Archive for October, 2009

KL’s Growth Innovation and Leadership conference

chriswestland | October 30, 2009 in Uncategorized | Comments (0)

Gil conferenceI had the opportunity at the beginning of this month to present our work in Red Wired at in two separate sessions of the Kuala Lumpur Growth Innovation and Leadership conference (GIL 2009: Asia Pacific, Program), at set of five international conferences – London (UK), Phoenix, AZ (USA), Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), Bangalore (India), Dubai (UAE), Shanghai (China) and Sao Paolo (Brazil) – held annually by Silicon Valley based Frost & Sullivan. The conference keynote speaker was former Malaysian Prime minister Mahathir Mohamad. Frost & Sullivan is a market leader in Global Growth Consulting across various industry sectors and levels and was founded in 1961 with a mission to research and analyze new opportunities for corporate growth in research, training, consulting and corporate strategy.


New broom may sweep Google China ahead

Sherman | October 19, 2009 in Baidu, China, Google, Internet, John Liu, Lee Kaifu, Robin Li, search engine | Comments (1)

Lee Kai-fu’s decision to quit his job as head of Google China has been portrayed as a major setback for the company as it struggles to catch up with mainland rival Baidu. Yet his successor’s background and preference for a less-technology heavy approach could play very much in the United States company’s favor. Read article in Asia Times.


Shanda Games shows its wrinkles

Sherman | October 6, 2009 in Changyou, China, Internet, Shanda, Sohu, online game | Comments (4)

Investors looking to celebrate after buying into the US$1 billion Nasdaq listing of Shanda Games, the largest US-listed initial public offering (IPO) in more than a year, were left mystified late last month, their fingers burnt as the share price turned flat.

Shanda Interactive, China’s largest online game company, did all right for itself in spinning off Shanda Games, taking the unit to market at the top of an indicated range of $10.50-$12.50, and increasing the amount of shares offered by over 30%.

But by the end of the first day’s trading, buyers of the stock were counting their losses as the shares closed down 14% to $10.80, with little in the way of recovery since then, the price hovering at around $11.01- $11.70 and closing on Monday at $11.26.

That baffled many investors who were looking for a repeat of the success earlier this year of Changyou.com, a similar games-division spin-off by Sohu, China’s second-largest portal. Changyou shares surged 25% on their first day of trading on the Nasdaq in April. Read the article in Asia Times.


CNN report on Red Wired: China’s Internet Revolution

Sherman | October 1, 2009 in Baidu, China, Google, Internet, Internet cafe, QQ, Tencent | Comments (0)

CNN’s Cherise Fong did a report about the book.  She summed up pretty well what the book is about. I like the following part the most:

“While 25.5 percent of the Chinese population is now online, CNNIC’s 2008 statistics sketch a relatively coherent portrait of the mainstream majority of them: 67 percent are below the age of 30; 73 percent have only a high school education or lower; 33 percent are students; and 28 percent fall into the lowest income bracket of under $75 per month.

Moreover, 78 percent go online at home and 42 percent log on at an Internet cafe. Once connected, 84 percent listen to music, 75 percent instant-message, 63 percent play online games, and only 57 percent e-mail.

In short, for the vast majority of Chinese, Internet means play, not work.

One could conclude that an Internet entrepreneur’s target audience in China is teenage and twenty-something students, low-end consumers in search of entertainment with plenty of time to kill.”

That applies to Tencent, all the online game players, such as Shanda, Netease, Changyou, The9, Perfect World, and so on, and even Baidu. Read complete article in CNN.


CNN Interview – video clip

Sherman | in Baidu, China, Google, Internet, Internet cafe, QQ, Tencent | Comments (0)

I did an interview with CNN last week about the book.  Here is me talking a bit about China Internet.