Move aside Facebook and Skype. Asian social networks, already hugely
popular on their continent, have set their sights on Europe where they could
prove stiff competition for their US rivals.
China's WeChat and Japan's Line, which let users make free calls, send
instant messages and post funny short videos and photos, take attributes from
Facebook, Skype and messaging application WhatsApp and roll them all together.
This week, Line executives traveled to France and Italy for a public
relations offensive aimed at raising awareness of the mobile app, which already
counts some 230 million users around the world including 47 million in Japan
alone.
The social network has already taken root in other parts of Europe. In
Spain, for instance, Line has forged heavyweight partnerships with football
clubs FC Barcelona and Real Madrid, brands such as Coca-Cola or tennis star
Rafael Nadal.
FC Barcelona, for instance, has a home page on the app where it posts
photos that has already drawn more than 8.2 million friends.
Line even has a permanent office in Spain, where it counts some 15 million
users already.
A French version of the mobile app, meanwhile, is to be launched before the
end of the year.
One of the main selling points for Line, which was launched at the
beginning of 2011, is its "stickers" -- funny, cartoon-like figures
that express emotions in a way deemed far more original and fun than
traditional emoticons.
On WeChat, users can post figures that move about dancing, blowing kisses
or punching the air. Both social networks also supply a selection of
"stickers" that users have to pay for.
"We're betting a lot on this new form of communication with
stickers," Sunny Kim, assistant director general of Line Europe and
America, told AFP on a trip to Paris.
This part of the business represents 30% of Line's overall turnover and in
July alone, users bought eight million euros ($10.8 million) worth of stickers.
The company makes the rest of its money on the sale of games integrated in
the mobile app (50 percent) and from partnerships and products on the side.
Line's logo is green with a conversation bubble inside, and looks
remarkably similar to the icon of WeChat, which began in January 2011.
Already translated into 19 languages, the social network has 500 million
users, including 100 million outside of China, and plans to launch in France
towards the end of the year.
While Line has Real Madrid, WeChat has enrolled the help of Argentinian
football star Lionel Messi, who has become ambassador of the brand and has
filmed a commercial for the social network.
But WeChat -- which belongs to China's web giant Tencent -- is also banking
on the huge Chinese diaspora to expand.
"The French of Chinese origin or the Canadians of Chinese origin, for
instance, are the bridge between China and the rest of the world," said
Renaud Edouard-Baraud, who heads up an Asia consulting branch of the
BNP-Paribas bank and advises WeChat.
Many brands keen to tap into the giant China market also have a presence on
WeChat. Companies can for instance use geolocalisation to pinpoint the exact
location of Chinese users when they are visiting Europe, and send them
promotional offers to lure them into their shops.
jugaad.com
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