any mobile or landline phone number.

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Alibaba Rakes in 1.78 Billion Dollars of Revenue in Q3 2013 https://technode.com/2014/01/29/alibaba-rakes-in-1-78-billion-dollars-of-revenue-in-q3-2013/ https://technode.com/2014/01/29/alibaba-rakes-in-1-78-billion-dollars-of-revenue-in-q3-2013/#respond Wed, 29 Jan 2014 05:36:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15636 In an internal letter from Alibaba’s legendary founder Jack Ma, he said that company has booked historical performance records last year. The fiscal report released by Yahoo!, a major shareholder which holds a 24% stake in the company, gives us a more detailed overview about Alibaba’s performance in 2013. The Internet giant generated $1.78 billion […]]]>

In an internal letter from Alibaba’s legendary founder Jack Ma, he said that company has booked historical performance records last year. The fiscal report released by Yahoo!, a major shareholder which holds a 24% stake in the company, gives us a more detailed overview about Alibaba’s performance in 2013.

The Internet giant generated $1.78 billion of revenues in the three-month period ended on Sep. 2013, up 51% YOY. Although Q3 revenue is higher than $1.38 million for Q1 and $1.74 million for Q2, the revenue growth rate is down from 71.4% and 61.3% for the first and the second quarter of 2013, respectively.

The report added that Alibaba’s gross profit increased by 58% YOY to $1.26 billion, while its operating profit amount to $786 million, swinging to profitability YOY. The company’s net profit soared 163.1% YOY to $800 million in the same period.

Although Alibaba’s IPO is still pending, the capitalists have shown interests in the company. Tiger Global Management,a top-performing U.S. technology investment firm, have acquired round $200 million worth of shares in Alibaba at a valuation of $125 billion.

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Kingsoft to Take Security Software Business KIS and List it on U.S. Market https://technode.com/2014/01/28/kingsoft-to-spin-off-security-software-business-kis-and-list-it-on-u-s-market/ https://technode.com/2014/01/28/kingsoft-to-spin-off-security-software-business-kis-and-list-it-on-u-s-market/#comments Tue, 28 Jan 2014 09:44:11 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15614 Kingsoft Corporation (SEHK: 3888), a leading applications and entertainment software developer in China, announced today that it planned to spin off security software business and list the sector on NASDAQ or New York stock exchange. Kingsoft has filed to Hong Kong Stock Exchange for the spin-off. Kingsoft’s security software business is operated by Kingsoft Internet Software Holdings Limited […]]]>

Kingsoft Corporation (SEHK: 3888), a leading applications and entertainment software developer in China, announced today that it planned to spin off security software business and list the sector on NASDAQ or New York stock exchange. Kingsoft has filed to Hong Kong Stock Exchange for the spin-off.

Kingsoft’s security software business is operated by Kingsoft Internet Software Holdings Limited (KIS), also known as Kingsoft Network in China. The company is principally engaged in development and operation of security software and web browser Liebao, as well as cross-platform value-added services and online advertising.

Kingsoft and the management of KIS currently hold 54.09% and 13.5% stake in the company, respectively. The competition between Qihoo and KIS intensified after Keniu, an Internet security company founded by former Qihoo Exec Fu Sheng, was merged into Kingsoft’s anti-virus business in late 2010. Tencent, which also waged battle against Qihoo last year, partnered up with KIS by acquiring an 18% stake last year, becoming the second largest shareholder of the company.

Clean Master, an Android storage management app developed by KIS, recorded more than 100 million users, disclosed Fu Sheng, current CEO of KIS. The company stealthily released the product two year ago in English-language market and never mentioned it before the end of last year. The reason for this, according to Mr. Fu, is to avoid drawing attention from its major competitor Qihoo.

According to the fiscal report released by KIS, its revenue from online ads and operation platform surged 144% year-over-year to 171 million yuan ($28.26 million) in the third quarter of last year. Its monthly active users on mobile terminals hit 123 million in the same period.

KIS is expected to adopt dual-class share structure so that Kingsoft can still maintain control over the company and consolidate its financial results following the IPO. The shares offered in the IPO will have limited voting rights per share, while stocks available to founders and existing shareholders will have more voting power per share.

image credit: Kingsoft

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Average Peak Internet Speed in China Climbs 14% in 2013: Xunlei Report https://technode.com/2014/01/28/average-peak-internet-speed-in-china-climbs-14-in-2013-xunlei-report/ https://technode.com/2014/01/28/average-peak-internet-speed-in-china-climbs-14-in-2013-xunlei-report/#comments Tue, 28 Jan 2014 07:39:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15602 China’s average peak Internet speed reached 737.4KB/S in 2013, up 14% as compared with the beginning of the same year, according to a broadband speed overview released by Xunlei. The peak Internet speed for Hongkong, Macau and Taiwan still take the leads as compared with that for other regions in Chinese mainland. The connection speed […]]]>

China’s average peak Internet speed reached 737.4KB/S in 2013, up 14% as compared with the beginning of the same year, according to a broadband speed overview released by Xunlei.

The peak Internet speed for Hongkong, Macau and Taiwan still take the leads as compared with that for other regions in Chinese mainland. The connection speed of Shanghai and Beijing reached 1,190.3KB/s and 970.2KB/s, respectively. The development of broadband infrastructure is quite uneven, while peak Internet speed of Xining, a city in underdevelopped northwestern China,  is only half of that for Shanghai.

2013 Peak Internet Speed of Chinese Provincial-level Regions (Data source: Xunlei)

Xunlei-1

China Telecom and China Unicom, two national broadband operators, account for 90% of the market share on aggregate, but their peak Internet speed is respectively 725.6KB/s and 723.9KB/s, lagging behind regional operators led by Greatwall Broadband Network (1,296.1 KB/s).

Peak Internet Speed of Operators (Data source: Xunlei)

Xunlei-3

From regional perspective, there’s little difference between the Internet speed of the North and the South. However, the Internet speed for eastern, middle and western regions shows a descending trend. This trend is highly correlated with the economic development levels of these three areas.

Big data download capacity is becoming the rigid demand of users. China’s average download per capital per time reached 113MB, with 16 provincial-level regions exceeded 100MB and five areas surpassed 200 MB. Shanxi Province topped the chart with 651MB.

In order to accelerate broadband construction in China, the central government released “Broadband China” strategic plan last August, targeting to realize full broadband network coverage by 2020. China also planned to construct seven backbone network nodes in addition to three existing ones in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

image credit: Shutterstock

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After-school Tutoring Service TAL Education Injects 150 Million Yuan in Childcare Portal Babytree https://technode.com/2014/01/27/after-school-tutoring-service-tal-education-injects-150-million-yuan-in-childcare-portal-babytree/ https://technode.com/2014/01/27/after-school-tutoring-service-tal-education-injects-150-million-yuan-in-childcare-portal-babytree/#comments Mon, 27 Jan 2014 11:28:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15577 TAL Education (NYSE:XRS), a K-12 after-school tutoring services provider formerly known as Xueersi, announced today it will inject 150 million yuan ($24.79 million) of strategic investment in childcare portal Babytree. Babytree has secured a combined $20 million of investments in previous rounds. The acquisition of Babytree will help TAL to include pre-school children into its […]]]>
Babytree

TAL Education (NYSE:XRS), a K-12 after-school tutoring services provider formerly known as Xueersi, announced today it will inject 150 million yuan ($24.79 million) of strategic investment in childcare portal Babytree. Babytree has secured a combined $20 million of investments in previous rounds.

The acquisition of Babytree will help TAL to include pre-school children into its target customers. TAL has acquired education site Kaoyan.com for 50 million yuan last year.

Babytree, a leading Chinese digital resources and community for maternal and childcare services, is cofounded by former Google China exec Wang Huainan and former cofounder of EachNet Shao Yibo in 2007. The company provides all-round professional information on baby care and health. In addition to the baby and maternal site Babytree.com, Babytree operates pre-school education brand Mika, and seven mobile apps. Moreover, Babytree also launched cooperation with hardware companies to develop a smartwatch for pregnant women and a smart photo frame.

The company claims to have registered more than 20 million users that are distributed in 460 cities nationwide. Its monthly pageview reached more than 80 million, covering more than 80% of Chinese netizen parents, according to data released by the firm.

Online education became a hot topic in China since last year with a wave of education startups raised fundings. Alibaba, Tencent and YY all dipped their toes into the sector. Gong Haiyan, founder of dating site Jiayuan, decided to enter the education market starting with an online English-learning site, but shifting to a K-12 e-learning platform by launching Ladder. English-learning service 51Talk raised two rounds fundings in last year.

image credit: Babytree

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Mobile Tourism Service Yikuaiqu Nets Millions of Dollars in Series A Financing https://technode.com/2014/01/27/mobile-tourism-service-yikuaiqu-nets-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/ https://technode.com/2014/01/27/mobile-tourism-service-yikuaiqu-nets-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/#comments Mon, 27 Jan 2014 09:32:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15548 Yikuaiqu, a tourism app, announced that it has raised millions of dollars in Series A financing led by Shenzhen Hight-tech Investment and followed by Shenzhen Capital Group, etc. The company has secured millions of yuan of angel investment in 2012. The capital will be used in research and development of its travel applications for scenic spots, said Liang […]]]>
Yikuaiqu

Yikuaiqu, a tourism app, announced that it has raised millions of dollars in Series A financing led by Shenzhen Hight-tech Investment and followed by Shenzhen Capital Group, etc. The company has secured millions of yuan of angel investment in 2012. The capital will be used in research and development of its travel applications for scenic spots, said Liang Jiankun, CTO of the company.

Yikuaiqu is an online travel service provider with core technologies for scenic spot navigation, e-tickets, and augmented reality. It is the attraction data provider for AutoNavi, Baidu LBS Cloud, Baidu OpenMap, etc.

The startup’s core product is Yikuaiqu App, a tourism mobile application based on augmented reality, which organizes enormous travel information and provides a search engine for China’s tourist attractions.

The company’s product portfolio also covers a tourism social networking service Pengyou (web and app), a ticket reservation service (app and WeChat account) that helps travelers to book e-tickets for nearby attractions at discount prices, a tourism navigation app Scenic Sport Helper, and a plug-in for UC’s Zhaoshenbian.

The company claimed to provide navigation service for more than 1,000 attractions countrywide. In addition to provide free apps, Yikuaiqu also planned to embed their services in the apps, web apps and WeChat accounts of its partners, Liang added.

In order to commercialize the service, Yikuaiqu has established cooperation with major domestic OTA, offering online e-ticket reservation service to more than 4,850 scenic spots, said Xu Min, operating head of the company.

image credit: Yikuaiqu

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[Update] Suning Commerce Fully Acquires Group-purchasing Site Manzuo with Nearly 10 Million Dollars https://technode.com/2014/01/27/update-suning-commerce-fully-acquires-group-purchasing-site-manzuo-with-nearly-10-million-dollars/ https://technode.com/2014/01/27/update-suning-commerce-fully-acquires-group-purchasing-site-manzuo-with-nearly-10-million-dollars/#respond Mon, 27 Jan 2014 06:20:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15534 Suning Commerce (SZ:002024) announced that it fully acquired group-buying site Manzuo for nearly $10 million (source in Chinese), continuing its expansion into Internet industry after becoming the largest shareholder of peer-to-peer video streaming service PPTV last year. In addition to maintaining independent operation, Manzuo will also take over the group-buying and travelling businesses under Suning. Feng Xiaohai, founder of […]]]>
manzuo2

Suning Commerce (SZ:002024) announced that it fully acquired group-buying site Manzuo for nearly $10 million (source in Chinese), continuing its expansion into Internet industry after becoming the largest shareholder of peer-to-peer video streaming service PPTV last year.

In addition to maintaining independent operation, Manzuo will also take over the group-buying and travelling businesses under Suning. Feng Xiaohai, founder of Manzuo, will be named as the head of Suning’s local life sector. The acquisition procedure will be completed by the end of this March.

The market valuation of Manzuo is much lower than Nuomi’s $300 million. Group-buying has become a money-burning business after initial booming development and few have survived the sluggish market. KPCB, an early-stage investor of Manzuo, exists after the acquisition. The number of domestic group-buying sites shrank to 213 from 281 in September last year, according to research report released by group-purchasing navigation website Tuan800.com.

Despite the reduction group-buying sites, the turnover of China’ group-buying industry rocketed 67.7% year-over-year to 35.88 billion yuan ($5.94 billion) in 2013, with customer number hitting 71.23 million as of Dec. 2013, according to the same report. These figures demonstrate a more centralized trend in the industry, with the turnover of top-five group-buying services (Dianping, Meituan, Nuomi, 55tuan, Lashou) amounted to 33.81 billion yuan, accounting for 95.7% of the total market.

Most of the leading group-buying sites are venture backed by deep-pocketed Internet giants. Baidu just acquired the remaining stakes in Nuomi. Meituan and Gaopeng are backed by Alibaba and Tencent, respectively.

In the past few years, Suning tried to establish online presence with a special focus on local life. It launched a local life channel last June and released Suning Life, an LBS-based mobile app for local cuisines and group-purchasing services, at the beginning of this year. Manzuo, which has abundant offline merchant resources, may help Suning to accelerate its exploration of local life market.

image credit: Manzuo

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Xianrenzhang, a Stock App Powered by Thematic Investment Strategy https://technode.com/2014/01/26/xianrenzhang-a-stock-app-powered-by-thematic-investment-strategy/ https://technode.com/2014/01/26/xianrenzhang-a-stock-app-powered-by-thematic-investment-strategy/#respond Sun, 26 Jan 2014 09:33:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15506 Screenshots of Xianrenzhang Xianrenzhang is a mobile app developed by Shanghai-based Richeninfo. It provides investment information, helps users to understand the stock market, and ultimately, makes wiser investment decisions. Xianrenzhang is powered by thematic investing, an emerging investment strategy which involves finding a general theme or trend that an investor feels might provide positive investment […]]]>
Richeninfo

Screenshots of Xianrenzhang

Xianrenzhang is a mobile app developed by Shanghai-based Richeninfo. It provides investment information, helps users to understand the stock market, and ultimately, makes wiser investment decisions.

Xianrenzhang is powered by thematic investing, an emerging investment strategy which involves finding a general theme or trend that an investor feels might provide positive investment returns, and then find regions, industries, sectors, and individual stocks that might benefit from that theme in the future.

Different from similar apps that categorize information according to industries and sectors, Xianrenzhang divides the stocks into different themes and offers analysis on market progress, theme trends, core component stocks, prospects, and risks.

To optimize user experience, the app adopts an interface similar to regular apps and displays accesses to important functions like thematic information, researches, on a left-handed sidebar.

Cofounded by three experts of financial industry, the company is currently operated by a team of 18 members. The app claimed to have registered more than 50,000 users as of present since its launch in October 2013. Similar domestic services are Emoney, DZH, Hithink Flush, Portfolio, etc.

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Tencent Fully Acquires Map Service Linktech Navi with 60 Million Yuan https://technode.com/2014/01/26/tencent-fully-acquires-map-service-linktech-navi-with-60-million-yuan/ https://technode.com/2014/01/26/tencent-fully-acquires-map-service-linktech-navi-with-60-million-yuan/#comments Sun, 26 Jan 2014 07:40:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15483 Chinese Internet giant Tencent continues its acquisition spree this year by pouring 60 million yuan ($9.92 million) of funding in Beijing-based mapping service Linktech Navi for a 100% stake in the company (source in Chinese). Founded in 2001, Linktech Navi is accredited with the state Grade-A qualification on surveying and mapping. The company’s main businesses are […]]]>
Tencent

Chinese Internet giant Tencent continues its acquisition spree this year by pouring 60 million yuan ($9.92 million) of funding in Beijing-based mapping service Linktech Navi for a 100% stake in the company (source in Chinese).

Founded in 2001, Linktech Navi is accredited with the state Grade-A qualification on surveying and mapping. The company’s main businesses are digital maps, navigation system, GPS vehicle monitoring solution, LBS application solution, etc. Linktech Navi’s customers include automobile manufacturers, like Chery, Shac, and Hawtai Motor, navigation services, telecos, among others.

Tencent has laid out in mapping sector by launching streetview maps via its search engine Soso.com back in 2011. After two years of development, Tencent recently rebranded Soso Streetview Map into Tencent Maps and claimed that the service has collected streetview data covering more than 2 million kilometers of streets in more than 100 cities.

With Grade-B qualification on surveying and mapping, Tencent previously have to file to municipal government when it planned to explore a new city. Grade-A qualification allows mapping services to file to provincial authorities, and therefore, will accelerate the data collecting speed for Tencent Maps, according to Zhang Xuan, head of Tencent Maps.

The acquisition of a mapping service may also give Tencent more advantages in competition with peers, because it is currently using the basic mapping data from leading digital map content and nevigation service provider AutoNavi.

Maps seem to have become a must for every company who is expanding, or has to expand, to mobile Internet market. Alibaba acquired Emapgo with $35 million in 2010 and invested $294 million in AutoNavi for a 28% stake in the company in 2013. Baidu acquired a map service Changdi Wanfang and launched a streetview feature last year.

image credit: w010w.com

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Tesla Announces Lower-than-Expected Price of $121k for Model S in China https://technode.com/2014/01/24/tesla-announces-lower-than-expected-price-of-121k-dollars-for-model-s-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/01/24/tesla-announces-lower-than-expected-price-of-121k-dollars-for-model-s-in-china/#comments Fri, 24 Jan 2014 09:24:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15445 Tesla Motors, the electronic car startup co-founded by PayPal billionaire Elon Musk, announced that Model S will be sold for 734,000 yuan (US$121,280), lower than over 1 million yuan as previously speculated by the public. Tesla claimed this is a fair price, although it is still about 40% more expensive as compared with $81,070 in […]]]>
Tesla

Tesla Motors, the electronic car startup co-founded by PayPal billionaire Elon Musk, announced that Model S will be sold for 734,000 yuan (US$121,280), lower than over 1 million yuan as previously speculated by the public.

Tesla claimed this is a fair price, although it is still about 40% more expensive as compared with $81,070 in the U.S. According to Tesla, the extra amount is generated from taxes, customs duties, and transportation costs. The company also breaks down the amount to $3,600 for shipping and handling, $19,000 for customs duties and taxes, and $17,700 for VAT.

Conventionally, international cars will always be priced higher in China than in domestic or Western markets, allegedly for high tariffs. Tesla blasts the competitors in the announcement, stating that “the real reason their car costs more is that they make double the profit per car in China compared to the United States or Europe”.

However, Tesla’s price is still quite high for most Chinese consumers, partly due to its perceived status as luxury goods. E6, an electric motor developed by Chinese automobile maker BYD is priced at 309,800 yuan ($51,227), while SPRINGO’s electric car is sold for 259,000 yuan.

Spotting the growth potentials of luxury vehicle market in China, Tesla opened its first showroom in Beijing  and launched a Chinese website Tuosule.cn to take pre-orders in 2013. The global sales of Tesla Model S reached 22,300 in 2013, Tesla announced recently.

image credit: Tesla

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Zepp, a Sports Tracking Wearable Maker, Raises $15 Million of Series B Funding https://technode.com/2014/01/24/zepp-a-sports-tracking-wearable-maker-raises-15-million-dollars-of-series-b-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/01/24/zepp-a-sports-tracking-wearable-maker-raises-15-million-dollars-of-series-b-funding/#comments Fri, 24 Jan 2014 08:49:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15428 Zepp, a manufacturer of sports tracking wearables, secured $15 million of Series B financing from GGV Capital, Legend Capital, Bertelsmann and Cherubic Ventures. The company previously booked $5 million of Series A financing from Legend Capital. The company’s flagship product is a 6.3g square wearable sensor powered by 3D motion technologies. According to data released […]]]>
Zepp-Multi-Sport-Sensor

Zepp, a manufacturer of sports tracking wearables, secured $15 million of Series B financing from GGV Capital, Legend Capital, Bertelsmann and Cherubic Ventures. The company previously booked $5 million of Series A financing from Legend Capital.

The company’s flagship product is a 6.3g square wearable sensor powered by 3D motion technologies. According to data released by the company, the sensor contains a powerful ARM processor and multiple sensors, with a battery life of eight hours and enough memory to store information for 200,000 swings at 1,000 data points per second.

The sensor can be attached to a golfer’s glove, end of a baseball bat or a tennis racket, enabling athletes and coaches to collect meaningful information so as to improve performances. The data thus collected can be transferred to either Android or iOS-enabled smartphones or tablet immediately via Bluetooth.

The product is currently on sale for $149.99, but only in packages composed of a sensor, rackets, gloves, and a charger.

Although Zepp primarily makes revenue from hardware at present, it planned to commercialize by offering interactive sports courses and star player data this year, according to Han Zheng, founder of the company.

Headquartered in both China and the U.S., Zepp claimed to have shipped nearly 100,000 sets of its products as of October last year, mainly to overseas markets.

image credit: Zepp

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Baidu Joins Hands with JD to Set up Innovative Hardware Open Platform https://technode.com/2014/01/23/baidu-joins-hands-with-jd-to-set-up-innovative-hardware-open-platform/ https://technode.com/2014/01/23/baidu-joins-hands-with-jd-to-set-up-innovative-hardware-open-platform/#comments Thu, 23 Jan 2014 09:46:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15396 Searching giant Baidu and leading online retailer JD signed a strategic agreement today to jointly launch an innovative hardware open platform (source in Chinese). Under the agreement, the two parties will capitalize on the incubating and promoting resources of each other. Projects that joined the program will be supported in terms of technologies, products, marketing […]]]>

Searching giant Baidu and leading online retailer JD signed a strategic agreement today to jointly launch an innovative hardware open platform (source in Chinese).

Under the agreement, the two parties will capitalize on the incubating and promoting resources of each other. Projects that joined the program will be supported in terms of technologies, products, marketing channels, data, etc.

All the smart devices incubated by the platform will use the logo of Baidu Inside and JD+, according to the report. Moreover, Baidu also planned to launch an official website for Baidu Inside brand to showcase products and provide marketing supports.

Baidu has released a series of gadgets to tap hardware industry, including electronics under Xiaodu brand and health wearable brand Dulife. JD is a popular e-commerce sales channel for smart hardware, like Hiwifi and  STB developed by Skyworth and iQiyi.

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Ivylla: Short-term Accommodation Rental Service for Trusted College Alumni https://technode.com/2014/01/23/ivylla-short-term-accommodation-rental-service-for-trusted-college-alumni/ https://technode.com/2014/01/23/ivylla-short-term-accommodation-rental-service-for-trusted-college-alumni/#respond Thu, 23 Jan 2014 08:54:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15367 Screenshot of Ivylla Ivylla is a global network where trusted alumni and friends from international top universities can share quality travel accommodations. Designed as the upscale alternative to Airbnb, Ivylla aims to ensure certain home quality while providing a platform for networking or making friends. As an exclusive home rental platform, Ivylla adopts real-name registration and […]]]>
ivylla1

Screenshot of Ivylla

Ivylla is a global network where trusted alumni and friends from international top universities can share quality travel accommodations. Designed as the upscale alternative to Airbnb, Ivylla aims to ensure certain home quality while providing a platform for networking or making friends.

As an exclusive home rental platform, Ivylla adopts real-name registration and users have to provide information to verify their status, such as email of a certain university, LinkedIn homepage, or member referrals. The site now has constructed the alumni communities for around 150 top international universities mainly from the U.S., Asia, and Europe.

As a host, users can rent out extra rooms to trusted university alumni and friends by posting prices, pictures, and descriptions of the place on Ivylla. Travelers can find convenient accommodations for next travel plans, whether it’s for business or pleasure, over a few days or for several months. Travelers also can book the rooms on the platform and pay the fares via PayPal, credit card, or AliPay.

The service is launched in Silicon Valley last September by three Chinese co-founders with overseas study experiences: CEO Gu Xiaocheng, CTO Yang Xiaosong, and COO Wan Ming. The company is presently seeking for angel investment.

Several similar domestic startups have received investments last year. Mayi.com secured Series A round of up to $10 million in Jan. 2013. Xiaozhu booked millions of Series A funding and Tujia raised a combined 400 million yuan in Series A and Series B round of financing.

image credit: Ivylla

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Umeng: 2013 Chinese Game MAU Rockets 4.5 Times YOY https://technode.com/2014/01/23/umeng-2013-chinese-game-mau-rockets-4-point-5-times-yoy/ https://technode.com/2014/01/23/umeng-2013-chinese-game-mau-rockets-4-point-5-times-yoy/#respond Thu, 23 Jan 2014 05:54:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15327 The monthly active users (MAU) of Chinese mobile gaming industry surged 4.5 times year-over-year as of August 2013, according to a report jointly released by Chinese mobile analytics and service provider Umeng and digital entertainment expo ChinaJoy. The growth speed is faster than the growth rate for Chinese mobile devices, which totaled 590 million as of […]]]>

The monthly active users (MAU) of Chinese mobile gaming industry surged 4.5 times year-over-year as of August 2013, according to a report jointly released by Chinese mobile analytics and service provider Umeng and digital entertainment expo ChinaJoy.

The growth speed is faster than the growth rate for Chinese mobile devices, which totaled 590 million as of the third quarter of 2013.

The report added that adventure games, causal games, chess and card games, sport games and strategic games took the top five spots in terms of growth of daily engagement times. Users are spending more time on soft-core games, with more than 42.1% of gamers choose casual games as their top options. The five most popular game categories in terms of time engagement are puzzle, action, chess and card, casual and sport games.

Top 5 Game Categories in Terms of Growth Rate for Daily Engagement Times

(2012-2013)

傲游截图20140123105231

Data source: Umeng

iPad users spend an average 6.7 minutes on games per time, higher than 5.1 minutes for iPhone and 5.8 minutes for Android devices. In addition, the daily gaming time for iPad users is 17% higher than that for iPhone players.

According to Umeng’s data for September 2013, the 1-Day and 7-Day retention rates for WeChat games that are shared by friends are 32% and 10.5%, respectively, higher than the retention rates for standalone game apps. Mobile games that have social networking features can attract more active users, citing the report.

image credit: Umeng

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Top Chinese App and Mobile Game Trends in 2013: Wandoujia https://technode.com/2014/01/22/top-chinese-app-and-mobile-game-trends-in-2013-wandoujia/ https://technode.com/2014/01/22/top-chinese-app-and-mobile-game-trends-in-2013-wandoujia/#comments Wed, 22 Jan 2014 10:06:03 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15279 Chinese Android app distributor Wandoujia (or SnapPea) and research institute iResearch jointly released a report on the hottest trends of Chinese mobile apps and games in last year. More than 500 million out of overall 618 million Chinese netizens are mobile device users, according to data released by CNNIC. Mobile apps: AliPay’s annual downloads are around 1.5 […]]]>
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Chinese Android app distributor Wandoujia (or SnapPea) and research institute iResearch jointly released a report on the hottest trends of Chinese mobile apps and games in last year. More than 500 million out of overall 618 million Chinese netizens are mobile device users, according to data released by CNNIC.

Mobile apps:

  1. AliPay’s annual downloads are around 1.5 times of the combined annual app downloads for major banks in China.
  2. Only Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache stood out from the fierce competition of Chinese taxi-booking app industry, while tens of smaller rivals are sunk into oblivion.
  3. The bimonthly download of 12306 app, China’s official service for train ticket sales, surpassed the annual downloads of all third-party ticket-booking services, despite the fact that 12306 is notorious for its poor user experience.

Mobile Games:

China’s active mobile gamers surged by nearly 50 million in 2013. With the upgrading of screen resolution and memory, smartphone is replacing handheld game consoles as the most popular gaming device in recent years.

  1. Five of the Top 10 stand-alone mobile games in terms of downloads are developed by domestic teams, including Find Something, Carrot Fantasy, Fishing Joy, Fishing Joy 2, and Crazy Guess Figure. Chinese game developers are catching up with their foreign counterparts.
  2. Male and female gamers are equally crazy for mobile games, while 50% of players who downloaded more than 15 games are female.
  3. Male gamers prefer hard-core games and female players like casual games.

image credit: Wandoujia

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Uber to Tap APAC Market, Hiring in 14 Southeastern Cities https://technode.com/2014/01/22/uber-to-tap-apac-market/ https://technode.com/2014/01/22/uber-to-tap-apac-market/#comments Wed, 22 Jan 2014 09:03:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15269 Representative of American online car booking service Uber  told TechNode today that the company planned to make foray into APAC market. The source added that Uber will launch a hiring spree across the region to prepare for the expansion. Uber planned to tap APAC market by launching services in Bangalore, Guangzhou, Hyderabad, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Melbourne, […]]]>
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Representative of American online car booking service Uber  told TechNode today that the company planned to make foray into APAC market. The source added that Uber will launch a hiring spree across the region to prepare for the expansion.

Uber planned to tap APAC market by launching services in Bangalore, Guangzhou, Hyderabad, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Melbourne, New Delhi, Seoul, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei and Tokyo, said the source.

According to official website of the company, Uber is recruiting for nearly thirty senior positions for branch offices across Asia, most of positions are general managers, operations and logistics managers, as well as community managers.

After landed in Shanghai last August, Uber is currently operating in two other Chinese cities, Shenzhen and Guangzhou. The company is also going to add Beijing and Hong Kong to its service list.

Under the fierce competition from domestic taxi-hailing apps and strict government regulations, Uber cuts service fares in Shanghai by 30% and slashed the base fare as well as minimum fare by half at the beginning of this year to attract greater mass of customers.

image credit: Uber

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Two Chinese Startups Enter Final Round of Swiss Startup Competition Seedstars World https://technode.com/2014/01/21/two-chinese-startups-enter-final-round-of-swiss-startup-competition-seedstars-world/ https://technode.com/2014/01/21/two-chinese-startups-enter-final-round-of-swiss-startup-competition-seedstars-world/#comments Tue, 21 Jan 2014 09:15:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15220 Two China-based startups Vimantra and JXJ Technologies have entered the final competition for Seedstars World (SSW), the worldwide startup competition in emerging markets and fast growing startup scenes. Overall 20 regional winners from Russia, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America will be in Switzerland for the Grand Final on February 4 to compete for an equity […]]]>
Seedstar

Two China-based startups Vimantra and JXJ Technologies have entered the final competition for Seedstars World (SSW), the worldwide startup competition in emerging markets and fast growing startup scenes. Overall 20 regional winners from Russia, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America will be in Switzerland for the Grand Final on February 4 to compete for an equity investment of up to $500k. The 20 projects were handpicked from nearly a thousand startups.

The winner in Hong Kong was Vimantra, a cloud video platform that brings interactive, connected and real time experiences for video broadcasting on all internet connected devices.

JXJ, the winner for Beijing region, provides health service through sensor network and back stage platform. Its terminal is a watch-like mobile phone with sensor embedded to monitor health condition based on China’s traditional pulse theory.

The final competition of Seedstars World will take place in two stages in Switzerland. The 20 selected startups will go first to Lausanne to participate in a 2-days bootcamp. The semi-final will be held at the world renowned MBA school IMD, where the 5 finalists will be selected by a high-level and distinguished jury panel.

The 5 finalists will go on stage to pitch their projects on Feb 4 in front of an international jury composed of successful and world renowned entrepreneurs and investors.

 image credit: Seedstars World

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Fashion Service YOHO! Books $30 Million Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/01/21/fashion-service-yoho-books-30-million-dollar-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/01/21/fashion-service-yoho-books-30-million-dollar-series-c-funding/#comments Tue, 21 Jan 2014 09:09:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15228 Chinese fashion service YOHO! (compounded from YOUNG + HOME) raised $30 million of Series C financing from SAIF Partners  (source in Chinese). Previous rounds are from CDHfund, Bertelsmann Asia Investments, and Vertex Venture. The capital raised this time will be invested in the development of media and ecommerce platforms. YOHO!’s ecommerce arm YOHOBUY will support more domestic brands […]]]>
Yoho1

Chinese fashion service YOHO! (compounded from YOUNG + HOME) raised $30 million of Series C financing from SAIF Partners  (source in Chinese). Previous rounds are from CDHfund, Bertelsmann Asia Investments, and Vertex Venture.

The capital raised this time will be invested in the development of media and ecommerce platforms. YOHO!’s ecommerce arm YOHOBUY will support more domestic brands as well as introduce first-tier brands to the platform.

Founded in 2005, the company’s main businesses are YOHO! Fashion, a fashion magazine targeted at male youths, fashion community YOHO.CN, and ecommerce platform YOHOBUY. The company launched a female fashion magazine and expanded to fashion exhibition sector last year.

According to data released by the company, the media and ecommerce platforms under YOHO! brand collectively register 5 million users as of present, with core user base ranging from 16 to 28 years old and the average price per order is between 350 yuan ($57.83) and 450 yuan.

The company claimed to record more than 500 million yuan of sales and 40 million yuan of profits in 2013. It is expected to record 1.2 billion yuan of sales and more than 100 million yuan of profits in the future two years, said Ren Jian, marketing head of the firm.

In addition to the head office in Nanjing, YOHO! has set up branch offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Tokyo.

image credit: YOHO!

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Migration of Chinese Startups to Second-tier Cities Continues in 2013: Itjuzi Report https://technode.com/2014/01/21/chinese-startups-is-migrating-to-second-tier-cities-in-2013-itjuzi-report/ https://technode.com/2014/01/21/chinese-startups-is-migrating-to-second-tier-cities-in-2013-itjuzi-report/#comments Tue, 21 Jan 2014 09:07:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15206 Chinese Internet startups are usually distributed in a few regions that have vibrant startup community, mature industrial chain, funding supports, and talents. Second-tier, even third-tier cities are attracting the attentions of startups in 2013, although Beijing is still the center of tech scenario with most startups and investment cases, according to report recently released by […]]]>

Chinese Internet startups are usually distributed in a few regions that have vibrant startup community, mature industrial chain, funding supports, and talents. Second-tier, even third-tier cities are attracting the attentions of startups in 2013, although Beijing is still the center of tech scenario with most startups and investment cases, according to report recently released by Chinese startup database ITjuzi.

Startup Map: Beijing still dominates tech scene, second- and third-tier cities are catching up

97% of Internet startups is distributed in Top 10 tech bases, namely, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Sichuan, Fujian, Hubei, Taiwan, and Shanxi, showing a more centralized trend than 94% in 2012. Hong Kong, which ranked in Top 10 list in 2012, is elbowed away by Shanxi in 2013.

Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou are still No. 1 destinations for startups, accounting for 76% of the total on aggregate. Zhejiang, Suzhou, Sichuan, Fujian, which account for a combined 18% of the total, is catching up thanks to government supports in policies, funds and other resources.

However, the combined percentage of startups based in regions that nabbed 4-10 spots in Top 10 list (where second-tier and third-tier cities located) reached 21% on aggregate, up from 13% in 2011 and 20% in 2012.

Top 10 Regions For Startup Companies

Data source: ITjuzi (as of Dec. 31 2013)

Investment Map: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou witnessed more than 80% of investment cases

In 2013, Itjuzi booked overall 854 investment cases that are distributed in 20 regions like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, demonstrating a more scattered trend as compared with 13 regions in 2012.

As shown in the figure below, most of the Top 10 regions in terms of investment cases are consistent with the list for startups. However, it is worth noting that Hong Kong nudged away Shanxi in this list.

Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou recorded 81% of the total investment cases, down from 84% in 2012. The combined percentage of investment cases based in regions that nabbed 4-10 spots in Top 10 list reached 16% on aggregate in 2013, slightly higher than a year ago.

Top 10 Regions For Investment Cases

ITjuzi 2

Data source: ITjuzi (as of Dec. 31 2013)

Click here to read another post for the same report.

image credit: Witsee

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Mobile Game Developer LineKong Rakes in $80 Million of Series C Funding https://technode.com/2014/01/20/mobile-game-developer-linekong-rakes-in-80-million-dollar-series-c-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/01/20/mobile-game-developer-linekong-rakes-in-80-million-dollar-series-c-funding/#comments Mon, 20 Jan 2014 12:07:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15171 Wang Feng, CEO of mobile game developer LineKong, confirmed today the company had secured $80 million of Series C funding from consortium consisted of Orchid Asia, SAIF Partners, Starwish Global Limited, Profitable Century International Limited. The company has received overall $35 million of investments from IDG Capital Partners, Northern Light Venture Capital, NEA in previous rounds of […]]]>

Wang Feng, CEO of mobile game developer LineKong, confirmed today the company had secured $80 million of Series C funding from consortium consisted of Orchid Asia, SAIF Partners, Starwish Global Limited, Profitable Century International Limited.

The company has received overall $35 million of investments from IDG Capital Partners, Northern Light Venture Capital, NEA in previous rounds of financing.

Wang Feng, CEO of the company, disclosed that the capital will be used for R&D, team construction, among others. Wang added that the company planned to release ten mobile games in 2014 with more than half of them to be developed by LineKong team.

Wang has previously disclosed that the company has record profits and planned to launch IPO in this year.

Started as a client game developer, the company shifted its focus to mobile games last April. Its premium products are mobile RPG game The Legend of King and Sword of Sky. Wang claimed The Legend of King has recorded a monthly turnover of 45 million yuan (around $7.4  mn) as of August last year.

Both Wang Feng and Liao Mingxiang, president of the company, had worked in Kingsoft for several years before founding LineKong . Wang is also the cofounder of smartwatch manufacturer Tomoon.

image credit: LineKong

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What’s Behind the 16 Chinese Tech IPOs in 2013 https://technode.com/2014/01/20/whats-behind-the-16-tech-ipos-in-2013-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/01/20/whats-behind-the-16-tech-ipos-in-2013-in-china/#comments Mon, 20 Jan 2014 10:47:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15147 Overall 16 Chinese Internet companies launched IPOs last year, up from only 7 cases in 2012, according to report released today by Chinese startup database ITjuzi. According to the report, U.S. stock market is still the top option for Chinese Internet companies to go public, despite some foreign financial research institutions are bearish on their prospects. […]]]>

Overall 16 Chinese Internet companies launched IPOs last year, up from only 7 cases in 2012, according to report released today by Chinese startup database ITjuzi.

According to the report, U.S. stock market is still the top option for Chinese Internet companies to go public, despite some foreign financial research institutions are bearish on their prospects. Altogether seven Chinese Internet enterprises got listed on the U.S. market, four for NYSE and three for NASDAQ.

On the other hand, Hong Kong stock market gained more attractions for domestic firms. Five companies got listed on HKEx during 2013, while four of them are gaming companies.

Game developer Youzu and visual content provider Visual China Group managed to go public on Chinese stock market via backdoor listing, as Chinese regulators suspended IPO application since the second half of 2012.

Most of the IPOs occurred in the second half of 2013, around October to December.

The share price of LightInTheBox (-27.5%), Forgame, and Qunar slumped as of Dec. 31, 2013 as compared with their listing prices. Ten newly listed companies recorded rising share prices, led by 58.com which surged 82.57%.

Fourteen out of the sixteen companies have once received venture capital, strategic investments or angel investments. The biggest winner of this year is IDG, which venture backed four listing companies, namely, Sungy Mobile, 500.com, IGG, and Binary Sale Technology. Sequoia Capital and GSR Ventures each venture backed two companies. Cai Wensheng, a legendary figure in China’s tech industry, is the angel investor of 58.com and Autohome.

Internet Companies Launched IPO in 2013 (Data source: ITjuzi)

QQ截图20140121090807

Please read the Chinese report here.

image credit: Online.sh.cn

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Baidu Releases Wireless Music Box Priced at $16 https://technode.com/2014/01/17/baidu-releases-wireless-music-box/ https://technode.com/2014/01/17/baidu-releases-wireless-music-box/#comments Fri, 17 Jan 2014 12:11:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15056 After releasing several smart devices last year, Baidu continues its forays into hardware industry by releasing a wireless music box to enrich its smart gadget lineup. The first batch of 20,000 sets is on sale at online retailer JD with a price tag of 99 yuan ($16.35) . The music box is a heart shaped box […]]]>
Baidu Music

After releasing several smart devices last year, Baidu continues its forays into hardware industry by releasing a wireless music box to enrich its smart gadget lineup. The first batch of 20,000 sets is on sale at online retailer JD with a price tag of 99 yuan ($16.35) .

The music box is a heart shaped box similar to Apple’s mouse both in shape and size. Supporting wireless Internet protocols of Airplay, DLNA, Qplay, it can play the music stored on users’ smartphones and tablets, as well as the songs from various apps like Baidu Music, QQ Music, Douban FM, Xiami Music, among others.

Baidu music box is also a smart router that supports 802.11 b/g/n, PPPoE as well as stable and dynamic IP access technologies. The transmission speed is up to 300Mbps.

image credit: JD

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Outbound Tourism App Go! Helps You to Travel More Economically by Snapping Up Last-minute Orders https://technode.com/2014/01/17/outbound-tourism-app-go/ https://technode.com/2014/01/17/outbound-tourism-app-go/#respond Fri, 17 Jan 2014 09:19:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15063 Most travelling agencies pre-book charter flights and hotels to lower the costs. In real practice, however, they are often trapped in dilemmas when some customers unexpectedly draw back from the travelling package or the number of applicants fall short of the plans. In order to make up for the loss, tourism agencies will slash the […]]]>
Go!

Most travelling agencies pre-book charter flights and hotels to lower the costs. In real practice, however, they are often trapped in dilemmas when some customers unexpectedly draw back from the travelling package or the number of applicants fall short of the plans. In order to make up for the loss, tourism agencies will slash the prices of these orders heavily.

Hanzhou-based startup team Goyo Network Technology spots the opportunity in this business and launched an outbound tourism app Go! this month to make profit of these last-minute orders.

Go! is in essence an integration platform for last-minute orders which are sold at preferential prices. The app showcases the latest information about these orders, including times left, prices, discount rate, and service provider. In addition, users can select the tourism services they are interested in according to departure places and destinations.

The app now integrates tourism information from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, and Chengdu, covering the tourism routes from nearly 300 tourism agencies. The travelling destinations are mainly Southeast Asia scenic spots.

The company’s core team consists of three members. Guo Qianping is former head of Taobao Travel mobile app and CEO of tourism platform Yeego365. Tian Shugang is co-founder and CTO of mobile financial service Tongbanjie. Xu Hengfei has worked at Taobao Wireless Department and Huawei.

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Microsoft Open Technologies Sets Up Subsidiary in China with Focus on Open Innovation https://technode.com/2014/01/16/microsoft-open-technologies-sets-up-subsidiary-in-china-with-focus-on-open-innovation/ https://technode.com/2014/01/16/microsoft-open-technologies-sets-up-subsidiary-in-china-with-focus-on-open-innovation/#comments Thu, 16 Jan 2014 12:57:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=15032 Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. (MS Open Tech), a subsidiary of Microsoft Corp. dedicated to bridging Microsoft and non-Microsoft technologies, announced today the opening of a subsidiary in China, Microsoft Open Technologies (Shanghai) Company Limited — (MS Open Tech Shanghai). MS Open Tech Shanghai will focus on open innovation and collaboration with open source and open […]]]>
微软开放技术(上海)有限公司宣布成立

Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. (MS Open Tech), a subsidiary of Microsoft Corp. dedicated to bridging Microsoft and non-Microsoft technologies, announced today the opening of a subsidiary in China, Microsoft Open Technologies (Shanghai) Company Limited — (MS Open Tech Shanghai).

MS Open Tech Shanghai will focus on open innovation and collaboration with open source and open standards communities in China. The new subsidiary is composed of a robust team of engineers, standards professionals and technical evangelists with roots in open source and open standards.

The Chinese subsidiary will focus on facilitating interactions between Microsoft proprietary development processes and the company’s open innovation efforts on services and devices by advancing the investments on interoperability,  open standards and open source.

As interest in cloud computing and open source technologies increases in China, Microsoft is focused on providing local customers with greater choice and opportunity to work successfully in heterogeneous IT environments. Through its operations in Shanghai, MS Open Tech aimes to play a bigger role by driving investments in interoperability and standards in Microsoft products, contributing to the open source community, and enabling open source software on Microsoft platforms, such as Windows Azure.

Jean Paoli, president of MS Open Tech said, “Our new subsidiary will offer more flexibility to iterate and release open source software created in China, participate in existing open source and open standards efforts and collaborate with the community of open source developers in China.”

“China is a strategic market for Microsoft. Over the past few years, Microsoft has significantly expanded the scope of R&D in China to not only help build global products but also help address the needs of China customers, partners and government. The  establishment of this new company aims to provide more choices for customers and developers, and more technology innovation for businesses, governments, and consumers, in particular in the era of cloud, big data, mobility and social”, said Dr. Zhang Yaqin, Corporate Vice President and Chairman of Microsoft Asia-Pacific Research and Development Group.

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2013 China’s Group-buying Turnover Rockets 67.7% YOY to 35.88 Billion Yuan https://technode.com/2014/01/15/2013-group-buying-turnover-rockets-68-percent-yoy-in-china/ https://technode.com/2014/01/15/2013-group-buying-turnover-rockets-68-percent-yoy-in-china/#respond Wed, 15 Jan 2014 10:47:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14936 The turnover of China’s group-buying industry hiked 67.7% year-over-year to 35.88 billion yuan ($5.94 billion) in 2013, according to research report released by group-purchasing navigation website Tuan800.com. As of December of 2013, the number of Chinese group-purchasing customers reached 71.23 million. The average price of each order increased to 59.4 yuan in 2013 from 46.9 yuan […]]]>
Group-buying

The turnover of China’s group-buying industry hiked 67.7% year-over-year to 35.88 billion yuan ($5.94 billion) in 2013, according to research report released by group-purchasing navigation website Tuan800.com.

As of December of 2013, the number of Chinese group-purchasing customers reached 71.23 million. The average price of each order increased to 59.4 yuan in 2013 from 46.9 yuan one year earlier.

Group-purchasing orders received from mobile terminals accounts for around 50% of the total, even hitting 70% for several leading group-buying sites. 73% of the mobile orders were used within one hour of the purchase, while the figure for PC orders is only 7%. The average per order consumption amount of iPhone users is 4.8 yuan higher than Android device users.

The most popular vertical fields are catering, film tickets, and hotels. The latter two fields, which respectively recorded 3.64 billion yuan and 3.21 billion yuan turnover this year, are becoming the hotspots for group-buying sites to expand their business scales.

Third- and fourth-tier cities has overtaken first- and second-tier cities to become the largest market of group-buying industry, representing a collectively 53.5 percent of the market in 2013, the report added.

The turnover of top-five group-buying services amounted to 33.81 billion yuan, accounting for 95.7% of the total market. Two leaders of the industry, Dianping and Alibaba-backed Meituan, represent 66.3% of the total market on aggregate and both of the two companies hit 1 billion yuan monthly turnover milestone. The monthly turnovers of Baidu-backed Nuomi, 55tuan, and Lashou, range between 300 million and 400 million yuan. Gaopeng, which is venture-backed by Tencent, is also a major player on the battlefield, according to the report.

Under the fierce competition, the number of domestic group-buying sites shrank to 213 from 281 in September last year, according to the report.

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Period Tracker Meet You Gets $15 Million in Fresh Funding https://technode.com/2014/01/15/period-tracker-meet-you-gets-15-million-in-fresh-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/01/15/period-tracker-meet-you-gets-15-million-in-fresh-funding/#comments Wed, 15 Jan 2014 10:38:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14948 Screenshot of Meet You Meet You, a menstruation period tracking app, just closed $15 million of Series B financing led by Matrix Partners China and followed by founder and team of the company. All the funds are now in position (source in Chinese). Meet You is launched in April 2013 and received millions of dollars […]]]>
MeetYou

Screenshot of Meet You

Meet You, a menstruation period tracking app, just closed $15 million of Series B financing led by Matrix Partners China and followed by founder and team of the company. All the funds are now in position (source in Chinese).

Meet You is launched in April 2013 and received millions of dollars in Series A funding at the same time. In September last year, Meet You expanded business from the mainstay period tracking service and set up a female community in the app based on previous user base.

The app registered more than 20 million users as of December last year, with more than 2 million daily active users and more than 1.2 million daily active users for the community.

The capital raised this time will be injected in construction of team and the female community.

Chen Fangyi, founder of the company, has previously set up Internet startup Linggan, which runs several products like coupon service Kanjia and e-commerce site Upin.

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Microsoft Ventures Accelerator Debuts 4th Batch of 19 Startups in Beijing https://technode.com/2014/01/15/microsoft-ventures-accelerator-debuts-4th-batch-of-19-startups-in-beijing/ https://technode.com/2014/01/15/microsoft-ventures-accelerator-debuts-4th-batch-of-19-startups-in-beijing/#comments Wed, 15 Jan 2014 06:50:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14918 Microsoft Ventures Accelerator, a program which has accelerated 154 startups in the past two years, just debuted its fourth batch of 19 startups coming from Chinese mainland, Singapore, and Taiwan. These new companies which were handpicked from 420 applicants range from Internet finance, education, smart wearables, etc. This session of the program will last six […]]]>
QQ截图20140115113732

Microsoft Ventures Accelerator, a program which has accelerated 154 startups in the past two years, just debuted its fourth batch of 19 startups coming from Chinese mainland, Singapore, and Taiwan. These new companies which were handpicked from 420 applicants range from Internet finance, education, smart wearables, etc. This session of the program will last six months from Jan to July this year.

Here is the full list of these startups:

1. My Manisku Pte. Ltd.

Based in Singapore, My Manisku is the developer of TradeHero, a free app that simulates the changes in stock markets by adopting real-time information from bourses around the world.

2. Sumscope

Sumscope is focused on RMB fixed income and derivative markets, providing working platform, real-time information and data service to clients.

3. Tomoon Technology

Tomoon Technology is a consumer electronics manufacturer and optimization solution provider. The company recently released smartwatch T-Fire.

4. Yuanchuang Yitong

Yuanchuang Yitong aims to construct a cloud platform for copyright content generators and users. The company’s product portfolio includes content platform Works.info and payment service Yibi (yibi.com).

5. Dnurse Technology

Dnurse Technology is a developer of blood glucose monitoring hardware and software.

6. Waqu

Waqu is a mobile content service provider that helps users to find interesting UGC videos.

7. Hydata

Hydata is a data interactive visualization service and solution provider, which makes full use of computer graphics and image processing technology.

8. My Bank

My Bank is an online marketing platform dedicated to Internet finance services by embedding data from various sites into its mobile app, helping users to get quick access to latest financial information.

9. Duizhan

Duizhan is the developer of SegmentFault, a technical community for Chinese developers.

10. PICOOC

PICOOC is an Internet startup focused on wearables and smart home devices. It is principally engaged in research and development of smart devices, health solution plans, and operating system for smart health devices.

11. Lanmei Information Technology

Lanmei is a mobile social networking radio, which enables users to listen to and share DIY contents by combining voice, pictures and texts.

12. Yiduoyun

Yiduoyun, developer of Tizi (ladder in Chinese), is founded by Gong Haiyan, the founder of US-listed online dating service Jiayuan. It’s a full-round platform for teachers, students and parents to do all kinds of educational activities besides school hours.

13. Youjuhui 

Youjuhui is the developer of Bihang, a bitcoin purse and trading platform.

14. Luzhao Network

Luzhao Network is the developer of Super Taxi, a taxi operation platform that integrates taxi hailing services from road, telephone and Internet.

15. Run Mobile

Run Mobile is a mobile solution and value-added service provider for celebrities.

16. Wanbang Huatang

Wanbang Huatang is principally engaged in providing high-quality digital products and services to primary and middle school students as well as education groups.

17. Aike Innovation

Aike Innovation is the developer of Huodongxing, a ticket platform targeted at MICE industry of Asian and greater China region.

18. Chenfengyun Technology

Chenfengyun is the developer of Quickbird, an app that helps users to speed up online surfing speed and save data traffic by adopting latest cloud acceleration and compression technologies.

19. Canshang Taihe Advertisement

Canshang Taiheis a mobile ad solution provider, which integrates the market for apps, integration platforms, third-party monitoring institutions, and ad platforms.

image credit: Microsoft Ventures

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Introducing Overseas Mobile Games to Chinese Market: Interview with Zhu Ming, CEO of Mobile Gaming Company MorningTec https://technode.com/2014/01/14/introducing-overseas-mobile-games-to-chinese-market-interview-with-zhu-ming-ceo-of-mobile-gaming-company-morningtec/ https://technode.com/2014/01/14/introducing-overseas-mobile-games-to-chinese-market-interview-with-zhu-ming-ceo-of-mobile-gaming-company-morningtec/#respond Tue, 14 Jan 2014 12:26:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14900 Seasoned veteran of Internet industry Zhu Ming cofounded MorningTec, a licensed game distributor and mobile game development tool provider, with current CTO of the company Chen Wenqi in 2013. The company just secured 50 million yuan of Series A funding from Haitong Leading Capital Management. The business model of MorningTec is to attract iOS-focused apps […]]]>

Seasoned veteran of Internet industry Zhu Ming cofounded MorningTec, a licensed game distributor and mobile game development tool provider, with current CTO of the company Chen Wenqi in 2013. The company just secured 50 million yuan of Series A funding from Haitong Leading Capital Management.

The business model of MorningTec is to attract iOS-focused apps from European and the U.S. markets with its homegrown product Stella SDK II, a cross-platform mobile game development tool which helps developers to port an iOS app to an Android version. MorningTec will then operate these overseas licensed games in domestic market and share revenues with them.

This past Monday Zhu Ming shared with TechNode the difficulties and milestones of MorningTec in the past year. Zhu said that the first and foremost difficulty he encountered is the lack of talents, which in turn, makes it increasingly hard to make innovations, especially on technical levels. Moreover, it is difficult for MorningTec to enter the market, because companies that adopt similar operation models, like Chukong and iDreamsky, have established their presence in the industry. Fortunately, the growth potential of Chinese market is still huge.

He added that MorningTec is focused on standalone Internet casual games, a relatively untapped market. But this positioning also brought forth challenges, like more costs for cooperation with telecom carriers and different Android game distribution channels, as well as the needs for quick adaptation to their ever-upgrading SDKs. In addition, how to select games to the taste of Chinese gamers is also a challenging problem.

Zhu disclosed that the capital raised this time will be invested in team construction and game publication. MorningTec planned to expand its 30-member team to round 60 people in the future. In addition to an excellent technical team, the company also aims to set up business development groups for domestic and overseas markets respectively. Moreover, MorningTec planned to launch more online and offline activities to promote its games.

The company will make Stella SDK II a semi-open source service next year in a bid to lure more Object-C based mobile game developers to use the tool. Zhu mentioned that Chukong’s cross-platform development tool Cocos2d-X is designed to port Android apps to iOS version. The two services is in a complementary, rather than competitive relationship.

MorningTec will roll out one game each month in the new year, with Monster Shooter2: Back to Earth this month, a game developed by Poland team GameLion Studios, for this January. It has currently established partnership with more than 20 mobile game development teams from the U.S., Turkey, Thailand, Spain, and Chile. The company gives priorities to mobile games that are to the tastes of Chinese games, which feature beautiful pictures, interesting gameplay, and easy engagement.

In addition to Chinese mainland market, MorningTec also set eyes on Taiwan, Japanese and South Korean markets.

The company now mainly targets at game developers, because game apps are highly adaptive and have clearer monetization model. But Zhu said they may also expand businesses to develop other apps when market demands rise in the future.

As a serial entrepreneur, Zhu has previously founded Fenle Digital Tech in 2006 to 2010. Chen Wenqi, CTO and cofounder of the company, is also the inventor of Stella SDK II.

team1

 Founder and CEO of MorningTec: Zhu Ming

image credit: MorningTec

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Smartwatch Maker Yingqu Unveils Six New Gadgets Priced Between $83-416 https://technode.com/2014/01/13/smartwatch-maker-yingqu-unveils-six-new-gadgets/ https://technode.com/2014/01/13/smartwatch-maker-yingqu-unveils-six-new-gadgets/#respond Mon, 13 Jan 2014 12:15:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14849 Domestic smartwatch maker Yingqu impressed the public today by rolling out six products under its homegrown brand inWatch, including inWatch One C, inWatch Z, inWatch X, inWatch Junior, together with, inWatch Kid and inWatch Health Care, two custom gadgets for kids and senior citizens respectively. inWatch One C is offered in three colors of black, […]]]>

Domestic smartwatch maker Yingqu impressed the public today by rolling out six products under its homegrown brand inWatch, including inWatch One C, inWatch Z, inWatch X, inWatch Junior, together with, inWatch Kid and inWatch Health Care, two custom gadgets for kids and senior citizens respectively.

inWatch One C is offered in three colors of black, white and gold. Featuring a 1.54-inch touch screen and powered by Android 4.1 system, it supports WiFi, bluetooth and GPS connectivity. As an upgraded version of inWatch One, inWatch One C removes the metal strip on top of the touch screen of inWatch One and adjusted the position of camera, avoiding the inWatch One’s problem of blocking the camera. Moreover, the battery life of inWatch One C is increased to 120 hours from 48 hours for inWatch One. The product is priced at 1,399 yuan ($233) and will be put into mass product in January.

inwatch one c

inWatch Z is made of metal materials with friction-resistant sapphire screen and ceramic rear cover, which accelerate the dissipation of heats. It adopts 1.2GHz dual-core processor A7C with 5 million pixel camera and 580mAh battery. The new inWatch Z is also equipped with a GSM SIM, WiFi, and bluetooth for access to mobile data connectivity. The product is priced at 1,799 yuan ($299) and will hit market in January.

inwatch Z

inWatch X is developed by an U.S. laboratory under the company, an incubation project dedicated to western markets. The product features a 0.1 mm thick flexible display developed by Samsung and LG and is powered by 4.3 Android system, 512MB RAM and 4G ROM. The product is priced at 2,499 yuan ($416) and will be shipped in April.

Inwatch x

inWatch Junior is smart wristband for juniors, which is priced at 499 yuan ($83). inWatch Kid is a kid tracking device with GPS. Other functions of the gadget are voice dialing and voice recognition. inWatch Health Care, a health care product for the elderlies, adopts the brainwave sensor developed by Neurosky.

inWatch currently has a team composed of more than 60 members, scattering in Beijing, Shenzhen and New York, according to Neo Wang, CEO and founder of the company.

The competition in smart wearables industry is heating up in China. With different positioning, every product released this time is dedicated to a specific group of users and has their own advantages, said Wang.

image credit: inWatch

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Huawei Unveils Tron, Android-powered Game Console https://technode.com/2014/01/10/huawei-unveils-android-powered-game-console-tron/ https://technode.com/2014/01/10/huawei-unveils-android-powered-game-console-tron/#comments Fri, 10 Jan 2014 09:14:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14780
tron

Chinese telecom equipment and mobile phone maker Huawei showed off its homegrown game console Tron at CES just days after China’s state council lifted the ban on game console sector imposed in 2000 (source in Chinese).

Powered by Android system and Nvidia’s Tegra 4 processor, Tron is a small cylindrical console that can be connected to TVs via HDMI. It also supports WiFi, bluetooth connectivity and even a USB 3.0 port.  Each console can connect to up to four gamepads. Another highlight of the gadget is that it supports fluent 4K video display.

Moreover, the company has partnered up with several game platforms like PS3, PC and NDS to develop custom games for Tron. 12 custom games are already available for the gadget. The product reportedly will be released after May of this year at $120 or less.

Microsoft has already established a joint venture with Chinese media company BesTV last year, planning to introduce Xbox One into the mainland this year.

image credit: Tencent

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CSRC Approves Backdoor Listing of Visual Content Provider VCG https://technode.com/2014/01/10/csrc-approves-backdoor-listing-of-visual-content-provider-vcg/ https://technode.com/2014/01/10/csrc-approves-backdoor-listing-of-visual-content-provider-vcg/#respond Fri, 10 Jan 2014 08:44:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14773 The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has conditionally approved the backdoor listing application of visual content and solution provider Visual China Group (VCG) via Far East Industrial Stock (SZ:000681). Relevant brands under the group are CFP, Getty Image China, TungStar, and Shijue. CFP, formerly known as Photo.com, is an online editorial imagery contents provider and distributing […]]]>
VCG

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has conditionally approved the backdoor listing application of visual content and solution provider Visual China Group (VCG) via Far East Industrial Stock (SZ:000681). Relevant brands under the group are CFP, Getty Image China, TungStar, and Shijue.

CFP, formerly known as Photo.com, is an online editorial imagery contents provider and distributing platform cofounded by Chai Jijun and YY’s CEO Li Xueling. Li left CEP in 2003 for divergence in development prospects of the company, but YY is still a controlling shareholder of the company. CFP is dedicated to providing Chinese and overseas customers with a rich and high quality images, video, visual products and professional services.

Getty Images China is a joint venture set up by VCG and Getty Images in 2005. Being a domestic provider for creative class photos, video copyright authorization, copyright clearance, entrust shoot and other professional services, it is committed to provide customers with high quality creative images, video material, and visual service.

TungStar is a professional production agency specializing in editing entertaining and news pictures and videos, with a professional entertainment editing group in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, etc. It was founded in 2004 and being acquired by VCG in 2012.

Shijue.me is an active sharing community for visual pictures and a socialized e-commercial platform for creative design for products. The company planned to roll out a homegrown micro-profit stock photography site with around 50 yuan ($8.26) for each picture, disclosed Lei Haibo, founder of the company.

The market size of Chinese copyright pictures is estimated to reach 1.2 billion yuan and exceed 2.5 million yuan by 2015, according to report released by research institution CCID on June 2013.

image credit: VCG

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Tencent’s Personal Cloud Storage Service Micro Cloud Releases 2.0 Version https://technode.com/2014/01/10/tencents-personal-cloud-storage-service-micro-cloud-releases-2-0-version/ https://technode.com/2014/01/10/tencents-personal-cloud-storage-service-micro-cloud-releases-2-0-version/#comments Fri, 10 Jan 2014 03:37:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14749 Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently released version 2.0 for its personal cloud storage Micro Cloud (Weiyun in Chinese) with a number of features that aims to turn the product into an integration service from a storage service. The new 2.0 version is expected to hit market on January 15 (source in Chinese). Tencent also announced […]]]>
Weiyun

Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently released version 2.0 for its personal cloud storage Micro Cloud (Weiyun in Chinese) with a number of features that aims to turn the product into an integration service from a storage service. The new 2.0 version is expected to hit market on January 15 (source in Chinese).

Tencent also announced that Micro Cloud registered more than 300 million users as of present, just seven months after the service hit 100 million user milestone in May 2013.

In addition to storing pictures, videos and audios, the revamped Micro Cloud 2.0 allows users to save websites, files, and notes via the service. All forms of documents saved on Micro Cloud are being synchronized across multiple devices, enabling users to check, edit and share them on different terminals.

Tencent also integrated Micro Cloud to other document sharing products under the company, like QQ Offline Transmission, QQ Mail, QQ Album, among others.

Tencent is in talks with hardware manufacturers to embed Micro Cloud into smartphones and wearable devices via pre-installation or API access, said Ji Shunyou, deputy manager of Tencent Cloud Platform.

Ji added that Micro Cloud will continue the tie-ups with WeChat and aims to become one part of the solution plan for WeChat public accounts.

Tencent rolled out Micro Cloud in July 2012 with four components include a cloud-based storage disk; a photo album; a Wi-Fi hotspot transfer feature and a cross-device clipboard feature.

Micro Cloud started to offer a jaw-dropping 10TB of free cloud storage from August 2013, when leading cloud storage companies waged a cloud storage war back then.

Chinese IT triumvirate known as BAT (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) all laid out in personal cloud storage sector. Alibaba acquired leading domestic cloud storage service Kanbox in September last year. Baidu Cloud announced 100 million users last September and established partnership with storage solution provider Western Digital in last December.

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Chinese Gamers Mad for Mid-core Card Collecting Games: Top Trends of China Apps by Wandoujia https://technode.com/2014/01/09/chinese-gamers-mad-for-mid-core-card-collecting-games-top-trends-of-china-apps-by-wandoujia/ https://technode.com/2014/01/09/chinese-gamers-mad-for-mid-core-card-collecting-games-top-trends-of-china-apps-by-wandoujia/#respond Thu, 09 Jan 2014 13:01:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14695 App distributor and content manager Wandoujia released the newest issue of China App Index for last December. Mid-core games with card-collecting elements, longer game lifespan and personal travel apps are three major trends that rule Chinese app market in this winter. 1. Mad for Mid-core: Card Games Collect Gamers “Mid-core” games have emerged in a […]]]>

App distributor and content manager Wandoujia released the newest issue of China App Index for last December. Mid-core games with card-collecting elements, longer game lifespan and personal travel apps are three major trends that rule Chinese app market in this winter.

1. Mad for Mid-core: Card Games Collect Gamers

“Mid-core” games have emerged in a niche between hardcore dragon-slaying RPGs and causal puzzle and side-scrolling runner games. Following the huge domestic success of I’m MT, Chinese publishers are crazy for mid-core games, especially ones that use card-collecting elements to drive gameplay. These games synthesize casual gameplay that hooks players in immersive game worlds that keep them interested longer.

Five of the Top10 New Games on Wanduojia have adopted its approach to mid-core, incorporating card game elements as a means of simplifying more involved genres. These 5 games garnered 332,000 downloads all together.

Among the five games, Three Kingdoms 15 takes second place among new games with 105,251 downloads and Papa Three Kingdoms recorded 61,829 downloads. Both of the games combine the popular Three Kingdoms story with a battle system employing hero cards.

未命名

Three Kingdoms 15 and Papa Three Kingdoms

Collectable card games was a $4.1 billion business in 2013, according to digital games market intelligence SuperData Research, and the burgeoning digital card game market accounted for a 32% increase in that number over the previous year.

2. Good Games Don’t Die Young

In the mobile era, it is more and more difficult for games to get longer lifespan as compared with the PC era. Let’s see how popularity has ebbed and flowed for various mobile hits.

Card games like I’m MT are assumed to have a longer life cycle than other titles. I’m MT continues to steadily build its audience one year after its release. Of course, card games are not the only ones with a long lifespan, as Temple Run and Fishing Joy also built an audience over a period of 6-18 months before reaching a peak, and now appears to be enjoying a long sunset.

However, the contrast is stark with two other titles that shot to popularity: WePOP, a bubble-popping titled by Tencent, and MomentCam, an app that creates a cartoon likeness. But then each app plummeted, search volume fell by over 66% from its peak within one month.

wandoujia-12

Source: Baidu Search Index for Mobile

It used to be that developers just tried to rack up as many installs as possible. 2013 demonstrated the power of social media in igniting app craze. In 2014, it is expected that developers should focus on retention and retargeting: getting users to return to the app in the months or years to come.

3. Traveling Gets Personal

Travel apps took three spots on this month’s Fastest Growing Apps ranking, a testament to a shifting attitude among Chinese tourists. Hotel and ticket-booking apps liberate Chinese tourists from package tours, and mobile travel SNS BreadTrip enables them to share itineraries, photos, tips, and dreams of new adventures. BreadTrip recorded 250.804 downloads at a growth rate of 171%.

Top New Game
Fast growing apps

image credit: Wandoujia

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Family Safety Guard Eachpal Showcases Kid Tracking Smart Wristband SmartUFO https://technode.com/2014/01/09/family-safety-guard-eachpal-showcases-kid-tracking-smart-wristband-smartufo/ https://technode.com/2014/01/09/family-safety-guard-eachpal-showcases-kid-tracking-smart-wristband-smartufo/#comments Thu, 09 Jan 2014 11:14:13 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14732 SmartUFO for Kids and Pets Eachpal, a family safety guard, recently released a WiFi-enabled kid tracking smart wristband SmartUFO together with a pet tracking gadget under the same brand. Designed specifically for kids, SmartUFO comes in four candy colors. The device traces activity route of kids using WiFi, GPS, and base stations, with focus on positioning […]]]>
Eachpal wristlet

SmartUFO for Kids and Pets

Eachpal, a family safety guard, recently released a WiFi-enabled kid tracking smart wristband SmartUFO together with a pet tracking gadget under the same brand.

Designed specifically for kids, SmartUFO comes in four candy colors. The device traces activity route of kids using WiFi, GPS, and base stations, with focus on positioning and social networking functions.

Battery life has long been a headache for positioning devices that adopt GPS, a battery-consuming technology. By integrating WiFi positioning, the company claims they can get up to two weeks of battery life, while that for most kid wristlets on the market are four to five hours.

Most interestingly, SmartUFO frees parents from sending short messages in the process of communicating with the gadget. Once parents installed Eachpal app on their handsets, the device will send real-time monitoring data to the app automatically. Moreover, three taps on the dial plate can send SOS alerts to predefined custodians.

SmartUFO for pets is IP67 (Ingress Protection) rated and operates normally after submersion in 1 meter of water for 30 minutes.

The company has secured 3 million yuan ($488,742) of angel investment from VRV Software (SZ:300352), a Beijing-based information security service, last October.

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P2P Lending Service Itouzi Raises Tens of Millions Yuan from CEAIC https://technode.com/2014/01/09/p2p-lending-service-itouzi-raises-tens-of-millions-yuan-from-ceaic/ https://technode.com/2014/01/09/p2p-lending-service-itouzi-raises-tens-of-millions-yuan-from-ceaic/#respond Thu, 09 Jan 2014 09:28:10 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14713 Itouzi, a P2P lending platform, reportedly secured tens of millions of yuan in Series A financing from China Emergency Assistance Investment Co., Ltd. (CEAIC), a state-backed institution that helps companies address fundraising dilemmas (via Tech NetEase). Different from other similar P2P platforms, Itouzi focuses on addressing the fundraising demands of companies, mainly financing guarantee institutions, […]]]>
Itouzi1

Itouzi, a P2P lending platform, reportedly secured tens of millions of yuan in Series A financing from China Emergency Assistance Investment Co., Ltd. (CEAIC), a state-backed institution that helps companies address fundraising dilemmas (via Tech NetEase).

Different from other similar P2P platforms, Itouzi focuses on addressing the fundraising demands of companies, mainly financing guarantee institutions, or a peer-to-company (P2C) model as defined by the company.

The capital raised this time will be used in team construction and branding, according to Wang Bo, CEO of Itouzi. He noted that the cooperation between the two parties will not be restricted in capital levels. They will also share resources in other aspects in an attempt to dig out the fundraising demands in emergency assistance sector.

Launched in March 2013, Itouzi claimed that its turnover has surpassed 100 million yuan ($16.51 million) as of September last year and exceeded 500 million yuan as of present.

P2P lending sector attracted even more funding recently than last year. Dianrong booked tens of million dollars from Northern Light. Renrendai received $130 million of Series A funding led by Trustbridge Partners. Youli, a P2P lending platform mainly cooperates with offline micro-credit companies, has raised tens of millions of dollars from SBCVC.

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Alibaba Rolls Out Mobile Game Platform To Take On Tencent https://technode.com/2014/01/08/alibaba-rolls-out-mobile-game-platform-to-take-on-tencent/ https://technode.com/2014/01/08/alibaba-rolls-out-mobile-game-platform-to-take-on-tencent/#comments Wed, 08 Jan 2014 09:12:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14662 Alibaba Group launched a mobile game platform today to compete head-on with its major rival Tencent in mobile gaming sector. The first game on Alibaba’s gaming platform is expected to be released on Taobao Mobile very soon. The platform won’t charge standalone mobile games or take revenue shares from them for the first year. As for […]]]>

Alibaba Group launched a mobile game platform today to compete head-on with its major rival Tencent in mobile gaming sector. The first game on Alibaba’s gaming platform is expected to be released on Taobao Mobile very soon.

The platform won’t charge standalone mobile games or take revenue shares from them for the first year. As for jointly operated mobile games, Alibaba will pocket 20% of the revenue, while 70% of the revenue will be distributed to developers and the rest 10% will be donated to charity funds, according to Liu Chunning, vice president of Alibaba Digital & Entertainment Unit who was also former exec of Tencent.

Alibaba claims that this scheme is far more generous than Tencent’s revenue-sharing ratio of 90% for operation platform and 10% for game developers.

Alibaba added that the mobile game platform will offer users and developers all-around services and technical resources, like cloud storage service AliCloud, AliPay, virtual currency, big data management, as well as to capitalize on existing ecommerce and social products in a bid to construct a “healthy, convenient and secure ecosystem”.

With the release of this platform, Alibaba claimed it aims to break the monopoly of Tencent and inspire innovations in mobile gaming sector.

Tencent’s casual games like WeRunner and Rhythm Master became instant success after their release in the second half of 2013, heating up the competition in domestic mobile gaming arena. Wu Gang, CEO of Wistone, noted that more than 80% of market growth in Q3 2013 was nabbed by Tencent.

Chinese mobile game players topped 300 million with market value surging from more than 5 billion yuan in 2012 to 11.2 billion yuan in 2013, according to data released by GPC under Publishers Association of China.

Tencent reportedly will partner up with Baidu’s 91 and Duoku to jointly distribute licensed mobile games from April this year (source in Chinese).

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Chinese Mobile Gaming Company MorningTec Secures RMB50 Million of Series A Funding https://technode.com/2014/01/08/chinese-mobile-gaming-company-morningtec-secures-50-million-of-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2014/01/08/chinese-mobile-gaming-company-morningtec-secures-50-million-of-series-a-funding/#comments Wed, 08 Jan 2014 03:25:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14649 MorningTec, a licensed game distributor and mobile game development tool provider, announced that it has raised RMB50 million of Series A financing from Haitong Leading Capital Management. As we reported earlier, MorningTec is a licensed game distribution platform that introduces foreign games to Asian markets. The company planned to roll out a flagship game Monster […]]]>
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MorningTec, a licensed game distributor and mobile game development tool provider, announced that it has raised RMB50 million of Series A financing from Haitong Leading Capital Management.

As we reported earlier, MorningTec is a licensed game distribution platform that introduces foreign games to Asian markets. The company planned to roll out a flagship game Monster Shooter2: Back to Earth this month.

In addition, the platform is backed by the company’s premium product Stella SKD, a cross-platform development tool that enables developers to transfer the source code of iOS to Android with one click.

Haitong invested in MorningTec because they are bullish on the technical and operational abilities of the latter. Cross-platform engine and high-efficiency data management ability are also the highlights of MorningTec, said Lv Jiadie, vice president of Haitong.

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Ctrip Reportedly Invests Over $100 Million in Overseas Travel Platform ToursForFun https://technode.com/2014/01/07/ctrip-reportedly-invests-over-100-million-in-overseas-travel-platform-toursforfun/ https://technode.com/2014/01/07/ctrip-reportedly-invests-over-100-million-in-overseas-travel-platform-toursforfun/#comments Tue, 07 Jan 2014 07:53:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14619 Chinese online travel giant Ctrip reportedly invested more than $100 million in overseas tourism service ToursForFun (report in Chinese). According to official website of ToursForFun, the company will become part of Ctrip’s North American branch, which was set up in last November. Founded in 2006, ToursForFun is a thriving online travel supplier dedicated to providing […]]]>
ToursForFun

Chinese online travel giant Ctrip reportedly invested more than $100 million in overseas tourism service ToursForFun (report in Chinese). According to official website of ToursForFun, the company will become part of Ctrip’s North American branch, which was set up in last November.

Founded in 2006, ToursForFun is a thriving online travel supplier dedicated to providing online purchasing experience for all travel needs. It is focused on overseas tours and vacation packages in North America, Europe, Asia, Australia & New Zealand, and South & Central America.

Ctrip launched acquisition spree last year, especially after the company raised 800 million yuan ($132.18 million) last November by issuing convertible bond. Here is a list of Ctrip’s investment and acquisition cases in 2013:

  • April: Invested in online travel searching engine Kuxun (amount not disclosed);
  • May: Invested in hotel app Economy Hotel Manager (amount not disclosed);
  • October: Invested undisclosed amount of capital in Chanyouji, a well-designed trip story sharing platform that supports videos and has features such as check-ins and bookkeeping;
  • December: Led a $60 million round in car rental service Yongche together with DCM;
  • December: Led a $100 million funding round in Chinese car rental company eHi AutoServices for a 20% stake;
  • December: Invested in ToursForFun.

The number of China’s outbound travelers is expected to surge 13% year-on-year to 110 million in 2014, according to data released by 2014 National Conference of Tourism Industry. The overseas travelling revenue is expected to climb 3% year-on-year to $49.2 billion (source in Chinese).

In addition to acquiring companies that have established presence in foreign markets like ToursForFun, Ctrip’s newly launched online ticket platform included tourist attractions in over 30 countries or regions outside China. Moreover, the company also launched overseas private tour platform with international car rental companies in a bid to tap overseas tourism market.

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Online Retailer LightInTheBox Acquires U.S. Social Commerce Site Ador, Names Foreign Execs https://technode.com/2014/01/07/online-retailer-lightinthebox-acquires-u-s-social-commerce-site-ador-names-foreign-execs/ https://technode.com/2014/01/07/online-retailer-lightinthebox-acquires-u-s-social-commerce-site-ador-names-foreign-execs/#respond Tue, 07 Jan 2014 05:42:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14610 LightInTheBox, a Beijing-based online retailer that targets at markets outside China, acquired Seattle-based social ecommerce site Ador at an undisclosed price (via Tencent Tech). The company will then set up its first office in the U.S. Mark Stabingas, CEO of Ador and former manager of Amazon Payments, is named as president of LightInTheBox, while CTO […]]]>
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LightInTheBox, a Beijing-based online retailer that targets at markets outside China, acquired Seattle-based social ecommerce site Ador at an undisclosed price (via Tencent Tech). The company will then set up its first office in the U.S.

Mark Stabingas, CEO of Ador and former manager of Amazon Payments, is named as president of LightInTheBox, while CTO of Ador Quinten Shay takes the post of senior vice president. Wen Xin and Zhang Liang, co-founders of LightInTheBox are appointed as executive vice presidents.

Founded in 2007 by former Google China executive Guo Quji, LightInTheBox started with selling electronics but gained momentum with wedding dresses and other fashion and lifestyle goods that are low-priced and made in China. In 2012, 98% of the total orders were from overseas customers of European and North American markets. The company went public on U.S. market last June.

Ador is a shoppable digital magazine rebranded from former social commerce and photo sharing service Lockerz.  Ador’s services is similar to some of those being offered on Lockerz, which has been transforming itself from a photo sharing service into a photo sharing service with a fashion, celebrity, e-commerce angle to it.

Driven by various reasons, more and more Chinese tech companies mulled to expand overseas market and LightInTheBox is just one of the sucessful cases.

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P2P Lending Platform Renrendai Secures $130 Million Funding Led by Trustbridge Partners https://technode.com/2014/01/07/p2p-lending-platform-renrendai-secures-130-million-funding-led-by-trustbridge-partners/ https://technode.com/2014/01/07/p2p-lending-platform-renrendai-secures-130-million-funding-led-by-trustbridge-partners/#comments Tue, 07 Jan 2014 03:10:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14587 Renren Ucredit, the parent company of P2P lending service Renrendai, reportedly booked $130 million of Series A funding led by Trustbridge Partners ($65 million) and an undisclosed institution ($65 million) (source in Chinese). The angel round is raised from Honghe Venture Capital in 2010. [Update: Renren Ucredit officially announced the news on Jan. 9] Renrendai […]]]>
renrenren

Renren Ucredit, the parent company of P2P lending service Renrendai, reportedly booked $130 million of Series A funding led by Trustbridge Partners ($65 million) and an undisclosed institution ($65 million) (source in Chinese). The angel round is raised from Honghe Venture Capital in 2010. [Update: Renren Ucredit officially announced the news on Jan. 9]

Renrendai adopts an operating model similar to Lending Club’s when it was launched in 2010, mainly focused on online micro-credit business. The company integrated with offline lending service Ucredit in 2012.

According to data released by the company, Renrendai’s turnover surged 276% year-over-year in the first half of 2013, hitting 1 billion yuan ($165.2 million) as of August of 2013.

P2P lending platforms has attracted attentions of investors and entrepreneurs since November of 2013. Youli, a P2P lending platform mainly cooperates with offline micro-credit companies, has raised tens of millions of dollars from SBCVC. Itouzi, a platform mainly cooperates with financing guarantee institutions, is also in talks with investors.

P2P lending industry experienced a chaotic year in 2013. On the one hand, several companies like Dianrong, Renrendai and Youli received huge capital injections. On the other hand, more than 70 P2P sites were closed in the past year, according to data from Wangdai Zhijia.

After two years of observation, the government is expected to release laws on P2P industry in this year. More players will be weeded out in 2014 under the pressures of fiercer competition and stiffer regulations. The market share left out by the withdrawal of these competitors will be devoured by leading companies. Maybe that’s why venture capital starts to inject capital in leading companies in the latter half of last year.

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10 Online Tourism Startups You Should Not Miss https://technode.com/2014/01/06/10-online-tourism-startups-you-should-not-miss/ https://technode.com/2014/01/06/10-online-tourism-startups-you-should-not-miss/#comments Mon, 06 Jan 2014 11:26:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14549 Chinese startup database ITjuzi recently released the newest round-up of online tourism services. In ITjuzi’s database, there are overall 337 startups fall into this vertical category, while 41 companies or 12.2% of the total have secured capital injections in the past year. Please read the Chinese report here. Let’s take a look at the 10 […]]]>

Chinese startup database ITjuzi recently released the newest round-up of online tourism services. In ITjuzi’s database, there are overall 337 startups fall into this vertical category, while 41 companies or 12.2% of the total have secured capital injections in the past year. Please read the Chinese report here.

Let’s take a look at the 10 must-visit tourism sites recommended by the database:

1.    Shijiebang

Shijiebang is an outbound and backpack tourism service platform which provides custom and cost-effective tourism services. The company secured tens of million dollars in Series A financing from angel investors led by Yahoo founder Jerry Yang, Fosun Capital and ChinaRock.

shijiebang

2.    8trip

Founded in December 2012, 8trip, a B2B tourism service, serves as a platform that bridge the gap between upstream tourism service providers and downstream travelling agencies, improving the trading efficiency for the two parties. The company raised 150 million yuan ($24.45 million) of funding from Vision Knight Capital and SBCVC last November.

8trip

3.    Tujia

Tujia is a hotel reservation platform that provides online searching, checking and trading services for hotel booking services at tourism destinations. The company provides three types of services: 1) online booking for middle and high-end holiday apartments; 2) housekeeping service for properties; 3) open trusteeship. The company secured overall 400 million yuan of capital in two rounds of investments. The first round is raised in February 2013 from consortium consists of Ctrip, GGV, Lightspeed, Homeaway, CDHfund, Qiming Ventures, CBC, while the second round is raised in May 2013.

Tujia

4.    Wuxinghui

Wuxinghui started as a high-quality catering service when it was founded in 2010. The company shifted its focus to online tourism in 2013, recommending flight ticket and hotel services across the country for backpack travelers. The company received tens of millions of dollars in Series A funding led by IDG and CDHfund. The angel round is from angel investors like Ji Qi and Wu Jiong.

wuxinghui

5.  117go

117go is a travel diary app supporting sharing of photos, locations, stories, among other things in a timeline. The app now registered more than 5 million of users. The company has received $1 million of Series A funding from RedPoint and millions of dollars in Series B financing from Alibaba. Tang Yibo, former exec of Ctrip, joined 117go as president in last September.

117go

6.    Breadtrip

Breadtrip an app that tracks the whole trip of a user and remembers all the photos, travel stories and locations the user uploads. The company just booked tens of millions of dollars in Series B financing led by CBC and followed by Vertex Venture, an existing investor who injected $2 million in Series A.

Breadtrip

7.    Yaochufa

Founded in 2011, Yaochufa is a flash sale site for high-end hotel and vacation services. The company secured angel invest from Innovation Works and millions of dollars from Vertex Venture last December.

yaochufa

8.    Vpiao

Founded in 2013, Vpiao is an e-ticket solution provider for tourism attractions. It offers both hardware and software like e-ticket distribution platform and scanning devices. The company has received millions of yuan of angel investments from Innovation Works.

Vpiao

9.    Yododo

Yododo is an online tourism community for backpack travelers. The company received 25 million of Series A financing from Gobi Partners in November of 2013.

Yododo

10.    Ilvxing

Founded in 2013, Ilvxing promotes tourism services on WeChat platform by introducing three to four services on sales price each day. Its services include tourism services, discount flight tickets, and hotels. The company received angel investment last December.

ilvxing
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WeChat Adds Taxi-booking App Didi Dache https://technode.com/2014/01/06/wechat-adds-taxi-booking-app-didi-dache/ https://technode.com/2014/01/06/wechat-adds-taxi-booking-app-didi-dache/#comments Mon, 06 Jan 2014 08:37:55 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14538 Tencent’s IM tool WeChat integrated Didi Dache into its services just after the parent company injected $100 million in Series C funding of the taxi-hailing app (via Tencent Tech). Tencent has previously invested $15 million of financing in Didi Dache in April last year. After finding Didi Dache in WeChat’s My Bankcard interface, users can […]]]>

Tencent’s IM tool WeChat integrated Didi Dache into its services just after the parent company injected $100 million in Series C funding of the taxi-hailing app (via Tencent Tech). Tencent has previously invested $15 million of financing in Didi Dache in April last year.

After finding Didi Dache in WeChat’s My Bankcard interface, users can book taxi by inputting their destinations and pay the taxi fees via WeChat Payment. In addition to Didi Dache, My Bankcard already features several local life services of film tickets, lotteries, phone bills, etc.

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Screenshot of Didi Dache in WeChat

In order to encourage customers to use Didi Dache via WeChat, the company came up with a policy to subsidize both users and taxi drivers with 10 yuan for each transaction. The upper limits of this subsidy policy are 30 yuan for users and 50 yuan for drivers per day.

Didi Dache claimed to have obtained more than 60% of market share and provide services in 32 cities including first-tier cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen, with more than 20 million registered users and over 350 thousand taxi drivers.

Kuaidi Dache, Didi Dache’s major competitor who is venture backed by Alibaba, also supports payments with Alipay, the digital payment service of Alibaba Group.

After one year of booming development in 2013, the market scene of taxi app industry becomes clearer. Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, two companies backed by deep-pocketed investors, stood out from rest of the rivals.

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Why Chinese Investors are Willing to Take Bold Bet on the Money Burning Taxi App Business? https://technode.com/2014/01/03/why-chinese-investors-are-willing-to-take-bold-bet-on-the-money-burning-taxi-app-business/ https://technode.com/2014/01/03/why-chinese-investors-are-willing-to-take-bold-bet-on-the-money-burning-taxi-app-business/#comments Fri, 03 Jan 2014 08:49:51 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14490 Taxi-booking apps experienced booming development in the past year. Investors are still bullish on the taxi app market and continue to invest heavily in the sector, despite the facts that the sprawling growth of the industry is highly dependent on capital injections and none of the leading companies generate any profit so far. Why Chinese […]]]>

Taxi-booking apps experienced booming development in the past year. Investors are still bullish on the taxi app market and continue to invest heavily in the sector, despite the facts that the sprawling growth of the industry is highly dependent on capital injections and none of the leading companies generate any profit so far.

Why Chinese investors are still willing to invest in this sector? Zhuang Minghao, investor and analyst at Matrix Partners China, discussed this question on Zhihu, a Quora-like site.

According to Zhuang, two crucial considerations for venture capitalists in determining whether to invest in a company are team (background, experience, execution, and complementarity) and direction (market potential, policy and competitors). The investment rounds of domestic taxi apps can be explained from these aspects.

Round 1 (2010-2012): Emergence of Uber Clones

Uber, an American online car booking service founded in 2009, ignited the craze for taxi-hailing apps. The company received $1.25 million of angel investment in 2010, $11 million of Series A financing in February 2011 and $37 million of Series B funding in December 2011, becoming the most popular startup of the year.

Yongche, the first Chinese Uber clone, launched service in September 2010 and secured angel investment from Xu Xiaoping, founder of ZhenFund. Gaining fundraising momentum led by Uber, Yongche booked Series A financing in August 2011, just half a year after Uber’s Round A financing. The company recently announced $60 million funding led by Ctrip and DCM.

A dozen of taxi apps emerged between late 2011 and early 2012, including Yaoyao Zhaoche, Dache Xiaomi (developed by Yongche), Anyimob, Easy Taxi, and Didi Dache.

Nearly all of the taxi apps received first round of funding during the period, because the vertical field is popular in the U.S. Although there are still restrictions on taxi industry in local market, it does not prevent investors from dipping toes in an emerging market at angel round.

Round 2 (First Half of 2013): Shuffling Begins

In order to grab larger market share in a crowded market, taxi app companies are competing to pay hefty subsidies to users and taxi drivers, because high-quality product alone is not enough to attract them. For the sake of market share, none of the taxi apps is taking transaction-based commission or any other fees. The whole industry experienced more impacts when the governments step in to regulate the market in the first half of 2013.

Didi Dache, Kuaidi Dache and Dahuangfeng survived the pressures and stand out from rest of the rivals.

Didi Dache snapped up nearly the whole Beijing market with outstanding execution powers, which are reflected in public relation, ad promotion, and subsidy strategy. The company then received $15 million of capital injection from Tencent.

Kuaidi Dache, which raised several millions of US dollars from e-commerce giant Alibaba, grabbed Hangzhou market and expanded quickly to Shanghai.

Dahuangfeng gained presence in Shanghai market after receiving $3 million of angel investment from Morningside Ventures.

Backed by these funding, the three companies vying to distribute subsidies extravagantly and competed head-on for market shares in Shanghai.

Monthly net loss of Kuaidi Dache reached millions of yuan and they do not expect profits in future two years, according to COO of the company Zhao Dong (source in Chinese).

Round 3 (Second Half of 2013): Emergence of Oligarch

In the second half of 2013, few taxi apps can sustain the staggering money burning speed. Two bellwethers of the industry Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache survived, while most of their rivals sunk into oblivion. Didi Dache consolidated its foothold in Beijing and expanded into 30 second-tier cities. Kuaidi Dache acquired Dahuangfeng, the fourth largest taxi app.

Therefore, it is not surprising to hear that Didi Dache finished another $100 million maga-ivnestment in Series C round from Citic and Tencent, given clearer market scene, outstanding execution power of the team, and endorsement of Tencent. Didi Dache has been integrated in Tencent’s products like WeChat and the latest version of Tencent Maps.

In addition to mainstay markets in south China, Kuaidi Dache also made foray into Beijing market via cooperation with AliPay.

Round 4 (2014): ?

Kuaidi Dache will sure to fight back after Didi Dache secured new round of funding. This is not end of the battle and the war will escalate in 2014.

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Extra! TechNode Rolling Out Co-working Space, the Node, at Beijing 751 https://technode.com/2014/01/03/technode-rolling-out-coworking-space-the-node-at-beijing-751/ https://technode.com/2014/01/03/technode-rolling-out-coworking-space-the-node-at-beijing-751/#comments Fri, 03 Jan 2014 03:53:14 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14471 We are exited to announce the launch of the Node International Entrepreneurship Center (Build A9, 798 Road, 751 D-Park, Chaoyang District, Beijing), which sits at Beijing’s new art and creative district 751 D-Park. The Node, a five-floor building covering more than 3,000 square meters, is our new home, as well as a co-working space and an activity venue for startup […]]]>
北京极地国际创新中心

We are exited to announce the launch of the Node International Entrepreneurship Center (Build A9, 798 Road, 751 D-Park, Chaoyang District, Beijing), which sits at Beijing’s new art and creative district 751 D-Park. The Node, a five-floor building covering more than 3,000 square meters, is our new home, as well as a co-working space and an activity venue for startup community.

Built under the concept of Office As a Service, the Node is the joint efforts of TechNode and our partners of the Node management team and APEC Young Entrepreneurs’ Summit.

Dr. Gang Lu, founder of TechNode, is a true believer of the idea that life is the best incubator for startups, because only those who really lived their lives can spot the demands of everyday life. Entrepreneurship should be a joyful experience and a positive life attitude, rather than a backbreaking journey.

That’s why we engaged all of our endeavors and resources to set up the Node and located it in 751, a place far from the fanfares of urban life, moreover, we hope the artistic atmosphere of 751 can spark innovative ideas and bring forth cross-boundary cooperation.

If you are launching a startup by yourself or with your team, you can rent a working space here (1,000 yuan/person/month). If you have a team with >4 staff, we have quite a few separate office room in upper floors for rent too. What’s more important, the Node will offer valuable entrepreneurial resources. You can either brainstorm with other teams on the big lawn in front of the Node, or chat with experts and venture capitalists while enjoying a cup of warm coffee.

theNode International Innovation Center, Beijing

We name the place the Node, 极地 in Chinese because the word 极 represents the very spirit of Geek, like co-founder of Paypal Max Levchin said, Once a Geek, Forever a Geek. Additionally, Node also stands for the magnetic force that attracting people with dreams, pursuit for extreme and perfection, as well as internationalization.

Welcome to visit us! You can contact us at thenode@technode.com or contact@thenode.co

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Crowdfunding Site DemoHour Secured Millions of Dollars Series A Funding from Matrix Partners and Intel https://technode.com/2014/01/03/crowdfunding-site-demohour-secured-millions-of-dollars-series-a-funding-from-matrix-partners-and-intel/ https://technode.com/2014/01/03/crowdfunding-site-demohour-secured-millions-of-dollars-series-a-funding-from-matrix-partners-and-intel/#comments Fri, 03 Jan 2014 02:26:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14457 Zhang You, founder of Kickstarter-like crowdfunding site DemoHour booked millions of dollars of Series A funding from Matrix Partners China and Intel (source in Chinese). The capital will be used to develop crowdfunding services for hardware and art, etc, said Zhang. Launched in July 2011, the site received $500 thousand seed fund from a Taiwanese […]]]>
DemoHour

Zhang You, founder of Kickstarter-like crowdfunding site DemoHour booked millions of dollars of Series A funding from Matrix Partners China and Intel (source in Chinese). The capital will be used to develop crowdfunding services for hardware and art, etc, said Zhang.

Launched in July 2011, the site received $500 thousand seed fund from a Taiwanese angel investor in the same year, according to Baidu Baike (a wikipedia-style service in Chinese).

Users can launch projects on the platform to gatherer money from the public. Project creators choose a deadline and a minimum funding goal. If the goal is not met by the deadline, no funds are collected, a provision point mechanism. If the fundraising is successful, project creators should pay back the investors according to previously agreed conditions.

In order to encourage users to adopt the service, DemoHour stopped to charge the 10% commission fee from July 4 of last year. It also launched a plan to raise overall 100 million yuan ($16 million) from one hundred enterprises to fund startups on the platform.

Similar domestic crowdfunding services include, AngelCrunch and 5ichuang.

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Daily Sales of Group Buying Site Meituan Surpass 100 Million Yuan https://technode.com/2014/01/02/daily-sales-of-group-buying-site-meituan-surpass-100-million-yuan/ https://technode.com/2014/01/02/daily-sales-of-group-buying-site-meituan-surpass-100-million-yuan/#comments Thu, 02 Jan 2014 08:37:49 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14434 Screenshot of Wang’s Weibo The daily sales of group purchasing site Meituan hit more than 100 million yuan ($16.52 million), according to a Weibo post by Wang Xing, CEO of the company as well as a serial entrepreneur who gave birth to Renren. Meituan only took half a year to double this figure after announcing […]]]>
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Screenshot of Wang’s Weibo

The daily sales of group purchasing site Meituan hit more than 100 million yuan ($16.52 million), according to a Weibo post by Wang Xing, CEO of the company as well as a serial entrepreneur who gave birth to Renren.

Meituan only took half a year to double this figure after announcing 50 million yuan milestone in June, 2013.

According to an insider, the company’s monthly sales for last December amounted to more than 2.1 billion yuan, while its annual sales chalked up to 16 billion yuan, turning to profitable for the whole year for the first time (via Tech Sina).

Wang previously claimed that Meituan has had a 50% market share of Chinese group buying sector. According to statistics released by Meituan, the company’s sales from film ticket group buying businesses account for around 10% of total domestic box office revenue, while its sales for hotel reservation business account for 70% of the group buying industry.

[Update] Meituan also launched online food ordering service to lay out in O2O sector. Although foods ordered on the platform are currently delivered by either merchant themselves or third-party delivery teams, Meituan planned to construct homegrown delivery team in the future, according to Wang Huiwen, vice president of the company (source in Chinese).

Meituan

Screenshot of Meituan Waimai

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Xiaomi Sold 18.70 Million Smartphones in 2013, to Enter Singapore Market in 2014 https://technode.com/2014/01/02/xiaomi-sold-18-70-million-smartphones-in-2013-to-enter-singapore-market-in-2014/ https://technode.com/2014/01/02/xiaomi-sold-18-70-million-smartphones-in-2013-to-enter-singapore-market-in-2014/#comments Thu, 02 Jan 2014 07:49:30 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14430 Lei Jun, chairman and CEO of smartphone maker Xiaomi, disclosed in an internal letter that the shipment of Xiaomi Phones jumped 160% year-over-year to 18.70 million sets this year, while the company’s revenue (tax included) advanced 150% from a year earlier to 31.6 billion yuan ($5.22 billion) (via Tech Sina). Lei added that the primary […]]]>

Lei Jun, chairman and CEO of smartphone maker Xiaomi, disclosed in an internal letter that the shipment of Xiaomi Phones jumped 160% year-over-year to 18.70 million sets this year, while the company’s revenue (tax included) advanced 150% from a year earlier to 31.6 billion yuan ($5.22 billion) (via Tech Sina).

Lei added that the primary goal for Xiaomi in 2014 is to promote production capacity. He just said in his Weibo that Xiaomi would “guarantee to supply 40 million phones” and recording 50 billion yuan of sales in 2014 (via Tech Sohu).

In the past year, Xiaomi enriched its product lineup by releasing several products, including Xiaomi3, Red Mi, Xiaomi TV, Xiaomi Box and Xiaomi Router, among others.

Lei enumerated a list of figures that Xiaomi achieved in the past year. MIUI OS registered more than 30 million users and the company distributed more than 18 million yuan of revenue to app developers in last December. The annual revenue of Xiaomi accessories and peripheral products exceeded 1 billion yuan. Moreover, Xiaomi has established six storage centers, 18 flagship retailing stores, and 436 repair centers.

Moreover, Xiaomi has landed on Hong Kong and Taiwan last year to explore markets beyond its home turf in Chinese mainland. Hugo Barra, current VP for Xiaomi’ international business and former Android exec, announced today Xiaomi’s entry to Singapore together with the launch a Xiaomi Singapore Facebook account. Xiaomi management once said they’d set up an office in Singapore. The company planned to expand to more overseas markets in the new year.

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Screenshot of Xiaomi Singapore Facebook Account

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Tech in China 2013: Every Hardware Turns Smart https://technode.com/2014/01/02/tech-in-china-2013-every-hardware-turns-smart/ https://technode.com/2014/01/02/tech-in-china-2013-every-hardware-turns-smart/#comments Thu, 02 Jan 2014 06:13:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14413 The concept of smart device is reinvigorating hardware industry in recent years. Triggered by the trend, it is no exaggeration to say that Chinese hardware industry experienced viral growth in 2013, while a spate of new hardware mushroomed and both internet giants and startups swarmed into the sector. Wearables Apart from smartwatch which we need […]]]>

The concept of smart device is reinvigorating hardware industry in recent years. Triggered by the trend, it is no exaggeration to say that Chinese hardware industry experienced viral growth in 2013, while a spate of new hardware mushroomed and both internet giants and startups swarmed into the sector.

Wearables

Apart from smartwatch which we need a stand-alone article to discuss, Chinese market witnessed the boom of a wild diversity of wearable gadgets, ranging from smart rings to smart wristbands, etc. The main functions of these products are sports monitoring and incentive, health care, and kid or elderly tracking, among others. The prices of most products are below 2,000 yuan ($330.6).

Here is a list of interesting wearables that caught our eye:

  • Baidu-backed Codoon launched the first and second generation of Codoon wristband within seven months. The company also developed other gadgets such as Codoon Candy and Codoon Smile, which have similar functions of the wristband. The searching giant Baidu released a dedicated website for wearables in cooperation with Codoon Wristband and inWatch.
  • Qihoo released 360 Child Guard, a GPS tracking bracelet, which can locate where the one wearing it anytime and can display the course on the app in smartphones for any given period of time.
  • GEAK, the hardware brand of Shanda, released a smart ring.
  • MAX released GalaRing G1 which is powered by NFC encryption technology.
  • Hong Kong-based tech company Digi-Care planned to release their first smart wristband ERI to users by early 2014.

However, the research and development of smart wearables are still in the preliminary stage, because most of them are still accessories for smartphones, featuring pretty much the same functions as smartphones.

The importance of hardware itself may reduce in the future with freemium model becoming a tendency. What matters most is the data collected by the smart gadgets. Shen Bo, head of Cocoon, once noted that what he valued most is Codoon Workout, the accompanying app for Codoon wristband which recorded more than 20 million installs so far (source in Chinese).

Smart Router

Smart WiFi router is expected to become the next hotspot of hardware sector, as more and more Chinese companies consented on the idea that smart router is the very gateway that can take control of Internet access and have impact on content consumption in families or working spaces.

The rise of hardware sector is creating new opportunities for China Internet.

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Tech in China 2013: WeChat Still Rules Chinese IM Industry, Rivals Mull to Catch Up https://technode.com/2013/12/31/tech-in-china-2013-wechat-still-rules-chinese-im-industry-rivals-mull-to-catch-up/ https://technode.com/2013/12/31/tech-in-china-2013-wechat-still-rules-chinese-im-industry-rivals-mull-to-catch-up/#comments Tue, 31 Dec 2013 09:11:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14353 WeChat still holds a leading position in Chinese IM industry this year, but several emerging rivals are poised to attract users and snap up market share. Alibaba promotes Laiwang aggressively both internally and externally with a wild wish of 30% of the market. NetEase and China Telecom partnered up to launch EasyChat, which supports calls with both landline and mobile lines, a feature missed […]]]>

WeChat still holds a leading position in Chinese IM industry this year, but several emerging rivals are poised to attract users and snap up market share.

Alibaba promotes Laiwang aggressively both internally and externally with a wild wish of 30% of the marketNetEase and China Telecom partnered up to launch EasyChat, which supports calls with both landline and mobile lines, a feature missed in WeChat.

Registered users

The users of IM tools recorded metric growth this year led by WeChat which now registered more than 600 million users, with more than 100 million overseas and 271.9 million monthly active users in Q3 2013.

Location-based social app Momo has registered 80 million users and 13 million daily active users after two years and three months of development.

EasyChat announced more than 30 million registered users (source in Chinese).

Alibaba’s Laiwang recorded 10 million users as of November with daily active users surged 500% MOM (source in Chinese).

In addition to the abovementioned mainstream IM tools, Shanda developed one named Youni. Sina injected funding in WeMeet, a similar app headed by former Sina Weibo lead. Online retailor JD released IM tool Dongdong for individual customers.

Cooperation with Telecos

With the booming demands for data service, free data will be an effective selling point to attract users. Major players of the industry competed to offer free data service via cooperation with telecom carriers.

On the other hand, telecom carriers are willing to take part in such cooperation, because they want to integrate various contents into their business and provide corresponding preferential programs, which enable them to share revenues with OTT services.

WeChat partnered up with Guangdong Branch of China Unicom this July to release WeChat Wo SIM card, which features low-budget data plan.

Veteran tech company NetEase joined the competition with EasyChat, partnering with carrier China Telecom, and offer services other players otherwise cannot do without backing from a carrier.

EasyChat and Laiwang launched free data plan to compete head-on with the WeChat.

Mobile Game   

WeChat hopped on the mobile gaming bandwagon by launching a number of WeChat-based mobile games, such as Rhythm MasterAircraft FightLink LinkWeRunner. Momo followed the suit to release an elimination game The Puzzle with South Korean gaming company Com2uS.

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Dianrong, P2P Funding Service Founded by Lending Club Co-founder, Books Tens of Million Dollars from Northern Light https://technode.com/2013/12/31/dianrong-p2p-funding-service-founded-by-lending-club-co-founder-books-tens-of-million-dollars-from-northern-light/ https://technode.com/2013/12/31/dianrong-p2p-funding-service-founded-by-lending-club-co-founder-books-tens-of-million-dollars-from-northern-light/#comments Tue, 31 Dec 2013 06:22:44 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14342 Dianrong, a peer-to-peer funding service, secured tens of millions of dollars in Series A financing from Northern Light Venture Capital (source in Chinese). The company is cofounded by Soul Htite, co-founder of Lending Club, and Guo Yuhang, an experienced lawyer in intellectual property and venture capital sector. Launched in March this year, the turnover of […]]]>
sinolending-dianrong-screenshot

Dianrong, a peer-to-peer funding service, secured tens of millions of dollars in Series A financing from Northern Light Venture Capital (source in Chinese). The company is cofounded by Soul Htite, co-founder of Lending Club, and Guo Yuhang, an experienced lawyer in intellectual property and venture capital sector.

Launched in March this year, the turnover of Dianrong amounted to more than 100 million yuan ($16.52 million) with over ten thousands of registered users as of November.

Giving priority to risk control and platform security, Dianrong integrates the system and management experience of Lending Club with local market conditions. In addition, the company also launched cooperation with state-backed China Orient Asset Management Corp.

The market size of Chinese P2P industry range between 20 billion to 40 billion yuan and developed at a staggering annual growth rate of 300%. Yang Ruirong, board member and general manager of Northern Light, expects P2P lending sector to boom in future five to ten years. He is also bullish on the execution powers of the impressive management group.

P2P lending comes under spotlight as one of the development directions for financial innovation. But it is haunted by a raft of problems, such as lack of regulation and high default rate.

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Bitcoin Trading Platform Okcoin Launches Poll for Commission Rate https://technode.com/2013/12/30/bitcoin-trading-platform-okcoin-launches-poll-for-commission-rate/ https://technode.com/2013/12/30/bitcoin-trading-platform-okcoin-launches-poll-for-commission-rate/#comments Mon, 30 Dec 2013 09:55:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14304 Bitcoin trading platform Okcoin launched today a poll asking clients to determine the commission rate for their future services. Xu Mingxing, CEO of the company, claimed in an announcement that it is the ubiquitous decision of the whole industry to charge fixed commissions in a bid to fend against profiteering. However, another bitcoin trading platform […]]]>

Bitcoin trading platform Okcoin launched today a poll asking clients to determine the commission rate for their future services. Xu Mingxing, CEO of the company, claimed in an announcement that it is the ubiquitous decision of the whole industry to charge fixed commissions in a bid to fend against profiteering.

However, another bitcoin trading platform Huobi continued to provide free services and its turnover once surpassed leading services like Okcoin and BTC China.

According to representative of Okcoin, the result of this poll will be posted on Thursday together with IP address, nickname and voting time of each vote. No commissions will be charged during the poll.

Xu added that Okcoin will set up a user commission as quickly as possible and invite big names like Li Xiaolai to discuss and make decisions with clients.

The customers of Okcoin reportedly consist of two parts, long-term investors and temporary investors. Most long-term investors are willing to pay fixed commissions for better service as long as the rate is acceptable, according to the company.

BTC China has started to charge a 0.3% commission since Dec. 20.

Chinese bitcoin trading services like Bitcoin and BTC China face major setbacks after the central government released a notification that warns financial institutions and payments services against risks. Leading domestic third-party payment services Alipay and Tenpay also terminated payment and clearing services for bitcon.

Trailing the recent surge in Bitcoin market, the daily turnover of Okcoin once hit 100 million yuan in early November.

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Tech in China 2013: Acquisition Spree in Mobile Game Industry https://technode.com/2013/12/30/tech-in-china-2013-acquisition-spree-in-mobile-game-industry/ https://technode.com/2013/12/30/tech-in-china-2013-acquisition-spree-in-mobile-game-industry/#comments Mon, 30 Dec 2013 08:34:32 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14291 The user base of Chinese gaming industry soared 20.6% year-on-year to 490 million this year, while the total revenue hiked 38% from a year earlier to 8.32 billion yuan ($1.37 billion), according to report released by China Game Industry Annual Conference (via Tech Sina). With the rise of smartphone and other mobile devices, mobile gaming […]]]>

The user base of Chinese gaming industry soared 20.6% year-on-year to 490 million this year, while the total revenue hiked 38% from a year earlier to 8.32 billion yuan ($1.37 billion), according to report released by China Game Industry Annual Conference (via Tech Sina).

With the rise of smartphone and other mobile devices, mobile gaming sector recorded 1.12 billion yuan of revenue this year and experienced an eventful year that can be summarized in three keywords, capital operation, distribution channel, and turnover (via Tech Sina).

Capital operation

Booming mobile game business has become a substantial attraction for investors. Shares related to mobile gaming concept surged and the heat even expanded to stocks remotely related to the concept. The market witnessed active acquisitions for mobile gaming companies and listing of game developers. The acquisition price of most mobile gaming companies range between 10 to 15 times of their annual net profits (source in Chinese).

Several industry practitioners agreed that it is not easy for gaming companies to gain profits from the crowded market. Some others predicted that the heat for this sector will cool down in the next year.

Let’s take a look at acquisition cases in mobile gaming industry:

Distribution channel

In addition to high-quality games, distribution channel is an indispensable part for the success of mobile games. The brand and promotion abilities of distribution channels are becoming crucial factors to attract attentions of users.

In addition to Shanda, online game developer LineKong launched LineKong game distribution center and Locojoy planned to kick off mobile game distribution platform by investing hundreds of millions of yuan.

Turnover

The number of mobile games that recorded tens of millions yuan of monthly turnover climbed from one in 2012 to eleven as of September 2013.

QQ截图20131230160326

Monthly Turnover of Mobile Games as of September (via Tech Sina)

Moreover, Internet giant Tencent takes took steps into mobile gaming industry with simple, but highly competitive gameplay by releasing a number of WeChat-based mobile games, including Rhythm Master, Aircraft Fight, Link Link, WeRunner. Foreign games that received plaudits from Chinese gamers are Plants VS Zombies 2, Clash of Clans, etc.

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Tech in China 2013: Chinese Online Reading Industry Undergone Major Shakeup https://technode.com/2013/12/27/chinese-online-reading-industry-undergone-major-shakeup-in-2013/ https://technode.com/2013/12/27/chinese-online-reading-industry-undergone-major-shakeup-in-2013/#comments Fri, 27 Dec 2013 09:45:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14203 The scene of online reading and, more recently, mobile reading witnessed dramatic change this year. The competition among online literature sites went nuclear and e-publishing platforms continued their efforts to perfect reading experiences for users. Here we summarized a list for major events of the online reading industry: In March, founder and core team of […]]]>
12071617343144

The scene of online reading and, more recently, mobile reading witnessed dramatic change this year. The competition among online literature sites went nuclear and e-publishing platforms continued their efforts to perfect reading experiences for users.

Here we summarized a list for major events of the online reading industry:

Internet companies swarmed into online literature sector, because literature is on the upstream of entertainment industry. The development of online literature will open up more cooperation opportunities with film, gaming and animation industry, according to Chen Wu, vice president of Tencent. He predicted that the value of literature industry will total 10 billion yuan, exceeding 100 billion yuan together with the output of related industries.

The market scene is transforming from the dominance of one single company to the rise of numerous players. Several latecomers backed by deep-pocketed Internet giants are challenging the once dominating online literature brand Shanda Cloudary. The market share of Shanda Cloudary is estimated to slump from more than 70% to around 50% to 30% in the future three years, according to an industry insider (via Sina Tech).

As we reported earlier here and here, e-publishing in China isn’t just uploading digital text files onto a website and introducing a digital payment solution. One of the major problems with e-publishing in China is that conventional publishing organizations don’t provide with well-formatted files. Both domestic e-publishing platforms and Kindle are trying to address this problem.

The China mobile reading market in 2012 was about RMB 5.6 billion ($900-ish million), with a 30% growth, according research results from Imedia Research Group.

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Tech in China: Boom of Taxi Apps in 2013 https://technode.com/2013/12/26/tech-in-china-ups-and-downs-of-taxi-apps-in-2013/ https://technode.com/2013/12/26/tech-in-china-ups-and-downs-of-taxi-apps-in-2013/#comments Thu, 26 Dec 2013 10:55:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14192 Technology developments have given rise to new solutions for urban transportation. Taxi apps gained popularity quickly in Chinese market this year, attracting sizable investments from leading venture capitalists and Internet companies. The leading ones include Beijing-based Didi Dache, Hangzhou-based Kuaidi Dache, Beijing-based YaoyaoZhaoche, and Shanghai-based Dahuangfeng. DidiDache received $15 million of funding from Tencent at valuation of […]]]>

Technology developments have given rise to new solutions for urban transportation. Taxi apps gained popularity quickly in Chinese market this year, attracting sizable investments from leading venture capitalists and Internet companies.

The leading ones include Beijing-based Didi Dache, Hangzhou-based Kuaidi Dache, Beijing-based YaoyaoZhaoche, and Shanghai-based Dahuangfeng. DidiDache received $15 million of funding from Tencent at valuation of $60 million and reportedly to raise $100 million round from investors such as Citic and Tencent. Kuaidi Dache secured several millions of US dollars from e-commerce giant Alibaba.

In order to gain bigger market share, taxi app companies invested heavily to attract passengers and taxi drivers by distributing cash bonus, mobile data plan, mobile chargers, etc. As of September this year, Didi Dache, Kuaidi Dache and Dahuangfeng have invested tens of millions of yuan on aggregate and the annual investment is expected to reach hundreds of millions of yuan (via Sina).

For the sake of market share, none of the taxi apps is taking transaction-based commission or any other fees. Monthly net loss of Kuaidi Dache reached millions of yuan and they do not expect profits in future two years, according to COO of the company Zhao Dong (source in Chinese).

Before taxi apps begin another round of expansion, the government steps in to ban taxi-hailing apps, because the popular “bid-to-win” feature, which allows users to offer tips upfront to win a cab in peak hours, violates existing price regulations and causes market instability, according to governmental officials.

Beijing municipality banned the bidding feature and announced officially credited taxi appsShanghai transportation bureau also claimed that the bidding service is not allowed and encouraged citizens to use taxi apps offered by taxi companies. Shenzhen government tries to ban taxi apps altogether.

Under the huge capital and policy pressure, the number of taxi apps shank quickly and convergence began. At least forty taxi booking apps were shut down, according to Lv Chuanwei, CEO of KuaidiDache. Alibaba-backed KuaidiDache acquired Dahuangfeng, the fourth largest player of the industry.

In order to survive the fierce competition, existing taxi apps started to expand their businesses in a bid to gain larger user base. Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache buddied up with OTA Ctrip to embed their services in the newly launched Ctrip mobile app. Didi Dache partnered up with AutoNavi Amap and both of the above-mentioned companies launched cooperation with Baidu Maps and travel search Qunar.

Car rental service is also booming in China, witnessing both capital injections and entrance of foreign companies. Yongche booked $60 million of financing let by Ctrip and DCM, while Ctrip led a $100 million funding round in eHai AutoServices for a 20% stake. Car Clubs, a Hangzhou-based car rental service, secured tens of millions of yuan in Series A financing from Incapital and Tobon VC.

Overseas car rental services also set eyes on Chinese market. U.S. car booking service Uber is expanding aggressively after landing in Shanghai this AugustPPzuche, a P2P car sharing platform which has already rolled out service in Singapore, hit Chinese market in October.

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Alibaba Reportedly Investes Tens of Millions of Dollars in LBE Security Master, Taping on Mobile Security Sector https://technode.com/2013/12/26/alibaba-reportedly-investes-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-lbe-security-master-taping-on-mobile-security-sector/ https://technode.com/2013/12/26/alibaba-reportedly-investes-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-lbe-security-master-taping-on-mobile-security-sector/#comments Thu, 26 Dec 2013 07:04:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14188 Alibaba reportedly injected tens of millions of dollars in mobile antivirus tool LBE Security Master to lay out in mobile security industry (report in Chinese). LBE Security Master is a HIPS application for Android platform developed by team started as a discussion group on Meizu’s forum. It adopts AVL SDK for smart phones to monitor […]]]>
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Alibaba reportedly injected tens of millions of dollars in mobile antivirus tool LBE Security Master to lay out in mobile security industry (report in Chinese).

LBE Security Master is a HIPS application for Android platform developed by team started as a discussion group on Meizu’s forum. It adopts AVL SDK for smart phones to monitor newly occurred malware, adware and spyware in real time. The company’s product portfolio includes LBE Security Master, One Click Root, Privacy Space and Authentication Management. The newly updated version of LBE Security Master features a NFC privacy management function.

The two companies reportedly planned to roll out app distribution platform Taobao Mobile Helper and launch cooperation in development of Alipay Wallet.

All leading domestic Internet companies released homemade mobile security services to lay out in the sector. Baidu just launched Baidu Phone Protector last week.

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Ctrip Launches Car Rental Services for Overseas Private Travelers https://technode.com/2013/12/25/ctrip-launches-car-rental-services-for-overseas-private-travelers/ https://technode.com/2013/12/25/ctrip-launches-car-rental-services-for-overseas-private-travelers/#respond Wed, 25 Dec 2013 13:04:24 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14182 Ctrip, the Chinese online travel giant, launched an overseas private tour platform with eight international car rental companies, including Hertz, Avis, Alamo, Enterprise, Dollar, Thrifty, and National. The service will cover more than 2,000 cities across 86 countries, including favorite destinations of Chinese travelers, like the U.S., Canada, France, U.K., and Thailand. Users can book cars […]]]>

Ctrip, the Chinese online travel giant, launched an overseas private tour platform with eight international car rental companies, including Hertz, Avis, Alamo, Enterprise, Dollar, Thrifty, and National. The service will cover more than 2,000 cities across 86 countries, including favorite destinations of Chinese travelers, like the U.S., Canada, France, U.K., and Thailand.

Users can book cars on the platform with their passports at a minimum price of 136 yuan ($22.35) per day and there is no need to pay deposits. Moreover, the site also features price comparison function.

The company has constructed online hotel, flight ticket, and attraction ticket service platforms for outbound travelers. Zhuang Yuxiang, vice president of the company, said that car rental service, an indispensible part of travelling, is a new business focus of the company.

Ctrip has partnered up with eHai, Avis and Top1 to launch private tour car rental services in domestic market. It recently leads a $100 million round in eHai and $60 million funding in Yongche. In addition, it has partnered up with two leading domestic taxi apps of DidiDache and KuaidiDache to embed their services in the newly launched 5.2 version of Ctrip’s mobile app.

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Tech in China 2013: Xiaomi MIUI Hits 30 Million Users Milestone https://technode.com/2013/12/25/tech-in-china-2013-xiaomi-miui-hits-30-million-users-milestone/ https://technode.com/2013/12/25/tech-in-china-2013-xiaomi-miui-hits-30-million-users-milestone/#comments Wed, 25 Dec 2013 06:08:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14174 Xiaomi has registered more than 30 million users for its Android-powered MIUI operating system, just five months after the company announced 20 million milestone in July this year. Moreover, Xiaomi states that its monthly revenue from MIUI Android system chalked up to over 35 million yuan ($5.76 million) (source in Chinese) . MIUI includes mixed services […]]]>

Xiaomi has registered more than 30 million users for its Android-powered MIUI operating system, just five months after the company announced 20 million milestone in July this year. Moreover, Xiaomi states that its monthly revenue from MIUI Android system chalked up to over 35 million yuan ($5.76 million) (source in Chinese) .

MIUI includes mixed services of a launcher, an app store, a game center, a browser, a book store, a theme storecloud storage services, Xiaomi Mall, and a messaging app.

MIUI app store distributes around 12 million apps per day, taking the fourth or fifth spot among domestic peers. It also accounts for more than 70% of all the apps distributed to Xiaomi Phones. Xiaomi browser is the most used browser on Xiaomi Phone, followed by UC browser and QQ browser (source in Chinese).

In a recent interview Hong Feng, cofounder and vice president of the company, hinted that their focus for the upcoming year will be MiHome Launcher, which claimed more than 2 million active users now. Launcher lowered the technical threshold than MIUI ROM.

In addition to e-publishing platform Duokan, Xiaomi recently launched Xiaomi Xiaoshuo, a new homemade e-reader app on its MIUI app store. The launch of in-house digital content platforms will help Xiaomi to aggregate contents from publishers and online e-reading platforms like Shanda’s Qidian and Tencent’s QQ bookstore. By developing these services, Xiaomi aims to construct an iTunes-like platform for Xiaomi phones.

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MI3 and RedMi

Xiaomi launched flagship MI3 and low-cost handset RedMi this year. In addition to mainstay smartphoe business, Xiaomi also made inroads into other hardware sectors this year. Xiaomi released a smart TV that runs a custom Android system, called MIUI TV, and 500 in-house developed smart Wifi router to beta testers.

Xiaomi reportedly invests in AV Concept Holdings Ltd., a Hong Kong-based electronic components distributor who holds majority stake in a fingerprint recognition solution provider. Xiaomi was working on technologies for entrance authentication, following the bandwagen triggered by iPhone 5S’s fingerprint sensor.

After launching the first brick-and-mortar store in Beijing, Xiaomi planned to open 18 flagship retail stores by the end of this year.

Lei Jun expects Xiaomi’annual revenue to reach 100 billion yuan in 2015, no latter than 2016. Lin Bin, president of Xiaomi, expected the shipment of Xiaomi Phone to reach 19 million sets this year and 40 million sets next year, driven by Xiaomi’s overseas expansion, LTE, etc.

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Tech in China 2013: Competition in Domestic Smartwatch Battlefield is Heating Up https://technode.com/2013/12/24/tech-in-china-2013-competition-in-domestic-smartwatch-battlefield-is-heating-up/ https://technode.com/2013/12/24/tech-in-china-2013-competition-in-domestic-smartwatch-battlefield-is-heating-up/#comments Tue, 24 Dec 2013 07:55:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14153 Apart from manufacturers and tech-savvy consumers, smartwatch has attracted wide attentions from both media and fashion industry this year. It is also a leading sector for wearable industry, which is expected to create the next digital craze after smartphones and tablets. Both foreign and domestic manufacturers swarmed into smartwatch industry. Samsung released Galaxy Gear, a gadget […]]]>

Apart from manufacturers and tech-savvy consumers, smartwatch has attracted wide attentions from both media and fashion industry this year. It is also a leading sector for wearable industry, which is expected to create the next digital craze after smartphones and tablets.

Both foreign and domestic manufacturers swarmed into smartwatch industry. Samsung released Galaxy Gear, a gadget compatible with a raft of custom apps, including several Chinese ones, while speculations on Apple’s iWatch are still stewing.

Domestic smartphone battlefield includes both big internet companies and startups:

Chinese smartphone maker Coolpad launched Cwatch, which features e-ink display, via a startup incubated by the Media Lab (Shenzhen) of Hunan University.

Shanda rolled out an Android 4.1-powered smartwatch GEAK Watch, but the product do not support voice calls like its peers do.

LineKong CEO buddied up with former Android engineer to set up Tomoon Technology and release T-Watch. Several leaked pictures of the upcoming smartwatch raked in nearly 20,000 orders for the companyHu Haiquan (Weibo), a musician of a Chinese two-men vocal band Yu Quan (Weibo Page), invested in the company to develop a smartwatch branded as T-Fire.

Yingqu Technology rolled out inWatch One, which boasts an independent app store to attract developers.

Voice recognition service Yunzhisheng recently launched a smartwatch Z Watch and a Chinese wearable electronics brand Smartdevices.

Guangzhou-based wearable device solution provider AppComm rolled out FashionCommA1, a smartwatch which can make phone call or send messages with embedded micro SIM card.

Umeox, a Shenzhen-based smartphone manufacturer, released Omate in domestic market for the first time after launching the first two generations overseas, mainly in European markets, such as Germany and France.

iChronoCloud also released an in-house smartwatch and announced millions of yuan of Pre-A Series financing.

Smartphone maker Xiaomi and also planned to jump on the bandwagon to release a proprietary smartwatch.

Baidu released a dedicated website for wearables, which features two products of Codoon Wristband and inWatch. The company also established a lab studying how to build such a platform for wearables. Baidu’s strategy on wearable smart devices is to connect devices with its Cloud, said Hou Zhenyu, chief architect of Baidu Cloud, at TechCrunch Shanghai.

The functions of these smartphones range from smartphone connection, such as Geak Watch, TWatch, to sports and health monitors, like Cwatch, iChronoCloud. Wearable technology is expected to upturn several established industries, and become the next wave of hardware innovation.

Market research institution NextMarket Insights predicted that global smartphone shipment will double to 15 million sets in 2014 and reach 80 million sets by 2016. Overall 93.1% of Chinese customers are familiarized with the concept of smartwatch and 46.4% are willing to purchase one, according to a report released by Baidu.

According to Qihoo CEO Zhou Hongyi, existing smartwatches by Chinese producers, which priced at between over 1,000 yuan to over 2,000 yuan, are beyond the affordability level of ordinary consumers. Moreover, Chinese companies are obsessed with slapping together all the functions popular with smartphones, which the small screen and short battery life can’t well support.

China’s manufacturing industry for smart wearables is on the rise in recent years with interesting made-in-China wearables mushroomed.

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Baidu Leads A $15 Million Financing Round in Fashion Site Yoka https://technode.com/2013/12/24/baidu-leads-a-15-million-dollar-financing-round-in-fashion-site-yoka/ https://technode.com/2013/12/24/baidu-leads-a-15-million-dollar-financing-round-in-fashion-site-yoka/#respond Tue, 24 Dec 2013 05:56:01 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14162 Fashion website Yoka secured $15 million of funding led by Baidu and followed by Fidelity Growth Partners, and existing investors of Hearst Ventures, Matrix Partners China, and IDG. Tang Hesong, vice president of Baidu, has become a board member for Yoka (report in Chinese). Co-founded in 2006, Yoka is China’s first vertical website targeted at premium brands […]]]>
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Fashion website Yoka secured $15 million of funding led by Baidu and followed by Fidelity Growth Partners, and existing investors of Hearst Ventures, Matrix Partners China, and IDG. Tang Hesong, vice president of Baidu, has become a board member for Yoka (report in Chinese).

Co-founded in 2006, Yoka is China’s first vertical website targeted at premium brands and fashion industry. The affiliated websites are Yokamen, Yoka Mobile and Yoka Mall.

According to the company’s founder Zhou Jun, Yoka, which holds copyrights for more than 2 million high quality pictures and 7 million fashion tips from users, is premium content provider for Baidu. On the other hand, Baidu is a valuble platform for Yoka to introduce its contents to readers.

Zhou added Yoka maintained double-digit growth during 2012 to 2013, a harsh period for fashion industry. The company’s apps have recorded more than 70 million registered users on aggregate.

Zhou added that Yoka is seeking to transform and integrate the various links on the industrial chain in 2014, aiming to provide one-stop service for customers.

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Tencent Follows $23 Million Series B Financing for Third-Party Android ROM Developer CyanogenMod https://technode.com/2013/12/20/tencent-follows-23-million-series-b-financing-for-third-party-android-rom-developer-cyanogenmod/ https://technode.com/2013/12/20/tencent-follows-23-million-series-b-financing-for-third-party-android-rom-developer-cyanogenmod/#comments Fri, 20 Dec 2013 08:19:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14126 Open source Android ROM developer CyanogenMod raised $23 million in Series B financing led by Andreessen Horowitz and followed by Tencent, Benchmark Capital, and Redpoint Ventures (report in Chinese). The company announced $7 million of Series A funding four months ago. The capital raised this time will be used in team expansion and global operation. […]]]>

Open source Android ROM developer CyanogenMod raised $23 million in Series B financing led by Andreessen Horowitz and followed by Tencent, Benchmark Capital, and Redpoint Ventures (report in Chinese). The company announced $7 million of Series A funding four months ago.

The capital raised this time will be used in team expansion and global operation. Setting eyes on Chinese market, the company has partnered up with domestic handset manufacture OPPO to develop custom ROM and handset N1.

CyanogenMod claimed to have 11 million monthly active users, up from 8 million in this September. In addition, the firm planned to explore wearable device and vehicle –amounted system industry.

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Screenshot of Steve Kondik’s microblog

OPPO’s vice president Liu Zuohu recently left the company to establish a startup. Steve Kondik, founder of CyanogenMod, microblogged that he has met with Liu and they are “conspiring to do something that might change the Andriod ecosystem”.

Liu disclosed that he planned to roll out an independent mobile brand OnePlus in May 2014 (report in Chinese).

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Kickstarter-like Crowdfunding Platform 5ichuang Helps Entrepreneurs to Bring Creative Endeavors to Life https://technode.com/2013/12/20/kickstarter-like-crowdfunding-platform-5ichuang-helps-entrepreneurs-to-bring-creative-endeavors-to-life/ https://technode.com/2013/12/20/kickstarter-like-crowdfunding-platform-5ichuang-helps-entrepreneurs-to-bring-creative-endeavors-to-life/#comments Fri, 20 Dec 2013 04:53:20 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14121 5ichuang is a Kickstarter-like crowdfunding service, which aims to establish a communication platform for entrepreneurs and investors. The site was launched in this December under the support of startup service agency Feimalv, which has helped tens of startups to raise over 300 million yuan ($49.01 million) of funds in the past two years. Like Kickstarter, 5ichuang claims […]]]>
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5ichuang is a Kickstarter-like crowdfunding service, which aims to establish a communication platform for entrepreneurs and investors. The site was launched in this December under the support of startup service agency Feimalv, which has helped tens of startups to raise over 300 million yuan ($49.01 million) of funds in the past two years.

Like Kickstarter, 5ichuang claims no ownership over the projects and the work they produce. Project creators can choose a funding goal and demo their ideas on the platform to attract attentions of both institutional and individual investors, which the company introduced as a B2B2C model.

Individual investors, who only can invest in projects that are approved by institutional investors, will enjoy the same investment provisions as institutional investors and the minimum investment amount is 30,000 yuan.

The ideal model for the service is that individual investors can nominate and vote for the projects they are interested in on 5ichuang beforehand. When these projects actually receive financing from institutional investors, individuals who have voted for the projects can follow the investment and enjoy the same credits as institutional investors.

The ideal individual investors are also the potential users of these startups, like a mobile gamer for mobile game companies.

5ichuang recently launched an online registration platform for SETV’s popular entrepreneurial reality show Aipincaihuiying (No Pain No Gain), enabling the audience to vote and invest in projects pitched in the show.

AngelCrunch, a similar AngelList-clone, attracted thousands of projects and around 700 individual investors, raising over 200 million funds (source in Chinese). Hit apps like DidiDacheDayima and Xiachufang all closed their first round of investment on the platform. DemoHour recorded less than 100 projects as of January 2012, according to earlier media reports.

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Zhonglu Capital Injects Millions of Yuan in Pet-based Social Network App Petta https://technode.com/2013/12/19/zhonglu-capital-injects-millions-of-yuan-in-pet-based-social-network-app-petta/ https://technode.com/2013/12/19/zhonglu-capital-injects-millions-of-yuan-in-pet-based-social-network-app-petta/#comments Thu, 19 Dec 2013 10:17:34 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14113 Shanghai-based Zhonglu Capital invested millions of yuan in Petta, a social networking app for users to share information, pictures, and videos of their pets. Petta will be released on both iOS and Android platforms before the Lunar New Year (report in Chinese). Lv Bosen, founder of Petta, previously set up Poopur, a pet community acquired […]]]>
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Shanghai-based Zhonglu Capital invested millions of yuan in Petta, a social networking app for users to share information, pictures, and videos of their pets. Petta will be released on both iOS and Android platforms before the Lunar New Year (report in Chinese).

Lv Bosen, founder of Petta, previously set up Poopur, a pet community acquired by dog lover e-commerce platform Goumin in 2012. Goumin has recently launched Aichongtuan, a group-buying app for pet supply.

Zhonglu Capital is also the angel investor of another leading domestic pet e-commerce platform Boqii, which booked more than 500 million yuan of sales this year.

Lv said that Petta choose to cooperate with the investor of Boqii because they want to capitalize on the huge user base (2 million registered users) of the platform. Similar domestic apps are Smellme and Haogougou, both of which recorded more than 100,000 registered users, but their active users still linger at less than 10,000.

The market size of Chinese pet industry exceeded 40 billion yuan in 2010 and surged at an annual growth rate of 30%.

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AWS Landing in China in Cooperation with Cloud Computing Infrastructure Provider Cloud Valley https://technode.com/2013/12/18/aws-landing-in-china-in-cooperation-with-cloud-computing-infrastructure-provider-cloud-valley/ https://technode.com/2013/12/18/aws-landing-in-china-in-cooperation-with-cloud-computing-infrastructure-provider-cloud-valley/#comments Wed, 18 Dec 2013 09:33:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14079 Amazon’s AWS cloud services division inked strategic cooperation agreement with Cloud Valley, a Beijing-based cloud computing infrastructure provider backed by CBC Capital, finally landing in Chinese market after loads of buzz since 2009, as well as the rumors fueled by a Chinese AWS website launched late 2012 (report in Chinese). The two parties may set up […]]]>
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Amazon’s AWS cloud services division inked strategic cooperation agreement with Cloud Valley, a Beijing-based cloud computing infrastructure provider backed by CBC Capital, finally landing in Chinese market after loads of buzz since 2009, as well as the rumors fueled by a Chinese AWS website launched late 2012 (report in Chinese).

The two parties may set up a data center in Northwestern China’s Ningxia Autonomous Region and an operation center in Beijing. Although the specific operation model between the two companies is not disclosed, they may refer to the model adopted by Microsoft’s Windows Azure when entering Chinese market.

In November last year, Microsoft rolled out its enterprise cloud services Office 365 and Windows Azure in China through its partner 21Vianet Group, a large carrier-neutral internet data services provider. Microsoft authorizes relevant technologies to 21Vianet and the latter is responsible for operation of these two services. This cooperation model enables Microsoft to avoid the obstacles in applying a telecom operation license in China.

Cloud Valley’s previous case in helping Evernote to introduce the note app’s Chinese version Yin Xiang Bi Ji into Chinese market may caught the eye of Amazon.

AWS recorded rapid development in recent years. The valuation of AWS is expected to surpass $50 billion by 2015, according to an analyst with U.S. investment Bank Evercore Partners.

The entry of AWS will heat up the competition in the already-crowded Chinese cloud market packed with domestic players like AliCloud, Baidu Cloud, Sina Cloud and Ucloud.

The key factor for AWS to tap Chinese market is localization, according to Ji Xinhua, CEO of domestic cloud computing startup Ucloud. He added that product development, technical support and marketing are the most urgent issues that AWS has to tackle.

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Baidu Launches Baidu Phone Protector to Tap Mobile Security Market https://technode.com/2013/12/18/baidu-launches-baidu-phone-protector-to-tap-mobile-security-market/ https://technode.com/2013/12/18/baidu-launches-baidu-phone-protector-to-tap-mobile-security-market/#comments Wed, 18 Dec 2013 07:40:28 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14084 Screenshot of Baidu Phone Protector Baidu released today Baidu Phone Protector to spearhead foray into mobile security arena (report in Chinese). The service is an upgraded version of Android Optimization Master, an Android OS optimization product developed by Dianxin which Baidu acquired in late 2012. Baidu claimed that the product features powerful virus detection and […]]]>
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Screenshot of Baidu Phone Protector

Baidu released today Baidu Phone Protector to spearhead foray into mobile security arena (report in Chinese). The service is an upgraded version of Android Optimization Master, an Android OS optimization product developed by Dianxin which Baidu acquired in late 2012.

Baidu claimed that the product features powerful virus detection and malware removal capacity. It can prevent malwares from racking up charges on your account and save data traffics. The service is distributed though Baidu Mobile Helper, 91 Helper and Android market.

Baidu Security Lab has established partnership with tens of security companies, including Kaspersky and Symantec, disclosed Dianxin founder Zhang Lei, who currently headed Baidu mobile security division.

The openness of Android system brings more users and developers as well as more security risks, because there’s much less regulation in terms of the app store that makes it much easier for criminals to target. Android apps that are infected by virus amounted to more than 100,000, while over 14 million users are affected by such malwares and costs totaled more than 70 million yuan ($11.45 million), citing Zhang (report in Chinese).

Li Mingyuan, vice president of Baidu, said that this product will fill the gap in Baidu’s mobile business and accelerate the construction of a complete mobile ecosystem.

Baidu has launched tens of mobile services and six of them have witnessed more than 100 million users. The development of a proprietary mobile security service may help Baidu to fend off competition from Qihoo 360, which enraged several companies by suggesting users to uninstall apps developed by its rivals.

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Alipay and Tenpay Terminate Payment and Clearing Services for Bitcoin https://technode.com/2013/12/17/alipay-and-tenpay-terminate-payment-and-clearing-services-for-bitcoin/ https://technode.com/2013/12/17/alipay-and-tenpay-terminate-payment-and-clearing-services-for-bitcoin/#comments Tue, 17 Dec 2013 08:29:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14066 Alipay and Tenpay terminated payment and clearing services for crypto-currencies after the Chinese central bank People’s Bank of China (PBOC) issued a ban which forbids payment companies from doing business with Bitcoin exchanges (report in Chinese). The PBOC met with around ten top Chinese third-party payment providers yesterday, banning banks and third-party payment firms from […]]]>

Alipay and Tenpay terminated payment and clearing services for crypto-currencies after the Chinese central bank People’s Bank of China (PBOC) issued a ban which forbids payment companies from doing business with Bitcoin exchanges (report in Chinese).

The PBOC met with around ten top Chinese third-party payment providers yesterday, banning banks and third-party payment firms from providing settlement and clearance services for transactions based on virtual currencies, like Bitcoin and Litecoin, as well as other peer-to-peer currency trading sites.

Tencent’s payment service Tenpay confirmed that it has halted cooperation with two major domestic exchange sites BTC China and Okcoin, while a representative from Alipay disclosed that the company has not establish cooperation with any virtual currency sites yet.

Companies which previously accept Bitcoin payment, like Baidu and Guoke, also suspended related businesses.

The PBOC released a notification on December 5, forbidding banks from engaging in financial transactions in Bitcoin, but left private clients to make their own decisions, leaving a space for support of the digital currency.

The trading price of Bitcoin on major domestic exchange sites ranges between 4,000 yuan ($654.14) to 4,200 yuan as of 7:00 AM Dec. 17 Beijing time, slumping from 7,000 yuan one month earlier.

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Smartisan Reportedly Raises 70 Million Yuan of Series A Financing at Market Valuation of 470 Million Yuan https://technode.com/2013/12/17/smartisan-reportedly-raises-70-million-yuan-of-series-a-financing-at-market-valuation-of-470-million-yuan/ https://technode.com/2013/12/17/smartisan-reportedly-raises-70-million-yuan-of-series-a-financing-at-market-valuation-of-470-million-yuan/#comments Tue, 17 Dec 2013 06:54:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14058 Smartisan, developer of Android-based ROM Smartisan OS, booked 70 million yuan ($11.45 million) of Series A funding at a market valuation of 470 million yuan, disclosed founder of the company Luo Yonghao, who is also the founder of Bullogger and a well-known English teacher and author. Screenshot of Luo’s Microblog Of the total investment, 40 […]]]>

Smartisan, developer of Android-based ROM Smartisan OS, booked 70 million yuan ($11.45 million) of Series A funding at a market valuation of 470 million yuan, disclosed founder of the company Luo Yonghao, who is also the founder of Bullogger and a well-known English teacher and author.

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Screenshot of Luo’s Microblog

Of the total investment, 40 million yuan comes from Buttonwood Capital and the rest comes from undisclosed sources. Tang Yan, founder of dating app Momo, is the angel investor of Smartisan.

The company attracted the attentions of investors after releasing Smartizan OS to much fanfare in March this year.

Similar to the likes of Xiaomi and Meizu, Smartisan planned to roll out its own smartphone in the first half of next year as well as to complement the OS.

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Online Retailer JD Releases IM Tool Dongdong for Individual Users https://technode.com/2013/12/17/online-retailer-jd-releases-im-tool-dongdong-for-individual-users/ https://technode.com/2013/12/17/online-retailer-jd-releases-im-tool-dongdong-for-individual-users/#comments Tue, 17 Dec 2013 05:46:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14055 Online retailor JD (previously known as 360buy) reportedly released IM tool Dongdong for individual customers. The service is currently under internal testing, but the official version will be released very soon (report in Chinese). According to introduction on the official website, this service features two functions of personal communication and consumer service for JD. Users […]]]>
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Online retailor JD (previously known as 360buy) reportedly released IM tool Dongdong for individual customers. The service is currently under internal testing, but the official version will be released very soon (report in Chinese).

According to introduction on the official website, this service features two functions of personal communication and consumer service for JD. Users can either start a conversation with their friends or communicate with JD’s consumer service staff via Dongdong. It is now only available on PC and users have to login with JD accounts.

JD has previously launched Dongdong for merchants, which has functions like online customer service and order management.

The positioning of Dongdong is similar to Wangwang, an IM tool provided by Taobao for retailers to communicate with consumers. It is natural for JD to roll out homegrown IM tool in light of its efforts to build a complete business ecosystem, disclosed an insider.

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Sina Weibo Launches Short Video App Miaopai and Announces 500 Million Users https://technode.com/2013/12/16/sina-weibo-initiates-short-video-strategy-with-miaopai-as-hit-product-announces-500-million-users/ https://technode.com/2013/12/16/sina-weibo-initiates-short-video-strategy-with-miaopai-as-hit-product-announces-500-million-users/#comments Mon, 16 Dec 2013 09:33:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14045 Sina Weibo partnered up with Miaopai, a short-video app which Sina Weibo invested in (report in Chinese). Miaopai is a Vine-like short video sharing app, which enables users to shoot up to ten seconds of video, and then edit or add frames to the video before sharing to friends. The service, which ensures real-time synching, is embedded […]]]>

Sina Weibo partnered up with Miaopai, a short-video app which Sina Weibo invested in (report in Chinese). Miaopai is a Vine-like short video sharing app, which enables users to shoot up to ten seconds of video, and then edit or add frames to the video before sharing to friends. The service, which ensures real-time synching, is embedded in 4.0 version of Sina Weibo.

To promote the service, Sina Weibo invited hundreds of celebrities to use Miaopai since its launch in August this year. In addition, the company planned to invest 10 million yuan ($1.64 million) next year to encourage UGC.

Sina Weibo claimed that Miaopai is not traffic-demanding, because the video clip it generated is very short. It needs up to 600K of traffic to upload a video, equivalent to the traffic needed by four pictures. Moreover, the development of 4G network will further ease users’ concerns on traffic problems.

According to latest data released by the company, Sina Weibo recorded more than 500 million registered users, of which 76.5% are mobile users. There are more than 570,000 third-party developers on Sina Weibo platform and over 60,000 have established cooperation with the company, covering the fields of film, travelling, shopping and music (report in Chinese).

Compared with foreign short video services like Vine, Keek and Instagram, domestic ones are still in a preliminary development stage. But more and more companies start to explore this sector, such as Tencent’s WeShow, Xiaoying, Papaqi and WeiCo+.

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Online Estate Service Soufun Launches Third-party Financial Platform to Tap Online Finance Industry https://technode.com/2013/12/16/online-estate-service-soufun-launches-third-party-financial-platform-to-tap-online-finance-industry/ https://technode.com/2013/12/16/online-estate-service-soufun-launches-third-party-financial-platform-to-tap-online-finance-industry/#comments Mon, 16 Dec 2013 07:23:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14038 China’s leading online estate service Soufun launched Soufun Financial Service Platform today, offering third-party financial products to customers to cater for their funding demands for property acquisition, home leasing and decoration. The service will be firstly launched in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai, and then expanded to other cities, according to Mo Tianquan, board chairman […]]]>
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China’s leading online estate service Soufun launched Soufun Financial Service Platform today, offering third-party financial products to customers to cater for their funding demands for property acquisition, home leasing and decoration.

The service will be firstly launched in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai, and then expanded to other cities, according to Mo Tianquan, board chairman of the company. Mo added that Soufun will join hands with financial institutions to roll out custom financial products for its members, and then, develop in-house financial products in the future.

In addition to mainstream domestic banks, the platform also established cooperation with foreign banks, such as CitiBank and SCB.

This is not the first time for Soufun to explore online financial industry. The company upgraded its e-commerce platform and released a financial product to members this November, offering up to 500,000 yuan ($81,763) of unsecured consumer loan at benchmark interest. On Dec. 4 this year, the firm issued up to $350 million worth of convertible bonds to prepare for the forays into Internet financial sector.

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English-learning Service 51Talk Raises $12 Million Series B Financing from Funds backed by Xiaomi’s CEO https://technode.com/2013/12/16/english-learning-service-51talk-raises-12-million-series-b-financing-from-funds-backed-by-xiaomis-ceo/ https://technode.com/2013/12/16/english-learning-service-51talk-raises-12-million-series-b-financing-from-funds-backed-by-xiaomis-ceo/#comments Mon, 16 Dec 2013 04:07:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14031 51Talk is an English-learning service which provides one-to-one course on oral English. It recently secured $12 million of Series B funding from Shunwei Venture Capital, a fund backed by Xiaomi’s CEO and co-founder Lei Jun. The company previously raised angel investment from ZhenFund in 2011 and several million dollars in Series A from DCM at […]]]>
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51Talk is an English-learning service which provides one-to-one course on oral English. It recently secured $12 million of Series B funding from Shunwei Venture Capital, a fund backed by Xiaomi’s CEO and co-founder Lei Jun. The company previously raised angel investment from ZhenFund in 2011 and several million dollars in Series A from DCM at the end of 2012.

Founded in 2011, 51Talk offers e-learning courses at more affordable prices (around 40 yuan per hour), around one fifth of the prices of its offline peers. The company currently has more than 1,000 foreign teachers, mainly from Philippine, and more than 200 operation staff.

The capital raised this time will be injected to product R&D, marketing and branding. Additionally, the company planned to develop homegrown communication tool to replace currently adopted ones like Skype and QQ.

Online education sector attracted the eyes of venture capitalists since the first half of this year and recorded strings of fundraising cases. But the craze ebbed while the competition in the sector tensed up. English-learning division alone reportedly recorded more than 100 startups, including 91Waijiao and Kingsoft’s Haowj, which are backed by big Internet companies, as well as Talk915, which is developed by telecom equipment supplier ZTE.

English-learning industry is facing a major reshuffle as a lot of companies plan to draw back from the over-crowed market, just like the case in group-buying business, said Huang Jiajia, founder of the company.

Gong Haiyan, founder of the US-listed dating site Jiayuan and English-leaning site 91Waijiao, recently shifted focus to K-12 e-learning by releasing Tizi (ladder in Chinese), a full-round platform for K-12 education besides school hours.

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China Unicom Releases A Kid Tracking Wristband Smartphone https://technode.com/2013/12/13/china-unicom-releases-a-kid-tracking-wristband-smartphone/ https://technode.com/2013/12/13/china-unicom-releases-a-kid-tracking-wristband-smartphone/#comments Fri, 13 Dec 2013 09:37:56 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14018 Beijing Branch of teleco China Unicom unveiled a GPS wristband smartphone, which enables parents to keep track of their little kids who are too young to use more complicated smartphones (report in Chinese). There are only four keys on the wristband, to which parents can set four contact numbers. The product can locate the kids […]]]>

Beijing Branch of teleco China Unicom unveiled a GPS wristband smartphone, which enables parents to keep track of their little kids who are too young to use more complicated smartphones (report in Chinese).

There are only four keys on the wristband, to which parents can set four contact numbers. The product can locate the kids wearing it and update their historical tracks via short messages, Internet or apps. Kids can send SOS alerts in case of emergencies.

In addition, parents also can set a parameter within or out of which their targets can roam free. Once their kids approach the boundary, the device will send signals, and the users will receive an app notification on their mobile devices. Parents can listen to the sounds around their children to determine whether they are in a safe environment.

China Unicom’s positioning service is now priced at a preferential price of 360 yuan ($58.89) for two years, while the wristband is given for free. After the two year contract, the service is priced at 10 yuan per month.

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                 Previous Kid Tracking Wristband Rleased by China Unicom

Although the company did not release pictures of the gadget, it is quite similar to a previous product released by China Unicom according to official descriptions, maybe with a few upgraded features.

A lot of domestic small electronic firms relaunched the revamped version of their previous electronic products to capitalize on the prevailing hardware craze.

image credit: 3G

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Taxi Apps DidiDache and KuaidiDache Buddy Up with OTA Ctrip for Larger User Base https://technode.com/2013/12/13/taxi-apps-dididache-and-kuaididache-buddy-up-with-ota-ctrip-for-larger-user-base/ https://technode.com/2013/12/13/taxi-apps-dididache-and-kuaididache-buddy-up-with-ota-ctrip-for-larger-user-base/#comments Fri, 13 Dec 2013 06:57:04 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14013 DidiDache and KuaidiDache, two leading domestic taxi apps, join hands with OTA Ctrip to embed their services in the newly launched 5.2 version of Ctrip’s mobile app (report in Chinese). After opening either of the apps via Ctrip app, the service will locate the starting point of users automatically. Customers only have to input their […]]]>

DidiDache and KuaidiDache, two leading domestic taxi apps, join hands with OTA Ctrip to embed their services in the newly launched 5.2 version of Ctrip’s mobile app (report in Chinese).

After opening either of the apps via Ctrip app, the service will locate the starting point of users automatically. Customers only have to input their destination and phone number to get a taxi. Both of the apps provide urban transportation and airport pickup services.

Taxi apps have been under a lot of pressure since Chinese regulators step in to ban the bidding feature this May. To maintain tractions for taxi drivers, they distribute subsidies to divers to make up for losses generated from absence of the bidding feature.

Under fierce competition, map and travel apps are favorable choices for taxi apps to attract larger user base. Aside from Ctrip, both DidiDache and KuaidiDache launched cooperation with Baidu Map and Qunar.

DidiDache reportedly rolled out airport pickup service in 13 cities countrywide. KuaidiDache claimed to launch services in 40 cities with 350,000 registered taxi drivers nationwide. The latter has acquired Dahuangfeng, a Shanghai based competitor, this year.

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Housekeeping App Ayibang Raises Millions of Dollars in Series A Financing https://technode.com/2013/12/13/housekeeping-app-ayibang-raises-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/ https://technode.com/2013/12/13/housekeeping-app-ayibang-raises-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2013 04:28:53 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=14003 Ayibang, a LBS housekeeping service which adopts a similar operation model with taxi apps’, reportedly secured millions of dollars in Series A funding (source in Chinese). Users can search for nearby housekeepers and browse their details on the app, such as comments of previous hirers. Founder of the company Wan Yong thinks that key factors […]]]>
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Ayibang, a LBS housekeeping service which adopts a similar operation model with taxi apps’, reportedly secured millions of dollars in Series A funding (source in Chinese).

Users can search for nearby housekeepers and browse their details on the app, such as comments of previous hirers. Founder of the company Wan Yong thinks that key factors for startups to compete with big classified service providers like, 58.com and Ganji, are service quality and branding.

In the past few months, the company has opened ten bricks-and-mortar centers in Beijing to train the housekeepers so as to guarantee service qualities, disclosed Wan. In addition to housekeeping kits and uniform, Ayibang will also give courses on manners and daily cleaning techniques to standardize the workload of each housekeeper.

Moreover, Ayibang has partnered up with several laundries and shoe care stops in Beijing. User can place orders on Ayibang and deliveryman will stop by to pick up your stuffs. Wan added that the company planned to roll out one new service in every one or two months, including services of cooking, floor waxing, etc.

Aybang recorded around 350 daily orders in Beijing with around 500 active housekeepers on the platform.

eJiajie a similar app developed by the team of taxi app Dididache just raised 4 million of seed funding from Tencent Industry Win-Win Fund this September.

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Microsoft’s Xbox Reportedly to Enter Chinese Market Next September https://technode.com/2013/12/12/microsofts-xbox-reportedly-to-enter-chinese-market-next-september/ https://technode.com/2013/12/12/microsofts-xbox-reportedly-to-enter-chinese-market-next-september/#comments Thu, 12 Dec 2013 07:24:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13986 Shanghai-based media service BesTV New Media and Microsoft Corp signed an agreement to introduce the latter’s gaming console Xbox to Chinese market next September via the joint venture the two companies established earlier this year, disclosed Luo Jiangchun, CEO of Funshion, a shareholding company of BesTV (report in Chinese). BesTV reportedly will introduce the latest […]]]>
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Shanghai-based media service BesTV New Media and Microsoft Corp signed an agreement to introduce the latter’s gaming console Xbox to Chinese market next September via the joint venture the two companies established earlier this year, disclosed Luo Jiangchun, CEO of Funshion, a shareholding company of BesTV (report in Chinese).

BesTV reportedly will introduce the latest version Xbox One into mainland China. Microsoft has sold out over 2 million sets of Xbox Ones since its debut on Nov.22, a record pace for the Xbox brand.

Different from Xbox 360 with advanced gaming features, the next-gene controller Xbox One is more of a living-room device which puts more emphasis on the media, video and social networking functions.

It includes Blu-ray playback, the TV overlay functionality called OneGuide, built-in support for voice and motion control through the included Kinect, and third-party video plug-in Hulu.

Xbox One, an all-in-one entertainment device, may encroach upon the market share of some domestic living-room gadgets, such smart boxes and Internet TV products.

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Tencent Unveils Fengling, WeChat-based Mobile Website Creation Tool https://technode.com/2013/12/12/tencent-unveils-fengling-wechat-based-mobile-website-creation-tool/ https://technode.com/2013/12/12/tencent-unveils-fengling-wechat-based-mobile-website-creation-tool/#respond Thu, 12 Dec 2013 05:47:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13980 Screenshot of Fengling Tencent recently took the wraps off Fengling, a WeChat-based mobile website creation tool dedicated to mobile marketing and promotion. It helps customers to create HTML5 website with the functions of interaction, communication, LBS and KPI monitoring. Two kinds of websites are available. General websites can be established in a breeze by dragging […]]]>
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Screenshot of Fengling

Tencent recently took the wraps off Fengling, a WeChat-based mobile website creation tool dedicated to mobile marketing and promotion. It helps customers to create HTML5 website with the functions of interaction, communication, LBS and KPI monitoring.

Two kinds of websites are available. General websites can be established in a breeze by dragging the modules into the editing interface. Industrial websites, which features custom models catered for needs of different industries, are only opened to members. Website thus created is pending for approval, which will be completed within around ten working days.

The service targets at enterprises which lack technical supports for website creation and maintenance. Developed by Tencent’s Online Media Group, Fengling’s freemium basic version is opened up for application now.

The release of Fengling is considered as a major measure for Tencent and WeChat to monetize their mobile services.

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VoIP Service Viber Celebrates Third Birthday by Unveiling Viber Out Worldwide https://technode.com/2013/12/12/voip-service-viber-celebrates-third-birthday-by-unveiling-viber-out-worldwide/ https://technode.com/2013/12/12/voip-service-viber-celebrates-third-birthday-by-unveiling-viber-out-worldwide/#comments Thu, 12 Dec 2013 02:11:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13975 Viber, a VoIP service claiming more than 200 million users, marked its third birthday by releasing Viber 4.1 which includes the full global launch of Viber Out, a new feature that allows users to make low-cost calls to any mobile or landline phone number. Viber Out enables all Viber users to call anyone worldwide on […]]]>
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Viber, a VoIP service claiming more than 200 million users, marked its third birthday by releasing Viber 4.1 which includes the full global launch of Viber Out, a new feature that allows users to make low-cost calls to any mobile or landline phone number.

Viber Out enables all Viber users to call anyone worldwide on Android, iPhone and Desktop, coming to Windows Phone in the future. Purchasing credit for Viber Out can be completed either through a simple in-app purchase via either the Google Play Store or the Apple App Store or using a credit card via Viber Desktop.

Additionally, Viber Out claimed that it has lower price-per-call than other competing services due to lower per minute rates and the omission of connection fees.

Unlike competing services, Viber Out displays caller’s real phone number to the recipient so he or she knows who is calling. Further, Viber Out on Desktop has an address book so users don’t have to remember numbers or dial them manually.

Viber Out joins the Viber Sticker Market as the app’s second paid feature. As part of this release, Viber added new stickers and will continue to add more content. Viber also released a new promotional video highlighting one of its signature characters – Violet.

Microsoft’s Skype, a major rival of Viber, recently terminated its cooperation with its Chinese operator Tom Online and partnered up with Guangming Fangzheng to run business in China.

image credit: Viber

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Chinese SME B2B E-commerce Operator JQW Debuts on AIM of LSE https://technode.com/2013/12/11/chinese-sme-b2b-e-commerce-operator-jqw-debuts-on-aim-of-lse/ https://technode.com/2013/12/11/chinese-sme-b2b-e-commerce-operator-jqw-debuts-on-aim-of-lse/#comments Wed, 11 Dec 2013 08:15:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13967 Domestic B2B e-commerce operator JQW went public on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) of London Stock Exchange on December 9 at a valuation of 1.4 billion yuan ($229.10 million) to raise 350 million yuan of funding (report in Chinese). The capital will be used to develop a mobile platform, as well as establishing a financial […]]]>
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Domestic B2B e-commerce operator JQW went public on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) of London Stock Exchange on December 9 at a valuation of 1.4 billion yuan ($229.10 million) to raise 350 million yuan of funding (report in Chinese).

The capital will be used to develop a mobile platform, as well as establishing a financial and trading platform to bring its existing users to an international audience. In addition, marketing and advertising programs will be launched to attract international members and promote the Group’s fee Chinese paying members to a global market.

JQW provides small and medium-sized Chinese business an online platform to advertise their products to other businesses.

The Yangzhou-based company was founded in 2004 and now ranked as second most popular Chinese B2B e-commerce destination by web traffic this July, next only to Alibaba, according to data from a research institution iResearch. It claimed more than 10 million registered users and over 9 million of merchants.

JQW hosts more than 500,000 sales a month through its site which generated 74.5 million yuan in the first six months of 2013. In June this year, the company reported profits of 70.8 million yuan for the year to date.

image credit: 21CN

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Mobile Financial Service Tongbanjie Books Tens of Millions of Dollars in Series A Financing https://technode.com/2013/12/11/mobile-financial-service-tongbanjie-books-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/ https://technode.com/2013/12/11/mobile-financial-service-tongbanjie-books-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-series-a-financing/#comments Wed, 11 Dec 2013 05:54:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13963 Mobile financial app Tonbanjie secured tens of millions of dollars in Series A funding led by IDG Capital. The angel round is from China Growth Capital. Launched this June, Tongbanjie adopts an operation model similar to that of Alipay’s Yuebao. Users can purchase or redeem financial products in the app with bonded bank cards. It […]]]>

Mobile financial app Tonbanjie secured tens of millions of dollars in Series A funding led by IDG Capital. The angel round is from China Growth Capital.

Launched this June, Tongbanjie adopts an operation model similar to that of Alipay’s Yuebao. Users can purchase or redeem financial products in the app with bonded bank cards. It established in-depth cooperation with Fund123 and Guohua Life, as well as several professional institutions, helping users to leverage profits and risks. The service now offers more than ten funds and insurance products.

It is worth noting that Tongbanjie do not have access to user’s capital. All the transactions were conducted within the system of financial institutions under banking supervision. The company planned to roll out custom service in the near future.

He Jun, CEO of the company, has eight years working experience in Alibaba and AliPay. IDG Capital is bullish on the team and prospect of online finance industry.

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Gaming Publisher Yodo1 Secures $11 Million of Series B Financing Led by GGV Capital https://technode.com/2013/12/11/gaming-publisher-yodo1-secures-11-million-of-series-b-financing-led-by-ggv-capital/ https://technode.com/2013/12/11/gaming-publisher-yodo1-secures-11-million-of-series-b-financing-led-by-ggv-capital/#comments Wed, 11 Dec 2013 03:08:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13951 Beijing-based gaming publisher Yodo1 raised $11 million of Series B funding led by GGV Capital, along with Pavillion Capital, Iris Capital, and SingTel Innov8. The company announced $5 million funding this April from SingTel Innov8, the corporate venture arm of a mobile carrier. The funding will be used to strengthen core business and support expansion […]]]>
Yodo

Beijing-based gaming publisher Yodo1 raised $11 million of Series B funding led by GGV Capital, along with Pavillion Capital, Iris Capital, and SingTel Innov8. The company announced $5 million funding this April from SingTel Innov8, the corporate venture arm of a mobile carrier.

The funding will be used to strengthen core business and support expansion to Japanese and Korean markets. They have just opened up a local studio in Seoul.

Backed by a full blown team of 125+, Yodo1 offers cross-border strategies for both Chinese and foreign gaming developers by getting access to code base of a western game and modify the graphics, virtual items and music for local Chinese tastes, or vice versa.

Yodo1 has co-developed a number of hit games, including Cut the Rope, Time Travel from ZeptoLab (Russia), Powder Monkeys from XMG Studio (Canada), Ski Safari from Defiant Development (Australia), and Clouds & Sheep from HandyGames (Germany).

Yodo1 now has more than 90 million mobile gamers in China, up 750% from 2012, according to Henry Fong, co-founder and CEO of the company.

Chinese market has long been a hard nut to crack for foreign game developers due to language and cultural barriers, and native social network ecosystem. Even those that managed to win plaudits from Chinese players still need a Chinese-friendly payment system before they can monetize, which in turn, creates a huge market for gaming localization businesses.

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Online Retailer JD to Release Revamped Chinabank Payments for Homegrown Payment System https://technode.com/2013/12/10/online-retailer-jd-to-release-revamped-chinabank-payments-for-homegrown-payment-system/ https://technode.com/2013/12/10/online-retailer-jd-to-release-revamped-chinabank-payments-for-homegrown-payment-system/#respond Tue, 10 Dec 2013 07:12:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13932 Online retailor JD (previously known as 360buy) planned to relaunch the revamped version of Chinabank Payments at the end of this year or first quarter of next year in a bid to foster a homegrown payment system (report in Chinese). Founded in 2003, Chinabank Payments’ business covers online payment, mobile phone payment, and fixed-line payment. […]]]>

Online retailor JD (previously known as 360buy) planned to relaunch the revamped version of Chinabank Payments at the end of this year or first quarter of next year in a bid to foster a homegrown payment system (report in Chinese).

Founded in 2003, Chinabank Payments’ business covers online payment, mobile phone payment, and fixed-line payment.

After acquiring Chinabank Payments in October 2012, JD reconstructed the company in terms of share and legal structure, connection with JD accounts and applied for various financial licenses, said Liu Changhong, head of JD’s Financial Development Department.

Chinabank Payments is positioned as a strategic focus for JD to explore online financial business. JD dumped all previous third-party payment solutions and denied account access of other services this August including, AliPay, Sina Weibo, Tencent’s TenPay and WeChat, to prepare for its relaunch.

JD made these moves because third-party payment companies have access to large amounts of user data and core information, including per customer transaction, turnover, and capital flow, Liu added.

While the rivalry among WeChat payment and Alipay Wallet is heating up, the entrance of Chinabank Payments, which is backed by the deep-pocketed JD, will no doubt bring the competition in mobile payment sector to a feverish pitch.

The financial landscape for JD is becoming clearer with the imminent release of Chinabank Payments and the debut of Jingbaobei, JD’s fundraising project aimed at its suppliers. Moreover, the company also planned to roll out other financial products, such as funds, insurance and micro-credit financial services.

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Samwer Brothers-backed Online Retailer Lazada Announces US$250 Million New Funding https://technode.com/2013/12/10/samwer-brothers-backed-online-retailer-lazada-announced-us250-million-new-funding/ https://technode.com/2013/12/10/samwer-brothers-backed-online-retailer-lazada-announced-us250-million-new-funding/#respond Tue, 10 Dec 2013 02:32:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13924 Lazada, a Southeast Asian e-commerce startup incubated by Rocket Internet, raises approximately $250 million of cash from a consortium including new investors of Tesco, Access Industries, and existing ones of Investment AB Kinnevik and Verlinvest. The company announced a $100 million round this June. This marks the first investment by multichannel retailer Tesco into a […]]]>

Lazada, a Southeast Asian e-commerce startup incubated by Rocket Internet, raises approximately $250 million of cash from a consortium including new investors of Tesco, Access Industries, and existing ones of Investment AB Kinnevik and Verlinvest. The company announced a $100 million round this June.

This marks the first investment by multichannel retailer Tesco into a pure online player in Southeast Asia. Synergies of this partnership will span across customer analytics, private label development and supply chain management.

As another key cornerstone of the Group’s strategy, Lazada also launched e-commerce marketplace Lamido in Indonesia and Vietnam, to tap into the large informal e-commerce market of C2C transactions which includes thousands of shops on social networks such as Facebook.

Lazada’s founders Samwer brothers also own Rocket Internet and Zalora. The latter is a Singapore-based online fashion & beauty store, which just announced a record-breaking $112 million funding this month.

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TinyWorld: Social E-learning Platform That Optimize Language Studying Experience with Technology https://technode.com/2013/12/09/tinyworld-social-e-learning-platform-that-optimize-language-studying-experience-with-technology/ https://technode.com/2013/12/09/tinyworld-social-e-learning-platform-that-optimize-language-studying-experience-with-technology/#comments Mon, 09 Dec 2013 09:15:05 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13901 TinyWorld is a social language acquisition site which aims to optimize user experience, the crucial factor for learning quality, with a perfect combination of technologies to facilitate online language sharing. The program is now seeking for $50,000 million funding on Indiegogo to support the radical approach to language learning and teaching. TinyWorld adopted a spate […]]]>
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TinyWorld is a social language acquisition site which aims to optimize user experience, the crucial factor for learning quality, with a perfect combination of technologies to facilitate online language sharing. The program is now seeking for $50,000 million funding on Indiegogo to support the radical approach to language learning and teaching.

TinyWorld adopted a spate of measures to keep the users motivated during the tough language learning process. The service offers learning sources through a simple theme-based platform. Learners are asked to pick one attractive theme from the eight currently available ones and a language to start. All the course materials are created by real people to ensure that the things you have learned can solve daily communication problems. In addition, it also mixed the elements of larger massive open online courses with social networking features.

TinyWorld makes the best use of e-learning concept to guarantee language immersion environment, helping users to practice with high rate of repetition and customized feedbacks from tutors.

Users can sign up as a student or teacher or both. It is up to the instructors to decide whether or how much to charge for the course.

The project has so far raised $35,557 with 23 days to go. The company is currently a few steps away from finishing a working prototype for TinyWorld and the fund will be used to complete the video streaming integration feature, add a few other key languages other than English to the platform, and fine-tune a few tools for enabling an easy-to-use and efficient learning environment.

Headquartered in New York and Shanghai, TinyWorld is founded by an international team of five members led by Andrew Wong, who is also the CEO and founder of NY Entrepreneurs Business Network (NYEBN), one of the largest business event companies in NYC serving small businesses, startups and entrepreneurs.

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Custom Emoticon Designer Siyanhui Books Angel Investment from ZhenFund and Innovation Angel https://technode.com/2013/12/09/custom-emoticon-designer-siyanhui-books-angel-investment-from-zhenfund-and-innovation-angel/ https://technode.com/2013/12/09/custom-emoticon-designer-siyanhui-books-angel-investment-from-zhenfund-and-innovation-angel/#comments Mon, 09 Dec 2013 06:58:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13895 Curated caricature avatar design service Siyanhui, the first project graduated from 3wcoffee’s Next Big incubator, secured angel investment from ZhenFund and Innovation Angel Funds, and moved to Shanghai (report in Chinese). Siyanhui is the Chinese translation of a Japanese term which refers to a painted caricature that shows the features of its subject in an […]]]>

Curated caricature avatar design service Siyanhui, the first project graduated from 3wcoffee’s Next Big incubator, secured angel investment from ZhenFund and Innovation Angel Funds, and moved to Shanghai (report in Chinese).

Siyanhui is the Chinese translation of a Japanese term which refers to a painted caricature that shows the features of its subject in an oversimplified or exaggerated way.

The company’s service is mainly offered via its subscription account (biaoqingmm) on WeChat platform, where users can select a service package and make payments via Alipay. The users will receive hand painted, rather computer generated, custom emoticons in five to seven working days after sending photos to Siyanhui through WeChat chatting windows. Additionally, the company also provides peripheral products, such as photo frames and cups painted with their rendered images.

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The firm rolled out custom service packages for celebrities with price tags of 9,999 yuan ($1,634) for static emoticons and 19,999 yuan for dynamic ones.

It is the company’s commitment for 100% freehand sketching that impressed the investors. Wang Sheng, manager of Innovation Angel, said only hand painting can ensure the individuality of custom caricatures. It is also this feature which differentiates it from MomentCam, a photo-editing app recorded viral spread recently. Siyanhui crowdsources the business to professional artists.

The company is trying to explore domestic market after established presence in overseas, especially Japanese market, according to Ding Yan, founder of the company.

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Alibaba Invests HK$2.82 Billion in Haier Electronics to Expand Logistics Business for Bulky Commodities https://technode.com/2013/12/09/alibaba-invests-hk2-82-billion-in-haier-electronics-to-expand-logistics-business-for-bulky-commodities/ https://technode.com/2013/12/09/alibaba-invests-hk2-82-billion-in-haier-electronics-to-expand-logistics-business-for-bulky-commodities/#comments Mon, 09 Dec 2013 04:03:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13891 Alibaba Group announced today that it reached a strategic cooperation agreement with household electrical appliance maker Haier Group. Alibaba will invest HK$2.82 billion ($363.90 million) in Haier Electronics, a listed subsidiary of Haier Group, to develop a complete set of logistics and installation service system for home appliances and bulky commodities (report in Chinese). Under the […]]]>
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Alibaba Group announced today that it reached a strategic cooperation agreement with household electrical appliance maker Haier Group. Alibaba will invest HK$2.82 billion ($363.90 million) in Haier Electronics, a listed subsidiary of Haier Group, to develop a complete set of logistics and installation service system for home appliances and bulky commodities (report in Chinese).

Under the deal, the two parties will set up a joint venture Ririsun Logistics to run the business. In addition to delivery and installation services, Ririsun also focused on the research and development of supply chain management solution plans and products.

Of the total funding, Alibaba will invest HK$1.86 billion in Ririshun for around 34% stake in the company. The rest of the capital will be used to buy the newly issued shares in Haier Electronics for a 2% stake in the company.

Ririshun currently has nine distribution bases and ninety delivery centers around the country, covering more than 2 million square meters of inventory space.

Zhang Ruimin, board chairman and CEO of Haier Group, said that this cooperation not only aims to expand the business scale, but also to provide better user experiences.

Alibaba has made its utmost efforts to develop logistics business this year in an attempt to complete the industrial cycle and consolidate its foothold in the e-commerce ecosystem. In May, the company initiated China Smart Logistic Network, or CSN, a logistic program aiming to support 30 billion yuan worth of daily transitions and same-day delivery to every corner in China.

image credit: Sina

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Kingsoft Cloud Releases Cloud Service Platform with Five New Products https://technode.com/2013/12/06/kingsoft-cloud-releases-cloud-service-platform-with-five-new-products/ https://technode.com/2013/12/06/kingsoft-cloud-releases-cloud-service-platform-with-five-new-products/#comments Fri, 06 Dec 2013 09:57:07 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13878 Kingsoft Cloud Storage, a subsidiary of Kingsoft Group, rolled out a cloud service platform together with five core products of compute cloud, cloud storage, load balancing, cloud hard disk and database (report in Chinese). Wang Yulin, president of the company, disclosed that more than ten enterprises have settled on the platform, including subsidiaries of Kingsoft […]]]>
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Kingsoft Cloud Storage, a subsidiary of Kingsoft Group, rolled out a cloud service platform together with five core products of compute cloud, cloud storage, load balancing, cloud hard disk and database (report in Chinese).

Wang Yulin, president of the company, disclosed that more than ten enterprises have settled on the platform, including subsidiaries of Kingsoft Group, Xiaomi, and Vancl.

Wang thinks that domestic cloud service market is big enough to accommodate several companies and Kingsoft enjoys advantages in security, gaming and smart devices.

Kingsoft Cloud’s other services include a cloud storage platform and Kingsoft Kuaipan. After securing $20 million of Series A financing led by Russian investor Yuri Milner in this August, Kingsoft Kuaipan started to offer 100G free storage service to users, which was previously charged for 229 yuan ($37.12) per year, to beat back the battle waged by rivals, including Baidu and Qihoo 360.

According to Wang, Kingsoft’s cloud storage platform booked tens of millions yuan of revenue since its release, while Kuaipan have more than 100 million individual users and tens of millions of daily active users.

Wang also disclosed that Kingsoft is in close cooperation with Xiaomi in development of the imminent Xiaomi router. The latter acquired a 9.87% stake in Kingsoft in 2012.

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Online Insurance Company Zhong An Rolled Out First Product Zhonglebao https://technode.com/2013/12/06/online-insurance-company-zhong-an-rolled-out-first-product-zhonglebao/ https://technode.com/2013/12/06/online-insurance-company-zhong-an-rolled-out-first-product-zhonglebao/#comments Fri, 06 Dec 2013 08:06:58 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13875 Zhong An, the first online insurance company jointly launched by Alibaba, Tencent, and Ping An, has launched its first product Zhonglebao, a service focused on merchants on Alibaba’s e-commerce site Taobao. Zhonglebao was on sale from December 5 (report in Chinese). Taobao previously required all Taobao retailers to pay 1,000 yuan to 10,000 yuan of […]]]>
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Zhong An, the first online insurance company jointly launched by Alibaba, Tencent, and Ping An, has launched its first product Zhonglebao, a service focused on merchants on Alibaba’s e-commerce site Taobao. Zhonglebao was on sale from December 5 (report in Chinese).

Taobao previously required all Taobao retailers to pay 1,000 yuan to 10,000 yuan of consumer protection deposit to ensure that consumers will receive product reimbursement when they are dissatisfied with products.

In case of a dispute, Zhonglebao will compensate the buyer first on behalf of the merchants and then charge them latter. Zhonglebao is priced at 1.8 percent of the deposit requirement for half a year and 3 percent for one year.

Zhonglebao enables Taobao retailers to free part of the money locked in the deposit and apply them to daily operation. While most of the retailers on Taobao are small companies, this product will help them to increase capital liquidity.

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Difference between Chinese and US Hardware Entrepreneurial Environment: Jiang Zhaoning, Founder of Appcessory Solution Provider Yeelink https://technode.com/2013/12/06/difference-between-chinese-and-us-hardware-entrepreneurial-environment-jiang-zhaoning-founder-of-appcessory-solution-provider-yeelink/ https://technode.com/2013/12/06/difference-between-chinese-and-us-hardware-entrepreneurial-environment-jiang-zhaoning-founder-of-appcessory-solution-provider-yeelink/#comments Fri, 06 Dec 2013 06:09:33 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13871 Hardware industry comes under spotlight in China with the emergence of more and more smart wearables and the entrance of domestic Internet giants, like Baidu and Qihoo. Jiang Zhaoning, founder of appcessory solution provider Yeelink, recently shared his insights on the difference between Chinese and the US hardware entrepreneurial environment. We have it partly translated […]]]>
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Hardware industry comes under spotlight in China with the emergence of more and more smart wearables and the entrance of domestic Internet giants, like Baidu and Qihoo. Jiang Zhaoning, founder of appcessory solution provider Yeelink, recently shared his insights on the difference between Chinese and the US hardware entrepreneurial environment. We have it partly translated as below:

  • The most prominent difference between Chinese and foreign hardware entrepreneurial environment is that foreign hardware products are made for international market (mainly English-speaking world), while Chinese ones are focused on domestic market (mainly Chinese mainland market).
  • Here I compared the difference between Yeelink, a startup backed by a Chinese team, and Spark, a hardware platform developed by an American group.

1. Supply Chain/ Manufacturing
Chinese startups enjoy advantages in this aspect, because they have easy access to strings of large-scale IC factories and module makers in Shenzhen. But how to make the best use of this advantage is still a big problem, since most Chinese engineers, especially software engineers, are introvert science geeks and awkward speakers. On the other hand, their US counterparts are able to communicate with confidence, giving full play to their exploring spirit to push the project even though they are hindered by language obstacles.

2. Accelerator
There are many excellent US accelerators, which is a crucial factor for the development of startups. In addition to early-stage funding, accelerators also help startups to get quick access to follow-up capital. Founders or program directors of most US accelerators like Halxr8r, 500Startup and YY are entrepreneurs who have rich technological and industrial experiences, or founders of some well-known companies. Their experiences can broaden the vision of startup companies and help them to get connected with outstanding industry practitioners. There are few accelerators in China and I doubt if there were any ones dedicated to hardware sector.

3. Fund Raising
There are plenty of channels for US startups to secure early-stage funds: 1) Crowdsource fundraising platforms like Kickstarter (most of well-prepared projects booked more than $100,000 of initial capital), 2) Accelerators: Haxlr8r, an accelerator program for hardware-based startups around the world, usually grants $300,000 to $500,000 seed funding to each project, 3) Angel Investors: Both veteran and amateur investors are quite active on various platforms, such as Angellist.

4. Seed User
Compared with US seed users, their Chinese counterparts are not only few in number but low in consumption abilities. Moreover, US seed users often provide professional suggestions to research teams.

5. PR/Marketing/Branding
Chinese and US groups have different advantages in this aspect. American people who play with DV since childhood are quite experienced in facing media. Xu Xiaoping, a well-respected angel investor and founder of early-stage investment fund ZhenFund, said that each startup team should have one music professional, because he will inspire the whole team while other members are overwhelmed by technical problems. CTO of SparkDevices got a doctoral degree in music composition and its CEO is a state TOP 10 finalist in America’s Got Talent.

6. Pricing/Position
Pricing strategy for Chinese startups is more flexible, but US teams cannot slash prices due to various reasons.

7. Distribution/Channel
Although domestic OEM market is huge, it is difficult to scale up the business without homegrown brands. It is interesting to note that almost all of US teams developed their own brands. 

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Baidu Showcases Cloud Surveillance Camera iermu, a Fourth Gadget under Hardware Brand Xiaodu https://technode.com/2013/12/05/baidu-showcases-cloud-surveillance-camera-iermu-a-fourth-gadget-under-hardware-brand-xiaodu/ https://technode.com/2013/12/05/baidu-showcases-cloud-surveillance-camera-iermu-a-fourth-gadget-under-hardware-brand-xiaodu/#comments Thu, 05 Dec 2013 08:54:31 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13854 Baidu added a cloud camera iermu to its hardware brand Xiaodu after releasing three gadgets under the brand earlier this year. With focus on home security market, iermu enables users to keep a keen eye on the security of your children, aged parents, and pets. The gadget is cloud-connected, providing 720p HD live video stream […]]]>
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Baidu added a cloud camera iermu to its hardware brand Xiaodu after releasing three gadgets under the brand earlier this year. With focus on home security market, iermu enables users to keep a keen eye on the security of your children, aged parents, and pets.

The gadget is cloud-connected, providing 720p HD live video stream as well as video content monitoring and alarm functions. There is no need to install or connected it to the computer. It will install automatically in 60 seconds in WiFi environment. With embedded microphone and loudspeaker, iermu supports two-way remote dialogue.

After registering a Baidu account, users can browse the monitoring video stored on Baidu Cloud on digital devices like PC, smartphone, or tablet.

In addition to hardware brand Xiaodu, the searching giant also made foray in wearable smart device market by releasing a dedicated website for wearables in cooperation with Codoon Wristband and inWatch. Baidu aims to attract more partners to adopt its cloud infrastructure and create an App Store-like platform, where users can upload data related to their daily life, noted by Hou Zhenyu, chief architect of Baidu Cloud, at TechCrunch Shanghai.

Qihoo also planned to explore hardware industry by releasing a dongle and a router earlier this year.

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Mail Manager Youxiaoguai Frees You from Chores of Sending Mass Email https://technode.com/2013/12/05/mail-manager-youxiaoguai-frees-you-from-chores-of-sending-mass-email/ https://technode.com/2013/12/05/mail-manager-youxiaoguai-frees-you-from-chores-of-sending-mass-email/#respond Thu, 05 Dec 2013 02:50:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13840 Youxiaoguai, a web-based email manager developed by Beijing Kaiba Software Technology, provides professional email management services to entry-level users. The service is still under internal testing. Aiming to provide simple and easy-to-use services to users, the service currently offers three major functions, namely custom content delivery, smart group email (users can set the number and […]]]>

Youxiaoguai, a web-based email manager developed by Beijing Kaiba Software Technology, provides professional email management services to entry-level users. The service is still under internal testing.

Aiming to provide simple and easy-to-use services to users, the service currently offers three major functions, namely custom content delivery, smart group email (users can set the number and time of sending emails), and real-time data analysis. The company planned to add the functions of automatic classification according to importance of the emails and roll out mobile version in the future.

The firm was founded in March this year by a group of five members. It is seeking for $250,000 of Series A financing for product development and marketing. Its business model is to charge for advanced functions.

Indeed, the email market is packed with both foreign services like Mail Chimp, Champaign Monitor and domestic ones like EmailCar, U-mail and SendCloud, but all of them targeted at technical users and the operation is quite complicated.

Youxiaoguai, which is featured by simple operation, set eyes on non-technical users who have to deal with large amounts of emails, like business people, students and teachers. The company’s direct competitors thus narrowed down to Gmail, Foxmail, and NetEase, big companies which do not count on email business to earn profits.

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Screenshot of Youxiaoguai

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Online Pet Community Goumin Launches Aichongtuan, a Group-buying App for Pet Supply https://technode.com/2013/12/04/online-pet-community-goumin-launched-aichongtuan-a-group-buying-app-for-pet-supply/ https://technode.com/2013/12/04/online-pet-community-goumin-launched-aichongtuan-a-group-buying-app-for-pet-supply/#comments Wed, 04 Dec 2013 08:20:27 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13829 Screenshots of Aichongtuan Although the concept of group-buying is nothing new in China, most of them are focused on the fields of catering, entertainment, and garments. Goumin, an online pet community, expanded the concept to pet industry by releasing Aichongtuan, a mobile app dedicated to group-purchasing of pet products. Users can select the kinds of […]]]>

Screenshots of Aichongtuan

Although the concept of group-buying is nothing new in China, most of them are focused on the fields of catering, entertainment, and garments. Goumin, an online pet community, expanded the concept to pet industry by releasing Aichongtuan, a mobile app dedicated to group-purchasing of pet products.

Users can select the kinds of pets or search the products you want on the front page to get quick access of high quality pet products. The app also supports the function of in-app payment.

Goumin was founded in 2006 by Tang Yang, founding member of Xiaonei, now known as Renren. It is a community where people can share pet pictures and tips in raising pets. According to official site of the company, Goumin has 1 million registered users with daily PV of more than 2 million. Goumin has dipped toes in e-commerce sector as early as 2010 by launching a special channel.

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Baidu’s BBS Service Tieba Shifts to Mobile Social Networking after Announcing 1 Billion Users on 10th Anniversary https://technode.com/2013/12/04/baidus-bbs-service-tieba-shifts-to-mobile-social-networking-after-announcing-1-billion-users-on-10th-anniversary/ https://technode.com/2013/12/04/baidus-bbs-service-tieba-shifts-to-mobile-social-networking-after-announcing-1-billion-users-on-10th-anniversary/#respond Wed, 04 Dec 2013 06:56:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13821 Baidu Tieba, the largest Chinese communication platform operated by Baidu, celebrated the 10th anniversary yesterday. As an online community closely bonded with Baidu’s mainstay searching business, Baidu Tieba experienced the most glorious days of BBS in China. The ten-year milestone may evoke some nostalgic and mournful feelings in the avid advocates of BBS, since several […]]]>

Baidu Tieba, the largest Chinese communication platform operated by Baidu, celebrated the 10th anniversary yesterday. As an online community closely bonded with Baidu’s mainstay searching business, Baidu Tieba experienced the most glorious days of BBS in China. The ten-year milestone may evoke some nostalgic and mournful feelings in the avid advocates of BBS, since several once ruling BBS platforms like Tianya and Mop witnessed severe user churn in face of the mobile era.

However, Baidu’s founder Robin Li impressed us again by releasing several stellar figures for Baidu Tieba, a service launched on Dec 3, 2003. Baidu Tieba currently registered nearly 1 billion users and 200 million monthly active users, with over 8.1 million bars (someplace on the internet like a forum providing place for users to do interactive social network site activities), mostly created by fans, which cover popular stars, films, comics or books. The site records nearly 60 million posts per day and a daily average page view of around 2 million times (source in Chinese).

The website enables users to search or create a bar by typing a keyword, bringing strangers who share same interests together to communicate and help each other expediently.

Mobile Internet has brought walls of challenges to traditional social networking models, Chinese IT triumvirate known as the BAT (for Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) all made moves to explore mobile networking division. Tencent operates the currently reigning WeChat which reportedly has 600 million registered users and Alibaba is catching up with Laiwang.

Baidu released microblog service Baidu Shuoba in 2011 to tap social networking sector, but service was closed in the same year, mainly due to requirements on real-name registration.

Baidu’s mobile strategy is taking form after it acquired 91 Wireless, one of the largest iOS and Android app distributors in China, for $1.85 billion earlier this year. Baidu Tieba, which already boasts a solid user base, is expected to be the next breakthrough point.

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Screenshots of Baidu Tieba Mobile App

Following the changes in web version, Baidu Tieba revamped the interface and function of mobile app version to better suit the habits of users in 2012. It changed from a simply reply-by-sequence user interface into a more complicated reply-in-same-floor one. Meanwhile, Baidu Tieba also changed the front-page, layout and picture browsing methods, etc.

The functions of voice message and group chatting were also added this year. The number of interest groups exceeded 2 million in 27 days after the launch of this new function in early May.

According to a representative of the service, Baidu Tieba will open up the platform to partners, including enterprises, institutions, media and celebrities, to offer services such as constructing platforms for activities, data, and customer service. After running internal test for one month, hundreds of companies have settled on the platform, including big names like CCTV, Tmall, and JD, he added.

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Online Fashion Retailer ZALORA Announced Record-breaking $112 Million Funding https://technode.com/2013/12/04/online-fashion-retailer-zalora-announced-record-breaking-112-million-funding/ https://technode.com/2013/12/04/online-fashion-retailer-zalora-announced-record-breaking-112-million-funding/#comments Wed, 04 Dec 2013 02:22:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13809 ZALORA, a Singapore-based fashion & beauty online store, has secured a $112 million round of funding from privately held investor group Access Industries, funds managed by US-based asset management firm Scopia Capital Management LLC and other institutional investors. Thereby, ZALORA breaks their own record set in May 2013 and then a funding round of $100 million. […]]]>

ZALORA, a Singapore-based fashion & beauty online store, has secured a $112 million round of funding from privately held investor group Access Industries, funds managed by US-based asset management firm Scopia Capital Management LLC and other institutional investors. Thereby, ZALORA breaks their own record set in May 2013 and then a funding round of $100 million.

Most recently, ZALORA launched its first private brand EZRA and focused on extending its assortment to offer broader variety of fashion and beauty items.

The new capital will support ZALORA’s efforts to scale up operations and gain a stronger foothold throughout South-East Asia and Australia, serving 600 million potential online shopping customers in the region.

Also part of the ZALORA Group is THE ICONIC, Australia’s number one online fashion retailer. Patrick Schmidt, CEO of THE ICONIC, adds: “ZALORA Group and The Iconic already have come a long way. In Australia we are approaching one million shipment orders. This investment will allow us to continue to build the one-stop online shopping destination for fashion, footwear and beyond through a singular focus on customer satisfaction.”

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Wedding Service 591wed Secured Tens of Millions Financing from Govtor Capital https://technode.com/2013/12/03/wedding-service-591wed-secured-tens-of-millions-financing-from-govtor-capital/ https://technode.com/2013/12/03/wedding-service-591wed-secured-tens-of-millions-financing-from-govtor-capital/#comments Tue, 03 Dec 2013 09:27:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13800 591wed, an O2O wedding service provider, announced tens of millions of capital injection from Govtor Capital, marking the largest single investment to date in this field. The company has received funding from Vcwill Capital earlier this year (report in Chinese). 591wed owns and operates an online platform for wedding services including wedding ceremony, wedding feast, […]]]>
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591wed, an O2O wedding service provider, announced tens of millions of capital injection from Govtor Capital, marking the largest single investment to date in this field. The company has received funding from Vcwill Capital earlier this year (report in Chinese).

591wed owns and operates an online platform for wedding services including wedding ceremony, wedding feast, wedding clothes, and photography. In addition, it also runs offline activities to provide one-stop procurement experience for wedding couples.

Founded in 2005, the company currently has nearly 200 employees, providing services in more than ten cities nationwide. The company held 30 large-scale wedding expos this year, recording an annual online and offline turnover of more than 1 billion yuan, according to Xie Chen, co-founder of the company.

The company planned to expand business to more second-tier cities, like Nanjing, Hangzhou, Zhengzhou, Changsha, etc. in the future three years, disclosed Xu Lu, co-founder of the firm.

Domestic wedding service market is relatively untapped. Gong Haiyan, founder of the online dating services Jiayuan, once launched a similar service named Xique, but the site was closed latter to prepare for the overall listing of Jiayuan on the U.S. market.

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Alibaba Reportedly Acquired Mobile Music Player TTPOD, Betting on Mobile Music Sector to Take on WeChat https://technode.com/2013/12/03/alibaba-reportedly-acquired-mobile-music-player-ttpod-betting-on-mobile-music-sector-to-take-on-wechat/ https://technode.com/2013/12/03/alibaba-reportedly-acquired-mobile-music-player-ttpod-betting-on-mobile-music-sector-to-take-on-wechat/#comments Tue, 03 Dec 2013 08:02:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13791 Screenshot of TTPOD Alibaba reportedly pushed through the acquisition for a second mobile music company TTPOD after acquiring music service Xiami in April this year (report in Chinese). Founded in May 2008, TTPOD has received millions of dollars of Series A in 2011 and secured strategic investment from Alibaba in October 2012. TTPOD registered north of […]]]>
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Screenshot of TTPOD

Alibaba reportedly pushed through the acquisition for a second mobile music company TTPOD after acquiring music service Xiami in April this year (report in Chinese).

Founded in May 2008, TTPOD has received millions of dollars of Series A in 2011 and secured strategic investment from Alibaba in October 2012. TTPOD registered north of 200 million users by this June, according to data from Xiami.

Alibaba has made strenuous efforts to explore mobile music sector. The ecommerce giant once rolled out music service in Taohua.com, the digital channel of Taobao, but the service did not develop as expected due to copyright issues. Then, Alibaba acquired Xiami and established an independent music unit.

Entertainment attribute is what Alibaba’s product lacks as compared with product backed by Tencent. This weakness becomes more obvious with the transition from PC to mobile networking era, said an industry insider. According to data from Tencent, more than 350 million users log in QQ Music per month.

The acquisition of TTPOD will boost the development of Alibaba’s IM tool Laiwang, because music service is a much effective means to attract users in its campaign against the reigning WeChat.

The business of Xiami and TTPOD are complementary, because Xiami is focused on high-tier and mature users, while TTPOD has a wider coverage on all tiers of users, most of whom are young people, said Zhang Yi, CEO of iResearch.

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Tuicool, A Digital Content Aggregator, Helps Techies to Pinpoint Curated IT Contents https://technode.com/2013/12/03/tuicool-a-digital-content-aggregator-helps-techies-to-pinpoint-curated-it-contents/ https://technode.com/2013/12/03/tuicool-a-digital-content-aggregator-helps-techies-to-pinpoint-curated-it-contents/#comments Tue, 03 Dec 2013 06:23:54 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13786 Screenshot of Tuicool Tuicool is a digital content aggregator that aims to pinpoint personalized contents for tech-savvy IT readers overwhelmed by large amounts of similar digital contents. Enabled by a smart algorithm, Tuicool will automatically aggregate and analyze IT-related contents from different channels, such as news sites, blogs, and microblogs, without the intervention of human […]]]>
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Screenshot of Tuicool

Tuicool is a digital content aggregator that aims to pinpoint personalized contents for tech-savvy IT readers overwhelmed by large amounts of similar digital contents.

Enabled by a smart algorithm, Tuicool will automatically aggregate and analyze IT-related contents from different channels, such as news sites, blogs, and microblogs, without the intervention of human editing. By choosing different topics, the service could learn and adapt to your tastes, or what they called “adaptive learning”. The service will recommend up to 300 pieces of various kinds of contents ranging from tech reports to microblog.

Kafka Yu, an experienced programmer, founded the company in 2011 after leaving Baidu one year earlier. Tuicool was launched in April this year after two years of development. The company aims to attract 30,000 to 40,000 users by the first quarter of next year.

The company’s revenue mainly comes from advertisements, commissions earned by recommending books and digital products, as well as sharing data with related companies.

Yu thinks there are two development directions for e-reading products. One direction is to shift to other fields like finance, an easy path after huge user base and data were guaranteed. The other direction is to develop peripheral functions based on reading product itself, such as social networking and O2O activities. Yu added that the company will stick to the development of its product in the near future.

The project graduated last year from CHINA-AXLR8R, a Chinese accelerator that provides seed funding, mentorship, and legal assistance to startups.

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Aimeiwei: Food-sharing App Aiming at SNS for Foodies https://technode.com/2013/12/02/aimeiwei-food-sharing-app-aiming-at-sns-for-foodies/ https://technode.com/2013/12/02/aimeiwei-food-sharing-app-aiming-at-sns-for-foodies/#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2013 08:18:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13770 Screenshot of Aimeiwei Aimeiwei is food-sharing app developed by Shanghai-based Zhangyu Network Technology. The app is designed to fulfill three functions of finding, tasting and sharing dishes. Users can login with either Sina Weibo or QQ accounts. Aimeiwei will recommend dishes to users according to their geographical proximity and the popularity degree of dishes. Users […]]]>
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Screenshot of Aimeiwei

Aimeiwei is food-sharing app developed by Shanghai-based Zhangyu Network Technology. The app is designed to fulfill three functions of finding, tasting and sharing dishes.

Users can login with either Sina Weibo or QQ accounts. Aimeiwei will recommend dishes to users according to their geographical proximity and the popularity degree of dishes. Users can save favorite dishes to their “itineraries” before hand and the app will push alerts to users when they are within 500 meters of the restaurant.

Food-snappers can upload dish pictures moderated with camera filters, name of restaurants and dishes, reviews, and prices.

Different from a vast majority of domestic ratings & reviews services that focused on environment and tastes of specific restaurants, Aimeishi set eyes on each dishes and the stories behind them, and therefore, the interface of Aimeishi is packed with picture of tasty dishes, more attracting than pictures of restaurants.

The service is compatible with both Android and iOS system. Similar apps are Burpple, Meishixing and Ricebook.

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24tidy: 24-hour O2O Laundry Service https://technode.com/2013/12/02/24tidy-24-hour-o2o-laundry-service/ https://technode.com/2013/12/02/24tidy-24-hour-o2o-laundry-service/#comments Mon, 02 Dec 2013 06:18:50 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13765 Screenshot of 24tidy 24tidy is a 24-hour O2O laundry site developed by Shanghai-based Tidy Digital. Steven Ho, former CEO of Yahoo! Kimo, was on board this August as strategic consultant after the service was kicked off in mid-June. 24tidy has closed the angel round and poised to launch Series A financing. 24tidy moved the operation model […]]]>
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Screenshot of 24tidy

24tidy is a 24-hour O2O laundry site developed by Shanghai-based Tidy Digital. Steven Ho, former CEO of Yahoo! Kimo, was on board this August as strategic consultant after the service was kicked off in mid-June. 24tidy has closed the angel round and poised to launch Series A financing.

24tidy moved the operation model of traditional laundries to the Internet, offering 24-hour high quality service for uniform prices. Users can place orders online by inputting address, convenient time, contacts, and payment method. 24tidy will pick up and deliver at customers’ convenient times when laundry was done. Of course, the users can track the progress of their orders on the site.

24tidy displays its services according to categories like clothes, shoes, leatherwear, etc. Each kind of service is tagged with prices, credits, service introductions and estimated time.

The service, which currently only available in Shanghai, reportedly covers around 600 thousand families.

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Djytapp: Dating App Helps Users to Find A Perfect Match https://technode.com/2013/12/02/djytapp-dating-app-helps-users-to-find-a-perfect-match/ https://technode.com/2013/12/02/djytapp-dating-app-helps-users-to-find-a-perfect-match/#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2013 04:59:17 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13758 Screenshot of Djytapp Djytapp, or Doujiangyoutiao in Chinese (soymilk and Chinese doughnut) is a speed dating app which adapts the metaphoric meaning of its Chinese name, the perfect match. The app adopts gaming elements and employs proprietary matching algorithm to ensure that users are shown the best potential candidates. After logging in with Sina Weibo […]]]>
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Screenshot of Djytapp

Djytapp, or Doujiangyoutiao in Chinese (soymilk and Chinese doughnut) is a speed dating app which adapts the metaphoric meaning of its Chinese name, the perfect match. The app adopts gaming elements and employs proprietary matching algorithm to ensure that users are shown the best potential candidates.

After logging in with Sina Weibo accounts, user has to complete the profile including information on profession, educational background, revenue, housing, etc. The user is first asked to choose from four randomly selected nearby strangers based on visual appeal, and then, backgrounds. The app will decide how well the user is matched to their prospective match and chatting only begins in case of mutual selection by both parties.

With focus on both Yuan (predestined relationship) and security, the gamified dating process tried to get rid of the creepy factors of dating apps. Potential candidates that have already been recommended to a cerain user will not appear on his/her recommendation list again and female users can choose to hide their personal information.

The app targets at female white-collar users between 18 to 35 years old, who do not have time and means to know new friends due to pressures from work.

The app is currently only available on iOS platform. Similar stranger dating app are Moumou, Yujian, and Zhantai.

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GalaRing G1: Magic Ring Powered by NFC Encryption Technology https://technode.com/2013/11/29/galaring-g1-magic-ring-powered-by-nfc-encryption-technology/ https://technode.com/2013/11/29/galaring-g1-magic-ring-powered-by-nfc-encryption-technology/#comments Fri, 29 Nov 2013 07:49:08 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13743 GalaRing G1 is the first smart product under the consumer electronic brand GalaGreat, which planned to cover a series of smart gadgets like smart cards, smart wristbands, and smart toys. The product has been opened up for preorder this October with a price tag of 199 yuan ($32.45). GalaRing G1 features titanium steel structure and […]]]>
galaring

GalaRing G1 is the first smart product under the consumer electronic brand GalaGreat, which planned to cover a series of smart gadgets like smart cards, smart wristbands, and smart toys. The product has been opened up for preorder this October with a price tag of 199 yuan ($32.45).

GalaRing G1 features titanium steel structure and covered with calf skin. Inside a normal-sized ring, two NFC chips are embedded. One of them is for digital business card, which contains customizable personal information. Users can exchange their digital business cards with another person by touching smartphones with NFC chips and there is no need to install any apps.

The other chip is for encryption of apps. After downloading a dedicated app, users can lock up their phones and only a slight touch with the ring can unlock the phone, saving the efforts for inputing passwords.

Moreover, there is no need to charge the ring, which is IP68 (Ingress Protection) rated and resisting to the intrusion of water and dust, even in harsh environments.

But the ring is now only compatible with Android-enabled smartphones with NFC technology, such as Samsung’ Galaxy, HTC One, Sony, Xiaomi, and OPPO.

The product is developed by MAX (MakerX), a startup team under AntiyLabs. Zhang Chong, head of the team, said that the smart ring market is relatively untapped. In addition to Guoke’s GEAK, two similar foreign companies are NFC Ring and Sesame Ring, but GalaRing G1 is the only one that has shipped products.

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Digi-Care ERI Wristband: Fitness Helper Shifting from Sports Tracking to Sports Incentive https://technode.com/2013/11/29/digi-care-eri-wristband-fitness-helper-shifting-from-sports-tracking-to-sports-incentive/ https://technode.com/2013/11/29/digi-care-eri-wristband-fitness-helper-shifting-from-sports-tracking-to-sports-incentive/#comments Fri, 29 Nov 2013 06:06:36 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13739 Hong Kong-based tech company Digi-Care demoed their first smart wristband ERI at TechCrunch Shanghai last week. ERI is now opened up for preorder and the company is seeking for $50,000 funds on Indiegogo in a bid to ship the product to users by early 2014. ERI features a 6mm slim band and is 20g in weight, offering […]]]>
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Hong Kong-based tech company Digi-Care demoed their first smart wristband ERI at TechCrunch Shanghai last week. ERI is now opened up for preorder and the company is seeking for $50,000 funds on Indiegogo in a bid to ship the product to users by early 2014.

ERI features a 6mm slim band and is 20g in weight, offering eight color options. It also sports high accuracy motion tracking sensor, ambient temperature sensor and pressure sensor. The polymer lithium battery can work for more than half a month. The wristband is compatible to iOS, Android, Mac OS and Window 8.1.

The gadget can identify what kind of sports the user is doing like running, swimming, or climbing and then track their route with smart algorithm. In order to encourage the users, the company developed a sports social game, where users can join fever activities around to reach achievements, even win rewards, and then, share the results to friends, making people’s fitness more funny and incentive.

DigiCare Technology was founded in 2012 by a group of experienced talents in Internet and hardware industry.

ERI is in an already crowded smart bracelet and pedometer market that packed with foreign counterparts like Jawbone Up 2, Nike+ Fuelband, Fitbit Flex as well as domestic ones like Codoon and Maibu. Samsung’s Gear and Sony’s SmartWatch are also powerful competitors.

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Kaado: Social Gifting Mobile App with Personalized Present Gallery https://technode.com/2013/11/29/kaadoo-social-gifting-mobile-app-with-personalized-present-gallery/ https://technode.com/2013/11/29/kaadoo-social-gifting-mobile-app-with-personalized-present-gallery/#comments Fri, 29 Nov 2013 03:00:02 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13730 Screenshot of Kaado While gift giving is a very kind way of showing love, care and gratitude, people adopted a busy lifestyle often tends to forget special occasions for their beloved ones. Kaado, a social mobile application developed by Beijing Joyful Technology, aims to tackle this problem by allowing users to choose and send impromptu […]]]>
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Screenshot of Kaado

While gift giving is a very kind way of showing love, care and gratitude, people adopted a busy lifestyle often tends to forget special occasions for their beloved ones.

Kaado, a social mobile application developed by Beijing Joyful Technology, aims to tackle this problem by allowing users to choose and send impromptu gift cards to friends and family members.

The app will send alerts to users when birthdays or anniversaries of friends are approaching after they are connected with friends from different channels, such as, phone contacts, QQ, Weibo, and Renren.

With special focus on social functions, Kaado allows users to share gift cards to other social communities. This function enables the platform to transform the social footprint to personalize recommendation engine, because the trending products in the market are handpicked by real people to share.

The app integrates various gift cards with photos, prices and detailed introductions. Users can pay for them via UnionPay or AliPay and then send them to friends directly.

The app is available on both iOS and Android platforms. Similar apps are Eliquan and Wowgift.

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Joosee: Mobile Web Creation Tool That Brings Web Design to Your Palm https://technode.com/2013/11/28/joosee-mobile-web-creation-tool-that-brings-web-design-to-your-palm/ https://technode.com/2013/11/28/joosee-mobile-web-creation-tool-that-brings-web-design-to-your-palm/#comments Thu, 28 Nov 2013 06:52:16 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13724 Sceenshot of Joosee Joosee is a mobile website creation tool dedicated to help users to create stunning mobile sites anytime and anywhere. Joosee is based on HTML 5, so users don’t need to install any apps. They can log in via browsers on smartphones with either Facebook or Google account, and then, create a beautiful […]]]>
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Sceenshot of Joosee

Joosee is a mobile website creation tool dedicated to help users to create stunning mobile sites anytime and anywhere.

Joosee is based on HTML 5, so users don’t need to install any apps. They can log in via browsers on smartphones with either Facebook or Google account, and then, create a beautiful site in minutes. The site offers two kinds of functions namely, web administration and web editing.

Business or personal, Jossee offers 100s of templates to choose from and each of them can be fully customized by customers. It also supports customization tools, QR code and desktop to mobile auto redirect. Once finished, users can shout it from the roof tops by sharing the site across social networks.

Joosee provides free service to up to 5 pages of 500 monthly visits and 14 days of trial service. Compared with other Web-based productivity suites like Zoho Site and Webnode, the selling point of Joosee is its mobility.

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Wearable Device Solution Provider AppComm Unveiled Smartwatch FashionComm A1 https://technode.com/2013/11/28/wearable-device-solution-provider-appcomm-unveiled-smartwatch-fashioncomm-a1/ https://technode.com/2013/11/28/wearable-device-solution-provider-appcomm-unveiled-smartwatch-fashioncomm-a1/#comments Thu, 28 Nov 2013 05:33:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13717 AppComm, a Guangzhou-based wearable device solution provider, rolled out today a smartwatch FashionComm A1 with a price tag of 1,299 yuan ($211.85). The gadget has been opened up for preorder and will be shipped on Dec. 12 (report in Chinese). A1 features MTK 6250 processor, 260MHz CPU, 2M pixel camera and offers six color options. […]]]>

AppComm, a Guangzhou-based wearable device solution provider, rolled out today a smartwatch FashionComm A1 with a price tag of 1,299 yuan ($211.85). The gadget has been opened up for preorder and will be shipped on Dec. 12 (report in Chinese).

A1 features MTK 6250 processor, 260MHz CPU, 2M pixel camera and offers six color options. A1 sports 1.55-inch Mirasol™ screen, an energy-saving display developed Qualcomm. It not only presents vivid visual effects of colored contents even under sunlight, but also supports multi-touch and extended the battery life to more than 220 hours.

Different from other smartwatches that need to be connected with smartphone or other devices, users can make phone calls or send messages via A1 directly because it embedded a micro SIM card. It also supports other functions, such as, sports data monitoring, album, radio, camera, alarm, music, and Bluetooth.

image credit: Sina

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Online Food Ordering Service Etaoshi Secured Nearly $10 Million in Series A Led by Highland Capital https://technode.com/2013/11/28/online-food-ordering-service-etaoshi-secured-nearly-10-million-in-series-a-led-by-highland-capital/ https://technode.com/2013/11/28/online-food-ordering-service-etaoshi-secured-nearly-10-million-in-series-a-led-by-highland-capital/#comments Thu, 28 Nov 2013 03:03:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13707 Etaoshi, an online food ordering and delivery platform, has received nearly $10 million of Series A funding led by Highland Capital Partners and followed by several domestic VCs, disclosed Zhang Yang, founder of the company (source in Chinese). The capital will be used to expand businesses in other first- and second-tier cities beyond its home […]]]>
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Etaoshi, an online food ordering and delivery platform, has received nearly $10 million of Series A funding led by Highland Capital Partners and followed by several domestic VCs, disclosed Zhang Yang, founder of the company (source in Chinese).

The capital will be used to expand businesses in other first- and second-tier cities beyond its home turf in Beijing, Zhang added.

The company offers different kinds of services under brands of Etaoshi, Etaoding, Etaoke and Etaosong, etc. These services fall into two categories:

1. 2B as Ecommerce Platform

2B service is the business focus of Etaoshi, which helps traditional restaurants to construct ecommerce platforms and analyzes their data with homegrown data management system. The company’s customers include both large chain restaurants and uprising catering companies and brands.

 2.  2C as Consumer Online Food Ordering Service

In Beijing, nearly 3,000 restaurants under around 600 brands are settled in Etaoshi. The average consumption amount per order is around 80 yuan ($13.05). The platform processes around 4,000 orders in Beijing and over 7,000 orders nationwide per day.

In addition to commissions from both 2B and 2C business, Etaoshi also charges for system services from 2B customers. 2B sector accounts for half of the company’s total revenue.

Similar companies are food delivery service Daojia and online food ordering site Ele.me, which just announced $25 million of Series C funding led by Sequoia China. Please click here and there for more interesting O2O local life startups.

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UCWeb Reportedly Acquired Jailbreaking PP Assistant to Layout in iOS Platform https://technode.com/2013/11/27/ucwe-reportedly-acquired-jailbreaking-pp-assistant-to-layout-in-ios-platform/ https://technode.com/2013/11/27/ucwe-reportedly-acquired-jailbreaking-pp-assistant-to-layout-in-ios-platform/#respond Wed, 27 Nov 2013 10:24:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13677 UC reportedly acquired 100% stake in iOS jailbreaking service PP Assistant in a bid to strengthen its presence in iOS platform (report in Chinese). PP Assistant, which started as an iOS jailbreaking service, supports the download, installation and management of software, game, and ringtone for iOS-powered devices, including iPhone, iPad, and iTouch. PP Assistant’s iOS users […]]]>
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UC reportedly acquired 100% stake in iOS jailbreaking service PP Assistant in a bid to strengthen its presence in iOS platform (report in Chinese).

PP Assistant, which started as an iOS jailbreaking service, supports the download, installation and management of software, game, and ringtone for iOS-powered devices, including iPhone, iPad, and iTouch.

PP Assistant’s iOS users reached 40 million with average daily app download of more than 8 million and monthly game revenue nearing 40 million yuan. In addition to jailbreak users, PP Assistant also tried to attract genuine as well as Android users by releasing PP Assistant Genuine and PP Assistant Android version. The latter has attracted more than 450,000 apps by September, just one month after its launch in August.

As a third-party browser which records over 100 million monthly active users on Android platform, UC did not have distribution channels in real sense for iOS platform, which has its own browser Safari.

Although UC declined to comment on the news, the company’s board chairman Yu Yongfu previously said that the firm planned to construct an ecosystem by investing in and acquiring domestic companies.

PP Assistant’s management once disclosed that although the founding team prefers to develop independently, investors tend to sell the company. Yaowan, a leading investor of PP Assistant, was fully acquired by Datang Telecom for around 1.7 billion yuan last June.

App distributors were favored by Internet giants this year. Baidu acquired 91 for $1.85 billion earlier this year and Wandoujia reportedly has secured $100 million from Softbank recently.

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China’s Daily Active Android User Reached 270 Million in Q3: Baidu Report https://technode.com/2013/11/27/chinas-daily-active-android-user-reached-270-million-in-q3-baidu-report/ https://technode.com/2013/11/27/chinas-daily-active-android-user-reached-270-million-in-q3-baidu-report/#respond Wed, 27 Nov 2013 08:16:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13683 Baidu released today the Report on Development Trends of Mobile Internet to analyze the status quo and prospects of mobile industry in terms of user attributes, user behaviors, and mobile searching. China’s daily active user on Android platform amounted to 270 million with daily usage time exceeding 150 minutes. But the quarter-on-quarter growth rate slowed […]]]>

Baidu released today the Report on Development Trends of Mobile Internet to analyze the status quo and prospects of mobile industry in terms of user attributes, user behaviors, and mobile searching.

China’s daily active user on Android platform amounted to 270 million with daily usage time exceeding 150 minutes. But the quarter-on-quarter growth rate slowed down to 13%.

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52% of 86 million Android terminals shipped this quarter are for replacement of the old Android devices, while 45% of the newly increased 37 million Android users come from third- or fourth-tier cities.

The adjustment in user base structure signaled that the users in first- and second-tier cities are becoming more mature and the rapid growth of medium- and low-end users opened up a wider market for handset manufacturers.

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WiFi is the first option for Android users to gain access to the Internet. The usage time of WiFi and 3G networks account for 46% and 23% of the total.

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Life, entertainment, tool, video and browser are the top five app categories in terms of download. Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent took the top three spots as app developers.

In the reporting period, monthly average app download per user is 10.5.15% of users will download at least one app per day, up 4% year-on-year.

Nearly 60% of users download apps from app stores and 13% from mobile searching engines.

image credit: Baidu

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IaaS Startup Ucloud Secured $10 Million Series A Financing from DCM and Bertelsman https://technode.com/2013/11/27/iaas-startup-ucloud-secured-10-million-series-a-financing-from-dcm-and-bertelsman/ https://technode.com/2013/11/27/iaas-startup-ucloud-secured-10-million-series-a-financing-from-dcm-and-bertelsman/#comments Wed, 27 Nov 2013 04:37:46 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13669 IaaS startup Ucloud announced $10 million of Series A financing led by DCM and Bertelsmann, the largest capital injection in this sector so far. The fund is now in place. The investment will be poured in R&D, marketing and procurement of hardware, such as servers, according to Ji Xinhua, CEO of the company (report in […]]]>
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IaaS startup Ucloud announced $10 million of Series A financing led by DCM and Bertelsmann, the largest capital injection in this sector so far. The fund is now in place. The investment will be poured in R&D, marketing and procurement of hardware, such as servers, according to Ji Xinhua, CEO of the company (report in Chinese).

Ucloud is principally engaged in R&D and operation of IaaS products, which cover cloud storage, cloud acceleration and cloud database. Ucloud, an open platform, is in cooperation with vertical cloud service providers on both upstream and downstream of the industrial chain, including, Upyun, Igetui, DNSPod, and QTestin, to provide cloud service to small- and medium-sized enterprises.

In addition to the development prospect of IaaS business, investors of this round are bullish on the executive and technological powers of the team. Ucloud is founded in 2011 by a group of talents from Huawei, Shanda, Neusoft and Tencent, who have rich experiences in research, development, operation, and maintenance.

The firm currently claimed thousands of premium users who mainly engaged in gaming service and e-commerce industries, such as HXYX and JJSG.

Ucloud launched Southeast Asia Data Center last week in cooperation with HGC, the largest telecom carrier of Hong Kong, to explore Southeast Asia market.

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Japan’s Room Rental Searching Site CHINTAI Launched New Room Searching Product https://technode.com/2013/11/26/japans-room-rental-searching-site-chintai-launched-new-room-searching-product/ https://technode.com/2013/11/26/japans-room-rental-searching-site-chintai-launched-new-room-searching-product/#respond Tue, 26 Nov 2013 07:20:23 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13657 Japanese tech company Mujuryoku rolled out Search Rod, a new room searching concept model, for room rental searching site CHINTAI at Tokyo Designers Week 2013. The room dowsing service can automatically find the user’s ideal room to make room searching a fun experience like treasure hunting. Searching Rod suggested a physical user interface sprung out from […]]]>

Japanese tech company Mujuryoku rolled out Search Rod, a new room searching concept model, for room rental searching site CHINTAI at Tokyo Designers Week 2013. The room dowsing service can automatically find the user’s ideal room to make room searching a fun experience like treasure hunting.

Searching Rod suggested a physical user interface sprung out from the PC or smartphone screen. The mechanism of this search rod is the acceleration sensor inside, which acquires movements of people.

The search rod reacts and spreads apart when people make a subconscious movement like, suddenly turning around, starts walking slowly from observing something, make small jumps by surprise, etc.

Because the reaction of the real dowsing machine seems to be caused by the subconscious movement by the users, the mechanism of the search rod is just the same as the real dowsing.

In the future, Mujuryoku might cooperate with GPS and house information database to make search rod available in more regions.

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App Monetization Service Metaps Announced DirectTAP, a Freemium Ad Network with Zero Commissions https://technode.com/2013/11/26/app-monetization-service-metaps-announced-directtap-a-freemium-ad-network-with-zero-commissions/ https://technode.com/2013/11/26/app-monetization-service-metaps-announced-directtap-a-freemium-ad-network-with-zero-commissions/#comments Tue, 26 Nov 2013 05:14:09 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13653 Tokyo-headquartered app monetization service Metaps released DirectTAP, an ad network that connects advertisers and app developers with zero commission. Highlights of DirectTAP are: 1) 100% Revenue Share: Direct-Tap is a new pay-per-click advertising network, which charges no commissions between advertiser and app developer, enabling app developers to earn the maximum advertisement revenue. 2) 100% Fill […]]]>
傲游截图20131126125731

Tokyo-headquartered app monetization service Metaps released DirectTAP, an ad network that connects advertisers and app developers with zero commission.

Highlights of DirectTAP are:

1) 100% Revenue Share: Direct-Tap is a new pay-per-click advertising network, which charges no commissions between advertiser and app developer, enabling app developers to earn the maximum advertisement revenue.

2) 100% Fill Rate: Along with the pay-per-click ads that are shown in DirectTAP, performance-based advertisements are used to fill remaining inventory, which in turn achieves 100% fill rate.

3) 100% House Ads: For developers wishing to promote their own apps, house ads can be used at no cost. It’s up to the user to choose the ratio of house ads and sponsored ads. With DirectTAP, it is possible to display up to 100% house ads.

For advertisers who want more: DirectT AP provides additional premium services such as consulting and ad optimization at an additional cost.

DirectTAP has been a closed beta that has grown to publishers with over 200 million downloads worldwide. DirectTAP only supports Android apps, but support will be extended to iPhone applications in the near future.

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Foreign Games Win Chinese Hearts, But Not Their Wallets: Trends of Chinese App Industry by Wandoujia https://technode.com/2013/11/26/foreign-games-win-chinese-hearts-but-not-their-walletstrends-of-chinese-app-industry-by-wandoujia/ https://technode.com/2013/11/26/foreign-games-win-chinese-hearts-but-not-their-walletstrends-of-chinese-app-industry-by-wandoujia/#comments Tue, 26 Nov 2013 02:49:59 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13643 Wandoujia, an app distributor and content manager, released the newest issue of China App Index for November. Please read the previous reports here and there. 1. Foreign Games Win Chinese Hearts, But Not Their Wallets Foreign games that have managed to win plaudits from Chinese players still need a China-friendly payment system before they can […]]]>

Wandoujia, an app distributor and content manager, released the newest issue of China App Index for November. Please read the previous reports here and there.

1. Foreign Games Win Chinese Hearts, But Not Their Wallets

Foreign games that have managed to win plaudits from Chinese players still need a China-friendly payment system before they can monetize. More than 70% of Android phones in China lack Google Play Services, and Google’s in-app billing system has yet to cross the Great Firewall, but there are multiple options for games wishing to cater to their Chinese play base.

Supercell’s break-out hit Clash of Clans is the number one game in China this month with 206k monthly downloads, but not a single of the Chinese players can purchase gems, the in-game monetization currency, due to the lack of a China-friendly payment system.

The billing systems used by Mini Motor Racing and I’m MT both offer Chinese players various methods for purchasing in-game content.

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Games lacking a Chinese payment system not only miss out on potential revenue, but also leave Chinese players locked out of premium game content and feeling frustrated.

2. MomentCam, a Chinese Export Hitting Shores Everywhere

China-developed MomentCam, which witnessed 54k of peak daily downloads, appeared on the radar suddenly in October and has spread virulently to foreign shores. MomentCam takes the user’s photo and makes it a cartoon sketch which users can place his visage, adorned with a choice of hairstyles, glasses and beards. Ample channels are available for spreading the hilarious creation to friends anywhere.

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According to App Annie, the app spread virulently through Southeast Asia, Australia and Scandinavia where it was the number one Google Play Photo app in 11 countries by the first week of November.

3. Everything in Moderation: Phone-Locking Apps Fight Distraction

Self-discipline apps recorded meteoric growth this month, signaling that maturing Chinese mobile user base is wrestling with the same issues of smartphone distraction that plague their counterparts in developed nations.

Phone-locking sleep aid I Wanna Sleep is the fastest growing app this month with a growth rate of 7,575%. Set a time to go to sleep, and I Wanna Sleep reminds you it’s time to hit the sack and locks your phone.

Developed by the same studio that created I Wanna Sleep, I Wanna Study will play an annoying song or post an embarrassing post to social media if students study longer than the allotted amount of time.

QQ截图20131126101703
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image credit: Wandoujia

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] From Startup Founder to Angel Investor: Kevin Day Founder of Discuz! https://technode.com/2013/11/25/techcrunch-shanghai-from-startup-founder-to-angel-investor-kevin-day-founder-of-discuz/ https://technode.com/2013/11/25/techcrunch-shanghai-from-startup-founder-to-angel-investor-kevin-day-founder-of-discuz/#comments Mon, 25 Nov 2013 07:50:52 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13632 TechNode’s founder Gang Lu took to the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to interview Discuz!’s founder Kevin Day on his experience in transforming from an entrepreneur to an angel investor. Day founded a BBS platform Discuz! in 2001 and gradually dipped toes into venture capital industry after making money from the business. Day is the angle […]]]>

TechNode’s founder Gang Lu took to the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to interview Discuz!’s founder Kevin Day on his experience in transforming from an entrepreneur to an angel investor.

Day founded a BBS platform Discuz! in 2001 and gradually dipped toes into venture capital industry after making money from the business. Day is the angle investor of Boyaaa game developer just listed on Hong Kong Stock Exchange recently, and Tianjin Hemu, which was acquired by an A-share company for $2 million.

Different from most venture capitalists with financial backgrounds, Day’s investment philosophy is guided by practical experiences as an entrepreneur. He thinks both paths can lead to a good investor.

Day choose to be an angle investor rather than venture capitalist, because he thinks there are there are too little, rather than too many entrepreneurs in China as compared with Silicon Valley or other countries. For those who don’t know their potentials, early-stage investors can inspire them as a tutor and help them to make the first steps. He finds the process of helping startups to grow up a fascinating idea and often provides insightful suggestions to startups by drawing upon his entrepreneurial experiences.

Day cited the case of Boyaa as an example when being asked about how to decide whether one person have the potentials of entrepreneur. Zhang Wei, CEO of Boyaa, stuck to the wrong development direction for seven years and the company experienced ups and downs during the period. Zhang has commitment to the prospects and will for business growth, the only thing he lacked is the right direction, and that’s where angel investor should step in to give advices based on their wider vision and insights on industry trends.

The characteristics he valued most in startup companies are abilities to learn from failures, clear goals, innovation, will for success and sense of commitment.

Day said his investment philosophy is refraining from following the so called hot topics but to find the projects that have true values.

Tencent acquired Comsenz, operator of Discuz!, in 2010 and Day became the head of Tencent’s lifestyle e-commerce division. His team released WeChat membership card in mid-2012, a loyalty program for users to subscribe to merchants’ WeChat accounts and for businesses to do CRM.

WeChat membership card is affiliated to WeChat service accounts and public accounts, parallel to WeChat payment function. It is not closely related to the payment function to avoid operational problems, disclosed Day in backstage interview.

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Atomico, Venture Capital Founded by Skype Founder, Announced $476 Million Series C Financing https://technode.com/2013/11/25/atomico-venture-capital-founded-by-skype-founder-announced-476-million-series-c-financing/ https://technode.com/2013/11/25/atomico-venture-capital-founded-by-skype-founder-announced-476-million-series-c-financing/#respond Mon, 25 Nov 2013 06:24:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13629 Atomico, an international venture capital founded in 2006 by co-founder of Skype Niklas Zennström, announced $476 million of Series C Financing, three times the size of previous fund and oversubscribed. Investors of this round, alongside the general partners, come from across Asia, the US and Europe, including the EIF. Atomico helps entrepreneurs, primarily those outside […]]]>

Atomico, an international venture capital founded in 2006 by co-founder of Skype Niklas Zennström, announced $476 million of Series C Financing, three times the size of previous fund and oversubscribed. Investors of this round, alongside the general partners, come from across Asia, the US and Europe, including the EIF.

Atomico helps entrepreneurs, primarily those outside Silicon Valley, to meet their challenges. It focuses exclusively on the technology sector, with investments ranging from small seed investments to larger growth investments. The company reportedly has made over 50 investments over four continents. Atomico operates with a single, international structure composed of two core teams; the value creation team, and the investment team.

The capital received this time will be used to build a concentrated portfolio of technology based growth companies that are looking to scale their businesses, again primarily outside Silicon Valley. The features for tech companies that Atomico valued are brilliant team, hit product underpinned by excellent technology, great market potentials, capability to attack and transform large industries, both domestically and globally.

With many key people from the initial global team behind Skype on board, Atomico’s international expansion team helps portfolio companies to scale across Europe and into large emerging markets like China, Japan, Brazil, Turkey, and Korea.

Niklas Zennström, CEO and Founding Partner at Atomico, said: “Great companies can come from anywhere. Ten years ago people thought you had to be in Silicon Valley to build a global technology business. That is no longer the case. We see entrepreneurs from all over the world achieving global success faster than ever before and across every sector of the global economy. Our new fund is aimed squarely at this opportunity”.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] The Big Money, Chinese Online Financial Market https://technode.com/2013/11/25/techcrunch-shanghai-the-big-money-chinese-online-financial-market/ https://technode.com/2013/11/25/techcrunch-shanghai-the-big-money-chinese-online-financial-market/#comments Mon, 25 Nov 2013 04:51:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13623 Partner of ChinaGrowth Partner Wayne Shiong, Co-founder of Lending Club and Dianrong Soul Htite, CEO of Haodai Li Minshun, and Director of Financial Management Business Unit, Small and Micro Financial Services Group Zu Guoming took stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to discuss the latest trend of Chinese online financial market. Li Mingshun proposed three keywords for online […]]]>

Partner of ChinaGrowth Partner Wayne Shiong, Co-founder of Lending Club and Dianrong Soul Htite, CEO of Haodai Li Minshun, and Director of Financial Management Business Unit, Small and Micro Financial Services Group Zu Guoming took stage at TechCrunch Shanghai last week to discuss the latest trend of Chinese online financial market.

Li Mingshun proposed three keywords for online financial industry. 1) Inclusive financial system: P2P funding is an effective platform to solve the problems of micro and small enterprises that are in desperate need of capital. The number of such companies amounted to 60 million countrywide and 95% of them have never got any loans from traditional financial system. 2) Marketization: The development of online finance will redefine the concept of trust by the standard of user experiences. 3) Private Economy: Triggered by the development of private economy, big banks like Minsheng Bank, CMB, Ping’an all muscled into micro-enterprise financial sector.

Haodai, a credit product searching engine, has established cooperation with more than 5,000 financial institutions across over 100 domestic cities, Li added. When being asked about how to acquire customers, Li said Internet is a much effective means to acquire users than traditional methods.

China and U.S. are different in both culture and law system in terms of financial investment, but trust is a crucial factor for investors from both of the countries, aid Soul.

P2P lending comes under spot light as one of the development directions for financial innovation. But it is haunted by a raft of problems, such as lack of regulation and high default rate. Similar domestic companies include CreditEase, Ppdai, and Rong360, among others

Zu disclosed that Alibaba will launch more small and micro financial services in the future. These services are not limited to the fields of funds, banking and securities, but all the services related to the demands of customers and investors. The company will classify customers based on big data collected from various channels like AliPay and Taobao and provide financial services accordingly.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Hardware, New Opportunities for China Internet? https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-hardware-new-opportunities-for-china-internet/ https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-hardware-new-opportunities-for-china-internet/#comments Fri, 22 Nov 2013 08:41:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13611 At TechCrunch Shanghai, a few insiders in Chinese hardware community took the stage to share their insights tabout the future of Chinese hardware industry, including founder of TMI and HWTrek Lucas Wang, CTO of Orange Labs International Center Beijing Dong Song, Director of Hunan University Media Lab (Shenzhen) Yan Qifeng, CEO of inWatch Neo Wang, and […]]]>

At TechCrunch Shanghai, a few insiders in Chinese hardware community took the stage to share their insights tabout the future of Chinese hardware industry, including founder of TMI and HWTrek Lucas Wang, CTO of Orange Labs International Center Beijing Dong Song, Director of Hunan University Media Lab (Shenzhen) Yan Qifeng, CEO of inWatch Neo Wang, and Special Assistant to Chairman & Chief Investment Director at Foxconn Charles Pan.

Yan, who comes from heart of China’s electronic manufacturing industry Shenzhen, said that local manufacturing companies started to design their own products and sell them through homegrown ecommerce channels, rather than foreign distribution channels.

Service is changing the manufacturing landscape, said Pan. He added that Foxconn will stick to OEM business, despite the fact that they already have the capabilities to do anything from component to assembly. They want to leverage the capability to create open hardware ecosystem so as to better serve both big companies like Apple and small innovative companies.

In order to help smaller projects to find trusted partners, Lucas Wang founded HWTrek, an open platform which invites supply chain experts on different verticals, and therefore, startups get to know what are their previous products and whether they are qualified.

Lucas and Neo agreed that smaller manufactures are better options for startups which just started their business.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] New Moves of Fruit Ninja Developer Halfbrick: CMO Phil Larsen https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-new-moves-of-fruit-ninja-developer-halfbrick-cmo-phil-larsen/ https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-new-moves-of-fruit-ninja-developer-halfbrick-cmo-phil-larsen/#respond Fri, 22 Nov 2013 05:23:25 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13603 Phil Larsen: CMO of Halfbrick Fruit Ninja swept over the whole world and recorded 500 million downloads since its release in 2010. Phil Larsen, CMO Halfbrick, operator of the fruit-slicing game, shared with the audience of TechCrunch Shanghai the latest moves of the Australian company, with a special focus on Chinese market. Founded in 2001, Halfbrick […]]]>

Phil Larsen: CMO of Halfbrick

Fruit Ninja swept over the whole world and recorded 500 million downloads since its release in 2010. Phil Larsen, CMO Halfbrick, operator of the fruit-slicing game, shared with the audience of TechCrunch Shanghai the latest moves of the Australian company, with a special focus on Chinese market.

Founded in 2001, Halfbrick started as developers of licensed titles for platforms such as GBA, DS and PSP. Halfbrick have expanded their portfolio with a range of hugely successful, independently released games on multiple platforms. The company released six games in 2013.

Phil confessed that the traction of Fruit Ninja is not as great as earlier, but it is still a vibrant franchise. The whole team continues to upgrade the game to bring more fun to players.

Jetpack Joyride, which has been welcomed by US and European markets, is the company’s second most popular game. But Phil recommended us Colossatron, a game to the tastes of Chinese users.

After acquiring stakes in an animation studio, Halfbrick also planned to produce cartoon series based on Fruit Ninja characters.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Using Personalized Data to Create Tiny Miracles: CEO of Fertility App Glow https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-using-personalized-data-to-create-tiny-miracles-ceo-of-fertility-app-glow/ https://technode.com/2013/11/22/techcrunch-shanghai-using-personalized-data-to-create-tiny-miracles-ceo-of-fertility-app-glow/#comments Fri, 22 Nov 2013 02:34:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13598 Mike Huang: CEO & Co-founder of Glow (left) At TechCrunch Shanghai, Jui Tan, General Partner of BlueRun China, sit down with Glow’s CEO and Co-founder Mike Huang to talk about what is unique about the fertility app. Glow is a data science company which helps women to conceive, tackling the huge issue of female fertility that […]]]>

Mike Huang: CEO & Co-founder of Glow (left)

At TechCrunch Shanghai, Jui Tan, General Partner of BlueRun China, sit down with Glow’s CEO and Co-founder Mike Huang to talk about what is unique about the fertility app.

Glow is a data science company which helps women to conceive, tackling the huge issue of female fertility that is at the center of a $5 billion market each year. It helps those who are struggling with fertility to save the hefty payment for fertility procedures which are not covered by health insurances, said Huang.

Glow rolled out an iOS-enabled free application (Android version is coming soon) based on data colelcted from those who failed to get pragnent and treated them with machine learning. It enables women to record detailed data about their menstrual cycles and symptoms to help predict their exact level of fertility each day.

The company also launched Glow First, a 10-month crowdfunding program for babies. Couples who want to have babies can invest $50 per month to the fund which will pay for fertility treatments of couples who failed to get pregnant by the end of 10 months.

Huang said Glow is not in a hurry to make money and their top priority right now is to make fantastic products for customers. They do not want to sacrifice any part of user experiences for monetization.

Glow is quickly establishing presence in Shanghai because its R&D team is based right here for around four years. Huang said that he truly believes the Chinese talents are comparable to their peers in Silicon Valley and what they need is more exposure to Silicon Valley’s innovative thinking.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Chinese and Global App Economy Trends: App Annie VP Yu Junde https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-chinese-and-global-app-economy-trends-app-annie-vp-yu-junde/ https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-chinese-and-global-app-economy-trends-app-annie-vp-yu-junde/#respond Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:45:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13590 Yu Junde: VP of App Annie App Annie, a mobile app analytics service, has established global presence after founded in Beijing in 2011. At TechCrunch Shanghai, Yu Junde, vice president of the app data tracker, is on stage to share the latest app trends home and abroad based on data from App Annie Intelligence. Global […]]]>

Yu Junde: VP of App Annie

App Annie, a mobile app analytics service, has established global presence after founded in Beijing in 2011. At TechCrunch Shanghai, Yu Junde, vice president of the app data tracker, is on stage to share the latest app trends home and abroad based on data from App Annie Intelligence.

Global Trends:

Google Play downloads is around 25% higher than iOS App Store in the third quarter of this year and the data does not include third-party market in China, which means that Google Play is a substantial leader by downloads worldwide. China used Android app stores extensively, but not Google Play.

However, iOS maintained a leading position in terms of revenue, nearly doubling the reading of Google Play in the same period. But Google Play is catching up with a high growth rate. Its revenue only account for slightly higher than a quarter by iOS revenue worldwide in six or nine months ago.

United States and China drove over 40% of iOS App Store downloads, according to data of September.

Chinese Trends:

The top categories in China for iOS game and non-game apps are action and entertainment in terms of downloads, and role playing and social networking in terms of revenue, respectively.

Traditional PC/online heavyweights like Tencent, PerfectWorld, Shanda are shifting to mobile sctor by investments and acquisitions both locally and abroad. This trend is also applicable to traditional Internet companies in other Asian companies, like Japan and Korea.

App Annie now offers three free products. Analytics tracks the sales, downloads and reviews of apps, following more than 325 thousand apps. Store Stats tracks the ranks, pricing and placement of apps, following over 3.5 million apps. Intelligence obtained accurate estimates of revenues and downloads. The company also rolled out an eBook analytics tool in October.

App Annie secured $15 million Series C funding led by Sequoia Capital in September. Investors for previous rounds are IDG, Greycroft Partners, Infinity Venture Partners, e.ventures, and Kii Capital.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Digital Innovation in Fashion from Technology to Services https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-digital-innovation-in-fashion-from-technology-to-services/ https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-digital-innovation-in-fashion-from-technology-to-services/#comments Thu, 21 Nov 2013 06:43:41 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13565 Technology is upending every single part of our daily life and fashion industry is no exception. CEO of VELVET Inception Agency Patrice Nordey, Digital General Manager at Nike China Nicolas Zurstrassen, Director of Ecommerce & Operations at Converse An Chiem, Director of Digital Marketing at Westin Hostel Penny Peng, and Regional Digital Manager Asia and […]]]>

Technology is upending every single part of our daily life and fashion industry is no exception. CEO of VELVET Inception Agency Patrice Nordey, Digital General Manager at Nike China Nicolas Zurstrassen, Director of Ecommerce & Operations at Converse An Chiem, Director of Digital Marketing at Westin Hostel Penny Peng, and Regional Digital Manager Asia and Australia at Nivea Eike Wobker joined us at TechCrunch Shanghai to discuss digital innovations in fashion industry.

All panelists agreed that social media, like Facebook, WeChat and Sina Weibo, plays a significant role in their interaction with customers.

In hospitality industry, the social media provides more convenience to customers, enabling them to search for hotels assorted based on reviews from friends, obtain customer services, etc., said Penny.

An Cheim noted that they want to maintain the application of social media at interactive level, to have two-way conversation with consumers, rather than going too far to become an ecommerce channel only.

In selection of digital technologies, brands always have to get back to the question of who your consumer is, what are their demands, and how do they want to be attracted to your brands, said Nocolas. The next crucial factor is to provide utility to them in terms of a tool, a story and a service. He added mobile marketing is not only about mobile phones, but about mobility or what the consumers need when they are out, and therefore, it is applicable to all wearables, like   shoes and clothes.

According to Eike, digital provides an opportunity to glue different marketing channels together.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] China Mobile Gaming Market, the Easy Market for Easy Money? https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-china-mobile-gaming-market-the-easy-market-for-easy-money/ https://technode.com/2013/11/21/techcrunch-shanghai-china-mobile-gaming-market-the-easy-market-for-easy-money/#comments Thu, 21 Nov 2013 01:33:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13562 2013 is undoubtedly an eventful year for Chinese mobile gaming sector, which witnessed a spate of major merger and acquisitions. Suddenly, everyone planned to muscle into this industry, but is it that easy to take a bite of the cake? Publishing head of PopCap China Zhou Xin, CEO of Gameloft China Eric Tan, and CEO of […]]]>

2013 is undoubtedly an eventful year for Chinese mobile gaming sector, which witnessed a spate of major merger and acquisitions. Suddenly, everyone planned to muscle into this industry, but is it that easy to take a bite of the cake? Publishing head of PopCap China Zhou Xin, CEO of Gameloft China Eric Tan, and CEO of Beintoo APAC Paul Chen tackled this problem at TechCrunch Shanghai today.

Cons

Paul Chen believed that it is difficult to make money from Chinese mobile gaming division, because domestic players are reluctant to pay for games and most developers harvest their revenue from the sales of in-game items and ads. In addition, it is tricky to set appropriate prices for these gaming items to make them more acceptable for users. Another monetization method for game developers is to launch cooperation with offline partners to roll out peripheral products.

There are few app distributors abroad, such as app store and Google Play, but the number of domestic distribution platforms amounted to 200 to 300, which become a major momentum for the development of Chinese mobile gaming sector.

With an emphasis on sales as well as partnerships with brands and developers, Beintoo opened its Asia Pacific office in Shanghai. Paul Chen, former general manager of Rovio China who has deep understandings about Chinese market, just been named as CEO of APAC region this September.

Eric Tan agreed with Paul. He disclosed that Gameloft operated around ten exclusive licensed games and several homegrown ones in the past year, but only received mediocre feedback from the users. The company planned to cut this number to five or six in 2014. Eric pointed out three problems encountered by game developers are large app package, monetization model, and piracy.

Pros

However, Zhou Xin with PopCap China, operator or Chinese version of Plants VS Zombies 2, thinks otherwise. Backed by a large Chinese market, PopCap has been tackling the problems mentioned by Eric for the past two years. PopCap managed a smaller app package with lower resolutions, which is still acceptable to gamers, to secure more low-end users. The company also provides more convenient payment methods. To prevent piracy, PopCap released the Chinese version of Plants VS Zombies 2 before the foreign version and launched cooperate with distribution channels.

Plants VS Zombies 2 continues the success of this franchise, taking the crown on App store free list seven hours after its debut on July 31, and then the top position with over 2 million down loads in October.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] From Online Dating to Online Education: Gong Haiyan, Founder of Jiayuan and 91Waijiao https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-from-online-dating-to-online-education-gong-haiyan-founder-of-jiayuan-and-91waijiao/ https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-from-online-dating-to-online-education-gong-haiyan-founder-of-jiayuan-and-91waijiao/#comments Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:04:43 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13573 Gong Haiyan: Founder of Jiayuan and Co-founder of 91Waijiao Gong Haiyan, the women behind the mega matchmaker Jiayuan and the online English-learning service 91Waijiao.com, took the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai this afternoon to share her entrepreneurial experience and insights on the two industries. Positioned as a serious dating website where single people can seek marriage […]]]>

Gong Haiyan: Founder of Jiayuan and Co-founder of 91Waijiao

Gong Haiyan, the women behind the mega matchmaker Jiayuan and the online English-learning service 91Waijiao.com, took the stage at TechCrunch Shanghai this afternoon to share her entrepreneurial experience and insights on the two industries.

Positioned as a serious dating website where single people can seek marriage not just dates, the NASDAQ-listed company currently has more than 100 million registered users, on the basis of authentic user profiles, considerable user data, and seriously motivated users. The business turned out to be a success for both her career and personal life, Gong added.

Gong Haiyan resigned as CEO of Jiayuan last year and started an online English-learning service 91Waijiao with Zhang Dong, a former Baidu scientist. 91Waijiao only provides teachers who speak English as mother tongue, aiming to shake up traditional education practices and teach each student according to their own aptitudes. 91Waijiao has raised $4 million in series A funding from NetEase, one of the biggest Internet companies in China.

Chinese entrepreneurial community embraced more mature ecosystem, but fiercer competition as compared with ten years ago when she founded Jiayuan back then, said Gong.

Online education catches the eyes of domestic investors in the past one-year period. Big companies like NetEase, Tencent and YY all dipped their toes in this sector.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] TechCrunch Co-founder Keith Teare: Revolution & Death in the Valley https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-techcrunch-co-founder-keith-teare-revolution-death-in-the-valley/ https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-techcrunch-co-founder-keith-teare-revolution-death-in-the-valley/#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2013 05:40:39 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13564 Keith Teare: Co-founder of TechCrunch Greetings from Shanghai! Keith Teare, Co-founder of TechCrunch, opened the second and final day of TechCrunch China’s first ever conference this morning. If you weren’t able to make it to Shanghai, you can watch it all in the live stream embedded here. The greatest change we are experiencing now is […]]]>

Keith Teare: Co-founder of TechCrunch

Greetings from Shanghai! Keith Teare, Co-founder of TechCrunch, opened the second and final day of TechCrunch China’s first ever conference this morning. If you weren’t able to make it to Shanghai, you can watch it all in the live stream embedded here.

The greatest change we are experiencing now is going mobile, said to Keith. Tablet is overtaking PC as the most commonly used digital device. In the U.S media industry, the only growth in the past five years is in the mobile consumption media. This not only means the devices we use are changing, but also the software we adopted. Huge mobile companies were being built, including China’s Tencent, Sina Weibo and America’s Vine and Snapchat.

Keith also addressed a common problem for startups in the Silicon Valley as well as China, Series A Crunch, or Second Round Problem as Keith put it.

After started in an incubator, most startups may hit roadblocks in raising more capital injection. According to data from CrunchBase, 27% of startups that have got A round funding received second round in one year, 6% secured second round in five years, and 67% of them never get any investments ever.

The key factor to brave though this bottleneck is whether the startups have tractions to investors and getting them to take the risks. For Keith, traction is kind of an artistic concept and the definition for it differs for specific investors.

VCs should be taking great risks, otherwise, entrepreneurs would prefer to settle on small ideas and nobody wants to invest on small ideas.

Second round capital is crucial because they could help incubators in the long run as well as support hundreds of startups to go through the difficulties in the initial stage and to become a company worth investing.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Uber’s Business Expansion Plan in China https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-ubers-business-expansion-plan-in-china/ https://technode.com/2013/11/20/techcrunch-shanghai-ubers-business-expansion-plan-in-china/#comments Tue, 19 Nov 2013 16:16:12 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13559 Sam Gellman: Head of Asia Expansion, Uber Online Car Booking Service Uber is recording meteoric expansion in Asia, offering services in around ten Asian cities, such as, Shanghai, Singapore, Seoul, Taipei, etc. after securing Series C financing at a valuation of $3.5 billion in late August. Sam Gellman, head of Uber’s Asia Expansion Division, is […]]]>

Sam Gellman: Head of Asia Expansion, Uber

Online Car Booking Service Uber is recording meteoric expansion in Asia, offering services in around ten Asian cities, such as, Shanghai, Singapore, Seoul, Taipei, etc. after securing Series C financing at a valuation of $3.5 billion in late August.

Sam Gellman, head of Uber’s Asia Expansion Division, is on stage at TechCrunch Shanghai to expound their expansion plans in China, a crucial party of Asian market. Uber just landed in Shanghai this August. It is now recruiting in every big Chinese city, planning to land in one Chinese city every three months. In exploring markets in new cities, Uber always hire local operational teams because they are more familiar with the conditions of local market.

The arrival time for cars booked on Uber is within seven minutes in Shanghai in pretty much every time of a day, still longer than less than three minutes in San Francisco and under four minutes in New York. Uber now provides services in 54 cities across 22 countries, Gellman disclosed.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai]Chinese B2D Market Landscape in The Eyes of Third-party Service Providers https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghaichinese-b2d-market-landscape-in-the-eyes-of-third-party-service-providers/ https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghaichinese-b2d-market-landscape-in-the-eyes-of-third-party-service-providers/#comments Tue, 19 Nov 2013 15:16:48 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13553 What’s the current landscape of business-to-developer (B2D) market in China? That’s a topic our panel of five third-party service providers addressed today at TechCrunch Shanghai. When being asked about the difference between Chinese and foreign app developers, Testin’s CEO Wang Jun noted that foreign startup entrepreneurs are prone to trust and utilize third-party services to […]]]>

What’s the current landscape of business-to-developer (B2D) market in China? That’s a topic our panel of five third-party service providers addressed today at TechCrunch Shanghai.

When being asked about the difference between Chinese and foreign app developers, Testin’s CEO Wang Jun noted that foreign startup entrepreneurs are prone to trust and utilize third-party services to solve problems that are not their expertise, while their Chinese peers are more reserved in adopting B2D services. But the situation is changing rapidly. Chinese app developers tend to pay for third-party services since this year, because they have seen the benefits brought about by these services. As a third-party service provider, it is crucial to keep hands off the important data of customers, Wang added.

B2D market embraced more opportunities because the threshold for developing apps is lowered, according to Dominique Tu, Kii’s VP of Greater China. Previously, most app developers are people with technology backgrounds (eg. engineers), but technical background is not a must for developers now. B2D services can make up for the technical demands for non-technical developpers.

Cloud computing and data storage services put startups on the same start line as giant companies in terms of technical supports and they enable startups to focus squarely on their products, said Li Jing, marketing VP of Qiniu.

In the past, VCs were reluctant to invest in B2C startups, because it is difficult for them to monetize. But now, the market is big enough to attract investors. The very case of Alibaba’s acquisition of UMeng indicated that the investors are now bullish on the potentials of B2D market, said Linda Jiang, VP of UMeng.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Why Curated Ecommerce Platform AHALife Acquired Photo-sharing App Kaptur: CEO Shauna Mei https://technode.com/2013/11/19/why-curated-ecommerce-platform-ahalife-acquired-photo-sharing-app-kaptur-ceo-shauna-mei/ https://technode.com/2013/11/19/why-curated-ecommerce-platform-ahalife-acquired-photo-sharing-app-kaptur-ceo-shauna-mei/#comments Tue, 19 Nov 2013 14:26:42 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13550 Shauna Mei (Left): CEO & Founder of AHALife This afternoon, I was lucky enough to sit down with Shauna Mei, founder of AHALife, backstage at TechCrunch Shanghai to talk about her company. AHALife acquired Kaptur, a photo sharing app, for almost one year. Mei said it is a great acquisition for both of the two […]]]>

Shauna Mei (Left): CEO & Founder of AHALife

This afternoon, I was lucky enough to sit down with Shauna Mei, founder of AHALife, backstage at TechCrunch Shanghai to talk about her company.

AHALife acquired Kaptur, a photo sharing app, for almost one year. Mei said it is a great acquisition for both of the two companies. Kaptur created an innovative user acquisition engine which is completely based on social attraction of human beings. Kaptur scaled up rapidly, not only acquiring over a million users, but also gained access to users’ social networks. Based on the data collected by Kaptur, it is very easy to target the customers, and then, AHALife can send very specific messages according to their preferences.

On the other hand, being acquired by an e-commerce company gives Kaptur a quick path to monetize its huge user base. After the acquisition of Kaptur, AHALife announced 1.5 million of combined users.

AHALife is a curated e-commerce platform for designers, which sells designer products by telling stories about who the designer is, where they are from and what they believe in. The company represents over 2,000 brands and has more than 40 tastemakers who have expertise in specific fields, said Mei.

The company recommends wide categories of products by sending emails to customers on daily basis. The selection of recommended products is a combination of science and art, said Mei. For the science part, AHALife picks products with great qualities, which customers cannot find anywhere else. For art the art side, AHALife aims to create a lifestyle with products covering everything from food, beauty to fashion and design, helping people to live a complete life.

AHALife aims to introduce foreign designer products into Chinese market in the future, but they planned to tap and test the market slowly, Mei added.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] Camera360 Launched Smart Scenario Identification Engine Camera360 Light Camera at TechCrunch Shanghai https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghai-camera360-launched-smart-scenario-identification-engine-camera360-light-camera-at-techcrunch-shanghai/ https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghai-camera360-launched-smart-scenario-identification-engine-camera360-light-camera-at-techcrunch-shanghai/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2013 07:35:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13545 Xu Hao: CEO & Cofounder of Camera360 CEO and cofounder of Camera360 Xu Hao is on stage a TechCrunch Shanghai to launch Cmemera360 Light Camera, a smart scenario identification engine, this morning. The new service will find the most suitable shooting scenario automatically, saving the efforts for consumers to select from diverse filters. The company […]]]>

Xu Hao: CEO & Cofounder of Camera360

CEO and cofounder of Camera360 Xu Hao is on stage a TechCrunch Shanghai to launch Cmemera360 Light Camera, a smart scenario identification engine, this morning.

The new service will find the most suitable shooting scenario automatically, saving the efforts for consumers to select from diverse filters. The company also launched Moive360, a movie app offering special effects.

Camera360 is a camera app for iPhone and Android system developed by Chengdu-based Pinguo Technology. The picture app differentiate itself with more than 100 filter effects, face identification function, hi-dynamic range effect, vector model for photos, among others.

Camera360 currently has more than 180 million users across 207 countries, generating nearly 80 million pictures per day and totaling 18 billion photos since its foundation in 2010.

In August this year, the company announced $18 million series B funding led by SIG. It just launched a new feature phonograph camera earlier this year.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai]Bangcle: Security Solutions Provider Helps Mobile Apps to Fend off Rising Mobile Malware https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghaibangcle-security-solutions-provider-helps-mobile-apps-to-fend-off-rising-mobile-malware/ https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghaibangcle-security-solutions-provider-helps-mobile-apps-to-fend-off-rising-mobile-malware/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2013 04:30:00 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13538 Zhao Yu: VP of Bangcle at TechCrunch Shanghai Speaking on stage here in Shanghai, Zhao Yu, vice president of mobile app security solutions service Bangcle, opened his speech by nothing that app has become the largest carrier for malware with more than 300,000 apps infected by virus. The most common problems encountered by app developers […]]]>

Zhao Yu: VP of Bangcle at TechCrunch Shanghai

Speaking on stage here in Shanghai, Zhao Yu, vice president of mobile app security solutions service Bangcle, opened his speech by nothing that app has become the largest carrier for malware with more than 300,000 apps infected by virus.

The most common problems encountered by app developers include pirate, data tampering, and copycat. Bangcle offers two core services of channel monitoring and app protection to address these problems.

Channel monitoring service helps developers to spot security problems in their apps by releasing distribution channel monitoring reports, while app protection warns developers against potential copycat and data tampering risks.

With special focus on technology, Bangcle now has a 30-member team after its establishment in 2010. Major customers of the company are domestic financial institutions and international gaming companies.

Bangcle provides app protection service to more than 6,000 developers, safeguarding more than 38,000 apps and nearly 300 million mobile users, Zhao added.

Kan Zhigang, CEO of the company, previously predicted that the market size of mobile app security industry will reach 1 billion by 2015.

The company raised tens of millions of dollars in Series B financing from Redpoint and IDG in April this year. The latter is also the Series A investor that injected US$10 million in it in August 2010.

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[TechCrunch Shanghai] TechCrunch Shanghai Officially Underway! https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghai-officially-underway/ https://technode.com/2013/11/19/techcrunch-shanghai-officially-underway/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2013 02:59:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13534 Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch, at TechCrunch Shanghai Dr. Gang Lu, Founder of TechNode, at TechCrunch Shanghai TechCrunch Shanghai, the first conference held by TechCrunch China, is kicking off this morning at Shanghai International Centre on the Huangpu River bank. The two-day event is packed with all the big names as well as 60 hand-picked […]]]>

Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch, at TechCrunch Shanghai

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Dr. Gang Lu, Founder of TechNode, at TechCrunch Shanghai

TechCrunch Shanghai, the first conference held by TechCrunch China, is kicking off this morning at Shanghai International Centre on the Huangpu River bank. The two-day event is packed with all the big names as well as 60 hand-picked startups from all over the world. Please click here for a live stream of the conference to take a close glimpse on the conference. COO of TechCrunch Ned Desmond and Lu Gang, founder of TechNode, welcomed the audience with opening remarks.

Ned Desmond looked back the history of TechCrunch’s entry into Chinese market. After holding a successful Disrupt conference in Beijing 2011, TechCrunch joined hands with TechNode to roll out TechCrunch.cn, the translation site for TechCrunch, earlier this year to secure more readers in China, more importantly, more readers on TechCrunch’s site. While in the past, TechCrunch’s articles are distributed on many different sites without official permission.

TechNode impressed TechCrunch with the commitment to build an ecosystem for startups in general. TechNode is responsible for the operation of TechCrunch.cn, which now has independent editorial team, reporting team, and translation team.

The cooperation will also cover themed events for Chinese tech industry. TechCrunch Shanghai is among a series of conferences which will get great lineup of speakers to the startup community.

Gang Lu expressed his warmest welcome and thanks to the participants for their supports over the past years. TechCrunch Shanghai aims to improve the ecosystem and introduce the latest Chinese tech trends to the world.

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Bitcoin Trading Platform BTC China Secured $5 Million Series A Funding https://technode.com/2013/11/18/bitcoin-trading-platform-btc-china-secured-5-million-series-a-funding/ https://technode.com/2013/11/18/bitcoin-trading-platform-btc-china-secured-5-million-series-a-funding/#comments Mon, 18 Nov 2013 03:35:35 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13521 BTC China, a Bitcoin trading platform, announced $5 million of Series A financing from investors including LightSpeed. The investment will be used to improve platform security as well as related products and services, according to Bobby Lee, founder of the company. BTC China has overtaken Mt.Gox and BitStamp to become the largest Bitcoin trading platform […]]]>

BTC China, a Bitcoin trading platform, announced $5 million of Series A financing from investors including LightSpeed. The investment will be used to improve platform security as well as related products and services, according to Bobby Lee, founder of the company.

BTC China has overtaken Mt.Gox and BitStamp to become the largest Bitcoin trading platform in terms of turnover, according to statistics from Bitcoinity.org. The daily turnover of BTC China is nearing 90,000 Bitcoins or more than 200 million yuan.

Ron Cao, chairman of LightSpeed China Partners, said that they invested in the company because they are bullish on the potentials of Bitcoin market and the excellent team of BTC China.

Chinese Bitcoin market has witnessed stunning growth, outrunning the U.S. to become the largest Bitcoin market. China’s daily turnover of Bitcoin reached 100,000, accounting for 50% of the global market share, according to Genesis Block, a digital currency research institute. Okcoin, a similar Chinese Bitcoin platform, announced 100 million yuan of turnover recently.

Bitcoin market heated up recently after the slump in April this year. The conversion price of Bitcoin exceeded 3,000 yuan as of yesterday. Despite the burgeoning market, the risk of investing in the open-source currency still looms due to security concerns and price fluctuations.

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Watch The Live Stream for TechCrunch Shanghai Here! https://technode.com/2013/11/18/watch-the-live-stream-for-techcrunch-shanghai-here/ https://technode.com/2013/11/18/watch-the-live-stream-for-techcrunch-shanghai-here/#respond Mon, 18 Nov 2013 02:31:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13519 TechCrunch and TechNode teams are counting down for TechCrunch Shanghai, the long-awaited and anticipated technology conference slated for Nov. 19 and 20. We are working hard on the remaining tasks to support a great event for all. For those who cannot make it to Shanghai to see the event in person, we’ve got a live […]]]>
TC

TechCrunch and TechNode teams are counting down for TechCrunch Shanghai, the long-awaited and anticipated technology conference slated for Nov. 19 and 20. We are working hard on the remaining tasks to support a great event for all.

For those who cannot make it to Shanghai to see the event in person, we’ve got a live stream at TechCrunch, TechCrunch China and TechNode where you can see it all. The live stream will be available from 9:00 Beijing time (17:00GMT) Nov. 19.

Under the theme of “The Red Web”, TechCrunch Shanghai will present the latest development in Chinese web industry. The two-day conference is packed with big names and outstanding startups from all around the world, so you won’t want to miss it.

Please click here for agenda of the conference.

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NetEase CEO Commented on EasyChat Product Architecture and Major IM Tools in Internal Letter https://technode.com/2013/11/15/netease-ceo-commented-on-easychat-product-architecture-and-major-im-tools-in-internal-letter/ https://technode.com/2013/11/15/netease-ceo-commented-on-easychat-product-architecture-and-major-im-tools-in-internal-letter/#respond Fri, 15 Nov 2013 07:41:37 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13486 Screenshot of the Microblog A former employee of NetEase posted on his microblog an internal letter under the signature of William Ding, CEO of NetEase. The letter commented on the product architecture of EasyChat and gave ratings for major domestic IM tools. We have the email partly translated as below: Reply: [Update] Product Architecture of EasyChat […]]]>
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Screenshot of the Microblog

A former employee of NetEase posted on his microblog an internal letter under the signature of William Ding, CEO of NetEase. The letter commented on the product architecture of EasyChat and gave ratings for major domestic IM tools.

We have the email partly translated as below:

Reply: [Update] Product Architecture of EasyChat

There is some problems with the concept of “social networking among acquaintances”.  

Compared with close friends, social networking is more applicable to people who are not quite familiar with each other, but share similar interests or in cooperation. More than 200 girls posted 4,000 to 5,000 messages in a shopping group of EasyChat in a single day, that’s because they share similar interests. Strangers or unfamiliar people are prone to start networking under the same topic.

On the contrary, people already familiar with each other only chat when there are absolute necessities, such as getting friends to do things for you.

For similar products, 5 points for WeChat, 4 points for MoMo, 0 points for EasyChat, and negative for Laiwang. Show me a new version of EasyChat that worth at least 6 points.

I would like to see social networking functions in the next version of EasyChat. Feel free to communicate with me on the progress of your project. Don’t be too harsh on yourselves, cause I am under much more pressure from our partner Telecom.

2013-11-14

William Ding

The war in Chinese IM industry is going nuclear this year. EasyChat and Laiwang launched free data plan to compete head-on with the current reigning WeChat, which reportedly surpassed 600 million milestone. Alibaba announced ALL In strategy for the promotion of Laiwang. Momo just claimed 80 million users.

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Daily Turnover of BTC Trading Platform Okcoin Peaked at 100 Million Yuan https://technode.com/2013/11/15/daily-turnover-of-btc-trading-platform-okcoin-peaked-at-100-million-yuan/ https://technode.com/2013/11/15/daily-turnover-of-btc-trading-platform-okcoin-peaked-at-100-million-yuan/#comments Fri, 15 Nov 2013 03:39:22 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13480 The daily turnover of Okcoin, a Bitcoin trading platform, soared from 30 million to 100 million yuan ($16.31 million) in five months since its debut in June this year, trailing the recent surge in Bitcoin market (report in Chinese). Okcoin is a free service targeted at domestic Bitcoin market. To guarantee trading security, Okcoin adopted […]]]>
傲游截图20131115111422

The daily turnover of Okcoin, a Bitcoin trading platform, soared from 30 million to 100 million yuan ($16.31 million) in five months since its debut in June this year, trailing the recent surge in Bitcoin market (report in Chinese).

Okcoin is a free service targeted at domestic Bitcoin market. To guarantee trading security, Okcoin adopted SSL protocol to prevent theft and tampering of user data. It also offers Bitcoin wallet service, depositing all Bitcoins in offline accounts. Okcoin opened 24 hour hotline to answer various questions of customers.

Xu Mingxing, founder of the company, disclosed that Okcoin currently has 100,000 registered users, most of whom are IT and financial elites. The company secured $1 million of angel investment from Tim Draper, partner of DFJ, and VenturesLab.

As the conversion price of Bitcoin rocketed to more than 2,000 yuan recently, people may kick themselves for not grabbing the chance to make big money, but who would foresee this when the conversion price slashed by half in this April.

Although Bitcoin becomes a hot topic in China, the risks involved with betting on a digital currency still loom. Hong Kong-based Bitcoin trading platform GBL vanished along with $4.1 million stolen from investors, shortly after the wallet service Inputs.io was allegedly hacked last month with 4,100 Bitcoins stolen. 42BTC, a Bitcoin exchange and miner tool manufacturer which failed to ship their products, refused to reimburse the money already paid by customers.

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Zaker Rolled out Shopping Brower Taoke, Marching One Step Further Towards Mobile E-commerce Industry https://technode.com/2013/11/14/zaker-rolled-out-shopping-brower-taoke-marching-one-step-further-towards-mobile-e-commerce-industry/ https://technode.com/2013/11/14/zaker-rolled-out-shopping-brower-taoke-marching-one-step-further-towards-mobile-e-commerce-industry/#respond Thu, 14 Nov 2013 06:34:40 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13464 Social magazine Zaker released Taoke, a mobile shopping browser, striding one step further towards e-commerce industry after releasing fashion app Zaker Showcase in May of 2012 (report in Chinese). Taoke maintained the elegant reading experience of Zaker, featuring price comparison, price drop alert, and price tracking functions. It integrates several mainstream e-commerce platforms such as, […]]]>

Social magazine Zaker released Taoke, a mobile shopping browser, striding one step further towards e-commerce industry after releasing fashion app Zaker Showcase in May of 2012 (report in Chinese).

Taoke maintained the elegant reading experience of Zaker, featuring price comparison, price drop alert, and price tracking functions. It integrates several mainstream e-commerce platforms such as, Taobao, JD, 51fanli, and Meituan, and will direct users to price comparison interfaces.

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Screenshot of Taoke

According to Li Sen, founder and CEO of Zaker, the company developed Taoke because they are upbeat on the market potential of mobile e-commerce. In addition, browser only serves as an access to connect multiple platforms, and therefore, it is not demanding in terms of operation and business development costs.

Taoke is developed by a three-member team for one month. It is currently only available on iPad that supports iOS6.0 or higher version, but will expand to other platforms if receives positive market feedback.

Although price comparison websites and plug-ins for PCs are quite common now, the market for their mobile counterparts is still untapped.

image credit: Zaker

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Alibaba Finance Reportedly to Inject $35 Million in P2P Lending Service Ppdai https://technode.com/2013/11/14/alibaba-finance-reportedly-to-inject-35-million-in-p2p-lending-service-ppdai/ https://technode.com/2013/11/14/alibaba-finance-reportedly-to-inject-35-million-in-p2p-lending-service-ppdai/#respond Thu, 14 Nov 2013 03:05:29 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13459 Alibaba Finance, the financial affiliate of Alibaba Group, planned to spearhead foray into P2P industry by investing $35 million in P2P lending platform Ppdai, according to people familiar with the matter (report in Chinese). Although neither of the company confirmed the news yet. Chen Dawei, head of Alibaba Small and Micro Financial Institute, previously said […]]]>
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Alibaba Finance, the financial affiliate of Alibaba Group, planned to spearhead foray into P2P industry by investing $35 million in P2P lending platform Ppdai, according to people familiar with the matter (report in Chinese).

Although neither of the company confirmed the news yet. Chen Dawei, head of Alibaba Small and Micro Financial Institute, previously said that Alibaba will explore P2P industry when the default rate of this sector is lowered. “There is no restricted zone for us and our top priority is to cater for the needs of micro and small enterprises” said Peng Lei, CEO of Alibaba Finance, last week.

Ppdai has established a dedicated department for the lending services of Taobao retailers. Since the turnover generated by this department accounts for more than 30% of Ppdai’s total, it may serve as a connection point for the integration of data and business of the two companies.

Launched in 2007, Ppdai is China’s first social lending site, claiming round 2 million registered users. The company’s turnover is expected to exceed 1 billion yuan ($163.06 million) this year. Ppdai has received $25 million of Series A financing from Sequoia Capital in last December.

Triggered by the Internet finance mania led by Yuebao, P2P lending comes under spot light as one of the development directions for financial innovation. But it is haunted by a raft of problems, such as lack of regulation and high default rate. Similar domestic companies include Dianrong, CreditEase, Rong360, Haodai, among others.

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Douban’s Monthly Unique Visitors Doubled YOY to 200 Million https://technode.com/2013/11/13/doubans-monthly-unique-visitors-doubled-yoy-to-200-million/ https://technode.com/2013/11/13/doubans-monthly-unique-visitors-doubled-yoy-to-200-million/#comments Wed, 13 Nov 2013 10:28:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13451 The monthly unique visitors of Douban, an interest-based social network, hiked 100% from a year earlier to more than 200 million for six consecutive months from April to September this year, the company announced today. As of September 2013, Douban covers reviews on 16.70 million books, 320 million movies, 1.06 million songs, 27,000 indie musicians, […]]]>
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The monthly unique visitors of Douban, an interest-based social network, hiked 100% from a year earlier to more than 200 million for six consecutive months from April to September this year, the company announced today.

As of September 2013, Douban covers reviews on 16.70 million books, 320 million movies, 1.06 million songs, 27,000 indie musicians, and 38,000 interest groups. It has registered over 75 million users, mainly from first- and second-tier cities, with a daily average PV of 210 million.

Douban grabbed 80 million yuan ($13 million) of revenue in 2012, mainly from commissions from e-commerce transactions, brand campaigns, and e-book sales.

Douban released Dongxi, a social shopping channel directing users to ecommerce retailers, in this September. Users also can buy movie tickets in more than 500 cinemas countrywide at the Douban page of a movie. Douban takes sales cuts from both of the services.

CPM-based targeted display ad is another major revenue source of the company. Douban now cooperates with two hundred well-known brands, offering advertising solutions based on user interests and content.

More than 5,000 books are available on Douban Read, an e-book store selling digital books and magazines from conventional publishers, third-party online publishers and the like.

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Players Make Payments in Tencent’s QQ Game Account for Over 35% of Total User Base https://technode.com/2013/11/13/players-make-payments-in-tencents-qq-game-account-for-over-35-of-total-user-base/ https://technode.com/2013/11/13/players-make-payments-in-tencents-qq-game-account-for-over-35-of-total-user-base/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2013 06:36:47 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13447 Players who purchase in-game items in Tencent’s casual gaming platform QQ Game represent more than 35% of its total user base, according to a report released by the company (report in Chinese). QQ Game claimed more than 100 games and north of 200 million active users, with number of concurrent users peaked at 80 million. […]]]>
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Players who purchase in-game items in Tencent’s casual gaming platform QQ Game represent more than 35% of its total user base, according to a report released by the company (report in Chinese).

QQ Game claimed more than 100 games and north of 200 million active users, with number of concurrent users peaked at 80 million.

The report analyzed the user base in terms of gender, age, and educational background. Male players outnumbered female users, accounting for 73.1% of the total. Gamers between 19 to 30 years old make up more than half of the total players. More specifically, 22.9% for players between 19 and 22 years old, 19.4% for gamers 23-25 years old, and 19.2% for players 26-30 years old. Most players received high school or college education.

image credit: Donews

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C2C Tourism Service Edaole Helps You to Travel Like A Local https://technode.com/2013/11/12/c2c-tourism-service-edaole-helps-you-to-travel-like-a-local/ https://technode.com/2013/11/12/c2c-tourism-service-edaole-helps-you-to-travel-like-a-local/#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2013 08:47:26 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13437 Edaole, a tourism service platform, was kicked off on November 11. Operating in a fashion similar to Taobao, Edaole adopts C2C business model to connect travelers and tourism service providers. On the one hand, Edaole helps travelers who are bored with conventional scenery spots of their tourism destinations to dig out the exciting and adventurous […]]]>

Edaole, a tourism service platform, was kicked off on November 11. Operating in a fashion similar to Taobao, Edaole adopts C2C business model to connect travelers and tourism service providers.

On the one hand, Edaole helps travelers who are bored with conventional scenery spots of their tourism destinations to dig out the exciting and adventurous activities recommended by local people.

On the other hand, tourism service providers can recommend their activities to tourist via the platform. All the services on Edaole are provided by local merchants or individuals.

Edaole covers wide categories of events, such as outdoor activities, cultural events, sightseeing, and cuisine. The adventurous and exciting events available on the platform include, flying a plane and paraglider, riding monocycle, making pottery, watching coral, parkour, and embroidery.

The company currently attracted hundreds of activities in Suzhou and Shanghai, planning to expand to other major cities in the future. The service generates profits from commissions and ads.

Edaole planned to make forays into outbound tourism sector. It now supports three languages, Chinese, English, and Germany and accepts the payments in Renminbi, Euro, and US dollar.

Edaole is similar to Ediqiu and Wanzi in terms that it offers travelling tips to backpack travelers, but it placed more emphasis on activities rather than giving advises on itineraries like the other two travelling webs.

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Tomoon Released Details for T-Fire: 1.73-inch Curved E-ink Screen https://technode.com/2013/11/12/tomoon-released-details-for-t-watch-1-73-inch-curved-e-ink-screen/ https://technode.com/2013/11/12/tomoon-released-details-for-t-watch-1-73-inch-curved-e-ink-screen/#comments Tue, 12 Nov 2013 06:11:57 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13431 Tomoom Technology revealed new information on the upcoming T-Fire after several leaked pictures of the smartwatch raked in nearly 20,000 orders for the new gadget. The company stated that the product will be shipped on Dec. 22 (report in Chinese). Enabled by 4.3 Android, T-Fire sports 1GHz CPU, 512M RAM, and 4GB ROM. It also features […]]]>
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Tomoom Technology revealed new information on the upcoming T-Fire after several leaked pictures of the smartwatch raked in nearly 20,000 orders for the new gadget. The company stated that the product will be shipped on Dec. 22 (report in Chinese).

Enabled by 4.3 Android, T-Fire sports 1GHz CPU, 512M RAM, and 4GB ROM. It also features 1.73-inch curved e-ink screen with 320*240 pixel resolution, offering three color options. Other functions include, build-in gyroscope, electronic compass, and gravity sensor.

Wang Wei, founder of the company, added that users can make phone calls with the smartwatch via bluetooth headsets. The iOS version of the smartwatch is also under development.

Chinese smartwatch market is becoming crowed with the release of several Android-powered products, such as Shanda’s GEAK and Umeox’s Omate.

image credit: Tomoon

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B2B Tourism Service 8trip Inked 150 Million Yuan Capital Injection https://technode.com/2013/11/12/b2b-tourism-service-8trip-inked-150-million-yuan-capital-injection/ https://technode.com/2013/11/12/b2b-tourism-service-8trip-inked-150-million-yuan-capital-injection/#comments Tue, 12 Nov 2013 02:44:19 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13424 8trip, a B2B tourism service, announced 150 million yuan ($24.45 million) of funding from Vision Knight Capital and SBCVC. This is so far the largest capital injection in this sector in China (report in Chinese). Founded in December 2012, 8trips serves as a platform that bridge the gap between upstream tourism service providers and downstream […]]]>
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8trip, a B2B tourism service, announced 150 million yuan ($24.45 million) of funding from Vision Knight Capital and SBCVC. This is so far the largest capital injection in this sector in China (report in Chinese).

Founded in December 2012, 8trips serves as a platform that bridge the gap between upstream tourism service providers and downstream travelling agencies, improving the trading efficiency for the two parties.

The fund raised this time will be used to improve the online platform and user experience, according to Yuan Dong, founder and CEO of the company. He added that 8trip will spin off the homegrown tourism services to focus squarely on B2B market, pledging that the company will not make inroads into terminal market.

Vision Knight Capital has previously invested in 91, 500wan, Allyes, and PPS. The big names in SBCV’s investment portfolio are Alibaba, Taobao, and Focus Media. The two experienced investors set eyes on 8trip because they are bullish on potentials of B2B tourism market as well as the innovation and executive power of the team, said Wei Zhe, partner of Vision Knight Capital.

8trip covers the markets of Wuxi, Nanjing, and Anhui this year, planning to explore oversea markets next year. The company established cooperation with nearly 1,000 tourism agencies and more than 4,000 service outlets.

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Mobile Video Service Xiaoying Secured 5 Million Yuan Angel Investment from Innovation Works https://technode.com/2013/11/11/mobile-video-service-xiaoying-secured-5-million-yuan-angel-investment-from-innovation-works/ https://technode.com/2013/11/11/mobile-video-service-xiaoying-secured-5-million-yuan-angel-investment-from-innovation-works/#comments Mon, 11 Nov 2013 06:04:18 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13402 Xiaoying (aka VivaVideo), a mobile video app, received 5 million yuan ($815,037) of angel investment from Innovation Works, disclosed Han Sheng, founder of the company. Different from other domestic video apps, Xiaoying gives priority to video editing features by simulating film production procedures in a bid to provide high-quality video beautifying service. It aims to become […]]]>
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Xiaoying (aka VivaVideo), a mobile video app, received 5 million yuan ($815,037) of angel investment from Innovation Works, disclosed Han Sheng, founder of the company.

Different from other domestic video apps, Xiaoying gives priority to video editing features by simulating film production procedures in a bid to provide high-quality video beautifying service. It aims to become Meituxiuxiu, a photo editing app known for its beautifying effects for self-portraits, for mobile video industry, stated Han.

In addition, Xiaoying’s users can share the video clips to Sina Weibo, WeChat, QQ Zone, Tencent Weibo, and Renren.

The company claimed over 10 million registered users, while more than 1,000 of video clips being uploaded per day. After releasing Android version in January this year, the iOS version will hit the market by the end of this month.

After the mobile video explosion ignited by Vine, similar Chinese apps mushroomed, including Miaopai, WeShow, Papaqi, and Weipai. Domestic video apps placed emphasis on video sharing functions and neglected the video shooting and editing features, according to Han.

Most of domestic video apps are backed by popular SNS tools to ensure large user base. Miaopai launched in-depth cooperation with Sina Weibo, while WeShow is a homegrown service released by Tencent.

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Smartphone Maker Umeox Unveiled Smartwatch Omate https://technode.com/2013/11/08/smartphone-maker-umeox-unveiled-smartwatch-omate/ https://technode.com/2013/11/08/smartphone-maker-umeox-unveiled-smartwatch-omate/#comments Fri, 08 Nov 2013 08:27:38 +0000 http://technode-live.newspackstaging.com/?p=13384 Umeox, a Shenzhen-based smartphone manufacturer, recently released its homegrown smartwatch Omate in domestic market for the first time after launching the first two generations overseas, mainly in European markets, such as Germany and France. The smatwatch is priced at 1,888 yuan ($307.48) (report in Chinese). Enabled by Android 2.2 system, Omate sports MTK dual-core processer and […]]]>
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Umeox, a Shenzhen-based smartphone manufacturer, recently released its homegrown smartwatch Omate in domestic market for the first time after launching the first two generations overseas, mainly in European markets, such as Germany and France. The smatwatch is priced at 1,888 yuan ($307.48) (report in Chinese).

Enabled by Android 2.2 system, Omate sports MTK dual-core processer and 240*240 pixels resolution. With the gadget, users can make phone calls, take pictures and receive messages from Android-powered smartphone that is bundled with it.

The product is expected to hit market by the end of this year. But actually, it is already available on the market, since Umeox has unveiled an Omate-based custom smartwatch for Babytree, an e-commerce company specializing in the sale of maternal and infant care products. With a price tag of 1,499 yuan, 2,000 sets of the product have been sold out on the first day of its release.

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Umeox just rolled out 360 Child Guard, a kid tracking bracelet, with Qihoo last week.

image credit:Sohu

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