Tuesday, September 1, 2009

China Mobile to Integrate App Store with SNS, IM

A representative for China Mobile's (NYSE: CHL; 0941.HK) app store, Mobile Market, said at a recent forum that as an open platform, Mobile Market is making continual improvements, and has already added recommendation functionality for users to suggest applications to friends. The representative said that in the future, China Mobile will also integrate its Fetion instant messaging service and its SNS into Mobile Market. For example, Fetion users will be able to see recommended applications in their buddy list, and to encourage users to recommend applications to their friends, Mobile Market will reward users with redeemable points based on an SNS system.
The representative said that users' past purchases are recorded and displayed in their Mobile Market user profiles, such that users who swap phones still have access to their applications and will not be charged for downloading again. When asked about the upcoming release of the OPhone and its marketing impact for Mobile Market, the representative said that China Mobile does not view the app store as a means to pressure users into trading their phones for an OPhone model.

eLong Develops Renren.com Plug-In

Online travel services provider eLong (Nasdaq:LONG) and Beijing-based online entertainment company Oak Pacific Interactive plan to release an eLong booking widget for Oak Pacific Interactive's social networking service site Renren.com (formerly called Xiaonei.com) September 4, Sina reported August 28 citing eLong CEO Cui Guangfu. Reports in mid-August said that Oak Pacific Interactive will continue to purchase shares in eLong in order to gain "speaking rights" and better integrate the companies' user bases.

Monday, August 17, 2009

No Xiaonei Anymore, Here Comes RenRen

If I ask who are the popular social networking sites in China? I think most of you will talk about Kaixin001.com, QQ, 51.com and Xiaonei.com. However, since yesterday, there is no Xiaonei.com anymore, Joe Chen, CEO of Oak Pacific changed its name from Xiaonei.com to RenRen.com.

But why changing the already well-known Xiaonei.com brand to Renren.com (brief history of Renren below)? Some people think it is because Xiaonei means “in campus” in Chinese, which limited its users bases on university and college users. By changing its name to Renren, which means “everyone” in Chinese, can help to promote to white collar users, this market is now dominated by Kaixin001.com.

That’s why there is also rumor that Joe Chen plans to merge all three SNS sites under Oak Pacific, i.e. Xiaonei, MOP and Kaixin.com, into Renren.com. But they denied the rumor. If so, they already have Kaixin.com which compete head-to-head with Kaixin001.com on white collar users, why bother to change the name of Xiaonei. After Xiaonei changed name and strategy, will there be another site who can dominate the university and college users SNS market? Will it be QQ Xiaoyou?

Renren.com actually is not a new site, which was founded in 1999 and was a quite high-profile website during the Internet Bubble, it went bankruptcy in 2001. Joe Chen bought Renren.com domain name in 2005. Joe Chen relaunched RenRen.com as an online classified site in 2006, but it was shut down again in 2007.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Kaixin001 to Announce New Funding

Beijing-based social networking site Kaixin001.com plans to announce new second-round funding at the end of March, reports Sohu quoting an unnamed insider from investment bank and Kaixin001.com financial consultant China Renaissance.

An unnamed insider said in early March that three venture capital firms, including existing investor Northern Light Venture Capital (NLVC) and Ceyuan Ventures, had agreed to invest in the site as part of second-round funding that could total $20 million. NLVC completed investment in Kaixin001.com in 2008; NLVC Partner John Wu said in September of that year that his firm planned to invest $4-5 million in the site.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Oak Pacific to Enter Japanese Market

According to an employment advertisement released by Chinese Internet platform provider Oak Pacific, the company is looking to find a Japanese product manager to oversee Oak Pacific's Japanese SNS product development.
A Japanese domain for Oak Pacific's SNS Kaixin.com (kaixin.jp) has been registered, with a Chinese-language SNS platform already established on the site.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Campus SNS Site Tongxue Nabs $6M Investment

 Campus social networking site Tongxue.com has received investment of $6 million from venture capital firms and the Tano China Private Equity Fund I (TCPEFI), reports ChinaVenture. Tongxue.com expects to grow from its current 10 million users, 70% of whom are college students, to surpass 30 million registered users by the end of 2009, reports qq.com quoting company President Zhu Huaming. Tongxue.com has completed the $6 million in funding as well as some previous angel investments, and it expects to break even in 2010, said Zhu. Zhu said the $6 million investment can support the site for two to three years, and it plans to spend most of the funding on product innovation and brand promotion. Tongxue.com currently has twenty to thirty employees, said Zhu. The site was founded as FaceRen.com in May 2006 and changed its name to Tongxue.com in March 2008.

Sohu's ChinaRen Adds SNS Functions

Sohu (Nasdaq:SOHU) has updated its alumni site ChinaRen.com to offer social networking functions including a personal homepage that lists contacts, groups, blogs, greetings, latest visitors and photos, reports ccw.com.cn. ChinaRen has nearly 100 million users and more than 1 million unique daily logins, said the report. Sohu acquired ChinaRen in 2000, one year after the site was launched.

Sohu Nears SNS Product, Sougou Includes Baidu, Google Results

Sohu (Nasdaq:SOHU) has almost finished testing its social networking service (SNS) product but would not specify the product's release date, reports ChinaByte quoting the company's public relations department. Sohu has opened up the search rights of its search engine Sogou.com to include results from Baidu (Nasdaq:BIDU), Google (Nasdaq:GOOG) and other engines, said the report.

Sohu CEO Charles Zhang said in early January that the company planned to release an independent SNS product after China's Spring Festival (January 25 - February 1).

source:jlmpacificepoch.com/

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Rumor: Sohu to Expand into SNS Market

Chinese Internet firm Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) is rumored to be preparing to enter the social networking service (SNS) business with a new product scheduled to be released soon. Sohu Blogs has also recently stated that it will abandon its policy of accepting only search engine crawls from its own Sogou search engine, and has once again begun to accept crawls from Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Google. A Sohu spokesperson said that the previous policy of refusing other search engine crawls was mainly to protect user privacy.

source:marbridgeconsulting.com

Sunday, February 15, 2009

China Yahoo to E-Commercialize Koubei

Alibaba Group's daily life information website Yahoo Koubei (koubei.com) and social networking service Yahoo Guanxi will be "e-commercialized" in 2009 and eventually integrated into Alibaba's e-commerce system, reports qq.com quoting China Yahoo Public Relations Director Wang Tong. China Yahoo designated its life and email services and Yahoo Guanxi as its key businesses in an annual meeting, reports Sina quoting a company insider. The company established a sales team of more than 60 employees to generate profit from e-commerce in life services, and all China Yahoo resources will be put towards life services in 2009, said the insider.

China Yahoo currently has nearly 700 employees, including nearly 200 for Koubei, but only 20 maintain and update China Yahoo content, said the Sina report quoting Wang. Search and blog services will not be emphasized in the future, and China Yahoo will not spend more money on search traffic, said Wang. China Yahoo has stopped providing some download and upload functions for its online photo service and plans to shut down its new community platform on February 28 due to business restructuring.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

51.com to Invest RMB 100 Mln on Gaming Infrastructure

Chinese social networking service (SNS) 51.com has revealed that it plans to invest a total of RMB 100 mln between 2009 and 2010 to be used toward improvements for basic network infrastructure to support its current gaming projects and provide a network operating environment for new gaming projects expected to be released this year. 51.com has already signed cooperative agreements with internet data center service providers, and network equipment providers and operators including Huawei, China Telecom (NYSE: CHA; 0728.HK), and China Unicom (NYSE: CHU; 0762.HK; 600050.SH). 2009 contracts amount to RMB 50 mln.
51.com has also denied rumors reportedly spread by competitors suggesting the company's cooperation with Huawei is simply a means to distract public attention from rumored large-scale layoffs.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Chinese SNS Website UUZone.com To Close In March 2009

UUZone.com, one of the first social networking service websites in China, has published a notice stating it will close all services in March 2009.
As one of the first batch of Chinese SNS websites, UUZone.com once gained over USD1 million investment from the venture capital firm Morningside Ventures. In 2005, the peak time for UUZone.com, its comprehensive power ranked first among the top nine Chinese SNS websites with three million registered users. Apparently it could not adequately maneuver a userbase of three million into making decent revenue, so the website must now close.
Morningside is probably licking its wounds now, and the website's closure comes after a number of missteps. In mid-December 2006, the third anniversary of UUZone.com, its founder Mao Zhihong departed from the company. At the end of February 2007, the website suffered problems that caused it to go offline, which caused concern among users. On May 15, 2007, UUZone.com dismissed many of its employees because of financial problems.

source:chinatechnews.com

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

SNS Site 51.com Targets Stronger Network Through Huawei Partnership

Shanghai-based social networking site 51.com confirmed that it has signed an agreement to obtain network equipment solutions from Huawei, and the site will announce the partnership soon, reports Sina. 51.com plans to spend over RMB 100 million on the cooperation, said the report.

Huawei may be preparing a project to provide software or services to online community operators like China Mobile's (NYSE:CHL, 941.HK) social networking service (SNS) site 139.com, said an unnamed employee. The equipment manufacturer began recruiting personnel via headhunters to build an SNS-related team last year, said the report.

source:jlmpacificepoch.com

Monday, January 19, 2009

Online social networks popular in China

Online social networks are growing in popularity. Since launching in May 2008, the Chinese social networking website kaixin001.com has seen incredible growth. It is now the 13th most viewed site in the nation. But in an already crowded sector - and in a country where online copying is rampant - it's anyone's guess whether it will continue to remain popular. Who knows when and if another site will come along and surpass it.

Kaixin001.com
Kaixin001.com
Daniella and Maggie, two twenty-somethings living in Beijing and working for Lenovo, are hooked on China's hot new craze. The western world has Facebook and MySpace; China has Kaixin, which means happy.
Kaixin001.com is similar to many other social networking sites, but also has online games. For example they have a game called Parking War where each user parks his or her cars in a friend's parking spot to earn virtual money. This money can then be spent on buying more cars. In the game Friend Sales, each user can be bought for a number of hours, and forced to do things like clean a toilet, make a cup of tea or sing a song.
Daniella Zhang, one Kaixin user said "Before work starts, I'll get on it and check it out, then during the day when I'm a bit bored, and then again at the end of work. I park my cars, buy some friends, vote in some polls."
Kaixin has quickly established itself as China's top social networking site. An estimated 30 million users log on everyday.
iResearch Consulting Group places the total market value of Chinese networking services in 2007 as upwards of 500 million yuan. Of this amount, social networking services accounted for more than half. The total market value is predicted to hit 1.6 billion yuan by 2011.
But, China's online market is different than many others because copying is rampant. If one site has even a hint of traction, others doing the exact same thing will spring up seemingly overnight.
After the recent success of kaixin001.com a copycat emerged. The registered, but previously inactive domain name kaixin.com was purchased in October 2008 and launched a site of similar design and operation to kaixin001.com.
The new Kaixin has become popular in its own right, thanks in part to people who think they're logging onto the original Kaixin.
Tan Xiaosheng, CTO of Myspace China highlights the instability of the market. He notes that even the top ranked sites still only reach a small percentage of China's vast population.
And while he expects the growth of social networking sites to continue at breakneck speed, he cautions that the turnover of sites could be greater than ever.
Tan Xiaosheng, CTO of Myspace China said "If one enterprise or a website doesn't build up their own core competence, and they can't produce a unique product they won't be competive. Also, if they don't have their own marketing, PR, or creativity, they won't survive."
Somewhat troubling for Kaixin is the fact that two of their most fervent supporters aren't convinced it has staying power.
Daniella says she is already beginning to lose interest in the site, while Maggie says the site could be a distant memory in a year's time.
What is clear is that social networking in China is already hugely popular and continues to grow. But for the dominant sites in the sector, the trick is not just getting to the top, but staying there.

source:cctv.com

Thursday, January 15, 2009

China blacklists 17 more Web sites in porn crackdown

    BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- China has named and shamed another17 Web sites as part of a monthlong drive to stamp out online porn.
    The Web sites were accused of providing obscene content and of being slow to delete erotic materials after the campaign was launched on Jan. 5 by the State Council's Information Office, Public Security and Culture ministries and four other government agencies.
    The sites, including www.xiaonei.com, www. 9you.com, were urged to immediately delete obscene or erotic information and were threatened with closure if they ignore the warning made Tuesday.
    Public distribution of pornography is illegal in China. Previously, the country had blacklisted 33 Web sites, including search engine Google and Baidu and MSN China. Ninety-one other Websites have been shut down.
    China's Internet users hit 298 million in 2008, overtaking the United States as the nation with the world's largest online population, according to latest figures released by the China Internet Network Information Center.

Oak Pacific Opens Kaixin.com In China

The Chinese Web 2.0 company Oak Pacific Interactive has announced the opening of its social networking site Kaixin.com to developers.
The open platform of Kaixin.com will allow the third-party developers to place brand advertisements within the site's services and Kaixin.com will not participate in the profit-sharing of the advertising income of these developers.
A representative from the Oak Pacific Interactive told local media that the company has decided to develop Kaixin.com into a fully opened entertainment platform, which will adopt the same open platform rules as Xiaonei.com, but the website will launch a new payment system which is different from that of Xiaonei.com.
Xiaonei.com, another SNS website owned by Oak Pacific Interactive, launched the open platform on July 8, 2008. According to Xu Chaojun, vice president for China InterActive Corp and the person in charge of Xiaonei.com, the open platform of Xiaonei.com is like the API of Facebook and the Open Social of Google, which implements full open programming interface, protocol and structure.

source:chinatechnews.com

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Oak Pacific Positions Kaixin.com as Open Entertainment Platform

Oak Pacific Interactive's Kaixin.com, a domain name purchased in October 2008, will be an open entertainment platform with third-party-developed widgets and advertisements, reports qq.com quoting unnamed insider. The company plans to announce Kaixin.com's orientation and development strategy on Friday, said the report.

Oak Pacific CEO Chen Yizhou has considered changing the name of campus social networking site Xiaonei.com to Xiaowai.com or establishing a new website called Xiaowai.com targeting white collar users, reports Sina quoting unnamed sources. "Xiaonei" and "Xiaowai" can be roughly translated as "in school" and "out of school," respectively. The sources also said that before purchasing Kaixin.com, Oak Pacific tried to acquire Beijing-based social networking site Kaixin001.com but was rejected.

source:jlmpacificepoch.com

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Tencent Launches "Xiaoyou" SNS, Tests Web-Based IM Tool

 Tencent (700.HK) officially launched social networking service site xiaoyou.qq.com on January 6. The service, roughly translated as "school friends," allows users to login with their QQ accounts and add QQ group contacts. Tencent released a beta version of the SNS site that required real-name registration and integrated with Tencent personal space and blog service Qzone on June 6, 2008.

The Internet company is currently conducting alpha testing of "My QQ," a browser-based version of its instant messaging tool QQ. The new tool, which follows 2007's Web QQ beta 1, offers access to Tencent's email service.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

SNS Site iPart CEO Discloses Statistics and Strategy

Taiwan-based social networking service (SNS) site iPart recorded revenue of more than $3 million in 2008 and expects the total to reach $10 million in 2009, reports Sina quoting iPart CEO Zhang Jiaming. Zhang said that virtual item sales and advertising each account for roughly 50% of iPart's 2008 total revenue, while virtual items made up 80% of the 2007 total. Advertising revenue is likely to grow by 300-500% year-on-year in 2009, said Zhang. iPart's Mainland site (ipart.cn) has recorded over 14 million members, 60% of whom are female, up from 10 million users in April.

iPart has become profitable and is targeting an A-shares or Hong Kong listing in two to three years, said Zhang. Zhang said the site may acquire companies and considered an acquisition of Beijing-based social networking site Kaixin001.com in March and April. iPart has spent the $8.5 million its received from a Singaporean investor in September 2007 on personnel, offices, promotions, advertising and partnerships, said Zhang.

Established in Taiwan in 2003, iPart entered the Mainland market in 2004 and has set up offices in Beijing, Shanghai and Taipei. The company has roughly 180 total employees.

Source:jlmpacificepoch.com

China Mobile Starts Closed Beta Testing of SNS

China Mobile (NYSE: CHL; 0941.HK) began open beta testing today of its SNS platform "139 Community". The site is tailored for China Mobile subscribers, and is currently accepting registration applications from Guangdong Mobile users.
In addition to basic SNS functionality, 139 Community also allows users to send SMS and MMS messages online and provides online data storage, SMS conversation log management, and a personal address book.
China Mobile's 139 Mailbox service has also been moved to the 139.com second-level domain mail.139.com.