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Chinese smartphone brands are going places and capture market share from heavyweight global rivals

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Ringing up profits

Chinese smartphone brands are going places as they amp up their appeal and capture market share from heavyweight global rivals. Zhou Mo reports.

1442548854441_100.jpg


Homegrown Chinese mainland smartphone producers Xiaomi and Huawei overtook global giants Apple and Samsung in the second quarter of 2015 to become the leading vendors in the domestic market, carving out respective shares of 15.9 percent and 15.7 percent, according to market research firm Canalys.

But the picture was rather different just a year ago, when Samsung ranked second with a 12 percent share. However, the second quarter of the current calendar year saw the South Korean giant post a 37.6 percent year-on-year decline in mobile service-related profits and thus slide to fourth position in the mainland market.

A similar fate befell Apple. While it took the lead in the first three months this year, the US behemoth was beaten to third place by local rivals in the second quarter.

Even as global giants falter, homegrown mainland smartphone producers are posting robust growth. The Canalys report shows that shipment of Huawei smartphones grew 48 percent sequentially in the second quarter, representing the strongest growth among its peers in the top 10.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, homegrown smartphone makers now occupy more than 70 percent of the mainland market.

While competitive pricing continues to be seen as a core advantage of domestic vendors, many of them are also adopting other strategies to adapt to a rapidly changing market, a move that has contributed to the trend, industry insiders believe.

Bells and whistles

Jessie Ding, a research analyst at Canalys Shanghai, believes that greater attention to brand enhancement and marketing are factors that have boosted the sales graph.

“Xiaomi and Huawei are now putting more focus on the quality and design of flagship (models), which has significantly improved their brand recognition and the purchase willingness of consumers,” Ding said.

“On the marketing side, the two are also doing quite well. Both held a fan festival online on April 8 offering discounts to consumers.”

And it is not just market leaders Xiaomi and Huawei. Other Chinese vendors are also beefing up promotional campaigns. A case in point is Oppo, the Dongguan-based smartphone maker that has greatly increased its popularity by sponsoring influential media programs and inviting local celebrities to endorse its products.

Familiarity with the local market and customers also puts domestic producers in an advantageous position, notes James Yan, a senior analyst at market trackers International Data Corporation (IDC) China.

“Chinese smartphone makers have designed more easy-to-use functions and adopted a promotion and communication mode that is easy for Chinese customers to accept,” said Yan, adding that the sound industrial chain in the national smartphone sector has facilitated their rise.

As per capita income grows steadily on the mainland, an increasing number of consumers are willing to buy medium- and high-end devices.

The general view is that smartphones that cost under 1,000 yuan ($157) are low-end devices, while those between 1,000 yuan and 3,000 yuan are on the medium level. Smartphones with price tags of over 3,000 yuan are categorized as high-end.

In the past, only Apple and Samsung fell into the third group. Chinese vendors were known for their specialty of making cheap products. But many spotted the change in buying preferences and have taken action.

While Xiaomi continues to offer Redmi series handsets for below 1,000 yuan, it has also introduced a high-end version priced at around 3,000 yuan to appeal to a different category of customers.

Shenzhen-based ZTE Corp in July launched their flagship Axon smartphones, with the highest price reaching 3,888 yuan, but also sells a range of low-priced phones.

“Offering value-for-money devices that well meet the needs of price-sensitive Chinese consumers remains the great specialty of local vendors. Unlike Apple, which offers iPhones only at a high price point, many local brands offer products at a wide range of price points,” said Ding.

Lin Shujie, 29, used to be a loyal fan of Apple. But the Shenzhen-based web editor changed her view toward local brands after a trial use of her younger sister’s smartphone.

“I used to think that domestic-made smartphones were poor in appearance and quality. But when I tried out my sister’s handset, I totally changed my mind,” Lin said.

“It looks amazing and has all the functions I need and is easy to use. I can hardly find any drawbacks in user experience. More importantly, it is much, much cheaper than my iPhone 6.”

However, despite growing recognition from Chinese users, domestic brands still need to face up to challenges in building better brand equity and improving core technology, Yan warned.

“Although some brands have been making progress, prices of domestic smartphones have generally been kept at a relatively low level,” he said. “It would be a challenge for those producers to increase their brand value. Moreover, they need to improve their technology for core parts, like processing chip, camera chip, and so on.”

1442547847591_114.jpg

With its still-low mobile penetration and large price-conscious population, India is among emerging markets drawing the likes of Xiaomi, Meizu and Huawei.

World exploration starts close to home

On Aug 10, leading Chinese mainland smartphone producer Xiaomi announced it had started sales in India of its first handsets also manufactured in that country.

Days later on Aug 26, Xiaomi’s mainland peer Meizu launched its new handset in the South Asian nation. Meanwhile, smartphones from Shenzhen-based Huawei continue to enjoy rising popularity among Indian consumers.

At a time when smartphone sales on the mainland are showing signs of a slowdown, homegrown producers are turning their eyes overseas, with India becoming the latest battleground.

According to a recent report from market research organization International Data Corporation (IDC), smartphone shipments to India in the second quarter of 2015 soared 44 percent to 26.5 million units, from 18.4 million for the same period a year ago.

Chinese mainland vendors were a main contributor to the figure. Lenovo, Xiaomi, Huawei and Gionee took up 12 percent of India’s smartphone market in the second quarter, doubling their year-ago share.

“As the Chinese economy has started to slow down, most vendors from the country have targeted India as the next big growth market for smartphones,” said Kiranjeet Kaur, research manager with IDC’s Asia-Pacific mobile phone team.

Meizu is one of them. A rising star among Chinese smartphone makers, the Zhuhai-based company declared that it is targeting India as one of its most important markets to develop this year.

“With a population of nearly 1.3 billion, India has a large user base and huge potential for growth. Our main objective this year is to develop the Indian market and achieve localization,” said a Meizu executive in charge of the overseas market.

Shenzhen-headquartered ZTE Corp first tapped into Europe 10 years ago. But now, it is stepping up efforts to expand its Indian market share.

“Our goal is to become one of the five (top) smartphone brands in India within the next three years,” said Waiman Lam, global spokesperson for mobile products and technology at ZTE.


1442547847344_64.jpg

Young Indians jostle for handsets from Xiaomi, in a testament to the Chinese smartphone maker’s popularity in the South Asian country.

Smartphone penetration in India has remained low, with fewer than 120 million people owning the device. That contrasts greatly with China, where smartphone ownership reached 95 percent after years of high-speed growth and has now begun to slow down.

A separate IDC report shows that smartphone shipment on the Chinese market contracted 4 percent to 98.8 million units in the first quarter of 2015, compared with the same period a year ago, the first time in six years that this has happened.

However, India is only part of the overseas expansion plan of Chinese smartphone producers. A fierce scramble is under way over the broader international market as well.

And Southeast Asia, with its multiple developing countries and large population, has become the most popular target for Chinese smartphone producers.

In 2009, Dongguan-based Oppo brought its cellphones to Thailand, its first overseas market.

After five years of exploration, the company in 2014 became one of the top three best-selling brands in Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Thailand.

Shenzhen-based Vivo, which has set up 20 specialty stores and 15 after-sales service centers in Thailand, ranked fifth in terms of smartphone market share on the Chinese mainland in the second quarter of 2015, according to market research firm Canalys.

However, the ambition of these smartphone companies is not limited to Asia as they are determined to bring their products to consumers around the world.

ZTE says it is strengthening its global presence through several strategic engines, including markets in Europe, Japan, South Korea and India.

“Just exploring markets in developing countries is not enough for ZTE, which aims to become an internationally influential mobile phone producer. We need also to have a voice in high-end markets,” Lam said.

Meanwhile, Shenzhen mobile phone brand OnePlus, despite being a newcomer, has brought its products to 36 countries and regions around the world, including the US and Europe.

The company, founded in late 2013, launched its OnePlus2 handset in August in Paris. Reservation of the new smartphones reached more than 2 million globally within 72 hours of debut.

“We will continue to follow an international strategy. On the one hand, we will consolidate our existing mature and emerging markets overseas and seek further expansion, while on the other, we will conduct careful studies before entering a new one to avoid blind expansion,” said Pete Lau, chief executive officer of OnePlus.

Exploration of developed markets is believed to be tougher, compared with emerging ones.

“In developed countries, lack of intellectual property rights remains a challenge,” warned Jessie Ding, a research analyst from Canalys Shanghai. “In regions other than China, especially in developed regions like North America and Western Europe, Chinese vendors still have a very long way to go.”

In developing countries like India and Brazil, meanwhile, the ability to figure out the most effective marketing strategy and channels to be adopted will be their big concern, she pointed out.

Despite the obstacles, Ding still believes there is a lot of room for domestic mobile phone brands to develop globally. Emerging economies like India, Indonesia and Latin America are the most promising markets for Chinese smartphone producers to explore, she noted.

“Unlike the near-saturated and mature market in developed countries, smartphone markets in emerging regions are still fast-growing. Great opportunities and demand lie there,” she said.
 
. . .
Ringing up profits

Chinese smartphone brands are going places as they amp up their appeal and capture market share from heavyweight global rivals. Zhou Mo reports.

1442548854441_100.jpg


Homegrown Chinese mainland smartphone producers Xiaomi and Huawei overtook global giants Apple and Samsung in the second quarter of 2015 to become the leading vendors in the domestic market, carving out respective shares of 15.9 percent and 15.7 percent, according to market research firm Canalys.

But the picture was rather different just a year ago, when Samsung ranked second with a 12 percent share. However, the second quarter of the current calendar year saw the South Korean giant post a 37.6 percent year-on-year decline in mobile service-related profits and thus slide to fourth position in the mainland market.

A similar fate befell Apple. While it took the lead in the first three months this year, the US behemoth was beaten to third place by local rivals in the second quarter.

Even as global giants falter, homegrown mainland smartphone producers are posting robust growth. The Canalys report shows that shipment of Huawei smartphones grew 48 percent sequentially in the second quarter, representing the strongest growth among its peers in the top 10.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, homegrown smartphone makers now occupy more than 70 percent of the mainland market.

While competitive pricing continues to be seen as a core advantage of domestic vendors, many of them are also adopting other strategies to adapt to a rapidly changing market, a move that has contributed to the trend, industry insiders believe.

Bells and whistles

Jessie Ding, a research analyst at Canalys Shanghai, believes that greater attention to brand enhancement and marketing are factors that have boosted the sales graph.

“Xiaomi and Huawei are now putting more focus on the quality and design of flagship (models), which has significantly improved their brand recognition and the purchase willingness of consumers,” Ding said.

“On the marketing side, the two are also doing quite well. Both held a fan festival online on April 8 offering discounts to consumers.”

And it is not just market leaders Xiaomi and Huawei. Other Chinese vendors are also beefing up promotional campaigns. A case in point is Oppo, the Dongguan-based smartphone maker that has greatly increased its popularity by sponsoring influential media programs and inviting local celebrities to endorse its products.

Familiarity with the local market and customers also puts domestic producers in an advantageous position, notes James Yan, a senior analyst at market trackers International Data Corporation (IDC) China.

“Chinese smartphone makers have designed more easy-to-use functions and adopted a promotion and communication mode that is easy for Chinese customers to accept,” said Yan, adding that the sound industrial chain in the national smartphone sector has facilitated their rise.

As per capita income grows steadily on the mainland, an increasing number of consumers are willing to buy medium- and high-end devices.

The general view is that smartphones that cost under 1,000 yuan ($157) are low-end devices, while those between 1,000 yuan and 3,000 yuan are on the medium level. Smartphones with price tags of over 3,000 yuan are categorized as high-end.

In the past, only Apple and Samsung fell into the third group. Chinese vendors were known for their specialty of making cheap products. But many spotted the change in buying preferences and have taken action.

While Xiaomi continues to offer Redmi series handsets for below 1,000 yuan, it has also introduced a high-end version priced at around 3,000 yuan to appeal to a different category of customers.

Shenzhen-based ZTE Corp in July launched their flagship Axon smartphones, with the highest price reaching 3,888 yuan, but also sells a range of low-priced phones.

“Offering value-for-money devices that well meet the needs of price-sensitive Chinese consumers remains the great specialty of local vendors. Unlike Apple, which offers iPhones only at a high price point, many local brands offer products at a wide range of price points,” said Ding.

Lin Shujie, 29, used to be a loyal fan of Apple. But the Shenzhen-based web editor changed her view toward local brands after a trial use of her younger sister’s smartphone.

“I used to think that domestic-made smartphones were poor in appearance and quality. But when I tried out my sister’s handset, I totally changed my mind,” Lin said.

“It looks amazing and has all the functions I need and is easy to use. I can hardly find any drawbacks in user experience. More importantly, it is much, much cheaper than my iPhone 6.”

However, despite growing recognition from Chinese users, domestic brands still need to face up to challenges in building better brand equity and improving core technology, Yan warned.

“Although some brands have been making progress, prices of domestic smartphones have generally been kept at a relatively low level,” he said. “It would be a challenge for those producers to increase their brand value. Moreover, they need to improve their technology for core parts, like processing chip, camera chip, and so on.”

1442547847591_114.jpg

With its still-low mobile penetration and large price-conscious population, India is among emerging markets drawing the likes of Xiaomi, Meizu and Huawei.

World exploration starts close to home

On Aug 10, leading Chinese mainland smartphone producer Xiaomi announced it had started sales in India of its first handsets also manufactured in that country.

Days later on Aug 26, Xiaomi’s mainland peer Meizu launched its new handset in the South Asian nation. Meanwhile, smartphones from Shenzhen-based Huawei continue to enjoy rising popularity among Indian consumers.

At a time when smartphone sales on the mainland are showing signs of a slowdown, homegrown producers are turning their eyes overseas, with India becoming the latest battleground.

According to a recent report from market research organization International Data Corporation (IDC), smartphone shipments to India in the second quarter of 2015 soared 44 percent to 26.5 million units, from 18.4 million for the same period a year ago.

Chinese mainland vendors were a main contributor to the figure. Lenovo, Xiaomi, Huawei and Gionee took up 12 percent of India’s smartphone market in the second quarter, doubling their year-ago share.

“As the Chinese economy has started to slow down, most vendors from the country have targeted India as the next big growth market for smartphones,” said Kiranjeet Kaur, research manager with IDC’s Asia-Pacific mobile phone team.

Meizu is one of them. A rising star among Chinese smartphone makers, the Zhuhai-based company declared that it is targeting India as one of its most important markets to develop this year.

“With a population of nearly 1.3 billion, India has a large user base and huge potential for growth. Our main objective this year is to develop the Indian market and achieve localization,” said a Meizu executive in charge of the overseas market.

Shenzhen-headquartered ZTE Corp first tapped into Europe 10 years ago. But now, it is stepping up efforts to expand its Indian market share.

“Our goal is to become one of the five (top) smartphone brands in India within the next three years,” said Waiman Lam, global spokesperson for mobile products and technology at ZTE.


1442547847344_64.jpg

Young Indians jostle for handsets from Xiaomi, in a testament to the Chinese smartphone maker’s popularity in the South Asian country.

Smartphone penetration in India has remained low, with fewer than 120 million people owning the device. That contrasts greatly with China, where smartphone ownership reached 95 percent after years of high-speed growth and has now begun to slow down.

A separate IDC report shows that smartphone shipment on the Chinese market contracted 4 percent to 98.8 million units in the first quarter of 2015, compared with the same period a year ago, the first time in six years that this has happened.

However, India is only part of the overseas expansion plan of Chinese smartphone producers. A fierce scramble is under way over the broader international market as well.

And Southeast Asia, with its multiple developing countries and large population, has become the most popular target for Chinese smartphone producers.

In 2009, Dongguan-based Oppo brought its cellphones to Thailand, its first overseas market.

After five years of exploration, the company in 2014 became one of the top three best-selling brands in Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Thailand.

Shenzhen-based Vivo, which has set up 20 specialty stores and 15 after-sales service centers in Thailand, ranked fifth in terms of smartphone market share on the Chinese mainland in the second quarter of 2015, according to market research firm Canalys.

However, the ambition of these smartphone companies is not limited to Asia as they are determined to bring their products to consumers around the world.

ZTE says it is strengthening its global presence through several strategic engines, including markets in Europe, Japan, South Korea and India.

“Just exploring markets in developing countries is not enough for ZTE, which aims to become an internationally influential mobile phone producer. We need also to have a voice in high-end markets,” Lam said.

Meanwhile, Shenzhen mobile phone brand OnePlus, despite being a newcomer, has brought its products to 36 countries and regions around the world, including the US and Europe.

The company, founded in late 2013, launched its OnePlus2 handset in August in Paris. Reservation of the new smartphones reached more than 2 million globally within 72 hours of debut.

“We will continue to follow an international strategy. On the one hand, we will consolidate our existing mature and emerging markets overseas and seek further expansion, while on the other, we will conduct careful studies before entering a new one to avoid blind expansion,” said Pete Lau, chief executive officer of OnePlus.

Exploration of developed markets is believed to be tougher, compared with emerging ones.

“In developed countries, lack of intellectual property rights remains a challenge,” warned Jessie Ding, a research analyst from Canalys Shanghai. “In regions other than China, especially in developed regions like North America and Western Europe, Chinese vendors still have a very long way to go.”

In developing countries like India and Brazil, meanwhile, the ability to figure out the most effective marketing strategy and channels to be adopted will be their big concern, she pointed out.

Despite the obstacles, Ding still believes there is a lot of room for domestic mobile phone brands to develop globally. Emerging economies like India, Indonesia and Latin America are the most promising markets for Chinese smartphone producers to explore, she noted.

“Unlike the near-saturated and mature market in developed countries, smartphone markets in emerging regions are still fast-growing. Great opportunities and demand lie there,” she said.
huawie is best :D
 
.
Offline vivo and OPPO are the two brands with the highest market shares now a days。

Huawei: Don't call us cheap

Chinese networking vendor says it doesn't want to be perceived as a low-cost market competitor against the likes of Cisco Systems, noting that its server price points in China are comparable to that of IBM's.

By Eileen Yu for By The Way | September 19, 2015

Huawei Technologies does not want to be seen as a vendor that competes purely on low cost, at least, in the server market, where it says its products come with a price tag that is comparable to its foreign competitors.

Against its rivals, namely Cisco Systems, the Chinese networking vendor had been seen to compete based on price points. This, however, was not an accurate reflection of its gameplay, said Redfox, Huawei's general manager of server product domain, who noted that the company did not want to be perceived as a low-price market competitor.

Speaking at a media briefing at Huawei Cloud Congress 2015 in Shanghai on Saturday, he said: "In China, our prices are equivalent to that of IBM's so [our pricing is] actually relatively high." Redfox added that price was just one of several key considerations in a customer's buying process.

"We believe low cost isn't the right competitive strategy for the server market. It should instead be about innovation, product performance, and quality. When customers want to test our products in oversea markets, they'll realise that," he said.

Citing Gartner market stats, Huawei said it ranked fourth over the past eight quarters in global server shipments, behind Hewlett-Packard, Dell, and Lenovo. In China, it is the leading server vendor in the banking and public sectors according to unit shipments, according to Cody Wang, Huawei's general manager of mission critical server.

The Chinese vendor has earmarked 18 countries for global expansion, which were selected primarily based on their GDP. Noting that server shipment correlated closely to GDP, Redfox said the 18 markets were mostly developed countries with the exception of India, and together with China, they accounted for 75 percent of the worldwide server shipment.

He said he had set himself a "personal target" of pushing overseas sales to account for 50 percent of Huawei's server business by 2018, up from its current 20 percent. Some 70 percent of Huawei's total revenue currently are generated from outside China, he noted.

The vendor is pitching itself as a provider of IT infrastructure, software platforms, and enterprise cloud services based on an open source architecture -- in particular, the OpenStack Foundation, of which it is a Gold Member.

Huawei also is betting on strong collaboration with its partner network to drive its cloud strategy and innovation. Rotating CEO Eric Xu said: "In the coming years, Huawei will develop a leading cloud OS, big data platform, and PaaS platform by combing our technical strengths with those of our partners. Together, we will create an open and dynamic cloud ecosystem."

In a separate announcement made at the congress Saturday, Huawei signed an agreement with Micron Technology to co-develop flash technologies for datacentre deployment. Company executives, however, declined to provide details related to their investment plans and targeted roadmap.

Darren Thomas, Micron's vice president of storage solutions, said it was still too soon to announce product plans, saying both companies were looking to build "new products that don't exist today". "But, we're not ready to talk about them yet," Thomas said, adding that the two companies were existing partners and already had co-developed products.

With flash prices falling, Huawei believes all HDD eventually will be replaced with SSD, noted Joy Huang, its vice president of IT product line. He pointed to the Chinese vendor's campaign to replace SAS HDD with SDDs, offering its customers free system upgrades so they pay the same price for the same capacity running SDD disks.

The extended partnership with Micron would improve Huawei's flash systems and drive innovation in 3D NAND technology, Huang said.

The Chinese vendor also announced a new release of its cloud platform, FusionSphere 6.0, which touts support for native OpenStack standards as well as APIs. The vendor added that third-party cloud applications developed on the open source industry platform would be able to run on FusionSphere 6.0 without any code changes.

In addition, Huawei launched a cloud disaster recovery offering based on OpenStack.

Huawei: Don't call us cheap | ZDNet
 
.
Innovation key to China's overall development: Chinese vice premier
2015-09-20

As China's economic growth has entered a "new normal", the Chinese government attaches great importance to innovation and is eager to deepen and broaden innovation cooperation with Britain, Chinese Vice Premier Liu Yandong said on Friday.

Liu said this at the UK-China Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum held in Cardiff University, where she delivered a keynote speech. She was accompanied by British First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones.

Liu said the Chinese people are good at innovation and that over the past 66 years since the founding of new China, especially during the past 37 years since China's reform and opening-up, China has learned from the advanced experiences of countries like Britain and vigorously pursued the strategy of rejuvenating China through science, education and talent cultivation.

The country's innovative ability has been greatly enhanced, sustained China's rapid economic growth for more than 30 years, and has thus made significant contribution to global economic development.

"We can say that China's reform and opening-up in itself is an unprecedented large-scale innovative event. We have finished in only a few decades a development journey which took the advanced countries hundreds of years to traverse," said Liu.

Liu said innovation and development are crucial to China's modernization drive and the realization of the Chinese dream to rejuvenate the nation.

She also said innovation cooperation is an important part of the comprehensive strategic partnership between China and Britain and China-UK people-to-people exchanges.

She hoped that both China and Britain could promote mutual-learning of innovative ideas, treat each other equally, deepen cooperation and researches in some important fields such as health, environmental technology, water and food, urbanization, energy and education.

China and Britain should also strengthen joint training of innovative talents, share innovation resources, encourage and support their universities and institutions to build laboratories together, and improve coordination mechanism in innovation cooperation to implement important cooperation projects.

She believes that Chinese President Xi Jinping's historic state visit to Britain next month will certainly further boost bilateral innovation cooperation.
 
. .
With more and more 2/3 G users turn to 4G, Chinese smartphones brands have a greater opportunity to climb up in the middle/high-end market.

View attachment 259024 View attachment 259023

Hey bro where are you now, lost in HK?

Can you check VIVO top model HK version (港行) for me, what's the price?
I want the top model (e.g. X5 Max or whatever) with independent HiFi chips to match my Beats Studio 2.0
 
.
Hey bro where are you now, lost in HK?

Can you check VIVO top model HK version (港行) for me, what's the price?
I want the top model (e.g. X5 Max or whatever) with independent HiFi chips to match my Beats Studio 2.0
Sorry bro, I'm not in HK but hope to be lost in HK soon.
Actually I'm waiting for the movie Lost in HK which will be released on Friday.:D
VIVO is the best HiFi smart phone without doubt.:tup:
 
.
Ringing up profits

Chinese smartphone brands are going places as they amp up their appeal and capture market share from heavyweight global rivals. Zhou Mo reports.

1442548854441_100.jpg


Homegrown Chinese mainland smartphone producers Xiaomi and Huawei overtook global giants Apple and Samsung in the second quarter of 2015 to become the leading vendors in the domestic market, carving out respective shares of 15.9 percent and 15.7 percent, according to market research firm Canalys.

But the picture was rather different just a year ago, when Samsung ranked second with a 12 percent share. However, the second quarter of the current calendar year saw the South Korean giant post a 37.6 percent year-on-year decline in mobile service-related profits and thus slide to fourth position in the mainland market.

A similar fate befell Apple. While it took the lead in the first three months this year, the US behemoth was beaten to third place by local rivals in the second quarter.

Even as global giants falter, homegrown mainland smartphone producers are posting robust growth. The Canalys report shows that shipment of Huawei smartphones grew 48 percent sequentially in the second quarter, representing the strongest growth among its peers in the top 10.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, homegrown smartphone makers now occupy more than 70 percent of the mainland market.

While competitive pricing continues to be seen as a core advantage of domestic vendors, many of them are also adopting other strategies to adapt to a rapidly changing market, a move that has contributed to the trend, industry insiders believe.

Bells and whistles

Jessie Ding, a research analyst at Canalys Shanghai, believes that greater attention to brand enhancement and marketing are factors that have boosted the sales graph.

“Xiaomi and Huawei are now putting more focus on the quality and design of flagship (models), which has significantly improved their brand recognition and the purchase willingness of consumers,” Ding said.

“On the marketing side, the two are also doing quite well. Both held a fan festival online on April 8 offering discounts to consumers.”

And it is not just market leaders Xiaomi and Huawei. Other Chinese vendors are also beefing up promotional campaigns. A case in point is Oppo, the Dongguan-based smartphone maker that has greatly increased its popularity by sponsoring influential media programs and inviting local celebrities to endorse its products.

Familiarity with the local market and customers also puts domestic producers in an advantageous position, notes James Yan, a senior analyst at market trackers International Data Corporation (IDC) China.

“Chinese smartphone makers have designed more easy-to-use functions and adopted a promotion and communication mode that is easy for Chinese customers to accept,” said Yan, adding that the sound industrial chain in the national smartphone sector has facilitated their rise.

As per capita income grows steadily on the mainland, an increasing number of consumers are willing to buy medium- and high-end devices.

The general view is that smartphones that cost under 1,000 yuan ($157) are low-end devices, while those between 1,000 yuan and 3,000 yuan are on the medium level. Smartphones with price tags of over 3,000 yuan are categorized as high-end.

In the past, only Apple and Samsung fell into the third group. Chinese vendors were known for their specialty of making cheap products. But many spotted the change in buying preferences and have taken action.

While Xiaomi continues to offer Redmi series handsets for below 1,000 yuan, it has also introduced a high-end version priced at around 3,000 yuan to appeal to a different category of customers.

Shenzhen-based ZTE Corp in July launched their flagship Axon smartphones, with the highest price reaching 3,888 yuan, but also sells a range of low-priced phones.

“Offering value-for-money devices that well meet the needs of price-sensitive Chinese consumers remains the great specialty of local vendors. Unlike Apple, which offers iPhones only at a high price point, many local brands offer products at a wide range of price points,” said Ding.

Lin Shujie, 29, used to be a loyal fan of Apple. But the Shenzhen-based web editor changed her view toward local brands after a trial use of her younger sister’s smartphone.

“I used to think that domestic-made smartphones were poor in appearance and quality. But when I tried out my sister’s handset, I totally changed my mind,” Lin said.

“It looks amazing and has all the functions I need and is easy to use. I can hardly find any drawbacks in user experience. More importantly, it is much, much cheaper than my iPhone 6.”

However, despite growing recognition from Chinese users, domestic brands still need to face up to challenges in building better brand equity and improving core technology, Yan warned.

“Although some brands have been making progress, prices of domestic smartphones have generally been kept at a relatively low level,” he said. “It would be a challenge for those producers to increase their brand value. Moreover, they need to improve their technology for core parts, like processing chip, camera chip, and so on.”

1442547847591_114.jpg

With its still-low mobile penetration and large price-conscious population, India is among emerging markets drawing the likes of Xiaomi, Meizu and Huawei.

World exploration starts close to home

On Aug 10, leading Chinese mainland smartphone producer Xiaomi announced it had started sales in India of its first handsets also manufactured in that country.

Days later on Aug 26, Xiaomi’s mainland peer Meizu launched its new handset in the South Asian nation. Meanwhile, smartphones from Shenzhen-based Huawei continue to enjoy rising popularity among Indian consumers.

At a time when smartphone sales on the mainland are showing signs of a slowdown, homegrown producers are turning their eyes overseas, with India becoming the latest battleground.

According to a recent report from market research organization International Data Corporation (IDC), smartphone shipments to India in the second quarter of 2015 soared 44 percent to 26.5 million units, from 18.4 million for the same period a year ago.

Chinese mainland vendors were a main contributor to the figure. Lenovo, Xiaomi, Huawei and Gionee took up 12 percent of India’s smartphone market in the second quarter, doubling their year-ago share.

“As the Chinese economy has started to slow down, most vendors from the country have targeted India as the next big growth market for smartphones,” said Kiranjeet Kaur, research manager with IDC’s Asia-Pacific mobile phone team.

Meizu is one of them. A rising star among Chinese smartphone makers, the Zhuhai-based company declared that it is targeting India as one of its most important markets to develop this year.

“With a population of nearly 1.3 billion, India has a large user base and huge potential for growth. Our main objective this year is to develop the Indian market and achieve localization,” said a Meizu executive in charge of the overseas market.

Shenzhen-headquartered ZTE Corp first tapped into Europe 10 years ago. But now, it is stepping up efforts to expand its Indian market share.

“Our goal is to become one of the five (top) smartphone brands in India within the next three years,” said Waiman Lam, global spokesperson for mobile products and technology at ZTE.


1442547847344_64.jpg

Young Indians jostle for handsets from Xiaomi, in a testament to the Chinese smartphone maker’s popularity in the South Asian country.

Smartphone penetration in India has remained low, with fewer than 120 million people owning the device. That contrasts greatly with China, where smartphone ownership reached 95 percent after years of high-speed growth and has now begun to slow down.

A separate IDC report shows that smartphone shipment on the Chinese market contracted 4 percent to 98.8 million units in the first quarter of 2015, compared with the same period a year ago, the first time in six years that this has happened.

However, India is only part of the overseas expansion plan of Chinese smartphone producers. A fierce scramble is under way over the broader international market as well.

And Southeast Asia, with its multiple developing countries and large population, has become the most popular target for Chinese smartphone producers.

In 2009, Dongguan-based Oppo brought its cellphones to Thailand, its first overseas market.

After five years of exploration, the company in 2014 became one of the top three best-selling brands in Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Thailand.

Shenzhen-based Vivo, which has set up 20 specialty stores and 15 after-sales service centers in Thailand, ranked fifth in terms of smartphone market share on the Chinese mainland in the second quarter of 2015, according to market research firm Canalys.

However, the ambition of these smartphone companies is not limited to Asia as they are determined to bring their products to consumers around the world.

ZTE says it is strengthening its global presence through several strategic engines, including markets in Europe, Japan, South Korea and India.

“Just exploring markets in developing countries is not enough for ZTE, which aims to become an internationally influential mobile phone producer. We need also to have a voice in high-end markets,” Lam said.

Meanwhile, Shenzhen mobile phone brand OnePlus, despite being a newcomer, has brought its products to 36 countries and regions around the world, including the US and Europe.

The company, founded in late 2013, launched its OnePlus2 handset in August in Paris. Reservation of the new smartphones reached more than 2 million globally within 72 hours of debut.

“We will continue to follow an international strategy. On the one hand, we will consolidate our existing mature and emerging markets overseas and seek further expansion, while on the other, we will conduct careful studies before entering a new one to avoid blind expansion,” said Pete Lau, chief executive officer of OnePlus.

Exploration of developed markets is believed to be tougher, compared with emerging ones.

“In developed countries, lack of intellectual property rights remains a challenge,” warned Jessie Ding, a research analyst from Canalys Shanghai. “In regions other than China, especially in developed regions like North America and Western Europe, Chinese vendors still have a very long way to go.”

In developing countries like India and Brazil, meanwhile, the ability to figure out the most effective marketing strategy and channels to be adopted will be their big concern, she pointed out.

Despite the obstacles, Ding still believes there is a lot of room for domestic mobile phone brands to develop globally. Emerging economies like India, Indonesia and Latin America are the most promising markets for Chinese smartphone producers to explore, she noted.

“Unlike the near-saturated and mature market in developed countries, smartphone markets in emerging regions are still fast-growing. Great opportunities and demand lie there,” she said.

Next marketing scheme Xaoimi and Huwaei need to learn is this from Apple. When introducing your next phone, pay people to line up days before the store open to draw attention and media. Apple is famous for this type of bogus.

Sorry bro, I'm not in HK but hope to be lost in HK soon.
Actually I'm waiting for the movie Lost in HK which will be released on Friday.:D
VIVO is the best HiFi smart phone without doubt.:tup:
Dude you can't get lost in HK. You walk ten minutes at the most in any direction and you will find a subway station.
 
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Next marketing scheme Xaoimi and Huwaei need to learn is this from Apple. When introducing your next phone, pay people to line up days before the store open to draw attention and media. Apple is famous for this type of bogus.


Dude you can't get lost in HK. You walk ten minutes at the most in any direction and you will find a subway station.

hey Jlaw, is that you who were looking to buy OnePlus2 weeks ago and complained about hard to get an invite?
 
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hey Jlaw, is that you who were looking to buy OnePlus2 weeks ago and complained about hard to get an invite?
lol, no. I am not those crazy people lining up days for Black Friday and phones. But I think it's a good little scheme that Apple uses--rather old scheme but it sure fool people.
 
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Next marketing scheme Xaoimi and Huwaei need to learn is this from Apple. When introducing your next phone, pay people to line up days before the store open to draw attention and media. Apple is famous for this type of bogus.

Agree, especially creating a fake media hype is important. That's why China should have a strongly regime-friendly, middle-class oriented corporate media to go international. Just like in the US. That's taking shape, in fact.

Surrealistic media hype is the surest way to create obsolete-in-6-months icons, sheep and cult followers globally.
 
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Agree, especially creating a fake media hype is important. That's why China should have a strongly regime-friendly, middle-class oriented corporate media to go international. Just like in the US. That's taking shape, in fact.

Surrealistic media hype is the surest way to create obsolete-in-6-months icons, sheep and cult followers globally.
Indian media is another good example. Making majority of the population believe the country have achieve great success, but in reality----
 
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Indian media is another good example. Making majority of the population believe the country have achieve great success, but in reality----

In elitist - corporatist - class-driven polities it is sure damn easy to churn out human robots like German sauces.

Socialist-Communist citizenry is damn politically conscious. That's why I at times think while the state should stay socialist-communist, it must promote capitalism at the society level. I might be wrong.

(Edit: While I agree this socialism-capitalism or whatever label must remain essentially Chinese)

However, if one compares socialist and capitalist-liberal parties in Europe, one often will see turmoil, change of heads, disfranchising, splitting up in Communist parties (hence perhaps hundreds of mini parties spring up) while the liberal-conservative-right wing parties maintain the single bloc nature for ever with little questioning, internal democracy in the party.
 
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