The Asian Copycats of Social Networks and Mobile Apps

Local social media platforms and mobile applications are flooding the market. Some are used worldwide, others are local phenomena. And then there are the copycats. These copy networks are the spitting image of the original Facebook or Instagram, but are fine-tuned for their local markets.

Sometimes the local copies have more users than the original, and better features too. Our guest blogger Juliana Loh has examined these and compared some of the copies with its original counterparts, giving great insights and ideas to companies ready to take the plunge into Asian markets and their social spheres.

Social networking: Ren Ren vs. Facebook


There have been, and still are, various Chinese versions and copies of Facebook, but hands-down Ren Ren is the most popular. Ren Ren has a wide range of users, targeting to business professionals and white collar workers. So it is a suitable platform for brands to create a presence. It’s also the top app for download on iTunes, and free.

The other close competitor platform is Kaixin, but it has a larger demographic of students.


Microblog:
Sina Weibo vs. Twitter

The sheer volume of netizens on the microblog Weibo beats Twitter handsdown. On the first day of the Chinese New Year this year, 32 312 tweets/messages were sent in one (!) second at the stroke of midnight on Weibo.

The interface is interactive and has always had the thumbnails of images and videos, which Twitter only recently implemented.

Most foreign luxury brands use Weibo, and some only post in English. Even President Obama himself uses it to spread his pre-campaign message. Many expats in China, or foreign celebrities, also have accounts to build their personal brand in the Asian marketplace, all tweeting only in English.

Interesting to note is also that Tencent QQ’s microblog, also called Weibo (to make matters even more confusing!), is catching up with Sina Weibo.


Photos:
Weico vs. Instagram

This photo app is linked directly to Sina Weibo, the Chinese microblog and China’s equivalent of Twitter.

Apart from the different filters, there are however many more options in Weico, such as a ‘lomo wall’ and content marked by categories like ‘entertainment’ ‘horror’ ‘humour’ ‘news’ ‘hotspots’ (all linked to Jiepang, the China Foursquare equivalent).


Location services:
Jiepang vs. Foursquare

Jiepang is a direct copy of Foursquare. It works the same way, but with a slightly easier navigation and interface.

The icon is a red crab that works the same way as a Foursquare check-in. It allows venues to promote specials, have fun badges and allow the user to see ‘hotspots’, ‘friends nearby’, ‘check-ins’ and tell you ‘how many people are there’.


Messaging chat programs:
Weixin vs. Whatsapp (what is it?)

WhatsApp Messenger and Weixin are mobile messaging program apps. Weixin is free to download and has the full functions of the more known Whatsapp, but complete with emoticons. Tencent QQ (equivalent of MSN), is behind Weixin. The user interface has a full English option, so it’s a good way to stay in touch with Chinese friends, as Whatsapp comes at a cost to download. The app also has a photo function with different filters and layouts.

There are also options to find friends with a QR code or import them from your QQ contacts. They go even further by being cheeky to ask you to back up your contacts on your server (and sell the database after?).

 

Author Bio:

Juliana Loh was born and bred in Singapore and has worked in Italy (www.fabrica.it) and then Beijing where she spent 4 years working with the off/online Chinese media landscape before relocating to Hong Kong in February 2011 to set up the social media arm for @swirehotels. She is also editor-in-chief of their recently launched blog. She is responsible for curating and writing all its content, feeding and updating all social media platforms—an integral part of her digital strategy for Swire Hotels. Yes, she’s the multitasking elf behind illuminated screens answering all your tweets @swirehotels,@OppositeHouse @UpperHouse_HKG @EASTHongKong and inquiries on all the Facebook pages in Asia. Follow her tweets: @bilbaobab or 微博 @julianaloh

 

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Customer Service At People Days On Thursday and Friday

 

On 16  and 17 February, Mynewsdesk HQ in Stockholm will host People Days, our global staff conference.

While Customer Service will be open from 9am to 5pm as usual, please note that it may take us a little longer to respond to emails. Any invoicing or technical queries will be answered on Monday 20 February at the latest.

Thank you in advance for your understanding!

Best regards,
Mynewsdesk Customer Service

 

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Mynewsdesk – steadily improving the platform

 

Nothing is so good it can’t get better. That could be the motto for our product team, who see to it that the Mynewsdesk platform is steadily being improved upon.

 

Mynewsdesk is the smarter platform for PR and brand engagement, but even a smarter platform can always get even better. Behind the scenes, our product team is working full time to improve on our offering. Sometimes, that means creating whole new features, like Explore. Sometimes, it means improving on what’s already there. That’s what they did this time. Three small but important updates to the platform to make life easier for our clients.

 

First out, it’s image uploading.
We’ve made it possible to upload multiple files at once to an account. We’ve also changed the way images are handled; rather than having two types of images – web images and high-resolution images – all pictures can be used for all types of materials.

 

Then, it’s related materials.
Now, relating item A to item B means that B is automatically related back to A. Sounds complicated? Not at all. You can set up the relation from either direction. Let’s say you have a press release and want to relate it to five images. As soon as you’ve added those five images and saved the press release, you’re done. You don’t have to go to each of the five images and relate them back to the press release.

 

The third and final update
This time it only concerns our Pro, Premium and Plus accounts. We’ve made it easier to add your newsroom to Facebook! From a 6-step instruction to one simple green button. Click it, and select the Facebook page you connect from the drop down menu.

 

What you can count on
If there’s one thing you can count on, whether you’re already using Mynewsdesk or considering signing up for the service, it’s that the platform is constantly being worked on to get even better, and even smarter. Nothing is so good it can’t get better!

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Find your key influencers with Mynewsdesk Explore

At the dawn of the new year, Mynewsdesk has launched a new and improved version of the Explore functionality. We’ve sharpened the claws when it comes to finding your key influencers!

To identify the key influencers for your brand, it’s not enough knowing just what is being said – you also need to know who’s saying it, and what kind of influence that person has. And that’s exactly what our Explore functionality is made for. It gives you a quick and easy overview of who’s said what about your brand, your competitors, your industry… Create your alerts, get the results in real time and get in touch with your key influencers.

The improved Explore functionality covers more than 40,000 sources. You’ll get a clear overview showing top influencers, most frequent influencers and most frequent sources. Explore covers not only editorial sites, but also Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. It couldn’t be easier. Go on, go ahead and find your key influencers!

5 points to make Explore work for you!

So how do you get the most out of Explore? We’ve put together these five easy steps to help you along  – here’s how to do it!

1)   Create your alerts
Figure out what’s important for you when finding your key influencers. Decide which key words you can use to cover your interests. A good place to start is your company name, words related to your industry and your biggest competitors.

2)   Sit back and give it some time
Let the Explore engine work its magic for a day or so. The alerts will start when you create them, and will not work on content published prior to you activating your search profile.

3)   Check out the results
On your Explore dashboard, the results will be collected in an overview, where you can see who’s been saying what. You can also check the hits, to see what’s being said.

4)   Get into the details
Check out the different hits. Who’s the actual person behind them? What sort of areas do the most influential hits cover?

5)   Get in touch
In the dashboard view, hit “follow”, in the hits view, you can choose to email. The choice of how to get in touch and interact with your key influencers is yours. You can easily reply to tweets, retweet, share likes or share articles on your own social media channels. Explore the possibilities of Explore, and don’t be afraid to click the different buttons to see what they do. There is always an extra step before anything is sent, so it’s hard to do something unintentionally.

Get Exploring!

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Brief Intro To Navigating the Chinese Social Media Landscape

Not enough has been shared about Chinese social media channels and even then, some are misleading and I personally find not quite helpful in terms of helping big corporations understand the game and what the marketing potential and critical mass of the Chinese can do for their products.

At the World Social Media Forum in Sep 2011 held in Singapore, there was little mention about weibo 微博, Sina’s microblogging platform that has huge marketing potential. One of the world’s larget market still remains exclusive and somewhat mysterious largely because of the language and cultural barriers. Additionally one needs to navigate the censorship heavy media landscape sensitively and strategically as the rules of the game changes in real time according the events happening in the country. Most recently, the riots in Guangzhou has caused restrictions in posts with words/vocab that hint opposition or violence are blocked.

Kidnapped children have been found and returned to their parents via weibo and real time netizen updates keeps one in the loop of popular culture. http://www.jingdaily.com/en/luxury/shang-xia-turns-luxury-to-philanthropy-helping-children-of-migrant-workers/

This introductory post is just a tip of the iceberg to introduce social media in China and the mirror platforms that I use frequently for Swire Hotels as well as some recent statistics that might be useful. The marketing team of Sina Weibo also kindly shared their marketing tools slide on how brands make full use of the micro blogging platform to launch and track campaigns in the Greater China markets.

We all know doing business in China is about relationships, or guanxi 关系, so entering the market with the right foot requires time, commitment and knowing the right friendly local folks who will help you out, whether is to make the phonecalls to the right person or organizing dinner with the connected person.

Sina Weibo Campaign Reference

A recent group discussion on linkedin listed the top 5 best key opinion leaders on weibo, it is misleading and I have to disagree with this because the startling numbers of 12-15 million followers for these celebrities don’t make them the right influencers for all brands like the article’s subhead claims “top 5 best profiles on Sina Weibo for your Key Opinion Leaders to help you to penetrate the China Market with the social media marketing”. It’s like asking Dunhill to put Snoop Dog in a suit and tweet given sheer fan numbers. Marketing to a Chinese audience follows the same vein. You get the drift.

For a high-end fashion brand, it’s logical to garner the support of the edit or in chief ofVogue China, Angelica who may only have 300,000+ followers, but her influence on consumer decisions is huge. I think Nike did a brilliant job with their China market penetration by updating their wallpaper with Li Na’s victory in real time when she won the championship. National pride + sporting spirit + a women’s sportswear label. Win-win. great social media strategy on their part.

I wouldn’t rule out the possibility that China would have its own intranet someday, with critical online mass, their own mirror social media platforms and the power of the great firewall, that would definitely be possible. If you’re in China, a good and reliable VPN is Astrill, the other proxy networks, well needs a VPN for you to land on the site to purchase one. The irony.

Some other stats and trivia at a recent weibo seminar in Sep 2011.

  1. Weibo HKG has hit 2million users recently, with over 1000 corporate accounts (the blue V) and over 600,000 monthly unique vistors
  2. has a KPI of 91%
  3. Sucessful brand case studies on weibo include Johnny Walker, Intel, Olay feat Maggie cheung that generated significant number of forwards
  4. ICBC has 159 accounts altogether managed by a team of 40. Weibo had advised against so many accounts given that content doesn’t differ much, but they have managed to push relevant content geographically for all their branches.

Author Bio:
Juliana Loh was born and bred in Singapore and has worked in Italy (www.fabrica.it) and then Beijing where she spent 4 years working with the off/online Chinese media landscape before relocating to Hong Kong in February 2011 to set up the social media arm for @swirehotels. She is also editor-in-chief of their recently launched blog. She is responsible for curating and writing all its content, feeding and updating all social media platforms—an integral part of her digital strategy for Swire Hotels. Yes, she’s the multitasking elf behind illuminated screens answering all your tweets @swirehotels,@OppositeHouse @UpperHouse_HKG @EASTHongKong and inquiries on all the Facebook pages in Asia. Follow her tweets: @bilbaobab or 微博 @julianaloh

Check out the Swire Hotels social media campaign that launched 3 weeks ago.

China sites in English that are helpful:
www.danwei.org
www.chinasmack.com

China’s version of sex in the city for laughs:
Sexy Beijing

 

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