I like talking with journalists because, naturally, they have a way of
asking interesting questions. The same journalist who got me thinking
about
corruption in PR hit me with a poser while we were talking:
"Name a successful American Internet firm in China," he said.
"Well," I answered, "there's always...er." And I thought about a bit.
"What about...nah, they're not doing so hot." And I thought about it a bit more.
Ok, so there isn't one. American Internet firms are, by and large, doing badly
in China. The whys and wherefores of this could fill a few posts, but a few reasons come to mind:
- Arrogance
- Poor communication
- Lack of understanding of Chinese culture, reflected in interfaces, communication tools and services provided
- A preference for local products among Chinese Internet users
The large portals are, of course, media firms, and they have also been
victimized by many of the same things that have bedeviled
traditional media firms coming into China, such as a strict regulatory
regime and a sense that the services offered here are sanitized
versions of the real thing. While local Internet firms are subject to
the same restrictions, they seem to be able to manage appearances better. I think this is in part because they benefit from
the (correct) perception that they serve the Chinese audience first.
Every time a foreign Internet firm gets involved in a censorship or
other scandal, it reinforces that perception. Plus, a little "root for the home team" nationalism goes a long way in China.
Two bits of recent corporate communication illustrate the problems of
foreign Internet firms in China, in different ways. The first is a
statement issued by Yahoo! Hong Kong (not China) in response to the
controversy over the turning over of Chinese journalist Shi Tao's
e-mail to the Chinese police, and his subsequent arrest. Here it is:
Yahoo! Hong Kong Statement
18 October 2005
As a company operating in the jurisdiction of the Hong Kong Special
Administration Region, Yahoo! Hong Kong adheres to all applicable local
laws and regulations in Hong Kong and our privacy policy. The Chinese
authorities have never contacted Yahoo! Hong Kong to request any of its
user information. Yahoo! Hong Kong and Yahoo! China are managed
and operated separately and independently of one another. As
such, Yahoo! Hong Kong and Yahoo! China have never exchanged or
revealed respective user information to one another.
This is really interesting for several reasons. First, its an attempt
by Yahoo! Hong Kong to distance itself from Yahoo! China. Now, checking
the bottom of the Yahoo! China website will show you that Yahoo! China
is also operated out of Hong Kong, by Yahoo! Holdings, Hong Kong. So it
is, indeed, a different operating company from Yahoo! Hong Kong.
There are a couple of legitimate reasons why Yahoo! Hong Kong would
want to do this. First, they were probably getting a lot of misdirected
media inquiries and hate mail. Second, as they serve the uppity and
more democratically minded Hong Kong audience, the may wish to distance
themselves from something they find unpalatable.
Nevertheless, from an International PR point of view, this makes no
difference. The damage done to Yahoo! by the Shi Tao affair was at the
international brand level. Yahoo! Hong Kong, Yahoo! China, or Yahoo!
Upper Volta, it doesn't make any difference. Especially to the liberal
minded Americans and Europeans who are still Yahoo!'s bread-and-butter
customers. And the continued woes in that department can be seen in this recent,
very interesting article from the
International Herald Tribune. As
previously predicted in this space, the "just following local laws" excuse is now coming under wider scrutiny:
Yahoo, meanwhile, gets to keep its piece of the gigantic China pie,
insisting like most Western companies doing business there that it must
abide by the laws of countries in which it operates.
"What if local law required Yahoo to cooperate in strictly separating
the races?" asked Max Boot, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations, in a widely circulated essay for The Los Angeles Times. "Or
the rounding up and extermination of a certain race? Or the stoning of
homosexuals?"
Jim Etchison, an information technology management consultant from
Pomona, California, created BooYahoo, at booyahoo.blogspot.com, a site
dedicated to urging "freedom-loving citizens of the Internet" to stop
using Yahoo services "as a result of their oppressive policies."
"I was a happy Yahoo user for about nine years and was so offended by
the Shi Tao business that I boycotted them," Etchison said in an e-mail
message. "What begins in China will end where I live."
Of course, nobody in China can see Jim's site because it is on Blogspot and, therefore, blocked.
The Yahoo! Hong Kong statement is also interesting because it suggests that the legal
obligations of Yahoo! Holdings, Hong Kong (operator of Yahoo! China)
may be conflicted between Hong Kong's privacy regulations and China's
demands for more-or-less complete fiat over all media firms operating
within mainland borders or serving mainland audiences. But I am
unschooled on such things, and this is just a wild hare.
The other
interesting announcement
was one from online auction juggernaut, eBay, in response to a zero-fee
deal from pesky, Chinese competitor Taobao (part of Jack Ma's Alibaba
empire, recently sold to, whaddaya know, Yahoo!):
eBay (Nasdaq:EBAY)(www.ebay.com) today issued the following statement regarding Taobao's pricing challenge:
"Free" is not a business model. It speaks volumes about the strength of
eBay's business in China that Taobao today announced that it is unable
to charge for its products for the next three years.
We're very proud that eBay is creating a sustainable business in China,
while providing Chinese consumers and entrepreneurs with the safest,
most professional, and most exciting global trading environment
available today.
An
interesting article
in Red Herring looks at the competition between Taobao and eBay. It
raises industry observers' doubts about Taobao's approach. But it also
had this to say:
EachNet founder and Chairman Bo Shao once dismissed the
Taobao approach, pronouncing, “Free is not a business model.”
Free-at-first, however, does seem to have worked for Taobao’s parent
company Alibaba, the business-to-business (B2B) portal Mr. Ma founded
in 1999. Hangzhou-based Alibaba, which Mr. Ma claims is the largest
global B2B site in the world, did not charge for its first three years,
but Mr. Ma asserts that the company has been in the black since the
third quarter of 2002. “We know the difference between investing money
and burning it,” he says.
Jack Ma's success in building Alibaba suggests that he has some idea
what he is doing, so it will be interesting to watch how this unfolds.
He also claims, in the
Red Herring article, that Taobao can
make money on advertising alone, although they plan to go to a fee
model eventually. There is another issue with auction sites as well.
Unlike a news site, the value of an auction site, and hence its power
to attract and retain users, grows as the size of its community
expands. The network effect creates a more interesting and liquid
marketplace. So if you can afford to spend money to build a critical
audience, why not? Indeed, as
Red Herring points out, this tactic was used successfully against eBay in Japan already.
But beyond that, there is the tone of eBay's press statement. This is
the kind of thing that peaks a flack's interest. If eBay's plan was to
project confidence, it failed. Instead, it projected defensiveness. I
don't think many people suspect that Taobao is "unable to charge". I
think most people suspect it simply doesn't want to charge until it has
to. And there is a strategic argument to be made for that. Free can be
a business model...for a while. eBay could have found a more
constructive way to make its argument.
If the ultimate test of a press statement is how journalists respond to
it, this one didn't pass muster. The journalist I was speaking to
summed it up in one word:
"Snarky," he said.
Note: Thanks to the journalist cited above for turning me on
to both of these statements, and for talking through some of this with
me.