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China’s Xiaomi sells 100,000 units of its newest phone in 86 seconds and

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3,000 smart TVs in 2 minutes. :tup:

By Kaylene Hong, 7 hours ago

Early last month, Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi unveiled its latest flagship device, the Mi-3. At the same time, the company also officially stepped into the living room with the launch of a 47-inch 3D smart TV.

The first batch of 100,000 Mi-3 phones were released at 12 noon today for sale on its website, and they were snapped up in 86 seconds flat, Xiaomi announced on its Sina Weibo account today. The 16GB version of Mi-3 is retailing for CNY1999 ($327), while the 64GB version is going for CNY2499 ($410).

Xiaomi’s TV sets also turned out to be popular among customers. The first batch of 3,000 TVs released on Xiaomi’s website was wiped out in nearly 2 minutes (1 minute and 58 seconds, to be precise), the company said on Sina Weibo. The smart TV, which comes as a natural progression following the company’s launch of Xiaomi’s stream-to-TV set-top box earlier this year, is retailing for CNY2,999 ($490).

The company subsequently announced the milestone on its Twitter account as well.

100,000 Xiaomi MI3s are sold out in one minute and twenty-six seconds,and 3000 MITVs are sold out in one minute and fifty-eight seconds.

— Xiaomi (@XiaomiChina) October 15, 2013

Xiaomi has been riding high on the waves of its popularity after inspiring the loyalty of many consumers with its competitively-priced devices and its strong emphasis on user feedback.

Previously, its phones already regularly sold out fast when released in batches, often within half an hour. In August, the company released the first batch of 100,000 units of its lowest-priced phone, the Hongmi, and they were snapped up in 90 seconds flat.

However, a Chinese report notes that scalpers may well have been the ones snapping up these Xiaomi devices so rapidly — instead of consumers themselves — as they seek to make profit off these handsets that have shown high demand.

Xiaomi has reportedly said that it is raising its sales target for this year to 20 million smartphones, up from the previous target of 15 million. Xiaomi sold 7.03 million devices in the first six months this year, just shy of the 7.19 million units that it sold during the whole of 2012.

Xiaomi Sells 100,000 Units Of Its Flagship Phone In 86 Seconds
 
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Xiaomi: China’s Threat to Apple and Samsung

Why Xiaomi should worry Apple, Samsung and others

By Kevin Kelleher Oct. 14, 2013

Have you heard of Xiaomi yet? If you haven’t, you probably will pretty soon. If you have, you know the Beijing-based company has come out of nowhere this year to become the biggest threat to Apple, Samsung and other smartphone makers.

That’s because Xiaomi designs its phones with high-end specs and sells them at midrange prices. Xiaomi phones can’t touch the iPhone or the Galaxy in terms of quality (yet), but the company beats them handily on price, the paramount factor for many consumers in China. Xiaomi’s popular Mi3 handset — including a Nvidia Tegra 4 chip, a 13-megapixel Sony camera and 2-gigabit RAM — sells for $327. In comparison, in China, Apple’s iPhone 5S retails for $866 without a service plan, while the Samsung’s 32GB Galaxy Note 3 retails for $884.

Founded in 2010, Xiaomi started shipping products a year later. The company’s name comes from the Chinese word for millet (and may or may not reference a communist slogan), and its founders have backgrounds at Google, Microsoft and Kingsoft, an early Chinese software company.

The company’s private valuation is already estimated to have surpassed $10 billion — double the valuation of BlackBerry and half that of Sony. Xiaomi sold 7 million handsets last year and just as many in the first half of this year, putting it on track to sell 20 million in all of 2013. (Apple, by contrast, sold 125 million phones last year.) Very few startups can claim to have reached such milestones so quickly.

Outside of China, Xiaomi began to gain notice in July, when research firm Canalys said that the company’s market share in China surpassed Apple for the first time in the second quarter. Apple’s share fell from 8% to 5% in a single quarter. Around that time, Xiaomi unveiled its Hongmi, or Red Rice, phone for around $130 and offered 100,000 handsets for sale online. It sold out in 90 seconds. This month, Xiaomi moved past Taiwan’s HTC to become the fifth largest smartphone company in China.

The company made even bigger waves in late August, when it hired Hugo Barra from Google. Barra, who was head of product development at Google’s Android unit, was impressed with how the company forked Android to its handsets. At Xiaomi, he will oversee the company’s overseas expansion.

Beyond selling high-end phones at low cost, other factors are driving Xiaomi’s success. It helps that the company has a contract with China Mobile, the country’s state-owned telecom giant. China has 745 million customers (465 million smartphones and growing), promoting its 3G network. Samsung also has deal with China Mobile, while Apple doesn’t — although there are signs that that may change soon.

Xiaomi’s executives like to stress how the company is focused on user experience, but in a way that is different from Apple. Apple famously anticipates what will work with users and limits their ability to customize the product. Xiaomi updates its Android software every Friday after urging engineers to talk with customers to solicit feedback, CEO Lei Jun said at a conference this year.

Another divergence from Apple’s strategy: while the Cupertino, Calif., giant ran iTunes for years at little or no profit — using its music, movies and apps as a way to sell higher-margin devices — Xiaomi’s approach is similar to Amazon. Amazon sells its Kindle devices at or below cost to expand market share, using apps and content revenue to shore up slim margins.

Xiaomi also kept costs low by selling its phones online. That may be changing as it sells more phones through stores, including its own retail shops. The company is evolving quickly in other ways. Barra’s hiring suggests the company will be moving into new markets soon, starting with Taiwan and Hong Kong and moving on to Europe. It’s also already produced its first smart TV— a 47-in., 3-D screen retailing for around $490. It is reportedly working on its own smart watch.

Such ambitious growth may present Xiaomi with new challenges. It’s not clear whether it can maintain its intensive focus on customer experience as it moves into new markets, each with its own peculiar needs. Or whether it can grow quickly in them without the kind of support it receives from China Mobile. Or, most importantly, whether it can grow into new countries and new product categories with its small margins.

On the other hand, Xiaomi has a huge opportunity in other developing countries. According to ABI Research, low-cost smartphone shipments will rise to 758 million units in 2018, from 238 million this year. And Xiaomi’s phones have already proved popular by offering more bang for the buck.

The rise of Xiaomi has left some securities analysts wondering about how Apple will respond to a company thriving by using strategies very different from its own. In a research note, Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Mark Newman called Xiaomi a “new disruptive force” that “particularly stands out to us as a potential game-changer.”

Meanwhile, UBS analyst Steve Milunovich wrote that “it would be a bit surprising if Apple were easily disrupted.” But he also noted, “It’s possible that Apple is becoming the Digital Equipment of phones, delivering improved technology for its best customers but ignoring the growth below because the company does not want to ‘compromise the user experience.’”

For its part, Xiaomi sounds a little more confident — if not outright cocky — about its prospects against Apple. “They [Apple] don’t really care about what the users want,” Lei said in a recent interview. “They imagine what the users want.”


Read more: China
 
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Former Android exec Hugo Barra reflects on his first week at ‘Google-like’ Xiaomi

By Kaylene Hong, 9 hours ago

Nexus7-645x250.jpg


Hugo Barra, former Google VP for Android and now vice president for Xiaomi Global, has already spent one week working with the popular Chinese smartphone manufacturer — and he took some time to reflect on his “pretty intense journey” in a Google+ update.

Barra says his new home Xiaomi is pretty much “Google-like” — with the engineering floor always busy “with people building well into the night.” He says: “The teams are small and scrappy, and speed (in both UX and execution) is always a top priority.”

Xiaomi-Hugo.jpg


Xiaomi has been on the rise recently, despite just being founded three years ago and releasing its first device as recently as 2011. Its revenue for the first half of 2013 reached $2.15 billion after it sold 7.03 million devices — just shy of the 7.19 million units it sold during the whole of 2012.

Xiaomi co-founder and president Bin LinLin told TNW in an interview last month that it is entirely Barra’s job ”to figure out which region that we should enter next and how.” Given that different countries’ consumers will have different needs, Barra needs to focus on what these potential customers want in terms of software and hardware design before going international.

It seems like Barra has hit the nail on the head by zooming in on how the Chinese company is “insanely focused” on users, which will likely be the direction he takes as he pushes Xiaomi abroad.

Everyone at Xiaomi — engineers, PMs, designers and marketeers — is insanely focused on users and “doing the right thing”. We have a special term for our users — we call them “Mi fans”, and “Mi fans” always come first.

xiaomi-1-520x292.jpg


As Barra moves from the West to the East, two things about China’s tech scene have stood out for him: how the Chinese tech ecosystem “moves at breakneck speed” and how social media has a great influence in China — “bigger than anything I’ve seen in the West”.

It remains to be seen if Barra can successfully push the Xiaomi brand overseas, but placed in such an environment where he is absorbing lessons from China and possibly merging them with the Western approach he is used to, it promises to be an exciting ride ahead for him and Xiaomi.

Hugo Barra Reflects On First Week At Xiaomi
 
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Given its price point and specs list I think there is a huge market for such devices even outside China.
 
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