''' TECHNOLOGY
-MARKET- TURNPIKES '''
THE TRUTH IS : THAT RIGHT THROUGH the Decade ahead-
And
even more, the most prominent and profound emotion the entire world
is most likely to exhibit, display and have induced, is Fear of the
Unknown.
Fear, is likely to rule the roost
in world politics, inter-state relationships, societies, consumers,
technology, markets, success and failures.
Without doubt, China's readership on:
Sam
Daily Times : The Voice of the Voiceless is very low. But we accept
that with patience and glory and continue working forward towards an
exciting future-
Of getting to compete with all the Social Networks, Technology Giants right before , just about 1/4th of Mankind.
The
World Students Society has many great and formidable strengths and we
play on those, while learning wisdom and how best to manage our many
weaknesses.
The World Students Society, most
lovingly and respectfully called, !WOW! wishes China, Its Students,
Professors and Teachers its very best wishes. .
While Apple's position in China is about as different from Facebook's as possible.......- it has built a hugely valuable retail business -it too has been affected by law.
Just the week before WhatsApp was hit by the disruptions, Apple said that to ensure that a complied with the law it would begin storing data from its iCloud service in China.
It
also said that it would work with a local Chinese company to set up a
data center in southwest China as part of a $1 billion investment.
An
Apple spokeswoman referred to remarks by Apple's chief executive,
Timothy D. Cook, during the company's most recent earnings call, in
which he said was ''very enthusiastic'' about opportunities in China.
Yet keeping Beijing satisfied is only part of the challenge for Apple. With more and more Chinese smartphone makers selling high-quality smartphones cheaply, the company's sales in the country have slid over the past two years.
In the second quarter ending April 1, the company's revenue in greater China fell 14 percent, even as the
market remains critical. Greater China accounts for 21% of the
company's sales, making it Apple's most important market after the
United States.
In a new tack for Apple in
China, just last week it created a new position, general manger for
greater China, and appointed a longtime manager, Isabel GeMabe, to the position.
Ms. Ge Mabe was born in China, speaks Mandarin and has deep engineering
experience. The company is also in search of a greater China policy head
after its former head, Jun Ge, recently resigned, according two people
familiar with the matter.
If Apple is trying something new, LinkedIn is showing that what had been an accepted model within China is no guarantee of success.
Unlike Apple, which as a hardware company is considered as less threatening by the Chinese government, LinkedIn had to go along with a bargain other Internet companies have refused.
In
2014, the company agreed to start censoring -much as Google had done
almost a decade before it eventually left China -and formed a
partnership with two influential Chinese venture capital investment
funds to create a separate China operation.
While the self-censorship drew complaints from users, other technology companies looking to get into China came to see LinkedIn approach as a model.
By
bringing in well-connected investors, it was able to ensure that its
communications with the Chinese government were in very capable hands.
It also focused on the particulars of the local market.
It hired Derek Shen, a successful Chinese entrepreneur and Google veteran, to run its China operation separately.
Mr.
Shen, in turn created a stand alone app to bring LinkedIn, a service
built around email and computers, to China's smartphone-dependent
population.
Three years later,
the results have been mixed. Troubles have included missing sales
targets and failing to attract enough users, according to four former and current employees who declined to be named because they were not authorized to speak officially.
LinkedIn local app, Chitu,
also failed to attract the hundreds of millions of would be-users who
have less exposure to the international work force and live in China's
smaller cities.
While in most countries LinkedIn simply runs its network as it does in the United States, in China
that proved difficult. In China, many of the people the company wants
attract use only smartphones, and communicate on messaging apps instead of email.
Mr. Shen decided to try a specialized app catering to those patterns. Yet it had to compete with entrenched social networks, Like WeChat, and gained little traction.
In June, the company also announced the departure of Mr. Shen and is still in the process of looking for his permanent replacement.
A LinkedIn spokesman said the decision that Mr. Shen would leave was mutual, and his decision was motivated by desire to join a more entrepreneurial effort.
The Honor and Serving of the latest Operational Research on China, Markets and Technology Giants continues.
With
respectful dedication to the Leaders, Students, Professors and Teachers
of the world. See Ya all on !WOW! -the World Students Society and
Twitter-!E-WOW! -the Ecosystem 2011:
''' Tech & Measure '''
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless
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