Tech in Asia » Infographic http://www.techinasia.com Asia's Tech News for the World Wed, 19 Jun 2013 05:45:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Online Infographic Design Tool PiktoChart Hits 300,000 Users http://www.techinasia.com/online-infographic-design-tool-piktochart-hits-300000-users/ http://www.techinasia.com/online-infographic-design-tool-piktochart-hits-300000-users/#comments Thu, 06 Jun 2013 02:33:03 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=125505 Read more »]]>

About a month ago, online infographic tool Piktochart hit 300,000 users and co-founder Ai Ching shared how the startup pulled it off in a blog post (Ai also provided the graphic you see above). The startup had previously told us that it had 170,000 users (with 5,000 of them as paid users) and that it has been profitable from the very start.

To grow to 300,000 users, Piktochart used a mixture of online and offline tactics. I have taken the liberty of summarizing and elaborating on Ai Ching’s marketing and PR pointers below. They are by no means best practices but I figured they’re interesting to share anyway. 300,000 users is still something to clap about for a startup.

Offline:

  • Sharing about Piktochart while networking

  • Participating at startup pitching competitions (PiktoChart won second at our Startup Arena in Singapore last year)

Online:

  • Participating in online discussions on infographic-related posts

  • Cold-emailing and pitching to bloggers and at forums who might find Piktochart interesting

  • Blogging with a focus on related keywords to improve search engine optimization (SEO) on the site

  • Promotion with AppSumo

Ai Ching says that the funding it got from Cradle fund allowed them to test Adwords, banner retargeting using adroll.com, and Facebook retargeting ads. “Our CPC can vary but CPA for a free user can start at US$5 all the way to US$12,” she added.

The promotion PiktoChart did with AppSumo involved lowering its pricing from $49 per year to $14.99, which caused a huge boost in users. Still, Ai Ching stresses that building a good product with good tutorials matters most:

We wanted to see if massive advertising could bring in users, but focusing on community building, a good product, creating useful tutorials, and localizing the app would work better in the long run.

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Thailand Now Has 18 Million Social Media Users (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/thailand-18-million-social-media-users-in-2013/ http://www.techinasia.com/thailand-18-million-social-media-users-in-2013/#comments Mon, 13 May 2013 07:56:58 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=121485 Read more »]]> Our ZocialInc buddies in Bangkok always keep a close eye on Thailand’s social media scene. In their newest infographic report, the crew has found that the biggest social gainer in Thailand is Instagram, which has seen 163 percent growth in users in the country in the past 12 months. Facebook, in contrast, has slowed down in the country, seeing only 28 percent growth. But in terms of sheer numbers, Facebook is still way ahead with 18 million Thai users, while Instagram is now up to 600,000 at the end of the first quarter of 2013. Across the nation as a whole, there are now 18 million social media users.

Let’s take a look at the highlights from the infographic (the full thing is embedded at bottom) and the newest statistics for Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Foursquare, and Line.

Social media users in Thailand 2013 Thailand_social_media_2013__infographic__02

Facebook in Thailand

Zoning in on Facebook, the ZocialInc crew finds that the peak time for posting is 11pm. These are the demographics within Thailand:

Social media users in Thailand 2013

Twittery Thais

There are now two million Thais on Twitter, who on average tweet 5.5 times each day. Like with Facebook, the country’s Twitterers are night owls, tending to post more between 10pm and midnight. 66.7 percent of Twitter posts in Thailand are made on mobiles.

Social media users in Thailand 2013 Thailand_social_media_2013__infographic__05

YouTube boom

YouTube is still seeing great growth in Thailand, and is now up to 630,000 channels within the nation, adding up to 5.3 million videos uploaded by Thai users. The top video cateogry for these guys and girls is music.

Social media users in Thailand 2013

Snapping up Instagram

With the most stellar growth in Thailand in the past year, Instagram is now up to 600,000 users in the country, up from 150,000 this time last year. In the first four months of 2013, they collectively posted 21.38 million photos. One of the most liked users is @aum_patchrapa, the beauty queen turned actress Pachrapa ‘Aum’ Chaichua.

Social media users in Thailand 2013 Social media users in Thailand 2013 Social media users in Thailand 2013

Checking out of Foursquare?

Foursquare, the location-based service, saw a nine percent drop in check-ins in the past year in Thailand, but the number of venues grew. The best growth figure for Foursquare was that 55 percent more people checked in via Instagram.

Social media users in Thailand 2013

Line up

There are no Thailand-specific numbers from WeChat for Thailand, so let’s focus on rival app Line, which has a pretty spectacular 15 million Thai users. It’s also an important new platform for social marketing and brands outreach, with the top Thai brand on Line having 4.6 million followers already.

Social media users in Thailand 2013

Here’s the full slideshow presentation:

(Source: ZocialInc blog)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Chinese Netizens and Their Love Affair With European Footballers on Weibo (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-netizens-love-affair-european-footballers-weibo-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-netizens-love-affair-european-footballers-weibo-infographic/#comments Thu, 02 May 2013 12:00:33 +0000 Enricko Lukman http://www.techinasia.com/?p=120256 Read more »]]> Mailman Group has come back with another infographic about how popular European footballers are on Twitter-esque services Sina Weibo and Tencent Weibo. The two most famous players on the social networks have just fallen out of the Champions League competition: Barcelona’s Lionel Messi and Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo. They both record the highest number of followers in China and the most engaged Weibo accounts as well.

The report notes that the best newcomer, in the eyes of Chinese netizens, is Tottenham Hotspurs’ Gareth Bale. Interestingly, Spain’s La Liga players are a lot more popular than those in the English Premier League (BPL). La Liga’s top six most popular players on Weibo have eight times – yes, x8 – the number of followers compared to BPL’s top eight players.

One interesting thing to note is that Japan’s Hidetoshi Nakata – who retired a few years back – is the fourth most popular European player on China’s leading social networks. Although he’s Japanese, he’s played in a few European clubs like AS Roma and Parma in the past.

The last time the Mailman Group, which helps celebrities do social marketing in China, assessed football mania on Weibo, it noted that European football clubs have 15.6 million supporters online in China.

Here’s the infographic for you football fans:

Top-Footballers-on-Weibo-Infographic

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Indonesian Airlines Are Flying Sky High on Social Media [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/indonesian-airlines-flying-sky-high-social-media-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/indonesian-airlines-flying-sky-high-social-media-infographic/#comments Wed, 01 May 2013 10:00:02 +0000 Enricko Lukman http://www.techinasia.com/?p=120096 Read more »]]> A company that monitors social media in Indonesia, Brand24.co.id, today released an interesting infographic 1 about the country’s airlines and their presence on social networking sites. AirAsia Indonesia is the king on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn in terms of followers. While the country’s flagship airline, Garuda Indonesia, is quite strong on Facebook and Twitter, its presence on LinkedIn is minimal.

Brand24 then monitored the spikes in conversations that happened for local airlines Garuda Indonesia, Lion Air, and Batavia air. Garuda was mentioned a lot of times when South Korean pop groups 2PM, Sistar, and Infinite made their flights to Indonesia with the airline. But there were also spikes in terms of mentions for the wrong reasons. A Lion Air plane crashed just off Bali’s coast a few weeks back, while Batavia Air was in figurative deep waters regarding the company’s bankruptcy.

Monitoring these online conversations as well as the social sentiment among Indonesian netizens, Lion Air and Garuda Indonesia were discussed more than AirAsia Indonesia. At least in the past two months.

The same company released another infographic last month, which was about how social Jakarta folks really are.

Here is the infographic on the nation’s airlines on social media:

indonesia in the sky brand24 infographic

  1. Disclosure: Tech in Asia is a Brand24 publishing partner for this infographic. See our ethics statement for more details.


For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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The Biggest Brands on Social Media in Southeast Asia in 2013 (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/biggest-brands-social-media-southeast-asia-2013-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/biggest-brands-social-media-southeast-asia-2013-infographic/#comments Wed, 24 Apr 2013 14:05:00 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=119277 Read more »]]> The crew at Bangkok-based social analytics firm ZocialInc has fired up its ZocialRank platform to see which brands are doing the best on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram in Southeast Asia in 2013, with the focus being on Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines. The ranking combines the follower/fan counts on those four social sites to gauge which companies have the best online marketing IQ.

Japanese companies seem to be doing well in terms of social marketing, with drink-maker Ichitan coming out on top in Thailand, and bike-maker Yamaha revs up the most social media fans in Indonesia. But in Malaysia and the Philippines, two homegrown brands (Air Asia and Smart, respectively) are at the top of this ranking.

This combined count can be a bit unfair in some ways, as it punishes brands who opt to, say, avoid Instagram but have good numbers on other networks. An example is BlackBerry Indonesia, which is not in the ranking despite being one of the nation’s top Facebook brand pages with 26.7 million followers.

With all that in mind, here’s the full infographic, which also has some fun snippets about user behavior on brand pages on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram:

Biggest Brands Social Media Southeast Asia 2013 new Infographic

(Source: ZocialInc blog)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Startup Asia Singapore 2013 In An Infographic http://www.techinasia.com/startup-asia-singapore-2013-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/startup-asia-singapore-2013-infographic/#comments Thu, 18 Apr 2013 01:58:52 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=118283 Yes, we know: Startup Asia Singapore was a couple weeks ago, but it takes time to gather data, feedback, and visualize Startup Asia Singapore 2013 into the sweet looking infographic below designed by the good folks at Piktochart. Better late than never!

So what kind of data have we collected over the past couple weeks? Besides the usual attendee breakdown, we surveyed participants to find out what they thought about the conference. Out of a possible five, participants at Startup Asia Singapore 2013 rated:

  • 4.12 on average when asked how much they agreed with the statement: “The choice of speakers at Startup Asia Singapore is great”

  • 4.00 on average when asked how much they agreed with the statement: “I’m overall happy with Startup Asia Singapore 2013”

Last year, participants were complaining about WiFi issues and I think our team overcame the problem this year. There were no major complaints as far as we have heard. Even so, we will be seriously studying all the feedback to serve our participants better at our upcoming Startup Asia Jakarta on November 21 and 22.

Videos of every coffee chat, panel, sharing session, and Arena pitch will be out soon. Our videographer is working hard on it so we seek your kind patience on that front. Meanwhile, you can catch all of our articles about the conference here.

Last but definitely not least, we would like to thank our sponsors and partners for making Startup Asia Singapore 2013 possible. Only with their support can our team continue to do what we love doing: covering entrepreneurs, startups, and technology in Asia.

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The Rise of Mobile Apps in India (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-apps-india-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-apps-india-infographic/#comments Tue, 02 Apr 2013 01:00:58 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=115383 Read more »]]> india-android

Mobile apps are getting big everywhere, but it was just a few years ago that you might have been forgiven for thinking that India was still the land of feature phones. Well, no longer. Cheap smartphones and cheap mobile data plans have helped mobile apps take off in India in a big way. So what does the mobile app scene in India look like now? Thankfully the folks at Vserv have compiled an infographic that should answer a lot of your questions. Behold!

Apponomy-latest

Like infographics like this? Well then you’re going to love all these posts with infographics in them. Aww yeah.

(via Vserv.mobi)

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China Has 160 Million Active Android Users, 85 Million on iOS (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/china-active-android-ios-users-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-active-android-ios-users-2012/#comments Thu, 28 Mar 2013 04:50:12 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=114837 Read more »]]> We’ve heard a lot about sales and projections for smartphones in China – such as 199 percent smartphone growth in the past year – but how about active mobiles in the hands of Chinese users? The cross-promotion and ads platform Umeng has released its newest report accompanied by an infographic. It shows that, at the end of 2012, China has 160 million active Android users, with 85 million engaged in using iOS.

Newly activated Android devices really started to rocket in numbers last summer, the report notes. Across both platforms, smartphones are now so ingrained in the lives of Chinese mobile users that mobile app sessions rose 16-fold in 2012, with a 12-fold increase in the time spent within the apps that Umeng observed.

As well as lots of interesting demographics and app trends in the infographic, it also points out that iOS jailbreaking is on the decline in the long-run – down from 42.4 percent of Apple iOS gadgets in September 2012 to just 32.3 percent a few weeks ago. Here’s the full graphic:

China 2012, active Android iOS users

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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China Will Have 300 Million Android Users by the End of 2013 (INFOGRAPHIC) http://www.techinasia.com/china-300-million-android-users-in-2013/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-300-million-android-users-in-2013/#comments Mon, 25 Mar 2013 01:58:19 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=114135 Read more »]]>

Let’s start Monday morning with some big numbers. Now that smartphones account for 73.2 percent of all mobiles sold in China, and with many locals opting for Android devices across a variety of price-points, it’s not too big a surprise that China is an Android nation. As neatly outlined in this brand-new infographic, China had 224 million Android users at the end of last year (already three times larger than the number of US fandroids), and is on course for 300 million by the end of this year.

Thanks to the flexibility of Google’s Android OS, various research groups reckon that 86 percent of smartphones sold in China run Android, leaving Apple’s iOS to take much of what remains (12 percent).

Chinese devs dominate apps; Foreign studios make the top games

The Chinese startup behind this infographic is Wandoujia, the third-party Android app store that went global last summer with its SnapPea app for Android-to-desktop syncing. Using the analytical data from its hundreds of millions of individual Android app downloads, Wandoujia reveals an interesting dichotomy when it comes to the top apps and games that Chinese Android users enjoy. This is largely true on iOS as well (1). Essentially, it’s mostly Chinese developers that make the nation’s favorite apps, but foreign gaming studios create China’s most-tapped games.

Indeed, only 10 percent of Wandoujia’s top app downloads are from overseas developers, while 70 percent of the leading games are from outside China’s borders – led by the ever-frantic Temple Run. Chinese giant Tencent makes four of the 10 smash-hit apps, with its WeChat messaging app rising fast to the top alongside Tencent’s old-skool QQ instant messenger app.

Good news for developers is that monetization on Android is finally getting better, especially on games. Here’s the full graphic:

300 million Android users in China

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.


  1. Though Chinese developers seem to be stronger on iPhone and iPad, with the homegrown – and very odd – I’m MT game being the top grossing game on iOS right now.  ↩
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Messaging Apps Invade Asia, Now the Most Active Social Networks in Japan and Korea (Infographic) http://www.techinasia.com/messaging-apps-now-most-active-social-networks-in-korea-japan/ http://www.techinasia.com/messaging-apps-now-most-active-social-networks-in-korea-japan/#comments Thu, 21 Mar 2013 05:00:35 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=113799 Read more »]]> We’ve been following the rapid progress of messaging apps very closely across Asia, and we’ve even noted that they might be a threat to the dominance of Facebook in the region. Now we have a clearer view of this seismic social shift in this new infographic. It shows that two nations have turned away from Facebook, Twitter and other large social sites in such numbers that a mobile-only chat app is now the leading social service in each of those places.

Yes, South Korea now has 19 million daily active users on KakaoTalk, and Japan has 36 million active users on rival app Line. That’s according to the compiled statistics from social media agency WeAreSocial. When we looked at the overview from the same agency back in October last year, Cyworld was leading in Korea, and Twitter was top in Japan. But not any longer. WeAreSocial’s Simon Kemp explains to us that he decided to focus on active users on the social sites to give a clearer view of what people are using. He explains:

The (previous figure of) 26 million was total registered users on CyWorld, but we’re becoming increasingly aware that this does not represent active use. Also, the figures for KakaoTalk are daily active users, so the monthly active users (i.e. the figure Facebook reports) are likely to be much higher. Given that, we’re confident that KakaoTalk is now the most active network in South Korea.

Here’s the infographic map:

Social media in Asia shifts to messaging apps

Overall, Asia now has 874 million social media users, according to Simon’s calculations. Despite the recalibration to active users, that’s still an 18 percent larger figure than was seen in last October’s data.

Of course, Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) is still growing in Asia, despite the rise of messaging apps and its recent clean-up of fake accounts. Nonetheless, some drops in Facebook active usage have been observed in Singapore, Brunei, and Hong Kong.

Aside from Line and KakaoTalk, the China-based WeChat app is still one to look out for. As we reported last night, the makers of that app, Tencent, are planning to test a social gaming platform within WeChat this year. When that eventually launches it’ll make the app an even stronger rival to Line and KakaoTalk, which are already benefitting from gaming integration.

On the whole, social media penetration remains at an average 23 percent across Asia:

Social media in Asia shifts to messaging apps

(Source: WeAreSocial Singapore)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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New Samsung Galaxy S4 in an Infographic http://www.techinasia.com/samsung-galaxy-s4-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/samsung-galaxy-s4-infographic/#comments Fri, 15 Mar 2013 12:08:22 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=113180 Read more »]]>

Now that the new Samsung Galaxy S4 is out, let’s take a quick look at what could be the world’s next best-selling smartphone – with some help from this Samsung infographic. According to the Guardian, the Galaxy S4 will eventually reach 327 mobile operators in 125 countries. Here are some feature highlights:

S Translator - Provides instant translation, using text or voice translation on applications including email, text message, and ChatON (Samsung’s answer to Line and KakaoTalk).

‘Smart Pause’ and ‘Smart Scroll’ - Basically it’s an eye control sensor so that a video stops if you look away, or the webpage will shift in sync with your eye movements.

Better photo features - Equipped with a 13 megapixel rear camera, the new Galaxy S4 allows you to add frames in photos, and blend photos (with some built-in design options). You can also record voice and sound within the picture.

Find the full Galaxy S4 specs here or check out the review by The Verge team which suggests that the eye-tracking feature is mostly a gimmick. Here are the specs in infographic form:

samsung galaxy s4 infographic

Source: Samsung Tomorrow

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GREE Games Put Up Some Impressive Numbers [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/gree-games-put-impressive-numbers-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/gree-games-put-impressive-numbers-infographic/#comments Thu, 14 Mar 2013 00:30:46 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=112954 Read more »]]> You probably already know that Japan’s GREE is a mobile gaming giant. But just how giant is giant? How big are GREE’s biggest mobile games? In a new infographic, the company reveals some impressive numbers and makes some fun comparisons. Did you know, for example, that Knights & Dragons players have created enough virtual armor that, if it were real, it would fill every square inch of Buckingham Palance? You probably didn’t know that, and that’s what this infographic is here to fix:

Of course, if you want to learn more about GREE, a good place to start would be this long interview we did with GREE founder Yoshikazu Tanaka.

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Check Out the Numbers on China’s Top 10 Social Media Sites (Infographic) http://www.techinasia.com/2013-china-top-10-social-sites-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/2013-china-top-10-social-sites-infographic/#comments Wed, 13 Mar 2013 08:45:46 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=112855 Read more »]]> With an estimated 597 million people active on social media in China, the country’s top 10 sites actually have a staggering 3.2 billion individual accounts. Armed with the newest user numbers for these Chinese sites, the team at Go Globe has made a good-looking infographic showing how they all stand at present.

Along with those numbers, the data also shows that the largest section of China’s social media users – a full 30 percent – are aged 26 to 30. The perfect target for advertisers. As a whole, 91 percent of Chinese netizens have social accounts, which is way above the 67 percent in the US.

So what are those top 10 sites about? I’d categorize some of them like this:

  • Twitter-like - In second and third place are the Twitter clones, Tencent Weibo and Sina Weibo. The latter one gets most of the media attention, both in China and around the world.
  • Facebook-y - Four of the sites are a lot like Facebook. Tencent’s QZone, Tencent’s Pengyou, Renren, and Kaixin are all focused around a mix of social profiles, albums, buddies, and social gaming. Interestingly, they don’t get so much hype these days, and feel rather like the past generation of sites on China’s web.
  • Whatsapp-ish - The much talked about WeChat is like Whatsapp, and is one of a number of Asia-made messaging apps – like Line and KakaoTalk – that are battling to get onto the smartphones of young Chinese and Southeast Asian web users.

Here’s the full infographic:

Social Media in China, March 2013

(Source: Go Globe)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Indonesia is Social: 2.4% of World’s Twitter Posts Come From Jakarta [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/indonesia-social-jakarta-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/indonesia-social-jakarta-infographic/#comments Wed, 13 Mar 2013 01:00:19 +0000 Enricko Lukman http://www.techinasia.com/?p=112733 Read more »]]>
Brand24.co.id, an Indonesian company that monitors social marketing online, has come out with this interesting new infographic about Indonesia’s online socializing. It shows how the country – and particularly residents of the capital, Jakarta – has taken to sites like Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, and YouTube in huge numbers 1.

The infographic shows Jakarta is very social, ranked second in terms of the world’s top cities on Facebook (Bangkok is first). When it comes to Twitter, Jakarta alone contributed about 2.4 percent of the 10.6 billion Twitter posts made worldwide from January to March this year. Tokyo came close, creating 2.3 percent of all tweets. The nation as a whole has 29 million Twitter users.

When it comes to startups in the country, Indonesian humor site MalesBanget made it to the number one spot for the size of its local YouTube account. Besides cheering for celebrities Agnes Monica and Sherina Munaf, around 4.7 million Indonesian Twitter users read their astrology forecasts through @tweetramalan every day.

See more stats about brand pages and LinkedIn’s popularity in the full infographic:

jakarta infographic

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.


  1. The data is compiled from statistics by SocialBakers and MediaBistro from the end of 2012 to this month, March 2013.

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How the Great Firewall of China Works [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/great-firewall-china-works-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/great-firewall-china-works-infographic/#comments Thu, 28 Feb 2013 06:00:46 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=111203 Read more »]]> China’s Great Firewall is widely reviled (and with good reason), but how it actually works isn’t well understood. This is something we have written about before, but the folks at BackgroundCheck.org have kindly put together an infographic that illustrates how the Great Firewall works visually.

I have to say, I’m not a big fan of the first half of this infographic, which is a little misleading. For instance, the Great Firewall exists just as much to block illegal content like gun sales websites as it does to block politically sensitive content. Moreover, the infographic implies that the Great Firewall blocks things like microblog posts, which it actually doesn’t — the vast majority of the time, objectionable posts are deleted by the content teams at the company that runs the microblogging service.

That said, the second half of the infographic — especially the part where it details visually how the Great Firewall works on a technical level — is quite helpful and definitely worth taking a gander at. If you’re wondering why sometimes you get a “connection reset” error and other times you get a “site not found” error in China, for example, this infographic will answer your questions:

Like infographics? We’ve got plenty more where this came from.

(via BackgroundCheck.org)

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China’s Giant E-Commerce Marketplace By the Numbers [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/chinas-giant-ecommerce-marketplace-numbers-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/chinas-giant-ecommerce-marketplace-numbers-infographic/#comments Thu, 28 Feb 2013 00:00:14 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=111194 Read more »]]> China’s e-commerce market can be tough to wrap your head around. Between the sky-high numbers, the various competing platforms, and the different demographics and desires of Chinese customers, getting Chinese e-commerce isn’t easy. Luckily Alibaba has produced an infographic to give you a quick, clear introduction to the market.

(Though most of the data in this infographic comes from the reports of independent research firms, do keep in mind that as an infographic produced by Alibaba it isn’t coming from an unbiased source. Even so, though, we think it’s definitely worth checking out).

Like infographics? Here are some more you might enjoy.

(via Alizila)

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Chinese Check-In Service Jiepang Sums Up 2012 [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-checkin-service-jiepang-sums-2012-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-checkin-service-jiepang-sums-2012-infographic/#comments Wed, 20 Feb 2013 00:00:02 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=110280 Read more »]]> China seems to have its own take on almost every popular foreign web service, and its take on Foursquare is the widely-popular Jiepang. The company kept very busy last year, making changes like WeChat integration to keep up with the fast-changing world of China’s web. And it has worked well; Jiepang CEO David Liu told PandoDaily that 200,000 people now use the service every day. But now that 2012 has drawn to a close, how did the year turn out? Jiepang has produced an infographic to fill you in!

Click here for the very large full-size version of this infographic.

But will Jiepang look the same at the end of 2013? It’s not likely. As we mentioned, Jiepang has already begun a shift towards WeChat and that service’s massive-and-growing user base. But according to PandoDaily, over the coming year Jiepang will shift even further away from its roots, switching to a more Path-like service so as to ensure Jiepang still offers something unique and valuable to the social users who are now getting their location-sharing fix from WeChat.

But of course, such a switch will put Jiepang more squarely in the line of fire from other more “traditional” social services like Renren and Sina Weibo. Whether or not the company will be able to produce such a positive infographic after 2013 is over remains to be seen.

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By 2016, China Will Have 423 Million E-Commerce Shoppers Spending $457 Billion [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-ecommerce-shoppers-in-2016/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-ecommerce-shoppers-in-2016/#comments Tue, 12 Feb 2013 09:03:22 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=109451 Read more »]]> Regular readers will already know that there are now over 200 million Chinese e-commerce shoppers who are spending about $40,000 per second. But with over half a billion people online in China, there’s clearly room for growth. This new infographic made by Go-Globe [1] gives us a good overview of where it’s heading: eventually towards 423 million online shoppers in China spending a total of $457.6 billion in 2016.

The figures suggest that China’s e-commerce scene will not grow exponentially in 2013, and growth will slow every year as the realistic saturation point is finally reached. While the growth in online shopping in the country was over 100 percent from 2011 to 2012, it’ll be down to just 22.8 percent expansion from 2015 to 2016. By 2015, Chinese e-tailers will be taking in 7.4 percent of China’s total retail value.

Aside from all the growth, the infographic gives a good summary of the current players [2] in the B2C e-commerce sector, which is dominated by Alibaba’s Tmall and the perhaps-soon-to-IPO 360Buy. There’s also market share info for e-payments providers in China, again dominated by an Alibaba company (Alipay), along with Tencent’s Tenpay. Here’s the full thing:

china ecommerce 2016

(Infographic source: Go-Globe)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.


  1. Inevitably with different statistics providers, the numbers differ slightly. This one says 219.8 million e-shoppers in China in 2012, previously we saw the 242 million number.  ↩

  2. We have reported some more recent e-commerce market share stats than those shown in the infographic. The main omission is Tencent’s QQ Buy which is up to third place in the B2C sector at 2012 Q2.  ↩

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170,000 Users Strong and Profitable: Piktochart Rolls Out Upgraded Infographic Builder http://www.techinasia.com/piktochart-upgraded-infographic-builder/ http://www.techinasia.com/piktochart-upgraded-infographic-builder/#comments Wed, 30 Jan 2013 14:16:48 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=108121 Read more »]]>

It’s always heart-warming to see a startup growing from a paper idea into reality and success. Alright, success is subjective. But I think the folks at Piktochart have done quite a phenomenal job so far. Piktochart is a simple-to-use online infographic builder for both designers and non-designers. We know that our readers love it.

[UPDATED: The new Piktochart tools are now live and can be found here].

The Malaysian startup was part of the 2011 China Accelerator program and also took part in our Startup Arena competition in Singapore last year where they won third place. (Shameless plug: this year’s Startup Arena in Singapore is still accepting startup applications). Today, Piktochart announces its new and refreshed infographic builder with more useful features packed into this upgrade. Users can now include hyperlinks and multiple clickable tabs all within a single infographic. Infographics in HTML format exported from Piktochart are now search engine friendly too. Previously, only images could be exported.

To date, it has over 5,000 premium users, with more than 170,000 users altogether. 51 percent of Piktochart’s users are from the U.S. and Canada. When asked if Piktochart is profitable, CEO and co-founder Ai Ching Goh told me that the startup has been profitable since June 2012 and is now generating more than $40,000 a month in revenue. In September 2012, Piktochart received $140,000 of commercialization funding from Cradle Fund to scale its business.

Founded in June 2011, the Piktochart team consists of a total of nine people today. The startup claims that they have no tricks in scaling up at such a fast pace. Ai Ching believes that building a product that meets the market’s needs is key to success. She also credits her team, all of whom are willing to sleep in the office to work things out whenever needed. Her future plan is simply to make Piktochart better by listening to its users. She shared with me some of Piktochart’s future plans:

[We aim to] make Piktochart even better. We are planning for interactive controls such as tabbing and tool tips – but make them more graphically relevant so that it replaces any wordy landing page. Interactive, simpler, more-user-friendly, and we will keep iterating based on what users tell

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Are Chinese Schools Beating the US in Technology Integration? http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-schools-beating-technology-integration/ http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-schools-beating-technology-integration/#comments Sat, 19 Jan 2013 02:30:35 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=106721 Read more »]]> Yesterday, Tech in Asia (and probably a lot of other blogs) got a link to the following infographic in our mailboxes. It concerns the comparative integration of technology in China and the United States. As you can see below, it states that Chinese schools have better integrated technology and Chinese students use technology more often than their American counterparts. That’s quite a dramatic claim, but I immediately suspected that the survey this infographic is based on suffers from one of the most common misunderstandings when it comes to China and technology.

So what is the misunderstanding that plagues this handsome infographic and the Dell survey that it is based on? Sampling bias. Because while the infographic talks about “China”, here’s who Dell actually talked to:

[525] respondents in China [that] came from predominantly major cities and are mostly urban respondents.

It’s not clear exactly what “major cities” means here, but I’d bet the ranch that Dell spoke to very few people outside Beijing, Shanghai, and maybe Guangzhou. I’d also bet quite a bit that they didn’t speak to any migrant worker parents or their children and teachers in those cities. So when the infographic says “China”, what it actually means is a very select group of people from China’s most developed and prosperous cities.

Now, I don’t dispute that technology needs to be better integrated into classrooms, nor that the U.S. education system is, to put it lightly, a mess (though I would argue that China’s system is equally problematic, though in completely different ways). But the fact is that far too often when we talk about technology in China, we do this. We say “China” when we mean “Beijing and Shanghai”. Those cities are massive, but they don’t even account for four percent of China’s total population, yet we use them all the time as though they represent the whole of the nation. They don’t.

Returning to technology and education, for example, I spent a year teaching at schools in Harbin, China, and most of the classrooms that I saw didn’t have anything more high-tech than a podium, a blackboard, and some chalk. Harbin is not the sticks, it is a relatively cosmopolitan city with a population of more than ten million, and I was not teaching at schools for migrants. That’s just what most classrooms in China are like.

Of course, that is changing fast, and that’s a good thing (for example, broadband coverage is now available in most of China’s rural villages). But while we should celebrate China’s technological development, we should also be cautious not to fall into the trap of thinking that whatever is true of Beijing and Shanghai is true of China as a whole. It is a vast nation, and the degree of technological development varies by region, sometimes even by district or street! It would be foolish to look at elite schools in Shanghai and then conclude that China is doing well at integrating technology in the classroom when many students in other areas don’t even have basic access to computers in school.

To help out with this, I have put together a special infographic of my own that people can refer to when needed:

(Infographic via BrainTrack)

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China Now Has 242 Million E-Commerce Shoppers, Spending $40,000 per Second [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-ecommerce-242-million-online-shoppers-2013-stats/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-ecommerce-242-million-online-shoppers-2013-stats/#comments Fri, 18 Jan 2013 06:15:39 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=106747 Read more »]]> Yesterday we looked at the Chinese social media side of a mammoth new infographic report. Today, let’s focus on another powerhouse aspect of the Chinese web: e-commerce. It’s a vast industry that has now grown to 242 million online shoppers, which is the largest in any nation in the world, and it means that 43 percent of all Chinese netizens buy stuff online.

Before looking at a few graphics put together by We Are Social (embedded in full below), here are some more stats from the e-tailing sector in China:

  • 25 percent more online shoppers in China in 2012 from the previous year
  • China has two-times more online shoppers than Japan; it has 75 million more than the US
  • Older e-shoppers can’t be ignored, as five million of them in China are over 50 years of age
  • There are 83.27 million shoppers on Groupon-style daily deals sites
  • The total transaction value of all e-commerce in China in just Q3 2012 was US$319 billion, which amounts to $40,000 being spent per second in the country on the web.

Here are a few slides focusing on the market-leading Taobao (C2C) and Tmall (B2C) sites, which are both run by Alibaba Group, as well as some stats for mobile commerce in China:

China ecommerce shopping stats 2013
China ecommerce shopping stats 2013

Here’s the full report, starting at the e-commerce section:

(Source: WeAreSocial SG)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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With 600 Million Social Media Users, This is China’s Web in 2013 [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/social-media-and-social-marketing-china-stats-2013/ http://www.techinasia.com/social-media-and-social-marketing-china-stats-2013/#comments Thu, 17 Jan 2013 08:07:05 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=106628 Read more »]]> We noted the other day that China now has 564 million internet users and 420 million mobile web users. Now the We Are Social team has put the whole Chinese internet landscape into context – and infographics – in this giant report released today.

The Chinese social media scene has, of course, seen huge growth alongside growing web penetration. 50.9 million new netizens were added in the country in 2012. There are now 597.6 million people (out of 1.34 billion in population) active on the nation’s top social network, QZone, which is made by local web giant Tencent). With 41 percent of the populace being under the age of 40, that’s good news for social networks – and social marketing – in China.

Before looking at the full report (embedded below), you might to see some of the standout slides. This is what they like to get up to online:

China social media and social marketing in 2013
China social media and social marketing in 2013

Focusing on social media in China, you’ll see that the Twitter-style Sina Weibo might be the most talked about, but it’s not the market leader as such:

China social media and social marketing in 2013
China social media and social marketing in 2013

As the full infographic report points out, Tencent’s QQ instant messenger app (which is linked to QZone) has the most number of active accounts, with a staggering 784 million active users per month. But then QQ numbers (aka: accounts) are about as ubiquitous here as phone numbers.

In terms of social marketing, it’s worth looking at the following few slides (starting at page 60 in the embed) to see the huge scope for engagement for brands in China, especially by having a presence on Sina Weibo:

China social media and social marketing in 2013
China social media and social marketing in 2013
China social media and social marketing in 2013

You might also like to check out a different report about which overseas brands are doing the best social media marketing in China – and how they’re doing it.

Here’s the full presentation from We Are Social, which also ventures into mobile and e-commerce, in all its 200+ pages glory:

(Source: WeAreSocial SG)

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Here’s a Heatmap of WeChat Users Around the World http://www.techinasia.com/heatmap-wechat-users-worldwide-january-2013/ http://www.techinasia.com/heatmap-wechat-users-worldwide-january-2013/#comments Mon, 14 Jan 2013 04:08:44 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=106080 Read more »]]>

The WeChat messaging app seems to be China’s biggest social media export to date. But, apart from Tencent telling us that the “focus is Asia,” no one knows where WeChat is proving popular. Keen to find out where the app is doing well, the China-oriented consultants Value2020 have come up with this neat heatmap.

We’re told that the map is collated “based on app stores’ rankings” of WeChat, balanced by a “percentage of smartphones connected to the internet” in that country. While it’s far from an official way of tracking WeChat’s near 300 million user-base, it seems like a decent approach to find such elusive information. Of course, download numbers and app store tallies don’t equate to registered or active users, so that has to be thrown in there as a disclaimer.

In demand in India, Malaysia

The WeChat heatmap reveals that Tencent’s Asia strategy is paying off, with strong popularity for the app in places like Malaysia. Indeed, Tencent’s country manager for that area revealed a while back that WeChat has one million users in Malaysia, so that’s a useful, solid reference point. The Value2020 team says that India is actually the second-most popular area for WeChat outside of its native China. So long as the app’s censorship slip-up last week doesn’t put off overseas users, it looks like WeChat is building up a strong bulwark against Line and Whatsapp in some crucial, mobile-oriented markets.

In terms of recent trends, we’re informed that the messaging app is now growing even faster in India than it was last year, and it has been taking off in Spain, Mexico, and Argentina since last summer. Here’s the heatmap that Value2020 cooked up:

WeChat heatmap worldwide users

[Source: Value2020]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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East Ventures on 3rd Anniversary: 26 Startup Investments, Big Focus on Indonesia [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/east-ventures-third-year-anniversary-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/east-ventures-third-year-anniversary-infographic/#comments Fri, 04 Jan 2013 06:30:01 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=104927 Read more »]]>

This month marks the third year of life for East Ventures, the early-stage fund that focuses on Singapore and Indonesia. So it’s a good time – as with any birthday or anniversary – for the team to look back on what lessons can be learned from mistakes, and what has been achieved. (Disclosure: East Ventures is an investor in TechinAsia; please see our ethics page for more information).

Lots of insights and data have been crammed into the infographic below, made by East Ventures to celebrate its journey thus far. Covering its portfolio startups and the East Ventures Alpha events and 100-day accelerator program, the graphic reveals that most of the fund’s startups are based in Indonesia, and that the investments are mostly directed at the e-commerce space. Looking outside of Jakarta shows that Bandung and Jogjakarta are places to watch for mobile and social gaming.

Of the 26 young companies that have been backed so far:

Plus, eight are still active, and six have dived into the deepest of waters – the dead pool. Here’s the full infographic:

East Ventures on 3rd Anniversary - Infographic

Disclosure: As mentioned above, East Ventures is an investor in TechinAsia. See our ethics page for more information.


For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Study: Actually Only About 20,000 Twitter Users in China [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/study-20000-twitter-users-in-china/ http://www.techinasia.com/study-20000-twitter-users-in-china/#comments Thu, 03 Jan 2013 11:20:39 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=104809 Read more »]]>

Remember that bizarre kerfuffle over the dubious stats showing that China had tens of millions of Twitter users (the one on which we called bullshit)? Well, now there’s a much more plausible study of China-based Twitter users that suggests there are fewer than 20,000 of these rare birds in the country.

With Twitter fully blocked in the country since June 2009 – and authorities recently ramping up pressure on those who try to evade the so-called Great Firewall – it’s little surprise that Twitter’s usage is seriously limited. The tiny number was gleaned by a Chinese programmer – @ooof on Twitter – who analyzed all tweets in Chinese posted around the world at one point in time. He explained to the South China Morning Post that he then divided all those Chinese-language posts by time-zones and then did his best to split them up by region using Twiyia.com for help. In his rough infographic, “Beijing” refers to all the Twitter users in the Beijing time zone – a mere 18,164, to be precise – he believes are in mainland China:

Number of Twitter users in China

It’s not an ideal study, but it seems like a better snapshot than the erroneous extrapolation that last year claimed a huge tally of 35 million on Twitter in the restrictive country. It’s worth noting that this new count excludes posts in other languages and those who had no location information. Plus there’s the issue of the huge number attributed to Alaska, which the programmer clarified to the Hong Kong paper:

@ooof said the location information which twiyia.com collected were the time zones Twitter users had chosen – not the cities they said they lived in. Those who chose Alaska were probably people living on the west coast of North America, he explained.

[Source: @ooof; via South China Morning Post]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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You’ve Come a Long Way Baby — 1,000 Days of KakaoTalk http://www.techinasia.com/kakaotalk-1000-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/kakaotalk-1000-infographic/#comments Fri, 14 Dec 2012 11:00:19 +0000 Enricko Lukman http://www.techinasia.com/?p=102652 Read more »]]> Three days ago, December 11th marked the 1,000th day since the launch of Korean-made chat app KakaoTalk. To celebrate that feat, the chat app published an infographic about its newest stats earlier today.

KakaoTalk now has a team of 280 people, an increase from a team of 14 just three years ago. Its 70 million users spend an average of 302 minutes on KakaoTalk, a huge increase compared to back in July, when it was just 175 minutes. This surge might have been caused by the chat app’s new hit gaming platform which was launched in July.

There are 27 million daily unique visitors in its apps, sending 4.2 billion messages every day. It is interesting to note that according to AppAnnie, KakaoTalk’s position in Japan’s iOS free app section has jumped 102 spots to number five recently. That’s Line’s territory, of course, so it will be very interesting to see how it fares there. Check out Kakao’s infographic below:

Click to see it a bit bigger.

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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India Passes 60 Million Social Media Users, Still Has a Long Way to Go [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/india-social-web-users-facebook-stats-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/india-social-web-users-facebook-stats-2012/#comments Fri, 09 Nov 2012 05:00:32 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=98371 Read more »]]> A lot of people – and companies – are watching India closely as its citizens get more wired and engage more with social media. And although India produces some amazing stats in these areas, it’s still a very underdeveloped market. Yes, social media users in India grew from 38 million in November 2011 to 60.5 million at present – but that’s just five percent social media penetration among the growing populace as a whole.

It’s the same story in lots of other areas. India added 37 million internet users in the past 12 months, but – at 137 million in total – that’s still just 11 percent penetration, three times below the global average. One fundamental reason behind this might be that 69 percent of Indians live in rural areas, and are often totally off the grid. And so, at present, 72 percent of the country’s web users live in urban areas.

All these updated stats for India have been compiled by Singapore social media agency WeAreSocial in its latest infographic report. This is the updated overview for the country:

India’s young web users – 75 percent of its netizens are below the age of 35 – mean that the social media boom is only just starting. That’s great news for Facebook, which saw 14.8 million new users in India in the past six months. India – in the absence of China, which blocks Facebook – could become the biggest Facebook user-base in the world, but for now it’s the third-largest:


Here’s the full infographic report in the form of a slideshow:

[Source: WeAreSocial Singapore]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Cambodia Generates a Quarter of All Web Traffic on Mobiles [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/cambodia-internet-users-mobile-web-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/cambodia-internet-users-mobile-web-2012/#comments Tue, 30 Oct 2012 04:06:48 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=97087 Read more »]]> Cambodia is unusual in Asia for having a largely rural population – only 20 percent live in an urban environment. Perhaps as a direct result of this, Cambodia’s 15 million inhabitants are pioneers of the mobile web. Recently, Cambodia was the first country in the world to claim more mobile phones than landlines, and this new infographic report from WeAreSocial reveals that almost one quarter of all the nation’s internet activity comes from mobile phones.

Since we last looked at Cambodia’s web scene late last year, it has seen mobile subscribers nearly double so that there’s now 131 percent mobile penetration. As for 3G, a very encouraging 3.25 million are signed up to the quickest mobile data on offer, which is a pretty solid 16.5 percent of all mobile subscriptions. The number of internet users has leapt up by an even more extraordinary 548 percent, so that there are now 2.47 million connected online. This is likely due to seven new ISPs coming online in 2011 as Cambodia’s infrastructure slowly modernizes.

With 64 percent of the population being under 30 years of age, it’s no surprise that social media are a core online passtime. The Facebook Ad Planner suggests there are 690,520 social media users in Cambodia this month – not an enticingly huge draw for brands doing social marketing (compared to the 8.53 million social users in Vietnam this year), but it’s still a young and receptive audience. It’s surely also a country where Facebook is looking forward to seeing millions of new users. Here’s the full report in slideshow form:

[Source: WeAreSocial blog]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Startup Asia Bandung Hackathon in an Infographic http://www.techinasia.com/startup-asia-bandung-2012-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/startup-asia-bandung-2012-infographic/#comments Fri, 19 Oct 2012 08:15:36 +0000 Enricko Lukman http://www.techinasia.com/?p=96066 Read more »]]> We can’t thank everyone enough for your support at last weekend’s Startup Asia Bandung Hackathon. We had great fun over the 24 hours that we spent with you there, and congratulations again to all the winning developers.

We’re still learning to make our next hackathons even better for you guys, and we’re sorry for all the various mishaps that happened during the event – things like dodgy internet connections. Anyway, to round things up, here is an infographic of the Bandung Hackathon in terms of who took part and what people were chattering about on Twitter during the event. One of the top five words discussed on Twitter under our hashtag was “Pizza.” We guess you loved that surprise we gave you – well, courtesy of our sponsor Softlayer, to be precise!

Looking over the apps that the assembled 500+ developers made in 100+ teams, it’s interesting to see that Android or web apps were the priority – and that more opted to develop for Windows Phone than for iOS.

Thank you to the Piktochart team for making this infographic for us. We’ve put the embed code below if you’d like to republish it.

Embed code:

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This is Vietnam’s Web in 2012, As Facebook Overtakes Zing In the Country [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/vietnam-web-social-users-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/vietnam-web-social-users-2012/#comments Wed, 17 Oct 2012 04:00:28 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=95728 Read more »]]>

After last week’s Asia-wide report on the state of the web, mobile, and social media, comes the infographic from digital agency WeAreSocial that focuses on Vietnam. The big news is that Facebook has overtaken Zing as Vietnam’s social network of choice – now Facebook has 8.5 million Vietnamese users, surpassing Zing’s 8.2 million in the country.

The WeAreSocial team notes that Facebook had a mere 2.9 million Facebook users in Vietnam last summer, so it’s seeing stellar growth among Vietnam’s very young and mobile netizens. But a note of caution: Zing’s self-reported figures are a little older than Facebook’s, so there’s still a chance for the homegrown service to regain its crown. After all, Zing is still growing from its 6.8 million figure last year.

Here’s the key slide from the infographic presentation showing Vietnam’s web scene:

Some highlights in Vietnam to look out for:

  • Social media penetration of nine percent shows there’s massive room for growth
  • 127.3 million mobile subscribers in total, which is above the population figure of 91.5 million
  • 19 million mobile internet users, which works out at penetration of around 21 percent
  • 35 percent of those user their phones to access social media
  • 28 percent of Vietnamese netizens now have a Facebook account

And here is the full deck for you to browse:

[Source: WeAreSocial blog]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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Now With Over 1 Billion Netizens, This is How Asia is Social and Mobile in 2012 [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/asia-social-mobile-infographic-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/asia-social-mobile-infographic-2012/#comments Wed, 10 Oct 2012 03:30:06 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=94772 Read more »]]> Let’s step back and take a look at the big picture of the web in Asia in 2012. We see internet penetration in the region has jumped from 24 percent last year, to 27 percent now. And with that comes a leap to just over a billion Asian netizens this year – 1.034 billion, to be precise. Mobile penetration in Asia has risen from 74 to 82 percent, and for many people it’s the primary mode of accessing the internet.

All those stats are compiled by the folks at the Singapore branch of the WeAreSocial digital agency, who have just released their 2012 infographic report – see it here, or embedded below – that updates the series that we enjoyed so much last year.

Before you browse the whole set of infographic slides at the bottom of this post, here are a few key points on social media in Asia:





Yes, Facebook is still the region-wide king – not counting the massive weight of Chinese socal networks which tend to be used only in China. But Facebook’s throne is far from safe, we reckon, with more group messaging apps – like Whatsapp, KakaoTalk, Line, WeChat – ready to take away much of the activity that Facebook is used for. After all, the Facebook and Facebook Messenger apps are not as good as many of its rivals in terms of facilitating simple and fun chatting with friends. OK, here’s the full slideshow:

[Source: We Are Social’s blog]

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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WeChat vs Sina Weibo for Business in China [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/comparing-wechat-weibo-business/ http://www.techinasia.com/comparing-wechat-weibo-business/#comments Thu, 27 Sep 2012 13:20:50 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=93594

We’ve written much about China’s up-and-coming WeChat application from Tencent (HKG:0700) recently. It has just hit the 200 million user mark, and is already making efforts to cater to brands as a social media marketing solution. We have seen Starbucks jump to be among the first to tap WeChat to interact with Chinese consumers.

CIC founder Sam Flemming has shared an informative graphic comparing the business applications of WeChat and Sina (NASDAQ:SINA) Weibo. Of course, Weibo and WeChat are both very different animals, the former is a microblog, and the latter is a messaging app. And while Weibo has a bit of a head start on WeChat, but this is still an insightful overview for any brands out there who might be pondering which platform(s) is best for them in China. Check out the graphic in full below.

Tencent appears to be very calculating in WeChat’s international expansion as well, doing so without the Tencent or made-in-China brand anywhere to be seen. At a time where China is not making many friends on the political stage, this is probably a wise choice.

weibo-wechat-business-infographic-china

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

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China’s Broadband Speeds Show Shanghai Zooming Ahead [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-broadband-speeds-2012-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-broadband-speeds-2012-infographic/#comments Thu, 20 Sep 2012 04:00:18 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=92657 Read more »]]>

Regular readers will know that China is aiming for 100 Mbps broadband in some regions by 2015. But for now, most Chinese web users spend a lot of time looking at spinning or expanding loading graphics as their under-performing broadband struggles to deliver.

Slow broadband has significant implications in a lot of areas: it could cramp the phenomenal rise of e-commerce in China, thwart startups, and even deter foreign direct investment. China’s MIIT has said that, as of the end of 2011, 83 percent of Chinese broadband users were on at least 2 Mbps connections. That’s a long way short of 100 Mbps.

So which areas are zooming ahead or lagging behind? This infographic from ChinaCache – the folks who run this local speed test site – shows that, perhaps unsurprisingly, China’s much more developed southern and eastern regions have the best home and office web speeds, with averages close to 6 Mbps. But with neighboring Hong Kong three times faster than Shanghai, it’s clearly still a question of struggling infrastructure. Shanghai is the fastest in the mainland, and accelerating away from the others with an 86 percent increase in speed between December 2011 and May 2012. Notice that the supposed tech hub around Guangdong province – which contains Shenzhen, borders Hong Kong, and is a GDP powerhouse – has some truly lamentable broadband speeds:

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

[Source: ChinaCache / ChinaWebReport]

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The Biggest Brands on Social Media in Southeast Asia [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/biggest-brands-social-media-southeast-asia-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/biggest-brands-social-media-southeast-asia-infographic/#comments Tue, 04 Sep 2012 02:00:13 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=90473 Read more »]]> Social media marketing is something that brands need to do right – especially as it’s often a shortcut to the hearts and wallets of a nation’s youngest and most engaged consumers. And although there’s more to this marketing strategy than sheer numbers, here’s a neat infographic showing the biggest brands in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines on four important platforms: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Youtube.

Made by the folks at Thailand-based social analytics firm ZocialInc, it’s concocted using data from its ZocialRank system. The infographic shows that Thailand has the greatest number of high-ranking brands on social media (86 brands), and that the most liked/followed brand in the region is the Bali-based clothing retailer Surfer Girl, which is apparently living up to its claim of being a fun brand. It’s also got some killer social skills. Global brands in the top 10 include motorbike-maker Yamaha, AirAsia, BlackBerry, Nescafé, and Starbucks.

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

[Source: ZocialInc blog]

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Japan’s Mobile Leadership [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/japan-mobile-leadership-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/japan-mobile-leadership-infographic/#comments Thu, 23 Aug 2012 14:10:42 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=89210 Read more »]]> Here’s an interesting graphic from Roman Nedielka which points to Japan as a world leader in the mobile industry [1], but notes that it’s a leader that is currently undergoing a shift of sorts.

He points out what he calls Japan’s “old story” which saw high profile hardware manufacturers leading the world in producing quality electronics. Japan’s opportunity to stay out front as a leader, he notes, lies in retaining its culture of quality and applying it to mobile services, citing GREE (TYO:3632) and NHN Japan’s Line as key examples of services leading the way already.

I certainly agree that Japan, and certainly Korea, are already certainly breaking some new ground with interesting business models that they can test with consumers already comfortable with mobile payments. Although with regards to the common narrative that Japanese mobile manufacturing is a thing of the past as companies like Apple and Samsung soar, I would like to point to an argument recently made by our friends at Wireless Watch, who figure that Japanese companies still produce about 40 percent of the components used in all the world’s mobile phones.

Check out Roman’s graphic below, and let us know what you think.

most-advanced-mobile-nation

  1. Roman notes in his graphic that Japan is the ‘most advanced mobile nation,’ which of course is debatable depending on which metrics you use. Roman tells me in this case, he is citing Tomi Ahonen’s ‘20 Most Advanced Countries in Mobile’ for 2011. The rest of Roman’s sources for this graphic can be found here.  ↩

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Opera Reveals Mobile Market Facts and Figures for China, India, and Indonesia [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/opera-reveals-mobile-market-facts-figures-china-india-indonesia-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/opera-reveals-mobile-market-facts-figures-china-india-indonesia-infographic/#comments Mon, 06 Aug 2012 13:58:55 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=86680 Read more »]]> Update: Note that the infographic has an error in it. The date for Opera in China to hit one million users should be February 2009 while India’s should be March 2008.


Opera, the maker of the popular and web and mobile browser, has shared some interesting statistics with us. Asia is pretty big so we took the liberty of focusing on three key countries/markets: China, India, and Indonesia. Opera has had presence in these markets before mobile internet was a big thing, and since 2008, it has at least a million users in each nation (regrettably, we don’t know the exact user total).

The following infographic, designed by Piktochart, details popular sites accessed via Opera browsers and we’re pleasantly surprised that Mobile9, a startup based in Malaysia, was listed as number eight in India. As you might expect, each country’s list has its fair share of local sites. Google has a dominant showing as well, ranking within the top three for China, India, and Indonesia.

As far as the mobile internet is concerned, Nokia is still the top brand. Sony Ericsson and Samsung are the only non-Nokia phones within that particular section. Note that the stats and figures in the infographic may or may not be an accurate representation of these markets as a whole, but the numbers obtained from Opera users certainly are interesting!

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How Thai Football Fans Reacted to Euro 2012 Final on Social Media [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/euro-2012-thailand-social-media-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/euro-2012-thailand-social-media-infographic/#comments Fri, 06 Jul 2012 13:45:11 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=83011 Read more »]]> Euro 2012 is all over after a spectacular win by Spain that gives them the extraordinary triple whammy of wins in the last World Cup and Euro 2008 as well. As soon as the match was over, the mavens of social media metrics at Zocialrank leapt on their analytics tools and figured out what the football fans of Thailand made of the Euro 2012 finale on Twitter and Foursquare.

The results have been prettified and portrayed in the infographic below. Some of the social highlights out of Thailand include:

  • Spain got about double the amount of Twitter mentions by Thai footie fans before, during, and after the match. Clearly they know how to pick a winner!

  • The most mentioned player was Spain’s Torres, who scored [UPDATE: Oops!] three the third of the nation’s four goals in the final.

  • The major brands backing UEFA’s Euro cup this year didn’t fare too well, with only three percent of Thai football viewers mentioning any of the major brands involved, such as Honda or McDonald’s.

  • Instead, Euro 2012 viewers in Thailand were too busy discussing the practicalities of seeing the game via “หนวดกุ้ง” (traditional antenna TV) or via GMMZ.

  • The social peak of Euro 2012 among the Thai viewers came as the first goal hit the net at 2:01am local time.

Here’s Zocialrank’s Euro 2012 finale graphic in full:

For more fun graphics like this one, check out previous entries in our infographic series.

[Source: Zocial Inc blog]

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The Rise of Social Media in China, With All-New User Numbers [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/rise-of-china-social-media-infographic-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/rise-of-china-social-media-infographic-2012/#comments Wed, 30 May 2012 08:21:36 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=79480 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Here’s a useful infographic showing where the Chinese web is at in mid-2012, with all the updated stats for how many folks are online, and new social media user figures for a dozen of the nation’s most popular services.

Made for us by the folks over at BestFreeOnline, it highlights how Chinese net users are some of the world’s most social, with 91 percent of them in a sample survey saying that they’d visited a social media site in the past six months. By comparison, only 87 percent of Americans have done the same.

Tencent’s QZone remains the country’s most-used social site, featuring the web profiles and photo albums that are complementary to the Tencent (HKG:0700) QQ instant-messaging platform. Sina’s (NASDAQ:SINA) Weibo, as China’s hottest Twitter-like site, is growing at an amazing pace, recently surpassing 300 million registered users and now standing at 324 million.

Further down in the infographic, also look out for some amazing e-commerce revenue projections for 2015, sourced from our reporting on the subject earlier this month:

[Source: BestFreeOnline]

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Thai User Numbers on Instagram and the Celebrities They Follow [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/thai-user-numbers-on-instagram/ http://www.techinasia.com/thai-user-numbers-on-instagram/#comments Thu, 10 May 2012 12:00:36 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=77764 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


We know that Thais love Instagram – and, for some reason, using the photo-sharing app to photograph Suvarnabhumi airport more than any other place – and now we have some stats to attach to its popularity. The Bangkok-based brand agency Zocialrank has made the pretty infographic you see below with the key stats: more than 150,000 local users on Instagram who have uploaded just over 11 million photos.

Thai celebrities are a key part of this success for Instagram. The most followed of which within the service is Chermarn Boonyasak (see her photo collection here) with 314,793 followers from around the world at present. Fellow actress Pachrapa Chaichua is a close second. Nine out of 10 of the most followed Thais on Instagram are (very attractive showbiz) females – I’m guessing that’s due to a mix of women fans and male voyeurs.

Check out the full list in the infographic, and also see which filters are preferred by the nation’s smartphone snappers.

[Source: Zocial Inc blog]

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Survey Says Japan Seen as Most Creative Country, By Everyone Except Japan [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/japan-adobe-state-of-create/ http://www.techinasia.com/japan-adobe-state-of-create/#comments Tue, 08 May 2012 08:08:48 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=77450 Read more »]]> Adobe has released an interesting survey which takes a look at creativity across the globe. Its State of Create global benchmark study surveyed [1] people in the US, the UK, Germany, France, and Japan and came up with a number of interesting findings on how people in some of the world’s largest economies view creativity. Among the most remarkable findings in this report is how the respondents around the world view creativity in Japan, and how this contrasts with how respondents in Japan see themselves.

Among the total respondents, Japan was deemed the most creative country among those listed (by 36 percent) and Tokyo the world’s most creative city (by 30 percent of respondents). The report noted however that Japan does not seem to see itself in the same way the rest of the world does, with most Japanese seeing the US and New York as the most creative country and city respectively. The report further states:

Outside of Japan, national pride in each country is evident, with residents of the United Kingdom, Germany and France ranking their own countries and cities next in line after Japan.

I also found it interesting that 78 percent of Japanese respondents said that “being creative is still reserved for the arts community” – a stark contrast with the other nations surveyed who responded in the range of 21 to 38 percent. Personally, I find it pretty easy to discover creativity in Japan by walking down almost any street here, where almost every single yard or garden is impeccably groomed with colorful flowers and beautiful stone walls.

But from a technology point-of-view, there’s still no shortage of great ideas coming from Japan, I think. For more information, check out the full report, or browse Adobe’s accompanying infographic below.

Adobe_State_of_Create_Infographic

  1. The study interviewed 5,000 adults in the six countries. Myself and my colleagues can’t help but wonder how China might have fared on this survey had it been included.  ↩

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Facebook Adds 20 Million New Users Across Asia as Social Media Grows Apace [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/social-media-user-numbers-asia-may-2012/ http://www.techinasia.com/social-media-user-numbers-asia-may-2012/#comments Tue, 08 May 2012 06:47:37 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=77434 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


A fresh snapshot of Asia’s social media landscape reveals which service dominates in each country – and it’s especially good news for Facebook, which has added more than 20 million users across Asia in the past six months.

The infographic and its stats were put together by the Singapore-based branding and PR agency WeAreSocial. It points out that Facebook now has more than 192 million users across the 24 main Asian wired nations.

The only countries that prefer a different social network are China (where Tencent’s (HKG:0700) QZone dominates), Vietnam (Zing), South Korea (CyWorld), and Japan (Twitter). In the latter country, Japanese social network Mixi has been struggling and is now getting swamped by both Facebook and Twitter.

In China, Tencent’s Qzone looks monstrously huge, but its user numbers have dropped by five million since we last checked on the Asian social media scene last year. That squeeze will have been caused by increasingly popular microblogs (weibo), such as those from Sina and Tencent itself.

Here’s the current view across the region, with the newest site-reported stats that are available for each country (click to enlarge):

Check out which social networks are the most popular in each nation in Asia (May 2012) - Click to enlarge.

[Source: WeAreSocial blog]

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InMobi Sees iOS Falling in Hong Kong, Android Invading [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-advertising-market-hong-kong-2011/ http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-advertising-market-hong-kong-2011/#comments Mon, 30 Apr 2012 14:37:40 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=76763 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Mobile ad platform InMobi has been busy these past few days crunching ad impressions stats from across Asia, giving us insights into growing smartphone usage in various countries. Now it’s Hong Kong’s turn, where mobile advertising grew 656 percent from Q4 2010 to the same period at the end of 2011. But the picture in Hong Kong is a bleak one for Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), whose iOS presence in the Chinese SAR fell 16.1 percent; in contrast, Android seemed to grow by a staggering 36.8 percent, and is now the dominant mobile OS in Hong Kong by some margin.

Smartphones as a whole now account for 80 percent of all of InMobi’s observed advertising impressions, squeezing down features-phones – or “advanced phones” as the company calls them – from 38 percent at the end of 2010 down to just 20 percent at the end of 2011.

It’s all in interesting contrast to InMobi’s stats for Vietnam, which we looked at last week – but of course, Hong Kong is a technologically much more advanced market.

There’s also good news for Samsung (005930:KS) in there, as it now has the first- and third-most popular phone in Hong Kong. Here’s the full infographic, which you can click to enlarge:

InMobi_Network_Research_HongKong_2010vs2011_Infographic ]]>
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InMobi Says Mobile Now Top Media Channel in Vietnam [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-advertising-market-vietnam/ http://www.techinasia.com/mobile-advertising-market-vietnam/#comments Thu, 26 Apr 2012 06:15:49 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=76383 Read more »]]> We have some interesting insights today about the Vietnam mobile market from mobile advertising network InMobi. The company says that the mobile advertising market in that country grew 121 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011, as the company saw its ad impressions rocket to six billion, more than double its total from the previous year.

InMobi says that of the more than six billion ad impressions it served in Q4 2011, 5.6 billion were on feature phones [1], and only 0.4 billion were on smartphones. For those of us who live in more mature markets, it may come as somewhat of a surprise to find that Nokia (HEL:NOK1V; NYSE:NOK) is the dominant phone manufacturer in the market, one which is still dominated by feature phones. As you can see below, even though Nokia is the dominant handset maker by far, its market share is shrinking, while Samsung (005930:KS) and other Android phones appear to be on the rise, but Android still only accounts for 2.6 percent of the market overall.

Vietnamese users also differ in their media consumption habits, as mobile is their preferred media channel (35 percent of their daily media time), over television (25 percent) and PC (18 percent), according to a survey conducted by InMobi [2]. The company’s regional director and general manger in Southeast Asia, Phalgun Raju, noted that an upswing in mobile online shopping can be expected in Vietnam as well:

Our survey found that three-quarters of mobile web users in Vietnam have been influenced by mobile advertising when making purchases… In addition, we also found that 77 percent of consumers expect to conduct mobile commerce in the next 12 months – a 36 percent increase from where we are today.

Check out more details in infographic below, which nicely illustrates these important changes happening in Vietnam’s mobile sector.

InMobi_Network_Research_Vietnam_2010vs2011_Infographic

  1. Note that in the infographic above, InMobi (somewhat generously) refers to ‘feature phones’ as ‘advanced phones.’ I’m going to stick with what I think is the standard industry moniker, even though many feature phones can indeed sometimes be quite advanced.  ↩

  2. InMobi says its sample size in Vietnam for this particular survey is 1,183 mobile web users. That’s not a whole lot, but still significant I think.  ↩

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24% of Web Content is Now in Chinese, Will Soon Surpass English [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/dominant-languages-on-internet-english-chinese/ http://www.techinasia.com/dominant-languages-on-internet-english-chinese/#comments Fri, 20 Apr 2012 14:00:10 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=75893 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

A new infographic shows that Chinese will soon overtake English as the dominant language online. At the end of 2011, 27 percent of web content was in English, while 24 percent was in Chinese. Despite that, the graphic’s creators, the translation management platform Smartling, lament that the web is still too monolingual, with “56 percent of online content [being] English-only.” It calls for a more multilingual approach to the web.

We’ve taken the liberty of using some of the main images from the infographic and put them below, but you really want to check out the full thing in all its interactive and multilingual glory on the Smartling site.

First up, here’s how the web stands in Asia right now, with this region accounting for 45 percent of all the world’s web users, even though only 26 percent of the 3.5 billion people based in Asia are yet online. That’s room for some amazing growth:



The three-layer pie chart below shows the spread of languages on the web in 2000, 2005, and then 2011. In the past decade, English has shrunk from being 39 percent of all internet content down to just 27 percent at the end of 2011. It is still the lingua franca (boy, that must annoy the French) online but now by a tiny margin: it leads over Chinese – badged as ZH, which is short for Zhong wen – by just 3 percent:


Clearly, Chinese is going to overtake English as the web’s number one language very soon. At its current rate of growth, that could well happen by mid-2014. Its growth has been stellar in the past 11 years, when most other languages have been static – that’s obviously because so few of its populace was online before. Today it’s still a fairly long way from its saturation point.

Other languages are getting proportionally squeezed, such as the drop in the global share of Japanese, which is now at 8 percent and has been static since 2005. But, last year when we looked at languages used on global social media such as Twitter, we noticed the greater prevalence of Japanese, Korean, and Bahasa Indonesia.

[Source: Smartling]

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Japan’s Social Gaming Market [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/japans-social-gaming-market-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/japans-social-gaming-market-infographic/#comments Mon, 16 Apr 2012 02:20:21 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=75291 Read more »]]> It has been interesting for us to follow the growth of Japan’s social gaming market, particularly the bigger players like GREE and DeNA as they try to translate their domestic successes abroad. One of the most insightful voices about this space is Serkan Toto, who we tend to reference more than a few times here on Tech In Asia.

Serkan just sent us a long a wonderful graphical overview of Japan’s social gaming space, created by Tokyo-based designer Francesco Romano. Appropriately, it’s designed with a fun game motif, which I thought was rather clever. In terms of financials, some of the numbers here are pretty astronomical. Serkan points out that this is ‘almost entirely’ from Japanese users.

If you’re interested in keeping tabs on the social gaming in Japan, do follow Serkan on his blog where he often writes about the latest development in that space. He recently posted a short discussion on the possibility of regulation coming to the industry.

You can check out the full infographic below, and if you’d like to post it on your own blog, the embed code is here.

Japan Social Gaming Market, Design, Francesco Romano; Written/researched by Serkan Toto


Embed code:

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Play Monopoly with Chinese Internet Services http://www.techinasia.com/play-monopoly-chinese-internet-services/ http://www.techinasia.com/play-monopoly-chinese-internet-services/#comments Fri, 16 Mar 2012 07:45:08 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=72652 Read more »]]> Have you ever wished learning about the Chinese internet was more like Monopoly? No? Well, neither has anyone else, but this still exists. Yup, it’s “Mailmanopoly”, a graphic designed by the folks at Mailman as linkbait a fun way to review China’s top websites by category.

Click for the full-size version

As a rundown of China’s top sites, it’s pretty well done. There are so many sites that they had to squeeze multiple ones onto each property square, but all the big guys are there. It does seem to be a bit outdated, though. Amazon still appears on the board with Joyo branding, despite the fact that it dropped that name last October, and Youku and Tudou appear on different squares in the video category, which seems off considering their recent merger.

As a monopoly game, though, the board is sorely lacking. There are some clever conceits — the jail becoming the blocked website zone is a good one — but the image is too small to print out, there are no prices on the properties, and because they added in extra property squares, the board doesn’t parallel real monopoly. Honestly, this probably makes me a nerd, but when I saw it the first thing I wanted to see was what they’d put on Boardwalk and Park Place — in other words, what are China’s two most valuable internet companies? Unfortunately, that’s not how they did things; there is no Boardwalk or Park Place equivalent on this board. Other things are just uninspired; the Community Chest card reads: “You have won second place in a tech context [sic].”

Still, it’s a fun image for a quick overview of the main players on China’s internet and where they all stand. I hope it inspires someone to create a full-resolution, playable version of Chinese internet Monopoly though. Something with a full deck of chance and community chest cards, and maybe property prices based on the market valuations of each company, or user numbers? Maybe a version that was printable so that, uh, other people could play it at home? I mean, I’m not that big a nerd, but I’m sure there’s an interest. Just sayin’.

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China’s Social Media and Web Landscape in 2012 [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media-landscape-2012-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media-landscape-2012-infographic/#comments Thu, 15 Mar 2012 05:00:56 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=72499 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Here’s a very handy cheat-sheet – created by CIC, the Chinese social business analysts – showing you the leading Chinese web services in each category alongside their western counterparts.

The CIC ‘social media landscape’ for 2012 infographic has all bases covered, from local dating networks like Jiayuan (NASDAQ:DATE), social review sites like Dianping, and the most popular aggregator reading apps such as Zaker. Those are the popular equivalents to Match, Yelp, and Flipboard respectively.

Of course, the Chinese web is not a total parallel universe – there are still some much-loved foreign social media services here such as MSN, Skype, and, er… well, that’s it really.

For CIC’s future reference, it’d be good to add in some other popular categories next time, such as hugely popular photo-sharing apps (eg: Tuding as a local usurper of Instagram) or up-and-coming social video apps as well. But those are missing for now. Perhaps a task for Ogilvy, which does a very similar – not sure who conceived of this first! – ‘digital influence’ circle every year. (Here’s Ogilvy’s for 2011).

Without further ado, here’s CIC’s new creation embedded as a PDF (or Chinese readers can click the source link below) so that you can zoom in and explore it full-size:

[Source: CIC blog - article in Chinese]

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Cloud Computing’s Role in Job Creation in Asia [Infographic] http://www.techinasia.com/cloud-computing-job-asia/ http://www.techinasia.com/cloud-computing-job-asia/#comments Fri, 09 Mar 2012 14:08:54 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=71893 Read more »]]> Thanks to cloud computing, doing an IT startup nowadays is way more affordable. And the benefits don’t end there. They are passed on. The more new businesses we have, the more jobs opportunities there are available to the larger population. And the more job opportunities we have, chances are, we’ll have a greater shot at happiness too.

Microsoft released research conducted by IDC that shows exactly this trend. Cloud computing will create nearly 14 million new jobs by 2015 globally. Interestingly, the rising superpower nations, Indonesia, China and India, will account for about half of all new cloud-related jobs, adding more than seven million cloud-related jobs by 2015.

In Asia, communications and media are expected to amount for 1.8 million cloud-related jobs by 2015, while banking will hit 1 million. Other parts of APAC, including Australia, Malaysia, Japan, and Korea are expected to enjoy a growth rate as high as 155 percent in cloud-related jobs. Check out the full infographic below:

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Why Chinese Consumers Can’t Resist Movie Ticket Deals [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-discount-movie-deals-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-discount-movie-deals-infographic/#comments Wed, 07 Mar 2012 08:49:23 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=71530 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

When we looked at the most recent stats last month for the group-buy market in mainland China, we noticed some interesting phenomena, such as the top three sites – Meituan, 55Tuan, and Lashou – now look like an established hierarchy, and movie tickets were the hottest leisure deals.

And now the source of those stats, the aggregator and deals analysts DaTaoTuan, has made an infographic showing why movie coupons are such an important differentiator for a daily deals site, potentially bringing in over half a million sales worth over 10 million RMB (US$1.58) to a single company. Movie ticket deals now account for 13.4 percent of all revenue in the mainland China group-buying sector.

In summary, before looking at the infographic below, it seems that Meituan and 55Tuan are making the biggest piles of celluloid-derived cash, with Meituan bringing in 13 million RMB ($2.06 million) in the space of nine days with its movie deals across 44 Chinese cities. The infographic astutely points out that cinema tickets are way expensive compared to the usual pirated DVDs here – like, 70 RMB tickets versus 7 RMB discs – so big discounts are proving to be a great way for deals sites to bring in new customers and reconnect with old ones as well.

[Source: DaTaoTuan’s blog]

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Startups in Asia (Singapore) 2012 in an Infographic http://www.techinasia.com/sua-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/sua-infographic/#comments Mon, 20 Feb 2012 03:08:11 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=68218 Read more »]]> We had a lot of requests from startups, as well as corporate and investor folks to produce some attendance statistics for our Startups in Asia 2012 (Singapore) conference. We already had that in mind, but it took some time to gather the data and make it look all pretty.

Scroll down to check out some of the more interesting conference statistics in an infographic, ranging from participants to digital media conversations. If you’re interested, you can also head over here to read all the positive feedback we have gathered so far over email.

Special thanks and a shoutout to Piktochart (also one of the our Arena pitchers) for taking time to create the infographic. Embed code is below if you’d like to re-publish.

Startups in Singapore 2012 infographic

Embed code:

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Every 60 Seconds On the Chinese Internet… [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/every-60-seconds-on-the-chinese-internet-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/every-60-seconds-on-the-chinese-internet-infographic/#comments Fri, 30 Dec 2011 15:05:07 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=63302 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

There has been a bit of a fad on the internet in recent days for posts about amazing things that happen online in just one minute, and so the Chinese site 17Startup made one about the web scene in China. The numbers were so awesome that we felt it was worth whacking the infographic into an image editor in order to translate it into English.

It shows that insane amounts of money – and a great deal of content – flows from the fingers of Chinese internet users every sixty seconds. The hugest number is the amount of ads that Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU) serves every minute, and just how much is spent on e-commerce site Taobao:

(Click to enlarge a bit)

If that’s compared with the recent – and more glossy – pair of infographics from web design company Go-Globe.com (via this blog), which looks at the worldwide scene, we see China’s numbers stack up favorably in many instances.

For example, as you see below, Xiaomi’s Android-powered M1 phones seem to be outselling all of RIM’s (NASDAQ:RIMM) Blackberry handsets, and Twitter’s 98,000 tweets per minute pale in comparison to the firing of missives from Sina’s (NASDAQ:SINA) Weibo.com:

(Click to enlarge a bit)

(Click to enlarge a bit)

[Chinese infographic source: 17startup, via Toumingti - articles in Chinese]

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Singapore’s Social, Smartphone-Luvvin’ Citizens [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/singapore-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/singapore-infographic/#comments Fri, 23 Dec 2011 13:00:02 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=62742 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Singapore has always punched above its size in the world’s economy, and so it’s no surprise that its citizens are so wired and engaged with gadgets and social media. Indeed, the island state has the highest concentration of smartphones anywhere in the world, and over three-quarters of its citizens access the web every single day.

Singaporeans are social on the web, too, with people there spending about one hour each day engaging with other folks online – mostly on Facebook. (Though Brunei’s netizens take the title of being Asia’s most social when on the web).

Here’s the We Are Social infographic slideshow for Singapore as part of its ‘social, digital, mobile Asia’ series:

And that’s a wrap on our coverage of We Are Social’s excellent overview of the Asian web, mobile, and social scene as it stands at the end of 2011. Catch the previous seven infographics and slideshows on this tag.

But the Singaporean social marketers still have a few more reports to share from other countries in the region, such as Thailand, and Pakistan, so hit the source link below to follow their blog.

[Source: We Are Social]

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Web, Smartphones, and Social Media are Thriving in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Macau [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/web-social-media-hong-kong-taiwan-macau-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/web-social-media-hong-kong-taiwan-macau-infographic/#comments Tue, 20 Dec 2011 06:00:14 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=62410 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Across Asia, countries seem to be split into those who’re well hooked-up to the high-speed web, and those who access instead from mobiles and PC cafés – with only mainland China somewhat torn between those two states of being.

But in the Greater China area, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau are certainly in the first group – enjoying high rates of internet penetration on an uncensored web whilst also having over 100 percent phone ownership, many of which are smartphones.

That’s the picture painted by We Are Social’s new report on the three areas, which is part of its marathon survey of 24 countries across the region.

Some other highlights from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau include the facts that 35 percent of HK folks own smartphones, and 56 percent of them use their devices to search the web every single day; Taiwan has the world’s most active blog readers and BBS users; and in tiny Macau, more women than men are using Facebook, which bucks the general trend across Asia. Here are the three full slideshows:


Hong Kong



Taiwan



Macau



Check out all the posts in this Asia-wide series, or hit the source link below to see We Are Social’s analysis as well.

[Source: We Are Social]

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Samsung Dominates Android in China, But Tablets Growing Less Popular [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/samsung-android-china/ http://www.techinasia.com/samsung-android-china/#comments Thu, 15 Dec 2011 12:20:03 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=62067 Read more »]]>

And this year's Android winner in China is... Samsung! Especially this Galaxy S, which seems to be China's hottest Android smartphone this year.

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


The Chinese mobile analytics company Umeng has released new stats which give us a clear picture of the Android user-base and the devices being used in China.

It shows us that in Q3 2011 Samsung (005930.KS) and HTC (TPE:2498) dominated the Android scene here, together accounting for about 53 percent of all phone traffic detected by Umeng. Bizarrely, it also reveals that Android tablets have become less popular this quarter, with decreased usage from Q2 to Q3.

Umeng only covers apps which utilize its mobile ad network – which we reviewed before – so this is not a measure of sales, more of active usage. But that’s actually fine, as it covers over 10,000 common apps that are downloadable from a range of sources and alternative Android app stores. And so it gives a pretty representative view.

Android Tablets vs Android Phones
Yes, Android tablets – which seem to be as popular as stale cakes – saw even less usage in China in Q3. The Ionesco-esque rhinocéros in the room is that the iPad is still booming, whilst Android tablets are not quite so appealing to consumers. Meanwhile, in the graph on the right, we see the top ten Android phone brands in China:

Phone Models
Samsung’s GT-I9100 – better known as the Galaxy S – is the most popular single model of Android phone in China. Huawei snuck into a surprise second place with its cheap but low-end C8650:

Tablet Models
Another victory for Samsung in terms of tablet models, with its seven-inch Galaxy Tab taking the top spot. It’s another home-grown competitor in second place, but this time it’s from Lenovo (HKG:0992):

Powerful Androids
It seems people are more likely to have really powerful tablets than phones. The processor speed (the CPU) of most phones is spread quite evenly, suggesting a broad price range of devices. The afore-mentioned Galaxy S phone has a 1 GHz CPU, making it pretty speedy:

Phone Screen Resolution
Further indication that many people in China are on budget handsets comes from the fact that about 40 percent of people are using phones with a resolution of 320 by 480 pixels or less. Higher rez screens, such as seen on the new Motorola MT917 for China are creeping in slowly, meaning that local developers need to remember to create more detailed graphics for apps and games:

Tablet Screen Resolution
Here’s the same scenario amongst tablet users here:

Pricey vs Cheap
From looking at the models that are on the Umeng network, the company has figured what kind of money people are currently spending on their Androids:

Across China
No surprises here, where the richest areas in China show the most usage of these smartphones and tablets. In descending order, the provinces are: Guangdong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Beijing, and Shanghai, which are highlighted in that blue rectangle:

How Has All That Changed From 2010?
Good question, dear reader. Looking back at Umeng’s report from Q4 2010, we see that Motorola (NYSE:MMI) and HTC had the most popular models. So it has not been too great a year for either of those to have been usurped by Samsung in 2011. Here’s the old view from 2010:

Download the full reports – and others from the archive – from Umeng at the link below.

[Source: Umeng report - page and report in Chinese]

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LinkedIn Advises Users to Banish CV Buzzwords – Here’s Your Top 10, Singapore [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/linkedin-cv-buzzwords-singapore/ http://www.techinasia.com/linkedin-cv-buzzwords-singapore/#comments Wed, 14 Dec 2011 04:30:04 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=61906 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Motivated. Dynamic. Innovative. Three much-used – indeed, overused – adjectives on many people’s CVs. There are other resumé regulars, too – such as “interpersonal skills,” “track record” – that have become cliché and tiresome, used unthinkingly, and which are blasts from the past that really ought to be avoided like the plague and used few and far between. D’oh!

LinkedIn (NYSE:LNKD), the business-oriented social network, has picked through the buzzwords on the profiles of its 135 million users worldwide and found which words and phrases and most overused in each region. Users in Singapore seem most fond of the term “track record” in a presumed bid to show that they are long-serving experts in their fields.

Before looking at the infographic, LinkedIn got Chan Ngee Key, a career Coach and strategist at YourOwn360, to give some advice to users on avoiding such trite turns of phrase:

Competition for opportunities can be fierce, so craft your LinkedIn profile to stand out from the professional pack. Some objectives you should keep in mind are: Banish buzzwords from your profile. Use language that illustrates your unique professional accomplishments and experiences. Give concrete examples of results you’ve achieved whenever possible and reference attributes that are specific to you.

Singapore’s top ten trotted-out buzzwords are:

  1. Track record
  2. Motivated
  3. Effective
  4. Creative
  5. Dynamic
  6. Innovative
  7. Problem solving
  8. Communication skills
  9. Extensive experience
  10. Interpersonal skills
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Who Needs PCs? Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos Opt For the Mobile Web [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/vietnam-cambodia-laos-mobile-web/ http://www.techinasia.com/vietnam-cambodia-laos-mobile-web/#comments Mon, 12 Dec 2011 07:30:46 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=61714 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos are areas that don’t get too much coverage in the tech press – but that doesn’t mean that there aren’t interesting phenomena in the way its web and tech scene are developing.

Vietnam is especially one to watch, with a fledgeling start-up scene empowered by game-development successes that are attracting a lot of investment from Japan.

Across these three countries, mobile is proving especially revolutionary – getting people not just talking, but also online. It’s a situation we’re seeing, too, in India and Indonesia. Following that path, we’re likely to see Cambodia and Laos pick up social media, e-commerce, and gaming almost exclusively on mobile, not on desktop PCs. Vietnam’s infrastructure, though, fares somewhat better.

To read the full analysis, head on over to the We Are Social blog where they also have the slideshow. Here are the three reports in full:


Vietnam



Cambodia



Laos



You might like to check out our previous four articles from this infographic series.

[Source: We Are Social]

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Social and Mobile, This is How India Enjoys the Internet [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/india-mobile-social-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/india-mobile-social-infographic/#comments Thu, 08 Dec 2011 15:00:09 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=61445 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


India and China are often mentioned in the same breath, as Asia’s powerhouse economies. But on the web, the two countries are developing very differently, with India’s younger demographics – half the nation is under the age of 25 – making the best of poor broadband infrastructure by going online and engaging in social media on their mobiles instead. And that’s great, because the web needn’t be trapped inside a weighty, underpowered old desktop PC.

But while India’s internet landscape is a lot freer than China’s, there are other extant issues, such as terrible broadband infrastructure – which has pushed forward the importance of mobiles – that sees a mere two percent of rural Indians on the internet. Plus, there’s a massive gender imbalance in terms of web access, skewed 70:30 towards males – that’s even more of a problem than in Indonesia, which we looked at last week.

For the full report, hit the We Are Social site to view it as a slideshow. But right now, here are 12 of the hottest infographics plucked out of it for your browsing pleasure…


Mobile Me


With 72 percent of India’s populace living in rural areas, it should be no surprise that this report, compiled of up-to-date information from numerous sources (including from PO), finds that 31 percent of them have never heard of the internet. On the bright side, Indian startups such as SMS GupShup are bringing some in-depth services to people on feature-phones who don’t have web access.

Internet adoption is growing fast, though. Perhaps of more concern going forward is how disproportionately male are India’s netizens:









Social


And, to round off our look at India’s web scene, social media is flourishing amongst India’s younger web users – but the nationwide social networking penetration is just at three percent (see the first image above), compared to 40 percent in China.

Businesspeople, who are likely more able to get online, are jumping about professional social networks – LinkedIn’s (NYSE:LNKD) Indian users are its second-largest user-base in the world. But let’s focus mostly on Facebook:





There are some slides above that provide even greater insights when compared side-by-side with the same survey reports produced on China or on Indonesia.

See the full 45-slide presentation at the source link below.

[Source: We Are Social blog]

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The Ubiquity of Social Media and E-Commerce in China [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media-ecommerce-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media-ecommerce-infographic/#comments Tue, 06 Dec 2011 06:00:29 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=61156

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


The Asia-oriented branding and PR agency We Are Social has just released its report on all that’s happening in social, digital, and mobile in China. It’s a monster of a slideshow presentation, befitting the region’s biggest web and mobile users.

Did you know that there are currently 10 million new internet users in China each month – adding to the ranks of Chinese netizens that are already more numerous than the populace of Europe – and that they spend an average of 150 minutes online each day?

The full presentation is on the We Are Social site, and runs to 55 slides. But here are ten of the key slides picked out to form a vertical infographic, and focusing on social media and e-commerce. Get your scrolling finger ready…


Big Red


The report finds that Chinese web users see the medium as much more engaging than either TV or radio. But that doesn’t stop an amusing 87 percent of netizens from also watching TV at the same time…





Social Media Mavens


The social media boom in China in the past decade has been monumental, and there’s still ample room for growth, as the over 200 percent growth in microblogging this year has shown. For now, though, let’s focus on some numbers, and also highlight the biggest overseas social success in China – the business-oriented Tianji SNS:




Checkout E-Commerce


E-commerce, has been game-changing in China as well, and is now worth over US$100 billion per year. It’s creating a stronger culture of customer service where user-feedback and a seller’s rating is crucial, as exemplified by how many people read comments before making a purchase:




You might like to see our previous infographics in this series – the Asia-wide one, and the Indonesia special report. Hit the source link below for the full slideshow of today’s China presentation.

[Source: We Are Social]

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A Portrait of Indonesia’s Very Young, Social, Mobile Web Users [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/indonesia-web-users-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/indonesia-web-users-infographic/#comments Thu, 01 Dec 2011 04:48:12 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=60709 Read more »]]>

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.


Indonesia’s web users are remarkable in that they tend to be very young, social, and mobile. To celebrate this, the first We Are Social country-by-country report of 24 nations across Asia focuses on Indonesia. And here it is.

Coming after last week’s Asia-wide analysis, this time we get a clear portrait of how more than half of Indonesia’s internet users are younger than 20 years of age, and that 66 percent of all desktop web access is from internet cafés. But that’s where mobile fills the breach…

As before, the full slideshow presentation is on the We Are Social site, and here’s a selection of some of the hottest stats:


Young, Mobile, But Too Male


The only issue with what’s going on in the country’s vibrant webosphere is that it’s far too skewed towards males.

The fact that people use their mobiles more to get online, however, is actually good news, as it means they’re sort of skipping merrily past the cumbersome PC era. The report tells us that 61 percent of all internet usage in Indonesia is from mobile devices. It’s also allowing the youth to be more social, and has created a preference for DMs over emails:





Indo <3 Facebook & Twitter


Speaking of social, let’s focus solely on Facebook and Twitter. With a full 89 percent of all the nation’s web users visiting social media sites, it’s no surprise that Facebook Pages are big news for brands in the region. Facebook users in the country are a bit more balanced out along gender lines – 60:40 – than the general web populace.

As for Twitter, We Are Social says that the SNS is increasingly becoming a BBM replacement in Indonesia, which would be very bad news for RIM (NASDAQ:RIMM). That’s why there are nearly 1.3 million new tweets from its netizens each day, which is about 15 per second:





Hooked On the Web


Lastly, the country’s internet users are, of course, doing plenty of other things on the web, such as greasing the wheels of business on LinkedIn (860,000 users in Indonesia), or posting to their ‘ole-fashioned blogs (nearly 5.3 million of those in the country). Plus…


Look out for a few more of these in the coming days and weeks, as we peer more closely into some of the nations that PO covers most often, such as Japan, China, India, and Singapore. Check out the full Indonesia presentation at the source link below.

[Source: We Are Social blog]

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How Asia is Going Social, Mobile, on the Web [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/asia-social-mobile-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/asia-social-mobile-infographic/#comments Tue, 29 Nov 2011 07:00:42 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=60326

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Branding and PR agency We Are Social has created a vital and up-to-date overview of all that’s happening in social, digital, and mobile in Asia. It was made to answer some frequently reoccurring questions from its clients, and to give everyone a good-looking primer on what’s happening on the web in 24 nations across the region.

The full 56-page presentation is available on the We Are Social site, and is recommended viewing. The team will follow this up with specific studies on each country in the coming weeks. But I thought it’d be fun to take some choice cuts from its first release, and make it into an easily scrollable infographic for those in a hurry…


Mostly Rural, Mostly Mobile


Of Asia’s 3.715 billion populace, 58 percent still live in rural areas, and this is creating a tendency towards mobile web usage – skewed especially by India and Indonesia – with an Asia-wide 24 percent rate of internet penetration compared to 74 percent on mobile subscriptions. And as we have seen in India and Indonesia – such as with SMS GupShup – a lack of smartphone uptake is no barrier to getting online whilst on the move.

Plus, the number who intend to make online purchases in the next six months (not pictured) indicates how the growing middle-classes hold the key to the web’s greatest profit potential:




Who’s The Most Social?


With a purported three quarters of a billion social media users across Asia, how does that break down by countries and services? Although social networking penetration is highest in Brunei and Hong Kong, it’s actually Indonesia and the Philippines who are in a tie for first place for the jolly title of “most social” country in Asia.

In terms of services, China’s Tencent (HKG:0700) and Sina (NASDAQ:SINA) are the clear leaders. Tencent’s QZone – a social profile page that’s linked to its ubiquitous QQ instant-messenger – is three times bigger than Facebook across the region, even though its usage is mostly just in the Greater China area:




China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and Singapore


Until the We Are Social team releases its detailed studies for each country, let’s look at the five we cover most frequently on PO:






Hit the source link below for the full presentation.

[Source: We Are Social's blog]

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iOS Download Stats for China Show the Importance of App Localization [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/ios-china-app-localization/ http://www.techinasia.com/ios-china-app-localization/#comments Fri, 25 Nov 2011 07:45:26 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=60038

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

New statistics showing the popularity of various free and paid iOS apps in China show the great importance of localization. And now that China is the second-biggest downloader of free – or freemium – iPhone and iPad apps, it’s even more critical to a game’s success that it comes with Chinese language translations throughout the app and download page.

These stats from AppAnnie also highlight a strong desire in Asia for apps that have a local language name – particularly so in mainland China, Taiwan, and South Korea.

Before we look at the infographics, remember that Apple rolled out easier RMB payments in China this month (these stats are from September, prior to that new development), and so Mandarin-language paid apps should be considered more of a priority from now on.


Global Free iOS Downloads, Revenue


Although China now accounts for 12 percent of all the world’s free iOS app downloads, it accounts for only 2 percent of revenue for developers. But, as I said with the new payments system, this will now slowly change, and freemium might become less of a trend on Apple’s (NASDAQ:AAPL) smartphone platform in China.

Of course, that two percent figure accounts only for direct app revenue, and takes no account of other clever ways of cashing-in on games in China, such as Rovio Mobile with its merchandising push.


Mandarin, Muhfukka, Do You Speak It?



Getting back onto the subject of localization, we can now see very strong demand for local language iPhone and iPad apps in China, with nearly half of all top 25 apps consumed in China being those with Chinese-language names. And so game publishers like Popcap have ensured that its cult titles, like Plants vs Zombies (pictured top), have a decent local name as well.

Major new entrants to China, such as the American 6waves Lolapps – with whom we chatted recently, about its social gaming plans in China – seem to realise this, and have been making acquisitions and tie-ups right, left, and centre in order to get it done right in Asia. Smaller/solo game devs face a tougher challenge though.

There seems to be more of a propensity in western European countries for Apple mobile device owners to not need a local language version, such as in multilingual Switzerland. Understandably, that’s not so feasible in east Asian countries that use different character sets.

If you’re a game developer, this panel discussion on localizing games for global success might be of interest, as it features expert advice from the likes of EA and Tapjoy.

[Source: AppAnnie’s blog]

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China’s Explosion in Weibo and E-Commerce Usage, Across the Social Divides [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-weibo-ecommerce-usage/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-weibo-ecommerce-usage/#comments Tue, 15 Nov 2011 04:48:41 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=58808

The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Market research firm Synovate has some new insights into Chinese netizens usage of the web – how it differs between poorer and richer cities, that more people than ever in China go online on their mobiles, how e-commerce has exploded even in less prosperous cities, and that the internet has (for the first time) surpassed television in terms of engagement levels.

It’s a part of Synovate’s Media Atlas China study, which surveyed 66,000 consumers across 88 ‘tier one’ to ‘tier five’ cities and rural areas across mainland China. Before we get to the meat on the bones, we have to gnaw at the gristle of what exactly constitutes these levels of cities.

So here’s a quick primer on China’s cities:

The tier one megacities are the likes of Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou, while tier two cities are wealthy provincial capitals like Hangzhou, and Nanjing. Tier three urban areas have a moderate GDP level and are pretty large; then tier four and five cities are noticeably smaller and poorer, but very numerous. All those 645 cities together comprise China’s urban spread, and account for just over 611 million of its populace.


More Fun Than TV


The study found something of a milestone in the internet’s growth in China:

The latest index shows internet overtook all other media as the most engaging. It has the highest engagement score of 77, followed by television with an index score of 73, and mobile with the score of 68.

That greater preference for the web is even more pronounced in China’s largest cities:

The engagement index of tier one [city] consumers is 82 for internet versus 77 for TV, while tier five consumers indicated index scores of 76 for internet and 73 for TV.

But remarkably, some smaller cities surpassed megacities in terms of its peoples’ online usage, although those were mostly sporadic.

Nationwide, the average amount of time spent online was 163 minutes, with those in China’s four megacities spending more time doing so, and being more likely to do it daily.


On Weibo, On Mobile


The report’s authors claim that “one in four Chinese urbanites aged 15 to 64 are now on Weibo.” Indeed, last week’s updated stats from China’s two major microblogging platforms, Sina (NASDAQ:SINA) and Tencent (HKG:0700), seem to back this up. Breaking it down by location and age, we get a clearer picture of the impact of Twitter-esque social media:

Almost half (45 percent) of the younger generation in tier one, two and three cities use Weibo, while one in three youngsters in lower-tier cities are already there.


E-Commerce Explosion


Good news for the likes of Tmall, QQ Buy, and Vancl – the huge e-commerce explosion in China is spread remarkably evenly across the country. Indeed, residents of tier two cities are the most keen on buying clothes, shoes, and accessories online. That indicates to e-commerce portals and brands that they’d be wise to heed stats like these, and perhaps spend more money advertising in, say, Hangzhou, and less in nearby Shanghai.

It seems that only in terms of purchasing books and magazines online do the megacity inhabitants outrank other areas. That’s pleasing news for Dangdang and Amazon.

One more eye-watering detail:

Overall, one in seven (14 percent) Chinese urbanites has shopped online in the past month, while 11 percent in tier five cities have done so. Given the vast number of tier five cities and their population, this translated to a 49 percent market share of online shopping by consumers in tier five cities alone.

Remember that all those inhabitants of China’s so-called poorer cities make up nearly half of all China’s city-dwelling folk.

[Source: Synovate]

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GREE: The Mobile Gaming Social Network In An Infographic http://www.techinasia.com/gree-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/gree-infographic/#comments Fri, 11 Nov 2011 12:00:59 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=58411 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Gree-Yoshikazu-Tanaka

As of 2010, at age 33, Yoshikazu Tanaka, founder of GREE, was ranked as “Asia's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire” under the age of 35.

We have covered much about GREE on our blog. But I wouldn’t be surprised if some lost souls are still confused about what GREE is doing (subscribe to our feed if you’re one of them) even though it has 130 million users worldwide and over 850 million in reach. You may also not be clear on exactly how it has been generating income through mobile gaming.

I stumbled upon a neat report by the Japanese mobile gaming social network which shared some interesting diagrams to help explain its business better to the public.

And I thought it would be a good idea to arrange them to create an infographic to help people understand the company better.

Fyi, we are also currently working on an infographic featuring DeNA, GREE’s competitor.

gree-infographic

Also see infographics on: Alibaba Group, Rakuten.

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Sina and Tencent Weibo Are Like Countries [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/sina-and-tencent-weibo-are-like-countries-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/sina-and-tencent-weibo-are-like-countries-infographic/#comments Thu, 10 Nov 2011 13:00:09 +0000 C. Custer http://www.techinasia.com/?p=58343 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Earlier this week we reported on the latest massive user number updates from Sina Weibo and Tencent Weibo. And while we’re a little bit suspicious of these self-reported user counts, the numbers are still pretty amazing.

So, we thought we’d have some fun with them and see how they compare to the populations of different countries! The results are below. Enjoy!

weibo-nation-infographic

(For those curious, we made this infographic with Cacoo, who we have written about before).

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India and the UK are Facebook BFFs [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/india-uk-facebook-friends/ http://www.techinasia.com/india-uk-facebook-friends/#comments Wed, 19 Oct 2011 04:00:28 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=55541 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Inside Facebook's Hyderabad office. (Image courtesy of Singla Ji Deepak).

A bit of data-delving by Western Union has revealed that British Facebook users have more friendship ties to India than anywhere else in the world.

The data was gathered using Western Union’s Your World Facebook app, which allows users to visualize where their buddies are in the world. Perhaps surprisingly, it reveals that the UK’s social media mavens have more ‘friended’ more people half the world away in India than in closer countries such as France or the US.

Of all the Facebook users in the UK who used the app, a full 11 percent of their overseas friends are Indian; American buddies are the next most numerous, making up eight percent. Here’s the infographic (which you can click to enlarge a bit, if you wish):

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Ogilvy’s ‘Social Media Equivalents’ in China 2011 [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-social-media/#comments Mon, 17 Oct 2011 07:30:05 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=55258 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Ogilvy’s Asia Pacific arm has recent republished its ‘China Social Media Equivalants’ chart. One of the most notable changes since the last time the group published this graphic is in the SNS/Microblogging section, where a couple of Weibos (Sina and Tencent) straddle both classifications.

The graphic is pretty solid, I think, with our only suggested addition being social games. But then again, is there a Chinese answer to a company like Zynga? Not yet, anyway.

Ogilvy’s chart is a little hard to fit in a blog post, so we’ve made it zoomable so you can get in a little closer. Alternatively, you can see entire static image here.

To learn more, drop over to Asia Digital Map for more details.

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How China Rocks iOS: Usage, Upgrading, and Updating [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-ios-iphone-ipad-usage/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-ios-iphone-ipad-usage/#comments Fri, 14 Oct 2011 04:45:01 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=54925 The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

A brand-new report by analytics company Umeng reveals a whole bunch of interesting facts and stats about iPhone and iPad usage and adoption in China, and how iOS is taking off across the country.

We all know that China has a huge taste for Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) products, so it’s good to have updated figures to match to that. This data was collated up to 2011 Q2 from online usage of around 3,000 domestic iOS apps, which Umeng then analysed by device, location, time, and type of apps being used. I’ve picked out seven of the most interesting pages, and broken them down with a translation-cum-commentary.

iPhone model upgrades - First up, here’s the proportional growth in different iPhone models in China, from the start of this year up to the end of June. Last summer’s new model, the iPhone 4, grew to an eventual 83.4 percent (or 83.8, including the later-issued CDMA variant), showing a strong preference for newer models in the country. The new-for-2009 3GS model is already astonishingly thin on the ground here. I’ll be curious to see if the new iPhone 4S sets the same rate of upgrades by next summer – although that’s perhaps more unlikely given its identical form-factor:

iPad model upgrades - The same analysis of the iPad in China reveals keen adoption of newer models as well, but the later release of the iPad 2 – in March of this year – means that the original Apple slate is still out in force. In total, it looks like the new iPad 2 in all its variants accounts for 59.7 percent of Chinese users, with the original iPad on 40.2:

iOS software updates - With so many people here upgrading their Apple devices annually – and with fairly easy updates in iTunes – it’s not too surprising to see the majority of people using the newest version of the software back in June, which was iOS 4.3. That was only released in March, so it had a swift rise – in just three months – to be on 69.3 percent of iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch models by the summer:

Apple device usage by province - Across China, iOS usage is concentrated around the country’s wealthier southern and eastern coastal provinces. Just five areas – Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Guangdong – account for 50.5 percent of usage in this survey. Down at the bottom of the chart is the massive but isolated Tibetan region, which has only 0.1 percent of Chinese iOS users:

iOS vs Android; and iOS devices per capita - Following on from that map above, this chart shows adoption of iOS verses Android. It’s interesting to see that Guangdong province, whose people have the most Apple mobile devices, are even bigger fans of Android, Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) mobile OS. But, in the other four wealthy regions, more tablets and smartphones are rocking iOS. In general across China, Android has a slight lead.

On the chart on the right, we see that Beijing has the greatest number of iOS devices per capita:

Types of iOS apps used - For the sixth page, let’s look at the time of apps being used. The chart on the left breaks it down to a week, while the one on the right shows the flow during a single, average day:

iPhone vs iPad usage - Lastly, we see that iPhones and iPads tend to be used in China more at varying times of day. I suspect this might be a global phenomenon, as people reach for a larger screen when they get home in the evening and when they’re relaxing at the weekends:

[Source: Umeng; Umeng’s report as PDF download]

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In a Nightmare Year, Which Chinese Tech IPOs are the Winners or Losers? [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-tech-ipos-winners-losers/ http://www.techinasia.com/chinese-tech-ipos-winners-losers/#comments Mon, 10 Oct 2011 13:00:29 +0000 Steven Millward http://www.techinasia.com/?p=54342 Read more »]]>

It’s a rough year. An awful economic situation across much of the western world has restricted sources of investment; in China, tech companies and start-ups have come to be viewed with some suspicion after the post-IPO scandals at Longtop and Sino-Forest; plus, tightening regulations in the Chinese tech and media industry will make it much harder to access foreign investment going forward. All mashed together, it has made for a year of extreme winners and losers amongst this year’s Chinese tech IPOs.

Indeed, as a new infographic from IPO Dashboards reveals, this year’s hardest-hit industry is the tech sector, whose global IPOs fell an average of nearly 20 percent as some observers squabbled over whether a new tech bubble was about to pop.

Looking at the infographic, the only real tech IPO winner from China is Qihoo (NYSE:QIHU), the anti-virus vendor, with 15.31 percent growth this year from its debut on the tickers. It’s fully interactive, so click on any bar to see further stats and percentages:

Which means there are a lot of IPO losers who have gotten a bit nauseous on their roller-coaster ride. The Chinese ones are: the dating site, Jiayuan (NASDAQ:DATE); data centre operator 21Vianet (NASDAQ:VNET); the children’s digital entertainment network, Taomee (NYSE:TAOM); chip maker BCD (NASDAQ:BCDS), video-sharing site Tudou (NASDAQ:TUDO), social network, Renren (NYSE:RENN), and anti-virus provider Netqin (NYSE:NQ), whose value plummetted 62 percent.

As for American social media, we’re getting very mixed messages, with SNS IPOs both gaining the most (LinkedIn (NYSE:LNKD)) and failing the hardest (that’s you, FriendFinder (NYSE:FFN)). Clearly that’s due to judgements on their ability to monetize, or the value to advertisers of their users.

It’s such a poor economic climate right now, it’s possible that only one further Chinese company will float in New York this year – the e-commerce platform Vancl, which aims to raise as much as US$1 billion.

But with some fearing that “a winter is coming” for tech companies in China, it might be too early to gauge who truly won or lost in 2011.

[Source: IPO Dashboards]

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China’s Taste for Apple [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/china-apple-infographic/ http://www.techinasia.com/china-apple-infographic/#comments Sun, 02 Oct 2011 05:50:30 +0000 Rick Martin http://www.techinasia.com/?p=53525 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the Day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

Props go out to The Motley Fool blog for creating this very informative graphic about Apple’s recent activities in China.

To me, the most notable tidbit included here is the fact that China saw a six-fold increase in growth in the last 12 months. This is even more remarkable when you consider that iPhone in China costs about 21 percent of the GDP per capita. While I’m sure this would vary greatly if limited to urban areas only, I think it’s still pretty stunning.

You can be sure that China will be watching for the upcoming launch of the new iPhone 5 just as closely as the rest of the world.

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10 Million Indian Professionals on LinkedIn [INFOGRAPHIC] http://www.techinasia.com/linkedin-india/ http://www.techinasia.com/linkedin-india/#comments Fri, 23 Sep 2011 15:52:44 +0000 Willis Wee http://www.techinasia.com/?p=52676 Read more »]]> The Infographic of the day series visually expresses important stories from Asia and the world of technology.

linkedin-indiaAbout six months ago, LinkedIn reported it has over 100 million users across the globe. And out of these, 10 million are based in India. The number is poised to increase as LinkedIn starts placing more emphasis on Asia-Pacific markets, especially in India and Japan.

LinkedIn has already had offices in India since 2009. It recently set up an APAC head office in Singapore. Plus, a Japan office will be opened later this year.

Despite those moves into other nations in Asia, India still proves to be one of the core markets for the professional social networking site. The good folks at Eyedealab created an infographic to provide us a visual breakdown of LinkedIn in India. Here are three interesting facts that caught my attention:

  • I’m the boss! — There are 400,000 Indian LinkedIn users who’re listed as business owners in their titles.
  • A geeky country indeed — IT is one of the top industries listed in India
  • Ayurveda’ in job titles? Yes, 2,587 of them have that.

Catch the infographic below and let us know what catches your attention.

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