Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Groupon China Rumored to Bring Daily Deals into WeChat App

Now that Groupon’s (NASDAQ:GRPN) official China site, Gaopeng, is effectively controlled by Tencent, the country’s biggest web company, it’s rumored to be entering into a very interesting and social partnership. According to sources cited by Techweb, Gaopeng will be tapped as the official daily deals provider for Tencent’s (HKG:0700) WeChat app in a future update that’ll see the messaging app introduce local deals.

With a great many of WeChat’s 200 million users being in China (where the app is known as “Weixin”), this Gaopeng integration would mark a major expansion of the Whatsapp-like service in an e-commerce direction. The new feature is rumored to be coming in late November or early December, and will be dubbed “micro group buy”.

Why is Tencent steering Groupon’s Gaopeng into this? That’s because Gaopeng was recently merged with FTuan under the guiding hand of Tencent, an investor in both those deals sites. Now Tencent has a major (but undisclosed) stake in the merged holding company, which is called GroupNet.

The payments infrastructure for WeChat’s rumored new direction is ready with Tencent’s Tenpay app recently updated to accept cash-less mobile payments. It’s not clear if that’ll be needed for WeChat users to purchase deals in the messaging app.

With other messaging apps like KakaoTalk and Line aiming for fun and entertainment, it’d be interesting if Tencent’s WeChat instead took aim at O2O and local deals.

[Sources: Techweb (1) and (2) - articles in Chinese; via Marbridge Daily]

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LAUNCHPAD is Thailand’s latest coworking space

LAUNCHPAD, Thailand’s latest co-working space, has launched last week. Check out their facilities. Shortly after HUBBA shared with us how coworking spaces are playing an important role in supporting startup ecosystems, Thailand welcomes its latest coworking space. LAUNCHPAD is a new 800 sqm coworking space located in the Silom area just 400 meters from the Surasak...

The post LAUNCHPAD is Thailand’s latest coworking space appeared first on e27.


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LAUNCHPAD is Thailand’s latest coworking space

LAUNCHPAD, Thailand’s latest co-working space, has launched last week. Check out their facilities. Shortly after HUBBA shared with us how coworking spaces are playing an important role in supporting startup ecosystems, Thailand welcomes its latest coworking space. LAUNCHPAD is a new 800 sqm coworking space located in the Silom area just 400 meters from the Surasak...

The post LAUNCHPAD is Thailand’s latest coworking space appeared first on e27.


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GREE Quarterly Financials Dip Once Again, But Company Foresees Recovery Trend

GREE, Tokyo Game Show 2012

GREE, Tokyo Game Show 2012

Japanese mobile social gaming giant GREE (TYO:3632) announced its FY2013 first quarter financial results yesterday, with net sales and operating profit both down for a second consecutive quarter.

These results are not far off from an article published earlier in the month from The Nikkei [1] which reported as much. A GREE representative tells us this morning that the company’s sales have increased in both August and September, and that they are confident that there is a trend towards a recovery.

The company’s labor cost has been rising of late, due to its ever-expanding global operations, and there are also effects from global games that fell behind schedule. I understand that GREE plans to continue its already aggressive marketing in order to reach its goals.

[Download image version of chart]

Yesterday the company also announced a partnership with SingTel for mobile games in Singapore, as well as an initiative to expand its HTML5 compatibility for the GREE platform. Regarding this latter point, our friend Serkan Toto has an interesting take on why this could be the wrong approach. Go check it out. I’m not a developer, so I’m not really sure if this is the wrong approach or not. My guess would be that eliminating any obstacles between them and the user’s money would be a plus.


  1. h/t to the afore-mentioned Serkan Toto for previously pointing that out.  ↩

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Meet Wada, Vietnam’s Homegrown Search Engine to Challenge Google

wada-opera

Wada CEO Pham Tien Thinh speaking on stage

When it comes to search in Vietnam, Google is number one, at least according to Alexa. But Vietnamese netizens aren’t exactly happy with Google’s search service because it wasn’t built with Vietnamese characters in mind. And that’s where Wada, a new search engine launching publicly today that’s run from Vietnam, is seeing an opportunity.

Wada is developed by local company New Horizon Internet. It is, however, based on search technology invented by Russia’s Ashmanov & Partners.

On Wada, users can find web directories based on genres across entertainment, business, and sports. There’s also a one-page news aggregator from over 250 news sources. The news aggregator is able to identify the primary news source and filter duplicated news for users’ reading convenience. Alexander Smirnov, business development director of Ashmanov and Partners, says:

We consider these services very important for the Vietnam market, especially mobile users. In Russia, at least 20 percent of mobile users are new to the internet. And they do not like to search by putting in queries but by clicking on directories. […] We believe these are features users want in Vietnam.

One example of the search engine’s localization is being able to detect Vietnamese names quickly and accurately. Wada also allows searching without the need to insert accent signs while you are keying Vietnamese on mobile. The search engine (pictured below) will suggest the correct accent signs to your search queries. Google.vn, on the other hand, doesn’t do this useful thing:

wada-search

Challenging Google


As I see it, Wada wants to challenge Google in Vietnam, to create a search engine for Vietnam that’s much more localized and specialized. It isn’t just about language, but also some cultural and behavioral aspects of Google’s search engine that aren’t quite suited to Vietnamese users.

In Wada, the potential is certainly there. Thinh Pham, the CEO of Wada, says that Vietnam has more than 30 million internet users (out of 91.5 million in total population) and 75 percent of them use search engines actively. Vietnam also has many mobile subscribers – 127 million – and many are still on feature phones.

So it’s not surprising that Opera Mini (which is well-known for saving users’ mobile data and loading pages faster) is the number one mobile browser in Vietnam. And today’s announcement here in Hanoi also highlighted a partnership between Wada and Opera. For Vietnamese users on Opera Mini browser, Opera will feature Wada.vn on its start page. Opera insists that this partnership isn’t to challenge any other search engines. The mobile browser remains neutral and open to work with any content provider. Opera Asia’s senior VP, Fabrizio Caruso, says:

We’re an open platform only to give our users the best mobile browsing experience. […] We give relevant content to users. And we believe that Wada will give relevant content to Vietnamese users.

Since being featured on Opera Mini, Caruso says that Wada has attracted 180,000 unique users and 700,000 page views within two weeks in Vietnam.

Anyway, it should be fun to see how Google will react to this punch from a local competitor. It isn’t just Google who will be pulling its hair out, though. Chinese search engine Baidu recently set up a language R&D center to research the Vietnamese language (and also Thai) in Singapore, and the Chinese giant may also be taken aback by this news.

When asked by the media about how Wada will be able to change users’ habits now, when they’re already used to Google, CEO Thinh Pham didn’t really answer the question directly but insisted that the purpose of Wada isn’t to compete directly with the current search engines. Rather, Wada is focused on building a better search experience for people who use the Vietnamese language. Pham did concede that he’s aiming to bring Wada to other markets in the future. Smirnov added:

In the short term, we would like to have one million users. In two to three years, we would like to have 30 percent share of the search market [in Vietnam]. Search is just our technology, we would like to build other services around it.

The post Meet Wada, Vietnam’s Homegrown Search Engine to Challenge Google appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Qihoo’s 360 Search Finally Gets a (Very Basic) Mobile Site

Qihoo (NYSE:QIHU) disrupted China’s search engine market in August of this year with the launch of its own contender. And now Qihoo’s 360 Search has finally rolled out a mobile-optimized site at m.so.com. The mobile pages are very basic, and are a reminder that Qihoo is ‘disrupting’ not by innovation but by the weight of its portal’s traffic.

The 360 Search mobile landing page has no options to search for maps, images, or anything (pictured above); it’s only after searching for something that you then get one option for a news search. But that’s it.

In Qihoo’s new battle against Google and Baidu, the company still has quite a few offerings to add. It’s likely that 360 Search will venture into these other areas – like maps, images, and music – which will be yet more bad news for Baidu. 360 Search has rocketed to second place in this sector in China, with 9.64 percent market share chipping away from the dominant Baidu.

The quality of Qihoo’s search is being held back by all these omissions, and the mobile pages make this issue all the more painfully obvious. If you’re standing on the street and search for Starbucks – as I did for these screenshots – Qihoo’s search results are utterly useless, giving you the Starbucks corporate website and lots of other newsy and wiki-like links. For useful info, like maps, directions, or the phone number of the nearest Starbucks branch, you’d have to head to Google or Baidu on your phone.

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Adways Indonesia Releases First Feature Phone Title on Kotagames

Adways Indonesia, a subsidiary of the Japanese advertising company Adways, released its first feature phone game with game publisher Kotagames last week. It’s called ‘Musica Sphere.’ Vincent Wang, the VP of developer platforms for Kotagames, explains that Musica Sphere is a system where people develop their musical skills and do battles to become the next rising star.

Gameplay is similar to Mafia Wars. You will first choose which character you want to become – a vocalist or a guitarist – and then you train your character with lots of music related activities such as ear training to discern vocal notes.

Hayato Takano, the president director of Adways Indonesia explained the reasoning behind this game launch:

We realize that the Indonesian market will increase rapidly. Therefore, we want to open our business to game development. We also consider that in Southeast Asia, the majority of the games are coming from US and Europe, and these games are very popular. It’s for this reason we want to make our own games in Indonesia, to fulfill the needs of the Indonesian market. Later, we’re planning to utilize a mobile reward advertising system for each platform.

Adways Indonesia believes that the feature phone platform is the way for them to reach the biggest market right now in Indonesia. Hayato also thinks that Indonesians have a very close connection to music, which is the reason why the company chose the theme for its feature phone game debut.

Hayato said that they are planning to develop smartphone games and expand business to other countries in near future. He also teased that Adways Indonesia is also preparing to open a game studio in Jakarta to help build more games and applications for the company. Kotagames’ Vincent Wang told us that their company is going to release a smartphone platform by the end of this year.

Musica Sphere will continue to be developed by Adways Indonesia, with the next big update allowing players to fight each other. You can play Adways Indonesia’s first feature phone game Musica Sphere right now over at Kotagames.com.

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Last day to submit your proposals for MobApp Hunt 2012


This is the last day to send in your proposals for MobApp Hunt 2012 The challenge is currently accepting App Proposals in any of the following platforms: Android, Blackberry (Java), HTML5 (Mobile Web), iOS, J2ME, Symbian/QT or WP7 by November 15, Thursday 11:59 PM (UTC +8).

A reward of PHP 50,000 (USD 1,215) will be awarded to every App that is accepted and published on or before 21st December, 2012. For an additional incentive, a generous amount of PHP 500,000 (USD 12,151) will be given for two or even five apps with the most number of downloads, number of user adoption/retention, and highest points accumulated during the presentation to the panel / evaluator session. For more details on criteria and eligibility requirements, visit MobApp Hunt 2012 page.

Important dates:
October 31 – Program Kickoff
November 15 – Deadline of App Proposals
November 20 – Announcement of Accepted App Proposals
December 7 – Deadline of Application Submissions (including publishing form and other requirements )
December 21- Publication to AppStore Live Launch * (TBA): Presentation to Panel / Evaluator

Submit your App Proposals HERE

About MobApp Hunt:
Initially launched in 2010, Globe Labs – MobApp Hunt is an initiative designed to facilitate the development of mobile applications that have market potential and can be published on Globe MyAppsMall, Google Play, iTunes, BB App World, WP Marketplace or Nokia Philippines Store. For this year, the search is from October 31 to December 21.

The post Last day to submit your proposals for MobApp Hunt 2012 appeared first on SGE.


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Japanese App Gets You There with Hybrid Map and Augmented Reality Display

ar-maps

A company in Japan is offering a clever mobile map alternative that combines a conventional map display with an augmented reality view in a split-screen presentation. It’s called AR-Maps, and is now available in English thanks to a recent upgrade.

The folks over at Diginfo news have a good video demonstration of the application (see below), showing the various modes available. If you input your destination, you can use the AR view to see your destination overlaid on a live camera view. If you happen to be lost, you can also send your current location to your friends, as a sort of mobile SOS for them to help you out. The app also lets you search for nearby points of interests, like cafes or restaurants.

The company behind the app, Crossfader, has very diplomatically allowed users to switch between Apple’s own maps solution and Google Maps for the map display.

The app has been doing respectably well in Apple’s Japanese app store since its initial launch this summer and briefly held the tap spot in the navigation category in August. A mid-October upgrade to version 1.3 has given it a resurgence that saw it return to number one for a day last month.

The latest version improves battery consumption, added English support, and also has a mode for when your iPhone is sitting in a fixed position, like if it’s mounted on a car dashboard.

Check out the video demo below, for visual explanation of exactly how it works. If you’d like to try it out, you can download it here.

The post Japanese App Gets You There with Hybrid Map and Augmented Reality Display appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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5 Lessons Learned from Chinese Startup Failures

They say you learn more from failure than you do from success. And that appears to be the theory behind a new blog post from Sinobeat Capital managing partner and Fortune China columnist Ding Chenling. In his very long post, Ding lays out the stories of 17 Chinese startups that ultimately failed, and breaks down the lessons learned. The whole thing is a bit too long for our purposes, but here are a few of the most interesting startups (and lessons) Ding picked.


Company: Fanfou
Lesson: Startups shouldn’t work in areas that could be politically sensitive.

Fanfou is actually still around, but these days it pales in comparison to its competitors Sina and Tencent Weibo, even though it was around long before either of those services. Fanfou was China’s first Twitter clone, and back in 2009 it seemed to have the world at its fingertips. 300,000 users and growing, the company had netted a big investment from HP. And although the company was doing its best to block “sensitive” words and keep political speech to a minimum, it was blocked (along with a host of other sites) following the Urumqi riots in July, 2009. This gave big companies, which already had established relationships with the government and were better equipped to implement censorship, time to develop their own microblog products, and by the time Fanfou was allowed to re-open, Sina and Tencent had already left it in the dust.

The story has sort of a happy ending, though, as Fanfou founder Wang Xing went on to found Groupon clone Meituan, which has been quite successful.


Company: MySee.com
Lesson: Don’t get cocky, don’t waste money.

MySee looked like a company that had it all. P2P video services were hot. Investments were pouring in from all over the place. But the company burned money too fast. A few dozen employees were costing hundreds of thousands of dollars per month, and the company went all in on an expansive, ostentatious office that cost nearly $200,000 to decorate. But it also had to spend hundreds of thousands on video content, and in just a few months, it burned through nearly all of a $2 million investment. The company leadership was also inflating its numbers for the press, and using these fake numbers to brag about themselves. Investors found out, the money stopped coming in, and MySee folded.

This one doesn’t have a happy ending, either: Ding says that he saw MySee founder Gao Ran at a conference in 2010, but no one else there recognized him. He also says he has heard that some of MySee’s original investors had been telling other VCs never to invest in a project that Gao Ran was associated with.


Company: 24quan
Lesson: Pick investors you can work with.

Like everyone else on this list, things were once looking great for 24quan. At its highest point, the company was China’s fifth-biggest daily deals site, which is no small accomplishment considering that at the time there were literally thousands of daily deals sites. But when winter came to the group buy industry, only the most robust companies could survive, and although 24quan was actually seeing profits in some cities, CEO Du Yinan was having an internal struggle with his investors over control of the company. Like with an ugly divorce, it’s hard to know who is at fault now, with both sides blaming the other, but the end result is that 24quan is on permanent hiatus.

There are rumors that Ftuan might still be interested in buying the company, so a kind of happy ending might be possible here, but even if that happens — I wouldn’t hold my breath — the price is going to be very low.


Company: Weimian
Lesson: Pick your industry carefully.

Weimian was a luxury sock and stockings e-commerce company that won a big investment by catching the eye of angel investor Xu Xiaoping. But even with a million RMB in cash to play with, the company struggled and ultimately folded. The reason? Socks — even luxury socks — just weren’t expensive enough to keep up with the costs of running an ecommerce company in China. Order totals were relatively low because socks don’t cost that much, and competitors kept margins pretty thin, so Weimian wasn’t able to make much money。 Ultimately, the company folded, and at least in Ding’s opinion, it failed because socks and Chinese ecommerce don’t really mix.

Of course, as we wrote recently, Xu Xiaoping invests in people, not products, and it only took him twenty minutes to offer Weimian a one million RMB investment, so I’m guessing Weimian’s founder will be able to get Xu to invest in his next project if he wants.


Company: 5 Minutes
Lesson: Stay focused on what you know.

You may not have heard of 5 Minutes, but you’ve probably heard of Happy Farm, the game Zynga copied to make Farmville. 5 Minutes was the Chinese game developer behind Happy Farm and a host of other web games, but the transition to mobile didn’t treat them well. Earlier this year, the company launched its first HTML5 game and its first mobile game, but it also continued to work on web games and, ultimately, spread itself too thin. When the company’s B-round of financing fell through, it wasn’t focused enough on any one game to be generating much revenue. It also wasn’t really ready for the stiffer competition it faced from global developers in the app stores. Now, it’s dead, although reportedly it may have been split into two new companies that will work in similar spheres.

(A lack of focus wasn’t 5 Minutes’ only problem, though; it was also bleeding staffers thanks to an inexperienced management team, and losing that round of financing is probably also indicative of poor management.)


If you’re interested in lessons from more failed Chinese startups, Ding Chenling has a whole heap of them for you to wade through. But the big lesson here is to learn from other people’s failures instead of making these mistakes yourself. So if you’re doing a startup in China, really ask yourself whether you could be making any of the mistakes these companies made. They were all well-funded, and many of them were well on their way to success when mistakes brought them crashing back down to earth. Don’t let that be you.

The post 5 Lessons Learned from Chinese Startup Failures appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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