Tag: china

Splio se renforce en Chine et intègre WeChat à sa solution

03/06/2018 – Spécialiste de l’omnicanal, Splio nomme Jean-Baptiste Le Blan au poste de directeur général Chine. Ancien d’AccorHotel et immergé depuis sept ans dans l’écosystème chinois, il aura notamment pour première mission d’accompagner le déploiement de WeChat au sein de la solution de l’entreprise.

Splio officialise à l’occasion de China Connect la nomination de Jean-Baptiste Le Blan à la direction générale de son bureau chinois, basé à Shangaï. Arrivé en Chine en 2011, il occupait alors la direction marketing d’AccorHotel en Chine, avec à sa charge la marque, le digital, la fidélisation et l’expérience client. Mais c’est surtout son expertise en matière d’utilisation et d’adaptation des spécificités chinoises comme WeChat qui interpellent, alors que l’entreprise annonce justement l’intégration de WeChat aux fonctionnalités de sa plateforme dédiée à l’harmonisation de l’expérience client on et offline.

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L'inspiration au menu du 8eme China Connect

02/06/2018 — Première conférence européenne dédiée aux tendances conso chinoises, à son marketing digital et mobile, son retail et son innovation technologique, China Connect décrypte chaque année à Paris depuis 2011 — et à Shanghai depuis 2017 — l’écosystème chinois avec une quarantaine de top executives venus du monde entier, le plus souvent inédits. La 8e édition est marquée par un tournant dans l’évolution de l’économie chinoise, qui impose désormais les prémisses d’un nouvel ordre digital mondial.
 
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What can Europe learn from China? China Connect brings Chinese tech and social leaders to Paris

02/09/2018 — When it comes to tech and entrepreneurship, China has been brimming with ideas during the last decade. Now it’s time to bring these ideas out into the world and according to China Connect founder and organizer Laure de Carayon, Paris is the right place. China Connect Paris is a two-day conference starting on March 7th, 2018 which aims to help European firms understand the China market by gathering influential internet players and marketers from Greater China and Asia-Pacific. The theme of this year’s event is China, The New World’s Inspiration—a nod to the idea that the worldwide digital order has begun to shift towards Asia.
 
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VIDEO: [Made in China] Les dessous de la collaboration entre Tencent et JD.com

02/08/2018 — En marge du China Connect Morning spécial Paiements mobiles et Fintech, nous vous proposons une interview inédite de Andrea Ghizzoni, Director Europe, Tencent IBG et Florent Courau, General Manager France, JD.com qui évoquent la collaboration de leurs deux groupes avec, entre autres :
– l’intégration toujours plus importante, fonctionnalités et data, de WeChat/WeChat Pay dans JD.com
– les annonces de ce début d’année avec l’offensive de Tencent sur l’e-commerce pour contrer Alibaba : prise de participation de 863 millions de dollars avec JD.com dans VIPshop spécialisé dans le luxe, prise de participation commune de 5,4 milliards de dollars la semaine dernière dans Wanda Mall, création d’une joint-venture entre JD.com et Meili Inc, spécialiste du commerce social, pour créer une plateforme commune sur WeChat, filiale de Tencent…
 
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China Connect : le rendez-vous de l’écosystème digital chinois, les 7 et 8 mars à Paris

02/08/2018 — Première et seule conférence européenne dédiée aux tendances chinoises, China Connect réunit chaque année depuis 2011 l’écosystème chinois à Paris, pour décrypter les nouveautés des domaines de l’innovation, du contenu, du social, de la data et du mobile en Chine. Avec plus de 40 « Top Executives » venus du monde entier et le plus souvent inédits, l’événement est un rendez-vous obligé pour tous ceux qui souhaitent développer leur business à l’Est. En attendant l’ouverture des portes le 7 mars prochain, nous avons posé quelques questions à Laure de Carayon, fondatrice et organisatrice de China Connect.
 
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Europe Firms Eye China Potential

01/19/2018 — This week’s China Connect conference looks to help all that.As the event brings together Europe’s largest gathering of experts on Chinese business trends.
Held in Paris, the event aids Western companies to develop strategies to cater to China’s burgeoning consumer market.
According to China Connect’s website, so far, more than 600 professionals have attended the conference. Among them are French business leaders, but also entrepreneurs who flew in from the UK and China to participate in the event.
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Can pop music connect teens in China with the world?

09/13/2017 — Musical.ly co-founder Louis Yang wants to find out. The ability of social media platforms to cross China’s Great Firewall has been limited, regardless of whether they are aiming to go out or in, as the country has been increasingly tightening its control over the internet and any media businesses.
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Going Mobile Behind the Great Firewall

 
China has at least 593 million mobile internet users. This is more internet users than in the whole of the EU – who number around 400 million – and around 17% of the total number of internet users in the world. And most of them are online using mobile devices. Just five years ago, mobile users started to outnumber those only using desktops, and now close to 90% of internet users are going online this way (China Internet Watch). Those who stick to desktop or laptops only to access the internet are a clear minority.
In China, your mobile is important because it’s closely tied to who you are. It’s used for shopping accounts and for social network accounts. Where we would normally expect to choose a username, it’s far more common to use a mobile number to log in. People very often choose to officially link their mobile numbers to their government-issued IDs – their number is more than a way to reach them, but also something that identifies who they are.
 
Load fast; load every time
So for any company wishing to target the Chinese market, making your website accessible on mobile is clearly a must. If you have a site with a responsive design that adapts to mobiles, you may think you’re most of the way there. However, websites in China have not, in general, followed the west’s example and adopted responsive design as a mobile solution. Mobile sites are more often completely separate, and considered the “primary” website.
But there are many more considerations than how the site looks on mobile. Creating a China-focused website obviously needs a .cn domain and full translations. But simply mirroring translated content on a different domain isn’t nearly enough to make a successful website in China.
Today, very few sites have content from only one source. Often there will be videos embedded from Youtube, social plugins from Facebook and Twitter, and – depending on the site – photos from Flickr or presentations from Slideshare. All of these are currently blocked by the ‘great firewall’ in China, and will at the very least slow down access to your site or make it completely inaccessible.
The ‘Great Firewall’, officially known as the ‘Golden Shield’, is a sophisticated internet filtering system that restricts online access in mainland China – Websites have to be licensed and all content has to adhere to Chinese regulations. If you’re in China and want to check your Gmail account or look something up on Wikipedia, these sites won’t load. Similarly, if you’re browsing a website that includes elements from a blocked domain, such as a sidebar showing ‘recent tweets’, this may also block the entire site from view.
All of the content on the site must be accessible in China. Similarly, payment options, advertising, search engine marketing, and social plug-ins should all be chosen with accessibility in mind. But even with all of this, being able to access a site is far from guaranteed. If it takes more than five seconds to load a site, people will simply give up – accessing sites hosted outside China often means load times of up to 60 seconds. A lot of companies use creative ways to show the progress of page loading but there is an even better solution.
 
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Cool Bear Hi 2010
At 4%: “Choose Cool Bear Hi. Share your happiness.”
At 22%: “Wear a smiling face every day, and say Hi to everybody.”
At 41%: “Cool Bear is impatient, ‘Why hasn’t anybody taken me home!’”
At 70%: “Book a test-drive appoint. Get your special gift and reward points.”
Source: smashingmagazine.com/
 
 
Navigating cultural differences
But even if you create a site that loads quickly, loads every time, has no blocked or slow-loading content, and is promoted well, the site may not have anything close to the response wanted if it is not designed with Chinese tastes in mind.
To someone used to western websites, visiting a Chinese website can seem disorienting. There are a number of reasons for this – it’s more difficult to use fonts to grab attention in Chinese; people tend to want to click links rather than search because typing in Chinese on an alphabet-based keyboard can be quite a nuisance; and slow internet speeds means that text-heavy sites are preferable to loading lots of separate pages. This makes the minimalistic design of many western websites unappealing.
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Minimalist sites do however have their place – on mobile. Many brands are making use of single-serving “light apps”, a popular trend in China.
These “light apps” are actually microsites aimed at a mobile audience, often accessed using a QR code. They have a single message, and are designed to be shared across social platforms rather than to sell something directly to the person browsing.
 
 
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QR codes are everywhere and very different from the ones we are used to here in Europe – Source: visualead.com
 
 
China has 577 million mobile social media users – almost every internet user uses social media – despite Facebook and Twitter being blocked by the Great Firewall. WeChat, Qzone, SinaWeibo, Baidu Tieba, and Renren are all popular, with WeChat the most popular by quite some way. Triggering the desire to share is all about entertainment – quizzes, animations, and games that mean people will want their friends and family to see the app.
Creating a site that will meet users’ expectations takes a lot of time, effort and resources – much more than simply translating what you have and hoping for the best. After allocating these resources and creating a great site or light app that people will share, it’s vital to make sure that your site loads quickly by avoiding blocked elements and using a content delivery network that will ensure availability – otherwise a sixth of the world’s internet users will miss your site.
 
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Source: taobao.com
 
Chris Townsley, Sales Director EMEA / CDNETWORKS (UK)
 

Comprendre l’univers du numérique et du mobile en Chine

February 19, 2015

China Connect est de retour ! La conférence internationale sur l’Empire du milieu, en partenariat avec INfluencia, ouvre sa cinquième saison avec un panel d’experts toujours aussi prestigieux. Cette nouvelle cuvée se focalise sur le raz de marée provoqué par le numérique et le mobile en Chine.
 
Click to read the full story
 
 

Bridging East and West

February 16, 2015

What inspired you to set up the China Connect project?

It’s quite simple, and it has been very quick. I have a background in advertising, media agencies and TV production, and specialize in branded content. I first read about what was happening in this field in China early 2010…

Click to read the interview

Au CES de Las Vegas, 1 Exposant sur 4 Etait Chinois

January 19, 2015

La Chine n’aura pas attendu la 48è édition du Consumer Electronics Show (CES) de Las Vegas pour être récompensée sur ce qui se fait de mieux dans le monde en matière d’innovation technologique en électronique grand public. Mais si les produits et gadgets “made in China” ont depuis longtemps envahi les foyers américains (et du monde), d’après Millward Brown, seuls 6% des Americains pouvent citer une seule marque chinoise. Et au classement Interbrand 2014 des “Best 100 Global Brands” seule figurait Huawei, à la 94è place. Le CES 2015 marquerait il une étape … ?

Click here to read the full articleMovie Rings (2017)

Interview : Why K-Pop is such a sensation in China

December 8, 2014

K-pop (Korean pop music) has taken the world by storm thanks to the phenomenon of Psy’s success, and China is no exception. With a mix of popular songs, choreography and comic dances, and strong visual elements in its videos, K-pop’s influence is spreading massively across the entertainment, video, cosmetics, fashion, and electronics industries in particular, and garners intense word of mouth on social networks.
Read the full article here

China Connect on Darkplanneur.com (+video)

March 13, 2012

This article is only available in French

Darkplanneur : “Pourquoi aller à China Connect ?”

Laure de Carayon : “Pour s’informer, décrypter, s’adapter, gagner du temps – ou plutôt ne pas risquer d’en perdre – partager, networker, afin de saisir les opportunités immenses en même temps que les obstacles, du marketing et du digital. La Chine est la zone de croissance mondiale par excellence sur laquelle nombre de marques mettent leurs espoirs/objectifs business ces prochaines années. Cet exercice, on l’a déjà beaucoup dit, n’a d’égal que la complexité, la singularité et la vitalité du pays” Enfin, c’est la 1ère fois en France, et sans doute en Europe, que 3 acteurs majeurs de l’internet chinois seront réunis: Youku, 1er site video, Tmall.com, 1er site e-commerce B2C et Sina, portail d’information et éditeur de Sina Weibo, plateforme de microblogging à succès. Cet écosystème est complexe et en perpétuelle évolution (preuve encore hier, l’annonce importante du rachat par Youku de son challenger Tudou, et quel meilleur calendrier pour répondre aux questions qu’il suscite de la part des annonceurs, comme des agences ?!): ses responsables viennent à Paris avec une vraie volonté de pédagogie et d’échange, car souvent nos marques représentent une part significative de leur business- pour Youku, 70% du CA est réalisé par des marques internationales.

La suite>>>


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