Sunday, August 19, 2012

Understanding How the Internet Is Transforming Personal Connections in China

S Y Lau delivers a presentation at the Ad Age Digital Conference Tuesday afternoon in New York.
Photo Credit: Patrick Butler

The internet has transformed China's closed inner circle of personal connections, referred to as guanxi, into a more open chain of relationships, said social-media giant S Y Lau of Tencent.

S Y Lau delivers a presentation at the Ad Age Digital Conference Tuesday afternoon in New York. 

Speaking at Ad Age's Digital Conference on Tuesday, Mr. Lau described the opportunities for marketers that understand the values of Chinese consumers -- from lack of brand loyalty to a hunger for respect. Mr. Lau is senior exec VP-president of online-media business at Tencent, which includes the QQ messaging service, with 721 million active accounts. Just 14 months ago, Tencent developed a smartphone-messaging app, Weixin, that now has 100 million users, Mr. Lau said.

The numbers are staggering in a country with 513 million internet users: Every day, more than 164,031 Chinese go online for the first time and 17 million new smartphones are activated. Jeremy Lin has 5.4 million fans on Tencent's social networks in China, and 370,000 people play mahjong on the networks at the same time, according to Mr. Lau.

Mr. Lau said that the Chinese are impressionable and intrigued by imagery but unlikely to remain loyal to brands. Creating content -- such as a campaign Tencent did with Nike that led to the formation of 62,000 virtual basketball teams -- helps build brand intimacy.

Consumers' skepticism is often a challenge for marketers participating in big events, Mr. Lau said. In a move to counter that, two years ago Tencent and BMW aimed to create a huge volunteer network by mobilizing consumers in a viral campaign to spread the spirit of the World Expo held in Shanghai.

Chinese also seek respect, or "face," meaning a good reputation in front of one's peers. One expression of that is a huge market for virtual products. "Personal image is vital here," Mr. Lau said. "[People] spend billions of yuan on virtual goods to maintain their online image."

In a Q&A session at the conference, John Quelch, professor of international management and dean at the China Europe International Business School, said that the government does block search results on a few topics and that Chinese web companies understand these limitations.

"But if you look at the upside of having 500 million to 600 million internet users, and the information being exchanged, no central authority can control all that," Mr. Quelch said. "There are restrictions on sensitive issues. There was a temporary shutdown for three days of the comments feature of microblogging sites. The government didn't attempt to shut down the posting or forwarding features, just comments. ... Reason prevailed, and after three days the restrictions were lifted. Maybe because they were ineffective, maybe because there was such a popular outcry."

Mr. Quelch said Chinese society was built around fear, with citizens close to only "six people around my banquet table." But that's changing, he added. "Chinese are learning to be social in a much broader societal sense."

That's an important message for marketers. When one blogger posted a bad review of a Siemens refrigerator, the negative message was retweeted 170 million times in China, he said....

By: Laurel Wentz | Published: April 18, 2012. Please go to Ad Age to read the whole story and comments.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

The End of Cheap China

The End of Cheap China is a fun, riveting, must-read book not only for people doing business in China but for anyone interested in understanding the forces that are changing the world.

Many Americans know China for manufacturing cheap products, thanks largely to the country's vast supply of low-cost workers. But China is changing, and the glut of cheap labor that has made everyday low prices possible is drying up as the Chinese people seek not to make iPhones, but to buy them. Shaun Rein, Founder of the China Market Research Group, puts China's continuing transformation from producer to large-scale consumer - a process that is farther along than most economists think - under the microscope, examining eight megatrends that are catalyzing change in China and posing threats to Americans' consumption-driven way of life.

Rein takes an engaging and informative approach to examining the extraordinary changes taking place across all levels of Chinese society, talking to everyone from Chinese billionaires and senior government officials to poor migrant workers and even prostitutes. He draws on personal stories and experiences from living in China since the 1990s as well as hard economic data. Each chapter focuses on a different aspect of China's transformation, from fast-improving Chinese companies to confident, optimistic Chinese women to the role of China's government, and at the end breaks down key lessons for readers to take away.