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China’s Innovation Has Outstripped Its ‘Follow Fast’ Reputation

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China’s Innovation Has Outstripped Its ‘Follow Fast’ Reputation

BY GURU GOWRAPPAN, QUIXEY

07.03.14

innovationwall_660.jpg

Image: boegh/photopin cc



These days, China is growing faster than ever and shattering any perception of it as a follower in the process. Although the country grew into a technology powerhouse initially by following the example of the U.S. tech industry, it is now home to four of the world’s ten largest internet and technology companies – Alibaba, Baidu, Tencent, and Xiaomi. What’s even more impressive is that three of those four broke into the global top ten just since 2013. China’s growing economy is increasingly focused on mobile, and the conviction and passion of its leaders are something to be taken seriously. The opportunity is certainly there — the market cap for China’s biggest Internet companies sits at more than $400 billion — the only thing that needs to change is foreign perception of Chinese innovation.

Whatever the stereotypes that have followed around the Chinese economy (fake iPhones, bootleg DVDs, rapidly produced imitations of every popular game on the App Store, etc), these are all background noise to the country’s actual world impact. Perceptions of China as a country that “follows the leader” have been blown out of proportion for a while, and now it is clear that the nation is an innovator that has in many ways defined markets like search, commerce, social, entertainment, and advertising. With surging growth and a huge untapped market both internally and in neighboring Asian countries, China is well positioned to continue innovating within technology and outside of it. The following are a few examples of how China is blazing new trails that the US hasn’t yet approached.

It’s a Really Big Market

To begin with the obvious, China’s consumer market is simply massive, and it’s primed for surging growth. Its urban areas are booming, and despite government worries about unchecked population growth in large cities, some Chinese scholars argue that all but the very largest cities (those with populations under 10 million) have room for growth. If urbanization continues at its current speed, by 2040, one billion Chinese citizens will be living in cities, a rate of urbanization that is unprecedented in history.

Growth in cities drives other growth as well: according to the World Bank, the Chinese economy was 87 percent as large as the US economy in 2011. Since then, China’s economy has grown at a much faster rate than that of the US, averaging about 9 percent growth each year, compared to a US average of 3 percent. Yes, the Chinese economy has slowed from its formerly astronomic pace of over 13 percent a year in the early 90s, and as the economy continues to expand, growth will become more difficult and slow down. But China is still on track to become the world’s largest economy by the end of 2014, and by some estimates, it has already claimed that title. And it won’t be content to maintain current growth levels — it’s increasing investment in research and development activities at a rate of 20 percent a year, reflecting a national commitment to innovation.

With a population of 1.35 billion, there is an enormous opportunity on the horizon as China’s rapid technology growth continues. According to Alibaba’s S-1, there are currently 618 million Internet users in China. A staggering figure, but not even half of the potential the country holds. Digging deeper, there are 500 million Chinese internet users on mobile and 301 million internet shoppers — online shopping makes up 7.9 percent of China’s total consumption. The market is simply huge, and companies like Alibaba are moving fast to capitalize on it with great success — the commerce giant stated on its S-1 that the total gross merchandise volume on its China retail marketplaces currently sits at $248 billion.

China Has the World’s Biggest and Fastest-Growing Mobile Companies

While Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun got his start at Kingsoft, a very similar company to Microsoft, his new smartphone company is now succeeding in its own right. The world’s fastest-growing mobile phone company, Xiaomi, is seeking to put pressure on Apple — not by copying, but by innovating. Already the third-largest phone manufacturer in China and sixth-biggest in the world (according to Canalys), Xiaomi is looking to get bigger. Weekly software updates to its Android-based MIUI platform, often based on user feedback, put bi-annual releases from Apple and Google to shame. And Xiaomi has found success largely through word of mouth and social messaging, selling online only and avoiding traditional marketing and advertising expenditures. Alibaba is next in line for innovation in this field, demonstrating real promise with its YunOS devices. Interestingly enough, Microsoft is trying to play catch-up now by opening stores in China. Is it too late?

China has had the world’s largest smartphone market since 2012, and smartphone sales have grownenormously each year since. China’s 500 million mobile Internet users add up to almost 50 percent more than the entire US population. State-owned China Mobile is the world’s biggest mobile phone company in terms of subscribers and profits, and the company has been displaying a great deal of interest in expanding its brand globally. It recently purchased an 18 percent stake in one of Thailand’s biggest telcos, True Corporation, for $880 million.

China Has More Social Messaging Users Than the US Has People

It’s hard to overstate how important mobile messaging is in China, as most of its top companies have their own messaging services. Tencent created WeChat (called Weixin in China), which has 396 million monthly active users, and also QQ, a social media platform and messaging service popular among young people. Alibaba recently invested $215 million in TangoMe Inc, the Silicon Valley-based startup behind Tango, a popular free video call app. These giants understand the value of messaging and have paid close attention to how their users communicate through mobile.

Tencent’s founder and CEO, Pony Ma, is often portrayed as a follower instead of a leader, even in China. He prefers to let other companies take the initial innovation steps, then quickly moves in to one-up them — or ten-up them, if you will. And you can’t deny he is a smart man: under his leadership, WeChat is flourishing, and its scope has expanded to become far more than a messaging service: it’s also a global social network, a la Facebook, with 100 million registered accounts outside of China. Users report spending up to six hours per day on Weixin, as it’s the nexus of their social and work lives as well as their commerce hub.

China’s social messaging platforms, although less constricting than Sina Weibo, have recently been subject to harsher scrutiny. Tencent recently closed 20 million WeChat accounts and has closed tens of thousands of false accounts associated with promoting slander and spreading rumors.

China Is Ahead on Mobile and Commerce

Mobile commerce users can manage their money, order taxis, and even invest in money market funds, all from their phones. In the US, these kinds of activities aren’t even close to as widespread on mobile.

Alibaba is the ecommerce giant of China, accounting for about 80 percent of China’s retail traffic. Just this month, soon before its potentially huge US IPO, it launched 11 Main, an invitation-only US retail website featuring a huge range of specialty items, from clothing to antiques to flashy bicycles, and one of the first China-led ecommerce plays in the US. And since adding mobile money market fund investment capabilities, Alipay, Alibaba’s third-party payment service, has brought in $89 billion in assets under management in 10 months, making it already a top three global money market fund and proving that it is more than “the PayPal of the East,” instead, it’s a force to be reckoned with in its own right.

This type of success is pushing some analysts to believe that Alibaba’s market cap could soar to multiple of $100 billion by its IPO — this would place it in the top 5 on the US top 10 list, behind only Apple, Google, and Microsoft and ahead of IBM and Facebook. Clearly, they are the key example that innovation is streaming out of China.

Innovation in China Can Be Tough, But It’s Worth It

While it’s generally cheaper for companies to operate in China, both in terms of production and human capital, the actual software engineering and development is much harder. This is because China’s market has evolved much differently than the US did, moving more aggressively into mobile. As a result, China’s ecosystem and its users’ behavior are much more complex than that of the US. On top of the sheer volume of users, their maturity cycle makes for a much more difficult landscape. As a result, it’s generally the case that if you can build a successful product in China, expertly navigating challenges such as extreme localization, you can really build a product anywhere, although go-to-market strategies will differ geographically. That’s why innovating in China is doubly important — it strengthens a company’s ability to operate all over the world.

This gives China a leg up on the US when it comes to technology flow. Now that the country has reached a certain point in its own tech evolution, look for more China-led initiatives to pop up in the US. At this point, it’s really a matter of delivering quality products that continue to push the boundaries of consumer and market expectations. And although the prospect of Chinese government censorship may turn off Westerners interested in China’s expanding social networks and tech services, the siren song of seemingly boundless Chinese innovation, driven largely by the global ambitions of its CEOs, will probably prove difficult to resist. So it may be time for the US to look to China for inspiration — not the other way around.

Guru Gowrappan is Chief Operating Officer at Quixey, a search engine for apps.

China's Innovation Has Outstripped Its 'Follow Fast' Reputation | Innovation Insights | Wired.com
 
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China Web Firms Odds-On Winners With World Cup Gambling

World | Agence France-Presse | Updated: July 04, 2014 11:42 IST


People_Watching_World_Cup_360.jpg

Agence France-Presse

This photo taken on July 1, 2014 shows people watching a screen showing live coverage of the 2014 World Cup football tournament in Brazil between France and Nigeria, outside a shopping mall in Beijing.

Beijing, China: China's Internet giants and insurance companies are finding ever more innovative ways to get around the country's strict betting laws and reap a payout as fans wager billions on the World Cup.

Gambling is banned in China, except where it is run by the government or the proceeds donated to charity, but technology behemoths Alibaba and Tencent have this year linked up with state-owned provincial lotteries to enable punters to bet on the World Cup online.

Both have smartphone gambling apps which have proved hugely popular during the Brazil tournament, and on which more than 10 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) is expected to be bet legally dwarfing the 2.3 billion yuan figure reached at the 2010 finals in South Africa. Many times more will be spent illegally.

"I find it so much easier to bet on an app, rather than having to go to a lottery centre," said Li Qiang, from Shanghai, who said he won 200 yuan when Uruguay beat Italy in the group stage.

"I love the World Cup, but being Chinese, we have little way to get involved other than to bet," he said, lamenting the poor performances of the national team, who are ranked 103rd by FIFA.

Neither Tencent nor Alibaba have gambling licences, but earn revenue by acting as online platforms for provincial lotteries which offer odds betting on most aspects of the game.

Alibaba which heavily promotes World Cup betting on its main e-commerce shopping platform, Taobao takes a seven percent cut of money gambled through its websites, the Beijing Youth Daily reported.

On Thursday, an advertisement on Taobao priced Brazil as favourites to win the tournament at 2.3/1, less generous than the 2.75/1 generally available from British bookmakers.

Alibaba, which is preparing a multi-billion-dollar share offer in the US, declined to comment to AFP. Tencent did not respond to a request for comment.

Heartbreak insurance

More than 500 million people in China access the Internet via their smartphones, according to the state-run China Internet Network Information Center.

"The law is quite strict in China, but gaming opportunities are very accessible to anyone who has a smartphone," Huang Guihai, associate professor at the Gaming Teaching and Research Centre at the Macao Polytechnic Institute, told AFP.

Insurance firms, though, have found their attempts to do World Cup business meeting official disapproval.

An Cheng Insurance offered a "heartbreak" policy offering fans Taobao credit if their team was eliminated, to "alleviate the mental shock" effectively enabling customers to try to profit from teams going out of the contest.

Regulators stepped in last week to issue an urgent notice that "insurance products with gaming character should be suspended", the official news agency Xinhua said.

"Some insurance companies have pulled related World Cup regret insurances from the shelves," it added.

Fatal cost

Most Chinese sports betting, though, takes place via outlawed websites, where odds are more attractive and credit offered.

Research by sports newspaper Titan Weekly estimated an astonishing 500 billion yuan was spent on legal and illegal online gambling during the 2006 tournament in Germany - roughly two percent of China's GDP.

"The issue of illegal gambling is particularly serious during the World Cup," said Wang Xuehong, head of the Lottery Research Institute at Peking University.

Given the scale of the demand, official restrictions on betting created opportunities for illegal operators, she said. "It is difficult to carry out measures to deal with it, and it is difficult to supervise Internet activities."

The sums and networks involved are vast.

The Doha-based watchdog International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS) warned in a May report that Asian-dominated criminal groups are laundering more than $140 billion in illegal sports betting annually, with many gamblers coming from China.

Laurent Vidal, chair of the joint Sorbonne-ICSS research programme that produced the report, said previously: "The Chinese are not interested in local sport any more, that is why they bet on European sport."

In May, police in Shanghai detained 63 people for being involved in an illegal online gambling operation that was alleged to have handled more than 113 billion yuan.

Police in the southern province of Guangdong busted 1,651 criminal gambling cases in the months leading up to the World Cup, detaining 58,154 suspects in raids across the province, police said.

For the losers, though, the consequences can be fatal.

A college student in Guangdong leaped to his death after losing more than $3,000 gambling on the World Cup, state media reported last week, adding that moments earlier, the student was heard telling a telephone caller he would "return the money".

A 32-year-old woman on the southern island of Hainan also reportedly committed suicide after losing more than $16,000.

"There should be awareness training to let the public know of the potential risk of gambling becoming addictive," said Huang, of the Macao Polytechnic Institute.

"With gambling, the rules favour the casinos, favour the lottery agencies. They provide this entertainment service for profit."

China Web Firms Odds-On Winners With World Cup Gambling - NDTV
 
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Of course, of all things, gambling. One of the worst social evils in China.... :disagree:
 
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China's rural areas outpace cities in online shopping

By Meng Jing (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2014-07-03 11:25


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Photo taken on Aug 21, 2009, show a view of Alibaba building located in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province. [Photo/IC]


Growth in online shopping in counties and villages has outpaced those in cities, becoming a new engine that is further driving China's domestic consumption:enjoy:, according to research from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, the country's largest e-commerce group.

It said in its first county-level economy and e-commerce forum in its headquarters in Hangzhou on Thursday that the overall online shopping market in China reported a growth of 50 percent year-on-year in 2013. The growth rate of online transactions in counties and villages in the same year was 13.6 percentage higher than that of cities'.

Apart from those who enjoy shopping online, an increasing number of businessmen in China's counties and villages are making a living on the Internet by setting up their online stores.

According to statistics from Taobao and Tmall, the two main online marketplaces of Alibaba, residents in counties and villages in China received a total of 1.8 billion packages in 2013 from the purchases they ordered online and sold 1.4 billion packages online in the same year.

Counties and villages in East China still enjoy an edge in e-commerce, thanks to the advanced manufacturing bases in coastal China.

However, the online transactions generated by counties and villages in North China, Central China and South China, have shown stronger growth momentums, accounting for 30 percent of the overall online transactions made by counties and villages in China.

China's rural areas outpace cities in online shopping - Business - Chinadaily.com.cn
 
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If it were not for government intervention since early this year,deposits held in Yuebao would have gone north of 1 trillion yuan。:azn:

1 year and $92 billion later, Alibaba’s massive mutual fund starts to stagnate

July 3, 2014 at 8:22 pm

by Paul Bischoff Share 56485330

yuebao-720x304.png


Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba’s premiere mutual fund savings product Yuebao turned one year old this week, and announced it now holds RMB 574 billion (US$92 billion) in assets. That makes it the fourth-largest money market fund in the world, according to the company’s official blog.

That’s pretty impressive, but those assets are growing at a much slower clip now than they were in the first quarter of this year. This is due to a variety of reasons.

yuebao-assets-256


Yuebao’s annual yield fell below five percent for the first time in May. This is in part due to heavier pressure placed on Alibaba and its bank partners by China’s big four state-owned banks. New restrictions emerged around March, making it harder for customers to shift funds to online rivals, imposing transfer limits, banning new types of payments such as QR codes, and preeminently halting the launch of virtual credit cards. Alibaba chairman Jack Ma publicly slammed the central bank and big four for abusing their ‘monopoly’.

See: How does Alibaba respond when China cracks down on investment products? It launches another investment product.

Additionally, as China’s overall economy begins to slow, yields will probably dip across the board.

Secondly, Yuebao seemed to really take off around Chinese New Year, when cash gifts between friends and family are a common custom. This likely led to a surge in deposits and the inevitable lull in the months after.

Yuebao caught fire in China because of its higher yields and lower barrier to entry than the big four banks. There’s no minimum investment amount, and users can deposit funds directly from their Alipay accounts on both PCs and mobile devices. Alipay is China’s biggest third-party payment system used on the biggest ecommerce marketplaces in the country, Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, among many other online storefronts.

Alibaba recently acquired Tianhong Asset Management, the fund firm that ultimately runs Yuebao, to secure a stronger hold over its customers’ money. Yuebao, as part of the Alipay arm, will not be part of the company’s impending US IPO. :azn:

Data for chart pulled from multiple sources including Nikkei Asian Review, Global Times, China Internet Watch, The Wall Street Journal, and Business Spectator.

$92B later, Alibaba’s massive mutual fund starts to stagnate
 
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:coffee::enjoy:

Jul 4, 2014

Huawei Sells New Smartphone Through WeChat App

By Juro Osawa

When Huawei Technologies released its new smartphone in China this week, the company chose the Chinese messaging app WeChat as one of its main sales channels.

While many businesses use Tencent’s WeChat for marketing and customer service, the idea of actually selling products through WeChat is only starting to take off, after a virtual store run by online retailer JD.com was integrated into WeChat in late May.

JD, China’s second-largest e-commerce company after Alibaba Group, said in a statement this week that its WeChat store received 550,000 pre-orders for Huawei’s new Honor 6 smartphone, before the handset became available on Tuesday.:enjoy:

This shows that WeChat is already recognized by Chinese consumers as a shopping channel, JD said. In March, Tencent, the Internet giant that developed WeChat, announced a deal to buy a 15% stake in JD and the two firms became strategic partners. It is the first time for the JD-WeChat store to team up with a handset maker, according to JD.

Last month, JD and Huawei launched a promotional event in which WeChat users tried to win a free Honor 6 phone by correctly guessing its price ahead of its release. The store has also been running ads for the Honor 6, which comes with a 5-inch screen, a 13-megapixel camera and a mobile processor made by Huawei’s own chip unit. It went on sale this week for 1,999 yuan ($322) in China.

For Tencent and JD, providing the main venue for Huawei’s major product launch is a way to get more Chinese consumers to view WeChat as a place for shopping. For Huawei, which has relied mainly on telecom carriers to distribute its handsets in China, WeChat offers an opportunity to broaden its customer base.

Huawei’s focus on WeChat comes as the company faces tougher competition. In the first quarter, Huawei was ranked No. 6 in China’s crowded smartphone market, with an 8% share– behind Samsung Electronics and Apple as well as Chinese rivals Lenovo, Xiaomi and Yulong – according to research firm Canalys.

WeChat has about 400 monthly active users, and most of its users are in mainland China. Chinese users not only send text and voice messages — they also share photos and updates, play games and even hail taxis using WeChat. Tencent added an electronic payment function to the app last summer, and has been trying to turn the communication tool into a platform for online shopping and other services that can make people spend money.

Huawei Sells New Smartphone Through WeChat App - Digits - WSJ
 
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:coffee::close_tema::crazy::azn:

China Fruits Corporation to enter into Fruit e-commerce market

Published 01 July 2014

China Fruits Corporation, a distributor and producer of fresh tangerine and other fresh fruits in People's Republic of China, decides to open its flagship store in Tmall, a leading third-party platform for brands and retailers.

This would be a significant step entering the Chinese domestic fruit e-commerce.

"The huge traffic and high user trust of Tmall could enable the Company to make a major breakthrough into the domestic fruit e-commerce," said Mr. Quanlong Chen, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of China Fruits Corporation, "through Tmall's mature technical platform and high quality customer service, we are now establishing basis for future branding and official website traffic attracting."

Developing e-commerce with Alibaba's platform is one of the most critical strategies for the Company, which provides a powerful access to the non-China markets. By standing on the solid soil of the great reputation earned at Alibaba.com for years, China Fruits has achieved a successful business overseas.

The flagship store in preparatory stage in Tmall gives a signal of the upcoming battle to the Chinese fruit e-commerce. According to strategic plans, the Company will further expand its fruit e-commerce business to leading business-to-consumer platforms like JD.com, Yhd.com, and major group-buying websites, to establish core competencies of high quality, wide range of variety and efficient delivery. While developing and consolidating the fruit e-commerce industrial chain, China Fruits will work in conjunction with increasing fruit retail franchise stores to introduce a "online to offline" business model for its fruit e-commerce business. The total number of franchise stores is expected to reach around 64 by the end of 2014, and it would continue to rise rapidly in the future.

In addition, China Fruits plans to develop an "Online Distribution and Franchise" system in order to build a comprehensive vertical fruit e-commerce platform with major fruit participants, operators and industry bodies, which would add muscle in paving the way to future success of the Company's fruit e-commerce chain brand.

China Fruits Corporation to enter into Fruit e-commerce market - Retail Business Review

 
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China's Rising Star Might be Why Samsung is Struggling

By Sam Mattera

July 3, 2014

Last week, Samsung (NASDAQOTH: SSNLF ) CFO Lee Sang-hoon warned that the Korean tech giant's upcoming earnings report would not "look too good." Management offered nothing in the way of an explanation, but given the company's dependence on profits from its mobile division, weak handset sales may be to blame.

If Samsung's handset business is indeed struggling, it could be due to the growth of one of its major competitors. Earlier this week, China's Xiaomi said that its handset sales for the first half of 2014 were up a whopping 271% from the same period of last year.

Xiaomi's rapid growth may even challenge Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ) as it looks for growth in emerging markets.

Xiaomi: China's rising star

Xiaomi was founded just four years ago, but it has attracted some big-name executives -- most notably Google's Hugo Barra --, and has taken the Chinese handset market by storm. Kantar Worldpanel reported that Xiaomi in April sold more smartphones than Samsung -- this is notable, as Samsung has been the top-selling smartphone vendor in China in recent quarters.

Xiaomi's success has largely been a byproduct of its budget handsets: Its flagship Mi3 is a high-end smartphone that retails for roughly $300 in China. To Chinese consumers, with an average family income of only a few thousand U.S. dollars, Xiaomi's devices are understandably attractive.

Poaching Samsung's customers

As TechCrunch noted, many of Xiaomi's customers are first-time smartphone buyers, but almost a quarter were former Samsung handset owners. Like Samsung, Xiaomi's smartphones use the Android operating system.

Xiaomi's version of Android is heavily modified, but that's not particularly relevant. Few Chinese consumers actually use the official Google Play -- the majority of Chinese Android apps are downloaded through third-party app stores.

Apple looks to China for growth

With its monopoly on the iOS operating system, Apple is less likely than Samsung to lose customer to Xiaomi, in China or anywhere else.

But Xiaomi is still a competitive threat to Apple's emerging-market ambitions. Although the Cupertino-based company has a firm grip on developed economies such as the U.S. and Japan, analysts have looked to China and other markets to provide incremental iPhone demand.

To a large extent, that has happened. Last quarter, Apple sold more iPhones than analysts had anticipated, mostly due to record emerging-market demand. In China, for example, Apple's revenue increased 5% sequentially, and company management noted that revenue from the BRIC countries collectively was at an all-time high.

Investors may be tempted to write off Xiaomi's phones as low-end budget devices, stepping stones for Chinese customers who will one day (if they can afford it) purchase Apple's iPhone. In reality, Xiaomi's phones are fairly high end -- the Mi 3, for example, has specs comparable to Apple's top-of-the-line iPhone 5s.

If Xiaomi can continue to capture first-time Chinese smartphone buyers, Apple may have a difficult time prying them away. As Xiaomi expands into other emerging markets, it could prove to be a major competitive threat.

Investors should be mindful of Xiaomi

Unfortunately, Xiaomi is a private company, leaving investors unable to take advantage of its rapid growth. Yet shareholders in the space, particularly Apple and Samsung investors, should be mindful of Xiaomi's rapid expansion.

When it comes to China, and emerging markets more broadly, Xiaomi could prove to be a major thorn in the side for these two tech majors.

Leaked: Apple's next smart device (warning, it may shock you)

Apple recently recruited a secret-development "dream team" to guarantee its newest smart device was kept hidden from the public for as long as possible. But the secret is out, and some early viewers are claiming its everyday impact could trump the iPod, iPhone, and the iPad. In fact, ABI Research predicts 485 million of this type of device will be sold per year. But one small company makes Apple's gadget possible. And its stock price has nearly unlimited room to run for early in-the-know investors. To be one of them, and see Apple's newest smart gizmo, just click here!

China's Rising Star Might be Why Samsung is Struggling (AAPL, SSNLF)
 
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China's Forbidden City goes mobile

(Xinhua) Updated: 2014-07-03 16:16

BEIJING - China's Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, has launched a free tour guide mobile application for visitors.

The app can be downloaded from mobile app stores and markets as well as the museum's official website, according to a statement by the museum on Thursday.

The app features detailed guide information about the palaces, halls and buildings in the Forbidden City, and it will also provide route finding services and itinerary suggestions based on visitors' GPS locations, the statement said.

Its English version, "Your Forbidden City," is also available at the Palace Museum's website.

The Palace Museum launched two iPad applications based on its collections last year, and three others will follow this year, according to the statement.

China's Forbidden City goes mobile - Business - Chinadaily.com.cn
 
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China’s Innovation Has Outstripped Its ‘Follow Fast’ Reputation

BY GURU GOWRAPPAN, QUIXEY

07.03.14

innovationwall_660.jpg

Image: boegh/photopin cc



These days, China is growing faster than ever and shattering any perception of it as a follower in the process. Although the country grew into a technology powerhouse initially by following the example of the U.S. tech industry, it is now home to four of the world’s ten largest internet and technology companies – Alibaba, Baidu, Tencent, and Xiaomi. What’s even more impressive is that three of those four broke into the global top ten just since 2013. China’s growing economy is increasingly focused on mobile, and the conviction and passion of its leaders are something to be taken seriously. The opportunity is certainly there — the market cap for China’s biggest Internet companies sits at more than $400 billion — the only thing that needs to change is foreign perception of Chinese innovation.

Whatever the stereotypes that have followed around the Chinese economy (fake iPhones, bootleg DVDs, rapidly produced imitations of every popular game on the App Store, etc), these are all background noise to the country’s actual world impact. Perceptions of China as a country that “follows the leader” have been blown out of proportion for a while, and now it is clear that the nation is an innovator that has in many ways defined markets like search, commerce, social, entertainment, and advertising. With surging growth and a huge untapped market both internally and in neighboring Asian countries, China is well positioned to continue innovating within technology and outside of it. The following are a few examples of how China is blazing new trails that the US hasn’t yet approached.

It’s a Really Big Market

To begin with the obvious, China’s consumer market is simply massive, and it’s primed for surging growth. Its urban areas are booming, and despite government worries about unchecked population growth in large cities, some Chinese scholars argue that all but the very largest cities (those with populations under 10 million) have room for growth. If urbanization continues at its current speed, by 2040, one billion Chinese citizens will be living in cities, a rate of urbanization that is unprecedented in history.

Growth in cities drives other growth as well: according to the World Bank, the Chinese economy was 87 percent as large as the US economy in 2011. Since then, China’s economy has grown at a much faster rate than that of the US, averaging about 9 percent growth each year, compared to a US average of 3 percent. Yes, the Chinese economy has slowed from its formerly astronomic pace of over 13 percent a year in the early 90s, and as the economy continues to expand, growth will become more difficult and slow down. But China is still on track to become the world’s largest economy by the end of 2014, and by some estimates, it has already claimed that title. And it won’t be content to maintain current growth levels — it’s increasing investment in research and development activities at a rate of 20 percent a year, reflecting a national commitment to innovation.

With a population of 1.35 billion, there is an enormous opportunity on the horizon as China’s rapid technology growth continues. According to Alibaba’s S-1, there are currently 618 million Internet users in China. A staggering figure, but not even half of the potential the country holds. Digging deeper, there are 500 million Chinese internet users on mobile and 301 million internet shoppers — online shopping makes up 7.9 percent of China’s total consumption. The market is simply huge, and companies like Alibaba are moving fast to capitalize on it with great success — the commerce giant stated on its S-1 that the total gross merchandise volume on its China retail marketplaces currently sits at $248 billion.

China Has the World’s Biggest and Fastest-Growing Mobile Companies

While Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun got his start at Kingsoft, a very similar company to Microsoft, his new smartphone company is now succeeding in its own right. The world’s fastest-growing mobile phone company, Xiaomi, is seeking to put pressure on Apple — not by copying, but by innovating. Already the third-largest phone manufacturer in China and sixth-biggest in the world (according to Canalys), Xiaomi is looking to get bigger. Weekly software updates to its Android-based MIUI platform, often based on user feedback, put bi-annual releases from Apple and Google to shame. And Xiaomi has found success largely through word of mouth and social messaging, selling online only and avoiding traditional marketing and advertising expenditures. Alibaba is next in line for innovation in this field, demonstrating real promise with its YunOS devices. Interestingly enough, Microsoft is trying to play catch-up now by opening stores in China. Is it too late?

China has had the world’s largest smartphone market since 2012, and smartphone sales have grownenormously each year since. China’s 500 million mobile Internet users add up to almost 50 percent more than the entire US population. State-owned China Mobile is the world’s biggest mobile phone company in terms of subscribers and profits, and the company has been displaying a great deal of interest in expanding its brand globally. It recently purchased an 18 percent stake in one of Thailand’s biggest telcos, True Corporation, for $880 million.

China Has More Social Messaging Users Than the US Has People

It’s hard to overstate how important mobile messaging is in China, as most of its top companies have their own messaging services. Tencent created WeChat (called Weixin in China), which has 396 million monthly active users, and also QQ, a social media platform and messaging service popular among young people. Alibaba recently invested $215 million in TangoMe Inc, the Silicon Valley-based startup behind Tango, a popular free video call app. These giants understand the value of messaging and have paid close attention to how their users communicate through mobile.

Tencent’s founder and CEO, Pony Ma, is often portrayed as a follower instead of a leader, even in China. He prefers to let other companies take the initial innovation steps, then quickly moves in to one-up them — or ten-up them, if you will. And you can’t deny he is a smart man: under his leadership, WeChat is flourishing, and its scope has expanded to become far more than a messaging service: it’s also a global social network, a la Facebook, with 100 million registered accounts outside of China. Users report spending up to six hours per day on Weixin, as it’s the nexus of their social and work lives as well as their commerce hub.

China’s social messaging platforms, although less constricting than Sina Weibo, have recently been subject to harsher scrutiny. Tencent recently closed 20 million WeChat accounts and has closed tens of thousands of false accounts associated with promoting slander and spreading rumors.

China Is Ahead on Mobile and Commerce

Mobile commerce users can manage their money, order taxis, and even invest in money market funds, all from their phones. In the US, these kinds of activities aren’t even close to as widespread on mobile.

Alibaba is the ecommerce giant of China, accounting for about 80 percent of China’s retail traffic. Just this month, soon before its potentially huge US IPO, it launched 11 Main, an invitation-only US retail website featuring a huge range of specialty items, from clothing to antiques to flashy bicycles, and one of the first China-led ecommerce plays in the US. And since adding mobile money market fund investment capabilities, Alipay, Alibaba’s third-party payment service, has brought in $89 billion in assets under management in 10 months, making it already a top three global money market fund and proving that it is more than “the PayPal of the East,” instead, it’s a force to be reckoned with in its own right.

This type of success is pushing some analysts to believe that Alibaba’s market cap could soar to multiple of $100 billion by its IPO — this would place it in the top 5 on the US top 10 list, behind only Apple, Google, and Microsoft and ahead of IBM and Facebook. Clearly, they are the key example that innovation is streaming out of China.

Innovation in China Can Be Tough, But It’s Worth It

While it’s generally cheaper for companies to operate in China, both in terms of production and human capital, the actual software engineering and development is much harder. This is because China’s market has evolved much differently than the US did, moving more aggressively into mobile. As a result, China’s ecosystem and its users’ behavior are much more complex than that of the US. On top of the sheer volume of users, their maturity cycle makes for a much more difficult landscape. As a result, it’s generally the case that if you can build a successful product in China, expertly navigating challenges such as extreme localization, you can really build a product anywhere, although go-to-market strategies will differ geographically. That’s why innovating in China is doubly important — it strengthens a company’s ability to operate all over the world.

This gives China a leg up on the US when it comes to technology flow. Now that the country has reached a certain point in its own tech evolution, look for more China-led initiatives to pop up in the US. At this point, it’s really a matter of delivering quality products that continue to push the boundaries of consumer and market expectations. And although the prospect of Chinese government censorship may turn off Westerners interested in China’s expanding social networks and tech services, the siren song of seemingly boundless Chinese innovation, driven largely by the global ambitions of its CEOs, will probably prove difficult to resist. So it may be time for the US to look to China for inspiration — not the other way around.

Guru Gowrappan is Chief Operating Officer at Quixey, a search engine for apps.

China's Innovation Has Outstripped Its 'Follow Fast' Reputation | Innovation Insights | Wired.com

The premise of the article is that China is now an innovative leader, not a following copier. With all due respect, the gargantuan size of the Chinese economy is not proof of this. What support for the premise appears in the article? MIUI, WeChat, Alipay, etc. are not innovations.
 
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Innovation is overrated, and there is nothing wrong with copying, everyone does it.
Doesn't matter if the cat is black or white, what matters is it catches mice.

I am pleased that we agree the article was incorrect.

And I also favor that saying by Deng Xiaoping, as it illustrates the practical mindset that has led China to achieve such success.
 
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Innovation is overrated, and there is nothing wrong with copying, everyone does it.
Doesn't matter if the cat is black or white, what matters is it catches mice.

Innovation is not really overrated, it's nice for countries to have inventions so history will record they were the first who developed this or that. When other countries copied stuffs from other countries it shows they have the capabilities to do it. The West copied stuffs from ancient China and China has done it too. Nothing to be ashamed of but plenty westerners love to portray China as copy cats, that's what they used to say about the Japanese too.
 
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The premise of the article is that China is now an innovative leader, not a following copier. With all due respect, the gargantuan size of the Chinese economy is not proof of this. What support for the premise appears in the article? MIUI, WeChat, Alipay, etc. are not innovations.

I think the article confuses innovation with leadership. Chinese companies replacing foreign counterparts as top tech companies is certainly not innovation.

Innovation is overrated, and there is nothing wrong with copying, everyone does it.
Doesn't matter if the cat is black or white, what matters is it catches mice.

When it comes to military technologies, you get whacked before you learn to copy. ;p
 
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Innovation is not really overrated, it's nice for countries to have inventions so history will record they were the first who developed this or that. When other countries copied stuffs from other countries it shows they have the capabilities to do it. The West copied stuffs from ancient China and China has done it too. Nothing to be ashamed of but plenty westerners love to portray China as copy cats, that's what they used to say about the Japanese too.

I am not saying that China does not or will not innovate. I am saying that the article was an abject failure in proving that "China's innovation has outstripped its follow-fast reputation." On the contrary, all of the examples cited were derivatives of previous Western innovations.
 
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